You're Wrong About - Rosie Ruiz and the Marathon Women with Maggie Mertens
Episode Date: August 5, 2024Maggie Mertens tells us a tale of the first women who fought to run the marathon, and of one woman who decided to cut to the finish line. Find Maggie online here. Find Maggie's book Better Faster... Farther: How Running Changed Everything We Know About Women online here.Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show: You Are GoodLinks:https://maggiemertens.com/https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/maggie-mertens/better-faster-farther/9781643753355/https://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the Show.
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When I was young, I wanted to read about murder and now I want to read about game show scandals.
Welcome to You're Wrong About.
I'm Sarah Marshall and today we are talking with Maggie Mertens about women and the marathon.
One marathon in particular, one marathon scam
in particular, and the bigger question beyond that of why women had to work so hard to be
allowed to run long distances and unpacking a little bit of the culture that meant we didn't
have an Olympic marathon for women until 1984. I really loved doing this episode with Maggie.
I love talking about how American culture grapples
with the idea of women and strength and gender
and performance and how all of this comes together
in sporting events so much of the time.
That anytime we want something to just be about sports,
we're really bringing all of the baggage we have
as people
into it for better or for worse. And we learn so much about ourselves this way. And also
it's a great story.
As always, we have bonus episodes for you on Patreon and Apple Plus subscriptions. And
the one we just put out most recently is very close to my heart because I got to talk with Sarah Archer at length about both Rosemary's Baby, a fantastic novel, and the sequel to
Rosemary's Baby, Son of Rosemary.
And we had a wonderful time talking about it.
So if you want to learn more about what happened to Rosemary in 1999, I know I did then you can check that out there
And of course we have lots of past episodes our Britney Spears memoir club with Eve Lindley
Extended cuts of some past episodes including our George Michael series flowers in the attic
We talked about that last summer a lot of stuff over there for you to look at
Or you can spend your money on a whole lot of popsicles.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you for being here,
struggling through August with us.
Here's your show.
Welcome to your Wrong About,
the podcast where we take you
to the wide, wide world of sports,
and sometimes the scam, scam, scammy world
of sports as well. With me today is Maggie Mertens. Maggie, hello.
Hello, Sarah. Thank you for coming on.
Thanks for having me. It's really nice to be able to bring you on
for what I am thinking of as our Olympics episode, because my feeling about the Olympics
is that it like snuck up on me this year, like Michael Myers and Halloween. Like you
just, it seems like a normal day and you look over and there's the Olympics like three
yards away.
It's especially weird because the 2020 Summer Olympics were delayed for a year. And so it
has only been three years since the last Summer Olympics.
So I think a lot of people are feeling that way.
Yeah. So it was kind of that feeling of like missing a stair.
Yes, exactly.
And you're like, Whoa, I thought we had a little more time. And what so you just came
out with a book called Better, Faster, Farther, which is about, you know, I hate to even try
and give it a one line description because you've just been touring.
And I feel like you've been listening to people describe your book incorrectly for like two months or something.
So what is your book about in your opinion?
I mean, I like to say that the book is about women and running.
And then if people kind of seem at all interested, I'll say something else, which is that I actually think it's about gender and physical capability
and how we define gender through these ideas of what men and women can and cannot do.
And yeah, so it goes into a lot of different things, just how sport like influences society
and society influences sport and how a lot of that is just really tied up in these gender inequality
discussions as well.
And you talk about something that I find really interesting historically through my love of
Tonya Harding, which is how we police gender through sport.
And especially looking at women's sports, there is this kind of incredible continual
undercurrent of like lift weights but don't get bulky basically.
Like I thought a lot while reading your book
about the way the press describes figure skaters
and gymnasts and I'm thinking especially
of like Nadia Komanić where sometimes there is
an absolute fixation on talking about the tininess
of the female athlete.
It's like the loneliness of the long distance runner,
the tininess of the female athlete. It's like the loneliness of the long-distance runner the tininess of the female athlete and like what's
What's that about in your opinion? I mean, I think that's a hundred percent about
Keeping this gender binary intact as we allowed
allowed women to be take part in sports because there was like this idea that sports was for, you know,
defining masculinity and for proving how big and fast and strong men were. And of course,
like when we define men, we have to like define them in opposition. And so as women were like,
given opportunities to enter the sporting space, they had to conform to this ideal that
was like, okay, you can do this, but you have to keep looking super feminine.
And in so many cases that became like, okay, the opposite of what we think of as masculine,
which is small and frail and tiny.
And yeah, you see it and you still see it.
You know, like these, it's amazing that she's so, so little.
Women are just Marcel Vichelle.
Yes, exactly.
It's like the ideal woman is like, do you know what I use for a beanbag share?
A raisin.
As small as possible, but also, you know, fast and unbelievable and worthy of our attention,
you know?
Yeah.
And so we're going to talk today, your book is about kind of, you know, one of my descriptions
of it would be the history of women and running and this idea of like women can't run and
your chapters kind of are very cheekily like women can't run.
Well, they can run, but they can't run more than a few hundred yards.
Well, they can't run a mile.
Well, they can't, but only if they're white.
But well, they can't run a marathon.
Well, but they have to be cisgender.
And it's like, okay.
Yes.
And in this, you know, that we're in this moment now
of like suddenly people acting as if they care so much
about women and sports because
now we are defending gender by defending cis women because suddenly there's supposed to
be money in sports for them. That's the argument.
Yes, we must protect all of that money and attention that the female athletes are getting
from all of these people who are scared that it's going away.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so where should we begin?
This happens in April 1980.
So we're at the Boston Marathon.
The Boston Marathon has about 5,500 people running it in 1980, and around 500 of those
are women.
So that's like a very tiny percentage.
But also this is only like the third year at all that there are over 100 women participating.
So it's really kind of exponentially grown because the women's marathon in Boston wasn't
sanctioned until 1972.
So this is the eighth year that women are officially running the Boston Marathon, even
though the Boston Marathon has been around since 1897.
Which is incredible.
I was really shocked by that fact that it's been around since the newsies.
Yes, it's an extremely old thing.
But in those first years, it was very small.
It was tiny numbers of people,
less than 100 in a lot of cases, of these men who were kind of seen as freaks for wanting
to run 26 miles. It just seemed like, why would you know, kind of the turn of the sanctuary, the 19th sanctuary, I should specify.
No, no one was doing marathons. They basically invented the marathon in 1896 when they revived
the Olympic Games. And this was sort of a nod to like the Greeks. And there's this Greek
legend that a soldier ran from the Battle of Marathon back to Athens
to tell everyone that they'd won the battle.
In the legend, he drops dead after he has run this far.
Yeah, which the joke delivered to you on a silver platter by that is like, hmm, not great
advertisement for running a marathon.
Yes.
But what's funny is actually that never happened.
Historians now are like, oh, these stories kind of got confused.
And actually, this one runner actually did run, but he ran much farther.
He ran hundreds of miles, not just 26. And after the marathon battle, actually the whole army marched the 26 miles back to Athens.
So there's a lot of like misinformation just from the beginning.
Which is a better story.
Like if your army has won, you can probably take your time.
Yes.
And it's pretty impressive to like march 26 miles. I don't know.
Yeah, and you feel like that sounds like a lot more fun. There probably would have been
camaraderie. It implies that they're not sprinting the whole time. Yeah, they're drinking
wine out of their helmets.
There should be a movie about that.
It'll have Zac Efron in it.
Oh my gosh, if only.
So that's kind of also why it was really seen as not feminine.
I write in the book a lot about how distance was a really big hurdle, so to speak, for
women runners because it just was seen as too hard.
It was going to be too much on their bodies
and their uteruses might fall out
or they might not be able to have babies
or they might just fall down and not look very good
and we don't wanna have to see that.
But it was really considered like a very debilitating thing
to be a woman, to menstruate, to of course,
to be pregnant, all of those things.
And so that really kept men in this zone of believing
that like, well, we just don't wanna mess with that.
And we don't want anything that might come between
like us having our wives have babies.
So why would we allow them to do these other things
that might hurt that?
Which I realize we're not in a logical area here, but it's like, it's hard to imagine that
running 26 miles, which is like, is a lot of miles, but if you're conditioned for it,
is like a very thinkable amount compared to, you know, carrying and feeding a living creature
and eventually, you know, pushing an object the size of a
Christmas ham through a hole the size of a tangerine.
I know.
You just have to keep doing something until it's over.
Yes, exactly.
And there's a lot of recovery time and a lot of pain.
So yeah, 1980, we're at the Boston Marathon.
So Boston kind of sees that it happens in the Olympics and they take it on as their
own.
It's kind of one of those quirky Boston things.
Have you been to a marathon, Sarah?
Once when I was like 11, my mom and I had to like walk through the current of the Honolulu
Marathon route.
So I guess I remember that moment. It was very sweet. had to like walk through the current of the Honolulu Marathon route.
So I guess remember that moment.
It was very sweet.
And she was like, now we can say we've run in the Honolulu Marathon.
I was like, wow, really?
Which actually probably fits with our theme quite well.
That is so amazing.
But no, I haven't, I haven't watched one.
I've spectated at a lot of dogsled races, which I imagine is similar,
partly in the sense that you were at a fixed point and the athletes are going past you.
But yeah, but what are marathons like as a scene?
Because it takes place over such a long distance, right? You can't see the whole thing. You
have to kind of choose where you want to stand, you know,
what mile you want to be at. And the thing about Boston is because it has such a like
strong history because like Bostonians feel very connected to it. Like it's considered
a holiday. Like people don't work that day often and there's people lining the course the whole way. But for sure, there's all these different checkpoints
where people are just cheering and yelling
and dancing the whole time.
And it's a very intense feeling.
I remember the first time I saw the New York City Marathon
when I was living in New York, I burst into tears
because it's just like a very beautiful,
supportive environment in general, right?
And you're just seeing all of these people
who are like doing something very, very hard
and all of these other people who are just there
to like cheer them on and say good job.
And I think that's just a very nice part of humanity
that we don't see a lot, you know,
especially for people who aren't like professional athletes or something like that.
Like it can really be anyone.
And in Boston, the thing, the other thing that makes Boston kind of special is you have
to qualify for Boston.
So you have to actually be a pretty good runner to run in Boston.
They have a time cutoff.
This is actually kind of controversial these days,
but they have this very kind of like elite sensibility.
And the people who run Boston, who are like, you know,
in that elite category and are, you know,
potential winners are pretty well known.
And even in 1980, this was pretty much the case.
So it's like Anchorage and the Iditarod, really.
It's it's like it's their thing.
Yes. Yeah. And so there is like there are favorites.
There are people that people get to know, you know, throughout the years, if they've won
before or if they're trying again or things like that.
You know, thinking inevitably about the Boston Marathon bombing.
Yeah. The way you're describing it, it feels like,
of course, you would target a large event.
That's something that kind of makes sense in a general way.
But from what you're saying, it also
feels like this is just a profound way of attacking
the heart of a city as well.
Totally.
So this is the year.
It's 1980. And the man who wins is named Bill Rogers.
He crosses the finish line in two hours and 12 minutes. This was like a big deal because
this was actually his fourth win of the Boston Marathon and his third win in a row.
Wow, he's the Sonia Henny of the Boston Marathon.
Exactly. He was like an Olympian.
He looks exactly like you would think like a marathon running man would look in 1980,
like very tall and thin and like kind of, you know, nerdy looking with floppy hair.
And so he had like this great, great finish.
And then there's maybe like 20 minutes go past and a woman crosses the finish line.
She's the first woman to cross. Her name is Rosie Ruiz and she has dark brown hair,
a pixie cut. She has these like very beautiful shaped eighties eyebrows. And at Boston, when
you win, you get a laurel wreath put on your head because again,
they love the Greeks.
Yeah, that's so adorable.
You know, and the medal. And so she gets the laurel wreath on her head, she gets a medal
on and people are congratulating her, but people are also a little bit confused. And
I would love to ask you here, Sarah, what you know about Rosie Ruiz.
Well, so this was kind of the first I ever heard
of the Boston Marathon was a story about her.
Because I remember, I think my mom had friends
who I remember they had lived in Boston at one time.
And so they told the legend of Rosie Ruiz to me
when I was 11 or something again about how basically the story goes that she had, I like she, I
want to say she did by taking, taking the T to the finish line and getting there somehow.
And then just like running the last little bit and then being like, hello, I won. I think there is something that people generally
and Americans especially find very charming
about extremely brazen attempts at cheating.
We're like very angered by it, but we love it.
I remember when I would teach writing classes
showing this clip that I found
and I forget what excuse I had for showing it,
but I was kind of talking about media
and sort of the news and et cetera.
News is a first draft.
And so she's being interviewed by a woman
who's covering the marathon for some local news outlet,
who I think is also a runner herself and who is like,
well, you've improved your time
from the New York City Marathon by 26 minutes.
How'd you do that?
And you have the sense that she's like,
yeah, does not know what to say
and is not improvising well at that point.
And then it's like, and I remember she was like,
well, to improve your time by 26 minutes,
you must have been doing a lot of interval training.
And she's like, what's interval training?
It's a powerful cringe clip, I guess, really. And I think, yeah, it's I find it fascinating to
think about I think there are many possible motives for pretending to finish a marathon,
let alone win a marathon that you aren't able to pretend to do something that you can't actually
do. I always find that
interesting, I guess. And I guess the rest of us do as well.
Yeah. And what was the kind of tone? I'm curious about like your mom's friends. Like, what
was the tone of the story?
I think like absolutely a comedy, which I think these stories, you normally learn them
this way that it's this great farce about this like very brazen cheater who
Got away with it somehow but not for very long
so yeah, so what happens is she crossed the line and she was you know in the middle of kind of being congratulated and and
sort of immediately
there's sort of like I want to say like a game of telephone going on because again,
the way that you tracked the marathon at that point, like they didn't have chip technology,
which is what they use today, which is like everyone's number, like the bib that you
pin to your shirt, everyone's number has like a tracking chip in it.
You can track them live, you know, you can like go on the internet and see where everyone
is. You never are unsure of if somebody's about to come in on the last mile or not.
But at this time, they didn't have that kind of technology.
And so what they did was they had certain checkpoints throughout the race where race
workers would have a clipboard and a pen and write down like the top three to five
like men and women that they saw crossing the checkpoint so that they could kind of be prepared
for you know who was going to win but also like you know add to the race report stories after
everything's over and see like when did somebody get in the lead,
all of that. But one of the things about this being 1980 and, you know, only the eighth
time that women were running the Boston Marathon is that the women's marathon was still sort
of seen as a joke. Like it wasn't taken as serious for sure.
It's like the implication is that it's like when you put like sunglasses on a golden retriever.
Yes.
Yes.
And so some of the criticism is that, you know, these checkpoints weren't really paying
attention to the women.
Like, maybe they just missed her, you know.
They're just like, who cares?
They all look the same to me.
Yes.
All I see is tits on legs, Chatty.
One of the people that actually is paying the closest attention is Catherine Switzer.
You might know that name because she was the woman in probably the most famous photograph
of the Boston Marathon, which is in 1967.
She ran the marathon as a registered entrant using her initials before
women were allowed to run officially. And one of the race directors,
Jacques Semple, who is still a race director in the year 1980, he actually goes after her and tries
to get the number off of her shirt. And it looks very menacing
and the photos are pretty shocking. And I think a really great example of like the physical
restraint that you know, women were kind of under in terms of not being allowed into certain
events.
It's so kind of classic Victorian in terms of like, we have to protect femininity as
a concept by attacking this woman personally.
So what Katherine Switzer has done in the years since then is really become, you know,
she actually wasn't like the best runner.
She wasn't like going to be an elite marathoner.
But what she did was become a huge advocate.
And in fact, was one of those people
that because of her notoriety, because of what she had done,
she really used that to lift up other women marathoners
and say, look, we're out here.
Why don't we have these opportunities?
And was one of the people who started
a group that tried to get the Women's Olympic Marathon started.
And what she ended up doing,
because the IOC and World Athletics were not super,
they didn't really hear those requests.
And we're just basically wrote them off as,
this isn't something people wanna watch,
or no one will be interested, this isn't something people want to watch or, you know, no one
will be interested. There aren't enough women in the world who are running marathons anyway.
We won't have the athletes. And at this time, like, actually, the longest Olympic event
for women runners was 1500 meters, which is a mile. So that was the extent that if you
wanted to be an Olympian and you were a distance
runner, like you had to run one mile, which is really not very far for distance runners.
And so there was just a huge disparity there.
And so one of the things Katherine Switzer did was she started an entire group of women's
races around the world.
She put on three different international marathons.
She put on all of these different road races to kind of introduce women's road racing to many different countries to prove that there would be women interested,
to prove that we would be able to have athletes there and just to kind of like, I guess, improve access to women's
running and women's racing for women all over the world.
So she knew so many of these women and she knew who the favorites were.
And she was also tracking, she was because she was there as an NBC correspondent and
she was at the checkpoints and she was paying attention and
she followed the top two runners.
The person who was in front was named Jacqueline Gereau.
She's Canadian, French Canadian, and this was kind of her, it was going to be like kind
of a big moment for her.
The other woman was Patti Lyons, who had been
kind of like a mainstay in the Boston Marathon. She was a local, people really loved her,
and she was very good. But Jacqueline was like way ahead. I think she was like at least
a mile ahead of Patti at certain points. And Catherine, at various checkpoints, you know,
like made eye contact with Jacqueline and like held up one finger like you're in
first place. So Catherine Switzer is actually the woman that that you remember from the
interview that you showed your students. Oh my god. Wow. Because she's like, this seems
super weird. I don't know who this woman is. She asks a camera operator to come with her and
I guess the camera operator was like, I really don't have much tape left. I don't have a
lot of tape. And she was like, do you have a little tape? And he was like, yeah, I have
a little tape. And she's like, okay, come with me. But she knows that something's fishy
and so she starts asking those questions of Rosie Ruiz. to? I don't know. Have you been doing a lot of heavy intervals? Someone else asked me
that. I'm not sure what intervals are. What are they? Intervals are track workouts that
are designed to make your speed improve dramatically. And if you went from a 256 to 231, one would
normally expect that you'd do a lot of speed work. Is someone coaching you or advising
you? No, I advise myself. Well, It was a fantastic performance, Rosie. Congratulations. Rosie Ruiz,
the mystery woman winner. We missed her at all our checkpoints. She came through the
finish in a fantastic 2.31. We have to confirm that time at this point, but she was way ahead
of a world-class field here today in the Boston Marathon. Thank you, Rose. Thank you. Yes. What's an interval? I just love that she asks it back.
Yes. It's like, just say yes. Say, yeah, intervals, sure.
I was just going to say the other thing that happens in there is that Rosie starts sneezing.
The way Catherine Switzer writes about it later is like, she's just had these like nervous sneezes.
And I was like, is nervous sneezing a real thing?
Right?
Sometimes you're nervous and you've got flowers on your head.
Although I don't know if they those are.
This reminds me of the I watched I got sick recently and found on YouTube the perfect
documentary for being sick in bed, which is major Fraud, which was a Bashir-hosted
special on this scandal on the British who wants to be a millionaire, where this guy cheated
by having someone in the audience coughing to indicate the correct answer.
Oh, yes. I feel like I remember that.
When I was young, I wanted to read about murder, and now I want to read about game show scandals.
Yes, so all of this is very suspicious of course.
The other part that is very suspicious is that she has crossed the line in two hours
and 31 minutes.
Which seems fast to me.
Extremely fast and sometimes women were jumping into their second marathon and realizing,
oh, I'm really good at this.
But often they were like, they were working with like a running club or a coach or and
Rosie Ruiz, like if she had crossed into 31, that would have also been like the third fastest marathon ever
run by a woman.
The other person who really starts to question her is Bill Rogers, who was the male winner
that year.
We got to start calling people male athletes more often.
I think that would really freak out men.
He's a male football player.
Bill Rogers is like, she didn't look like a runner.
She had too much fat on her legs.
A lot of marathoners are kind of on the thin side, but I found that like very shocking.
He says, point blank, like she had too much body fat, but he also says she didn't appear
as fatigued.
She wasn't, she didn't have
like sweat stains on her face or anything, like no like, you know, those like salty marks.
She didn't know what intervals were, she didn't know what splits were. And he was like, there's
just no way. And he knew the other women who were coming in, you know, in second and third.
And he was like, there's no way this girl did this and improved this
much to beat these women who are like really world class athletes.
Do you think that there's an element of like, people having this idea that marathon runners
have a particular body type because that's who tries to run a marathon anyway? I don't
know. I mean, your book gets into quite a lot about the fixation on how runners
are supposed to look and how that fixation on a certain body type completely undermines
women's ability to run a lot of the time.
Yeah, exactly. Your body can have a lot of terrible medical and physical effects from
not fueling enough, especially when you're
someone like a long distance runner who's expelling a lot of energy. And you know, that's
still a thing is that we kind of look at people and assume that we know what they're good
at. It gets kind of repeated a lot that she's not, she didn't look exactly like a runner.
And it's like, well, sure. but also she wasn't seen at any of the
checkpoints and that's probably even more suspicious.
That's probably the suspicious part.
And yeah the excuse too that one of the things Rosie says because they say oh we didn't we
missed you you know you were like this mystery runner because we didn't see you at any of
the checkpoints and her kind of immediate response is, oh, you probably didn't notice because I have short hair. You probably thought
I was a man. You probably didn't see that I was a woman, right?
Good save, Rosie.
One of the articles that I read, you know, kind of mentioned this and they were like, She is 5'7", so maybe she was mistaken for a man. Oh my god!
Ah, this giant test striding through the streets.
Makes sense.
Yes, with the fat on her thighs.
You know, it's just like, right, like female runners are supposed to like fall through
the subway grate if they're not careful.
Yes, exactly, exactly.
Exactly.
So also, you know, this weird thing, but she's wearing this t-shirt and she's wearing a t-shirt
that has the old Adidas logo on it.
It also says the letters M-T-I and it's this kind of like thick cotton t-shirt.
Massachusetts Institute of Ichnology. It actually stands for Metal Traders
Institute, which is where she worked. It's the company she worked for, which is a metals
trading company in New York. They're on D&L. Yeah. But the thing about this shirt is it's
like one of those like ringer tees. It's like very like thick cotton and
Most people would not run a marathon in something like that
Especially like an elite runner and it's only wet kind of like down the very front
You know later someone will say oh she just like took a glass of water and dumped it on her head
so she looked sweaty and
And the whole thing is like if you've run a marathon, your whole body is going to be sweaty. You are going to be very sweaty.
It's 26 miles.
This is also springtime in Boston.
One of the things that happens is the next day, the next morning, she goes on the local
morning Boston news show with Bill Rogers. that happens is the next day, the next morning, she goes on kind of like the local morning
Boston news show with Bill Rogers. And she does an interview, they do the interview together
and Rogers kind of like calls her out. Oh, wow.
One of the interviewers is like, Rosie, like this was such a guy and like such a huge improvement.
How did you make this improvement? And she,, oh, I know that some people are saying,
I must not have really done it, but of course I did it.
And Rogers cuts her off and is like,
it is a pretty remarkable improvement.
I think Rosie's gonna have to figure this one out
for herself, gives her the like,
okay, we don't believe you. To her face.
He gives her the sure Jan.
Yeah.
But Jan, you don't have any friends.
He starts telling the press like, oh, I'm super skeptical. I don't really believe she ran it.
She doesn't look like a runner. She didn't look tired. And the race directors too are saying like, ah, this doesn't look great. We're not sure what
happened. We're gonna we're gonna mount an investigation. Three days later, there's a press
conference that she gives. And she's just like sobbing. And it feels very fake to me. Like,
very like, why are you just why are you digging yourself this hole?
She says, I had no idea I was first.
I'm happy for myself.
This is a big accomplishment for me.
I'm sad such controversy is going on.
I really don't know why.
I ran the race.
I would not say anything different.
I'm upset.
I've been crying a lot,
but it's not up to me to clear myself
because I ran the race in spite of everything
I'm glad I came
And she's like asked questions during this press conference like oh what was like?
What was your favorite part along the route and she's kind of like I saw a lot of
buildings and churches
But the one thing that she does do that I think is really smart is she kind of politicizes it. And she says, I do not believe that there's enough coverage
for women in any of the races. I believe that maybe after this, whether you prove me guilty
or not, which I am not, there will be more coverage of women
crossing the finish line during 26 miles."
Well, that would be nice.
And then she's like, I'll take a lie detector test.
I'll submit to anything.
I'll run another marathon.
Honey, pump the brakes a little.
The press is insane for this story.
It's just good news to quote Peep Show.
Yes.
The Daily News, the New York Daily News, offered her a thousand dollars to run a marathon distance.
Oh wow.
And she said, I choose not to run.
She said it was too close to when she had just run this other marathon.
She was too tired. She needed some time to recover.
Oh, fair enough. She is an elite athlete after all.
Yeah, yeah. And so it's like the amount of journalists that you wish were covering,
like the 2025 project right now.
Oh, boy. That amount of reporters are like unleashed on this story in a way
that like they are tracking down her boss, they are tracking down her family, they are
tracking down her roommates and her, the security guards at her building. Like every possible
source that might know something about Rosie Ruiz is being contacted by the press.
No, I think that that is, you know,
like without a doubt a traumatic experience.
Yes, exactly.
Aside from the reason why and everything else around it.
Yes, she does talk for like the first week or so.
She's giving interviews, she's answering questions.
And what she says is-
She's like, I'm gonna
un-paint myself out of this corner, I just know it.
And she tells everyone that her boss at the Metal Traders, Inc., he offered to pay her
way to Boston because she qualified for Boston from her New York City Marathon time last
fall.
And that's why she was wearing the MTI shirt.
This one dude named Steve Marek, who is a president of a running club in Westchester,
New York, kind of like comes to her aid.
And he's like, also known as a kind of a big weirdo in the running world.
He got sort of famous because he started running marathons in a Superman costume.
Why not?
Why not?
So a little bit eccentric, and he just kind of becomes
her kind of like press person, her supporter.
It's a really interesting relationship,
but he's also like, I've got witnesses.
She was there.
I can show you.
You know, like we know we have evidence.
And it's really coming to her defense.
Release the emails.
They find Rosie's aunt and her aunt is a professor at Wayne State College in Nebraska.
They interview her aunt and her aunt says, you know, I really hope that this
controversy resolves and that she did win. What she says is, you know, she's been a girl
with a lot of problems in this country because of the separation from her father. Rosie was
born in Cuba and this is during the Cuban revolution and essentially in 1962, Rosie left Cuba, like many, many, many children left Cuba
under Fidel Castro, because everyone was very scared. There was this idea that like children
weren't going to belong to their parents anymore. There was actually a ton of unaccompanied minors
who were sent to Miami. And this is where Rosie grew up.
It's a little unclear whether her mom came at that point
or not, but her father definitely stayed in Cuba
and she never saw him again because, you know,
the borders were closed.
There was not any way to kind of maintain connection
that way.
When after Rosie had graduated from high school,
she actually went and lived with her aunt in Nebraska.
Her aunt got her into Wayne State College.
She took classes for about a year or two.
It's a little bit unclear,
but like she was like a music student.
She had like professor,
former professors give interviews that like,
oh, she was great.
She was gonna be like a music teacher and we all really liked her. And one of the things that the press
takes away from this is like, oh, she says she's a graduate of Wayne State, but she actually
didn't even graduate. She was like half a semester short. I know. And the other thing the aunt says
is she actually returned,
the reason she didn't graduate is
because she went back to Florida
to take care of her mother who had cancer,
which is also not 100% sure if that's the case or not,
but also like, you know.
But she did end up, you know, in New York,
she was working as a secretary for this metal trading firm.
And she was living in this big apartment building near Times Square and they're trading metal.
So it's like a Wall Street kind of firm.
And there's this whole culture there that I imagine is probably very masculine too. And it kind of comes out later
that the reason that she said, oh, my boss said he would pay for me to go to Boston is
because he was a big runner and he actually like was encouraging a lot of his employees
to run. And so there's sort of this question of like, was she just getting into this all to like, be one of the boys to like, you know, prove she could to her boss?
People have done worse things to try and get random men to love them, you know?
Right? And you know, there's another article that said, oh, this this building she lives in is actually supposed to be only for members of like the actors
union. And she's not an actor, but maybe she like so maybe this whole thing is a ploy that
she's like really just like an actress and this is a big sham and Wow, getting blown
out of proportion. And it's like every little thing becomes a headline. It comes out that she has written some bad checks. She actually has a lawyer because she's written about 10
bad checks and she's had to kind of like get them settled.
Can I also say I know that like writing bad checks can like, sometimes it's like intentional
fraud, which obviously you shouldn't do if you can avoid it, you know, generally.
But also, like, I am always over drawing my account now that banking is easier.
And like in the past, I would have also just had a bad memory and fucked up with greater
consequences, you know, so it's like it's a very, as a criminal charge, that one is
very elastic in terms of just kind of, you know,
using it to imply intent where there might not be. But in this case, you know, I'm not
averse to believing she might have been doing something on purpose.
I mean, I agree, though. I think it's kind of like, okay, it's not murder.
You know, right. It's like, right, are we asking the right questions maybe?
Although those do support the idea of a pattern, but you know.
I think the other thing that happens is this tone of jokiness.
There's a newspaper that holds a limerick contest for people to send in their best Rosie
Ruiz limericks of how she really ran the marathon.
And the New York Times editorial page is like, well, this is something that's actually entertaining
that came from the world of running.
And there's kind of this undercurrent of running is so boring, at least something interesting
happened, which is very funny.
Jimmy Breslin, who's like, was an incredible journalist and columnist,
and just he was like a Pulitzer winner.
He was livid.
He wrote this like column about how like she should be arrested.
And like all of this, like he's like, I'm like this like liberal softy but like
this really gets to me because I'm a runner and like one of my like greatest
achievements is being seen as a runner and running a marathon and like cheating
at this just like really pisses me off and it's like a very weird like super
angry undercurrent to this whole thing.
And it does kind of start to remind me
of the like save women's sports people of today
is like none of you people were paying attention before.
So like, why are you mad about this?
Why are you mad about something
that you didn't ever think about until today?
Exactly.
The head of the New York Roadrunners,
who is the group that runs the New York Marathon,
is a little bit concerned because the way that she qualified was at the New York Marathon.
Then, because there's so much press coverage, this woman in New York comes forward with
information about the New York Marathon. Her name was Susan Morrow and she was a
photographer in New York and she happened to have met Rosie on the subway during the New York City
Marathon that fall. And she was wearing the number and she looked, you know, like a marathon runner.
And so they started talking and Rosie told Susan on the subway train that,
oh, she had to drop out of the race after about 10 miles.
She had a twisted ankle.
She was like, she was taking the train to the finish line
so she could go to the medical tent.
This is the subway story that people are often, like,
it gets a little confusing
because there were two marathons in fact.
Right. We just mash stuff together in memory.
And so she gets to the finish line at Central Park and this woman, Susan, kind of walks
with her. They actually like exchanged phone numbers and they were gonna like, this is
how you met people, I guess in 1980 1980 but they were gonna go have lunch together and
like be friends. The way that Susan remembers this is like she got to see actually like the women's
winner of the New York Marathon that year who was Greta Waits who's like an incredible like
historical figure in women's marathon running and held the world record at this time and Susan was
like it was actually like this extremely amazing moment in my life because I got to witness it like
from a very up close. And the reason she was up close is because she was walking with Rosie
who kept telling the police and the barricades like, Oh, I'm a runner. I'm getting, I'm getting
to the medical tent. Like, let me buy. Wow. Later, some reporting will say
that Rosie went to the medical tent
and they kind of like took her number down there
and gave her a finish time.
Like she told them basically like,
oh yeah, I've finished.
Now I need some medical attention.
It's not totally clear how that happened,
whether it was her trying to do it
or whether it was a marathon, you know.
Or whether she kind of lucked into it
a little bit potentially.
Exactly, but what did happen is she did the next day
go to check her like official finish time.
So some people took that to mean like she knew that she was like,
tried to get the real finish time, even though she hadn't finished the New York
Marathon.
And the New York Marathon officials actually ended up watching the finish line
tape and they did not see Rosie cross a finish line.
So they invalidated her time on April
25th. So this was 96 hours after she had finished Boston. She was still considered the winner
at Boston. And New York said actually she never finished New York.
It's a very short lived reign.
You know, Boston has been during this intervening time reviewing all of these photographs from
the event. They say that they looked over 10, these photographs from the event. They say that they
looked over 10,000 photographs from the event, never saw Rosie. And eight days after the marathon
has occurred, they officially take away her title. And they ask if she would give the medal back.
And she says, no, I'm not giving the medal back. If you're going to cheat, then like just go all the way. Be a handful.
Keep the medal. They can make a new one.
They did. They did. They made a new one.
Nobody wants a used medal, you know.
She does give one more interview in the days after this.
And she is just 100 percent gung ho. Of course course I did it. All of this is a sham. And
they just keep kind of like bringing up these inconsistencies. And she just does what she
did in that first interview, which is like, what? What's that? Oh, okay. You know, and
the other thing that this article brings up is that they've found medical records of
Rosie's which show that she had a brain tumor removed in 1973 and another surgery in 1978
to have a plate put in.
The reason this is a little bit relevant is that she actually in her application to the New York Marathon that fall of 79, she was actually
late registering, but she asked for a medical exemption because she said she was dying of
brain cancer. And that's why she was allowed in even though she was beyond the registration deadline.
They actually have her medical records supposedly.
They show them to a neurosurgeon.
They have him assess.
Supposedly what they say is she had been in a car accident, she had some head trauma,
and because of that they found a benign tumor in her brain
that was like the size of a tangerine and that was 1973. Yeah, a pretty large tumor. So she did
have that removed. I can't believe I brought up tangerines earlier. You just had a feeling.
Gosh, I mean, that's like a tangerine is I mean, that's really that seems so big.
So in 1973, she had that removed in 1978.
She had this plate put in this doctor who looks over these records for them says really
this shouldn't have caused anything to happen to her.
She would have been fine, she wouldn't have had brain damage, she's not like this shouldn't
have caused anything.
But also no, she never had cancer.
And whatever she wrote on that form was probably a lie.
So in this article, they literally diagnose her as a sociopath.
Great. Great journalism. Love it.
They like went to a psychologist at Oberlin and were like, what kind of person just tells
lies like this?
Everyone. Americans. That's who.
It's very weird to read because then it like at the end of the article is like, this is what a sociopath is,
and they print the ways that you can identify a sociopath.
Karly Coming up next, Ronald Reagan. Seems nice,
seems great.
Samarra She also tells this reporter at the time that
she's on a paid leave from her job at the metal trading firm because her boss told
her that he wanted her to rest and get ready for her next race.
And apparently, that is not what actually happened.
He was pretty concerned about her lying and was basically like had to fire her after
a few weeks off.
She was also like signed up for another marathon in Vermont that was going to be kind of like
under the radar, we're not going to tell the press.
And then she pulled out of it right before because she said she had an injury.
And so she kind of disappears for a time after that.
Yeah, good for her really.
So Switzer actually really took a great experience away from this, which like what she started
telling everyone was, you know, really, you should all be running the women's race better
than you have been.
Like, clearly, you're not running this race well enough.
At the checkpoints, people really need to be paying attention.
What happens with Garou, who is my little French-Canadian, like, love at this point,
they call her back to Boston, and they give her her own medal. They have a little banquet for her
and they stage like a photo op of her
crossing the finish line.
And they like put the tape back up
and they bring in like people to stand and cheer.
And in every interview, like she is so gracious,
even today, like she she is so gracious, even today. Like, she is in her 70s, and she's just, like, still, this was probably worse for her than
it was for me.
Like, she said, like, yes, I wish she would have apologized at some point, I wish she
would have come clean, but also I'm sure this was probably pretty bad for her.
So I wanted to, like, kind of take a break here from her story and just sort of pull
back and look at why this was so fascinating to the media for so long. Because really when
we look at women's marathons at the time, any coverage of it might appear for like a
day, like the Boston winner might get one little paragraph
of the women's race in this, you know,
in the coverage of who won.
Even today, you know, looking back at the people
who did make big headlines like Bobby Gibb
when she snuck into the marathon
or Catherine Switzer herself, you know,
when she registered and was pushed out.
Like those stories didn't last that long.
You know, it was maybe a day
or two of media attention. And the other thing that I started to notice in these articles
was these mentions that men cheated all the time at marathons.
Men cheat? No.
I know. I found this entire article when they were in the midst of like, did Rosie do it
or not. There was a whole separate article about some man named Michael Wheeler who would
serially do this. He would register to these huge marathons. And the way that he would
get in is he would use a name of a different Michael
who was like an elite runner or like a known runner.
That's brilliant because we all know there's like infinity Michaels out there.
And he did this for Boston, he did this for New York, he did this at the Orange Bowl Marathon.
Perhaps a Sarah could do the same, but you know, those glory days are over. So everyone's
microchipped.
It's too hard. Well, he would often not run them. He would do the thing that Rosie did, which is
jump in at a certain point. And people started to like recognize him as the guy who jumped in.
And it's just very funny to me that like, okay, that guy, nobody knows Michael's name, but we all made Rosie
Ruiz into this decades-long joke.
Also the race director of the New York Marathon is quoted in one of these stories saying,
oh yeah, we had six people caught this year for cutting the course, 18 for wearing another
runner's number, 12 for giving their numbers to somebody else,
two using false names. And it's just like, okay, this is just a thing that has happened
in these races that are so huge and, you know, kind of on a mass scale of every man humanity,
you know?
What do you think motivates people to cheat in marathons? I mean, I realize there's like a lot
of different potential motivation, but like what what occurs to you when you think about it? Or,
you know, to cheat to cheat more broadly, but like marathons in particular seem like an interesting
thing to cheat at because people are so impressed by it, you know, it's such a kind of status symbol,
it would seem to me. Exactly. I think I think for sure it's probably there's probably for a lot of people a status thing
involved.
For Rosie too, it was like being able to go back to work the next day and say like, you
know, I ran the Boston Marathon was probably what she was looking for, you know, and is
often what a lot of other people are trying to say that they did, something that was,
especially at this time, still not done by very many people. It was a pretty, kind of
like a superhuman feat. You could feel like you accomplished and you would probably get
a little bit of social boost from that. But I don't know. I mean, it does feel like if you're gonna
do it, why not just try to do it in some ways. But also like, yeah, if it's open to like
anyone that signs up and you can get away with it. Like maybe some people like trying
to figure out how to get away with things too. I think that might be part of it Yeah, something I've been trying to live by more lately is the idea that like small finite
Accomplishments make humans really happy, you know, like I grew some potatoes this year
Some tiny little potatoes and it like brought me a lot of joy to eat my tiny potatoes literally small potatoes
oh my god. And so like if she was actually to like
start running, then she would probably end up like doing a little like 5k or something.
And I would hope that like that would actually be fulfilling in a way that like,
because I think people who like embark on these cons
when like it's not for gain, it's for prestige,
like I think it's something that you can probably
need to keep escalating because you're never actually
fulfilled by it because it's not yours and you know it isn't.
You know, and also I do want to point out like she's,
she's a woman who, who got away with a con.
And I think people typically are more fascinated
in women doing things like this.
On a broader sort of male-driven cultural level, I think in a way like women pulling
cons is appealing the same way women running is where it's like, well golly, I can't believe
she the little lady pulled that off.
And also to point out, she was Cuban, and this is a very, like Boston is a very, like
even today, people talk about how it's not very diverse.
It's like, you know, has this very kind of New England-y, WASP-y vibe.
To be fair, like the road race is very white, but you know, potato, potata, really.
Yeah.
Exactly. Exactly. And she was an immigrant. She had a bit of
an accent. It also turns out that she's queer, like that's confirmed later in life. But,
you know, I think there's kind of this maybe outsider ness to her that does make, you know,
the media but society at large, white men lie and pull fraud all the
time and get away with it, right?
And we just kind of let it happen.
Yes, it's called Wall Street.
And so I thought I'd get back to Rosie here and sort of what happens in these post marathon
years because she continues to receive so much scrutiny and there is some crazy shit that happens in her life
Hmm, I bet you know, this doesn't exactly help a person's employment prospects. I don't
Well speaking of which her old boss gets interviewed years later and
Kind of tells the whole story and you know earlier there had been reports that he
of tells the whole story. And earlier there had been reports
that he offered to pay for her to go to Boston
when he found out she qualified.
And this was kind of all her trying to impress him.
And he gives this pretty extensive interview
12 years later, or no, 16 years later,
and says that actually the office was
so excited when she won. She came back wearing the Laurel crown into the office was so excited when she won.
She came back wearing the Laurel crown into the office.
Everyone was so thrilled for her.
He hadn't paid for her to go, but he had said,
please wear the t-shirt.
He described the vibe of the office
that year as we were like young and fun and
runners and this was kind of like something we all talked about was like
a running and that she was like a girl trying to break through and so that
makes me think like okay she was probably in a fairly male office
especially thinking it's finance what was she she doing? You know, what was her
motivation for saying she was doing this stuff? And apparently when she got back and then,
you know, these questions start coming out about what she had done. He actually offers
her. He says, I will give you paid leave to go train for a marathon and just finish it.
I don't care what your time is. Just finish it.
It's a very Jimmy Carter thing to do, honestly. Right. Yes.
I, yeah. And then she kind of comes back a couple of weeks later and is like,
Oh, I've got a bad ankle. I got, I got an injury. I can't run anymore.
And he's like, Oh, well, where were you? Where were you training?
She says I was training in Montauk. Well, that's where he lives and he runs. And he's like, well, well, where were you? Where were you training? She says I was training in Montauk.
Well, that's where he lives and he runs and he's like, well, I never saw you out there.
And she just kind of does the thing like what's an interval sort of responses and like, catch
me if you can.
No, really, please catch me.
I'm jogging very slowly.
So she gets fired.
He says it's not because of Boston.
It's because you're lying to me and I can't really
trust you and I need to trust you because we're a financial firm.
I mean kind of a novel concept in finance, but yeah, I appreciate it generally.
He should be like, we are promoting you.
You are fantastic. So two years later she's working for a real estate firm in New York and she actually gets
caught stealing $60,000 in cash and checks from the firm and ends up in jail for a week
and she gets sentenced to five years of probation.
The next year she moves back to Florida. She is arrested at an airport hotel with two other women for trying to sell two kilos of
cocaine to undercover agents.
And a couple years later, she actually gets married to a Colombian man, which lasts for
about a year and a half.
She told someone later that they divorced because she was too liberal for him, which lasts for about a year and a half. She told someone later that they divorced
because she was too liberal for him, which I think is funny quote. But one thing she
got out of the marriage was that she changed her name. So she changed it to Rosie Vivas.
She took his name and ended up being moving to South Florida. She says to be closer to
her mother who had Alzheimer's and was living in a nursing home.
In 1996, the Boston Globe did this huge investigation on her and this giant feature story, which
is a little weird, right?
Sixteen years after this had happened.
I was wondering if you wanted to read a bit of the article.
Of course I would.
Ruiz makes sure she was never to speak again publicly, although her story, rich fodder
for the TV tabloids, could bring the video cams and strobe lights to her apartment door
now that her whereabouts had been printed here.
Her roommate clearly was distressed at being found.
How did you know my name?
She said when she came to the gate of the courtyard that leads to the apartment
store, you've talked with her brother.
Did her brother tell you where she lived?
Isn't that sound like threatening and scary?
There's a sort of changing ethic and journalism that I find very interesting
about, like, what, how much of a right does the press have to bother people? And that's like a very
interesting conversation to be have. But I do think that like, it's hard to see an argument
where like in 1996, it's worth right hunting someone like a fox in the forest.
The other person who kind of changes their story is Steve Merrick, who was the Superman guy who was kind of defending
Rosie against the press at the time. And he actually tells the Globe in 96 that she actually
admitted to him that she didn't run the race a few months afterwards. And this is the only
time anyone ever says that she had admitted it.
What's interesting though is he says, I would still defend her, you know, if it was all the same,
because she just needed someone like on her side and he could tell that she
needed someone on her side.
Yeah. Guilty people need a defense. And I do think that like, you know,
in terms of becoming a tabloid sort of just the person of the moment,
and I think the medium has changed, but of just the person of the moment, and
I think the medium has changed, but the mechanism is still basically the same today, except
that we go through more people faster.
Is that like the, I think the punishment basically never fits the crime because people achieve
this kind of notoriety by doing something that is like maybe, you know, and I'm talking
about not serious crimes, but likes and cheating scandals and someone
doing something that really is mostly just epically a bad idea.
We're like, what were they thinking?
And it's like, well, they probably weren't thinking that well about any of it for whatever
reason.
And so in that case, it's like us treating them like a war criminal in terms of the way
we talk about them isn't isn't going to help.
You know, like you don't have to think that they didn't do it or that what they did was
like not a terrible idea to think that it makes sense to treat them this way.
Yeah, exactly.
And he also says, you know, which I think is a really like, human way of framing her,
which she didn't really receive a lot of is he's like,
I think she just kind of made a mistake.
Like she didn't mean to win it.
She was obviously very surprised when she, you know,
went across first and they,
and they crowned her and everything.
He's like, she just timed it wrong.
And she probably just wanted to put up a pretty good time
and go back to her
office and like have the glory of that of finishing the Boston Marathon with her office
mates who all apparently were obsessed with running at the time.
It makes a million times more sense, in my opinion, or at least the way my brain works
to like, not do something so incredibly conspicuous that you're going
to end up with like, yeah, a record time for the marathon. I mean, I guess really she should
have learned more about marathons and how not to be too impressive. She's like, I just
got to be done with this thing.
And so what's interesting is she had listed the Globe had found two addresses associated with her during
the story. The first is where they met the woman who they refer to as her roommate. Yeah,
she was, I think they say, at the very least a very caring roommate, you know, something like that. All right, Boston Globe.
Exactly.
What's kind of funny is that she was actually living at the other address with another woman,
her actual partner at the time and their family.
They actually, her partner had a few small children and they were a family together. And at the very end of the piece, they kind of relate
this moment of the reporter confronting her, like, essentially like staking out the house
and like confronting her when she like gets out of the car. The only thing that I will
say about that is that there is another reference to like her legs being quote unquote, sick.
If you must stake out someone's house, you don't have to comment about their body as
well.
You know, it's a thought.
No.
So the last thing that we hear from Rosie Ruiz is about two years later in 1998, she
does give an interview to the Palm Beach Post. She's apparently like doing fine. She has a job
at Lab Corp. She's like a customer representative or something. And her coworkers were all, they
described her as quote, extremely friendly and quote, extremely sweet. And they said that over
the years, they'd asked her many times if she was the Rosie Ruiz from the marathon. And she would say, Nope, you're confusing
me with someone else. Love it. And then when she found out that this reporter was talking
to her colleagues, she called her boss and said, Yes, it was me. I ran it and I won it
and nobody was expecting me to win. I was young and they expected someone else to win and it was political.
Hmm. Okay. What do you think about that?
Um...
It makes me think that like, like you must be also trying to convince yourself of something, right?
Yeah.
There is this other thing that continues to come up, you know, which
is like her trauma of leaving Cuba and leaving her family when she's a child. And she says,
she tells this reporter during this interview, she ran to escape the pressures of moving
to Florida and there was nothing for me to do but run. It was an escape for me. And so
even if that isn't true, I feel like
there's like a narrative in her head that she could convince herself it is.
And wouldn't it be a great story? You know, she did become this great runner and she did
this very American thing of turning adversity into excellence, which we love so much.
Exactly. And like if it was political, like Cuba was extremely political in 1980. Like it was,
you know, there was a lot of international politics going on there and between the US and Cuba. And,
you know, that could also be an explanation for like her being doubted. But, you know, we also
know that it almost certainly did not happen. But two days after she finishes the phone interview,
she apparently sends a letter to this reporter
and continuing to say that not only did she
run the Boston Marathon in 1980,
she is going to run another marathon in 2000.
Better start doing some intervals, you know?
Yes.
So she says, what I can promise myself and the American public who believes in
me is to run again. I may not win this time, but I will be there and I'll run
again the entire course just as before, except this time I'll be more prepared.
I'll look just like any other runner. I'm sure they won't mistake me this time.
You know what? I love her.
Who among us has not lied about winning the Boston Marathon and then convinced ourselves it really happened for the rest of our lives? That's what I would like to put to the people.
It's not the most compelling argument I've ever made. But you know, yeah,
I guess I guess I feel like if you become a figure of like this much entertainment for
the American people, then like you deserve leniency. You've already kind of done your
time for whatever you did and more. Yeah. Yeah. And she has literally done her time
for what she had. That's true. Yeah. The other crime. So we're coming to the end, which is Rosie Ruiz died in 2019.
She was 66.
And her death was like kind of shrouded in mystery too, because she had withdrawn so
much from from public life for obvious reasons.
The way that the press kind of found out about her death was her family had posted an obituary, you know, on one of those like memorial sites and.
They used her name Rosie Vivas and they don't refer to the marathon. I mean, obviously.
Um, yeah. And so all there is again, another kind of little media frenzy just to send Rosie off to the other side, which is like, is she really dead? Is this the actual Rosie Ruiz?
Wow. Nice. And it is, of course if you wanted to read just like a tiny bit of the
obituary because I think it's actually very lovely.
I would love that. Thank you for letting me do that.
Okay.
Rosie was always full of life and love. One of her biggest accomplishments was when she
met the love of her life in 1988 at a friend's party. They started off as friends first and eventually it turned into a partnership that
lasted 26 years. One would say that destiny brought them together. Not only did she gain
a partner, she gained an entire family. She played a huge part in helping raise their
three wonderful boys. Sharing her love with such a blessing to the family.
You know, the big question that is always implicit to me when we talk about somebody
who we have this flash fold memory of because everybody paid attention to them for a couple
weeks and then moved on is like, not necessarily like, you know, what did they do? What are
they telling the truth about this or that? But like, well, what kind of life did they have?
You know, and this feels like if we believe this obituary, because why not? She didn't write it, that she had a really great life. Apart from the whole, you know, being followed by the press
periodically the whole time thing. I don't like that part. But the rest of it, you know,
Catherine Switzer was kind of asked about her a lot because, you know, she was
this huge advocate for the women's marathon.
And people would often say, you know, oh, this is going to just set us back, isn't it?
Like that, like having this cheater in the race and, you know, it's just good.
It's just made the women's race a joke.
And Switzer was always kind of like, actually, this was really good for us.
This brought us so much
attention. It made the race officials really mad. So it made them actually have to care
about the race and like making it more professional.
We got to pay attention to the female runners because they might cheat.
Exactly. The next year, 1981, is when, you know, the IOC finally accepted the women's marathon into the Olympics.
And it was kind of on this bigger stage all of a sudden.
And I think it's one of those things where maybe hearing about the women's marathon
again and again and again in the press for a year, like, maybe that put the idea in people's
minds that like, oh yeah, there's a women's
marathon.
Well, yeah.
And this is like incredible free press for the existence of women who run marathons,
right?
So like how many people did first think about long distance running because they heard about
a cheating scandal and they're like, I could try that.
Not the cheating, but the running.
Exactly. You know, I did want to give kind of like the last bit to Jacqueline Gereau,
who is the real winner of the 1980 Boston Marathon.
Yeah.
You know, like Switzer, she was just extremely gracious about Rosie Ruiz.
She actually did end up getting to run in the 1984 Olympic
Marathon. She was a national record holder in Canada. She still runs. She
actually looks like an extremely lovely like old hippie lady. She's like a
massage therapist. In every interview she's of course asked about Rosie Ruiz
and every single time she is so gracious. And I was wondering if
you wanted to read the very last thing, which is what she posted on Facebook when Rosie
died.
Yeah, thank you. I love the readings that we're doing in this one. Okay, wow. She
said, Let's remember Rosie is a great woman who cared for her family and was a very loving person and like all of us made some mistakes. R.A.P. Rosie Ruiz.
We do all make mistakes. We do all lie sometimes. And you know, some of us have more reason
to than others as well.
Yeah. Sometimes you make a mistake when you're making a mistake and you meant to make a small
mistake but it's a big mistake.
It's a really big mistake.
And then you're on TV and you're kind of stuck.
And you've got a laurel wreath on your head.
Oh my God.
I really love that.
You know, I'm sure that like different people feel differently and like would feel differently
if they also were the person who actually won that year and who was not remembered to the same extent as the
person who pretended to win. The idea of, well, if you cheat, the victims are the people
who actually ran it. And it's like, well, in a way, but also you can't take anything
away from them because they actually did run that race. Nobody can take that away really.
Yeah.
Maggie, this is so lovely. And where can people find you and a little more of your work? Where
can they catch you if they can? I lost track of that.
People can totally find my book, hopefully in any bookstore that is close to them that
they love.
It's called Better, Faster, Farther, How Running Changed Everything We Know About Women.
You can also find me on Instagram or Substack.
You can just look me up. Maggie Mertens, I have a newsletter that I send out
ostensibly once a week, but not so much lately about feminism and kind of our daily lives.
But you know, who wants a newsletter once a week? That's essentially someone saying
to you, here, you delete this. Exactly. I want a newsletter to come sporadically when
I least expect it. That's ideal.
Then you're the perfect reader for me, Sarah.
And you're the perfect newsletter for me.
And that was our episode. Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you again for being with us.
You can find Maggie's book, Better, Faster, Farther, How Running Changed, everything we
know about women.
Anywhere you like to find books, you will probably find it there.
Thank you again to Maggie for being our guest.
Thank you to Carolyn Kendrick for editing and producing this episode.
Thank you to you.
We'll see you in two weeks. You you