Time Machine Diaries: Ancient Civilizations & Future World Predictions.

CNC Productions

An auditory journey through history; From ancient civilizations to futuristic visions, our host guides you through immersive narratives, blending facts with fiction to explore what it means to time travel through the human experience. Music by https://www.youtube.com/ Sound effects by https://www.voicy.network/ Music and Sound Effects by https://pixabay.com/ Donate patreon.com/THO420 Music and SFX https://archive.org/ Sources: https://www.britannica.com/ https://www.nationalww2museum.org/

  1. Tolbiac

    VOR 7 STD.

    Tolbiac

    Long before the Battle of Tolbiac turned into legend there was a teenage king trying to survive in a violent world where power was taken with steel and held through fear. In this Time Machine Diaries episode, Cullen traces the rise of Clovis from the son of the Frankish ruler Childeric to the most powerful warlord in Gaul. The story begins with the strange hybrid world left behind after the fall of the Roman Empire, where Roman cities still stood, but Roman armies were gone. Frankish kings served in Roman commands while building their own dynasties in the shadows of collapsing imperial authority. The episode explores the Merovingian bloodline and the archaeological discovery of Childeric’s grave which revealed the strange mix of Roman and Germanic power that shaped the Frankish world. It looks at the brutal rivalries between Frankish kings and the violent politics that allowed Clovis to consolidate power. The story then moves to the marriage between Clovis and the Burgundian princess Clotilde, whose Christian faith created tension inside the royal household and would later influence one of the most famous turning points in early medieval history. From there the episode dives into Frankish warfare including the weapons of the Merovingian warriors the shield wall tactics used on the battlefield and the deadly throwing axe known as the francisca. It reconstructs the rise of the Alemanni confederation along the Rhine frontier and explains why their clash with the Franks became inevitable. Finally the narrative reaches the Battle of Tolbiac itself where thousands of warriors collided in a brutal infantry struggle that helped reshape the political future of Gaul. The episode also examines the famous story that Clovis prayed to the Christian God during the battle and explains why historians remain cautious about that claim since the account comes decades later from Gregory of Tours. What can be confirmed is that Clovis won the battle and soon afterward converted to Christianity creating an alliance between the Frankish kingdom and the Catholic Church that would shape the future of Europe for centuries. This episode is a deep exploration of dynasty warfare religion and power in the chaotic centuries after Rome fell and shows how the rise of one king and one battlefield helped lay the foundations for the medieval world. Bachrach, Bernard S. Merovingian Military Organization 481–751. University of Minnesota Press, 1972. Geary, Patrick J. Before France and Germany The Creation and Transformation of the Merovingian World. Oxford University Press, 1988. Gregory of Tours. The History of the Franks. Translated by Lewis Thorpe. Penguin Classics, 1974. Heather, Peter. The Fall of the Roman Empire A New History of Rome and the Barbarians. Oxford University Press, 2005. James, Edward. The Franks. Basil Blackwell, 1988. Wallace Hadrill, J. M. The Long Haired Kings and Other Studies in Frankish History. University of Toronto Press, 1962. Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450–751. Routledge, 1994. BBC. The Dark Ages An Age of Light. BBC Documentary Series. The Great Courses. The Early Middle Ages. Audiobook Lecture Series by Philip Daileader. National Geographic. Rise of the Franks. Documentary.

    25 Min.
  2. Native Wars Part 2 — When They Couldn’t Win, They Erased

    3. MÄRZ

    Native Wars Part 2 — When They Couldn’t Win, They Erased

    When brute force didn’t work, Russia turned to erasure. This episode dives deep into the Koryak campaigns, the Aleut slave raids in Alaska, and the violent birth of cultural extermination as policy. We follow firsthand accounts of starvation, hostage taking, and the destruction of Indigenous lifeways across the Russian Far East. Then we trace the evolution of that violence, from open slaughter to identity theft: forced Orthodox conversions, renamed children, banned languages, and burned traditions. This isn’t just Russian history. This is an empire in practice, and it echoes across continents. Anderson, David G. Identity and Ecology in Arctic Siberia: The Number One Reindeer Brigade. Oxford University Press, 2000. Black, Lydia T. Russians in Alaska, 1732–1867. University of Alaska Press, 2004. Bolkhovitinov, Nikolai N. Russia and the United States: Diplomatic Relations to 1917. Translated by Elena Marakova, University of Hawaii Press, 1987. Chaussonnet, Valérie. Native Cultures of Alaska and Siberia: The Legacy of the Bering Strait Connection. Smithsonian Institution, 1995. Fisher, Raymond H. The Russian Fur Trade 1550–1700. University of California Press, 1943. Forsyth, James. A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia’s North Asian Colony 1581–1990. Cambridge University Press, 1992. Gibson, James R. Imperial Russia in Frontier America: The Changing Geography of Supply of Russian America, 1784–1867. Oxford University Press, 1976. Hawkes, David C. Ethnohistory in Alaska: A Regional Bibliography. University of Alaska Fairbanks, 1981. Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (Australia). Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families. 1997. Kan, Sergei. "History of Russian-Alutiiq Relations." Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 1980. Kerttula, Anna M. Antler on the Sea: The Yup’ik and Chukchi of the Russian Far East. Cornell University Press, 2000. Krupnik, Igor, and Ludmila Vakhtin. “Indigenous Peoples of the Russian North.” Cultural Survival Quarterly, vol. 15, no. 2, 1991, pp. 23–29. Leisy, Ernest J. “The Impact of the Russian Orthodox Mission on Alaskan Native Cultures.” Alaska Journal, vol. 15, no. 3, 1985, pp. 14–19. Pierce, Richard A. Russia’s American Colony. University of Wisconsin Press, 1973. Russian Academy of Sciences. The Peoples of Siberia. Edited by M. G. Levin and L. P. Potapov, University of Chicago Press, 1964. Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. 2015. Vakhtin, Nikolai. "Native Peoples of the Russian Far North." Minority Rights Group International Report, 1992. Vakhtin, Nikolai. "Language Shift among the Siberian Peoples." Études/Inuit/Studies, vol. 19, no. 2, 1995, pp. 59–78. Veniaminov, Ioann. Notes on the Islands of the Unalashka District. Translated by Lydia T. Black and Richard A. Pierce, Limestone Press, 1984. Znamenski, Andrei A. Shamanism and Christianity: Native Encounters with Russian Orthodox Missions in Siberia and Alaska, 1820–1917. Greenwood Press, 1999.

    34 Min.
  3. The Last War of Classical Greece

    24. FEB.

    The Last War of Classical Greece

    Sorry for The Delay, my wife had a Baby!!! A cinematic historical deep dive into the forgotten war that ended the age of classical Greece. This epic narrative explores the Cremonidean War (267–261 BCE), when Athens and Sparta made one final attempt to reclaim their independence from Macedonian rule. After the death of Alexander the Great, the world changed. Kings replaced citizens, empires replaced city-states, and the Greek world struggled to survive under foreign domination. Follow the full story from the rise of Macedonian power under Antigonus II Gonatas, to the desperate alliance between Athens, Sparta, and Ptolemaic Egypt, to the brutal siege of Athens and the collapse of the classical polis. This documentary reveals the strategy, politics, battles, starvation warfare, and psychological collapse that reshaped the ancient Mediterranean. This is not just a war story. It is the story of how the world of democracy and independent city-states came to an end. Shipley, Graham. The Greek World After Alexander 323–30 BC. Routledge, 2000. (Audiobook available via academic audio platforms) Green, Peter. Alexander to Actium: The Historical Evolution of the Hellenistic Age. University of California Press, 1990. Audiobook, University of California Press. Walbank, F. W. The Hellenistic World. Harvard University Press, 1981. Audiobook edition, Harvard University Press. Errington, R. Malcolm. A History of the Hellenistic World: 323–30 BC. Blackwell Publishing, 2008. Audiobook edition available. Waterfield, Robin. Dividing the Spoils: The War for Alexander the Great’s Empire. Oxford University Press, 2011. Audiobook edition. Boardman, John, et al. The Oxford History of Greece and the Hellenistic World. Oxford University Press, 2001. Pausanias. Description of Greece. Translated by W. H. S. Jones and H. A. Ormerod, Harvard University Press, 1918. (Primary source describing events and figures related to the period; audiobook versions available)

    35 Min.
  4. The First General: Benjamin O. Davis Sr. and the War Inside America

    16. FEB.

    The First General: Benjamin O. Davis Sr. and the War Inside America

    Before military integration. Before the Tuskegee Airmen. Before civil rights entered the national spotlight, one man forced the United States Army to confront its own contradictions. In this massive Time Machine Diaries deep dive, Cullen explores the life of General Benjamin O. Davis Sr., the first African American general in United States Army history. Born just after the Civil War and one generation removed from slavery, Davis rose through a segregated military that never intended to make space for him. Through discipline, endurance, and strategic brilliance, he broke barriers that reshaped American military history. This episode examines the collapse of Reconstruction, the rise of Jim Crow, the Buffalo Soldiers, World War I, institutional racism inside the officer corps, the road to his historic promotion in 1940, and the ripple effects that helped lead to military integration and the rise of the Tuskegee Airmen. This is not just a war story. It is a story about power, resistance, leadership, and the cost of forcing a nation to live up to its ideals. History is not clean. Progress is not easy. Systems do not change willingly. Benjamin O. Davis Sr. made change unavoidable. Cloud, Roy, and Louis R. Harlan. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr.: American. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1989. Audiobook edition available via Audible. Gropman, Alan L. The Air Force Integrates, 1945–1964. University Press of the Pacific, 2001. Audiobook edition available. MacGregor, Morris J., Jr. Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940–1965. Center of Military History, United States Army, 1981. Audiobook edition available through government archives. Mersky, Peter B. Black Wings: The American Black in Aviation. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1998. Audiobook edition available. Sandler, Stanley. Segregated Skies: All-Black Combat Squadrons of World War II. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992. Audiobook edition available. “Double Victory: The African American Military Experience in World War II.” Directed by Frank Martin, PBS, 2007. “Freedom Flyers: The Tuskegee Airmen of World War II.” Directed by Judd Ehrlich, PBS American Experience, 1995. “Tuskegee Airmen: Legacy of Courage.” History Channel Documentary, A&E Television Networks, 2002. “America’s Black Warriors: Buffalo Soldiers.” History Channel Documentary, A&E Television Networks, 2007. United States Army Center of Military History. Black Americans in the U.S. Army. Government Printing Office.

    32 Min.
  5. Granuaile: The Pirate Queen Who Wouldn’t Submit

    9. FEB.

    Granuaile: The Pirate Queen Who Wouldn’t Submit

    In this episode of Time Machine Diaries, Cullen explores the life of Gráinne Mhaol, better known as Grace O’Malley, the Irish maritime leader often remembered as the Pirate Queen. Moving beyond legend, this deep historical breakdown examines her rise to power along Ireland’s west coast, her command of ships and alliances, and her confrontation with English colonial authority during the Tudor expansion into Ireland. The episode covers her political and economic influence in Clew Bay, her conflict with Governor Richard Bingham, and her documented negotiation with Queen Elizabeth I at Greenwich Palace. By placing her story within the realities of maritime power, clan authority, and gender expectations of the sixteenth century, this episode presents a grounded look at how leadership and legitimacy were defined and challenged during a period of state expansion. This historical dive is designed for listeners interested in Irish history, women leaders, naval power, and the intersection of politics and maritime strategy. Books Chambers, Anne. Granuaile: Ireland’s Pirate Queen 1530–1603. Gill & Macmillan.Canny, Nicholas. Making Ireland British 1580–1650. Oxford University Press.Ellis, Steven G. Tudor Ireland. Longman Publishing.Flanagan, Marie Therese. Irish Society, Anglo-Norman Settlers, Angevin Kingship. Oxford. State Papers of Ireland — Elizabethan PeriodDictionary of Irish Biography — Royal Irish AcademyNational Library of Ireland ArchivesRoyal Museums Greenwich Maritime History Resources Westport House Historical ArchivesClare Island Abbey RecordsNational Maritime Museum Collections RTÉ History FeaturesBBC History Extra Content on Tudor IrelandSmithsonian Maritime Articles (contextual naval material) Academic / Historical References, Museums / Historical Sites, Documentary / Audio Friendly#GraceOMalley#Granuaile#IrishHistory#HistoryPodcast#WomenInHistory#PirateHistory#MaritimeHistory#TudorEra#TimeMachineDiaries#HistoricalDive

    31 Min.
  6. (BHM) OSAGE AVENUE: The Day Philadelphia Dropped a Bomb

    2. FEB.

    (BHM) OSAGE AVENUE: The Day Philadelphia Dropped a Bomb

    On May 13, 1985, the City of Philadelphia carried out one of the most shocking acts of state violence in modern American history. Nearly 500 police officers surrounded a rowhouse on Osage Avenue occupied by members of MOVE, a Black liberation and back-to-nature organization founded by John Africa (Vincent Leaphart). After a prolonged siege and an exchange of gunfire, police dropped an explosive device from a helicopter onto the home, igniting a fire that officials allowed to burn. The flames spread across the block, destroying 61 homes and leaving an entire Black neighborhood in ashes. Eleven people were killed, including five children. No city officials or police leaders went to prison. This episode honors the victims by name, breaks down what MOVE truly was, exposes how Black empowerment groups were treated as enemies of the state while white extremist violence was tolerated, and forces the listener to confront a reality America still struggles to admit: sometimes the government doesn’t protect its people. City of Philadelphia. Final Report of the Independent Investigation into the City of Philadelphia’s Possession of Human Remains of Victims of the 1985 MOVE Bombing. 9 June 2022. City of Philadelphia, https://www.phila.gov/documents/independent-report-on-the-history-and-handling-of-move-victims-remains/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026. Fernandez, Bob. The MOVE Bombing. Temple University Press, 2019. Goode, Wilson, and Randall M. Miller. 84 W. Osage Avenue: The MOVE Crisis in Philadelphia. Temple University Press, 2013. Osder, Jason, director. Let the Fire Burn. Zeitgeist Films, 2013. Let the Fire Burn. Independent Lens, PBS, https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/documentaries/let-the-fire-burn/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.

    25 Min.
  7. The Breadbasket Graveyard: Ukraine 1933 (Holodomor — Starvation as a Weapon) Pt1.

    26. JAN.

    The Breadbasket Graveyard: Ukraine 1933 (Holodomor — Starvation as a Weapon) Pt1.

    In this gut-wrenching multi-part episode of Time Machine Diaries, Cullen dives into one of the darkest crimes of the 20th century: the Holodomor, the Ukrainian starvation of 1932–1933. This was not a natural famine. It was engineered. Through forced collectivization, impossible grain quotas, confiscation brigades, blacklisted villages, and sealed borders, Stalin’s Soviet state turned food into a weapon and transformed Ukraine, Europe’s breadbasket, into a graveyard. This episode breaks down how the system worked step-by-step, what starvation looked like in real villages, how survival was criminalized, and how propaganda tried to bury the truth for decades. It also makes uncomfortable modern comparisons to how power still controls people through resources, media narratives, and bureaucracy. This isn’t just history. It’s a warning. BooksApplebaum, Anne. Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine. Doubleday, 2017.Conquest, Robert. The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine. Oxford UP, 1986.Davies, R. W., and Stephen G. Wheatcroft. The Years of Hunger: Soviet Agriculture, 1931–1933. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.Fitzpatrick, Sheila. Stalin’s Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. Oxford UP, 1994.Graziosi, Andrea. The Great Soviet Peasant War: Bolsheviks and Peasants, 1917–1933. Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, 1996.Hosking, Geoffrey. Rulers and Victims: The Russians in the Soviet Union. Harvard UP, 2006.Marples, David R. Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine. Central European UP, 2007.Snyder, Timothy. Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books, 2010.Viola, Lynne. The Unknown Gulag: The Lost World of Stalin’s Special Settlements. Oxford UP, 2007. Academic / Research CollectionsKulchytsky, Stanislav. “The Holodomor of 1932–33 as Genocide.” Nationalities Papers, Cambridge UP, various issues/chapters.Plokhy, Serhii. The Gates of Europe: A History of Ukraine. Basic Books, 2015.Subtelny, Orest. Ukraine: A History. U of Toronto P, 2009. Primary Sources / Contemporary ReportingThe Gareth Jones and Malcolm Muggeridge famine reporting (1933) — published dispatches and archival reprints in various collections.Soviet archival documents and grain procurement records (commonly cited in Davies & Wheatcroft; Applebaum). Documentaries / FilmHolodomor: Ukraine’s Genocide of 1932–1933. (various versions; commonly distributed in educational releases).The Soviet Story. Directed by Edvīns Šnore, 2008.Harvest of Despair: The 1932–33 Famine in Ukraine. Directed by Slavko Nowytski, 1984. Museums / Institutions (Great for show notes credibility)Holodomor Research and Education Consortium (HREC).National Museum of the Holodomor-Genocide (Kyiv).U.S. Commission on the Ukraine Famine (Congressional commission report materials).

    12 Min.
  8. Nobody Here Is From Here: The Irish Famine, Immigration, and the Lie of “Real Americans”.

    19. JAN.

    Nobody Here Is From Here: The Irish Famine, Immigration, and the Lie of “Real Americans”.

    Every single person in the United States came from somewhere else, except Native Americans, who were here first, full stop. Using the Irish Potato Famine as the backbone, this episode connects forced migration, racial hierarchy, and modern immigration panic into one continuous story. From famine ships to “No Irish Need Apply,” from becoming “white” to forgetting what that cost, this episode dismantles the myth of the “real American” and exposes how every generation rewrites its own arrival story to justify cruelty toward the next. Kinealy, Christine. This Great Calamity: The Irish Famine 1845–52. Gill & Macmillan, 1994. Ó Gráda, Cormac. Black ’47 and Beyond: The Great Irish Famine in History, Economy, and Memory. Princeton University Press, 1999. Mitchel, John. The Last Conquest of Ireland (Perhaps). James McGlashan, 1861. The Times (London). Various editorials on the Irish potato blight, 1846–1847. British Newspaper Archive. Hickman, Mary J. “Racialized Boundaries: The Irish as an ‘Other’ in Britain and the United States.” Ethnic and Racial Studies, vol. 21, no. 2, 1998, pp. 288–312. Ignatiev, Noel. How the Irish Became White. Routledge, 1995. Diner, Hasia R. Erin’s Daughters in America: Irish Immigrant Women in the Nineteenth Century. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983. Library of Congress. “Immigration and American Expansion, 1800–1900.” www.loc.gov. Irish Central. O’Dowd, Niall. “Was It Genocide? What the British Ruling Class Really Said About the Irish Famine.” IrishCentral, 19 Apr. 2023. Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum. “Population Loss and Emigration.” Quinnipiac University.

    22 Min.

Info

An auditory journey through history; From ancient civilizations to futuristic visions, our host guides you through immersive narratives, blending facts with fiction to explore what it means to time travel through the human experience. Music by https://www.youtube.com/ Sound effects by https://www.voicy.network/ Music and Sound Effects by https://pixabay.com/ Donate patreon.com/THO420 Music and SFX https://archive.org/ Sources: https://www.britannica.com/ https://www.nationalww2museum.org/