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    <title><![CDATA[The Rewind Files]]></title>
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    <description><![CDATA[<p>Discover the hidden threads of history with <strong>The Rewind Files</strong>, an "on this day" podcast that proves the past is closer than you think. Join <strong>Brooklyn</strong> (straight out of Orange County) and <strong>Silas</strong> (representing the Bay Area) as they trade sarcastic barbs and flirty banter while unearthing lost events that secretly shape your daily life. In 15 minutes or less, they navigate everything from forgotten legends to modern-day consequences with a chemistry that is as funny as it is dead serious. It’s the perfect bite-sized deep dive for anyone who likes their history with a side of California attitude and a lot of heart.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Night the Sky Bled Red]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>April 17th, 2001. People went to sleep under a normal sky — and woke up to something that looked like the world was on fire.</p><p>The sun had other plans that day. A massive solar explosion launched a cosmic shockwave straight toward Earth, and when it hit... the sky turned <em>red.</em> Not sunset red. Not pretty pink red. Deep, blood-red curtains of light stretching across the night sky in places that had never seen anything like it before.</p><p>It was breathtaking. It was eerie. And it was a warning.</p><p>But a warning about <em>what exactly?</em> What does a crimson sky in 2001 have to do with your phone, your power, and the world you live in right now? Why are scientists still talking about this storm decades later — and what would happen if something even bigger hit us?</p><p>Brooklyn and Silas are breaking down the science, the spectacle, and the stakes. This one hits different. 🌌</p><p>🎧 Full episode linked in bio. Also streaming on Spotify — go add it to your queue right now.</p><p>#OnThisDay #April17th #SolarStorm #SpaceWeather #TheRewindFiles</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[Beneath the Rubble: The Day Israel Struck Lebanon]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>April 16th, 2001. Israel doesn't just strike back at Hezbollah — they go after <em>Syria.</em> On Syrian soil? No. On Lebanese soil. And that distinction changes <em>everything.</em></p><p>This wasn't a simple act of retaliation. It was a calculated, deliberate message sent to Damascus — and the entire region held its breath waiting for the response.</p><p>Why target Syria at all? What made this strike so different from every other military exchange in the region's already explosive history? And if the world was already sitting on a powder keg in 2001... what did lighting this particular fuse actually set in motion?</p><p>Brooklyn and Silas are digging into the layers — the proxy wars, the disputed territories, the power brokers operating in the shadows — and trust us, once you hear it all laid out, you'll never look at Middle East headlines the same way again.</p><p>🎧 Full episode linked in bio. Streaming now everywhere — add it to your playlist and don't sleep on this one.</p><p>#OnThisDay #April16th #MiddleEast #TheRewindFiles #HistoryPodcast</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Day Punk Died]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>April 15th, 2001. A New York hospital room. A U2 song playing softly. And just like that — the beating heart of the most rebellious movement in music history goes quiet forever.</p><p>Joey Ramone was 6'6" of pure chaos, leather jackets, and three chords that changed <em>everything.</em> He wasn't supposed to be a rock star. He was awkward, lanky, and didn't fit the mold — and that was exactly the point.</p><p>So what happens to a revolution when its last true believer is gone? Does it die with him... or does it mutate into something no one saw coming?</p><p>Brooklyn and Silas are breaking it all down — the legend, the legacy, and the questions nobody's asking out loud.</p><p>🎧 Full episode link in bio. Also streaming everywhere — go add it to your rotation.</p><p>#OnThisDay #April15th #JoeyRamone #TheRamones #RewindFiles</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[New Name, New Cut, Same Comb(s)]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>April 14, 2001. A man who built an empire—music, fashion, culture—walks onto MTV and tells the world to forget everything they knew about him. One name out, one name in. Just like that.</p><p>But why? What was he running from? Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs had just walked out of a courtroom a free man, but the name still carried weight. So he did what no celebrity had really done before: he threw the whole identity away on national television and asked the world to start over with him.</p><p>It was bold. It was calculated. And it might have been the blueprint for every celebrity "rebrand" you've ever seen since.</p><p>But here's the thing—can a new name actually make you a new person? Or does it just buy you time before the old paint starts to chip?</p><p>Brooklyn and Silas rewind to the moment that changed the rules of fame forever.</p><p>Link in bio to listen now on Spotify.</p><p>#TheRewindFiles #OnThisDay #April14th #PDiddyNameChange #CelebrityRebrand #PopCultureHistory</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Switch: A Teen, a Train, and a Miracle]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>It was Friday the 13th, and for the 132 passengers on Via Rail’s "Ocean" train, the superstition was about to become a terrifying reality. As they cruised through the foggy coast of Nova Scotia at 75 miles per hour, the world suddenly turned upside down. But this wasn't a mechanical failure or a natural disaster—it started with a 14-year-old local kid, a "bad idea," and a broken padlock. Silas and Brooklyn recount the unbelievable 2001 derailment in Stewiacke, where a passenger train was essentially "parallel parked" into a literal drugstore at highway speeds. It sounds like a Hollywood script, but the real story is what happened in the minutes after the screeching metal stopped. How did one small "experiment" lead to one of the most miraculous survivals in rail history? We’re diving into the mystery of "The Switch" and the teen who changed everything.</p><p>#TheRewindFiles #FridayThe13th #TrainDerailment #NovaScotia #TrueStories #MysteryPodcast #TheSwitch #MiracleOnTracks</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Aloha Landing: 11 Days in Hainan]]></title>
      <itunes:title><![CDATA[The Aloha Landing: 11 Days in Hainan]]></itunes:title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What happens when the two biggest superpowers on Earth play a high-stakes game of "who’s gonna blink first"? On April 1, 2001, a U.S. Navy spy plane collided with a Chinese fighter jet 22,000 feet over the South China Sea. The plane dropped 8,000 feet in a nose-dive, smelling of smoke and desperation, before making an unauthorized emergency landing in a country that definitely didn't want them there. Brooklyn and Silas break down the 11-day standoff of the "Hainan 24." It’s a story of "spy thriller" vibes, secret documents being shredded mid-air, and a diplomatic puzzle that seemed impossible to solve. How do you negotiate the release of 24 crew members when an apology is a four-letter word? We’re rewinding to the moment the world held its breath, waiting to see if a mid-air accident would spark a global conflict.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Game That Never Finished: Tragedy at Ellis Park]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Soccer in South Africa isn’t just a sport; it’s a lifestyle, a religion, and a roar that can be heard for miles. But on April 11, 2001, the "Soweto Derby" between the Kaizer Chiefs and the Orlando Pirates turned into the darkest day in the nation’s sporting history. Imagine 60,000 fans already inside a stadium and another 30,000 outside, desperate to hear the roar of a goal—only for the gates to give way. In this episode, Brooklyn and Silas investigate the Ellis Park Disaster, looking at how a series of small, overlooked mistakes converged into a massive tragedy. We explore the terrifying physics of a "crowd crush" and the haunting reality of a game that continued for 15 minutes while chaos unfolded just yards from the pitch. How did the biggest night in sports become a nightmare? We’re looking for answers in the shadows of the stadium lights.</p><p>#TheRewindFiles #EllisPark #SowetoDerby #SoccerHistory #SouthAfrica #Podcast #TragedyAndTriumph #TheBeautifulGame</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[Ice from the Sky: The Billion-Dollar Hailstorm]]></title>
      <itunes:title><![CDATA[Ice from the Sky: The Billion-Dollar Hailstorm]]></itunes:title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Ever seen the sky turn a "bruised shade of green" and wondered if the universe was about to throw hands? On April 10, 2001, the "Tristate Hailstorm" did exactly that, raining down grapefruit-sized ice blocks at 100 miles per hour. Silas and Brooklyn rewind to a Tuesday afternoon in St. Louis where commuters on I-70 were suddenly trapped in metal boxes while the sky literally fell. We’re talking about a storm that caused damage numbers so high they sound like a typo—reaching deep into the billions. How does a single afternoon of weather lead to car dealerships looking like war zones and insurance companies having an absolute meltdown? From the terrifying science of "terminal velocity" to the harrowing stories of people caught in the open, we break down how one supercell became a statistical anomaly that no one saw coming. Grab your helmet; this one gets loud.</p><p>#TheRewindFiles #StLouisHailstorm #WeatherGoneWild #ExtremeWeather #2001Flashback #BillionDollarStorm #PodcastHistory</p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Rhine's Breaking Point: The Long Shadows of Cincinnati]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>Imagine a city holding its breath so tightly the pressure finally blows the lid off. In this episode of <em>The Rewind Files</em>, Brooklyn and Silas take you back to April 9, 2001—the day Cincinnati reached its breaking point. When 19-year-old Timothy Thomas was shot and killed by police over minor traffic warrants, a community that had already lost 15 Black men to police actions in just five years reached its limit. What started as a demand for answers at City Hall quickly spiraled into something much larger. We’re diving into the 8 PM curfews, the National Guard on the streets, and the "war zone" atmosphere of the Over-the-Rhine neighborhood. How does a routine traffic stop lead to the largest civil unrest the U.S. had seen since the '92 LA Riots? Brooklyn and Silas peel back the layers of that tense April week to find out what happened when the city stopped asking for change and started demanding it. You won't believe the chain of events that followed the first brick being thrown.</p><p>#TheRewindFiles #Cincinnati2001 #TrueHistory #CityInCrisis #PodcastLife #OverTheRhine #HistoryUncovered</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Red Polo Prophet: Tiger's Impossible Slam]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>April 8, 2001: Tiger Woods didn't just win a golf tournament. He rewrote what's humanly possible—and changed the sport forever.</strong></p><p>Picture Augusta, Georgia. April 8th, 2001. A guy in a bright red polo steps up to the 18th green and sinks a putt that makes the entire world explode. But this wasn't just any win—it was the final infinity stone.</p><p>Tiger Woods had just won all four major golf championships while holding them at the same time. In golf terms? That had literally never happened in the modern era. The U.S. Open, the British Open, the PGA Championship, and the Masters—he owned them all. They didn't even have a name for it. They had to call it the "Tiger Slam."</p><p>The pressure was insane. He was going head-to-head with Phil Mickelson and David Duval. One bad swing and the dream dies. But Tiger had stone-cold killer instinct. He won by two strokes. When he grabbed the ball out of the hole, he covered his face with his cap—because even the GOAT gets emotional.</p><p>Then everything changed. Golf courses literally had to make their holes longer because he was hitting the ball too far. Nike and Titleist went into overdrive. The way we track stats now, the technology, the diversity in the game—it all traces back to the red polo.</p><p>He proved that "impossible" is just a word for people who aren't willing to practice their putting at 4:00 AM.</p><p><strong>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where one moment changes everything.</strong></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2026 04:39:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Longest Distance Relay: How an Ancient Spacecraft Became a Lifeline for Mars]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>April 7, 2001: NASA launches a spacecraft designed to last a few years. Twenty-five years later, it's still the backbone of Mars exploration.</strong></p><p>It's 11:02 AM at Cape Canaveral. A Delta II rocket clears the tower, and Mission Control erupts—not just in excitement, but pure relief. NASA's last two Mars missions had crashed and burned (literally one disappeared because someone confused metric and imperial units). This launch couldn't fail.</p><p>The Mars Odyssey was heading for a 200-day, 286-million-mile journey to the Red Planet. But getting there was only half the battle. It had to survive aerobraking—using Mars's atmosphere as a brake pad while traveling at insane speeds. One miscalculation and the spacecraft would burn up instead of slip into orbit.</p><p>It worked. And then it kept working.</p><p>Fast forward to 2026: the Mars Odyssey is still orbiting, still collecting data, still the reason we have those high-def Mars photos on our feeds. When Perseverance or Curiosity rovers find something cool, they don't talk directly to Earth—they talk to Odyssey, which relays the signal home. It's a space modem that's been running for 25 years without a restart.</p><p>A piece of tech built in the era of dial-up is the backbone of 2026 Mars exploration.</p><p>Next time your phone dies after eight hours, think of Odyssey—still circling the Red Planet, still working.</p><p><strong>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where yesterday's missions shape tomorrow's exploration.</strong></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Billion-Dollar "Death Tax" Gamble: How a Rebrand Changed American Wealth Forever]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>April 6, 2001: Politicians pull off one of history's greatest marketing heists—and we're still living with the consequences.</strong></p><p>It's a Friday in April 2001, and the House of Representatives votes to kill the "Death Tax." Sounds dramatic, right? That's the point. It was actually called the Estate Tax, but calling it the "Death Tax" made it sound like Uncle Sam was mugging you on your way to the afterlife.</p><p>The Bush administration was 77 days in and needed a win. They rebranded a 100-year-old tax, sold the image of grieving farmers forced to sell family land, and passed a $1.6 trillion tax cut. The Estate Tax would shrink every year until 2010, when it would disappear entirely. Then, like a zombie in a suit, it was supposed to jump back to life in 2011.</p><p>Spoiler: it never came back.</p><p>Here's what actually happened: in 2001, about 50,000 estates paid the tax. Today, after those changes? Only about 1,300 do. It's effectively gone for everyone except the super-rich. Critics warned this was the birth of a "New Aristocracy"—permanent wealth dynasties with zero obligation to give back. Twenty-five years later, the wealth gap has only widened.</p><p>The "Family Farm" story was powerful. The math? Not so much.</p><p>We are still living in the economic fallout of this single vote.</p><p><strong>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where yesterday's politics shape today's inequality.</strong></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Nokia of Spacecraft: How a 2001 Mission Still Snaps Your Mars Photos]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>April 5, 2001: NASA launches a spacecraft designed to last a few years. It's now 2026, and it's still the hardest-working machine in the solar system.</strong></p><p>While everyone was obsessed with Nokia 3310s and *NSYNC's PopOdyssey tour, NASA was sweating bullets on the launchpad at Cape Canaveral. The Mars Odyssey was about to launch—and it had to work. Two previous Mars missions had just failed back-to-back. This was the rebound mission that couldn't afford to fail.</p><p>Named after <em>2001: A Space Odyssey</em>, the spacecraft's mission was simple: <strong>Follow the Water</strong>. Using a gamma ray spectrometer (basically a super-powered "nose"), it would search for hydrogen buried in Mars's dirt—the telltale sign of water ice. If humans were ever going to Mars, we needed to know if it was actually habitable.</p><p>Here's the insane part: it worked so well that <strong>it's still working 25 years later</strong>. It's officially the longest-operating spacecraft ever sent to Mars. While newer rovers like Curiosity and Perseverance take all the Instagram-worthy photos, they beam the data up to the Odyssey orbiting above them, and it acts like a giant space-modem sending everything back to Earth.</p><p>We're using 2001 technology to transmit 2026 discoveries.</p><p>That's not a spacecraft. That's a legend.</p><p><strong>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where yesterday's missions change tomorrow's world.</strong></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Dictator's Downfall: Milošević's First Week Behind Bars]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>April 4, 2001: A war criminal who thought he was untouchable just spent his first week in a prison cell. It was a watershed moment for international justice.</strong></p><p>For over a decade, Slobodan Milošević orchestrated some of the Balkans' most devastating conflicts from his presidential palace. Then, on April 1st, 2001—no joke—he was arrested. By April 4th, he was locked up facing 66 counts: crimes against humanity, war crimes, and genocide stemming from the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, where over 8,000 Muslim men and boys were killed.</p><p>He wasn't pulling the trigger himself. He was the "boss of the bosses"—providing weapons, money, and the political green light to make it happen.</p><p>The trial that followed was legendary. Milošević refused legal representation and represented himself, turning the courtroom into a political soapbox for four years. He called the entire tribunal a "NATO puppet" and fought every charge with defiance. But here's the twist: he died of a heart attack in his cell in 2006, before the verdict was ever read.</p><p>No "guilty" verdict. No closure for victims. But something more important happened: the world watched, documented, and proved that <strong>even presidents aren't above the law</strong>.</p><p>That first week in prison marked the end of absolute impunity for dictators.</p><p><strong>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where history's reckoning comes into focus.</strong></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Hunt for "The Master Swtiches"]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Day Science Found Out We're All Basically the Same</strong></p><p>April 3rd, 2001: The smartest people on the planet realized we're genetically the same as a fruit fly. And it changed medicine forever.</p><p>The Human Genome Project had just dropped the "Book of Life." But the results were shocking: humans only have about 20,000 genes—the same as a mouse. Where was our genetic complexity?</p><p>Scientists realized they'd been looking at the wrong thing. The 98% of "junk" DNA they'd been ignoring? That was actually the control room. On this day 25 years ago, researchers announced they'd mapped 1.4 million SNPs—tiny genetic switches hidden in that "junk."</p><p>These weren't random typos. They were the master switches controlling everything: your disease risk, how you metabolize medication, your biological destiny.</p><p>This discovery launched personalized medicine. Today, you can spit in a tube and get a health report based on your specific genetic switches—not a one-size-fits-all approach.</p><p>Twenty-five years ago, we stopped thinking of DNA as a blueprint and started thinking of it as a control panel.</p><p>Subscribe to The Rewind Files—where history's quiet revolutions come back to life.</p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 06:05:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[When the Sun Almost Broke the Internet (in 2001)]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>The day humanity narrowly avoided a cosmic catastrophe—and nobody noticed.</p><p>On April 2nd, 2001, while the world obsessed over Mariah Carey's record deal and that U.S. spy plane incident, something genuinely apocalyptic was happening 93 million miles away. The Sun—you know, that thing that literally keeps us alive—decided to throw a temper tantrum so massive it makes nuclear weapons look quaint.</p><p>An X20-class solar flare erupted from a sunspot called Region 9393 (yes, it sounds like a sci-fi prison). We're talking an explosion equivalent to roughly one billion hydrogen bombs detonating simultaneously. This wasn't just big—it was the strongest solar flare recorded at that time, and it came from a cluster of magnetic energy thirteen times the size of Earth.</p><p>Here's where it gets wild: we survived by pure luck. The flare shot off from the side of the Sun, meaning the massive burst of radiation and plasma (called a Coronal Mass Ejection) mostly missed us. If that cannonball had been aimed directly at Earth? Global power grids would've collapsed. Satellites would've fallen from the sky. The modern world as we knew it would've gotten a hard reset—in 2001.</p><p>But even the "near miss" was intense. The radiation was so powerful it caused an R4 radio blackout across huge portions of the planet. GPS systems (remember when those were still fancy?) went dark. Satellite sensors literally got blinded because the energy was too bright to measure. And the particles that did hit our atmosphere? They triggered auroras so intense that people saw the Northern Lights as far south as Mexico.</p><p>This is the kind of history nobody talks about, but everyone should know: we're living next to a giant, glowing nuclear reactor that can flip a switch and potentially end civilization. And on April 2nd, 2001, it came uncomfortably close.</p><p>Welcome to The Rewind Files, where we dig into the moments history forgot—but probably shouldn't have.</p><p>New episodes every day.... hopefully. Subscribe now to make sure you don't miss the next story that almost changed everything.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Night the Glass Shattered]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>On April 1, 2001, 67,000 fans packed the Houston Astrodome for <strong>WrestleMania X-Seven</strong>, an event that served as the explosive "season finale" to the wildest era in entertainment. But this wasn't just a wrestling card; it was a cultural tectonic shift.</p><p>In this episode of <em>The Rewind</em>, Brooklyn and Silas break down:</p><ul><li><strong>The Industry Monopoly:</strong> How a shocking corporate buyout just days before the show changed the business forever.</li><li><strong>The "Physics Experiment":</strong> A look back at the high-flying chaos of TLC II and the stunt that redefined "extreme."</li><li><strong>Future Icons:</strong> How the stars of this night transitioned from the ring to become Hollywood A-listers, best-selling authors, and even government officials.</li><li><strong>The Handshake with the Devil:</strong> We dive into the controversial main event "swerve" between The Rock and Stone Cold Steve Austin that many fans believe killed a movement.</li></ul><p>Whether you're a lifelong fan or haven't watched a match in years, join us as we revisit the night the "Attitude Era" reached its peak—and then shattered.</p>]]></description>
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