The Dark History of Procter & Gamble: The Empire That Never Fell
For 143 years, Procter & Gamble has been the quietest presence in the American home. The soap in the dish, the toothpaste on the shelf, the detergent in the laundry, the paper in the kitchen. Most of it arrived without anyone choosing it and stayed without anyone questioning it. This is the story of how that happened, and of the one time the machine that put it there turned lethal. It begins in 1837, in a city that reeked of slaughtered hogs, where two immigrant tradesmen pooled about $7,000 behind a storefront and set a single wooden kettle boiling. It ends in the present, with a company worth more than $300 billion that has killed its own customers, been accused of serving the Devil, and outlived both without so much as stumbling. Between those two points lies the invention of the branded product and the purity claim that sold it. A model factory, and a velvet paternalism that kept the workers loyal while other companies bled in the streets. Market researchers sent into American kitchens to measure exactly how the housewife lived. A 3-page memo that invented modern brand management and then carried its author into the Pentagon and the founding of the agency that would build the internet. Radio dramas engineered to hold an audience in place between advertisements, one of which became the longest story ever told. And Rely, the superabsorbent tampon that took in more than anything before it, sold as the one that even absorbed the worry, until healthy young women began to die. In a single year there were 814 reported cases and 38 deaths, and the recall came 16 days too late for the first woman to die. Her husband took the company to court in Iowa and won a modest verdict, set against a reserve fund the company had quietly put aside and could barely feel. Then, as the remaining suits were settled out of sight, a rumor began to spread that the small moon-and-stars mark on the packaging was the signature of Satan, and for a quarter of a century the largest manufacturer of belief in America could not kill a single lie. The empire that did all of this never fell. It is larger now than it has ever been, present in more than 180 countries and in nearly every home in the nation, run by no family and owned by no one. This is the history of the dark engine inside the most trusted name in America. #ProcterAndGamble #AmericanHistory #Documentary Copyright & Fair Use Notice This video is a non-commercial, educational history documentary produced for research and for purposes of commentary, critique, and analysis. Certain archival photographs and video clips appear here under the Fair Use doctrine (Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act), including use for commentary and criticism, news reporting, instruction, scholarship, and research.

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