1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,040 Speaker 1: Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh. There's Chuck. 2 00:00:07,080 --> 00:00:11,960 Speaker 1: There's other Josh who's basically fast becoming. He's gunning at 3 00:00:12,039 --> 00:00:14,720 Speaker 1: Jerry's heels. I would say, Chuck. When't you agree? Well, 4 00:00:14,760 --> 00:00:16,439 Speaker 1: I think at the very least he's the new Frank 5 00:00:16,520 --> 00:00:19,960 Speaker 1: the chair. For sure. He may soon be the new bird, 6 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:24,720 Speaker 1: the bobbing bird. Oh that's right. Yeah. At any rate, 7 00:00:24,760 --> 00:00:27,440 Speaker 1: we're glad Josh is here, and we just almost two 8 00:00:27,440 --> 00:00:31,320 Speaker 1: inanimate objects. Exactly. We just ate up about a third 9 00:00:31,360 --> 00:00:34,040 Speaker 1: of our time. So let's we're gonna have to remove 10 00:00:34,080 --> 00:00:36,400 Speaker 1: the ending from this one. Okay, Yeah, this one is 11 00:00:36,479 --> 00:00:39,400 Speaker 1: interesting because I read the original New York Times piece 12 00:00:39,479 --> 00:00:43,120 Speaker 1: from nineteen o five or whatever, la la very different 13 00:00:43,240 --> 00:00:45,160 Speaker 1: than the story we get here in a lot of ways. 14 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:48,640 Speaker 1: So I can't wait to who knows, Let's just I'll 15 00:00:48,680 --> 00:00:50,840 Speaker 1: just point out what the New York Times article said 16 00:00:50,840 --> 00:00:52,640 Speaker 1: compared to what we have in front of us. Do 17 00:00:52,680 --> 00:00:55,040 Speaker 1: it like a cranky I T guy when I say something, 18 00:00:55,120 --> 00:00:58,760 Speaker 1: just be like wrong? Well, who knows? It is New 19 00:00:58,800 --> 00:01:00,520 Speaker 1: York Times, But I don't know what There's andreds were 20 00:01:00,520 --> 00:01:08,200 Speaker 1: like in nineteen five. I don't know either, right, Um, 21 00:01:08,280 --> 00:01:11,400 Speaker 1: So there's this this article from How Stuff Works that 22 00:01:11,440 --> 00:01:15,560 Speaker 1: we found um does a really good job of of 23 00:01:15,560 --> 00:01:19,840 Speaker 1: of placing this in context in the world and saying 24 00:01:19,880 --> 00:01:25,440 Speaker 1: that in Sanskrit, the word for coconut is kalpa vershka, 25 00:01:25,880 --> 00:01:29,839 Speaker 1: which means tree which gives all that is necessary for living, 26 00:01:30,040 --> 00:01:31,759 Speaker 1: which is a mouthful. I mean, that says a lot 27 00:01:31,800 --> 00:01:34,600 Speaker 1: about what you're saying about the coconut. You're saying, you 28 00:01:34,680 --> 00:01:37,000 Speaker 1: don't need anything else but this one tree. That's how 29 00:01:37,040 --> 00:01:39,920 Speaker 1: great this tree is. Yeah, and that's also just a 30 00:01:40,040 --> 00:01:45,640 Speaker 1: slightly fancier way than saying Webster's defines a little blank 31 00:01:45,920 --> 00:01:48,680 Speaker 1: a little bit. It's it's definitely fancier, for sure. It's 32 00:01:48,880 --> 00:01:52,280 Speaker 1: it's got like cursive everywhere. But the whole point is it, 33 00:01:52,960 --> 00:01:56,240 Speaker 1: coconuts m m are pretty fun and good to eat 34 00:01:56,280 --> 00:01:59,280 Speaker 1: and offer a decent amount of nutrition. It is it 35 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:02,200 Speaker 1: turns out that the sans Christs were saying is quite wrong, 36 00:02:02,440 --> 00:02:05,040 Speaker 1: like it's not everything you need. You couldn't just subsist 37 00:02:05,080 --> 00:02:08,040 Speaker 1: on coconuts. And there was actually a guy who was 38 00:02:08,080 --> 00:02:12,320 Speaker 1: born in eighteen seventy five named August Engelhardt who who 39 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:15,480 Speaker 1: basically proved that inadvertently it wasn't his intention to prove 40 00:02:15,560 --> 00:02:18,880 Speaker 1: that the Sanskrit term was wrong, but um, he actually 41 00:02:18,919 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 1: took it to heart, um and and tried to live 42 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:25,080 Speaker 1: exclusively on coconuts because he believed that all you needed 43 00:02:25,160 --> 00:02:28,280 Speaker 1: was coconuts and sunlight. And uh ended up living on 44 00:02:28,760 --> 00:02:30,920 Speaker 1: I don't want to say deserted island, but certainly a 45 00:02:31,040 --> 00:02:35,200 Speaker 1: sparsely populated island. Um living and dying there to to 46 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:40,920 Speaker 1: spoil the ending. Yeah, yeah, this is uh interesting mostly 47 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:44,320 Speaker 1: to me because it was when it happened. He was 48 00:02:44,360 --> 00:02:46,160 Speaker 1: born in eighteen seventy Like, if this happened in the 49 00:02:46,240 --> 00:02:49,040 Speaker 1: nineteen seventies would be like, sure, of course this happens 50 00:02:49,040 --> 00:02:51,600 Speaker 1: all the time. But this guy was born in eighteen 51 00:02:51,639 --> 00:02:55,400 Speaker 1: seventy five in Germany, and then after college sort of 52 00:02:55,400 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 1: became uh well there's a lot of debate and whether 53 00:02:58,360 --> 00:03:01,200 Speaker 1: or not he was mentally ill, but regardless of that, 54 00:03:01,280 --> 00:03:04,400 Speaker 1: he became very much into the Laban's Reform, which is 55 00:03:04,480 --> 00:03:08,480 Speaker 1: life reform movement. Basically what you would think of these 56 00:03:08,560 --> 00:03:12,520 Speaker 1: days is like a very sixties hippie American thing they 57 00:03:12,520 --> 00:03:16,160 Speaker 1: were doing, I guess in Germany in the you know, 58 00:03:16,240 --> 00:03:19,960 Speaker 1: early twentieth century. Yeah, I took it to be kind 59 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:25,440 Speaker 1: of like a prototype for Goop, for who for Goop, 60 00:03:25,560 --> 00:03:29,359 Speaker 1: Gwyneth Paltrow's site. Oh good lord, Yeah, that's that's kind 61 00:03:29,360 --> 00:03:32,799 Speaker 1: of I mean, like raw foods, alternative medicine. There was 62 00:03:32,840 --> 00:03:35,920 Speaker 1: a lot of crossover between what this guy believed and 63 00:03:36,040 --> 00:03:38,560 Speaker 1: what you could find on like some of the sites 64 00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:41,800 Speaker 1: that Coop endorses and coop itself, especially if you take 65 00:03:41,840 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 1: into account this book that he wrote, Um, it sounds 66 00:03:44,880 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: a lot like the advice that Goop offers these days. 67 00:03:48,240 --> 00:03:52,800 Speaker 1: You got sand Coop Coop so in he wrote a book, 68 00:03:53,400 --> 00:03:59,040 Speaker 1: uh called a care Free Future colon the New Gospel Semicolon. 69 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:01,960 Speaker 1: That's rare glimpse into the depth and distance for the 70 00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:06,800 Speaker 1: selection of mankind, comma comma for the reflection of all 71 00:04:07,840 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: comma for consideration and stimulation. And he should have just 72 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:15,720 Speaker 1: put an exclamation point at the end, just over all spaces. 73 00:04:15,800 --> 00:04:19,400 Speaker 1: He missed that Oxford comma after consideration though. But it 74 00:04:19,440 --> 00:04:21,919 Speaker 1: was a kind of a cookie book. He talked about life, 75 00:04:21,960 --> 00:04:24,280 Speaker 1: his lifestyle and what you know he believed his version 76 00:04:24,279 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 1: of the Laban's reform was. And then he also wrote 77 00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:30,719 Speaker 1: poems about coconuts. Yeah, like mother Coconut, The Coconut Spirit, 78 00:04:30,760 --> 00:04:32,920 Speaker 1: How to Become a Coconut. Those were titles of some 79 00:04:32,960 --> 00:04:35,200 Speaker 1: of the poems and tracks that he included in this book. 80 00:04:35,640 --> 00:04:39,200 Speaker 1: And like, it's really hard to overstate just how much 81 00:04:39,440 --> 00:04:42,760 Speaker 1: faith this guy placed in the coconut as the source 82 00:04:42,839 --> 00:04:47,960 Speaker 1: of not just life but health. And um it was based. 83 00:04:49,120 --> 00:04:53,120 Speaker 1: It was based on some somewhat unfounded ideas. So it 84 00:04:53,279 --> 00:04:55,920 Speaker 1: tied in very much with an idea that he had 85 00:04:55,960 --> 00:04:58,400 Speaker 1: that the sun was the source of all life in 86 00:04:58,440 --> 00:05:03,320 Speaker 1: the universe, and that coconuts grew on coconut palms um 87 00:05:03,360 --> 00:05:07,159 Speaker 1: toward the top, just like the brain in the human 88 00:05:07,200 --> 00:05:11,000 Speaker 1: head does. And since the brain is closest to the sun, 89 00:05:11,920 --> 00:05:16,040 Speaker 1: coconuts are closest to the sun. Ergo the coconut can 90 00:05:16,080 --> 00:05:18,719 Speaker 1: care for the brain and everything else you need in life. 91 00:05:19,279 --> 00:05:22,839 Speaker 1: And um, that was it. Yeah, that probably would have 92 00:05:22,839 --> 00:05:24,800 Speaker 1: been the end of his story had he not had 93 00:05:24,800 --> 00:05:27,760 Speaker 1: a substantial amount of money. Uh. I was about to 94 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:30,160 Speaker 1: say donated, but I guess he inherited it from a relative, 95 00:05:30,880 --> 00:05:32,880 Speaker 1: so he had some cash. All of a sudden, he 96 00:05:32,920 --> 00:05:35,599 Speaker 1: bought a hundred and eighty five acres of land on 97 00:05:35,640 --> 00:05:40,359 Speaker 1: a tiny little island called kabakan Um off of Papa 98 00:05:40,600 --> 00:05:44,320 Speaker 1: what is now known as Papua New Guinea, and he 99 00:05:44,360 --> 00:05:47,200 Speaker 1: took a long books, got rid of most of his 100 00:05:47,240 --> 00:05:52,560 Speaker 1: clothes and went out there and lived um by himself. 101 00:05:52,680 --> 00:05:56,000 Speaker 1: Well not by himself because there uh, there are indigenous 102 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:58,480 Speaker 1: peoples in the area, but he was certainly the only 103 00:05:59,040 --> 00:06:02,640 Speaker 1: white German there right. And his whole jam was that 104 00:06:02,720 --> 00:06:06,040 Speaker 1: he he had either heard or figured out that that 105 00:06:06,200 --> 00:06:10,120 Speaker 1: humans had evolved in the subtropics, between Tropic of Cancer 106 00:06:10,160 --> 00:06:13,320 Speaker 1: and Tropic of Capricorn. And that's what we were basically 107 00:06:13,360 --> 00:06:16,200 Speaker 1: evolved too, That's where we were evolved to be. So 108 00:06:16,320 --> 00:06:18,839 Speaker 1: the idea of living in like a house and driving 109 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:21,599 Speaker 1: a car eventually, I don't know if cars were invented yet, 110 00:06:21,680 --> 00:06:26,080 Speaker 1: but I'm sure this guy prefigured them. Um. The idea 111 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:30,800 Speaker 1: of just basically living in a boxing, cubicalized, stuffy life. 112 00:06:31,200 --> 00:06:34,720 Speaker 1: It was and athetical of how we were designed by 113 00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:37,960 Speaker 1: evolution or natural selection or even God if that's your bag, right, 114 00:06:38,360 --> 00:06:40,919 Speaker 1: And so he moved to this island so that he 115 00:06:40,960 --> 00:06:45,200 Speaker 1: could wander around naked, walking under the sun, eating coconuts, 116 00:06:45,440 --> 00:06:49,000 Speaker 1: living how This guy genuinely believed humans were meant to live. 117 00:06:49,279 --> 00:06:52,480 Speaker 1: And from what I can tell, he fully expected to 118 00:06:53,279 --> 00:06:56,560 Speaker 1: basically be free of all disease and any kind of 119 00:06:56,640 --> 00:07:00,279 Speaker 1: terrible condition living this way. But that's not the way 120 00:07:00,279 --> 00:07:03,920 Speaker 1: that it ended up at all. No, because, first of all, coconuts, 121 00:07:04,000 --> 00:07:06,960 Speaker 1: you cannot live on coconut alone. Um. They do have 122 00:07:07,000 --> 00:07:08,840 Speaker 1: a lot of good stuff in there. They have good 123 00:07:08,839 --> 00:07:11,760 Speaker 1: carbs and fat and stuff like that, but they lack 124 00:07:11,800 --> 00:07:16,560 Speaker 1: a lot of vitamins, notably B twelve, B six A K, 125 00:07:17,320 --> 00:07:21,520 Speaker 1: calcium um and protein. There's a little bit of protein, 126 00:07:21,880 --> 00:07:26,200 Speaker 1: about three to three grams or so, uh, but that's 127 00:07:26,400 --> 00:07:29,800 Speaker 1: that's not very much protein. So if you're gonna eat 128 00:07:29,920 --> 00:07:32,480 Speaker 1: enough coconuts to supply your body, and he was about 129 00:07:32,560 --> 00:07:35,920 Speaker 1: five ft eight, didn't weigh a lot and weighed increasingly 130 00:07:36,000 --> 00:07:38,560 Speaker 1: less as time went on, Obviously he would have had 131 00:07:38,600 --> 00:07:41,680 Speaker 1: to been eating, you know, between fourteen and eighteen coconuts 132 00:07:41,680 --> 00:07:44,320 Speaker 1: a day. That's a lot of coconuts. But I mean, 133 00:07:44,360 --> 00:07:46,640 Speaker 1: if that's all you're doing, if you're wandering around naked 134 00:07:46,680 --> 00:07:50,160 Speaker 1: on an island, reading some books, you got time to 135 00:07:50,200 --> 00:07:52,720 Speaker 1: eat fourteen to eighteen coconuts a day. So he could have, 136 00:07:53,080 --> 00:07:55,360 Speaker 1: but it's not clear that he knew he needed to 137 00:07:55,400 --> 00:07:57,800 Speaker 1: eat that amount. And it's also not clear that he 138 00:07:57,840 --> 00:08:01,200 Speaker 1: would have responded to that information. So he didn't and 139 00:08:01,280 --> 00:08:05,200 Speaker 1: he started to wither away, which, as you said, um, 140 00:08:05,640 --> 00:08:08,360 Speaker 1: probably would have been the end of the story had 141 00:08:08,400 --> 00:08:12,840 Speaker 1: this guy actually not managed to convince other people through 142 00:08:12,880 --> 00:08:15,200 Speaker 1: his book and then through correspondence with them to come 143 00:08:15,280 --> 00:08:17,600 Speaker 1: join them. And so people started to show up on 144 00:08:17,600 --> 00:08:20,160 Speaker 1: this island. And we'll talk about what happened after that 145 00:08:20,560 --> 00:08:45,760 Speaker 1: after this. Alright, So this this is where the New 146 00:08:45,840 --> 00:08:49,440 Speaker 1: York Times story has diverged already. Okay, they wrote an 147 00:08:49,559 --> 00:08:51,920 Speaker 1: article and everyone, if you don't know that The New 148 00:08:51,960 --> 00:08:54,679 Speaker 1: York Times has pretty much every article they've ever written, 149 00:08:55,280 --> 00:08:59,040 Speaker 1: uh scanned online. It's kind of great. Yeah, it's uh. 150 00:08:59,080 --> 00:09:01,679 Speaker 1: So there was an article failure of a womanless Eden 151 00:09:01,679 --> 00:09:05,920 Speaker 1: in the Pacific Dash, a strange story from the South seas. 152 00:09:06,679 --> 00:09:09,520 Speaker 1: As the New York Times tells it, only two people 153 00:09:10,000 --> 00:09:14,120 Speaker 1: joined the Sona Norton cult the Order of the Sun 154 00:09:14,120 --> 00:09:17,839 Speaker 1: cult um. This article that we have says, and I'm 155 00:09:17,880 --> 00:09:21,240 Speaker 1: inclined to go with ours, because you know, investigative journalism 156 00:09:21,240 --> 00:09:26,040 Speaker 1: has gotten better since nineteen UM. But the New York 157 00:09:26,080 --> 00:09:28,520 Speaker 1: Times set a boat showed up in the end that 158 00:09:28,559 --> 00:09:31,040 Speaker 1: he was thought was going to be full of like 159 00:09:31,040 --> 00:09:34,360 Speaker 1: twenty people and there was only two guys. Uh. The 160 00:09:34,400 --> 00:09:36,240 Speaker 1: rest of the people got worried that the island was 161 00:09:36,280 --> 00:09:39,880 Speaker 1: full of cannibals and decided not to show up. Which 162 00:09:40,360 --> 00:09:43,160 Speaker 1: if that's wrong, it sounds like it was completely made 163 00:09:43,240 --> 00:09:46,000 Speaker 1: up by the by the writer, because our thing says 164 00:09:46,000 --> 00:09:49,480 Speaker 1: that about fifteen people showed up, uh and took their 165 00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:53,360 Speaker 1: clothes off, and we're basically like, let's do this. Um. 166 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:56,679 Speaker 1: They did agree on the two two dudes though one 167 00:09:56,960 --> 00:10:01,160 Speaker 1: one guy's name was Einrich Yukin's. He was four years old, 168 00:10:01,160 --> 00:10:04,959 Speaker 1: he was a vegetarian, and he was away down with this, uh. 169 00:10:04,960 --> 00:10:07,160 Speaker 1: And the other was very famous person actually um or 170 00:10:07,160 --> 00:10:11,480 Speaker 1: at least medium famous in Germany at the time. Um, 171 00:10:11,520 --> 00:10:14,920 Speaker 1: that's a lot of qualifiers. His name was Max Lutzow 172 00:10:15,200 --> 00:10:18,960 Speaker 1: and he was a concert pianist and eventually conductor of 173 00:10:19,000 --> 00:10:23,640 Speaker 1: the Lutzeu Orchestra in Berlin. Right. So, so Yukin's and 174 00:10:23,760 --> 00:10:27,080 Speaker 1: lets ou basically showed up, from what I understand, and said, 175 00:10:27,160 --> 00:10:31,080 Speaker 1: we're here, Um, we're very enthusiastic for this. Let's see 176 00:10:31,080 --> 00:10:33,360 Speaker 1: some coconuts. They took their clothes off, they started to 177 00:10:33,400 --> 00:10:36,960 Speaker 1: live this way. Um. But there were two big problems 178 00:10:37,160 --> 00:10:41,480 Speaker 1: for for um Yukon's It was that he his body 179 00:10:41,520 --> 00:10:44,640 Speaker 1: did not take to this diet despite from what I understand, 180 00:10:44,640 --> 00:10:48,160 Speaker 1: being a vegetarian, if not a vegan ahead of time. Right, Still, 181 00:10:48,320 --> 00:10:51,240 Speaker 1: the coconuts got him. Maybe had an allergy, maybe he 182 00:10:51,280 --> 00:10:54,600 Speaker 1: got too much sign who knows, but he died. This 183 00:10:54,760 --> 00:10:57,040 Speaker 1: article from how Stuff Works puts that he dropped dead 184 00:10:57,320 --> 00:11:01,640 Speaker 1: within weeks of showing up and starting this this coconut subsistence. 185 00:11:01,800 --> 00:11:04,320 Speaker 1: New York Times confirms that, okay, good, all right, so 186 00:11:04,360 --> 00:11:07,400 Speaker 1: we've got a fact. We've we've unearthed the fact here too. 187 00:11:07,400 --> 00:11:11,440 Speaker 1: It's double double sourced, um unless our house stuff Works 188 00:11:11,520 --> 00:11:14,200 Speaker 1: article used that New York Times as a source. That's 189 00:11:14,200 --> 00:11:17,920 Speaker 1: how facts get generated. And then the other guy loots 190 00:11:17,920 --> 00:11:22,880 Speaker 1: out the conductor. He was doing fine and apparently he 191 00:11:22,920 --> 00:11:27,120 Speaker 1: got along with um August angel Heart, the leader of 192 00:11:27,160 --> 00:11:30,760 Speaker 1: this cult. But um he also they had they had 193 00:11:30,880 --> 00:11:34,079 Speaker 1: varying tastes in music, and that actually created a bit 194 00:11:34,120 --> 00:11:37,800 Speaker 1: of tension between the two. Yeah, apparently, let's out. I'm 195 00:11:37,800 --> 00:11:42,880 Speaker 1: sorry Inglehart hated but Set. I think let's love but Set. 196 00:11:43,880 --> 00:11:48,000 Speaker 1: And it says that lets brought his music collection. The 197 00:11:48,040 --> 00:11:49,680 Speaker 1: only thing I can figure is that he brought over 198 00:11:49,800 --> 00:11:51,840 Speaker 1: he was a violinist as well. That he brought a violin, 199 00:11:52,559 --> 00:11:54,120 Speaker 1: I don't know. He could have probably one of those 200 00:11:54,160 --> 00:11:58,840 Speaker 1: cranky gramophones maybe, you know, or maybe a bird with 201 00:11:58,880 --> 00:12:03,360 Speaker 1: a beak like Flintstone style, or maybe a person dressed 202 00:12:03,400 --> 00:12:06,719 Speaker 1: like a bird who could take direction really well. Yeah, 203 00:12:06,760 --> 00:12:11,200 Speaker 1: maybe he did bring records. Uh, I mean, Augus Inglehart 204 00:12:11,200 --> 00:12:15,319 Speaker 1: brought books. He could certainly bring a crank up record player. 205 00:12:16,040 --> 00:12:19,080 Speaker 1: So maybe that's what happened. But they they got the 206 00:12:19,080 --> 00:12:21,200 Speaker 1: way The New York Times described it as they started 207 00:12:21,200 --> 00:12:25,600 Speaker 1: getting into arguments about music. Uh. And because it was 208 00:12:25,640 --> 00:12:27,520 Speaker 1: just the two of them, according to that article, it 209 00:12:27,640 --> 00:12:29,560 Speaker 1: you know, it's gonna get a little crazy after a while. 210 00:12:30,240 --> 00:12:32,080 Speaker 1: And looks I was like, I don't want to spend 211 00:12:32,080 --> 00:12:35,480 Speaker 1: the night hit next to you tonight. Um And he 212 00:12:35,520 --> 00:12:39,560 Speaker 1: applied for permission, supposedly with Inglehart, to go spend the 213 00:12:39,640 --> 00:12:44,679 Speaker 1: night on a missionary boat that was nearby. Um at 214 00:12:44,679 --> 00:12:46,400 Speaker 1: one of the other it was a bunch of islands around, 215 00:12:46,840 --> 00:12:49,440 Speaker 1: and I guess Inglehart granted him this. He went on 216 00:12:49,480 --> 00:12:52,360 Speaker 1: board this boat, he spent the night. He would refuse 217 00:12:52,400 --> 00:12:54,800 Speaker 1: to eat any of the food that they had and 218 00:12:54,880 --> 00:12:57,640 Speaker 1: apparently there was a storm that prevented him from getting 219 00:12:57,679 --> 00:13:02,520 Speaker 1: back to his coconut paradise, and he died. Yes, he died. 220 00:13:02,720 --> 00:13:06,480 Speaker 1: And if there were so, if two people showed up 221 00:13:08,400 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 1: of the visitors died, but even if there were more 222 00:13:12,240 --> 00:13:15,240 Speaker 1: in this house stuff works articles, right, because this guy 223 00:13:15,320 --> 00:13:18,520 Speaker 1: carried this guy, August Engelhardt, he carried on even after 224 00:13:18,559 --> 00:13:22,440 Speaker 1: these two deaths, um for more than a decade beyond 225 00:13:22,520 --> 00:13:25,079 Speaker 1: that that New York Times articles. So maybe more people 226 00:13:25,080 --> 00:13:28,080 Speaker 1: showed up afterward, and that accounts for the discrepancy. But 227 00:13:28,120 --> 00:13:30,680 Speaker 1: as this how stuff Works article tells it, um, more 228 00:13:30,720 --> 00:13:33,560 Speaker 1: people showed up, More people died from things like the hydration, 229 00:13:34,040 --> 00:13:37,760 Speaker 1: heat stroke. Um. And then this one, this is tough 230 00:13:37,800 --> 00:13:41,400 Speaker 1: to swallow. If it is true, then there is a 231 00:13:41,440 --> 00:13:44,760 Speaker 1: creator God who does take pleasure in and and messing 232 00:13:44,800 --> 00:13:49,280 Speaker 1: with us. But somebody died from being hit by a coconut. 233 00:13:50,160 --> 00:13:53,959 Speaker 1: Somebody in the coconut worshiping cult died from being killed 234 00:13:54,320 --> 00:13:58,240 Speaker 1: or died from a coconut injury. Which happens, Sure it does, 235 00:13:58,360 --> 00:14:02,400 Speaker 1: it does, But I mean imagine traveling from Germany in 236 00:14:02,440 --> 00:14:05,720 Speaker 1: the nineteenth century early twentieth century, showing up to eat 237 00:14:05,760 --> 00:14:08,920 Speaker 1: nothing but coconuts and then dying because of coconut hit 238 00:14:08,960 --> 00:14:12,280 Speaker 1: you on the head. Pretty ironic. It is pretty ironic. 239 00:14:12,360 --> 00:14:15,680 Speaker 1: So um August Engelhardt himself died too, but he hung 240 00:14:15,720 --> 00:14:18,960 Speaker 1: on for a really long time, considering he had the 241 00:14:19,000 --> 00:14:22,880 Speaker 1: true grit of somebody who really would have just eating 242 00:14:23,000 --> 00:14:26,040 Speaker 1: eaten coconuts. From what I can tell, yeah, I mean, 243 00:14:26,040 --> 00:14:28,280 Speaker 1: there are some pictures, some rare photos at the time 244 00:14:28,280 --> 00:14:32,000 Speaker 1: from people who, uh, I guess we're nearby, and he 245 00:14:32,000 --> 00:14:34,080 Speaker 1: he looked awful. He looked like he would expect someone 246 00:14:34,080 --> 00:14:37,120 Speaker 1: to look. They describe him as a bearded bag of bones. 247 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:40,680 Speaker 1: There were lesions on his body. It was clear that 248 00:14:40,720 --> 00:14:44,520 Speaker 1: he was suffering from severe malnutrition. As the New York 249 00:14:44,520 --> 00:14:48,920 Speaker 1: Times tells it, he eventually was one of these missionary 250 00:14:48,920 --> 00:14:52,200 Speaker 1: boats came and got him and literally wrestled him onto 251 00:14:52,200 --> 00:14:55,880 Speaker 1: a boat, where he fought them physically as best he 252 00:14:55,960 --> 00:14:58,200 Speaker 1: could while they tried to care for him. It's probably 253 00:14:58,240 --> 00:15:01,000 Speaker 1: not not much now, until he jumped off the boat 254 00:15:01,360 --> 00:15:04,520 Speaker 1: to swim back to the island where he died. According 255 00:15:04,560 --> 00:15:08,520 Speaker 1: to our article and perhaps further you know, more accurate research, 256 00:15:09,120 --> 00:15:11,520 Speaker 1: he he did go on that boat. He was kind 257 00:15:11,560 --> 00:15:14,520 Speaker 1: of nurse back to semi health and then left again, 258 00:15:14,680 --> 00:15:19,680 Speaker 1: went back to the island. Um survived until nineteen fourteen, 259 00:15:20,200 --> 00:15:22,480 Speaker 1: and then because of World War One, he was captured 260 00:15:22,880 --> 00:15:26,000 Speaker 1: as a prisoner of war. Released from camp when they 261 00:15:26,040 --> 00:15:28,360 Speaker 1: realized he was mentally ill, They're like, wait, what is 262 00:15:28,400 --> 00:15:31,680 Speaker 1: this about coconuts? You're saying uh? And he carried on 263 00:15:31,720 --> 00:15:35,080 Speaker 1: apparently until nineteen nineteen, when he died at the age 264 00:15:35,120 --> 00:15:37,680 Speaker 1: of forty four, weighing less than seventy pounds. So this 265 00:15:37,720 --> 00:15:42,120 Speaker 1: guy did this for like maybe years ish, Yeah, I 266 00:15:42,120 --> 00:15:46,320 Speaker 1: mean eighteen years. That's impressive. Man. Hats off to this 267 00:15:46,360 --> 00:15:49,760 Speaker 1: guy for that level of commitment. So that's the story 268 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:52,560 Speaker 1: of August angle Heart. You can learn more about him 269 00:15:52,560 --> 00:15:55,680 Speaker 1: on How Stuff Works. They wrote this article. I also 270 00:15:55,800 --> 00:15:58,240 Speaker 1: want to just throw my two cents in and say 271 00:15:58,280 --> 00:16:01,120 Speaker 1: I would put pretty decent money on the idea that 272 00:16:01,240 --> 00:16:04,400 Speaker 1: angle Heart spent at least a significant amount of time 273 00:16:04,440 --> 00:16:07,760 Speaker 1: married to a coconut on the island probably, so uh. 274 00:16:07,800 --> 00:16:12,600 Speaker 1: Well with that, everyone, we bid you adieu from short Stuff. 275 00:16:15,880 --> 00:16:17,720 Speaker 1: Stuff You Should Know is a production of I Heart 276 00:16:17,800 --> 00:16:20,880 Speaker 1: Radio's How Stuff Works. For more podcasts for my heart Radio, 277 00:16:21,000 --> 00:16:23,840 Speaker 1: visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you 278 00:16:23,880 --> 00:16:28,080 Speaker 1: listen to your favorite shows. H