1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcomed Aaron Manky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of I 2 00:00:07,640 --> 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 --> 00:00:21,600 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 --> 00:00:38,080 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. As we get older, we tend to think 7 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:40,720 Speaker 1: about the things that could have been, lives we could 8 00:00:40,720 --> 00:00:43,800 Speaker 1: have led, choices we could have made, careers and loves 9 00:00:43,840 --> 00:00:46,400 Speaker 1: and kids that never were. We like to think that 10 00:00:46,440 --> 00:00:49,040 Speaker 1: we made the choices we did, because ironically we never 11 00:00:49,080 --> 00:00:51,600 Speaker 1: really had any choice to begin with, and had things 12 00:00:51,600 --> 00:00:54,520 Speaker 1: been slightly different, that dead end office job might have 13 00:00:54,560 --> 00:00:57,360 Speaker 1: been a movie studio, or a startup or a career 14 00:00:57,400 --> 00:01:00,200 Speaker 1: as a bestselling author. Of course, we'll never know what 15 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:02,800 Speaker 1: could have been, because well, we never got the chance 16 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:05,640 Speaker 1: to live it. But Charlie knew. He knew because he'd 17 00:01:05,640 --> 00:01:08,959 Speaker 1: been obsessed with the possibilities. But sadly others did not 18 00:01:09,080 --> 00:01:13,160 Speaker 1: share that obsession. Charlie was a professor from London, England. 19 00:01:13,240 --> 00:01:16,200 Speaker 1: He taught mathematics at Cambridge for almost ten years, but 20 00:01:16,280 --> 00:01:19,600 Speaker 1: it wasn't his passion. His mind was often elsewhere, either 21 00:01:19,680 --> 00:01:22,399 Speaker 1: on writing his next best seller or working on his 22 00:01:22,480 --> 00:01:26,440 Speaker 1: brand new invention, the computer. See. Charlie was something of 23 00:01:26,480 --> 00:01:29,160 Speaker 1: a pioneer in the computing world. He believed that all 24 00:01:29,200 --> 00:01:31,280 Speaker 1: the office work being done by hand at the time 25 00:01:31,280 --> 00:01:35,480 Speaker 1: could be accomplished more efficiently using a machine. Often tasks 26 00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:39,880 Speaker 1: such as navigation, calculations, and processing information were done by hand, 27 00:01:40,240 --> 00:01:42,280 Speaker 1: there was a lot of room for error, and Charlie 28 00:01:42,360 --> 00:01:44,480 Speaker 1: knew that there had to be a better way. He 29 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:48,160 Speaker 1: just had to invent it first. Others had started working 30 00:01:48,160 --> 00:01:51,640 Speaker 1: on their own computers already, but they'd all been rudimentary machines. 31 00:01:51,960 --> 00:01:54,480 Speaker 1: They could only store a small amount of information or 32 00:01:54,640 --> 00:01:57,920 Speaker 1: do a handful of calculations before needing to be reprogrammed, 33 00:01:58,080 --> 00:02:00,600 Speaker 1: so Charlie got to work on his own version. His 34 00:02:00,680 --> 00:02:03,560 Speaker 1: computer would be the first digital device to calculate the 35 00:02:03,640 --> 00:02:08,280 Speaker 1: values of polynomial functions automatically, as it used discreete digits 36 00:02:08,320 --> 00:02:12,080 Speaker 1: to perform the tabulations rather than smooth quantities, but his 37 00:02:12,160 --> 00:02:15,240 Speaker 1: skills were tailored more toward how the computer would work. 38 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:18,160 Speaker 1: He wasn't an engineer, nor did he have the capital 39 00:02:18,160 --> 00:02:20,800 Speaker 1: to fund his own project on his own, so Charlie 40 00:02:20,800 --> 00:02:23,280 Speaker 1: reached out for help. He went to the British government, 41 00:02:23,400 --> 00:02:26,600 Speaker 1: who sell value in what the mathematician was proposing. They 42 00:02:26,639 --> 00:02:29,280 Speaker 1: were also tired of doing all their paperwork by hand, 43 00:02:29,520 --> 00:02:31,639 Speaker 1: so they granted him the funding he needed to get 44 00:02:31,680 --> 00:02:34,200 Speaker 1: his start up off the ground. He then brought in 45 00:02:34,240 --> 00:02:37,080 Speaker 1: an engineer named Joe to handle the design of the device, 46 00:02:37,480 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: the Steve Wozniak to his Steve jobs, so to speak. Unfortunately, 47 00:02:42,040 --> 00:02:43,880 Speaker 1: the two men didn't see eye to eye on how 48 00:02:43,880 --> 00:02:47,919 Speaker 1: their prototype was progressing. Joe had high standards and wanted 49 00:02:47,919 --> 00:02:50,720 Speaker 1: the computer to use specific tools that Charlie could not 50 00:02:50,760 --> 00:02:54,680 Speaker 1: pay for. After arguing over the growing costs and Charlie's 51 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:57,639 Speaker 1: refusal to prepay Joe for his work, the two men 52 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:00,400 Speaker 1: had a falling out and the British government pulled their funding. 53 00:03:00,760 --> 00:03:03,880 Speaker 1: The age of the computer was already over before it 54 00:03:03,919 --> 00:03:07,240 Speaker 1: had even started, but Charlie wasn't discouraged. He got to 55 00:03:07,280 --> 00:03:10,959 Speaker 1: work on a new design. This more modern computer would 56 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:14,480 Speaker 1: be programmed using punch cards, similar to the IBM mainframes 57 00:03:14,480 --> 00:03:17,720 Speaker 1: of the fifties and sixties, and to display the output 58 00:03:17,760 --> 00:03:20,600 Speaker 1: from the device, Charlie planned on developing a printer for 59 00:03:20,680 --> 00:03:23,480 Speaker 1: it as well its internal memory could have been capable 60 00:03:23,480 --> 00:03:26,440 Speaker 1: of storing up to a thousand numbers each up to 61 00:03:26,560 --> 00:03:31,440 Speaker 1: forty decimal digits long. Unlike its predecessor, this updated model 62 00:03:31,480 --> 00:03:35,920 Speaker 1: was designed to do addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division plus 63 00:03:35,920 --> 00:03:39,800 Speaker 1: square roots and number comparisons. His first prototype could only 64 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:43,960 Speaker 1: do addition and subtraction calculations, though he created three types 65 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:47,160 Speaker 1: of punch cards to handle the different operations, as well 66 00:03:47,200 --> 00:03:50,400 Speaker 1: as a programming language light years ahead of anything else 67 00:03:50,480 --> 00:03:54,800 Speaker 1: on the market. Unfortunately, despite the advancements made between Charlie's 68 00:03:54,840 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 1: first and second iterations of his computer, he couldn't get 69 00:03:58,040 --> 00:04:01,320 Speaker 1: it built. He tinkered for the years and asked for 70 00:04:01,360 --> 00:04:04,160 Speaker 1: help from people like his son Henry to assist with 71 00:04:04,240 --> 00:04:07,120 Speaker 1: some of the engineering, but without funding, he couldn't get 72 00:04:07,160 --> 00:04:10,120 Speaker 1: it off the ground. Charlie died without ever seeing the 73 00:04:10,160 --> 00:04:13,800 Speaker 1: computer built to completion. If only he had lived another 74 00:04:14,040 --> 00:04:18,000 Speaker 1: hundred years or so. Because Charlie didn't design his computers 75 00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:21,080 Speaker 1: in his garage in the nineteen seventies, he didn't drop 76 00:04:21,080 --> 00:04:24,039 Speaker 1: out of college to start a billion dollar corporation either. 77 00:04:24,680 --> 00:04:29,240 Speaker 1: Charles Babbage designed his difference Engine and Analytical Engine before 78 00:04:29,279 --> 00:04:32,479 Speaker 1: there was a Microsoft, before there was an Apple computer, 79 00:04:32,920 --> 00:04:36,880 Speaker 1: and even before IBM was ever a company. He designed 80 00:04:36,920 --> 00:04:54,760 Speaker 1: them in the mid eighteen hundreds. As the saying goes, 81 00:04:54,880 --> 00:04:58,640 Speaker 1: one person's trash is another person's treasure. When Matt Barchuk 82 00:04:58,760 --> 00:05:01,440 Speaker 1: was invited to see a ninth en seventy five Corvette 83 00:05:01,480 --> 00:05:04,400 Speaker 1: someone was planning on selling him, he instead stumbled upon 84 00:05:04,440 --> 00:05:08,880 Speaker 1: the greatest find of his car collecting career fifty seven corvette. 85 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:11,599 Speaker 1: It's red and white shell was coated in dust, and 86 00:05:11,640 --> 00:05:14,040 Speaker 1: the engine was sitting on a stand several feet away 87 00:05:14,040 --> 00:05:17,039 Speaker 1: in an old barn. The wheels had been tossed haphazardly 88 00:05:17,080 --> 00:05:20,520 Speaker 1: on shelves and even inside the car. To anyone else, 89 00:05:20,520 --> 00:05:22,560 Speaker 1: it was nothing but a hunk of junk, but not 90 00:05:22,640 --> 00:05:25,320 Speaker 1: to Matt. He bought the vehicle and all its pieces, 91 00:05:25,600 --> 00:05:28,120 Speaker 1: took them home, and got to work restoring this piece 92 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:31,279 Speaker 1: of automotive history to its former glory, because all it 93 00:05:31,360 --> 00:05:33,920 Speaker 1: takes is one person to see the value in something 94 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:38,240 Speaker 1: everyone else sees as garbage. Back in the early nineteen sixties, though, 95 00:05:38,520 --> 00:05:40,800 Speaker 1: that one person happened to be the sales rep for 96 00:05:40,880 --> 00:05:44,520 Speaker 1: a food distribution company. The salesman worked for Alex Foods, 97 00:05:44,560 --> 00:05:49,680 Speaker 1: which delivered supplies to one very special Mexican restaurant in Anaheim, California, 98 00:05:49,960 --> 00:05:54,000 Speaker 1: called Casa de Fritos. If that word Fritos sounds familiar, 99 00:05:54,040 --> 00:05:56,240 Speaker 1: it's because the restaurant was owned by none other than 100 00:05:56,279 --> 00:05:59,599 Speaker 1: the Frito Lay Corporation. But that wasn't what made this 101 00:05:59,600 --> 00:06:02,920 Speaker 1: particular of the restaurants special. Casa de Fritos was built 102 00:06:02,960 --> 00:06:08,320 Speaker 1: in Frontier Land inside Disneyland. Alex Foods was responsible for 103 00:06:08,440 --> 00:06:12,120 Speaker 1: providing the tortillas the restaurant served in its dishes. One day, 104 00:06:12,279 --> 00:06:14,120 Speaker 1: while the rep was in the kitchen, he noticed that 105 00:06:14,120 --> 00:06:16,880 Speaker 1: the staff was throwing away a hefty supply of tortillas 106 00:06:16,880 --> 00:06:19,640 Speaker 1: that had gone stale. They were hard and couldn't be 107 00:06:19,680 --> 00:06:22,919 Speaker 1: sold to customers, But rather than have the restaurant waste food, 108 00:06:22,960 --> 00:06:25,839 Speaker 1: he suggested they do something with them. His advice was 109 00:06:25,920 --> 00:06:28,840 Speaker 1: to cut them up, fry them, and season them. They 110 00:06:28,839 --> 00:06:31,920 Speaker 1: would be similar to another Mexican dish called to topos, 111 00:06:31,960 --> 00:06:35,480 Speaker 1: which were nothing more than flattened corn pancakes that were fried, toasted, 112 00:06:35,600 --> 00:06:39,120 Speaker 1: or baked. This new preparation would help the restaurant increase 113 00:06:39,160 --> 00:06:42,760 Speaker 1: its profits while saving money on lost food product. The 114 00:06:42,839 --> 00:06:45,760 Speaker 1: kitchen staff took the reps advice and started saving their 115 00:06:45,800 --> 00:06:49,520 Speaker 1: stale tortillas, slicing them up, frying them, and sprinkling them 116 00:06:49,560 --> 00:06:52,160 Speaker 1: with a little seasoning. The pieces were then bagged up 117 00:06:52,160 --> 00:06:55,840 Speaker 1: and sold to customers coming into the restaurant. Things were 118 00:06:55,880 --> 00:06:58,640 Speaker 1: going well when one day the vice president of Friedo Lay, 119 00:06:58,800 --> 00:07:02,080 Speaker 1: Archie West, Dry, to buy to check on Casa de Fritos. 120 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:05,560 Speaker 1: He was thrilled. The restaurant was bustling and people were 121 00:07:05,600 --> 00:07:08,520 Speaker 1: buying up all the bags of its new fried tortilla chips. 122 00:07:08,920 --> 00:07:10,920 Speaker 1: West bought a bag for himself to see what the 123 00:07:10,960 --> 00:07:14,240 Speaker 1: hubbub was about. One bite and he instantly got it. 124 00:07:14,760 --> 00:07:18,400 Speaker 1: They were delicious. He went back to Friedo Lay and 125 00:07:18,480 --> 00:07:20,960 Speaker 1: told them what he'd found. The company believed that they 126 00:07:20,960 --> 00:07:23,080 Speaker 1: had a hit on their hands and gave West the 127 00:07:23,120 --> 00:07:25,880 Speaker 1: green light to help turn these homemade chips into a 128 00:07:25,960 --> 00:07:29,560 Speaker 1: real product. He contacted Alex Foods, the company whose rep 129 00:07:29,600 --> 00:07:31,480 Speaker 1: had kicked all of this off in the first place, 130 00:07:31,720 --> 00:07:33,240 Speaker 1: and asked them if they would like to be the 131 00:07:33,280 --> 00:07:36,600 Speaker 1: sole producers of this brand new Friedo Lay product. The 132 00:07:36,640 --> 00:07:40,200 Speaker 1: company couldn't say yes fast enough, but one vice president 133 00:07:40,240 --> 00:07:42,960 Speaker 1: and a bunch of Disneyland patrons wasn't enough of a 134 00:07:42,960 --> 00:07:45,760 Speaker 1: focus group to test whether the chips had a chance 135 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:49,280 Speaker 1: on a natural level, so Friedo Lay quietly launched them 136 00:07:49,280 --> 00:07:52,760 Speaker 1: in the southwestern United States to start. While the launch 137 00:07:53,360 --> 00:07:56,400 Speaker 1: wasn't that quiet even in one corner of the country, 138 00:07:56,600 --> 00:07:59,720 Speaker 1: the demand was too great. Alex Foods was quickly out 139 00:07:59,720 --> 00:08:02,280 Speaker 1: of its depth, and FRIEDA Lay had to step into 140 00:08:02,320 --> 00:08:06,040 Speaker 1: manufacture the chips itself. By May of nineteen sixty six, 141 00:08:06,320 --> 00:08:09,520 Speaker 1: the bags of fried stale tortillas were now available in 142 00:08:09,560 --> 00:08:13,400 Speaker 1: grocery store shelves all across the US. A few years later, 143 00:08:13,440 --> 00:08:16,080 Speaker 1: a new taco flavored version of the chips was released 144 00:08:16,320 --> 00:08:19,440 Speaker 1: and they performed well, but the best was yet to come. 145 00:08:20,440 --> 00:08:24,600 Speaker 1: In nineteen seventy two, Friedo Lay produced Nacho cheese flavored 146 00:08:24,680 --> 00:08:29,120 Speaker 1: chips and sales skyrocketed. Nacho Cheese is still available today, 147 00:08:29,440 --> 00:08:31,840 Speaker 1: as is a cool ranch flavor that was released in 148 00:08:31,920 --> 00:08:35,360 Speaker 1: nineteen eighty six. Most people who buy these chips today 149 00:08:35,559 --> 00:08:38,120 Speaker 1: don't realize the history behind them. They don't know that 150 00:08:38,160 --> 00:08:41,600 Speaker 1: back in the early nineteen sixties, a restaurant in Disneyland 151 00:08:41,640 --> 00:08:44,680 Speaker 1: decided to curb food waste by frying pieces of stale 152 00:08:44,679 --> 00:08:48,760 Speaker 1: tortillas and selling them to customers, accidentally giving birth to 153 00:08:48,760 --> 00:08:51,840 Speaker 1: one of the most popular and successful snack foods of 154 00:08:51,880 --> 00:08:59,880 Speaker 1: all time Derrito's. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided to 155 00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:03,280 Speaker 1: were of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on 156 00:09:03,320 --> 00:09:06,320 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting 157 00:09:06,480 --> 00:09:11,040 Speaker 1: Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me 158 00:09:11,240 --> 00:09:14,880 Speaker 1: Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make 159 00:09:14,960 --> 00:09:18,479 Speaker 1: another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 160 00:09:18,600 --> 00:09:21,560 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 161 00:09:21,559 --> 00:09:25,120 Speaker 1: about it over at the World of Lore dot com. 162 00:09:25,160 --> 00:09:28,600 Speaker 1: And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,