You're Wrong About - Elizabeth Báthory with Princess Weekes
Episode Date: November 6, 2024"Our alleged serial killers deserve better than this." Was Elizabeth Báthory the most prolific serial killer of all time, or was she just in the wrong place at the wrong time? Do we even ha...ve the tools to know? And what about that bathing in the blood of virgins thing? Lizzie correspondent Princess Weekes is here with your election night distract-a-thon. Princess' YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@Princess_Weekes"Tall, Dark and Racially Ambiguous" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvg5nShcAOUFind Princess on Blueskyhttps://bsky.app/profile/princesmweekes.bsky.socialCome see our live show with American Hysteria, A Massive Seance https://linktr.ee/amassiveseance Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show: You Are GoodLinks:Princess' YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Princess_Weekes"Tall, Dark and Racially Ambiguous" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xvg5nShcAOUPrincess on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/princesmweekes.bsky.socialA Massive Seance: https://linktr.ee/amassiveseanceBuy Cute YWA Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-aboutPaypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/yourewrongaboutYou Are Good: https://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodSupport the show
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Which is like at least the original scary story passes the Bechdel test.
Welcome to Your Wrong About.
I'm Sarah Marshall and this is your Election Day distraction episode, AKA me and Princess Weeks and some questions I have had
since the sixth grade about Elizabeth Bathory.
If you grew up watching History Channel specials
or other dubious historical content,
specifically with titles about real life vampires,
then you've probably heard of Elizabeth Bathory.
She is still alleged by apparently credible sources
at times to be the
world's most prolific serial killer. And I first met her in what I can only assume was a History
Channel special about the Countess who bathed in blood in order to preserve her youth and beauty.
So how much of that is true? Did she torture and kill hundreds of people?
Was it a modern day witch trial?
And how much can we ever really know about a person once legend has taken over?
This is the kind of Election Day distraction episode that I would want if I were asking for somebody to make one for me.
And it might be that for you too, and if it is, I'm very grateful.
We talk about some pretty gratuitous
hammer horror type scenarios that, in our estimation,
are a little bit difficult to believe,
but this episode also does get into the very real
and very painful life of serfs
and of actual torture allegations of the time as well.
So if that's not something that's gonna work for you today
or in your distraction episode, it works for me.
That's why four years ago
I was watching all the SAHM movies in a row,
but we are all very different from each other.
Then that happens about minute 22 to minute 42.
And you can just skip ahead to the historical analysis, which of course
in my opinion is the best part.
We are joined today by the incredible writer, YouTuber and friend of the show Princess Weeks.
I just loved having this conversation and Princess has joined us for a couple of previous
episodes if you like this one and you want to hear more.
She was on this year to talk about Rosa Parks
and also in the past to talk about Lizzie Borden.
There might be a trend.
She is our Liz correspondent
and I wouldn't have it any other way.
And that's it from me.
Take care of yourself.
Thank you for taking care of yourselves and each other.
I think that's what Jerry Springer used to say,
and now I'm saying it to you. Thank you for being here. We love you. Here's your episode.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where we look at maligned women of today and yesterday and
really, really yesterday and say,
did she even do anything? And sometimes we say, well, maybe she did do something, but perhaps not at the scale
that people act like she did. And with me today is Princess Weeks, who is here to discuss
Elizabeth? Elizabeth?
Yeah.
Liz?
The big Bathory.
The big Bathory.
Ah, thank you so much for being here.
This is a dream episode for me.
I'm so excited.
This has been one of the most trying episodes to research from a purely like,
I want to find primary sources account.
I bet.
So what came out of it, I'm both very proud of, and I think it leaves enough room
for our beautiful listeners to then go on their own Elizabeth Bathory journeys
to figure out how many people could she have realistically killed in a 10-year period?
And that's just a fun question, you know, for us all to think about of an autumnal evening
or beautiful spring evening in the Southern Hemisphere.
Exactly. So I guess I'll start with Sarah. What do you know about Elizabeth Bathory?
Okay. So the genesis of this topic is that, as you and I may have talked about before,
I was the kind of kid who grew up watching any kind of creepy one-hour special on basic
cable in the late 90s.
Did you also watch these things?
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, I feel like I must have seen something along the lines of real vampires on the History
Channel in like 1999 with like a little Vlad the Impaler
and then a little Elizabeth Bathory. And that it got into what I think of as the sort of
archetypal myth, which was that she was this woman who I couldn't tell you remotely where
she lived except generically in Eastern Europe or in what century except, you know, kind
of maybe around the 1500s? Question mark? Yeah. Something like that. Okay.
Your instincts are strong. It's a great sanctuary. And the story is presented by the History Channel,
I think in a very straight face, like, yeah, this is what happened kind of a way, as far as I
remember, was that she felt the need to murder hundreds of peasants in order to bathe in their blood and preserve her youth.
Yep. As women are wont to do.
You know, women.
Women be killing for the blood of virgins.
But yeah, I guess the story was that she had killed hundreds of people to try and
preserve her youth. I don't know where she got the idea, and they would have the role of like a hot woman shot in sort of blurry closeups bathing in something red.
So if you look at the Guinness Book of World Records, a quite reliable source, wink, wink.
They list Elizabeth Bathory as the most prolific serial killer.
You know, sisters are doing it for themselves. Ladies is pimps too.
But they even say like, even in the record that it's called into question how many people
that she actually killed.
And despite the fact that most modern historians definitely verge on either the amount of people
possible to kill, or if she even did it to begin with. She has remained in the public eye like a virgin killing, bloodbath, having vampire
slash werewolf hybrid, depending on the incarnation.
Karly, garbage picking, field goal kicking phenomenon.
It's a feminine-o-monon.
And I think one of the most challenging things about doing any research about her is that
over the years that line between fiction and fact has been so blurred to a degree that
even books that are cited as sources about things dealing with her do not have any direct
evidence or primary sources backing that up.
So I read a few well-cited sources, I researched some stuff about Hungary and its witch trials,
and I just added what I hope is a reasonable dash of common sense.
And through that, I asked myself the question, what is the truth?
Well, as far as you can get when something happened hundreds and hundreds of years ago.
Yeah.
But I do think it's, yeah, maybe worth using this as an example of pointing out that history is always an ago. Yeah, but I do think it's, yeah, so maybe worth using this as an example
of pointing out that history is always an attempt.
Yeah.
Which is nice, you know,
because if there was just like a single version of history
to learn, then we would all learn the same thing
and it wouldn't be the, I don't know,
the strange adventure that it always is.
So what I found is that like post-communism,
this group of historians, folklorists, and
archivists came together at the Department of Folk Beliefs and Customs at the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences in Budapest.
And one of their projects was to create a database of early Hungarian modern witch trials.
And they found 2,000 witch trials and what they call 20,000 bewitchment narratives,
which are basically like, you know,
the beginnings of certain witch trials,
depending on where they were located.
And they found at the time of their publication
of this evidence, documented proof of 848 executions
for witchcraft before 1800.
This is 848 people in a population of either 3.5 or 5.3 million, depending on how the borders
changed.
And they see this as the absolute minimum because they definitely agree that records
have been lost and the border of Hungary kept changing.
And within those changing borders, you had a bunch of different political machinations
that were going on. So at the time that Elizabeth Bathory is here, the Ottomans had occupied
Buda, which was the capital of the city in 1541. And so Hungary was divided into three
different parts. There was Upper Hungary, which was ruled by the Habsburgs in bread, Western European influence,
big chins.
You had the Ottomans who ruled central Hungary, and then you had the eastern part, which at
that point included Transylvania, which was its own principality.
But then all these Hungarian noble dynasties would rule that latter piece of it, and that
would also include the Bather's, who were among some
of the richest landowners in the area.
But we're going to put a little pin in that and we're going to go back to this whole witch
trials thing, because I think this is really important context for what we're going to
see later.
So they found in their research that a minimum of 4,592 accused witches were bought to trial
in the Kingdom of Hungary between 1213 and 1800.
And these witch trials tended to kind of ebb and flow, like whenever there was a moment
of peace, like between warfare, there was usually some kind of plague or something bad
happening that would create all this tension and then people would start accusing each
other.
And the three central patterns of witchcraft accusations were accusations from above,
where you had someone of like a higher ranking trying to accuse a lesser noble of something,
or someone of lesser mark of having done something. You had accusations from below,
which were like lower nobility, usually collaborating with a lot of other noble,
like lower nobles trying to overtake someone higher, or you had the intra-class
conflict between people within the same social status trying to essentially use hysteria
or supernatural TM to essentially say like, this person has been possessed by the devil
and they need to have their stuff taken from them.
Wow.
So it becomes kind of like a means of civil assets
for fixture in a way where you're like,
that guy's possessed, someone needs his stuff,
and perhaps I'm next in line, maybe.
Yeah.
It's like, why should we let someone possessed
by the devil have things when I could have things?
I mean, that's a great question.
I ask it all the time.
But it is in that context that we have Elizabeth Bathory's, the accusations against her coming
up, the kind of accusations they build up against her and why her as a Bathory and as
a landowner was a good person to accuse of certain things.
But before then, I'm going to play you a ridiculous movie trailer from one of the many movies about our dear Miss Bathory.
Excuse me, Countess.
Not only the look, but the feel of my skin is incredibly different.
You have to be careful what you wish for.
What is happening?
You are giving me something beautiful.
The Countess wants fresh blood.
Bring me a virgin.
No!
No!
No!
You are mad.
You like the blood before it is wasted.
A pile of rotten corpses.
Dismembered children.
Lies.
One witness saw her copulating with the devil himself.
Everything has its price. Why are you shaking my love?
Do you know how long I've been waiting for you?
I almost lost my mind.
Yeah, I found this trailer.
There are so many weird movies, but this one I found was especially entertaining
because it focuses on this idea that she did it for a man,
which I gotta tell you, the absolute untruth. Which is like at least the original scary story passes the Bechdel test.
Just at least we have that.
These alternatives, I think, especially what was interesting as we go forward, but she
was already like, she had been married since she was like 14 years old.
She had like plenty of like legitimate children.
She had like absolutely no reason to need nor want male attention.
And so the idea that like her big hang up was like,
I just want to be beautiful.
I'm like, I think she was okay.
I think she was okay.
Right. It's also like, I don't know, TikTok didn't exist yet.
It was a different time with regards to aging.
I mean, four or five years ago.
Exactly.
Dating is hard, guys. We have to all remember dating is hard. It was a different time with regards to aging. A mere four or five years ago. Exactly.
Dating is hard, guys.
We have to all remember dating is hard.
Dating is hard.
But you know, women are so resilient.
Yeah, that trailer is hilarious to me for like a myriad of reasons.
But just the biggest idea that like, oh, because she couldn't have a young boyfriend,
that's why she went.
I was like, guys, we have to do better.
Our serial, our alleged serial killers deserve better than this.
It's true. Well, and one of the things I love to point out as a trend about female serial
killers historically, to the extent that it's possible to observe trends, is that it's often
in the past seems to have been motivated by money. Where you just like, in a society that
deprives you of the ability to work or have full citizenship,
the only access to money is through men, you know?
So like, men around you sometimes just have to start having bad luck, if that's the case.
Right. Well, that's the thing about it too, is like, for her, that was not her motivation because she was so wealthy,
but we will get into that. So like, you know, I think that like there's this idea, this preoccupation with like the
two different archetypes of like female danger.
And I think even to a degree that there's this idea of like, the most prolific serial
killer of all time was a woman is like a thing that plays within the gender norms of as a
woman, you're supposed to be delicate and safe. And even the way in which her crimes are enacted, like the sadomasochism of it all is there
to tell us and tell the people who were the testimony against to tell them that like she
has betrayed her sex by being this violent.
And that is, uh, it's a lot.
Yeah, there's like this new, I guess like a new YA book out
as we're recording this about Lady Macbeth that's like-
Oh yeah, I've heard of it.
Lady Macbeth teen girl boss, yeah.
And there is a degree of like, it is like,
we're never gonna stop taking these sort of like
female characters slash archetypes out of history
and sort of trying out new
interiorities on them because we don't have anything left in a lot of these cases that
has been passed down to us. But yeah, I do. It is so interesting. I agree how like the
sort of femme fatale, like very feminized idea of violence and the female is deadlier
than the male, like does fit within gender norms really nicely
and within, you know, Christian patriarchal norms.
But I guess we will probably be exploring that
as we go forward.
Absolutely.
All right, so our Leo icon of this is Elizabeth Bathory
was born on August 17th, 1560.
To a very wealthy family
of what was then the Kingdom of Hungary.
And her family tree consisted of like a lot of dukes, leaders, noble people.
But the most important family member she had for this time period was that she was the
niece of the King of Poland, Stephen Bathory.
Oh, Steve.
And her nephew, Gabor Bathory, ruled the principality of Transylvania.
So she was already from her birth like a very influential noble figure and her family was
very rich and they married her to a man named Count, and I apologize to all the Hungarian
listeners for this, Ferent Nasdé, or Nasdé.
I think Nasdé is probably the most correct.
We're doing our best, but no guarantees.
You guys can yell at me and I definitely apologize.
And he was a very well-respected soldier and came from the basically next highest up wealthy
landowning family.
And he made himself very well known in Bows Against the Turks. And they were married when he was 19 and she was 14.
Standard noble marriage, she went to go live with his mother
so she could get the, you know,
acclimated to that kind of lifestyle.
They had several children,
but because he was always away due to his military excursions,
this left Elizabeth alone as the ruler of their massive estate.
Kind of ideal.
Yeah, so it's, and from what we know,
like there are letters between them that are like,
they're not overly romantic, but they're very like civil,
just her being like, yeah, one of our kids is sick,
now I'm feeling better, I just have a headache.
Like very much how you like just texting like,
hey babe, hope the front's going well, the kids are sick or whatever, but you know, life goes on. So it's all very
like basic. And that's how their relationship went. He was injured and then had to return
home and then eventually died January 4th, 1604 at 48. And he left all of his money and
land to his widow. All righty.
Which, you know, is great.
Like, this seems like a lot of time to be...
away, waging military campaigns.
Is this sort of like...
Is it fair to say that there's, like, very frequent
skirmishing over who owns what in this region?
Absolutely. About who owns what,
who's supposed to have control of it,
and it's gonna come up a little bit later, but because of Elizabeth's family connections, she kind of gets
embroiled in some kind of political anxiety happening in Transylvania, because her nephew
and the Palatine, which is like basically the prime minister of Hungary, are in a massive conflict later on.
So essentially all of that stuff and all of the loss and heavy changes of the constant battles with the Ottomans
does leave it for like, there's a lot of political openings and changing up going on in the area.
Especially because the borders keep changing. So that becomes an aspect of anxiety.
But unlike a lot of other women, with the death of her husband, she essentially became
the owner of the largest estates in all of Hungary.
And her fortresses basically stretched all the way from the east to the southwest of
the Hungarian Empire.
So she essentially got left this huge track of land that she had and she
already had sons and daughters and I think at this point, her children were all married
living other places. So she's just the ideal woman in her 40s. So they go like, her husband
just died, who knows if she, you know, and now she's rich and she's being left alone.
So, of course, something has to happen.
But even though she has all this, because she is still a woman,
the overseeing and protection of her and overall this property
was left to Gregory Thurso, who was the Palatine of Hungary.
A Palatine was essentially like the highest ranking office in Hungary.
They kind of act as representatives of the monarchs and eventually like that role would
become replaced with the prime minister.
So that's pretty much the length that we are talking about.
Yeah, wow.
Yeah.
So this guy, Gregory Terzoi, had the luck of being born into like the wealthiest noble
house in Upper Hungary,
which as we said before in the diagram, Upper Hungary was the one that was ruled by the
Habsburgs.
So he again, very military renowned, he defended Hungary from the Ottomans, was loyal to Habsburg
and that's how he became the Palatine.
And it was going to be him who, when the rumor started coming around about Elizabeth doing
things, was set up to investigate those allegations.
But there's a historian, her name is Dr. Irma Cardo.
She basically is like a legal scholar from Hungary who has done a lot of work on the
Bathory case.
And she wrote this quote that I think was really interesting. Shortly after assuming power, Thurso became
involved in a failed conspiracy attempt on the life of Prince Gabor Bathory. Remarkably,
three important events occurred around the same time. Gabor Bathory's assassination attempt in Transylvania,
Sigmund Bathory's imprisonment in Prague,
and Elizabeth Bathory's trial in Hungary.
So, essentially, within a very short period of time
of him becoming this ruler,
you have three members of the Bathory family
all having some sort of political upheaval
in their lives.
It's a coup to Bathory, arguably. Exactly.
Because I think now, because her name has become so
synonymous with this mythology, it's
hard to kind of see her as being like this massive power
player in the world.
Because there's so little we know about her outside
of this very key part.
Yeah.
Well, it's also when you're in that kind of a story,
it's like you don't think of the scary castle
as existing inside of a government
or like a political system.
You just think of it as a scary location lost in time.
So I don't know.
Yeah, there's something about situating things
within history that makes them maybe less creepy,
but more scary in this case.
Yeah.
And it's all this context that I think is why
when historians now go look at the case,
they're like, okay, it's weird that this case happened
and all these other members of her family
are being like either attempted killed
or like removed from power all at the same time.
Yeah.
It's just, you know, if nothing else,
it could be kind of a coincidence.
Yeah, it is interesting.
Yeah, so now I wanna pause to discuss a few things
that Elizabeth Bathory is alleged to have had happen
to her in her youth that we have little to no evidence for.
So these were things that when I was doing
like preliminary research,
I saw said by a few places,
but when I went to go look about what they were sourcing,
it was people who either didn't know Elizabeth
or it was written like a hundred plus years after she died.
Love it.
The gospels approach.
There is a rumor that she suffered from epilepsy.
I didn't see any sources listed for this. and the source that's listed on the Wikipedia,
which you know is like the first place everyone looks, is a Time Life magazine article.
So, like, and you know, that, like, not to shit on Time Life, but like they don't always
have a bunch of citations for their stuff.
Right.
They provide hours of entertainment, but it's more of a like, you know, you send away for
it and your family keeps getting it until your dad has a fit and cancels it.
Basically kind of a thing.
Right.
Very profit oriented.
Yeah.
And because I think things like this are treated like pulp, I think there's also just like
a lower tier of what people expect.
So like they're like, okay, that sounds great, who cares?
There's another rumor that at 13 years old,
she had a secret baby with a peasant boy.
GIGI NONTERAH-MORRISON Not peasants.
TANDIKHA Those peasant boys.
The source for this is listed as a book by Leslie Carroll
called Royal Pains, a rogue's gallery of brats, brutes, and bad seeds.
All righty.
So basically, she lists in her book,
she doesn't have citations,
but she does have like a listed bibliography at the back.
And of it, she lists Valentin Penrose's biography,
The Bloody Countess, as one of her sources.
This is something I've seen, I've seen a list in a bunch of other places.
The thing about it is that the author of this was like a surrealist poet.
And so like her work with the biography kind of skirts novel and actual fact.
And it's only 104 pages.
And I don't really see it as like a really rigorous biography.
It is worth reading because it is written
in like a very surrealist way, but it's definitely not like a primary document.
Right. It's like using Stephen Sondheim's assassins for like biographical material.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, and I feel like it's like something people don't maybe necessarily expect because
we venerate books so much is that that same kind of game
of telephone happens in history and academia and in publishing where it's like someone
creates the illusion of a fact and then it gets spread around so much that it becomes,
you know, it feels real.
Exactly.
And so what it says in the Carroll book is that it was rumored that in 1574 she gave
birth to an illegitimate daughter fathered by a peasant boy.
The child, if there was one, was purportedly smuggled away by a trustworthy local woman
who was paid hamsomely to take the baby to Wallachia, which is in Transylvania.
LESLIE KENDRICK Hmm, purportedly.
TANDIT Exactly. This came about centuries after her death. Again, no citation for this. No. Yeah.
And the other thing they try to do is say that Elizabeth witnessed
a lot of torture already growing up.
That she witnessed like serfs, servants and Romani people
being tortured by her family.
And again, the source listed for this is Carol and their book.
And she says in the she writes in the book a story about a Romani person being basically
tortured until they die by being essentially sewn into the body of a horse.
So that both, like both the horse, like why the horse has to suffer, I don't understand
as well.
It's a waste of a horse, you know.
You know, it's like inhumane and racist towards the Romani person. Horses don't grow on trees. And also it's inhuman and racist.
But yeah, but but also it's like when you have like these store and I don't know, it's
hard to judge sometimes, right? Because a lot of examples of human evil are like, extremely
flamboyant and over the top and unnecessary and the cruelty is
the point and it isn't about you know any kind of pragmatism but it's also like there are certain
stories especially kind of in history or sort of you know when it when something is kind of in an
urban legend part of the storytelling spectrum where you're like sewn into the body
of a horse, like who's got the time? Like you can be 100% evil and dehumanizing with
half the effort and you know.
And still have the horse, you know, like.
And still have a horse.
And I just, I remember reading that and I was just like, this just sounds like, you
know, like when Snow White, the stepmother, has to like dance with like the evil shoes
at the end of the fairy tale.
It just has this element of like a Grimm's narrative to it.
Yeah, the magical punishment.
It's true.
And we love our fairy tales.
We always have.
One thing is true is that because of everything going on, like, with serfdom, serfdom was
horrible and nobles definitely and absolutely abused and I believe to a certain degree tortured
their serfs.
I can only imagine the amount of like rape and sexual assault that would have been open
to them.
So it's definitely, it is definitely possible for any noble person that engaged in serfdom as a practice
to have abused their people.
However, it would not be something
that would get you thrown in jail for
unless it was super severe.
And then I have a quote I'm gonna send to you.
It's from John Padgett's Hungary and Transylvania.
It was written in 1839, and it's basically one of the well-known descriptions of Hungary
that was published in English later, and I'm going to send that to you right now.
Okay.
I apologize in advance for anything I may be about to read to the Hungarian people
and their children and their children's children.
Elizabeth was of a severe and cruel disposition, and her handmaidens led no joyous life.
Slight faults are said to have been punished by most merciless tortures.
As she washed from her hand the stain, she fancied
that the part which the blood had touched grew whiter, softer, and, as it were, more
young. Imbued with the dreams of the age, she believed that accident had revealed to
her what so many philosophers had wasted years to discover that in a maiden's blood she possessed the
elixir Vitae, the source of never failing youth and beauty.
If only she knew about K-Beauty and retinal cream.
I know.
All the lives that could have been saved.
She just needed to have snails crawl all over her face.
Like covering this, I almost feel like it's hard to like take it seriously, not because
it's not like horrible things being depicted, but because it just at a certain point, it's
like someone had to have made this up.
It reminds me of reading A Little Life, where at a certain point you're like, I've watched
this little boy suffer for so long.
I guess I better start enjoying it because there's 400 more pages to go.
And so it's definitely a lot of that.
Yeah, completely.
All right.
So now we're going to get to the accusations.
And I didn't want to make this too tedious and keep repeating allegation after allegation.
So I'll have some summaries of like what the witnesses said.
And if you need more expansions, Sarah, I have them all highlighted so we can get to
them.
Love it. Lickety split.
So in 1610, after years of alleged rumors, and I'm putting in air quotes for those who
can't, this is not a visual medium, but because, I just also want to reiterate this, her husband
definitely came home.
And the idea that she could just be walking around, like covered in like young virgin
blood from like 1590 onward. I'm like,
well, like, who was taking care of the household like this? It doesn't all make sense.
And is it like a leave-in conditioner? You know, you want to leave it on for a while,
kind of a thing. It's also, you know, we don't, the idea of bathing is actually, in a way
seems like kind of a modern concept, because like,
how big of a tub are we filling? But anyway, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Right. I just feel like it's so anachronistic in how it's concepted. But basically, Gregory
Thurso, the Palatine, I want to say Palpatine every time I say it.
I know. I keep hearing Palpatine.
Somehow Palpatine has returned.
Exactly.
He went to Elizabeth's home, her castle, at New Year's Eve, and he claimed that he surprised the
Countess in the middle of killing another servant girl, which people think this has definitely been
embellished because it was dramatized later on in a way that doesn't actually make sense.
But they said,
"'The first sight to greet him was Elizabeth Bathory herself.
Her face and arms with rolled-up sleeves were covered in blood.
Blood stains darkened her clothing.
Her outrageous screeching against a backdrop of demonic laughter
curled his blood.'"
It had to be demonic laughter.
It's like, isn't it enough with the servant girls and everything?
But also my first question is like, isn't it hard to sneak up on somebody in a castle?
Like, surely she has a designated area for doing this that isn't like the entryway.
It's truly outrageous.
And it's this idea that he like cleverly snuck up on her when people pretty much say that
he probably was doing this investigation in multiple steps
and had already prepared an entrance for her.
But he basically announced to all the members of her court that he had found her trying
to kill another girl and he brought civilians to the castle.
He's like, come one, come all, let me tell you about the crazy bitch that lives in this house.
And he brought the allegations against her and four of her servants, three of which were
elderly women, which, you know, at that time, who knows what that means, but they were older
women and one younger male helper.
And they were all tortured and threatened.
And when they were asked about, about like how long that they work with
her or how long everything happened, the young man basically said he worked there
for 16 years and he saw 37 girls killed. And then two other women, Helena and
Catherine, said 50. So at the very beginning of these allegations being held against her, the range of dead
girls was from around 36, 37 to 50, which I will say, for lack of a better word, seems
reasonable.
Like, if you told me that within like two decades, like a super-powered noble killed
like 50 serfs, I would be like, you know what,
I can see that.
You know, like,
Right.
Like that's a lot of people, but it's like thinkable as an amount that if someone were
to want to do that kind of thing, they end up if they were in a position of power that
like that feels like the number you can get away with without risking, like, a whole uprising
and rebellion.
TITUS Exactly.
And that's kind of the problem is that the girls that were a part of this, like, these
alleged sacrifices were both noble and poor girls because noble girls get sent to the
courts of other highbrow ladies to learn their arts and they become members of the household.
So even if you are a noble or you're a regular girl,
like going to Elizabeth Bathory's castle
would be considered like a massive accomplishment.
And at the time she apparently had like a very small court.
She had like maybe 20 to 30 people who worked for her inside
and then there were about 40 tending
to the vineyards and fields. And all the actual documentations we have of like her running the estate so that
it was very well managed. Like everything was very organized, like the records were
being held properly, she wasn't in any debt. And I know that this kind of maybe sounds
a little silly, but I just feel like if she's this, you know, severely
sick, megalomaniac, blood-soaking woman, then like, how could she be this good at her bookkeeping?
Well, yeah, because it is reckless behavior, you know, to put it lightly.
Because the image of her like, crackling maniacally Covered in blood at New Year's Eve
Or like just without any idea of anyone coming to see her it's just in very stark contrast
To the woman that we see written in like her own letters or the bookkeeping that we know of her estates
she wasn't and also like
to have killed
650 girls to a certain extent means that you had to find some
pretense of hiring them, which means that you would have like salary records for some of these
girls, especially the noble women. And I think the idea that she killed these noble women is
especially what makes people question it because she was according to some of the names in the
victim testimony, either related to them by blood or by marriage.
So these weren't just random girls that she like plucked from nowhere.
These were like her relatives.
And was she accused of killing noble women who actually went missing?
Were like, were there disappearances to account for?
Well that's the thing is that when they went to the time to do witnesses, some of the people that they allege like,
oh, it was this girl's, you know, this daughter of so and so,
that parent never came to trial.
And I think that if your child gets murdered
by a blood drinking countess,
you're gonna show up for the trial.
And also like, they all say that some of the bodies
were burned, but like, there is not the kind
of body trail you would expect for that amount of young women going missing.
Also like, where are the decline birth rates?
Like that's a lot of women who then never married, never had children.
Like these are all things that have very quantifiable results too.
Like they're very quantifiable, and that would happen in response to this kind of thing. And there really isn't a lot of conversation about that.
It does feel like the more we talk about it, like kind of a modern idea, because it's like
it's in the modern, you know, relatively modern, you know, 19th century world that we start
to have. Well, I mean, of course there were big urban centers in the 16th century, but I imagine Elizabeth Bathory's
castle being in a place where the disappearance
of 650 people or so over 20 years,
like you would notice that there aren't that many people
around, you know?
Exactly, and like, and it's not that long a period of time
because what they allege is that she started doing it again
in like 1590,
and then it stopped in 1610. Like, if you kill that many young girls in that sort of
minute of time, no matter where you brought them from, that is like decimating to like
your population.
Yeah. It's interesting too, because it's like if you're accused of killing that many people,
it's interesting that we need there to be a functional motive for her because surely it's just about killing you know
so why has this become such a folk legend based on the idea that she was doing it for youth and
beauty because that's what women do anyway. Exactly so from this earlier testimony it was just like
her four servants they kind of agreed on a few things.
So all of them agreed about certain methods of the ill treatment.
There's a lot of beating,
piercing with like little knives and needles and stuff like that,
burning.
They said that all girls had been buried,
some with or without proper ceremony,
which I would say then you would probably wanna excavate those grounds,
but what do I know?
There's a story about a young girl being forced
to suck on a log while being beaten.
Another one who was smeared with honey
and left for days and nights on the grounds
to be bitten by like ants and wasps and fleas.
Girls being tied to poles while like cold water
was thrown on them while they were being left at the cold.
So like all of the sort of like, and all the girls are usually naked or in some state of undress. holes while cold water was thrown on them while they were being left out the cold.
And all the girls are usually naked or in some state of undress.
Nicole Not at all a sexy thing to have a long trial
about, right?
Tawny Right.
So it's like you have these young girls being cut up, brutalized, penetrated, and kind of
sadomasochistic.
Nicole Tell me again about the bees part, magistrate.
Tawny Exactly.
So you said the honey was smeared all over her and then she was left out in the cold?
And she was naked?
Was she naked?
Yes, naked.
Sounds horrible.
I can't believe someone would do such a thing.
And it's very distressing to like read about it, but then also realize that there's a quick escalation in how it starts
off as just like piercing and beating to like left them outside, kiss me with honey, because
that has nothing to do with blood.
You're not even doing the thing.
It's like, well, that's just a waste, Elizabeth.
I mean, you're supposed to run a tight ship here.
Right.
It also that makes me think of how like, you know, this is not something I've researched
recently. So this is sort of a casual cul-de-sac CC. But my understanding is that a lot of
our modern ideas of, you know, scary historical tortures and scary ways to die, I did an episode
about this with Dana Schwartz a couple years ago, is kind of based on people in history
reconstructing previous periods of history in order to make
certain people look barbaric or to make themselves feel better about living in an age of reason,
you know, like the Iron Maiden.
Yeah.
As I believe kind of a Victorian concept of what those dumb middle-agers were up to.
And this feels kind of like that as well.
I mean, I realize we're talking
about a contemporary source in this case, but it's also, it feels very interesting
that like, yeah, that escalation in torture where you imagine that if you were a serf,
that like you would be familiar with beatings and you would be familiar with life being
very cheap in many ways. But it does remind me of the satanic panic in the sense
that you could be sort of an American woman in the 80s
talking about a history of sexual abuse in the home
or sexual assault and people would be like,
yeah, who cares?
But if Satan was involved, then suddenly
it's like a big important story.
And this feels similar too, where it's like
the everyday trauma gets escalated to something that's worth hearing about suddenly.
Right. And I think that and we'll and I'll have you quote what the torture was actually
like for some of the people who gave this testimony. But I definitely think there's
an element of and this is just my theory. I think a lot of what they end up doing during
torture is like taking their own experiences and elevating them. Because what is happening when you're being tortured?
You're being pierced, you're being beaten,
you're being whipped, and you're usually in a state of undress.
Another element I think that is happening,
is I think a lot of what they assign,
especially the honey and stuff like that,
feels like things that they took from propaganda
against the Ottomans and kind of reapplied.
That's the thing about with Vlad the Impaler, there's a lot of stuff that they're like, he against the Ottomans and kind of reapplied. The last thing about was like Vlad the Impaler.
It's like, there's a lot of stuff that they're like,
he learned how to do this from.
There's a lot of like sort of like anti-Ottoman,
Turkish things that you'll see get regurgitated
in like the torture segment.
Don't you love how when we like go off to the movie theater
to see whatever vampire thing comes out this season,
we'll be like,
you know, partaking in the trickle-down effect of anti-Ottoman Empire propaganda. Like, that's what I love about culture. I gotta tell you, my boyfriend is obsessed with the Ottoman Empire,
and it's so funny because it comes up all the time. And you think, how often can the Ottoman
Empire come up? And the answer is quite a lot.
I bet a lot.
They were very, very impactful. So like even in researching this and like knowing just even
a little bit about Vlad the Impaler, you do get this idea of, and this is my theory, that
these people in the state of torture are like taking what they've heard from like people
coming back from like fighting the Ottomans and fighting the Turks,
which is already gonna have its own propagandizing to it,
and finding a way to take what they know is barbarity
from other places and superimposing it into,
well, now we have to make it really extreme
so that us being complicit in it can be forgivable.
Right. And I guess one of the key questions here is like,
did something happen? Did she kill people?
Did they kill people?
And then did there emerge this thing of, yeah, as a helper
or someone accused alongside her as a servant, like, yeah,
do you have to escalate things to sort of squirm out of it
if you did help with something?
Because I think at a certain point, you can't say no. Because I think at a certain point you can't say no.
Because I think if there's one thing I've learned from knowing stuff about
Amblin is that if the king wants you dead, you can't say no, I did not have
incest with my sister. It's like...
I did not have incest with that woman. Yeah.
Who is also my sister. It's like, no, I have to say that, you know, it just,
there's no way if the people in charge
want you to be guilty for you not to be guilty.
Right.
And that's sort of the unfortunate reality of this.
Right, we gotta do an Anne Boleyn episode.
Anne Boleyn, how many fingers and more?
I mean, that's me and Mary Tudor.
I remember when I found out that I was like,
she killed like 7,000 people and they're like,
it's like 275 and I'm like, that's still not great. But that's not what I was told.
Nicole Zempire It is so weird. Yeah, a good
strategy as a historical figure is to like have a really inflated number make you look good in
comparison. And you're like, look at me with my 275.
Tanisha Jones I know it's also I think like especially
like Mary Tudor aka aka Bloody Mary, and Elizabeth
Bathory have the same, almost the same thing of like, we have evidence that shows that
they were definitely more nuanced people than what we get on the tin, but there is just
more of an investment in the myth that it doesn't actually matter what the truth is.
But now what I have sent you is this lovely description of what Hungarian torture tools
would be like.
So if you would please tell the lovely people at home.
Oh boy.
And these are like things that we know were actually used in reality to be clear.
These are confirmed things.
And you can tell, like, because they're all very painful, but also
very able to do quickly. I think that, like, you know, the thing about the rack is that
it takes a long time to happen and the damage of it is so severe, it makes the torture worse.
So it's better if you just, you know, you pull out their fingernails because, you know,
the people can forgive that. Stretching out your limbs till they pop is, you know, a little bit more intense.
Just a bit much. Yeah. Okay. All right. So yeah, here's, I'll read this. Here's our
little, our torture section. So yeah, skip ahead a couple of minutes if you don't want
to hear this part. The chief torturer would begin by displaying the instruments of torture
to the subject who would have been stripped naked and restrained.
This in itself might prompt a first confession.
The standard panoply included wooden wall and floor stocks, iron vices serving as finger
screws, iron collars spiked on the inside, the boot, a wooden or metal cylinder with
studs on the inside that could be tightened by the driving in of wedges.
There were also two-foot-long metal pincers and flails consisting of slender barbed chains
attached to a wooden handle. Next, some of the array of torture devices would be placed on the
victim's body. The mere touch of the thumb screws or the iron boot would concentrate the subject's
mind. But if this was not enough, the various tools were put to work, starting with the agonies
of crushed fingers and legs, and proceeding, if necessary, through lighted matches under
the finger and toenails.
The rack, either an upright bench or a ladder on which the suspect was stretched with the
aid of weights or a rectangular frame from which the subject was suspended, and the strapado to scourging, burning, branding,
boiling, and whatever local refinements were in vogue."
Yeah, and that's the kind of thing where, not that I was there, but where you're like,
right, this makes sense as things that human beings have figured out how to do to each other.
You don't need a lot of equipment. You can do it in a room. You can do it without a lot of effort on your part.
You're trying to get information or to get someone to confirm a certain story, as the case may be.
There's some kind of an alleged purpose to it. And I don't know, but I guess the history of people
doing awful things to each other predictably overlaps
a lot more with the thinkable than with the gothically unthinkable.
Right. And I think if you're already in a situation
where this is happening to you, your brain can go to even darker places
because why wouldn't it if you're already halfway through there?
Heck yeah? Yeah.
So this is where a lot of the preliminary information came from.
And then eventually they collected local sources.
Many of them were people who had never actually seen anything, but either heard something
from a friend of a friend.
So usually what would happen is like one person would come, say a piece of information. There is one of the witnesses, his name was Gregory Pallas, said
that he had carried the girls' bodies on a cart from one place to another, but he did
not know what manner of death they had suffered. One of the first witnesses, his name was Benedict,
declared that 175 girls and women were taken
out dead from the house, but he did not know the nature of their death.
One of the other witnesses, another Benedict, said he had no business in the house, knew
nothing but had heard rumors.
So again, it's like everyone will be like, I came in, I saw like two or three bodies
come out in a coffin and it was bad.
And that was it.
There was a knight,
his name was Francis Torok. He said that he had never seen her do anything before his
eyes, but he knew when she was traveling after the death of her brother that she carried
with her the corpses of three girls who died after torture and that he claimed that he
heard that she inserted hot rods into their genitals.
And when that happened, someone said to him,
Sir Francis, the girl you saw being tortured was strangled in the Turkish way.
Which again, harkens back to my theory that a lot of what they're talking about is like also just stuff that they've heard from like people who were dealing with the Ottomans and making shit up to be weird and racist.
Right.
And like the anxieties of a place that feels encroached upon.
Exactly.
There were allegations that she had been given a gray cake that was given to her by sorcerers
and that she would recite the words against different figures while eating the cake,
which I gotta say, if that's what cake can do,
local sorcerers, I will accept your magic Death Note cake.
I think that's reasonable.
I mean, it's interesting in that she's effectively being accused of witchcraft,
but just by another name in a way.
You know, these are all classic witch accusation things
to be up to.
Yes.
And there was a repeated story about a German servant girl
who was being publicly forced to suckle on a log.
Um, but even that, like, people kept giving dates
that differed by almost a decade.
So, like, it may have happened.
Someone may have publicly been forced to do that.
Again, how does this help us with the blood thing?
Exactly.
What's the point?
It doesn't. I hate to tell you. And I think what's the saddest part, I guess this is a spoiler alert,
but um, there is never any testimony that she ever bathed in the blood of any of these people.
God damn it. That's the only part that's fun.
Yeah, it didn't happen until like the 1700s
when some scholar wrote like the first written account
of the Bathory case and then mentioned the blood baths.
Oh, I love that.
Up until then there is like no testimony
that she actually did that.
Well, this is just proof that storytelling is collaborative.
Who owns what copyright?
I kept going like, okay, when is the blood bathing going to happen?
And it's like, never.
It's just a bunch of other horrible things.
And I'm just like, well, that's not what I came here for.
Right. Because it's like you don't have legs as a cultural figure if you just killed
and tortured everyone. You need to have done something kind of whimsical. You need something
unique.
Exactly. I know. I'm sorry to disappoint you. There were no alleged reports of blood
bathing.
No, I do. I love it though.
Because like, good for her.
It means that there's just a whole other person
behind this fabulous history channel story
we got to grow up with.
And I often suspect that that's the case.
That the bigger the legend,
the more the real person can hide behind it in the end.
It's interesting. And what I heard as well is that like,
because of the whole, like, was she a female Dracula kind of thing also is what made that entire story come up as well.
And so from all I saw, like, there is just, there's just, when she is bathing, it's like,
she's either dunking other women in ice water, but there is no real report of her doing anything like that.
So the first time it's ever put into print is in 1729,
and she died in like 1614.
So like over a hundred years later, they're like,
and you know, she did it.
I love that. So it's interesting that then they're like, and you know, she did it. I love that.
So it's interesting that then they're really just accusing her of being just,
you know, a very prolific but like garden variety murderer.
Really? She just wants to kill everyone out of malice, I guess.
Although only girls.
Is she accused of killing men?
No, no, it's mostly women.
It's all girls.
It's all very culty witchcrafty.
Which is why I even brought up the whole witchcraft up in the beginning, because there are people who believe that this was essentially just her getting caught up in a witch hunt.
But I'm sure people are wondering where the number 650 comes from.
Yeah, someone's ass.
Well, the ass of a witness who didn't give her her real name but chose to be known as Susanna.
She is the one that claimed that 650 girls were killed.
Good going, Susanna. It's like an auction. Say the highest number and we'll use your statistic forever.
Yeah, it's really based off of nothing because the number just kept getting higher.
It was like, we started off 38, now we're at 50, now we're at 175, and then she's like,
650!
And everyone was like, that's the one we're gonna pick.
And it's just like the idea that she's like traveling with like two, three corpses, just
like hanging out with her to go to a funeral.
And maybe even if she did travel with corpses, maybe she was taking
them to a church. Like, it doesn't have to be like, there are so many other explanations,
because one of the things that you kind of learn as well is that Elizabeth, as like the head of her
estate, was essentially responsible for like, the health and legal issues of the environment,
of the environment, of the area.
So if there was like a thing or a dispute that had to be done, you would go to Elizabeth
Bathory to then get it done.
So she's like the judge Judy of the area, really.
Exactly.
So imagine when you look at some of the witnesses and then you see, oh, wow, this person also
went to go get
Something like legislative by Elizabeth Bathory, and she did not vote for them. What a coincidence
Wow, oh my god did this paladine
Palpatine owe money to Elizabeth Bathory a little bit. That's crazy
So like one of the big theories is that while not every single witness was someone
who either owed money or had some kind of legal tie to Bathory, a significant amount
were.
And so you basically have another reason why people are very quick nowadays.
Not quick, but people are extra skeptical because it's like so not only is there no
real proof that any of this happened, but there's also like proof that some of these
people owed her money and that all of their debts were cleared very soon after this stuff
happened.
It's all very suspicious.
That's fascinating.
And I, this is also a class issue I would argue as well.
All of this stuff happened, but she was actually never convicted of anything.
Oh!
What?
Throughout all of this, she was arrested and like basically kept in like house arrest the
entire time.
And her servants were convicted and killed and executed for this.
Of course.
But she was never convicted of anything.
Good lord.
I would also argue that it might have also just been using her as somewhat of a political
chip because there is evidence of like you can be a noble person, get called out for
torture and then still get murdered.
So there is this Russian noblewoman name,
and I apologize again,
Darya Nikolayevna Saltova.
That sounded bad, but that's all I got.
I'm so sorry.
You know, that sounded at least close enough.
It sounded, it was secure.
I deeply apologize, but she was accused
of torturing a bunch of hirsufs.
But we have records of the victim's parents going to Catherine the Great to be like, people
keep dying at this household, we would like something to be done.
So Catherine, being Catherine, was like, okay, we're going to make sure the investigation
is done.
Call Columbo, he's on the case.
And so they actively went to figure out how many people she killed. And even though
there's a high number, she was convicted of the deaths of 38 serfs. But at the time, they had got
rid of capital punishment in Russia, enlightened death spot. And Catherine didn't want to actually
publicly kill a noble. But she did have her publicly chained on a platform in
Moscow for an hour with a sign around her neck saying that she was a murderer.
Just an hour though.
Yeah, just an hour.
So people could like heckle and jeer.
But you know, it's Moscow.
It's a very big city, even then.
So like that's a lot can happen in one hour.
That's true.
Yeah, that could be it.
And then she was in prison for the rest of her life in a cellar.
And then you have Giles DeRays,
who the Joan of Arc girls in the room might know this one,
but he was a knight and a lord and a commander
during the Hundred Year War and, like, fought with Joan of Arc.
Mm.
And he confessed to being a child murderer
of around 140 children,
and he was hung and... No, he was hanged and burned,
because that's, I remember how grammar works.
He was hanged and burned.
That's what's important in all this.
Do my research.
And even with him, because he is also
known as a very prolific occultist child killer,
even when they do modernday research about his trials,
even the people who are like, yeah, there could have been some sus things happening, but he did,
there is records of him doing enough of this stuff to be guilty of it. So like there is an ability to
actually apply a level of vigor to the allegations. Right, you can apply it to actual like missing
persons, whatever. And it's, I mean, that's the case. I don't can apply it to actual missing persons, whatever.
I mean, that's a case I don't know very much about, although I feel like it also has popped
up in a lot of Barnes and Noble branded true crime stuff I've gotten my mitts on over the
years.
And it's like, even if that figure is inflated, it's like, right, it starts with a very documented,
you know, something that exists on the record that was an invented sanctuary
after the events that took place and so on.
Yeah.
So basically, she was held in captivity until she died.
She died of natural causes.
She was buried in an unmarked grave at the castle that she lived in.
And before she died, she was able to like write her own will.
She was able to, you know, delineate all of her goods and assets to her children and other people.
So I think that that's also just in very heavy contrast to what she's accused of doing.
Because even though she's a noble woman, I think that if you are successfully convicted
– which, again, she wasn't – But I think if you could be successfully convicted of killing 650 women, I don't think that they
should just let you have a will where you're allowed to just divvy that up to everyday
people.
But all of those things, for me as someone looking outside who cannot know absolute truth,
all of this says to me that she was put into a position
where she could no longer be an enforcing member of the government,
of her society, which allowed the actual,
the Palatine to become the head and use some of her territory.
Getting her out of the way also, you know,
helped with getting rid of her nephew.
It was just, it seems very politically and economically motivated versus actual occulting.
LESLIE KENDRICK Well, yeah. I mean, and then you look at, like,
which of these things happens more often, you know? Like, I don't know. Like, I can believe
that somebody, I'm not gonna say that she's like that we stan a legend or anything here right
because it's like it feels like what we can say is that she came into a lot of power that she
seems to have known at least on some level how to use it and how to hold on to it because she did
and like could she have killed some serfs yeah why not I feel like everybody was back then right
but it's just, yeah,
it does seem like the story of like a very advantageous power grab that involved sort
of creating regardless of what the original, whether there was an original germ of truth,
they're creating a story that was sort of based on contemporary ideas of like, what's
the worst thing we can imagine a woman doing?
Right. To get those kind of numbers, you have to be part of a gang, you have to be like an
actual war criminal, or have the full backing of like a really powerful institution.
So like if she did kill people, I would say 50 to 75 is a reasonable quote unquote number.
Very healthy number, yeah.
I could believe that. I could even believe that she was an abusive person
towards her staff and that maybe some of them died from maltreatment.
Oh, yeah.
Like, that's absolutely possible. Like, eat the rich.
I just think that, like, when you look at the numbers,
and also how it has evolved to just be this very sexist, sadomasochistic,
and sometimes fun sapphic.
Because, you know, sometimes we reclaim it, we make it fun,
we make it cute.
JANELLE WONG CARMILLA, ETC.
Exactly. The book House of Hunger, which was really good,
is very much based on Elizabeth Bathory.
I think it just has to do with the ways in which
when women do bad things or are accused of doing bad things,
even if they're not convicted, just like Lizzie
Borden, the story about how it's possible for one woman to be that bloodthirsty or be
that dark is what captivates people and the truth ends up not mattering because it's not
as entertaining.
Like if you say like, oh, she didn't kill 650 people or bathe in their blood,
uh, she was probably the victim,
maybe the victim of, like, a big political coup.
It's like, that's not sexy.
We can't make Castlevania nocturne antagonist with that.
But if you turn her into, like, this vampire werewolf,
you know, driven by beauty,
that's something that people can understand,
quote, unquote, you know? Like, she can become's something that people can understand, quote unquote,
you know, like she can become like the evil stepmother from Snow White obsessed with beauty,
obsessed with youth.
Like we tell those narratives about women all the time.
Yeah, there's just, it's just, there's no, there's no actual evidence that things are
as intense as they want it to be.
And I mean, that's great because that means that, you know, 650 women never were killed.
And I do like that.
Yeah, I love that.
And like, maybe she was just a sadist, and that sucks.
But it is interesting to like, research a character, a figure like this and realize
how few sources actually exist that we have absorbed that are based on the truth.
Yeah, and to realize that everything you recognize about somebody is invented and that you kind
of have this silhouette of somebody you thought you knew, but it's really like they're wearing
a parka and you have no sense of the shape of them underneath it, if it comes to that
maybe. And it also occurs to me that this is a story that has persisted for a lot of
reasons, partly because the imagery is great.
But also because it's like, you know, the sort of useful folk legend, maybe because it's like a story of a woman who was in power and how did she wield that power? Badly.
You know?
Too much blood drinking and sexing.
drinking and sexing. There's something really delightful to me about the fact that the part of the story
I knew best is totally is beyond a shadow of a doubt totally fabricated because it's
like a very sort of patriarchal idea that women will kill absolutely everyone just to
like keep looking young.
I feel like the reality of aging is that like you could acknowledge that it's hard and you
cannot like it and you don't have to embrace it. You can just sort of like, you know, give it kind
of a breast hello and pointedly not offer it a beverage when you let it in. But like it's so
unlikely that you're going to just become an unhinged murderer because of it. You know,
it's just almost everybody just figures out a way to deal with it. And I think that's really nice.
Exactly. And also, you know, you just kind of become more chill.
Like, I feel like at that time, it's like, you know,
here I am with all of my money. Let me just relax.
You know, like this getting older is so fun.
Like, I love being older.
You know, I love being in my 30s.
I love, like, talking to younger women and being like, oh, my God, yes, you're gonna have so love being in my 30s. I love like talking to younger women and being like,
oh my god, yes, you're gonna have so much fun in your 30s despite everything because like,
you will like, life is hard. But like, there's just a lack of cares that happen, the older you get.
And I just think that's neat.
I do too. Yeah, maybe my kind of final thought is that I was, and I wonder if this resonates
with you. I was talking to Megan Burbank who has done a couple episodes with us and is
also a good friend of mine, not to brag. And she was saying that like there's something
interesting about being in your thirties where like the social targets that you're supposed
to hit as a woman in America,. They do kind of stop around 30.
The goal is to sort of like, speaking very generally
according to sort of mass culture,
is to finish the supermarket suite by 30
and have the man, because of course it's always a man
according to culture, the very general kind I'm thinking of
that just seems to get injected into our brains via TV,
Inc. and government. And that once you finished accumulating stuff and collecting the complete
set that makes up quote unquote it all, that then the script just sort of runs out for you and you're
supposed to just sort of like maintain it. And I guess, you know, around menopause, there start being things for you to do
according to sort of a cultural timeline.
But really it's like, you just kind of go off the map
and there's something kind of great about that
because you're like, what should I be doing?
I don't know, I haven't been given the assignment.
Exactly, and I just feel like you sort of realize I'm tired and if I am ever gonna find peace, I
have to stop caring so much about what other people think.
Yeah.
And that was exactly what Elizabeth Bathory was thinking when they came to arrest her.
If they caught her in the middle of torturing a girl, doesn't that great evidence to bring
out where'd she go?
Yeah, good point.
Where is she?
Princess Weeks, you've done a couple of episodes with us in the past.
We talked about Rosa Parks earlier this year and we talked about Lizzie Borden last year.
I love it.
And where else can people find you? What have
you been up to? All of that.
Oh yeah. I've been on so many podcasts, but mostly I've been doing my YouTube. I had
a great video I really enjoyed making called Tall, Dark, and Racially Ambiguous talking
about the ways which tall, dark, and handsome and olive skin are used in literature in a way
that's supposed to signify whiteness, but to most modern audiences or diverse audiences
doesn't work that same way.
So it was just really fun seeing people comment about like,
this character is called tall, dark, and handsome.
Like, I was literally just watching Beauty and the Beast for like the billionth time.
And I forget that the Bimbets call Gaston a tall, dark, strong and handsome brute.
And I was just like, oh, it's everywhere.
It's everywhere.
So that was a really fun one.
And I think if I could pick anything I've done recently that I've really loved is that.
I also am a co-host on the PBS Books Readers Club, which has been a lot of fun.
You can check us out there on the YouTube channel.
And yeah, just living my best life,
trying very hard to just make my cat happy.
Oh my God, yeah.
Yeah, let's just have that be the goal, you know?
Let's just make the cats happy.
Yeah, Lola deserves it.
She's a good girl.
Oh, she just came and looked at me.
And that was our episode. Thank you so much for listening, thank you for learning, thank you for being here with us. As always we have bonus episodes if you want to hear more.
We just put out one on the two movie adaptations of The Stepford Wives. I got to talk to Sarah
Archer about that and a whole bunch of other stuff about the speed at which we may or may
not be replaced by robots. Always an interesting question. I had a great time. If you know
me, you know I love The Stepford Wives and I love talking about it with Sarah Archer.
So check that out if you want to. And of course, I've mentioned before,
we've got some live shows coming up. I'm going to be doing a collaborative event with American
Hysteria, my favorite moral panic debunking podcast, and with The Little Lies, Seattle's
premier Fleetwood Mac Tribute Act. And we're going to be in Portland and Seattle in December
and in San Francisco
and LA in January.
You can find a link with information in the show notes if you can join.
We would love to love to just make that experience together with you and see if we can summon
a ghost and if not, then what else we can summon.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for making the show possible.
Thank you just for continuing down the road with us.
Thank you to Nicole Ortiz for production assistance.
Thank you to Miranda Zichler for editing.
And thank you to Carolyn Kendrick for producing.
We'll see you in two weeks. you