The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 694 - John Considine - Live

Episode Date: July 29, 2025

Comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds examine Seattle theater man John Considine - Recorded live in Spokane SOURCES TOUR DATES OFFICIAL MERCH   Nutrafol - Code: TheDollop...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to the Dollop! This is an American History podcast where each week I, Dave Anthony, read a story from American history to this thing. Thank you, sir. Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the topic is going to be about. Thank you, David. A lovely intro as always. You're gonna learn a lot tonight, shit head.
Starting point is 00:00:28 It's like a highly aggressive start. September 29th, 1868. I probably should have looked up how to pronounce this guy's name. John Considine. Could be Considine. Doesn't matter. Spokane, Spokane. Whatever. It's a fucking difference. They don't get mad when you call it, what did he call it? Spokane?
Starting point is 00:01:06 Yeah. Yeah, boy, you guys didn't care for that, did you? Yeah. No! But nobody, most people don't know where your city is, so be happy that he knew the name. Yeah. Get famous for more than Trout, maybe we'll learn it.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Two, three, four! What's his name? Shay? Matt, Shay, and Trout, What's his name? Shay? Matt, Shay, and Trout, that's all you got. By the way, we have a famous woman here tonight who ran against Shay. Oh yeah. Is that you?
Starting point is 00:01:39 And he doxed her. Matt, Shay doxed her. She's up there? Thank you for coming. Sorry we didn't get you a better seat for this event. Just to let you know, someday I will get vengeance and kill Matt Shea on your behalf.
Starting point is 00:02:02 And after I kill him, I will write your name in blood on the wall as sort of an honorarium, right? Like, this is for you. I won't be involved in any of that. I uh. This is for you, man. And I also, I will cover Gareth in blood also.
Starting point is 00:02:21 Nope. That's really. I don't know what you said. Also, that's really... You know, but... I don't know what you said. I'll say, don't care. It's nice though. I do believe it was like playing a record backwards
Starting point is 00:02:30 when he spoke. Yeah, yeah, yeah, who do you know next? Ha ha! Okay. Here's the deal. Two people have microphones. The rest ruin the event. Yeah! Yeah!
Starting point is 00:02:45 John Considine was born in Chicago in 1868 to Irish immigrants Mary and John William. Oh whoa! That baby. What's that? What's it coming out of? Oh, a hole. baby... Whoa. Is that... What's it coming out of? Oh, a hole. That's a baby hole.
Starting point is 00:03:09 Oh, okay. I didn't know they came out dressed. I just always assumed... I know when I say a baby hole, some, particularly the Northwest, when they have their babies, they put them underground. Oh, they can't see it.
Starting point is 00:03:21 And... I swear to God, I was like, we're bombing so hard early. I did, yeah, I told you not to talk. Remember when I told you not to talk, sir? That still holds. We got there without you. It was up there earlier until you kicked it.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Until I kicked it? What are you talking about? But you kicked the computer as hard as you could. Oh, this show's not going good. Yeah, turn around, I'll go take a look. How's that? Is that good? Can you actually fucking see anything there?
Starting point is 00:03:57 All right, so let's go from Baby Hole. I didn't know they came out closed. See, that was funny. In Spokane they put- That was funny. Ah! Don't touch it. I like how Luke, Luke- Luke, Luke, it's not-
Starting point is 00:04:20 Luke, it's not working. I just showed him my balls. That was why they're doing that. I'm so nervous to move it. May I see closer? I'm very nervous to move it. Yeah, that's good. Don't push it.
Starting point is 00:04:33 This is like, remember antennas? This is what that was like. Stay there, honey, the golf's working. Anyway, we were making jokes about that fucking baby. Oh, no, no, we'll go for the top. Is that how they come out? Okay, so John- So I guess the bombing wasn't the picture's fault.
Starting point is 00:04:49 What's that? I thought we were having an epic comeback. People were like, still not very funny. John Considine was born in Chicago in 1868 to Irish immigrants Mary and John William. He went to Catholic schools. The family was Devote Roman Catholic. He went to St. Mary's College in Kansas and then spent a short time as a cop in Chicago.
Starting point is 00:05:21 That's correct. But he had the acting bug and was offered a job with a traveling acting company and this is how he made his way to Seattle in 1889. He was a tough, tea-totaling, very religious, and pretty broke 21 year old. So he was not so much an actor as a showman, he was a very good talker and he was a net worker. Same. Yeah. When I think of you, I think of, I think of you. The performance is the problem, but networking is what I do.
Starting point is 00:05:59 Connections. And the what? Connections. Do that again? Connections. That's how I fixed that, connections. And let's not sleep on when I saved the laptop. You said idly bye.
Starting point is 00:06:18 You kicked the laptop and broke it. Shut the fuck up about your made-up kick! John was also very large. He was six feet and muscled. He wore, now when you say people like that's not that large, but back then you were a giant at six feet. He wore suits and lab ties and white gloves. Oh, wow. Alright. That's not a great energy. I might bring that back. I think that's an intimidate for my networking. Yes. Yeah, I just have, and I might go elbow length.
Starting point is 00:06:51 And do this like, no, don't dirty the. Yeah, away boy. Yeah. And then I'll have a third for fucking that across people. A third glove. So. Cause I don't want to go elbow down. Is that one here in the pocket, the breast pocket of the-
Starting point is 00:07:07 No, that's where my kerchief will be and in the back pocket will be a third glove. What if you pull it out of your asshole? Huh? What if you pull it out of your asshole? The human tissue declares a duel. And he chewed gum constantly. They had gum.
Starting point is 00:07:27 Yeah, they had gum. Well, they had gum. They had gum, didn't they? Now it's like doing a podcast with my mom. They had gum. That's an, it, trust me, I'm the voice of the people. That's interesting. We're all wondering when gum got invented.
Starting point is 00:07:45 And I actually do think we talked about it on the show before. I think so. He rarely swore and he had a bad temper. He was smart. Within two years of landing in... Yeah, by the way, I couldn't find any shit about Spelkan. So this is going to most be about Seattle. Oh, is there nothing about fish?
Starting point is 00:08:05 Fuck off! Why don't you tell that story about that real big drought? Tell the story of the famous tree. I mean, we are here. We are here. We probably shouldn't back out so bad. I mean, it's great to be here. This is the first time I've been here.
Starting point is 00:08:23 I've driven past here. I've been here a bunch. And honestly, it's one of those towns where like after the show people are like, why are you here? Are you okay? You should go. So within two years of landing in Seattle, he was managing the People's Theater.
Starting point is 00:08:45 Nice. So Seattle had been established in 1851. When the city was 12 years old, Miss Edith Mitchell was stranded there waiting for a ship. And the Washington Gazette called her, quote, an actress of noted ability and a favorable celebrity. Interesting. And she put on what is considered the first professional
Starting point is 00:09:06 performance in Seattle, doing quote, readings and personations of characters from Shakespeare and other great poets. Oh, it would have been awesome to watch that. You'd be like, this is fucking horrible. Yeah. Like now your brain's so rotted, you'd be like, this is terrible.
Starting point is 00:09:24 Yeah, this is, she's go. This is terrible. Yeah Crazy she's gonna read this shit. Yeah And now I'll be Juliet She also read from other great poets Honestly, I mean, it's awful. My brain is just it's rotted, I'll be honest. Watching someone read poetry, I'd be like, stop. This is horrible. If it doesn't rhyme, what are you doing? Right?
Starting point is 00:09:56 Anyone could do that if it's not rhyming. They're like, that makes it better. Wrong. No. As an audience member, it's just not as good. It's terrible. Anyone could do that. You're just audience member it's just not as good. It's terrible. Not anyone could do that. You're just talking. It's just weird. You have a weird point. Say it right or make it rhyme. One of the two. Pick a lane lady. Locals
Starting point is 00:10:18 watched it in a small hall above a store. 1865, Henry Yesler built the first hall. It was 30 by 100 feet. And the first professional play was put on in 1871. Uncle Tom's Cabin. Oh dear, oh boy. So, now talks became very common in Seattle. Uncle Tom's Cabin. A magnificent production.
Starting point is 00:10:48 Oh no, art. Of life among the lowly. Wow, that's cool. Oh. High class entertainment. The historic slave market. There's a lot of good stuff on this bill. A pair of full-blooded bloodhounds
Starting point is 00:11:03 trained to take part in the drama are used in the thrilling scene showing Eliza escaping from the slave hunters. Why'd you read it, dude? Why the fuck did you read it? It was small enough for no one to read. And you pushed it. You wanted to know.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Well guess what asshole? Fine print back then is not good. Their headlines are bad. Their fine print is awful. They're like, mind if I drop a couple of hand words in here real quick in this tiny little font? It was a great show tonight. There was a young lady in blackface
Starting point is 00:11:44 and they had animals chase her across the stage. The room was about 20 feet by 80. She got eaten by dogs. Yeah, she couldn't run very far. I don't think those hounds were actors. Anyway, it's a great and moral play. Anyway, it's a great and moral play. Okay, so talks became very common in Seattle. There was one on phrenology.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Oh, great. Physiognomy? What is physiognomy? Well, that's where that guy puttered out. Physionomy? I don't know how to pronounce words, but fuck you that guy puttered out. Is he onto me? I don't know how to pronounce words, but fuck you for asking what they mean.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I don't even think what I suggested is a word, to be honest, or that you just took the bait. Which is common in these parts. Uh, anthropology, love. Love? This is just one, Love? Yeah, this is one talk.
Starting point is 00:12:47 This is the advertiser of one talk. This guy's covering a lot of topics. Now see this show, I'd see. Now love. Ffff. Love's pretty crazy. Ah. Um, sorry.
Starting point is 00:13:02 It's okay, buddy. Getting it back. Uh, phrenology, physiognomy, anthropology, love, courtship, matrimony, the transfusion of desired qualities from parents to children, laws of health, diet, bathing, exercise, intellectual, moral, social improvements, ethical science, moral philosophy, universal reforms, et cetera, by.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Et cetera, there's more? And other things. Well, why don't you finish the list? Holy fuck, that's one performance. By... Now, Core Chip. By Dr. C. Pinkham. C. Pinkham?
Starting point is 00:13:35 Pinkham. Pinkham. Pinkham. Pinkham? Pinkham. Okay. And he closed the show by examining two heads. And he closed the show by examining two heads. Are you mad to go up on stage for that and have a guy be like,
Starting point is 00:13:51 her, she's got a small head. She's unlovable, unmotherly. Do you have a big round head in the back? Well, you're a good mother. Do you have a flat head? You are fucked. Can I get two volunteers with different heads? Trust me, this will be worth it. All right, now you can see this lady
Starting point is 00:14:11 has a big large head. That means she's a good mom. No chin. Whereas this next lady's got a tiny head and no hair. She shouldn't have kids. But I can tell where her throat starts. Hey, how good is this show?
Starting point is 00:14:29 Read what it says under parental love. Where it's, uh, oh fuck me. Parental love or the study of filoprogenetivitis. Filoprogenetivisus? Philoprogenetivisus, I think. So, entertainment was not great in Seattle. That's what we're saying. So in 1871, oh I already did that. So in 1875, the Daily Pacific Tribune reviewed a show,
Starting point is 00:15:00 quote, the performances were all good, especially those of two or three of the horses. That's the problem. Yeah, you can't beat that. What in the fuck is happening? What do you mean? That's way better. On stage?
Starting point is 00:15:19 Yeah, they probably did the fake counting thing. There was probably a lot. Even if they didn't, you were like, this horse is unbelievable. I don't know if it's in a different hall, but the first hall they built was on the second floor. Buddy, horses are very capable of climbing. Have you ever watched dressage? Nope. Well, brother, run don't walk.
Starting point is 00:15:43 The John Jack The company formed in the first performance was East Lynn quote in the third act little Willie refused to pass his checks being frightened and unaccustomed to the business the child couldn't see the utility of shuffling off the coil thusly what Not with, he wouldn't leave the stage. He wouldn't leave the stage. Not withstanding the desperate efforts of his heartbroken mother, Madame Vane, to make him lay down and die.
Starting point is 00:16:14 So I guess he's supposed to die. So his part in the play was that he dies, but he's like, no. He was like, nah, yeah, it's awesome. See, that's better than a horse. Watching a kid refuse to do the stage direction. No, I don't want to. You have to die now.
Starting point is 00:16:30 The horse didn't have to. Yeah. Mr. Jack was reluctantly obliged to bring down the curtain. Oh, that's great. I like the idea that that, you're like, that show had a very weird ending. I didn't understand it. You know, that's what I liked about watching those two horses.
Starting point is 00:16:51 It made sense. It did make sense. This show was very strange, how the boy wouldn't pass away. And she kept saying, die. Die, boy, die. And he said, you're not my mom. But that was his mom. But not his mom, mom.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Well, that's the way it lost me. Strange. Jack then took the troop on the road to Place de l'Expo-Can, where he lost money. Yeah. In Victoria, two cast members got drunk and refused to perform. Nice. Jack tried to juice up the show on their return to Seattle.
Starting point is 00:17:28 The Dispatch, quote, it is of the dime novel melodrama description and consisted of four abductions, one attempted poisoning, two Bowie knife combats, one chloroforming, and 24 haunt. This is in the play. This is the play. This is how he spiced it up?
Starting point is 00:17:45 Yes. It was like, guys, I've been doing rewrites and we just didn't have enough chloroforming. We're four shy of a show. A lot of people gotta die. So everyone's gonna get chloroformed at least once during the performance. I'm not gonna do that.
Starting point is 00:18:02 You'll be first. Consistent of four abductions, one attempted poisoning, two Bowie knife combats, one chloroforming and 24 homicides. It's an intense play. People were like, I gotta go on stage and get killed again. It's probably, yeah, it's people coming back on as different characters and dying. Yeah, right, for sure. Just people like, hello, I'm walking. Oh!
Starting point is 00:18:28 Oh! Not a chloroforming. Oh, now I'll probably get stabbed. And from beginning to end, there was a running fire of revolvers. Oh. A lot of shooting. Are they shooting?
Starting point is 00:18:42 I don't know if they would have blanks back then. What the fuck? Well, that's going to help with the murder count really. Perfect. It didn't work. Jack went broke. Oh, yeah. He only had three suits left. By the 1880s, Seattle could draw bigger names, opera companies, violinists,
Starting point is 00:19:07 a guy who had, quote, trained a cat to perform the marvelous feat of picking up soda water bottles and carrying it off stage. Oh, okay. Now there, that's why I got there. Yeah, you are a hundred percent in now. Oh yeah. Well, that's awesome. I mean, the idea that a cat can carry, that'd be amazing. Yeah. Well, amazing's not maybe the right word.
Starting point is 00:19:41 What? It's a cat carrying a bottle off a stage. What the fuck? You're just being an asshole because that would be incredible. If you saw someone train their cat to do that, you'd be like, that's shocking. If you saw that on Instagram, you'd send it to me. Shut the fuck up.
Starting point is 00:19:55 That's amazing. So boxing's illegal, so only private clubs could have fights. So boxers came and joined clubs, and then someone realized they could write a play that the boxer would star in, and then the final act would be him fighting a local boxer. (*audience laughs*)
Starting point is 00:20:20 Alright, that's fucking awesome. That is... (*audience laughs*) The cat water bottle can take a backseat to the idea that you write a show all about an ending where your main character might get the shit kicked out of him. Yeah. I put it all on myself for this match. So all I gotta do is go beat the local legend.
Starting point is 00:20:40 So many people... Come on Baldi, let's go. Jesus Christ, he's beat... Well fuck, he just got the shit kicked out of us. The ending doesn't make any sense. Bring the curtain down. Chloroform the other boxer. I'm in the hole a lot of fucking money here.
Starting point is 00:20:56 No, I'm not gonna do that. My God, we're in the hole a lot. We're really- I'll kick the shit out of you too. Who are you right now? I'm the boy who wouldn't be clear for him. You're the boy who wouldn't fall earlier? Jesus Christ, will you focus on the theater
Starting point is 00:21:12 and what we're doing in it? I, look, I'm doing a lot right now. I'm trying to revamp a show that's not going well by adding a lot of characters in it. Jesus Christ, the last show I wrote was a choose your own adventure boxing match. So with this set up a lot of big boxers come through. They would act and then fight.
Starting point is 00:21:37 One was Ruby. The acting part had to be so good. Oh, it would have been so bad. Oh my God. What I was trying to tell you from before, Mom, I forgot it. Oh, it would have been so bad, oh my God. What I was trying to tell you from before, Mom, uh, I forgot it. I forgot it again.
Starting point is 00:21:51 Hold on, I'm gonna go talk to the guy in charge. Hey. What am I supposed to say? Oh, it doesn't matter, just whatever you want. I'm an actor in a play. No, hey, no, Bob. No, just like make stuff up, like not about who you really are, like make like a character up
Starting point is 00:22:10 and then just go whatever. My name is, I am the charge of this play. I'm on stage talking to this boxer. Bob, Bob. Yeah, call me Ruby. Stop saying. Call me Ruby. Ruby? Yeah. Stop saying- Call me Ruby. Ruby?
Starting point is 00:22:25 Yeah. Stop saying that you're in a play and just go out there and make some stuff up. Why the problem is I don't know if you can see where my dog's from. I think everyone's confused. That's Australia. Huh? I'm Australian? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:41 The character or me in real life? No, you're from Australia. I know, but I'm a character. You said I was supposed to make it up. I can't work under these conditions. You keep asking me to be a vet, even I am. I'm gonna fight you in a second. Now that's a production.
Starting point is 00:23:09 So a lot of big boxers came through, like Ruby Robb Fitzsimmons. The ad said, quote, spar three rounds, make a horse shoe, punch the bag, shoe a horse, sing a funny song. This is so great to not know what performance is in any way. Like to have not figured it out. Did the other countries not have shows? I mean, we had, it was performance. I mean, performance existed, but America was like, justice, what you need to do is put a carnival on stage,
Starting point is 00:23:39 but it's scripted. Come on stage, fill a clown's mouth with water. Put a shoe on a horse, shoot a basket. I don't want to go to your stupid play. Their shoe on a horse? Trust me, you do. McTaffy, what's a play? We don't know.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Quality actors also came through now. Irving Barrymore, W.C.C Fields Sarah Bernhardt. Sarah Bernhardt whoa told locals that she wanted to go hunting quote they obligingly took her to the shore of Lake Washington put her safely in a blind and ushered into her sight an ancient bear that had been left behind by a circus. She killed the bear and carried his skin back to France. There she told people she'd crumb across the bear in a forest and killed it with her bare hands. (*audience laughs*)
Starting point is 00:24:49 Jesus Christ. What the fuck? She Donald Trump Jr'd the bear and that was just like... (*audience laughs*) You know, I actually kid this with my bare hands. (*audience laughs*) Imagine that! See, as so far, I mean, she is an actress, so.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Yeah. Yes, it came upon me and I made myself look bigger. Then I cut his throat, skinned him, and customs didn't care. I love that the bear is just some old bear and he's like, okay, I'll go out. Ancient bear who's like, it's nice to finally be out of the circus.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Not so fast, my buddy boy. We don't have any morals. I finally feel the sun on my body. Ah!
Starting point is 00:25:41 Yeah, stop pretending like he just walked out that day. That is worse. In my version, he's been there for a couple of weeks and he's like, this is nice. Maybe you could find me a lady bear. For sure. There's a lady bear in heat over there. All right.
Starting point is 00:26:04 Woo hoo. Oh. heat over there. Alright! Woohoo! Oh! Oh! Ah! Wait! Hey! There's no lady bear at all! Ah! You're waking a bear!
Starting point is 00:26:20 Well now there's a lot of blood going to be honest. I'm acting! Someone skin it! So theater isn't going great in Seattle. Trucks, and the whole Northwest, troops are folding, their owners are fleeing in the night because they're in debt.
Starting point is 00:26:44 That's fucking hilarious. Come on, let's go. The cultured class complained that only scandalous shows made money. Yeah, that's just like people watching online content now. Yeah. Like, Jesus Christ, all right. So I gotta get abs and do standup?
Starting point is 00:27:02 I can't do this. In 1885, the post-intelligencer warned readers that a show of 20 women was on the way. Quote, this is about the show of 20 women coming. The chief and only attraction being its purpose and the practice of its actors to pander to the depraved tastes of the spectators. It is an indecent ex- exhibition of a lot of women who, for what they can make out of it, parade their half-naked forms on stage. It is needless to say that the show draws immensely. — Well, because fucking morons keep putting articles in the paper of outrage that sound
Starting point is 00:27:48 like ads. Yeah. These hot fucking women are pretty naked. You see outlines, you know what's there. I wasn't going to go because it just kept talking about horse ladies, but now this says that half the horse ladies... Nobody's talking about horse ladies anymore but now this says that half the horse ladies. Nobody's talking about horse ladies anymore. We were shut down.
Starting point is 00:28:08 That production closed. Well, it says in here you can see her ass. Yeah. So Seattle shows had, they had shows in what were called box houses on Skid Row. And a box house was a saloon that had a theater attached. And they were usually found in basements. By the way, we've performed.
Starting point is 00:28:33 That's the ideal situation. Wasted people are like, what is this? Holy shit, horse girl. Man, are you really a chimney sweep? Because I got a smokeestack that is filthy. What do you charge? You should probably put on a couple more layers. You might get hurt.
Starting point is 00:28:55 They were usually found in basements and had to close during the rainy season because the floors were covered in water. What? It got wet. Okay. See, it's down there on the, it's in the wetland. Right.
Starting point is 00:29:11 Some box houses were built on pilings on the Elliott Bay tide flats, that way they could drop, just drunk through the trap doors, and then they'd wade ashore or float or whatever. Wait, what? What do you mean? They would, one of the reasons they built them on the title flats is because if someone got too drunk or whatever they could just open up the trap door. Why did that stop? Why did we get rid of trap doors? It feels like there's never been a better time to bring back the trap door.
Starting point is 00:29:45 I think, and I think because people died. I'm not saying it's a perfect system, but I am saying that right now, we need some Hail Marys, and trap doors, really, considering what's going on, could be pretty helpful. There should be a lot of trap doors. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:03 More trap doors? Oh, fuck. How great would life be? Great. We trap doors? Oh, fuck. How great would life be? Great. We all need more of a purpose. Yeah. Even in your house, you're like, I'm gonna invite Clark over.
Starting point is 00:30:11 I'm sick of him. Come closer. Little more. Little more. Put on the horse head. And then it just drops into, you're in an apartment, it just drops it in your neighbor's place. What the fuck?
Starting point is 00:30:30 Ah! Hello, come closer. Little more. I just did this upstairs! I don't have a trap door. Little more. Idiot. Who are you?
Starting point is 00:30:42 Ah! Step back a little bit. I'm not, no! I don't have a trap door. Yes you do! Alright, I do, but leave through that door. I don't know who you are. Leave through regular door.
Starting point is 00:30:58 I'd prefer the trap! That's my boy. Everyone's an inventor. Everyone's an inventor. So a description of a box house from Coast Magazine, quote, Nervous opium eating individual was hammering away at the piano. In the hall like space before the stage
Starting point is 00:31:19 were a hundred or more men and boys. Not a woman was to be seen in the robe seats only men smoking and chewing tobacco and boys eating peanuts so there were no women in the box house well in the theater part of the box house right it's just men eating peanuts and smoking boy there's a real nice smell in this room. Sickly men who are smoking and crushing peanuts. Okay, around the sides of the room, and at the end, opposite the stage, were built out thin pine board small apartments
Starting point is 00:31:57 with an opening towards the platform and a barn-like door leading into the narrow passageway along the wall. So you could have a home. So there's little rooms that are. Yeah, that you could just kind of walk out and be like, cool. No, it's not a home. That's the box.
Starting point is 00:32:15 Those are boxes. And the boxes are what? They're the. This is a box house. So there's little box rooms up there. So like a few little like, yeah, theater. OK, so you could be like, ooh, what's in here? This is horrible.
Starting point is 00:32:28 In each room was an electric torch button which communicated with a bar set up behind the stage. The boxes were unlighted save a stray beam might enter at the window. In these boxes were women. I mean, I understand being disappointed, but also, you know, look at this room. What did you think it was gonna be?
Starting point is 00:32:56 Boy, they're doing some great check-off upstairs. One and some more and others, women with dresses, reaching nearly to the point above their knees. Holy fuck! Whoa buddy! Woo! You know what that's close to. With stained and sweaty tights.
Starting point is 00:33:19 Oh, why? Huh, what? Read it again. With stained and sweaty tights. Okay. Someone do a wash. With bare arms and necks uncovered over halfway to their wrists.
Starting point is 00:33:35 Oh, whoa. Wait, elbow? What? Did we not know what an elbow was yet? Buddy, the fabric goes halfway down to their wrists. So halfway down to the arm? Man, you do the math. All I know is it looks like they pissed themselves.
Starting point is 00:33:56 And you come in thinking of grits and peanuts, the vibe electric. With blonde hair and some with powdered wigs, with faces rouged and powdered, eyebrows with winkers muttered up and blackened, there stood the female contingency at the doors and in the boxes. So this is the kind of place that John Constantine is running.
Starting point is 00:34:24 Ah. The people's theater, as we said at the beginning. Prophets came from booze and gambling, and women would perform and then go into the boxes and get men to buy drinks or sex. So it is a brothel, essentially. Yeah. Okay. But they're fucking a little... So what about the theater part of it?
Starting point is 00:34:44 You're like, well, it's also a show. No, it isn't. That's kind of a show. But they're fucking a little- So what about the theater part of it? You're like, well, it's also a show. No it isn't. That's kind of a show. Well there's a costume. Yeah. Sort of. Yeah there's like a, there's, there's a horse.
Starting point is 00:34:52 I like how he's like, I'm still a director of theater. Hey there's a drunk man full of peanuts in your room. Go fuck him. It took me a while to find my voice as a playwright. Didn't come easy. So John is an actor, so this is kind of offensive to him, so he decided to get more customers by having professional actresses while others ladies work the boxes. So instead of like having them perform
Starting point is 00:35:29 and then the guys going, I want that one, fuck, I wanted sex, they just have women who are actual performers do a show and then those guys go, want other woman, and then they go fuck a lady in the box. So it was kind of like a bait and switch. You'd be like, women on stage performing, and then they'd be like, I'm all riled up
Starting point is 00:35:52 from all that acting. Now I'm gonna go to the fuck room. It's very similar still to me. The only difference is, there's like some women up there like, mom, you don't do that to me. He's like, this is a good play. I should fuck someone. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:08 I'm so full of peanuts and tobacco and ale. This place must have smelled so bad. Oh, I'm fucking godly. Yeah. Godly. You'd walk in and be like, blah, blah, blah, blah. Little fancy boy.
Starting point is 00:36:23 Yeah. Yeah. Doesn't like a room where you can flick your butts and your shells on the ground. Well, we're doing a performance tonight, just so you know. So it works. There's better shows, more people come. He's making $2,000 a month. There's often fights in the box houses
Starting point is 00:36:45 because it's a rough environment. Sure. Not everyone's happy with the box houses, right? The refining folks, the church going folks. The women working in the boxes? They're fine with it. They're making cash. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:58 They took over city government in 1894 and passed an ordinance for bidding liquor sales in theaters. Well, that's going to change a lot of stuff. Ha ha ha ha. So John moved to Spokane and set up shop. Woo! Woo!
Starting point is 00:37:13 Woo! Woo! Woo! Woo! Woo! Some people not so proud of that. Ha ha ha ha. People are like, wait, don't be happy.
Starting point is 00:37:22 So he went to a place where laws didn't matter and nobody gave a flying fuck about anything. Here. So he was here for three years and doing the same shit, box houses, until Spokane barred women from working at box houses. Which is- Okay, now what's worse, no booze or no women?
Starting point is 00:37:46 No women. Absolutely. Yeah. Cause you just get, I'm gonna get shitfaced to go to the box houses. Now you're just like, now I'm drunk and I don't know what to do. Are we allowed to jack off in here?
Starting point is 00:37:59 Oh my god. We live in hell. This is hell. I'm paid to go jerk off in a room. I'm gonna go into that empty box house and eat peanuts and jack off. Yes. We've lost what made us America.
Starting point is 00:38:21 Will they at least leave some of their horribly sweaty clothes behind? Maybe I could form it into, if there's a powdered wig, I could form it into a lump of something. Try to fuck that. I'm just saying. We'd like you to leave. I'm just saying, hope's not dead. Jimmy, we'd like you to leave, actually.
Starting point is 00:38:41 I can't leave. Yeah, you can. We gotta make this work. Trap door. Ah, wait, wait, wait. Hold on. Can I jack off before I fall? No.
Starting point is 00:38:56 Can I get a handful of peanuts for my death? I'll throw them in your fucking face. Hey, Finally noted! Hey, I survived the fall! Oh, fuck! Get dressed up like a bear! Oh, boy! That sounds erotic! Boy, that's a gerotic. Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha.
Starting point is 00:39:24 Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. So. I said, hey, I'm okay. Get the fuck out of here.
Starting point is 00:39:31 Oh hey, I'm okay still. I don't care. Give me a cigarette. What? Give me a smokey for. Pfft. Oh. Oh.
Starting point is 00:39:39 Oh. Oh. Oh. Hey. Hey. What the fuck is happening? Hey, I'm gonna die real soon, I'm dying. It doesn't seem like it.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Take me up to one of them box houses to die. I have a final request. Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah!
Starting point is 00:40:09 Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah!
Starting point is 00:40:15 Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah!
Starting point is 00:40:22 Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! Ah! We should put a woman back in one of the box houses. Could be good. The dollop is brought to you by Nutriful. Gareth, Nutriful is the number one dermatologist recommended hair growth supplement brand. It is trusted by over one and a half million people. is the number one dermatologist recommended hair growth supplement brand.
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Starting point is 00:43:26 All right everybody, now the ad's over. Thanks everybody. Bye bye now, thank you. So John goes to the mayor of Spokane and asked if he could shut down the boxes and just have women in the theater selling drinks. But the mayor's like, no. So he closed his theater in Spokane and went back to Seattle.
Starting point is 00:43:52 Where it was just no liquor. Well, after John's. Did he know about other cities? No. He was like, well, you got to pick. There's only two I've heard of. There are no other cities in Washington. That's awesome. I know it's true.
Starting point is 00:44:12 It is amazing. It is amazing to just be like, well. That's it. Yeah, that's it, nothing. Are we gonna call Everett a city? Yeah, see that they exist so you can feel... Bellingham, basically fucking Canada. Pitching against it? What?
Starting point is 00:44:38 Huh? Every city has a Taco Bell. That's what's nice. We are a country. Yeah. So after John had left Seattle, the People's Theater was empty and it was full of vermin and filth and cobwebs. And it quote,
Starting point is 00:44:55 resembled the place where pigs hold forth. And then hobos took over the boxes and were living in them. Hey, someone's in that box up there. Oh no. I think they reopened it. How the fuck are you alive? Well, it's a wild story, Jack.
Starting point is 00:45:15 Ha ha ha ha. But I went up there and had my way with one of the box women. That's a hobo. Oh boy. That explains so much. By the way, I am dead. Isn't that crazy? It's pretty crazy, yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:35 It's been a wild run for me. I've had my weirdest year yet. Why are you talking to me? I have unfinished business here. In this realm, I need you to help me solve something so I can ascend. Oh, I don't want to do this. What am I supposed to help you solve?
Starting point is 00:45:57 Come on. If you help me, I'll help you. No, I just. I can't ascend until one, if we set one. What? I gotta have a handful of people. I'll help you. Nah, I just... I can't ascend until one... We said one thing... What? I gotta have a handful of peanuts.
Starting point is 00:46:10 That's it? Here. Well, no, not... no. But I can't grab anything. I can't grab anything. It's gonna be so hard. This is... This be so hard. This is really hard.
Starting point is 00:46:28 So you're a ghost and the only way to get off this earthly... Yeah, to go ascend. ...is to get a half full of peanuts. For me to eat one more half full of peanuts. But you can't hold peanuts because you're a ghost. Bingo. Talk about a conundrum. We're about to go on a ride, amigo. I don't think we're going on anything.
Starting point is 00:46:49 I'm just gonna leave you here. Oh, wait. Why would I help you? I don't have, uh, do I give you a million dollars? You don't have a... Did I give you a million dollars? You don't have your... I don't have any.
Starting point is 00:47:11 You're my best friend. Okay, I gotta go. I gotta go too. Trap door. How did that work? So there's all these hobos that live in the boxes, but then gold is found at the Claude Dike and a thousand abrows pour into Seattle. And the box houses reopen because the city council are okay with the box houses taking
Starting point is 00:47:37 advantage of non-locals. Right? It hasn't been, that's hilarious. You can come in here if you don't live here. Outsiders only. We don't want our kind. So the People's Theater reopens and the new renters spend thousands cleaning it up
Starting point is 00:47:59 and then that's when John comes back into town. Now he knew the People Theater's owners and he bet that the new renters only had a verbal agreement with them. So he goes down to San Francisco and undermines the deal and signs a year lease for the theater. And to start, he brought the most famous variety performer of the time.
Starting point is 00:48:18 Can't wait. Belly dancer, Little Egypt. Okay, so she's there. So she's known nationally. She's a very well-known dancer. Well, she also is known because she got arrested in New York for dancing nude at a party. So she's not just belly. So when she got to Seattle, the press is there very excited, which just helps business, obviously. And The People's was once more the top box house in Seattle, and John's status shot up.
Starting point is 00:48:49 Now the fourth ward where the theater was delivered more votes than any other part of the city, and John now controls a lot of votes because he's rich and he's from that area. So the rich and powerful of Seattle are coming to him, and papers described him as the statesman, or the boss sport. So he wore expensive suits and gaudy ties and high collars
Starting point is 00:49:11 and he only drank ice water and chewed a shit load of gum. He chewed five sticks of gum at once. Oh, wow. That's crazy. That is crazy. Yeah. It's also, it's aged him. Yeah. But his jaw is strong. You. It's also, it's aged him. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:25 But his jaw is strong. You'd think he'd have a stronger lower half. Strong jaw. He could bite through the bite. He looks flabby. Yeah. His sidekick was his. The best.
Starting point is 00:49:38 Already awesome. It's what you need. You always need a guy to be like, what are you talking about? Come on, I'm the boss sport. Well, his sidekick was his brother Tom, who was a known tough guy. And then also a guy named Doc Shaughnessy
Starting point is 00:49:53 was John's bodyguard. That's, yeah, all right. That's a crew. Now, Doc opened a gym where he would quote, remove fat fast from fighters and men under 40 for those over 40, I'll just try. It's tough to hear. It's tough to hear.
Starting point is 00:50:10 Back then I was like, yeah, you're fat for life, sir. You're over 40. This is before eugenics. That's right. Before guys like Doug Flutie and you know, Frank Thomas could just go golfing and talk about how hard their dicks get to each other. It's a different time. You know, where you're just like, man, how fucking good is it now? I can't stop getting hard on some.
Starting point is 00:50:40 Alright, should we start golfing? I think most people don't know what you're talking about. I am fully aware that, but there's like, six people are like, that's pretty good. But the rest are like, what's happening? It's definitely an indication of what sports you watch and where. Wait, what? Like that commercial doesn't run most places.
Starting point is 00:51:01 That's an ESPN commercial. ESPN, yeah, I'm their demographic. Yeah. But they're like, looking to fuck more? Sick of your belly? Want harder dicks? You're like, I'm listening.
Starting point is 00:51:15 Here's two guys playing golf from the late 80s. Like to golf with your old friends? No, but talk back to the belly dick stuff. That was awesome. That was awesome. That was awesome. That was awesome. That was awesome.
Starting point is 00:51:28 That was awesome. That was awesome. So John bought ownership in a saloon in a gambling hall and he bought real estate. He's rich now. Yeah. The Star newspaper. I mean, you didn't buy that much gum.
Starting point is 00:51:41 Yeah, that little bit of scorn though. Yeah, that little bit of scorn though. No, it's okay. No, it's okay. No, it's okay. No,rin-o. No, it's okay. A star newspaper reporter heard a sailor lost 2,000 in a roulette game and he asked the owner of the saloon about it and the owner said, quote, Yes, that's true, but I didn't think anybody'd find out. Here we are, having a moment. So then he offered the reporter free room and board if he would write some really good stories
Starting point is 00:52:12 about the hotel. This is the story of the New York Times. And the reporter was offended, and he went and told his editor, and the editor never printed the story, and moved into a room in the hotel I mean, what do you want? We're humans. We're gonna do this shit. This is it Yeah, gotta find a way around that got to get rid of the bad stuff
Starting point is 00:52:41 So the new mayor Tom Humesumes, opened up the town. By opening it up means like for vice and stuff. He wants to be governor. The post-intelligencer owner. But I mean governor, you were the mayor of two cities. Yeah, kinda. He's like, I have higher ambitions. I'd like to be the governor of the two towns
Starting point is 00:53:03 in this enormous, palala land. The post-intelligencer owner, John Wilson, was a behind-the-scenes power broker and wanted to block Hume's nomination for governor, so he got his own guy nominated, but his guy lost, and Wilson blamed Hume's and started attacking him in the Post Intelligence Center for running an open corrupt city government.
Starting point is 00:53:29 So Humes put the blame on the police chief and made him resign and then he picked a new guy, a connected guy, as chief, William Meredith. What is his angle here? Well, nevermind, whoa. So he's just trying to take the heat off of him and blame that little guy. Yeah, but what is the, what is Hume's,
Starting point is 00:53:52 maybe you said this, but what does Hume's like want to turn, open it up for like, he wants to go back to the old ways. Well he has, he made it more corrupt and the city more corrupt and everybody making money. Okay, so not right, okay. But anyway, this guy's cool. What, yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:08 Yeah, yeah, we're good here. Absolutely. By the way, he should chew a little gum on the right side for about five years. Yeah. Ha ha ha. Strengthen that side up a little bit. Get that jaw a little bit more in line.
Starting point is 00:54:19 You know what I mean? You know, you know Billy. He's got one dumb side and one smart side. You know Bill Meredith. he's got that little chin to the left. He looks like he always just finished saying, hmm. You know Bill. So Meredith had once worked for John,
Starting point is 00:54:39 but they were no longer friends. Okay. So no one knew why. Now as a cop, Meredith had arrested a pickpocket friend of John's and John sent Meredith to protection money from the pickpocket but then still arrested him. Well.
Starting point is 00:54:57 So that's fucked up. What a moral town. I paid you off to not arrest my pickpocket buddies. So John made that a public accusation and then... What kind of public accusation? That's crazy to be like, this man has low character. I bribed him to let illegalities continue and he made that illegal. You fucked me, Meredith.
Starting point is 00:55:23 So Meredith was then put on a desk job and he blamed John for that. Well yeah, he did it. Publicly. Yeah, and so now he's police chief. Uh oh. And he used the laws that had not been enforced to keep it an open town and he went after John.
Starting point is 00:55:43 Okay. So like women working in box houses that served alcohol, he used that against John. So cops were enforcing the law only at John's theater. Well, that's gonna be bad for business. This is trap door, right there. And Wilson, the editor of the Post-Intelligencer, wanted even more done and his paper kept writing stories about the vice problem that was going to destroy Seattle's amazing reputation.
Starting point is 00:56:10 And so a law and order league formed. The League presented a long list of crimes by Chief Meredith and Mayor Humes to the City Council and then the council held secret meetings on vice but everything leaked anyway. And so John testified first and he said one of Chief Meredith's men had demanded 500 for protection, which he paid and then followed the guy he paid and then he saw him handed to Meredith. Okay. And on the stand, Meredith called John a liar and said he was a bad influence on women, young women especially, and he brought up Mammy Jenkins. Mammy Jenkins?
Starting point is 00:56:56 Mammy Jenkins, who was a 17 year old contortionist. Jesus Christ, there's a lot coming at us. 17 year old contortionist. There's a lot coming at us. 17 year old contortionist. Yeah. So Merrith said she had been ruined by John and had an abortion. Well, and by genetics.
Starting point is 00:57:12 She had an abortion. Oh, okay. Because John ruined her. Oh, Jesus Christ. Trying to talk over it. Okay. That, the same day that he was accused of ruining Mammy Jenkins, the chief
Starting point is 00:57:28 Meredith sent a cop to order John to stop selling drinks or be arrested and John's like I'm gonna keep doing it quote it will only be a few days before they get that shrimp anyway. So he's saying we're gonna take down Meredith. Okay. A few days later the city council sent a report to the mayor saying Chief Meredith was unfit for duty. Quote, money has been paid to Meredith and Detective Wappenstein And detective Wappenstein for the privilege of being permitted to conduct bunko and sure-thing games in the city undisturbed So the mayor told after that report came out the mayor told Meredith to resign. Okay. What was the game you said? bunko bunko sure
Starting point is 00:58:20 The next morning Meredith. Do you not know a bunk is? I do not know what Bunko is. Ha! What is Bunko? I don't know. Ah. It's a... It's the dice game, right? Where you switch the... yeah. What?
Starting point is 00:58:35 I don't think you do. It's where you swap the cups, right? And you do the... Oh, it's not the cups? Yeah, you... I was the... yeah, she's like, it's the dice game. Exactly, it's dice. You have to get groups of dice. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:58:51 All the die have to be one number. You're going to Yahtzee. Okay. You know way too fucking much about Bunko. You lied about how much you knew about Bunko. I was just trying to fuck you. Ah. Ah.
Starting point is 00:59:08 Uh. Uh. Uh. Uh. Uh. Uh. You know, Dave used to have trouble fucking me. Then he took eugenics.
Starting point is 00:59:17 Then he took eugenics. Then he took eugenics. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. All right. All right. All right.
Starting point is 00:59:30 So Meredith resigns, and then the next morning, Meredith has one of his cops go to a secondhand store and buy a sawed off shotgun. Okay, secondhand store. And when the cop came back, he asked Meredith what he was going to do with it. Now you do it in the reverse order. You don't buy it and then go, what's your plan? You go, well, why?
Starting point is 00:59:52 Oh no, you don't go, now that you have it, what are you gonna do? Oh no, I'm complicit. Well, he said, quote, I'm gonna get my man. That's adorable, we've all been there. With eugenics. John's lawyers now had affidavits stating this 17 year old contortionist did not get an abortion,
Starting point is 01:00:14 but ruptured herself doing a contortion. Boy, can we just admit that her, she was having a fun week as a 17 year old where they were like, now, how did you rupture yourself? I'd really rather not do this anymore. Legally, we have to know. Is it a contortion rupture? If you can't show us how you bended,
Starting point is 01:00:38 we're gonna think you got fucked. Oh. What my partner is trying to say, Al, take a step out, take a fiver. That was. I'm gonna stare Oh. What a weird old man. What my partner is trying to say, Al, take a step out, take a fiver. That was. I'm gonna stare at her more. No, all right, oh boy. Al.
Starting point is 01:00:53 God damn it, why else do white men run things? Trap door, trap door, trap door, trap door, trap door. They told Meredith he had to write an apology and put it in the paper or John would sue for libel. Meredith, quote, I've already lost my job and now this. An hour or so later, John was on the street when a friend asked if he was carrying a gun and John said, no.
Starting point is 01:01:21 And the guy said, quote, Meredith, after you, get a gun for God's sakes. So John got his 38 revolver, and he and his brother left the theater, and when they did, Meredith was out on the streets with a shotgun wrapped in butcher paper. In what, in butcher paper? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:40 That's fucking hilarious. This is a long piece of meat. I got a pound of shaved lead. He also had a Colt 32 and a 38 in his pocket and a dagger in his other breast pocket. All in like butchers like paper. I'm having a barbecue this weekend. Everybody's coming. It's going gonna be great.
Starting point is 01:02:05 Yeah. He also had four silver dollars in his breast pocket for armor. Well, if I know one thing, it's that he'll probably shoot me right there. And just to be safe, I put a little butcher paper behind it. He asked a real estate agent if he'd seen- And just to be safe, I put a little butcher paper behind it. Oh. Oh. He asked a real estate agent if he'd seen- I'm looking to buy property. I know this is, seems oddly time because of all the gun and butcher paper, but.
Starting point is 01:02:35 What would you buy right now? What's the market like, sir? Down by the People's Theater. Interesting, wow. He asked a real estate agent if he'd seen the Constantine boys and said, quote, this town isn't big enough to hold us both.
Starting point is 01:02:52 I can't believe it. That actually got said. Well, yeah, we're building a bunch more towns soon. This whole state is, we're gonna make more cities. So far it's just two. So if you wait a minute, there'll be more, you can have your own town. I don't believe you. Probably within a year there'll be a lot of towns. What the fuck? I'm gonna call it Topeka!
Starting point is 01:03:13 Sure. What's that about? What is that? I don't know. It's the only other city I could think of. But it's not anywhere. No, there's a Topeka. Right now? I think so. I don't think, maybe there is? Not here, it's- Yeah, no, I know. Yeah, it's in Kansas. Okay.
Starting point is 01:03:34 What are you doing? Are you trying to alter reality? I don't know what reality is anymore. I don't know what reality is anymore. People had to each shout at you, it's in Kansas. Huh? Let them shout. So Meredith hangs around where John and his brother usually caught a street car. And he hangs around there for an hour.
Starting point is 01:04:02 That's like just keeping him waiting. God, there's a lot of butcher paper. And, uh, John... Hey, Bill! What do you got in the butcher paper? It's a shot, uh, it's meat. Wow! I love meat! Let me look at it.
Starting point is 01:04:18 No. Okay. Have a good day! So John went and met with his lawyer and he found out Meredith had resigned as chief. And the lawyer wanted the brothers to celebrate, but John had a sore throat and wanted to get some medicine. So they went to a drug store. While he's like, there's a guy who's trying to kill me. I'm going to go get some Robitussin real quick. I got a cold. Scratchy.
Starting point is 01:04:46 Meredith saw them and moved quickly toward them as the Constidines entered the drugstore, a cop was walking out of the drugstore and above the signs read, quote, Yerusa cures piles or $50 forfeited. So that's, there's a hemorrhoid. Yeah. Yeah. You don't have to carry your piles, you're in the money. I'm just setting the scene. And the cop reached out to shake John's hand
Starting point is 01:05:17 because he, the cop also hated Meredith for pocketing protection money from a pimp. So. Okay. So he didn't see Meredith behind them, and he quote, pushed the shotgun over Tom's shoulder at a range of about two feet and fired at John Considine. That's pretty close for a shotgun.
Starting point is 01:05:40 Yeah, yeah, right there, yeah. He missed. He missed. He missed. He missed. Jesus missed. He missed. He missed. Jesus Christ. Oh no. Hey, that wasn't barbecue at all.
Starting point is 01:05:53 What kind of meat do you have? Bill, the butcher ripped you off. That's a gun in there. Didn't you see when he was putting it in the paper that it was not meat? No. It was a gun, you big oaf. Gosh, I swear.
Starting point is 01:06:14 You almost killed that poor man with what you thought was a weekend's worth of barbecue. Yeah. This is, we're going to be telling this story for quite a while. That ha ha ha. This is, we're gonna be telling this story for quite a while. That much I know. Ha ha ha ha. So the buckshot did not scatter,
Starting point is 01:06:33 but instead just passed over John's shoulder. John was dazed by the blast and staggered through the wooden screen doors into the store, and Meredith pushed past Tom and the cop, who were just standing there, completely shocked. John was wobbly, but he ran by the glass counters, and Meredith shot again, but right as the swinging door came back
Starting point is 01:06:57 and hit his elbow. You mean halfway down to his wrist. Yeah. You mean halfway down to his wrist. This guy's having a bad time. My God! You're ripping, you're trying to, for the last time, Bill, that's not barbecue in there. You don't have meat. That's a gun.
Starting point is 01:07:21 Be careful, you shot it again. Oh boy, this story just got a lot richer One bill it hit John in the back of the neck and quote flattened against the bone at the base of a skull the rest Of the shotgun blast hit the arm of a guy sitting there enjoying a sarsaparilla It's the most 1880s shooting of all time. I got hit with Buckshot while having to assess Barilla at the drugstore today. We've all been there. Meredith now dropped the shotgun and pulled his Colt 32. John yelled for Tom to help and then jumped at Meredith and he grabbed him and hugged him
Starting point is 01:08:10 so he couldn't point the gun. Oh look, they're making up. Tom ran in and grabbed Meredith's hand, twisting the gun out, and then he grabbed it and beat Meredith brutally on the head with the gun. His jaw's straight. He... He fractured his skull in two places.
Starting point is 01:08:33 Oh Jesus Christ. Two cops rushed in and one grabbed the gun from Tom and Tom yelled, quote, Give it to me! He's got another! Meredith was now leaning against a counter and Tom yanked the gun away from the cop. And John yelled, quote, give it to him, Tom. People were now crowding into the store. Of course people are running in, they're shooting.
Starting point is 01:08:55 Hurry. I need my pile pills. Oh. Tom spun around and pointed at the people coming in. Quote, stand back you sons of bitches. All right Tom, let's all cool out. Ha ha ha. We're all heated.
Starting point is 01:09:13 Someone grabbed Tom from behind and Meredith got on his feet. And John wrestled himself loose from the guy holding him and pulled his 38 and shot at Meredith. It hit his torso and went through his liver. The second shot went right into his heart. And Meredith. No, no, no, that's where the money is.
Starting point is 01:09:32 Yes. Well, maybe in the other pocket. Oh. He put it in the non-heart pocket? Trust me. I know where he's headed. He'll think it's like a mirror thing, so he'll think it's on the other.
Starting point is 01:09:44 You gotta be two steps ahead. Why don't you put two coins in each pocket? No. You sound crazy. Why don't you go get more money and load all the pockets? Stop. Enough. So when the shot went into his heart,
Starting point is 01:10:05 Meredith said, quote, oh. That's when a French lady was like, skin him, I'll say I did it. Oh, the great last words, oh, ow. John was so close that the shot set Meredith's coat on fire. Oh my God! Well, I don't, I mean, that's awesome.
Starting point is 01:10:33 Look, you know, look, I'm not saying I support the action, but if you shoot a guy in the heart and then he catches on fire, you start to believe you're a god. Period. 100%. if you shoot a guy in the heart and then he catches on fire, you start to believe you're a god, period. 100%. You shoot someone and they catch you, you're like, what the fuck am I? Ah!
Starting point is 01:10:55 And you won't let me have a box house with booze and women? So he shoots one more time and that one went into his collar bone and then Meredith fell dead and the sheriff arrested John who just nodded. Five months later John went on trial. Now Meredith was hated when he was alive but now that he was dead he was a martyr hero. America's princess, always happens.
Starting point is 01:11:26 The trial became about an open city versus a closed city. Cop versus box house operator and John claims self defense. But the prosecution went with the argument of limp hands. Huh? The prosecution went with the argument of limp hands? That's right. What do you mean? Meredith was alive, but helpless, and on the ground
Starting point is 01:11:54 after Tom cracked him on the head with the revolver. But wait, Meredith tried to kill him. Well, remember Tom beat him? Yeah, but then Tom beat him on the head and then he was basically incapacitated and then Meredith shot him. Yeah. He tried to kill me. Then he caught on fire. God decided this was OK.
Starting point is 01:12:16 What are you talking about? Your Honor, I'd like to point out that when we shot Meredith, he shot Meredith, he caught on fire. We're good here. Well, if you caught on fire, obviously caught on fire. We're good here. Well, if he caught on fire. Obviously he caught on fire, that sounds awesome. That's God.
Starting point is 01:12:28 It's like, well, that's God. This is like watching an ACDC show. I haven't seen such an obvious, justified killing since that actress killed that painter. You're allowed to kill other people, yeah. So, oh, but, so while they're saying that, Meredith had been going around town So, oh, but so while they're saying that Meredith had been going around town saying he was armed and telling he was gonna kill John so yeah, he was like
Starting point is 01:12:58 So the child took 15 days and John was found not guilty Yeah, and afterwards he wept and the Times said it was open season on law officials. Yeah! The fucking paper said that? Yeah, well in like a bad way. Right, oh yeah. We're not saying like, yay! I thought it was like, oh you can kill the police now. Honey, pay attention to the punctuation.
Starting point is 01:13:19 Honey, the punctuation! Do do do do do. We just shot the sheriff, what's for supper? Do do do do do. We just shot The Sheriff, what's for supper? Um, so moving pictures became a thing and venues now show very short movies with a live show and John thought everyone showing the same, uh, with everyone showing the same movies, the way to get on top would be to offer a live show of the best live show along with the movie.
Starting point is 01:13:44 So, he- Wait, what do you mean? would be to offer a live show of the best live show along with the movie. So he Wait, what do you mean? People are starting to show movies. Uh-huh. But it's all the same movie. Right. They don't have different movies. So he offers a live show and the movie. Yeah, and the best live show. Right, right, right. So he bought half an interest in Edison's unique theater in 1902 and his plan was very successful and it took off. But it was hard to get the best acts to come to the East Coast and entice them. So to entice them he set up a Northwest theater circuit. And this was the first legit decently priced vaudeville chain. Okay. So he cuts off all connections to the People's Theater to
Starting point is 01:14:23 become legit. And he gave to charities and he got elected as president of a fishing and hunting club. So he's becoming like a top black fucking dude around the town. Right. Some years before, a musician's union had gone on strike against three main city theaters. And so the owners and managers met on a dock to talk about the strike. They chose a dock so that union spies couldn't sneak up. Sure, no, dock chats are always on the up and up.
Starting point is 01:14:52 Yeah. 100%. They ended up losing the strike, but the owners and managers then formed a club called the Independent Order of Good Things. So, is this right around when people naming the various things nice things started? Well, the Magic Club for Everyone's Happiness.
Starting point is 01:15:12 We need to crush unions. Their motto was skin them. Okie dokie. Don't mind if I do. But a month later, they thought the name seemed kind of dumb so they changed it to the Eagles. Oh I knew I hated that band. Because there was a picture of an eagle on the stage curtain in the room where they were meeting. So that's why they call it the Eagles.
Starting point is 01:15:41 Smart. I hope your story checks out. They were foes. So membership grew and they called their meeting houses lodges and they expanded to other cities. And after a few years, they were in over a hundred cities. And the third owner split off and formed his own group called the Moose.
Starting point is 01:16:00 Oh my God. And in 1906, John was a delegate for the Fraternal Order of Eagles convention in New York, where he connected with Tammany boss Big Tim Sullivan. Or Big Tim or Bigfeller. Okay. And they formed a partnership and ran the Sullivan-Constadine-Vaudeville circuit, and John bought theaters in Portland and Butte in San Francisco and Tacoma and more,
Starting point is 01:16:27 and he supplied acts to... Butte. Yeah, don't ever... Just fucking lost your mind over hearing Butte. I wouldn't. We drove by that today, and Luke just went, "'But,' and that's all that was said. That's all that was said in the van. But...'
Starting point is 01:16:49 So he also supplied acts to other theaters around the country, and while he was building his empire, another man was coming up in the business, Alexander Pantages. Oh my lord. Now he came from the world of saloons and pimps and gamblers and decided to take over a theater in Nome, Alaska and got some entertainers to back him, one of whose Klondike Kate, who you love. I love Klondike Kate. She's Alaska's most famous dancing girl,
Starting point is 01:17:13 but she never got her money back from Pantages, so for all of his life, men over all over Alaska hated him. I like that he picked Alaska. He was like, trust me, I know where we're going. The big city, Gnome. People will be coming all over that place once we build that bridge. So he charged 10 cents and other theaters charged 25.
Starting point is 01:17:37 He was just all about turnover. The shows were shorter. He opens a theater in Seattle in 1907 and now Pantages and John start trying to destroy each other. Jesus Christ, is this a two parter? No. John had money and connections, but Pantages is a genius.
Starting point is 01:17:55 He spoke six languages, and he hung out amongst the lower classes, so he knew what people wanted, and didn't care about famous names, just good shows. So whatever John announced a new star was coming, Pantages would find someone better and put him on just before John's star arrived. And performers knew the situation so they would make tentative agreements with both and then they come into town and see what offer more money. Sometimes actors would sign up John, would sign up with John, but then their equipment
Starting point is 01:18:28 wouldn't end up at the Pantages, and Pantages wouldn't let the equipment leave, so they'd have to go to his theater. I don't think you're allowed to do that. In 1909, a xylophone trio came to town. Shhh. I mean, you don't even know. That's the craziest thing in the story.
Starting point is 01:18:49 We are the Blue Man Group. A xylophone trio. Well, we had to kick one guy out. John offered them twice the money of Pantages and they told Pantages they were going to John's. So Pantages called his stage manager and told him to burn the xylophones. And one of the players cried, quote, My life, my soul.
Starting point is 01:19:23 quote, my life, my soul. I gotta tell ya, Pantages coming in at the end for MVP contention in the story. Big bang at the end. Lighting xylophones on fire. I swear to God, it would be horrible, but if that guy saw a guy do that over a xylophone, I'd be like, what the fuck?
Starting point is 01:19:52 My life, my soul. Dude, it's like eight pieces of wood, shut the fuck up. No, it's so much, man, it's got a whole thing inside. All right. Fucking nerd. Get a drum, you loser. So the Xylophone Trio ended up playing in the Pantages. Wait, so one of the guys just is like,
Starting point is 01:20:17 and then Todd, why don't you sit at the end and just cry? My life, my soul. My life, my soul. By 1911, John could offer Axe 70 straight weeks of work and Pantages 60, but Pantages booked better Axe and they battled it out for years. Bigfeller, John's New York partner, was declared insane due to syphilis and put in an institution. I mean, he liked to fuck. The New York Sun said he suffered from... You know what he It cures syphilis too. Nope. Hey wait, it's me.
Starting point is 01:21:13 Trapdoor. Ah! The New York Sun said he suffered from quote, religious mania. So that'll happen. Religious mania. so does the Pope like what are you talking about so he couldn't help with the business now and the theaters John had were all mortgaged to build the next one and he went on the road traveling hundreds of thousands of miles a year to keep it afloat but
Starting point is 01:21:41 finally couldn't take it anymore and he sold to Marcus Lowe in 1914. What the fuck? 4.5 million to split, but paid over years, so he was going to slowly pay it off over time. Uh-huh. But Lowe could call off the contract, and when World War I came, he did. And John had the chain again, but Lowe's, uh, and Lowe's down payment,
Starting point is 01:22:07 but he couldn't get Vaudeville going again. His biggest theater was foreclosed on. And then the entire chain fell apart. Pantages still killing it, though. In 1929, just before the crash, he sold it to Radio Keith Orpheum for 24 million. Oh, and then that guy was like, we're about to have a big year. Oh, fuck!
Starting point is 01:22:29 But through it all, John and Pantages were friends. In 1943, John, sorry, John Pantages' daughter married John's son. Oh, wow. In Los Angeles, where both families lived and John moved into motion picture producing and he died February 11th, 1943. Holy shit.
Starting point is 01:22:57 Jesus Christ, what a run. And Pantages never died. I like that a lot. Oh yeah. That was wild. Is that a crazy story? That's crazy. I can't, it feels like we, I can't believe that it was,
Starting point is 01:23:19 it feels like we just covered 200 years. Yeah, I mean, yeah. Yeah, see mean, yeah. Yeah, see you later. Alright, later guys. It's the end of the show. Source, Murray Morgan Skid Rowd an informal portrait of Seattle. Wow.
Starting point is 01:23:38 Next book, yeah. You got a little something in there, right? It's not. Yeah, I think that now you can be known for more than just your trout. Right, sir? No. Alright. What the fuck's wrong with you? Chad said, Chad said, cheap weak fish. Well, thank you guys for coming out.
Starting point is 01:24:07 We appreciate it. Thank you. Sorry about our technical difficulties. Blame Luke. Hashtag blame Luke. Hey, dollop fans. I know you love the dollop. You love listening to the dollop.
Starting point is 01:24:25 Do you want to watch the dollop? You're like, Gareth, what are you talking about? By the way, it's not Gary, it's Gareth. Well, we have partnered with Lakeside Animation and we are starting to animate some of our episodes. So if you want to go watch a five-partner animation, which is actually like a 22-minute episode or 30-minute episode, I can't remember, of The Rube. You can go to Lakeside Animation on YouTube and watch a really awesome animation of The Rube.
Starting point is 01:24:52 It really genuinely kicks ass and we're very proud of it. And the more you share it, the more you give it to people, the more you follow Lakeside, all that stuff, the better chance we have of making a lot more of them. We're already making a second one, so go there and watch The Rube.

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