Episodes

  • EP. 03 – The Last Day of Pompeii — 24 Hours That Buried a City Alive
    Mar 24 2026

    What if you woke up to a beautiful morning, had breakfast with your family, and by midnight you were frozen in time for two thousand years? On August 24th, 79 AD, the people of Pompeii had no idea their volcano was about to explode. This episode walks you through that final day — hour by hour, choice by choice — and shows you why this ancient disaster still haunts us today.

    In this episode: - Mount Vesuvius erupted with the force of 100,000 atomic bombs, burying Pompeii in 20 feet of ash and pumice in just 24 hours - The city was completely forgotten for 1,500 years until farmers accidentally dug it up in 1748 - Archaeologists found preserved bodies, graffiti on walls, and even loaves of bread still sitting in ovens - More than 1,000 people died in Pompeii that day, but the ash preserved their final moments like a snapshot

    Words to know:

    - erupt (verb) - when a volcano explodes and throws out hot rocks, ash, and lava | Mount Vesuvius erupted without warning on that summer morning.

    - preserve (verb) - to keep something exactly as it is, protecting it from decay or change | The volcanic ash preserved the city like a time capsule.

    - archaeologist (noun) - a scientist who studies ancient people by examining what they left behind | Archaeologists are still discovering new parts of Pompeii today.

    - ash (noun) - the gray powder that remains after something burns | Thick ash fell from the sky and covered everything.

    - disaster (noun) - a sudden terrible event that causes great damage or loss of life | The eruption was one of history's most famous natural disasters.

    - frozen in time (phrase) - preserved exactly as it was at a specific moment in the past | *Pompeii was frozen in time, showing us exactly how Romans lived.*

    Go deeper: - Pompeii virtual tour 3D - Mount Vesuvius eruption timeline - Pliny the Younger eyewitness account Pompeii Love this journey down the rabbit hole? Share this episode with a friend who loves history, leave us a review, or follow RABBIT HOLE for more stories that make English learning actually interesting.

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    10 mins
  • EP.02 – Marie Curie's Secret — The Affair That Shocked the World
    Mar 23 2026

    She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize. The first person to win two. A scientific genius who discovered radium and changed medicine forever. But in 1911, Marie Curie became the most hated woman in France — not for her science, but for falling in love with the wrong man.

    In this episode:

    - How a private love letter ended up on the front page of every French newspaper

    - Why the Nobel Committee almost banned Marie from accepting her second Nobel Prize

    - The widow, the physicist, and the scandal that nearly destroyed both their careers

    - What Albert Einstein wrote to Marie during her darkest moment

    **Words to know:**

    Affair (noun) - A romantic relationship between two people when at least one of them is married to someone else *Example: The scandal started when journalists discovered their affair.*

    Widow (noun) - A woman whose husband has died *Example: Marie Curie became a widow in 1906 when Pierre died in a street accident.*

    Scandal (noun) - An action or event that shocks people and damages someone's reputation *Example: The scandal made headlines across Europe.*

    Reputation (noun) - The opinion that people have about how good or bad someone is *Example: Marie worked hard to rebuild her reputation after the scandal.*

    Ban (verb) - To officially forbid someone from doing something *Example: The Nobel Committee wanted to ban her from the ceremony.*

    Go deeper: - "Paul Langevin Marie Curie letters" - "Women scientists 1900s public opinion" - "Einstein letter Marie Curie 1911" Love this episode? Share it with a friend who needs to hear Marie Curie's full story — not just the textbook version.

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    8 mins