『That's So Macaroni』のカバーアート

That's So Macaroni

That's So Macaroni

著者: Kelsey and Sarah
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概要

What happens when a history teacher with a World War II obsession teams up with a genetics nerd who works in a hospital lab? You get a show that treats untaught events, odd inventions, and overlooked people like a treasure hunt—with jokes, receipts, and plenty of curiosity. Chock full of twists and turns, Kelsey and Sarah bring history to life, with a little 'Mean Girl' energy. So put a feather in your cap doodle dandies - We're going to make "That's So Macaroni" happen!

© 2026 That's So Macaroni
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  • Episode 6: Hawaii’s Last Queen
    2026/02/23

    A queen holds the line while the ground shifts under her feet. We dive into the life of Queen Liliuokalani—Hawaii’s last sovereign—through the forces that shaped and ultimately shattered her reign: missionary families who became magnates, laws that hollowed out Native power, and the relentless pull of U.S. commercial and military ambition.

    If stories change how we remember, this one asks us to rethink everything we were taught about Hawaii—who held power, who took it, and what it cost. Listen, share with a friend who loves real history, and leave a review so more curious minds can find the show.

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    52 分
  • Episode 5: The Flags of Texas History - Six Flags: Part 2
    2026/02/09

    Texas history can feel like a roller coaster, but every drop and turn was engineered by choices. We track how a restless republic became a U.S. state that cut its own map to protect slavery, chased Santa Fe across decades, and doubled down on cotton while starving railroads, schools, and industry. The politics around the Missouri Compromise, Polk’s annexation push, and the “balance” of free and slave states weren’t background noise—they were the blueprint that shaped who counted, and who paid.

    We pull apart the myths around Confederate symbols and get specific about what the flag stood for: the right to own people and turn their bodies into political power. Texas’s Civil War story isn’t just Appomattox from afar. It’s cavalry culture, German Unionists dodging conscription, Tejanos caught between armies, and the audacious New Mexico campaign that fizzled at Glorieta Pass when Union troops burned Confederate supplies and flanked their way to a strategic win. On home soil, Texas lost and retook Galveston, sent tens of thousands east, and then refused to accept the war’s end until the following year.

    Reconstruction brings the legal hard reset—13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments—paired with a truth we still live with: rights on paper need muscle in practice. Juneteenth is the moral pivot of the episode, the moment 250,000 people in Texas finally heard freedom spoken aloud two years late. From there, the twentieth century rewires the state: Galveston’s seawall after the deadliest U.S. storm, safer energy because of a school explosion, aviation’s first military flight in San Antonio, and the microchip at Texas Instruments that launched modern electronics.

    We land at Six Flags Over Texas, where themed lands once turned history into scenery. Confederate Land is gone now, but the question remains: what do flags above a gate conceal or reveal about the past beneath our feet? If you’re ready for a clear-eyed tour through annexation politics, slavery’s expansion, wartime audacity, and the innovations that followed, press play, then tell us which moment changed how you see Texas. Subscribe, share with a history-loving friend, and leave a review with the one fact you’ll be quoting all week.

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    56 分
  • Episode 4: La Salle Got Lost, Texas Got A Theme Park - Six Flags: Part 1
    2026/01/26

    A roller coaster is fun. A border that won’t hold still is not. We open the gates at Six Flags Over Texas and walk past the turnstiles into three centuries of ambition, error, and reinvention. Arlington’s bid to rival Disneyland set the stage, but the park’s name reveals a bigger story: six regimes, six narratives, and a tangled web of claims that shaped a region long before the first ride tested its brakes.

    We trace Spain’s early claim and mission network, the Comanche’s leverage through trade and warfare, and France’s five-year misadventure when La Salle missed the Mississippi and accidentally rewrote future maps. Mexico’s independence arrives with abolition, fragile institutions, and colonization rules that invited settlers and conflict in equal measure. As tensions rise, the Republic of Texas is born with a constitution modeled on the U.S. South, a mounting debt problem, and a president—Sam Houston—who pursues diplomacy with Native nations and recognition abroad from France and Britain.

    Then the pendulum swings. Mirabeau Lamar dreams of a continental Texas, denies Native land claims, boosts the military, and burns political capital on the failed Santa Fe expedition. Raids, rivalries, and thin infrastructure expose how fragile the republic truly is. Through it all, the Comanche and Wichita are not footnotes; they are power brokers navigating trade routes, alliances, and epidemics that reshape the plains. By the time annexation looms, the flags have flown, the borders have shifted, and the myths are already hardening into memory.

    If you’ve ever stared at a park map and wondered what the names really mean, this is your guided tour: clear, candid, and full of the choices people made—good and bad—that led to the marquee. Listen, learn, and share with a friend who loves Texas lore, theme parks, or both. Subscribe for more sharp, story-driven dives, and leave a review to tell us which “flag” changed your mind.

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    54 分
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