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From Part-Time Genius: 9 Wonderful Wintertime Inventions
Episode Transcript
Pushkin too quick.
No, it's perfect pushkit stuff.
Speaker 2You got it.
Speaker 1Hey, it's Jacob Today.
Speaker 2We are going to play for you an episode of a show called part Time Genius.
The show is hosted by Will Pearson and Mungesh Hatikadur, and the episode You're about to hear goes into the surprising origins of nine wintertime inventions, including ear Muff's hot chocolate and Kleenex.
I hope you like the show.
Speaker 1Guess what mango was that?
Speaker 3Will?
Speaker 1So I slipping through the channels the other day and there was this sitcom on TV and I started thinking about this because there was snow on the ground, and I was wondering how they make that fake snow for TV and movies, because you think about all the things that could melt the snow there, Like there's these hot lights, they have these long shoots, and they can't use real snow, obviously.
So I looked it up and where do you find out?
Well, the good news a lot of it.
It's edible mango.
You can eat all that snow.
So in early movies they use corn flakes that were painted white to make snow.
But then when sound came into film, you know, Obviously, all the crunchy sounds would be too loud if they were stepping on it, so they had to find a replacement.
And over the years, sets have used everything from firefighting foam to instant potato flakes, to flour, even marble dust.
But the stuff they used today is actually mostly paper.
Believe it or not, that's pretty weird.
Speaker 4I feel like paper is the last thing I would have expected for like fake snow and movies.
Speaker 1Yeah, I wouldn't have thought about that either.
But you know, it's available in all different grains and sizes, depending on what kind of snow you're looking for.
But actually the process of making it is pretty cool.
So the paper snow is packaged in these huge bales and then it shot through a special hose that lightly dampens the paper so that it will stick to whatever it lands on, just like snow.
And according to Roland had Hathaway of the Snow Business Hollywood, very familiar with snow business Hollywood.
Oh yeah, the technique can cover up to thirty seven square meters per minute, plus it never melts.
So that's just the first of nine facts we've got for you today about wintertime inventions.
Let's dive in Hey their podcast listeners, Welcome to Part Time Genius.
I'm Will Pearson and as always I'm joined by my good friend mangesh Hot Ticketer and sitting behind the soundproof booth wrapped up in his slanket Mango I.
Speaker 4Know, which I really thought was like an off brand Snuggie, but Tristan insists this the original blanket with sleeve.
Speaker 1He is very passionate about this.
Yes, that's our friend and producer Tristan McNeil.
So.
I know it's boring to talk about the weather, but the weather definitely inspired this week's episode.
Speaker 3I know, this weekend was so miserable in New York City.
It was just like.
Speaker 4Rainy and wet, and when you've got two feral kids like I do, who are just like hard to tame and even harder to keep indoors, it is truly miserable.
But uh, you know, anyway, all this winter weather made us wondered, like, what are some great wintertime inventions worth celebrating?
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, Actually, I love that old quote that everyone always talks about the weather, but no one does anything about it.
Speaker 3And we definitely have.
Speaker 4A few people on this list who did something about it.
Including my first fact, which is about ear muffs.
So I don't know if I knew this before and forgot it or I just never heard this, But the inventor of the ear muffs was a fifteen year old boy from May named Chester Greenwood, and Chester had this horrible allergy to wool.
Speaker 1So before you could keep the story going, when are we talking about here?
Speaker 4I think it was like the late eighteen hundreds, so yeah, might not say eighteen seventy three, And of course it's surprising that a kid invented them, but you know, basically, Chester wanted to go skating with his friends at the pond, which of course sounds so wholesome and so American, but you know, he couldn't wear a hat because of this wool allergy he had, and his ears got so cold that he had to turn around and go home immediately.
Speaker 1And apparently this.
Speaker 4Was a pretty common occurrence for little Chester, but this time he was totally fed up, and when he got home he asked his grandmam to help him assemble this thing he'd been thinking about.
It was like little shields for his ears, and once he described what he wanted, his grandmam got out her sewing materials and she whipped up the world's first pair of ear muffs and the device Chester later called it the Greenwood Champion ear Protectors.
Speaker 1Oh wow, like that we should call him that.
Speaker 3I feel like it's a much better name than earmuffs.
Speaker 4But the original muffs were made from beaver fur on the outside and velvet on the ear side, and it had a band of wire connecting it too.
And over the years Chester improved on the design and he patented it and by the time he was twenty five, he'd actually become the owner of an ear muff factory that cranked out fifty thousand pairs every year.
Speaker 1Wow, that's pretty remarkable.
Speaker 4Yeah, I mean, you know, it gave toll me the weirdest thing about this.
Apparently, like Chester's legend, or the legend of his ears and their sensitivity grew over the years into like something of a myth, and even like the Wall Street Journal report on it, and this is what they said, quote Chester Greenwood's ears were so sensitive that they turned chalky white, then beat red, and deep blue in that order when the Mercury dead.
Speaker 1Wow blue.
Speaker 4I know it feels like a gobstopper or something, but you know, it's total nonsense.
According to his grandkids' ears were just cold, just big and cold.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's much less dramatic.
Oh well, here's a quick fact that I liked.
Did you know that the first makeshift snow vehicles that were used in the northern US and Canada were actually just pimped out Model Tea's.
Apparently this started as far back as the nineteen tens, when people would remove the cars undercarriage, and then what they would do is they would mount a pair of skis to the front and a set of tracks to the rear.
So these converted cars were referred to as snowflyers, and they were a god sent to these rural residents, especially when it came to mail delivery.
Speaker 3Oh that's really interesting.
Speaker 4I like that people were almost like hacking forwards, like it's Ikea furniture or something.
Speaker 3Pretty soon after they were.
Speaker 1Made, right, Yeah, I mean I think it was just a year or two after the first Model T came out that people thought to put them on skis.
But anyway, while I'm talking about snow vehicles, I'm actually gonna throw out another fact.
The first snowmobile was invented by a fifteen year old, So I'm going to match your fifteen year old fact with one of my own.
Speaker 4I feel like inventing a snowmobile is like a little bit more impressive than getting your grandmam to sew some ear mussels.
Speaker 1Yeah, well, the story's pretty fascinating.
So apparently in nineteen twenty two there was this kid from Quebec named Joseph Armand Bombardier, and he built and tested the first full scale snowmobile.
So Jo Armand had been interested in playing with mechanical things since he was a kid and had been making his own sense he was thirteen.
He built these toy tractors and boats for his younger siblings.
He had made a steam powered spinning wheel for his aunt, and even a miniature train that he built with his old clock part.
So yeah, the guy was pretty resourceful.
But none of those prior works could prepare Bombardier's family for what he sprang on them on New Year's Eve.
So, taking a queue from the locals, he had started with the model T engine, but rather than use the rest of the car, this young inventor instead mounted the engine to two wooden sleds that he hitched together.
And if that doesn't sound dangerous enough.
He also added a handmade wooden propeller to the back of the engine to help propel the rig through the snow.
I mean, this guy, this, I love this story.
Anyway.
Actually it was that last part that ultimately led his dad to order the contraption be dismantled.
Although Bombardier's younger brother was able to pilot the prototype snowmobile for more than half a mile, watching his son's speed across the snow that close to an open propeller, he said, made his stomach turn.
Speaker 3That is incredible.
Speaker 4And of course, like as a dad watching her kid like wander on this like rickety contraption.
What's also amazing to me is like the fact that uh, Bombardier got his hands on an engine, like a fifteen year old kid, just like ending up with an engine and two slights and turning this stuff.
Speaker 1To Especially at that time you wouldn't think that it would be that easy.
But anyway, later on, when his dad wasn't hovering over him, he perfected the invention, adding caterpillar treads to the design.
Speaker 3That's pretty amazing.
Speaker 4So here's what I didn't know.
It's that Eddie Bauer invented the first puffy down jacket in nineteen thirty six, and he actually has a pattern on it.
The jacket was originally called the blizzard Proof Jacket and later was rebranded as the Skyliner.
I guess, but Bower's coat was unusual because it used goose down to maximize warmth and breeding the ability.
But the thing that's most interesting about this whole story is that the coat was actually created out of necessity.
It was after Bauer had nearly died of hypothermia while on a winter fishing trip.
So you can imagine not only was Bauer the owner of this sporting goods store that was kind of famous, but he also loved the outdoors.
So this was January of nineteen thirty six.
His friend asked him to go fishing, and he decided to jump at the chance, and the day went super well.
They caught about one hundred pounds of steel head in a matter of hours, which is I guess impressive.
But as Bauer was hiking back to his car, he was soaked from the sweat and also just tired from this bag of fish he was hauling, and he started to fall asleep on his feet.
Apparently the moisture in the wool clothes had actually frozen in the cold, and hypothermia was setting in.
But Bauer was an outdoorsman.
He was quick thinking.
He actually had a gun on him, so he shot it twice in the air to signal to his friend, and his friend came running and saved him.
But apparently after he almost died from hypothermia, he realized that people really needed a lightweight jacket that could be worn comfortably, especially in cold weather, while they were doing things that were like strenuous or working or whatever.
And the very next year he invented the down jacket.
Speaker 1Wow.
I actually didn't realize that Eddie Bauer himself.
I'd invented so many of these things.
But yeah, well here's a quick one, since we're talking about staying warm.
I was actually looking up facts about mittens, so.
Speaker 4I actually looked up facts about mittens too, But the only thing I found that was even remotely interesting was there's something called a beer mitten.
Speaker 1Well, even though I was about to share my fact, I have to ask what is a beer mitten.
Speaker 4I guess it's like a mitten and a beer koozy in one, so like you can keep your hands warm and your beer cold.
Oh wow, it's this Icelandic convention and there are all these knitting patterns from them online.
But the weird thing is that it's super single purpose, so you can't really do anything other than drink and hold a beverage in your hand.
Speaker 3If you're wearing a beer midden.
Speaker 1Wow.
Speaker 4But I did cut you off.
So you said you were looking up midden.
Speaker 1Well, I'm glad you found something, because I didn't find anything great.
But you know, one thing I did find was that mittens are surprisingly old, like they've been around since prehistoric times.
What's interesting is, according to a publication called Fashion Time, is that the earliest gloves were found in King Tuts two, and since he died around thirteen twenty three BCE, that actually makes the oldest known pair of gloves well over thirty three hundred years old.
Speaker 4It's weird to think that gloves are like three thousand years old and ear muffs are only like one hundred and fifty years old.
But speaking of muffs, which is not a transition I normally about this.
Do you know what hand muffs are?
Speaker 1I don't what are hand muffs?
Speaker 3They are like.
Speaker 4Those furry cylindrical things that rich people wear.
Sometimes you see him in like old Hollywood movies or in ski towns, and you know, people just stuff their hands into them.
But apparently hand muffs have been a status symbol since the fourteen hundreds, and they've actually been called different things in different places.
Speaker 3In France they're called man shaan.
Speaker 4In England they were called snuffkins, which like but the name we know it by came from the Flemish word mouf or muff, and according to the Encyclopedia of Clothing and Fashion, this trend grew in popularity after the colonies started sending furs to Europe, So women in England and France would actually warm their hands with the furs of sables or martins, and sometimes they jazz up their muffs with stylish accessories, so listen to this.
They'd actually add bejeweled animal skulls to hang from the.
Speaker 1Chain, which is so weird it is.
Speaker 4Me Also, fashionable women in the sixteenth century would tote their tiny dogs in them, so they're kind of like the tiny dog purses you see today, right, And Weirdly, men also got in on this muff craze, although of course they wanted to wear more manly furs like Otter and tiger right, and people who were cash strapped and just kind of aspiring fashionistas, they'd settle for lesser animals like squirrel fur muffs.
Speaker 1I knew there was such a history there.
I feel like we've learned enough about hand muffs for a while now, So why don't we take a quick break and come back with two more facts.
Welcome back to part time Genius, where we're talking about winter inventions.
All right, mego, so what do you want to end with here?
Speaker 4So, in honor of my cold, which doesn't seem to go away ever, how about we talk about kleenex.
Speaker 1So how long have you been sick?
Speaker 4Now?
Speaker 1Is it thirty eight years?
Speaker 3I think so.
Speaker 4I feel like every time I start to get better, my kids bring back like different germs to invade my system.
Speaker 3But back to Kleenexes.
Speaker 4So it is fairly obvious that handkerchiefs pre date disposable tissues by several centuries, you know, but the disposable option is actually older than you might guess.
It turns out that the Japanese have been using disposable facial tissues since about the seventeenth century, and they used a super fine paper called washing the Western world, though they were a little later to the game.
They didn't get into until the nineteen twenties.
And that's when Kimberly Clark Corporation, which I'm sure you've heard of, they released Kleenex to the market in nineteen twenty four.
But this is the weird part.
Kleenex actually wasn't intended for blowing your nose at all.
Instead, Kleenex tissues were originally men as a way for women to remove cold cream and clean their faces, which is where the clean and the name comes from.
So even the early ads from the period have like Hollywood makeup departments endorsing them, and they show movie stars like Helen Hayes or Gene Harlow and how they supposedly used Kleenex to wipe off the theater makeup.
Speaker 3But the public sort of.
Speaker 4Immediately knew what to do with them, and within two years Kimberly Clark was getting all these letters from customers praising Kleenex as the perfect disposable handkerchief.
Apparently, sixty percent of customers used Kleenex for blowing their noses, which totally outnumbered the number who were using them to wipe off the cold cream.
Speaker 3And Kimberly Clark took the hint.
Speaker 4By nineteen thirty, the company had completely changed course and changed their marketing entirely, and Kleenex sales had.
Speaker 3Doubled as a result.
Wow, So, well, what fact do you want to end on?
All right?
Speaker 1Well, since I started with the fact about artificial snow, I kind of want to end with one on how man made snow got invented in the first place.
But before we talk about the snow, actually, let's talk about a special kind of ice that's called rhyme.
So when the water, vapor, and a cloud or fog collects on the surface of an object, it can sometimes freeze and form this white ice frost, which is rime.
So in the nineteen forties there was this low temperature lab in Canada that was experimenting to see what kind of effect rhyme had on the intakes of a jet engine.
So to recreate the icing effect in their lab, these researchers sprayed water in front of the engine that they had suspended in their wind tunnel.
But instead of creating rhyme, they accidentally started making snow, and I mean a lot of snow.
And according to the team's report, they had to shut down the engine multiple times just to shovel snow out of the wind tunnel.
It's been so much funny funny.
Speaker 4It does feel like a loud way to make snowed right, Like they must have refined snowmakers over the years.
Speaker 1I guess so, and those Canadian scientists were just the first to accidentally make snow.
I mean now the process is way quieter.
So anyway, after all these facts, who do you think deserves today's trophy?
Speaker 4You know, I like the one about the ear muff dude Chester, but I actually really love I feel like the one that's gonna be most memorable to me is the cornflake fact and the fact that people used to paint all these cornflakes white to make snow in movies.
It's crazy.
I think that's probably my favorite fact.
So I think you deserve the trophy today.
Speaker 1All right, well, I will take it, and that's it for today's part time genius.
If you've got some fun snow or ice or winter facts to share, we'd love to hear those from you.
We also love to just hear topics from you guys.
If you ever have ideas for episodes, but from gay Tristan Mango.
Actually, I think Tristan fell asleep in a slank at Mago, but anyway, thanks so much for listening.