Retropod

The Washington Post

About

Retropod is a show for history-lovers, featuring stories about the past, rediscovered. Host Mike Rosenwald introduces you to history’s most colorful characters - forgotten heroes, overlooked villains, dreamers, explorers, world changers.

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483 episodes

Earthrise

On Christmas Eve in 1968, the Apollo 8 astronauts captured an image that symbolizes hope and inspired environmentalism.

5m
Dec 31, 2019
Hair peace. Bed peace.

On March 25, 1969, John Lennon and Yoko Ono were a few days into their marriage when they invited the press to join them at their honeymoon suite at the Amsterdam Hilton Hotel.

5m
Dec 30, 2019
The jazz queen who chose home over fame

Jazz singer Ethel Ennis’s voice wowed audiences and won praise from critics. But when she was faced with the opportunity to become a superstar, Ennis chose a different path.

6m
Dec 27, 2019
Clara Barton, America's most famous nurse, broke boundaries to treat Civil War victims

The nurse who founded the American Red Cross had no formal training in medicine. She tended to countless wounded soldiers.

7m
Dec 26, 2019
The military's famous Santa Tracker began with a wrong number

In the 1950s, a child trying to call Santa Claus accidentally called NORAD and changed Christmas Eve forever.

6m
Dec 25, 2019
The 'Toy King' who never aspired to the throne.

Toys R Us founder Charles Lazarus had no idea how big the toy industry would become.

6m
Dec 23, 2019
Last Seen Ads

After the Civil War, formerly enslaved people placed notices in black-owned newspapers across the country to find their loved ones.

6m
Dec 20, 2019
How 'Broadway Joe' redefined the NFL

A few days before his team took the field as huge underdogs in Super Bowl III, New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath made what was seen as an insane prediction at the time: "The Jets will win Sunday," he said. "I guarantee it."

6m
Dec 19, 2019
The game show contestant who cheated his way to fame

In the 1950s, Charles Van Doren, a quiet professor in New York City, became wrapped up in one of the biggest television quiz show scandals in history.

6m
Dec 18, 2019
How food found its way into the freezer

While on a research trip to the Arctic in the early 20th century, scientist Clarence Birdseye — a name you might recognize from the frozen food aisle — made an observation that would go on to change the way we eat.

6m
Dec 17, 2019
The day before the Chernobyl disaster

Disasters don’t just happen. Like anything in life, there’s usually a buildup. In the case of the Chernobyl disaster, the series of failures stretched back more than a decade. But what happened the day before the explosion?

7m
Dec 16, 2019
The most difficult job Robert Mueller ever had

Serving as special counsel is probably only the third hardest job Robert Mueller has held. His life in public service started when he just 23 years old, as a Marine lieutenant in the Vietnam War.

6m
Dec 13, 2019
Queen Arawelo

Growing up in Somalia, a country where stories are handed down through generations, one of the first tales that children are told is about an ancient queen who fought to give women power by castrating men.

7m
Dec 12, 2019
The nurse who picked up a rifle

During World War I, British nurse Flora Sandes put down her nurses bag to fight with the Serbian Army.

4m
Dec 11, 2019
George Taliaferro, the first black player drafted to the NFL

He thought being drafted into the National Football League was so unlikely that he signed with an African American league team. Then, the NFL called.

6m
Dec 10, 2019
The summer men rebelled against their shirts

It doesn't seem like a big deal today, but 1930s America lived in fear of the male nipple.

5m
Dec 09, 2019
America’s forgotten Iranian hostage

Nine months before the Iran hostage crisis, Kenneth Kraus was held hostage in Iran for eight days.

5m
Dec 06, 2019
A bridge of ice at Niagara Falls

Once upon a time, people walked between the U.S. and Canada over a frozen Niagara Falls. But one day, that all changed forever.

5m
Dec 05, 2019
The Soviet officer who stopped World War III

In 1983, Stanislav Petrov, a lieutenant colonel in the Soviet Union’s Air Defense Forces, trusted his gut and averted a global nuclear catastrophe.

5m
Dec 04, 2019
Why isn’t lynching illegal?

It is one of the worst expressions of racism in American history. And there’s no federal law to prevent it.

6m
Dec 03, 2019
A letter from home

A German woman discovered that her childhood home was stolen from a Jewish family who fled Nazi Germany. Last year, she tracked down the address of one of the children, and wrote him a letter.

3m
Dec 02, 2019
The test that changed childbirth

In the 1950s, Dr. Virginia Apgar created a quick test that nurses have since performed on millions of babies just after birth. She is considered one of the most important figures in modern medicine — a world that almost pushed her away.

6m
Nov 29, 2019
A debate that went into extra innings: Can baseballs curve?

Beginning in the earliest days of baseball, fans, journalists and even physicists disputed whether or not pitchers could make a ball curve.

7m
Nov 28, 2019
Benjamin Franklin's complicated relationship with turkeys

Benjamin Franklin, the most colorful of America's Founding Fathers, had a misunderstood, electrical and ultimately homicidal relationship with turkeys.

5m
Nov 27, 2019
The cranberry crisis that changed how we see our food

Weeks before Thanksgiving, 1959, cranberries were declared unsafe to eat. The race was on to save America’s favorite holiday side dish.

5m
Nov 26, 2019
How Anita Hill’s testimony led to the "Year of the Woman"

No women served on the Senate Judiciary Committee in 1991. The ugly Anita Hill hearings changed that.

6m
Nov 25, 2019
The man who filmed JFK's assassination

For many, memories of that devastating day quickly revert to that silent, flickering sequence captured by Abraham Zapruder. It is as chilling as it is familiar: the approaching convertible, the waves of a crowd about to lose its innocence.

3m
Nov 22, 2019
The 'Night Witches'

During World War II, around 80 Russian women took to the skies and risked their lives to fight against the Germans.

4m
Nov 21, 2019
Robert Morris, the creator of the subpoena

The history of subpoenas, and the fiery congressional hearings that have captivated Americans for centuries began with a Founding Father raising his hand to say, “Investigate me!”

6m
Nov 20, 2019
Lee Harvey Oswald's final hours before killing Kennedy

The assassination of President John F. Kennedy devastated the nation. But the day before the shooting was just a normal day. It was particularly calm and uneventful for the gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald.

3m
Nov 19, 2019