1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcomed Aaron Mankey's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of I 2 00:00:07,600 --> 00:00:14,240 Speaker 1: Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is full 3 00:00:14,320 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,239 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,560 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:38,480 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. If you pay attention to the news, you've 7 00:00:38,520 --> 00:00:41,200 Speaker 1: most likely heard a sentence that started with the words 8 00:00:41,440 --> 00:00:46,040 Speaker 1: Florida man, Florida man in no seriously, I have drugs. 9 00:00:46,080 --> 00:00:50,280 Speaker 1: T Shirts arrested for possession of drugs, Florida man charged 10 00:00:50,320 --> 00:00:53,680 Speaker 1: with assault with a deadly weapon after throwing alligator through 11 00:00:53,720 --> 00:00:57,520 Speaker 1: Wendy's drive through window. And Florida man gets tired of 12 00:00:57,560 --> 00:01:01,960 Speaker 1: waiting at hospital, steals ambulance, drives home. And those, if 13 00:01:01,960 --> 00:01:05,360 Speaker 1: you're wondering, are all real headlines from the Sunshine State. 14 00:01:05,880 --> 00:01:08,720 Speaker 1: So what is it about Florida that attracts these kinds 15 00:01:08,720 --> 00:01:11,800 Speaker 1: of people? Well, the short answer is because there are 16 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:14,880 Speaker 1: so many of them. Florida, you see, is the third 17 00:01:14,920 --> 00:01:18,360 Speaker 1: most populous states in America, with upwards of twenty million 18 00:01:18,400 --> 00:01:22,240 Speaker 1: residents and another one hundred fifty million tourists visiting each year. 19 00:01:22,600 --> 00:01:25,800 Speaker 1: So really it's just a matter of statistics. But these 20 00:01:25,880 --> 00:01:29,600 Speaker 1: hijinks didn't start recently. Florida has always been a part 21 00:01:29,640 --> 00:01:32,120 Speaker 1: of the news cycle, going as far back as the 22 00:01:32,160 --> 00:01:36,120 Speaker 1: eighteen hundreds. About one hundred thirty miles north of Tampa 23 00:01:36,160 --> 00:01:39,000 Speaker 1: Bay is a city known as cedar Key. It's part 24 00:01:39,000 --> 00:01:42,000 Speaker 1: of a cluster of islands, most of which are uninhabited 25 00:01:42,040 --> 00:01:45,200 Speaker 1: today and make up a wildlife refuge protected by the government. 26 00:01:45,640 --> 00:01:48,600 Speaker 1: But during the eighteen hundreds, cedar Key was central to 27 00:01:48,720 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: Floridian commerce. The Eagle Pencil Company and eber Hard Faber 28 00:01:53,440 --> 00:01:56,320 Speaker 1: owned pencil mills in cedar Key. After the Civil War 29 00:01:56,680 --> 00:01:58,560 Speaker 1: it was a major port and there was even a 30 00:01:58,640 --> 00:02:01,600 Speaker 1: railroad line connected back to the mainland. But March of 31 00:02:01,640 --> 00:02:04,800 Speaker 1: eighteen eighty nine was when everything changed. A new mayor 32 00:02:04,880 --> 00:02:08,000 Speaker 1: had been elected, and his name was William Cartrell, a 33 00:02:08,080 --> 00:02:11,960 Speaker 1: thirty three year old poster child for nepotism. His father 34 00:02:12,040 --> 00:02:14,320 Speaker 1: had been a state senator and his brother was a 35 00:02:14,360 --> 00:02:17,720 Speaker 1: successful business owner on the island. He also managed to 36 00:02:17,800 --> 00:02:21,120 Speaker 1: marry up joining a high society family that allowed him 37 00:02:21,160 --> 00:02:24,160 Speaker 1: to move even higher in the world. But old Billy 38 00:02:24,280 --> 00:02:27,560 Speaker 1: had a problem. He liked to drink when he was sober, 39 00:02:27,600 --> 00:02:30,280 Speaker 1: he was a pleasant fellow and got along with most everyone. 40 00:02:30,680 --> 00:02:32,799 Speaker 1: But after a few fingers of whiskey, he was a 41 00:02:32,800 --> 00:02:37,399 Speaker 1: totally different person, mean, angry, and without restraint. As time 42 00:02:37,400 --> 00:02:40,919 Speaker 1: went on, the cachet of his politically connected family, along 43 00:02:40,919 --> 00:02:44,800 Speaker 1: with his own personal police force, turned Mayor Cartrell from 44 00:02:44,840 --> 00:02:48,800 Speaker 1: a belligerent drunk into a full on tyrant. With carte 45 00:02:48,800 --> 00:02:51,840 Speaker 1: blanche to do as he pleased, Catrell enjoyed loading up 46 00:02:51,840 --> 00:02:55,320 Speaker 1: on booze and abusing his authority. He yelled and ranted 47 00:02:55,320 --> 00:02:58,919 Speaker 1: at people, seemingly at random, screaming at whoever was closest 48 00:02:58,919 --> 00:03:01,760 Speaker 1: to him at the time. Often those rants would turn 49 00:03:01,840 --> 00:03:05,680 Speaker 1: into death threats against individuals that he believed had wronged him. 50 00:03:05,720 --> 00:03:08,720 Speaker 1: He would also walk into his brother's general store and 51 00:03:08,760 --> 00:03:12,240 Speaker 1: pull a gun on everyone inside, taking them hostage. He 52 00:03:12,280 --> 00:03:15,519 Speaker 1: didn't want money, though, he just really liked terrifying people. 53 00:03:16,440 --> 00:03:19,280 Speaker 1: On one awful evening, Mayor Catrell forced several of his 54 00:03:19,360 --> 00:03:22,360 Speaker 1: constituents out of their homes at gunpoint and made them 55 00:03:22,400 --> 00:03:24,920 Speaker 1: all dance for him in the street. That gun was 56 00:03:25,000 --> 00:03:28,680 Speaker 1: also used to torment the local telegraph operator, who Cotrell 57 00:03:28,800 --> 00:03:32,400 Speaker 1: hated for no known reason. During one of their spats. 58 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:35,280 Speaker 1: The mayor aimed the pistol at a black residence standing 59 00:03:35,320 --> 00:03:37,640 Speaker 1: off to the side, and told him to beat up 60 00:03:37,640 --> 00:03:41,560 Speaker 1: the telegraph operator for his enjoyment. Despite his out of 61 00:03:41,600 --> 00:03:46,560 Speaker 1: control nature, however, Catrell went unchallenged even his re election campaign. 62 00:03:46,600 --> 00:03:49,880 Speaker 1: Was his success. Perhaps the local populace didn't want to 63 00:03:49,960 --> 00:03:52,880 Speaker 1: upset him any further, but nobody stood up to him, 64 00:03:53,040 --> 00:03:56,400 Speaker 1: at least nobody in town. That wouldn't happen until the 65 00:03:56,480 --> 00:04:00,120 Speaker 1: arrival of James Harvey Pinkerton. Pinkerton had been appointed the 66 00:04:00,120 --> 00:04:03,640 Speaker 1: new customs agent on the island by President Benjamin Harrison. 67 00:04:04,000 --> 00:04:07,640 Speaker 1: He saw firsthand how the mayor handled his official business 68 00:04:07,720 --> 00:04:10,520 Speaker 1: with the locals. Pinkerton called him out on it, and 69 00:04:10,560 --> 00:04:13,800 Speaker 1: the mayor handled the offense as diplomatically as he knew how. 70 00:04:14,080 --> 00:04:17,960 Speaker 1: He threatened to kill Pinkerton, but that was a bad move. 71 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:21,400 Speaker 1: The average telegraph operator might have been helpless against the 72 00:04:21,440 --> 00:04:25,080 Speaker 1: mayor's drunken outbursts, but not an employee of the federal government. 73 00:04:25,320 --> 00:04:28,560 Speaker 1: Pinkerton wrote a detailed report of Cantrell's behavior and all 74 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 1: the things that he spat at the agents, and then 75 00:04:30,680 --> 00:04:33,479 Speaker 1: he sent it off to Washington. The report soon found 76 00:04:33,480 --> 00:04:37,680 Speaker 1: its way to the President's desk, and Benjamin Harrison knew 77 00:04:37,680 --> 00:04:40,240 Speaker 1: that the problem wouldn't fix itself, so he sent in 78 00:04:40,320 --> 00:04:44,159 Speaker 1: some reinforcements to help. In May of eighteen ninety, the U. S. 79 00:04:44,200 --> 00:04:46,400 Speaker 1: Coast Guard landed on the shores of the island to 80 00:04:46,480 --> 00:04:50,279 Speaker 1: take the mayor and his goons into custody. Catrell, having 81 00:04:50,360 --> 00:04:53,480 Speaker 1: learned of his impending arrest ahead of time, fled cedar 82 00:04:53,560 --> 00:04:56,640 Speaker 1: Key for the mainland. While the residents were happy that 83 00:04:56,680 --> 00:04:59,159 Speaker 1: the mayor was now out of their lives, they wanted 84 00:04:59,160 --> 00:05:02,120 Speaker 1: the Coastguard guard too. Many of those living in cedar 85 00:05:02,200 --> 00:05:05,520 Speaker 1: Key had been supporters of the Confederacy and they didn't 86 00:05:05,560 --> 00:05:08,760 Speaker 1: like the United States government snooping around their island. But 87 00:05:08,800 --> 00:05:12,120 Speaker 1: the President didn't care about their complaints. His people stuck 88 00:05:12,120 --> 00:05:15,320 Speaker 1: around and helped cedar Key install a new city government 89 00:05:15,720 --> 00:05:19,719 Speaker 1: that didn't keep them paralyzed by fear. As for Billy Catrell, 90 00:05:20,080 --> 00:05:23,080 Speaker 1: he escaped to Alabama until he was finally arrested for 91 00:05:23,160 --> 00:05:27,279 Speaker 1: his crimes and cedar Key. Unfortunately, though he never stood trial. 92 00:05:27,680 --> 00:05:30,240 Speaker 1: While out on bond, he got into an altercation at 93 00:05:30,240 --> 00:05:33,279 Speaker 1: a local bar and was placed in handcuffs once again. 94 00:05:33,720 --> 00:05:36,360 Speaker 1: He told police Chief Adolph Gerald that he would kill 95 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:39,040 Speaker 1: him once he was released, and even challenged him to 96 00:05:39,160 --> 00:05:42,919 Speaker 1: a duel. Mayor Catrell, true to his words, showed up 97 00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:45,679 Speaker 1: the next day in a horse drawn carriage ready to duel, 98 00:05:45,920 --> 00:05:48,600 Speaker 1: but the chief had the upper hand. As the former 99 00:05:48,640 --> 00:05:52,840 Speaker 1: mayor approached him, Gerald armed with his shotgun, fired twice 100 00:05:52,960 --> 00:05:56,960 Speaker 1: at his assailant and killed him on the spot. William 101 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:00,000 Speaker 1: Catrell was a terrible man with an even more terror 102 00:06:00,000 --> 00:06:02,880 Speaker 1: will temper. He was given near infinite power over a 103 00:06:02,920 --> 00:06:06,799 Speaker 1: small city, which he wielded with impunity. But the press 104 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:10,120 Speaker 1: had the last word on his reign of terror. Newspapers 105 00:06:10,160 --> 00:06:14,480 Speaker 1: everywhere published articles about Cantrell's demise, with many using too 106 00:06:14,480 --> 00:06:33,640 Speaker 1: simple words to sum up everyone's feelings. Good Ribbons Solomon 107 00:06:33,720 --> 00:06:37,479 Speaker 1: August Andre had a dream. Born in Sweden in eighteen 108 00:06:37,520 --> 00:06:40,320 Speaker 1: fifty four, Andre could never quite seem to get ahead. 109 00:06:40,640 --> 00:06:43,520 Speaker 1: He had a degree in mechanical engineering from the Royal 110 00:06:43,560 --> 00:06:47,000 Speaker 1: Institute of Technology in Stockholm, but came to the United 111 00:06:47,000 --> 00:06:50,080 Speaker 1: States in eighteen seventy six and worked as a janitor 112 00:06:50,240 --> 00:06:54,440 Speaker 1: at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. Upon his return to Sweden, 113 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:57,360 Speaker 1: he ran his own machine shop for several years until 114 00:06:57,440 --> 00:07:01,280 Speaker 1: a lack of business forced him to close. Andrea returned 115 00:07:01,320 --> 00:07:03,880 Speaker 1: to his alma mater as an assistant in eighteen eighty, 116 00:07:04,120 --> 00:07:06,200 Speaker 1: and two years later he was invited to join a 117 00:07:06,279 --> 00:07:10,480 Speaker 1: scientific expedition to the island of Spitzbergen in Norway. The 118 00:07:10,520 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 1: trip only lasted a year, after which he found work 119 00:07:13,320 --> 00:07:16,840 Speaker 1: in the Swedish Patent Office. In his spare time, Andrea 120 00:07:16,880 --> 00:07:22,120 Speaker 1: wrote extensively about air electricity, heat conduction, and various new inventions. 121 00:07:23,200 --> 00:07:26,120 Speaker 1: But there was something calling to him, something out there, 122 00:07:26,280 --> 00:07:29,320 Speaker 1: beckoning him from behind his desk and into the great 123 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:32,840 Speaker 1: wide open the North Pole. It came during a time 124 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:36,760 Speaker 1: known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration, when brave 125 00:07:36,800 --> 00:07:41,320 Speaker 1: explorers risked their lives to chart Antarctica. Andrea, however, wanted 126 00:07:41,360 --> 00:07:43,520 Speaker 1: to be the first to reach the opposite pole, and 127 00:07:43,640 --> 00:07:46,600 Speaker 1: to do so using only a hot air balloon. He'd 128 00:07:46,600 --> 00:07:49,680 Speaker 1: been fascinated with balloons ever since his eighteen seventy six 129 00:07:49,720 --> 00:07:52,840 Speaker 1: strip to America, when he'd run into John Wise, an 130 00:07:52,840 --> 00:07:57,040 Speaker 1: American ballooning expert and true pioneer in the field. Andrea 131 00:07:57,080 --> 00:07:59,800 Speaker 1: was captivated by the idea of soaring over the Earth 132 00:07:59,840 --> 00:08:02,760 Speaker 1: in a massive balloon and decided that that was how 133 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:05,320 Speaker 1: he was going to reach the North Pole, so he 134 00:08:05,360 --> 00:08:10,920 Speaker 1: approached the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on February and 135 00:08:10,960 --> 00:08:14,000 Speaker 1: he outlined his plan. He did so again five months 136 00:08:14,080 --> 00:08:16,680 Speaker 1: later in London when he spoke at the sixth International 137 00:08:16,760 --> 00:08:21,240 Speaker 1: Geographical Congress. He proposed using a hydrogen filled balloon to 138 00:08:21,320 --> 00:08:23,920 Speaker 1: be guided by the wind across the Arctic Sea and 139 00:08:24,040 --> 00:08:26,600 Speaker 1: to the Bearing Strait. From there, he and his team 140 00:08:26,680 --> 00:08:31,360 Speaker 1: of two other explorers would travel over Alaska, Canada, possibly Russia, 141 00:08:31,680 --> 00:08:35,080 Speaker 1: and finally across to the North Pole. He already had 142 00:08:35,080 --> 00:08:38,040 Speaker 1: a balloon to the Svie, which he had purchased two 143 00:08:38,120 --> 00:08:41,560 Speaker 1: years prior, and he'd accounted for all possible problems that 144 00:08:41,640 --> 00:08:44,160 Speaker 1: might arise during the journey. He would go during the 145 00:08:44,240 --> 00:08:47,120 Speaker 1: Arctic summer, when the temperatures were a bit warmer. The 146 00:08:47,160 --> 00:08:49,640 Speaker 1: midnight sun would allow the men to study the area 147 00:08:49,679 --> 00:08:52,480 Speaker 1: all day and night without having to stop, and there 148 00:08:52,480 --> 00:08:54,920 Speaker 1: wouldn't be much in the way of precipitation to weigh 149 00:08:54,960 --> 00:08:57,319 Speaker 1: the balloon down during the flight, and he snow that 150 00:08:57,360 --> 00:09:00,840 Speaker 1: did accumulate would simply melt at higher temperature or get 151 00:09:00,840 --> 00:09:04,400 Speaker 1: blown off by the wind. Andre first attempted the voyage 152 00:09:04,400 --> 00:09:07,560 Speaker 1: north in eighteen nineties six, but immediately had to cancel 153 00:09:07,679 --> 00:09:10,720 Speaker 1: when the winds refused to behave It wasn't until July 154 00:09:10,840 --> 00:09:13,560 Speaker 1: of the following year when he, along with twenty seven 155 00:09:13,640 --> 00:09:18,600 Speaker 1: year old civil engineer Canute Frankel and physics student Niles Strindberg, 156 00:09:18,840 --> 00:09:22,199 Speaker 1: were able to lift off from Norway's Danes Island. Takeoff 157 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:25,920 Speaker 1: was rocky. The brand new balloon, named the Omen Eagle, 158 00:09:26,120 --> 00:09:28,840 Speaker 1: was weighed down heavily by the men, their equipment and 159 00:09:28,960 --> 00:09:32,319 Speaker 1: drag ropes. Those ropes were quickly discarded to allow them 160 00:09:32,360 --> 00:09:35,320 Speaker 1: to gain altitude within the first few minutes. Though Andrea 161 00:09:35,360 --> 00:09:38,000 Speaker 1: and his team had expelled more than sixteen hundred pounds 162 00:09:38,000 --> 00:09:40,640 Speaker 1: of essential weight to get the balloon high enough to 163 00:09:40,640 --> 00:09:44,280 Speaker 1: clear the water, it was actually too much. They climbed 164 00:09:44,400 --> 00:09:47,760 Speaker 1: higher and higher, reaching a peak altitude of twenty three 165 00:09:47,840 --> 00:09:51,800 Speaker 1: hundred feet. Andrea let lose several buoys with messages inside 166 00:09:51,800 --> 00:09:53,560 Speaker 1: that were meant to be carried back to land on 167 00:09:53,559 --> 00:09:57,720 Speaker 1: the ocean's currents. Homing pigeons were also released, each carrying 168 00:09:57,760 --> 00:10:00,320 Speaker 1: a note bearing their coordinates at the time for the 169 00:10:00,320 --> 00:10:03,520 Speaker 1: papers to report on. They floated for ten and a 170 00:10:03,600 --> 00:10:07,000 Speaker 1: half hours before the balloon started to sink. What followed 171 00:10:07,080 --> 00:10:09,959 Speaker 1: was another forty one hours of their basket dragging along 172 00:10:09,960 --> 00:10:13,120 Speaker 1: the ground as the aircraft struggled to stay up right. 173 00:10:13,800 --> 00:10:16,280 Speaker 1: They finally landed on a stretch of polar ice just 174 00:10:16,400 --> 00:10:19,840 Speaker 1: three hundred miles shy of the North Pole on July four. 175 00:10:20,600 --> 00:10:23,600 Speaker 1: They had come prepared with guns, skis, a tent, and 176 00:10:23,720 --> 00:10:26,600 Speaker 1: several months worth of provisions, and so they began their 177 00:10:26,640 --> 00:10:30,520 Speaker 1: trek north, hoping to reach the Pole before winter. Along 178 00:10:30,559 --> 00:10:33,240 Speaker 1: their journey, the three men killed and eight polar bears 179 00:10:33,280 --> 00:10:36,360 Speaker 1: and seals to keep them going, all while hiking along 180 00:10:36,400 --> 00:10:39,360 Speaker 1: the vast icy land. It wasn't until a few weeks 181 00:10:39,480 --> 00:10:42,040 Speaker 1: later when they realized that all their marching had been 182 00:10:42,080 --> 00:10:45,040 Speaker 1: in vain, as the pack ice they were on was 183 00:10:45,120 --> 00:10:47,720 Speaker 1: moving in the opposite direction to where they needed to go. 184 00:10:48,520 --> 00:10:50,920 Speaker 1: After that, the team changed course to make up for 185 00:10:51,000 --> 00:10:54,559 Speaker 1: lost time, headed toward a remote island named White Island 186 00:10:54,640 --> 00:10:59,160 Speaker 1: in October of eight, and that was the last anyone 187 00:10:59,240 --> 00:11:02,800 Speaker 1: ever heard for essay Andre and his two companions for 188 00:11:02,960 --> 00:11:06,440 Speaker 1: thirty three years. They were assumed lost until a Norwegian 189 00:11:06,440 --> 00:11:09,720 Speaker 1: ship on a scientific expedition discovered their remains on the 190 00:11:09,760 --> 00:11:12,880 Speaker 1: island of Vitea. The crew of the vessel had come 191 00:11:12,920 --> 00:11:16,880 Speaker 1: to study glaciers. Instead, they found Andrea's boat, his journal, 192 00:11:17,280 --> 00:11:21,440 Speaker 1: and two skeletons wearing monogram clothing. Another ship came to 193 00:11:21,440 --> 00:11:24,400 Speaker 1: the island months later and located the final body, as 194 00:11:24,440 --> 00:11:26,760 Speaker 1: well as a box of photographic film that had been 195 00:11:26,800 --> 00:11:30,360 Speaker 1: brought by Strindberg to document their journey. The three sets 196 00:11:30,360 --> 00:11:33,360 Speaker 1: of remains were sent back to Stockholm and cremated, but 197 00:11:33,440 --> 00:11:36,400 Speaker 1: the cause of their death was still a mystery. They 198 00:11:36,400 --> 00:11:38,960 Speaker 1: hadn't succumbed to the ice, and they hadn't killed each other. 199 00:11:39,480 --> 00:11:42,000 Speaker 1: After reading through their journals and notes, it was believed 200 00:11:42,000 --> 00:11:44,520 Speaker 1: by doctors and experts that all three men had died 201 00:11:44,559 --> 00:11:47,320 Speaker 1: of an illness brought on by eating half cooked polar 202 00:11:47,360 --> 00:11:50,000 Speaker 1: bear meat. Although he didn't quite make it to the 203 00:11:50,040 --> 00:11:53,320 Speaker 1: North Pole, sa Andrea was viewed as a hero. Back 204 00:11:53,360 --> 00:11:56,120 Speaker 1: home in Sweden, he and his team were celebrated for 205 00:11:56,160 --> 00:11:59,319 Speaker 1: giving their lives in the name of science. A documentary 206 00:11:59,360 --> 00:12:02,800 Speaker 1: novel publish in the nineteen sixties, however, posited that Andre 207 00:12:02,880 --> 00:12:05,480 Speaker 1: had actually been afraid to let down the Swedish press 208 00:12:05,520 --> 00:12:08,160 Speaker 1: and public, and so he carried on with the expedition 209 00:12:08,320 --> 00:12:12,920 Speaker 1: regardless of his own misgivings. Whatever the case, Andre died 210 00:12:13,000 --> 00:12:15,720 Speaker 1: an explorer. He got himself out of the patent office 211 00:12:15,760 --> 00:12:17,760 Speaker 1: and into the thick of it. He may not have 212 00:12:17,800 --> 00:12:20,760 Speaker 1: reached the North Pole, but he inspired many others after 213 00:12:20,880 --> 00:12:25,319 Speaker 1: him to keep trying, just not by hot air balloon. 214 00:12:29,520 --> 00:12:32,240 Speaker 1: I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet 215 00:12:32,240 --> 00:12:36,120 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn 216 00:12:36,200 --> 00:12:40,760 Speaker 1: more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. 217 00:12:40,800 --> 00:12:44,320 Speaker 1: The show was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership 218 00:12:44,400 --> 00:12:47,679 Speaker 1: with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show 219 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:51,840 Speaker 1: called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, 220 00:12:52,120 --> 00:12:54,000 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 221 00:12:54,160 --> 00:12:58,960 Speaker 1: World of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.