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Hosts Colton Dowling and Dylan Carlino bring Jamie Kilstein into the fold to come full frontal into the history of Hawaii and other things in history Dylan has never heard about. Jamie Kilstein is a comedian, podcaster, and writer, who lives in Austin, TX with the rest of the comedian podcasters.Jamie has appeared on the Joe Rogan Experience three times. Two of them were good and the other we don't talk about anymore. He has also performed standup on Conan, Showtime, the BBC, and more.He was fortunate enough to be mentored by Robin Williams. In 2009, Williams listed Jamie and Joan Rivers as his all-time favorite comedians.Robin said, "Jamie Kilstein is amazing, and I will be spreading the word. He has the spark that energized my conscience. We need more comedians kicking it like he does every night."Jamie got his start opening for comedic greats such as Marc Maron and Doug Stanhope after dropping out of high school, illegally squatting in NYC, and living out of his car playing coffee houses around the country for two years. Nobody approved of this very bad plan but it made Jamie funny, as most trauma does! Speaking of trauma, Jamie has also publicly talked about depression, anxiety, suicide attempts, rock bottoms, affairs, divorce, and soft cancelations.After being discovered by Paul Provenza (The Green Room and The Aristocrats), Jamie was quickly flying around the world performing at world-famous comedy and arts festivals, including: the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the Melbourne Comedy Festival, the Sydney Comedy Festival, Bumbershoot in Seattle, Lowlands Music Festival in Amsterdam, and Latitude in London. He's done standup in Hong Kong and Beijing, and co-headlined with Reggie Watts at the Sydney Opera House and Lakeshore Theater in Chicago.He was the first comedian to appear on Montreal's Just For Laughs prestigious New Faces in 2007 and returned the next year with his own solo show alongside Bill Burr and Patrice O'Neal. He has opened for Bad Religion, Talib Kweli, and Sarah Silverman. He has also sat on MSNBC panels with Pulitzer Prize Nominees and has become a frequent guest on the show of his former enemy, Glenn Beck,Interview Magazine listed him as a comic to watch alongside Aubrey Plaza, Kristen Schall, and Reggie Watts. He was Punchline Magazine's “One Comic to Watch in 2009,″ as well as a Timeout Chicago, Sydney, and London's Critics Pick.In 2022, Jamie performed at The Beacon Theater in NYC, somehow got a Times Square Billboard, headlined clubs around the country, and was featured on Dr. Drew's and Adam Carolla's shows.Jamie's goal is to show that through humor we can always find stuff to laugh at, even if we vote differently. He is determined to use all of the mistakes he made to help people come together, laugh, grow, and love each other more."Watching Jamie reminds me of why I got into comedy. It's like watching a combination of George Carlin and Bill Hicks." - Janeane Garofalo"Hilarious and scathing." - Rolling Stone★ ★ ★ ★★ "Kilstein is to me eerily reminiscent of Bill Hicks and not in the sense of an astute impersonation but as if we were witness to some sort of Second Coming. Eloquent intelligence, razor-sharp wit, and unconventionally convincing arguments. Kilstein is a special talent.” - Broadway Baby★ ★ ★ ★ "This is beautifully, intelligently crafted stuff. Kilstein is possibly the most impressive writer/performer I have seen–his set is so well written it could have a life apart from him and still be brilliant. Performed by him gives it an assed oomph, but I have not been so aware of the writing quality of a comedy set this year." - Kate Copstick, The Scotsman★ ★ ★ ★★ "Kilstein's savage intelligence and razor-sharp wit will make you think as much as laugh … damned funny.” - Andrew P Street, Time Out SydneyJamie Kilstein is a comedian, podcaster, and writer, who lives in Austin, TX with the rest of the comedian podcasters.
0:00:00 Introduction Richard Saunders 0:04:24 You Can Count on Adrienne Pseudoscience in Education In this discussion, Adrienne Hill, Kelly Burke, and the Skeptical Fairy Godmother Angel from the internet, aka the tooth fairy, aka Michelle Bijkersma, get together to discuss pseudoscience in education within their three countries of Canada, the USA and Australia. This is an edited version of the conversation, only touching on a few of the topics they cover in the full recording. But you can hear the unedited version by going to the Skeptic Zone YouTube page or by clicking on the link in this week's show notes. We also ask you to tell any teachers you might know about this conversation. Full version here: https://youtu.be/EVRvs01tXPQ 0:22:34 A Dive into a Trove A wander through the decades of digitised Australian newspapers on a search for references to "Kebrina Kinkade". Sydney Morning Herald - 16th March 1980 http://www.trove.nla.gov.au 0:40:22 Australian Skeptics Newsletter What skeptical news has caught the eye of Tim Mendham this week? Read by Adrienne Hill. http://www.skeptics.com.au 0:50:54 Maynard's Spooky Action What's on Maynard's Podcast? A new book from longtime music industry insider Jane Gazzo fills in Australian music history from a time before oversharing became endemic. Sound As Ever: A celebration of the greatest decade in Australian music (1990-1999), a book with Andrew P Street covers most things that you should know about the optimistic musical decade that was dashed against the uncaring digital rocks of the 21st century. http://www.maynard.com.au Also https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Mystery_House Australian Skeptics National Convention 2022 Science & Skepticism in a changed world 3 - 4 December, National Library of Australia, Canberra https://skepticon.org.au
A new book from longtime music industry insider Jane Gazzo fills in Australian music history from a time before oversharing became endemic. Sound As Ever: A celebration of the greatest decade in Australian music (1990-1999), a book with Andrew P Street covers most things that you should know about the optimistic musical decade that was... The post Jane Gazzo – Sound As Ever – Australian music 1990-1999 appeared first on Planet Maynard.
The summer series of The 9pm Edict kicks off today with our special guest, the wonderful Andrew P Street -- journalist, commentator, raconteur, and bearded person.We talk about many things, including parenting, poetry, pubic lice, productivity, journalism, capsicums, mullets, the Vaccine Police, the Bishop of Worcester, urine therapy, NFTs, and of course the continuing global pandemic.And, of course, that whole thing about the Serbian tennis player and his visa.Full podcast details and credits at:https://the9pmedict.com/edict/00154/Please consider supporting The 9pm Edict :https://the9pmedict.com/tip/https://skank.com.au/subscribe/
Majestic Horses: Live at The Bearded Lady, West End, 16 November 2019 Majestic Horses are a three-piece led by Kellie Lloyd, a long-time lynchpin of the Brisbane music community who has played in such bands as White Mansions, Warm Guns, DEAFCULT and Screamfeeder. On record, Majestic Horses are made up of Lloyd on vocals and guitar, Andrew P Street on bass and Kate Wilson on drums. Howerver, due to each member living in a different state they have taken on many different incarnations when playing live. The set you'll hear in this episode featured Lloyd, Imogen Kowalczyk on bass and Nathan Crust on drums. In 2019 the Majestic Horses released their debut album, "Away From The Sun". Includes an interview with Kellie Lloyd. Recorded by Nell Forster & Scott Mercer Mixed by Jack B-Jones Special thanks to live engineer Nell Forster Show production, engineering and host: Scott Mercer Originally aired via Zed Digital, 7-8pm, Sunday 22 August, 2021
We wrap up the Spring Series 2021 — finally — by solving most of the world's mysteries with journalist and all-round raconteur Andrew P Street. We talk about many things including UFOs, a poo-eating dog, public health education in the times of both COVID-19 and HIV/AIDS, the magic of Gummi Worm Day, bad housekeeping, and the physical impossibility of eating more than four pancakes.We also deliver some excellent ideas for political advertising.Please click through to The 9pm Late Winter Series 2021 and consider pledging your support for more special episodes of this podcast through July and August. You have until 22 July 2021. https://the9pmedict.com/latewinter2021Full podcast details and credits at:https://the9pmedict.com/edict/00138/If you miss the crowdfunding deadline of 22 July 2021 you can always support this podcast at:https://the9pmedict.com/tip/https://skank.com.au/subscribe/
Great to be joined by author & journalist - Andrew P Street (& his 2 year old toddler) - today for the SpinProof live podcast where we spoke about yet another busy #auspol week. Included today is Clive Palmer's bad week, the Govt's foolish rhetoric with China. We asked if religion & politics is getting too blurred under the Morrison Govt - and discussed Andrew Laming's claims about ADHD. We finished with some thoughts and probably not very good predictions on the Tasmanian election. A great chat to end the week!
Today's guest in the End of Spring Series 2020 is the wonderful Andrew P Street — author, columnist, journalist, voice-person, and renown mink-canceller.We talk about many things including the relative merits of two opposing rat-based scenarios, a "translucently pale man", sex parties in Brussels, the wrong kind of war crimes, Australia's relationship with China, COVID-19, the nature of democracy, cancel culture, Pete Evans, some inevitable racism, why we need someone to blame, and why compliance is violence. No, apparently it is.Full podcast details and credits at:https://the9pmedict.com/edict/00124/Support this podcast at:https://the9pmedict.com/tip/https://skank.com.au/subscribe/
Andrew P Street is The Bomb. As a music writer Andrew has written for the Sydney Morning Herald, the Guardian, the ABC, Rolling Stone, Cosmos, the Monthly, Time Out, NME, The Music and many others. As a political commentator he's also written for many of the above, including now writing a Patreon-supported guide to contemporary Australian politics. Written with style, snaz and in terms the rest of us can understand, he's bloody funny, too.APS has also written books, including The Long and Winding Way To The Top: Fifty (or so) Songs That Made Australia, The Short & Excruciatingly Embarrassing Reign of Captain Abbott andThe Curious Story of Malcolm Turnbull: the Incredible Shrinking Man in the Top Hat. He spoke to us on Music Mothers and Others about life as a parent, uncle, musician and writer – as well as his deep and everlasting love of The Muppets.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Never miss an episode.Subscribe to the newsletter: http://arationalfear.com Greetings Fearmongers — Recorded live on stage at the — In order for this political comedy podcast to qualify for a “Cabaret Festival” we brought the 2018 ARIA winners for best comedy Bridie Wyatt to sing songs at the start and the end of the show. Cabaret fans would say they're the best bits. But we have some other great bits too we fix South Australia's drop in tourists, we chip in on Izzy Folau's Go Fund Me, and try to get our money back on the F-35 jet fighter.Adelaide Cabaret Festival andI'd urge you to listen out for the excruciating audience reactions duringLewis Hobba's Logies rant in which he bravely rips into Adelaide a little too hard in front of the good people of Adelaide. Also in this showCal Wilsonweaves a beautiful allegory about millennials growing horns. Jon Brooks argues that it's about time ‘the left' had a rebrand. James McCann says Australia should stay a constitutional monarchy. Georgie Carol claims that germ warfare is grossly overrated. And journalist Andrew P. Street tells his story of seeking asylum in Adelaide. 00:00 — Pre Show.01:24 — Opening.02:15 — Introductions.05:20 — Bridie and Wyatt Introduction.07:00 — Sex Pest.10:25 — I'm afraid of the Bees.16:10 — Fearsome Fears: Where Is Everyone Adelaide?.20:55 — Fearsome Fears: Israel Folau on Go Fund Me.23:00 — Fearsome Fears: F-35 doesn't do much jetting or fighting.30:14 — F-35 Promo.31:50 — James McCann: God Damn The Queen.38:34 — Georgie Carol: Germ Warfare, so what?46:55 — Cal Wilson: Millennial Horns, the Wikipedia entry.54:10 — Jon Brook: Time to rebrand The Left'.1:03:00 — World Refugee Day: The political rhetoric need to change.1:06:40 — Andrew P. Street: Economic Refugee1:09:35 — Lewis Hobba: The Logies need a new home.1:19:40 — Bridie and Wyatt: The middle of a relationship.1:23:15 — Credits. A Rational Fear on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ARationalFear See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Long and Winding Way to the Top. Andrew P. Street chats to Felicity Biggins about the 50 (or so) songs that made Australia. This session was recorded at the 2018 Newcastle Writers Festival.
Broadcasting legend Ron Wilson joins regular hosts Andrew P Street and Michelle Stephenson to discuss the ins and outs of politics, while The Chaser's Dom Knight talks through the US midterms and his new book, Trumpedia. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
PRESENTING THE MUDGEE READERS' FESTIVALThis season Writes4Festivals is presenting all of the wonderful and interesting sessions from the 2018 Mudgee Readers' Festival, starting with "Comfort Reading". Authors Chris Womersley, Andrew P Street, Inga Simpson and Laura Elizabeth Woollett discuss the books they turn to again and again for solace and comfort. What are the stories that keep them feeling nourished and keep them writing? Jenn Martin probes the panel to find out. You may want to keep a pen and paper handy for this one...#MRF18 #MRF2018 #writing #reading #writingfestivals #writngnsw #createnswSHOW NOTES:Mudgee Readers' Festivalwww.mudgeereaders.comFacebook @mudgeereadersWrites4Festivals / Writes4Womenwww.writes4women.comFacebook @writes4womenTwitter and Instagram @w4wpodcastPamela Cookwww.pamelacook.com.auFacebook - @pamelacookauthorTwitter - @PamelaCookAUKel ButlerTwitter @KelBChris Womersleywww.chriswomersley.comAndrew P Streetwww.andrewpstreet.comInga Simpsonwww.ingasimpson.com.auLaura Elizabeth Woollettwww.lauraelizabethwoollett.com
Comedian, actor and former ASIO spy David Callan joins regular hosts Andrew P Street and Michelle Stephenson to discuss the fallout of the Wentworth by election, and Fairfax columnist Jenna Price dissects her provocative call to wrap up White Ribbon. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The god of Australian night time radio Smallzy joins regular hosts Andrew P Street and Michelle Stephenson to discuss parliamentary votes to decide whether its ok to be white before the Liberal candidate for Wentworth Dave Sharma talks about life as a front-runner. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sally Rugg from Change.org joins regular hosts Michelle Stephenson and Andrew P Street to discuss a political cycle that has largely been projected onto a heritage listed billboard formerly known as the Sydney Opera House, before ALP Wentworth candidate Tim Murray describes his efforts to find a press conference to hijack! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Journalist, podcaster, author and friend of the pod Andrew P Street returns to My Favorite Album to delve into the subject and process of his new book 'The Long and Winding Way to the Top: 50 or so songs that Made Australia'. Andrew takes us on a musical history of Australian culture since the birth of rock'n'roll, from JOK to AC/DC, Yothu Yindi to The Presets - telling the story of tectonic shifts in society, politics and more through the iconic songs that soundtracked those shifts and more. This episode should be a great entry point into the classic songs of Aussie rock and pop for our international listeners and might make some of our Australian listeners see some of these songs in a new light. My Favorite Album is a podcast on the impact great music has on our lives. Each episode features a guest on their favorite album of all time - why they love it, their history with the album and how it’s influenced them. Jeremy Dylan is a filmmaker, journalist, concert promoter and photographer. He directed the the feature music documentary Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts (out now!) and the film Benjamin Sniddlegrass and the Cauldron of Penguins. If you’ve got any feedback or suggestions, drop us a line at myfavoritealbumpodcast@gmail.com.
Jo Thornely talks to Andrew P Street about the cult that ruined train travel and hair tea for everyone: Aum Shinrikyo.
It's an all-Australian affair this episode with writer Andrew P Street giving his thoughts on The Hummingbirds' album loveBUZZ. Our guest: Andrew P Street – Journalist and Broadcaster (links to Andrew's book, podcast and Patreon project all on this link) Album chosen: loveBUZZ by The Hummingbirds (1989) ( Facebook — Spotify — iTunes) Links from the show discussion: […]
Astrophiz 43 – Cassini’s Legacy. As one of 30 very lucky Astrogeeks, Andrew P Street was a guest of the Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex on Friday 15 September 2017 to witness first hand the #GrandFinale of the astonishing 20 year Cassini Mission to Saturn. In this episode: With permission, we read Andrew P Street’s great article published in the Guardian the next day. Then Dr Ian Musgrave and I discuss my awed impressions of this amazing night at Tidbinbilla CDSCC as a guest of CSIRO/NASA, and my new understanding of the importance and capabilities of the 3 NASA/JPL Deep Space Network earth stations at Goldstone USA, Madrid Spain and Tidbinbilla Australia. Ian recounts some of Cassini’s iconic achievements. For observers and astrophotographers, Ian continues with ‘What’s Up Doc’ and tells us when, where and what to look for in morning and evening skies. In Ian’s Tangent, Ian helps us understand why the end of the Cassini Mission was such an emotional event compared with other famous missions. For Aurora Hunters, we include the spooky sounds of Saturn’s aurorae, as captured by Cassini. In the news: 1. In many previous episodes we have talked about how the sheer enormity of radio telescope data caches presents challenges for effective analysis. Today we quote from a review of the ‘ Big Data Boom’ in Nature Astronomy by Professor Ray Norris, School of Computing, Engineering, & Maths, Western Sydney University. 2. We report on the May 2018 launch of the NASA InSight Mission to Mars 3. A game-changing discovery by a Japanese team reveals Black Hole evolution.
Sydney Morning Herald columnist, author and podcaster (Double Disillusionists) Andrew P Street on the Aussie new wave classic 'Pleasure of Your Company', what makes a band like Models a band when the lineup is constantly changing, how this album changed the way he thought about Australian music, using musical taste to define your identity and how going from writing about music to writing about politics changed the way he listens and experiences music. There's almost no discussion of Peter Dutton. My Favorite Album is a podcast unpacking the great works of pop music. Each episode features a different songwriter or musician discussing their favorite album of all time - their history with it, the making of the album, individual songs and the album's influence on their own music. Jeremy Dylan is a filmmaker, journalist and photographer from Sydney, Australia who has worked in the music industry since 2007. He directed the the feature music documentary Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts (out now!) and the feature film Benjamin Sniddlegrass and the Cauldron of Penguins, in addition to many commercials and music videos. If you've got any feedback or suggestions, drop us a line at myfavoritealbumpodcast@gmail.com.
Hello! Welcome. This is the premiere episode of Pod Blart: Mall Cast - a podcast dedicated to dissecting the cinematic achievements of Paul Blart: Mall Cop. Your hosts for this start-studded affair are vaguely noteworthy media auteurs Patrick Kolan and Andrew P. Street. Special guest for episode one is actress Mikaela Franco who, incidentally, also came up with the best line in the podcast, where we draw this episode's title. Sheesh. You don't even need to listen now!
Jane Howard, Van Banham and Vicky Frost discuss An Iliad, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Bianco and the Fringe World show Red Bastard. We also check back in with Andrew P Street about how Beastie Boys' samples hold up in a stand alone concert, and catch up with Andrew Frost
In this podcast, Andrew Frost looks at an exhibition of works from Anne Ferran, Andrew P Street gives us a new band to watch in Lilt, and Vicky Frost shares her thoughts on Situation Rooms and the future of theatre. Plus, we join the Kelemen Quartet in rehearsal and talk to composer Ross Edwards
Join Vicky Frost, Andrew P Street and Andrew Frost as they discuss works at the Perth festival. In this first episode we look at Batsheva's Sadeh21, music from Austra and Ebony Bones, and festival artworks such as Sacrilege – the jumping castle Stonehenge we're bouncing on in this podcast. Perth festival director Jonathan Holloway also joins us for a chat
Vicky Frost, Ben Neutze and Andrew P Street talk about the latest festival reviews, plus we head down to the Basement to take a closer look at some of the programming
Vicky Frost, Andrew P Street and Van Badham spent most of Sunday seeing shows in the Famous Spiegeltent. We have their reviews plus chats with Brisbane festival's independent theatre curator David Berthold and Wizard of Oz writer Maxine Mellor