Episode Details
Back to EpisodesFrom Frozen Peas to Space Monkeys
Episode 5463
Published 3 weeks ago
Description
In this episode, we explore from frozen peas to space monkeys. Imagine sitting down to dinner in 1930, and you are served something entirely novel, something that feels like, well, an absolute miracle of modern science. Like a new invention. Exactly. It's a plate of frozen vegetables, courtesy of Clarence Bird's Eye. And at the time, it's this small, mundane domestic innovation, right? Just a curiosity. Right, just figuring out how to freeze a side dish. Yeah. But now keep that frozen pea in your mind and fast forward like less than 20 years. It's 1949. That is a fast jump. And instead of figuring out frozen food, we are literally strapping a rhesus monkey into the nose cone of a V2 rocket. Which is just wild to think about. Right. And we're launching it into the stratosphere on a suborbital flight. from a frozen vegetable to space exploration in under two decades. Welcome to this custom -tailored deep dive where the Soviet Union diplomatically. Wow. Yeah. And it passes the 21st Amendment, ending Prohibition. Suddenly the federal government isn't this distant hands -off entity. It is directly intervening in your bank account, your employment, your local infrastructure, and even what you are legally allowed to drink. So the immediate economic freefall is attached. The bleeding starts, but then the environment itself turns against the country. The dust bowl. Right. The timeline marks 1934 as the beginning of the Dust Bowl. Severe drought, decades of deep plowing, high winds. It all causes this massive ecological collapse across the Great Plains. You literally have black blizzards of topsoil blocking out the sun on the East Coast. Yet simultaneously, while the physical soil is literally blowing away, the government is pouring concrete on the modern institutional foundations we still rely on today. Well, in 1934 alone, you see the creation of the SEC.