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History For Weirdos

Andrew & Stephanie
History For Weirdos
Último episodio

172 episodios

  • History For Weirdos

    Episode 162: Crossing the Rubicon - Julius Caesar's Path to Glory

    24/02/2026 | 2 h 35 min
    Julius Caesar didn’t appear out of nowhere like a Roman superhero dropped into history to “end the Republic.” He was raised inside a system already cracking under the weight of its own success. An empire swollen by conquest, flooded with slaves and plunder was dominated by aristocrats who turned the Mediterranean into a wealth pipeline straight into their villas. As small farmers disappeared and the city filled with landless citizens, politics became a blood sport: reformers got murdered, street violence became routine, and generals learned that the quickest way to win an argument was to show up with an army. That is the world Caesar inherits and the world he’s about to master.

    In this episode, we follow Caesar’s rise from a politically connected but not all-powerful young patrician into the most dangerous man in Rome. We dig into the Flamen Dialis “golden cage,” his early survival under Sulla’s shadow, and the career sprint that made him a crowd favorite. Lavish games, massive debts, and a talent for turning public opinion into a weapon was part of Caesar's toolkit to obtaining power. Then the story expands with him: the First Triumvirate, the Gallic Wars, and the ugly economics behind the glory; conquest as policy, slavery as fuel, and an army that becomes loyal to Caesar personally, not to the Republic.

    And finally, we get to the question that still haunts the Ides of March: was Caesar a champion of the people, a power-hungry autocrat, or both at the same time? From civil war to dictatorship to assassination, we watch Rome’s institutions fail in real time and we end with the cruelest irony of all: the men who stabbed Caesar to “save the Republic” didn’t restore it. They cleared the runway for something even bigger, even sharper, and far more permanent.

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    This is Andrew's last episode. He really hopes you enjoyed it!

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    Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts.

    Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇

    Email: [email protected]

    IG/Threads: @historyforweirdos

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠historyforweirdos.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠
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  • History For Weirdos

    Episode 161: The Kingfish vs. Oligarchs - Huey Long’s War for the Working Class

    06/10/2025 | 1 h 11 min
    He paved roads, blew up tolls, handed kids free textbooks, and told the oil barons to get lost. Huey “The Kingfish” Long wasn’t just a politician; he was a one-man jailbreak for Louisiana’s poor. In the middle of the Great Depression, he turned the state into a living New Deal before the New Deal: hospitals for the sick, bridges for the forgotten, and a promise bold enough to make millionaires sweat—“Every man a king.” Then he cranked the volume to eleven with Share Our Wealth, a coast-to-coast crusade that said, out loud, what the working class had been thinking for decades: cap the hoards at the top and give ordinary families a fair shot.

    But here’s the twist only history can write: the more he fought for the have-nots, the more Huey bulldozed anyone who stood in his way. He browbeat legislators, built a machine, and played constitutional hardball like a modern leader of the populares. To his followers, he was the first guy in a long time who actually delivered; to his enemies, he looked like an American Caesar rehearsing for the crown.

    We take you from Winnfield mud to Baton Rouge marble to a late-night gunshot inside the capitol he built—unpacking how a righteous war for the working class made Huey Long a hero to millions, a menace to the elite, and a cautionary tale about the price of power.

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    Get History For Weirdos merch ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠!

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    Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts.

    Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇

    Email: [email protected]

    IG/Threads: @historyforweirdos

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠historyforweirdos.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠
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  • History For Weirdos

    Episode 160: The Beverly Hills Stabbing - Lana Turner, Johnny Stompanato & a Studio System on Trial

    22/09/2025 | 1 h 12 min
    In April 1958, Hollywood’s ice-queen glamour cracked. Lana Turner’s mob-linked boyfriend, Johnny Stompanato, lay dead on her Beverly Hills bedroom floor, felled by a single knife wound, and her 14-year-old daughter, Cheryl Crane, stood trembling with the knife in her hand. In this week’s History For Weirdos, we peel back the silk curtains to find the rough edges: a movie star at the height of her fame, a small-time hood with big-time connections, and a city where the studio machine and the underworld sometimes shared the same phone book.

    We follow the story from red-carpet sheen to coroner’s inquest: the jealous rages and whispered threats, the shadow of L.A.’s mob fixers, the studio publicists working overtime, and the tabloid feeding frenzy that turned a family tragedy into national theater. Along the way, we examine what the official narrative claimed happened that night—and why some details still don’t sit neatly even decades later. Was this a clear-cut case of a teen protecting her mother, or a story shaped by power, image, and the peculiar alchemy of Old Hollywood?

    Expect glamour and grit in equal measure as we trace how a single moment on April 1958 ricocheted through a star’s career, a daughter’s life, and a city addicted to scandal. Buckle up, weirdos: this is Tinseltown at its most dazzling—and most dangerous.

    Get History For Weirdos merch ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠!

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    Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts.

    Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇

    Email: [email protected]

    IG/Threads: @historyforweirdos

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠historyforweirdos.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠
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  • History For Weirdos

    Episode 159: Plato, Syracuse and the Tyrant

    25/08/2025 | 1 h 27 min
    A philosopher walks into a palace—no, really. This week on History For Weirdos, we follow Plato from the Academy to the armored court of Syracuse, where his friend (and insider) Dion bets that good ideas can tame bad power. Meet the Elder-and-Younger Dionysius tag team, a fortress-city built for paranoia, and a very risky plan to educate a ruler into a philosopher-king—shadowed the whole time by the (contested) Seventh Letter and its “this is how it went down” vibe.

    When ideals hit palace politics, bodies hit the floor. We track Dion’s return with mercenaries, the siege of Ortygia, and the assassination that blew up the reform—then zoom out to how the fiasco re-wired Plato’s own politics, from the starry-eyed Republic to the more legalistic, “second-best” Laws. Come for the philosopher-king experiment; stay for the receipts, the betrayals, and the uncomfortable lesson about teaching power to think.

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    Get History For Weirdos merch ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠!

    -

    Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts.

    Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇

    Email: [email protected]

    IG/Threads: @historyforweirdos

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠historyforweirdos.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

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    Sources for this week:

    Plutarch, Life of Dion
    Diodorus Siculus, Library 16
    Plutarch, Life of Timoleon

    https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lives_of_the_Eminent_Philosophers/Book_III

    https://classics.mit.edu/Plato/seventh_letter.html

    https://ndpr.nd.edu/reviews/the-pseudo-platonic-seventh-letter/

    https://www.britannica.com/topic/philosopher-king

    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-ethics-politics/
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  • History For Weirdos

    Episode 158: Consuelo Vanderbilt & the Gilded Age Dollar Princesses

    11/08/2025 | 55 min
    In this week’s episode we crack open the glittering shell of HBO’s The Gilded Age to meet the real women who inspired its most delicious plotline: America’s “dollar princesses.” When cash-poor British dukes needed money and nouveau-riche American dynasties wanted pedigree, transatlantic marriages became a booming business deal—with Consuelo Vanderbilt as the era’s most famous case. Pushed by her formidable mother, Alva, Consuelo wed the 9th Duke of Marlborough in 1895, her immense dowry shoring up an old title while she wept behind the veil. No season spoilers here, but we’ll trace how families like the Vanderbilts (think: the inspiration behind the Russells) turned railroad fortunes into aristocratic alliances—and why those unions were anything but fairy tales.

    We zoom out to the bigger picture Twain skewered as “gilded”: skyscrapers, electricity, and unimaginable wealth set against sweatshops, strikes, and Jim Crow repression. Within that contradiction, these brides were not just bargaining chips. Consuelo built hospitals, championed education and wartime relief, and later supported women’s suffrage; others—Jennie Jerome, Mary Leiter Curzon, and Nancy Astor—leveraged titles into political and social influence that outlasted their marriages.

    From the Commodore’s $100 ferry to Blenheim Palace’s balance sheets, this is a story about how money tried to buy class—and how the women at the center of it sometimes rewrote the terms. It’s the strange, uncomfortable, and relentlessly entertaining heart of the Gilded Age: duty versus desire, spectacle versus reality, and the unexpected power of women who refused to stay ornamental.
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    Get History For Weirdos merch ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠here⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠!

    -

    Thank you for listening Weirdos! Show the podcast some love by rating & subscribing on whichever platform you use to listen to podcasts.

    Your support means so much to us. Let's stay in touch 👇

    Email: [email protected]

    IG/Threads: @historyforweirdos

    Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠historyforweirdos.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

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    Sources for this week:

    https://historyfacts.com/us-history/article/gilded-age-dollar-princesses/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consuelo_Vanderbilt

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/natalierobehmed/2014/07/14/the-vanderbilts-how-american-royalty-lost-their-crown-jewels/

    https://www.vogue.com/article/consuelo-vanderbilt-marriage-the-gilded-age-fact-vs-fiction
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A deep dive into the strange obscure and relentlessly entertaining portions of human history. Married couple and armchair historians, Stephanie & Andrew, discuss the often overlooked parts of humanity. Whether the subject is an obscure event that has confused historians for centuries or a historical figure that doesn't get enough credit, we have you covered. New episodes available every other Monday!
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