The Oddities Department

Einstein's Brain Heist, Operation Mincemeat, Medieval Torture Devices, Cocaine Jazz Rats

1 h 32 min · 5. maj 2026
episode Einstein's Brain Heist, Operation Mincemeat, Medieval Torture Devices, Cocaine Jazz Rats cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] In Episode 18 of The Oddities Department, we take you through four wildly unsettling (and occasionally hilarious) exhibits where history, science, and human curiosity collide in the most chaotic ways imaginable. 🧠 Einstein’s Brain Heist When Albert Einstein died in 1955, he asked for a simple cremation—no autopsy, no spectacle. A pathologist ignored that, removed his brain without permission, and spent decades slicing it up and distributing it to scientists around the world. Science
 or theft? 💀 Operation Mincemeat (WWII’s Most Absurd Spy Plan) British intelligence used the body of a homeless man, gave him a fake identity, a fiancĂ©e, and top-secret documents—then dropped him into the ocean to trick Nazi Germany. It worked. Somehow. 😬 Medieval Torture Devices Designed for Women From iron masks that shredded tongues to devices built for public humiliation and mutilation, we uncover the disturbing reality of gender-targeted torture in history. đŸ€đŸŽ· Cocaine Jazz Rats (Yes, This Is Real Science) In a real 2011 study, researchers gave rats cocaine and discovered something unexpected—they started preferring jazz music. What sounds like a joke is actually a fascinating look at how addiction rewires the brain.

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Alle episoder

21 episoder

episode Mammoth Cave, The Bone Wars, Paul the Octopus & Balloon Animal Mania cover

Mammoth Cave, The Bone Wars, Paul the Octopus & Balloon Animal Mania

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] This week on The Oddities Department, history gets underground, overconfident, tentacled, and fully airborne. In Episode 21, Gavin and Lindsay take you through four bizarre true stories from the stranger corners of science, history, and human decision-making. First, we descend into Mammoth Cave, where one of the largest cave systems on Earth comes with blind shrimp, fish-eating spiders, ancient Indigenous exploration, ghost stories, tuberculosis huts, tourist scams, fake police officers, and the Kentucky Cave Wars. Because apparently, even a hole in the ground can become a business rivalry with bad signage and worse judgment. Then we dig into The Bone Wars, the ridiculous scientific feud between Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh. These two brilliant paleontologists helped introduce the world to some of the most famous dinosaurs in history, then spent years turning fossil discovery into a petty, expensive, reputation-destroying slap fight. There are grudges, sabotage, dynamite, academic humiliation, and one dinosaur head placed very confidently on the wrong end. From there, we meet Paul the Octopus, the eight-armed oracle who predicted World Cup winners and made the entire sports world briefly surrender its sanity to a mollusk. What started as a cute aquarium publicity stunt became an international frenzy involving gamblers, angry fans, government officials, death threats, soccer superstition, and one damp little legend with a mussel and vibes. Finally, we float back to the 1700s for Balloon Mania, when Europe discovered hot air balloon flight and immediately decided the responsible thing to do was send up a sheep, a duck, and a rooster first. It was Enlightenment science, public spectacle, animal testing, and barnyard aviation all wrapped into one deeply questionable basket. This episode has everything: cave spiders, fossil drama, psychic seafood, dinosaur beef, cursed tourism, medical hubris, hot air balloons, airborne livestock, and just enough education to make the chaos feel legally defensible. Content warning: This episode contains discussion of death, claustrophobia, entrapment, starvation and exposure, tuberculosis, historical medical experimentation, human remains, animal testing and endangerment, death threats, profanity, and historical mistreatment of people and animals.

1. juni 20261 h 52 min
episode Nuns Gone Wild, Idaho's Beaver Drop, Ogoh-Ogoh & Nyepi, The Newport Sex Scandal cover

Nuns Gone Wild, Idaho's Beaver Drop, Ogoh-Ogoh & Nyepi, The Newport Sex Scandal

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] This week on The Oddities Department, history gets feral, airborne, spiritually cleansed, and deeply inappropriate. In Episode 20, Gavin and Lindsay take you through four bizarre true stories from the stranger corners of history. First, we enter the medieval convent, where The Nuns Go Wild, stressed-out nuns started meowing, biting, clawing, and spiraling into full group chaos. Was it mass psychogenic illness, repression, neurospicy energy, or the world’s holiest cat choir? Probably yes. Then we head to 1948 Idaho for The Great Idaho Beaver Drop, also known as Operation High-Dive — the real wildlife management plan where officials solved a beaver relocation problem by putting beavers in crates and dropping them from airplanes with parachutes. Somehow, against all logic and reason, it worked. From there, we travel to Bali for Ogoh-Ogoh and Nyepi, a powerful New Year tradition where giant demon effigies are built, paraded through the streets, shaken, burned, and followed by a full day of silence, reflection, and reset. It’s emotional arson with cultural depth, and honestly, we’re obsessed. Finally, we end in Newport, Rhode Island, with one of the wildest scandals in U.S. Navy history: the 1919 Newport Sex Scandal. What began as a moral crusade against queer sailors turned into an outrageous undercover investigation involving entrapment, hypocrisy, explicit reports, Senate outrage, and an accidental archive of early 20th-century queer life. This episode has everything: meowing nuns, airborne beavers, Balinese demon rituals, Navy scandal, queer history, government incompetence, moral panic, and just enough education to make the chaos feel productive. Content warning: This episode contains explicit sexual language, discussion of anti-queer persecution, institutional abuse, religious repression, and historical mistreatment of marginalized people.

26. maj 20261 h 14 min
episode King Ferdinand’s Royal Rooster, Prehistoric Trees, Unusual Body Disposal Methods & Tobacco Smoke Enemas cover

King Ferdinand’s Royal Rooster, Prehistoric Trees, Unusual Body Disposal Methods & Tobacco Smoke Enemas

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] This week on The Oddities Department, Gavin and Lindsay drag you through four exhibits that somehow connect royal anatomy, prehistoric swamp forests, death rituals, and one of the worst medical ideas humanity ever committed to paper. We start with King Ferdinand VII of Spain, a terrible ruler with an allegedly massive, malformed royal problem that required doctors, strategy, and possibly furniture. Then we travel back more than 300 million years to the Carboniferous Period, when trees refused to rot, oxygen levels went wild, and bugs grew large enough to make eye contact with your soul. From there, Lindsay builds Gavin a deeply cursed post-death menu featuring sky burial, Famadihana, mellification, and possibly the most annoying afterlife option of all: becoming glitter. Finally, Gavin closes the tour with the truly real history of tobacco smoke enemas, the 18th-century medical practice where doctors believed the cure for drowning, disease, and general inconvenience was blowing smoke directly up someone’s backside. This episode has everything: bizarre history, strange science, royal scandals, giant prehistoric insects, creative corpse disposal, questionable medicine, and enough wood jokes to get us escorted out of our own museum. Stay curious. Stay weird. And please
 keep the tobacco out of your chocolate starfish. Topics include: King Ferdinand VII, Spanish royalty, bizarre medical history, Carboniferous Era trees, prehistoric insects, odd burial practices, sky burial, Famadihana, mellification, tobacco smoke enemas, weird history, strange science, and The Oddities Department.

18. maj 20261 h 21 min
episode Einstein's Brain Heist, Operation Mincemeat, Medieval Torture Devices, Cocaine Jazz Rats cover

Einstein's Brain Heist, Operation Mincemeat, Medieval Torture Devices, Cocaine Jazz Rats

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] In Episode 18 of The Oddities Department, we take you through four wildly unsettling (and occasionally hilarious) exhibits where history, science, and human curiosity collide in the most chaotic ways imaginable. 🧠 Einstein’s Brain Heist When Albert Einstein died in 1955, he asked for a simple cremation—no autopsy, no spectacle. A pathologist ignored that, removed his brain without permission, and spent decades slicing it up and distributing it to scientists around the world. Science
 or theft? 💀 Operation Mincemeat (WWII’s Most Absurd Spy Plan) British intelligence used the body of a homeless man, gave him a fake identity, a fiancĂ©e, and top-secret documents—then dropped him into the ocean to trick Nazi Germany. It worked. Somehow. 😬 Medieval Torture Devices Designed for Women From iron masks that shredded tongues to devices built for public humiliation and mutilation, we uncover the disturbing reality of gender-targeted torture in history. đŸ€đŸŽ· Cocaine Jazz Rats (Yes, This Is Real Science) In a real 2011 study, researchers gave rats cocaine and discovered something unexpected—they started preferring jazz music. What sounds like a joke is actually a fascinating look at how addiction rewires the brain.

5. maj 20261 h 32 min
episode The Silent Twins, Defenestration, The Gympie Gympie Tree, The Duality Of A Spy, Booty Hole Eel & Tarrare cover

The Silent Twins, Defenestration, The Gympie Gympie Tree, The Duality Of A Spy, Booty Hole Eel & Tarrare

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563520/fan_mail/new] Episode 17 of The Oddities Department is what happens when the museum staff quits, the exhibits get hostile, and absolutely no one is left in charge. This week’s tour is unstable from the jump. We begin with June and Jennifer Gibbons — The Silent Twins, a haunting true story of two sisters who spoke only to each other, mirrored each other’s every move, and ultimately made a pact that only one of them could survive. From there, we open a window—literally—with Defenestration, the long-standing historical tradition of solving political disagreements by throwing people out of buildings. Prague really committed to the bit. Then we step into the Australian rainforest and meet the Gympie Gympie Tree, a plant so excruciatingly painful that contact with it has driven people to the brink. Nature, once again, chooses violence. Next, we follow Juan Pujol García, the Spanish chicken farmer turned double agent who built an entire fake spy network and convinced the Nazis to believe every word of it—helping reshape the outcome of World War II through pure deception. And then
 things get worse. Because we arrive at Mr. Liu and the 2023 Butthole Eel, a modern medical emergency that proves not every idea deserves follow-through. Finally, we close with Tarrare, the man who ate everything—objects, animals, entire meals meant for dozens—and left behind one of the most disturbing and unexplainable medical cases in history. Six exhibits.  Zero janitorial support.  And something is definitely still moving in the basement. Welcome back to The Oddities Department.

27. apr. 20261 h 42 min