Stuff That We Like/Enjoy at Least at This Point in Time

S8E4 (Ep 88) Organs You Can Live Without / Pol Pot And The Cambodian Genocide

54 min · 27. apr. 2026
episode S8E4 (Ep 88) Organs You Can Live Without / Pol Pot And The Cambodian Genocide cover

Description

You can lose seven organs and still live. You can also lose a quarter of a country's population in four years. This week we cover both. Christina takes the science chair and breaks down your organs, what they are, what each one actually does, and the surprising list of organs you can lose, donate, or have removed and still keep going. From the ones you absolutely cannot live without to the ones nature seems to have packed as backups, she walks through the body's essential machinery and where the real non-negotiables are. Then Caleb takes us inside the regime of Pol Pot — the leader of the Khmer Rouge whose four-year rule over Cambodia led to the deaths of roughly a quarter of the country's population. From his Paris education to the killing fields, Caleb traces how a quiet schoolteacher engineered one of the 20th century's most devastating genocides. Two hosts. Two unrelated topics. One episode that somehow makes sense by the end.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Stuff That We Like/Enjoy at Least at This Point in Time community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

97 episodes

episode S8E12 (Ep 96) Adolf Hitler: Childhood, Rise To Power, And How To Never Repeat History artwork

S8E12 (Ep 96) Adolf Hitler: Childhood, Rise To Power, And How To Never Repeat History

He was rejected from art school twice, decorated as a soldier in WWI, and less than 20 years later he'd orchestrate the deaths of over 17 million people. This week Caleb and Christina both take on the same topic together: Adolf Hitler. For the first time on the show, we tag-team a single subject. We start with Hitler's childhood in Austria (the abusive father, the doting mother, the failed art career, the years spent broke and homeless in Vienna) and trace how a nobody with a grudge climbed the ranks of a fringe political party to become chancellor of Germany. From there we cover the machinery of the Third Reich, the Holocaust, and the roughly 6 million Jewish people plus 11 million others killed under his regime. Then we get to the part that matters most: what warning signs were there, what did ordinary Germans miss or ignore, and what should any of us watch for in ourselves, our leaders, and our own moment in history. Because "how did this happen" is only useful if it becomes "how do we make sure it doesn't happen again." Two hosts. One of the worst people who ever lived. A conversation about how it happened, and how to make sure it doesn't happen to us.

Yesterday45 min
episode S8E11 (Ep 95) Take the Big Swing/What Europe Does Right ft. Nathan & Daniel Yake artwork

S8E11 (Ep 95) Take the Big Swing/What Europe Does Right ft. Nathan & Daniel Yake

Christina is off this week. Caleb brought his two best friends instead and somehow it got a little out of hand.Daniel Yake makes the case that most people aim too low on purpose, that we sandbag our own ambitions to avoid the embarrassment of falling short, and that the actual path to growth is to promise bigger than you think you can deliver and then figure out how to catch up to it. Nathan Yake just got back from Europe and has opinions. What it does to the American mind to walk through a city that has been standing for six hundred years. Portugal was a personal highlight. The food in particular. It's part travel story, part unintentional indictment of American culture, and funnier than either of those descriptions make it sound.Three guys. Two topics. One episode Christina will probably have notes on.Caleb, Daniel & Nathan

29. juni 20261 h 4 min
episode S8E10 (Ep 94) Stalin: The Most Dangerous Man of the 20th Century artwork

S8E10 (Ep 94) Stalin: The Most Dangerous Man of the 20th Century

Caleb and Christina both researched Stalin independently and spent this episode going back and forth on the history. The conclusion they kept landing on: he doesn't get the attention he deserves, and that's a problem worth naming out loud. They get into how a Georgian seminary student became the undisputed ruler of the Soviet Union, how he turned paranoia into a governing strategy, and why the people closest to him were statistically the most likely to disappear. The show trials, the purges that gutted his own military, the famines that killed millions while grain was being exported, the gulag system that ran less like a prison network and more like a forced labor economy. All of it. They also get into why Stalin occupies a different cultural space than other 20th century dictators and what that gap between reputation and reality actually costs us. This one is heavier than usual. It's worth it.

22. juni 202639 min
episode S8E9 (Ep 93) 32 Days, 400 Pages, One Very Complicated Opinion on Dracula artwork

S8E9 (Ep 93) 32 Days, 400 Pages, One Very Complicated Opinion on Dracula

Caleb and Christina spent 32 days reading Dracula together and have thoughts. The short version: it's a classic for a reason, and also it takes a while to get there. Bram Stoker wrote the whole thing as journals, letters, and newspaper clippings, which is either a brilliant narrative device or a genuine endurance test depending on where you are in the book. Probably both. The atmosphere is real, the horror holds up, and by the end you understand why this particular vampire became the vampire. But there's also a stretch somewhere in the middle where you will wonder if anything is ever going to happen again. They get into what actually makes the book work (and what doesn't), whether it deserves its reputation, and what it's like to read a 19th century novel on a deadline you set for yourself. Two hosts. One very long book. Thirty-two days. Contact us at stuffthatwelikepodcast@gmail.com [stuffthatwelikepodcast@gmail.com] with any questions, concerns, or corrections! — Caleb & Christina

15. juni 202632 min
episode S8E8 (Ep 92) The Paleo Diet / Weird Laws in the USA artwork

S8E8 (Ep 92) The Paleo Diet / Weird Laws in the USA

This week Caleb tries to figure out if the paleo diet is actually backed by science or just a really compelling story, and Christina ranks weird laws that somehow still exist in the United States.Caleb breaks down where the paleo diet actually came from a gastroenterologist named Walter Voegtlin wrote about it in 1975, almost nobody read it, and then Crossfit discovered it around 2010 and turned it into a lifestyle brand. The core idea is simple: if a caveman could have found it, eat it. If it required a factory, skip it. But the evolutionary argument has some real holes in it, turns out we actually don't know what paleolithic people ate, and our bodies have been quietly adapting to agricultural foods for thousands of years. Caleb gets into what the research actually shows (the short version: it probably works, just not for the reason people think) and where the diet falls apart if you try to make it permanent.Christina goes through some of the strangest laws still on the books across the country and ranks them. It's exactly what it sounds like and somehow still manages to be educational.Two hosts. Two unrelated topics. One episode that somehow makes sense by the end.

2. juni 202654 min