Episodi

  • Three Times Everyone Fell For It: History's Hoaxes & Human Gullibility
    Dec 21 2025

    In 1912, scientists believed they'd found the missing link between apes and humans. Forty years later, someone noticed the jaw was filed down and stained with tea. In 1869, workers dug up a 10-foot stone man in upstate New York—newspapers called it proof of biblical giants. It was carved in a barn the year before. In 1938, Orson Welles read a radio script and convinced America that Martians had landed in New Jersey. This episode covers hoaxes so good they fooled experts, made fortunes, and revealed how badly people want to believe something extraordinary.

    Content Notice

    This episode discusses historical hoaxes and public panic events. Treatment is analytical and historical and focuses on human psychology and institutional failures rather than mocking victims of deception.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    18 min
  • Engineering Brilliance: The Fine Line Between Prank and Crime
    Nov 30 2025

    Epic (and illegal) college pranks that demanded advanced engineering degrees, weeks of planning, and cross-country logistics. We look at feats requiring custom equipment to steal a 1.7-ton cannon and complex assembly to build a police car replica atop a massive dome. These stories reveal what happens when brilliant, unsupervised minds choose hilarity over homework, proving that the greatest challenge is often the joke itself.


    Content Notice

    This episode discusses technically illegal activities undertaken as pranks, including theft of property (The Caltech Cannon Heist), breaking and entering, public disruption, and a hoax involving claims of building a nuclear reactor which crossed into a public safety concern (The MIT "Reactor" Prank). The content is framed within the context of historical college traditions and engineering challenges.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    14 min
  • No Turkey, No Pie, No Invitation : Unpacking the Harvest
    Nov 27 2025

    Today we dive into the true roots of Thanksgiving, a holiday ranked second only to Christmas. The rosy story taught in school leaves out crucial details. We ask: Why wasn't turkey even on the menu, and what exactly brought the Wampanoag tribe to the Pilgrims' harvest festival? This rabbit hole uncovers the controversial history and long-held myths, examining why the accepted narrative obscures the brutal truths of early colonial history.


    Content Notice

    This episode discusses the real history of Thanksgiving, focusing on controversial aspects and dark historical facts that differ from grade-school narratives. Topics include the whitewashing of history, the concept of Manifest Destiny, the bloody conflicts between settlers and Native Americans, including massacres, death from disease brought by colonizers, and the capture and selling of Native Americans into slaver

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    13 min
  • When Everyone Lost Their Minds: History's Strangest Mass Manias
    Nov 23 2025

    Flower bulbs traded for houses. A man sat on a pole for weeks while crowds watched. Hundreds danced in the streets until they died. Stuffed animals became retirement plans. A prophecy sent people fleeing to mountaintops with homemade boats. This episode covers the moments when mass delusion took over—not because people were stupid, but because social pressure and fear of missing out override everything else. It all sounds ridiculous now. It felt inevitable then.

    Content Notice

    This episode discusses mass hysteria events and economic bubbles. Treatment is historical and analytical.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    13 min
  • From Battlefield to Kitchen: Accidental Inventions Born of Necessity
    Nov 18 2025

    A contest to feed Napoleon's army created the canning industry. Engineers trying to survive nuclear war accidentally invented the internet. A submarine navigation system became GPS. A messy lab bench saved millions from infection. A melted chocolate bar led to the microwave. This episode covers inventions nobody planned—solutions to specific problems that ended up solving problems nobody knew existed. Sometimes the best innovations come from noticing what wasn't supposed to happen.

    Content Notice

    This episode discusses military technology development and wartime applications. Treatment is historical and analytical.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    6 min
  • The Parking Lot Paradox: Why Starting Is Harder Than Doing
    Nov 12 2025

    David Goggins sat in his truck for a week outside a Navy recruiting office, too afraid to walk in. Not because he didn't want to be a SEAL—because finding out he couldn't would destroy the dream. A story about the ten steps that changed everything, and why the parking lot was harder than Hell Week.


    Content Notice

    This episode discusses weight loss, intense physical training, and military selection processes. Contains references to depression and self-doubt. Presents honest but encouraging perspective on overcoming fear of failure.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    13 min
  • Disasters Exactly as Predicted: The Warnings We Archive and Ignore
    Nov 7 2025

    Radium that glowed in the dark. Lead that stopped engines from knocking. Teflon that made everything slide off. They solved real problems. Then decades later, we found them in everyone's blood. This episode covers the substances we thought were miracles until we realized they don't break down, don't leave, and accumulate forever. The gap between "this works" and "this kills you slowly" turns out to be about fifty years. By the time we figured it out, it was already everywhere.

    Content Notice

    This episode discusses toxic chemical exposure, occupational deaths, and corporate negligence. Treatment is factual and investigative, not graphic.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    15 min
  • Banned: Ridiculous Laws Born from Bureacracy
    Nov 3 2025

    Let's explore a catalog of prohibitions imposed by governments convinced they were protecting citizens. Why were common recreational games, popular foods enjoyed globally, specific colors, and even reference books deemed illegal? We trace the moral panics that led to restrictions lasting decades, revealing a structural failure: the ease with which fun things are banned compared to the difficulty of regulating profitable dangers.

    Content Notice

    This episode discusses historical legal restrictions surrounding moral panics, including accusations of organized crime (Pinball) and laws initially targeting prostitution (Japanese dance ban). It also references censorship and "objectionable" words like "knock up" and "ball" in the discussion of dictionary bans.

    Let's see what the world's been hiding.

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    18 min