Wait, That's Random: This Day in History

May 18 - It Ended… and Everyone Was Watching

4 min · 18. maj 2026
episode May 18 - It Ended… and Everyone Was Watching cover

Beskrivelse

May 18, 2026 — Today is Visit Your Relatives Day, a reminder of how connections build over time. Today we’re looking at moments defined by timing. From the sudden eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980, to the long-term success of early heart-lung transplants in 1987, to the Seinfeld finale in 1998, which became a shared experience for millions. Plus, a look at Rick Wakeman, whose layered musical style helped shape progressive rock. It raises a question about how timing—whether sudden or sustained—shapes how something is remembered. Anyway… that’s what I ended up finding while working through May 18.

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131 episoder

episode May 27 - The City Built Out of Sheer Willpower cover

May 27 - The City Built Out of Sheer Willpower

May 27, 2026 — Today is National Grape Popsicle Day, which somehow pairs surprisingly well with a day full of strange turning points in history. Today’s episode looks at Peter the Great founding St. Petersburg directly on top of swampland despite enormous skepticism… Muhammad Ali’s infamous “phantom punch” fight against Sonny Liston that left audiences arguing over what they had just seen… and the life-changing horseback accident that transformed Christopher Reeve from Superman actor into something many people found even more inspiring. Plus, the birthday of Vincent Price — the legendary horror icon who was apparently one of the warmest people in Hollywood. A lot of this episode ended up becoming about perception: what people think they’re seeing… versus what’s actually there. Anyway… that’s what I ended up finding while working through May 27.

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episode May 26 - When Systems Start Shifting cover

May 26 - When Systems Start Shifting

May 26, 2026 — Today is National Paper Airplane Day, which feels like proof that humans enjoy building things specifically to watch them crash. Today we’re looking at moments where systems started changing underneath everyday life. From the end of the Model T production era, to the creation of the House Un-American Activities Committee during growing fears of communist influence, to Atlantic City betting its future on legalized casino gambling. Plus, a correction involving John Wayne, whose actual birthday is May 26, 1907 — despite what a previous episode accidentally suggested. It’s interesting how often large societal shifts begin before most people fully realize the long-term consequences. Anyway… that’s what I ended up finding while working through May 26.

I går8 min
episode May 25 - When Something Stops Feeling Small cover

May 25 - When Something Stops Feeling Small

May 25, 2026 — Today is National Brown-Bag-It Day, which feels like a reminder that packing your lunch used to sound practical instead of financially strategic. Today we’re looking at moments where something crossed a line from “interesting” into something people would remember permanently. From Jesse Owens rewriting the record books in less than an hour, to crowds walking across the newly opened Golden Gate Bridge, to Star Wars quietly changing blockbuster filmmaking forever. Plus, a look at Mike Myers and the strange power of fully committing to a character. It’s interesting how often major cultural shifts don’t arrive with an announcement — people simply realize afterward that something has changed. Anyway… that’s what I ended up finding while working through May 25.

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