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It seems these days every second touring band is doing an anniversary run for an album from their back catalogue. Almost to the point where the whole concept is starting to lose its appeal, mainly because it's hard to tell which bands have a genuine interest in revisiting that album and which bands just see it as a potential financial bonanza.You don't have to think hard to see which side of the ledger The Butterfly Effect sit.The Butterfly Effect have been a mainstay on the Australian music scene for approaching a quarter of a century, churning out a plethora of hit singles and being widely recognised as one of the country's leading live acts.So when they announced last year that they would be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their debut album Begins Here fans rushed to buy tickets, eager to hear not only the singles from the album - Crave, Beautiful Mine, Always and One Second Of Insanity - but also the rest of the album that, for some, shaped large parts of their youth.That tour wound up earlier this year, but The Butterfly Effect weren't done yet. While capital cities got to experience the band in full flights, their regional counterparts missed out and after a bit of prompting from fans in those areas The Butterfly Effect decided to do another celebration run, this time taking in those less populated - but still music loving - areas.Rejigged to be the 21st Anniversary Of Begins Here Tour, the 25-date run of shows kicks off in Cairns on January 30, 2025 before finishing in Darwin on March 14.It is a massive run of shows across the length and breadth of the country, but one which frontman Clint Boge is adamant the fans deserve.HEAVY caught up with Boge to find out more."I'm a sucker for punishment," he laughed. "What can I tell you? My bloody drummer keeps booking gigs and I keep saying to him 'mate, how old do you think I am' (laughs). We're rounding the bend for 50 - and I must say we're looking very good for 50. It's amazing. I've gotta be honest with you, after this tour, I'm gonna need the whole rest of the year off to recover (laughs). We're all really stoked. We're all really excited. Everyone is starting to ramp up to it. We're talking about getting fit and healthy as a group, and you have to these days. It used to be late nights and partying until you drop, but yeah… we can't really do that any more. It's the next day that gets ya. We can still do it, but it's the next day."In the full interview, Clint reflects on The Butterfly Effect's recent 20th-anniversary tour, discussing the positive fan response and their desire to connect with long-time supporters while addressing the challenges of performing entire albums live. He reminisced about the band's early days, the evolution of their sound, and the timeless appeal of Begins Here.He spoke about how the fans had a say in where the regional tour would go, if the same songs that were popular on Begins Here 20 years ago were still popular two decades later, the timeless qualities of the album and the importance of allowing your music to breath, future new music and more.Tickets for the 21 Years Of Begins Here Regional Tour available here: thebutterflyeffectband.com.au.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
Mixing storytelling with conventional Q&A, The Butteffly Effetc's Clint Boge joins #EP30 of the Life Is Peachy Podcast to celebrate 20 years of “Begins Here”.Life Is Podcast Links:LIFE IS PEACHY PODCAST - https://linktr.ee/lifeispeachypodcastLIP MIXTAPE SESSIONS (Second Channel) - https://linktr.ee/LIPMixtapeSessionsLEAVE A REVIEW - https://apple.co/38Ol9IdPATREON - https://www.patreon.com/lifeispeachypodcastINSTAGRAM - https://www.instagram.com/lifeispeachypodcast/REACTION CHANNEL - https://bit.ly/2IQda2KFACEBOOK - https://www.facebook.com/groups/lifeispeachypodcastHNIMP - http://www.hernameismurderproductions.comLife Is Peachy Mixtape is a paid promotion and is officially live. If YOU would like to feature on an episode to discuss and promote, email: lifeispeachypodcast@hotmail.com for a quote.EPISODE 30 Links:Episode 30 (The Butterfly Effect) YouTube Playlist - https://shorturl.at/bmYZ3“Circus” - https://shorturl.at/dgksGA huge Thank YOU to the LIP “Virtual Tip Jar” Patrons and to Darren, Phillip, Rami & Shane who are spinning the CD Discman and Magika, FlyofChange & Vadgenator rocking the Michael Bolton Tier over on Patreon - www.patreon.com/lifeispeachypodcast“Life Is Peachy” Artwork Created by Chris Lisa Liefting. https://chrislisaliefting.com/ “Life Is Peachy” Theme Song Written & Performed by Tim Richardson. https://www.youtube.com/user/tnarichardson All music from “Begins Here” is used by permission:-Obo-Clint Boge, Glenn Esmond, Kurt Goedhart & Ben Hall.The Life Is Peachy Podcast is NOT monetized. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. All rights and credits go to its rightful owners.
Interview by Kris PetersThe Butterfly Effect are possibly one of the greatest rock outfits to emerge from this country.Since releasing their self-titled EP in 2001 which led to their superb debut album Begins Here two years later, The Butterfly Effect have epitomised the Aussie battler in musical terms, often punching above their weight but invariably taking the points on a TKO every time.As with most bands, The Butterfly Effect have had their share of ups and downs but have always emerged triumphant with their integrity intact.Now, 20 years after the release of Begins Here - an album that spawned the singles One Second Of Insanity, Crave, Always and Beautiful Mine - the boys from Brisbane have decided to relive those early days of struggle and uncertainty by taking to the road to celebrate that groundbreaking album by playing it in full.What started as only a handful of shows soon swelled to double digits, with almost half sold out already - still two weeks out from the first show.HEAVY tracked down frontman Clint Boge earlier this week to discuss the tour and the album that started it all."They said we'd never make it mate, and we're here," he smiled. "Australian heavy music is alive and well and still going. You've got all of the bands that paved the way - trail blazed - back in the day, and can I just say I am super stoked to be a part of it 20 years on. I'm probably a little bit heavier, a little bit wiser with a few more grey hairs, but I'm still here."We mention the tour and press Boge on how excited the band is to hit the road and journey back to their musical roots every night."We're nervous. There's a sense of anxiousness around the group at the moment, and we're nervous," he admitted, "because we want it to be great. We haven't played some of these songs for 20 years. I think we played Without Wings in its demo format at the Hard Rock Cafe on the Gold Coast in 2001/2002 and that was the last time that thing got played. Overwhelmed got played in I think 2004 - that was the last time it got played - so we've had to relearn, rejig and duck, weave and dodge because the brain isn't as malleable as it was 20 years ago. The excitement is palpable around the group at the moment. Glen is coming up this evening, and I'm going in the studio tomorrow to do some touch ups for vocal stuff. We're doing a full band practice, it's all systems go. We're firing on all cylinders, which is great."In the full interview, Clint talks more about the tour, the fantastic response from fans, what we can expect from the gigs, playing Begins Here in full and any difficulties it presented, the planning stages for the album and what was discussed, his memories of making it, his initial thoughts on how good the material was, his personal favourite tracks on the album, if he thinks the songs have stood the test of time, how The Butterfly Effect have changed as a band since it was recorded, their latest album IV and how the fans reacted to it, future plans and more.
Welcome to the first season of Last Week On! The podcast where we take our favourite TV shows and go through them episode by episode.To wrap up season one of the podcast, we are including a few specials and taking a look back at some classic movies.In this episode we are looking back at the 2004 classic - THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT!Join Adam Straughan (@Straughan87) with special guests Zachary Patton-García (@AdventureZandB) and Troy McEady (@Dunzopodcast) as they discuss the cult classic's twisted timelines and the Ashton Kutcher of it all.Don't forget to follow the show on Twitter and Instagram - @LastWeekOnPodAlso don't forget to SUBSCRIBE!Theme music by Brian BrysonSoundcloud profile: https://soundcloud.com/brian-bryson-711061143
The Butterfly Effect – to their fans at least – are a band who can do no wrong.Even the small matter of fourteen years passing between albums has done little to dampen the enthusiasm of a large portion of this countries population when it was announced the gang was getting back together.Ever since the bands self titled debut EP graced the airwaves in 2001, The Butterfly Effect have been melting souls and mesmerizing sensibilities with their emotionally driven sonic landscape capable of at times working the listener into a frenzy and at others soothing them to quiet.Front man Clint Boge was – and still is – unlike any vocalist seen or hard in this country, his vocal range and sincerity able to snap into bouts of aggression effortlessly and at will.Never aggressive enough to be classified as anything more than a hard rock band, but also capable of unleashing the demon within, The Butterfly Effect have always been more than just a band.They are an experience.When Boge announced his departure in 2012 many – and rightfully – foretold the demise of The Butterfly Effect, who respectfully attempted salvation with another vocalist. This was short lived and always doomed to failure, with The Butterfly Effect flapping their wings for what was, for all intents and purposes, the last time in 2016. Not because of the lack of love and respect afforded to the remaining and new members, but more for the fact a vocalist like Boge is impossible to replace.Following a chance meeting between Boge and guitarist Kurt Goedhart the following year, the band unanimously agreed to hit the road for again possibly the last time, in part to see if the fires still burned but also more as a show of gratitude to the loyal legion of fans who could have justifiably felt robbed by Boge's departure some five years earlier.The rest, as they say, is history. The shows sold out in record time, vindicating the bands desire to offer fans closure, but more importantly the band members found their own passion quickly restored and thus the caterpillar once more took flight.The only thing that could have excited the now happy Butterfly army more was new material, and when The Butterfly Effect Dropped the balls out rock number So Tired late last year it seemed the planets had finally aligned almost a decade after the walls fell crumbling inwards for many.So Tired was followed by Nil By Mouth before the softer paced, but still meaty track Visiting Hours was released along with absolute confirmation that The Butterfly Effects' fourth album – appropriately titled IV – would be released on September 2.Even HEAVY was excited and we jumped at the chance to chat with the top bloke that is Clint Boge, who was in good spirits when we caught up despite only being one coffee into his day."Holy crap, yeah man,” he replied when I pointed out the obvious. “Look, you've had to wait longer for this one than you have a tool album, so that's saying something! It's crazy, but you know what, when we left off with Final Conversation Of Kings we wrote a whole bunch of songs, and Visiting Hours was one of those songs. So we had these five songs flapping in the breeze with all these other instrumental demos. I think it was like 20 or 30 songs and we've got them on hard drives so we just threw them into a drop box folder and just started cherry picking the best that we could find, or the songs that resonated most with us. So, all of the songs that you're hearing bar one or two, or maybe three are old songs demoed. So this is all written off the back of Final Conversation Of Kings and it was interesting to get Kurty to write new music, because he was kind of like ‘I don't know man', but after that reformation tour in 2018 - I think when Brisbane sold out in under ten minutes - he was like, okay, maybe we should do some new music.”The Butterfly Effect have always layered their music with enough emotion and atmospherics in perfect contrast of light and shade. It is an identifiable characteristic of their sound and one which can't be easy to repeatedly nail, yet somehow they always do."I think some bands do it inherently,” Boge measured. “They just do it instinctively, and for us that's just what we do. The four of us playing in a room together really capture... there's a depth to the music and we really lock into the essence of what we are feeling. It's my job as lyricist and vocalist of the band to translate what each musician is telling me. When you listen to the album, you'll hear me drop in on Ben's snare hit, so that's intuitive after working together for 22 years - well I had a little break in between (laughs) - but you know what I'm saying? Knowing these guys for so long, when you drop in on these moments, or you listen to Kurt's accents, or you listen to where the bass is going, and when we do that together it really does find a... it's the musical glue I call it. And that's those edges of those frequencies, that little bit of a dark edge that we get and that's instinctive. Whereas some bands have really got to try and extract that it's very natural for us. And I think we've been lucky in that respect. It has worked for us, and against us at times, because we've butted heads many times in the band room, as I'm sure everyone can relate to (laughs)."In the full interview, Clint talks about how he has grown into himself as a vocalist in the 14 years that have elapsed between albums, the opening track on IV and how it sets the whole album up, the three singles released to date and how they represent the album, reconnecting with the rest of the band when they crossed paths again, what changed for him to come back, repaying the fans for their loyalty, the massive tour they are about to embark on and what to expect, future plans and more.Interview intro track thanks to HELLZ Abyss with 'Kill The Real Girls' https://youtu.be/UwiD2pNdudU
Today we have Neuroscientist Dr. Trish Leigh. We talk about how porn damages the brain, fixing porn addiction, NoFap, birth of fetishes, most people fap compulsively, how to fap healthily, creating new neuropathways, developing healthier relationships, pair-bonding, The Butterfly Effect, extreme sports, dangers of edging, and more.
Since bursting onto the scene with their 2009 self-titled debut EP, Gold Coast metal machine Azreal have been one of those bands whose reputation deservedly precedes them at every turn.Through countless shows on their home turf through to an international tour supporting the mighty Devildriver, Azreal have always maintained their sense of adventure and musical aggression, most notably with their astonishing ru of seven appearances at the Gold Coast's premiere music festival Wallapalooza.On the cusp of yet another appearance, HEAVY sat down with the entire band – vocalist Luke Hosking, drummer Chris Dennis, guitarist Jimmy Glinster and bass player Scott Campbell to see how they are feeling about playing at what will be the biggest Wallapalooza yet.Although not being on the initial line-up for the rescheduled event, Glinster is quick to point out Azreal is deservedly on the updated bill."Technically, we were on the line-up when it was due last September,” he corrected, “and then it got pushed back to November and we couldn't do it because of Chris' bucks party. As it turns out a couple of bands that were booked in dropped out, so..."This year Wallapalooza moves from its usual home at the Wallaby Hotel to the larger confines of the Mudgeeraba showgrounds, a move the band agrees was inevitable and also warranted."It's a well organised festival,” Hosking shrugged. “It always has a good turnout, it's always cranking, it's always got good local bands and it's a good fun scene. Everyone has a wicked time so they come back. There's never been a Walla that hasn't smashed it. Not that we've been at anyway.""Having done seven you can progressively see each year getting bigger and better and obviously this year bigger again," added Campbell.In the full interview the band chats about their time slot, the local bands on the bill, playing with some of the biggest names in Australian music, what the band has been doing in the five years since their last single Beast, possible new music, the Gold Coast metal scene and more.
If Brisbane had a throne for the Kings Of Metal, then Brisbane outfit Massic would be sitting atop that velvet chair as we speak.Blending groove, sludge and hardcore metal into a chaotic brand bearing their own signature, Massic play each show like their life depends on it – literally – and since their debut album Redshift in 2018 have taken nothing for granted.After overcoming serious well documented health issues suffered by their frontman Simon Russell-White, Massic last year released “Assimilate”, a driving slab of metal meatiness that served as a teaser for the band's follow up album.The release last month of “Surrender” dangled the carrot just that bit further, with the accompanying announcement of the band's next album tempered only by the sorrow at not having a chance to see Massic perform live on stage for far too long.All of that changes next weekend when Massic take to the stage as part of Wallapalooza 2022, featuring Grinspoon, The Butterfly Effect, 28 Days, British India, The Poor, Cosmic Psychos and more.Massic are just one of a wealth of local talent asked to perform at the festival, with Azreal, Awake In Time, Smoking Martha, Goatzilla and more also getting the chance to share the stage with some of this countries bigger names.Simon joined HEAVY for a chat about Wallapalooza earlier this week."Me and the boys have a bit of a thing,” he laughed. “It's not gonna be real until we're all standing on stage together and about to hit that first song, so we'll see. Nah, we're keen as man, it's gonna be great. I really feel that being in a band can be frustrating, but hats off to all the organisers of any festival. Andy and Erin and everyone else involved with Walla, it takes serious balls to continue a festival like this."Aside from Among The Ruined and Azreal, Massic are flying the metal flag for the event, with Simon admitting the band were looking forward to the honour."I think originally we were the only heavy metal band, so it's kind of cool to have Among The Ruined and our brothers in Azreal there,” he smiled. “I think it's awesome being one of the only metal bands. Apart from the crazy, cool line-up, I think it's gonna be sweet t get some metal in there. It's really cool to have been asked as being one of the lesser genres."In the full interview, Simon talks more about the new single, the upcoming album, what to expect musically, more clean singing on this one, his new side project and more.
Nathan Osmond breaks down one of his all-time favorite movies, "It's A Wonderful Life." He compares Edward Lorenz's "Butterfly Effect" to what he calls, "The George Bailey Effect." Don't miss out on this Holiday episode all about gratitude the effect that each one of us play on this earth.
For more than 20 years, Brisbane rock outfit The Butterfly Effect have been one of the best and most successful rock bands in Australia.Their music, while having an unmistakable hard edge, has also resonated on a deeper level with frontman Clint Boge rightfully respected as one of the finest vocalists this country has produced.After an extended hiatus the band returned with a vengeance in 2019 with the single Unbroken which was followed by a string of festival appearances and live shows before COVID reared its ugly head and the bands momentum was thwarted.Although remaining largely out of the public eye since that time, The Butterfly Effect have not gone back into hibernation, in fact quite the opposite.They have bunkered down and spent their time writing material for a new album – their first in 14 years – which is planned for a 2022 release.Not only that, the band has recently released an absolute banger single called So Tired that has all of the hallmarks expected and loved from The Butterfly Effect plus more.Much more.Guitarist Kurt Goedhart joined HEAVY to chat about the song and the momentum The Butterfly Effect is starting to rebuild. "As with all the new music we just wanted it to be hard and heavy,” he shrugged when asked about the new single. “We sort of started… on our last release… straying into the progressive world. This song, and when we came back - especially when we did the tour - it was a bit of a realisation because we put together all of our most rocking tracks and we had so much fun on the tour. This is what we do best. We do simple, hard tunes the best, so let's just stick to what we know and that's what we've done. I guess that's been the formula and always been the bridge before we start writing. The actual song itself was written as a verse at about three minutes for the whole song. The last two minutes is just a bit of old school stuff of what we used to do. It's been great fun. All of the tracks that we're writing we're just trying to make everything as short and hard and heavy and dark and catchy as we can."In the full interview Kurt talks more about So Tired and what the song means to him, other new material the band are working on and what direction it is taking, the awesome film clip and how it fits the song, their upcoming show at Wallapalooza and other plans, their 2019 comeback and how COVID impacted it and more.
Kasey and Joe thrash out; Shelley Duvall, feet, Kasey's cubital and carpal tunnel surgery, Joe's tonsils, Charo @kaseyplaysbass @whatupcuzshow youtube.com/whatupcuzshow instagram.com/whatupcuzshow whatupcuzshow.com
Jesus and the Devil, near death experiences, soul families, or reincarnation? What exactly happens when we die? Like our facebook page: www.facebook.com/allsick.podcastFollow us on instagram: @allsick.podcastFollow Felecia on instagram/tiktok/twitter: @heyxfeleciaFollow Cassie on instagram: @cassandranhernandezhttps://themindfool.com/soul-family/#:~:text=Soul%20families%20are%20just%20what,lessons%20and%20themes%20as%20you.https://www.britannica.com/topic/reincarnation
It's your favourite early 2000s Ashton Kutcher movie, The Butterfly Effect! Joining us is stand up comedian and master memer, John Gaalli! Strap in folks, cause this is the extra long director's cut episode! Relive the traumatic memories of your childhood with “The Nose Bleed” Fruit Punch Vodka Gin Follows us on IG & FB: @haventseenitpodcast and Twitter: @Havent_Seen_It You can listen to Haven't Seen It Podcast anywhere you find your podcasts! (https://linktr.ee/haventseenitpodcast)
Super Glued Wooden Pirates are back! Join us as we take you on a journey through space and time, discussing some of Hollywood's best and worst time travelling movies...including Bill and Ted, Terminator, Black Knight, and MANY more!
In this episode of AFTERSHOCKS, we sit down with Moonspell vocalist Francisco Ribeiro. Ribeiro checked in to talk about the reissue of the release THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT, being compared to Peter Steele, if he will ever do a solo release, and the recent change in their lineup that saw longtime drummer Mike Gaspar leave the band. Website: https://www.aftershockspodcast.com Podcast Link: https://anchor.fm/aftershockspod1 Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/aftershocks-podcast/id1510634520 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1An7v0PYI2xPBjtvwEBvYm Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xZTYxNzZkYy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-d40UR-th1Mk17xa3uS0Kw Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1510634520/aftershocks-podcast Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/ylhcq412 Cast Box: https://castbox.fm/channel/Aftershocks-Podcast-id2827964 Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/aftershocks-podcast-GMzyO1 Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/aftershocks-podcast RSS: https://anchor.fm/s/1e6176dc/podcast/rss Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aftershockspod1 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/aftershockspod1 Instagram: https://www.twitter.com/aftershockspod1
Join us as we hear from our Sydney Campus Pastor, Grant Hoyle, as he brings us another instalment of our current series, 'The Butterfly Effect'.
Join us as we hear from our Senior Pastor, Ellen Cave, as she brings us the Second instalment of our new series, 'The Butterfly Effect'.
Join us as we hear from our Senior Pastor, Joel Cave, as he brings us the first instalment of our new series, 'The Butterfly Effect'.
Oggi vi parlo di cos'è l'EFFETTO FARFALLA e di come possiamo cambiare tutta la nostra vita e la nostra Realtà. Seguimi su Telegram per tutti gli aggiornamenti http://t.me/alsorace Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/alsorace/ Supporta il Podcast su PATREON https://www.patreon.com/alessandrosorace
Bobbinz is back in the van! Bobbinz played drums for Downtown Brown from 2011 to 2016. Neil and Bobbinz talk about 'The Butterfly Effect' and Axl Rose.
Clint Boge from Brisbane alt-rock band The Butterfly Effect has a chat with Steve about the bands upcoming performance at the Good Things festival, as well as their latest single 'Unbroken', their first new music in over 10 years.
Clint Boge from The Butterfly Effect drops by for a chat and delivers a big surprise.
Time travel movies are usually pretty bad, so let's talk about a couple. "Dunce Upon a Time" covers 'The Butterfly Effect', a 2004 thriller starring Ashton Kutcher. It is tasteless nonsense, convoluted in the extreme, but general audiences love it. WHY?! We do not know.
Jon Ronson is the journalist behind books like 'The Psychopath Test' and 'You've Been Publicly Shamed', documentaries such as 'Tottenham Ayatollah' and more recently the podcasts 'The Last Days of August' and 'The Butterfly Effect' investigating the porn industry. He talks to Krishnan while on a stage tour in the UK about the importance of curiosity, why he's decided to talk about his mental breakdown, and the ethics that drive his journalism. Subscribe to Ways to Change the World for more in-depth interviews every Wednesday. Recorded: 14 May 2019 Producers: Sarah Gough, Rachel Evans
Chris & Erica discuss the 2004 film The Butterfly Effect. Join us as we wrap up the month long theme of TIME TRAVEL with this 2004 Ashton Kutcher CLASSIC! :/
Tumblr er et slags museum. Et æstetisk, socialt medie, hvor billeder af skovsøer, katte-memes og blomsterarrangementer kan eksistere i kontrastfuld harmoni side om side med dick pics, gifs med kreative buttplugs, bryster, makabre russiske pornoblogs og lydfiler med lyden af onani og orgasmer.Eller, sådan var det i hvert fald. Indtil d. 17. december, hvor Tumblr fjernede alt pornografisk indhold fra sit site - med den begrundelse, at det var for svært at kontrollere delingen af pornografi med mindreårige.Ugens panel deler deres kærlighed til forskellige 'voksenblogs' og kommer med forslag til, hvor man kan gå hen, hvis man fortsat gerne vil dyrke den spontane og nysgerrige seksualitet i trygge, visuelt behagelige omgivelser.Ugens panel: Olivia Nanny Sørensen, William Abrahamsen & Aminata Amanda Corr.Ugens anbefalinger:1. Lyt til podcasten 'The Butterfly Effect'.2. Følg ejendomsmægleren Adam Schnack på Instagram for dit daglige skud boligporno.3. Find Pitbulls 'Ocean To Ocean' på YouTube og fortab dig selv i kommentarsporet.4. Læs Niels Lyngsøes essay 'Ti dages stilhed'.Redaktion: Lucia Odoom, Christine Runøe, Sille Westphal, Kathrine Eggert Wadsholt & Nina Kragh.
Jon is a multi-award winning author, screenwriter, and documentarian, whose work includes The Psychopath Test, Them, The Men Who Stare at Goats and So You've Been Publicly Shamed AND the first ever guest on the BLANK podcast!We caught up with Jon while he was in the UK to do some live shows about his brilliant Audible series 'The Butterfly Effect'.We talked about the destructive nature of a social media pile on and Jon's own recent brush with it. Jon tells us about his own methods for making sure he avoids going BLANK on projects and opens up about empathy being his first way into a story.Let us know what you think of the pod: hello@theblankpocast.com or @blankpod on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Wat is 'The Butterfly Effect' van verkoop? by Jurriaan Dekkers