140 points

I believed it. Sadly it’s not real: https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/plutonium-jazz

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39 points

It seems believable given the story of the “Radium Girls”, workers who painted radioactive paint on watch dials to make them glow. They’d lick the tips of the brushes when they got too frayed… which eventually led to cancer.

https://www.cnn.com/2017/12/19/style/radium-girls-radioactive-paint/index.html#:~:text=Women painting alarm clock faces,brush and ingesting radioactive radium.

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17 points

Whoa. Eating radioactive material isn’t great at all.

From a different time, too: An X-Ray shoe fitter

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10 points

A department store still had one of these when I was a kid, but it wasn’t used. It was, however, in occasional use when my brother was very little in the early 80s. My mom has pictures of him with his foot in it.

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4 points
*

Thanks, Woke.

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2 points
Deleted by creator
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8 points

To be fair, the factory management knew that it was dangerous but didn’t tell the workers and encouraged them to lick the brush.

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8 points

Sadly??

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6 points

Phew.

I came to the comments for this hope.

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103 points

This sounds like something that was made up for a fallout game.

Of course, so does “bombarding myself with xrays and moving around to entertain the audience looking at my bones” and “including uranium in paint to make watch dials glow”

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16 points

They did it with uranium too? I knew about radium, but not that.

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24 points

Uranium wasn’t used for watch dials, but Uranium Orange is a colour of cermic glaze. It was pretty popular in America from the 1930’s to around 1942, when the government needed all the uranium for some big secret project. After the 60’s it was made with depleted uranium, instead of natural ore, until someone realized this still wasn’t a great idea.

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11 points

Fun fact: fiestaware plates (this was the company that made the uraranium glazed ceramics) are commonly used by radiation safety folks as check sources and for teaching how to use survey meters. This is because they usually aren’t considered a radioisotope source, so there’s less paperwork to keep them around.

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16 points

Sadly, it is. (But not for Fallout specifically.)

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58 points

I believed this was real until I searched for it 😂 To be fair to my own credulity, Plutonium Jazz would not be the most insane thing people did with radioactive materials back then. The “medicines” alone make Plutonium Jazz sound pretty tame.

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50 points

But Geiger counters aren’t rhythmic at all, radioactive decay is, pretty famously, random.

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28 points

True, much like memes are pretty famously fabricated.

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13 points

… Jazz.

/S

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6 points

Rhythmic? No, not really. More exciting if the musician could somehow anticipate this fundamentally unpredictable event? Absolutely.

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2 points

Follows a Poisson distribution. I guess one could call that random.

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4 points

Well, its random, like… by definition.

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29 points

The third sentence makes it clear it’s fake

  • Geiger counters aren’t rhythmic, they’re random
  • How would the audience know the beat matches the counter?
  • Random music doesn’t sound good, the audience would be more excited for good music

Disappointed in the people who believed this.

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9 points

Well… This is jazz… I’m skeptic as well, but what if it was some sort of experimental modern jazz where the musicians would try to predict the next click?

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5 points

You can’t predict the next click, that’s what random means. This would never have gotten far enough to appear in front of an audience. They would have tried it at rehearsal and realised it was impossible.

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7 points

It does have a rate though. Each click is random, but overall they’re at a predictable rate. Still, it wouldn’t be useful for music really. I could see someone trying to make it happen though. I’ve heard of dumber things.

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2 points

It would be Musical Roulette essentially

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2 points

The Geiger counter can be pre recorded, creating the illusion it was life, yet allowing the composition to be crafted around it

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8 points

And even if it worked, you wouldn’t need a radiation source more dangerous than a banana to make a geiger counter go click enough to play along.

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