heydaralon wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 3:29 pmBolleli has his share of good shows, but he doesn't even deserve to smell Cooper's shit. Not that he isn't good, he is, but not in the same league. Also, I've listened to him do interviews with Carlin and they both expose their liberal cuckold colors pretty quickly, no offense to either of them.Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 3:09 pmMartyrMade was actually much better than Carlin or that Italian guy. The only thing that would have been interesting to me is if an Israeli historian were to put out in English his own take on the birth of his nation, and then the two of them discussed it for a few episodes.
Imagine if an Israeli podcaster with a history background tackled it as a response series, and after each episode, the two of them discussed the differences of opinion.
The Italian guy would be more interesting to me if he discussed more practical matters in history, especially specifics about tactics and warfare since he studies martial arts as well. Lots of people can do podcasts about the big historical events and trends. Maybe go into detail about how people did things and what life was like.
I mean.. even in terms of farming.. a podcast episode on how medieval people produced food, the technology they used, and how they organized their days and planned their harvests would be interesting to me.
I would enjoy an entire episode on how they built water mills and used them. But maybe I am weird like that.
I would like to see an episode on what an average church service was like for any given period of time for any given religion. No one ever discusses that, but don't you think it would be crazy to imagine what an early Christian service was like in Rome when it wasn't the dominant religion, contrasted with a Medieval Church service? Not a full series or anything, but a micro history-episode.
I would also like to hear an episode on some of the competing dogmas of the Early Church, like Arianism, or maybe jump ahead a few centuries to the Cathars and Buggers and the subsequent conflicts that followed.
Latin Mass and whatever the Greek Orthodox version is haven't changed all that much for hundreds of years. From what I hear there isn't really any doctrine for how Latin Mass is organized in America so maybe ours can vary depending on the priest.