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Recent episodes
Cold War 311: Coletillas
Jun 25, 2026
Unknown duration
Cold War 310: Ice Cream and Ideology (CUBAN REVOLUTION #34)
Jun 9, 2026
27m 52s
The Man Who Owned Everything: Cold War 309: Cuban Revolution #33
May 27, 2026
30m 55s
The Land They Were Never Meant To Own – Cold War 308 (Cuban Revolution #33)
May 7, 2026
13m 06s
Fidel Does America – Cold War 307 (Cuban Revolution #32)
Apr 29, 2026
32m 27s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/25/26 | ![]() Cold War 311: Coletillas | Mikoyan, Soviet deputy premier and ice cream king, rolls into Havana in February 1960 with a 40-person delegation, a science exhibit, and advice for Castro to just take all the American-owned land wit | — | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() Cold War 310: Ice Cream and Ideology (CUBAN REVOLUTION #34)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | — | Cuba | CubaFidel Castro+6 | — | 27m 52s | |
| 5/27/26 | ![]() The Man Who Owned Everything: Cold War 309: Cuban Revolution #33✨ | Cuban Revolutionagrarian reform+3 | — | Eisenhower | CubaTexas | Castroagrarian reform+3 | — | 30m 55s | |
| 5/7/26 | ![]() The Land They Were Never Meant To Own – Cold War 308 (Cuban Revolution #33)✨ | Cuban RevolutionAgrarian Reform+3 | — | Cuban Communist PartyAgrarian Reform Act of 1959 | Cuba | Cuban RevolutionAgrarian Reform Act+3 | — | 13m 06s | |
| 4/29/26 | ![]() Fidel Does America – Cold War 307 (Cuban Revolution #32)✨ | Cuban RevolutionCold War+3 | — | CIA | CubaUnited States | Fidel CastroRichard Nixon+5 | — | 32m 27s | |
| 4/26/26 | ![]() Prime Minister Castro – Cold War #306 (Cuban Revolution #31)✨ | Cuban RevolutionCastro's reforms+4 | — | — | CubaLatin America | Cuban RevolutionCastro+5 | — | 23m 15s | |
| 4/14/26 | ![]() Revolutionary Justice – Cold War 305 (Cuban Revolution #30)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+4 | — | BritainAmerican media | — | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | 30m 18s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() The Dove Has Landed – CW 304 (Cuban Revolution #29)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | Directorio RevolucionarioEd Sullivan | — | Fidel CastroCuban Revolution+8 | — | 33m 43s | |
| 3/20/26 | ![]() Fangio, Fatigues, and the Fall of Batista (CW 303) (Cuban Revolution #28)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFulgencio Batista+5 | — | — | CubaSierra Maestra | Cuban RevolutionFulgencio Batista+5 | — | 31m 34s | |
| 3/5/26 | ![]() The Mountain Shadow Government – Cold War 302 (Cuban Revolution #27)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | Catholic ChurchUnited States | — | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | — | |
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| 2/5/26 | ![]() The Miami Pact – Cold War 301 (Cuban Revolution #26)✨ | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+5 | — | Directorio Revolucionario | CubaMiami | Cuban RevolutionFidel Castro+7 | — | — | |
| 1/14/26 | ![]() Cold War #300 – Castro Goes Viral (Cuban Revolution #25) | Episode 300 marks a major waypoint for the Cold War Podcast, and the discussion dives straight back into the hard mechanics of revolution. Castro is alive, hiding in the Sierra Maestra with a tiny guerrilla force, but survival alone isn’t victory. This episode explores the real problem facing Fidel Castro in 1957: how to overthrow a dictator when you barely have a few dozen fighters, almost no supplies, and multiple rival revolutionary movements competing for legitimacy. Cameron and Ray unpack how revolutions are built in parallel layers—mountain guerrillas, urban resistance networks, propaganda operations, logistics pipelines, and political alliances—and how Castro slowly stitched these together into something that looked like a shadow government. The episode focuses heavily on Castro’s extraordinary media strategy, his manipulation of foreign journalists, and the way American media unexpectedly turned him into a global celebrity before he ever seized power. Along the way, the discussion examines the growing ideological tensions between urban moderates and radical guerrillas, the role of figures like Che Guevara, Celia Sánchez, and Frank País, and the contradictions of courting middle-class support while drifting steadily toward Marxism. By the end, the revolution is no longer just a jungle insurgency—it’s a fragile, volatile coalition hurtling toward open confrontation. | — | ||||||
| 1/2/26 | ![]() Cold War #299 – Castro Is Dead. Long Live Castro! (Cuban Revolution #24) | In this episode, Cameron and Ray pick up the Cuban Revolution story at its most fragile moment: Fidel Castro has just landed in eastern Cuba with 82 men, most of them dead, scattered, or captured within days. Batista’s regime confidently declares Castro dead, the international press runs with it, and the revolution appears finished before it has begun. But history, as usual, has other plans. From hiding under sugarcane leaves to scraping together a band of 19 survivors in the Sierra Maestra, Castro learns guerrilla warfare the hard way. The episode traces his first small victories, the brutal countermeasures of the Batista regime, and the human cost borne by peasants caught in between. The story then pivots to one of the most consequential acts of propaganda in Cold War history: Castro’s calculated courtship of the international press. Through Herbert Matthews’ risky journey into the mountains and his front-page New York Times reporting, the world learns that Fidel Castro is very much alive, organised, and growing. This episode explores how myth, media, theatre, and violence intertwine at the birth of a revolution—and how a handful of men with rifles, cigars, and a journalist changed global perceptions overnight. | — | ||||||
| 10/27/25 | ![]() Cold War #295 – History Will Absolve Me (Cuban Revolution #20) | Fidel Castro’s first attempt to ignite revolution in Cuba ends in disaster — but also forges the legend. We follow the aftermath of the failed 1953 Moncada Barracks raid: the brutal reprisals, Fidel’s near-execution, the unlikely lieutenant who saves him, the public opinion shift as Batista’s regime overreaches, and Fidel’s transformation from fiery idealist to imprisoned revolutionary intellectual. We hear how History Will Absolve Me is born, what Fidel is reading behind bars (spoiler: Trotsky and Roosevelt), and how his personal life gets… complicated. By the time he’s released after only two years, Castro is no longer just a nuisance — he’s become the most famous man in Cuba and an unstoppable symbol of rebellion.  | — | ||||||
| 10/8/25 | ![]() Cold War #294 – Castro’s First Swing: The Moncada Misfire (Cuban Revolution #19) | In this episode, Cam and Ray bring their trademark banter and historical nerdery to the story of Fidel Castro’s first attempt at revolution — the ill-fated 1953 Moncada Barracks attack. What starts as a coup joke about Batista’s boredom quickly spirals into a lively mix of history and comedy. We follow a 26-year-old Fidel as he decides that ballots and lawsuits won’t topple a corrupt regime, so he turns to bullets instead. The episode explores his planning, paranoia, and sheer audacity as he leads a small group of poorly armed men in a doomed assault on one of Cuba’s largest military garrisons. Along the way, the boys detour into mobsters, Catholic apostles, ham-radio fanatics, and whether Ray actually has friends who play pool. By the end, we’re left with Fidel’s first great failure — the Moncada disaster — and the foreshadowing of the revolution to come. | — | ||||||
| 9/18/25 | ![]() Cold War #293 – Castro’s Crossroads (Cuban Revolution #18) | In this episode of Cold War, Cameron and Ray dig into the aftermath of Batista’s March 1952 coup in Cuba and how it shaped Fidel Castro’s early strategies. The conversation explores Castro’s proclamation denouncing the coup, his first failed attempts to rally the public, and why the Cuban people weren’t yet ready for revolution. We see how Castro pivoted from politics to pamphlets, protests, lawsuits, and eventually the realization that only a professional revolutionary force could succeed. Along the way, the hosts connect Batista’s propaganda playbook with U.S. media bias, draw parallels to Iran’s 1953 coup, and reflect on the timeless tactics of seizing power. They also detour into the Mob’s growing influence in Havana and the darker history of honeypot operations linking Epstein, Maxwell, and intelligence agencies. | — | ||||||
| 9/5/25 | ![]() Cold War #292 – Batista’s Bloodless Coup: Havana 1952 (Cuban Revolution #17) | In this episode of The Cold War, Cameron and Ray take us to Havana in 1952, when Fulgencio Batista staged a meticulously planned coup d’état. They walk through the midnight maneuvers at Camp Columbia, the arrest of generals, the swift control of communication hubs, and the apathy of the Cuban people after years of corruption. We see how Batista positioned himself as “the man” while suspending civil liberties, dissolving Congress, and reassuring both the Americans and local elites. Alongside this, Fidel Castro makes his first serious moves as a revolutionary—drafting a proclamation condemning Batista’s coup and beginning the trajectory that would define his life. The conversation ties Batista’s actions to lessons from Rome, Mussolini, and even contemporary American politics, blending history, irony, and sharp commentary. | — | ||||||
| 8/20/25 | ![]() Cold War #291 – The Lawyer for the Poor (Cuban Revolution #16) | In this episode, Cameron and Ray continue the story of Fidel Castro’s early years, charting his transformation from a fiery young activist entangled with street gangs into a determined reformer and aspiring politician. They explore how Castro navigated gang violence in Havana, his involvement with the nonviolent September 30th movement, his bold courtroom defenses, and his law practice dedicated to the poor. The episode also covers his growing disillusionment with Cuba’s political parties, his clashes with President Prío’s corruption, his unlikely meeting with Batista, and his relentless drive to clean up his reputation and pursue political power. Along the way, Cam and Ray weave in colorful anecdotes, wry humor, and comparisons to figures from Rome and Napoleon to highlight the revolutionary forces shaping Castro’s trajectory. | — | ||||||
| 8/11/25 | ![]() Cold War #290 – The Making Of Fidel (Cuban Revolution #15) | Cameron and Ray pick up Fidel Castro’s story in 1948 as he returns from Colombia in the wake of the Bogotazo riots. We follow Castro through his early 20s as he campaigns for Eduardo Chibás, clashes with Havana police over accusations of corruption, and narrowly escapes being framed for murder. The conversation dives into the student-led bus fare protests—linked to shady U.S. business deals—that propelled Castro into the spotlight. We hear about his whirlwind romance and three-month honeymoon in the United States, his growing fascination with Marxist thought, and his balancing act between rival student gangs and political factions. The episode ends with the murder of his close friend, fellow activist Manolo Fuentes, a turning point that forces Castro to reconsider his alliances and the dangerous reality of Havana’s violent political landscape. | — | ||||||
| 7/27/25 | ![]() Cold War #289 – The Rise Of Fidel (Cuban Revolution #14) | In this episode, Cam and Ray kick off their deep dive into the life and legend of Fidel Castro. Picking up from the Batista coup of 1952, they trace Fidel’s early years—born illegitimate on his father’s sugar plantation, educated by Jesuits, and shaped by political violence. We follow Fidel through elite boarding schools, law school radicalisation, and his early attempts to overthrow regimes across Latin America. From jumping ship with a machine gun to surviving student death threats, Castro emerges as a man driven by revolutionary ideals, a hunger for justice, and an almost messianic sense of destiny. Along the way, we encounter Perón, Guevara, Trujillo, and Gabriel García Márquez—and we get a glimpse of the revolutionary vanguard that would eventually upend Cuba forever. | — | ||||||
| 7/10/25 | ![]() Cold War #288 – Seven Governments, One Puppetmaster (Cuban Revolution #13) | In this raucous and revelatory episode of _The Cold War Podcast_, Cameron and Ray finally reach the man of the hour: Fulgencio Batista. From humble military stenographer to kingmaker of a chaotic Cuba, Batista’s rise is traced through coups, constitutions, and crushing dissent. Cameron performs a blistering freestyle rap tribute to Ray (“Ray Bear Has No Hair”), then the duo dive into Batista’s reign, the boom years of WWII, puppet governments, violent suppression of opposition, and the eerie parallels to authoritarian creep in modern democracies. The episode also explores the cultural fallout of constant violence, Fidel Castro’s formative influences, and the suicide of Eduardo Chibás on live radio—a moment that cemented Castro’s revolutionary zeal. Come for the history, stay for the dick jokes, cos this one’s got everything. | — | ||||||
| 6/13/25 | ![]() Cold War #287 – The Fall of Macho Man Machado (Cuban Revolution #12) | In this episode of the Cold War podcast, Cam and Ray continue their wild ride through Cuban history, focusing on the rise and fall of Gerardo “Macho Man” Machado, the proto-strongman president who turned Cuba into a playground for rich tourists—and a pressure cooker for everyone else. From political repression and violent union crackdowns to communist organizing and student uprisings, this chapter sets the stage for Cuba’s eventual revolution. Along the way, we meet fascinating figures like Julio Antonio Mella (the OG Castro prototype), discuss the communist roots of Cuban resistance, and learn how America played both arsonist and firefighter in the region. Plus: cigars, lesbians, and martinis. You’re welcome. | — | ||||||
| 2/1/25 | ![]() Cold War #279 – Gunpowder In Hell (Cuban Revolution #4) | When the U.S. troops landed in Cuba, it changed the nature of the war. The old racism returned. Of course, when the war was over in July, the U.S. had no intention of letting the Cuban people have their independence. As the commander of US forces in Cuba said: "Why, these people are no more fit for self-government than gunpowder is for hell." In the fight for freedom, lives had been lost and the country had been wiped out economically. Yet the Cubans still weren't going to get their independence. | — | ||||||
| 12/13/24 | ![]() Cold War #276 – The Cuban Revolution | It's finally time to talk about the Cuban Revolution. But of course before we can do that story justice, we need to explain some back story. Everything needs to be understood in context. Let's go back in time to when Spain still had its American colonies. | — | ||||||
| 12/5/24 | ![]() Cold War #275 – 1983 (Interview) | Some people have said 1983 was the most dangerous year in human history. On four separate occasions, the U.S.A. and the USSR nearly ended up in a hot nuclear war. Soviet leaders apparently became deeply worried that the US was preparing to launch a surprise nuclear attack on the USSR under the cover of a NATO exercise titled ‘Able Archer.’ Brian J. Morra is a former U.S. intelligence officer and a retired senior aerospace executive who took part in the events of 1983 and has written an excellent and terrifying book on the topic, "The Able Archers". He's our guest today. We talk about the events of 1983, why 2024 might be even more dangerous, and why world leaders haven't learned the lessons of 1983. | — | ||||||
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