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Andy's avatar

God forbid those without “formal education” elect to self-educate and are passionate enough to want to share their knowledge with others.

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Marc Roy's avatar

I also quite enjoy The Rest is History, which I believe I came across from your recommendation on Twitter some time ago!

In a very different style, but I’m going to count it as a history podcast, Le Village by Radio Canada and CBC (I listened in French, but an English version was also released, I’m not sure whether it has any substantive differences) was excellent, covering an important period of history for the gay community in Montreal and the relationship between the gay community and the Montreal police in the 1980s and 90s.

I also hugely enjoy Slate’s Slow Burn (topics have included Watergate, the Clinton sex scandal and impeachment, and the lead-up to the Iraq war) and One Year (each season looking at unrelated and more-or-less forgotten stories a from a particular year; they’ve done 1977, 1995, and 1942) podcasts.

All of the above are produced by journalists and I don’t know to what extent they have any academic historians involved in their teams, but they are all, as far as I can evaluate, serious and credible.

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