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On the show
From 11 epsHost
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Recent episodes
Thoughts on Sportsball
Jun 5, 2026
28m 43s
A New Recorder and The Highway
May 10, 2026
13m 47s
FLASHBACK - Icebergs Are No Danger
Mar 24, 2026
43m 06s
The Proper Hecatombs
Nov 23, 2025
30m 06s
The Cloture Curse
Nov 5, 2025
7m 10s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/5/26 | ![]() Thoughts on Sportsball✨ | sports fandomteam loyalty+5 | — | DodgersBroncos+4 | BrooklynDenver+1 | sportsfandom+6 | — | 28m 43s | |
| 5/10/26 | ![]() A New Recorder and The Highway✨ | nostalgiatechnology+4 | — | Adobe Audition | Hood Canal BridgeWashington State+2 | highwaydiner+4 | — | 13m 47s | |
| 3/24/26 | ![]() FLASHBACK - Icebergs Are No Danger✨ | icebergsdanger+3 | John | — | — | icebergsdanger+4 | — | 43m 06s | |
| 11/23/25 | ![]() The Proper Hecatombs✨ | sacrificeleadership+4 | — | Republic | island of Pharosshore | Menelaussacrifice+5 | — | 30m 06s | |
| 11/5/25 | ![]() The Cloture Curse✨ | filibustercloture+3 | — | United States Senate | — | filibustercloture+5 | — | 7m 10s | |
| 10/31/25 | ![]() The American Crises - Pt 5✨ | faithliberty+4 | — | The American Crisishashgacha pratis | — | Thomas PaineProvidence+5 | — | 1m 32s | |
| 10/30/25 | ![]() The American Crises - Pt 4✨ | American Revolutionunity+4 | — | The American Crisis | America | Thomas PaineAmerican Crisis+5 | — | 1m 36s | |
| 10/29/25 | ![]() The American Crises - Pt 3✨ | American independencemonarchy+3 | — | Common Sense | — | Thomas PaineCommon Sense+3 | — | 2m 01s | |
| 10/28/25 | ![]() The American Crises - Pt 2✨ | American RevolutionThomas Paine+4 | — | The American Crisis | — | American RevolutionThomas Paine+5 | — | 21m 18s | |
| 10/27/25 | ![]() The American Crises - Pt 1✨ | American RevolutionThomas Paine+4 | — | The American Crisis | — | Thomas PaineThe American Crisis+5 | — | 2m 15s | |
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| 10/10/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - The Quiet Before the Storm✨ | American Revolutionliberty+4 | — | Congress | NorwichBoston+2 | American RevolutionGeneral Howe+5 | — | 34m 37s | |
| 10/9/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - Taking the War to Sea | Welcome to Revolutionary Talk on WREV 760 AM. It is October 9, 1775, and today the tide quite literally turns. In Philadelphia, the Continental Congress has voted to arm two ships and send them against British supply vessels. Out of quills and parchment, a navy is born.John Adams declared that a nation cannot defend its liberty without command of the sea, and tonight his words begin to take shape in oak and canvas. From small harbors to great rivers, shipwrights and sailors are ready to trade cargo for cannon and turn commerce into courage.While the King in London sharpens his edicts and readies more troops, America quietly builds her first defense. The fleet may be small, but its purpose is vast. Liberty now flies upon the water, and every sail that fills with wind carries the promise that this rebellion has become a revolution. | — | ||||||
| 10/8/25 | ![]() The Army | Welcome to Revolutionary Talk on WREV 760AM. It is October 8, 1775, and General Washington has called a council of war in Cambridge to decide the future of the Continental Army. The debate over numbers and enlistments has turned into a debate over principle. Today, the army ruled that no Black man, free or enslaved, may serve in the ranks.The decision is said to preserve order among the colonies, but it has drawn a line that liberty itself may not cross. From Norwich to Philadelphia, men are asking what freedom truly means if it does not belong to everyone.Tonight, we will look inside that council chamber, where maps and muskets shared the table with fear and compromise. We will hear from those who defend the choice and from those who call it what it is, a betrayal of the very cause we claim to serve. | — | ||||||
| 10/7/25 | ![]() TREASON!!! | Welcome back to Revolutionary Talk on WREV 760AM, Norwich’s voice of the times. It’s October 7, 1775, and the Revolution has just taken a hard blow. In Cambridge, General Washington has uncovered the unthinkable—Dr. Benjamin Church, surgeon general of our own army, has been exposed as a British spy. The man who bound our wounds has been sending our secrets to the enemy. The shock runs deep, and trust runs thin.And while our army reels from betrayal, word reaches us from Boston that General Gage is gone, recalled in disgrace, replaced by the King’s new hammer, General William Howe. London calls him the man to finish this rebellion once and for all.Tonight we’ll ask: who can we trust, and what comes next when treason and tyranny share the same week? Stay tuned. This is Revolutionary Talk, and the war just got personal. | — | ||||||
| 10/6/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - The Cost of Living | Welcome back to Revolutionary Talk on WREV 760AM, Norwich’s voice for liberty and reason. It’s October 6, 1775, and the talk around town isn’t just about muskets and marches anymore. It’s about money. Prices are climbing, salt is scarce, and paper bills from Congress are multiplying faster than they’re worth. Folks here in Norwich are paying more and getting less, and they’re starting to wonder whether the promise of liberty comes with an empty purse.In Philadelphia, Congress debates foreign alliances and secret correspondence, hinting at a war that might stretch across oceans. Washington holds the lines at Boston, Benedict Arnold pushes deeper into the wilderness, and in London the King’s men polish the words that will soon brand us rebels.The fighting may still be far away, but the struggle is already here—in every coin, every market, and every hungry table. | — | ||||||
| 10/3/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - Our General | Welcome back to Powder to Parchment on WREV 760AM, where we bring you Revolutionary Talk straight from the heart of 1775. Today we turn our attention to Benedict Arnold, and not the man remembered for betrayal, but the soldier who was still a hero.On October 3, 1775, Arnold and more than a thousand men began their march north through the wilds of Maine, bound for Quebec. They carried bateaux that leaked, maps that lied, and provisions that would soon rot, yet they carried also the hopes of General Washington and the survival of the Revolution.Arnold had already seized Fort Ticonderoga, yet Congress treated him with suspicion and scorn. Washington, however, saw fire and trusted him with a bold gamble. If Quebec could be taken, Canada might join the American cause.This is the story of ambition, boldness, and the making of a Revolutionary hero. | — | ||||||
| 10/2/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - We Need a Navy (Oct 2) | Welcome back to Powder to Parchment on WREV 760AM, Norwich’s home for Revolutionary Talk. Today, October 2, 1775, we turn to Philadelphia, where the Continental Congress takes up an idea as bold as it is dangerous: creating a navy.John Adams rises and declares, “Without a navy we cannot do much.” His words cut through the dust and hesitation of the chamber. Yet the room divides. Adams sees survival in schooners and privateers; John Dickinson sees danger in expense and provocation. Boldness against caution, liberty against reconciliation.Meanwhile, across the ocean, King George drafts his speech branding us rebels and his ministers hire Hessians to finish the job. So which will it be, Norwich? Ships or speeches? Schooners or supplication? Stay tuned... Revolutionary Talk begins now. | — | ||||||
| 10/2/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Talk - Powder Problems | It's October 1, 1775, and WREV 760AM is on the air, bringing you "Revolutionary Talk" with your firebrand host, Dave Diamond. Word from Cambridge is not good. Shocking even. And from London the King has waddled in as he gets ready to open the session of Parliament. It doesn't look like he's in a conciliatory mood. Grab a mug of ale and fill your pipe, settle back in front of the fire as Dave brings you the news of the day as only he can. | — | ||||||
| 8/29/25 | ![]() Up All Night: Shoulder Pain, Homeless Hotels, and Finding Perspective | This episode starts with a couple of stories that probably only I care about, like the lawsuit over Seattle’s homeless shelter hotels and yet another IT failure that managed to make life harder for the people caught in its web. But then the show turns inward.I take you through the long story of my right shoulder, which goes all the way back to Navy sports in the 1980s, took a bad turn with a fall in 2018, and now has doctors listing off arthritis, cartilage tears, and tendon problems like they are reciting baseball stats. The plain English translation? It hurts, it is weak, and it makes life a whole lot more complicated.Surgery might be on the horizon, and that means five weeks of forced immobility. So today’s show is about pain, persistence, and trying not to lose sight of what matters most. | — | ||||||
| 8/28/25 | ![]() Ferry Folly: Washington’s $714 Million Hybrid-Electric Contract Sends Jobs to Florida | Washington State just handed a Florida shipyard a contract worth $714 million dollars to build three new hybrid-electric ferries. For the first time in decades, these boats won’t be built here at home, and the ripple effects are already hitting taxpayers, local shipyards, and the reliability of our ferry system.The story is bigger than dollars and steel. It’s about climate mandates, political choices, and whether Washington’s Climate Commitment Act is driving policy off course. Supporters call this progress. Critics say it’s a hidden tax that inflates costs, outsources jobs, and delivers little global impact for a very high local price.Is this really in our best interest, or is it a case study in failed public policy? | — | ||||||
| 8/27/25 | ![]() Cracker Barrel Biglari | Cracker Barrel has long been a roadside favorite, a place for biscuits, rocking chairs, and a slice of nostalgia. But today the chain is at the center of a high-stakes corporate fight. Activist investor Sardar Biglari is challenging Cracker Barrel’s leadership, arguing that the company has wasted money, lost touch with its customers, and needs a drastic overhaul. His plan is blunt: cut waste, sell off weak side ventures, fix operations, and return money to shareholders.At the same time, customers are grumbling about smaller portions, slower service, and management that seems disconnected from the brand’s roots. Analysts have turned cold, with no buy ratings left on the stock. And looming over it all are the power brokers at BlackRock and Vanguard, whose votes will decide the outcome.Lena Marlowe and Graham Calder unpack what this battle means for Cracker Barrel and for the future of legacy American brands. | — | ||||||
| 8/25/25 | ![]() Posee Chicagotatus? | This week on Dave Does History, Dave is out, but the show rolls on with Lena Marlowe and Graham Calder in the host chairs. Together, they tackle one of the thorniest questions in American public life: should the National Guard be used to police our cities? Chicago often takes center stage in this debate, with violent crime making national headlines and sparking calls for action beyond what local law enforcement can manage. But bringing in the Guard isn’t as simple as it sounds. From the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 to the Insurrection Act and beyond, the legal and historical backdrop is a minefield. Lena and Graham weigh the potential benefits of increased manpower and order against the dangers of militarizing our neighborhoods and blurring the lines between soldier and police officer. Stay tuned, because this is one conversation that reaches far beyond Chicago. | — | ||||||
| 5/12/25 | ![]() Revolutionary Lessons from the Iliad | What do Achilles, Odysseus, and the Founding Fathers have in common? In this episode we explore how flawed heroes—from mythic battlefields to the halls of Independence—can still shape the world. Drawing from Stephen Fry’s Troy, we unpack the pride, grief, and imperfection of ancient warriors and connect them to the real, complicated men who signed the Declaration of Independence.Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin—none of them were saints. But like the heroes of legend, they carried heavy contradictions while laying the foundation for liberty.As we launch the Liberty – 250 series in the lead-up to America’s 250th birthday, we are not polishing halos—we are pulling back the curtain on greatness born from imperfection.Subscribe, share, and join the conversation as we ask the big question: Can flawed men still forge freedom?#Liberty250 #DaveDoesHistory #AmericanFounding #Troy #StephenFry #FoundingFathers #FlawedHeroes | — | ||||||
| 4/22/25 | ![]() DDH - Conclave | Pope Francis has died, and the world now turns its eyes to the smoke above the Sistine Chapel. In this episode of Dave Does History, Dave Bowman joins Bill Mick to break down the ancient—and often misunderstood—process of the papal conclave. From medieval roof removals to modern-day power plays, Dave explores the rituals, rules, and raw politics of picking the next pope. Was it always this secretive? (Yes.) Was it always this messy? (Also yes.) Tune in for history, humor, and maybe a few holy surprises. It’s “Game of Thrones,” but with incense and Latin. | — | ||||||
| 4/9/25 | ![]() Wrestling with Ghosts | In this episode of Dave Does History on Bill Mick Live, we head north—way north—to uncover the bizarre moment when the United States almost claimed part of Greenland. It started with a bad map, involved a lost Danish expedition, and ended with two frostbitten heroes proving the truth. From mistaken geography to geopolitical consequences, Dave unpacks how a simple cartographic error nearly redrew the Arctic. Join us as we explore survival, sovereignty, and the enduring value of getting your facts straight—even when they’re buried under two feet of ice. Catch it now on Spotify, iTunes, and the iHeart Radio app. | — | ||||||
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