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We're fifty episodes/two years (in like two weeks) into the Russian Revolution and Mike just introduced Rasputin; we've probably got at least two more years to go, especially since he's got another book coming out that'll he have to tour and promote.
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# ? May 7, 2021 21:54 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 02:18 |
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Appoda posted:I was into Our Fake History until he started doing subjects that either didn't have much of a story, or was obviously false like "did aliens build the pyramids." I think he's trying to speak to a younger audience and disprove some of the more dangerous conspiracy theories out there, which is part and parcel with the pod title and not a bad thing at all, but I get that stuff well enough from my more in depth pods. Yeah... I haven't listened to it before but was interested in the Ethiopia episodes. I'm on the second one, it's 23 minutes into a 66 minute podcast, and he hasn't started yet. Probably not going to listen to any of the other ones after this.
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# ? May 8, 2021 02:37 |
Lions Led by Donkeys is the podcast I keep meaning to listen to. Heard the host guest on a couple other pods and he seemed like a cool dude.
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# ? May 8, 2021 06:10 |
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Appoda posted:Lions Led by Donkeys is the podcast I keep meaning to listen to. Heard the host guest on a couple other pods and he seemed like a cool dude. It's real real goddamn good. The Iran-Iraq series is great, the Soviet-Afghan one is even better. Everyone seems to rave about the Napoleon in Russia series (and it's v.good) but those two are really some next-level work. Schadenboner fucked around with this message at 12:46 on May 8, 2021 |
# ? May 8, 2021 12:44 |
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Schadenboner posted:It's real real goddamn good. The Iran-Iraq series is great, the Soviet-Afghan one is even better. Huh, this is very much my thing, I'll look into it.
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# ? May 8, 2021 13:56 |
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Cockblocktopus posted:We're fifty episodes/two years (in like two weeks) into the Russian Revolution and Mike just introduced Rasputin; we've probably got at least two more years to go, especially since he's got another book coming out that'll he have to tour and promote. I wonder if he regrets doing 1905 at this point. Obviously there were delays not related to his pace in the actual podcast, but even if it's not actually another two years, he's going to dramatically overshoot his summer 2021 mark for ending this thing.
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# ? May 8, 2021 15:09 |
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Sinteres posted:I wonder if he regrets doing 1905 at this point. Obviously there were delays not related to his pace in the actual podcast, but even if it's not actually another two years, he's going to dramatically overshoot his summer 2021 mark for ending this thing. The problem is, in order to tell the narrative in a digestible way for the kind of audience that listens to history podcasts, you are obligated to do 1905 if you do 1917 and there is no way to get around that.
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# ? May 8, 2021 16:33 |
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I suspect Mike Duncan's regrets are more along the vein of "gyah, I should have spent more time on"
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# ? May 8, 2021 17:52 |
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Arrhythmia posted:I suspect Mike Duncan's regrets are more along the vein of "gyah, I should have spent more time on" Especially on the English Civil Wars
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# ? May 10, 2021 03:59 |
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CommonShore posted:Especially on the English Civil Wars *chuckles softly every time mike duncan says the series will be 13 episodes long each*
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# ? May 10, 2021 04:02 |
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He's also on record that were he to do the American Revolution over, he'd take a completely different approach to it.
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# ? May 10, 2021 04:13 |
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CommonShore posted:Especially on the English Civil Wars I would love nothing more than for Mike to do 30 episodes on the English Civil War
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# ? May 10, 2021 04:29 |
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It gets weird trying to sort through sort through important events that you were brought up mythologizing. Even when you push past the myth, you'll be prone to putting all your philosophical thoughts about the country into your read of the events and maybe just fall into a hole of being blanketly contrarian towards the myths. At the very least, Mike Duncan has got the hang of digging deep into events to bring out some interesting stuff while still keeping episodes in digestible sizes. I hope he manages to finish the last season and do it justice, but if he doesn't, he'll at least learn something about pacing his projects.
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# ? May 10, 2021 05:34 |
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I remember him mentioning how much he liked John Lambert and wishing he'd had more time to go off on that. Seems like an interesting dude. Pax Britannica is coming up on that time period though
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# ? May 10, 2021 05:35 |
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Turns out there's a new episode of HH Addendum (Malcolm Gladwell on American bombing campaign in WWII). I'm not sure that anyone ever referred to The Hitler Channel as "The WWII Channel".
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# ? May 12, 2021 03:40 |
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Gladwell is one of the most boring people I've ever had the displeasure of listening too. I can't imagine he has any good insights or thoughts on anything of note
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# ? May 13, 2021 20:55 |
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He's happy to talk about how little he knew Jeffrey Epstein when they hung out together.
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# ? May 13, 2021 22:09 |
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Gaius Marius posted:Gladwell is one of the most boring people I've ever had the displeasure of listening too. I can't imagine he has any good insights or thoughts on anything of note what sucks is the topic is an interesting one but i know he will just turn it into some dumb asspulled fable for some self help grift poo poo.
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# ? May 13, 2021 22:11 |
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If you're tempted to listen to Malcolm Gladwell download a podcast on a topic you know a lot about and then count how many times he says things that are wrong in the first 10 minutes and then delete it.
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# ? May 13, 2021 22:18 |
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I'm a big fan of the one episode of the podcast I listened to where he made sweeping claims about US policy in Vietnam after interviewing one person. Then somehow spent more than half the rest talking about himself. It was a tour de force, I've never seen someone so completely fail at analyzing a historical event.
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# ? May 13, 2021 22:36 |
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CommonShore posted:If you're tempted to listen to Malcolm Gladwell download a podcast on a topic you know a lot about and then count how many times he says things that are wrong in the first 10 minutes and then delete it. Could pretty much say the same thing about Carlin lol. The perfect HH guest host.
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# ? May 13, 2021 22:39 |
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I feel like Gladwell had a semi-interesting podcast years ago that I've long since stopped listening to. I can't even remember what it was about lol, just that it had a lot of ads for Zip Recruiter
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# ? May 14, 2021 01:57 |
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webmeister posted:I feel like Gladwell had a semi-interesting podcast years ago that I've long since stopped listening to. I can't even remember what it was about lol, just that it had a lot of ads for Zip Recruiter Isn’t that the podcast where he literally wanted people to not have an episode title or topic in the description and just to listen to whatever he wanted to talk about no matter what?
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# ? May 14, 2021 03:54 |
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CommonShore posted:If you're tempted to listen to Malcolm Gladwell download a podcast on a topic you know a lot about and then count how many times he says things that are wrong in the first 10 minutes and then delete it. What I call the 'Yuval Noah Harari experience'. I just listened to the tides of history episode on the indus valley civilization, super interesting.
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# ? May 16, 2021 14:30 |
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BTW the Malcolm Gladwell episode I had that experience with was the one about satire, where he makes the claim that history's most (and only?) successful piece of satire is some dumbass British fish out of water class comedy from the 90s, like this show changed the world in a way that nothing else has. Like, never mind literally every other piece of loving historical satire. There are so many easy counter examples that I'm tripping over myself and sputtering mad just thinking about how to choose good and illustrative examples that meet his criteria but in a way better and clearer way. It's such a nonsensical claim that I can't even formulate a coherent response. e. productive edit I've worked through Fall of Civilizations - that one had a couple episodes where there were a few suspect claims, particularly the Aztec one. We got into discussing this in the MilHist thread, but he had this bit about Old World / New World historical/technological progress that made me raise an eyebrow, and then someone posted a paragraph from a book about the Comanche which makes me wonder if FoC plagiarized from it. Overall I've enjoyed the series but that left a sour taste in my mouth. I'm getting into When Diplomacy Fails now, beginning with the World War I special and I'm enjoying this too. This guy is quite good at letting the material be entertaining, and sometimes even funny, without having to shoehorn jokes in there. CommonShore fucked around with this message at 15:54 on May 16, 2021 |
# ? May 16, 2021 15:50 |
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kanonvandekempen posted:What I call the 'Yuval Noah Harari experience'. I've picked up Sapiens in a book store several times because it sounds super interesting. I flip it open to a random page, read it, then put it down and back away. It feels like superficial observations passed off as profundities.
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# ? May 16, 2021 17:19 |
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Count Roland posted:I've picked up Sapiens in a book store several times because it sounds super interesting. I flip it open to a random page, read it, then put it down and back away. It feels like superficial observations passed off as profundities. That's like half of all pop science publications.
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# ? May 16, 2021 18:44 |
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CommonShore posted:e. productive edit Yeah, that's a strange lapse from him given the way he approached the story of Easter Island and the Greenland Vikings, but when it comes to the civilizations of the Americas writers seem to lose their minds at the scale of their collapses and lurch from one over-generalization to another. Like you said, he had a lot of detail about their agriculture that didn't bear on the essential details of the events that led to their defeat.
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# ? May 16, 2021 19:07 |
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The problem with creating historical content about the native civilizations of the Americas is that there is incredibly sparse historical record to work from. Many of them didn't keep written records in the traditional sense (ie: quipus) or if they did the conquistadors systematically hunted them down and burned them because they considered them heretical. So you're primarily left with archeological findings, first hand accounts from the Europeans who invaded and destroyed the native empires, and a handful of interviews of native survivors by curious Europeans about what their life was like after it was mostly already destroyed. That's a really shaky and potentially unreliable base to start from, and there are only more gaps to fill in from there. I'm not saying any of this justifies the huge leaps in logic and sweeping generalizations historians tend to break out when talking about the Aztecs, Mayans, Inca, etc; I can see though how it would be really difficult to create a three hour podcast about the history of the Aztecs without doing so though.
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# ? May 16, 2021 20:03 |
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Question about Donkeys leading Lions: I started listening to it as I do, a couple of the first episodes coupled with the latest, before doing all the archives, as I'm a completionist. It's fine so far, but are they military fetishists? I know they are soldiers themselves, but something that I really hated from the latest Carlin interview and Carlin in general these days is how much he lionizes (no pun intended) the military, and I got that a bit from these dudes. I get the necessity of an army and I get why a lot of people enlist, but I'm pacifist enough that I don't wholly subscribe to Our Army=Heroes mentality and it's not something I feel like listening to.
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# ? May 16, 2021 20:53 |
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Theyre current and former military and are 100% non-moto. They named the podcast after a wry British phrase from WWI that is about the futility of war and the common soldier being meaningless to The Brass, who are out for themselves. The theme of the podcast is historical military blunders and how for the past 4000 years both Joe and war have never changed. When they talk about their own experience, it is rarely flattering to either themselves or militarism. If you find them to be too rah-rah for ARE TROOPS perhaps Pacifica Radio has some podcasts for you. Edit: The creator/host wrote a book about his time on active duty called "The Hooligans of Kandahar: Not All War Stories are Heroic." Rest easy that he is not pro war or even pro military. stealie72 fucked around with this message at 21:20 on May 16, 2021 |
# ? May 16, 2021 21:15 |
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Cool thanks. The thought came up with the Bill Millin episode, but even it came with a grain of salt. I just wanted to be sure. The early episodes are a bit rough, but the latest ones show promise and I think I'll overall enjoy the archives of this show.
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# ? May 16, 2021 21:48 |
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Sydin posted:The problem with creating historical content about the native civilizations of the Americas is that there is incredibly sparse historical record to work from. Many of them didn't keep written records in the traditional sense (ie: quipus) or if they did the conquistadors systematically hunted them down and burned them because they considered them heretical. So you're primarily left with archeological findings, first hand accounts from the Europeans who invaded and destroyed the native empires, and a handful of interviews of native survivors by curious Europeans about what their life was like after it was mostly already destroyed. That's a really shaky and potentially unreliable base to start from, and there are only more gaps to fill in from there. I'm not saying any of this justifies the huge leaps in logic and sweeping generalizations historians tend to break out when talking about the Aztecs, Mayans, Inca, etc; I can see though how it would be really difficult to create a three hour podcast about the history of the Aztecs without doing so though. Yeah but the claim was not load-bearing to his narrative in any way - was basically "Agriculture started in the Americas five thousand years later than in the Old World, so the Old World had a five thousand year head start on Civilization, and so the Americas were so far behind that they never had a chance." It was sandwiched between descriptions of the technical ingenuity and cultural complexity of the societies in question on one hand, and on descriptions of the massive depopulation from disease on the other. Had that section simply been deleted from the podcast nothing would have been lost.
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# ? May 16, 2021 22:48 |
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Porfiriato posted:As a complement to those two, I'd also mention With Chinese Characteristics. They take a bit lighter approach to Chinese history while still managing to cover the bases of whatever topic they're talking about. Yes, that is us! I appreciate the kind words. I know some people in here prefer the very focused and lengthy exploration of topics some other podcasts do, but neither of us is a professional historian (and we both have day jobs) so we'd never be able to match that level of detail. Also sometimes we talk about modern stuff because modern chinese politics and society gets us down and we need to vent. Instead we try to find topics that interest us personally, and do as much research as we can to give context to the event (and hopefully get across why we think its interesting). Chinese history and culture of the past 200 years is so crazy and chaotic and interesting that we enjoy doing the podcast for fun.
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# ? May 17, 2021 02:28 |
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CommonShore posted:Especially on the English Civil Wars I'm late to Duncan-chat but yeah. I actually started at French and worked forward, only rolling back to ECW after catching up on Russia, and it is almost comedic how rushed and shallow the ECW series feels relative to anything French and forward. I honestly am not even sure if I listened to his ARW series, but just from the episode descriptions it does not look good.
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# ? May 17, 2021 06:30 |
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PittTheElder posted:I'm late to Duncan-chat but yeah. I actually started at French and worked forward, only rolling back to ECW after catching up on Russia, and it is almost comedic how rushed and shallow the ECW series feels relative to anything French and forward. I honestly am not even sure if I listened to his ARW series, but just from the episode descriptions it does not look good. If you listened to the rest of it you might as well
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# ? May 17, 2021 08:48 |
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Don't bother with the American Revolution episodes imo, especially if you're actually American. As noted earlier, he's said he'd cover them differently if he did it now (inspired by doing the Haitian Revolution), but as it stands if you already have familiarity with the subject you aren't going to get much in the way of a new perspective.
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# ? May 17, 2021 15:26 |
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Sinteres posted:Don't bother with the American Revolution episodes imo, especially if you're actually American. As noted earlier, he's said he'd cover them differently if he did it now (inspired by doing the Haitian Revolution), but as it stands if you already have familiarity with the subject you aren't going to get much in the way of a new perspective. OTOH, I've heard non Americans be pretty OK with it, because a basic primer is less offensive when you're not already familiar with the material. Gentleman Johnny's Party Train is the Revoltuions shirt I ended up with, so maybe I'm biased. I wish he one about Robespierre's very narrow path.
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# ? May 17, 2021 16:08 |
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As a non-American I though they were pretty decent. We get a fair amount of American history in Canadian classrooms but outside the classroom you don’t really get any ARW stuff so the primer was good.
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# ? May 17, 2021 16:22 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 02:18 |
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Jordan7hm posted:As a non-American I though they were pretty decent. We get a fair amount of American history in Canadian classrooms but outside the classroom you don’t really get any ARW stuff so the primer was good. Same
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# ? May 17, 2021 16:43 |