In 1958, on a yacht floating in Miami’s Biscayne Bay, the devil died. His name was Norman Baker. In life, Baker had been gifted with the power of persuasion, a flair for showmanship that drew the eye of the weak and a
To add believability to his claim, he asked five volunteers to be treated with his cure and planned to print the tale of their miraculous recovery in his own self-promotion magazine. The fact that one of his patients died before press date didn’t stop him from announcing just that—that cancer had been cured forever. The death of a second volunteer, and then a third and fourth, and finally the last of the volunteers didn’t stop him from publishing the exact same article twice more, never wavering from his life-promising lie.
Just imagine—it’s 1930 and your doctor looks you in the eye and says it’s cancer. There’s the surgeon’s knife, but all it can guarantee is pain. You could nuke it out with radiation, but doses are take-no-prisoner high and radiation is more likely to kill you than it is the cancer. Chemotherapy is still decades away. And there Baker is, telling you not to listen to your doctor, that they’re all butchers and vultures, that the AMA has offered him a million dollars to squelch his cure and keep their profit machine rolling along. It was a lie, of course, but Baker had connived his way into owning his own radio station and illegally powered it up to 10,000 watts, giving him a primitive version of a non-stop infomercial. He has all day to convince you he is a man of truth. What would you do?
I made my living in radio for more years than I care to admit and I hate that Baker used it the way he did, that he took something of such great good and used it for pure undeserving profit. In a single year, in the depths of the Great Depression, Baker made more than $400,000 hawking his cure to the desperate. He kept raking it in until the AMA and then the newspapers and finally the courts caught on to his quackery.
They say the souls of those who were injected with Dr. Baker’s cure, who writhed in pain as the carbolic acid seeped through their veins, now haunt the Crescent. The hotel transformed back into a hotel years ago, but
Nobody on our tour saw any ghosts, and I like to think that’s because the ghosts are all at peace. They suffered enough, didn’t they? It’s unfair to expect them to haunt for our entertainment after enduring both cancer and Baker’s bogus cure. Baker, on the other hand, is welcome to walk the place forever if his spirit is that restless, and I hope it is. I doubt it, though. More likely he’s deep in the dungeons of hell, stuck in the gooey muck of his own evil. Or, the opposite of heaven being not hell but a complete separation from God, a nothingness, Baker’s spirit has simply ceased to exist. That leaves a job opening in the position of devil. But just look around–resumes are pouring in.
Happy Halloween. And peace.
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