Couverture de Aaron Orth's podcast

Aaron Orth's podcast

Aaron Orth's podcast

De : Aaron Orth
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There are stories we were taught… and then there are the stories that were quietly removed.
Missing Pages is a cinematic, investigative horror series that ventures into the erased chapters of history—the events, people, and truths that were buried, rewritten, or deliberately forgotten. These are the stories that slipped between the lines, the ones that never made it into textbooks, and the ones someone, somewhere, hoped you would never question.

Every episode is a standalone descent into a different “missing page,” blending documentary‑style narration with atmospheric sound design to create an immersive, slow‑burn experience. The show moves through the shadows of history, folklore, psychology, and human behavior, uncovering the patterns of silence that reveal more than the official record ever did.

Some pages were lost by accident.
Some were distorted over time.
And some were removed with intention.

Missing Pages explores all three.

Across the series, listeners are guided through forgotten histories, unsettling folklore, and real events that feel stranger than fiction. Each episode begins with what we think we know—an accepted narrative, a familiar myth, a historical footnote—and then peels back the layers to expose the contradictions, omissions, and buried truths beneath. The result is a hybrid of investigative journalism and psychological horror, where the fear doesn’t come from monsters or ghosts, but from the realization that the truth was always there… just not where you were told to look.

You’ll encounter stories of communities erased from maps, rituals rewritten into harmless legends, scientific discoveries credited to the wrong hands, and tragedies that were quietly reframed to protect reputations rather than reveal reality. You’ll hear about folklore with roots far darker than the sanitized versions we grew up with, and about historical events that were altered so thoroughly that the original version barely survives in whispers, rumors, or a single surviving document.

Each episode asks a simple question:
What was left out—and why?

The answers are rarely simple. Sometimes the missing page exposes a political motive. Sometimes it reveals a cultural fear. Sometimes it uncovers a personal vendetta, a cover‑up, or a truth that was simply too uncomfortable for its time. And sometimes the missing page isn’t a page at all, but a pattern—a silence repeated across generations until it becomes invisible.

Through carefully crafted narration and cinematic soundscapes, Missing Pages recreates the feeling of opening an old archive box, flipping through brittle documents, and discovering something that was never meant to be found. The show doesn’t rely on jump scares or gore; instead, it builds a creeping sense of unease through authenticity, restraint, and the unsettling realization that the real world is often far more disturbing than fiction.

Listeners who enjoy dark history, investigative storytelling, psychological horror, folklore, and slow‑burn mysteries will find a home here. The series is designed for those who question accepted narratives, who sense that the official version of events is rarely the whole story, and who understand that history is not a fixed record—it’s a curated one.

Missing Pages is not about rewriting history.
It’s about restoring the parts that were removed.

Every episode stands alone, but together they form a larger mosaic: a portrait of how stories are shaped, how truth is controlled, and how the past continues to influence the present in ways we rarely notice. By examining what was erased, the show reveals what societies fear, what they value, and what they are willing to sacrifice to maintain a particular version of reality.

This is a series for listeners who want to be immersed, challenged, and unsettled. It’s for those who appreciate storytelling that respects their intelligence and rewards their curiosity. It’s for those who understand that horror doesn’t always come from the supernatural—it often comes from the human impulse to hide, distort, or destroy the truth.

If you think you know the story…
you’ve only read the version they left behind.

Missing Pages invites you to turn the lights down, put your headphones on, and step into the archive. The pages are waiting. The silence is waiting. And the truth—buried, fragmented, and restless—is waiting too.Copyright Aaron Orth
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Épisodes
  • E episode two
    May 6 2026
    “The Hymns That Weren’t Meant to Be Sung”

    A hymnal rewritten.
    A melody bent out of shape.
    A generation taught to worship a God who never approved of their suffering.

    In Episode Two of Missing Pages, we uncover the Slave Hymnal — the edited songs designed to control emotions, reshape identity, and silence the truth that God stands with the oppressed. More than verses were removed. Hope was removed. Dignity was removed. Freedom was removed.

    But the people who were never meant to sing the real hymns… found them anyway.

    This episode dives into:
    • the theology of control used in the early 1800s
    • the missionary boards and institutions that rewrote worship
    • the emotional and spiritual damage caused by edited hymns
    • the rebellion that rose through secret songs and coded music
    • the God who never blessed oppression — and the scriptures that prove it
    • why this lost chapter of history must never be forgotten

    And in the outro, host Aaron Orth shares how families today can protect their own stories from becoming “missing pages,” and introduces the Grayson Jones ADHD‑friendly book series by Nora Aron — empowering kids who deserve stories written at their speed, not around their struggles.

    Next week:
    Episode Three — “The Schools That Erased the Truth.”
    A journey into the classrooms that didn’t just teach history… they edited it.
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    28 min
  • Episode one the Bible that wasn’t a Bible
    May 5 2026
    Episode 1 — The Bible That Wasn’t a Bible

    The premiere of Missing Pages plunges listeners into the unsettling history of the 1807 Slave Bible—a version of scripture deliberately edited to control, pacify, and reshape the beliefs of enslaved people. More than 80% of the Old Testament and nearly half of the New Testament were removed, including every passage that spoke of freedom, liberation, or resistance.

    Through atmospheric sound design and investigative storytelling, the episode exposes how a sacred text was weaponized, how entire narratives were erased, and how the absence of those missing pages shaped generations. It’s a story about power, manipulation, and the quiet violence of editing truth out of existence.
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    26 min
  • Missing pages episode 1 teaser The Bible That Wasn’t A Bible
    May 4 2026
    There are stories we were taught… and then there are the stories that were quietly removed.
    Missing Pages is a cinematic, investigative horror series that ventures into the erased chapters of history—the events, people, and truths that were buried, rewritten, or deliberately forgotten. These are the stories that slipped between the lines, the ones that never made it into textbooks, and the ones someone, somewhere, hoped you would never question.

    Every episode is a standalone descent into a different “missing page,” blending documentary‑style narration with atmospheric sound design to create an immersive, slow‑burn experience. The show moves through the shadows of history, folklore, psychology, and human behavior, uncovering the patterns of silence that reveal more than the official record ever did.

    Some pages were lost by accident.
    Some were distorted over time.
    And some were removed with intention.

    Missing Pages explores all three.

    Across the series, listeners are guided through forgotten histories, unsettling folklore, and real events that feel stranger than fiction. Each episode begins with what we think we know—an accepted narrative, a familiar myth, a historical footnote—and then peels back the layers to expose the contradictions, omissions, and buried truths beneath. The result is a hybrid of investigative journalism and psychological horror, where the fear doesn’t come from monsters or ghosts, but from the realization that the truth was always there… just not where you were told to look.

    You’ll encounter stories of communities erased from maps, rituals rewritten into harmless legends, scientific discoveries credited to the wrong hands, and tragedies that were quietly reframed to protect reputations rather than reveal reality. You’ll hear about folklore with roots far darker than the sanitized versions we grew up with, and about historical events that were altered so thoroughly that the original version barely survives in whispers, rumors, or a single surviving document.

    Each episode asks a simple question:
    What was left out—and why?

    The answers are rarely simple. Sometimes the missing page exposes a political motive. Sometimes it reveals a cultural fear. Sometimes it uncovers a personal vendetta, a cover‑up, or a truth that was simply too uncomfortable for its time. And sometimes the missing page isn’t a page at all, but a pattern—a silence repeated across generations until it becomes invisible.

    Through carefully crafted narration and cinematic soundscapes, Missing Pages recreates the feeling of opening an old archive box, flipping through brittle documents, and discovering something that was never meant to be found. The show doesn’t rely on jump scares or gore; instead, it builds a creeping sense of unease through authenticity, restraint, and the unsettling realization that the real world is often far more disturbing than fiction.

    Listeners who enjoy dark history, investigative storytelling, psychological horror, folklore, and slow‑burn mysteries will find a home here. The series is designed for those who question accepted narratives, who sense that the official version of events is rarely the whole story, and who understand that history is not a fixed record—it’s a curated one.

    Missing Pages is not about rewriting history.
    It’s about restoring the parts that were removed.

    Every episode stands alone, but together they form a larger mosaic: a portrait of how stories are shaped, how truth is controlled, and how the past continues to influence the present in ways we rarely notice. By examining what was erased, the show reveals what societies fear, what they value, and what they are willing to sacrifice to maintain a particular version of reality.

    This is a series for listeners who want to be immersed, challenged, and unsettled. It’s for those who appreciate storytelling that respects their intelligence and rewards their curiosity. It’s for those who understand that horror doesn’t always come from the supernatural—it often comes from the human impulse to hide, distort, or destroy the truth.

    If you think you know the story…
    you’ve only read the version they left behind.

    Missing Pages invites you to turn the lights down, put your headphones on, and step into the archive. The pages are waiting. The silence is waiting. And the truth—buried, fragmented, and restless—is waiting too.
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    2 min
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