1. Did you know that
there was once a time
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2. when your fridge could be fatal?
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3. Just imagine you're so
afraid of your refrigerator,
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4. you gotta keep it outside.
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5. Do you remember when
holiday decorations were made
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6. from toxins?
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7. It has this beautiful effect,
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8. but in reality,
it's a death trap.
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9. It's like a
Christmas nightmare.
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10. Or when monkeys
arrived by mail?
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11. You'd open the box and
that monkey would jump out
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12. and bite the first
person it sees.
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13. Wild, wild stuff.
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14. These are the things we
used to do for fun, for money,
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15. or maybe out of boredom,
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16. that we'll never see again.
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17. Were they dangerous? Certainly.
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18. Deadly? Occasionally.
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19. But boy, wasn't it exciting?
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20. These days, it seems
like you can get
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21. anything you want delivered
straight to your door,
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22. but back in the day, there
were things you could get
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23. through the mail that
would never fly today.
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24. In 1888, the first Sears
Roebuck catalog comes out
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25. and it is absolutely
no exaggeration to say
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26. that this will become
the Amazon of its time.
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27. Mail
order catalogs
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28. offer a far greater assortment
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29. than you could ever find
in any store in America.
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30. The joys of internet shopping
today would not be possible
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31. without the mail order catalog.
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32. You could get anything
and everything.
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33. If you needed some new
soap, maybe a new outfit,
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34. you could even get a house.
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35. But you know what
else you could get?
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36. Dynamite.
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37. Sears sells
dynamite for as little
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38. as 13 cents a pound,
less than $5 today.
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39. They actually say, verbatim,
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40. "Dynamite is, in our
opinion, an excellent agent
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41. for removing tree stumps,"
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42. and it's hard to argue that
it wouldn't get the job done.
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43. There's no training,
there's no regulations,
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44. and so to cover their
risk, Sears says
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45. they'll include a safety
brochure for the amateur.
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46. You could be blowing
up a tree stump
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47. as per the suggestion,
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48. or you could be doing who
knows with your dynamite.
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49. Imagine being able to add
dynamite to your Amazon cart.
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50. It's amazing to think there
was a time when your neighbor
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51. down the street could just
start blasting off dynamite.
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52. For most of us, dynamite
is just something
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53. we've seen in cartoons.
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54. Eventually, Sears
stops offering dynamite,
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55. noting that to conform
with the insurance laws,
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56. it has been forced to
stop selling explosives.
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57. Sears isn't the only
place you can get wild items
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58. through the mail.
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59. The golden age
of the comic book
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60. is the 1930s, '40s and '50s.
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61. This is where America is
introduced to superheroes
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62. like Captain America,
Superman, Batman,
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63. Wonder Woman.
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64. One of the most iconic
elements of classic comic books
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65. of the time, are really
these over the top ads.
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66. I mean, you can order
things like x-ray specs,
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67. Whoopee cushions,
and even live pets.
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68. For 18.95, a company
in Miami Beach,
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69. Florida will send
you a real, live
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70. squirrel monkey in the mail.
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71. A monkey coming
through the mail
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72. with no real instructions
about its care, its food.
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73. It says actually that they
can eat anything you eat,
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74. and also they love lollipops,
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75. which probably don't
exist in the jungles
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76. from which they come.
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77. Most customers think
they're getting a cute,
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78. furry little creature.
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79. They are completely unprepared
for what they're getting
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80. and what the challenges will be.
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81. Squirrel monkeys require
an insane level of care.
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82. And two common squirrel
monkey traits:
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83. throwing feces and
frequent masturbation.
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84. But still,
squirrel monkey fever
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85. sweeps over the United
States in the '60s and '70s.
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86. As many as 173,000 squirrel
monkeys are imported from Peru
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87. and Columbia during
this time period.
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88. This would never happen today.
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89. There are so many regulations
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90. about sending live
animals through the mail.
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91. When they arrive, they're
hungry, they're angry.
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92. You'd open the box and
that monkey would jump out
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93. and bite the first
person it sees.
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94. And there's just
reports about, you know,
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95. someone's aunt getting bitten,
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96. a kid getting bitten,
just like, it's nuts.
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97. It's probably no surprise
that by the late '70s,
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98. the ads for live monkeys, they
disappear from comic books.
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99. I can't imagine there were
too many repeat customers.
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100. Combing your
hair seems like one
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101. of the least dangerous
things you could do,
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102. but there was a time when it
could be the most dangerous.
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103. These days, it seems like
everything is made from plastic.
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104. In the 19th century, it didn't
exist, they used ivory.
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105. The problem with ivory is
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106. that it comes mostly
from elephants,
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107. and they have to be hunted
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108. and then their ivory
has to be harvested
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109. and shipped to
the United States.
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110. All of that makes
it very expensive.
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111. Manufacturers
have little else to turn to.
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112. Not only is ivory good
for everyday items,
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113. it is the only
material durable enough
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114. and elegant enough for high-end
products like piano keys
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115. and billiard balls.
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116. In the 1860s,
billiards is starting
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117. to evolve from a purely
upper class leisure pursuit
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118. to more of a kind of
middle class amusement.
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119. So this billiards company,
Phelan & Collender,
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120. put out this call,
anybody that can come up
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121. with a substance
that will allow us
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122. to make billiard
balls more affordable,
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123. we will pay you $10,000.
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124. An inventor named
John Wesley Hyatt comes up
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125. with just the thing.
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126. He combines different
materials, wood pulp, camper,
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127. cellulose, shellac, and alcohol.
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128. He succeeds in creating
this durable, lightweight,
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129. and versatile material.
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130. Essentially created
synthetic plastic.
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131. Hyatt patents
the material as celluloid.
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132. Celluloid,
a cheap, plentiful
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133. and manmade
substitute for ivory.
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134. Since it can be mass produced,
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135. you can actually add coloring,
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136. you can give it a
different luster.
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137. You can make it look shiny.
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138. It could look more
like tortoise shell
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139. by adding different
additives to it.
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140. So celluloid not only was
a substitute for ivory,
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141. but it could be enhanced.
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142. Celluloid is a
miracle material.
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143. It's used for everything
from billiard balls
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144. to eyeglass frames,
to hair combs.
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145. It just has one problem.
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146. Celluloid is really flammable.
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147. It's possibly one of the
most combustible things
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148. on planet Earth.
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149. It will go up fast
and it will go up hot.
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150. When celluloid
is exposed to heat,
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151. it can quickly release a gas
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152. that can result in an explosion.
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153. In the late 1800s, an
ivory comb would run you
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154. around $10, which
doesn't sound like a lot,
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155. but that's $350
in today's money.
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156. So when celluloid comes along
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157. and offers combs for less
than $1, people are ecstatic.
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158. These combs are everywhere.
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159. Women use decorative combs
to hold their hair in place.
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160. Men are combing their beards.
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161. But this is the time
before electrification.
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162. There's gas lamps everywhere.
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163. When people cooked,
they cooked on a hearth
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164. or they cooked on a stove
where there's flames.
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165. And these combs, made of
this combustible material,
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166. would just light up
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167. and it would be a catastrophe.
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168. In Pittsburgh, an 82-year-old
man is combing his hair
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169. near a gas stove and
his comb explodes,
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170. setting his beard
and hair on fire.
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171. In one incident, a comb
explodes with such force
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172. that it throws a woman
back several feet,
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173. leaving her banged up
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174. with horrible burns
on her face and neck.
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175. There's many reports of
people losing their eyelashes,
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176. their eyebrows, their hair.
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177. Soon, there are these
crazy headlines
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178. like, "Comb, Cause of Death,"
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179. "Beware the Celluloid Comb."
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180. This stuff is nasty business.
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181. But what makes
this material so combustible?
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182. One of its main ingredients,
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183. nitrocellulose.
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184. Nitrocellulose is chemically
related to gun cotton,
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185. which is related to gunpowder.
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186. But gun cotton is
way more powerful.
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187. So basically what this means is
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188. that people are combing
their hair with an explosive
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189. more dangerous than gunpowder.
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190. Wild, wild stuff.
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191. Despite the dangers,
celluloid combs continue
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192. to be produced for decades
until more versatile
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193. and less explosive
plastics were introduced
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194. in the 1920s and '30s.
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195. Now, I don't know about
you, but when I was a kid
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196. and I came home from school,
I went right to the fridge.
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197. Little did I know what
dangers lurked in there.
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198. In the early 1900s,
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199. the way people
kept food fresh is
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200. they had a device
known as an ice box,
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201. and a ice deliverer
would go down the street
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202. in a horse drawn wagon and
deliver them a big block of ice.
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203. But ice has a big problem.
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204. It melts and the ice boxes
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205. aren't particularly
well insulated,
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206. so the ice is gone
every day or two
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207. and you have to replace
it before the food spoils.
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208. This is a pretty
crappy system.
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209. It produces its own
kind of rot and flies.
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210. It's not a good situation.
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211. But then in 1918,
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212. automobile pioneer William
Durant has a breakthrough.
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213. He mass produces
a home refrigerator
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214. for the very first time, really
making ice boxes obsolete.
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215. Today, everyone has a fridge,
we take it for granted.
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216. But back then, it's
like a miracle.
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217. Suddenly you don't have to
worry about your food going bad.
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218. The electric refrigerator
becomes a must-have appliance
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219. for every American.
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220. And in the early
1930s, only about 8%
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221. of the American public has
an electric refrigerator
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222. in their home.
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223. By the end of the decade,
it's half the country.
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224. It really is the epitome
of the American dream.
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225. Any food you want at any
time, no icebox required.
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226. What's at the core
of this huge innovation?
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227. Let's think a little
bit about a refrigerator.
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228. It's an insulated box
and it's kept cool
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229. because it's refrigerant.
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230. Some coolant, if you will, is
traveling through the inside
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231. and keeping the inside cool.
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232. The refrigerants in
these machines is ammonia,
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233. methyl chloride,
and sulfur dioxide.
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234. In other words, poisons.
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235. Once these refrigerators
make it into people's homes,
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236. problems start, in
that the compressors
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237. start leaking toxic gas.
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238. Sulfur dioxide can cause
loss of vision and skin burns.
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239. Methyl chloride, just a
few hours of exposure
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240. can lead to death.
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241. In just a handful of
months in 1929 in Chicago,
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242. 15 people are killed
from refrigerator leaks.
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243. There's even
refrigerator leak in 1937
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244. that causes an evacuation
in the White House.
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245. The leak is so severe it
turns the roses in one room
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246. from red to white,
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247. I mean completely destroys
the pigment in them.
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248. Families started putting them
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249. outside the house just
in case a leak occurred.
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250. Just imagine you're so
afraid of your refrigerator,
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251. you gotta keep it outside.
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252. Refrigerator companies are
getting so much bad press.
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253. They really begin to wonder
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254. if it's gonna like,
kill their sales.
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255. A year after
the Chicago tragedies,
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256. thanks to a chemical engineer
named Thomas Midgley Jr.,
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257. a new coolant is
developed, Freon.
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258. Tom Midgley says Freon
is the way of the future.
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259. It is a cooling gas that is
safer and it's non-flammable.
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260. And to demonstrate it
in front of a crowd,
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261. he inhales a huge amount of
Freon and he blows out a candle.
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262. Perfect, right? No, not perfect!
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263. Tom, Freon is not
safe to inhale.
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264. You don't do that.
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265. Freon becomes the norm
for the next seven decades,
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266. and is also instrumental
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267. in the creation of
air conditioners.
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268. Eventually, scientists
come to understand
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269. that Freon depletes
the ozone layer.
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270. In 2015, scientists
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271. and governments alike
begin to phase out Freon
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272. in favor of other coolants.
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273. I have a good relationship
with my fridge these days,
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274. but perhaps tonight,
I will sleep
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275. with one eye open, cast
towards my kitchen tonight
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276. just to make sure
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277. that I don't go out in the
stupidest way imaginable.
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278. Here lies Brian Quinn,
killed by a fridge.
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279. Did you know that there
are tons of everyday items
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280. that were invented
by the US military?
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281. Like the microwave oven,
duct tape, super glue,
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282. and one very famous insecticide.
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283. Or should I say infamous?
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284. The American
military has a problem.
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285. It's fighting a war in the
Pacific in a tropical zone.
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286. During World War II,
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287. American soldiers are
under attack, by insects.
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288. Bugs, and their insect
born diseases are almost
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289. as much of an
enemy as the enemy.
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290. A Swiss chemist uncovers
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291. this new chemical
compound called DDT,
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292. and this stuff is great.
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293. It's a powerful insecticide,
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294. it doesn't irritate human skin,
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295. and it remains effective
for up to 30 days.
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296. DDT becomes the allied
forces' insecticide of choice.
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297. DDT comes home
from the war a hero,
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298. and it's about to
become the product
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299. for domestic use in American
suburbs and farmland.
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300. By 1945, DDT goes
on sale as sprays,
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301. as powders, as mist.
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302. It's for sale in grocery
stores, department stores,
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303. hardware stores.
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304. DDT is everywhere
and it's a hit.
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305. It's used on livestock,
in farms, and in crops.
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306. People are eating
foods sprayed with DDT.
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307. Used right,
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308. it is absolutely harmless
to humans and animals,
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309. but to insects, it is deadly.
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310. Dry cleaners were adding
it to their solutions
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311. to ward off moths.
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312. In the US alone,
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313. over 1.3 billion
pounds of DDT are sold
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314. during the 30 years that follow.
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315. At the height
of its popularity,
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316. DDT is used all over, on the
body as a lice treatment,
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317. sprinkled directly
onto the skin and hair,
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318. on clothing and
bedding to kill insects
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319. and prevent disease, sprayed
on walls, furniture,
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320. mattresses, and floors.
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321. All
people have to do is
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322. to press the patented
top like this.
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323. It's used in public spaces
like schools, hospitals,
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324. and theaters, and most
famously on suburban lawns.
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325. America's lawns, gardens,
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326. and farms have
never looked better,
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327. but it takes years
before anyone realizes
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328. that this comes at
a very high price.
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329. DDT, it seemed like
such a miracle cure all,
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330. but over time, they
realize that, oh my God,
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331. there's health effects
involved in using DDT.
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332. DDT can lead to hormonal
disruption that can lead
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333. to cancer, diabetes,
male infertility,
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334. impair neurological development,
and neurological diseases.
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335. By the time all these
hazards have been discovered,
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336. people have been eating food,
spraying their own clothes,
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337. treating their homes
with DDT for decades.
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338. When we were kids, we would
hear the DDT truck coming
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339. and it would be spewing out
literally a thick, gray cloud
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340. of DDT-infused smoke
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341. and the game was, who could
get closer to the pipe?
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342. Looking back, not a good idea
running around in a cloud
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343. of DDT, but it was sure fun.
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344. As fate would have it,
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345. by the 1970s, DDT
fell out of favor,
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346. not because of
what it was doing,
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347. but because of what it wasn't.
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348. Insects developed
an immunity to it.
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349. Who doesn't love the scent
of freshly laundered clothes?
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350. But did you know that
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351. before most houses had
modern washing machines,
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352. doing laundry wasn't
just time consuming,
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353. it was surprisingly dangerous?
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354. In the early 1900s,
laundry is a tedious chore.
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355. It can take hours or even days.
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356. First, you have to soak
your laundry overnight.
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357. Then, you have to rub,
scrub, and scour.
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358. And then to dry your clothes,
that's an entire production.
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359. What most people
have in their homes is
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360. something called the ringer.
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361. Two rollers with a hand crank.
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362. You feed your wet clothes
between the rollers
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363. and turn the hand crank
to squeeze the water out.
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364. The thing about that is it
went at the speed of a person.
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365. Luckily, in 1911, the
process gets a huge upgrade
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366. when the first motorized
ringer is produced.
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367. No more tedious hand cranking,
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368. the motorized version
feels like a godsend.
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369. It becomes a must-have.
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370. Companies are racing to
create this new home appliance.
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371. One company even calls
it the Hired Girl.
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372. In their peak year
producing these in 1948,
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373. they're pumping out 2,000
of these machines a day.
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374. With the addition
of the motor,
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375. the ringer gets much faster,
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376. but you still have
to feed your laundry
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377. by hand into automated
motorized ringers.
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378. The leap from going
from the mechanical ringer
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379. to the electric ringer is
like hopping on a Ducati
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380. the second you took the training
wheels off your bicycle.
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381. It's a whole new
world of danger.
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382. When you iron a shirt,
you may put a few pounds
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383. of pressure on the iron,
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384. but to dry that same shirt,
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385. the ringer puts up 800
pounds of pressure.
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386. That's enough to break
the bones in your body.
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387. If you get your
hair, or your jewelry,
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388. or God forbid, your fingers
caught in a mechanical ringer,
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389. stop turning it,
roll it backwards.
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390. Problem solved.
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391. If you get your
hair, or jewelry,
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392. or worse, your fingers
caught in a merciless,
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393. nonstop electrical ringer,
you're going down.
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394. This powered machine will
not stop for anything.
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395. It has no safeguards.
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396. I don't even wanna imagine
what a hand would look like
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397. after it gets put
through the ringer.
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398. You have so much damage to
the skin, to the muscles,
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399. the tendons, the bone itself,
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400. that there's really
nothing you can do.
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401. There's no way to put
that back together.
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402. This is where the term
"put through the ringer"
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403. originated from.
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404. An industrial
version comes along
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405. called the Mangler.
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406. If you wanted to wash the
towels and sheets at a hospital
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407. or a hotel, you
needed the Mangler.
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408. It even caught the
imagination of Stephen King,
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409. who wrote a short story
called the Mangler
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410. that was eventually
turned into a film.
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411. It was about one of these
machines becoming possessed
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412. by a demon and really
just wreaking havoc
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413. on everyone around it.
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414. Eventually, automatic
washing machines come
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415. around in the 1950s that
control the entire process.
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416. But these modern washing
machines are too pricey
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417. and frankly, they're
not built to last.
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418. Laundromats come into play,
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419. but a lot of people want
to do the laundry at home
Copy !req
420. and ringers stay
around until the 1980s.
Copy !req
421. People hung on
to their ringers
Copy !req
422. long after they
probably should have.
Copy !req
423. Laundry's not the only thing
Copy !req
424. that can create
stress in a home.
Copy !req
425. Consider the holidays.
Copy !req
426. If you think they're tough
today, you won't believe
Copy !req
427. what people put themselves
through in the past.
Copy !req
428. Christmas really begins
gaining traction in America
Copy !req
429. in the mid-1800s, becomes an
integral part of our lives.
Copy !req
430. And with celebrating Christmas
Copy !req
431. comes the rise of
Christmas paraphernalia.
Copy !req
432. Americans go big,
Copy !req
433. they get Christmas trees
as tall as their ceilings
Copy !req
434. and decorate them
from top to bottom.
Copy !req
435. Decor of all kinds
flood the market,
Copy !req
436. including artificial snow.
Copy !req
437. The original fake snow was
cotton, and cotton is cheap
Copy !req
438. and plentiful, and so many
houses had cotton strewn
Copy !req
439. all about the place
to look like snow.
Copy !req
440. There's one problem though,
cotton is incredibly flammable.
Copy !req
441. This is the era
before electric lights.
Copy !req
442. People are illuminating
their trees with candles.
Copy !req
443. You have a dry tree that
could go up like a match.
Copy !req
444. Now you put flammable
cotton all over it.
Copy !req
445. It's a Christmas nightmare.
Copy !req
446. Manufacturers have
to replace cotton,
Copy !req
447. they have to find a safe
artificial snow alternative.
Copy !req
448. They try things
made out of salts
Copy !req
449. and they try things
made out of minerals.
Copy !req
450. And eventually
the eureka moment,
Copy !req
451. someone has found
something that is white.
Copy !req
452. it looks like snow,
Copy !req
453. and best of all, it's
completely fireproof.
Copy !req
454. The substance: asbestos.
Copy !req
455. At the time,
Copy !req
456. asbestos is considered
a marvel, renowned
Copy !req
457. for its flame
retardant properties.
Copy !req
458. What has
been your experience
Copy !req
459. with these asbestos
cement sidewalls?
Copy !req
460. Well, we've been very pleased.
Copy !req
461. Asbestos is not an
unfamiliar product.
Copy !req
462. It had been around
for a long time.
Copy !req
463. It's used in insulation,
Copy !req
464. on roof tiles, in
cigarette filters.
Copy !req
465. Asbestos is a wonder product
and demand for it takes off.
Copy !req
466. Between the 1930s and 1960s,
Copy !req
467. asbestos is found in
every Christmas household,
Copy !req
468. boxes are sold for
five to 10 cents a box.
Copy !req
469. That's cheaper than
artificial garland.
Copy !req
470. You'd sprinkle it on trees,
Copy !req
471. you'd run it across your mantle.
Copy !req
472. You made little triangles on
your windows to simulate snow.
Copy !req
473. Asbestos becomes this
popular thing to the point
Copy !req
474. where Hollywood turns to it.
Copy !req
475. You're seeing it in Christmas
movies, "It's a Wonderful Life."
Copy !req
476. Yeah!
Copy !req
477. Hello, Bedford Falls!
Copy !req
478. You're seeing it
in "Wizard of Oz,"
Copy !req
479. one of the most classic
movies of all time.
Copy !req
480. It has this beautiful effect.
Copy !req
481. These actors are surrounded
by it, inhaling it.
Copy !req
482. The producers, directors,
behind the scenes people,
Copy !req
483. the stage crew, they're
all surrounded by asbestos
Copy !req
484. because it's so great and
it looks so good on film,
Copy !req
485. but they don't know that in
reality, it's a death trap.
Copy !req
486. We've since learned
that if a little bit
Copy !req
487. of it gets lodged in your lungs,
Copy !req
488. it can lead to inflammation.
Copy !req
489. And at larger scales, cancer.
Copy !req
490. Asbestos is an incredibly
valuable fire retardant product,
Copy !req
491. and when it's in a large block
Copy !req
492. or big chunks on its own,
it's really not too harmful.
Copy !req
493. It's most harmful
when it's broken down
Copy !req
494. into small airborne fibers,
Copy !req
495. like in the case of maybe
fluffy bits of snow.
Copy !req
496. Asbestos finally becomes
a thing of Christmas past
Copy !req
497. during World War II, not
because of health concerns,
Copy !req
498. but because it's
needed in Navy ships
Copy !req
499. for its fire retardant
capabilities.
Copy !req
500. Between 1900 and
1980, 30 million tons
Copy !req
501. of asbestos were used,
Copy !req
502. and at its height, it's found
in about 3,000 products.
Copy !req
503. After the war,
Copy !req
504. companies replaced asbestos
in Christmas decorations,
Copy !req
505. but that didn't stop
it from showing up
Copy !req
506. in some very unexpected places.
Copy !req
507. Who remembers talcum
powder? Cool, clean,
Copy !req
508. and with a scent that made
everything feel fresher.
Copy !req
509. We used it on babies, after
baths, even in our shoes,
Copy !req
510. because for
generations it seemed
Copy !req
511. like the gentlest
thing in the world.
Copy !req
512. Imagine learning how
very wrong we were.
Copy !req
513. In the late 19th century,
there is this new desire
Copy !req
514. to be clean, but our households
haven't caught up yet.
Copy !req
515. We don't have showers at home.
Copy !req
516. We don't have changes
of clothes every day.
Copy !req
517. Talcum powder is
this miracle product.
Copy !req
518. You wanna smell good, you
wanna absorb some moisture,
Copy !req
519. you wanna relieve your chafing,
Copy !req
520. you wanna help your
baby who's irritated
Copy !req
521. with a rash, Talcum powder.
Copy !req
522. Talcum
powder is so effective
Copy !req
523. at keeping babies
dry and rash free,
Copy !req
524. it's almost immediately
marketed as baby powder.
Copy !req
525. The writing on the container
was flowery and sweet.
Copy !req
526. It was usually white
with a little bit
Copy !req
527. of a pink ribbon on it.
Copy !req
528. It had a great smell you equate
with babies, with childhood.
Copy !req
529. It was always on
the changing table.
Copy !req
530. In the '70s when I grew up
and had little brothers
Copy !req
531. and sisters, it was
a critical element.
Copy !req
532. That's what you did right before
you closed up that diaper.
Copy !req
533. Almost every baby
born from the 1900s
Copy !req
534. to the 1990s had talcum
powdered dumped in its diaper.
Copy !req
535. Everybody grew up with it.
Copy !req
536. Imagine a baby, you change
the diaper five times a day,
Copy !req
537. multiplied by countless
babies born in a year.
Copy !req
538. Probably like enough
talcum powder to fill up
Copy !req
539. the biggest football
stadium in the country.
Copy !req
540. But what exactly
is this magic powder?
Copy !req
541. It's a good question.
Copy !req
542. So if you were looking at
a bottle of talcum powder,
Copy !req
543. it may not have
all the ingredients
Copy !req
544. because people who
are manufacturing
Copy !req
545. it have gotten this
material from a mine.
Copy !req
546. Talc is a natural mineral
made up of magnesium,
Copy !req
547. silicone, and oxygen,
all natural, all safe.
Copy !req
548. The problem is that
when talc is mined,
Copy !req
549. it sometimes gets
cross-contaminated by a material
Copy !req
550. that is harmful to humans:
Copy !req
551. asbestos.
Copy !req
552. Like the fake snow, the
dangers of asbestos stay hidden
Copy !req
553. while talcum powder
Copy !req
554. floods the homes of
Americans everywhere.
Copy !req
555. Think about the last 40
years and how much time
Copy !req
556. and money we've spent trying
Copy !req
557. to eliminate asbestos from
our buildings, right?
Copy !req
558. And in reality, we were
dumping this on our kids.
Copy !req
559. Never in a million years
would we think something
Copy !req
560. as simple, as pure,
as good smelling,
Copy !req
561. and as effective as
it was could hurt us.
Copy !req
562. But in the 2000s,
a rise in cancer rates
Copy !req
563. and a flurry of
court cases reveal
Copy !req
564. just how dangerous
baby powder can be.
Copy !req
565. Talc just seems so innocuous,
Copy !req
566. and then you learn that
they could give rise
Copy !req
567. to an increase in cancer.
Copy !req
568. Talc on its own,
Copy !req
569. if it didn't have the asbestos,
it was pretty wonderful.
Copy !req
570. Baby powder is still around,
but it's a lot less toxic,
Copy !req
571. thanks to baking
powder and corn starch.
Copy !req
572. You know, there's
another product
Copy !req
573. that you probably have in your
home, a popular disinfectant?
Copy !req
574. For much of the 20th
century, it was used in a way
Copy !req
575. that will definitely
surprise you.
Copy !req
576. It's 1918 and America
is in the grips
Copy !req
577. of the Great Spanish
Flu pandemic.
Copy !req
578. Almost 700,000 Americans die.
Copy !req
579. That's more than the deaths
in World War I, World War II,
Copy !req
580. Korea, and Vietnam combined.
Copy !req
581. Americans were desperate
to end this pandemic.
Copy !req
582. There was all kinds of policy
measures like preventing
Copy !req
583. people from spitting
in the streets.
Copy !req
584. Poster campaigns,
wear your mask,
Copy !req
585. but there was actually a
product that did quite a bit
Copy !req
586. to end the pandemic.
Copy !req
587. It's one you probably have
in your household today:
Copy !req
588. Lysol.
Copy !req
589. Lysol is invented
in Germany in 1889,
Copy !req
590. and it's really designed to
help fight the cholera epidemic
Copy !req
591. that they were fighting there.
Copy !req
592. Finally, it finds
its way to America
Copy !req
593. and is introduced into that
world as a miracle germ killer.
Copy !req
594. It's successful,
and because of that,
Copy !req
595. Lysol earns a place,
Copy !req
596. sort of in every American
cabinet across the country.
Copy !req
597. By the year 1920, the flu
pandemic is largely over.
Copy !req
598. Thanks Lysol, great job.
Copy !req
599. But now the manufacturers
had a big, big problem.
Copy !req
600. Now that everyone's healthy
and they're not getting sick
Copy !req
601. and they aren't seeing people
dying all over the place,
Copy !req
602. maybe they're not gonna go out
Copy !req
603. and buy as much Lysol, they'll
just have the same canister
Copy !req
604. up in their shelf
for maybe a year
Copy !req
605. or two years, three years.
Copy !req
606. At this
time, Lysol is owned
Copy !req
607. by a different company
called Lehn & Fink,
Copy !req
608. and they're looking for a new
way to market their product.
Copy !req
609. Women in the 1920s bought
most of the household products.
Copy !req
610. So these manufacturers started
thinking maybe these women
Copy !req
611. would buy Lysol
for their bodies.
Copy !req
612. Lysol comes up with a
fairly novel solution.
Copy !req
613. They say, you can use
Lysol for feminine hygiene.
Copy !req
614. Wrap your head around this.
Copy !req
615. These ads for Lysol were
effectively saying, like,
Copy !req
616. here's this household
cleaner and just dilute it
Copy !req
617. and then you can put it
Copy !req
618. in your most intimate
parts of your body.
Copy !req
619. These days, it seems like
a very clearly bad idea,
Copy !req
620. but it's not like there was
a feminine hygiene aisle
Copy !req
621. at CVS in 1920.
Copy !req
622. This was a new idea.
Copy !req
623. You know, hygiene in
general was a new industry,
Copy !req
624. so it became a very successful
feminine hygiene product.
Copy !req
625. That's likely
because the advertising
Copy !req
626. includes testimonials
that appear
Copy !req
627. to be from medical
professionals.
Copy !req
628. In this era, people were
really intrigued by science,
Copy !req
629. and so if you had somebody who
said, "This is a good product,
Copy !req
630. and it'll keep you healthy,
and was made in a lab,"
Copy !req
631. people were very primed
to believe in that.
Copy !req
632. So the ads include these
female doctors saying,
Copy !req
633. "We approve of this treatment,"
Copy !req
634. but those doctors were
completely made up.
Copy !req
635. The nutty part is, that
wasn't illegal at the time.
Copy !req
636. The Pure Food and Drug Act
of 1906 does regulate food
Copy !req
637. and drugs, but it does not
regulate household products.
Copy !req
638. So Lysol doesn't fit into that,
Copy !req
639. and the worst thing that could
happen is they would have
Copy !req
640. to pay a fine from anywhere
from like $500 to $2,000.
Copy !req
641. Without regulations,
Copy !req
642. the advertising strategy
is very effective.
Copy !req
643. Since Lysol was widely
available, cheap, private,
Copy !req
644. you did not have to speak
to a doctor about it.
Copy !req
645. Lysol was the top
feminine hygiene product
Copy !req
646. from the '30s all the
way to the 1960s.
Copy !req
647. I think they were
also enabled by the fact
Copy !req
648. that there was a lot
of kind of nervousness
Copy !req
649. and modesty about talking
about these things.
Copy !req
650. So women were not about
to go start asking a lot
Copy !req
651. of questions or even really to
talk with their friends about
Copy !req
652. what they were buying this
product and for what purpose.
Copy !req
653. In 1969, Lysol is
acquired by another company
Copy !req
654. that decided selling it
Copy !req
655. for feminine hygiene is
probably not the best strategy,
Copy !req
656. and it's still one of
the most popular brands
Copy !req
657. in America today.
Copy !req
658. By the 1930s, a new household
hazard was on the horizon,
Copy !req
659. a popular line of dishware
Copy !req
660. that you probably didn't
want in your home,
Copy !req
661. let alone on your
dining room table.
Copy !req
662. By the 1930s,
Copy !req
663. attitudes towards dishware is
starting to change somewhat.
Copy !req
664. The Laughlin Pottery Company
in east Liverpool, Ohio,
Copy !req
665. they had been making dishes
Copy !req
666. and China since the 1870s.
Copy !req
667. They are actually
producing 10%
Copy !req
668. of the country's dinnerware
Copy !req
669. all from that one factory.
Copy !req
670. But when the Great Depression
hits in the late 1920s,
Copy !req
671. people don't have expendable
income to buy really beautiful,
Copy !req
672. ornate, bone China
and expensive dishes.
Copy !req
673. This really directs a
cultural shift to minimalism.
Copy !req
674. You're just looking
for the most practical
Copy !req
675. versions of things you can get.
Copy !req
676. But the Laughlin
Brothers don't want
Copy !req
677. to churn out boring
white dishes.
Copy !req
678. So in 1936, they introduced
an affordable, sturdy,
Copy !req
679. and colorful line of
tableware called Fiestaware.
Copy !req
680. Yellow, red, cobalt
blue, and green.
Copy !req
681. It was really like dinnerware
you had never seen before.
Copy !req
682. Fiestaware is one
of these amazing hits.
Copy !req
683. Within a decade and a half,
Copy !req
684. 120 million pieces are
sold in the United States.
Copy !req
685. Fiestaware really
brings this sense of
Copy !req
686. what, at the time, was
a very modern design
Copy !req
687. into your dinnerware, and
it had to seem exciting
Copy !req
688. and different compared
to the dinnerware
Copy !req
689. with all the ornate patterns
that had come before.
Copy !req
690. I remember we would
go down to Florida
Copy !req
691. and my grandma used to
serve stuff on Fiestaware.
Copy !req
692. It was kind of part of
the whole experience.
Copy !req
693. It's warm, there's palm
trees and sunshine,
Copy !req
694. and this beautiful,
brightly glazed Fiestaware.
Copy !req
695. And how do you
achieve such beautiful colors?
Copy !req
696. The colorant that
was used in the glaze
Copy !req
697. was based on uranium.
Copy !req
698. Yes, that material
is radioactive.
Copy !req
699. This is the same uranium
Copy !req
700. that now you need protective
gear to handle in any form.
Copy !req
701. People are eating food
off of a radioactive plate.
Copy !req
702. When they started using uranium
Copy !req
703. and uranium oxide, it had to
seem like a miracle product.
Copy !req
704. Not only does it
protect the dish,
Copy !req
705. but it really makes it vibrant.
Copy !req
706. Before World War
II, look, uranium
Copy !req
707. and uranium oxide is
going into glassware,
Copy !req
708. it's going into punch bowls.
Copy !req
709. Consumers are loving it.
Copy !req
710. In the 1930s, people
have heard of radioactivity,
Copy !req
711. but most of them don't
realize how harmful it is.
Copy !req
712. People didn't know
they were being harmed.
Copy !req
713. Uranium isn't one of these
things that if you touch it,
Copy !req
714. your hand is going to
burn or you can smell it.
Copy !req
715. The danger is the exposure,
the long lasting exposure.
Copy !req
716. So if you're using
this plate every day,
Copy !req
717. or your teacup every day,
Copy !req
718. you're constantly getting
exposed to radiation.
Copy !req
719. This is bad stuff.
Copy !req
720. One study showed that
just drinking out
Copy !req
721. of a red Fiestaware
teacup is the equivalent
Copy !req
722. of getting 2,500 dental
x-rays, the kind that you have
Copy !req
723. to wear a lead apron for.
Copy !req
724. Despite the danger,
Copy !req
725. lawmakers don't restrict
the production of Fiestaware
Copy !req
726. until the 1940s.
Copy !req
727. During World War II,
Copy !req
728. production of uranium
glazed Fiestaware comes
Copy !req
729. to a halt, but not for the
reasons you might think.
Copy !req
730. Fiestaware is actually a
stymied by the war effort.
Copy !req
731. The US government seizes
the company's uranium stock
Copy !req
732. and restricts all use of it to
nuclear weapons development.
Copy !req
733. So basically,
Robert Oppenheimer
Copy !req
734. and the Manhattan Project
are using the same material
Copy !req
735. that's on your dinner table.
Copy !req
736. And like a lot of things
when they're first introduced,
Copy !req
737. uranium oxide ultimately was
gonna be one of those things
Copy !req
738. that was maybe a little
too good to be true.
Copy !req
739. Now, after the war, Fiestaware
returns to stores, this time
Copy !req
740. with depleted uranium.
Copy !req
741. And then finally in 1973,
without any uranium at all.
Copy !req
742. Turns out a little radiation
hasn't stopped collectors
Copy !req
743. from buying vintage Fiestaware.
Copy !req
744. Danger never looked so stylish.
Copy !req
745. If ever America
needed a pop of color,
Copy !req
746. it was during the gray
days of the 1800s.
Copy !req
747. And one specific color came
with a little extra pop.
Copy !req
748. Now you can go to an
interior design firm
Copy !req
749. and see 800 different
variations of red,
Copy !req
750. 2,000 different
variations of white.
Copy !req
751. But at this time in history,
there is not a lot of options.
Copy !req
752. Dyes were largely based
on natural products.
Copy !req
753. Ironically, the hardest
color to make was green.
Copy !req
754. Adding color is
very, very expensive.
Copy !req
755. Old cloaks that are worn by
royalty were only made possible
Copy !req
756. by crushing bugs, hundreds
Copy !req
757. and hundreds of bugs
to get the color.
Copy !req
758. This is the industrial
revolution, which means
Copy !req
759. that there's a lot of
industrial pollution.
Copy !req
760. People don't have a lot of
green spaces around them.
Copy !req
761. So the idea of bringing
the natural world indoors
Copy !req
762. is incredibly appealing.
Copy !req
763. To the rescue comes
something called Shields green.
Copy !req
764. It was invented
Copy !req
765. by a Swedish chemist
named Carl Wilhelm Shield.
Copy !req
766. This is bright,
vibrant, green pigment
Copy !req
767. and it becomes
incredibly popular.
Copy !req
768. People want products that
reminds them of nature.
Copy !req
769. Shields green shows up in
clothing, in wallpaper,
Copy !req
770. in art, in false flowers.
Copy !req
771. Green, from having
been so expensive
Copy !req
772. and so hard to make,
was now inexpensive.
Copy !req
773. Everywhere you looked,
Shields green was present,
Copy !req
774. but it was very dangerous.
Copy !req
775. Shields green was
made from something
Copy !req
776. called copper arsonite.
Copy !req
777. Copper arsonite.
Copy !req
778. It's like arsenic,
and that has poison.
Copy !req
779. Arsenic is
naturally occurring,
Copy !req
780. but repeated exposure to these
chemicals even on the skin is
Copy !req
781. where you get
yourself into trouble.
Copy !req
782. People reacted
really differently
Copy !req
783. depending on their age, on
their degree of exposure.
Copy !req
784. A teenager might feel
a little bit ill,
Copy !req
785. somebody else might pass out.
Copy !req
786. Somebody else might
get violently ill.
Copy !req
787. If they have a small exposure
Copy !req
788. 'cause it's just
our handkerchief,
Copy !req
789. well, they're gonna
have a mild response.
Copy !req
790. But if it's a dress, well,
their skin's gonna be irritated
Copy !req
791. and maybe it gives
rise to oozing sores.
Copy !req
792. Shields green is also
dangerous when it's inhaled.
Copy !req
793. Shields green can also
release poisonous arsenic fumes,
Copy !req
794. and these can wreak
all sorts of havoc.
Copy !req
795. People start getting
sick, rashes, vomiting,
Copy !req
796. nausea, dizzy spells.
Copy !req
797. Some people even die.
Copy !req
798. And what do they
all have in common?
Copy !req
799. Exposure to Shields green.
Copy !req
800. Napoleon died in a room
Copy !req
801. that was painted
with Shields green.
Copy !req
802. Many years later,
the room was examined
Copy !req
803. and people think maybe he
died from exposure to it,
Copy !req
804. but when they reexamined him,
a modern x-ray analysis found
Copy !req
805. that there really wasn't
enough to kill him.
Copy !req
806. But it's crazy to think that
people were getting killed
Copy !req
807. because of their wallpaper.
Copy !req
808. By the time the federal
government gets around
Copy !req
809. to regulating arsenic,
Copy !req
810. Shields green is
basically out of fashion.
Copy !req
811. But decades
later, the impact
Copy !req
812. of Shields green is
still being felt.
Copy !req
813. In 1950, the American
ambassador to Italy,
Copy !req
814. Clare Boothe Luce, is on
a trip and she falls ill.
Copy !req
815. Espionage
is suspected,
Copy !req
816. but ultimately ruled out.
Copy !req
817. She was staying
in a hotel room
Copy !req
818. where the ceiling was
painted with Shields green.
Copy !req
819. There was a washing machine
installed on the floor
Copy !req
820. above her, and when it
shook, it made little pieces
Copy !req
821. of the paint fall into her
bed, which she inhaled.
Copy !req
822. As recently as April of
2024, the National Library
Copy !req
823. of France removed four
books that date back to 1855
Copy !req
824. because there were concerns
Copy !req
825. that the bright, emerald
color in those covers
Copy !req
826. could be laced with arsenic.
Copy !req
827. America has a rich legacy
of product innovation,
Copy !req
828. and looking back even
with the best intentions,
Copy !req
829. things haven't always gone
right, like monkeys by mail,
Copy !req
830. exploding combs, and
poisonous wallpaper.
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831. But maybe those gambles
paved the way for the ideas
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832. that did transform everyday life
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833. and made our hazardous
history so inspiring.
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