Episodes

  • The Year Rome Nearly Died: 5,000 Dead a Day
    Jan 26 2026

    251 AD wasn’t just a bad year. It was Rome’s near-death experience.


    First, an emperor vanishes into a Balkan swamp. Decius charges forward with his son—and both are gone. No heroic last stand. No recovered body. Just an army shattered and 20,000 Romans dead.


    Then comes the second удар: the Plague of Cyprian. Fever. Diarrhea. Throat ulcers. Entire streets empty in days. Ancient sources claim 5,000 dying per day in Rome at the peak.


    This episode walks you through the moment Romans may have first felt the thought:

    “This might actually be the fall.”


    In this video, you’ll learn:


    • Why 251 AD sits at the center of the Crisis of the Third Century

    • What happened at the Battle of Abritus

    • How plague + invasion create the perfect collapse spiral

    • Why Rome survived…barely—and what it cost


    👇 Question: What kills empires faster—external invasions or internal decay?

    Comment INVASIONS or DECAY and tell me why.


    Subscribe for more episodes connecting Rome’s collapse patterns to the world we’re living through now—because history doesn’t repeat, but it does rhyme.

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    9 mins
  • The Banker Who Owned The Emperor
    Jan 26 2026

    Frankfurt, 1519. Seven prince-electors perform a holy ritual—Latin prayers, incense, sacred oaths.


    But behind the ceremony is the real mechanism: an auction financed by debt.


    In this episode of Hidden Forces in History, we trace how Jakob Fugger and his banking network helped decide who would wear the imperial crown—by underwriting bribes, guaranteeing pensions, and turning future imperial revenue into collateral.


    History books say Charles V was chosen by God. The ledgers say he was installed by the bank. This wasn't an election; it was a liquidation sale of the Holy Roman Empire.


    What this episode exposes:

    • How the Fugger network turned loans into political leverage

    • Why Charles V’s victory depended on credibility, not just bloodline

    • How indulgence money and church finance became a revenue pipeline

    • What happens when an emperor governs under structural dependence

    • Why legitimacy had to be purchased after power was bought


    If a throne can be bought, who really rules—the man with the crown, or the man who holds the note?


    👇 Drop your take: was this corruption… or simply how power has always worked?

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    19 mins
  • How Power Really Works | The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show (Official Trailer)
    Jan 24 2026

    Power doesn’t announce itself.


    It operates quietly—behind institutions, behind wars, and behind the stories you’re told.

    The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show is a bi-weekly investigation into how power really works—across history, empires, and the modern world.


    Each episode draws on two core lenses:


    Hidden forces behind history—royal murders, financial systems, lost colonies, modern elites, propaganda, and the quiet mechanisms shaping events long before they reach the headlines.


    The Roman Pattern—the idea that today’s crises aren’t new. Currency collapse. Political division. Border chaos. Military overreach. Rome faced them all first—and left behind a playbook we’re following again, page by page.


    Through conversations with historians, researchers, and serious thinkers—and deep dives into primary sources, documents, and records—this show connects ancient history to modern power with evidence, not opinion.


    You’ll learn to:


    • Recognize collapse signals before they’re obvious

    • Understand modern crises through ancient parallels

    • See how empires actually rise, decay, and fall

    • Spot the patterns shaping what comes next


    From ancient Rome to today’s global order—this is history as investigation.


    No spin. No narratives. Just receipts.


    New episodes twice a week.

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    2 mins
  • The Medici Blueprint: How a Banking Family Quietly Captured Europe
    Jan 21 2026

    The Medici are remembered as enlightened patrons of art—the family behind Michelangelo, Botticelli, and the Renaissance itself.


    That version of history is incomplete.


    In this episode of Hidden Forces in History, we strip away the marble and mythology to examine Medici family as they actually were: a private banking dynasty that embedded itself inside moral authority, captured a republic without abolishing it, and rewrote its legacy through art, architecture, and storytelling.


    We follow the money—from Florentine ledgers to the Vatican—showing how the Medici:


    • Plugged into Church finance to gain leverage across Europe

    • Used patronage as a form of long-term propaganda

    • Helped trigger the Reformation through indulgence financing

    • Lost their bank—but preserved their legend


    This isn’t just a Renaissance story.


    It’s a repeatable playbook—one still used by modern elites, foundations, and institutions today.


    Same system.

    Different century.


    👇 If modern power feels familiar, you’re seeing an old script.

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    15 mins
  • 6 Emperors in 1 Year: Total System Collapse
    Jan 19 2026

    In a single year, Rome went through six emperors.


    Not candidates. Not dynasties.

    Six men who actually wore the purple—and by the end of 238 AD, four were dead.


    This wasn’t just a bad year. It was the moment Rome learned a terrifying truth:


    Once an army learns it can make and unmake emperors, the empire belongs to whoever holds the swords—not the laws.


    In this episode of The Roman Pattern, we break down the Year of Six Emperors:


    The assassination that turned succession into an auction


    Maximinus Thrax: the military strongman who squeezed the provinces


    The African tax revolt that lit the match


    The Senate’s desperate gamble (and why it failed fast)


    The Praetorian Guard’s palace coup in the capital


    Gordian III: the teenage “compromise” emperor—aka a puppet


    And the real takeaway: 238 didn’t destroy Rome overnight… it normalized chaos.

    After this, succession wasn’t law, tradition, or dynasty. It was speed, violence, and who could move troops first.


    Rome is falling right now—you’re just watching the replay.


    👇 Comment: What’s the real tipping point—when rules break, or when everyone starts acting like they’ll never return?

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    9 mins
  • The Fall of Constantinople: Europe's Greatest Failure
    Jan 14 2026

    On May 29th, 1453, Constantinople fell—and with it, the last continuation of Rome.


    But the real story isn’t just Ottoman cannons and overwhelming numbers.

    It’s the cold mathematics of power: betrayal, sabotage, and profit-driven neutrality.


    In this episode of Hidden Forces in History, we follow the receipts behind one of the most pivotal days in world history:


    why the city was still defensible (if help had come)


    how Genoa’s colony of Galata stayed “neutral” while Ottoman ships passed


    why Venice negotiated safe passage instead of fighting


    how Western Europe sent prayers instead of armies


    and why the fall wasn’t inevitable—it was a series of choices


    Because the most disturbing truth is this:

    Constantinople didn’t fall because it was weak. It fell because powerful allies decided it was convenient to let it fall.


    If you want history as investigation—documents, incentives, and the people who benefited—subscribe for weekly deep dives into the hidden forces behind the official story.


    Question for you: Was this “inevitable”… or a calculated sacrifice?

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    30 mins
  • The Day a General Decided to Take Rome by Force
    Jan 12 2026

    Rome didn’t fall when the Praetorian Guard auctioned off the Empire.


    That was just the moment the mask came off.


    The real collapse began when a hard man on the frontier heard the price… and decided to pay in steel instead of silver.


    In 193 AD, the Praetorians murdered Emperor Pertinax, paraded his head through the streets, and sold the throne to the highest bidder. A senator bought the Empire like a piece of property. The Senate pretended it was legal.


    But on the Danube, Septimius Severus did the math: if Rome is a marketplace, the men with swords set the prices.


    In this episode of The Roman Pattern, you’ll see how Severus:

    - Marched on his own capital and exposed what power really was

    - Disbanded the Praetorian Guard and rebuilt it with his own veterans

    - Humiliated the Senate without abolishing it

    - And rewrote Rome’s “constitution” into one brutal principle: pay the soldiers, despise everyone else


    Rome didn’t collapse in a day. It collapsed in revelations.

    First: the throne had a price.

    Second: the mechanism was force.


    And that’s why Rome is falling right now… you’re just watching the replay.


    👇 Comment below: Was Severus a stabilizer… or the man who made collapse inevitable?

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    21 mins
  • Friday the 13th: How a Bankrupt King Destroyed the Knights Templar
    Jan 7 2026

    On Friday the 13th, October 1307, the Knights Templar were destroyed in a single coordinated operation across France.


    Hundreds of Templar knights were arrested at dawn. Their property was seized. Their leaders were tortured. And within a few years, the most powerful military and financial institution in medieval Europe was erased.


    The official story says the Knights Templar were heretics.


    This investigation shows something very different.


    In this episode of Hidden Forces in History, we uncover how the Knights Templar became Europe’s first international banking system — and how a bankrupt king used fabricated heresy charges to eliminate his creditors in what may be the largest sovereign debt default of the Middle Ages.


    We examine:

    • How the Knights Templar became the bankers of kings and popes

    • Why King Philip IV of France was deeply indebted to the Templars

    • How heresy accusations were engineered as political weapons

    • The role of torture, propaganda, and legal theater

    • Why Friday the 13th still carries a legacy of power and fear


    This wasn’t religious persecution.


    It was financial warfare — disguised as morality.


    Subscribe for weekly deep dives into the hidden forces behind history, power, money, and control.


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    33 mins