4.6 • 836 Ratings
🗓️ 25 October 2024
⏱️ 9 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hello all, Eric Rivenis with the Most Notorious podcast here. Each week I interview an author or historian about a historical true crime, tragedy, or disaster. |
0:11.8 | Subject matter ranges from gunslingers to Gilded Age murder, to gangsters, to fires, to pirates, to wild prison breaks. |
0:19.6 | I guess spring their incredible knowledge |
0:22.0 | directly to you. Please subscribe to Most Notorious on your favorite podcast app. Cheers and have a safe |
0:29.1 | tomorrow. In the creators of the popular science show with millions of YouTube subscribers |
0:33.4 | comes the Minute Earth podcast. Every episode of the show dives deep into a science question |
0:38.3 | you might not even know you had, but once you hear the answer, you'll want to share it with |
0:41.9 | everyone you know. Why do rivers curve? Why did the T-Rex have such tiny arms? And why do |
0:47.7 | so many more kids need glasses now than they used to? Spoiler alert, it isn't screen time. |
0:53.3 | Our team of scientists digs into the |
0:55.2 | research and breaks it down into a short, entertaining explanation jam-packed with science |
0:59.3 | facts and terrible puns. Subscribe to Minute Earth wherever you like to listen. Southern Gothic is a podcast that explores the history behind the American South's |
1:18.1 | darkest days, greatest mysteries, and most chilling ghost stories. |
1:23.2 | But today, we aren't hitting the history books. |
1:26.5 | We're going to go down to the campfire for our annual Halloween tradition |
1:30.5 | of 13 spooky tales over the course of 13 nights. Jackson Burroughs, South Carolina, is a small, unincorporated rural community down on the Edisto River, |
1:57.7 | a pit stop between Charleston and Beaufort, not far from the old cemetery |
2:03.2 | where one of my favorite stories of all time, the Legend of Julio Ligree, took place. |
2:10.9 | Well, this particular community was founded back in the 1730s, and while it was a county seat back in the 18th century, |
2:19.5 | aside from the railroad line that comes through, it never really took off, and today there |
2:26.0 | are less than 500 people that call Jacksonborough home. |
2:31.2 | But for folks like us who like old legends and ghost lore, Jacksonborough delivers because |
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