Stuff You Should Know

Podbit · Stuff You Should Know

Short Stuff: The Voice of God

Explore episode Jul 15, 2026

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Disrupting Hollywood's In-House Trailer Model

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In the 1960s, film studios handled all their own promotion in-house — LaFontaine and producer Floyd Peterson were among the first to break that model by offering independent trailer production. They accidentally became 'disruptors' before the word existed, a fact that sends Josh into a Silicon Valley eye-roll.

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Area 51's Origins: A Dry Lake Bed That Changed History

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Richard Bissell, an economics professor turned CIA operative, surveyed the Nevada desert by plane in 1955 and selected a desolate dry salt flat called Groom Lake as the perfect secret test site. Isolated by mountains and adjacent to the nuclear test site, it became Area 51 — the most consequential patch of classified real estate in American history.

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Native American Dogs Deep Dive: A Hall-of-Fame Podcast Tangent

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Theo speculates that Blue Heelers might be Native American dogs. The internet immediately and bluntly responds: No. But the actual deep dive is fascinating — Plains Indian dogs pulled V-shaped wooden sleds called travois, the Salish wool dog was sheared like sheep for blankets, and the Xoloitzcuintli was used as a literal body heater by the Aztecs.

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Mule Suttles: The Coal Miner Who Swung a 50-Ounce Bat

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From a tangent about athlete legacies, the crew discovers George 'Mule' Suttles — a Negro Leagues slugger who swung a 50-ounce bat (Bryce Harper uses 35), hit a ball over the center field fence into what looked like an ocean, and was a coal miner in the offseason. His teammates would yell 'Kick, Mule, kick!' to fire him up in big moments.

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Data point $50M

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