• 🎙️ Juxtaposition — Objects That Shouldn’t Exist
    Feb 15 2026
    Some artifacts don’t just belong to history… they challenge it.

    This week on Juxtaposition, we examine objects that shouldn’t exist — from an ancient device that behaves like a battery, to a map that may preserve knowledge from lost civilizations, to a medieval book so massive and mysterious it spawned legends of the supernatural… and a modern artifact that may have been explained away far too quickly.

    Are these simply misunderstood relics… or evidence that knowledge can appear, disappear, and survive in ways history isn’t comfortable admitting? Join us as we explore the places where certainty breaks down — and mystery refuses to die.
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    2 hrs and 8 mins
  • Juxtaposition 01-24-26 When Land Misbehaves
    Jan 25 2026
    What happens when an investigation doesn’t lead to answers — and never has?
    From a hole that won’t register depth to a valley where instruments contradict each other, this episode traces a pattern of geography that resists explanation itself.
    If one place behaved this way, it would be a mystery.
    When many do, coincidence starts to collapse.
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    2 hrs
  • Juxtaposition-01-10-26 The Record That Vanishes
    Jan 23 2026
    Lost Media: The Record That Vanished examines a quiet assumption we rarely question: that if something was broadcast, it must still exist somewhere. This episode starts from solid ground, establishing that many recordings we know aired—news footage, live broadcasts, cultural moments—are now unlocatable despite being witnessed, referenced, and treated as real at the time.

    From there, the focus tightens on moments when reality was still raw. Early local 9/11 coverage, classroom broadcasts during the Challenger explosion, and the first televised reactions to the Zapruder film all share a strange trait: the earliest, most uncertain recordings are the least likely to survive. What remains is the stabilized version—the one that makes sense after the fact. The pattern doesn’t stop with tragedy. Entire episodes of beloved television were wiped. One-night performances vanished. Regional variations of famous broadcasts collapsed into a single official version. These weren’t dangerous or classified moments, yet they disappeared anyway, leaving behind scripts, stills, memories, and references without the recordings themselves.

    The episode closes by naming the behavior without explaining it away. Systems don’t preserve everything—they preserve what’s stable, defensible, and repeatable. What resists framing tends to fall out of the record. No villains. No final theory. Just an unsettling takeaway: disappearance isn’t random, and the historical record grows cleaner as it grows narrower. Because what vanishes may not be what mattered least—but what couldn’t be absorbed at the time
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    2 hrs and 10 mins
  • Juxtaposition 12-20-25 “The Holiday Vanishings”
    Dec 30 2025
    This episode explores two holiday horrors that feel wildly different—but share the same seasonal pressure. In the first half, we follow the winter travel corridor, where disappearances spike between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Cars are found idling with no footprints in the snow. Dashcams cut out mid-drive. Travelers vanish between security cameras in airports and rest stops.

    From the iron-rich terrain of Vermont’s Bennington Triangle to long, silent highway stretches in Wyoming and Nevada, winter doesn’t just erase evidence—it distorts perception, time, and orientation. These aren’t reckless wanderers. These are people who were almost home.

    In the second half, the lens flips inward. Black Friday isn’t a mystery of missing bodies—it’s a mystery of missing selves. Crowds surge into ritual frenzy, driven by scarcity psychology, dopamine loops, and sanctioned hysteria. Stampedes, injuries, locked doors, and mob behavior mirror disaster responses more than shopping events. It’s anthropological, unsettling, and darkly funny. Together, the episode asks a single question:
    What does winter do to the human mind? Some people disappear into the snow.
    Some disappear into the crowd.

    Both vanish during the same season. The holidays take a toll—on the road or under fluorescent lights—and winter decides how.
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    2 hrs and 51 mins
  • Juxtaposition 12-27-25 “The Goblinverse: When the Feast Is Over”
    Dec 30 2025
    After the feasting has ended, the audit begins! Join Rick and Ody as they deep dive into the goblinverse!
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    2 hrs and 3 mins
  • Juxtaposition: All quiet on the SETI front.
    2 hrs and 8 mins
  • Juxtober Episode 5 -- 11-01-25 Cryptids Roundtable -- Welcome to Cryptozoology 101
    Nov 2 2025
    Join Rick and Ordy, along with fellow KLRNRadio and SHR Media alum, as they discuss Cryptids for the final installment of Juxtober. From Bigfoot to Nessie and everything in between, they want to believe, and they know you do too.
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    2 hrs and 3 mins
  • Juxtober: The Ones Who Look Like Us — From Wild Men to Bimary Bigfoot
    Oct 26 2025
    From the forest’s edge to the edge of the internet, the human shadow has never stopped moving. This Juxtober episode traces the Wild Man’s evolution—from Enkidu and the Green Man to Bigfoot, the Yeti, and finally the digital entities we conjure with clicks and fear.
    What if every monster that ever looked like us was just the echo of ourselves trying to get back in? Step beyond the campfire glow—into the screenlight—and meet the beings we built to keep the mystery alive.
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    2 hrs and 17 mins