War of the Worlds: The Panic That Never Actually Happened

Halloween 1938: Orson Welles takes to the CBS airwaves and supposedly sends millions of Americans fleeing into the streets, convinced Martians have landed in New Jersey. It is the most famous radio broadcast of all time. There is just one problem with the story you were taught in school.

This episode deconstructs the legend of the War of the Worlds panic, revealing how a brilliant audio experiment became a textbook case of fake news manufactured by a threatened industry. We examine how the broadcast was engineered to feel real, why the mass hysteria was almost entirely invented, and how the same format later turned deadly in Ecuador.

  • How the Munich crisis and constant breaking-news bulletins primed an anxious 1938 audience for simulated news flashes
  • The audio engineering tricks, from studying the Hindenburg recording to using a lone piano during dead air to stretch suspense
  • The C.E. Hooper phone survey proving only about 2 percent of households were tuned in, with not one citing a news broadcast
  • How newspapers, threatened by radio’s ad revenue, published roughly 12,500 articles in three weeks to manufacture the panic narrative
  • The 1949 Radio Quito broadcast in Ecuador, where a pre-seeded hoax sparked a real riot that left at least seven dead

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