1 00:00:00,280 --> 00:00:02,840 Speaker 1: Brought to you by the reinvented two thousand twelve camera. 2 00:00:03,160 --> 00:00:07,320 Speaker 1: It's ready. Are you welcome to stuff you should know 3 00:00:07,920 --> 00:00:10,680 Speaker 1: from how Stuff Works dot Com? Brought to you by 4 00:00:10,880 --> 00:00:14,920 Speaker 1: consumer Guy at Automotive we make carbine easier. Hi, and 5 00:00:14,960 --> 00:00:17,759 Speaker 1: welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, is staff writer 6 00:00:17,880 --> 00:00:20,480 Speaker 1: here at how Stuff Works dot Com. With me again 7 00:00:20,520 --> 00:00:24,439 Speaker 1: after a long absence is my former editor Chris Pallette. 8 00:00:24,440 --> 00:00:27,400 Speaker 1: How are you doing? Chris? Doing great on the effects 9 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:30,480 Speaker 1: of the cryogenic freeze are starting to wear off? Fantastic? Yeah, 10 00:00:30,480 --> 00:00:33,280 Speaker 1: and your hair looks magnificent to still and Chris, I 11 00:00:33,360 --> 00:00:35,920 Speaker 1: want to say congratulations on the birth of your second child. 12 00:00:36,360 --> 00:00:40,360 Speaker 1: Way to do absolutely nothing. Thanks. Yeah, Well, let's get 13 00:00:40,360 --> 00:00:43,920 Speaker 1: to it, shall we. Speaking of, uh of absolutely nothing, 14 00:00:43,920 --> 00:00:47,879 Speaker 1: we're talking about abandoned city today, yes, and specifically modern 15 00:00:47,920 --> 00:00:51,360 Speaker 1: abandoned cities. So, I mean, there's such thing as ghost towns, 16 00:00:51,400 --> 00:00:54,040 Speaker 1: and there's one, uh, a legitimate ghost town out in 17 00:00:54,040 --> 00:00:57,880 Speaker 1: California called Body, California. Um. It was a old gold 18 00:00:57,960 --> 00:01:01,160 Speaker 1: mining boom town and they've got the old saloon and 19 00:01:01,240 --> 00:01:03,800 Speaker 1: you know that kind of thing. Um. But the thing is, 20 00:01:03,840 --> 00:01:06,880 Speaker 1: when you go there, you can imagine um, guns slingers 21 00:01:06,920 --> 00:01:09,360 Speaker 1: drinking sasaparilla at the bar, but you can't really relate 22 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:12,920 Speaker 1: to them. I find modern abandoned cities much more fascinating. 23 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:15,280 Speaker 1: Note to you. Yeah, and in a way, it's it's 24 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:17,880 Speaker 1: even creepier because you can relate to the people when 25 00:01:17,880 --> 00:01:21,560 Speaker 1: you see the things that are left behind by these people. Uh, 26 00:01:21,720 --> 00:01:23,440 Speaker 1: you can relate to it a lot better than you 27 00:01:23,480 --> 00:01:25,520 Speaker 1: could with the Old West, because we've never lived that 28 00:01:25,760 --> 00:01:28,559 Speaker 1: that lifestyle, right exactly. I mean I've been a gun slinger, 29 00:01:28,600 --> 00:01:30,759 Speaker 1: but it wasn't in the Old West, you know, I mean, 30 00:01:30,760 --> 00:01:34,080 Speaker 1: give me a break. So one of the things when 31 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:36,920 Speaker 1: I was researching this article was that there's all sorts 32 00:01:36,920 --> 00:01:40,840 Speaker 1: of different reasons why cities become abandoned. Um it can 33 00:01:40,880 --> 00:01:45,399 Speaker 1: be a disaster, Um, it can be because they're they've 34 00:01:45,440 --> 00:01:50,360 Speaker 1: outlived their usefulness. Um, there's all sorts of reasons why. Uh. 35 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:53,440 Speaker 1: Like take Prepia, Ukraine, for instance, that this was this 36 00:01:53,480 --> 00:01:56,200 Speaker 1: was an abandoned city because well, it was right next 37 00:01:56,240 --> 00:02:00,480 Speaker 1: to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant when Chernobyl helted down 38 00:02:00,520 --> 00:02:03,240 Speaker 1: the number four reactor in nineteen six, and this is 39 00:02:03,240 --> 00:02:05,800 Speaker 1: actually the company town for the nuclear power plants, So 40 00:02:05,840 --> 00:02:08,919 Speaker 1: they were right there, a lot of people died, and 41 00:02:08,960 --> 00:02:11,120 Speaker 1: they had to evacuate the city and I think within 42 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:15,720 Speaker 1: sixty hours after the meltdown, so um, everything was just 43 00:02:15,840 --> 00:02:19,519 Speaker 1: left behind. Yeah, I've seen I've seen pictures, uh, that 44 00:02:19,639 --> 00:02:22,680 Speaker 1: were taken by people who had snuck into the government 45 00:02:22,680 --> 00:02:26,200 Speaker 1: controlled area. And it's, um, that's sort of what I 46 00:02:26,280 --> 00:02:28,760 Speaker 1: meant by by the creepy because you go in and 47 00:02:28,800 --> 00:02:31,360 Speaker 1: you see all the stuff that people left behind in 48 00:02:31,400 --> 00:02:34,119 Speaker 1: a hurry, and so you see all these modern artifacts, 49 00:02:34,720 --> 00:02:38,000 Speaker 1: you know, pieces of of these people's lives that they 50 00:02:38,040 --> 00:02:40,639 Speaker 1: just that they had to leave behind as they ran 51 00:02:40,720 --> 00:02:42,800 Speaker 1: as fast as they could away from the radiation. And 52 00:02:42,800 --> 00:02:44,640 Speaker 1: and like you said, it's a lot easier to relate 53 00:02:44,680 --> 00:02:46,800 Speaker 1: to because these are things in our lives as well. 54 00:02:47,400 --> 00:02:50,280 Speaker 1: It makes it a lot more haunting, I think, yeah. Um. 55 00:02:50,360 --> 00:02:53,160 Speaker 1: And and then there's other cases like Detroit. Now Detroit 56 00:02:53,280 --> 00:02:56,320 Speaker 1: is not an abandoned city, but there are entire sections 57 00:02:56,320 --> 00:03:00,040 Speaker 1: of it that are basically abandoned. And it's it's it. 58 00:03:00,120 --> 00:03:02,440 Speaker 1: He can become abandoned or partially abandoned just from an 59 00:03:02,440 --> 00:03:05,680 Speaker 1: economic downturn, which is the case of Detroit, right right, 60 00:03:05,760 --> 00:03:09,520 Speaker 1: So I mean, have you been on forgotten Detroit dot com. Yeah, 61 00:03:09,520 --> 00:03:13,080 Speaker 1: I've been there before. Um, it's it's pretty fascinating, especially 62 00:03:13,120 --> 00:03:16,240 Speaker 1: because these areas are right next to places that are 63 00:03:16,240 --> 00:03:19,600 Speaker 1: still inhabited. Um, but they're they're bordered there like a 64 00:03:19,639 --> 00:03:22,880 Speaker 1: world away, boarded up that's just natural light coming in. 65 00:03:22,960 --> 00:03:25,200 Speaker 1: And again, like you said, modern artifacts is kind of 66 00:03:25,240 --> 00:03:28,800 Speaker 1: scattered throughout right. It's amazing to think that a city 67 00:03:28,840 --> 00:03:32,040 Speaker 1: that I think of is one of the largest cities 68 00:03:32,639 --> 00:03:35,840 Speaker 1: in North America, you know, just has these huge sections 69 00:03:35,920 --> 00:03:39,560 Speaker 1: where you know, people are the population has receded enough 70 00:03:39,600 --> 00:03:42,880 Speaker 1: to become you know, create little pockets of abandoned city, right, 71 00:03:42,880 --> 00:03:45,760 Speaker 1: And Detroit's hardly alone. I drove to Alabama recently and 72 00:03:45,800 --> 00:03:49,119 Speaker 1: I can't tell you how many dying towns I drove through, 73 00:03:49,120 --> 00:03:52,440 Speaker 1: and they have these fantastic ornate downtowns that are all 74 00:03:52,480 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 1: just boarded up and unused. And there was a heyday 75 00:03:55,760 --> 00:03:58,160 Speaker 1: there and it was fairly recently, like the forties or 76 00:03:58,200 --> 00:04:02,640 Speaker 1: fifties or sixties. But the populations dying off there's there. 77 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:05,280 Speaker 1: The economy can't support it any longer. So these towns 78 00:04:05,280 --> 00:04:09,200 Speaker 1: are slowly becoming abandoned. Oh sure. And there you know, 79 00:04:09,360 --> 00:04:12,320 Speaker 1: the roads get rerouted when the interstate system, you know, 80 00:04:12,520 --> 00:04:14,960 Speaker 1: changed the way people traveled around the country. Yeah, that's 81 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:17,440 Speaker 1: pretty much like instant death for a town. You know. Yeah, 82 00:04:17,480 --> 00:04:20,279 Speaker 1: that's true. Oh, speaking of a town that no longer 83 00:04:20,320 --> 00:04:23,039 Speaker 1: has roads leading to it, of your number one that 84 00:04:23,160 --> 00:04:27,080 Speaker 1: you chose for the articles. For those of you who 85 00:04:27,160 --> 00:04:30,400 Speaker 1: who are unfamiliar with it, it's a a city that 86 00:04:30,560 --> 00:04:33,159 Speaker 1: was a coal mining Uh you know had coal mining 87 00:04:33,279 --> 00:04:36,640 Speaker 1: is one of its major um staples. Well it was. 88 00:04:36,720 --> 00:04:39,920 Speaker 1: It was what gave Centralia life, but it also killed 89 00:04:39,920 --> 00:04:42,560 Speaker 1: it too, didn't it true. Well, you know, they ignited 90 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:44,800 Speaker 1: that underground coal fire, and of course it's sitting on 91 00:04:44,839 --> 00:04:48,039 Speaker 1: a massive amount of coal, so you know, this is 92 00:04:48,080 --> 00:04:52,719 Speaker 1: burning underground, giving off toxic fumes, uh, you know, causing sinkholes, 93 00:04:52,760 --> 00:04:55,400 Speaker 1: people falling in. Yes, some some twelve year old kid 94 00:04:55,480 --> 00:04:58,480 Speaker 1: um almost got sucked into a hundred and fifty ft 95 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,720 Speaker 1: sinkhole that suddenly erupted neath his feet. That's when people 96 00:05:01,760 --> 00:05:04,760 Speaker 1: started moving out. But there's still about a dozen people left. 97 00:05:04,960 --> 00:05:07,000 Speaker 1: And despite the fact that the government has taken away 98 00:05:07,000 --> 00:05:10,680 Speaker 1: the roads using eminent domain. Actually the government also took 99 00:05:10,680 --> 00:05:12,560 Speaker 1: away their lands and these people are now squatting in 100 00:05:12,600 --> 00:05:14,760 Speaker 1: their homes. So if you haven't caught the drift that 101 00:05:15,200 --> 00:05:19,160 Speaker 1: abandoned cities are pretty interesting. Look up five modern abandoned 102 00:05:19,160 --> 00:05:21,960 Speaker 1: cities on how stuff works dot com. It will creep 103 00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:25,279 Speaker 1: you out. For more on this and thousands of other topics, 104 00:05:25,520 --> 00:05:28,359 Speaker 1: is that how stuff works dot com. Let us know 105 00:05:28,440 --> 00:05:31,360 Speaker 1: what you think. Send an email to podcast at how 106 00:05:31,400 --> 00:05:36,680 Speaker 1: stuff works dot com. Brought to you by the reinvented 107 00:05:36,680 --> 00:05:39,400 Speaker 1: two thousand twelve camera. It's ready, are you