Is There a Real Joe Brandt? Dreamer of
Mega-Earthquake "The Big One" in California

If you are unfamiliar with his personal dream accounts, be sure you first read the complete text of and/or watch a cinematic
half-hour YouTube based on Joe Brandt’s diary entries on these dreams. There is also a six-minute animated dramatization of his dream presented in Spanish (Espanol). Even if you already know about Joe Brandt's dream, a reread of his accounts will give you more insights into what I'm discussing in this blog post.
One of the key questions this story has raised for me is –
who is Joe Brandt? Was he a real
person? If so, do any of his stats line
up with the story relayed back in 1965 to author Jessica Madigan (Mei Ling),
who originally published Joe’s account in 1969?
Through some not-so-extravagant research, I found a Joseph
Wendell Brandt (November 19, 1919-July 5, 1995) whose last known residence was
Fresno, California. His mother's name was Alice. Joseph would have been 17 years old most of the year 1937
until his birthday in November, when he would turn 18. He lived to age 75. This information was found on
ancientfaces.com and familysearch.org.
As well, Joseph W. Brandt served in the army during World War II, enlisting at age 24 in June 1944.
Joseph Brandt’s wife, Fran, who Jessica Madigan said was her
closest friend, died in what might be March 1967. Outside of what Madigan said
herself, it is hard to pin down anything on Fran Brandt. Also, with Fran’s
death so many years prior to modern electronic technology, information is
spartan.
Who for that matter was Jessica Madigan, who sometimes
published under the pseudonym Mei Ling? I couldn’t find much about her
personally, other than her series of small press, homespun, self-published
books published between 1963-1992 on the topics of world prophecy, dreams, past
lives, reincarnation and other new age issues.
She supposedly was a follower of Edgar Cayce.
Some speculate that Madigan may have fabricated Brandt’s story. However, pinning her motive on needed income during her husband’s
illness doesn’t hold much water. None of
her self-published, humble-looking books were blockbusters by any stretch of
the imagination. Having been in the small press business myself along with my
husband, I know that most of such publication efforts are more significant as labors
of love than as any venue of profit. Madigan’s first publication of Joe’s story
in a Christian newsletter called “Living Water” back in 1969 could also hardly
be a cash cow.
Let me suggest four different takes, one of which might be
the truth about Joe Brandt’s earthquake dream story:
1.) Everything Madigan published was a verbatim
transcription from Joe Brandt’s dream diaries of 1937.
2.) Not many 17-year-olds with a mere three years of
high school under their belts are as articulate, clear or as visual a writer as
Brandt. Nevertheless, students his age in 1937 were likely better-trained writers,
more knowledgeable about the world around them, and with greater vocabularies
than many young people today. Perhaps
Madigan, as a professional writer, might have edited Brandt’s work enough to
make it more cognizant to the reader.
3.) Perhaps Brandt’s written account was a little
crude and sketchy. Madigan may have enhanced the writing with a lot of what-ifs
that might be common among earthquakes. What did the air smell like? Did the
birds and other animals disappear? What expressions did the people have when
the earthquake took place? What did they do and say? Perhaps she took wider liberties
in making the piece as compelling and
hard-hitting as it is by adding a sizable number of fictive and dramatic details.
4.) Or Madigan completely fabricated the entire
piece.
However, in regard to point number four, I find it hard to
trace any kind of motive for Madigan to totally fabricate such an account, or
for a honorably discharged World War II veteran and semi-skilled worker such as
Brandt to allow someone to create an entirely fictitious story about him.
I don’t know if Brandt’s original handwritten diary pages
still exist or if they ever existed. It would be interesting to see photographs
of the original manuscript. I haven’t the faintest idea of where to even look
to find them. I can’t imagine they are in any public archive.
But my search, as far as answering my original question
about the authenticity of a real person who fits the description of the Joe
Brandt who dreamt of an upcoming California megaquake, has me sufficiently
satisfied. I believe totally that Joseph W. Brandt, who was born 1919 and died
1995 in Fresno, California, is that person.
I am a Christian and believe God can lead us in various, and sometimes unconventional, ways. I will continue
to pray for guidance, evidence and confirmation while seeking what’s true from
false. ##
Postscripts: In the dream text, in which the action takes place primarily on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles, a section reads, "Those crazy kids. Why are they dressed like that? Maybe it is some big Halloween doings, but it don't seem like Halloween. More like early spring."
It is interesting to note that the "Hollywood Boulevard Characters" who dress up in costume on Hollywood Blvd and ask people to pose in pictures with them for tips first appeared on Hollywood Boulevard in the early 1990s, starting with Superman, then followed by Elvis Presley and Charlie Chaplin, before slowly blossoming into more than 80 characters in current times. Obviously, this wasn't taking place when Joe Brandt wrote his diary in 1937, nor even when the account was first published in 1969.
Another phrasing from the diary, "Funny glow about them. It is a shine around their heads -- something shining." Could this be from glowing headphones and headsets? Some readers of this blog have suggested that the "glow" is an illumination from cellphones on the young persons' faces. These readers may be on to something.
Note that in Brandt's dream, he saw a movie marquee featuring a blonde with one leg draped six-feet long. The movie might be an IMAX and 3D film, suitable for a film venue such as the TCL Chinese Theater IMAX at 6925 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California. Perhaps the marketing for the character includes the character's six-foot leg either as part of a cut-out print poster or an image on a digital marquee. A live action film version of about the doll "Barbie" (a long-legged character if there ever was one) is in the making in Hollywood starring Margot Robbie. May this fit the earthquake's timeframe when this film finally debuts? Or perhaps the film "Blonde" about Marilyn Monroe, starring Ana de Armas, which premieres on Netflix late September 2022 and in some selected theaters.
Was Joe Brandt talking about autonomous cars in the following passage, about cars that can drive themselves? Self-driving car technology is just emerging and may become mainstream before too many years in the future. In addition, the "baby, half-size" car he mentions resembles today's Smart car. He even suggests that the cars have some type of innate intelligence or personality by the way he describes the cars specifically and not their drivers. He wrote, "I looked out at the cars. They were honking, but not scared. They just kept moving. They didn't seem to know yet that anything was happening. Then, that white car, that baby half-sized one came sprawling from the inside lane right against the curb."
A little strange something caught my attention in the text. Everyone laughed after an initial small earthquake. "The ground shook, just an instant. People looked at each other, surprised. Then they laughed. I laughed, too. So this was what I had been waiting for. This funny little shake. It meant nothing."
Do most people in California laugh at a small earthquake? Maybe they do. Or instead, wouldn't they be a little alarmed? People are surprised and laugh more often when they are expecting one thing and another happens, something not so consequential. Were people expecting a large earthquake? Or was there a mega-quake in Japan and California is expecting a tsunami? Is this set a future time when earthquake prediction is more refined and accurate? Is everyone actually on edge and expecting a large earthquake when this first little small one arrives?
Recent news reveals that tar and natural gas smell is arising from the street corner across from the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles at a rate unseen before. In Joe's dream account he said, "There was a funny smell. I don't know where it came from. I didn't like it. A smell like sulphur, sulfuric acid, a smell like death. For a minute I thought I was back in chem." [Chemistry class].
A reader informed me about the possible "5 &10" Joe Brandt saw on Hollywood Blvd in his dream. The old 5-and-10-cent store previously on Hollywood Blvd. is long gone. A replica of it was created in Disney World in Florida in a recreation of Hollywood Blvd.
Today, a $5 and $10 store (unrelated to the previous 5&10) stands next to Grauman's Ghinese Theater on Hollywood Blvd. LA Weekly ran a story that included the new "5 &10" which calls itself "Everything's $10 Luxury Accessories." However, a street-level sign out in front always advertises everything on sale for $5 for "one-day only"(see bullet point #6)
◦
Postscripts: In the dream text, in which the action takes place primarily on Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles, a section reads, "Those crazy kids. Why are they dressed like that? Maybe it is some big Halloween doings, but it don't seem like Halloween. More like early spring."
It is interesting to note that the "Hollywood Boulevard Characters" who dress up in costume on Hollywood Blvd and ask people to pose in pictures with them for tips first appeared on Hollywood Boulevard in the early 1990s, starting with Superman, then followed by Elvis Presley and Charlie Chaplin, before slowly blossoming into more than 80 characters in current times. Obviously, this wasn't taking place when Joe Brandt wrote his diary in 1937, nor even when the account was first published in 1969.
Another phrasing from the diary, "Funny glow about them. It is a shine around their heads -- something shining." Could this be from glowing headphones and headsets? Some readers of this blog have suggested that the "glow" is an illumination from cellphones on the young persons' faces. These readers may be on to something.
Note that in Brandt's dream, he saw a movie marquee featuring a blonde with one leg draped six-feet long. The movie might be an IMAX and 3D film, suitable for a film venue such as the TCL Chinese Theater IMAX at 6925 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California. Perhaps the marketing for the character includes the character's six-foot leg either as part of a cut-out print poster or an image on a digital marquee. A live action film version of about the doll "Barbie" (a long-legged character if there ever was one) is in the making in Hollywood starring Margot Robbie. May this fit the earthquake's timeframe when this film finally debuts? Or perhaps the film "Blonde" about Marilyn Monroe, starring Ana de Armas, which premieres on Netflix late September 2022 and in some selected theaters.
Was Joe Brandt talking about autonomous cars in the following passage, about cars that can drive themselves? Self-driving car technology is just emerging and may become mainstream before too many years in the future. In addition, the "baby, half-size" car he mentions resembles today's Smart car. He even suggests that the cars have some type of innate intelligence or personality by the way he describes the cars specifically and not their drivers. He wrote, "I looked out at the cars. They were honking, but not scared. They just kept moving. They didn't seem to know yet that anything was happening. Then, that white car, that baby half-sized one came sprawling from the inside lane right against the curb."
A little strange something caught my attention in the text. Everyone laughed after an initial small earthquake. "The ground shook, just an instant. People looked at each other, surprised. Then they laughed. I laughed, too. So this was what I had been waiting for. This funny little shake. It meant nothing."
Do most people in California laugh at a small earthquake? Maybe they do. Or instead, wouldn't they be a little alarmed? People are surprised and laugh more often when they are expecting one thing and another happens, something not so consequential. Were people expecting a large earthquake? Or was there a mega-quake in Japan and California is expecting a tsunami? Is this set a future time when earthquake prediction is more refined and accurate? Is everyone actually on edge and expecting a large earthquake when this first little small one arrives?
Recent news reveals that tar and natural gas smell is arising from the street corner across from the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles at a rate unseen before. In Joe's dream account he said, "There was a funny smell. I don't know where it came from. I didn't like it. A smell like sulphur, sulfuric acid, a smell like death. For a minute I thought I was back in chem." [Chemistry class].
A reader informed me about the possible "5 &10" Joe Brandt saw on Hollywood Blvd in his dream. The old 5-and-10-cent store previously on Hollywood Blvd. is long gone. A replica of it was created in Disney World in Florida in a recreation of Hollywood Blvd.
Today, a $5 and $10 store (unrelated to the previous 5&10) stands next to Grauman's Ghinese Theater on Hollywood Blvd. LA Weekly ran a story that included the new "5 &10" which calls itself "Everything's $10 Luxury Accessories." However, a street-level sign out in front always advertises everything on sale for $5 for "one-day only"(see bullet point #6)
