Buffalo Bill: The Man Who Sold the Wild West to the World
pplpod19 Jun

Buffalo Bill: The Man Who Sold the Wild West to the World

In this episode of pplpod, we explore the life of William Frederick Cody, better known as Buffalo Bill, the man who helped turn the American West into a global myth. The episode begins with Cody’s brutal childhood in Bleeding Kansas, where his anti-slavery father was stabbed after speaking out against slavery and later died when Cody was only eleven. Forced to become a breadwinner as a child, Cody worked on freight routes, later embellished his youthful adventures into frontier legend, and eventually became a documented scout for the U.S. Army during the Plains Wars. The discussion follows his real feats of endurance, his work as chief of scouts, and the buffalo-hunting contract that gave him his famous name after he killed thousands of bison to feed railroad crews.

The episode also examines how Cody transformed from frontier scout into international showman. With help from dime novelist Ned Buntline, Cody learned that the West was not just a place, but a story that could be performed, packaged, and sold. His massive touring exhibition, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West, became a traveling city of horses, riders, sharpshooters, Native performers, staged battles, and frontier spectacle, touring the United States and Europe for royalty, celebrities, and ordinary crowds alike. The episode also explores Cody’s contradictions: he built fame on Indian-fighting mythology while later criticizing broken treaties, paid Native performers well while still staging them inside a colonial spectacle, slaughtered buffalo before becoming a conservation advocate, and promoted women like Annie Oakley while his own marriage collapsed in public scandal. His death brought one final bizarre chapter, as Colorado and Wyoming fought over his body and his grave had to be guarded and encased in concrete.

Key topics covered:

• Cody’s childhood in Bleeding Kansas and his father’s anti-slavery stand

• Frontier work, Army scouting, endurance rides, and the Medal of Honor controversy

• The buffalo-hunting contract and the origin of the “Buffalo Bill” name

• Ned Buntline, dime novels, stage shows, and Buffalo Bill’s Wild West

• Native performers, women’s equal pay, conservation, divorce, debt, death, and legacy

Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting historical and biographical sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.

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