PODCAST · history
Let me put my Historian Hat on
by Andrew McGregor
Thoughts and Rants from Doctor's Perspective. I have a PhD in American History with an emphasis on race, sport, and politics plus specialized training in public and digital history. I use this experience to discuss contemporary events and tell stories. amcgregor.substack.com
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Episode 25: The Politics of MSEs
Dallas is one of the host cities for the 2026 World Cup. In this episode I explore how Mega-Sporting-Events (MSEs) have played a role in international relations, altering perceptions of host nations. In recent years this has brought more attention to Human Rights, creating opportunities to move beyond national and civic boosterism and to create lasting legacies.* Correction: I note that the 1934 World Cup took place before fascism took hold in Italy. Mussolini took power in 1922, and did in fact try to use the 1934 World Cup to promote his regime. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 24: Another Endless War
Responding to the recent bombing of Iran by the United States, I explore how Cold War ideology and the Military Industrial Complex continue to shape and complicate U.S. foreign relations. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 23: Kansas and the Harms of Reform Fatigue
In this episode I reflect on the chaos of our current political moment before looking at the lessons of Bleeding Kansas. I discuss the success of Kansas as a political project of the New England Emigrant Aid Company to consider how we may reach out to Red States, and warn of the dangers of “reform fatigue,” which has undermined every truly progressive movement toward equality. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 22: MLK Day 2025
This episode reflects on the lessons of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. amidst the heaviness of January 20, 2025. I weave together ideas that I think can help us move forward and inspire us as we face a daunting four years ahead. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 21: Panic, Depression, and Christmas Fulfillment
This is my Christmas Episode. I start by walking us through the cycles of Panics and Depressions in U.S. history before discussing the causes of the Great Depression and how it set us on path towards never ending consumption. I conclude by considering the dangers of modern consumption, including its dehumanizing impact on anonymous blue-collar workers left unfulfilled within the Christmas supply chain. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 20: Theory of Change
In this episode I discuss historical methodology and theory of change. I begin by reflecting on a new book I’m eager to read and how hearing a few interviews with its author already has my historical mind spinning. I follows these tangents into explorations of how history helps us develop a sense of place, how places hold history and make us curious, and how that curiosity is really all about studying change, which can then help us develop our theories of change so that we can use lessons from the past to influence the future. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 19: Thanksgiving and Rebecca the Raccoon
In this episode I suggest we’ve got more work to do to complicate the myth of thanksgiving and center the lives and agency of indigenous people. I also discuss how the holiday has become an American tradition aided by gifts to American presidents. One of those strange gifts, intended to be a part of the thanksgiving meal, became a beloved presidential pet. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 18: L. Frank Baum creator of the Oz Universe
With the release of Wicked this weekend, I wanted to share the story of L. Frank Baum, author of the Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Baum created the Oz universe, which is a uniquely American fairy tale with enduring popularity. Yet, hidden within the original Oz book is a parable on the populist politics of the 1890s. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 17: William Henry Lewis
In this episode I share the story of William Henry Lewis, an incredible figure in African American history, sport history, and early twentieth-century politics. He is a figure I think everyone should remember and know about. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 16: the Historical and Political Rhymes of the 1880s
In this meandering episode I discuss the 1880s as a political era that’s has some “rhymes” with our present day. I highlight issues of corruption, immigration, tariffs, the Gilded Age, and elections between mediocre white men. The 1884 election takes center stage to consider Grover Cleveland as the first president to serve non-consecutive terms. Note: I talk kind of fast in this episode. I’m sorry! Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 15: Questions + Elections Rambles
This a rambling episode reflecting on the 2024 Presidential Election, how we got here and what it says about us, plus how questions are key for us to connect and find community. I want to hear from you, please share your thoughts on the elections and this episode in the comments bellow.I referenced a post by a fellow historian written 8-years ago but published today. You can read it here: https://www.thepublicprofessor.com/this-is-not-eight-year-ago/ Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 14: Native American Olympian Billy Mills: Part 4
This is the fourth in a series of episodes exploring the life and career of Billy Mills, the Gold Medal winner at 10,000m the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation as well as the only American to have ever won Gold in the 10,000m. In Part 4, I looked beyond the 1964 Olympics to share the untold story of his attempted comeback in 1968. Relying on a 2022 interview as well as media coverage, I explain why Mills did not make the U.S. Olympic team and how his experience in 1968 both shaped and inspired his career as activist. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 13: Native American Olympian Billy Mills: Part 3
This is the third in a series of episodes exploring the life and career of Billy Mills, the Gold Medal winner at 10,000m the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation as well as the only American to have ever won Gold in the 10,000m. In Part 3, I discuss how his time in the Marines impacted his training and preparation for the 1964 Olympics as well as factored into media coverage of his victory. This episode also shares the story of 1964 Olympic 10,000m race. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 12: Native American Olympian Billy Mills: Part 2
This is the second of a series of episodes exploring the life and career of Billy Mills, the Gold Medal winner at 10,000m the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation as well as the only American to have ever won Gold in the 10,000m. In Part 2, I discuss Mills’ upbringing, the influence of his father and brothers, as well as key figures in his life during high school at the Haskell Institute and college at the University of Kansas. I note how these experiences were shaped by the attitudes and policies towards Native Americans. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 11: Native American Olympian Billy Mills: Part 1
This is the first of series episodes exploring the life and career of Billy Mills, the Gold Medal winner at 10,000m the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He is a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation as well as the only American to have ever won Gold in the 10,000m. In Part 1, I set the stage for Mills’ career by situating him in the larger context of Native American history, providing an overview of U.S. policies and attitudes towards indigenous people and connecting his family history to significant events and developments. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 10: Sports and Human Rights
In this episode I introduce Human Rights Dallas, a new non-profit that I work with, and discuss some of its goals. I note that the organization intends to help with preparations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup as a way to help make Dallas a human rights city. Following this introduction, I share the story of the Olympic Project for Human Rights and its efforts that ultimately led to Tommie Smith and John Carlos’s iconic “Human Rights Salute” on the 200m medal stand at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 9: the House Settlement + OU-Texas
As promised I return to the topic of college football to discuss recent developments,particularly preliminary approval of the House Settlement and recent Top 10 upsets. Then, I turn to discuss the annual Red River Rivalry game between the University of Oklahoma and the University of Texas at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas’s Fair Park. This Saturday’s game will be the 12th time that one of the two teams enters ranked #1 in the AP poll. The last time was 2008, when Texas upset Oklahoma. The last time Texas entered the game ranked #1 was 1984. That edition featured Mack Brown as an Oklahoma assistant coach and ultimately ended in a 15-15 tie. OU is 6-2 in Red River Rivalry Games when ranked #1; Texas is 2-0-1. Some of my OU-Texas commentary come from my 2021 Op-Ed on the game: “The Red River Showdown reminds us that Oklahoma and Texas are inseparable,” Made by History Blog, Washington Post, 9 October 2021.Corrections: I incorrectly identified Vernon Parrington’s Pulitzer Prize winning book. It was Main Currents in American Thought.The Texas Longhorns did in fact win the 1963 National Championship after upsetting #1 OU while ranked #2 in the only 1 vs. 2 matchup in Red River Rivalry History.Oklahoma won the 1948 Red River Shootout, the first college football game broadcast-live in Texas on Amon Carter’s WBAP-TV.I incorrectly stated Texas went on to the championship game following their upset of #1 OU in 2008. Oklahoma rebounded and made the 2009 BCS Championship game, where the Sooners lost to Tim Tebow’s Florida Gators. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 8: Jimmy Carter: Life & Aging
To celebrate former President Jimmy Carter’s 100th birthday (it was October 1st) this episode briefly discusses his life and career, before turning to a discussion of his book The Virtues of Aging. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 7: NIL, UNLV, and the Historical Antecedents of Recruiting College Football Chaos
In this episode I look at a few historic antecedents to the chaos in college sports under the NIL system. I discuss postwar recruiting and the development of booster clubs and slush-fund recruitment. I share the story of how OU tried to “ransom” a recruit from a rival and discuss the similarity to our current moment. The NCAA stepped in becoming a regulatory body in the mid-1950s, resulting in amateur hypocrisy (sorry SMU) until recent lawsuits have opened the gates for paying players. I suggest that after these losses the NCAA now seems reluctant to involve itself, resulting in a confusing and chaotic landscape today.Note: I incorrectly say that Missouri and Iowa Pre-Flight Coach Don Faurot’s name is Jim.Books I mention:Randy Roberts, A Team For America: the Army-Navy Game That Rallied the Nation, (New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011).Wilbur D. Jones, Jr. “Football! Navy! War!” How Military “Lend-Lease” Players Saved the College Game and Helped Win World War II, (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 2009).David Whitfield, A Payroll To Meet: A Story of Greed, Corruption, and Football at SMU, (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2013). “THE LEAD1 ANGLE” EPISODE 14: DR. ANDREW MCGREGOR: https://lead1association.com/the-lead1-angle-episode-14-dr-andrew-mcgregor-dallas-college/ Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 6: College Football from Muscular Christianity to the Cultural Wars
In this episode I return to the topic of sports and college football. I outline how sport became socially acceptable during the 19th Century thanks to Muscular Christians and political leaders, operating as a form of character development. And then I turn to how coaches and political leaders worked hand-in-hand to position the cultural values of college football as essential to Cold War America, and maintaining order amidst the upheaval of the New Left in the late-1960s and into the Culture Wars of the last 40-years. In this episode I mention a few things I have published. The citations are below:“The Anti-Intellectual coach: The Cultural Politics of Coaching from the New Left to the present,” Journal of Sport and Social Issues (May 2022). https://doi.org/10.1177%2F01937235221098915“Emissaries of Toughness: How Coaches Teamed with U.S. Presidents to Politicize College Football during the Cold War” in: Sports and the American Presidency: From Theodore Roosevelt to Donald Trump, eds. Adam Burns and Rivers Gambrell, (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2022). “College football gives conservatives their own safe space on campus,” Made By History Blog, Washington Post, 1 September 2017. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 5: Constitution Day
In this episode I celebrate Constitution Day by sharing the history and debates that led to the creation of the U.S. Constitution. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 4: Tariffs + Doing History
In this episode I don’t talk about sports! Instead, I offer a brief discussion of the tariff in American history. I also share some insight into the strangeness of historians and how we do research and build our own personal archives. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 3: The Santa Claus of Campus
In this episode I discuss college football as “the Santa Claus of campus.” I look at how the sport developed as a big-time commercial enterprise and adapted overtime to new media and regulations. You’ll learn about the development of the NCAA in this context as well as how and why our current moment is so significant for reshaping our national sporting infrastructure. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 2: Pit Bull Stadium
In this episode I discuss Pit Bull’s naming rights deal with Florida International University as well as the history of stadium names, and how college teams serve as marketing arms of American colleges and universities, providing taxpayers a return on their investments. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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Episode 1: Introductions
After years of people telling me that I need to start a podcast, and even having people eager to co-host, I’ve finally sat down and made one. Full disclosure: I am learning how to do this all on the fly. It’s a fun new adventure!This first episode introduces me and my work as well as shares a few storylines I am following for the 2024 college football season (because I can’t not talk about sport). It’s short (under 15 minutes) but I hope you’ll listen, ask questions, and suggest topics for future episodes. Get full access to History + Sport at amcgregor.substack.com/subscribe
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Thoughts and Rants from Doctor's Perspective. I have a PhD in American History with an emphasis on race, sport, and politics plus specialized training in public and digital history. I use this experience to discuss contemporary events and tell stories. amcgregor.substack.com
HOSTED BY
Andrew McGregor
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