M⁴: Medicine, Mystery, Mayhem... and Sometimes Murder

EP. 39: Pour Some Sugar on Me

54 min · 17 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio EP. 39: Pour Some Sugar on Me

Descripción

On January 15, 1919, a massive steel tank in Boston's North End ruptured without warning, releasing 2.3 million gallons of molasses in a wave that reached 25 feet high and moved at 35 miles per hour. It crushed buildings, snapped elevated train tracks, and killed 21 people. The cleanup took weeks. The myths have lasted a century. In this episode, Andrea takes us through one of the strangest industrial disasters in American history. Why was that much molasses sitting in a residential neighborhood? What did rescuers face when the wave finally stopped? And how did a flood of sugar end up changing corporate accountability in America forever? Join Andrea and Crystal as they wade through the science of why this wave was anything but slow, and the medical realities of drowning in syrup.

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41 episodios

episode Ep. 41: Who Can it Be Now? artwork

Ep. 41: Who Can it Be Now?

Imagine your hand picking up a glass, unbuttoning your shirt, or reaching for someone else's plate, and you had nothing to do with it. You didn't decide. You didn't even feel it coming. You just watched your own hand act like it belongs to someone else. This week, Crystal and Andrea dig into Alien Hand Syndrome, the rare neurological condition where one hand moves with purpose but without permission. We cover where it comes from, including stroke, traumatic brain injury, brain tumors, and certain neurodegenerative diseases, and why a condition this strange so often gets mistaken for something else entirely. We get into the split-brain surgeries that first revealed it, the cases where patients gave their hand its own name just to cope, and the unsettling question at the center of it all: what happens when part of your body stops listening to you. It's rare. It's real. And it might be happening right now to someone who has no idea why their own hand won't behave.

Ayer1 h 3 min
episode EP. 39: Pour Some Sugar on Me artwork

EP. 39: Pour Some Sugar on Me

On January 15, 1919, a massive steel tank in Boston's North End ruptured without warning, releasing 2.3 million gallons of molasses in a wave that reached 25 feet high and moved at 35 miles per hour. It crushed buildings, snapped elevated train tracks, and killed 21 people. The cleanup took weeks. The myths have lasted a century. In this episode, Andrea takes us through one of the strangest industrial disasters in American history. Why was that much molasses sitting in a residential neighborhood? What did rescuers face when the wave finally stopped? And how did a flood of sugar end up changing corporate accountability in America forever? Join Andrea and Crystal as they wade through the science of why this wave was anything but slow, and the medical realities of drowning in syrup.

17 de jun de 202654 min
episode Ep. 38: It's Your Poison Running Through My Veins artwork

Ep. 38: It's Your Poison Running Through My Veins

In the 1910s and 1920s, thousands of young women sat at factory benches painting radium onto watch dials, pressing their brushes to their lips to form a fine point with every single stroke. They were told it was safe. Some were told it would put roses in their cheeks. The scientists who handled the same material wore lead-lined gloves. This week, Crystal walks through the full story of the Radium Girls — the dial painters of New Jersey and Ottawa, Illinois, who were poisoned by their employers, gaslit by company-hired doctors, and whose deaths were falsely attributed to syphilis. And then fought back anyway, from courtrooms, from bedsides, from their own living room couches. We cover the science of what radium does inside the human body, how modern radiation medicine traces its foundations directly to these women, and the extraordinary legal legacy that helped build OSHA and protect every American worker who came after them. SOURCES:Moore, Kate. The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America'sShining Women. Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks, Inc., 2017. NIH/PMC. 'Radium Dial Workers: Back to the Future.' pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10563809/ NIH/PMC. 'Facts and Ideas from Anywhere' — Ottawa dialpainters overview. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5595405/ NIST Journal of Research. 'The National Bureau of Standardsand the Radium Dial Painters.' Vol. 126 (2021). nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/jres/126/jres.126.051.pdf MIT News. 'Professor Robley D. Evans, nuclear medicinepioneer, dies.' January 1996. news.mit.edu ORAU. 'Tales from the Atomic Age: Robley Evans in the WildWest.' orau.org ORAU. 'Radium Girls: The Health Scandal of Radium DialPainters.' orau.org Library of Congress. United States Radium Corporation sitedocumentation. loc.gov/item/nj1644/ REAC/TS Radiation Countermeasures (ORISE). Ca-DTPA/Zn-DTPAguidance. orise.orau.gov/reacts Radiation Emergency Medical Management (REMM/HHS).'Ca-DTPA/Zn-DTPA.' remm.hhs.gov/dtpa.htm NORD. 'Radiation Sickness.' rarediseases.org TED Ideas. 'This Pill May Be a Cure for Radiation Poisoning.'Abergel research, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. ideas.ted.com NPR Illinois. 'The Radium Girls — An Illinois Tragedy.' TaraMcClellan McAndrew, January 25, 2018. will.illinois.edu Library of Congress / Headlines & Heroes. 'Radium Girls:Living Dead Women.' March 2019. blogs.loc.gov National Archives Blog. 'The Radium Girls at the NationalArchives.' June 2021. text-message.blogs.archives.gov NIST Blog. 'New Jersey's Radium Girls and the NIST-TrainedScientist Who Came to Their Aid.' January 2026. nist.gov History.com. 'How the Radium Girls Forced Workplace SafetyReforms.' History.com. 'Radium: The Deadly Health Fad of the Early1900s.' HowStuffWorks. 'The Radium Girls' Dark Story Still Glows WithDeath and Deceit.' Kate Morgan, 2022. Duquesne Law / Juris Magazine. 'The Radium Girls: A Tale ofWorkplace Safety.' December 2019. HistoryNet. 'Radium Girls vs. U.S. Radium.' VOA News. 'Radium Girls Remembered for Role in Shaping USLabor Law.' September 2011. Illinois Women's History Trail — Radium Girls. sites.google.com/ismsociety.org/womens-history-trail/radium-girls Historical Marker Database. 'Remembering the Radium Girls.'Ottawa, IL. Wikipedia. 'Radium Girls'; 'Grace Fryer'; 'Radium.' AccessedApril 2026. theradiumgirls.com — individual women's biographical profiles. ExploreTheArchive.com. 'The Tragic Case of the Radium Girls.'2022. Popular Science. 'The Radioactive Miracle Water That KilledIts Believers.' CBS News / Kang & Pedersen. Excerpt from Quackery: ABrief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything. Workman Publishing,2017.

10 de jun de 20261 h 11 min
episode Ep. 37: Twist and Shout artwork

Ep. 37: Twist and Shout

Some people are born with a blueprint that's slightly off. The structure looks right at first glance, but the details are wrong in ways that matter: joints that stretch too far, a heart that works too hard, a frame that grows faster than it should. Marfan Syndrome is a genetic connective tissue disorder that hides in plain sight, and for decades, it hid in some of the most recognizable bodies in history. This week, we're breaking down the science behind the mutation that affects fibrillin-1, what it actually does to the body over time, and why Marfan often doesn't get caught until something catastrophic makes it impossible to ignore. We'll look at what modern screening can and can't do for the people living with it today. It looks like tall. It looks like flexible. It looks like gifted. Until it doesn't.

3 de jun de 20261 h 4 min