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The Cold War, Prohibition, the Gold Rush, the Space Race. Every part of your life - the words you speak, the ideas you share - can be traced to our history, but how well do you really know the stories that made America? We'll take you to the events, the times and the people that shaped our nation. And we'll show you how our history affected them, their families and affects you today. Hosted by Lindsay Graham (not the Senator). From Wondery, the network behind American Scandal, Tides of Histo ...
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The Fairy Tellers

The Fairy Tellers

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Welcome to The Fairy Tellers podcast! We explore what myths, legends, folklore, fables, and fairy tales say about cultures both then and now. So grab a hot cup of cocoa and a comfy seat while we retell you a thing.
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歌送者 X Song Tellers

歌送者 X Song Tellers

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我們不只聽音樂,我們「說」音樂。 來自90年代,喜歡分享、熱愛音樂,但真的不會唱歌。 🔸David - 不安於現況,身處異鄉卻擋不住想做podcast之心的微斜槓青年。 🔸Eric - 自稱社畜,卻是朋友眼中的勝利組。勉強幽默、充滿故事的初老青年。 🔸Green - 時常遊走在自卑自信、快樂憂鬱的多愁善感女子。 三個個性截然不同的好友對談,以音樂帶入故事,交換喜怒哀樂、分享關於人生的全新觀點,陪伴你無論晴天雨天。 📻歡迎收聽【歌送者 X Song Tellers】 【疑難雜症來這裡找歌送者~ 】 💊IG:https://www.instagram.com/songteller2020 💊Email:[email protected] -- Hosting provided by SoundOn
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Tellers Podcast

DGLS Media

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Real people telling Real stories. Life is full of twist, turns and always unpredictable. These Tellers sit down and share their stories with host Alisha Tinker and Christopher J. Douglas. Recorded in Cleveland, Ohio
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A Cornucopia Of Tales and Tellers

A Cornucopia of Tales and Tellers

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Storytellers from all around the world join us to tell their favourite tales. Join us for tales of wonder, might, magic, folklore and history as we head to every corner of the earth, every period in history and even into the otherworlds.
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Storytellers and Storysellers Podcast gives you a front-row seat to find out how the best stories are told and sold. Tune in for strategy & storytelling perspectives from the brightest minds in entertainment, in conversation with Vineet Kanabar. From music to movies, from gaming to podcasts, from platforms to technologies. New episodes every Thursday. Follow the host Vineet Kanabar on Twitter & Instagram: https://twitter.com/ashcharyafuckit and https://instagram.com/ashcharyafuckit
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"In the fall of 1620, the Mayflower embarked on a 3,000-mile journey across the Atlantic Ocean. Over the next nine weeks, its passengers and crew battled fierce storms and rampant illness. They had left England dangerously late in the season, and provisions ran low. In the ship’s cramped cabins, the Puritan Separatists shared close quarters with a …
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Step into the steeple and listen: this episode peels back the gleam to reveal the Liberty Bell's real life — a noisy workbell, a flawed casting, and a slow-creeping crack that history remade into meaning. From humble laborers and Quaker ideals to abolitionists, suffragists, and touring crowds, the bell's fracture becomes a story of contested libert…
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In this episode, Katrina is back from another year of the American Folklore Conference. She talks about the fun of academic conferences and being around the same nerds that understand a good ATU type joke. In the course of some of that joking, Katrina ended up with a ribbon on her name tag that said ATU SIX SEVEN, which then prompted academics to a…
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In this special edition of The Bank Tellers, we explore the rapidly evolving intersection of traditional finance and decentralized finance with Jonathan Levin, Co-Founder and CEO of Chainalysis. As regulatory frameworks like the Genius Act reshape the landscape, we dive deep into how these two worlds are converging like never before. Tune in to hea…
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In the early 1600s, an orphaned teenager named William Bradford joined a clandestine congregation of passionate Puritan worshipers in the village of Scrooby, England. Every Sunday, he met in secret with the radical group known as Separatists, who believed that the Church of England was corrupt, and that the only way forward was to break with it ent…
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It’s late, you’re tired, and the glowing drive‑thru menu promises salvation: melty, greasy, perfect. In this episode we follow that first bite back through time — from Hamburg steak to county fair tinkering, from a kid named Lionel’s bold slice of cheese to the diner counters of Erie where Greek sauce rules — and uncover the messy, delicious argume…
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Humans are resilient. In our toughest moments, we will fight, we will struggle, and we will triumph...often against the odds. In this immersive series from Wondery, host-adventurers Mike Corey and Cassie De Pecol will share thrilling stories of survival. From the daring rescue of a soccer team trapped in an underwater cave in Thailand, to a woman t…
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In the aftermath of the deadly shootout at the OK Corral, the residents of Tombstone are sharply divided over whether to indict the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday. As the town teeters on the edge of all-out war, Wyatt Earp decides to take justice into his own hands leading to a vengeful ""Vendetta Ride"" that puts Wyatt on the wrong side of the law…
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It’s not just silence — it’s something older than sound. Stand on the rim of a mile-deep canyon as sunlight crawls across stone that remembers a time before life had legs, and climb into cliff rooms where hands shaped a life that still speaks. In this final episode of our series, Renee and Dan follow rivers through red rock, explore Mesa Verde’s an…
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October 26, 1825: a packet boat slides out of Buffalo, Governor DeWitt Clinton pours Lake Erie into the Atlantic, and a ribbon of water reshapes a continent. This episode sails the Erie Canal’s dramatic voyage — from the feverish hand‑digging and deadly swamps to the politics that branded it “Clinton’s Folly” and the jubilant Wedding of the Waters …
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Tensions boil over in Tombstone, Arizona as the Earp brothers confront the Clanton and McLaury outlaw gang, resulting in a 30-second shootout that leaves several dead. With the town divided over the Earps' actions, the brothers face an onslaught of assassination attempts as they try to maintain order in the lawless frontier town. Be the first to kn…
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Stand ankle-deep in a cypress swamp as mist rises and something moves in the reeds — this episode opens in the thick, humming heart of the Southeast and pulls you into a landscape that feels alive and full of secrets. We hike the Great Smoky Mountains at sunrise, paddle the Everglades’ river of grass, creep along Congaree’s cathedral of trees, and …
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Join Money20/20's Head of Audience Development, Micky Tesfaye, for a special edition of The Bank Tellers right on the heels of Money20/20 USA 2025! Ran Goldi, SVP of Payments & Network at Fireblocks, shares insider insights from processing $6 trillion in transactions this year - with over half being stablecoins. Learn about: USDC's 40% growth surge…
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Content Warning: Suicide and Murder In this episode, Geoff and Katrina dive back into the world of the French salons to talk about Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy and further their discussion on Specters of the Marvelous: Race and the Development of the European Fairy Tale by Kimberly J. Lau. While France was spreading their imperial reach, the imaginatio…
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Join Scarlett Sieber, Chief Strategy and Growth Officer at Money20/20, for a special edition of The Bank Tellers podcast as she sits down with Chris Harmse, Co-Founder and Chief Business Officer at BVNK, to explore the rapidly evolving convergence of decentralized and traditional finance. Chris shares the inside story of how BVNK became the largest…
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After several months of anxiety, the tensions in Tombstone finally explode into violence as Ike Clanton and his friends provoke the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday into a deadly showdown. Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletter Listen to American His…
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Step into a vast, wind-carved landscape where geysers huff like old engines, glaciers whisper their slow retreat, and redwoods stand like stone columns holding fog in their branches. In Episode 3, hosts Renee and Dan lead you from Yellowstone’s boiling, bison-strewn plains through Glacier’s alpine drama and Olympic’s dripping rainforests to the cat…
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TradFi and DeFi converge on another exciting episode of The Bank Tellers podcast! This time, we chat with JP Richardson, CEO of Exodus. Fresh from witnessing the historic signing of the Genius Act at the White House, JP shares his perspective on how regulatory clarity is reshaping the financial landscape. Tune in to hear about: JP's firsthand exper…
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In the 1880s the booming silver mining town of Tombstone, Arizona was home to one of the most famous gunfights in American history. Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and Wyatt's brothers try to bring law and order to a small town, but they clash with a gang of outlaw cowboys, leading a legendary final showdown: the Shootout at the OK Corral. Be the first t…
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Join us for a compelling conversation with Nabil Manji, Senior Vice President of Fintech Growth and Financial Partnerships at WorldPay, as we explore the evolving landscape where traditional finance meets digital assets. In this special episode ahead of Money20/20 USA, Nabil shares insights from WorldPay's decade-long journey in the digital asset s…
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From horse-drawn carriages on Pennsylvania Avenue to locked museum gates in modern Washington, this episode traces the unlikely history of government shutdowns — a story that begins as procedural quibbles and becomes national crisis. We follow the 1884 Anti-Deficiency Act, the 1980 opinion that introduced “shutdowns,” and the dramatic standoffs of …
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In early 1864, a group of Union prisoners made a daring escape from Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia - the capital of the Confederacy. Known for its sadistic guards and horrific conditions, Union Officers at Libby suffered from hunger, lice, and the freezing cold. In this episode, Lindsay is joined by historian Dr. Robert P. Watson, author of Esc…
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Music. A river you can't hear has been carving a poem into stone for longer than human memory — and two hosts are perched a little too close to the rim to keep from making you feel the vertigo. In this first episode of a five-part series, Dan and Renee pull you into the origin story of America’s national parks: the watercolor pitch that sold Yellow…
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During World War II, the United States housed hundreds of thousands of enemy soldiers who had been captured as prisoners of war. Camp Papago Park, located in Phoenix, was built to hold captured German U-boat crew members, some of the most well-trained and ardent members of the German military. Authorities hoped that the harsh Arizona desert would d…
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Join us for a special edition of The Bank Tellers, where we explore the intersection of TradFi and DeFi! Money20/20’s Head of Audience Development, Micky Tesfaye, we dive deep into the rapidly evolving relationship between traditional finance and decentralized finance with Paul Brody, EY's Global Blockchain Leader. As the financial world stands at …
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This podcast is a work of historical interpretation while we strive for accuracy some aspects of history are open to interpretation and debate thank you for listening What if I told you the most iconic Chinese dish in America wasn't Chinese, and the pizza you fold and chase with a soda would be turned away in Naples? In this episode we peel back th…
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In this episode, Geoff and Katrina discuss stories that look at the corrupting power of wealth. While doing an Instagram challenge in July, by Tish Black (author of Ebony, Blood, and Snow: New Stories from Old Tales), Katrina kept finding stories from around the world talking about how growing wealth can cause a degrading of the soul. They take thr…
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In 1909, a young convicted train robber named Frank Grigware began a life sentence at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas. Leavenworth was the nation’s first federal penitentiary, touted as a state-of-the-art facility. But in the early 20th century, its prisoners endured bleak conditions, rigid routines, and harsh punishments. In …
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They left with hope and wagons full of dreams, chasing California’s promise—and found themselves trapped by early Sierra snow, raw hunger, and impossible choices. This episode follows families, friendships, and failures as the Donner-Reed party’s optimistic migration fractures into desperation and moral reckoning. Through firsthand diary fragments,…
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In the frosty winter of 1802, the American presidency witnessed a unique act of gratitude—a colossal 1,200-pound wheel of cheese, crafted not just with milk, but with a message of faith and liberty. Delivered by oxen over treacherous roads from the small town of Cheshire, Massachusetts, this gift embodied the hopes and convictions of a humble commu…
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Located amid the treacherous waters of the San Francisco Bay, Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary was designed to hold the most-wanted prisoners in America, and developed a reputation as an unbreakable fortress. But from the moment Frank Lee Morris set foot on the island in 1962, he was determined to break free. Together, with three other conspirators, h…
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Join Renee and Dan on a captivating journey through time as they unravel the complex and oftentimes tumultuous history of how the Southern states of the United States came to have their current shapes. This episode promises a rich tapestry woven with European ambitions, indigenous native arrangements, and the indelible marks of colonial rivalries. …
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Join us for a special edition of The Bank Tellers, where we explore the intersection of TradFi and DeFi! Money20/20's VP, Fintech Strategy, Zach Anderson Pettet, sits down with Katherine Dowling, General Counsel and CCO of Bitwise Asset Management, and they hold nothing back! With her unique background as a former federal prosecutor and investment …
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In February 1864, more than 100 Union Army officers broke out of Libby Prison, an infamous Confederate prisoner of war compound in Richmond, Virginia. It was the largest prison break of the Civil War. Libby held more than 1,000 Union officers who were crammed into the former tobacco warehouse. They faced rampant illness, meager rations, and constan…
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It started with a dream of open land and a better life, but the Oregon Trail was carved in sweat, blood, and impossible choices. Over months of dust, river crossings, and fever, families packed prairie schooners with flour, coffee, and fragile hope—electing leaders, erecting rules, and learning that survival often meant sacrifice. In this episode, …
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In the early 1850s, as people continued to flood West, California’s booming cities experienced rapid growth, but also turmoil. Fires regularly swept through hastily erected towns, and battles broke out between lawless miners and new, civic-minded residents who wanted to clean up the burgeoning cities. Meanwhile, women arriving in male-dominated gol…
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In the 1840s, New York and Philadelphia become battlegrounds where immigrant families, a fiery bishop, and nativist mobs fight over a simple question: which Bible will be read in public schools? From street threats to burned churches and militia cannon in the streets, this episode follows the dramatic flashpoints that forced a national reckoning ab…
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For white settlers, the Gold Rush offered a chance for fortune, but for California’s Native inhabitants, the sudden hunger for gold spelled disaster. As the numbers of miners grew, they forced Native people off their ancestral lands, often starving or slaughtering them in the process. As California became a state, informal policies that discriminat…
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In the summer of 1807, Richmond, Virginia hosted the most sensational trial in the young nation’s history. At stake was the life of Aaron Burr, who stood accused of plotting an armed insurrection against the United States. The battle over Burr’s guilt or innocence pitted President Thomas Jefferson, who wanted to see his former vice president convic…
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This podcast is a work of historical interpretation. While we strive for accuracy, some aspects of history are open to interpretation and debate. Thank you for listening. What does it mean to be educated in America? Time Tellers traces a fierce, century-spanning journey—from indigenous oral traditions and one-room schoolhouses to boarding schools, …
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In early 1849, thousands of gold-hungry Americans began pouring into California from the eastern United States. But most of the so-called 49ers were wildly unprepared for the perilous journey west. Once they reached California, they found unexpected obstacles and fierce competition in the gold mines. For many, their dreamed-of riches rarely materia…
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In August 1806, Aaron Burr began the final preparations for his mysterious expedition to the western frontier. As he traveled, rumors that he was plotting a dangerous conspiracy followed in his wake. Newspapers reported that Burr was planning to invade Mexico and start a secessionist rebellion in New Orleans. As evidence mounted, a dogged federal p…
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After the discovery of gold at Sutter’s Mill in 1848, hundreds of thousands of prospectors poured into California, hoping to strike it rich. In the early days, rather than coming from within the U.S., most miners arrived from places like China, Hawaii, Chile, and Australia. But when President James K. Polk confirmed that newspaper reports of vast g…
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June 2025: the sky over Los Angeles is hazy, uniforms form a wall on Alameda Street, and the rumble of ICE SUVs mixes with the heat. What looks like a scene from another era becomes the opening chapter of a modern drama—federal troops in the streets, a governor calling it an occupation, and a lawsuit that could redraw the line between military migh…
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In the summer of 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr was wanted for the murder of Alexander Hamilton. The fatal duel made him a political pariah and the target of widespread public outcry. But as Burr’s Vice Presidency came to an end, he refused to slink into the shadows. Vowing to rise again, he decided to seek his fortunes in the West. Soon, he would…
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Join host, Sheryl Chen, as she sits down with Noor Farilla Abdullah, Group Chief Digital Officer of Bank Islam Malaysia, at Money20/20 Asia in Bangkok. Noor Farilla shares her remarkable journey of building a digital bank entirely during the COVID-19 pandemic while working remotely. As the first Malaysian bank to deploy critical workloads to the cl…
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Step into the mesmerizing journey of the Internet, where every beep and screech of the dial-up modem tells a story of human innovation and digital exploration. In this episode, we dive deep into the origins of online connectivity, tracing its humble beginnings from Cold War technologies and geeky dorm room experiments to the sprawling, interconnect…
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In July 1804, Aaron Burr faced political rival Alexander Hamilton on the cliffs of Weehawken, New Jersey, in a legendary duel that would change Burr’s life forever. As a young man, Burr had distinguished himself as a patriot, lawyer and politician. But as his political star rose, he made many enemies. He challenged Thomas Jefferson, in the tumultuo…
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