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Stelleri
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Sep 13, 2022 12:52PM

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Gregory S. Aldrete is good.
World War II: The Pacific Theater was very good. I have basically given up on WWII documentaries, as they don't generally tell me anything I didn't already know, but these 24 lectures were WORTHWHILE.
I enjoyed Barbarians of the Steppes.
I am currently on episode 31 of The Story of Medieval England: From King Arthur to the Tudor Conquest, and it is the last Wondrium course that I am interested in available on Kanopy at my library so I hope to find good ones here.

The Pagan World: ancient religions before Christianity, (Hans-Friedrich, Mueller) (he says it's awesome)
Pompeii: daily life in an ancient Roman city (Steven L. Tuck)
The Black Death: the world's most devastating plague (24 lectures) (Dorsey Armstrong).
After the above lectures were presented, new research in the meantime necessitated the creation of:
The Black Death: new lessons from recent research (7 lectures) (Dorsey Armstrong)
He also really enjoys Aldrete, especially:
The Rise of Rome
The Roman Empire
Famous Greeks (J. Rufus Fears)- Different from the other lectures. Fears is really a storyteller. He tells the story of Greece through the biographies of famous Greeks. Lecture #12 on Pericles, explains the meaning of the Greek plays to the ancient Greeks watching them. Chris was very impressed.
He also seconds the comment about Barbarians of the Steppes.


'Math and Magic' and 'Mathematics Games and Puzzles' were both a lot of fun. Amaze our friends! Learn why gambling is stupid!
The French course was probably the most useful one.
Also enjoyed 'Ancient Civilizations of North America'.

The version I watched was "The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague"



Food: A Cultural Culinary History with Ken Albala
and Archaeology: An Introduction to the World's Greatest Sites with Eric H. Cline are faves as well as Ken Harl's stuff.


Melinda Varian

Melinda Varian"
Hah! I'd just been about to rec that one myself. I'm about 3/4 through. His wonderful illuminating models (engineering, not fashion) star in the show. I agree it's his best yet, and I've seen them all. Though it's very hard to beat Greek and Roman Engineering for a writer researching, literally, world-building.
My Dad being a nondestructive testing/welding engineering professor, a lot of Ressler's subjects like metal fatigue in the new course were dinner table talk in my childhood -- well, if the dinner was at an engineering society meeting -- when I was a kid. My dad's first television x-ray system was developed to inspect welds in non-visible locations, like inside aluminum honeycomb sheets (used in airplanes.) The medical applications of the tech and its descendants most of us have seen or had used on us came later.
Ta, L.


May I just say, "the rapacity of change" is a typo/autocorrupt I adore.
Ta, L.

Ha! Well I don't shy from admitting to an over abundance of typos and outright misspellings for which I rely heavily on the wonders of spellcheck. Here I confess my vocabulary soaked brain swapped my intended "rapidity" for "rapacity" all on it's own though. Sounded right to me at the time lol perhaps it is my back brain chiming in her own take on things.