The American Presidents

Selenius Media

“The Presidents” is a long-form narrative project that tells the American story through the people who carried its executive power before it had a president and after the office had a name. We start where most textbooks don’t—inside the dim rooms of the Continental Congress—then move through the Articles era and into the modern Oval Office, treating each figure not as a bust on a mantel but as a decision-maker inside a living system. Every chapter asks the same unforgiving questions: What did this person actually do? What did they refuse to do? Who paid for their choices, and who prospered because of them? We separate campaign mythology from archival fact, trace how ideas turned into institutions, and watch the office grow teeth, rituals, and limits. The famous are made specific; the forgotten are restored to the map. It’s the republic told in scenes—treaties negotiated, vetoes drafted, wars averted or invited, roads and schools imagined into being, rights opened and closed—so listeners can feel how policy becomes weather in ordinary lives. From the presidents of Congress to the latest occupant of the West Wing, this is a guided tour of power, consequence, and the national temperament, written to be read aloud in one voice and built to stand as a reference you can return to as the present changes the past. Produced by Selenius Media

  1. President Joseph R. Biden Jr

    12/20/2025

    President Joseph R. Biden Jr

    President Joseph R. Biden Jr On a chilly January afternoon in 2021, amidst profound national turmoil, Joseph R. Biden Jr. stood on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol, placed his hand on a hefty family Bible held by his wife Jill, and took the oath of office to become the 46th President of the United States. The scene was starkly different from inaugurations past: the National Mall was largely empty, save for flags representing absent spectators, a precaution due to the raging COVID-19 pandemic. Just two weeks earlier, the very Capitol steps where Biden now stood had been the site of violent insurrection. Now, as the oldest man ever to assume the presidency at 78, Biden addressed a nation in pain and disarray. He spoke of unity, of restoring the “soul of America,” and of overcoming the cascading crises at hand—pandemic, economic collapse, political division. The journey that brought Joe Biden to this pinnacle was long, winding, and marked by personal tragedy, decades of public service, and a resilient faith in the power of government to do good. Joe Biden’s life began in the blue-collar city of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Born November 20, 1942, he was the first of four siblings in an Irish Catholic family. His father, Joe Sr., worked various jobs—cleaning boilers, selling cars—and his mother, Catherine “Jean” Biden, was the family’s heart, instilling in young Joe a fierce belief in perseverance and dignity. The Bidens fell on hard times when Scranton’s economy declined in the 1950s. When Joe was 10, the family moved to Claymont, Delaware, in search of better opportunities, eventually settling in the neighboring town of Wilmington. There, Joe Sr. found more stable work selling used cars. The experience of seeing his father struggle but never lose his optimism left an indelible mark on Joe. It gave him a genuine relatability to working-class struggles and a chip on his shoulder about proving oneself. Selenius Media

    46 min
  2. President Donald J Trump

    12/17/2025

    President Donald J Trump

    President Donald J Trump On the evening of November 8, 2016, Americans and the world looked on in astonishment as the election results defied almost all expectations. Donald J. Trump—a billionaire real estate mogul and reality television star with no prior political office—was declared the winner of the U.S. presidential race. It was one of the most extraordinary political upsets in American history. To Trump’s fervent supporters, many of whom felt ignored and left behind by the political establishment, it was a jubilant victory, a chance to “Make America Great Again” and shake up a status quo they despised. To his opponents, it was a moment of shock and alarm, as a man known for his brash, norm-breaking persona now prepared to occupy the Oval Office. Trump’s rise to the presidency marked a sharp break from political tradition and signaled a deeply polarized era ahead, with clashes over fundamental values that would test America’s institutions. Donald John Trump was born on June 14, 1946, in Queens, New York City, into a life of privilege and blunt ambition. He was the fourth of five children of Fred Trump and Mary MacLeod Trump. Fred was a successful real estate developer who built middle-class housing in Brooklyn and Queens; Mary was a Scottish immigrant who had met Fred in New York. Young Donald grew up in a stately home in the Jamaica Estates neighborhood. As a boy, he was strong-willed and confident—to the point of being considered a troublemaker at times. At 13, after Donald got into some misbehavior (reportedly frequent bullying and possibly involvement in vandalizing a neighbor’s property), his father decided he would benefit from discipline and sent him to the New York Military Academy. There, Donald Trump thrived under the regimented lifestyle. He became a student leader, played multiple sports, and learned the value of projecting strength and winning—traits that would become central to his identity. Selenius Media

    48 min
  3. President Barack Obama

    12/14/2025

    President Barack Obama

    President Barack Obama On the night of November 4, 2008, tens of thousands of people gathered in Chicago’s Grant Park, their breath visible in the crisp autumn air, united by a shared moment of history. Barack Obama—son of a Kenyan father and a Kansan mother—walked onto the stage, having just been elected the 44th President of the United States. He was the first African American ever to claim the nation’s highest office, and as he addressed the roaring crowd, many wept with joy and disbelief. “If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible,” he began, inviting a hopeful reflection on how far the country had come. Obama spoke of hope and the enduring power of the American ideal, famously reminding the nation, “Yes we can.” That electrifying victory speech marked not just the culmination of a remarkable campaign, but the dawn of a presidency laden with sky-high expectations and daunting challenges. Barack Hussein Obama II was born on August 4, 1961, in Honolulu, Hawaii. His very name and heritage foreshadowed the diverse path his life would take. His mother, Stanley Ann Dunham (known as Ann), was a white woman from Kansas with a free-spirited intellect, and his father, Barack Obama Sr., was a Black man from a small village in Kenya who came to the University of Hawaii on a scholarship. They met in a Russian language class, fell in love, and had Barack, their “Barry,” as a young couple. But the marriage was short-lived; Barack’s father left Hawaii when the boy was two to pursue a Ph.D. at Harvard and then returned to Kenya. Obama’s early childhood was thus shaped primarily by his mother and her parents, with only distant memories of a brief visit from his father when Barack was 10. Ann Obama was a curious, idealistic woman. When Barack was six, she married an Indonesian man, Lolo Soetoro, and the family moved to Jakarta. For four years, from ages 6 to 10, young Barack lived in Indonesia, attending local schools—where he sometimes was noted for being the only foreign, Black child in class—and absorbing the sights and sounds of a very different world. He’s recalled waking to the call to prayer from mosques, walking past open sewers to school, and seeing beggars and farmers in the streets—experiences that broadened his perspective about global inequality at an early age. Selenius Media

    47 min
  4. President George W Bush

    12/08/2025

    President George W Bush

    President George W Bush George W. Bush had been President of the United States for less than a year when the course of his tenure was transformed in a single morning. On September 11, 2001, as the sun rose into a clear blue sky, Bush found himself confronting the worst terrorist attack in American history. The nation watched as he learned of the attacks in a Florida classroom, a moment of dawning crisis. In the hours and days that followed, this relatively new president—born into one of America’s prominent political families but still carving out his own legacy—became the face of a nation’s grief and resolve. With a bullhorn in hand amid the rubble of Ground Zero, he promised a stunned country that those responsible would “hear from all of us soon.” It was a defining moment that would come to overshadow the rest of Bush’s presidency and shape the era in which he governed. To understand how George W. Bush came to that moment of trial, one must trace the arc of his life and career from its roots. George Walker Bush was born on July 6, 1946, in New Haven, Connecticut, the first child of George Herbert Walker Bush and Barbara Pierce Bush. The Bush family legacy loomed large: his father would rise to serve as a congressman, ambassador, director of the CIA, and ultimately the 41st President of the United States, and his grandfather Prescott Bush was a U.S. senator. Yet young George’s early years were spent far from the corridors of East Coast power. When he was a toddler, the family moved to West Texas, where his father entered the oil business. George W. Bush grew up in Midland, Texas, in the 1950s—a dusty oil town where his boyhood was more about Little League baseball and neighborhood mischief than political privilege. The Bush household was loving but disciplined, imbued with a strong sense of public service and faith. His parents taught him the value of personal responsibility and compassion—a theme Bush would later call “compassionate conservatism” in his own political rhetoric. Selenius Media

    46 min

About

“The Presidents” is a long-form narrative project that tells the American story through the people who carried its executive power before it had a president and after the office had a name. We start where most textbooks don’t—inside the dim rooms of the Continental Congress—then move through the Articles era and into the modern Oval Office, treating each figure not as a bust on a mantel but as a decision-maker inside a living system. Every chapter asks the same unforgiving questions: What did this person actually do? What did they refuse to do? Who paid for their choices, and who prospered because of them? We separate campaign mythology from archival fact, trace how ideas turned into institutions, and watch the office grow teeth, rituals, and limits. The famous are made specific; the forgotten are restored to the map. It’s the republic told in scenes—treaties negotiated, vetoes drafted, wars averted or invited, roads and schools imagined into being, rights opened and closed—so listeners can feel how policy becomes weather in ordinary lives. From the presidents of Congress to the latest occupant of the West Wing, this is a guided tour of power, consequence, and the national temperament, written to be read aloud in one voice and built to stand as a reference you can return to as the present changes the past. Produced by Selenius Media

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