Before Independence… There Was Doubt 🇺🇸😳 What Really Happened in 1776?
Release Date: 04/18/2026
The Not Old - Better Show
🚘🔥 Modesto, chrome, rock & roll, and American Graffiti Festival 2026 The Not Old Better Show, Art of Living Interview Series 🚘 Some communities have landmarks. Modesto California has a soundtrack, a streetlight, a polished hood, and a story that helped shape American pop culture. On this episode of The Not Old Better Show, Paul Vogelzang talks with Steve Perry and Chris Murphy about the — a celebration tied to George Lucas, American Graffiti, classic cars, radio, rock and roll, and the culture of 1950s–70s Americana. But this conversation goes far beyond chrome. Steve and...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
Rachel Carson’s Question: What Are We Not Seeing? Smithsonian Associates Interview Series with Rebecca Henson 🛑 Before the headlines… before the movement… there was a question: ❓ What are we not seeing? Rachel Carson—📖 writer, 🔬 scientist, ⚖️ truth-teller—challenged a nation at the height of its confidence. Her words didn’t just inform—they unsettled, awakened, and changed the course of history. 🎙️ Smithsonian Associate Rebecca Henson joins us to reveal Carson’s full story—her wonder, her courage, and why her message hits just as hard today. 🎧 Listen...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
🧠 The Math Lie: You Were Never Bad at Math—You Were Taught to Fear It 🔥 🧠 What if math was never the problem—only the way we were taught to see it? In this episode of The Not Old Better Show, Paul talks with award-winning author Junaid Mubeen about Think Like a Mathematician and the surprising tools math gives us for everyday life: spotting patterns, weighing choices, escaping all-or-nothing thinking, and understanding why small actions can change everything. 🔥 From combinatorics to chaos theory, this is math without the panic and with real purpose—especially for adults 60+...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
🇺🇸 America turns 250… but what exactly are we celebrating? And who gets to decide the story of the United States? 🤔📜 This week on The Not Old – Better Show, award-winning host Paul Vogelzang sits down with Princeton historian and CNN political analyst Dr. Julian Zelizer for a timely conversation about democracy, polarization, patriotism, and the future of America itself. From the founders’ vision 🇺🇸 to today’s battles over elections, misinformation, and civic trust, Dr. Zelizer explains why America 250 may become a defining test for the nation. 🎧 Thoughtful....
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
The Mental Health Benefits of Movement Live Long Better, Fitness Interview Series with Dr. Sabrena Jo What if one of the best things you can do for your mood, your memory, your confidence, and your independence does not require a gym, a stopwatch, or a brand-new pair of shoes? What if it starts with standing up, taking a walk down the hall, stretching while the coffee brews, or practicing balance beside the kitchen counter? Welcome to the April Live Long Better series from The Not Old Better Show. Today, we are talking about “The Mental Health Benefits of Movement,” and here is the...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
Behind Closed Doors: Why Historic House Museums Are Rewriting the Story of America’s Past: America 250 The Not Old Better Show, Smithsonian Associates Interview Series We don’t just inherit history—we decide how it’s told. 🏠 In this episode, shares why historic house museums are at a turning point. These aren’t just preserved spaces. They’re places where real lives—complicated, human, unfinished—still speak. What happens when we stop admiring the furniture… and start listening to the stories? For those of us thinking about legacy, community, and meaning—this...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
Dr. Robert Watson, Distinguished Professor of American History at Lynn University, reveals the lesser-known stories, surprising twists, and forgotten voices behind the most iconic document in U.S. history. Drawing from a wealth of primary sources—including letters, diaries, newspapers, and diplomatic communiqués—Watson reconstructs the debates, drafts, and drama that surrounded the creation of the Declaration of Independence. Focusing on the influence of women, enslaved individuals, and Indigenous peoples, Watson brings to light the varied cast of often-forgotten characters and...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
What if better health didn’t require drastic change—just smarter habits? In this episode of The Not Old Better Show, I speak with Dr. Sabrena Jo from the American Council on Exercise about two highly effective, accessible strategies: strength training and morning light exposure. For adults over 50, maintaining muscle, balance, and mobility is essential for independence. Dr. Jo explains how simple resistance exercises—done just a few times a week—can make a measurable difference. We also explore emerging research on morning sunlight. Just 10–20 minutes early in...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
Anthony Horowitz: Murder, Mystery, and the Power of a Second Act The Not Old Better Show, Art of Living Interview Series What if your finest work comes later? 📚 In this episode of The Not Old Better Show, Anthony Horowitz reflects on a career that keeps finding new life. From Foyle’s War and Alex Rider to Marble Hall Murders and A Deadly Episode, he continues to surprise readers and viewers with wit, nerve, and remarkable range. What stayed with me most is this: growth does not end with early success. For writers, readers, and anyone in a second act, Anthony speaks candidly about risk,...
info_outlineThe Not Old - Better Show
😴 What’s Really Ruining Your Sleep? The Mattress Myths, Cooling Claims & Bedding Fixes That Actually Matter 🛏️🔬✨ The Not Old Better Show, Good Housekeeping Good Better Best Interview Series 😴 Poor sleep affects far more than your nights. It can shape focus, mood, recovery, and how you show up the next day. 🌙 In recognition of National Sleep Awareness Month, Good Housekeeping’s Good Better Best features Grace Wu and Amanda Constantine from the Good Housekeeping Institute’s Textiles, Paper & Apparel Lab. Their work combines lab analysis,...
info_outlineBefore Independence… There Was Doubt 🇺🇸😳 What Really Happened in 1776?
The Not Old Better Show, Smithsonian Associates Interview Series
1776 wasn’t inevitable 🇺🇸⚡
At the start of that year, most Americans weren’t calling for independence. They were asking for fairness… representation… a better version of the system they already knew.
And yet, in just twelve months, something extraordinary happened.
People changed their minds.
Not overnight. Not easily. But through a steady collision of ideas 📜, lived experience, and undeniable reality. Pamphlets like Common Sense didn’t just inform—they reframed the debate. What once felt acceptable suddenly felt impossible. What once felt radical became necessary.
That shift is worth paying attention to—especially now.
Because 1776 reminds us that transformation doesn’t begin with certainty. It begins with conversation 🗣️… with disagreement… with the courage to rethink long-held assumptions. It asks a hard question: what does it take for individuals—and entire societies—to move from comfort to conviction?
For those of us thinking about leadership, legacy, and the future we’re shaping, that question still matters.
The founding generation didn’t have the luxury of clarity. They had risk. They had doubt. And they moved forward anyway ⚔️
🎧 I explore this in a recent conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Smithsonian Associate Edward J. Larson and his new book Declaring Independence: Why 1776 Matters.
It’s not just a look back—it’s a lens on how change actually happens.