The Lovelock Giant Legend
In the high desert of Nevada, about twenty miles south of the town of Lovelock, a dry limestone cave holds one of the richest archaeological records in the American West — and one of the most stubborn legends in American...
Podcast Index
Browse podcasts by category, open recent episodes, and download audio to listen offline.
Disturbing History
Disturbing History-True Stories
Horror Queers
Bloody FM
The Team House
dee takos
Wicked and Grim: A True Crime Podcast
Ben Gibson
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)
Ascension
Rainy Day Rabbit Holes: History Unhinged
Rainy Day Rabbit Holes
The Eastern Border
Curonian
Le Cours de l'histoire
France Culture
New Books in Central Asian Studies
Marshall Poe
Move Forth With Grace: A Discipleship for Women
Angela Grace Forth
American Revolution Podcast
Michael Troy
The Archaeology Podcast Network Feed
The Archaeology Podcast Network
Civics In A Year
The Center for American Civics
BioGraphics - True Biographies & History's Most Fascinating People
biog
Christian History Almanac
1517 Podcasts
Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More
Gary Arndt
مَنبِت | Manbet
Sowt Media | صوت
Gamers Week Podcast
Gamers Week Podcast
Gunsmoke - Tales of the West
John Meston
The Falcon Radio
Dougall & Bennett
Philosophy Daily
solgoodmedia.com
The Daily Philosopher
solgoodmedia.com
Neville Goddard - Bedtime Radio
Neville Goddard
Ghost Town: Strange History, True Crime, & the Paranormal
Ghost Town
Alien UFO Podcast
Simon Bown
Norrtälje 400 år
Norrtälje 400 år
Socials with the Saints | a Pilgrim Center of Hope podcast
Pilgrim Center of Hope
Confessions of a Not-So-Dangerous Mind*
Jeremy Cohen
Bro History
Bro History
Jewish History Uncensored
Rabbi Arnie Wittenstein
东亚观察局
番薯剥壳工作室
BiblioAsia Podcast
National Library, Singapore
Scandali
BOATS
Henry läser Wikipedia
Acast
Rock & Pop Stories
Dominique Duforest
Sisters in Crime – Frauen, die töten
Jule Gölsdorf und Karolin Kandler
History
Disturbing History-True Stories
In the high desert of Nevada, about twenty miles south of the town of Lovelock, a dry limestone cave holds one of the richest archaeological records in the American West — and one of the most stubborn legends in American...
What happens when the most powerful man in the world asks his own government a direct question and still can't get a straight answer? When Bill Clinton took office in 1993, he wanted to know two things: who really killed...
Walt Disney built the most trusted brand in the world, and he built it on top of a story the company has spent eighty years hoping you would never hear. Behind the castle, the cardigan, and the warm Missouri voice was a ...
The murder of John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November twenty-second, nineteen sixty-three remains the most contested crime in American history, and at the center of the contest stands the man who became president before Ai...
Ulysses S. Grant left the White House without a fortune, never took a bribe, and never sold an office, yet his administration produced more documented corruption than any presidency of the nineteenth century.This episode...
On New Year's Day 1927, New York City's medical examiner stood in front of reporters and accused the United States government of poisoning its own citizens. He could prove it, because the bodies were stacking up in his m...
On January 6, 1949, two starving Japanese machine gunners walked out of the caves on Iwo Jima and surrendered to American airmen who had no idea they were there. The war had been over for more than three years. They're w...
For weeks this show has lived in the corridors of power, among presidents and spies and the men who shaped the country from behind closed doors. This time we leave all of that behind and walk into a restaurant parking lo...
In this episode of the Disturbing History presidential series, we cross out of settled history and into living memory to examine the presidency of George W. Bush through the architecture of the War on Terror.Beginning wi...
The nation wept for Warren G. Harding in August 1923. The funeral train crawled home through crowds that stretched for miles, mourners singing hymns by the tracks, certain they were burying one of the most beloved men ev...
This week we step away from the corridors of presidential power and head into the North Georgia mountains, to a hand-built stone castle on Taylor's Ridge and one of the most misunderstood crimes in the state's history. O...
Everyone knows George Washington was the first President of the United States. Technically true. But it's also a sleight of hand, because fourteen men held the title of President before him, and almost no American today ...
Dwight Eisenhower is the president most Americans remember as the calm grandfather of the nineteen fifties. The general who beat Hitler. The man who built the interstate highways.The smile under the bald head. But undern...
The story of the Foo Fighters of World War Two is one of the strangest, best-documented, and least-resolved cases in the history of military aviation. In the late autumn of nineteen forty-four, pilots of the United State...
Most people think they know Watergate. They don't. They know the headline. The break-in, the tapes, the resignation, the wave from the helicopter on the South Lawn. They know the word. They've seen the photograph. What t...
In the late afternoon of November twenty-first, 1986, Marine Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North and his secretary Fawn Hall stood inside an office a short walk from the Oval Office and fed classified documents into a shredd...
On the day after Christmas, 1862, 38 Dakota men were hanged from a single scaffold in Mankato, Minnesota. It remains the largest mass execution in American history. The man who signed the order was Abraham Lincoln. He si...
Andrew Jackson sold himself as the champion of the common man. His face has been on the twenty dollar bill since 1928. There are statues of him in city squares from Tennessee to Washington. He's been claimed, in successi...
This episode contains discussion of child abuse, physical and sexual violence against minors, and descriptions of deaths in state custody. Listener discretion is advised.For more than a century, the state of Florida ran ...
The Wild West most of us inherited is a marketing campaign. The cowboy in the lighter hat, the noble sheriff, the high-noon duel in a dusty street — those came out of dime novels, traveling shows, and ghostwritten biogra...
Fill in the form below. Make sure to select both Country and Genres.
Send us a message below. We will get back to you within 24 hours.