I've finished up through 1804. Pretty good and recommended. Podcasts are about 40 to 45 minutes long. Doing one a week up to the election, they've most recently published 1984.
Narrated by a Lindsey Graham. Who is not the Senator nor related to him.
https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/wondery/american-elections-wicked-gameSome highlights, I always assumed in my head that Burr shot Hamilton shortly after the 1800 election. I didn't realize it wasn't until 1804.
His negatives aside (as of 1804), Burr was very forward-thinking and innovative as far as political campaigns. His Manhattan campaign described in the 1800 election show would not be far away from how it was done decades into the future.
Alexander Hamilton, foremost leader of the Federalists he was, from listening to these shows I feel has been overrated as a political mastermind. He made a lot of what I feel were needless tactical errors in presidential election planning and contrary to how the Federalists and Republicans viewed how government was supposed to operate, he was significantly outorganized by his opposition. His scheming against Adams in 1796 helped to make Jefferson vice president. I also didn't know about his own sex scandal until this podcast (no, I've not seen Hamilton). One simple explanation of history I and most others have probably read was "the Federalists went down because no one replaced Hamilton after he died". Well he didn't die until 1804, when the Federalists were already going downhill. If he lived, what would've been his future politically if he was steadfastly anti-Jeffersonian?