Épisodes

  • Roman Bacchanalia Panic of 186 B.C.
    Feb 3 2026
    In this episode, we explore the Roman Bacchanalia panic, a historical event where the Senate reacted with extreme fear and repression to private religious gatherings. We discuss how leaders, faced with what they don't understand, often resort to exaggeration and moral panic rather than seeking to understand the underlying needs driving such movements.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction to the Bacchanalia Panic    01:08 Whispers of Secret Gatherings    04:46 Senatorial Fear and Repression    08:46 The Role of Witnesses and Historians    12:41 Leadership Failure and Lasting Lessons
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    11 min
  • The Challenger Tragedy: What Went Wrong
    Feb 2 2026
    In this episode, we revisit the devastating Challenger space shuttle disaster of 1986, examining the critical decisions and organizational pressures that led to the catastrophe. We explore how a system rewarded confidence and forward motion over the quiet expertise of engineers, ultimately forcing reasonable decisions to drift into tragedy.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction to the Challenger Disaster    00:46 The O-Ring Dilemma    02:32 Engineers vs. Managers    05:09 The Fateful Launch    07:26 Organizational Failure
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    8 min
  • The Fall of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
    Feb 1 2026
    In this episode, we explore the gradual dismantling of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, a vast European republic that succumbed not to revolution or conquest, but to internal paralysis and external manipulation. We examine how a political system valuing 'golden liberty' and the 'Liberum Veto' ultimately rendered the Commonwealth vulnerable to its neighbors.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction to the Commonwealth    00:40 Golden Liberty and Liberum Veto    03:46 External Interference and Partitions    07:06 Failed Reforms and Final Collapse
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    7 min
  • Stanislav Petrov: The Man Who Saved the World
    Jan 31 2026
    In this episode, we revisit the almost catastrophic night in September 1983 when the Soviet Union's nuclear early warning system indicated an incoming attack. We explore how Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov, against protocol, trusted his gut feeling and prevented a global nuclear war.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction    00:29 Cold War Tensions in 1983    01:56 The Serpukhov-15 Command Center    03:22 The Alarm Sounds: Five Missiles Detected    05:39 Petrov's Moment of Doubt    10:41 The Aftermath and Petrov's Legacy
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    12 min
  • Bernard Kornfeld's Mutual Fund Empire
    Jan 30 2026
    In this episode, we explore the rise and fall of Bernard Kornfeld, an American salesman who built one of the world's largest mutual fund empires, Investors Overseas Services (IOS). We discuss how his relentless pursuit of growth and confidence ultimately led to its collapse, leaving a trail of financial devastation.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction to Bernard Kornfeld    00:40 Formation of IOS and Sales Strategy    04:46 The Downfall of IOS    10:12 Aftermath and Lessons Learned
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    9 min
  • Oleg Penkovsky: The Soviet Colonel Who Saw Through the Bluff
    Jan 29 2026
    In this episode, we explore the story of Oleg Penkovsky, a Soviet GRU colonel who became a crucial Cold War spy after realizing the Soviet leadership was dangerously misguided about their missile capabilities. We learn how his intelligence disclosures significantly impacted the Cuban Missile Crisis, allowing the West to navigate the precarious situation with vital insights.          Chapters    00:00 Introduction to Oleg Penkovsky    00:42 Penkovsky's Rise and Realization    04:56 The Decision to Spy and its Impact    10:26 Capture, Execution, and Legacy
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    10 min
  • The Dred Scott President: How James Buchanan Lit the Fuse
    Jan 19 2026

    Buchanan believed the Supreme Court could settle the slavery question once and for all. Instead, the Dred Scott decision inflamed the nation. This episode examines how outsourcing moral leadership made conflict inevitable.

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    10 min