
đ âWhen Fear Goes Viral: From Salem to Satanic Panicâ
đ§ Episode Overview
A chilling exploration of mass hysteria, false memory, conformity, and moral panics, told through three historical lenses: the Salem Witch Trials, the 1980s Satanic Panic, and the 1518 Dancing Plague in France. The episode dissects how fear and authority can spiral into collective delusion, injustice, and long-lasting societal trauma.
Salem Witch Trials
Manon tells a vivid (and partly dramatized) story of Bridget Bishop, the first woman executed during the Salem Witch Trials (hanged, not burned).
Sets the thematic tone: hysteria, fear, the danger of belief.
Mass psychogenic illness in Strasbourg, France.
400 people danced uncontrollably; some died from exhaustion.
Linked to religious fear, famine, and mass stress.
Betty Parris & Abigail Williams trigger panic with strange behavior.
Use of spectral evidence leads to 200+ accusations and 20 deaths.
Social tensions between Salem Village (rural, poor, Puritan) and Salem Town (urban, wealthy) explain the deep divisions.
Families like the Putnams vs. Porters used accusations to gain power.
Religion, gender roles, and economic stress all contributed.
Key figures:
Titubaâs coerced confession
John & Elizabeth Proctor
Giles Corey ("More weight")âpressed to death
Judge Samuel Sewall later publicly repents.
Trials ended when the governorâs wife was accused.
Satanic Panic of 1980s
Sparked by Michelle Remembers (1980) and media amplification.
Panic spread to preschools, music, games (D&D), and TV (e.g., Oprah).
McMartin Preschool case: 41 children, bizarre testimonies, no convictions.
âRecovered memory therapyâ now discredited.
APA and FBI eventually refuted claimsâno evidence of ritual abuse.
Mass Psychogenic Illness (Mass Hysteria)
False Memory Syndrome â Elizabeth Loftus's research
Conformity â Asch line experiments
Obedience to Authority â Stanley Milgramâs shock experiments
Groupthink â Irving Janis
Moral Panic â Stanley Cohenâs theory
Suggestibility and Fear-Based Behavior â Role of religion, media, and authority
âThis wasnât just dancingâit was people mentally breaking under pressure.â
âSpectral evidence... basically the 1692 version of âI had a bad dream and now youâre going to jail.ââ
âPsychology hasnât changedâjust the platforms that spread the panic.â
âMass hysteria doesnât always look like witches or demons. Sometimes, it wears the face of someone you trust.â
Mass hysteria arises from anxiety, fear, and suggestibility.
Authority figures can unwittingly or purposefully spread misinformation.
Historical panics may look different today but follow the same psychological patterns.
Vigilance, skepticism, and education are critical.
âWhat would you have done? Would you have spoken up⊠or stayed silent?â