Episodes

  • Shadows of Jim Crow: The Atlanta Ripper and the Women the City Forgot
    Jun 14 2025
    Atlanta, 1911. Black women like Rosa Trice are turning up dead, again and again, and the city barely flinches. No headlines. No suspects. No justice. Just silence.

    But this episode? We’re dragging that silence into the daylight.

    Because when the history books forget… we remember.

    Throw in some zombies, a house that suspiciously vanished, and the kind of systemic racism that still hits way too close to home. And yeah, it gets real.

    Not your grandma’s ghost story.
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    44 mins
  • The Devil's Dirty Dozen
    Apr 30 2025
    Black cats. Broken mirrors. Spilled salt. Lucky charms stuffed in your pocket like a goblin.
    Superstitions aren’t just spooky little habits! They’re survival stories in disguise. In Episode 13, we crack open 13 infamous beliefs — the Devil’s Dirty Dozen — and trace the fears, rituals, and side-eye superstition that kept our ancestors alive (and kinda paranoid).


    From haunted mirrors to Hoodoo mojo bags, this episode explores the rituals we still cling to when life feels unhinged.

    Are they silly? Sacred? Or both?

    You may not believe in superstitions....but you still knock on wood, don’t you? 😏
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    34 mins
  • A River Runs Greedy: The Johnstown Flood of 1889
    Mar 26 2025
    Welcome to Gilded Age Pennsylvania, where steel tycoons are cosplaying wilderness men, the rich are allergic to accountability, and a 40-foot wall of water is about to become the worst “I told you so” in American history.

    It’s 1889, and the South Fork Dam is hanging on by literal straw while the sky dumps 10 inches of rain like it’s trying to make a point. When the dam breaks? Johnstown is erased in minutes. Fire. Barbed wire. Mud. Death.

    In this episode of Bygone Echoes, we uncover how a bunch of billionaires with zero engineering skills accidentally committed mass manslaughter—then just… ghosted. No lawsuits. No jail. Just yachts.
    This is a story of disaster, denial, and ducklings (yes, really). Featuring mattress-floating survivors, a brick house that didn’t stand strong, and the birth of American disaster relief—because someone had to clean up after capitalism’s tantrum.

    Greed caused it. The people survived it. History remembers it.

    Kinda.
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    40 mins
  • Nothing Really Matters… Except This Song
    Feb 13 2025
    What is Bohemian Rhapsody even about? Regret? Fate? Random murder? My kid hit me with that question in the car, and I had to face the truth—I had no idea.

    So in this episode of Bygone Echoes, we’re exploring one of my favorite topics—music! We’ll rewind to 1975: a time of global chaos, disco rebellion, funk power, and rock bands getting extra (looking at you, Led Zeppelin). And at the center of it all? The weird, chaotic genius of Queen’s most legendary song. Record labels told Queen a six-minute rock opera was career suicide, and Freddie Mercury said, "Bet."

    Along the way, I’ll unpack my own late-blooming love for the song, the music that shaped me, and why Bohemian Rhapsody still hits like an emotional freight train. So get ready—we’re about to figure out why this song refuses to die, even if none of us know what it means.
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    23 mins
  • LA Gone Wild: The 1871 Chinese Massacre and America’s Forgotten Hate Crime
    Jan 27 2025
    What happens when fear, hate, unchecked power, and racism collide? In 1871 Los Angeles, it led to one of the deadliest racially motivated massacres in U.S. history. A mob of 500 stormed Chinatown, lynched 19 Chinese immigrants, and left the community devastated—all fueled by anti-immigrant propaganda and systemic racism. But here’s the kicker: history kept the receipts, and those same patterns of scapegoating and violence are still happening today.

    As Chinese New Year approaches—a celebration of resilience, renewal, and hope—we’ll uncover the tragedy of the 1871 Chinese Massacre, connect it to modern immigration policies, and ask why these historical echoes are still screaming in 2025.

    👀 Spoiler alert: this episode is heavy, but it’s the kind of story we can’t afford to forget.
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    36 mins
  • The Lady in White World Tour
    Jan 23 2025
    Ready for a ghost story road trip? Buckle up—wait, don’t, because the Lady in White might be hitching a ride!

    From misty English castles to moonlit rivers in Mexico and Chicago’s haunted highways, these ghostly gals have been slaying (metaphorically, mostly) the supernatural scene for centuries. Always tragic, always mysterious, and rocking that timeless white gown.

    But what’s the deal with these ghostly fashionistas? Why are they always women? Why do they appear in white? And why do they all seem so, well, emotionally unavailable? Turns out, these stories are less about scares and more about society’s baggage—grief, injustice, and impossible expectations rolled into one spooky package.

    So grab a snack, maybe a flashlight, and join us as us as we explore the hauntingly global phenomenon of the Lady in White. It’s spooky, it’s tragic, and yes, it’s absolutely ghost goals. 👻✨
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    46 mins
  • Baby, It’s Cold Outside: How Frost, Famine & Inequality Fueled A Revolution
    Dec 27 2024
    Pack your mittens and grab a warm drink because this episode of Bygone Echoes is serving up climate chaos, hunger, and full-on revolution drama! When brutal, unpredictable weather wiped out crops and disastrous economic policies crushed an already struggling population, bread—the everyday staple for the masses—became a luxury few could afford. This icy collision of natural disasters and human greed pushed 18th-century France to the brink, setting the stage for a revolution that rewrote history.

    Baby, it’s cold outside—but the rage? It was scorching. And while we’re not flipping through the revolution itself, we’ll unpack the perfect storm of events that made it inevitable. From today’s climate crises to growing inequality and corporate greed pushing people to extremes, this story still resonates. So, is the cake a lie? Are we doomed to keep repeating this level? We decide.
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    26 mins
  • Of Monster Soup, Ghostly Maps & Men
    Nov 26 2024
    Welcome to Victorian London, where the Thames is serving up “Monster Soup,” disease spreads faster than bad TikTok trends, and everyone thinks sickness comes from vibes. It’s 1854, and cholera is tearing through Soho, leaving death and fear in its wake.

    In this episode of Bygone Echoes, Dr. John Snow (the one who knows something, not nothing) and Reverend Henry Whitehead team up to take down the true villain: a killer water pump. Armed with data, determination, and a hauntingly accurate Ghost Map, they didn’t just stop the outbreak—they changed the course of public health forever. This is a story of bad science, worse sanitation, and two unlikely heroes who proved that even in the messiest of times, progress is possible.
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    29 mins
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