Space Rocket History Podcast
Michael Annis has been methodically working through the entire history of spaceflight since 2013, and the level of detail is staggering. Starting from the earliest Sputnik missions and working forward chronologically, the show has produced 210 deeply researched episodes that read more like chapters in a comprehensive textbook than casual podcast chatter. The current focus is a multi-part series on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, covering training, rendezvous procedures, docking mechanics, and mission aftermath across several episodes. Each installment runs 40 to 50 minutes and is packed with primary source material and firsthand accounts. The podcast holds a remarkable 4.9 rating from 631 reviews, which is almost unheard of for a show this niche. Listeners consistently praise the enthusiasm and thoroughness—several reviews mention the importance of preserving these stories while original mission participants are still alive to tell them. The production is straightforward with no flashy sound design, just careful narration and well-organized research. It moves at a deliberate pace, so this is not the show for quick news updates. But if you want to genuinely understand how we got from theoretical rocketry to walking on the moon, episode by episode, there is nothing else quite like it.
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