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Classics For Plebs
Attica
24 episodes
4 days ago
Teachers would call it 'lively,' scholars would call it 'unorthodox,' and I'd call it 'honest'...I re-interpret Virgil's Aeneid with a dash of realism and all the underlying sarcastic comments necessary, reminding everyone that the classics are for all of us, always. (ps. in Rome, the plebs were the ordinary people. You and me. This is Classics, for Us). Bonus points: if you're studying Classics right now, I made sure to include all those important bits that'll definitely come up in your exams...
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Teachers would call it 'lively,' scholars would call it 'unorthodox,' and I'd call it 'honest'...I re-interpret Virgil's Aeneid with a dash of realism and all the underlying sarcastic comments necessary, reminding everyone that the classics are for all of us, always. (ps. in Rome, the plebs were the ordinary people. You and me. This is Classics, for Us). Bonus points: if you're studying Classics right now, I made sure to include all those important bits that'll definitely come up in your exams...
Show more...
History
Episodes (20/24)
Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Nine: Hercules, Horns and Havoc
The one where Achelous, a very-boring River god, develops an accent more suited to a bored Northern receptionist, a girl turns into a tree, we finally hear about Hercules, another girl turns into a tree, Ovid reminds us that incest never ends well and, to shake things up a little, a girl turns into a tree…
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2 years ago
18 minutes 30 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Eight: Ariadne, Atlanta, and Achelous
The one with all the A’s. Bonus points if you can pronounce all the names (apologies, it’s very clear that I can’t). Note to self: there is nothing less sexy than taking your dad’s hair as a gift on a blind date, and never try to out- do a bloated river god at storytelling.
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2 years ago
19 minutes 52 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Seven: Magic, Murder, and Medea

Please don't try these spells at home, kids. Or steal any magical oak trees. Or invoke the wrath of Juno. 

It never ends well.

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3 years ago
15 minutes 31 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Six: The Wonders of Weaving
Can you solve the following equations? (Don’t forget to show your working out!) 1. Arachne had 2 legs. Now she has 8. How did that happen? 2. Niobe had 14 children. Now she has none. Where did they go? Listen on to check your answers and learn so many more bizarre stories in Book Six of Ovid’s Metamorphoses!
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3 years ago
14 minutes 14 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Five: The Amusing Tale of the Musing Muses
Roll up, roll up! Join us, mortals and immortals and any nymphs in-between, for Book Five of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, including all your favourite family games: Pull the Gorgon out of the Hat, Pin the Tail on the Newt-Boy, and Pass the Persephone (except you don’t ever let her go. ever).
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4 years ago
14 minutes 11 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses -Book Four: The Sex-Starved Sisters and other Saucy Tales
Once upon a time there were three little nymphomaniacs, and their names were Arsippe, Leuconoë and Alcithoë…. Also, you want the #honest story of Medusa? I got you, babe.
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4 years ago
17 minutes 34 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book Three: But First, Wine
What with sailors turning into lizards, vines with no sense of personal space, and mildly cannibalistic mothers, episode Three of Ovid’s Metamorphoses provides us with a solid moral tale: don’t mess with wine, kids.
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4 years ago
16 minutes 42 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses- Book Two: Crash and Burn
In episode two we encounter numerous delights such as: 1. why ‘take your demi-god child to immortal work day’ wasn’t encouraged, 2. that Juno has yet more reasons to be angry, and 3. that Mercury enjoys turning mortals into pebbles…
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4 years ago
14 minutes 54 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Metamorphoses - Book One: In The Beginning...There Was Zeus
In this re-telling of the first book of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, we encounter Chaos and Zeus...the two are interchangeable, really....
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4 years ago
16 minutes 17 seconds

Classics For Plebs
#CiceroSpecial - The Catilinarian Orations

It is 63BC. Cicero is consul of Rome. He has made it. He has achieved his lifelong ambition. It literally shouldn't get any better...

And yet, a grave peril threatens to de-stabilise his consulship, indeed, threatens to destroy the entirety of Rome... in the form of Lucius Sergius Catiline.

And, of course, there is only one man who can be called upon to save the Republic (...twice).

I present, in two episodes, a commentary on the four Catilinarian Orations, which Cicero gave to the people and the Senate as the Catilinarian conspiracy against Rome unfolded around them, and then a dramatic, abridged version of the orations themselves.

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4 years ago
52 minutes 6 seconds

Classics For Plebs
#CiceroSpecial - The Catilinarian Orations - Commentary

It is 63BC. Cicero is consul of Rome. He has made it. He has achieved his lifelong ambition. It literally shouldn't get any better...

And yet, a grave peril threatens to de-stabilise his consulship, indeed, threatens to destroy the entirety of Rome... in the form of Lucius Sergius Catiline.

And, of course, there is only one man who can be called upon to save the Republic (...twice).

I present, in two episodes, a commentary on the four Catilinarian Orations, which Cicero gave to the people and the Senate as the Catilinarian conspiracy against Rome unfolded around them, and then a dramatic, abridged version of the orations themselves.

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4 years ago
19 minutes 10 seconds

Classics For Plebs
#CiceroSpecial - The Verrine Orations

The year is 70BC. It is the height of decline in the Late Roman Republic. Gaius Verres, governor of Sicily, is on trial for extortion. The Senatorial Order that runs the extortion courts is, therefore, also on trial for it's perpetual blind-eye to corruption. Their prosecutor? Marcus Tullius Cicero (on the behalf of the Republic, of course).


This episode provides a full summary of the events and context of the speech, before also offering a slightly-abridged re-telling of the First Verrine Oration itself.

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4 years ago
39 minutes 8 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Twelve: Of Arms and Men

We made it. The Final Showdown. 

There have been endless deaths. Endless tears. Endless broken hearts. Endless emotional breakdowns (mortal and immortal).

But, finally, the armies stop bickering, the gods stop tantruming, and Aeneas and Turnus can meet on the battlefield. 

There can only be one winner. 

(Rome)

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5 years ago
40 minutes 6 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Eleven: Women's Work

We're almost there, and the Trojans and Latins know it. 

As the men weep, bury their dead, and bicker amongst themselves about whose fault it was that this war started in the first place, at least the women can be relied upon to get business done: Camilla, Diana and, finally, the women of Latium themselves all make their mark in this penultimate episode. 

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5 years ago
31 minutes 54 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Ten: A Family Affair

The gods just can't help themselves. The Trojans and Latins destroy one another mercilessly, though neither side can quite remember why or how this started, and as innocent, young, honest lives are lost on both sides, the immortals bicker over breakfast about the injustice of it all (for them. Not for the mortals. Obviously). 

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5 years ago
29 minutes 44 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Nine: The Tragedy of the Poppies

Thanks to a little helpful nudging from Juno (of course), war breaks out between the Trojans and the Latins. Planks of wood turn into women, Turnus is related to lions, tigers and bears (oh my!) more times than is frankly necessary, and innocent sons, husbands, fathers, are slaughtered on all sides...like when wildflowers are cut by ploughs, or when poppies bow their heads in the rain....

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5 years ago
23 minutes 25 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Eight: What Did the Trojans Ever Do For Us?

I mean, what have the Trojans ever given us, anyway?

"Romulus?"

Oh, well, yeah...ok, yeah, but apart from him.

"The Salii?"

Alright, yeah, I'll grant you that one too, they're decent. 

"What about the Trojan Games?"

Well, yes, ok, but apart from Romulus, the Salii, the Trojan Games - what have the Trojans EVER really done for us?

...

"They founded Rome?"

Oh do shut up!


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5 years ago
25 minutes 18 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Seven: Oh Deer!

Believe it or not, the Trojans do eventually make it to Italy. Even better, they actually manage to befriend the local people and it not result in passionate love and suicide (...yet). 

Sounds too good to be true? Of course it is. Juno's no pushover, and she's got a few tricks up her tunic, including a bitter queen, a Fury born of everlasting night...and a deer. 

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5 years ago
25 minutes 50 seconds

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Six: Highway to Hell

How to Be an Epic Hero in Three Easy Steps. One: Son of a goddess - check. Two: Endless suffering - check. Three: Go to hell and back for a cup of tea and a natter with your dad - pending.
Have you forgotten what all this moping and moaning is all about? So has Aeneas. Follow him and the Sibyl to remind yourselves what the Trojans ever did for us...

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5 years ago
27 minutes 1 second

Classics For Plebs
The Aeneid - Book Five: Where Have I Heard This Before? (hint: The Odyssey)

Virgil gives us a brief little filler chapter. Pious Aeneas is very...pious, the Trojans are slow to learn there's...probably always a fire when you see smoke, and the moral of the story is you can do anything you put your mind to with the help of a few water nymphs or a good old tantrum.

Show more...
5 years ago
20 minutes 20 seconds

Classics For Plebs
Teachers would call it 'lively,' scholars would call it 'unorthodox,' and I'd call it 'honest'...I re-interpret Virgil's Aeneid with a dash of realism and all the underlying sarcastic comments necessary, reminding everyone that the classics are for all of us, always. (ps. in Rome, the plebs were the ordinary people. You and me. This is Classics, for Us). Bonus points: if you're studying Classics right now, I made sure to include all those important bits that'll definitely come up in your exams...