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  • AI in the Classroom w/ Dr. Timothy Stafford
    Feb 21 2026

    In this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Chris and Ray sit down with Dr. Timothy Stafford for a timely and thought provoking discussion about artificial intelligence and its growing impact on our lives, especially in education.

    How should teachers approach AI in the classroom? Is it a threat to academic integrity, or a powerful tool to deepen learning? What does responsible AI use actually look like for students? And beyond school, how do we make sure we’re not replaced by the very technology we’re creating?

    Dr. Stafford helps us unpack the promises and pitfalls of AI, offering practical insight for educators, students, and anyone trying to navigate a rapidly changing world. Whether you’re excited, skeptical, or somewhere in between, this episode will challenge the way you think about intelligence, both human and artificial.

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    52 Min.
  • America at 250: Past, Present, and the Story Yet to Be Told
    Feb 14 2026

    As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, we take a thoughtful look at the long and often complicated road from 1776 to today. In this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Chris and Ray explore the challenges the nation has faced since its founding, political division, war, expansion, reform, and reinvention, and consider how those struggles have shaped the American story.

    We also reflect on what the Semiquincentennial means for us now and look ahead to the future. What lessons from the past still matter? And what kind of nation will the next 250 years require us to build?

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    22 Min.
  • The Fate of Billy The Kid
    Feb 4 2026

    In this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Ray and Christ dive into the fate of Billy the Kid. What really happened the night Pat Garrett pulled the trigger, and whether the story actually ends there. They explore the claim of Brushy Bill Roberts, who insisted he was Billy the Kid and lived to tell the tale. Along the way, they zoom out and talk about why conspiracy theories stick, how they grow, and what they reveal about our relationship with history. Sometimes the legend refuses to die...even when the history says it should.

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    23 Min.
  • Martin Luther King Jr.: The Civic Conscience of America
    Jan 19 2026

    In this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Chris and Ray explore the life and activism of Martin Luther King Jr., not just as a civil rights symbol, but as a civic force. King understood the Constitution as a challenge the nation had not yet fully met, where equal protection, voting rights, and the rule of law were promises still being tested. Through nonviolent protest, he exposed the distance between American ideals and American reality and used that tension to drive lasting legal and political change. King didn’t ask the country to feel better about itself; he demanded that it govern itself better. In doing so, he became more than a civil rights leader, he became one of the most important civic teachers in American history.

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    25 Min.
  • When Christmas Changed: The Civil War and the Birth of a Modern Holiday
    Dec 23 2025

    Christmas during the Civil War wasn’t just about battles paused and soldiers in camp, it was about families, faith, longing, and a country in transition. In this episode of History You Didn't Know But Should, Chris and Ray explore how Americans actually experienced Christmas in the 1860s: at home, in churches, and far from loved ones. They look at how traditions were changing, how faith and sentiment shaped the holiday, and how the foundations of our modern Christmas were quietly taking form amid war, loss, and hope.


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    22 Min.
  • George Washington and Executive Power
    Nov 17 2025

    In this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Chris and Ray sit down with Dr. Denver Brunsman, Department Chair and Associate Professor of History at The George Washington University. We explore how George Washington approached executive power and how his character, military experience, and political instincts shaped the presidency. Dr. Brunsman also considers whether Washington unintentionally set the stage for what some call the imperial presidency. He shares insights from his forthcoming book George Washington and His World. It is an insightful and energizing conversation with one of the leading scholars of early America.

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    34 Min.
  • The Phantom Hiker of Grandfather Mountain
    Nov 8 2025

    On this episode of History You Didn’t Know But Should, Chris and Ray head into the mountains of North Carolina to chase the legend of Grandfather Mountain’s Phantom Hiker, the silent, ghostly figure who passes travelers on the trail before fading into the trees. Along the way, they follow the breadcrumbs of other ghostly wanderers, from prophetic vanishing hitchhikers warning that “Jesus is coming” to lone spirits keeping to their favorite paths long after death. Pull up a chair and settle in. This one’s a spooky good time.

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    16 Min.
  • Murder, Myth, and the Heartbeat Bridge
    Oct 18 2025

    Down a lonely dirt road outside Whiteville, North Carolina, lies a bridge with a heartbeat. Locals call it Heartbeat Bridge, a place where legend says a masked killer once claimed his victim, cutting out her heart and tossing it into the swamp below. Stop your car on the bridge at midnight, kill the engine, and listen closely, some say you’ll hear a pulse echoing from the darkness.

    In this episode of History You Didn't Know But Should, Chris and Ray dive into the eerie lore of Heartbeat Bridge, explore the swampy landscape that feeds the fear, and uncover why stories like this thrive in rural North Carolina. Is it just the wind and frogs…or something darker keeping time in the woods?

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    18 Min.