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Relative Disasters
Greg & Ella
153 episodes
2 weeks ago
The podcast where a brother and sister manage their existential angst by discussing historical disasters.
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All content for Relative Disasters is the property of Greg & Ella and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The podcast where a brother and sister manage their existential angst by discussing historical disasters.
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History
Episodes (20/153)
Relative Disasters
The Roosevelt-Ronden Expedition of 1913-1914 (Episode 146)

In 1913, Teddy Roosevelt and Candido Ronden, national heroes of the United States and Brazil, set out to map a previously-uncartographed river. By the time they saw civilization again, two men were dead, one was lost to the jungle (and good riddance), and Roosevelt was nearly dead.

This is what happened.

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1 year ago
1 hour 4 minutes 41 seconds

Relative Disasters
Queen Jane, Approximately - The Story of Lady Jane Grey (Episode 145)

The Lady Jane Grey was many things in her short life - a polyglot, a religious scholar, a young woman who approached the world with curiosity. She was also a pawn in the schemes of her much-less-intelligent father, and it resulted in her becoming Queen of England... for a moment.

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1 year ago
34 minutes 53 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Mystery of Richard III (Episode 144)

Richard the Third of England has been regarded as a monstrous ruler, a murderer of his nephews, and a raving, hunchbacked lunatic.

As with all disasters - especially those of rulers - the truth is far more interesting.

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1 year ago
1 hour 7 minutes 45 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Nimiipuu Fighting Retreat of 1877 (Episode 143)

In 1877, a series of cultural misunderstandings and distrust led to a completely avoidable war, the execution of which saw the United States Army consistently out-maneuvered and tactically embarrassed by a tactical genius... or at least that was the story. In actuality, the desperate Nimiipuu people were running for their lives, helped out by the fact that their pursuing enemy just couldn't get out of their own way.

Apologies for my (wretched) pronunciations of the Nimiipuu language during this episode.

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1 year ago
59 minutes 47 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Collapse of the Bronze Age (Episode 142)

It was one of the largest collapses of human civilization, arguably bigger and more important to history than the fall of Rome... so why do we know so little about it? Well, it's only recently that theories about how the major empires of the Bronze Age fell have found corroborating evidence in the archaeological record - so join us as we talk about the empires of the day, how they fell, and what we can learn from the whole mess!

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1 year ago
1 hour 2 minutes 48 seconds

Relative Disasters
Ancient Sparta Was A Dumpster Fire (Episode 141)

The mythology of ancient Sparta is that of peerless warriors, un-defeatable soldiers who defended democracy and resisted those who would conquer Greece.

The reality is... a lot different.

We're going to take a look at what ancient Sparta was actually like, why it was like that, and whether or not their Spartiates were actually that good at war.

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1 year ago
44 minutes 42 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Altamont Free Concert (Relative Disasters Episode 140)

It was intended to be "Woodstock West", a celebration of music in a free concert in California. It was intended to have a fun lineup of some of the biggest rock bands on 1969, headlined by The Rolling Stones.

It ended with four people dead, hundreds injured, and is often pointed to as the death of the 1960s peace & love / counter-culture movements.

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1 year ago
27 minutes 37 seconds

Relative Disasters
The 1968-1969 Sunday Times Golden Globe Race (Episode 139)

In 1968, a race launched from the British Isles, a race to be the first person to circumnavigate the globe by themself. Nine people entered the race.

When it ended, one person had won, seven people had given up, and one person was never found again.

We're going to talk about the open ocean, the dangers of the route, and the toll that isolation and danger takes on the human psyche.

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1 year ago
31 minutes

Relative Disasters
The Radium Girls (Episode 138)

In 1914, a scientist made a new kind of paint, a paint that glowed. A company was founded, and they needed girls with small hands to work there, applying that paint to the hands and numbers of watches and to the dials of gauges in aircraft.

One problem - the paint was deadly. And nobody told the girls.

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1 year ago
19 minutes 24 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Reign of King John, 1199-1216 (Episode 137)

Auntie Lynn joins us to discuss the disastrous reign of King John - and the numerous sidebars with which we become distracted. This episode is a free-wheeling discussion of John and a lot of random - but interesting - nonsense surrounding his reign!

Note: As happens often, the dogs wanted to co-host, so you will hear some puppers in the background.

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1 year ago
1 hour 24 minutes 20 seconds

Relative Disasters
The London Beer Flood of 1814 (Episode 136)

A flood is a flood, whether it's water or beer - and a 571-ton, 15-foot tall wave is going to be destructive, no matter what it's made of. Join us as we talk about beer, rookeries, prejudices, and settle some myths.

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1 year ago
18 minutes 9 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Australian Cane Toad Invasion (Episode 135)

Back in the 1930s, some folks in Australia's sugar industry imported the Cane Toad from South America to help control a destructive beetle population. It... did not go well. It continues to not go well. It will likely keep not going well.


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1 year ago
18 minutes 43 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Chi'Ing-yang Event of 1490 (Episode 134)

The city of Chi'Ing-yang got flattened in the late fourteen hundreds... and nobody really knows what happened. We'll talk about meteorites, comets, and explosions as we examine some of the more plausible theories.

A nerdy brother and sister talk about disasters - that's what the show's all about. Especially in early April.


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1 year ago
8 minutes 42 seconds

Relative Disasters
The 1887 Nanaimo Mine Explosion (Episode 133)

We're headed underground yet again, to visit beautiful British Colombia and talk about what happens when you mix explosives, methane, and coal dust. It's a tragedy that affected an entire city and is still relevant today.


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1 year ago
17 minutes 59 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Malleus Maleficarum (Episode 132)

A guy wrote a book, collecting and codifying religious and social suppression of women. That book became a sensation, propelling the man to fame and fortune. No, we're not talking about some modern "MRA" idiot or so-called "incel"... no, this guy existed over half a millennium ago and we're still seeing his fingerprints on modern misogyny today.

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1 year ago
27 minutes 27 seconds

Relative Disasters
The 1933 Business Plot (Episode 131)

This week we're looking at an attempt to overthrow the American president Franklin Delano Roosevelt by a group of Wall Street financiers and big business leaders. Mocked and dismissed at the time - in newspapers owned by said business leaders - this attempted coup was a uniquely American close-call with facism.

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1 year ago
33 minutes 53 seconds

Relative Disasters
They Read The Fine Print (Episode 130)

Join us for three stories of people exploiting - or trying to - ill-thought-out corporate promotions. We'll talk about Vacuums, Soft Drinks, and Pudding, all tied together by an odd connection to airplanes - The Hoover Free Flights promotion, the Pepsi Points Harrier Jet legal case, and the Healthy Choice airline miles promotion.


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1 year ago
21 minutes 43 seconds

Relative Disasters
The L-8 Ghost Airship Incident of 1942 (Episode 129)

Join us in the skies off the coast of California in this episode. We'll talk about the US Naval airship L-8, the mysterious disappearance of its crew, and its brief time as an airborne ghost ship!

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1 year ago
21 minutes 15 seconds

Relative Disasters
The 1975 Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald (Episode 85)

Re-upload.


Join us as Ella explains the events of a fateful night that sent a crew of 29 to the bottom of the largest freshwater lake in North America. We'll discuss shipping tonnage, the incredibly dangerous weather systems of the Great Lakes, and talk a little about Gordon Lightfoot's haunting tribute to the disaster.


This episode was taken down due to a copyright concern; we'd quoted some lyrics from Lightfoot's song in the initial version of this episode. Those quotations have been removed and I'm glad to be able to put this one back up for everyone.

-Greg

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1 year ago
1 hour 3 minutes 7 seconds

Relative Disasters
The Great French Wine Blight (Episode 128)

Join us as we head to the mid-1800's and learn about a very specific blight that nearly crippled the French wine industry!

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1 year ago
14 minutes 21 seconds

Relative Disasters
The podcast where a brother and sister manage their existential angst by discussing historical disasters.