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This is my first season produced in English. Season One is available in the original Danish version.
What if the greatest lost civilizations aren’t buried under sand or hidden beneath jungle ruins —
but erased by time, secrecy, and the way knowledge itself is controlled?
The Lost Civilizations is not a show about myths for the sake of myths.
It’s a long-form investigation into what humanity forgets, what institutions obscure, and what questions are quietly declared off-limits.
In our first episodes, we explore the mystery known as the Black Knight satellite — not to prove it’s extraterrestrial, but to expose something more unsettling: how scientific explanations can be delivered without transparency, how authority can replace verification, and how trust is often demanded where evidence is inaccessible.
From classified government programs and institutional science, to anomalies that don’t fit existing models, this series examines the boundary between knowledge and power.
Between science as a method — and science as a tool of governance.
But this podcast goes further.
Lost civilizations are not only ancient cultures.
They are lost ways of knowing.
Lost histories.
Lost questions.
From forgotten technologies and suppressed discoveries, to paradigm shifts that never happened — or happened too late — The Lost Civilizations asks one central question:
What happens to truth when only a few are allowed to see it?
If you’re ready to question certainty — welcome.
By R.V. NielsenThis is my first season produced in English. Season One is available in the original Danish version.
What if the greatest lost civilizations aren’t buried under sand or hidden beneath jungle ruins —
but erased by time, secrecy, and the way knowledge itself is controlled?
The Lost Civilizations is not a show about myths for the sake of myths.
It’s a long-form investigation into what humanity forgets, what institutions obscure, and what questions are quietly declared off-limits.
In our first episodes, we explore the mystery known as the Black Knight satellite — not to prove it’s extraterrestrial, but to expose something more unsettling: how scientific explanations can be delivered without transparency, how authority can replace verification, and how trust is often demanded where evidence is inaccessible.
From classified government programs and institutional science, to anomalies that don’t fit existing models, this series examines the boundary between knowledge and power.
Between science as a method — and science as a tool of governance.
But this podcast goes further.
Lost civilizations are not only ancient cultures.
They are lost ways of knowing.
Lost histories.
Lost questions.
From forgotten technologies and suppressed discoveries, to paradigm shifts that never happened — or happened too late — The Lost Civilizations asks one central question:
What happens to truth when only a few are allowed to see it?
If you’re ready to question certainty — welcome.