Rabbit Holes
Watergate turned America into a nation of conspiracy theorists.
Listen & Subscribe
Choose your preferred player:
Get Your Slate Plus Podcast
If you can't access your feeds, please contact customer support.
Listen on your computer:
Apple Podcasts will only work on MacOS operating systems since Catalina. We do not support Android apps on desktop at this time.
Listen on your device:RECOMMENDED
These links will only work if you're on the device you listen to podcasts on. We do not support Stitcher at this time.
Set up manually:
Episode Notes
Why were so many Americans ready to believe conspiracy theories after Watergate? How did those beliefs help trigger Nixon‘s downfall? And given what we know about Watergate—what separates a conspiracy theory from just a theory? In the sixth episode of Slow Burn, Leon Neyfakh looks at the bouquet of wild theories that sprung up after Watergate and the people who promulgated them—from FM-radio cranks to U.S. senators.
Read the Episode 6 transcript.
Notes on Episode 6
Books
Blumenthal, Sid and Yazijian, Harvey. Government by Gunplay: Assassination Conspiracy Theories From Dallas to Today. The New American Library/Signet, 1976.
Brussell, Mae. The Essential Mae Brussell: Investigations of Fascism in America. Feral House, 2014.
Dash, Sam. Chief Counsel: Inside the Ervin Committee—The Untold Story of Watergate, Random House, 1976.
Doyle, James. Not Above the Law. Morrow, 1977.
Emery, Fred. Watergate: The Corruption of American Politics and the Fall of Richard Nixon. Times Books, 1994.
Greenberg, David. Nixon’s Shadow. Norton, 2003.
Killen, Andreas. 1973 Nervous Breakdown: Watergate, Warhol, and the Birth of Post-Sixties America. Bloomsbury, 2006.
Krassner, Paul. Confessions of a Raving Unconfined Nut: Misadventures in the Counter-Culture. Touchstone, 1994.
Kutler, Stanley. The Wars of Watergate: The Last Crisis of Richard Nixon. W. W. Norton, 1992.
Lang, Gladys Engel and Lang, Kurt. The Battle For Public Opinion: The President, the Press, and the Polls During Watergate. Columbia University Press, 1983.
Lukas, J. Anthony. Nightmare: The Underside of the Nixon Years. Viking Press, 1976.
Perlstein, Rick. The Invisible Bridge: The Fall of Nixon and the Rise of Reagan, Simon & Schuster, 2014.
Thompson, Fred. At That Point in Time: The Inside Story of the Senate Watergate Committee, Quadrangle, 1975.
News articles
Anderson, Jack and Binstein, Michael. “Nixon’s Paradoxical Nature,” Washington Post, April 28, 1994.
Brussell, Mae. “Why Was Martha Mitchell Kidnapped?” The Realist, No. 95, Dec. 1972.
Brussell, Mae. “Why Is the Senate Watergate Committee Functioning As Part of the Cover-Up?“ The Realist, July 1973.
Buck, Thomas. “Sabotage in jet crash: Skolnick,” Chicago Tribune, June 14. 1973.
Caruana, Stephanie. “About Women: Mae Brussell,” Playgirl Magazine, August 1974.
Copeland, Miles. “The Unmentionable Uses of the C.I.A,” National Review, Sept. 14, 1973.
Groves, Martha. “Documentary-maker rediscovers Judaism, family, self,” Los Angeles Times, Nov. 29, 2015.
“Crash Mrs. Hunt Died In Blamed On Pilot Error,” UPI, published Sept. 28, 1973 in the St. Petersburg Times.
Crewdson, John M. “C.I.A. Is Criticized Over Watergate,” New York Times, July 3, 1974
Eisner, Judith. “Carmel Closeup: Mae Brussell,” Carmel Pine Cone, Sept. 21, 1972.
Epstein, Edward J., Berendt, John. “Did There Come a Point in Time When There Were 43 Different Theories of How Watergate Happened?” Esquire, Nov. 1973.
Graham, Victoria. “Who Killed JFK? Doubt, Questions Linger.” Associated Press, published Dec. 8, 1975 in the Lancaster Eagle-Gazette.
Greenberg, David. “Dallas Through the Looking Glass: The plot to link JFK’s death and Watergate,” Slate, Nov. 20, 2003.
Greenberg, David. “Watergate Fueled Conspiracy Theories, Too,” Politico Magazine, June 17, 2007.
Holland, Max. “‘Grassy Knoll’ Sid: Hillary’s Personal Conspiracy Theorist,” Washington Decoded, June 11, 2015.
Jackman, Tom. “Ashburn’s Marguerite McCausland recalls surviving crash of United Flight 553 in Chicago in 1972,” Washington Post, Dec. 6, 2012.
Krassner, Paul. “The Mind of Mae Brussell,” OUI, May 1978.
Krassner, Paul. “The Ballad of Mae Brussell,”High Times, Sept. 1991
Leung, Rebecca. “Watergate: Aviator Connection?“ CBS News, Feb. 24, 2005
MacLeish, Rod. “When conspiracy theories turn into bald facts,” Washington Post. Republished Aug. 8, 1975 in the Bennington Banner.
Meyer, Lawrence. “Baker Probes Possible Ties Between CIA and Watergate,” Washington Post, March 25, 1974.
Nobile, Philip. “An Answer to the Watergate Riddle?” Interview with Sherman Skolnick. The Daily Press, New Dominion, Newport News, Dec. 8, 1974.
Scott, Peter Dale. “From Dallas to Watergate: The Longest Cover-Up,” Ramparts, November 1973.
Sheridan, Terence. “Hell on Wheels: On Sherman Skolnick’s Trail,” Rolling Stone, Sept. 13, 1973.
Valentine, Tom. “Crash of Plane Carrying 12 Watergate People Suspicious.” The Spotlight, Feb. 14, 1994.
Van Horne, Harriet. “Conspiracy theory rises again,” Philadelphia Inquirer, April 27, 1974.
Wellman, Tom. “Watergate’s boosting Skolnick,” Des Plaines Herald, July 2, 1973.
Other
Beal, Matt. Brussell Sprout blog. http://brussellsprout.blogspot.com/
Canale, Tim. The Mae Brussell Website. http://www.maebrussell.com
Corbett, James. “The Corbett Report,” Episode 212: Remember Mae Brussell.
Osanic, Lee. The Mae Brussell Reference Site. http://www.prouty.org/brussell/
The Realist Archive Project. http://www.ep.tc/realist/
Reed, John. Aircraft Accident Report on United 553. National Safety Transportation Board, Aug. 29, 1973.
Worldwatchers Archive: A Tribute to Mae Brussell. http://www.worldwatchers.info
Episode 3 makes use of archival footage from the following sources:
NBC Nightly News, 12/8/1972 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
NBC Nightly News, 4/25/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 3/5/78 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, undated but likely 7/9/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 1/25/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 2/1/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 5/31/76 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
NBC Nightly News, 09/12/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 11/26/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
NBC News Special Report, 11/22/1963 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 11/26/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 3/29/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 11/5/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
WBAI, Aspects of Watergate, 1973 (courtesy of Pacifica Radio Archives)
Face the Nation, 3/24/1974 (courtesy of CBS News and Wazee Digital)
Dialogue Conspiracy, 10/29/73 (courtesy www.maebrussell.com)
White House tapes, 7/1/71 (courtesy of the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum)
NBC Nightly News, 05/18/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
NBC Nightly News, 05/21/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
NBC Nightly News, 8/21/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
NBC Nightly News, 7/19/1973 (courtesy of the NBC news archive)
Slow Burn’s theme song is “Back to the Old House” by Niklas Ahlström. Other music in Episode 6 includes “Please Listen Carefully” by Jahzzar.
Season one of Slow Burn was produced by Leon Neyfakh and Andrew Parsons. Bonus episodes for the season were produced by Leon Neyfakh and Jeff Friedrich.