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Radiolab

Quicksaaaand!

Radiolab

WNYC Studios

Science, Natural Sciences, History, Society & Culture, Documentary

4.643.5K Ratings

🗓️ 16 September 2022

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For many of us, quicksand was once a real fear — it held a vise grip on our imaginations, from childish sandbox games to grown-up anxieties about venturing into unknown lands. But these days, quicksand can't even scare an 8-year-old. In this short, we try to find out why.

Then-Producer Soren Wheeler introduces us to Dan Engber, writer and columnist for Slate, now with The Atlantic. Dan became obsessed with quicksand after happening upon a strange fact: kids are no longer afraid of it. In this episode, Dan recounts for Soren and Robert Krulwich the story of his obsession. He immersed himself in research, compiled mountains of data, met with quicksand fetishists and, in the end, formulated a theory about why the terror of his childhood seems to have lost its menacing allure. Then Carlton Cuse, who at the time we first aired this episode was best-known as the writer and executive producer of Lost, helps us think about whether giant pits of hero-swallowing mud might one day creep back into the spotlight.And, as this episode first aired in 2013, we can see if we were right.

Episode Credits:Reported and produced by Soren Wheeler

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, it's a lot to, when many of us were younger, TV and movies were full of moments where

0:04.5

some hapless character would be walking along in some new exotic place, they'd take a

0:10.4

wrong step, and then they'd just start to slowly get slurps down into the earth.

0:19.5

Quick-sand was in so many movies, and it makes total sense to why, right?

0:23.8

Like the sucking, sinking, inevitable drawn outness of it.

0:28.9

That's just universally terrifying, right?

0:33.4

Turns out, nope.

0:35.9

In 2013, journalist Dan Engber pulled our editor, Sorn Wheeler, into his obsession with

0:41.0

Quick-sand, and it's surprisingly deep resonance is through history.

0:45.3

What it all reveals is that what we fear and how we articulate those fears are a lot more

0:52.0

shifty and sandy than you might think.

0:55.0

So now, for no other reason than that we wanted to, we're playing that episode for you again,

1:03.1

quick-sand!

1:06.5

Enjoy.

1:07.5

Hey, I'm Chad Abumron.

1:27.5

I'm Robert Crowley, which is radio lab.

1:30.0

We do have an interesting podcast for you.

1:31.6

We do indeed.

1:32.6

Sorn Wheeler is standing by, because he and I had a conversation with someone, we can just

1:36.0

keep you in the middle of the night.

1:39.5

So today, we have a story of an obsession that swallowed reporter Dan Engber pretty

1:46.6

much whole.

...

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