The Forbidden Frequency
The Forbidden Frequency isn’t just a podcast—it’s a signal breaking through the static of controlled narratives and sanitized textbooks. Each episode pulls back the curtain on the stories they don’t teach in school and the truths they’re too afraid to broadcast. From buried history and shadow government operations to modern-day conspiracies and whistleblower confessions, this show dives headfirst into the facts they tried to erase. We cover the real history of covert wars, secret experiments, media manipulation, and the people who dared to speak up—then mysteriously disappeared. No topic is off-limits. No authority goes unquestioned. This is for the listeners who don’t settle for the official story. For those who feel something is off, but can’t quite put their finger on it. For those brave enough to hear what others are too scared to say out loud. Truth is not a theory. It’s just forbidden. Subscribe to The Forbidden Frequency—and tune in to what they tried to keep off the record.
Episodes

13 hours ago
13 hours ago
In the predawn hours of February 25, 1942, the skies over Los Angeles exploded in chaos. Air raid sirens screamed. Searchlights crisscrossed the darkness. And the U.S. military fired over 1,400 anti-aircraft shells at… something. No enemy planes were ever recovered. No damage was done—except to the truth.
In this gripping solo investigation, host Davis unpacks the mysterious “Battle of Los Angeles,” a wartime event cloaked in confusion, contradictions, and conspiracy. Was it a false alarm? A Japanese reconnaissance mission? Or the U.S. military’s first engagement with unidentified flying objects?
Through declassified documents, eyewitness accounts, and postwar speculation, this episode digs deep into one of America's earliest mass UFO sightings—and the official silence that followed.
Tune in to The Forbidden Frequency and ask yourself: what really happened in the skies above L.A.?

6 days ago
6 days ago
Before Silicon Valley and the rise of Wall Street, Black communities across America built their own thriving economic centers—complete with banks, hospitals, schools, and newspapers. You've probably heard of Tulsa’s Greenwood District, but what if it wasn’t the only Black Wall Street?
In this powerful episode, host Davis unearths the hidden histories of places like Durham’s Hayti District, Richmond’s Jackson Ward, Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn, Chicago’s Bronzeville, and Boley, Oklahoma—communities where Black excellence wasn’t the exception, but the norm. Until it was systematically dismantled.
Through vivid storytelling and historical insight, “Beyond Tulsa” reveals how policy, infrastructure, and silence conspired to erase these legacies—and why reclaiming them matters now more than ever.
This isn’t just a history lesson. It’s a reclamation.

7 days ago
7 days ago
This presentation "The Gullah Wars" explores a powerful historical narrative arguing that:
The Gullah Wars (also called the Seminole Wars or the “100 Years War”) were a series of rebellions and battles from 1739 to 1858 involving Black African (Gullah/Geechee) and Native American allies.
The commonly accepted myths about slavery and emancipation overlook this extensive and organized resistance.
Key events such as the Stono Rebellion, Negro Fort, and the Battle of Suwannee are presented as military campaigns waged by Black warriors against U.S. forces.
The presentation claims the Emancipation Proclamation was a political cover-up for what was truly a forced concession due to unstoppable Gullah resistance.