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Professor Buzzkill is an exciting podcast that explores history myths in an illuminating, entertaining, and humorous way.... more
FAQs about Professor Buzzkill History Podcast:How many episodes does Professor Buzzkill History Podcast have?The podcast currently has 805 episodes available.
July 13, 2018*Flashback Friday* #85 - Droit du SeigneurDroit du Seigneir (French: "right of the lord") refers to the "right" of a feudal lord to sleep with the bride of his vassals on their wedding night. While this "right" appears as early as the Epic of Gilgamesh (c 2100 BC), is an important plot device in The Marriage of Figaro (the play by Beaumarchais, written in 1788) and in Mel Gibson's film Braveheart (1995), there's no solid evidence that it ever existed in medieval European law or that it was ever practised then....more3minPlay
July 09, 2018#267 - Man Crush Monday: Melvin PurvisMelvin Purvis, head of the Chicago Division of the young FBI, is usually overshadowed by the character of J. Edgar Hoover. But who did the real work of capturing or killing Pretty Boy Floyd and John Dillinger. Professor Nash joins us to discuss G-Man Melvin Purvis and where he belongs in the history of American law enforcement. Listen in!...more13minPlay
July 01, 2018#266 - Canadians Burning the White House, 1814Did Canadians burn the White House in 1814, in the last few months of the War of 1812, as President Trump apparently believes? Who was in command, Tim Horton? Bob and Doug MacKenzie? Or was it British forces, as we’ve been told in our history classes since, well, 1814. And, by the way, what the hell does Napoleon have to do with it? Find out!...more5minPlay
June 30, 2018#265 - World War II Internment in the United StatesGovernment internment of “enemy aliens” during World War II has been a controversial topic ever since the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Not only is the history much more complicated than is popularly known, the various policies applied at the time were very complicated, and often contradictory. In this episode we talk about how Japanese-Americans, Italian-Americans, and German-Americans were treated during the 20th Century’s darkest years....more26minPlay
June 29, 2018*Flashback Friday* #66 - Mini-Myth: The AlamoEveryone was killed at the Alamo. Right, Buzzkillers? That's why "Remember the Alamo" is such a famous rallying cry in American history. But was everyone killed inside the Alamo? Civilians? Women and children? Was Santa Anna essentially a murderer? Find out, Buzzkillers, by listening to this Mini-Myth!...more6minPlay
June 15, 2018*Flashback Friday* #60 - Mini-Myth: Magellan Didn't Circumnavigate the GlobeHe may have had a GPS system named after him, but Ferdinand Magellan wouldn't have needed it during his trip around the globe back in the early 1500s. He only made it halfway, dying in the Philippines at the hands of natives who got sick of him asking for directions. But since it was his ship that eventually got back to Europe, he gets the credit. Oh well, Buzzkillers. Who cares about the details anyway?...more3minPlay
June 12, 2018#264- Quote or No Quote: Einstein | A Little Knowledge is a Dangerous ThingOne of the most common Einstein No Quotes you see coursing around the internet is: “A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.” Sometimes the mis-quote-meisters add “so is a lot,” to this pithy quote saying about knowledge, and we end up with “A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. So is a lot.” It’s probably the type of thing Einstein would say, but did he ever actually say it? Find out in this episode!...more6minPlay
June 08, 2018*Flashback Friday* #58 - Mini-Myth: Witches Burned at the Stake at SalemBurn the witch! Burn the witch! It makes for a dramatic story, with about as final an ending as you can imagine. Suspected witches were nabbed, but on trial, convicted, and burned at the stake in the 1690s in Massachusetts. But it's just not true. The convicted witches faced a far more mundane fate. Listen and find out!...more3minPlay
June 05, 2018#263 - Nadir of African-American History1865. The Civil War is over. Slavery has been abolished. The country is “reconstructing” itself. This should have meant that the lives of African-Americans improved during this period. But it didn’t. 1865-1930 is often called the “nadir of African-American life.” Not only did they gain very little economic or social benefit from the end of slavery, white Southerners built up a system of race oppression that still stains American consciousness. Listen as Professor Phil Nash explains it all!...more43minPlay
June 01, 2018*Flashback Friday* #56 - Mini-Myth: Lee Offered His Sword to GrantIt's a great "Gone with the Wind" romantic-type story. The defeated, but honorable, General Robert E. Lee offered his sword to the victor, U.S. Grant, during the Confederacy's surrender at Appomattox Court House. Grant, just as honorably, refused to take it. But it didn't happen, Buzzkillers. It was a made-up press report that caught the public's attention and kept getting repeated....more3minPlay
FAQs about Professor Buzzkill History Podcast:How many episodes does Professor Buzzkill History Podcast have?The podcast currently has 805 episodes available.