Naked History

Ep 25 Debrief: The Radium Girls: The Afterglow, Corporate Denial, and What's Beneath

25 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Ep 25 Debrief: The Radium Girls: The Afterglow, Corporate Denial, and What's Beneath cover

Description

The Radium Girls story is already horrifying: young women told to paint glow-in-the-dark watch dials with radioactive paint, sharpen their brushes with their lips, and trust the companies that swore everything was safe. But the main episode only scratches the glowing surface. In this Naked History: Debrief, we’re opening the drawer of radioactive footnotes: what got left out, how corporate denial kept dragging on, why the Radium Girls’ fight still matters, and how their bones became evidence when the companies tried to bury the truth. We’ll also step into This Week in History for the week of June 15th, because history never takes a week off from being dramatic, weird, and deeply inconvenient. This is the after-party for The Radium Girls: Corporate Denial with a Glow, a story about workplace lies, radioactive bodies, women refusing to disappear quietly, and the long shadow of companies choosing profit over people. Because sometimes the past does not whisper. Sometimes it glows in the dark. Music Credit: * "In The West" Kevin MacLeod (⁠⁠⁠incompetech.com⁠⁠⁠) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License ⁠⁠⁠http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/⁠⁠ * Music by Ievgen Poltavskyi from Pixabay * Music by FreeMusicForVideo from Pixabay * Music track: lavender by massobeats Source: https://freetouse.com/music

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56 episodes

episode America's 250th Special, Ep 3: The Basement and the Porch: Expansion, Memory, and the Next 250 Years artwork

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America’s birthday starts at the front door. In the first episode of the Naked History 250th Special, we step inside the American Experiment and ask what was actually being born in 1776: a nation, a rebellion, a political argument, or a very expensive group project with muskets? This episode looks at the Revolution before it became marble statues and schoolhouse mythology. The colonies were not one big liberty-loving family reunion. They were divided, angry, indebted, suspicious, smuggling, printing, protesting, and slowly pressurizing into something dangerous. We’ll walk through the printing room, where the Declaration became more than a document. It became a political weapon. We’ll sit at the treason table, where founding a country also meant risking a noose. And then we’ll meet the first ghost in the house: the word “all.” Because “all men are created equal” was beautiful. It was also haunted from the beginning. Welcome to the American Experiment. Please wipe your feet. Music Credit: * "In The West" Kevin MacLeod (⁠⁠⁠incompetech.com⁠⁠⁠)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License ⁠⁠⁠http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/⁠⁠ * Music track: lavender by massobeats Source: ⁠⁠⁠https://freetouse.com/music ⁠⁠⁠Royalty Free Music for Video (Safe) * Sound effects courtesy of freesound__community, Trygve Larsen, Jurji, Gavin Mogensen, Darina Evstafeva, Moniker_Subriquet, Richard Multimedia, Soul Serenity Sounds, and Wulangjia from Pixabay,com

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America’s birthday has a footnote. This week on Naked History, we’re warming up for the big July 4th special with a short episode about why the Fourth of July was not always destined to be the Fourth of July. The vote for independence happened on July 2nd, 1776. The Declaration was adopted on July 4th. And somehow, because history loves branding almost as much as it loves paperwork, the press release got the holiday. In this episode, we look at the Fourth before it was the Fourth: John Adams’s wrong-but-understandable prediction, the difference between declaring independence and explaining it, and how America’s birthday became a memory machine full of fireworks, contradictions, mythology, and potato salad. Because July 4th is not just a celebration. It is a story America tells about itself. And next week, we’re going much deeper. Music Credit: * "In The West" Kevin MacLeod (⁠⁠⁠incompetech.com⁠⁠⁠)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License ⁠⁠⁠http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/⁠⁠ * Music track: lavender by massobeats Source: ⁠⁠⁠https://freetouse.com/music ⁠⁠⁠Royalty Free Music for Video (Safe)

23. juni 202620 min
episode Ep 25 Debrief: The Radium Girls: The Afterglow, Corporate Denial, and What's Beneath artwork

Ep 25 Debrief: The Radium Girls: The Afterglow, Corporate Denial, and What's Beneath

The Radium Girls story is already horrifying: young women told to paint glow-in-the-dark watch dials with radioactive paint, sharpen their brushes with their lips, and trust the companies that swore everything was safe. But the main episode only scratches the glowing surface. In this Naked History: Debrief, we’re opening the drawer of radioactive footnotes: what got left out, how corporate denial kept dragging on, why the Radium Girls’ fight still matters, and how their bones became evidence when the companies tried to bury the truth. We’ll also step into This Week in History for the week of June 15th, because history never takes a week off from being dramatic, weird, and deeply inconvenient. This is the after-party for The Radium Girls: Corporate Denial with a Glow, a story about workplace lies, radioactive bodies, women refusing to disappear quietly, and the long shadow of companies choosing profit over people. Because sometimes the past does not whisper. Sometimes it glows in the dark. Music Credit: * "In The West" Kevin MacLeod (⁠⁠⁠incompetech.com⁠⁠⁠) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License ⁠⁠⁠http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/⁠⁠ * Music by Ievgen Poltavskyi from Pixabay * Music by FreeMusicForVideo from Pixabay * Music track: lavender by massobeats Source: https://freetouse.com/music

15. juni 202625 min