Episodes

  • History’s Strangest Questions: Where does the name America come from?
    Jun 27 2026

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    Everyone knows America was named after Amerigo Vespucci. The Italian explorer. The New World. The map. Case closed.

    Except it isn't.

    Current research points to someone else entirely. Someone hiding in plain sight for five hundred years. Someone the history books never mention.

    The answer, when it comes, is not what you'd expect. And once you hear it — you won't easily unhear it.

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    8 mins
  • The Dutch East India Company — Every Port Has a Price (Part Three)
    Jun 27 2026

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    The VOC was dissolved on the thirty-first of December, 1799. But empires don't simply end. They leave things behind.

    In the third and final part of this series, we sail into the aftermath. The ports your ship is passing through, Semarang, Bali, Lombok, Malacca were not merely trading posts. They were the architecture of a system. A system designed to extract, to control, and to profit at any human cost necessary.

    What does that legacy look like today? Who inherited the model the Dutch pioneered? And what does it mean to stand in these harbours, two centuries later, knowing what happened here?

    From the ruins of Batavia to the rise of the modern corporation, from the islands where nutmeg once cost more than gold to the city-state that turned colonial infrastructure into a miracle of self-invention — this is the story of what the VOC left behind.

    Every port has a price. The question is — who paid it?

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    52 mins
  • The Dutch East India Company —Nutmeg: The Spice They Traded Manhattan For (Part Two)
    Jun 21 2026

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    What if the most valuable commodity on earth — more precious than gold, more coveted than silk — grew in just one place? Six tiny volcanic islands in the middle of the Indonesian sea, surrounded by reefs, monsoons, and men willing to kill to keep it that way.

    This is the story of nutmeg. The spice in your kitchen cupboard that once drove empires to war, sent Samuel Pepys to the docks at midnight to buy from black-market sailors, and inspired the Dutch East India Company to commit atrocities so complete they nearly wiped an entire people from the earth.

    And at the end of it all? The English walked away with one small island. The Dutch handed them something else in return — a modest patch of land on the eastern seaboard of North America. You may have heard of it. They called it Manhattan.

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • The Dutch East India Company — Spies, Spices and the Birth of the Stock Market (Part One)
    Jun 21 2026

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    One man. A stolen map. The birth of modern capitalism.

    In 1583, a young Dutchman talked his way into the heart of Portugal's Asian empire — and spent six years quietly copying its most jealously guarded secrets. Routes. Charts. The knowledge that underpinned a century of Portuguese dominance over the world's most lucrative trade.

    When he sailed home, everything changed.

    Within two decades, the Dutch had smashed the Portuguese monopoly, invented the tradeable share, built the world's first stock exchange — and accidentally created the world's first financial scandal in the process.

    The Dutch East India Company didn't just dominate global trade. It rewrote the rules of money itself.

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    49 mins
  • The Flying Tigers, CAT, Air America — An Unbroken Thread: The Legacy (Part Three)
    Jun 20 2026

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    They flew wars that officially never happened. They built a nation that might not exist without them. They were civilians on paper and combat veterans in reality — and most of them came home to silence.

    This is the final chapter of the trilogy that began with the Flying Tigers and the Hump crews, and continued through the collapse of Nationalist China, the birth of Civil Air Transport, and the long secret war stretching from Korea to the fall of Saigon. Now we ask the question those two episodes were always building toward: what is the legacy?

    From the Taiwan economic miracle that CAT helped make possible, to the veterans and families still fighting for recognition decades later. From the wreckage still emerging from Himalayan glaciers, to the Civil Air Transport Association — the organisation that refused to let this history disappear, and who honoured me with Honorary Membership to help tell their story.

    Nearly forty years. One unbroken thread. Men who kept going when everything argued for stopping.

    This is what they left behind.

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    27 mins
  • From The Hump to Saigon: The Extraordinary Story of CAT, Air America and Air Asia (Part Two)
    Jun 20 2026

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    What happened to the legendary pilots of The Hump after the Second World War ended?

    The answer is one of the most extraordinary and least known stories in aviation history.

    From the battlefields of China to the jungles of Laos and Vietnam, the men who once flew supplies across the Himalayas followed General Claire Chennault into a new and secret war. Under the banners of CAT, Air America and Air Asia, they evacuated a nation, helped build another, flew refugees to safety, supplied isolated outposts, rescued downed airmen and carried out missions that governments often preferred not to acknowledge.

    This is the story of the largest covert airline operation in history. A story of courage, ingenuity, espionage and sacrifice that stretched from the final days of the Chinese Civil War to the fall of Saigon in 1975.

    Featuring daring rescues, secret missions, Cold War intrigue, Dien Bien Phu, Laos, Taiwan, Allen Pope, the CIA and the remarkable pilots who lived in the shadows so that others could operate in the light, this is a chapter of history that deserves to be remembered.

    Because from The Hump to Saigon, these men were never far from the centre of history.

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    35 mins
  • The Flying Tigers - The Hump Crews (Part One)
    Jun 20 2026

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    The Flying Tigers became legends. The shark mouths. The dogfights. The mythology of fearless American pilots diving through the skies above China and Burma. But behind the glamour lay another war almost nobody remembers.

    This is the story of The Hump crews, the exhausted transport pilots, navigators, mechanics, and bomber crews who flew through Himalayan storms carrying fuel, bombs, medicine, and hope into a collapsing China. Men vanished into cloud wrapped mountains so often the pilots gave the route a grim nickname, Aluminium Alley.

    And when the Second World War ended, many of those same men did not come home. They flew straight into the secret wars of the Cold War, helping build Civil Air Transport and eventually Air America, the CIA’s shadow airline across Asia.

    This is not simply a story about war. It is a story about exhaustion, survival, forgotten courage, and the men history almost allowed to disappear.

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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • History’s Strangest Questions: The Most Extreme Psychological Warfare Ever Recorded
    Jun 12 2026

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    What is the most extreme act of psychological warfare in history?

    In 496 BC, the Chinese ruler King Goujian unveiled a tactic so shocking that it still resonates more than 2,500 years later.

    In this episode of History’s Strangest Questions, we explore one of the most extraordinary examples of psychological warfare ever recorded, we examine how a commander sought to win a battle in the minds of his enemies before the fighting even began.

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    For books written and published by Keith Hocton

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    7 mins