Episodes

  • I Didn't Expect Centaurs to Be Like THIS
    Apr 18 2026

    Centaurs in Greek Mythology: Savage Beasts or Noble Teachers?During a recent trip to Athens, there was one creature more prevalent in art than Athena herself. From violent wedding massacres to the tragic death of Heracles, discover the dark origins and hidden meaning of the half-man, half-horse creatures of ancient Greece.Centaurs are some of the most recognisable creatures in mythology — but the truth behind them is far darker than modern fantasy suggests. In this deep dive, we explore their ancient Mesopotamian roots, the twisted punishment of King Ixion, the savage Centauromachy, the deadly revenge of Nessus, and the tragic sacrifice of Chiron. Were centaurs symbols of uncontrollable instinct? Foreign “barbarians”? Or a warning about what happens when civilisation loses control?

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    13 mins
  • Fairies Weren't What You Think | The Dark Truth Behind British & Irish Folklore
    Apr 17 2026

    Fairies were never one “species”—they were a warning label for whatever lived beside us, didn’t belong, and could ruin your life if you got it wrong.From Tinker Bell to the Aos Sí, we’re tracing the REAL fairy traditions of Britain & Ireland—England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland.The fairies of folklore aren’t cute, tiny, and winged—they’re human-sized, rule-bound, easily offended, and dangerously literal. In this long-form deep dive, we peel back the modern “sparkly” image and travel region by region through Britain and Ireland’s most influential fairy beliefs: elf-shot and fairy rings, pixie-led travellers, changelings, Welsh lake maidens, Ireland’s mound-dwelling Aos Sí, and Scotland’s Seelie/Unseelie courts—where a single mistake can cost you years… or your life.

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    51 mins
  • Why Killing a Dragon Is Heroic in Europe But Blasphemy in China
    Apr 16 2026

    When is slaying a dragon an act of heroism… and when is it a crime against nature?From Nezha and Ao Bing to Saint George and the Tarasque, this episode looks at dragon slayers as mirrors of their cultures.In China, dragons bring rain and life; in medieval Europe, dragons are chaos that must be destroyed. In this final part of the dragon origins series, we follow heroes like Nezha, Hou Yi, Erlang Shen, Saint George and Saint Martha to ask a bigger question: do we see ourselves as part of nature… or its conquerors? Stick around to the end for the idea that dragons aren’t just beasts in stories, but reflections of our fear, faith, and place in the world.

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    10 mins
  • From Sacred Serpent to Monster: The Dragon’s True Origin
    Apr 15 2026

    The dragon didn’t start as a fire-breathing castle-burner — it began as a sacred water serpent tied to rain, crops, and survival. In Part 2, we trace that path from ancient Africa to China, Europe, and beyond, and ask: what was the first “dragon” really like?Explore how a helpful rain-snake became a world-serpent, a river-maker, and finally the monster heroes had to slay.Across rock art, archaeology, and old stories, we find a core pattern: a giant serpent linked to storms and rivers that later splits into “good” and “evil” forms. This episode keeps the language simple and the evidence front-and-centre — so you can see how one idea travelled the world and changed shape while it moved.

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    19 mins
  • Where did dragons originally come from?
    Apr 14 2026

    Here be dragons… but why do cultures everywhere imagine the same giant serpent? Discover how evolution, migration, and geology forged humanity’s oldest monster.From hardwired snake detection to fire-breathing gas vents, we unpack the science behind dragons you’ve always felt.Our journey traces the dragon back to a primal serpent: a creature our eyes evolved to spot in an instant, a fear our stories magnified, and a myth the Earth itself “confirmed” with fossils and flames. From Greek chimaeras and Turkish fire hills to Chinese “dragon bones,” see how one serpent became many dragons—yet stayed strangely the same.

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    18 mins
  • The Knockers: The ghostly miners of Cornwall
    Apr 13 2026

    The eerie “knock… knock…” in Cornwall’s tin mines—warning, trickster, or something older? Meet the Knockers, the goblin-like mine spirits whose legend spread from Britain to the Americas and the Andes.From pasty offerings to the rule of “no whistling,” discover why miners treated them like coworkers—and sometimes like gods.A rhythmic tap in the dark. Vanishing tools. Warnings before cave-ins. This episode follows the Knockers from Cornish shafts to American “Tommyknockers,” then across the world to Bluecaps, Kobolds, the Peruvian Muqui, and Bolivia’s fearsome El Tío. We balance folklore with science—acoustics, pareidolia, and deep-time fears—and ask: why are these stories so eerily consistent across continents?

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    18 mins
  • This Monster Will Give You Nightmares | Manananggal
    Apr 12 2026

    Filipino Mythology is... different. And nothing is more shocking than the Manananggal.Discover its chilling origins, strange “black chick” curse, and the colonial history that may have turned healers into “monsters.”Manananggal lore runs deep across the Visayas—bat-like wings, a proboscis tongue, and a severed torso hunting by night. In this episode, we unpack how to spot (and stop) one, why a tiny black chick lives at the heart of the curse, and how Spanish-era values may have reshaped women’s roles into demonic myths. Stay to the end for eerie modern echoes in film, comics, and TV.

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    11 mins
  • Why Did Kuchisake Onna Terrify an Entire Nation?
    Apr 11 2026

    “Am I beautiful?” In Japan, those three words belong to Kuchisake-Onna—the Slit-Mouthed Woman—an urban legend that triggered a real-life panic in 1979.From Edo-era whispers to modern schoolyard dread, discover her origins, the infamous Gifu scare, and the eerie “tricks” people swear will save you.

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    9 mins