Episodios

  • Apollo 1 — Fire on the Pad
    Apr 14 2026

    On a golden Florida evening in January 1967, three astronauts climbed into Apollo 1 for a routine ground test. What began as a plugs-out rehearsal became a nightmare: a spark in a pure-oxygen cabin turned ordinary materials into fuel, and in less than 30 seconds the capsule ruptured. In this episode we weave the technical failures, the human stories, and the mounting pressures behind the disaster — from Gus Grissom’s quiet warnings and Ed White’s buoyant spirit to Roger Chaffee’s quiet dedication. Through meticulous reporting and intimate storytelling, we follow how grief and accountability reshaped NASA’s culture, spurred a complete redesign, and set the stage for future triumphs — all while honoring the lives and families forever changed by a preventable tragedy.

    With voices and archive audio, we reconstruct those final moments, trace the long investigation that followed, and explore how loss became an engine for reform. This is not just a chronicle of engineering failures; it’s a human story about sacrifice, institutional responsibility, and the ways in which we remember the people behind the myths. Listen as Time Tellers brings you the full story of Apollo 1 — the tragedy that forced NASA to learn, change, and ultimately reach the moon.

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    37 m
  • Shooting Fish Is Illegal? Inside Indiana's Strangest Laws
    Apr 11 2026

    Walk into a curious chapter of Midwestern law where metaphors collide with statutes. In this episode we follow the trail from the odd—shooting fish with a gun or explosives is outlawed by Indiana conservation code—to the almost-mythic: one town’s old rule that black cats must wear bells on Friday the 13th. We unpack which claims are ceremonial, which are lightly apocryphal, and which are codified and enforced.

    Along the way we recount the sober reality that skiing while intoxicated in Indiana carries the same penalties as an OUI on the road, and how everyday vibes meet real-world verdicts. Tune in for surprising stories, legal twists, and a teaser toward Iowa’s own eccentricity—margarine under suspicion.

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    1 m
  • Dun, Dun, Dun: When Sputnik Shook the World
    Apr 7 2026

    Intro music fades in—tense and cinematic. Dun, dun, dun. On a Friday night in October 1957 a tiny metal beep sliced through the air and the world changed: Sputnik was orbiting Earth, and with it came panic, possibility, and a race that would reshape history.

    From the morally tangled genius of Wernher von Braun to the anonymous brilliance of Sergei Korolev, from Laika’s lonely orbit to America’s bumbling Vanguard and the Mercury Seven’s sudden celebrity, this episode stitches together the human moments behind the headlines. Political brinkmanship, scientific daring, and heartbreaking loss collide as nations sling rockets and reputations into the void.

    We trace the arc from Sputnik’s beep to Kennedy’s audacious moonshot, through the agony of Apollo 1’s fire to the breathless 17 seconds of fuel left as Eagle found a landing spot. It’s a trailer for our deeper Apollo series—an urgent, cinematic primer on bravery, error, invention, and the people who refused to accept the impossible.

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    24 m
  • Don't Nap by the Colby: Real (and Ridiculous) Illinois Laws
    Apr 4 2026

    Imagine wandering into a cheese factory after a long day and deciding it’s the perfect place for a nap — only to be told you’ve just broken the law. That absurd image sets the stage for this episode, where we follow odd, funny, and surprisingly practical rules that lurk inside state codes. We open on the Sanitary Food Preparation Act in Illinois, tracing how a sensible public-health rule about sleeping in food prep areas became an unexpectedly memorable headline.

    Next, we slip into a darker corner of wildlife protection: the seemingly bizarre ban on owning certain aquatic life, including salamanders, unless acquired legally and above a value threshold. What might sound like a quirky pet prohibition is really a story about poaching, markets, and the lengths lawmakers will go to protect vulnerable species.

    Then we chase a much-told yarn about giving a dog a cigar in Chicago — a punchline that’s been passed around as legal fact for generations. We follow the trail through old cartoons, joke ordinances, and the absence of any statute, showing how folklore takes on the patina of law when people stop checking the sources.

    Through each vignette, the episode blends humor with investigation, turning laughable images into windows on public health, conservation, and the power of myth. By the end, you’ll never look at a cheese wheel, a salamander, or an urban legend the same way again.

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    1 m
  • Corrections
    Apr 1 2026

    We are sorry, here are some corrections.

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    20 m
  • The White House Makeover
    Mar 31 2026

    Welcome back to Time Tellers. In this episode, Renee and Dan guide listeners through the White House’s dramatic transformations—from James Hoban’s original plan and the 1814 burning to Teddy Roosevelt’s 1902 modernization, Truman’s gutting rebuild, Jackie Kennedy’s museum-quality restoration, the rise of fortress-like security, and the present controversy over a glass-walled ballroom that tore down the East Wing. Through vivid anecdotes, sharp arguments, and surprising details, they show how each renovation reflected the needs, ambitions, and anxieties of its time.

    As donors, preservationists, lawmakers, and presidents collide, the story becomes a debate over who controls national memory and the built symbols of power. Tune in for history, scandal, and the personal moments that make the People’s House a never-ending work in progress.

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    42 m
  • Don't Eat the Neighbor: Idaho's Anti‑Cannibalism Law and Other Legal Oddities
    Mar 28 2026

    Dan's legal tip of the day opens with a dark, oddly comic mystery: Idaho forbids cannibalism — punishable by up to 14 years in prison unless it was the only way to survive — drawing a line between Donner Party desperation and Hannibal Lecter horror. With dry wit and vivid detail, Dan turns statutes into stories, testing where law, morality, and survival collide.

    From a 1907 blue law banning Sunday merry‑go‑rounds to a strict rule that tattoos must be done in licensed parlors, the episode stitches together real statutes and their surprising backstories. Listen as Dan delivers verdicts, ponders the past, and teases what's next — Illinois naps, cheese factories, and a $600 salamander — inviting you to laugh, shudder, and keep listening.

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    2 m
  • Don't Stick a Coin in Your Ear: Hawaii's Wild Laws
    Mar 21 2026

    Step into an episode that treats paradise like a courtroom—Hawaii’s sun-drenched beaches, strict billboard bans and the bizarre law against putting coins in your ear become the stage for a series of odd legal tales. We weave through real statutes, urban legends and half-remembered advisories, turning statutes into stories and sparking the question: what makes a law strange enough to tell?

    Along the way we chase a rumored toilet restriction, tease apart fact from folklore, and then take a sharp turn to Idaho’s unsettlingly blunt rule about eating people “unless you really have to.” The result: a short, surprising journey through laws that reveal as much about culture and history as they do about legality.

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    1 m