37 episodes

An Offer You Can't Refuse is a podcast that focuses on the history of organized crime in the United States. It employs an academic approach to its study in that it places organized crime within the broader context of American history.

An Offer You Can't Refuse: the History of Organized Crime in the United States Ryan Pettengill

    • History

An Offer You Can't Refuse is a podcast that focuses on the history of organized crime in the United States. It employs an academic approach to its study in that it places organized crime within the broader context of American history.

    BONUS EPISODE: Interview of Crime Journalist, Chris Dalby

    BONUS EPISODE: Interview of Crime Journalist, Chris Dalby

    In this BONUS EPISODE of An Offer You Can't Refuse, Pettengill sits down with renown crime journalist, Chris Dalby. Dalby's expertise is grounded in the rise and evolutionary of the Mexican drug cartels. In this interview, we discover that there were numerous similarities between the ethnic-racial groups taken up on this podcast and the situation with the cartels. Racist policies, official stances taken by governing officials, and unintended consequences all led to the empowerment of the cartels, offering one potential view of organized crime in the twenty-first century.

    • 53 min
    "The Man with the Bad Eyes": Santo Trafficante, the Florida Don

    "The Man with the Bad Eyes": Santo Trafficante, the Florida Don

    In another BONUS EPISODE, Pettengill focuses on one of the most powerful and important mafioso in American history - Santo Trafficante, Jr. Much like Meyer Lansky, Trafficante was instrumental in the making of a criminal empire in Cuba. But this is not a story that Pettengill can tell on his own. This episode features a Trafficante insider, a liason, the incomparable Joann "Joiew" Gallo.

    • 39 min
    BONUS EPISODE: the Ambiance Affluence: the Famed Casinos of Havana

    BONUS EPISODE: the Ambiance Affluence: the Famed Casinos of Havana

    Pettengill's Havana miniseries begins in earnest with a look at the famed hotel-casinos of Havana and the mobsters who made the envy of the entertainment world. Specifically, Pettengill examines the Sans Souci, the Tropicana, and the Riviera but, like any good historian, he places them within the proper context of the postwar period. It is impossible to understand this world without noting the rise of the American middle class, the mid-twentieth century culture of conformity, or innovations within the airline industry. As Meyer Lansky, Santo Trafficante, and Martin Fox built their famous hotel-casinos, the "Havana in the 50s" culture began to take firm root.

    • 38 min
    "A Sucker's Paradise": Meyer Lansky and the Making of the Havana Mob

    "A Sucker's Paradise": Meyer Lansky and the Making of the Havana Mob

    Episode 25 embarks on a new miniseries, one focused on the Mafia's criminal empire in Cuba. While the miniseries will take up a variety of different topics, this episode is primarily focused on the groundwork Meyer Lansky laid to expand his operations into Havana. Nothing, however, would have been possible would have been possible without the help of the Cuban government. And, as Pettengill notes, the United States government had ensured there would be an American-friendly government in Cuba ever since consolidating their power in the region at the turn of the twentieth century. In sum, it is impossible to understand American history in the aggregate without understanding the development of the Havana mob.

    • 47 min
    "Bigger than U.S. Steel": Mainstreaming Crime in the Postwar Era

    "Bigger than U.S. Steel": Mainstreaming Crime in the Postwar Era

    In Episode 25, Pettengill moves on to examine the post-World War II era. Specifically, he notes how the world of organized crime began to resemble the postwar economic order. Similar to how corporate giants like Hershey or Anheuser-Busch, flush with cash from their wartime profits, crushed their competition through ruthless takeovers and consolidations, Chicago's Outfit absorbed the "neighborhood gang" when Lenny Patrick assassinated Benjamin Zuckerberg in 1944. Further to the East, Russell Bufalino streamlined everything from illegal gambling to "friendly" labor relations. Pettengill sees the postwar period as a critical turning point for the mob as crime was no longer connected to "place" in the same way it had been in the early and mid-twentieth century.

    • 36 min
    A Hoodlum Complex: Frank Sinatra, American Mass Culture, and the Mob

    A Hoodlum Complex: Frank Sinatra, American Mass Culture, and the Mob

    Frank Sinatra was one of the most successful recording artists of the twentieth century. He was also one of the controversial figures within American mass culture. From the earliest days of his ascent, rumors abounded with respect to his alleged connections to the criminal underworld. In Episode 24, Pettengill examines these connections that intersect American culture, even in a twenty-first century context. But WAS Sinatra connected? Did a Don, ANY DON, make Harry Cohn...or Tommy Dorsey an "offer they" couldn't refuse? The answers are complicated.

    • 1 hr 11 min

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