Épisodes

  • The Forgotten First Major Public Nuclear Disaster
    Sep 30 2025
    When one thinks of nuclear nations, the United Kingdom usually doesn’t spring to mind. But Old Blighty has a long and impressive record of nuclear accomplishments dating back to the very origins of the field. British scientists like William Penney, Rudolf Peierls, and John Cockcroft were instrumental in kickstarting the Manhattan Project, while on October 3, 1952 Britain became the third nation after the United States and Soviet Union to build and test its own atomic bomb. Throughout the Cold War, squadrons of Royal Air Force V-Bombers armed stood ready to counter any Soviet attack, while today the Royal Navy’s four Vanguard-class submarines, armed with up to 16 Trident II ballistic missiles each, prowl the world’s oceans on vital deterrence patrols. And on October 10, 1957, decades before better-known disasters like Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima, the UK became the site of one of the Nuclear Age’s first major accidents. On that day, a reactor at Cumbria accidentally caught fire, threatening to contaminate hundreds of square kilometres of English countryside with deadly radioactive fallout. This is the story of the Windscale Fire, the UK’s forgotten nuclear disaster. Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    50 min
  • How Does Darth Vader Poop?
    Sep 28 2025
    “You always remember the bad guy.” These were the words of the late David Prowse, the man who physically portrayed Darth Vader in the original trilogy and it’s kind of ridiculous just how right he was. Almost 50 years later Darth Vader is just as iconic and instantly recognisable as he was when he first power-walked into frame to his own theme song. Since then a mind-boggling amount of content has been created featuring the Dark Lord of the Sith explaining near enough everything about him. On that note, let's talk about how Anakin Skywalker takes a dump and all manner of other fascinating things about his suit the films fail to mention, shall we? Author: Karl Smallwood Host: Daven Hiskey Editor: Daven Hiskey Producer: Samuel Avila Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    29 min
  • One of the Most Disastrous Naval Experiements of All Time
    Sep 25 2025
    team-powered, gunned-up, and utterly cursed—cruiser submarines were meant to revolutionize naval warfare. Instead, they sank their own crews more often than the enemy. Here’s the story of history’s worst sub design. Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Go to  hellofresh.com/brainfood10fm to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    56 min
  • How Did the Crusades Actually Work?
    Sep 24 2025
    When thinking about the middle ages, chances are that among the many images popping into your mind there stands a noble knight. Now, there are a variety of myths about what it was like to be a knight during medieval times, not just spread by Hollywood, but even by the contemporary legends during medieval times themselves- in both featuring widespread depictions of the chivalric knight rushing to the aid of damsels in distress and generally spending their time being bastions of all that is good and the very definition of "noble". We’ll get into a lot of these myths throughout this video, but within this mythology we have the white clad Christian knight, his shield or surcoat adorned with a cross. And on the other side an equally imposing Muslim horseman, peppering said knight with dozens of arrows. But behind the epic facade of titanic clashes in the Holy Land, lurk the mundane realities of Mediaeval era warfare. For example: that brave warrior signed by the Cross, was statistically less likely to fall in combat, than to die pants down, squatting behind a bush and emptying his bloody bowels. But who would have been responsible to feed and water that knight? Who would have paid for his weapons, horses, supplies? Who organised transport for Crusaders troops, and how? Who led them into combat? And going further up the chain: how did Crusades actually start in the first place? In short, how did the crusades actually work from a practical standpoint from start to finish? If these questions keep you up at night, as they do us, well, you’re in luck. For today we will be diving into all this, as well as a whole lot of knightly myth debunking along the way, including whether any supposedly chivalrous knight in history actually ever rescued a damsel in distress. So strapon your spaulders and gardbraces, and don your noble helm, and let’s dive into it all, shall we? Author: Arnaldo Teodorani Host: Simon Whistler Editor: Daven Hiskey Producer: Samuel Avila Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠⁠. Go to  ⁠hellofresh.com/brainfood10fm⁠ to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    50 min
  • The Secretary: Great Expectations
    Sep 22 2025
    “[T]here would not be I believe, a happier being in the United States… [c]ould I have just enough business to support my expences, so as to relieve me from the mortification of being at my time of life, a burden to my Parents…” -John Quincy Adams (December 14, 1790) These were the words of the 23 year old John Quincy Adams, tirelessly working in a profession he seemingly didn’t particularly enjoy, but making very little headway in it and dependent upon money from his parents to live. Four years after this, he was now a 27 year old who had not made a ton of outward progress despite an extreme amount of effort in between. As we teased in our last video: The Secretary: Training for Greatness, this period of one of the greatest men in U.S. history’s life was filled with bouts of depression, anxiety, countless sleepless nights, and a whole lot of hopelessness. Trained from birth to become that great man, and with it drilled into him he must become so, after he graduated college, he found achieving this seemingly an impossible task no matter how hard he worked. His aunt Elizabeth Shaw, who John Quincy would live with for a little while during one of his deepest bouts of depression shortly after graduating college, would write of this period of her nephew’s life, “Perhaps, no one, knew better than myself, the strong emotions which tore, & agitated your Mind— I could have sat by your side & counted out Tear, for Tear…” And this was more or less the state of his life from about 20 to 27. Needless to say, his first true steps into one of the greatest men of his era were slightly stumbling. But rather than break under the pressure, John Quincy merely bent for a time, unlike others in his family. On that, as John Quincy Adams' son, Charles Francis Adams, who himself led a rather distinguished life, among many other things including serving as the U.S. Minister to the UK during the American Civil War and being a key figure in keeping Europe mostly out of that war, would sum up, “The history of my family is not a pleasant one to remember. It is one of great triumphs in the world but of deep groans within, one of extraordinary brilliancy and deep corroding mortification—The misery of children falling as much below the ordinary .... Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠⁠. Go to  ⁠hellofresh.com/brainfood10fm⁠ to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 4 min
  • When is the Optimal School Start Time?
    Sep 20 2025
    Much like is the case with some adult humans, in the morning our miniature Sapiens often have a preference for expressing themselves in low-pitched, unintelligible grunts, mumbled from within the cavernous darkness of their bedrooms as you try to wake them up. The words might be jumbled, but the meaning is rather clear: ‘It’s too early. I want to sleep. Leave me alone.’ And yet, the adults in charge within the pack have to drag them out of their torpor, stuff their food holes with some semblance of organic nutrition, ensure their body odour is not too pungent so that they aren’t the class smelly kid, and then cart them off to school. From there, their days are filled to the brim with mentally and physically demanding activities, whose timing and frequency are at odds with the kids’ own biology. No surprise then, if they may appear chronically tired, grumpy and irrational. And yet, there is one simple, scientifically proven change that parents, teachers, and society at large could enact to greatly improve their well-being, lower mental health issues, increase their overall physical health metrics, and even help keep more of them alive to reach adulthood- move the time of the start of school slightly later in the morning. Why does this work? What does science specifically say? What are the exact benefits? And what is the optimal school start time according to science? Well, let’s dive into it all shall we? Author: Arnaldo Teodorani Editor: Daven Hiskey Host: Daven Hiskey Producer: Samuel Avila 0:00 Intro 3:38 School Start Times 5:00 But Why? 6:41 An Epidemic 8:30 A Bad Solution 10:20 The Best Solution 11:36 The Data 16:14 A Huge Ancillary Benefit 19:16 Graduation Rates 20:01 Yet More Data Beating Us Over the Head 21:38 Physical Health 21:57 Complications? 23:08 Automobile Accidents 24:39 Mental Health 25:54 Seriously, Stop It 26:20 Optimal Start Time 27:56 Practical Problems? Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    33 min
  • Hitler's Many Women and Their Often Unfortunate Ends
    Sep 18 2025
    Unsurprisingly to anyone who’s historied, Hitler was a man who promoted a hateful ideology, had millions murdered, crippled a generation, and plunged an entire continent into ruin. What’s maybe slightly less known is that before he did all this, he was a lazy layabout, ultimately squandering his inheritance culminating in him becoming homeless for a few years. To say Hitler avoided anything even remotely resembling work, except for the work he put into not doing any work, or responsibility leading up to his rise would be a gross understatement. On top of that, his first dalliances into love were about as creepy as you can come by, including at one point devising a plan to murder the object of his love because she wasn’t into him. If he couldn’t have her, he simply planned to Romeo and Juliet himself and her. It should also be noted he never actually bothered to talk to her even once in his life before planning this all out, only stalking her from afar for years… When you combine all that with his silly moustache, you’d think Hitler wouldn’t exactly be the kind of guy who could pull in the ladies… And, actually, that was very true for most of his life. But after his rise to power… Well, Hitler didn’t change, but many women’s attraction to him seemingly did right quick. Despite his extreme mood swings, narcissistic tendencies, odd behavior, propensity to run the women down mentally, control them in every possible way, and the mein furry he kept under his nose, the Fuhrer of the III Reich could, and did, seem to have a rather long string of female conquests. Many of which mysteriously decided to stop living, or otherwise suffered from extreme depression, after their time with the so-called German Messiah. But who were these women, did he actually have any of them killed as some say? And in all of it, were there ever any little baby Fuhrer’s? Well, slip on your lederhosen, and let’s dive into it all shall we? Author: Arnaldo Teodorani, Teri Zambigli, and Daven Hiskey Editor: Daven Hiskey Producer: Samuel Avila Host: Simon Whistler Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 h et 8 min
  • The Secretary- Training for Greatness
    Sep 16 2025
    “What are the Qualifications of a Secretary of State? He ought to be a Man of universal Reading in Laws, Governments, History. Our whole terrestrial Universe ought to be summarily comprehended in his Mind.” -John Adams July 5, 1811 The speed at which the United States’ rose from birth to prominence on the world stage has rarely been matched in history. From first casting off a king and parliament that no longer served them to unequivocally telling the rest of the world that the new nation would no longer allow any state from the Old World to continue directly interfering with budding nations on the American side of the pond took only 47 years. In all this, some of the most significant advancements in modern international politics, and the United States’ role in it, came in part thanks to one man and the eight years he spent as the U.S. Secretary of State. Trained from birth to serve his nation, you’d be hard pressed to find any individual in U.S. History more well prepared for the role he was eventually chosen for. And the results, well, they showed. This future President of the United States and, as noted by one time governor of Virginia Henry Wise, “the acutest, the astutest, the archest enemy of Southern slavery that ever existed”, is still today generally considered the greatest Secretary of State in United States history. For instance, in one pole conducted by Dr. David L Porter of William Penn College asking 50 of the leading diplomatic historians in the United States who they felt the best Secretary of States were, a whopping 80% of them chose as number one our man of the hour- John Quincy Adams, with a distant second place going to William H. Seward, Secretary of State under Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson. So, without further ado, here now is the remarkable story of John Quincy Adam’s rise to one of the most powerful offices’ in the nation, and how he irrevocably changed world history in countless ways, leveraging all the training his life, and parents, had provided him to do it. Author: Daven Hiskey Host: Daven Hiskey Producer: Samuel Avila Sponsor note:  Our listeners get 10% off their first month at ⁠betterhelp.com/BrainFoodShow⁠. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    47 min