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Sidequests


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  • The Pig That Nearly Started a War

    15:29|
    In 1859, an American farmer shot a pig belonging to the British Hudson's Bay Company on a disputed island in the Pacific Northwest, and two major world powers spent the next thirteen years facing each other down over the incident. American troops dug in under George Pickett — that George Pickett. Britain responded with five warships and two thousand soldiers. Both sides were ready to fight. Neither side fired a shot. The only casualty of the entire thirteen-year standoff was the pig. This is the Pig War — one of history's most accidental near-wars and most improbable peaceful resolutions.

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  • Is It Possible to Own the Moon?

    12:27|
    In 1980, Dennis Hope filed paperwork claiming ownership of the Moon and sent formal notice to the United Nations. Nobody objected. So he started selling. This episode of Sidequests traces how a struggling used-car salesman from San Francisco built a multimillion-dollar real estate business on a gap in the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, generated roughly twelve million dollars in revenue, sold property to Ronald Reagan and Tom Cruise, created his own interplanetary government, and was never successfully stopped by any country on Earth. Whether it's legal is still, technically, unclear — which is exactly the point.
  • The Sinking of the RMS Titanic: Part Nine - Carpathia and Californian

    14:55|
    Episode 8 of our ten part series The Titanic Disaster covers what happened after the ship disappeared — five hours of darkness and cold in the lifeboats, the arrival of Carpathia at dawn, and the ship that sat ten to twenty miles away watching distress rockets and did nothing. It’s a story with a clear hero and a clear villain, and both earned their reputations entirely.The free episode covers Carpathia’s race through the ice field, the rescue operations at dawn, and the SS Californian’s catastrophic inaction. The premium episode goes deeper on the lifeboats themselves, the long-term trauma survivors carried for the rest of their lives, and the grim work of body recovery off Halifax.
  • The Lavish Funeral of a Pickled General

    07:14|
    Antonio López de Santa Anna was President of Mexico eleven times, fought the Texas Revolution, and declared himself the Napoleon of the West. He was also the man who, after losing his leg to cannon fire, had the limb preserved, paraded through Mexico City in a glass coffin, and buried with full military honors. Then a mob dug it up. Then he accidentally helped invent bubble gum. This is the strangest footnote in Mexican history — and it's an actual foot.
  • Why You Can't Escape the Spam Call Epidemic

    16:00|
    Americans received 52.5 billion robocalls in 2025 — 160 per person, per year, most of them offering loans you never applied for. But where do these calls actually come from? This episode of Sidequests traces the full ecosystem: the fake websites harvesting your data, the brokers selling it dozens of times over, the overseas call centers placing millions of calls at near-zero cost, and the reason blocking individual numbers never works. Plus: what you can actually do about it, and why pressing 2 to be removed makes everything worse.
  • The Sinking of the RMS Titanic: Part Eight - The Sinking

    14:29|
    Episode 8 of our ten part series The Titanic Disaster covers the two hours and forty minutes between the collision and the moment Titanic vanishes. The bow descends, the stern rises, the ship breaks in two, and 1,517 people die in water that is four degrees above freezing. The free episode follows the evacuation — the band assembling on deck, the lifeboats launching half-empty, the separations, the discipline that held longer than anyone had a right to expect, and the screaming that started the moment the ship disappeared and stopped thirty minutes later when there was no one left to scream.The premium episode goes deeper on the people who made extraordinary choices in those final hours — those who refused to leave, those who dressed for death, those who stayed at their posts, and the ones history has mostly forgotten.
  • NASA's Missions That Never Flew

    14:51|
    NASA has announced plans for a permanent lunar base. Which is exciting — and also something NASA has announced before. This episode of Sidequests covers the missions that were seriously planned, thoroughly engineered, and never flew: a human Venus flyby designed around existing Apollo hardware, a nuclear rocket engine that actually worked and could have reached Mars in the 1980s, a U.S. Army Moon base proposal from 1959 that predated the Space Race, and a space station that fell out of orbit while the shuttle that could have saved it sat grounded two years behind schedule. The history of spaceflight isn't just what launched. It's also the remarkable futures that almost were.