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- Competitive game show based around traveling (and its hardships) where contestants complete challenges to use different modes of transportation. With the world as the "board," each season is a unique take on classic household games.
- All the world's a stage and Jen and Sam have learned the hard way, being trapped in a Shakespearean multiverse. On their quest to discover the doorway back to reality they notice something unusual about Henry 'Hotspur' Percy
- Bryson discusses his stories in an animated and comedic tone.
- A movie about friendship, parallel universes, the internet, and genocidal coconuts.
- A recovering ex-vampire is forced to revisit a dead romance when an old rival invites her out for a quick bite.
- ShortA pair of new hires must unravel their identity while navigating a corporate metaverse that controls virtually every aspect of its employees' online reality.
- Patrick analyzes in an obsessive way different movie topics while he drives his friends insane, teams up with an evil coconut and wears tons of striped t-shirts.
- The events of World War One are followed week by week as occurred 100 years ago.
- Sam O'Nella Academy is an edutainment YouTube channel which produces videos exploring various historical and scientific topics, narrated by a long-haired stick figure presenting himself as Sam O'Nella.
- In the Summer of 1940 Britain stood alone on the edge of Europe. With Britain's shores secure, the Germans were left with one option. The Battle of Britain was the world's first war to take place entirely in the skies.
- Half as Interesting put the 34 weirdest laws in America on a map and gave Sam 72 hours and $5,000 to break eight of them. But the HAI writers got $3,000 and a live tracker on Sam-and if they tag him, he loses a point.
- Abigail Thorn hosts free philosophy lessons on YouTube, sometimes branching out into politics, humour, and personal reflection.
- TV SeriesSix creators embark on a road trip across the American West, engaging in a game of social strategy and deception, where alliances are formed and trust is tested.
- A new WW2 documentary about The Battle of Berlin,. The Battle of Berlin was a gigantic battle in which over 3 million soldiers fought in one of the biggest cities of Europe that was still populated by civilians while the fight was raging.
- Extra History is an educational series of Extra Credits about historical moments. From the Punic Wars to the The Brothers Gracchi, the series has endless stories to tell.
- Lindsay Ellis dissects film and media topics.
- Abandoned is a Canadian web series that explores the circumstances that led to the abandonment of various amusement parks and businesses, as well as how the abandoned locations have aged in the years since.
- An underexposed image is a photograph that captures fewer details in the shadows. In this series, precisely these shadowy aspects of a wide range of topics are brought to light.
- Host Jake Williams discusses the history of businesses that went bankrupt and have gone out of business.
- Major Hollywood historical films are reviewed, both for their artistic quality and historical accuracy.
- Wendover Productions spans the globe with stories about how the world works on subjects including; economics, logistics, politics, transportation and technology. Each story is information rich with deep analysis and insight into the broad implications of the story that is rarely found in the traditional news media anymore.
- Now you can stop asking me about the amazon show
- Taboo on Screen investigates the many ways taboos are presented and received in popular filmmaking. It explores a variety of films that attempt to shed light on the shunned, fringe, and uglier aspects of the human condition - successfully or not.
- Ten thousand years ago, humans survived many landscapes, droughts, blizzards, volcanoes, saber-toothed tigers, and cave bears without any of the conveniences of modern life. How did they do it? Do we still have what it takes to handle even a fraction of those challenges? Archeology Quest is an episodic documentary game show in which two amateur naturalists compete to prove their ability to survive in the Paleolithic world, using only technology from that time period.
- The 21st century may be the most peaceful in history so far, but we are still not completely free from wars and conflicts. From 1980 to the present day, Modern Conflicts explores recent struggles between nations and peoples.
- Johnny Harris explores subjects that seem strange, not quite right maybe even bad. He generally finds there a method to the madness but that doesn't mean it's a better way. Or couldn't be better. Or at least make sense.
- Exploring the defining steps in the history of our evolution.
- Host Jake Williams discusses the history of television shows, video games, and amusement parks that were all cancelled.
- The Layover is Jet Lag: The Game's Nebula exclusive podcast where Ben, Sam, Adam, and guests sit down to discuss the latest episodes. Join them for behind the scenes stories, community questions, and more.
- The Colorado River is the foundation of the American Southwest. But the confluence of a once-in-a-millennium drought, a hundred-year-old mistake, and a generations-old conflict have put the river--and the civilization built atop it--in crisis, and at a crossroads. As the southwest continues to grow, and the river continues to shrink, time is running out to solve the problem of the Colorado.
- Because liking things is more fun than not liking things. Sometimes the critics are wrong. Some movies, while full of plot holes, continuity errors, and bad acting have plenty of wins.
- In August of 1945, as the world celebrates Imperial Japan's surrender and the effective end of the second world war, the American's make a puzzling discovery out in the Pacific. The US Navy has intercepted a Japanese submarine that's unlike anything they've seen before. It's by far the largest submarine ever constructed, at nearly twice the length of a typical German U-boat. But it's what the submarine carries that truly baffles the Americans. The Japanese I-400-Class submarine's most unusual feature was that it carried three torpedo/dive bombers inside an internal hanger. In order to fit, these full size attack float planes had wings and tailplanes that could be folded. The submarines also featured a catapult launch system and a crane mechanism to recover the aircraft. The I-400 submarine was effectively the world's first underwater aircraft carrier. It was also a formidable submarine in the conventional sense, heavily armed with torpedo tubes, an enormous deck gun and anti-aircraft cannons. Conceived as a secret Japanese weapon at the start of the Pacific war, a fleet of I-400 submarines would be tasked with launching surprise attacks on New York, Washington, San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles. The attacks were intended to shake the will of the American people to keep fighting in the war. But as the war turned against Imperial Japan, shortages in war materials and shifting military priorities resulted in only 3 I-400 completing construction before Japan's surrender. Fortunately, the I-400 was never allowed to demonstrate it's true capacity.
- This series attempts to make sense of the origins and increasingly complex present forms of global fascism and considers the actions we need to take to protect our society from this insidious ideology.
- The breakup of the Beatles and other things Yoko Ono was not responsible for (and also some things that she was.)
- Maggie Mae Fish dives into the history of sex, sexuality, and gender in film, from the silent era to sexploitation to modern erotic movies.
- Real Time History offers in-depth looks at various important episodes of Nineteenth and Twentieth Century conflicts, such as the War of 1812, the Franco-Prussian War and World War 2
- Broey posts monthly videos on a mixture of film analyses, retrospectives, politics and just absolutely overthinking anything to do with pop culture.
- Short
- TLDR News aims to make news and politics easier to understand.
- Half as Interesting is an entertaining, fact-based, educational series covering diverse topics of general interest presented in a somewhat humorous, quirky style. Topics range from curious to weird and are rarely important to know unless you're looking for some lunch room or coffee break conversation starters.
- The true story of a feud between two researchers which threatened to take down a Nobel Prize winner, from Kevan MacKay (BobbyBroccoli)
- Lawyer Devin James Stone reviews various media and current events to explain the legal aspects of them.
- For years, Half as Interesting has exploited a loophole in CIA and FBI protocols--they never watch more than 30 seconds of videos that pose a potential threat to national security. HAI has therefore prefaced videos on government secrets with discussion of bricks. Their luck has finally run out, though, and Sam is put behind bars. The Brick Facade is the legal drama of the century. As we follow Sam's fight to prove his innocence, what ensues is one of the most consequential cases to ever pass through the US justice system.
- "There are two "Chinas" - the image presented by Beijing to the world and the one lived by 1.4 billion people. China, Actually is an exploration of how one of the world's most consequential countries really works.