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    <title>BSKiller Book Autopsy</title>
    <link>https://bskiller.com/podcast</link>
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    <copyright>BSKiller 2026</copyright>
    <description>Two shows, one feed. Season 1: Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon. Every chapter autopsied. Every claim verified. Every receipt shown. Season 2: Dead Authors Club -- we read books by dead authors so you don't have to. Public domain classics fact-checked against centuries of hindsight. Two hosts, one skeptic and one researcher. No hagiography. No AI slop. Just receipts.</description>
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    <itunes:email>pran@bskiller.com</itunes:email>
    <itunes:summary>Two shows, one feed. Season 1: Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon, scoring each book on BS, Edge, and Replicability. Season 2: Dead Authors Club -- public domain classics fact-checked against modern scholarship. Same hosts, same receipts, different centuries.</itunes:summary>
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      <title>Dead Authors Club E04: The Man Who Saved England Before It Existed -- Teutoburg Forest, AD 9</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/podcast</link>
      <description>A Roman citizen. Roman educated. Roman knight. He dined with the Emperor. Then he went home to Germany and wiped out three Roman legions in a forest ambush. Augustus spent the rest of his life smashing his head against walls screaming "Varus, give me back my legions!" -- and that's from Suetonius, the imperial biographer, not a Reddit post. Arminius is the Severus Snape of the Roman Empire -- trusted insider who was secretly working for the other side the entire time. He eloped with Thusnelda against her pro-Roman father's wishes. Dad then betrayed her to the Romans as revenge. She was paraded pregnant through Rome in a triumphal procession. Arminius destroyed Varus's army of 14,000 legionaries in the Teutoburg Forest -- three days of ambushes in rain-soaked woods and marshes. Varus committed suicide. The Romans threw the survivors into sacred groves and sacrificed them. Rome never used legion numbers XVII, XVIII, and XIX again -- 2,000 years of retired jerseys. Creasy claims without Arminius "this island would never have borne the name of England." Germanic tribes stayed independent, became the Anglo-Saxons, invaded Britain, created England. Bold claim but actually kind of true. In 1987, a British army officer named Tony Clunn found the actual battlefield at Kalkriese -- Roman coins, sling bullets, and a haunting bronze face mask in the mud after 2,000 years. Netflix's Barbarians (2020, IMDB 7.1) dramatizes the story with dialogue in actual Latin. The 87-foot Hermann Monument in Detmold was built in 1875, then awkwardly adopted by German nationalists and later the Nazis. Arminius was murdered by his own relatives at age 37. The liberator of Germany, killed by Germans. Tacitus called him "beyond doubt the liberator of Germany." 39 minutes. 29 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified. Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dead Authors Club E04: The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (AD 9)</p>
<p>Book: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851), Chapter 5</p>
<p>39 minutes. 29 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified.</p>
<p><strong>What we cover:</strong> Arminius the ultimate double agent. Augustus's mental breakdown. The three-day ambush in the forest. Varus's suicide. The brother scene across the Weser. Thusnelda's capture and betrayal. The Kalkriese archaeological discovery. Netflix's Barbarians. The Hermann Monument. Retired legion numbers. Creasy's "England" argument.</p>
<p><strong>Modern corrections:</strong> Kalkriese discovery (1987) confirmed the battlefield location. Netflix Barbarians (IMDB 7.1) uses actual Latin dialogue. Hermann Monument appropriated by Nazis -- awkward legacy.</p>
<p><strong>Verdict:</strong> KEEP. Six for six on the scoreboard.</p>
<p>Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2. We read books by dead authors so you don't have to.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Apr 2026 15:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Dead Authors Club E03: The Deer Hound and the Wolf Pack -- Metaurus, 207 BC</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/podcast</link>
      <description>Hannibal had been terrorizing Italy for eleven years. Not an invasion -- more like history's most aggressive Airbnb guest. His brother Hasdrubal was marching south with reinforcements. If they joined forces, Rome was finished. A Roman consul named Claudius Nero -- not THAT Nero, this one lived 400 years before the fiddle-playing emperor -- marched 7,000 men 250 miles in seven days without Hannibal noticing. He fought a battle, won, and Hannibal learned his brother was dead when the Romans threw Hasdrubal's severed head into his camp. Creasy calls it "savage brutality which deformed the Roman national character." When a Victorian imperialist thinks you've gone too far, you've gone too far. Hannibal crossed the Alps with 37 elephants. They all died except one named Surus -- the Syrian. Hannibal rode Surus into battle with one eye because he'd lost the other to a swamp infection crossing the marshes of the Arno. The CDC published a paper in 2021 analyzing what infection it probably was. We cover Creasy's deer-hound metaphor for the Punic Wars, Nero's secret forced march, the intercepted letter that changed everything -- history's first pre-internet phishing attack -- the Scipio/Wellington parallel, and why modern historians debate whether Metaurus or Zama was the real turning point. Denzel Washington is filming a Hannibal movie for Netflix in Italy summer 2026. If they don't include the severed head scene, what are we even doing. Also: the myth that Romans salted the earth at Carthage is completely false -- zero ancient sources, first mentioned in 1863. 28 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified. Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dead Authors Club E03: The Battle of the Metaurus (207 BC)</p>
<p>Book: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851), Chapter 4</p>
<p>29 minutes. 28 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified.</p>
<p><strong>What we cover:</strong> Hannibal's 11 years in Italy. Hasdrubal's Alpine crossing. The intercepted letter. Nero's secret 250-mile march. The battle. The severed head. Creasy's deer-hound metaphor. The Scipio/Wellington parallel. Why the salt-the-earth myth is fake.</p>
<p><strong>Modern corrections:</strong> Hasdrubal's army was ~30,000 (not the inflated ancient numbers). Battle site still disputed -- University of Jaen fieldwork near Fossombrone (2019). Michelet's racial framing completely rejected by modern scholarship.</p>
<p><strong>Verdict:</strong> KEEP. Five for five on the scoreboard.</p>
<p>Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2. We read books by dead authors so you don't have to.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Apr 2026 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Dead Authors Club E02: The Empire Strikes Back -- Syracuse 413 BC + Arbela 331 BC</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/podcast</link>
      <description>Athens sent the greatest naval expedition in history to conquer Sicily. Every single ship was destroyed. Every single soldier was killed or enslaved. Twenty years later, a 25-year-old Macedonian conquered the entire known world in eleven years. We cover two chapters from Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851). Syracuse: how the heroes of Marathon became the villains. Alcibiades -- the most brilliant traitor in ancient history, who defected to Sparta and gave them the playbook to destroy Athens. The night battle on Epipolae where Athenians killed Athenians in the moonlit chaos. The Boeotian brigade that held firm and turned the tide. Nicias and Demosthenes executed in cold blood. Seven thousand prisoners in the stone quarries. Creasy's comparison to Napoleon at St. Jean d'Acre. And the Iraq War parallel -- Nicias warned of inadequate forces like General Shinseki before Iraq. Arbela: Napoleon rated Alexander one of seven greatest generals in history. Alexander was 25 years old. Persian army numbers inflated from 1 million to the modern estimate of 90,000-100,000. The scythed chariots -- classified as "Hellenistic gimmick weapons" by modern military historians. Parmenio proposed a night attack. Alexander refused -- "he scorned to steal a victory." Darius fled on horseback. And Creasy's most Victorian moment: comparing Alexander's conquests to "England's present mission to break up the mental and moral stagnation of India and Cathay." Two KEEP/CUT votes. 74 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified. Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dead Authors Club E02: Syracuse (413 BC) + Arbela/Gaugamela (331 BC)</p>
<p>Book: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851), Chapters 2-3</p>
<p>34 minutes. 74 claims fact-checked. Zero Hallucination Protocol verified.</p>
<p><strong>Syracuse:</strong> The greatest military disaster in ancient history. Athens sent 134 warships and 40,000 men. Not one returned. Alcibiades defected to Sparta. Nicias and Demosthenes executed. 7,000 in stone quarries.</p>
<p><strong>Arbela:</strong> Alexander at 25 conquers the known world. Napoleon's assessment. The oblique order tactic. Scythed chariots neutralized. Darius flees. Persian army inflated from 1M to actual 90-100K.</p>
<p><strong>Verdicts:</strong> Syracuse -- KEEP. Arbela -- KEEP.</p>
<p>Dead Authors Club is BSKiller Book Autopsy Season 2. We read books by dead authors so you don't have to.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Apr 2026 11:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Dead Authors Club E01: The Ten Thousand vs The Empire -- Marathon, 490 BC</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/podcast</link>
      <description>Ten thousand Greeks against the largest empire on Earth. The vote to fight was six to five. One man changed his mind. A Victorian professor says that vote saved Western civilization. We fact-checked him with 175 years of hindsight. The Persian army numbers are wrong by a factor of four. The marathon origin story is based on a poem based on a story that never happened. But the battle itself? Still one of the most important afternoons in human history. We cover the 6-5 vote that decided Athens would fight. Miltiades -- the Persian double agent who became Greece's greatest general. Darius's nine-year daily ritual of rage where a servant reminded him at every meal to "remember the Athenians." The running charge in bronze armour across the plain of Marathon. The double envelopment tactic that Hannibal would copy 277 years later. The Pheidippides myth debunked -- he ran to Sparta (153 miles), not Marathon to Athens. Why 300: Rise of an Empire got Marathon completely wrong. And the Nemesis statue carved from the marble the Persians brought to build their own victory monument. Modern corrections applied: Persian army was 20,000-25,000 not 100,000 (Krentz, Yale 2010). Creasy's "saved civilization" claim is oversold -- the Persian Empire was actually tolerant of conquered peoples' religions and customs. Verdict: KEEP. Marathon stays on the list. From the book Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851). 32 minutes. 24 claims fact-checked. Dead Authors Club is a BSKiller production.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dead Authors Club S1E01: The Battle of Marathon (490 BC)</p>
<p>Book: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World by Sir Edward Creasy (1851), Chapter 1</p>
<p>32 minutes. 24 claims fact-checked. 4 errors caught and corrected by Zero Hallucination Protocol.</p>
<p><strong>What we cover:</strong> The 6-5 vote that decided Athens would fight. Miltiades -- the Persian double agent who became Greece's greatest general. Darius's nine-year daily ritual of rage. The running charge in bronze armour. The double envelopment that Hannibal would copy 277 years later. The Pheidippides myth debunked. Why 300: Rise of an Empire got Marathon completely wrong. And the Nemesis statue carved from the Persians' own victory marble.</p>
<p><strong>Modern corrections:</strong> Persian army was 20-25K not 100K (Krentz, Yale 2010). "Saved civilization" claim oversold -- Persian Empire was relatively tolerant. Pheidippides ran to Sparta (153 mi), not Marathon to Athens.</p>
<p><strong>Verdict:</strong> KEEP. Marathon stays on the list.</p>
<p>Dead Authors Club is a BSKiller production. We read books by dead authors so you don't have to.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sun, 20 Apr 2026 02:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:duration>1945</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Book Autopsy S1E03: Atomic Habits -- The Remix Album That Outsold the Originals</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/books/atomic-habits</link>
      <description>Fifteen million copies. The best-selling nonfiction book of the last five years. And almost nothing in it is original. We autopsied all 20 chapters of Atomic Habits by James Clear from the primary text. The habit loop is Duhigg's from The Power of Habit. The tiny habits concept is BJ Fogg's. The environment design comes from Thaler and Sunstein's Nudge. The identity insight draws from self-determination theory. But Clear organized them better than anyone before him -- and that's genuinely valuable. The 1% daily improvement math is correct arithmetic and completely meaningless biology -- your body doesn't compound like a savings account. The British Cycling story omits massive funding increases and doping investigations. The photography class story is probably from a ceramics class at the University of Florida. But three studies hold up beautifully: the Vietnam heroin study (Robins 1974), implementation intentions research (Milne, Orbell, and Sheehan 2002 -- 91% vs 35% exercise rates), and the Karachi handwashing trial (Luby 2005 -- diarrhea down 52%). The identity insight most readers miss: Chapter 2 says build identity through habits, Chapter 20 says don't cling to identity. Both are right. Key quotes verified verbatim against the book: "You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems" (p. 27). "Every action is a vote for the type of person you wish to become" (p. 38). BS 3.5 out of 10. Edge 7.5. Replicability 6.0. This is the best-organized behavioral change manual available -- just don't mistake the metaphors for science. 40 minutes. 22 per-chapter autopsies. Every quote verified with page numbers. BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy Episode 3: Atomic Habits by James Clear (2018).</p>
<p>40 minutes. 22 per-chapter autopsies from primary text. 12 external claims researched. Every quote verified with page numbers.</p>
<p><strong>What we cover:</strong> Clear's baseball bat injury origin story. The Four Laws framework (Obvious/Attractive/Easy/Satisfying) as a diagnostic checklist. Three studies that hold up: Vietnam heroin (Robins 1974), implementation intentions (Milne/Orbell/Sheehan 2002 -- 91% vs 35%), Karachi handwashing (Luby 2005 -- diarrhea down 52%). The 1% math that's wrong. The photography class story that's probably fake. And the identity insight most readers miss -- Chapter 2 says build identity through habits, Chapter 20 says don't cling to identity. Both are right.</p>
<p><strong>Key quotes verified:</strong> "You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems" (p. 27). "Every action is a vote for the type of person you wish to become" (p. 38). "Self-control is a short-term strategy, not a long-term one" (p. 85).</p>
<p>Scores: BS 3.5/10 | Edge 7.5/10 | Replicability 6.0/10</p>
<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sat, 19 Apr 2026 10:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Book Autopsy S1E02: Thinking, Fast and Slow -- The Replication Crisis Audit</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/books/thinking-fast-and-slow</link>
      <description>A Nobel laureate wrote a book that contains both the best and the worst of modern psychology. Then he publicly said parts of it were wrong. The book was never revised. Daniel Kahneman won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002. In 2011 he published Thinking, Fast and Slow -- the most influential psychology book of the 21st century. In 2012 he wrote an open letter warning that the priming research in his own book was heading for a "train wreck." In 2017 he publicly admitted he "placed too much faith in underpowered studies." Kahneman died in March 2024. The book was never revised. We autopsied all 38 chapters from the primary text -- 44 autopsies total. The replication scorecard: six major claims are dead. The Florida effect -- walking slowly after reading old-age words -- failed to replicate (Doyen 2012). Ego depletion -- willpower as a finite resource -- meta-analysis shows no effect (Hagger 2016). Money priming, pencil-in-mouth forcing smiles, the glucose model of self-control, and the Lady Macbeth hand-washing effect -- all failed. Five more claims are wounded with mixed evidence. But seventeen-plus survived, including the Nobel Prize work on prospect theory, WYSIATI (What You See Is All There Is), the planning fallacy, anchoring effects, and the Asian disease framing effect. The System 1 vs System 2 framework remains one of the most useful mental models in existence -- even if some of the examples used to illustrate it turned out to be wrong. BS 5.0 out of 10. Edge 8.5. Replicability 6.0. 38 minutes. Every chapter autopsied from the actual text. BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy Episode 2: Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (2011).</p>
<p>Daniel Kahneman won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002. In 2011 he published Thinking, Fast and Slow. In 2012 he wrote an open letter warning that the priming research in his own book was heading for a "train wreck." In 2017 he publicly admitted he "placed too much faith in underpowered studies." The book was never revised. Kahneman died in March 2024.</p>
<p>We autopsied all 38 chapters from the primary text. The replication scorecard: 6 claims dead, 5 wounded, 17+ survived.</p>
<p>Scores: BS 5.0/10 | Edge 8.5/10 | Replicability 6.0/10</p>
<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Fri, 18 Apr 2026 10:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:duration>2314</itunes:duration>
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      <title>Book Autopsy S1E01: Poor Charlie's Almanack -- The 53% Drawdown Nobody Quotes</title>
      <link>https://bskiller.com/books/poor-charlies-almanack</link>
      <description>Charlie Munger's 19.8% annual return is the number every investor quotes. Nobody quotes the 53% drawdown from 1973 to 1974. We autopsied all 618 pages of Poor Charlie's Almanack -- 74 claims fact-checked against the primary text, every quote verified verbatim. We found a first wife erased in just 3 sentences, a career path where he practiced law without a degree that's now illegal in every state, and Munger's own overconfidence example being overconfident -- his Swedish driver statistics claim doesn't hold up against actual data. But the 25 psychological tendencies from his famous Harvard speech? Those might save your next investment decision. The mental models framework -- learning the big ideas across all disciplines -- remains one of the most powerful intellectual tools any investor can adopt. Munger's key insight: "The first rule is that you can't really know anything if you just remember isolated facts. If the facts don't hang together on a latticework of theory, you don't have them in a usable form." We verified that quote verbatim against page 61. The Berkshire Hathaway partnership numbers check out. The concentration investing philosophy is genuinely contrarian and genuinely backed by results. BS 4.1 out of 10. Edge 7.9. Replicability 6.2. 38 minutes. 74 claims fact-checked against the actual book text. Zero hallucination. BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy Episode 1: Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger (ed. Peter Kaufman, 2005).</p>
<p>38 minutes. Every claim fact-checked against the actual book text. Zero hallucination.</p>
<p>Scores: BS 4.1/10 | Edge 7.9/10 | Replicability 6.2/10</p>
<p>BSKiller Book Autopsy -- we fact-check the business book canon.</p>]]></content:encoded>

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      <pubDate>Sat, 19 Apr 2026 07:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
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