

Cuba – Revolution Before the Revolution
09.1.2026 | 18 Min.
This episode traces the long build of pressure that shaped modern Cuba before the moment the world remembers. From the end of Spanish rule to the fall of Batista, the story follows how limited sovereignty, economic control, political violence, and blocked reform created a system that could not release tension peacefully. Independence existed, but it was conditional. Elections existed, but power lived elsewhere. As legal paths narrowed, force replaced trust, and stability became an excuse rather than a solution. This is the history beneath the headline revolution. The one that formed it.

Haiti – The Only Successful Slave Revolution
08.1.2026 | 15 Min.
This episode examines Haiti’s revolution from uprising to aftermath, and the price imposed for winning it. It traces how the world’s richest slave colony collapsed under an organized revolt, how independence was achieved against global powers, and how that victory triggered isolation, debt, and intervention. The story follows Haiti beyond eighteen zero four, showing how punishment replaced chains, and how freedom itself became something the world demanded Haiti pay for. This is a country history focused on systems, consequences, and endurance, not myth or celebration.

Jamaica – From Plantation Colony to Cultural Superpower
07.1.2026 | 19 Min.
This episode traces Jamaica’s transformation from a violently engineered plantation colony into one of the most influential cultural forces on the planet. It examines how sugar, slavery, and colonial control shaped the island’s foundations, how resistance and survival strategies emerged under constant pressure, and how freedom arrived without power. Moving through rebellion, emancipation, crown rule, independence, and global migration, the episode shows how Jamaicans turned endurance into identity. This is not a celebration piece. It is a grounded examination of how a small island, built to be exploited, learned to speak back to the world and reshape global culture while still wrestling with the unfinished consequences of its past.

Why the Caribbean Still Matters Globally
06.1.2026 | 21 Min.
Why the Caribbean Still Matters Globally challenges the idea that the region is small, peripheral, or finished with history. From the nineteen hundreds to the present, this episode traces how Caribbean identity, labor, culture, and political experience have shaped global systems far beyond the islands themselves. It examines how the region moved from plantation economies into migration pipelines, cultural influence, and strategic relevance, often without gaining equal power or protection. This is not a celebration piece. It is a clear-eyed examination of why the Caribbean remains central to global politics, economics, culture, and crisis, and why that relevance continues to be contested rather than respected.

Independence Promises and Early Failures
05.1.2026 | 19 Min.
This episode examines the moment after celebration, when independence moved from promise to practice. Focusing on Jamaica, Trinidad, and Barbados between the nineteen fifties and nineteen seventies, it traces how political freedom arrived without economic control. Through governance choices, inherited systems, and rising public pressure, the episode exposes why hope faded so quickly and how early failures reshaped trust between citizens and the state. This is not a story of lost independence, but of expectations colliding with reality, and the long shadow that collision cast over Caribbean political life.



History of the Caribbeans | Exploring Resilience and Culture