pplpod

pplpod is a podcast about people, places and lots of other stuff. Each episode takes a deep dive into the lives, choices, and legacies of fascinating figures from history, culture, music, and beyond. From icons who shaped entire generations to hidden stories that deserve the spotlight, pplpod brings you closer to the people behind the headlines and the legends.

Thoughtful, engaging, and story-driven, pplpod explores what makes these lives extraordinary—and what we can learn from them today.

Tämä podcast on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi podcastin jaksot saattavat sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(7464)

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: How One Prisoner's Pen Shook the Soviet Empire

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: How One Prisoner's Pen Shook the Soviet Empire

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn spent eight years in the Soviet gulag system, then wrote about it with such devastating precision that his books cracked the moral legitimacy of the entire Soviet project. One D...

15 Kesä 21min

George Eliot: How a Social Pariah Living in Sin Wrote the Greatest English Novel

George Eliot: How a Social Pariah Living in Sin Wrote the Greatest English Novel

George Eliot — born Mary Ann Evans — lived openly with a married man for over two decades in an era when such arrangements meant complete social exile. She was shunned by her own family, excluded from...

15 Kesä 19min

Hermann Hesse: How a Nervous Breakdown Made Him the Hippie Generation's Favorite Novelist

Hermann Hesse: How a Nervous Breakdown Made Him the Hippie Generation's Favorite Novelist

Hermann Hesse won the Nobel Prize for Literature, but his real fame came decades later when the American counterculture adopted Siddhartha, Steppenwolf, and The Glass Bead Game as sacred texts. The Ge...

15 Kesä 21min

Henri Poincare: The Four-Hour Genius Who Saw Mathematics in Flashes of Intuition

Henri Poincare: The Four-Hour Genius Who Saw Mathematics in Flashes of Intuition

Henri Poincare worked only four hours a day and produced more original mathematics than almost anyone in history. His breakthroughs came not through grinding labor but through sudden flashes of insigh...

15 Kesä 23min

Georg Cantor: The Mathematician Who Proved That Some Infinities Are Bigger Than Others

Georg Cantor: The Mathematician Who Proved That Some Infinities Are Bigger Than Others

Georg Cantor proved that infinity comes in different sizes — that there are more real numbers than whole numbers, even though both sets are infinite. The idea was so counterintuitive that it drove him...

15 Kesä 21min

Friedrich Schiller: The Fugitive Playwright Whose Tomb Turned Out to Be Empty

Friedrich Schiller: The Fugitive Playwright Whose Tomb Turned Out to Be Empty

Friedrich Schiller wrote the "Ode to Joy" that Beethoven set to music, created some of the greatest plays in the German language, and formed the most celebrated literary friendship in history with Goe...

15 Kesä 21min

David Hilbert: The Mathematician Who Declared War on the Unknowable

David Hilbert: The Mathematician Who Declared War on the Unknowable

David Hilbert stood before the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1900 and posed twenty-three unsolved problems that would define the direction of mathematics for the entire twentieth century...

15 Kesä 20min

Dante Alighieri: The Exile Who Wrote the Divine Comedy and Whose Bones Were Hidden for Centuries

Dante Alighieri: The Exile Who Wrote the Divine Comedy and Whose Bones Were Hidden for Centuries

Dante Alighieri was banished from Florence on pain of death and never returned. He spent the last nineteen years of his life wandering Italy as a political exile, writing the Divine Comedy — the poem ...

15 Kesä 24min

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