

699 - Jack London - live
Sep 2, 2025
Comedian and union organizer Nato Green joins the discussion, bringing his blend of humor and activism. The trio dives into Jack London's quirky San Francisco childhood filled with wild jobs and a dash of oyster piracy. They reflect on the absurdity of the Gold Rush, featuring tales of miners facing dangerous odds. Green humorously critiques London's complex legacy, from his socialist ideals to his personal struggles. Expect laughter as they navigate the contradictions of this literary icon’s life and work.
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From Street Kid To Oyster Pirate
- Jack London grew up poor in San Francisco and started working from childhood in brutal jobs like cannery labor and newsboy routes.
- Before his teens he became an oyster pirate, earning more in a night than a month's factory wages and living among hard-drinking sailors.
Radicalized By Hardship And Jail
- Jack rode the rails and joined Coxley's Army, witnessing severe labor conditions that radicalized him toward socialism.
- He was arrested for vagrancy, jailed, and later vowed to become a "brain merchant" rather than keep relying on brawn.
Klondike Ordeal: The Walk Of Death
- London joined the Klondike Gold Rush, enduring brutal travel like the Chilkoot Pass and hauling 2,000 pounds of supplies over and over.
- He described bleeding shoulders, dead horses, and men dying en masse on the trail, experiences he later fictionalized.