Épisodes

  • 140: The American Revolution Within The Whimsical World of Ken Burns, Pt. 1
    Jan 8 2026

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    What happens when a twelve-hour history epic meets two hosts who love maps, motives, and messy truths? We dove into the first two parts of PBS’s American Revolution and came up with a sharper, more honest read: there’s real value in the battle maps, the troop movements, and the logistics that make Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill feel tangible. But there’s also a framing choice that changes everything—less about English liberties, more about equality—and that shift colors Washington’s introduction, Jefferson’s contradictions, and how the documentary asks us to weigh ideals against interests.

    We start with the early case for union: Franklin’s “Join, or Die,” the Iroquois Confederacy as political inspiration, and why the colonies were more rivals than teammates. Then we follow the money and the maps. The 1763 Proclamation Line strangled elite land speculation west of the Appalachians, pulling Virginia’s planter class and New England’s merchants toward the same fight for leverage. The film nails the military spine—Henry Knox’s impossible cannon haul from Ticonderoga, the brutal math at Bunker Hill, the strategic obsession with the Hudson–Lake Champlain corridor—while stumbling when every beat becomes a litmus test. Washington, introduced first as a slaveholder, is historically accurate yet context-poor; Benedict Arnold, by contrast, is drawn with nuance: daring, wounded, essential, then embittered.

    We also zoom out to the British view: the empire’s real prize was the Caribbean and the southern colonies, not a rebellious Boston. Add in the Hessians, smallpox, and Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation, and you get a war shaped as much by disease and manpower as by declarations. Our take: the Revolution reads truer as a fight to preserve inherited English rights than as an egalitarian crusade, and the documentary works best when it lets those competing truths coexist. If you’re curious where the storytelling soars, where it stumbles, and what got left out—Magna Carta to Mayflower, local governance to militia culture—this breakdown is for you.

    If you enjoyed the conversation, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves early America, and leave a quick review—what did the doc nail, and what did it miss?

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    1 h et 19 min
  • 139: He Wanted Paris, Got Prison, And Sang On The Gallows
    Jan 4 2026

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    We ring in 2026 with fan calls, a messy production catch‑up, and a deep dive into Death by Lightning, using Garfield’s rise and Guiteau’s delusion to unpack the Gilded Age spoils system and a presidency undone by infection as much as a bullet. Chester Arthur’s surprising turn toward reform gives the story its heart.

    • 1880 convention deadlock and Garfield’s dark horse nomination
    • The spoils system, stalwarts vs half‑breeds, and Roscoe Conkling’s machine
    • Guiteau’s forged notes, Blaine’s rebuke, and the psychology of entitlement
    • The shooting, germ theory, and fatal medical error vs the bullet
    • Alexander Graham Bell’s failed device and the autopsy dispute
    • Arthur’s pivot from patronage to civil service reform
    • Missed chances in the show: the trial, self‑defense, and “I am going to the Lordy”
    • Our field trips, fan shoutouts, and what’s coming next

    This episode is brought to you by the Strava app: if you sign up for a premium subscription and use the code nailed it, you get nothing off, but we get a kudos


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    1 h et 35 min
  • 138: Road Trip Through The Founders’ Backyards
    Nov 18 2025

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    The plan was simple: drive to Charlottesville, see three presidential homes, soak in the views, and come back with a few good stories. What we got was a bracing look at how history is curated, where it gets messy, and how visitor experiences can either illuminate the past or accidentally hide it in plain sight. We start at Monticello, where Jefferson’s clever design choices and meticulous gadgets share space with a frank accounting of slavery, debt, and contradictions that won’t sit quietly on the tour bus. The foyer artifacts, the pulley calendar, and the Lewis and Clark links all impress—but the muddy lawn and scripted talking points tell their own tale about legacy and upkeep.

    Then the plot twists at Highland. We wind up a beautiful, wooded drive expecting Monroe’s home and meet a yellow house, a guest house, and an archaeological dig. The reveal—delivered by a theatrical tour guide knocking on an empty foundation—lands somewhere between clever and deflating. It raises honest questions about transparency: if the house burned in the 1820s, what exactly are we touring? There’s value in the research and the landscape, but for visitors seeking Monroe himself, Fredericksburg’s dedicated museum looks like the smarter bet.

    Montpelier brings the clarity we were hunting. With DuPont-era layers acknowledged and peeled back, the tour builds a richer picture of Madison’s life, the Constitution’s context, and the brutal economics of enslavement on the estate. The exhibits beneath the house do the heavy lifting—names, roles, reconstructed quarters—and the guide threads together how debt, decisions, and power shaped people’s lives, including families sold south “down the river.” It’s thoughtful, grounded, and surprisingly moving.

    Between site visits we wander UVA’s Rotunda and find refuge at Miller’s, an old-school bar with pool tables and PBR that reminded us travel is as much about the in-between moments as the headline stops. If you care about American history, architecture, and how institutions tell hard stories, this one’s for you. Hit play, subscribe for more road-tested deep dives, and tell us: which site would you visit first, and why?

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    1 h et 20 min
  • **URGENT** -- Google Pulled The Plug
    Nov 11 2025

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    The door slammed without warning: our podcast Gmail was disabled, our recording tools broke, and our notes vanished into a limbo we couldn’t even name. We hit record anyway, tracing the chain reaction from a single login error to a full-stack outage and a $24 stopgap just to keep our voices live. What started as a Sunday session turned into a forensic tour of how one platform account can control your publishing, your files, and your ability to show up for listeners.

    We walk through the message that greeted us—“account disabled,” appeal link, no reason—and the blind spot that creates when you’re trying to fix the unknown. From Google sign-in blocking our Descript access to YouTube still hosting our videos, the paradox is clear: the platform can keep your content while cutting you off from the keys. We sort possible causes—policy flags, suspected hacking, file-sharing on Drive, even mislabeled educational use—and explain why uncertainty is the hardest part. Without a specific violation, every creative habit feels like a risk, and every minute becomes troubleshooting instead of storytelling.

    Then we get practical. We outline what we lost (Drive notes, episode prep, trip write-ups), what we salvaged (publishing through our host), and what we changed in real time: building a backup path to record, drafting a plan to decouple third-party logins, and mapping a storage strategy that mirrors files across local drives and an alternate cloud. If you rely on single sign-on, if your show notes live in one workspace, or if your backup plan is “we’ll export later,” this conversation is your fire drill. We share the playbook we wish we had a week ago so you can build resilience before a silent lockout hits your feed.

    If this story helps you future-proof your workflow, share it with a creator who needs the nudge. Subscribe for updates as our appeal unfolds, and leave a review with your best platform-proofing tip so we can feature it next time.

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    30 min
  • 137: After Dark: Money Talks, BS Walks: The Sequel No One Asked For
    Oct 12 2025

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    Ever wondered why a president can send the National Guard into a city that didn’t ask for it? We light the fuse on a late-night, no-bleeps conversation that links today’s deployments to a long trail of precedent—from George Washington’s march during the Whiskey Rebellion to Woodrow Wilson’s 1916 overhauls and the 14th Amendment’s slow centralization of power. It’s not just a rant; it’s a map of how federal authority grew, why states ceded immigration control, and how both sides spin law and order to score political points while locals live with the consequences.

    We walk through the legal gray zones around ICE, the friction between cooperation and obstruction, and the realities of federalism that most headlines skip. Then we pull history closer: Washington’s show of force, Hamilton’s tax, and Wilson’s National Defense Act that standardized and federalized state militias into today’s National Guard. Along the way, we question whether “emergencies” justify muscle, and who gets to say when the emergency ends. The 14th Amendment’s incorporation story gets its due too, reminding us how rights protection and centralization became intertwined.

    On the culture side, we’re having fun with serious stakes. We set prop bets for Ken Burns’s new American Revolution series—who gets named, what themes hit first, how “complex” villains become—and we cheer Netflix’s upcoming Death by Lightning, a gripping take on President James Garfield’s assassination, Charles Guiteau’s chaotic spiral, and the era’s flawed medicine. These stories aren’t detours; they’re primers on how a nation learns to read power. If you care about civil liberties, federalism, immigration policy, and the history that keeps repeating, this after-dark session is your field guide.

    If you’re into smart, unscripted history with sharp edges, hit play, share this with a friend, and tell us: where do you draw the line on federal force? Subscribe, leave a review, and drop your boldest prop bet for the Revolution series.

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    54 min
  • 136: Hold on to Your Butts + Fashion Crash Course
    Jul 17 2025

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    We announce our ambitious new project covering each state's journey to joining the Union, starting with Delaware and proceeding in order of ratification or annexation. This special series will coincide with America's upcoming 250th anniversary celebration.

    • John recaps his experience hosting an office trivia contest where his fashion choice (suit jacket with jeans) became a controversial talking point
    • Discussion of fan feedback from "Dick Pepperfield" about the trivia contest and suggestions for improvement
    • Analysis of Born on the Fourth of July film and connections to American patriotism
    • Announcement of our new 50-state podcast series examining how each state joined the Union
    • Preview of Delaware as "The First State" with fun facts about its size, population, and corporate significance
    • Plans to keep episodes concise while covering each state's unique story and historical context

    Join us for our next episode as we properly begin our journey through all 50 states, starting with Delaware's path to becoming the first state to ratify the Constitution!


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    33 min
  • 135: Newlywed, Jon N., Needs Our Help
    Jun 26 2025

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    When newlywed John returns from his California nuptials, the podcast takes a refreshingly personal turn as Matt recounts his best man experience and the unexpected drama surrounding the wedding's signature cocktail. The "Simply Peach Juice debacle" becomes a running joke throughout the episode, as the hosts describe their frantic day-before search for this elusive ingredient, only to run out during cocktail hour anyway.

    What makes this episode particularly enjoyable is how organically it transitions from wedding talk to an impromptu American history quiz session. John reveals he's been tasked with creating Fourth of July trivia for his workplace, and Matt becomes the reluctant guinea pig for testing these questions. Their back-and-forth banter creates both humor and genuine historical insights as they debate the difficulty level and entertainment value of each question.

    The trivia section uncovers fascinating Independence Day connections many listeners might not know: Calvin Coolidge was the only U.S. president born on July 4th; Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on July 4th, 1826 (exactly 50 years after the Declaration of Independence); and Italian patriot Giuseppe Garibaldi, born on July 4th, 1807, was offered but refused a commission in the Union Army during the Civil War.

    Beyond just facts, the episode showcases the hosts' different approaches to making history engaging. John tends toward straightforward questions, while Matt advocates for injecting humor to make the trivia more memorable. Their friendly disagreement about whether questions should be multiple choice or fill-in-the-blank reflects wider debates about history education – should we focus on accessibility or deeper knowledge?

    Whether you're planning your own history-themed trivia night or simply enjoy learning American history through casual conversation, this episode delivers both entertainment and education in equal measure. What Fourth of July fact would surprise your friends the most? Let us know and join the historical conversation!

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    1 h et 2 min
  • 134: We paid $35 to get yelled at by people in colonial costumes
    May 15 2025

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    Have you ever paid good money for a disappointing experience? In this continuation of our Virginia adventure, we dive into the reality behind the tourism facade of the Historic Triangle – and it's not always pretty.

    We pick up where we left off after Sherwood Forest, as our four-man crew embarks on exploring Jamestown, Williamsburg, and Yorktown. What should have been a fascinating journey through America's colonial beginnings quickly devolves into a series of increasingly bizarre encounters with historical interpreters who can't seem to decide if they're in the 18th century or the 21st. From the young man dangerously swinging a hoe while attempting to explain tobacco farming, to the tattooed kitchen worker who responds to genuine questions with a dismissive "stuff," the supposed guardians of historical authenticity left much to be desired.

    Williamsburg emerges as the villain of our tale – a $35 per person tourist trap where asphalt streets are somehow meant to transport you to 1774, rollerbladers cruise past colonial buildings, and the main attraction (the Capitol Building) locks its gates in our faces at precisely 5:00 PM with a smile. The experience raises fascinating questions about historical tourism: When does educational entertainment become exploitative? How do modern sensibilities interact with historical interpretation? And why do some sites succeed where others fail so spectacularly?

    Fortunately, Yorktown provides redemption with its well-managed National Park Service battlefield tour and thoughtful exhibits, including a proper recreation of Washington's command tent. Through our misadventures, we offer genuine insights for anyone considering their own historical journey through Virginia – which sites deliver authentic experiences worth your time and money, and which might leave you running back to the 21st century in search of something real.

    Join us for laughs, frustrations, and genuine historical curiosity as we navigate the awkward middle ground between past and present in Virginia's Historic Triangle. And learn from our mistakes so your own historical adventures might prove more rewarding than ours!

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    1 h et 23 min