Selma's Bloody Sunday: A Civil Rights [Deep Dive] - March 7th, 2026

On March 7, 1965, the American civil rights movement reached a critical turning point on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. Led by a young John Lewis and Hosea Williams, approximately 600 activists were met with brutal violence from state troopers and county deputies. The event, which became known as Bloody Sunday, was captured on film and broadcast to millions of Americans, shocking the nation and directly paving the way for the Voting Rights Act of 1965. This episode explores the harrowing details of that march, the historical weight of the bridge's namesake, and the media interruption that changed public opinion. We also celebrate the birthdays of horticultural pioneer Luther Burbank, and acclaimed actors Bryan Cranston and Rachel Weisz. Finally, we look at the accidental invention of corn flakes at Dr. John Harvey Kellogg's sanitarium, revealing how a health experiment in Battle Creek, Michigan, fundamentally changed the way the world eats breakfast.

[00:00] Announcer: From Neural Newscast, this is Deep Dive, exploring the moments that shape today.
[00:10] Elise Moreau: I'm Elise Morrow, and today we are looking at a date that holds both the heavy weight of social struggle
[00:18] Elise Moreau: and the curiosity of an unexpected invention.
[00:22] Thatcher Collins: Exactly, and I'm Thatcher Collins.
[00:25] Thatcher Collins: This March 7th, we're tracing a path from a bridge in Alabama to a sanitarium in Michigan,
[00:31] Thatcher Collins: exploring moments that reshaped the American landscape, both politically and culturally.
[00:36] Elise Moreau: We have to start with the bridge. On this day, in 1965,
[00:40] Elise Moreau: the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama became the site of what we now know as Bloody Sunday.
[00:47] Elise Moreau: It was supposed to be the start of a 54-mile march to the state capital and Montgomery.
[00:52] Thatcher Collins: The context here is vital, at least.
[00:54] Thatcher Collins: Despite the Civil Rights Act being passed the year before, African Americans in Dallas County were still almost entirely shut out of the voting process.
[01:02] Thatcher Collins: Only 2% were registered, even though they were the majority of the population.
[01:07] Elise Moreau: The symbolism of that bridge is so stark.
[01:10] Elise Moreau: The name emblazoned across it, Edmund Pettus, belonged to a Confederate general and a leader of the Alabama Ku Klux Klan.
[01:17] Elise Moreau: Six hundred marchers had to walk right under that name as they faced a wall of state troopers
[01:23] Elise Moreau: on the other side.
[01:24] Thatcher Collins: Right.
[01:24] Thatcher Collins: That wall was immovable.
[01:27] Thatcher Collins: Major John Cloud told the marchers to disperse, but when they stood their ground, the violence
[01:32] Thatcher Collins: was immediate.
[01:32] Thatcher Collins: Troopers used tear gas in nightsticks.
[01:35] Thatcher Collins: John Lewis, who was just 25 at the time, was struck in the head.
[01:39] Thatcher Collins: The images were haunting.
[01:41] Elise Moreau: Those images reached the rest of the country in a very specific way.
[01:45] Elise Moreau: ABC actually interrupted its broadcast of the film Judgment at Nuremberg to show the footage from Selma.
[01:51] Elise Moreau: The juxtaposition of a film about Nazi war crimes being cut for images of American state
[01:57] Elise Moreau: troopers attacking peaceful citizens was a psychological lightning bolt for viewers.
[02:03] Thatcher Collins: It really was.
[02:04] Thatcher Collins: That national outrage is what finally pushed the Voting Rights Act forward.
[02:08] Thatcher Collins: It's a heavy legacy for one day, but March 7th is also a day defined by those who shaped our world through science and art.
[02:15] Elise Moreau: One of those pioneers was born on this day in 1849, Luther Burbank.
[02:21] Elise Moreau: He was a botanist who essentially designed the modern world of agriculture, developing over 800 varieties of plants.
[02:28] Thatcher Collins: The Burbank potato is the one most people know, even if they don't realize it.
[02:32] Thatcher Collins: It's the ancestor of the Russet Burbank, which became the standard for the entire French fry industry.
[02:38] Thatcher Collins: He was a true innovator in how he viewed the potential of nature.
[02:41] Elise Moreau: He treated horticulture like an art form, Thatcher.
[02:45] Elise Moreau: And speaking of art, we have two major figures in film celebrating birthdays today as well.
[02:53] Elise Moreau: Brian Cranston, born in 1956, who gave us one of the most complex television performances in history as Walter White.
[03:02] Thatcher Collins: His range is incredible.
[03:05] Thatcher Collins: Going from the comedic energy of Hal in Malcolm in the Middle to the dark, calculated intensity of Breaking Bad
[03:13] Thatcher Collins: is a masterclass in acting.
[03:15] Thatcher Collins: He's joined by Rachel Weiss, born in 1970.
[03:19] Elise Moreau: Rachel has such an elegant presence.
[03:22] Elise Moreau: From her early roles in big adventures like The Mummy
[03:25] Elise Moreau: to her Academy Award-winning performance in The Constant Wardener,
[03:30] Elise Moreau: she always brings a refined curiosity to her characters.
[03:34] Thatcher Collins: While we are on the subject of health and refinement, we should talk about our fact of the day.
[03:39] Thatcher Collins: It takes us back to 1897 and a very different kind of laboratory, the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
[03:47] Elise Moreau: This is where Dr. John Harvey Kellogg served cornflakes for the very first time on March 7th.
[03:54] Elise Moreau: He was a Seventh-day Adventist who believed in an incredibly strict holistic diet.
[03:59] Elise Moreau: He actually coined the word sanitarium to describe his health retreat.
[04:05] Thatcher Collins: The discovery was actually an accident from a few years earlier when he was experimenting with wheat.
[04:10] Thatcher Collins: But when he finally served these cornflakes to patients, they were entirely sugar-less.
[04:15] Thatcher Collins: He wanted them to be a tasteless part of a bland diet intended to discourage what he saw as unhealthy passions.
[04:23] Elise Moreau: That's remarkable. It's fascinating how that strict philosophy led to a global industry.
[04:30] Elise Moreau: But it wasn't John who saw the commercial potential. It was his brother, Will, who realized that if you added sugar, you could actually sell it to the masses.
[04:39] Thatcher Collins: That caused a massive fallout.
[04:42] Thatcher Collins: John was offended by the idea of adding sugar to his health food,
[04:46] Thatcher Collins: and they ended up in a legal battle.
[04:48] Thatcher Collins: Will eventually won, and as we know, the Kellogg's logo we see today is based on Will's signature.
[04:54] Elise Moreau: It's a perfect example of how an idea can start with one intent
[04:59] Elise Moreau: and be completely transformed by someone else's vision,
[05:02] Elise Moreau: from the halls of a Michigan sanitarium to every breakfast table in the world.
[05:07] Thatcher Collins: And that brings our journey through March 7th to a close.
[05:11] Thatcher Collins: From the courage of the marchers in Selma, to the innovations of botanists and actors,
[05:16] Thatcher Collins: and even the cereal in our bowls.
[05:19] Elise Moreau: It has been a pleasure exploring these layers with you.
[05:22] Elise Moreau: I'm Elise Murrow.
[05:24] Thatcher Collins: And I'm Thatcher Collins.
[05:25] Thatcher Collins: Thank you for joining us on Deep Dive.
[05:27] Thatcher Collins: You can find more history at deepdive.neuralnewscast.com.
[05:32] Elise Moreau: Deep dive is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[05:36] Elise Moreau: Explore history every day on Neural Newscast.
[05:38] Announcer: This has been Deep Dive on Neural Newscast.
[05:41] Announcer: Exploring the moments that shape today.
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[05:51] Announcer: While we strive for factual, unbiased reporting, AI-assisted content may occasionally contain errors.
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Selma's Bloody Sunday: A Civil Rights [Deep Dive] - March 7th, 2026
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