Hosted by Craig Sechler, Death of the Megabeasts goes in search of the biological, geological and environmental answers to the megafauna extinction around 125.000 years ago.
Marked as the worst human-made catastrophe in history, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant meltdown on 26th April 1986 is re-created through original footage and re-enactment by actors in Zero Hour: Disaster at Chernobyl.
The Chernobyl Podcast continues in part three. In this part we'll get to know more about how the contamination was handled by the people involved and the plan to stop the spread of the nuclear fallout.
Peter Sagal and Craig Mazin continues The Chernobyl Podcast in part two. Our hosts discuss how the nuclear meltdown was contained while millions of people were at risk to exposure across Europe.
The Chernobyl Podcast part one seeks to flesh out the same named HBO miniseries, Chernobyl, by contributing historical facts and true stories to show what lead up to the catastrophic disaster in Russia 1986.
Is there a reason for the inequality of modern world societies? Jared Diamond believes so and traces humanity's journey over the last 13,000 years to understand the roots of global inequality.
Download or read the Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli online here. The Prince is a 16th-century political treatise by the Italian diplomat and political theorist Niccolò Machiavelli.
The Extraordinary Collector follows art dealer Gordon Watson through six different documentary episodes as he stakes his money and reputation on buying, selling and getting the best art and collector deals.
Japanese palaeontologists make a once-in-a-century discovery: a fossilized skeleton of an 8-meter long dinosaur. Travel back 72 million years ago to discover more about this dinosaur, dubbed the Mukawaryu dinosaur.
Kings and Queens of England is a six-part documentary series chronicling one-thousand years of English monarch history. Starting from the year 1066, the series moves up to our present day English modern monarchy.
Wildlife expert and cameraman David Reichert travels to the remote volcanic archipelago of the Crozet islands to film and live with the surrounding nature and wildlife.
Evoking a world of trolls, witches and magic, Sabine Baring-Gould's book Iceland: Its Scenes and Sagas explores the mythology and language of Icelandic lore. The book also describes his fellow travellers and the Icelanders he meets on his travels.
Filmmaker Werner Herzog has conversations with two death row inmates about the crime they committed and why they did it. The crime documentary serves as an examination of why people - and the state - kill.