Épisodes

  • State of Hazing February 2026
    Feb 14 2026
    In this deeply personal and investigative episode of Cultured Unplugged: Where the Silence Ends, Uncle Chris examines the latest and most heartbreaking hazing cases unfolding across college campuses — starting with the tragic death of an 18-year-old student at Northern Arizona University. From arrests tied to alleged rush-related hazing to university disciplinary actions and broader patterns of risk, this episode goes beyond headlines. We unpack: 🎙 The details of the NAU hazing death and the criminal charges brought against fraternity members 🎙 How universities like Stillman College and the University of Alabama are responding to hazing allegations 🎙 The recurring role of alcohol, group pressure, and silence in devastating outcomes 🎙 What parents and students need to know to protect themselves and their communities 🎙 Why hazing continues to persist — despite awareness, policy, and past tragedies This episode is more than information — it’s a call to awareness and action. Hazing harms individuals and families, and it thrives in silence. At Cultured Unplugged, we confront that silence with thoughtful analysis, survivor-centered conversation, and community empowerment. 💬 Whether you’re a student, a parent, an educator, or someone concerned about student safety, this episode offers critical insight into the human cost of hazing and the cultural shift that must happen next. 👇 Listen now and share with someone who needs to hear this. Hazing thrives in silence — here, that silence ends.
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    18 min
  • The Donnie Wade Story
    Jan 23 2026
    In this haunting episode of Cultured Unplugged, Uncle Chris revisits the tragic and largely forgotten death of Donnie Wade Jr., a 20-year-old Prairie View A&M student whose dream of brotherhood turned into a nightmare. What began as a search for belonging ended in devastation — a young man pushed beyond his limits in the name of “tradition,” collapsing during a hazing ritual that should have never happened. Donnie would never walk off that track, never call his family again, never graduate, and never live the life ahead of him. Through careful investigation and unflinching storytelling, this episode asks the questions many still avoid: How did this happen? Who failed him? And how many more students must die before campuses truly change? This is not just Donnie’s story — it is a mirror held up to a culture that too often values silence over safety, reputation over responsibility, and ritual over human life. Listen as Uncle Chris unpacks the events, the aftermath, and the painful legacy left behind for Donnie’s family — reminding us that hazing is not history, it is still happening. Trigger warning: This episode discusses hazing, trauma, and death. Because hazing survives in silence… and this is where the silence ends.
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    18 min
  • Testimony 2009
    Jan 16 2026
    In this episode, I share my story like I never have before. Unfiltered. Uncut. And deeply personal. For the first time, I open the door to the heaviest parts of my hazing experience, told directly through my own reflection, 17 years later. What I carried in silence. What I survived. And how those moments still shape who I am today. This is not an easy listen. Listener discretion is strongly advised. But if you have ever questioned tradition, loyalty, brotherhood, or the cost of silence, this testimony is for you. This is my journey. This is my truth. And this is where the silence ends. This is where the silence ends
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    58 min
  • The Adam Oakes Story
    Jan 9 2026

    Listen in as I speak with the father of Adamn Oakes, Eric Oakes as he shares his pain turned into action and justice for his son.

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    1 h et 17 min
  • Where the Silence Ends: The Caleb Wilson Story
    Jan 5 2026

    Uncle Chris introduces Cultured Unplugged’s mission to expose hazing, abuse, and institutional cover-ups, then focuses on the fatal hazing of 20-year-old Caleb Wilson at Southern University and the subsequent indictments under Louisiana’s Max Gruver Act.

    As a survivor, Uncle Chris reflects on the systemic problem, the alleged cover-up, and the urgent need for accountability and cultural change to stop hazing deaths.

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    29 min