It’s September 26th. This day in 1983, a lieutenant colonel in the Soviet Air Defense Forces determined that an alert about an incoming nuclear attack was, in fact, a computer glitch, likely preventing a series of retaliations by the USSR and the USA.
Jody, NIki, and Kellie discuss how Petrov made his decision, what could have gone wrong, and why the policy of “mutually assured destruction” invited such perilous scenarios.
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Our team: Jacob Feldman, Researcher/Producer; Brittani Brown, Producer; Khawla Nakua, Transcripts; music by Teen Daze and Blue Dot Sessions; Audrey Mardavich is our Executive Producer at Radiotopia
Ask Us Anything (Part 1)
Stuff That Inspired Us: Popular Work
Stuff That Inspired Us: Academic Work
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Karl Rove's "IT Guru" and the 2004 Ohio Rumor Mill (2008)
Ford on "Dynasty" (1983)
JFK Almost Assassinated (1960)
Bernie Madoff's Pyramid Collapses (2008)
Sandy Hook Conspiracies Take Root (2012)
The Video Game Freakout (1993)
The Nullification Crisis and the Almost-Civil-War (1832)
Colored Conventions Movement (1830)
The First Email. Probably. (1971)
Jews To Alaska (1938)
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400 Episodes! (pt 1) w/ Jacob Feldman
The Jekyll Island Secret Meeting (1910) w/ Jacob Goldstein
Jaywalking (1923) w/ Doug Gordon
Trotter Confronts Wilson (1914)
Denver Rejects The Olympics (1972)
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