
Podcast Episodes You Might Enjoy
We love podcasts! We hope you enjoy this curated list.
World’s Greatest Con
How To Fool Hitler
“How To Fool Hitler - The Allies have an audacious plan to win WW2. Drop a body with misinformation to hoax Hitler into believing they'll attack the wrong place. The only problem? They have to approve it first.”
Revisionist History
The King of Tears
Why country music makes you cry, and rock and roll doesn’t: A musical interpretation of divided America.
Snap Judgment
This Is Not a Drill
Ballistic missile threat inbound to Hawaii. Seek immediate shelter. A very special presentation of the day the world almost ended.
Wind of Change
My Friend Michael
The Scorpions’ song “Wind of Change” became the soundtrack to the end of the Cold War. But decades later, New Yorker investigative journalist Patrick Radden Keefe heard a rumor from a trusted source: the Scorpions didn’t write the song. The CIA did.
This is episode one of a very compelling series.
Hardcore History
Wrath of the Khans
Rarely will I list an episode you have to purchase. Wrath of the Khans is an exception and well worth the $1.99. A preview is included below, but to save yourself some time, just go buy it.
Get it here:
Hardcore History - Wrath of the Khans
The Dollop #207 (Live Episode)
The Animal Horror of Macquarie Island
The Dollop is a podcast hosted since April 2014 by American comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds. Each episode centers around an event or person from history selected for its humorousness or peculiarity. Typical episodes feature subjects from American history described by Anthony and commented on by Anthony and Reynolds. (Some Explicit Language)
Live from Melbourne, Australia, Comedians Dave Anthony, Gareth Reynolds, and Wil Anderson take a look at the horrific treatment of animals on Macquarie Island.
https://allthingscomedy.com/podcasts/207---the-animal-horror-of-macquarie-island
99% Invisible
The Architect of Hollywood
“In the golden era of Hollywood of the 1930s, 40s and 50s, the new movie industry titans who flocked to L.A. had an opportunity to construct whatever style houses they wanted. After all, Los Angeles had a lot of open space to develop, and no unifying architectural style. And there was one particular architect who could make any kind of building and make it well: Paul Revere Williams.”
https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/the-architect-of-hollywood/
