Episodes

  • Power of Restraint: Learning from Cincinnatus & Washington - Ep.5
    Jun 13 2025

    Send us a text

    Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is walk away.

    In this episode I explore the lives of two men who understood that truth better than anyone: Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus and George Washington. These were leaders who were given immense power during times of crisis. They led with strength and resolve. But when their duty was done, they stepped down. They went home.

    This isn’t just a history lesson. Whether you’re building a business, navigating a relationship, leading a team, or chasing your own goals, the idea of knowing when to let go matters. We live in a world that glorifies constant striving, "hustling" and grasping on to ambition. But history tells us something else. It tells us that the people we remember with the most respect are often the ones who had the courage to say “enough" before their disastrous fall.

    History does not smile upon those who did not heed this warning rooted all the way back to the Ancient Greek Myths of stories like Icarus and Narcissus.

    In this episode we look at what made Cincinnatus and Washington so different. We talk about the ancient myths and figures from history that have warned against the hunger for more. And we reflect on how restraint, humility, and walking away with dignity can be more powerful than any crown or title.

    I hope this episode leaves you thinking not just about the past, but about your own life too. Because power is not just about what you take. It’s about what you choose not to.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Christianity's First Rival: The Cult of Mithras - Ep.4
    May 30 2025

    Send us a text

    Before the cross, there was the bull and dagger. Before churches rose across Rome, underground temples echoed with chants to a forgotten god. In this episode of Talks History, we dive into the shadowy world of Mithras—the bull-slaying mystery deity who once rivaled Jesus for the soul of the Roman Empire.

    Who was this caped god born from stone, worshiped by emperors and legionaries alike? Why did Mithraism flourish across the empire only to vanish without a trace? And what might the world have looked like if his cult, not Christianity, had shaped the Western soul? And why did Christianity ultimately capture the hearts and minds of Western Civilization?

    This isn’t just a tale of gods and temples—it’s a battle of ideas: exclusivity vs. inclusivity, strength vs. salvation, ritual vs. revelation.

    If you’ve ever wondered how religions rise, fall, and rewrite the course of history, this is the episode you don’t want to miss.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    40 mins
  • The 38 Minute War - Ep.3
    May 22 2025

    Send us a text

    Most wars last years. This one couldn’t outlast a podcast episode.

    In 1896, the British Empire declared war on the tiny sultanate of Zanzibar, and wrapped the whole thing up in less time than it takes to cook a full English breakfast.

    But beneath the trivia-night absurdity of “the shortest war in history” is a brutal, brilliant display of imperial power, a palace in ruins, and a sultan who learned the hard way what happens when you challenge the world’s largest empire without a plan… or navy.

    In this episode, we dig into how a miscalculated succession crisis, three British warships, and exactly zero patience turned a royal dispute into a 38-minute spectacle of firepower. You'll hear about defiant sultans, strategic telegrams, and a royal yacht that didn’t stand a chance. It’s a war with everything condensed into less than an hour.

    Because sometimes, history doesn’t need a battlefield.


    Sometimes, all it takes to erase a kingdom… is 38 minutes.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    26 mins
  • Can Sports Prevent War? - Ep. 2
    May 11 2025

    Send us a text

    In this episode of Talks History, I explore a question that’s been quietly echoing in my mind for weeks: do sports actually prevent war, or are they just another arena for our instinct toward violence? The more I looked into it, the more I became captivated by how deeply modern sports reflect the language and structure of warfare. We draft players like soldiers, we suit them in uniforms, we rally around tribal banners, and we praise strategic assaults like blitzing the quarterback or defending our territory.

    But could it be that sports offer something profound? A pressure valve for humanity's darker impulses? A safe battlefield for our endless craving for struggle, story, and glory?

    To answer this, I take you on a journey through time. We begin in ancient Greece, where the Olympic Games brought sacred truces between rival city-states, pausing real conflict in favor of athletic spectacle. We descend into the roaring crowds of the Roman Colosseum, where bloodsport imitated war so vividly that it blurred the line between entertainment and execution. We visit the frozen trenches of World War I, where British and German soldiers, surrounded by death, momentarily became teammates in a spontaneous Christmas soccer match. And we arrive at the Cold War, where the Olympic Games became a symbolic battleground between the United States and the USSR, carrying the weight of nuclear tension with every gold medal.

    Through these extraordinary moments, we confront the original question. Are sports a civilizing force that channels violence into something meaningful and beautiful? Or are they just a more acceptable battlefield, a modern colosseum where our primal instincts still play out?

    This is not just an episode about games. It’s about what it means to be human, to compete, to fight, and to find peace—if only for a moment.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    55 mins
  • 3 Ingredients of Apocalypse - Ep. 1
    May 1 2025

    Send us a text

    I remember distinctly from the early 2010s that it felt like we were culturally obsessed with the end of the world. Everywhere you looked — movies, TV shows, video games — we were surrounded by visions of apocalypse: zombie outbreaks, nuclear wastelands, collapsing civilizations.

    But why were we so fascinated by it? And what if the end of the world wasn’t just fiction?

    In this episode, we explore three moments in history where the apocalypse wasn’t imagined — it was real. The Siege of Baghdad in 1258, the slow political collapse of Rome, and the devastating plagues that swept through Indigenous North America. For the people who lived through these events, this wasn’t a story.

    It was the end of everything they knew.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    48 mins