Let's Talk About Myths, Baby! Greek & Roman Mythology Retold
A podcast by Liv Albert and iHeartPodcasts
667 Episodes
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XLVI: Matricide Mania! Furies, Furies Everywhere (The Oresteia Part 3)
Published: 12/02/2019 -
Mini Myth: Hubris & Hamartia, Or, How the Ancient Greeks Warned Us
Published: 5/02/2019 -
XLV: Orestes & Electra, the Angriest, Best-Named Children of Greek Mythology (The Oresteia Part Two)
Published: 29/01/2019 -
Mini Myth: Minor God Madness! Thanatos, Kratos, & Other Characters You've Asked About
Published: 22/01/2019 -
XLIV: Will Someone Please Just Believe Cassandra?! (The Oresteia Part One)
Published: 15/01/2019 -
Mini Myth: Zodiac Constellations, Capricorn, Who is Really Just a "Sea-Goat"
Published: 8/01/2019 -
Mini Myth: Aesclepius, God of Medicine, or, Apollo Has Awful Moments, too
Published: 18/12/2018 -
XLIII: Bellerophon, the Underserved Hero Who Actually Rode Pegasus
Published: 11/12/2018 -
Mini Myth: Zodiac Constellations, Chiron, Trainer to the Stars (Sagittarius)
Published: 7/12/2018 -
XLII: Poseidon & His Sea of Awful Behaviour
Published: 27/11/2018 -
Mini Myth: Sisphyus & the Boulder, Sisyphus & the Boulder, Sisyphus & the Boulder
Published: 21/11/2018 -
XLI: Hecuba, Cassandra, Andromache... Euripides' Trojan Women
Published: 13/11/2018 -
Mini Myth: Zodiac Constellations, Orion & the Scorpion (Scorpio)
Published: 6/11/2018 -
Halloween Special: It’s Scary as Hell Down There… Hades and his Underworld
Published: 31/10/2018 -
XL: The End of the Trojan War, Something About a Horse & a Heel
Published: 23/10/2018 -
XXXIX: Hector & the Wrath of Achilles, the Iliad's Finale
Published: 10/10/2018 -
Mini Myth: Pygmalion & Galatea, the Gross Origins of My Fair Lady
Published: 27/09/2018 -
Mini Myth: Ixion, Cloud-lover Extraordinnaire
Published: 20/09/2018 -
XXXVIII: Patroclus, Patroclus, Patroclus (The Iliad Part Ten)
Published: 11/09/2018 -
XXXVII: Hera & Zeus' Dysfunctional Relationship (The Iliad Part Nine)
Published: 28/08/2018
The most entertaining and enraging stories from mythology told casually, contemporarily, and (let's be honest) sarcastically. Greek and Roman gods did some pretty weird (and awful) things. Gods, goddesses, heroes, monsters, and everything in between. Regular episodes every Tuesday, conversations with authors and scholars or readings of ancient epics every Friday.