
The corpse builders to the stars
Clip: Season 12 Episode 4 | 5m 18sVideo has Closed Captions
For Eileen and BJ Winslow, making bodies, bones and monsters is their everyday life.
Eileen and BJ Winslow run Dapper Cadaver in Madison, creating realistic dummies and body parts for major productions like "American Horror Story" and "Law and Order." Their dummies also provide hands-on practice for students of the forensic training programs at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville.
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Wisconsin Life is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Life is provided by the Wooden Nickel Fund, Mary and Lowell Peterson, A.C.V. and Mary Elston Family, Obrodovich Family Foundation, Stanley J. Cottrill Fund, Alliant Energy, UW...

The corpse builders to the stars
Clip: Season 12 Episode 4 | 5m 18sVideo has Closed Captions
Eileen and BJ Winslow run Dapper Cadaver in Madison, creating realistic dummies and body parts for major productions like "American Horror Story" and "Law and Order." Their dummies also provide hands-on practice for students of the forensic training programs at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- BJ Winslow: I feel like every place has a spooky factor.
But I do find it is unique here in Wisconsin.
- Eileen Winslow: There's definitely a weird factor.
It's something that we enjoy tapping into.
Hi, I'm Eileen Winslow.
- And I'm BJ Winslow.
- And we run Dapper Cadaver.
[spooky music] [prop shrieks] - Who wants to play a funny little trick tonight?
[laughs] - We make and provide death-related props and decor for a number of industries, including productions, attractions, and educational facilities worldwide.
- BJ: We also have the shop.
We're located here in Madison, Wisconsin.
We do stuff that is, like, Halloween characters that you're gonna see in a haunted house or an amusement park.
And then we also do realistic dummies for film and television.
- We've provided things for American Horror Story, Law and Order, 911, Shogun.
- We start with a liquid material.
Urethane, polyurethane, polyfoam, silicone.
We've got a fab team that are gonna be filling the molds.
A lot of our molds are realistic heads, are realistic bodies and body parts.
Those are life cast off of actual people.
Once it's all set up, the liquid material becomes an expanding foam.
So a small piece can be set in, like, an hour and a larger piece over four.
And then, you know, once it's all set up, you can crack open the mold, pull it out, brush the skin layers, and you've got yourself a realistic body.
- Eileen: I'm originally from Milwaukee, south side.
- BJ: I'm originally from California.
I grew up in northern California.
I've been making things for as long as I can remember.
- I had graduated from the University of Southern California.
We met through friends in LA.
It was actually right after BJ had moved down from northern California.
And I started doing props after I got out of college, working at another guy's shop.
And I wanted to branch out on my own, and, y'know, we were able to.
[spray paint hissing] - BJ was making props in our garage, and then I had helped him set up a website, 'cause actually at that point, I worked in internet marketing.
- And that was huge.
Nobody else was doing prop shop websites at the time.
- It started to grow to the point where then, it wasn't sustainable to keep doing it from the house.
We started the business, we got married, went on a honeymoon, came back, and then-- - And opened.
- And opened, yeah.
We moved back here in fall of 2020.
We really like the business environment in Wisconsin.
There you go.
- Customer: Thank you.
- Thank you.
It's really great for the bulk of what we do, which is manufacturing.
When we were moving, there was no guarantee that people would continue calling us.
And we're just extremely happy and grateful that they did.
It's been a leap of faith in terms of continuing to grow the business in new ways as well.
- We've done a number of dummies for UW-Platteville forensic training.
These are people that are going to school to become forensic investigators.
And we recently did a brand-new type of dummy where it has lividity that's like bruising.
It will actually bleach when you touch it and then go back to pink, so we developed a type of paint that does that as well.
It's nice to go into work and have, like, both sides of things where it's like, "Today, I'm gonna do something really stupid and I'm gonna love it," or "Today, I'm gonna do something that could save lives."
In the fall, we like to do the night market.
There we go, cool.
We like to put out one of our great characters.
And people love to take their pictures with 'em.
And that's always fun.
We do September and October here 'cause that's our season.
- One of the things I loved with working with BJ well over a decade now is just seeing him grow as an artist and as a person.
- Yeah, I can't imagine doing this on my own.
- I love working with creative people and I love working with people that are helping other people.
If you can do that for a living, what else can you ask for in life?
- Yeah, and it's fun.
[chuckles] [groovy music] [prop shrieks]
Farmer brings a taste of Mexico to the fields of Verona
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep4 | 5m 30s | Juan Gonzalez missed the herbs of his native Puebla, Mexico. Planting them grew into a business. (5m 30s)
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Celebrate Latino cultural icons Cheech Marin, Rauw Alejandro, Rosie Perez, Gloria Trevi, and more!
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Wisconsin Life is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Life is provided by the Wooden Nickel Fund, Mary and Lowell Peterson, A.C.V. and Mary Elston Family, Obrodovich Family Foundation, Stanley J. Cottrill Fund, Alliant Energy, UW...