1 00:00:04,160 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Menke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:09,400 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild. 3 00:00:12,920 --> 00:00:16,919 Speaker 2: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 4 00:00:17,120 --> 00:00:20,599 Speaker 2: is an open book, all of these amazing tales right 5 00:00:20,600 --> 00:00:25,720 Speaker 2: there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome 6 00:00:26,880 --> 00:00:38,480 Speaker 2: to the Cabinet of Curiosities. In September of nineteen eighty five, 7 00:00:38,600 --> 00:00:41,760 Speaker 2: a fire broke out in a working class home in Yorkshire, England. 8 00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:44,480 Speaker 2: In just a few short minutes, everything Ron and Mary 9 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:47,279 Speaker 2: Hall had built for twenty seven years had gone up 10 00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:52,239 Speaker 2: in smoke, well almost everything. As the firefighters tramped through 11 00:00:52,240 --> 00:00:55,400 Speaker 2: the home, putting out the last of the smoldering embers, 12 00:00:55,440 --> 00:00:58,520 Speaker 2: something caught their eye. Hanging on the soot blackened wall 13 00:00:58,680 --> 00:01:01,840 Speaker 2: was a perfectly pristine painting of a young street urchin 14 00:01:02,120 --> 00:01:05,600 Speaker 2: with tears rolling down his face. Upon seeing it, one 15 00:01:05,640 --> 00:01:08,679 Speaker 2: of the firefighter's side the curse of the crying boy 16 00:01:08,680 --> 00:01:12,880 Speaker 2: painting had struck again. In the fall of nineteen eighty five, 17 00:01:12,959 --> 00:01:16,800 Speaker 2: a strange phenomenon was tearing across England. One by one, 18 00:01:17,000 --> 00:01:20,120 Speaker 2: houses were going up in smoke. Now, this in and 19 00:01:20,160 --> 00:01:23,440 Speaker 2: of itself wasn't unusual. Every one of these fires had 20 00:01:23,440 --> 00:01:28,520 Speaker 2: a perfectly normal explanation, like faulty wiring or a smoldering cigarette. 21 00:01:28,760 --> 00:01:32,319 Speaker 2: What was strange were the paintings left behind. In nearly 22 00:01:32,360 --> 00:01:35,560 Speaker 2: every case, the only thing left untouched by the blaze 23 00:01:35,840 --> 00:01:39,319 Speaker 2: was a framed print of a crying little boy. The 24 00:01:39,400 --> 00:01:42,280 Speaker 2: crying boy paintings weren't uncommon at the time. In fact, 25 00:01:42,280 --> 00:01:45,560 Speaker 2: they were hugely popular with working class Brits. As the 26 00:01:45,600 --> 00:01:48,840 Speaker 2: story goes, after World War II, a series of tearful 27 00:01:48,880 --> 00:01:52,280 Speaker 2: portraits of children started appearing in Italy, and they were 28 00:01:52,280 --> 00:01:57,280 Speaker 2: attributed to a few different artists like Giovanni Braggoline or Franchoiseville, 29 00:01:57,600 --> 00:02:01,120 Speaker 2: but in truth, these were both pseudonyms for one individual man, 30 00:02:01,440 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 2: Spanish painter Bruno Amadio. Bruno supposedly began painting street urchins 31 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:08,960 Speaker 2: as a way to bring attention to the plight of 32 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:12,440 Speaker 2: children orphaned by the war. Cheap prints of his paintings 33 00:02:12,560 --> 00:02:16,720 Speaker 2: were sold all across Europe, proving especially popular with British tourists, 34 00:02:17,160 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 2: so much so that an estimated fifty thousand of Bruno's 35 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:24,239 Speaker 2: prints were sold in England alone. While this explains why 36 00:02:24,240 --> 00:02:27,400 Speaker 2: Bruno's paintings were popular, it doesn't shed any light on 37 00:02:27,480 --> 00:02:30,160 Speaker 2: why they were at the heart of so many mysterious fires, 38 00:02:30,720 --> 00:02:33,720 Speaker 2: that is until the newspapers brought a little known story 39 00:02:33,760 --> 00:02:37,160 Speaker 2: to light. According to the Sun, a British tabloid, one 40 00:02:37,240 --> 00:02:39,680 Speaker 2: of the most popular crying boy paintings was of a 41 00:02:39,680 --> 00:02:42,800 Speaker 2: young boy named Don Bonillo. Don had been dealt a 42 00:02:42,840 --> 00:02:45,640 Speaker 2: tragic hand and was orphaned when his parents perished in 43 00:02:45,680 --> 00:02:50,240 Speaker 2: a fire, and supposedly wherever Don went, mysterious fires would 44 00:02:50,280 --> 00:02:55,960 Speaker 2: spontaneously appear. Despite the rumors, Bruno adopted Don. All was 45 00:02:56,000 --> 00:02:58,040 Speaker 2: well until one day when a fire broke out in 46 00:02:58,160 --> 00:03:02,280 Speaker 2: Bruno's studio. Angry the boy, Bruno accused him of arson 47 00:03:02,360 --> 00:03:04,880 Speaker 2: and kicked him out, and he never saw Don again, 48 00:03:05,360 --> 00:03:07,680 Speaker 2: but stories of the boy trickled back to him seven 49 00:03:07,760 --> 00:03:10,799 Speaker 2: years later, when a car crashed in Barcelona and burst 50 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:14,639 Speaker 2: into flames. The driver's remains were burned beyond recognition, but 51 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:19,200 Speaker 2: a driver's license in his wallet identified him as Don Bonillo. 52 00:03:19,400 --> 00:03:22,720 Speaker 2: This backstory, coupled with the blazes, was enough to convince 53 00:03:22,760 --> 00:03:25,800 Speaker 2: many Brits that the crime boy paintings were cursed. So 54 00:03:26,080 --> 00:03:28,840 Speaker 2: when a tabloid called The Sun offered to help people 55 00:03:28,919 --> 00:03:32,079 Speaker 2: get rid of their unwonted art, hundreds of prints came 56 00:03:32,120 --> 00:03:35,720 Speaker 2: pouring into their London office. On Halloween nights in nineteen 57 00:03:35,760 --> 00:03:39,040 Speaker 2: eighty five, the Sun built a bonfire of crime Boy 58 00:03:39,080 --> 00:03:42,840 Speaker 2: paintings and set them alight, and with that they put 59 00:03:42,880 --> 00:03:46,120 Speaker 2: an end to the crime Boy curse, which was very poetic, 60 00:03:46,320 --> 00:03:49,320 Speaker 2: as after all they had started it in the first place. 61 00:03:49,880 --> 00:03:52,240 Speaker 2: You see, the Sun was a tabloid that was not 62 00:03:52,320 --> 00:03:55,360 Speaker 2: above in belishing a story to sell a paper, and 63 00:03:55,480 --> 00:03:57,680 Speaker 2: in nineteen eighty five it was a paper that was 64 00:03:57,720 --> 00:04:00,800 Speaker 2: in a war. Its chief rival, the Day Mirror, was 65 00:04:00,840 --> 00:04:04,320 Speaker 2: threatening its circulation, so when the first Crying Boy story 66 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:08,720 Speaker 2: proved popular, they leaned into it. Yes, the fires were real, 67 00:04:09,080 --> 00:04:11,800 Speaker 2: as were the crime Boy portraits, but since it was 68 00:04:11,840 --> 00:04:14,480 Speaker 2: such a popular series of prints, there was really nothing 69 00:04:14,560 --> 00:04:18,760 Speaker 2: unusual about them being present at multiple house fires. Oh 70 00:04:18,839 --> 00:04:22,279 Speaker 2: and about Bruno, the enigmatic painter. While he was a 71 00:04:22,320 --> 00:04:25,120 Speaker 2: real painter, it's doubtful that he ever adopted a young 72 00:04:25,200 --> 00:04:28,480 Speaker 2: fire starter street urchin, especially not one who wanted to 73 00:04:28,520 --> 00:04:31,640 Speaker 2: haunt his paintings. That was an invention of the Sun 74 00:04:31,800 --> 00:04:35,280 Speaker 2: as well. And as for the paintings themselves, well, even 75 00:04:35,360 --> 00:04:37,680 Speaker 2: at the time, the firemen believed that they knew why 76 00:04:37,720 --> 00:04:41,080 Speaker 2: the prince survived the fires. The cheap prints many people 77 00:04:41,080 --> 00:04:43,799 Speaker 2: had in their homes were made of high density hardboard. 78 00:04:44,160 --> 00:04:46,920 Speaker 2: This material is very tough to burn. In fact, when 79 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:49,400 Speaker 2: a BBC presenter tried to set one on fire in 80 00:04:49,480 --> 00:04:52,320 Speaker 2: twenty ten, he was barely able to singe the boy. 81 00:04:52,960 --> 00:04:56,200 Speaker 2: With that, any last lingering beliefs in the Crying Boy 82 00:04:56,279 --> 00:05:14,719 Speaker 2: curse suddenly went up in smoke. We eat a lot 83 00:05:14,760 --> 00:05:17,960 Speaker 2: of meat. The average American consumes two hundred and twenty 84 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:21,480 Speaker 2: five pounds of animal products each year, the vast majority 85 00:05:21,520 --> 00:05:25,680 Speaker 2: of which is beef, pork, and chicken. Specialty meats like veal, lamb, 86 00:05:25,680 --> 00:05:28,719 Speaker 2: and bison are reasonably easy to get your hands on, 87 00:05:28,839 --> 00:05:30,920 Speaker 2: but for the most part, we restrict ourselves to a 88 00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:34,200 Speaker 2: tiny corner of the animal kingdom. At least most of 89 00:05:34,279 --> 00:05:37,000 Speaker 2: us do. In the nineteen twenties, a group of students 90 00:05:37,040 --> 00:05:40,280 Speaker 2: at Cambridge University set out to expand their diets by 91 00:05:40,320 --> 00:05:44,200 Speaker 2: sampling what they called strange flesh. They dubbed themselves the 92 00:05:44,279 --> 00:05:47,039 Speaker 2: Glutton Club, and they more than lived up to their name. 93 00:05:47,480 --> 00:05:50,359 Speaker 2: Their mission, as stated, was to dine on and I quote, 94 00:05:50,560 --> 00:05:54,200 Speaker 2: birds and beasts which were before unknown to the human pellet. 95 00:05:54,760 --> 00:05:57,560 Speaker 1: The Gluttons met weekly and ate everything they could get 96 00:05:57,560 --> 00:06:00,880 Speaker 1: their hands on that mainly turned out to be exotic birds. 97 00:06:01,279 --> 00:06:04,760 Speaker 1: First they tried hawk, then heron, and eventually an elderly 98 00:06:04,839 --> 00:06:07,520 Speaker 1: brown owl, which was so stringy they could barely keep 99 00:06:07,560 --> 00:06:10,560 Speaker 1: it down. As you'd imagine, the club's appetites took a 100 00:06:10,640 --> 00:06:13,880 Speaker 1: serious dive after that incident, with many members choosing to 101 00:06:13,920 --> 00:06:16,800 Speaker 1: focus on their ports rather than on their plates, but 102 00:06:16,800 --> 00:06:19,240 Speaker 1: at least one member stayed true to the cause. After 103 00:06:19,320 --> 00:06:22,400 Speaker 1: leaving Cambridge, the Glutton Club's president was offered a spot 104 00:06:22,480 --> 00:06:25,160 Speaker 1: on an oceanic voyage around the world. It was the 105 00:06:25,200 --> 00:06:29,039 Speaker 1: perfect opportunity to encounter and devour species of animals that 106 00:06:29,080 --> 00:06:32,400 Speaker 1: had never been tasted by an Englishman before. His mouth 107 00:06:32,520 --> 00:06:35,719 Speaker 1: was watering before he could say yes. For the next 108 00:06:35,760 --> 00:06:38,960 Speaker 1: five years, he traveled the globe, eating his way across 109 00:06:39,000 --> 00:06:43,600 Speaker 1: one continent after another, and technically he was the expedition's naturalist, 110 00:06:43,839 --> 00:06:46,599 Speaker 1: brought along to study and catalog the various species they 111 00:06:46,720 --> 00:06:50,039 Speaker 1: encountered during the voyage, and he did do that. But 112 00:06:50,279 --> 00:06:53,320 Speaker 1: once he was done studying the specimens, each one found 113 00:06:53,320 --> 00:06:56,640 Speaker 1: its way onto his plate. He filled his research journals 114 00:06:56,680 --> 00:06:59,680 Speaker 1: with descriptions of the exotic meats he tried, commenting and 115 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:03,719 Speaker 1: compared ring flavor and tenderness. He sampled everything from pumas 116 00:07:03,760 --> 00:07:07,839 Speaker 1: and armadillos to iguanas and giant tortoises, and while he 117 00:07:07,880 --> 00:07:10,240 Speaker 1: did enjoy many of them, it was the South American 118 00:07:10,280 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 1: agouti that proved to be the most memorable. This large 119 00:07:13,360 --> 00:07:17,000 Speaker 1: rodent weighs upwards of twenty pounds, is typically slow roasted 120 00:07:17,040 --> 00:07:20,080 Speaker 1: over a fire, and is closely related to the guinea pig. 121 00:07:20,320 --> 00:07:23,040 Speaker 1: According to the Gluttons Journals, it was the best meal 122 00:07:23,240 --> 00:07:26,800 Speaker 1: he had ever tasted. His appetite almost got the better 123 00:07:26,840 --> 00:07:28,960 Speaker 1: of him one winter when he sat down for Christmas 124 00:07:29,040 --> 00:07:32,000 Speaker 1: dinner with the crew. He was halfway through what looked 125 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:34,880 Speaker 1: like turkey when he realized it was something else. The 126 00:07:34,920 --> 00:07:38,280 Speaker 1: meat came from a Rhea, a large flightless bird similar 127 00:07:38,320 --> 00:07:41,640 Speaker 1: to an ostrich. The glutton had been tracking rhea for weeks, 128 00:07:41,680 --> 00:07:44,680 Speaker 1: trying to catch one, with no luck. Apparently, the ship's 129 00:07:44,680 --> 00:07:47,480 Speaker 1: cook had beaten him to the punch. Realizing that he 130 00:07:47,520 --> 00:07:51,120 Speaker 1: was about to devour a priceless, unstudied specimen, the glutton 131 00:07:51,200 --> 00:07:54,160 Speaker 1: leaped to his feet and shouted for everyone to stop eating. 132 00:07:54,480 --> 00:07:57,679 Speaker 1: He quickly gathered up the remaining bones, skin and flesh 133 00:07:57,960 --> 00:08:00,480 Speaker 1: and hacked them into a crate and had them ship 134 00:08:00,520 --> 00:08:04,960 Speaker 1: back to London for examination and storage. Christmas Dinner was ruined, 135 00:08:04,960 --> 00:08:09,000 Speaker 1: but the science had been mostly salvaged. The Glutton finally 136 00:08:09,040 --> 00:08:11,840 Speaker 1: returned to England in eighteen thirty six, but his work 137 00:08:12,040 --> 00:08:15,320 Speaker 1: was far from over. He spent several more years examining 138 00:08:15,320 --> 00:08:17,400 Speaker 1: the specimens and the notes that he had brought back, 139 00:08:17,720 --> 00:08:20,280 Speaker 1: and then finally, in eighteen fifty nine, he published a 140 00:08:20,360 --> 00:08:23,840 Speaker 1: book on everything he had learned during his voyage. This time, 141 00:08:23,880 --> 00:08:26,080 Speaker 1: he didn't focus so much on the flavor of the 142 00:08:26,120 --> 00:08:29,040 Speaker 1: animals he encountered, but his beliefs about how they had 143 00:08:29,040 --> 00:08:32,720 Speaker 1: come to exist in their habitats. From his observations, he 144 00:08:32,800 --> 00:08:37,520 Speaker 1: extrapolated a theory explaining how organisms changed over time, suggesting 145 00:08:37,559 --> 00:08:40,120 Speaker 1: that all life on Earth could be traced back to 146 00:08:40,200 --> 00:08:44,120 Speaker 1: a single origin. His book rocked the scientific community to 147 00:08:44,160 --> 00:08:46,560 Speaker 1: its core and is still considered one of the most 148 00:08:46,559 --> 00:08:50,439 Speaker 1: significant works of modern science. The Glutton, of course, was 149 00:08:50,559 --> 00:08:54,000 Speaker 1: named Charles Darwin. His book The Origin of Species is 150 00:08:54,160 --> 00:08:57,880 Speaker 1: famous for introducing the theory of evolution that changed our 151 00:08:57,960 --> 00:09:01,720 Speaker 1: understanding of the natural world forever. And Darwin might not 152 00:09:01,760 --> 00:09:03,960 Speaker 1: have ever devised it at all, if not for his 153 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:12,400 Speaker 1: voracious appetite for discovery. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided 154 00:09:12,440 --> 00:09:15,840 Speaker 1: tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on 155 00:09:15,880 --> 00:09:18,880 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting 156 00:09:19,040 --> 00:09:23,640 Speaker 1: Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me 157 00:09:23,840 --> 00:09:27,440 Speaker 1: Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make 158 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:31,040 Speaker 1: another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 159 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:34,120 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 160 00:09:34,120 --> 00:09:38,200 Speaker 1: about it over at the Worldoflore dot com. And until 161 00:09:38,200 --> 00:09:41,880 Speaker 1: next time, stay curious.