The Unresolved Mysteries of HP Lovecraft's Ocean | Podcast
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Related videos
The Insane Ending of The Three Body Problem Series
Quinn's Ideas
18.0k views
Ancient Astronauts and The Old Ones At the Mountains of Madness & Prometheus | Podcast
Quinn's Ideas
15.3k views
The Scariest Part of Three Body Problem
Quinn's Ideas
43.2k views
The Question That Outlived the Universe | Asimov's The Last Question
Quinn's Ideas
77.9k views
The Existential Loneliness of Tau Zero
Quinn's Ideas
187.0k views
The Horrifying Utopia of Prime Intellect
Quinn's Ideas
424.7k views
Biggest Ancient Mysteries Solved | The Proof Is Out There
HISTORY
120.9k views
Unsolved Alaskan Mysteries | The Proof Is Out There
HISTORY
193.1k views
The Truth Lovecraft Didn’t Tell | The Ballad of Black Tom and the Horrors of Humanity
Quinn's Ideas
169.1k views
The Mystery of The Architects & The Horror of Un-Space | Shards of Earth
Quinn's Ideas
404.8k views
Top Comments (10)
“There’s water at the bottom of the ocean.” - Talking Heads
More podcasts please
Another fun ocean fact is that the Diel Vertical Migration is the largest synchronized movement of biomass on earth, and it happens every day!
I already knew everything brought up in the podcast but still enjoyed it. I’m with Quinn about how terrifying the ocean is. Even standing on the beach at night and facing its dark immensity with calm but relentless motion speaks of its power, forever attempting to break its containment and swallow all.
Just throwing my 2 cents in here: it's so much more terrifying for Cthulhu and whoever else of his pals if they had come from outer space WITHOUT the use of any space-ship; like some giant deep-space surviving kaijus. Good talk, cheers!
“die-uh-tuh-may-shuss earth”. also, loved the show!
The window that cracked on the Trieste was not a important window it was the window for the tunnel that you use to get in and out. If it broke they would be OK. Also it was basically an underwater blimp. Instead of helium it used Oil because its incompressible and lighter than water.
My father worked as an engineer on the hydraulics of the propulsion systems on the original Triste submersible!
The Mariana Trench is also featured in "The Kraken Wakes" by John Wyndham. (I'm a big fan of John Wyndham). In the end, the Ocean is both powerful and unknown - no wonder we're scared of it.
A podcast so chill I can watch it at 2x speed and it still sounds like a casual conversation.
Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge
- Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
- Chat with videos, export text & PDF
- $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research
Free forever plan • All features unlocked
Top Comments (10)
“There’s water at the bottom of the ocean.” - Talking Heads
More podcasts please
Another fun ocean fact is that the Diel Vertical Migration is the largest synchronized movement of biomass on earth, and it happens every day!
I already knew everything brought up in the podcast but still enjoyed it. I’m with Quinn about how terrifying the ocean is. Even standing on the beach at night and facing its dark immensity with calm but relentless motion speaks of its power, forever attempting to break its containment and swallow all.
Just throwing my 2 cents in here: it's so much more terrifying for Cthulhu and whoever else of his pals if they had come from outer space WITHOUT the use of any space-ship; like some giant deep-space surviving kaijus. Good talk, cheers!
“die-uh-tuh-may-shuss earth”. also, loved the show!
The window that cracked on the Trieste was not a important window it was the window for the tunnel that you use to get in and out. If it broke they would be OK. Also it was basically an underwater blimp. Instead of helium it used Oil because its incompressible and lighter than water.
My father worked as an engineer on the hydraulics of the propulsion systems on the original Triste submersible!
The Mariana Trench is also featured in "The Kraken Wakes" by John Wyndham. (I'm a big fan of John Wyndham). In the end, the Ocean is both powerful and unknown - no wonder we're scared of it.
A podcast so chill I can watch it at 2x speed and it still sounds like a casual conversation.