• Hoodoo, Healing, and the Paradox of Poison in the Antebellum South
    Jan 23 2026

    Imagine a world where saving a life could cost you your own. In 1748 Virginia, the legislature passed a terrifying law: any enslaved person caught administering medicine was committing a felony punishable by death "without benefit of clergy." Yet, in a twist of historical irony, the very slaveholders who passed these laws often relied on Black healers when their own expensive doctors failed.

    In this deep dive, we unearth the complex, hidden world of African American spirituality and medicine during slavery. From the "biological war zone" of the South to the secret spirit bundles hidden beneath the floorboards of future presidents, we explore how Hoodoo and Conjure provided not just health, but a powerful form of resistance and psychological warfare.

    In this episode, we cover:

    1. The Legal Paradox: Why the Antebellum South feared Black medical knowledge as "poison" while simultaneously depending on it for survival.
    2. The Healer Hierarchy: The distinct roles of the Midwife, the Root Doctor, and the Conjurer.
    3. Archaeological Mysteries: The debate over "gaming pieces" vs. ritual chicken gizzard stones (gastroliths) found at slave quarters.
    4. Spirits in the Floorboards: The discovery of Minkisi bundles—containing crystals, beads, and "cosmogram" buttons—hidden under the home of Union General Ulysses S. Grant.
    5. The AI Warning: A look at how modern AI can hallucinate historical laws and artifacts, and why primary sources still matter.

    Featured Stories:

    1. Dinky, King of the Voodoos: How one man used "goofer dust" and a snake skin to terrify a brutal overseer into leaving him alone.
    2. The Trial of Tom and Amy: A 1806 courtroom drama where a white doctor testified that a child died of croup, but the court saw "poison" and "conjure."
    3. Mildred Graves: The enslaved midwife who stepped in to save a white mother and child after the "official" doctors gave up.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    1. Zora Neale Hurston’s Hoodoo in America
    2. The WPA Slave Narratives
    3. The Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site (White Haven)
    4. The distinction between Haitian Vodou and American Hoodoo

    Tune in to uncover the history buried in the backyard—and the resilience of those who practiced medicine in the shadows.

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    26 mins
  • Hexed & Vexed: The Deadly Chemistry of Flying Ointment
    Jan 20 2026

    Did medieval witches really fly on broomsticks, or was it all a hallucination fueled by the most dangerous plants on Earth?

    In this episode of The Hexed Vexed Experience, we peel back the velvet curtain of folklore to expose the terrifying toxicology behind "Flying Ointment." We’re ditching the Hocus Pocus props to investigate the lethal nightshades—Belladonna, Henbane, and Datura—that powered ancient rituals.

    Join us as we explore:

    1. 🧪 The Forbidden Recipe: Why baby fat wasn’t the scariest ingredient in the cauldron.
    2. 🧹 The Broomstick Theory: The R-rated truth about how witches actually "applied" their potions (and why it involves mucus membranes).
    3. ✈️ The First Trip: How atropine and scopolamine trick the brain into believing it's defying gravity.
    4. ⚖️ Fact vs. Folklore: Did the Inquisition invent the Flying Witch to explain away a drug trip, or was it a genuine shamanic practice?

    Warning: This episode discusses toxic substances and historical torture. Do not try this at home. The history is fascinating; the poisoning is real.

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    26 mins
  • Trump's Second Term: Health Red Flags?
    Jan 19 2026

    On today's Deep Dive we delve into the Health of a President.

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    29 mins
  • God the Mother: The History of the Goddess Movement
    Jan 18 2026

    Who killed the Goddess, and how did she come back? Today we are dissecting the history of the Goddess Movement, tracing its roots from 19th-century anthropology to modern Neo-Paganism.

    Join us as we explore how the search for a "Divine Feminine" challenged the patriarchal foundations of Western religion. We discuss the controversial archeological theories of Marija Gimbutas, who claimed Old Europe was a peaceful, goddess-worshipping civilization destroyed by warrior tribes. We also look at how these ideas fueled second-wave feminism and eco-spirituality.

    In this episode:

    1. The Origin Story: How Victorian men accidentally laid the groundwork for feminist spirituality.
    2. The Golden Age Myth: Was there really a universal era of peace and goddess worship?
    3. Starhawk’s Legacy: The fusion of magic, politics, and environmentalism.
    4. Immanence vs. Transcendence: The shift from looking up to looking in and around.

    Sources:

    1. Works by J.J. Bachofen, Marija Gimbutas, Starhawk, and Riane Eisler.

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    17 mins
  • The Zombie Workforce: Why the Undead Punch the Clock
    Jan 18 2026

    We tend to think of zombies as brain-eating monsters from Hollywood movies, but in the Copperbelt of Zambia, the zombie is something far more tragic: the ultimate unpaid laborer. In this episode, we decode the "Economic Logic" of witchcraft, exploring how rumors of zombie workers are actually a sophisticated critique of modern capitalism.

    We discuss how the sudden, unexplained wealth of local businessmen in towns like Chambishi fuels accusations of "Satanism"—the belief that success comes from turning neighbors into mindless automatons to work the night shift. We also dive into the terrifying phenomenon of "penis snatching"—a mass panic where a simple handshake with a stranger is believed to steal a man's virility for profit.

    Join us as we break down the "Zero-Sum Game" of the occult economy, where every Mercedes bought is believed to cost a human life, and explore why, in a world of invisible market forces, magic is the only explanation that makes sense.

    Topics Covered:

    1. The Zombie as Slave: Why the African zombie is a symbol of exhaustion, not horror.
    2. The Chambishi Riots: The 2012 uprising against a businessman accused of harvesting locals.
    3. Penis Snatching: How "transaction anxiety" in cities creates fears of physical theft.
    4. Mami Wata: The spirit of globalization who offers wealth in exchange for fertility.

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    29 mins
  • Resurrecting the Goddess: From Myth to Movement
    Jan 18 2026

    For two thousand years, Western civilization has largely pictured the divine as male: a father figure in the sky. But in the 20th century, a radical shift occurred. In this Deep Dive, we trace the fascinating journey of the "Goddess Movement"—a spiritual revolution that sought to bring the divine back down to earth.

    We explore the unexpected origins of this movement, from dusty Victorian libraries to the counter-culture explosion of the 1970s. Discover how a Swiss jurist's study of ancient myths sparked a feminist theological wildfire, leading to the rise of Dianic Wicca and the influential work of Starhawk.

    We unpack the controversial "Goddess Hypothesis"—the idea of a pre-historic Golden Age of peace and matriarchy—and examine how modern pagans use myth not as literal history, but as a tool for personal and political liberation.

    Topics Covered:

    1. The "Bachofen Shift": How a 19th-century legal scholar invented the idea of a matriarchal past.
    2. The Chalice and the Blade: Riane Eisler’s theory of partnership vs. dominator cultures.
    3. Political Witchcraft: How Starhawk merged spirituality with direct action activism.
    4. The Theology of Immanence: Why finding God in the dirt changes everything.

    Sources:

    1. Works by J.J. Bachofen, Marija Gimbutas, Starhawk, and Riane Eisler.

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    17 mins
  • The Vampire Businessmen of Zambia: When Modernity Meets Magic
    Jan 18 2026

    Is it possible to become a vampire through the sheer power of free-market capitalism? In this Deep Dive, we travel to the mining town of Chambishi, Zambia, where a terrifying riot in 2012 revealed the dark side of globalization.

    We explore the shocking accusation that sparked two days of violence: a local businessman allegedly practicing "Satanism" to harvest body parts for profit. But this isn't just a story about superstition. It's about what happens when traditional communities are forced into a merciless global economy. We unpack how these accusations of "witchcraft" and "Satanism" are actually a sophisticated moral critique of wealth inequality—a way for communities to make sense of a world where profit seems to drain the life out of the poor.

    Join us as we challenge the Western idea that modernity erases magic, and instead show how the two can merge to create new, terrifying monsters.

    Topics Covered:

    1. The Chambishi Riots: How a rumor of ritual murder shut down a town.
    2. High-Octane Witchcraft: Why modern magic happens in shopping malls, not villages.
    3. The Zero-Sum Game: The "Moral Economy" that equates rapid wealth with theft of life.
    4. Zombies of Capitalism: The terrifying new folklore of "invisible slave labor."

    Sources:

    1. Research by Peter Geschiere, Jean & John Comaroff, and Isak Nieha

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    30 mins
  • The Greatest Magic Trick: How Gerald Gardner Rebranded Aleister Crowley
    Jan 18 2026

    What if one of the world's fastest-growing religions, Wicca, wasn't an ancient survival from the Stone Age, but a clever rebrand cooked up in 1945? In this Deep Dive, we explore the explosive theory by researcher Alan Greenfield that reveals the secret history behind modern witchcraft.

    We take you back to a freezing boarding house in Hastings, England, where a dying Aleister Crowley—the infamous "wickedest man in the world"—allegedly struck a deal with civil servant Gerald Gardner. Discover how Gardner may have purchased the franchise rights to Crowley’s high-octane sex magic, stripped out the jargon, added a "nature-loving" aesthetic, and sold it to the world as an ancient fertility cult.

    Using forensic evidence like the "Book of Shadows" manuscript analysis, we uncover how a complex, elite occult system was transformed into the accessible, nature-based spirituality we know today.

    Topics Covered:

    1. The Smoking Gun: The O.T.O. charter that turned Gardner into the "Prince of Jerusalem."
    2. Forensic Plagiarism: How Crowley’s writings were cut-and-pasted into the original Wiccan texts.
    3. The "Divine Con Men": Why inventing a fake history might have been a necessary "holy lie."
    4. From Sex Cult to Nature Religion: How 1940s taboos were softened for mass consumption.

    Sources:

    1. The Secret History of Modern Witchcraft by Alan Greenfield.

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    16 mins