PODCAST · society
History of the Caribbeans | Exploring Resilience and Culture
by history experts | Joe & Kevin
Join Caribbean history experts Joe & Kevin as they uncover the #1 Caribbean History & Culture Podcast powerful stories, cultural legacies, and untold truths that shaped the region in History of the Caribbeans: Tales of Resilience and Culture — a podcast for listeners passionate about Caribbean history, heritage, and the enduring spirit of a people who’ve shaped the world.
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Gyalis Class Episode 1: The Badman Gyalis | Why Women Choose Dangerous Men
Master the Gallus class to identify exactly what type of man you are dealing with. Stop guessing and start analyzing male behavior. Most men watch others succeed with women they do not understand, often reacting with anger instead of insight. This lecture provides the framework to stop that cycle. Whether you are looking to decode social dynamics or sharpen your perception, this material offers a direct look at the psychology behind why certain men command respect and others fail to maintain it. By the end of this session, you will possess the tools to read any individual instantly. We move past storytelling to provide pure education on human interaction. This is for those tired of confusion and ready to apply objective logic to their observations. Subscribe for weekly psychology breakdowns, and comment below with which behavioral pattern you want analyzed next.
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610
True Crime Jamaica: How the Garrisons Were Born — Politics, Guns & the Ghetto
Jamaica’s garrison communities did not appear by accident. They were built through politics, housing, poverty, party loyalty, guns, and fear. In this episode of True Crime Jamaica from The History of the Caribbean, we look at how Kingston’s inner-city communities became political strongholds, how ordinary people were forced into systems they did not create, and how the relationship between politicians, dons, gangs, and voters changed Jamaica for more than sixty years. This is not the story of one don, one shooting, or one election. This is the story of how a political system turned poor communities into controlled territories, and how the people inside those communities paid the price. Watch the full episode and follow for more stories from Jamaica, the Caribbean, and the history they never taught properly.
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609
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Early Bird — The Rise of the Spangler Posse and the Secret King of Matthews Lane
Discover the legacy of Early Bird, the secret king of Matthew's Lane. Learn how his story defined the rise of the Spangler Posse. This video explores the visual history of the Spangler Posse through the lens of community murals. We examine the imagery of memory found in Matthew's Lane, where every face painted tells a specific part of the local narrative. For those interested in urban history and neighborhood storytelling, this breakdown connects the art to the figures who shaped the area. By documenting these street murals, we preserve the history of Early Bird and his influence on the community. You will gain a clearer understanding of how local legends are kept alive through art and why these specific figures remain central to the identity of the lane. Subscribe for weekly neighborhood history breakdowns, and comment which local legend you want us to cover next.
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608
THE HISTORY OF JAMAICAN POLITICS: The Morant Bay Uprising
Paul Bogle walked forty-five miles to ask Governor Edward John Eyre to hear the cries of the poor people of St. Thomas. The governor refused. What followed became one of the most important turning points in Jamaican history. In this episode of The History Of Jamaican Politics, we look at Paul Bogle, George William Gordon, and the 1865 Morant Bay Rebellion. This is the story of poverty, land hunger, colonial power, political silence, courthouse fire, martial law, execution, and the rebellion that helped end the old plantocracy-controlled system in Jamaica. Paul Bogle was not simply a riot leader. He was a Baptist deacon, a landowner, a community organizer, and a man who understood that the post-emancipation promise had been broken. This is the story of what happened when the people asked to be heard, and the government sent them home. Watch now and follow The History Of Jamaican Politics for more stories from Jamaica’s political past.
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607
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Puppy String — The Rise of the Klansman Gang
Learn how the Klansman Gang operates in Spanish Town and explore the influence of Derek Puppy String Eccleston on the streets. This account examines the power structures currently shaping the area. This episode focuses on the rise of the Klansman Gang, providing a clear look at how they exert authority in Spanish Town. We examine the specific methods used to collect taxes and maintain dominance within the community. It is essential viewing for those interested in understanding the complex realities of local power dynamics. Throughout the report, we analyze the role of Derek Puppy String Eccleston in cementing the organization's status as one of the most significant groups in the region. By detailing the intense atmosphere and community tension, this breakdown provides context on why Jamaican gang violence remains a critical issue. We strip away the speculation to focus on the documented activities surrounding these figures. Subscribe for weekly criminal history breakdowns, and let me know in the comments which specific gang organization you want to see analyzed next. Explore the rise of the Clansman gang in Spanish Town as we trace the early criminal path of Derek Puppy String Eckleston. Learn how this figure began his influence in the streets of Jamaica. This episode examines the early history of the Clansman gang and the specific environment that shaped key figures like Derek Puppy String Eckleston. We look at the atmosphere in Spanish Town and the early moves that defined the trajectory of Jamaican gangster history. If you are interested in the roots of organized crime in Jamaica, this breakdown provides context on the evolution of these local power structures. By analyzing the rise of figures like Puppy String, viewers gain a clearer understanding of how Spanish Town crime became a defining element of the region. We document these events to preserve the history of the streets, focusing on the tactical and social factors that allowed these groups to gain control. Subscribe for weekly Jamaican crime stories and analysis. Let us know in the comments which historical figure or gang you want us to cover next.
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606
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Sandokhan — The Phantom of the 80s
Hear the true story of Wayne Smith, known as Sandocon, and the 1986 attack on the Olympic Gardens Police Station.This episode of Jamaican Gangster examines the events of November 19, 1986, when the Olympic Gardens Police Station became a target rather than a place of refuge. If you follow Jamaican gangster history, this breakdown provides a factual account of the morning that changed the station forever. We focus on the specific details regarding Sandocon and the circumstances surrounding this brazen act of violence.By analyzing 1986 crime history, we provide context for how these incidents impacted local law enforcement and the surrounding communities. This video is for viewers interested in the reality of Jamaican crime stories and the figures who shaped the narrative during this era. We strip away the rumors to look strictly at what happened when danger arrived at the station doors.Subscribe for weekly Jamaican Gangster episodes, and let us know in the comments which case you want us to cover next.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Bunman Hope — The One Order Leader and the Siege of Spanish Town
Welcome to another compelling episode of Jamaican Gangster. This video depicts the raw footage of a courthouse burning in Spanish Town, a significant moment in true crime history. We explore the broader implications for jamaica news and caribbean culture, revealing stories often overlooked.
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604
He Left His Wife's Birthday Dinner and Never Came Home
A Jamaican MTA conductor in Brooklyn. A wife who trusted him completely. A woman he found crying on the last train of his shift. And one act of kindness that became a two-year double life that ended in three gunshots in a Crown Heights restaurant on his wife's birthday night. This is the story of Tony Smith. A good man. A present father. A husband who built something real — a brownstone on Hendrix Street, a family, a life that cost years to build. And a man who made one decision he told himself was charity, then kept making it, one lie at a time, until there was nothing left to save. Tony didn't set out to destroy his family. He sat down across from a crying woman on a dead train at midnight. He texted his wife. He thought he was done. He was not done. This is what a double life actually costs. Not just the man running it — but the wife in the blue dress who trusted him. The children who didn't know yet. The grandmother who watched it assemble itself and said nothing. And the woman on a Crown Heights floor with blood on her hands who told the truth when it was the only thing she had left to give. Subscribe and turn on notifications — new Caribbean stories every week.
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603
The History Of Jamaican Sound-System Culture: Hedley Jones’ System | The Amplifier That Started It All
Explore the roots of Jamaican sound system culture with Hedley Jones, the visionary craftsman behind the original amplifier design. See the workshop where Hedley Jones engineered the technology that powered the island's most iconic outdoor parties. This footage captures the raw energy of early Jamaican sound system culture, highlighting how these custom-built rigs created a competitive atmosphere between parishes that defined the local music scene. Witness the technical precision of a legendary amplifier builder and how his inventions became the backbone of community gatherings. By examining the equipment used in these vintage setups, you gain a clearer understanding of how the sound systems evolved to dominate Jamaican music history. Subscribe for more deep dives into audio engineering history, and comment below on which sound system pioneer you want to see featured next.
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602
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Dog Paw — How a Choir Boy Ruled the Streets
Welcome to another compelling episode of Jamaican Gangster, where we dive into the complex world of true crime jamaica. This episode focuses on Christopher "Dogpaw" Linton and the events of October 11, 2021, in St. Andrew, shedding light on the challenges faced by jamaican people in dangerous countries. We explore the broader implications for jamaica news and caribbean culture, revealing stories often overlooked.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Ten | Season Finale
Character analysis reveals that every decision we make in isolation reflects our true self. Understand how voting defines you. This video explores the psychology behind why the act of voting serves as a mirror for personal integrity. When you are alone with a choice that cannot be undone, the process of arriving at that decision is where your identity is formed. We examine why private moments of decision making are more telling than any public performance or managed identity. By looking at the weight of these quiet choices, you will gain a clearer perspective on how your moral choices shape the version of yourself you carry for the rest of your life. This analysis is for those interested in the deeper implications of personal accountability and the true meaning of character analysis in our daily lives. Subscribe for weekly philosophical breakdowns, and comment below on a time your own decision making process taught you something new about yourself.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Nine | Seven Months
Organizational health relies on understanding the season of waiting. Learn why indecision is more dangerous than open conflict. Many leaders assume that open war is the greatest threat to a team. However, the season of waiting proves far more volatile. This video examines why suspended threats and undecided outcomes create unique risks for your structure. If you are struggling with team stagnation or feeling the pressure of an unclear path forward, understanding these dynamics is essential for maintaining clarity and purpose. We break down why clarity is a form of protection. When a team knows exactly where they stand and what is required of them, they can navigate challenges effectively. But when the organization enters a period of waiting, that clarity evaporates. Use these insights to identify when your team is stuck in this dangerous phase and take the necessary steps to force a decision. Subscribe for weekly leadership breakdowns, and comment below on how you handle periods of uncertainty in your organization.
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599
The History of Dub Reggae: How Jamaica Invented the Remix
Learn what is dub music and how it uses silence, echo, and fragmentation to reshape traditional reggae compositions.This breakdown explores the core characteristics that define the genre, specifically focusing on how producers manipulate vocal fragments and rhythm sections. You will understand why the genre is far more than just instrumental reggae, as we examine the unique reliance on deep sonic tunnels and sudden absences of sound.By analyzing these studio techniques, you will gain a clearer perspective on how space and echo become just as important as the instruments themselves. If you are interested in reggae production techniques, this analysis provides the technical context needed to appreciate the minimalist approach behind the tracks.Subscribe for weekly music production breakdowns, and comment which genre you want us to analyze next.
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598
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Natty Morgan — The Ruthless Outlaw Who Declared War on the State
This episode of Jamaican Gangster features Natty Morgan, set in the 1990s amidst political violence and poverty. The narrative appears to involve police drama and Natty Morgan's potential escape, with a call received by the police station in the evening. This crime investigation dives into the complexities of the Jamaican justice system.
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597
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: The Black Roses Crew — The Dancehall Empire That Ran the Streets of Kingston
Learn the true history of Willie Haggert and the Black Roses crew. We examine how this dancehall empire controlled Kingston streets. This episode of Jamaican Gangster details the rise and influence of the Black Roses crew, led by Willie Haggert. We recount the specific events of April 18th, 2001, on Lincoln Avenue, providing a factual breakdown of the day that changed the local landscape forever. If you are interested in the deeper story behind Kingston street history, this breakdown provides the context and timeline you need. By examining the power dynamics of this dancehall empire, viewers gain a clearer understanding of the figures who shaped the culture. We strip away the rumors to focus on the documented reality of the era, offering a precise look at the events that defined the legacy of Willie Haggert. Subscribe for weekly Jamaican Gangster breakdowns, and comment below on which historical figure you want us to cover next.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Eight | Eleven Months
Character building over 12 months is the true measure of a man in leadership. Learn how daily choices define long-term success.Twelve months is not merely a measurement of time. For those who manage money, relationships, and the futures of others, a year serves as the ultimate test of integrity. This discussion examines the daily working machinery of an organization and why the choices you make when nobody is watching dictate your actual character. It is about closing the gap between who you claim to be and who you prove to be through 365 consecutive days of action.Father Clark breaks down the reality of professional accountability and the consequences paid when everyone is watching. If you are focused on leadership development, professional integrity, or personal accountability, this perspective offers a sobering look at how to measure your own progress. We explore why long-term character building matters more than short-term results and how to align your daily choices with your stated values.Subscribe for weekly leadership breakdowns, and comment below on how you track your own professional character growth.
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595
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: My Son - A Mother Killed, A Son Jailed, A Father's Final Choice
On a quiet Saturday morning in Ocho Rios, Jamaica, Robyna Caldwell walked into a supermarket with her fifteen year old son Cameron and never walked out. When the One Shot One Kill gang stormed the store and opened fire, seven people lost their lives. Robyna was one of them. Her son witnessed everything from behind a freezer in aisle seven. Three years passed. The case went cold. The man who pulled the trigger walked free. Then Cameron arrived at the University of the West Indies in Kingston, and came face to face with his mother's killer in a KFC line. What happened next set off a chain of events that would send a father and his son to the same prison, and force one man to make the most devastating choice a parent can make. This is My Son. One of the most emotional stories we have ever told on this channel. 00:00 The Caldwell Family and the Morning That Changed Everything 18:30 Cameron Arrives in Kingston and Finds the Man 32:00 The Trial, the Verdict, and a Father's Final Choice Subscribe and follow The History of the Caribbean so you never miss a new episode of Jamaican Gangster. Every story we tell is one you will not find told like this anywhere else. #JamaicanGangster #MySon #JamaicaTrueCrime #HistoryOfTheCaribbean #KingstonJamaica #OchoRios #WestKingston #CaribbeanCrime #JamaicaGang #TrueCrimeJamaica #GarrisonJamaica #JamaicaPodcast #CaribbeanPodcast #FatherAndSon #JamaicaJustice #LongFormCrime #JamaicanHistory #TrueCrimeCaribbean #OneShot #JamaicaStories
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Seven | Twelve Months
Every builder reaches a point where their creation takes on a life of its own, a subtle shift often unnoticed until it's complete. This video offers a motivational speech on personal development, exploring the profound idea of taking responsibility as things evolve beyond initial control. It's an in-depth analysis of how leadership and business advice can guide us through these moments, fostering spiritual growth as we adapt to new realities.
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593
He Left His Wife's Birthday Dinner and Never Came Home
He was a Jamaican immigrant who built the kind of life Brooklyn doesn't give out easily — a brownstone, a nursing wife, two kids, a real future. He walked the last car of the last train every night for six years. He knew how to read a situation. He read this one wrong. In tonight's episode we tell the full story of Tony Smith — the MTA conductor who found a Jamaican woman crying alone on a dead train at midnight, made one decision he called charity, and spent the next two years managing a double life so complete and so carefully constructed that the people closest to him never saw it coming. Not until a phone call on his wife's birthday sent him across Brooklyn running stop signs — toward a Crown Heights restaurant, a man named Calvin McKenzie, and three shots that ended everything. This is not a story about a monster. It is a story about a good man who paid for one moment of not being honest with himself with everything he had built. His life. His family. His children's mornings. And the woman he loved, on the floor of a restaurant with his blood on her hands, telling the truth about all of it for the very first time.
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592
THE HISTORY BEHIND JAMAICAN FOOD: ACKEE AND SALTFISH
Jamaica's national dish was built from a fruit that could kill you and a fish nobody else wanted. This is the full story of ackee and saltfish, where it really came from, and the people who created it.
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591
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Godfather of Rocksteady & The Voice That Bridged Ska to Reggae
The full Alton Ellis story. Trenchtown 1938 to Hammersmith 2008. Federal, Studio One, Treasure Isle, Pama London, All-Tone Brixton. Three hundred recordings. The bridge from ska to reggae. The voice that outlived every contract. The godfather of rocksteady. Definitive single-sitting documentary.
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590
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Dog Paw — The Church Boy Who Became a Warlord
Welcome to another compelling episode of Jamaican Gangster, where we dive into the complex world of true crime jamaica. This episode focuses on Christopher "Dogpaw" Linton and the events of October 11, 2021, in St. Andrew, shedding light on the challenges faced by jamaican people in dangerous countries. We explore the broader implications for jamaica news and caribbean culture, revealing stories often overlooked.
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589
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — All Is Mine, Said the Industry | Part 13 | The Voice That Outlived Every Contract
Series epilogue. The phrase underneath everything — "all is mine" — said by an industry to a generation that built a global music and rarely owned it. Alton's contracts ran out. His voice didn't. Cry Tough is still doing its work. Part 13. The voice that outlived every contract.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Six | He Sent His Mother
Explore the profound impact of life's smallest, most unexpected moments. This video delves into the philosophical idea of 'dividing moments' – those subtle shifts that fundamentally alter who we are, often without us realizing until much later. Have you ever looked back and realized a seemingly insignificant event changed your entire path? We're not talking about life's big milestones, but the quiet, personal turning points that truly divide your 'before' from your 'after.' Join us as we contemplate these unspoken transformations and the wisdom gained from hindsight. What moments have defined you? #PhilosophicalMoments #LifeChanges #DefiningMoments #PersonalGrowth #BeforeAndAfter #SelfReflection #LifePhilosophy #MeaningfulMoments Don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more thought-provoking content!
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587
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Five | The Number
Some doors, once opened, cannot be closed again, a profound thought that guides us through the complexities of personal growth. This video explores how such moments, much like an inspirational quote, highlight the significance of the choices we make. It’s a testament to resilience, reminding us that true improvement comes from confronting these shifts rather than avoiding them, shaping our mindset as we move forward.
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586
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Question Nobody Could Answer | Part 12 | The Credit History Refused to Settle
Series finale. He named the genre, trained the voices, and died with zero royalties. Part 12 walks the credit back to the source — Studio One, Treasure Isle, Brixton, the OD, the IRAWMA — and asks the question reggae still refuses to answer out loud: who named rocksteady?
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585
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: The Black Roses Crew — The Dancehall Empire That Ran the Streets of Kingston
Welcome to another episode of Jamaican Gangster, featuring Willie Haggart and the Black Roses crew. This episode highlights their influence as a dancehall empire that ran the streets of Kingston, showcasing their impact on the local scene. If you're interested in music discovery and the authentic sounds of the city, this is a must-watch.
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584
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Diagnosis at Hammersmith | Part 11 | The Last Show He Refused Not to Sing
Late summer 2008. Hammersmith Hospital. Lymphoma. Then he flew home to Jamaica and did one of the best shows of his life. On October 10, 2008, the Godfather of Rocksteady died at 70. Part 11 of the Reggae Dancehall Pioneers series holds space for the defiance, the diagnosis, and the dignified close.
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583
Natty Morgan — The Ruthless Outlaw Who Declared War on the State
This episode of Jamaican Gangster features Natty Morgan, set in the 1990s amidst political violence and poverty. The narrative appears to involve police drama and Natty Morgan's potential escape, with a call received by the police station in the evening. This crime investigation dives into the complexities of the Jamaican justice system.
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582
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Four | Percy's Son
The video opens with the arrival of "Friday," a concept that carries both anticipation and dread for different individuals. This narrative, reminiscent of a "scary story," explores the contrasting realities faced by people on the same island, under the same morning light. It touches upon the "dark truth" of how different people navigate the day, highlighting a compelling look at human experience.
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581
Jamaican Gangster: My Son - A Mother Killed, A Son Jailed, A Father's Final Choice
On a quiet Saturday morning in Ocho Rios, Jamaica, Robyna Caldwell walked into a supermarket with her fifteen year old son Cameron and never walked out. When the One Shot One Kill gang stormed the store and opened fire, seven people lost their lives. Robyna was one of them. Her son witnessed everything from behind a freezer in aisle seven. Three years passed. The case went cold. The man who pulled the trigger walked free. Then Cameron arrived at the University of the West Indies in Kingston, and came face to face with his mother's killer in a KFC line. What happened next set off a chain of events that would send a father and his son to the same prison, and force one man to make the most devastating choice a parent can make. This is My Son. One of the most emotional stories we have ever told on this channel.
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580
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Man Who Did Not Come Down | Part 10 | The Reserve That Hid the Weight
In 1994 Jamaica awarded Alton Ellis the Order of Distinction. By the 2000s he was on Hollywood Boulevard collecting a Lifetime Achievement Award. And on the road, Dennis Alcapone remembers, he stopped coming down for breakfast. Part 10 of the Reggae Dancehall Pioneers series is the reserve that hid the weight.
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season one Episode 3 | Phase Two
Father Clark shares profound insights, noting that some men conduct their most dangerous thinking in silence, having already made decisions. This episode explores the depths of "male psychology" and "masculinity", emphasizing a "power mindset" rooted in "stoic wisdom." It's a journey into "philosophy for men" that encourages deep contemplation and decisive action.
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578
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Copper — The Marksman Outlaw and the Great Kingston Shootouts
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Copper — The Marksman Outlaw and the Great Kingston Shootouts Dennis “Copper” Barth was not just another name in Jamaica’s violent 1970s underworld. He became one of the island’s first true “most wanted” men — a cool, calculated marksman from Rennock Lodge whose reputation was built on prison escapes, bank robberies, deadly shootouts, and a protection network so loyal that no one ever collected the bounty on his head. This is the story of Copper, the Hot Steppers Posse, and a Kingston era where politics, poverty, guns, and community survival collided. To some, he was a dangerous criminal. To others, he was a modern-day Robin Hood who fed the people the system had abandoned. Eight days after the One Love Peace Concert, where Jamaica tried to imagine peace, Copper’s story ended in gunfire at Caymanas Park. His final decision — turning back for a dropped sub-machine gun — became the moment that separated the man from the legend. Was Dennis “Copper” Barth a criminal who happened to help his community, or a community provider who happened to rob banks? Kingston knew the answer. It just never gave him up. #JamaicanGangster #DennisCopperBarth #JamaicaHistory #KingstonJamaica #TrueCrimeDocumentary #DancehallHistory #ReggaeHistory #JamaicanHistory #CaribVibesTV #CaymanasPark
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REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Deals That Vanished | Part 9 | When Island and A&M Walked Away
By the late 1970s, Island Records and A&M Records were both talking to Alton Ellis. Both walked away. Meanwhile he was carrying a family of 20+ children on session fees and shop receipts. Part 9 of the Reggae Dancehall Pioneers series tells the chapter the cleaner biographies fold away.
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576
Reggae Dancehall Pioneers: Ken Boothe | Studio One Legend, Lovers Rock Pioneer & The Velvet Voice of Jamaica
Welcome to another episode of Reggae Dancehall Pioneers, where we feature the legendary Ken Boothe! This video highlights his incredible journey, including his song that hit "number 1" on the UK charts in 1974, making a significant mark on "music history." His impact on "70s music" and the broader "british music" scene is undeniable, showcasing the vibrant sounds of "jamaica."
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JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode Two | The Morning After
The morning after always tells the truth, a stark realization captured in this new movie. This intense thriller explores the aftermath of a significant event, with the protagonist reflecting on the previous night's occurrences. The flat, honest morning light serves as a merciless backdrop to a compelling movie trailer, hinting at deeper secrets.
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574
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: MOB ISLAND | Season One Episode One | When River Run Red
The night arrived, hot and wet, as Jamaican nights often do in November. This episode captures the essence of a tranquil, yet somber, atmosphere with soothing rain sounds. Let the ambient sounds and relaxing rain guide you to deep sleep, as we bring you a unique auditory experience.
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573
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Brixton Years Begin | Part 8 | The Singer Who Built His Own Lifeboat
In 1972 Alton Ellis moved to London and opened All-Tone Records in Brixton. Six years later, two teenagers rode his rhythm to UK number one with Uptown Top Ranking. He never saw the money. Part 8 of the Reggae Dancehall Pioneers series tells the story of the lifeboat he built — and the question that never left him.
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572
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Rap Before Rap | Part 7 | The London Single Nobody Talks About
In 1967, Alton Ellis cut a London single on Pama Records where he didn't sing — he rapped. Twelve years before Sugarhill Gang. Part 7 of the Reggae Dancehall Pioneers series tells the story of "The Message," the forgotten record that puts the Godfather of Rocksteady inside hip-hop's origin story.
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571
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Skeng Don — The Architect of Digital Dancehall and the Man Who Outsmarted the System
Welcome to another episode of Jamaican Gangster, where we dive into a compelling true crime story focusing on the intricate dance between law enforcement and the legal system. This episode spotlights how the courts processed a significant case, bringing to light the challenges faced within a court show setting. Witness the pursuit of justice as we explore the complexities of the legal process.
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570
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Rambo — The FBI Top Ten Fugitive and the LA Massacre
The FBI called him the 510th most wanted man in America. Los Angeles called him a ghost. Jamaica called him Rambo. This is the true story of Marlon Jones — the Kingston-born enforcer whose name the federal government still cannot fully confirm.
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569
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Anti-Rudie Songs | Part 6 | Standing Against the Ratchet Knives
In 1967 Kingston, while the Wailers met the rude boys with sympathy, Alton Ellis named them in his songs. "Don't Trouble People," "Dance Crasher," "Cry Tough" — line by line, he stood alone. Then Coxsone put him on a plane to London, where the Caribbean diaspora already knew every word.
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568
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Treasure Isle Run | Part 5 | When One Voice Owned Jamaica
From 1965 to 1968, one voice owned Jamaica. Part 5 traces Alton Ellis's Treasure Isle hit run — "Rock Steady," "Cry Tough," "Girl I've Got a Date," "I'm Still in Love with You" — the body of work the world would call Mr. Soul of Jamaica. And the man who collected on it all: Duke Reid.
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567
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Rodigan — The Gangster Who Adopted a DJ’s Name
Welcome to another episode of Jamaican Gangster, where we dive into the life of Robert Davis, known as Rodigan. This true crime story explores the impact of crime and loss in the community, shedding light on a compelling crime documentary. Join us as we piece together the narrative, offering true crime stories from the streets of Kingston.
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566
They Hanged a Deacon. Then England Had to Decide What Kind of Empire It Was.
In 1865, Paul Bogle — a Baptist deacon who had spent years filing petitions, writing letters, and walking forty miles to ask for a meeting that was refused — led a march on the Morant Bay courthouse in Jamaica. The colonial militia fired. Thirty days of martial law followed: 439 killed, 604 flogged, over a thousand homes burned. Then England was given three separate legal opportunities to prosecute the man who ordered it. Each time, the courts found new reasons to say no. History of the Caribbean — available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and everywhere you listen.
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565
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — I Named It Rocksteady | Part 4 | The Disputed Birth of a Genre
In 1965 at Duke Reid's Treasure Isle, Alton Ellis recorded "Girl I've Got a Date" — and insisted he named the genre we now call rocksteady. But Lynn Taitt, Hopeton Lewis, Hugh Malcolm, and others all claim the credit. Part 4 maps the most disputed origin story in Jamaican music.
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564
REGGAE DANCEHALL PIONEERS: Alton Ellis — The Printer Who Came Back | Part 3 | The Months He Almost Walked Away From Music
Before he was the Godfather of Rocksteady, Alton Ellis nearly quit music to work as a printer in Kingston. Part 3 traces his lost months, his vocal group the Flames, and the day ska died — when Hopeton Lewis, Lynn Taitt, and Gladstone Anderson invented a new sound called rocksteady.
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563
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Joel Andem — The Gideon Warrior and the Jamaican Hills Manhunt
The full Joel Andem story — the complete four-year manhunt assembled into one episode. From the urban-edge hill communities of eastern St. Andrew where the name was made, through the seized video that pushed a reputation into national consciousness, into the rural fog of Clarksonville, St. Ann where a six-bedroom house finally held him. We trace the architecture of fear, the structure of evasion, the shift from chase to intelligence-driven penetration, the May 2004 morning operation, and the 2005 Gun Court convictions that became the proven legal anchor of the story. Not a celebration. A precise close — how a fugitive legend is built in the space between what police allege, what courts prove, what communities fear, and what the landscape allows. Series: Jamaican Gangster — Joel Andem (Complete)Episode: The Gideon Warrior and the Jamaican Hills Manhunt — Full StoryRuntime length and chapter markers in the show notes.
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562
JAMAICAN GANGSTER: Bulbie Bennett — The Invisible Billionaire of Spanish Town
He was on Jamaica's most wanted list for 10 years. He was linked to over 100 murders. And he kept receiving government contracts. This is the story of Donovan "Bulbie" Bennett — Klansman Gang leader, Spanish Town's invisible billionaire, and the man politicians were shielded from naming. From the 1993 killing that started it all to the Operation Kingfish raid that ended it.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Join Caribbean history experts Joe & Kevin as they uncover the #1 Caribbean History & Culture Podcast powerful stories, cultural legacies, and untold truths that shaped the region in History of the Caribbeans: Tales of Resilience and Culture — a podcast for listeners passionate about Caribbean history, heritage, and the enduring spirit of a people who’ve shaped the world.
HOSTED BY
history experts | Joe & Kevin
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