Folgen

  • Pistols at Dawn: Kentucky’s Duel Oath and Other Absurd Laws
    May 2 2026

    Step into a courtroom that time forgot: in Kentucky, every public official must swear they never fought a duel — a relic of 1800s honor culture that still decides who can run for office. With a wink at Hamilton and Burr, the episode opens like a legal melodrama where perjury and pistols shape political fate.

    We roam from the oddly humane ban on selling dyed chicks at Easter to Lexington’s old ordinance against dumping wash water from balconies, each law a small story about fear, custom, and control. By the time we land in Louisiana and joke that Jambalaya ought to be above the law, you’ll be hooked on these surprising statutes and the human histories they hide.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    2 Min.
  • The Eagle has Landed: Apollo 11
    Apr 28 2026

    July 16, 1969: a roar of five F‑1 engines, a million on the beaches, and half the planet holding its breath. This episode opens at the launch pad and plunges listeners into the raw, immediate tension of a mission that was never guaranteed to succeed — alarms that nobody expected, split‑second decisions, and a tiny team of people whose choices would decide whether humanity ever returned from the moon.

    We follow the trio at the heart of Apollo 11 — Neil Armstrong the cool, instinctive pilot; Buzz Aldrin the brilliant, searching engineer; and Michael Collins, orbiting alone and keeping the ship they all must trust. Through near‑disasters like the infamous 1202 computer alarm and Armstrong’s desperate manual landing, the narrative stitches technical peril to human fear, courage, and quiet humor.

    Finally, the episode takes you onto the lunar dust: the televised, imperfect poetry of "one small step," Aldrin’s blunt, aching phrase "magnificent desolation," and the breathless reunion that followed. By the end you’ll feel the mission not as a date in a history book but as a lived, almost unbearable story — a gamble, a miracle, and a moment the world claimed as its own.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    24 Min.
  • Don't Tap the Vending Machine — It's a Crime in Kansas
    Apr 25 2026

    A dollar disappears into a vending machine, you give it a little love tap—and suddenly you’re committing a crime. This episode opens on that absurd moment and follows the surprising logic of a law that treats a well-meaning nudge as criminal property damage while your stolen cash quietly vanishes.

    From there we speed off onto the water, where Kansas forbids shooting rabbits from motorboats (paddleboats remain suspiciously ambiguous). It’s a story about safety, fair chase and the quirky details that reveal how people tried to make hunting make sense.

    Finally, we stroll into a smoky, glassless bar of the past: Kansas didn’t legalize liquor by the glass until 1986, meaning patrons once brought their own bottle to drink in public. Dry counties and Sunday sales limits linger as echoes of that era. Each law is a small, human story—odd, revealing, and oddly persuasive about how local history shapes the rules we live by.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    2 Min.
  • Earthrise
    Apr 21 2026

    December 1968 had splintered a nation—assassinations, riots, a war that refused to end. Into that fracture climbed three men in a rocket, not just to test hardware but to answer a Cold War gamble. This episode unfolds the quiet terror and impossible daring of Apollo 8: the hurried decision to send an untested Saturn V, the gut‑clenching 16‑minute radio blackout behind the moon, and the fragile human moments that held a mission together.

    Listen as we trace the accidental miracle of Earthrise—one frame taken from a checklist that became a mirror for the world—and the surreal, deliberate poetry of three astronauts reading Genesis back to Earth on Christmas Eve. Through cockpit banter, nausea, technical margins measured in seconds, and a broadcast heard by a billion, the story moves from procedural risk to an almost spiritual reckoning.

    By the end you’ll understand how a Cold War stunt became a cultural turning point: a photograph and a few words that helped a fractured species see itself as one small, vulnerable planet. Tune in for the tension, the humor, and the moment that changed everything.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    26 Min.
  • Butter on Trial: Iowa’s Strange Laws About Margarine, Fake Drugs, and Lemonade
    Apr 18 2026

    Step into Iowa where everyday objects become the center of legal drama: a stick of margarine can land a restaurateur in court, substitute sugar packets can stand accused of being illicit pills, and a child’s lemonade stand once required government paperwork. This episode follows the human stories behind these unlikely statutes — the restaurateurs baffled by a butter-first law, prosecutors wielding a lookalike-drug statute in surprising ways, and families who turned a shutdown into a legislative change.

    We move from outrage to resolution: the margarine ban stands as an odd relic of the Dairy vs. Olio battles, the lookalike-drug law still sees real use by law enforcement, and the once-criminalized lemonade stand has been liberated by new legislation. With humor, interviews, and a dash of courtroom tension, we uncover how law, culture, and common sense collide in the Heartland.

    Stay tuned — Kansas is next on our map of quirky statutes. Keep your hands off the vending machines.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Min.
  • Apollo 1 — Fire on the Pad
    Apr 14 2026

    On a golden Florida evening in January 1967, three astronauts climbed into Apollo 1 for a routine ground test. What began as a plugs-out rehearsal became a nightmare: a spark in a pure-oxygen cabin turned ordinary materials into fuel, and in less than 30 seconds the capsule ruptured. In this episode we weave the technical failures, the human stories, and the mounting pressures behind the disaster — from Gus Grissom’s quiet warnings and Ed White’s buoyant spirit to Roger Chaffee’s quiet dedication. Through meticulous reporting and intimate storytelling, we follow how grief and accountability reshaped NASA’s culture, spurred a complete redesign, and set the stage for future triumphs — all while honoring the lives and families forever changed by a preventable tragedy.

    With voices and archive audio, we reconstruct those final moments, trace the long investigation that followed, and explore how loss became an engine for reform. This is not just a chronicle of engineering failures; it’s a human story about sacrifice, institutional responsibility, and the ways in which we remember the people behind the myths. Listen as Time Tellers brings you the full story of Apollo 1 — the tragedy that forced NASA to learn, change, and ultimately reach the moon.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    37 Min.
  • Shooting Fish Is Illegal? Inside Indiana's Strangest Laws
    Apr 11 2026

    Walk into a curious chapter of Midwestern law where metaphors collide with statutes. In this episode we follow the trail from the odd—shooting fish with a gun or explosives is outlawed by Indiana conservation code—to the almost-mythic: one town’s old rule that black cats must wear bells on Friday the 13th. We unpack which claims are ceremonial, which are lightly apocryphal, and which are codified and enforced.

    Along the way we recount the sober reality that skiing while intoxicated in Indiana carries the same penalties as an OUI on the road, and how everyday vibes meet real-world verdicts. Tune in for surprising stories, legal twists, and a teaser toward Iowa’s own eccentricity—margarine under suspicion.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Min.
  • Dun, Dun, Dun: When Sputnik Shook the World
    Apr 7 2026

    Intro music fades in—tense and cinematic. Dun, dun, dun. On a Friday night in October 1957 a tiny metal beep sliced through the air and the world changed: Sputnik was orbiting Earth, and with it came panic, possibility, and a race that would reshape history.

    From the morally tangled genius of Wernher von Braun to the anonymous brilliance of Sergei Korolev, from Laika’s lonely orbit to America’s bumbling Vanguard and the Mercury Seven’s sudden celebrity, this episode stitches together the human moments behind the headlines. Political brinkmanship, scientific daring, and heartbreaking loss collide as nations sling rockets and reputations into the void.

    We trace the arc from Sputnik’s beep to Kennedy’s audacious moonshot, through the agony of Apollo 1’s fire to the breathless 17 seconds of fuel left as Eagle found a landing spot. It’s a trailer for our deeper Apollo series—an urgent, cinematic primer on bravery, error, invention, and the people who refused to accept the impossible.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    24 Min.