Stanley Milgram

Strange Country Ep. 81: Hit Me Baby One More Time

Hit Me Baby One More Time: Rule Following with Beth and Kelly Hey Readers, are you rule followers? Really what we are asking here is, are you a potential Nazi? Join friends, librarians, contrarians, and mothers Kelly and Beth as they grapple with the rules of society and just how far we will go to please someone who appears to have authority. In this episode of Strange Country, we uncover the complexities of psychologist Stanley Milgram’s famous experiment of the 1960’s. Subjects in the experiment were paid $4 to play a teacher armed with a little electricity to zap a student if they were incorrect. Sounds fun right? Would any of you have signed up for this experiment? As you listen, you may find out if Beth deserves a parking ticket or a sticker for being a good rule follower, while Kelly tries to figure out if there are any good rules worth following. Dashhounds- listen in-or it’s 350 volts for you!

Theme music: Resting Place by A Cast of Thousands.

Cite Your Sources:

Beck, Martha. What Redefining Virtue Can Teach You About Happiness. http://www.oprah.com/inspiration/how-to-handle-bad-luck-martha-beck-life-advice. Accessed Feb. 2019

Blass, Thomas. The Man Who Shocked the World. Basic Books, 2009.

Cherry, Kendra. Stanley Milgram, A Biography. VerywellMind. https://www.verywellmind.com/stanley-milgram-biography-2795532. Accessed Feb. 2019.

McLeod, S. A. (2017, Feb 05). The Milgram experiment. Retrieved from https://www.simplypsychology.org/milgram.html

Milgram, Stanley. Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View. Harper Perennial Modern Thought. Reprint 2009.