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Bored and Ambitious

Podcast door Bored and Ambitious

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over Bored and Ambitious

Long-form narrative history for listeners who want the whole story—not the highlight reel, but the full account of how we got here. Audiobook-length episodes, exhaustively researched, dramatically told. Every fact from the historical record. We trace the people, systems, and accidents that built the modern world—from the glacier that carved Manhattan to the banking rules now governing AI. History as architecture. Hosted by Sir Chadwick. Presented by BitsBound. Check out our short docs at https://www.youtube.com/@BoredandAmbitious

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124 afleveringen

aflevering Steel: The Skeleton of Civilization (Ep. 124) artwork

Steel: The Skeleton of Civilization (Ep. 124)

In 1855, a self-taught inventor with no metallurgical training poured seven hundred pounds of molten pig iron into a clay vessel, blew cold air through the bottom, and watched the metal catch fire from the inside out. Fifteen minutes later, Henry Bessemer had converted worthless pig iron into steel — without adding a single lump of fuel. It was the most important metallurgical event in human history. And every expert alive said it was impossible. This episode traces steel's full arc across three millennia and four continents. From a Hittite king in 1250 BC who couldn't afford to give away a single iron dagger blade, to Indian craftsmen forging legendary wootz steel in buried crucibles, to Japanese swordsmiths folding tamahagane fifteen times to create blades that were simultaneously hard and flexible. For three thousand years, steel remained one of the rarest substances on earth — produced ounce by ounce, at ruinous cost, through processes so slow and temperamental that a single good sword blade was worth a king's ransom. We follow Bessemer from his fateful dinner with Napoleon III — where a casual question about artillery shells launched a revolution — to his triumphant presentation at Cheltenham, where he announced cheap steel to a room of ironmasters who thought he was a fraud. We watch his process fail catastrophically when phosphorus-rich British ores produced metal that crumbled like biscuits, and we meet Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, a dying twenty-eight-year-old police court clerk who solved the phosphorus problem through midnight chemistry experiments in a cousin's backyard — unlocking the iron deposits of an entire continent. We trace Andrew Carnegie's journey from a thirteen-year-old Scottish bobbin boy earning $1.20 a week to the man who built the largest steel empire on earth. We stand on the Eads Bridge in St. Louis — the first major structure built entirely of steel — where Captain James Eads bet his reputation on a material most engineers still didn't trust. And we watch six nations that had spent centuries slaughtering each other pool their coal and steel production in 1951, creating an institution so boring it ended the cycle of European war. Steel is the skeleton of civilization. Strip it away and the buildings fall, the bridges crumble, the surgery cannot happen. You are surrounded by it right now. This is the story of how it went from a king's ransom to a penny a pound.

6 feb 2026 - 2 h 52 min
aflevering Ibn Battuta: How a Twenty-One-Year-Old on a Donkey Mapped the First Global Civilization artwork

Ibn Battuta: How a Twenty-One-Year-Old on a Donkey Mapped the First Global Civilization

In 1325, a weeping twenty-one-year-old legal student rode out of Tangier, Morocco on a donkey. He carried no gold, no trade goods, no letters of introduction from any king. He carried an education. Twenty-nine years and seventy-three thousand miles later, he had traveled three times the distance of Marco Polo — across forty-four modern countries on three continents — sustained by nothing but a Maliki legal credential and the hospitality of the medieval Islamic world. His name was Ibn Battuta. And his journey reveals the hidden infrastructure of the first global civilization the world ever produced. This episode traces the full arc of that civilization through one man's extraordinary life. From the Sufi lodges and waqf endowments that fed and housed him across three continents, to the crumbling Pharos Lighthouse he entered as one of its last eyewitnesses. From the staggering scale of Mamluk Cairo — with its free hospital, music therapy, and six hundred thousand inhabitants — to the ruins of Baghdad, still haunted sixty-nine years after the Mongol sack that destroyed the House of Wisdom. From the frozen steppes of the Golden Horde where three fur coats couldn't keep him warm, to the court of Muhammad bin Tughluq in Delhi — a brilliant philosopher-sultan who debated jurisprudence between elephant executions. We follow Ibn Battuta through kidnapping in a cave by Indian bandits, shipwreck at the spice port of Calicut, nine chaotic months as chief judge of the Maldives, and a crossing of the Sahara to the gold-rich Mali Empire. We watch him survive the Black Death in Damascus, where Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Samaritans walked barefoot through the dying city together — carrying their holy books, weeping, praying side by side. And we watch him come home to find both parents dead and a world that no longer knew him. The medieval Islamic world was not perfect. But it connected more of the planet, more deeply, more institutionally, than anything before it. The proof is a book dictated entirely from memory, surviving in five manuscript copies, forgotten for five centuries, and now recognized as one of the most important travel documents in human history. Marco Polo traveled between civilizations. Ibn Battuta traveled within one. That difference changes everything.

5 feb 2026 - 2 h 52 min
aflevering New Orleans: Bienville's Bargain (Ep. 122) artwork

New Orleans: Bienville's Bargain (Ep. 122)

Built on a swamp, below sea level, in hurricane alley. For three hundred years, every reasonable person has explained why New Orleans should not exist. New Orleans has responded by throwing a party. In 1699, a seventeen-year-old named Bienville identified the one spot where a city might be attempted — a crescent bend where the Mississippi approached Lake Pontchartrain closely enough to create a shortcut for commerce. The location was terrible for habitation and perfect for trade. He spent nineteen years fighting to build there. Enslaved Africans from Senegambia arrived with musical traditions that would change the world. A brutal slave code contained one provision that was actually enforced: Sundays off. In that legally protected space, at a dusty field called Congo Square, the foundation of jazz was being practiced every Sunday afternoon. The city burned to the ground on Good Friday, 1788 — 856 of its 1,100 buildings destroyed because Catholic law forbade ringing the bells to sound the alarm. It was rebuilt in brick and stucco. The French Quarter is actually Spanish. We trace the Mississippi Bubble, the Louisiana Purchase, Buddy Bolden — the cornetist who pioneered jazz and never recorded a single note — Louis Armstrong's journey from the Battlefield to global fame, and Storyville, the red-light district where jazz found its first paying audiences. Then August 29, 2005. The levees failed. Eighty percent of the city underwater. Thirty thousand trapped in the Superdome. A nation asking where the help was. The people returned anyway. And sixteen years to the day after Katrina, Hurricane Ida struck with even stronger winds. The $14.5 billion post-Katrina levee system held. The impossible city has decided, once again, to exist. Laissez les bon temps rouler.

5 feb 2026 - 3 h 22 min
aflevering Ada Lovelace: How Lord Byron's Daughter Invented Programming (Ep. 121) artwork

Ada Lovelace: How Lord Byron's Daughter Invented Programming (Ep. 121)

She was Lord Byron's daughter, raised behind a curtain that hid her father's portrait. Her mother filled her mind with mathematics to suppress the poetic madness she feared lurked in Byron's blood. It worked—and it didn't. At seventeen, Ada Byron met Charles Babbage and saw in his brass calculating engine something no one else could see: not just a machine that computed numbers, but a universal engine that could weave any pattern—music, logic, language—anything expressible in symbols. In 1843, she wrote what we now recognize as the first computer program, an algorithm for Babbage's Analytical Engine that wouldn't be built for another century. Her Notes asked the question that still haunts artificial intelligence: can machines originate, or can they only do what we tell them? She died at thirty-six—the same age as her father—and asked to be buried beside him. The daughter who'd been kept from Byron in life chose to spend eternity at his side. The poet and the programmer, together at last. This is the story of the Enchantress of Number.

5 feb 2026 - 2 h 19 min
aflevering Elon Musk: The Manchild Who Moved Mountains (Ep. 120) artwork

Elon Musk: The Manchild Who Moved Mountains (Ep. 120)

September 28, 2008. A rocket climbs over the Pacific on its fourth and final attempt. If it fails, SpaceX dies. Its founder has invested every dollar from his PayPal fortune into two companies that are both weeks from bankruptcy. In a control room in Hawthorne, California, the man who will one day become the richest person on Earth is borrowing money from friends to pay rent. The rocket reaches orbit. And the most complicated entrepreneur of our time lives to build another day. This episode traces the full arc of Elon Musk — from a bullied boy reading encyclopedias in Pretoria to the man who put humans in orbit, revolutionized the auto industry, and then bought Twitter and set it on fire. We begin in apartheid South Africa, where a strange, brilliant child escapes into Asimov novels and dreams of Mars while surviving a father whose damage would shape everything that followed. We follow the teenage escape to Canada, the early ventures — Zip2, X.com, the merger that became PayPal — and the $180 million sale that gave a twenty-something the capital to bet on the impossible. We watch him found SpaceX in a warehouse with twelve employees and a dream that Boeing laughed at. We see three rockets explode before the fourth saves the company with days of cash remaining. We follow the parallel crisis at Tesla — a startup trying to build an electric car that every expert said couldn't be built — through the ouster of its original founder, the Roadster's catastrophic cost overruns, and the Christmas Eve funding round that closed on the last day before bankruptcy. Then the triumphs: reusable rockets landing on drone ships. The Model S earning the highest Consumer Reports rating in history. Model 3 production hell — Musk sleeping on the factory floor, building an assembly line in a parking lot tent. Crew Dragon carrying astronauts to orbit from American soil for the first time in nine years. Then the unraveling: the funding-secured tweet, the SEC sanctions, and the $44 billion Twitter acquisition that took every trait that built rockets and cars — the risk tolerance, the refusal to listen to experts, the conviction that he knew better — and applied them where they proved catastrophic. The manchild who moved mountains. The question is where they'll land.

4 feb 2026 - 3 h 1 min
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