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Here Be Monsters

HBM030: Crickets, Cadavars, and Conventional Wisdom

Here Be Monsters

Here Be Monsters Podcast

Science, Society & Culture, Social Sciences, Personal Journals, Documentary

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 27 November 2013

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This episode is a Grab-bag, it contains three segments that serve as follow-ups to the three most recent episodes of Here Be Monsters.

Part 1: Crickets on Tape

In this segment, Jeff takes apart his tape recorder and installs a knob to help him slow down the tape without using digital wizardry in attempts to de-muddy the waters after HBM029: Do Crickets Sing Hymns.  He bought some more crickets and slowed the cassette slowed down to 1/3 speed.  The results were telling, and surprising.

In that episode, we were talking about the confusion surrounding the bit of audio called God's Cricket Chorus by Jim Wilson.  In this segment we’ll clear up exactly what is known and exactly what is not about God’s Cricket Chorus and its derivative works.

Also, a correction to a mistake we made in Episode 29 about how digital audio is constructed for our ears.  In that episode we represented the final product of digital audio to be choppy, yet moving by too quick for our ears to notice its choppiness.  This is NOT the case.  In fact, digital audio is always converted back to analog before it hits our ears.  This is done with a device called a Digital to Analog Converter (DAC).  Here’s an article that explains this process very simply  (Page 4 is where the good stuff starts).  Big thanks to the two commenter s who pointed out this error.

Want to try stretching some crickets yourself?  Download this same set of cricket songs we used for the shows.

Part 2: Conventional Wisdom on the Future of the Four Humors

In HBM027: Balancing Act, Here Be Monsters producer Lina Misitzis delved into the rich history of the Four Humors, which was, for thousands of years, the way much of world understood medicine, the body and the universe as a whole.

While we never heard from Alain Touwaide in that episode, he was central to our research of traditional medicine.  He’s the director of the Institute for the Preservation of Medical Traditions in Washington DC.

He spoke with Lina about the foggy past and likely future of Humorism. 

Part 3: The Resting Places of Medical Cadavers

In HBM028: Johnathan’s Cadaver Paintings, Johnathan Happ, a grad student at the University of Washington, visits one of the cadaver labs on campus.  He spends a lot of time there, studying the bodies, so that he can make paintings of them in his studio. 

While that episode has a lot of information about the cadaver labs themselves.  We never got the chance to talk about  what happens to those bodies after their 3 year rotation in the lab. 

So, in this segment, Jeff goes out to the Evergreen-Washelli Cemetery in northern Seattle, where most of those bodies come to rest. 

Special thanks to two employees of Evergreen-Washelli who helped out with a lot of the background for this piece:  Sandy Matthie (Reception at Columbarium) and Brian Braathen (Funeral Home Manager)

Music: The Black Spot ||| Half Ghost  <-- New!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

All right, so I just got to take this out, put that in, wind it a little bit, hit play.

0:12.0

Today show is going to be just a little bit of a grab bang.

0:15.0

The three most recent episodes of Hereby monsters have tried to accomplish a lot,

0:19.0

from describing the inside of a Cadaver lab to explaining the history of modern medicine to debunking and rebunking a bit of viral audio online.

0:30.0

So these shows took off some really big bites to chew and in this episode we have three short segments

0:36.2

that we give a little bit more context to each of those pieces.

0:41.7

Oh and you might have noticed my voice sounds just a little bit different than it normally does, and that's because this audio that you're hearing right now is originally recorded on tape, cassette tape, to be specific, and without giving away the first segment of today's show, let me just

0:55.2

show you why that's important. Okay, stay tuned. Here be monsters, the podcast about.

1:07.0

Trying to understand what the world was made up.

1:15.0

The podcast about...

1:17.0

The unknown.

1:19.0

Now.

1:20.0

Now. Now.

1:22.0

All right, so I'm back now, but this time you're hearing me on the digital recorder.

1:27.6

And the reason for that gimmick is because there's something I want to clear up from last

1:31.1

week's show.

1:32.2

In that episode, it was called Do Cricket Sing Hams?

1:34.8

A guest and I were trying to figure out a little bit of audio called God's Cricket Chorus,

1:39.3

which was released by a recording artist named Jim Wilson back in the 90s.

1:44.0

However, recently, a pirated version of that audio has surfaced again online and has been

1:49.8

causing just a little bit of hubbub. In that episode, we talked a lot about the differences between digital and analog audio.

2:02.0

And one thing that made it into the episode

...

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