Episode 766
In this episode of The Box of Oddities, Kat and Jethro Gilligan-Toth begin the new year by pulling apart something we all use but rarely question: the calendar. From Julius Caesar’s ego-driven timekeeping decisions to the leap year, misplaced months, and how entire civilizations quietly agreed on when the year should begin, it’s a surprisingly strange history of how humans try — and often fail — to organize time itself.
But once the clock runs out, the episode takes a much darker turn.
Jethro dives into the true story of the Memorial Mound in Bessemer, Alabama — an underground burial mausoleum inspired by ancient Roman catacombs and Indigenous burial traditions, designed to last for centuries. Instead, it became one of the most disturbing cases of abandonment in modern funeral history.
After the site quietly closed, human remains were left behind for years. Caskets stacked like warehouse inventory. Bodies decomposing in sealed darkness. An infant among them. When urban explorers finally entered the structure in 2014, what they found triggered a federal investigation and raised troubling questions about oversight, neglect, and how easily the dead can be forgotten.
Along the way, you’ll hear:
• The strange origins of month names and New Year’s Day
• How calendars slowly drifted out of reality
• A “Thing in the Middle” packed with bizarre machine and technology facts
• And a documented case of human remains abandoned inside an American mausoleum
It’s a story about time, memory, and what happens when systems fail — quietly, slowly, and out of sight.
Keep flying that freak flag.
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Published on 7 hours ago
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