The Jordan Harbinger Show - 653: Ear Candling | Skeptical Sunday
Episode Date: April 17, 2022Is ear candling -- the practice of inserting a lit, hollow candle in your ear to remove earwax -- a safe, practical way to get the job done? If you have a burning desire to discover the truth..., listen on! Welcome to Skeptical Sunday, a special edition of The Jordan Harbinger Show where Jordan and fact-checker, comedian, and podcast host David C. Smalley break down a topic that you may have never thought about, open things up, and debunk common misconceptions. On This Week's Skeptical Sunday, We Discuss: Where did the practice of ear candling originate? It's got to come from a noble, ancient, shamanic tradition and not some hippies out to make a buck, right? Ear candling is a thriving industry that rakes in about $1.2 million a year. Are there risks to placing a hollow, burning candle in your living human ear canal? In spite of any of its potential dangers, at least ear candling gets rid of excess earwax and other debris like it's supposed to, right? If ear candling is so hazardous to your health, the FDA or some governmental agency is on the case to have it banned, right? Right? Connect with Jordan on Twitter, on Instagram, and on YouTube. If you have something you'd like us to tackle here on Skeptical Sunday, drop Jordan a line at jordan@jordanharbinger.com and let him know! Connect with David at his website, on Twitter, on Instagram, on TikTok, and on YouTube, and make sure to check out The David C. Smalley Podcast here or wherever you enjoy listening to fine podcasts! If you like to get out of your house and catch live comedy, keep an eye on David's tour dates here and text David directly at (424) 306-0798 for tickets when he comes to your town! Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/653 Sign up for Six-Minute Networking -- our free networking and relationship development mini course -- at jordanharbinger.com/course! Miss our conversation with behavioral expert Thomas Erikson? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This episode is sponsored in part by Conspiruality Podcast.
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Today, on this edition of Skeptical Sunday, ear candles.
You've heard a lot about these from your grandma and maybe even the crazy lady down the street,
or maybe you are the crazy lady down the street.
Why are otherwise intelligent people putting candles in their ears and lighting them on fire?
Is there something to this, or is this just a great way to burn your house down?
If you want to find out, lay back, pop a flaming hot stick of wax in one of the most
sensitive parts of your body, ideally right next to your eyes, and use your other ear
to listen to what we've got to say about ear candling on this episode of Skeptical Sunday.
Misinformation comes in many forms.
Phrases like fake news and fact check are becoming pretty commonplace.
I mean, they have been for the last few years.
People are even afraid to trust fact checkers because, well, everybody has an agenda.
So who can we trust and how do we know that we can trust them?
Now we have our very own resident fact checker.
He's a skeptic comedian who's hosted his own fact-checking show for 12 years.
David C. Somali.
By the way, man, thanks for coming on.
You're an underrated interviewer, if I can say that.
Or is that insulting?
I don't even know.
No, I appreciate you.
I think I'm underrated at everything I do because I find myself amazing.
No, I appreciate that, actually.
Thank you for that, man.
I enjoy the organic conversation process.
So maybe that's where you're picking up on that.
Well, yeah, and also you get into things where I'm like, you're just asking to get canceled or have crazy religious wingnuts that are extreme, right, hunt you down somewhere.
Yeah.
And I'm sure actually, that must have happened.
That's a different story for another time.
But you take on conspiracies, supernatural claims, even food, drug, medical industries.
And I'm excited.
Yeah, no, I'm so grateful that we're doing this, man, because I think more people need to not only just hear the information, but what I want to do is inspire people to.
to be critical thinkers and I want to have a good time while we're doing it. I mean, just about every
episode I put out, I get people on one side calling me a maniac or an idiot or a moron, people
on the other side saying the exact same thing for the opposite reasons. And then this group
of people going, I'm having a hard time figuring out where you stand on this. You just provided
a lot of info. I'm like, how can I be hated on both sides and draw confusion? But also confusing.
Yeah, but I want people to just be inspired to do their own fact checking and critical thinking.
I just, that's ultimately what the show's about. Well, good. Well, I mean,
excited. This is a kind of a new segment we're testing and we'll see how it goes. If the people
hate you, there won't be too many more of these, but yeah, if they like it, then we can make a bunch.
Absolutely. So what do you have for us today? Okay, so you may have seen these videos making
the rounds on social media of people using a candle to remove earwax. Have you seen this?
Okay, yes, I have seen that. So it's like an ear cleaning, but with, and my mom suggested this to me
when I was little. So this wasn't my first exposure to it. It's like a candle that you stick in your ear.
I never understood how or why it would work,
and I still don't understand how or why it could possibly work.
And my guess is that it doesn't actually work.
Well, I probably wouldn't be talking about it if it did.
But yeah, there's a video right now making the rounds on TikTok
that's got like 4 million views of someone doing this.
And this guy is, it kind of looks like clinic-y.
You know, he kind of has like scrubs on.
He's lighting the candle.
He puts it in this woman's ear,
and then they cut it open and they show this like big black worm
looking thing that's, you know, sucked out of her ear after she's been, you know,
you know, doing, the candle's burning for like 10 minutes or so. And it's disgusting.
And they're ripping it open. They're scraping earwax out of this candle. Everybody's
freaking out. It gets all these views and then people go out and buy this thing and, you know,
people are making tons of money on it. So I'm not sure if that's the video you saw if you've just
seen clips all over. But there's one huge one making the rounds right now.
I've seen some version of this for years because I keep Googling it. Whenever my ears are clogged,
you know, you're looking for like any solution. Probably,
every other winner, right? And I'm like, what? There's not that much wax in my ear. How does this person
hear anything? How do they function? How can they possibly have a sense of balance if there's this
like big black worm-looking thing just stuck in her ear? And also the physics don't make sense.
Like that's my biggest gripe is the physics make no sense. Like gravity, hello. Yeah.
So I don't get that. And the suction of this flame. And I'll get into that. Because I think the
general idea is that you put this candle in your ear and you light it. And whatever suction is
caused by a flame, you know, like pulling things in or sort of the airflow is supposed to
pull out bacteria and things like that.
Yeah.
Now, let me just stop right now, just for your safety and everyone else's safety.
I'm not a doctor.
And so nothing I say should be considered medical advice.
And saying that, you know, you shouldn't listen to a comedian podcaster for medical advice
is like the 2022 version of do not eat packaging.
Okay.
Talk to your own doctor if you have questions about this.
But I am armed with common sense.
So, you know, get ready for that.
There's lots of ways to clean your ears.
You know, there's a little vacuum thing that people use.
That sounds also painful slash dangerous.
You know, side note, I personally have one of those.
It's not a vacuum.
It's like a, it looks like a little gun.
Okay.
And you just put it in and you turn it on.
It's very light.
You hear a little, and it just is very light.
And then you can just kind of scrape around the inside.
It's very, very soft.
It's got a little rubber tip on it.
And it works well for me.
And I've asked my doctor and like, yeah, that's fine.
I'm a person who only in my left ear,
I've got like this really sticky earwax on the other sides, there's no problem.
So anytime I swim, if I don't put an ear plug in my left ear, I get swimmer's ear
every single time.
Gross.
So I just will go swimming and not, you know, not put my head in the water or I shove
an earplug here.
So I've actually had a lot of talks with doctors about my earwax and what I'm allowed
to use.
No wonder you're so passionate.
You're like, I can't wait to talk about earwax.
It's actually relevant.
Instead of just pissing off my first day.
Like, why don't these Tinder gals call me back?
Exactly.
So there's actually a brand new thing where you can like Bluetooth this little camera thing.
That's like a suction device or a grabbing device.
And you can look in there.
To your phone.
Like you can be entertained by disgusting images of what's going on inside your earhole while you're doing it.
And from what I've seen, these things are mostly safe.
But lighting fire on your ear, like going back to ear candling, which the, where the physics make no sense.
That doesn't sound safe at all.
You're sticking something that's on fire right next to your head inside your ear.
What?
Yeah.
If it sounds dangerous, it's because it is.
This is huge, it's a big wave in the alternative medicine scene right now.
And it wouldn't be a thing if people just use to Google.
I mean, any airflow that's generated by that is not going to undo millions of years
of sticky evolution that is locking this thing inside your head.
So it's going to be too heavy to pull any wax out of your ear.
But there are tons of people who have been injured by this.
First of all, let's back up.
Whose idea was this?
Where do this originate?
Do we know?
Because a lot of this nonsense stuff
has roots either a couple hundred years ago
as wives tales, you know, like folk tales,
or it comes from some alternative medicine,
but then it just gets bastardized
by the time it gets to like Minnesota.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that's actually interesting part of this.
The people who push this as therapy
are either lying about where this came from
or they were given misinformation.
They just pass it on
because they trust their guru teacher or whatever.
Yeah.
But they actually claim that it was an ancient healing tradition from the Hopi Indian tribe.
And so in doing my research, I found that CBS News actually reached out to Vanessa Charles,
who was the public relations director or officer of the Hopi Indian Council in Arizona.
And she said, and I quote, ear candling is not and has not ever been a practice conducted by the Hopi tribe or the Hopi people.
So honestly, it was probably, you know, invented by some Reiki guru named Twilight in 2004,
for all we know. It's not connected with an ancient healing tradition at all, as far as we can tell.
That's so funny. It reminds me of a lot of this stuff that supposedly comes from India and you're
you'll go do core power yoga because you want to stretch and they're like, you know,
this comes from, and you'll talk to somebody who's from that part of India and they're like,
definitely this type of crystal healing thing that's being pushed by some franchise owner at
Core Power Yoga is not from India. We don't even have this, never heard of this.
It's kind of the same feeling most Americans get when they find out Pandexpress isn't Chinese.
Exactly, exactly.
Same thing.
They try and make things more mystical.
I think it's called Orientalism, right?
Where you sort of fetishize the culture, this foreign culture, and be like, oh, yeah, Kung Fu, it's mysterious.
But really, it's just kind of like diet racism in a way, like light racism.
We're like, and it just causes misconceptions like this.
And I can imagine the Hopi Indians are like, don't blame us if you burn your hair or your face because we did not invent this.
Right.
This is not us.
Right.
I guess you don't use just any type of can.
You don't throw like a birthday candle in your ear.
I mean, look, these people who are believing this, they just might be.
They might be shoving them up their nose to clear their sinuses for all I know.
That might work, actually.
Who knows?
It's the burning it in your ear definitely won't, yeah.
If you just set your whole nose on fire, you might get rid of a lot of problems and create a whole bunch more.
But there is a specific candle that these charlatans are using.
It's actually a 10-inch tapered candle, and it's hollowed out.
So it's a special ear candle.
And it happens to be more expensive by a lot.
Oh, way more, way more.
It's also very large.
Yeah.
Well, that's an interesting piece of this too that we'll get into a second.
But basically, they're not just making money by doing the procedure if you go somewhere to have
it done, but they're also making tons of money off of manufacturing, producing, and selling
these things so that people can sort of disguise these bad ideas as freedom.
You know, if you want to buy something and do something dumb with it, if you don't buy 16
cheeseburgers and eat them all in one sitting, no one's going to arrest you for it.
You know what I mean? So you have the freedom to make really bad decisions, and that's what this is.
Right. So a manufacturer of kind of BS stuff, like sugar pills, there's a lot of sugar pills that you can buy, and people go, oh, it's really good for breaking your fever, because after you take it, your fever breaks. And I'm like, well, yeah, that happens with everybody who's got a fever unless they die from that, right? So theoretically, this medicine looks like it works. So they can manufacture these. And then when people go, hey, this doesn't work, they go, look, we just make these for people who want to do this kind of therapy.
We don't say that this therapy actually works, which is a pretty safe way to make something that's
dangerous and stupid, but then absolve yourself of all responsibility.
Yeah, you could just stamp for entertainment use only on it.
Yeah, we're making no medical claims here.
Yeah, exactly.
But the problem is people are actually doing this in the clinics.
Like, there are people that are actually performing this, right?
They're not only just doing it by themselves.
Right, so you can also go to that clinic and get crystal healing or your tarot cards read or something
probably too.
Yep.
And I don't want to crap on taro.
Some people like it as a hobby, but if you think you're seeing the future, then, you know, that's where we break.
Right.
And I mean, look, if you want to do it for, and I've done it before, and it's fun sometimes.
Ear candling or taro?
No, taro.
Only the taro.
Yeah.
And so I get it.
It can be fun.
And you could talk to a psychic just to see what they're saying.
The problem comes when you actually try to use these things to solve real life issues.
Sure.
Because not only is this pseudoscience, this ear candling is pseudoscience, with no evidence that it works, people are seriously getting in.
Like, seriously, there are a lot of times, the most common reports are burning embers and ash are falling
down the hollow tube back into the person's ear.
That seems like the first and most obvious problem that would happen.
It's a funnel-shaped candle that goes in your ear.
Oh, yeah, so a burning part of that fell down the tapered part into my ear.
Oh, how did we not think of that?
Yeah, here's the fun part about it.
Most people like poke a hole in a plate or put tinfoil or something to protect themselves, but then they
have this hollow tube on fire directly inside the ear canal.
To funnel burning embers into your ear.
That would normally not hit your ear.
They would miss safely.
Now they slide right into your ear canal.
Exactly.
It's a direct link, you know.
But seriously, though, there are people who have burning.
They have scars.
They have permanent hearing damage or hearing loss.
Oh, man.
I mean, I want your viewers and listeners to go to pentadocs.com to look this stuff up.
P-E-N-T-A-D-C-S.
Pentadocs.
It's the website for Pinnacle.
ear, nose, and throat doctors. They have a whole section on how ear candling claims to treat
tinnitus, TMD, swimmer's ear, sinus infections, and even Meneer's disease. And they explain
clearly it does not work. And they even cite reports from the FDA, which found burns to the face,
eardrum, ear canal, and middle ear, as well as, this is something I didn't think about,
melted dripping hot wax pouring back into the ear canal and clogging the ear and then drying and sticking itself causing a hearing loss.
Oh my God. I didn't even think about that, but that is a sweet irony, right? Because you're trying to clean your ears so you can hear better and clear everything up. And it's like now you just have a hardened wax in your ear deep in there that you have to then have professionally cleaned out, I would imagine, by an audiologist or a doctor.
There are even FDA reports of punctured eardrums from this. Oh, wow. No one sits down.
down and goes, oh, I'm going to puncture my eardrum today. So people out there are thinking I could
do it and not hurt myself. That's what everybody thinks that starts this process. There's a man
named Eric Mann, who's the clinical deputy director of the FDA's division on medical devices. I have
a quote from him here. It says, the FDA believes there is no valid scientific evidence for any
medical benefit from the use of ear candles whenever he was asked specifically about him. On top of that,
the National Institute of Health released a clinical report on PubMed of a four-year-old girl
Oh, no.
With white deposits on her eardrum.
White deposits?
Like wax deposits?
Oh, man.
The report says white deposits.
So now it goes from, you know, a couple of drunk, you know, guys in college doing this for,
you know, a party bit to being really serious if, you know, parents are putting these things
in their kids' ears and lighting them on fire and then are having to be rushed to the ER because
the kid has some kind of earwax or a punctured ear drum or white deposits of, you know,
candling on the actual ear drum itself.
So don't stick.
burning torches of fire into your ear.
I mean, if you want to, you can.
I recommend you don't.
But I'm not a doctor.
That's true.
I'm not a doctor.
Yeah, are you a doctor?
Can you really give me advice?
I'm trusting TikTokers, not some comedian who's also on TikTok, okay?
There you go.
I mean, even that, the National Institute of Health also released an article, and it's called
Ear Candles, a triumph of ignorance over science.
In there, they say that a critical assessment of the evidence shows that its mode of action
is implausible, which is what we were talking about, a moment.
ago. The whole concept of it pulling earwax out of your ear upwards to defy gravity based on this
little flame. It's just ridiculous. And it says it's implausible and demonstrably wrong. There is no
data to suggest that it is effective for any condition. Furthermore, ear candles have been associated
with ear injuries. And the inescapable conclusion is that ear candles do more harm than good.
Their use should be discouraged. So please don't try this at home. There are safer options like
little vacuums and stuff. So do that or talk to your doctor instead.
You're listening to Skeptical Sunday on the Jordan Harbinger show. We'll be right back.
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Yeah, I can imagine even if you had really good instructions on how to use an ear candle,
that it would not work well for you.
Like, this is one of those things where it's bound to go wrong,
just purely based on the fact that it's stupid to stick a flaming torch funnel in your ear.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I mean, even if it comes with instructions or you go somewhere to have it done,
it's just too damn dangerous and there's zero evidence of it actually ever working.
And by the way, this is not just talking about injury.
to your person. I found a video by a woman named Angela Williams from 2019. She tried
ear candling. She bought a kid online. She got her instructions. She set her carpet on fire.
Oh. So she posted a video about it on YouTube. Don't worry, though, Jordan. She asked for prayers,
so I'm assuming she's going to be fine. It's going to sort itself out. Yeah, at that point.
It's going to sort itself out. It's going to be fine. The DIY element of this makes it even more dangerous
than going to a clinic because at least if it happens there, you've lit their carpet on fire and you can just go home
after that. And theoretically, then they're also paying attention for burning embers going down the
ear funnel and maybe they can try to do something about it. But again, since it's complete nonsense,
I probably shouldn't also assume that they're being really safe and taking every precaution
with their nonsense. And I think it's funny that in these videos that they show online, some of the
stuff that you shared for prep here, and we'll link in the show notes, that there's going to be
somebody in a lab coat. Because yeah, I've got to do this seriously. I need to be in a clean room.
I need to have a lab coat on it. Just like the more accoutrements of the,
actual medicine that these people use, I find that a lot of times the more ridiculous it is.
Like if I go to the doctor, of course he's got a lab code on, but also when I go to get like
a regular massage, they don't. But if I go to get like a healing massage, every single person there
is in scrubs. And I'm like, are you doing surgery in the back of this place or what? And they're
selling like multi-level marketing, a soyberry oil and juice in the front of the place. And I'm like,
it's almost like you have to make up for your lack of science by looking more scientific.
Like you need a stethoscope and a bunch of instruments on the wall to be like, hey, this isn't just some crap we learned on YouTube. This is real.
Yeah, you're like, I'm getting a massage. Why is there a skeleton in the corner of the room? This is bizarre.
These are the bones that you have in your body. I know anatomy. Bend over. I mean, lay on the table.
I found a lady who's been doing this for at least 13 years. And if people want to look her up, I'll give the name. I don't know if you want to bleep this or not. Her name is Polina Bowler.
Okay. We can link to it in the show notes.
Look, she's publicly offering this.
We're not outing her.
She probably loves the free advertising.
Right, right, right.
She's the owner and head acupuncturist.
So there's a red flag.
At East Meets West Holistic Center,
she's got this video with 4.5 million views,
which is why I'm talking about it
because it's that significant.
And the video is called,
I got years of wax removed holistically,
and it shows her treating a patient.
And anybody can pull that video and watch it.
She literally says, and this is a quote from her in the video,
quote, ear candling is a bit of a mystery.
Nobody really knows how it works.
Scientifically, it doesn't make sense.
End quote.
I mean, I agree with you.
It is a bit of a mystery.
Nobody really knows how it works because technically, and you're right,
nobody knows how it works because it doesn't work,
not because we can't figure it out.
And scientifically, it doesn't make any sense.
So yeah, I 100% agree with, or at least 66% agree with this statement.
It's not really a mystery.
It's mystery solved.
It's a scam.
Right.
by the way, she's still doing it right now. She continues to do it in the video even saying
scientifically it doesn't make sense. And by the way, she's based here in L.A. So if you and I want to
scrounge up, if you want to scrounge up $85 and meet me there, we can go risk our lives for science.
You want to try this out, you know, for the viewers. I don't know. I mean, it sounds like a great
way for me to look. I kind of need my hearing in this line of work, so I'm going to pass on
shoving a flame torch in my ear on that one. What do you make of the results? And I put
results in air quotes, but they show these videos of ear wax and the candle.
it really does look like a really gross, like dark red
or black worm thing that comes out of the candle
that supposedly comes out of your ear
and it reminds me of,
have you ever seen those sham surgeries
where like someone's digging in your abdomen
and you're supposedly pulling out cancer
but it's clearly just like chicken guts and blood?
Right.
It's like the same thing.
It's like, look at all the wax that was in your ear
or look at all these cancerous tumors
I pulled out of your abdomen.
It's just total nonsense.
It's like the same thing but for your ears.
Yeah, my answer is incredibly disappointing.
The black worm thing
is completely fake.
They either load that thing
into the candle
before they light it.
There have been people
who will stick this thing
down into the candle
and they'll put it really low
in the bottom of the candle
and then they'll set the top
empty part on fire
and then once it burns down
they stop, they take it out
and they rip it open
and go look what it pulled out of your ear.
They do that or if they're doing
a TikTok video or YouTube video
they'll switch it later
and they'll do a camera cut
just to say look what we pulled
out of your ear.
But there's also this
actual wax
it looks like it's coming out of your ear.
Okay.
If people watch that video I just referenced,
she scrapes actual, like, burnt wax out of the candle.
The candle after the fact, yeah.
And you can see that in the video.
It even shows it again in slow motion,
and you can hear the head acupuncture as say,
that came out of your left ear.
Like, it's so believable to these folks,
and it's so real.
It definitely did not.
And crap like that would not come out of your ear,
no matter how long it's been since your last shower.
Dr. Cher Zhao, I have to credit on this.
She's a pediatric ENT at mass eye and ear.
She did an interview with Focus, where she cites a study of experts analyzing the wax
that comes out of it.
They actually did a full scientific study on it.
And what they found is there is wax that comes out of it.
They cut them open and they're scraping this wax out.
100% of the wax that was tested by these experts, zero percent of it contained human ear wax.
Well, yeah, it's freaking candle wax, right?
Well, bees wax from inside the candle itself.
Okay.
That does get hot, that does appear to be burnt, so it's very convincing to a lot of people.
So the black worm is intentionally inserted, but the wax-looking stuff comes default in these
candles by default. So it does, you know, people are convinced that that's what happened.
I guess I already know the answer to this, but I'm going to ask anyway. Why would somebody
want to fake something that is just so easily debunked or even by common sense?
I think for the same reason people get divorced money.
Divorced because of money? Okay.
Yeah, I guess divorce. Because look, even if they're not directly selling something,
because someone could go, hey, I'm just a crystal healer or whatever.
I don't make money on it.
I mean, you know, even if they're not selling something, they're getting millions of
views, they're getting a licensing deal with one of those fail sites because their video went viral
or, you know, they're being paid by impressions, they're getting a licensing deal or something
like that, or they're putting their links to merchandise and their buy.
It's all motivated by money and traffic.
And unfortunately, people see it, they try it, they hurt themselves, all because they don't
listen to the Jordan Harbinger podcast on Skeptical Sundays where David C.
Smalley comes and debunks this nonsense and then plugs himself for more downloads.
Right. Yeah. Let's remember why we're really here to get people to go to listen to the David
See Smalley podcast, which we'll also link in the show notes. Absolutely. But one could also
make the argument that some of these people are duped themselves. And this is something that I struggle
with on my own podcast. It's hard for me to get angry at these folks, regardless of what they're
pushing, because from what I've seen, it appears that most of them believe what they're doing.
So is it possible that they can don white lab coats perform this procedure for years and never even
so much as Google this stuff? I mean, who knows? I once had a conversation with an ER doctor,
or sorry, she was an ER nurse who told me that I shouldn't swim for an hour after I ate
or I would get stomach cramps and drown. Yeah. I mean, she is a professional in the medical
field but still thought something that was nonsensical because it's what she was always taught
as a kid and never bothered to look it up. So I don't know. I guess it's possible that some of these
people just don't know any better. But I think most are probably grifters who were looking for people
who don't have internet access. Yeah, I think you're right. I mean, look, if you
are confusing the burnt beeswax that was in the candle and you think it's here you're confusing
it for earwax that i kind of understand it's still dumb i think and you should know better but i understand
why that would be confusing but if you're loading a pellet of some nonsense wax expander whatever thing
into your fake candle to trick the person who's on the table then it's really obvious who the con artist is
and who's just really woefully uninformed here's what i've seen it described as the idea was we were pranking this
one particular woman who's a friend of mine, right? Okay. It's, we're going to prank her at home. So we buy the
candle. We buy the little worm thing. We burn like a gummy worm or something, shove that into the candle.
And then we prank her and what you're filming is the prank, right? Okay. But then it just gets
cut and edited down to a 42 second clip. And then the video blows up and now there's a bunch of,
you know, all this misinformation out there and people are going out and buying these things because
they think it worked. Like it wasn't a clinician doing the black worm thing. It was just a dude
pranking his sister, you know, and then the video goes viral. Right. So they cut the end where he goes,
it's a prank. I loaded this in there. And then it's like, here's a, it becomes an affiliate
video for like Johnson's ear candles, not that they make ear candles. But if they did,
right, this would be some viral marketing. I've seen a couple debunks of this where some are like,
hey, this doesn't work that way. But I've also seen other YouTubers get duped by this where they're like,
oh my God, look at how much wax was in there. And then all the comments are like, you're an idiot.
Yeah, there's this one YouTube channel called Mixed Makeup, hosted by Susan and Shazad,
and they've got a show on that channel called The Sass, and they go do crazy stuff all the time,
and they had fun with it.
Well, they went and did this ear candling thing and showed every step of the way,
and sure enough, at the end, the person cuts the candle open, shows all the earwax.
They're like, ew, they're doing close-ups, they're freaking out,
and they were eviscerated in their own comment section.
Like, this is dumb, you're perpetuating bullshit, and they were, like, flipping out about it.
and they got tons of hate.
And so rather than going back and like confronting, you know, the person who did it or whatever,
these ladies just bought their own candles and had them shipped and then burned the candles,
like lit the candles without putting them in ears.
And then at the end, they opened it and had the exact same result.
Interesting.
They put that out and were like, look, we set this on fire and clearly that was an earwax that came out.
We apologize.
And everybody's like, go back to that place to tell them.
And the person's like, the two ladies are like, oh, they have the freedom to do
their own business. We don't want to hurt their business. And I'm like, that's where I would absolutely
want to do that because clearly they're making money. Yeah, I disagree with that. Look, I agree everyone
has the right to a business. This is a con job. They would have had a hell of a video going back and
confronting the person on that and saying, hey, we lit these. Here's a video of us lighting these
without putting it in an ear. Here's the exact same result. And then you see if the person goes,
oh my God, I've been doing this for years. I can't believe it doesn't work. Or they go,
get out of my store. Yep. Get out of my fake medical establishment. So yeah, there's a fine line
between being respectful to somebody's business and then allowing a scam to continue, especially after
you've advertised for that same scam. Exactly. Unwittingly. So I don't know. I do wonder how a lot of
those places are allowed to legally operate. But then again, what are you going to do? Regulate the
practice of every single person that claims to do anything. It's just impossible. Well, apparently
they're getting close, or at least at one point they were. According to Cohen Healthcare law,
in February of 2010, the FDA issued warning letters to three large manufacturers of ear candles,
as well as retailers and outlets and even clinics.
These letters were so like threatening and legalistic sounding.
These firms were informed that like the FDA had determined
that there was no agency approval,
meaning there was no agent assigned to approve these things as medical devices.
There was no clearance.
There was no manufacturing facility registration.
There was no device listing.
There was no adverse event reporting system in place regarding these ear candles.
And the way it was worded, this led sort of people to believe
that they were officially illegal.
legal. And so people stopped carrying them. A lot of the places shut it down for a while around
2010. And it slowed it down quite a bit. They did a good thing. Well, then this person who calls
themselves Doc Harmony, DOC, by the way. Oh, DOC. Oh, right. So not actually doctor. Hey, I didn't
say doctor. Right. It's short for something else, Doc. Yeah. Yeah. It's just a nickname. That's the lab
coat of nicknames right there. That's what that is. You're right. That's so funny. So,
Doc Harmony sued the FDA and essentially requested that ear candles not be called medical devices, but rather personal care products.
They also claim that they have the bodily autonomy to choose alternative methods of therapy, which it's hard to argue with that when we talk about freedom in the United States.
So it ended up being taken all the way to the Supreme Court and Doc Harmony lost, but in the loss it was kind of a win because the ruling stated that Doc Harmony had no case because the FDA had only sent out.
warnings and threats, but never officially outlawed or banned the use of ear candles. So to this day,
something happened in that lawsuit that if you go search for ear candling on the FDA website,
what it's going to reroute you to is frauds and medical warnings and scams and things like that.
But if you find an actual article with a title on it having to do with ear candling on the FDA website,
it's probably going to be a dead link. The links are broken. So despite dangers and reported medical
issues caused by these candles, apparently the FDA just doesn't think it's worth it.
anyone's time or money to chase this down. So technically, right now, it's still legal, but highly
discouraged, you know, but at the same time, just like praying over your child rather than seeking,
you know, medical attention, you have the rights to do that. You have the religious freedoms
to do what you want. But if that child becomes harmed in some way, you will definitely
face legal troubles and criminal charges and child endangerment and bodily harm and bodily injury
and things like that, neglect. So that's basically what the FDA has said when it comes to this. Do this at your
own risk, and if people get hurt, we're coming for you. If you stick it in your kid's ear and light
it on fire, you have the right to do it, you have the right to buy it, you have the right to film
it, but if your kid gets hurt, you know, get ready to face some child endangerment issues,
you know, or if you do a prank on someone and they get hurt as a result, you know,
I personally think they need to readdress it, but it doesn't appear that we're getting
smarter as a species. No, and we have just the Hopi Indian tribe to thank for this terrible,
oh wait, sorry, sorry, never mind. Scratch that. Scratch that. Sorry, Hopi Indians.
scapegoated again. Thanks so much, David. Really appreciate having you on. Of course, you can find
the David C. Smalley podcast, not only linked in the show notes, but anywhere you listen to podcast.
Thanks so much for coming on, man. Hey, thanks for having me. If you're looking for another episode
of the Jordan Harbinger Show to sink your teeth into, here's a trailer of my interview with Thomas
Erickson on how to spot a psychopath. Some people tell me, do they have to be psychopaths?
Couldn't it just be they are evil? But hey, for me, same thing. They are out there.
regardless that we are talking about it or not.
The stupid psychopath, he would go up to you on the street and see,
hey, you got a nice watch, and then you will bang you in the head and take to watch.
The intelligent psychopath, he will see your beautiful watch,
and he says, that's a nice watch, and then he will talk you into giving him the watch.
That's the difference.
All narcissists are not psychopaths, but every psychopath is a narcissist.
They think it is their right.
They are entitled to act in this way.
It is their birthright to use you and me and anybody else.
The more you present yourself to the psychopath,
the more understanding he has about you,
the more dangerous he becomes.
Love bombing is one of the most dangerous manipulation techniques that they can use.
If you haven't experienced, let's say true love, let's call it.
And then you think you have it within your reach, you're done.
I get, you know, I get shivers down my spine.
I mean, psychopathy is not an illness.
It's a personality disorder.
It starts at the moment in the woman's womb, actually.
You can never change a psychopath.
How much value would you put in yourself?
How much do you think you deserve in life?
Do you deserve a good relationship?
For more on how to protect yourself from psychopaths,
check out episode 465 with Thomas Erickson
on the Jordan Harbizons.
All right, that does it for the second episode of Skeptical Sunday.
I would love to hear what you think about these.
Many of you did get back to me with positive feedback and some suggestions.
Please do keep that coming.
As mentioned last week, these are probably not going to be every single week.
We'll see what shakes out, of course.
Topic suggestions for future episodes of Skeptical Sunday are always welcome.
Just email me Jordan at Jordan Harbinger.com and give me your thoughts.
A link to the show notes for the episode can be found at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Transcripts are in the show notes.
I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram,
or just hit me on LinkedIn.
You can find David Smalley at David C. Smalley
on all social media platforms at David C. Somali.com
or, better yet, on his podcast,
the David C. Smalley Show,
links to all that in the show notes as well.
This show is created in association with Podcast One.
My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson,
Robert Fogarty, Ian Baird,
Millio Campo, Josh Ballard, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
Our advice and opinions, they're our own,
I'm a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer, and I was probably never a good lawyer.
So do your own research before implementing anything you hear on the show.
Remember, we rise by lifting others.
Share the show with those you love.
If you found this episode useful, please share it with somebody else who needs to hear it.
You know, like somebody who puts candles in their ears and lights them.
In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you listen.
And we'll see you next time.
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