Conversations: Our Man in Tokyo Before Pearl Harbor, w/ Steve Kemper
Release Date: 02/06/2026
History Shorts
During the darkest years of the Great Depression, Americans didn’t just lose jobs, homes, and savings—they lost faith in the systems meant to protect them. Out of that desperation emerged a strange and deeply revealing phenomenon: penny auctions. On courthouse steps and dusty town squares, neighbors gathered as foreclosed farms, homes, and equipment were auctioned off—often for just a few cents. But these weren’t ordinary sales. Communities quietly conspired to sabotage the auctions themselves, intimidating outside bidders and ensuring property could be returned to its original owners...
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In the chaos left behind by the fall of Rome, Europe fractured into violence, petty kingdoms, and fading memory. Then one man began stitching it back together by force, faith, and fire. Known to history as Charlemagne, or Charles the Great, he forged an empire stretching from the Pyrenees to the Danube, reshaping Europe more profoundly than any ruler since antiquity. Crowned Emperor by the Pope on Christmas Day in the year 800, Charlemagne fused Roman authority, Germanic warfare, and Christian legitimacy into a new political order—one whose echoes still shape Europe today. DON’T...
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In 1969, amid urban inequality, educational gaps, and a rapidly changing America, a revolutionary idea took shape: what if television could teach—and teach every child, regardless of background? The result was Sesame Street—a bold experiment that blended entertainment with rigorous educational research, puppets with purpose, and joy with social responsibility. From Big Bird and Cookie Monster to lessons on letters, numbers, empathy, and loss, the show didn’t just entertain generations of children—it reshaped childhood itself. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A...
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In 1908, Dudley Allen Sargent, a professor at Harvard University, shocked the nation by announcing he had scientifically identified the “perfect woman.” Her name was Annette Kellerman — a fearless swimmer, vaudeville star, early film actress, and social rebel who once caused scandal simply by wearing a one-piece swimsuit. This episode explores the bizarre collision of early science, beauty standards, and celebrity culture — and how a woman who broke every rule became the symbol of physical perfection. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN...
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n this episode of History Shorts, we explore how an unlikely bequest sparked the creation of America’s great national museums, the struggles to bring them to life, and how the Smithsonian grew into a global center for science, culture, and preservation. From dinosaur bones to space capsules, presidential relics to priceless art, the Smithsonian became the keeper of the nation’s memory — and a window into humanity’s past. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED...
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In this Conversation Series episode of History Shorts, Peter sits down with the undisputed master of alternative history, Harry Turtledove, to explore how a single changed moment in the past can reshape the entire course of human history. From Civil War battlefields altered by future technology to alien invasions colliding with World War II in his sweeping Worldwar, Turtledove has spent decades asking one powerful question: what if? In this wide-ranging conversation, he reveals how real historical research underpins even his wildest scenarios, why turning points matter more than famous...
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In 1789, one of the most famous rebellions in maritime history exploded aboard the British ship HMS Bounty. After months at sea under the harsh command of Captain William Bligh, a group of sailors led by Fletcher Christian seized control of the ship in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Bligh and his loyal men were cast adrift in a small open boat — a death sentence that somehow turned into one of the greatest survival voyages in history. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: ...
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In the summer of 1916, along a quiet stretch of countryside in northern France, one of the deadliest battles in human history erupted — and forever changed the nature of warfare. In this episode of History Shorts, we dive into the Battle of the Somme, a brutal World War I offensive meant to break the stalemate of trench warfare. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! SUPPORT THE SHOW: ADVERTISE: LEARN MORE: SPONSORED BY:
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In the ancient Greek imagination, there existed a society unlike any other — a nation of fierce, independent women who lived by the sword, rode into battle on horseback, and struck fear into the hearts of even the greatest heroes of myth. In this episode of History Shorts, we explore the legend of the Amazons — warrior women said to live beyond the edges of the known world. From their epic clashes with Hercules and Theseus to their role in the Trojan War, the Amazons stood as both rivals and reflections of Greek society’s deepest fears and fascinations. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE...
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For nearly 150 years, the presidency followed an unwritten rule set by George Washington: two terms, then step aside. But in the chaos of the Great Depression and World War II, that tradition was shattered by one man — Franklin D. Roosevelt — who was elected an unprecedented four times. In this episode of History Shorts, we explore how Roosevelt’s extraordinary presidency led directly to the creation of the 22nd Amendment, permanently limiting future presidents to two terms in office. DON’T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE AND LEAVE A RATING OR A REVIEW! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! SUPPORT THE...
info_outlineDuring World War II, while most Americans were fleeing Axis territory, one man stayed behind in the heart of Imperial Japan.
In this special conversation episode of History Shorts, host Peter Zablocki sits down with bestselling author and historian Steve Kemper to discuss his gripping book Our Man in Tokyo — the true story of Otto Tolischus, the American journalist who reported from inside Japan’s wartime capital as it allied with Nazi Germany.
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