Informações:
Sinopse
Podcast by Allen Tatman
Episódios
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So, a Podcast Walks into a Pub...
25/04/2017 Duração: 01h03minSo, a Podcast Walks into a Pub... by Allen Tatman
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There But for the Grace of God...
18/04/2017 Duração: 40minThere But for the Grace of God... by Allen Tatman
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THE WEIRD, THE WHACKED, and WTF?!?!?
28/03/2017 Duração: 59minTHE WEIRD, THE WHACKED, and WTF?!?!? by Allen Tatman
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Beannaithe Lá Fhéile Pádraig
14/03/2017 Duração: 01h31sBeannaithe Lá Fhéile Pádraig by Allen Tatman
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Love, Sex, and Alcohol in the Ancient World
14/02/2017 Duração: 46minLove, Sex, and Alcohol in the Ancient World by Allen Tatman
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Chicago and Prohibition: Part 2
06/02/2017 Duração: 58minChicago and Prohibition: Part 2 by Allen Tatman
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Chicago and Prohibition: Part 1
31/01/2017 Duração: 57minChicago and Prohibition: Part 1 by Allen Tatman
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The Lifeblood of a Small Nation
24/01/2017 Duração: 51minIn the far northeast end of Ireland, from County Antrim, if you look out just 12 miles across the North Channel of the Irish Sea, you will see the Scottish headland known as the Mull of Kintyre. On a clear day the misty craggy cliffs of the Mull can be seen rising, almost beckoning one to cross the water. I know. I’ve been there. I’ve looked out across the channel and wanted cross over to Scotland, but, I have yet to go there. I’m not the first to long for that crossing. Even before the channel was covered in water, there was a land bridge; archaeologists tell us that the first human beings, hunter-gatherers to arrive in Ireland crossed over on foot near the end of the last ice age, around 10,000 BCE. When the Celts arrived in Ireland in the 6th Century BCE, they called the original inhabitants the Fir Bolg, sometimes called the ‘Dark Men.’ It is believed that the Fir Bolg assimilated with the Celts, probably not of their own volition but through violence and subjugation, and their legends and cultur
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The Divine Drink
16/01/2017 Duração: 37minWhat’s the biggest party you’ve ever been to? Not a music or cultural festival, but a party thrown by one person. I was thinking about this the other day. What else are you going to think about during the malaise of mid January in mid Missouri? We’ve all been to them, with hundreds maybe thousands of people. Our newly elected governor had his inaugural party last week. I didn’t go. We didn’t even open the pub. Firstly because it was on a Monday, and we’re normally closed on Mondays. It’s Jefferson City. If you live here, you understand. And the other reason we didn’t open is because all of the recently elected politicians invite all of their supporters up from Bugtussle or wherever to the capitol, and these people come into our city and act like they’re shit doesn’t stink because they are friends, paid friends, but still in their minds, friends with a state representative and that everybody in Jefferson City ought to kiss their ass, and because they’re from a place where they’ve never heard of cra
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Yo Ho Ho! And a Bottle of Rum! The First Global Spirit
03/01/2017 Duração: 34minSugar, it seems, is in almost all of our foods. And not just sugar, but sweeteners in general, are added to so many of our processed foods. As an additive it enhances flavor and aroma, and it helps products retain moisture. And in this day and age sugar is relatively inexpensive. But many are surprised to learn that sugar and sweeteners as an everyday food additive are a relatively recent innovation, and prior to the European invasions of the Western Hemisphere, sugar was a very costly luxury item. As Europeans established sugar plantations throughout their Caribbean and Latin America territories, sugar became more readily available for European markets. As the demand and consumption of cane sugar grew in the second half of the Second Millennia CE, the sugar processors were left with the byproduct molasses, and what can be made from molasses? Rum, and it would become the first distilled spirit to be sold around the globe. It would be easy to think that sugar cane was indigenous to the New World, since