Unexplainable - Mi Vickicito
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Host Julia Longoria signs off from Unexplainable with one final question: Why does her grandma love Vicks VapoRub so much? A version of this episode originally aired on WNYC’s Only Human podca...st. For more, go to http://vox.com/unexplainable It’s a great place to sign up for our newsletter, view show transcripts, and read more about the topics on our show. Also, email us! unexplainable@vox.com We read every email. Support Unexplainable by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, Unexplanable listeners.
Julia Longoria here, one of your co-hosts, and I'm here with you to share a piece of news,
which is that this will be my very last episode with Unexplainable, at least for now,
who knows what turns life takes. And to say goodbye, I wanted to share with you one of the very
first radio stories that I ever made, because at the center of it is an unexplainable phenomenon,
which is, why does my grandma, and so many people in the world, put Vicks Vaporub on everything?
I worked on this story with a reporter named Kenny Malone for a show from WMIC called Only Human.
My grandma just turned 80, but I'd be willing to bet my grandma's 80 is not the 80 you're thinking.
This is a woman who in one year underwent knee replacement surgery.
and took trips to China, New York City, and Paris.
The woman defies expectation.
One minute, she's designing high-fashioned dresses.
The next, she's starting spitball fights at dinner.
Irreverent, intelligent, it's like every week she's telling us about a different novel she's reading.
In English, her non-native tongue.
All of this is to say my grandmother is no fool.
That's why I can't wrap my head around how or why the woman I've just described.
worships a little blue jar of eucalyptus jelly.
Of course, as a little kid, there was no reason to think grandma's love affair with Vix was unusual.
But in hindsight, there were some pretty obvious clues.
There was a time I remember walking into her bedroom and seeing four, five, maybe even six jars strewn on her vanity.
There's the fact that Grandma doesn't actually call Vicks Vicks.
She only talks about her beloved Vicky Sito.
She adds the Ito as a mini love letter to the Vizabeth.
the stuff. And then, maybe strangest of all, was that when she would stay at our house and take a
shower, the bathroom would always reek of Vick's vapor up afterwards, whether or not she was sick.
Now that I'm older, it occurs to me that actually I have a lot of questions about grandma and
her Vicky Cito. So I sent an audio recorded to my sister Paula, who was with our grandma,
and I called.
Just a few things to know before you hear this.
Number one, my grandma is from Cuba, so I'm going to kind of translate for her as she speaks in Spanglish.
Number two, she's got a little bit of a low voice.
And number three, before I could even ask her why she loves Vicks so much, she said something that sent the conversation totally off the rails.
Hello?
Grandma.
Yeah, this is Carla, Julia.
Hi.
Okay, I want to talk with you about Vickizito.
Oh, Vikisito.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Every time that you have like a sore throat.
I feel that you are coughing.
I said, no, no.
If you have to give Vickizito.
It's good for all.
It's good for all.
Right there.
Vickisito is good for everything.
Vix is good for everything.
So I'm like, wait.
What do you mean everything?
So first she's like,
you could put it on your chest
because it'll help with your cough.
That makes sense that's on the label.
Then she's like, you can use it on your knee,
if you have a sore knee.
And that one's also on the label.
But then things start getting weird.
For fungus?
She says Vicks on your toenails will cure your toenail fungus.
And she says she puts it on her fingernails to stop them from breaking.
You think it makes your nails stronger?
Yeah.
And then this is just insane to me.
Wait, wait, wait. Grandma used to put it in your hair.
Yes. Yes, before you got your, before you shampoo your hair.
Vicks vaporub as hair conditioner. So I asked her, is this why the shower smelled like Vix?
And she said, oh no, I'm sure I'd stop using Vix's hair conditioner by then.
It was probably because I was using it as hand and foot cream.
So the story of how my grandma ended up using Vix literally from,
head to toe, turns out to be a story about Cuba.
Or at least that's what she hinted at in our conversation.
What's your earliest memory of Vix?
Oh, my gosh.
I think I grew up with that when someone was very little.
She said she grew up with it when she was very little,
which was surprising to me because grandma doesn't talk much about her past,
about her childhood or life in Cuba.
She was 30 when she and her family left in 1967.
And I feel like Cuba, for her, for her,
it's like when we're watching TV together,
she'll always pick everybody loves Raymond
over any HBO drama I want to watch.
Aye, she goes,
why are we going to choose to watch ugly things?
Life has enough ugly things already.
I'm pretty sure for her,
Cuba is one of those ugly things.
Do you think, I mean, I wonder, like,
when the embargo started, did you still get VIX?
She's like, well, sometimes it was there,
and sometimes it wasn't.
If it was there, I used it.
So I asked her, there was a time when there wasn't Vicks?
And she says, that's right, but then it came back.
I don't remember very well after the Bay of Pigs.
I know that may not sound like much, but I'm almost positive that that was the first time my grandma ever said the words, Bay of Pigs, out loud to me.
That's when the U.S. tried to invade Cuba in 1961.
She was still living there at that point.
And we've never talked about that or the revolution or her childhood.
Nothing.
In college, I became obsessed with Cuba.
I did my thesis on Cuban bloggers.
And last year, I went to Cuba for the first time.
I haven't really talked to Grandma about any of this.
And it's kind of weird.
Because I think of us as close.
But I guess I don't know much about her as the person, pre-grandma.
The whole thing is making me kind of nervous.
All four of my grandparents fled Cuba.
and grandma is the last one still living.
I've never known how to start the Cuba conversation.
If Vick's vaporub is a foot in the door, it's better than nothing.
So I asked her if she'd be willing to sit down in person
and talk more about this Vick stuff,
and maybe Vicks in Cuba.
I don't know, we should do that when we're together again.
Okay, maybe another day.
Okay.
Grandma was scheduled to come visit me in New York in a few months,
and she promised she'd sit down with me
and tell me the rest of the story.
That's after the break.
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Before sitting down with Grandma, there was something she'd mentioned in our first conversation that I needed
to understand. She seemed to imply that there was some connection between Vicks Vaporub and the Bay of Pigs
invasion. The assault has begun on the dictatorship of Fidel Castro. Just a little refresher.
In 1961, the United States tried to overthrow Fidel Castro. This was a
about two years after he'd taken power, the U.S. trained a small militia of Cuban exiles
to invade their former country and oust Castro.
And the rebellion against the red-tinned dictator was on.
The invasion failed spectacularly, and Castro captured around 1,100 people.
Have you heard much from your husband since he's been in prison?
I've too much nervous.
They stayed in Cuba's prisons for almost two years.
And just before Christmas, in 1962, the U.S. and Cuba five
finalized a deal to free the majority of the prisoners.
What do you think about the release of all your companions?
Well, I think this is a wonderful thing.
The reason this is important to our story is that the U.S. paid an unusual ransom for the hostages.
It wasn't cash.
The prisoners were exchanged for about $50 million in food and medical supplies,
everything from listerine to aspirin to surgical equipment.
And as best we can tell, in that ransom was a whole lot of vicer.
vapor-up.
You could sit there.
Are we talking about Vic?
Yes, we're talking about Vicissito.
So it's two months later,
Grandma's in New York,
and we're sitting down in a studio at WMYC.
You shouldn't be nervous.
This is like where,
I know it's weird,
but it's like we're sitting at home, whatever.
We just never do this.
I've always thought of Grandma
as this fearless matriarch
who started a new life
in a new country as a young woman.
It's so strange to see her nervous like this.
And do you remember, what's like your first memory of VIX?
Oh, when I was very young and then I got cold.
My mother, she used to put big, and then you have to be in your room.
And do you remember what your room looked like?
My bedroom set was pink with flower painted, and I have my pink cupboard, you know, from my bed.
I have a good life when I was young.
Grandma grew up near one of the most beautiful beach towns in Cuba called Baradero.
She and my grandpa met on the beach.
He was a friend of her big brothers.
I have this black and white picture hanging in my room of the two of them sitting on the sand.
Grandma's got one of those 50s halter bathing suits with little buttons down the middle.
Auello's got his hair slick back.
They're both smiling this stylish, effortless smile.
She was 21 years old when the revolution came.
Oh, I mean, that was unbelievable.
What happened there?
Let me tell you unbelievable.
But that is another point of...
Well, what do you mean?
It's another point because with their revolutions and all that, you know, then in Cuba,
it was really hard.
It was a very hard time.
What do you mean?
Like, what do you remember when you say it was a hard time?
It's really scary.
Right away, everything disappeared.
You go to the groceries and it was nothing.
It was a very, very hard time.
And then...
And then when all those medical supplies came in,
Oh, my God, people get crazy.
You have to see the lines of the pharmacy to people get.
Was that when you started using VIX in different ways,
like for conditioner and stuff like that?
Yes, you know, because I remember when Castro took power in Cuba
that you can find any hands cream or anything,
then I find out that when I use it for my kids,
and I put it in my head, oh, my skin, you know, my hands look soft.
I said, oh, it's good for the skin, too.
And then what else?
After that, like, how did you get to, like, put it on?
And then, you know, I remember when I was in Cuba,
the soap there was very hard, and then the water was good.
And then my nails started to break a lot and, you know, said, oh, gosh.
My hands are big and not pretty, but I like to have my nail to look nice.
Then I started to use that, and my nails said, oh, my God, my nail looks much better.
Well, Grandma, I don't think your hands are.
ugly? Like, I actually think about your hands as like, I want to have beautiful hands like
like Grandma. I always think that. For real. No, I compare my hands with my friends. I said,
oh my God, my hands are so big. I do that same thing, actually. And then you said you, did you
use it for fungus? When was the first time? Yeah, I have fungus, and then I noticed that they
start to get better. So it was, but it was on your toes, right? Like, how did you get from the point
of, like, my hands? Well, if it's good for your hands. It has to be good for your feet.
So I started to use it.
It was like the worst period of your life when you were using VIX in all these crazy ways.
If that were me, like it would bring back horrible memories and I might like never want to see it again, right?
Yeah, right.
But you embrace it now.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, because that always made me feel good.
When I was sick, I mean, like I said, it was working for me.
So even in my hard times, you know, I'm like I said, it was working for me.
Hard times.
I love that.
Yeah.
So, hold on, I can't be crying in this part.
Take big.
Smell me.
When I get one with a Vix, I am transported back to my room at Grandma's house.
I see my pink and teal bedspread.
I hear Grandma opening the door to say good morning and sing me las maninas loudly and off tune.
I laugh and throw pillows at her, she throws them right back at me.
Vix takes me to my origins, a place of comfort and silliness and joy.
I never thought about where Vicky Cito must transport grandma.
I always figured her obsession with an American product must be another way she dissimilated
and left her past behind.
All this time, the stuff has been bringing her back to her own beginnings,
to her own pink room, the place where she learned what comforts.
for it is. When I was going back
and listening to the tape, I found this
one wonderful moment.
It happened when I had to step out of the studio for
a second, and I left Grandma
by herself. Hold on one second.
Let me just, I'll be your back.
While I stepped out, Grandma picked up
a little container VIX I had in the studio.
She unscrewed the lid
and just enjoyed the smell for a while.
It's hard to hear, but Grandma
just said. This episode
was produced by Kenny Malone and
me, Julia Longoria, with
Hell from Jillian Weinberger.
It was edited by Ben Adair.
Special thanks to Jim Ratsonberger,
Ashley Kaufman, and the Greensboro History Museum.
Some of the archival audio you heard in this episode
comes from the Lynn and Lewis Wolfson, Florida Moving Image Archives.
The unexplainable team includes Jorge Just,
Joanna Solitarev, Meredith Haudenot, Bird Pinkerton,
Noam Hesinfeld, Zallyhelm, Amy Padula,
and Christian Ayala.
If you have thoughts to share with us,
We're at Unexplanable at Vox.com.
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