Laughter is a universal language and today we celebrate humor through the ages by exploring three historic pranks. The first involves Anthemius of Tralles, one of the main architects involved in building the Hagia Sophia and a genius who really knew how to hold a grudge. Then we skip ahead several handfuls of centuries to uncover the Great Moon Hoax of 1835 when a newspaper editor for The Sun ignited a hoax that had everyone looking to the moon for bipedal beavers, bat-like humanoids, and even a unicorn. After that we head to the 1950s near Atlanta, Georgia where three guys, a $10 bet, a fake UFO sighting, and one unfortunate "Monkey from Mars" show us just how quickly a prank can go too far.
Joe Carstairs Part 3: The Kingdom of Whale Cay
Joe Carstairs Part 2: The Fastest Woman on Water
Joe Carstairs: The Fastest Woman on Water Part 1
The Death of James Dean and the ”Curse” of Little Bastard
History’s Happy Little Accidents
The Red Ghost: Lost Camels of the American West
Shackleton Update: ENDURANCE FOUND
On Cheating Death and Inventing the Saxophone
A Heist at Lincoln’s Tomb and the Snarky Farewell of Mr. Accordion
The Real Treasure Island
Stagecoach Mary
Hans Trapp the Christmas Scarecrow
The 1904 Olympic Marathon: History‘s Most Ridiculous Race
When History Falls From the Sky
The Raven
Hulda of Bohemia: The ”Witch‘” of Sleepy Hollow
600 Years of Animals Put on Trial
Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer and the Coelacanth
The Monte Vista Hotel: Where History Meets Lore
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Irish Songs with Ken Murray
History Obscura
Historycal: Words that Shaped the World
The Rest Is History
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