It's Probably a Folk Thing

Rest in Peace, Not in Pieces

8 min · 5 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Rest in Peace, Not in Pieces

Descripción

Why do we say someone "passed away" instead of "died"? And why does it matter so much which words we choose? In this episode, host Aaron Crawford explores the folklore behind death euphemisms — the unwritten rules that tell us which phrases belong at a graveside and which ones belong at a bar. From "departed" to "kicked the bucket," the language we use around death isn't random. It's a socially transmitted code that varies by community, generation, and context, enforced not by law but by a well-timed silence or a sharp look across the room. Music Credits Intro music: Humorous and Comic Intro By Free Music — soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic [https://soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic] Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/] Available at: chosic.com/download-audio/27133/ [https://www.chosic.com/download-audio/27133/] Music promoted by Chosic [https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/free-music/all/]

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16 episodios

episode Blood Will Tell artwork

Blood Will Tell

Why does it matter so much where your blood comes from? And what happens when the DNA doesn't match the story? In 2012, archaeologists pulled King Richard III out from under a parking lot in Leicester, England. The maternal DNA confirmed who he was. But the paternal DNA told a different story. Somewhere in the royal bloodline, the father-to-son chain quietly broke, and nobody noticed for centuries. Wars were fought, tens of thousands died, and an entire political order rested on a connection that wasn't intact. In this episode, host Aaron Crawford explores the folk belief in lineage: why we trace family trees, keep names in Bibles, and feel a pull toward places we've never been. The political system built on bloodline is gone. But the folk belief? The kitchen-table kind, passed down informally through old photos and origin stories and "you have your grandmother's eyes"? That one never cracked. And maybe that persistence tells us something about what actually matters. It's probably a folk thing.

28 de abr de 20269 min
episode Rest in Peace, Not in Pieces artwork

Rest in Peace, Not in Pieces

Why do we say someone "passed away" instead of "died"? And why does it matter so much which words we choose? In this episode, host Aaron Crawford explores the folklore behind death euphemisms — the unwritten rules that tell us which phrases belong at a graveside and which ones belong at a bar. From "departed" to "kicked the bucket," the language we use around death isn't random. It's a socially transmitted code that varies by community, generation, and context, enforced not by law but by a well-timed silence or a sharp look across the room. Music Credits Intro music: Humorous and Comic Intro By Free Music — soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic [https://soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic] Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/] Available at: chosic.com/download-audio/27133/ [https://www.chosic.com/download-audio/27133/] Music promoted by Chosic [https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/free-music/all/]

5 de mar de 20268 min
episode Silent Night for Another Fortnight artwork

Silent Night for Another Fortnight

Why does everyone lose their collective mind when Christmas music shows up “too early”? In this episode, we dig into the folk social control behind holiday soundtracks: How communities quietly regulate behavior with nothing but side-eye, shared expectations, and a deep fear of low-effort Christmas covers. From nose-picking norms to unspoken rules of public space, we explore why boundaries like this exist and how folklore keeps them in place… even against the full power of the corporations’ fake “holiday cheer.” Sidenote: A "fortnight" is an old-timey way of saying "two weeks." It's often used to indicate an indeterminate time in the future, as in "Call on me again in a fortnight." Incidentally, it is correctly spelled the way I spelled it. I, for one, would be super embarrassed if I started a major franchise using the term but I spelled it incorrectly. Music Credits Intro music: Humorous and Comic Intro By Free Music — soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic [https://soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic] Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/] Available at: chosic.com/download-audio/27133/ [https://www.chosic.com/download-audio/27133/] Music promoted by Chosic [https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/free-music/all/]

5 de dic de 20257 min
episode Trick, Treat, and Trade Places artwork

Trick, Treat, and Trade Places

Treat or treating isn't just a fun way to gather enough candy to make a child ill for three days. It's a ritual inversion: A deliberate role reversal, where the tiny become powerful. Join host Aaron Crawford as we learn how trick or treating allows our culture to blow off steam, challenge its hierarchies, and laugh at its own rules. Music Credits Intro music: Humorous and Comic Intro By Free Music — soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic [https://soundcloud.com/fm_freemusic] Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/] Available at: chosic.com/download-audio/27133/ [https://www.chosic.com/download-audio/27133/] Music promoted by Chosic [https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/free-music/all/]

25 de oct de 20255 min