Stuff You Should Know - The Strange Story of Sea Monkeys
Episode Date: March 6, 2018Anyone who ever picked up a comic book as a kid probably marveled at the ads for the mysterious Sea Monkeys. In reality, they are just brine shrimp, not fantastical beings with magical powers. But the... story behind the invention of the Sea Monkey is tale all its own. Listen in today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Tuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry over there.
We are swimmingly excited about this one
because it is about sea monkeys.
Jerry, is mama sea monkey?
Yeah, she's got her little blonde bob hairdo going on.
And I guess we're baby sea monkeys.
I guess, yeah, that's cool.
We'll let the dad not exist.
Okay, we're brothers.
That's right.
I think that's a good move.
With a non-existent father,
which really explains a lot about us.
A non-existent sea monkey father, no less.
So, Chuck, I realized that I don't know something about you,
which is weird,
because we've been doing this for almost 10 years.
And we're sea monkey brothers.
We are.
We know a lot about one another.
We know one another's smells, looks, scowls,
all sorts of stuff, right?
Triumphs, victories.
One thing I don't know about you
is whether you were into comic books as a kid.
Well, glad you asked.
I feel like we've talked about this at some point,
but maybe not.
I, yeah, we have, for sure.
Because remember, I read Archie and Richie Rich?
Oh, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I wasn't, well, here's a couple of things.
I read Archie and Richie Rich growing up
and didn't get into the superhero comics much,
because I don't know why.
But then also, you don't know this part.
We used to go to visit my grandmother on my father's side.
She was big time into Thor.
Granny Thor.
She lived in Jackson, Tennessee.
And it was, I had sort of the modern grandparents
with cable TV who lived in a condo.
Yeah.
And then old school granny who lived
in a house in the country.
And so Granny Bryant didn't have TV or anything like that.
But what she did have in the back room
was a bunch of my dad and uncle Ed's old toys
in comic books from when they were kids.
Nice.
So I think they were mainly uncle Eddie.
So I got, I had a big stack of comics
from I guess the 1960s that were like man from uncle.
I'm trying to read, I'm trying to think of a few more.
No superhero stuff, but just those weird sort of,
I guess it wasn't weird,
but man from uncle is the only one I can remember.
But.
It's a little weird.
Long story short is because that's all the entertainment
we had to ingest.
We would, my brother and I would go back there
and read those every year for years.
That's pretty awesome.
The same comics.
So you made your way through that stack multiple times?
Oh, many, many times.
Gotcha.
I remember the ads.
I remember everything about them.
So then you remember obviously,
I think you probably knew where I was going with this
from the outset.
You remember the ads for the sea monkeys then?
I remember sea monkeys.
I remember x-ray specs.
Sure.
Which we'll get into.
And I remember for sure all the ads for like,
can you draw this parrot or pirate?
Oh yeah.
Remember that?
For the art school.
Yeah, what was that?
I think they just took your money
and then sent you a degree for your art school.
Is that what it was?
I'm pretty sure.
Oh, so disappointing.
Yeah, but the turtle was pretty cool.
He had like a Newsy camp on and a turtleneck
and he just looked like he was ready to get mellow, you know?
Yeah.
Oh, you know, the other one too was the Charles Atlas
workout thing.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, where the 98 pound weakling
gets sand kicked in his face.
Totally, man.
Yeah, that's really playing on some 15 year olds
insecurities and it works.
Oh yeah, for sure.
For sure.
What about you?
I remember Sea Monkeys.
There's one that always stuck out to me
was a bonkers ad from the 80s.
This would have been way past your Man
from Uncle era comic books.
But I think I've asked you before,
if you'd ever had bonkers or like these fruit juice,
they were like just the superior starburst.
There was a comic book ad in there
with like this kind of crotchety old lady in it.
And I don't even remember the gist of it.
I think maybe she was mad that the kid was eating bonkers
and enjoying it.
I don't know.
But I'll never forget that comic for some reason
because the colors in it were just perfect
and they struck my brain just right.
So I've always got that bonkers comic book ad in there too.
And a lot of bubble yum comic book ads
are stuck in there as well.
Nothing that means anything really.
And certainly nothing pertinent to this episode
except for that Sea Monkeys ad.
Yeah, but you and I were also into Mad Magazine Big Time
which I believe was ad free, wasn't it?
It was.
I like those fake ads.
Oh yeah, of course.
Which were pretty hilarious.
Satirical ads.
Sure.
But now I don't think they had any actual ads in them.
They were just strictly subscription based.
That's right.
So in that Sea Monkeys ad, if you'll remember correctly,
and I think for many decades,
it was virtually the same thing.
It was this kind of group, this tribe of humanoid figures.
It was a family.
It was a family.
But exactly what kind of family they were
is really up for debate.
So they were kind of lanky, like stringy,
ropey arms and legs.
Ponchy tummies.
Naked is the day they were born.
Webbed feet, webbed tails,
like the end of their tail was like webbed.
Which if you look closely,
I think was probably just a device to cover
dad's junk in the illustration.
They were like,
something on the end of their tail there, buddy.
And this is like this classic illustration
of the Sea Monkeys that apparently was done
by this guy named Joe Orlando.
Mad Magazine.
Yeah, he's from Mad Magazine.
Creepy Magazine is another one.
He ran some comic lines at DC Comics for a while.
He's kind of a legend.
But he's also extremely well known
outside of the comic world
for having drawn that Sea Monkey family.
Yeah, I mean, I'm looking at it right now.
Look at that.
It's like unchanged.
I know.
And what's great too is,
as we'll talk about later,
some people went in and fiddled around with it.
And if you look now,
if you go to buy the Sea Monkeys now,
they're basically back to the way they were before.
Well, yeah, and we'll get to that too.
You also didn't mention the castle,
which is kind of key because somehow
they have these little crown like heads.
And I guess we're kings of the bowl.
I guess they were a royal Sea Monkey family.
Kings of the fishbowl and only inhabitants, actually.
So if you, right.
So you could proclaim yourself the royal family.
You and me and I have done that at our house.
So if you look closely at some of those ads,
they say there's like a little fine print
that says these are caricatures of Sea Monkeys.
It's not actually what your Sea Monkeys look like,
or it's an artist's interpretation
or something like that.
And it turns out that Sea Monkeys,
and just prepare for your childhood
to blow away like so much dust in the wind, Chuck.
Sea Monkeys don't actually exist.
There's no such thing.
Yeah.
Did you know that already?
Well, of course.
Well, Sea Monkeys as Sea Monkeys don't exist,
but they are real little living creatures that you buy
and have shipped in an envelope back in those days
in an envelope to your home.
And they are actually their own thing.
So what they are ultimately is something called Artemia
or Brian Shrimp.
Yes.
But the guy who ended up calling them Sea Monkeys
was actually well within his right to call them something
different than just Brian Shrimp
because they're a hybrid version of Brian Shrimp.
The guy who invented Sea Monkeys actually tinkered
along with a micro crustaceans expert named Di Augustino.
I can't remember his first name.
I think when you have a name like Degustino,
you can just go by that.
So Degustino and this guy named Harold von Brotten
or Braun Hot, right?
They got together and they actually took Brian Shrimp
and made them into something different,
a hybrid version that we now know and love as Sea Monkeys.
Yeah, so the literal Sea Monkeys that you buy
don't exist in nature.
Right.
They are a man-made creation.
I don't think we can get that through clearly enough
because it's pretty, scientifically it's pretty amazing
and they did that because they couldn't find
any of these Brian Shrimp varieties
that would live through the shipping process
and be able to be essentially rehydrated
and brought to life to the delight of children.
So they made them.
Right.
And it worked.
There was no clapping and squealing
with original Brian Shrimp, right?
No.
So through these crossbreeding programs,
they made Brian Shrimp.
Brian Shrimp are already, you could,
I think you can still go to pet stores and buy them.
They're a type of food.
They're a pet food.
Yeah.
They're just like tiny little micro crustaceans
and they enter into what's called cryptobiosis.
Yeah.
And they're basically,
if you'll remember our tardigrade episode,
they basically do the same thing that tardigrades do.
They enter into the state of suspended animation,
a desiccated state where they're just dried out
and just sitting there waiting for the conditions to be right
to basically come back to life.
That's what sea monkeys are.
Yeah.
So you get this little package.
They're Brian Shrimp eggs is what it is or what they are.
And then you get purified water, put them in there.
And I believe there's a growth formula as well, right?
Yeah, that's like their food.
It's like spirulina and yeast, I believe.
Right.
But no one truly knows what the exact formulation
for all this stuff is because it is locked
in a vault in Manhattan because it was the only one
that worked and it was owned by this Van Brotten character.
Van Brotten?
Bronhut.
Yeah, no, it's a tough word, tough name to say.
I've seen it a hundred times in the last eight hours,
but still.
Yeah, so until he died in 2003, Harold Van Bronhut
and his wife Yolanda were the only two people on the planet
who knew what this special formula was that created
those conditions because remember, you've got sea monkeys,
little Brian Shrimp that are in the state of crypto bios.
This is dried out, desiccated state.
And when you put them just into regular tap water,
they don't necessarily come to life.
There's something in that powder that alters the pH
and the salinity and makes it just perfect for them
to emerge from this crypto biosis almost instantaneously.
In fact, early on the sea monkeys were originally
just called instant life, I believe,
is what the name they were originally marketed under.
Not the best name.
No, and it's weird that that name was chosen
because it turns out that Harold Van Bronhut
is or was a marketing genius.
He wrote the original 32 page booklet
that I believe still comes with the sets, is that right?
I couldn't find evidence of that
and I was looking online to find a transcription of it
and was very surprised to find no one's done that.
Like you would think there'd be entire fan sites
that this is like their Bible,
the original version of it
would have later additions of it.
Couldn't find it anywhere.
Well, I don't know if it still comes with it
but for many, many, many years
and even after his death, that original prose was
which told this fantastical story.
I mean, that's the whole point.
It wasn't just like add water and you're all set.
It told the whole story of sea monkeys.
Yeah, it said things like your sea monkeys can be hypnotized.
You can train them to play baseball.
You can race them, they're like they love to race.
All sorts of things.
You can basically train them into a pack of friendly seals
I think is the way they put it.
It talked about like their courtship and reproduction
and just all sorts of stuff.
Like it was, yeah, this guy's just basically,
do you remember that treatment that George Lucas wrote
about Wookiees and Chewbacca's planet
that got turned into the Star Wars Christmas special?
Yeah.
This is the exact same thing
but this is the sea monkeys world.
Right.
I would like to see, well, it's about to say
I'd like to see the sea monkeys TV show but I did.
What did you think?
Did you watch any of it?
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, so there was a TV show in the 80s
starring Howie Mandel.
Yeah.
It just really doesn't get any better.
Like who else would have been better
than Howie Mandel for that?
It was Howie Mandel, he produced it as well
along with the Chioto brothers
who were known for making killer clowns from outer space.
Yeah, so you know what you're gonna get there?
It is the definition of camp.
Like they watch Peewee's play house and they're like,
this is kind of campy but let's increase it by 35%.
Yeah.
And that's what they did.
It was not long for this world though, right?
No, and the thing is, is I don't know
if we've gotten this across, it was live action.
Oh yeah, it wasn't a cartoon.
That's what made it so not just campy,
that made it unsettling as well.
Like the actors were all done up as like sea monkeys
and it was for kids, but it was obviously made by adults
with a wink and a nod to other adults.
It was a weird, weird, weird show.
Yeah, it was, I didn't see it,
I'd only watched like a bit of one episode.
I didn't see enough to judge the whole 11,
I think episode lifespan.
But it was like Sid and Marty Kroff without the LSD.
Right, it was with PCP instead.
That's how it struck me.
I was like, these people are on angel dust.
Yeah, but all this to say that it was,
was and continues to be a big selling item.
Like kids loved sea monkeys, they bought them.
And I mean, from what I can tell,
when kids bought sea monkeys,
they didn't care that they didn't look like those things.
And they were just thought it was cool
that something they got in the mail really did come to life.
Yeah, for sure.
And you could raise them and after some tinkering,
Von Braunhut managed to get them to live for a while.
So these were like pets to the kids.
Plus I also think Chuck, I suspect,
and this is a big reason why sea monkeys
were such a success, Von Braunhut,
when he started to market these things early on,
he was following immediately in the wake
of something called Instant Fish
that I think Wamo had tried to market
and had failed terribly at.
And he was going around trying to market something similar
and toy stores and retailers were like,
we don't want anything to do with those.
People almost lost their jobs over that Instant Fish stuff.
Get out of here.
So Von Braunhut in a stroke of genius said,
you know what, I'm gonna go right to the source.
So he started marketing directly to kids.
He started hanging out at elementary school parking lot.
He did.
And he'd be like, here kid, come look at my minivan.
I've got a bunch of stuff for you to choose from, right?
Yeah, well, the comic books thing was a stroke of genius.
How many like three, three and a half million ads a year?
Was that it or pages?
303 million pages a year.
And now though, so most of those were two page inserts.
So that's 150 million issues of comic books a year.
I wonder how expensive that was.
I don't know.
I'm quite sure he got some deals over the years
because he started that marketing push in 1964.
And I don't know exactly when it stopped,
but it was well into the 90s
that there were a C-Monkey ads in comic books still
that were virtually the same as ever.
Did you ever buy any of that stuff?
I had a friend who had C-Monkeys.
I never did myself.
Oh, but that was the point that I was getting away from
that I wanted to make.
I think one of the reasons C-Monkeys were successful
was because it wasn't just that these things
were pets or whatever, you ordered them yourself.
Like you handled this transaction yourself.
And you got to show your friend something that you purchased.
Like your parents didn't take you to the store
or anything like that.
You contracted with this strange man
to buy these brine shrimp from them
and they arrived and you followed the instructions
and now they're floating around.
Well, you probably got mom or dad to cut you a 49 cent check
or have them cut a check.
Or you maybe got the funds from your lemonade stand
and converted that to a cash bond.
Yep.
A bear bond.
A bear bond.
I don't know what any of that stuff is.
But yeah, so you probably had a little assistance
from mom or maybe you put a dollar in an envelope.
I'll bet many kids did.
I wonder if Bronhut sent the change back
or was like, I'm keeping this change kid
just to teach you a lesson not to send a dollar bill
in the mail anymore.
Yeah, because you can't send change in the mail, right?
Right.
So I mean, suffice to say, C-Monkeys were and are just
like one of the classic toys of all time,
largely because of the way they were marketed, right?
Well, yeah, in Von Bronhut, this was not his only jam.
He had close to 200 patents on everything.
Like, you know, we mentioned the X-ray specs
and that great, great ad of the guy looking at his hand
or the sexist, misogynistic ad of him
leering at a woman in a dress.
Right.
And X-ray specs were very disappointing when you got those
because they were, it was two pieces of cardboard
with little pinholes that you look through.
And in between the cardboard,
where that pinhole is, is a feather.
Right.
And so what it did was it basically projected
two overlapping images of the same thing.
So the edges around the outside of it
were just kind of fuzzier than the middle.
Basically, yeah.
Supposedly that was what an X-ray of your hand looked like.
Yeah.
So that's a case of fraud.
Yeah, it's a good way to put it.
Or what about the invisible goldfish?
That was another one is.
That is, that's so fraudulent that it's just beautiful.
It's elegant and it's fraudulent.
Well, but it's almost not fraudulent
because here was the deal.
He sold what was called invisible goldfish,
which basically means nothing.
He sold nothing successfully.
Right.
It was a, the kit came with the fishbowl,
fish food and instructions and that was it.
And there was a guarantee
that you would never see your invisible fish
because they would remain invisible.
Yeah. And that what's,
I think that is the distinction that makes it not fraud.
Right.
Is he basically said,
you're not going to see anything in this bowl.
Yeah. And that was that.
What else did he do?
He had, he invented Balderdash.
Oh, that's right.
He also invented those dolls eyes
where you lay your doll back and its eyes closed.
He invented those.
Yeah. He invented that technology,
which is, was a game changer for creepy baby dolls.
He also, even before his days of inventing,
he was an interesting guy, basically his whole life.
He, he raced motorcycles and cars
under the name the green Hornet.
Mm-hmm.
He was a talent manager for a couple of people.
One was a mentalist.
Yeah. Talent manager like Broadway Danny Rose
was a talent manager.
Okay. I don't know that his bum would go along with it.
What is that?
What's that from?
The name's familiar, but I don't know who it is.
It was a Woody Allen movie where he played,
that was, it was a talent manager that managed like,
you know, people like this that would,
the high divers that would dive into shallow pools
and mentalists.
And this guy was even a,
wouldn't he a mentalist for a little while?
I didn't see that.
I wouldn't be at all surprised.
Yeah. I think he did a little work as the great something.
Did you sit, well,
he managed a guy named the great Danager.
I didn't get whether that was him or not though.
It could have been.
No, no, no.
That was him and he had his own act.
Oh, gotcha. Okay.
Did you see the guy who the high dive guy?
Did you see his jump?
No.
Oh my. Okay.
There's a guy named Henri Lamothe, I believe.
Yeah.
He, yeah. Henri Lamothe.
If you go look him up, H-E-N-R-I-L-A-M-O-T-H-E.
You're going to be treated to an AP video
that was shot in the early seventies from the looks of it
where he's opening up for an evil Knievel act
in a parking lot in God knows where in New Jersey.
And he climbs up this ladder, a 40 foot ladder,
and below beneath is one of these tiny little kiddie pools
filled with like 18 inches of water.
And this guy who is clearly in his mid seventies,
maybe older, dives 40 feet into 18 inches of water
in a kiddie pool.
Belly first, he does basically a belly flop
and immediately stands up with like ta-da.
It's one of the most amazing things
I've ever seen in my life.
And this guy, Harold von Braunhut,
managed that guy back in the day.
Yeah. Okay.
He was a magician who worked under the name
The Great Telepo.
That's a pretty good name.
And he also invented something called the Direct-O-Mat,
which was this device where you punch in
your destination in New York, like you're in New York City,
you punch in your destination
and the machine told you the fastest subway route.
Oh, that's smart.
It was Google Maps.
That's very smart.
Like 50 years early.
But using like punch cards instead of, you know,
real technology.
Basically, but I mean, the guy, you know,
not only was he a marketing genius,
he had a real knack for inventing
some successful, useful things.
So he had this other thing that you could get
for like $59.95, and it was actually a weapon,
so much so that he was stopped at LaGuardia Airport in 1979
and arrested because he had a briefcase
of samples of this stuff that he was selling,
I think through mail order.
And it was called the, what is, Koyoga Agent M5?
Yeah, the Koyoga Agent M5,
it's basically a telescoping metal whip.
You know, you've seen the telescoping batons and things.
Right.
That cops can use, I guess.
Sure.
Anybody can use them.
And do.
I actually had one of those for a little while,
for some reason.
Did you really?
I did.
I thought, you know what, I'm not a gun guy,
but I thought, I'll put this thing
in the floorboard of my car.
Sure.
And if anyone ever reaches their hand in the window,
then they're gonna get a wrapped knuckle.
It's smart.
That's funny.
I don't know where it went though.
It didn't telescope properly,
so I was like, that's probably not good.
No, it's not because you,
I mean, that's not what you want.
And you, plus you have to practice with that kind of thing.
That's all, it's a big commitment.
You're just turning and running is way better.
Well, yeah, I just, I went back to plan A,
which is poop my pants and cry.
Right.
Hopefully that works.
No one wants to punch a guy who's just pooped his pants,
you know?
All right, so they,
none of them butt, at least.
Right.
So this M5 telescoping whip,
all right, this is where things get weird.
Yeah.
Well, we'll set this up right before the ad break
because it turns out that Mr. Von Brohut,
Mr. Von Brownhut was perhaps almost certifiably
a white nationalist, Aryan Nazi.
Sure.
Is that fair to say?
I think so.
All right, and we'll get to that right after this.
If you wanna know, then you're in luck.
And just listen up to Josh and Chuck's stuff you should know.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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Stuff you should know.
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OK, Chuck, I'm sure everybody just bit the tips
of their fingers off waiting for those ads to finish
so we could get back to it.
Is it fair to call him a Nazi?
So here's the thing.
It has been so thoroughly documented
by legitimate sources like the Washington Post,
the Los Angeles Times.
His own mouth.
Yes, his own mouth.
The Jewish Anti-Defamation League,
I believe, I don't know if the Southern Poverty Law
Center actually tracked him or not,
but this guy has definitely been identified
as somebody who was a longtime contributor
to white nationalist groups, specifically
the Aryan nations out of Idaho, which
was one of the original white hate groups
in the United States.
That's right.
Here's the problem with that.
This is the guy who invented sea monkeys.
Problem number two is that if you ever sent your money off
to buy some sea monkeys, some of that money
had a very good chance of having been turned around
and given to the Aryan nation.
And herein lies a real moral conundrum
for a lot of people, understandably so.
Yeah, so well, I didn't see.
Did he just give money, period?
Yes, but the people are saying I gave you
some of that money for sea monkeys.
Who knows what dimes and nickels that I gave you
went to Aryan nation.
I don't want any money going to Aryan nation,
so I feel horrible that my money went to you,
which you in turn gave to the Aryan nation.
Right, however, this M5 was a man named Richard Butler.
This guy was a real piece of human garbage.
He was the founder of the Aryan nation.
Yeah, he was the worst.
He's not with us anymore, thankfully,
but he was a very bad man.
And he was brought up on trial.
And basically, this M5, a little telescoping
whip that was invented by Von Braunhut,
that was specifically used, that product and proceeds
from that specifically went to a fund
to help out Richard Butler.
Right, so we know that for sure.
Yeah, everything's going along for Harold Von Braunhut
pretty swimmingly until the late 80s, right?
In the late 80s, Richard Butler is brought up along
with, I think, 14 or 15 other white nationalist leaders
on sedition charges, basically trying
to overthrow the government through plotting,
assassinations, trying to start a race war.
They had some serious charges against them.
They were eventually acquitted of these charges.
But as part of this defense fund in the Aryan nation newsletter,
Richard Butler talks about the Kayoga Agent M5
as a great tool for every Aryan nationalist
to have, a great weapon and defense mechanism.
And if you order this thing on the order form,
write the letters A-N for Aryan nation.
And the inventor of this product
has pledged that $25 of those $60 will be given to my defense
fund.
So now, all of a sudden, for the first time ever,
the guy who invented sea monkeys is
tied to the guy who founded the Aryan nation hate group.
Yeah, and this was just like the beginning
of the can of worms, which he did not
invent the can of worms, but he should have.
It was the beginning of that being open because, like he
said, late 80s, what was it?
88, I think, in the Washington Post basically
got ahold of this story, did some investigating
and found that he was involved in, quote,
some of the most extreme racist and anti-Semitic
organizations in the country.
But here's the deal.
Like, there are quotes from his mouth
that say things about inscrutable slanty Korean eyes
when dealing with Korean shop owners
and talking about Jews and black people, like literal quotes.
Yet when he's finally contacted, this is a great article
that we kind of started with was when he was still alive.
He would deny that this was him, but not
trying to clear it up or anything, basically just
say that's a bunch of bunk.
There were newsletters written for an organization
called the National Anti-Zionist Institute,
written by one Hendrik von Braun.
But the return address was the same PO box
that you sent off to get sea monkeys.
Yeah, sea monkey like paraphernalia.
Still today, same address.
So it's not very, yeah, it's in Maryland,
which is where he lived.
So he wasn't covering his tracks very well at all.
So all that started, that Washington Post exposé
specifically also, came out of a property dispute.
He later claimed that all of these were lies
and that they were drummed up by somebody who
was in a property dispute with.
I think there was a developer who was encroaching on his land
and he was suing them.
And I think he said that the developer had brought all this
up.
The thing is, whether the developer exposed it or not,
or tipped the Washington Post off to this or not,
this is already pretty well known in the toy industry.
Supposedly, yeah.
And pretty well documented.
It wasn't just that this Harold von Braunhut
gave money to the Aryan nation.
Like he would go to their annual rally in Idaho
and light the cross himself.
He would speak at some of their conferences
and apparently not very well received.
I thought that's pretty funny.
He wasn't like the best speaker.
No, he would kind of go off on topics
that the Aryans weren't particularly interested in,
like numerology or the pyramids or how it all tied together.
But the thing is, he had a lot of money
and he was apparently quite willing to give it.
Now, we have to say, no one has ever
documented a penny that was given to the Aryan nation.
The closest thing to a smoking gun
is that newsletter from Richard Butler saying
that the inventor of this has pledged $25 per.
But the very fact that he was basically
allowed into the orbit of Richard Butler himself
strongly suggests that he actually followed through
on those campaign pledges and legal defense fund pledges.
And apparently, a former spokesman
for the Aryan nation who is now a reformed racist,
he says, spoke out about Harold von Braunhut and said,
he didn't know exactly how much he gave, but he gave a lot
and he gave pretty frequently when he was asked.
Right.
So things get a little weirder here
because it turns out that von Braunhut was actually Jewish.
He was born to Jeanette Cohen and Edward Braunhut, not von
Braunhut, out of that little von to, I guess, Germanize him.
I guess so.
And he was born in New York City on March 31, 1926,
as Harold Nathan Braunhut.
And if you know anything about Aryan nations or any of those
groups, they don't take kindly to a Jewish guy,
even if he's like, rebukes that to being a member.
Right.
But like you said, he had a lot of dough.
And that's basically why everyone thinks they allowed him
to stay on as a member.
Yeah, so the 1988 Washington Post article
did a couple of things.
One, it outed the inventor of sea monkeys
as an Aryan white supremacist.
Or I should say, just a white supremacist.
He was an Aryan.
It also outed him as a non-Aryan, as a Jewish person.
Born Jewish to Jewish parents, about as Jewish as you can
possibly get, aside from being a practicing Jew.
So he was outed in this Washington Post article
like two times over.
So everybody was mad at him from either side.
The thing is, even after, I guess, the Aryan nation
released a press release about this,
saying that they were disappointed to find out
this guy that they were friends with was actually Jewish.
But he was not kicked out of their circle.
He stayed, apparently, as interacted as he was before.
And still was a part of the organization's conferences
and stuff like that.
Yeah, and it wasn't just the Aryan nations.
He, in 1985, the Washington Post says that US attorney
Thomas Bauer, there was a weapons case in 1985
against a member of the Klan.
Grand Dragon Dale Reusch.
Yeah, it was in 1980, I think, that the transaction happened.
OK, but the weapons case was in 1985.
Gotcha.
And Van Braunhut basically loaned the guy $12,000
so he could buy more than 80 firearms.
Yeah.
Like, here, go buy a bunch of guns.
Well, OK, yes.
And this is a Grand Wizard of the Klan, I believe, right?
Yes.
So the reason I pointed out that it happened in 1980,
the year before the Washington Post had drummed up
in that 1988 article, the year before he had paid like $1,300
for his parents' graves in a Jewish cemetery
to be kept up in perpetuity.
So this is this weird dual life this guy is living,
like born and raised Jewish, respecting
his Jewish parents' funeral wishes and burial wishes.
And then months later, helping a Grand Wizard of the KKK
buy 83 firearms and then taking possession of the firearms
himself until the loan was paid back.
It's crazy.
It is a little crazy.
It's quite surprising, actually, too.
I mean, that's like a big one-two punch, you know?
Yeah, so he didn't actually, he would do licensing deals
over the years.
That's how he ran his business, probably smartly
to do that, if you ask me.
But over the years have been many, many companies
that held the license for sea monkeys that he partnered with.
And they all kind of had different reactions.
There was one called Larme Limited, one called Basic Fund,
one called Educational Insights.
There may have been more.
Today it resides with Big Time Toys.
But this article that we dug up from when he was still alive,
basically this guy gets in touch with a lot of these people.
And some of them said they believe the story,
that it was just some story that this angry neighbor
cooked up to slander his name.
Other ones have said, yeah, you know what?
Everyone kind of knew about it.
But we're not going to take that out on the sea monkeys.
Right.
And he was a nice guy to us.
And what he does in his private time is no one's business.
Yeah, the thing is, it's like some of the people
that he was doing business with were Jewish.
And we're taking some of the things
he was doing in his private life personally themselves.
Like the guy who was the president of Basic Fund,
that's one of the worst names for a toy company ever.
Basic Fund.
It's like, don't get too excited.
This is just Basic Fund.
They had a spinoff company called Minimal Enjoyment.
Right.
He got the license.
Or his company got the license for sea monkeys
to handle distributing and marketing sea monkeys.
And he apparently asked Von Braunhut, like, is this true?
And Von Braunhut told him, no, there's
this developer I'm in a dispute with who's
like trying to drum up bad press.
They're all lies.
Well, within a year, The New York Times
wrote an article about that annual rally at the Aryan Nation
compound in Idaho and said that Harold Von Braunhut had
been a speaker there.
So the guy from Basic Fund was like, yeah, that's it.
I'm done with your contracts broken.
Yeah, I mean, that did happen sometimes over the years.
And other times, people, I guess, money talks.
So they were willing to put up with it.
Yeah.
Yep.
It's crazy.
Like when he was called personally,
he said, I don't have to defend myself to you or anyone else.
I'm hanging up.
So I guess it was a time when pre-Internet,
pre-social media where you could kind of get away
with stuff like this a little easier.
Yeah, I mean, like he was, yeah, it was just an open secret.
And I think like you said, I think you hit the nail on the head,
man, when there's like this much money involved
and when you're talking about a brand where it's just
like an beloved American icon, people just
look the other way on the fact that you're a white supremacist.
It's bizarre.
But apparently, this is a story of how the world works
in that respect.
Yeah, it was interesting for this one article, I think,
from the early 2000s.
From the all?
Was that?
Oh, no, no, no.
That was from 2011.
The other one was.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
That was when he had currently, the licensee
was Educational Insights.
And they, at the time, it was funny to go back and read this,
that they were trying to update the image for the sea monkeys.
Yeah, yeah.
They had these drawings.
They hired some big advertising guy and marketing guy.
And he came in and was basically like, no, man,
like kids these days, they don't want
these little skinny potbellied king, queen prints
and princess family.
They want superheroes.
So he buffed them up and put capes on them
and made a new jingle.
And they never went with any of that stuff.
It kind of all went in the waste basket, I think.
Well, one new thing did come out of it.
And Harold Braun had a patent on it.
It was one of his last patents.
It was a watch that you could inject a couple of live sea
monkeys into.
And they would live in there for 24 hours before, I guess,
either they died or if you could suck them back out
and put them back in their aquarium.
But you could walk around with your two favorite or luckiest
sea monkeys for the day and tell time as well.
There was at least one thing that came out of that updating.
But if you go back and look, if you look at those,
you're like, this is pretty lame.
And you go back and look today at the sea monkey packaging.
It is basically back to how it was in that Joe Orlando style.
But if you do want to watch some business people
do some tap dancing, it's really interesting.
Read this article.
It's called The Sea Monkeys and the White Supremacist.
It was in the LA Times on October 1st, 2000,
written by Tamar Brot, who did a pretty good job of just
some good old fashioned like footwork or legwork
going to pound the beat with the footwork.
Sniff them off the case.
You know what I'm saying.
All right.
Well, let's take another break.
And we're going to come back and we're
going to talk about where things stand today
in the fight over the rights and the fortune of the sea monkeys.
If you want to know, then you're in luck.
Just listen up to Josh and Chuck, stuff you should know.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
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All right, so we know what happened.
Actually, how did he die?
I didn't even see that.
I didn't see that either.
He died in 2003, but I'm not sure why.
All right, so he died.
Yeah, that's true.
But he left behind his wife, Yolanda Signorelli von
Bronhardt.
Did you look her up?
Oh, yeah.
OK.
Yeah, she was an actress.
She was sort of like a pin-up bombshell B-movie actress.
Is that fair to say?
Yeah, it's fair-ish.
I had also seen her movies as described as adult films as well.
Sure.
She was in a movie.
I got to see this one.
It's called Love After Death.
And it's a soft-core zombie flick from the 60s, yeah.
But yeah, she was a pretty interesting person in her own
right as well.
Yeah, and she says for her, as far as the Aryan nation stuff,
she says, I never knew and saw this side of him.
So I don't know if she's being on the level
or if she's just kind of quashing this and covering for him.
It's kind of not clear to me.
I don't know if it was in that New York Times article
or the 1988 Washington Post article,
but his first wife was contacted and interviewed for it.
And she was like, what are you guys talking about?
Really?
Yeah, so who knows?
Maybe he did just keep that.
He was clearly somebody who could compartmentalize
the different parts of his personality.
So maybe he really did just leave the wives out of it.
Man, how could you not know something like that's crazy?
Just going to Idaho on my yearly trip.
Yeah, that's weird.
He always goes to Idaho when the Aryan nation assembles.
All right, so Yolanda Signore Livon-Bronhut lived
and I think still lives, or at least as of two years ago
when this article came out, in the Potomac River estate
in southern Maryland.
But she is broke, basically.
She has no electricity, no running water.
And she has been in a legal battle with Big Time Toys
and their chief executive, Sam Harwell,
for basically several years trying to get money
because Big Time Toys says, this is our company now.
Yeah, Big Time Toys sounds like I'd
be nervous about going into business with them.
I'm more of a basic fun guy.
Big Time Toys sounds like they're moving too fast for me.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So yeah, so Yolanda Bronhut has, she's
got kind of like a great gardens thing going on right now.
Against her will, this is not something
she's happy about at all.
And her position is, as far as the Times tells it,
is that she engaged in a licensing deal, which
is how sea monkeys have been produced basically
since the beginning with a company, with that company,
Big Time Toys, where they would handle the packaging
and the distribution.
And her company, her own little company,
would handle making the actual sea monkeys that
were put into the packaging that Big Time Toys sold, right?
So Big Time Toys would buy the sea monkeys
that they would put into the packages
and then would turn around and sell to the public.
That was the arrangement initially.
Right, so we have the secret formula
that no one else has seemed to have been able to crack.
This is Yolanda talking.
Yeah.
Should I have done my Yolanda voice?
Yeah, let's hear it.
I don't know what she sounds like.
High-pitched Italian stereotype.
Let's hear it, show.
No, no, no.
She, it would have been like three different groups of people
if I could.
Yeah, I think you would.
She basically said, we have the secret formula for the only one
that works that can keep these things alive.
Everyone else has tried and failed.
And so we will sell these to you and you can do everything else
and cut me a check.
And there was also a side deal that said,
you can buy this company, including the secret formula,
for $5 million upfront and then another $5 million
in installments.
And so Big Time basically called her up a few years ago,
probably about five years ago at this point
if my math is right, and said, you know what?
All these payments we've been making to you
for the licensing deal, we just kind of consider that layaway.
And as far as we're concerned, we own Sea Monkeys now.
Yeah, we've reached that $5 million point, so there are.
Which ostensibly should not have been that money.
It should have been separate payments.
Right.
If I understand this correctly.
But I mean, when somebody does that,
what are you gonna do?
You gotta go sue them.
Right.
And that's what they're doing.
And they're bleeding this Lady Dry,
at least as far as this New York Times profile is concerned.
And I mean, if you get into a fight like that
and you don't have the money, you can lose.
So this could be a sad end to the Sea Monkey saga.
Because here's the other problem.
You might be saying to yourself, well, why doesn't she just
not sell them the Sea Monkeys anymore?
Well, she did.
She stopped when they stopped making payments
and said they own the Sea Monkey brand.
And it turned out that in this court case,
that big, big, big time toys have been buying knockoff Sea
Monkeys from China.
And then that's what they were putting
into the Sea Monkey thing.
So apparently, if you're buying currently a Sea Monkey
package, you're getting big time toys packaging
and Chinese knockoff Sea Monkey packets.
Which don't work, apparently.
I went and looked at Amazon reviews.
And almost all of them, for all the product,
said none of them hatched or they hatched for like a day.
These things stink.
When I was a kid, they worked.
So it's weird that it's sort of ironic that they ended up
creating this special breed, essentially, that worked.
And that ended up being their undoing.
Because in court, in the affidavit,
the leader, this Harwell guy, whose wife, by the way,
is the head, she's the speaker of the House of the Tennessee
House of Representatives.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah, they're a power family all the way around,
not to be trifled with.
In his affidavit, he says he outsourced the Sea Monkey
to China and says, there are seven recognized species
of Artemia brine shrimp.
And this is not one of them.
So because they had created their own species,
they ended up being their undoing in court, it looks like,
because it doesn't officially exist as a real species
that these guys are getting.
Yeah, but I'm pretty sure he got a patent on the species
that they made.
Well, no, that's what I'm saying, though.
But he's not getting that species.
Oh, I see.
He's getting these, well, they're not knockoffs.
They're Mother Nature's own from China.
But they're not the ones that are working.
Right, I got you.
So it's just a mess.
But then still, doesn't that raise questions
about how you could use the Sea Monkey's name?
That's what I wondered.
But I guess if they had the license
to use the Sea Monkey's name because they were in charge
of packaging and distribution, then yeah,
I guess they could say, well, we're not
going to use the official ones any longer.
We're going to use these natural ones.
Man, what a mess.
Well, and it's a mess too because you're like,
oh, do I root for the side of this guy who
was a white nationalist?
But his wife says she didn't know anything about that.
And she's going broke and has been basically
of this company stolen from her, it seems like.
It's just, I don't know.
I don't know what to think.
Or do you root for the guys who are apparently stealing
the company from the widow of the white nationalist?
Carried for big-time toys.
Yeah, you know what?
I predict that, Chuck, I predict that Sea Monkey's,
the brand, will ultimately rise about this,
that it will survive this somehow,
and still be around 20, 30 years from now.
The Sea Monkeys will take over?
Yeah, they will eventually overthrow the human race,
like the Aryans plotted to overthrow the US government.
What a story.
It's quite a story.
That's a good one, man.
Thanks for digging this up.
Sure.
Well, if you want to know more about Sea Monkeys,
just start digging around, pulling at the loose threads.
You're going to find some interesting stuff.
And since I said interesting stuff,
that means it's time, friends, for a listener mail.
I'm going to call this Pompeii, Pompeian?
Lemons.
Is that how you would say it, Pompeian?
Yeah, I thought that was beautiful.
All right, longtime listener, first-time e-mailer guys,
recently listened to the Pompei show, very informative.
And I used to be a tour guide in Europe
and led close to 15 tours on the Amalfi Coast, Pompeii
and Mount Vesuvius.
I listened to Josh's experience with the lemons.
They do, in fact, grow to be the size of your head.
However, those gigantic lemons are actually called sedri
and are more for show than anything.
They're called sedri the entertainer.
If you ever cut one and a half, the inside
is actually about the size of a normal lemon.
The rind can be a few inches thick.
And boy, are they bitter.
Definitely not something you keep around for lemonade, just
something I wanted to share.
Thanks for ruining everything for me.
And also another thought, the other day in the car,
have either of you just said no when one of you
asked for a commercial break?
Thought it'd be funny if one of you just said no.
We've come close.
We have, haven't we?
I don't know.
Did it not make it into an episode?
It might not have.
We have, and we just edited that part out and kept going,
I think.
Well, that is from Matt McDonald,
who is a software developer at NeoCloud.
Thanks a lot, Matt.
I think I was kind of disappointed to read that email
originally, but whatever.
I guess you got to just live with reality, right?
You've made an enemy today.
If you want to get in touch with us and ruin our reality,
like Matt did, you can tweet to us.
I'm at JoshumClark.
There's also an SYSK podcast Twitter handle.
I also have a website called rucseriesclark.com.
Chuck, your friend Chuck, is at facebook.com
slash Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
There's also a facebook.com slash stuff you should know site.
You can send all of us, including Jerry,
an email to stuffpodcastthoustuffworks.com.
And as always, join us at our home on the web,
stuffyoushouldknow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.