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Shortcide: Conmen and the Audacity They Rode in On

Shortcide: Conmen and the Audacity They Rode in On

Update: 2025-08-13
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Some criminals steal for money. These two stole for sport.


Chelsea takes on Victor Lustig, the smooth-talking con artist who “sold” the Eiffel Tower — twice — and even conned Al Capone. From fake government papers to counterfeit money presses, Lustig’s schemes left a trail of humiliated victims from Paris to New York.


Bailey dives into Ferdinand Waldo Demara, the master impostor who bluffed his way through careers he had no business holding — including performing actual surgeries in the Royal Canadian Navy after skimming a medical textbook.


Both men built empires on charm, lies, and sheer audacity. Both pushed their luck until the world finally caught up. And both prove that sometimes, the boldest crimes are the ones so ridiculous… you almost want to see if they’ll get away with it.


 


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Background music by Brad Parsons at Train Sound Studio. Art for the podcast was created by Kelly Steen. 


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References:


CFB Esquimalt Naval & Military Museum. (2019, July 17). Ferdinand “Waldo” Demara. CFB Esquimalt

Naval & Military Museum.

https://navalandmilitarymuseum.org/archives/articles/characters/ferdinand-waldo-demara/

Time. (2009, May 26). Faking it: Ferdinand Demara. Time.

https://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1900621_1900618_1900605,00.

html

Maysh, J. (2016, March 9). The man who sold the Eiffel Tower. Twice. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved

from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/man-who-sold-eiffel-tower-twice-180958370/

Ferdinand Waldo Demara: One of the greatest imposters the world has ever seen | The Independent

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Shortcide: Conmen and the Audacity They Rode in On

Shortcide: Conmen and the Audacity They Rode in On

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