1000 Ways To Die Wiki
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|number = 196
 
|number = 196
 
|name = Radium Girls
 
|name = Radium Girls
  +
|pun = the true story of the Radium Girls
|pun = "radium girls"
 
|image = File:Radiumgirl.jpg
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|image = File:Radium Girls.png
 
|date = January 5, 1920
 
|date = January 5, 1920
 
|location = U.S. Radium Corp<br>Orange, New Jersey
 
|location = U.S. Radium Corp<br>Orange, New Jersey
|episode = Cure for the Common Death, Part I
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|episode = [[Cure for the Common Death, Part I]]
 
|imagewidth = 300px
 
|imagewidth = 300px
|previous = [[Poker Face]]
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|previous = [[Die Laughing]]
 
|next = [[Dead Eye]]
 
|next = [[Dead Eye]]
 
|quote = "Overcoming years of denial and foul-play, the Radium Girls lead to higher safety standards across America."}}'''Radium Girls''', Way to Die #196, is the fourth death featured in "[[Cure for the Common Death, Part I]]", which aired on March 22, 2009.
 
|quote = "Overcoming years of denial and foul-play, the Radium Girls lead to higher safety standards across America."}}'''Radium Girls''', Way to Die #196, is the fourth death featured in "[[Cure for the Common Death, Part I]]", which aired on March 22, 2009.
 
==Plot==
 
==Plot==
In the 1920s, Wendy and a group of women work at a factory that uses paint containing radium to create fluorescent watch faces. Wendy and the women notice that the paint also glows when applied to their skin. They eventually expose themselves to huge amounts of radiation after repeated applications (mostly using the radioactive paint as glow-in-the-dark body paint for their lovers during sex). Wendy was one of the first women to die from bone cancer, and six of her surviving colleagues joined together and filed one of the first successful workers' rights lawsuits against the company and won, leading to increased safety standards in American workplaces.
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In the 1920s, Wendy and a group of women work at a factory that uses paint containing radium to create fluorescent watch faces. Wendy and the women notice that the paint also glows when applied to their skin. They eventually expose themselves to huge amounts of radiation after repeated applications (mostly using the radioactive paint as glow-in-the-dark body paint for their lovers during sex). Wendy was one of the first women to die from bone cancer, and six of her surviving colleagues joined together and filed one of the first successful workers' rights lawsuits against the company and won, leading to increased safety standards in American workplaces. Wendy is now sent to heaven, where all of the Radium Girls will surely meet her one day.
   
  +
''"It turns out the company knew all along about the harmful effects of radium, yet they allowed the girls to ingest it daily."''
''"Overcoming years of denial and foul-play, the Radium Girls lead to higher safety standards across America."''
 
   
==Interviewees==
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==Interviewees and Cast==
 
*Dr. Kim Henderson - Toxicologist
 
*Dr. Kim Henderson - Toxicologist
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*Marion Kerr - Wendy (lead: intended victim)
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*Christine Mulhern - Radium Co-Worker
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*Christopher Whalen (I) - Wendy's Husband
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*Georgia Reed (I) - Radium Co-Worker
   
 
==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
*Based on a real story about Radium Girls from 1917 to 1926.
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*Based on a real story about Radium Girls from 1917 to 1926. This incident caused hundreds or even thousands of workers to die.
  +
**This also makes this death the highest consecutive death in a story.
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**This death is similar to [[Glow Job]] (which aired 18 episodes later). However the victim was guilty. This victim was innocent.
  +
 
[[File:Radium_Girls.JPG|thumb|250x250px]]
 
[[File:Radium_Girls.JPG|thumb|250x250px]]
 
[[Category:Article management templates]]
 
[[Category:Article management templates]]
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[[Category:Original Episodes]]
 
[[Category:Original Episodes]]
 
[[Category:Deathie Award Runners-Up]]
 
[[Category:Deathie Award Runners-Up]]
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[[Category:Dying Peacefully]]
 
[[Category:Dying Peacefully]]
 
[[Category:Innocent People]]
 
[[Category:Innocent People]]
 
[[Category:Undeserved deaths]]
 
[[Category:Undeserved deaths]]
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[[Category:Perverts]]
 
[[Category:Nude Deaths]]
 
[[Category:Nude Deaths]]
 
[[Category:Good People]]
 
[[Category:Good People]]
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[[Category:Victims Died Alone]]
 
[[Category:Victims Died Alone]]
 
[[Category:Future Deaths]]
 
[[Category:Future Deaths]]
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[[Category:Polite Humans]]
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[[Category:Tragic Deaths]]

Revision as of 16:35, 9 May 2022

Radium Girls, Way to Die #196, is the fourth death featured in "Cure for the Common Death, Part I", which aired on March 22, 2009.

Plot

In the 1920s, Wendy and a group of women work at a factory that uses paint containing radium to create fluorescent watch faces. Wendy and the women notice that the paint also glows when applied to their skin. They eventually expose themselves to huge amounts of radiation after repeated applications (mostly using the radioactive paint as glow-in-the-dark body paint for their lovers during sex). Wendy was one of the first women to die from bone cancer, and six of her surviving colleagues joined together and filed one of the first successful workers' rights lawsuits against the company and won, leading to increased safety standards in American workplaces. Wendy is now sent to heaven, where all of the Radium Girls will surely meet her one day.

"It turns out the company knew all along about the harmful effects of radium, yet they allowed the girls to ingest it daily."

Interviewees and Cast

  • Dr. Kim Henderson - Toxicologist
  • Marion Kerr - Wendy (lead: intended victim)
  • Christine Mulhern - Radium Co-Worker
  • Christopher Whalen (I) - Wendy's Husband
  • Georgia Reed (I) - Radium Co-Worker

Trivia

  • Based on a real story about Radium Girls from 1917 to 1926. This incident caused hundreds or even thousands of workers to die.
    • This also makes this death the highest consecutive death in a story.
    • This death is similar to Glow Job (which aired 18 episodes later). However the victim was guilty. This victim was innocent.
Radium Girls