Fail to the Chief
Comic historian Thom Woodley loves at Walter Mondale, the landslide Ronald Reagan reelection of 1984, and growing up in the 1980s in general.
info_outline BOB DOLE BOB DOLE BOB DOLEFail to the Chief
Sad to hear of Bob Dole's passing this week. In honor of the man, here is the Bob Dole chapter from my book Fail to the Chief Vol. 2 (available on Amazon!)
info_outline UPDATE! and 1992: Ross PerotFail to the Chief
Fail to the Chief THE BOOK? Yes indeed.
info_outline 1988. Michael Dukakis, a.k.a. Zorba the Clerk.Fail to the Chief
Thom Woodley takes you on a tour of presidential losers of the past. In this episode, the George Bush vs. Michael Dukakis election of 1988.
info_outline BONUS: 1980. John B. Anderson, the Best Candidate You Never Heard Of,Fail to the Chief
Thom Woodley digs into the losers of presidential history - in this case, the independent candidacy of former Republican Congressman John B. Anderson (IL-16), who lost to Ronald Reagan but might have been the architect of a much better future.
info_outline 1972. George McGovern's McGovernment.Fail to the Chief
Thom Woodley takes you through the history of the disastrous 1972 presidential campaign of liberal icon and Nixon opponent, George McGovern.
info_outline 1968. Hubert Horatio Humphrey, the Happy Handshaker.Fail to the Chief
Thom Woodley discusses the losers of presidential history - this year, the big Democratic loser of the chaotic year of 1968, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who lost to Richard Nixon in the midst of the Vietnam War.
info_outline 1968. George Wallace, Segregator-in-ChiefFail to the Chief
Rerelease of a 2015 Episode. Just in time for MLK Day, it's our episode on George Wallace, the 3rd party candidate in the 1968 election. Why wasn't he elected president? And how would he have been in office?
info_outline BONUS! The 5th Era of American Politics ReviewFail to the Chief
In this episode, we explore ALL of the losers of the 5th Period in American Politics (1932-1968), Alf Landon, Wendell Willkie, Thomas Dewey, Adlai Stevenson, Strom Thurmond, Henry Wallace and Barry Goldwater. Where do they rank among the losers of American history?
info_outline 1964. In your heart, you know Barry Goldwater's right.Fail to the Chief
Amateur historian host Thom Woodley re-releases his 2016 episode on Barry Goldwater, the very conservative-libertarian Republican losing candidate of the 1964 Lyndon Johnson presidential election.
info_outlineEvery episode, comic historian Thom Woodley dissects one of the losers of presidential elections. This time, the discussion is on Wendell Willkie, a proto-Trump figure: businessman who never served in office, former Democrat, famous for speaking on a controversial issue. What would have happened had a completely nonexperienced man had beaten FDR and been at the helm during WW2??