The Nvg8r
Random History
Join The Nvg8r as he teaches you about lesser known events and people throughout history. I'd like to dedicate this show to my incredible wife, without whom I'd be lost.-Nvg8rThis show is an Argos101 production.
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Episodes
Battle on Skates and the Green Beret that was shot over 30 times 28.03.2026 27:12
Today we're plunging into one of Europe's longest, strangest, and most consequential conflicts: the Eighty Years' War, or the Dutch Revolt. From 1568 to 1648, a ragtag coalition of merchants, sailors, farmers, and Calvinist firebrands fought the mightiest empire on Earth – Habsburg Spain – for their faith, their freedoms, and their future. But we're not just skimming the surface....
The Yugoslav underground and Colonel Killer Kane 04.03.2026 28:03
Today we're diving into one of World War II's most audacious rescue operations: how the Yugoslav underground, led by General Draža Mihailović and his Chetnik forces, hid, protected, and guided hundreds of downed American airmen back to safety despite being deep in Nazi-occupied territory. This is the story of Operation Halyard – a tale of unlikely alliances, makeshift airstrips, and unbrea...
The Island that Exploded and The Real GI Joe Francis Currey 31.01.2026 33:47
For the main story, we're charting a course straight into one of the loudest, deadliest, and most colorful disasters in human history: the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa in the Sunda Strait of modern Indonesea. For our true hero segment, we are going to examine one of the most amazing heroes of the European theater in World War II. Defying orders, he held a key bridge during the Battle of the Bulge...
Another Christmas Miracle Crossing the Delaware and Thomas Custer 20.12.2025 24:58
Thoughout history, mankind has always tried to harness nature. To use it to our advantage. On Christmas Eve 1776, General George Washington took advantage of Nature in a last ditch gamble to save our infant country. Inspiring one of the most iconic images of the Revolution, and added several myths to the birth of our nation. The United States had only declared its independence a few months earlier...
The Candy Bomber and Thomas J Hudner 13.11.2025 23:05
Today we're soaring into one of the sweetest stories from the early Cold War era. Picture this: a city divided, a superpower standoff, and one pilot who turned a humanitarian crisis into a candy-coated act of kindness. We're talking about the Candy Bomber from the Berlin Airlift.
The Plane That Ended World War II and Charlie Kirk 14.10.2025 28:46
One of the last episodes I did in Season One was on the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Today, we begin Season Two, and I thought we could start by exploring another pivotal—and controversial—plane in aviation history: another B-29 Superfortress, this one named Bockscar. This wasn't just any bomber; it delivered the second atomic bomb ever used in warfare, over Nagasaki on August 9,...
The Wright Brothers and Ernest Evans 20.08.2025 18:40
Let’s step back in time... It’s the late 19th century, and the world is buzzing with new tech. Bicycles are the hot new thing, electricity is lighting up cities, and people are starting to dream big—like, flying big. Enter Wilbur and Orville Wright, born in 1867 and 1871, respectively, to a preacher dad, Milton, and a mechanically savvy mom, Susan. These brothers grew up in Dayton, Ohio, in a hous...
The Church That Survived the Atomic Bomb 06.08.2025 21:16
Today, we’re diving into a story that sounds like it’s straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster, but it’s 100% real. We’re talking about a church in Hiroshima, Japan, that stood tall against the unimaginable force of the atomic bomb dropped on 6 August 1945. Not only did the building survive, but so did the people inside it—against all odds. This is the story of the Jesuit Church of Our Lady of the...
The Limping Lady (Virginia Hall) and William Carney 26.07.2025 14:13
In Episode 11, I told you the story of one of America’s greatest code breakers of World War 2, Elizabeth Smith. Today we’re stepping into the other side of the intelligence game; the more shadowy world of espionage, to uncover the incredible story of Virginia Hall, an American woman who became one of the most dangerous Allied spies of World War II. Known to the Gestapo as the “Limping Lady,” her c...
D-Day and its heroes 06.06.2025 17:10
Today is 6 June 2025; the 81st anniversary of the Normandy Invasion. Code named Overlord, it was faced with all kinds of security headaches. One general let slip the date the invasion was to take place. He was sent home after being busted down in rank to Lt. Col. A London newspaper printed several of the codewords as answers in their weekly crossword puzzle. However, through careful misdirection,...
The Navajo Code Talkers and the Arizona Balloon Buster 02.06.2025 14:45
Several years ago, there was a Nicholas Cage movie out about a group of men who had a dramatic impact on the course of the Pacific Theater during the second World War. Unfortunately, Windtalkers , focused on Nicholas Cage’s character, rather than on the actual heroes, the Navajo Code Talkers who deserved to be the central point of the film. Today, I will discuss some of the heroes of the Pacific T...
Wojtek the Army Bear and Daniel Daly 16.05.2025 16:53
In today’s episode, we’re diving into one of those stories…and to be honest, it sounds like it’s straight out of a Pixar movie—but as I said… it is real. Picture this: World War II, chaos everywhere, soldiers fighting for their lives, and in the middle of it all… a bear. Not just any bear, but a bear with a military rank, a paycheck, and a taste for beer and cigarettes. This is the story of Wojte...
Dancing Plague and Willie Johnston 31.03.2025 12:26
Now, I know what you're thinking: "Dancing? Could be fun!" And, well, under normal circumstances and for certain people, it is fun. But imagine, if you will, an historical event where hundreds, even thousands, of people were seized by an uncontrollable urge… to dance. And I don't mean a casual waltz. We’re talking hours, even days of relentless, frenzied movement. Exhaustion, dehydration, heart at...
The Emu War and Charles McGee 09.03.2025 16:56
Today’s episode deviates a little from my usual stories—while it is a bizarre event, it is a bit more well known than my previous topics.
Pidgeon Guided Bombs and Josephine Baker 08.02.2025 16:40
I have taught Psychology for the past 12 years or so. It is an introductory class, so we cover many of the theorists and topics that you would expect; DeCartres, Pavlov, Freud, Jung, and Watson. One of the most important theorists we cover in this class is B.F. Skinner. There have been all kinds of stories about Skinner and his experiments through the years, but I stumbled upon today’s story while...
Bazooka Charlie and Don Ross 29.01.2025 14:05
They say that necessity is the mother of invention. During the Second World War, there were many times that this proverb rang very true; inventions like synthetic rubber, the jeep, the atomic bomb, and even duct tape were all developed to meet the needs of the war effort. There were a few other innovations that proved themselves in the war as well; the creation of floating tanks, the mine and hedg...
Tunguska Event and Leonard Funk 10.01.2025 15:37
I normally do not put a lot of stock in conspiracy theories. However, lately I have been re-evaluating that position—in fact I am working on an episode dedicated to them. One of these conspiracy theories is that of an immense release of energy in the Siberian Tundra in 1908. In today’s episode I will discuss several of the theories surrounding this mysterious burst of energy. I am recording this e...
The Christmas Truce and John R Fox 24.12.2024 16:35
Several years ago, I stumbled upon a video of an extended commercial from the Sainsbury company in Britain that portrayed an event I had heard of but really didn’t know anything about. It portrayed the Christmas Truce of 1914 in World War One. There was also a “making of” type video linked to it. The story and images were inspiring and really struck a chord with me. Every time I teach about World...
Pontiac's war and Witold Pilecki 21.12.2024 16:38
When I was in high school, one of the best classes I took was an elective history class called Ohio History. One of our required readings was a book by Allan W Eckert, called The Frontiersman because it centered around the founding of Ohio as first a territory, then a state. The book was one of a series called “The Winning of America.” One of the other books in the series was titled The Conquerors...
The Man Who Fell To Earth and Maynard Smith 16.12.2024 17:11
Both subjects today were B-17 ball turret gunners in World War II. The first story is truly one you would think was made up, but it is 100% true. The man was thrown from his stricken plane, fell 20,000 feet, crashed through a glass roof and lived to tell the tale. The True Hero for today, was the first enlisted person in the Army Air Corps to be awarded the Medal of Honor.
The Ghosts of Pearl Harbor 07.12.2024 28:24
In this episode of Random History we explore the paranormal of Pearl Harbor.
The Real Avengers and Corporal Tibor Rubin 02.12.2024 15:46
One of the most successful movie franchises of all time has to be the Marvel Avengers series. The movies are iconic. There are so many memorable lines and scenes in the series. Most people do not know of the real avengers, however. These men did not fight aliens or try to undo “the snap” …these men set out to avenge what is arguably the worst genocide in history. They hunted down and prosecuted th...
The Bloody 100th and Gale Cleven 22.11.2024 15:05
Apple TV is currently running a miniseries called Masters of the Air. This program depicts the exploits of the 100th Bomb Group of the 8th Air Force (also known as the “Bloody 100th”) during World War II. I have watched several episodes of the series, and the flying and action sequences are amazing; however, as with most drama series like this, some artistic license is taken with the historical as...
Three Mile Island and Louis Slotin 15.11.2024 15:33
When I was in middle school, there was an accident at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power plant near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. About the same time, there was a movie that came out called, “The China Syndrome.” In fact, I looked it up…the movie came out 10 or 12 days after the incident. People took the fictional events in the movie and conflated them around the accident at Three Mile Island. It sp...
The Ghost Plane and 2nd Lt. Joseph R. Sarnosky 10.11.2024 18:59
The Navigator dives into the story of the Ghost plane, a B-17 that landed itself without a crew. Find sources, scripts, request a topic and more: https://randhist.bio.link
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