He didn’t build a suit—he became one. In 1982, a man named Elias Core, 54, was found dead in his apartment. Night-shift at a metal recycling plant. No family on file. When the body was opened, examiners found metal inside—plates tucked behind ribs, bands around the forearms, a hinge fused to the knee. His skin showed a patchwork of attempts to hold it all together (non-graphic).
The apartment told the rest: an oil-stained workbench, mirrors on the ceiling, a strap bolted to the floor, and hand-drawn diagrams where bones were reimagined as steel. Tools lay in surgical order. In his journal, one line ran like a heartbeat: If I can survive, so can you. Taped inside the back cover: a Polaroid of a man watching from across the street.
They called him Iron Man—not the comic, but a survivor who turned his body into armor. This episode critiques the legend versus the record: what the metal really meant, where desperation meets design, and how a myth can grow from a bench covered in oil and blood.
Stuff You Should Know
If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.
Cardiac Cowboys
The heart was always off-limits to surgeons. Cutting into it spelled instant death for the patient. That is, until a ragtag group of doctors scattered across the Midwest and Texas decided to throw out the rule book. Working in makeshift laboratories and home garages, using medical devices made from scavenged machine parts and beer tubes, these men and women invented the field of open heart surgery. Odds are, someone you know is alive because of them. So why has history left them behind? Presented by Chris Pine, CARDIAC COWBOYS tells the gripping true story behind the birth of heart surgery, and the young, Greatest Generation doctors who made it happen. For years, they competed and feuded, racing to be the first, the best, and the most prolific. Some appeared on the cover of Time Magazine, operated on kings and advised presidents. Others ended up disgraced, penniless, and convicted of felonies. Together, they ignited a revolution in medicine, and changed the world.
The Joe Rogan Experience
The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.