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Wolfgang Petersen's The Never Ending Story This week we look into the cinematic psyche of Mr. Ibrahim Chavez. Our path is Wolfgang Petersen's 1984 Childrens' Dark Fantasy, The Never Ending Story. A childrens' adventure/heroes journey of youth battling nihilism (in this case The Nothing), bullies, parental loss, and the power of imagination, self-worth (self-belief), and self-realization. Possibilities abound in this story surrounding a magical book, a young warrior (Atreyu), beautiful, frightening, and troubling settings (The Swamp of Sadness - one of the most depressing and overpowering setttings in The History of Movies), and imaginative puppetry (The Luck Dragon - Falkor, Gmork, Turtle-like Morla, and The Rock-Eater - truly magnificent). The struggle to save the mythical Fantasia of the film presents imaginative and important points for those of us who have always loved reading and literature and the new generations that are understanding the power of literature. Take a listen and let us know what you think. As always, we can be reached at gondoramos@yahoo.com - Our Continued Thanks. For those of you who would like to donate to this undying labor of love, you can do so with a contribution at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/watchrickramos - Anything and Everything is appreciated, You Cheap Bastards.
Cultists, let's extend our vampire theme one more episode and catch up with a Dracula adaptation that slipped by your Horror Hosts last year. Luc Besson's Dracula: A Love Tale, is more of an adaptation of Coppola's Dracula than it is of Bram Stoker's Novel but it does have some pretty unique takes on lore as well. Please join us for the Dissection Dissection Topic https://www.imdb.com/title/tt31434030/?ref_=ext_shr https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B0GKP1PFBB/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r Unholy Sacrament Carpathians - Czech Dark Lager, Block 15 Brewing Company https://untp.beer/vNx3e Vault of Darkness They Cloned Tyrone (Taylor,2023) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9873892/?ref_=ext_shr https://www.netflix.com/title/80996324 36 Streets by T.R. Napper https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/678795/36-streets-by-t-r-napper/ The Curse (2025) Atreyu https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_nmaurME9TwJrFL-brRGDzRCUk6ZGAvmyk&si=UQ_XsfsHiU-nnlix https://www.discogs.com/release/34696884-Atreyu-The-Curse-2025 #dracula, #draculaalovetale, #bramstoker, #lucbesson, #caleblandryjones, #christophwaltz, #zoëbleu, #zoebleu, #ewansabid, #raphaelluce, #dannyelfman, #lovetale, #bramstokersdracula, #minamurry, #johnathanharker, #vanhelsing, #draculamovie, #classicmonsters, #classichorror, #vampiremovies,
The economy was designed to serve life. At some point, it forgot. This article traces how that happened - through colonial extraction, currency manipulation, and centuries of treating the Earth as an inexhaustible resource - and more importantly, what is already being built in its place. It is also worth naming what is being built against it. Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC), digital identity systems, and the broader technocratic agenda advancing through institutions like the World Economic Forum represent a competing vision of the future - one where economic participation is surveilled, programmable, and ultimately controlled by the few. That is not a regenerative economy. It is the extractive economy in a new interface. The regenerative economy moves in the opposite direction: toward decentralization, sovereignty, reciprocity, and life. From Time Banks in New York to community currencies in Ecuador to worker cooperatives in Spain, it is not a future vision. It is a present reality, waiting to be joined. And while blockchain and regenerative finance are real and important parts of this picture, the regenerative economy is bigger than any single technology. It is a whole-systems redesign - cultural, spiritual, and practical - of how human beings relate to value, to each other, and to all living beings on Earth.A System Feature | Designed to ExtractA president steps up to the podium in Manila, praising the economic progress their country has fulfilled after, what many of us call “ the plandemic”. Outside the auditorium, a young mother carries her child on her hip, knocking on car windows at a red light, eyes down, asking for alms. The applause inside the hall doesn't reach her. It never does.The president says the currency has strengthened. That prices are coming down. Meanwhile, across the city, a farmer named Rodrigo is standing in the field he has worked for thirty years, calculating whether this harvest will cover the loan he took out before the last typhoon swept his crop away. It didn't. This is not an exception to the economic system. It is a feature of it. A reflection of a culture that does not care about those actually in need.Many nations measure their health through GDP - Gross Domestic Product - which essentially dictates whether or not an economy is “progressing.” It runs under one quiet assumption: that the Earth will keep giving. Indefinitely. Without asking anything in return. That before the calculations around supply, demand, and the balance of everything else, all the raw materials are already ideally supplied.The Earth is answering. Typhoons that once came once a generation now arrive like clockwork. Harvests that fed communities for centuries are failing across the Andes, the Sahel, the Mekong delta. The seasons that indigenous peoples read as living calendars have become erratic, unreliable, grieving. None of this is random. It is a response - accurate and proportional - to an economy built on the assumption that extraction has no cost.If we were truly “abundant” financially, we would not have billions of people at risk of starvation, homelessness, and other manifestations of neglect and poverty. The economy was supposed to serve all life. It has forgotten this. And in forgetting it, it has begun to abandon human life itself.The Story We InheritedMoney was supposed to be a promissory note for the gold reserves one actually held. The paper was a symbol - pointing at something real, something held in a vault somewhere, something that could be touched.Then the notes began circulating. And the longer they circulated, the more people forgot what they were pointing to. Eventually, the circulation gave rise to the idea of turning the notes into currency itself. The symbol became the standard. It became backed not by gold, but by story - a story so strong, so repeated, so programmed into every transaction of daily life, that we began to mistake it for the truth.We placed a middleman between ourselves and our needs. And somewhere along the way, we forgot we had done it. Perhaps, by design. Here is what the story never tells you: the gold itself did not arrive innocently.In 1302, Pope Boniface VIII issued Unam Sanctam, declaring papal authority supreme over all earthly power - making the Earth itself, philosophically, ownable. A century and a half later, that claim became economic policy. Dum Diversas (1452) authorized the enslavement of non-Christians across the globe. Romanus Pontifex (1455) granted Portugal the right to colonize and extract across Africa and the New World. Inter Caetera (1493) extended the same to Spain and the Americas.These were the founding economic legislation of the extractive world we live in - all cloaked in religious language.What followed was centuries of forced extraction. Economists Flynn and Giráldez have documented that colonial American silver - mined through indigenous forced labor in Potosí and across Peru and Mexico - became the standard monetary foundation of early global trade. The gold in the vault was never simply there. It was coercively taken.And then, on August 15, 1971, even that material trace was erased. President Nixon closed the gold window, ending the Bretton Woods system and severing the dollar's convertibility to gold. According to the Federal Reserve's own record, the international community was not consulted. From that moment, currency was backed by nothing but the authority of the government printing it.Knowing that we wrote ourselves into this story, we are now remembering that we can write ourselves out of it. Not only by writing new stories, but by reconnecting with stories that existed long before our current economic situation - stories that are still alive, still practiced, still remembered by the communities that never abandoned them.What Has Always WorkedBefore the conquest of certain nations to centralize power into their hands, other societies practiced more communal and regenerative ways of exchanging value. To them, considering other people and the Earth itself was not an ethical add-on. It was integral to the flourishing of their economies.Pre-colonial PhilippinesLong before the Spaniards arrived, the Philippine archipelago was a major hub in the maritime Silk Road - one of Asia's most active trade networks. Communities exchanged with Chinese, Japanese, Arab, and Indian traders at coastal ports and river settlements.The archipelagic geography made it impossible to consolidate wealth in any single place. Different tribes like the Maranao exchanged surplus agricultural produce, textiles, metalware, and forest products through robust barter systems built on kinship ties and alliances among polities. Value moved between two people who chose to relate. No middleman. Mutual trust was the economic infrastructure.Andean PeoplesThe Quechua people organized their economy around a relational foundation that lives in the language itself. Ayni - sacred reciprocity. Minka - collective community work. Randi-Randi - generalized reciprocity, the understanding that what circulates returns. All three connect to the broader principle of Sumak Kawsay: good living in right relationship with community, land, and the living world.Sumak Kawsay does not separate prosperity from the wellbeing of ecosystems. It understands them as one thing. This recognition runs so deep that Ecuador enshrined it as the central guiding principle for its national development in its 2008 constitution - the living legal inheritance of an ancient economy that knew how to stay.Haudenosaunee in North AmericaIn their 1981 formal statement to the United Nations, the Haudenosaunee Council of Chiefs articulated what their communities had practiced for centuries: that the earth was created for all to use, forever - not for the present generation to exhaust. Under their law, land is held by the women of each clan, who farm and care for it for the benefit of future generations.The Haudenosaunee saw land as a responsibility to be stewarded in trust. Anthropologist Kurt Jordan from Cornell University documented their economic practices and described them as “a reasonably sustainable, localized economy” even under intense external pressure. They had embodied communal stewardship long before theories about such things were written down.Southern Africa“I am because we are.”This is Ubuntu - the philosophy at the core of both social and economic life across Southern Africa. Communities in South Africa and Mozambique relied on mutual aid networks, intergenerational knowledge systems, and participatory rituals as practical economic infrastructure. These systems enhanced community cohesion and collective resilience precisely in the moments when extractive economies failed them. They understood, bone-deep, that no human being thrives in isolation.Diversity of Regen Economic SystemsMany communities across continents are actively rebuilding economic systems beyond the extractive model. The following are not theoretical. They are actively running. Hence, the more diversity of economic systems each person and community practices, the more abundant, unbreakable and independent we are from degenerative systems from governments and corporations that want to control it all. The Commons FoundationOne body of research forms the intellectual foundation for nearly all of them: the life's work of Elinor Ostrom, the first woman to receive the Nobel Prize in Economics. Ostrom spent decades documenting over 800 cases of communities successfully governing shared resources - in Switzerland, Kenya, Guatemala, Nepal, and beyond - without either privatization or state control.Her conclusion was simple and radical: communities do not inevitably destroy what they share. Given the right institutional design, they protect it and pass this duty to the next generation. And her eight design principles for successful commons governance - the framework that emerged from all that fieldwork - describe, as she herself acknowledged, the same governance systems that indigenous communities had been practicing for centuries.Her work is not a new idea. It is a confirmation of ancient ones.Regenerative Economics | Beyond ReFi - The Whole-Systems VisionWhen most people first encounter the term “regenerative economy,” they arrive through crypto. Through ReFi - regenerative finance - and the promise of blockchain as a tool for funding ecological restoration, decentralizing power, and making impact transparent. These are real contributions. They matter.But John Fullerton, founder of the Capital Institute and one of the most rigorous thinkers in this field, spent two decades on Wall Street before arriving at a different and more fundamental question: what if the entire framework of modern finance is running in conflict with how life actually works?Fullerton's work focuses on building an economic framework that supports the long-term health of people, communities, and the planet - not by tweaking the existing system, but by replacing its underlying logic. His core argument is that we are running our society in conflict with the patterns and principles that explain how life works.His answer is what he calls regenerative economics: eight principles drawn from living systems science that describe how healthy economies - like healthy ecosystems - actually function. Diversity. Balance. Circular flow. Robust circulation. Surplus financial capital, in his framework, needs to be recycled and regenerated into other forms of capital - natural, social, and cultural. Not hoarded nor extracted. Composted back into the living system that produced it.ReFi, in Fullerton's framing, is one tool within this larger architecture. Blockchain can decentralize power. Tokenized nature credits can make ecological value legible to markets. Community currencies can circulate value locally. But the technology is only as regenerative as the values underneath it. A crypto project built on extraction logic is still extraction, regardless of the chain it runs on.Regenerative economy is not a financial product. It is a civilizational shift - in how we measure wealth, in what we decide to protect, in whose voices count when decisions are made. ReFi is welcome in that shift. It is one current in a much larger river.Time BanksIn Jackson Heights, Queens, a retired nurse named Gloria hasn't touched the formal economy in months for the things that matter most to her. She spends three hours teaching English to a recent immigrant. Those hours become credits. She spends them on home repairs from a neighbor who knows carpentry. He spends his credits on childcare. The loop keeps moving.This is a Time Bank - a community exchange system built on one radical premise: everyone's time is worth the same. One hour of legal advice equals one hour of gardening equals one hour of emotional support. The hierarchy of market wages disappears. What remains is a web of people who need each other.Edgar Cahn, who developed Time Banking in the 1980s after surviving a near-fatal heart attack, called it “co-production” - the idea that the economy needs what the market can never price: care, community, civic participation, the work of raising children and holding elders. Time Banks make that invisible labor visible, and circulate it back into the community that produced it.Today there are over 500 Time Banks operating in more than 30 countries. Some have formalized into neighborhood institutions. Others run through apps. All of them rest on the same foundation the Quechua called Ayni - sacred reciprocity - translated into the language of modern urban life.Mondragon CorporationThe Mondragon Corporation in Spain's Basque region remains the most studied proof that democratic ownership functions at scale. Founded by six worker-owners in 1956, it now comprises 96 cooperatives employing over 70,000 people, with annual revenues exceeding €11 billion. Workers own the company collectively, vote on strategy at general assemblies, and operate under a constitutionally capped pay ratio of 6-to-1 between the highest and lowest earners.Traditional Dream FactoryIn a 25-hectare village in Alentejo, Portugal, Traditional Dream Factory is a living prototype of the self-sustaining regenerative community - blending collective ownership, ecological restoration, intentional community, and decentralized economy in one working place. They have raised over €1.25 million in total capital across 280+ token holders. Their 2026 build phase is completing co-living rooms, artist studios, a farm-to-table restaurant, a mushroom farm, and a biopool wellness space.AtreyuInvestment, as most of us have encountered it, prioritizes short-term financial returns above all else. Atreyu challenges this at the root by approaching investment through living systems principles and deep relational due diligence. They support their investees to ensure that both the enterprises and the ecosystems they steward realize their potential - together. They focus on early-stage businesses and actively encourage steward-ownership models that enshrine self-governance and purpose orientation.Muyu CoinOne of the first social coins in South America, Based in Ecuador - Muyu serves as an alternative exchange system rooted in community trust and an understanding of sacred economy. It protects the sovereignty of communities in their production, distribution, exchange, consumption, and post-consumption - keeping the loop of value inside the community rather than extracting it outward. It uses Cyclos, an enchrypted platform, a base.It first did an attempt to start in 2015, but not many people showed interest. It then came back very strong in 2020, due to the “plandemic”. People felt the need to have alternative ways to transact that was not controlled by limiting governments. Giving communities complete independence. Currently with over 150+ members who are exchanging goods and services in different nodes throughout the country. From food produce, clothing and art -to- car mechanic, dentists and school teachers serving to the community.Grassroots EconomicsFounded in Kenya, Grassroots Economics supports communities in building their own self-sustaining economies - even when national currency is scarce - through a model called Commitment Pooling.Consider Wanjiru, a vegetable seller in Mombasa's Bangla Pesa network. During a slow week when Kenyan shillings are tight, she issues a Community Asset Voucher - a commitment to provide vegetables - and deposits it into a communal pool. Her neighbor, a carpenter named Kamau, redeems it. He offers his own labor in return. The loop closes. Food reaches a family that needed it. A roof gets repaired. No national currency changes hands.This is not a workaround. It is a return to how value was always supposed to move.Since Grassroots Economics was established in 2010, they have supported 26,600 people across 290+ communities, issuing over 2,140 vouchers. Their protocol is inspired by indigenous Rotational Labor Associations similar to Kenya's mwethya and harambee traditions. It is open-source and blockchain-agnostic - meaning any community, anywhere, can deploy it.The Choice in Front of UsThese regenerative endeavors share one answer to the core assumption of the extractive economy: the economy does not need to extract in order to function. Value can circulate and regenerate rather than accumulate. Ecological health, community resilience, and the wellbeing of the next generations are not costs to minimize - they are the actual metrics that demonstrate economic success.The question is no longer whether it is possible. It is happening. The question is whether enough of us choose to participate in building it, and whether we remember our roles as stewards of the Earth that has always sustained us.We get to choose the future we want for ourselves, our children, and the seven generations that come after.Your Role in the Regenerative EconomyReading this is already a kind of remembering. The question that follows is simple: where do you begin?The regenerative economy is not waiting to be invented. It is waiting to be joined. Every one of the models described here started with a small group of people who decided to practice a different relationship with value - before it was proven, before it was popular, before it was funded.Here are real entry points, available now:Start with your immediate circle. Identify three skills or resources you have in excess - time, knowledge, food from a garden, tools sitting unused. Offer them. Ask for what you need in return. This is Ayni. It requires no platform, no signup, no permission.Relocalize your spending. Every dollar (fiat currency) that circulates inside a local economy multiplies its impact without leaving the community. Farmers markets, community-supported agriculture, local cooperatives, regenerative small businesses - these are not lifestyle choices. They are votes for a different system, cast weekly.Find or start a Time Bank in your area. hOurworld.org and TimeBanks.org maintain active directories. If nothing exists near you, starting one requires little more than a spreadsheet and a Telegram/Whatsapp group.Join a community working on this. It can be our Regenerative Leadership Community from www.regenerativeculture.life is one place. There are others - transition towns, ecovillages, commons networks - in most regions of the world. Find your people. The regenerative economy is, at its root, a relationship economy. It does not work alone.Learn the language. Permaculture design, commons governance, cooperative economics, sacred reciprocity - these are not abstract concepts. They are practical skills with deep traditions behind them. The more fluent you become, the more useful you are to the communities building this.The scale of what needs to change can feel paralyzing. It is not meant to. The models described in this article did not begin at scale. Mondragon began with six people. Grassroots Economics began in one neighborhood in Mombasa. The Quechua did not design Ayni for a movement - they designed it for a harvest.Start where you are. With what you have. With whoever is near you. That has always been enough to begin. It's not easy, but it is possible.Written by Gertie Farenas and Yoshi Pantera - 90% by us humans and 10% AI assisted.This Audio is recorded by a true voice - Yoshi PanteraThis article is part of the Regenerative Culture Chronicle - a publication exploring the ideas, practices, and communities building a world that benefits all life.Learn more at RegenerativeCulture.LifeThanks for reading Regenerative Culture Chronicle! This post is public so feel free to share it.Regenerative Culture Chronicle is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support our work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Thank you! Get full access to Regenerative Culture Chronicle at regenerativecultureworld.substack.com/subscribe
I sit down with Atreyu to talk about new music, old music and being hated on is a good thing?Don't forget to bang your head on the links belowTikTokhttps://www.tiktok.com/@jesealee Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/jesealee/ Podcast available on Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music and everywhere else you consume podcastsProduction by WhatTheGleeson https://www.instagram.com/whatthegleeson/Theme song by Michael Stoutengerhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/6LO5e...Subscribe to my newsletter:https://jesealee.substack.com/Everything else:https://www.jesealee.com/
They put some nuts into it! This week's guest on Discover New Music is Brandon Saller of Atreyu. "The End Is Not The End" is album number 10 for that band...and they didn't even realize it at first! Saller talks about putting all of Atreyu into this record, but also allowing it to stand on its own. Plus, it's heavy...really heavy...and that's exactly what they were going for. Saller also talks about how a joke turned into working with metal icon! As always, a quick round of Rapid Fire is played...and Bugs in drag gets a high score!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, we're scratching The Itch to be repeat customers! Within a span of a few days, the guys saw a pair of shows at Delmar Hall, which has quickly become one of our favorite St. Louis venues. First, the whole gang catches past guest Des Rocs and future guests King Falcon in a good ol' rock and roll show with an electropunk set from Romes sandwiched in the middle. Technical difficulties led to some fun and unique improvised on-stage activities (especially if you're into Pokémon), and a thunderstorm during the show led to some quality wordplay. And good and safe times were had by almost all. Then, KC and Dan caught past guest Brandon Saller and Atreyu for a set that featured a lot of comedy and an opening performance from a different-than-last-time sounding Fire From the Gods. While getting some good laughs and a great performance from Atreyu was a given, we weren't sure what to expect from new Fire frontman Myke Terry, who replaced past guest AJ Channer last year. Well now we know, and we've got some ideas for what the future of the band might hold. Enjoy. Listen to The Itch Rock Radio Show Rock with us every Sunday night from 6-9pm CST on KCLC-FM in St. Louis. Outside the area? Stream online at 891thewood.com, TuneIn, Radio.net, and OnlineRadioBox! Connect With The Itch For any and all friendship, questions, inquiries, and offers of pizza, The Itch can be found at the following: Website: itchrocks.com Facebook: Facebook.com/itchrocks Instagram: Instagram.com/itchrocks Email: itchrocks@gmail.com Support the Show Thank you so much for listening. If you like what you hear, please subscribe and leave a positive review and rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Podchaser to help our audience grow. Reviews only take a minute and help us reach more rock fans just like you. Credits Our theme song, "Corrupted", is used with permission from the amazing Skindred. All other content is copyright of The Itch. All rights reserved, including the right to rock on.
For the 3rd time, our guest today is a visual artist, a graphic designer, and the powerhouse bassist for Atreyu, Porter Mcknight. Porter is a down to earth, genuine person, who has great insights into what keeps a band together, how much he appreciates the fans, and what it takes to keep the band staying creative and together after all these years. We get into everything from recording in Japan, to moving to Germany, to just how much Atreyu's new album means to Porter. Make sure to check out The End is Not the End now available for purchase and streaming. Have a listen! We also dive into Mike's visit to the Serial Killer exhibit and Scott chats about a video that went viral. Another great week.
With their new album, The End Is Not the End, now out, Travis Miguel of Atreyu returns to the show to talk about Star Wars, Shrinking, Maul: Shadow Lord, Daredevil: Born Again & much more!EARGASM Use the code METALCORENERDS to save 10% off your order. Protect your hearing while still enjoying the music you love.Support Atreyu!Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | MerchSong of the Week: Execution Day ft. Take The Name "BAND-AIDS ON BULLET HOLES"Check out the Metalcore Nerds Pull List Spotify PlaylistJoin the Metalcore Nerds Community:Discord | FB GroupFollow Metalcore Nerds on Social Media:Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube | TikTok
Join Travis and I as we talk about the bands latest album, "The End Is Not The End". Travis shares how the band really wanted to step out of their comfort zone and write and record as a full band. He also talks about how that process has gotten easier over the decades, not being precious about your ideas and what it was like having one of his favorite vocalists sing on the album.We also talk about avoiding the comment sections and why we as people tend to fixate on ONE negative thing versus all the positives people say about us. Travis takes us through the process of making another signature guitar, the new features that make this one different from the last and how it's really an extension of trying new things in life as well. All this and more in my chat with the Atreyu guitarist. Music:Hard Lines by Tom Denney Links:Facebook: www.facebook.com/atreyuwww.facebook.com/rockabiliacomwww.facebook.com/brewspeakpodInstagram:@travismiguel, @atreyuofficial, @rockabiliacom, @brewspeakpod, @jbeatty616Website:www.atreyuofficial.comEmail: Brewtallyspeaking@gmail.comRATE/REVIEW/SUBSCRIBE!!!
Atreyu at this point are the elder statesmen of metal-core and they're embracing it. That doesn't mean they are slowing down, in fact you could make the argument that Atreyu are busier and more relevant now then ever before. With a new album coming out next Friday called The End is Not the End, the old school has met the new school. On top of that a tour with the most influential band in modern heavy music, Sevendust, kicks off this week. It's good to be in Atreyu right now, let's find out more from lead singer Brandon Saller.
259 - Atreyu (Dan and Travis) In episode 259 of “Have Guitar Will Travel”, presented by Vintage Guitar Magazine,host James Patrick Regan speaks with Dan Jacobs and Travis Miguel, the guitarists from the band Atreyu. In their conversation the two talk about living in Southern California and having the other members of the band spread across the world and the logistics of production, rehearsal and recording and they discuss their upcoming tour with Sevendust. The two share their thoughts on their new album “The End Is Not The End” and the performances on the album including the vocals. The two take us through their live rigs which are all digital Neural DSP Quad Cortex's and what the benefits are working with them and they take us through their guitars and their endorsements and signature instruments Keisel (kieselguitars.com) for Dan and Balaguer (balaguerguitars.com) for Travis. Dan talks a bit about a company he works for Pluginz keychains (pluginzkeychains.com). The two give us the history of the band and their punk roots and how the name of the band came about from the movie “The Never Ending Story” they also take us their guitar influences. Finally the two talk about their spare time craft cocktails, saxophone and piano and film. To find out more about Dan and Travis and their band Atreyu you can go to their website: atreyumerch.com Please subscribe, like, comment, share and review this podcast! #VintageGuitarMagazine #DanJacobs #TravisMiguel #Atreyu #TheEndIsNotTheEnd #KeiselGuitars #NeuralDSPQuadCortex #BalaguerGuitars #PlugInzKeyChains #JamesPatrickRegan #theDeadlies #haveguitarwilltravelpodcast #HGWT #tourlife https://www.patreon.com/cw/HaveGuitarWillTravelPodcast Please like, comment, and share this podcast! Download Link
----- Shout out to all our members who make this content possible, sign up for only $5 a month https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNNTZgxNQuBrhbO0VrG8woA/join Promote Your Music with No Jumper - https://nojumper.com/pages/promo CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE!!! https://nojumper.com NO JUMPER PATREON http://www.patreon.com/nojumper CHECK OUT OUR NEW SPOTIFY PLAYLIST https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5tesvmDS8h50LkjnSAWMOs?si=j6sJD6DkR4mk5NZZWnlK7g Follow us on SNAPCHAT https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_Jumper/4874336901 Follow us on SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/4z4yCTjwXa4an6sBGIe7m5 iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/no-jumper/id1001659715?mt=2 Follow us on Social Media: https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_Jumper/4874336901 http://www.twitter.com/nojumper http://www.instagram.com/nojumper https://www.facebook.com/nojumper http://www.reddit.com/r/nojumper JOIN THE DISCORD: https://discord.gg/Q3XPfBm Follow Adam22: http://www.instagram.com/adam22 adam22bro on Snapchat Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Does anyone actually want to go to Journey's farewell tour because right now it doesn't even seem like the band wants to be therePlus later, Atreyu's Brandon Saller says fans calling for a reunion with their original singer to move on and does the new bilmuri go kinda hard or super hardDon't forget to bang your head on the links belowTikTokhttps://www.tiktok.com/@jesealeeInstagramhttps://www.instagram.com/jesealee/YouTubehttps://youtube.com/@JeseaLeePodcast available on Spotify, YouTube, Apple Music and everywhere else you consume podcastsProduction by WhatTheGleeson Content Creation https://www.instagram.com/whatthegleesonTheme song by Michael Stoutengerhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/6LO5eGttpemsEdm5kixX10?si=pXW6AbohTWaFgHMdh3ZmzgSubscribe to my newsletter:https://jesealee.substack.com/Everything else:https://www.jesealee.com/
Garza sits down in-person with Brandon Saller & Dan Jacobs from metalcore band ATREYU. New Album “The End is Not the End” out April 24th! https://instagram.com/atreyuofficialSPONSORS: DistroKid - https://distrokid.com00:00 Intro06:55 Bands Hanging Out11:11 First Time Smoking Weed14:56 Sevendust18:12 The End is Not the End19:57 Writing Music in Tokyo22:40 How Atreyu Writes New Songs27:32 Writing “Death” & “Ego Death”28:47 Brandon's Hand Injury35:15 Songwriting Career37:53 The Time is Now44:57 Dan's Kiesel Guitar57:07 2000s Metalcore1:03:39 Riff: Lip Gloss and Black1:09:07 Early Demos1:17:41 How to Record Ideas1:20:24 Early Jobs & Being Entrepreneurial1:29:18 Self-Managing a Band1:38:16 Pluginz1:39:35 The 10 Year Rule for Creativity1:44:38 Becoming a Frontman1:50:04 Relationship with Alex Varkatzas1:53:37 Married Life & Family1:58:32 Which Bands Shaped Metalcore2:04:37 3 Albums To Check Out2:07:40 The End is Not the End Out April 24th
Rob Damiani of Don Broco and Brandon Saller of Atreyu join Loaded Radio to break down the mindset behind their latest albums, Nightmare Tripping and The End Is Not The End. Both bands had momentum—and chose not to repeat it. Damiani dives into the themes behind Don Broco's most unpredictable release yet, including the politically charged "True Believers," while Saller explains why Atreyu leaned into their heaviest sound to date and how writing sessions in Tokyo and total isolation shaped the record. This conversation goes beyond surface-level promo. It gets into risk, identity, and why both bands decided to push forward instead of playing it safe. If you've followed either band for years, this is the kind of insight you don't usually get.
Ebru Kaya (LI) and André Stürmer (LI) founders of both RIA and Atreyu came by the podcast for a deepdive into regenerative investing. Not just investing in regenerative companies but what it means to invest regeneratively. We speak of profit, the position, role and stance of the investor, the experiences Ebru and André have made in their long experience as well as their learning edge. We speak of how everyone is an investor and the relationship between a company and it's field or ecology - and why it makes sense to focus both on the health of a company and it's surroundings. This is a wonderful conversation that really highlights the difference between impact and regenerative investing. Enjoy!
Brandon Saller dives into Atreyu's latest song, their next record and takes some time to reflect on the band's career.
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Link Up w/The Morning Sickness Digitally All Over:Instagram: @hms_98_official, @bosskupd, @bretvesely, @dickToledoX/Twitter: @HMSon98, @DickToledo, @bretveselyFacebook: @HMSKUPDYouTube: @hmspodcast9320, @98kupdRequest/Call in/Wakeup Song line:(IN AZ) 585.9800More HMS: holmbergpodcast.com, 98kupd.comEmail: dtoledo@98kupd.com, bvesely@98kupd.com, bbogen@98kupd.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Every apartment building has some trolls living in it, am I right? Mark welcomes horror queen, trivia master, and witchy Salem resident Kelly Kapow (@missscareall) to celebrate 40 years of the 1986 cult classic Troll! Is it a bad movie? Maybe. Do we love it? Definitely! Cobbling together different things from other '80s horror films, this dark fantasy comedy give us Atreyu, Sonny Bono, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the original Harry Potter, and so much more. Shout-out to Hostel and Wolf Creek for their recent 20th anniversaries! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In 2020, Zero 9:36 hit the rock scene running with the single "Adrenaline" and an album released in early 2021 called ...If You Don't Save Yourself. Except there was this little thing that happened called an international pandemic that shut everything down and put careers on hold. Since then Zero has been doing it his way, and he joins me to discuss just that, his take on A.I., and much, much more.Zero 9:36 They Were Always Here is available now, and more new music is coming later this year.
Interview aired the weekend of 12/19/25
Tiffany Hobbs witnessed some strange and saucy shenanigans in her neighbor’s car spot. California Republicans suing over Prop 50, saying race was used to create an unfair voting bloc. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum is pressing charges against the man who groped her breast. Updates to Kentucky UPS plane crash in which 13 people are confirmed dead with others unaccounted. Nancy Pelosi is retiring at the conclusion of her current term. A dog named Atreyu ingested meth when its owner was walking him in their North Hollywood neighborhood. The FAA has a list of 40 airports across the country that will encounter major flight delays starting tonight, due to the government shutdown. The USDA has revised its earlier decision, and contingency funds will be released for SNAP beneficiaries to receive part of their funds so they can purchase food.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we round out October by posting in November about an album that will be listened to once you wake me up when September ends: Atreyu's the Curse. Our curse is that like in The Ring viewing media will haunt you, but in this case the haunted media is that now you've seen a photo of our cat in a bra.Also up for sizzlin' scary (discu)ssion: Mullets are back with mouth, iCarly finally has a pop-punk moment, and what if Macklemore was Bon Iver? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Atreyu are playing several shows here in Germany, and we caught up with Porter “Marc” McKnight from Atreyu for an exclusive ROCK ANTENNE interview to talk about the upcoming concerts. The bassist and vocalist also shares what's new about the re-recorded album "The Curse" compared to the original. Enjoy the interview!
Watch on YouTubeIn this episode of the Worship Keys Podcast, we talk with Atreyu “Tre” Singleton—music director, Ableton-certified trainer, and worship leader. Tre shares how he builds worship patches in Omnisphere and Logic Pro, the power of layering sounds, and how AI is shaping the future of worship sound design. He also opens up about his devotional project, Memoirs of a Minstrel, his passion for mentoring young musicians, and why character offstage matters as much as skill onstage. Whether you're new to worship keys or a seasoned player, you'll find both practical tools and spiritual encouragement in this conversation.Atreyu Singleton Support the showThanks for listening! Subscribe here to the podcast, as well as on YouTube and other social media platforms. If you have any questions or suggestions for who you want as a featured guest in the future or a topic you want to hear, email carson@theworshipkeys.com. New episodes release every Wednesday!
Good Noise Podcast discuss new releases from DED, Motion City Soundtrack, I Prevail, Arrows in Action, Super Whatevr, DRAIN, and more. Show reviews -The Plot In You, Northlane, Invent Animate, Windwaker -Little Hag, latewaves, Nematode, girlbossanova, Emily Darcy -Rachel Ana Dobken Album reviews DED, Motion City Soundtrack, I Prevail, and Arrows in Action EP reviews Super Whatevr and KennyHoopla Single reviews DON BROCO, Of Mice & Men, Thornhill, Waterparks, Ryan Oakes, Pollyanna, All Time Low, Bloom / Yours Truly, Atreyu, girlfriends, DRAIN, Greyhaven, As Everything Unfolds, Better Lovers, Taylor Acorn, Bearings / State Champs, In Her Own Words, The All-American Rejects, Hail The Sun, and Guilt Trip Grab some GNP Merch!: https://goodnoisepodcast.creator-spring.com/ Check out the recording gear we use: https://www.amazon.com/shop/goodnoisepodcast Support the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/goodnoisepodcast Good Noise Podcast Socials: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/goodnoisepodcast/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/goodnoisepod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@goodnoisepodcast Discord: https://discord.gg/nDAQKwT YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFHKPdUxxe1MaGNWoFtjoJA Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/04IMtdIrCIvbIr7g6ttZHi All other streaming platforms: https://linktr.ee/goodnoisepodcast Bandcamp: https://goodnoiserecords.bandcamp.com/
The first of our Virginia series, happy to talk to Frank from Out To Destroy and Atreyu, formerly. Follow Out to Destroy on ig @ OuttodestroyhcHOMEWORK ASSIGNEDFrank:Mastodon - Leviathan and RemissionLength of Time - Shame to this WeaknessConfessor - UnraveledMarc Maron - PanickedJerm:Ancient Death - Sacred Vessel EPRealms of Death - RuinMike:Kontusion - Insatiable Lust for Death
Turn around and look at what you see as we soar into the Mirror of our Dreams in The Neverending Story. We discuss how this dark children's fantasy film traumatized us, the light mythology of the world of Fantasia, and why this film became so iconic to an entire generation. Hop your luck dragon to rediscover this classic childhood Messed Up Movie. Synopsis: A troubled boy dives into a wondrous fantasy world through the pages of a mysterious book. Starring: Noah Hathaway, Barret Oliver, Gerald McRaney Directed by Wolfgang Petersen Help us make our first feature length Messed Up Movie: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/mr-creamjean-s-hidey-hole-horror-comedy-movie#/ Support the show on the Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/messedupmoviespod Watch our newest short film Sugar Tits Now! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sz7leFqqo4g
Historically, pop culture has been so important to LGBTQ people, not only because we often experience sexual awakenings to figures in the media we consume, but also because so many of our favorite films, shows, and records have been created by queer people. In this episode, Gabe and Chris have a freewheeling discussion about pop culture, erotic discovery, porn parodies, cruising and Buffy slashfic, with our favorite podcaster and author: Ira Madison III. Then, a cruising confession from a horny French slut has Gabe and Chris saying “sacre bleu!” Follow Sniffies' Cruising Confessions: cruisingconfessions.com Try Sniffies: sniffies.com Follow Sniffies on Social: Instagram: instagram.com/sniffiesapp X: x.com/sniffiesapp TikTik: tiktok.com/@sniffiesapp Follow the hosts: Gabe Gonzalez: instagram.com/gaybonez Chris Patterson-Rosso: instagram.com/cprgivesyoulife Guests featured in this episode: Ira Madison III: https://www.instagram.com/irathethird/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
️ LA HISTORIA INTERMINABLE — Un viaje a Fantasía desde La Guarida del Sith Hoy abrimos el portal entre mundos, desempolvamos el Auryn, y nos subimos a lomos de Fújur para sumergirnos en una de las historias más queridas y eternas del imaginario fantástico: La Historia Interminable. En este episodio: ¿Es Bastián un lector o un escapista? Atreyu, el guerrero del corazón puro que enfrenta la Nada. Los monstruos, los símbolos, y la filosofía oculta entre páginas y celuloide. Análisis de la película, el libro y todo lo que Michael Ende detestó. Las criaturas más emblemáticas, el papel de la Emperatriz Infantil y… por supuesto, ese tema musical que aún resuena en nuestra infancia. ️ Hoy nos acompañan tres guardianes de la fantasía: Frikilandias, con su mochila llena de referencias pop y nostalgia sin filtro. Natalia, que guía esta aventura con sensibilidad y mirada literaria. Y Asier, el Mamado Lidel, que entra galopando como un lobo de Gmork, pero con el corazón de Fújur. ⚔️ Un programa con magia, emoción, crítica y mucho amor por la fantasía de verdad. Porque si dejas de creer en Fantasía... esta desaparece. Podeis ver el VIDEO PODCAST aqui https://youtu.be/K3N8rzXq2y0
In this very special episode, Michael shares his Atreyu journey. Having recently announced that Atreyu would not be continuing to produce shoes & would be shutting down at the end of 2025, Steve asks Michael some questions about his Atreyu journey. This episode is not the whole story, by any stretch, but it is a conversation around what really matters. We hope you enjoy this candid conversation around Michael's Atreyu journey. Godspeed, friends; godspeed.
Episodio donde nos damos cuenta que Hunter Schafer es trans y como quiera pueda ser una buena Zelda, lo que significa ser un actor, modificar personajes para reflejar el estatus actual de su actor en la vida real, el internet critica a Avril Lavigne y a Cristian Castro por su cuerpo actual, foto de Pari que parece de 18 años, Sophie Turner será Lara Croft de Tomb Raider, la última película de Mission: Impossible falló porque se gastaron demasiado dinero en producción, la pregunta si Tom Cruise moriría feliz si muere en uno de sus stunts, el ver en pantalla la verdadera muerte de Brandon Lee, en los 70s y 80s no cuidaban a los animales en películas como Atreyu en la Historia Sin Fin, cuando películas usan cosas de verdad para ahorrarse dinero como en Cannibal Holocaust y Poltergeist, el próximo actor supremo de acción después de Tom Cruise, los encargados de Ghost of Yōtei estudiaron muy bien para recrear correctamente Japón, el tech demo de Witcher 4, Pari compra el juego Still Wakes the Deep, la anticipación de Wisto por el juego Cronos desarrollado por los que hicieron el remake de Dead Space, opinión de Wisto sobre Doom The Dark Ages y termianamos con la noticia que Trump le quiere poner aranceles a las películas que se graben fuera de Estados Unidos! Escúchanos: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / YouTube Apóyanos: patreon.com/holamsupernova Síguenos: Instagram/ Twitter/ TikTok @holamsupernova Merch: holamsupernova.myshopify.com
Let us all hold hands and gather in a circle as offer up a sacrifice to AI – but before we do, please turn your attention to The Drop, where everything is real and nothing is plagiarized, as evidenced by our conversations on shoes bought on the dark web, trying to figure out Mastercard naming strategies, and the real life questions that come with acquiring a pet dog. Plus, you'll get some authentic shoe talk when we dive into the one-two punch of the Asics Metaspeed Sky and Edge Tokyo. SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! SWIFTWICKThe best running socks in the game, Swiftwick is made right here in the USA, which means no price increases on account of tariffs. We're always running in their socks and you should be too. The Drop listeners can get 15% off their first purchase with code BELIEVE15. Shop here: https://swiftwick.com/collections/believeLMNTNEW FLAVOR ALERT! Squeeze the most out of summer with LMNT's new limited-time Lemonade Salt — salty, tart, and refreshing, it brings you the best of summer wherever you are. Get your free 8-count LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: http://drinklmnt.com/thedropINDEX0:00 - Intro1:37 - Global Running Day6:20 - Mount To Coast x Oberhills10:39 - The Dark Web15:44 - Move Her Mind Event Series NYC / Mastercard Mini 10K31:18 - Futuristic Hotels33:27 - The Church of AI42:00 - Running talk52:50 - George the Dog1:00:26 - Saying Goodbye to Atreyu Running1:16:40 - Asics Metaspeed Edge Tokyo
In this radical episode of Past Tens: A Top 10 Time Machine, Dave and Milt hop in their DeLorean — flux capacitor fully operational — and set the date for June 16, 1984. They're not just cruising through the Billboard Top 10; they're living it like extras in Footloose. The episode kicks off with a heartfelt and totally tubular tribute to Dave's late father — think The Karate Kid's Mr. Miyagi, but with better dad jokes. From there, it's a parade of parachute pants, popped collars, and personal memories as they discuss the artists who ruled the airwaves: Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Duran Duran, and Cyndi Lauper — basically the Justice League of 1984 pop. Of course, it wouldn't be Past Tens without a few twists. There's a Playdate Quiz that would stump even The NeverEnding Story's Atreyu, a musical mashup segment that's more chaotic than Gremlins after midnight, and their signature song substitution game — think Indiana Jones swapping the idol for a bag of sand, but with Huey Lewis tracks. Some highlights: 00:54: A heartfelt memorial for Dave's father, complete with more heart than Kevin Bacon dancing alone in a warehouse. 08:33: Pop Culture Highlights: Ghostbusters hit theaters, Purple Rain was on the horizon, and nobody put Baby in a corner (yet — Dirty Dancing was still a few years away). 15:22: Countdown kicks off — Night Ranger's “Sister Christian” taught us all what "motoring" really means (spoiler: it's not what your dad thinks). 38:01: Musical Mashups — imagine Footloose meets Thriller but performed by the cast of Revenge of the Nerds. 39:22: Laura Branigan's “Self Control” — the unofficial soundtrack to sneaking out past curfew in 1984. 44:54: Huey Lewis reminds everyone that the heart of rock and roll is still beating — even if it's wearing leg warmers. 59:33: Steve Perry's “Oh Sherrie,” a ballad so powerful it could get E.T. to phone home twice. 01:19:50: Cyndi Lauper's “Time After Time” — guaranteed to make even the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man misty-eyed. 01:23:15: Cyndi's legendary ties to the wrestling world — she could literally have body-slammed a Goonie. Milt also teases his upcoming trip to Africa, though we're unclear whether he'll be traveling by Toto song or Temple of Doom bridge. It's a journey that's equal parts nostalgia, musicology, and a John Hughes movie montage. Crank up your Walkman and join the ride — just don't feed Milt after midnight.
Jay takes a seat at the world's most uncomfortable dinner party courtesy of Mike's latest cinematic punishment: Sushi Girl (2012), a post-Tarantino crime flick where the tension is raw, the violence is extra crispy, and the titular sushi girl lies perfectly still while a bunch of washed-up crooks yell at each other in between flashbacks. Mark Hamill wonderfully hams it up, Tony Todd tries to class up the joint, and somewhere in the middle a rogue's gallery of B-movie/slumming A-list stars arrive; including Michael Biehn, Danny Trejo, Sonny Chiba, Jeff Fahey and Noah Hathaway, the now all-grown-up guy who played Atreyu from The Neverending Story! Jay tries to figure out if this is a crime thriller, a food safety violation, or both, and then the guys count down their Bottom Five Meals—cinematic servings of food so unappetizing they'll have you reaching for antacid. And if all that weren't enough to settle your stomach, the guys close out the show by paying tribute to the recently-passed Tony Todd with a memorial tribute round of Kick Two, Pick Two. So grab your chopsticks, question your life choices, and join the podcast that wields films like deadly weapons where, like sushi, revenge is served cold.
I grew up on Route 66 and have road trips in my veins. I've driven all over this great country, visited every single state and seen thousands of interesting things. Nothing inspires me more than a good road trip film — if you're the same way, check out one of this week's recommendations. All of the my picks on this week's list are pretty well known, which makes them so much fun to revisit. If you haven't seen one or all of them in a few years, what better time to revisit them?Pee-wee's Big Adventure (1985)There's nothing Pee-wee Herman loves more than his bicycle. Unfortunately for him, spoiled frenemie Francis Buxton loves it to, and hires someone to steal it for him. A distraught Pee-wee organizes a search party to find his bicycle and eventually hits the road and crosses multiple states in search of his irreplicable bike. Join Pee-wee and all the friends he meets along the way as he goes on his adventure. The Muppet Movie (1979)Life's like a movie, write your own ending! In the first full-length Muppet film, Kermit is convinced by a lost agent to head to Hollywood to fulfill his dream of making millions of people happy. Along his journey, Kermit meets a joke-telling bear named Fozzie, a weirdo named Gonzo, a rock band called the Electric Mayhem (led by Dr. Teeth), and the world's most beautiful women, Miss Piggy. Will Kermit and his friends reach Hollywood before Doc Hopper catches Kermit and forces him to become the mascot for his restaurant? I hope so, because there are a lot more Muppet movies after this one! The NeverEnding Story (1984)While hiding from school bullies, young Bastion acquires a book promising a never ending story and skips school, hiding in the attic to read it. The book tells the story of Atreyu and his quest to save Fantasia from a darkness known as The Nothing. The more Bastian reads, the more it seems his own life is becoming entertwined with the book itself! Featuring a hit theme song and a luck dragon, The NeverEnding Story is a journey not to be missed. National Lampoon's Vacation (1983)If you've ever gone on a road trip, either as a child or a parent, you'll relate to the Griswolds as they drive across the country in their new station wagon from Chicago to Wallyworld! Directed by Harold Ramis and starring Chevy Chase, Beverly D'Angelo, Anthony Michael Hall, and Dana Barron, and Randy Quaid, and featuring cameos from comedians including Eugene Levy and John Candy, among others. As a kid I identified as oldest sibling Rusty, and as a parent I can't help but see a little bit of Clark in the rearview mirror.Spring is here and there's no better time to roll down your windows, put the pedal to the metal, and hit the open road. If you can't fit a road trip into your current schedule, watching one of these movies about journeys is the next best thing! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.videostorepodcast.com
Even though we didn't plan this episode to link up so well with the last one (see Ep 88: Liminal Running (Part I): Breaking Frames), it just does. A continued bending of the tariffs impact on Atreyu & Michael's livelihood with one of Steve's major philosophical positions, soul-style. We really catch a groove here & are interested in your feedback, if you've got any. Thanks for listening, we truly appreciate our listeners. Godspeed, y'all, godspeed.
*5:00am: Gen Z Needs To Be Schooled On Hip Hop Legends *6:00am: Do You Force Your Spouse To Wear Certain Things, Your Job's “Trick of the Trade” *7:00am: Say What With Steph *8:00am: Justice For Atreyu *9:00am: A Sound That Makes You Emotional
Lindsey from Vegas Pet Rescue Project talks about the heartbreaking case of Atreyu, the Chihuahua mix found tossed in a dumpster in Las Vegas. We discusss what happened, how the community is responding, and what needs to change to protect animals from cruelty.
This week, we're scratching The Itch for reggae metal! Nathan Aurora's band Aurorawave released one of our favorite albums of 2024, and he's putting the finishing touches on the exciting follow-up. Nathan joins us to talk about straddling the line between his reggae roots and his metal aspirations, the Crossed Heart Clothing company he runs with his wife, how he got guest features like Brandon Saller and Dan Jacobs of Atreyu and Jonathan Vigil of The Ghost Inside on his band's debut album, and the time his baby was his biggest critic. Nathan is one of the most driven guests we've had, and one of the easiest conversations. Enjoy. And if you know a reggae keyboardist who can scream, send him Nathan's way. If you like what you hear, you can hear more of us every Sunday night broadcasting rock to the masses from 6-9pm CST on KCLC-FM. If you're not in the St. Louis area, you can stream the show from 891thewood.com, TuneIn, Radio.net, and OnlineRadioBox! And if you have the itch to hear some of the best new tracks in rock, follow our New Rock Roundup playlist! For any and all friendship, questions, inquiries, and offers of pizza, The Itch can be found at the following: Website: itchrocks.com Facebook: Facebook.com/itchrocks Instagram: Instagram.com/itchrocks Email: itchrocks@gmail.com Thank you so much for listening. If you like what you hear, please subscribe and leave a positive review and rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Podchaser to help our audience grow. If you don't like what you hear, please tell us anyway to help our skills grow. Our theme song "Corrupted", is used with permission from the amazing Skindred. All other content is copyright of The Itch. All rights reserved, including the right to rock on. Check out our podcast host, Pinecast. Start your own podcast for free with no credit card required. If you decide to upgrade, use coupon code r-6cf77a for 40% off for 4 months, and support The Itch Rock Podcast.
Interview aired the weekend of 1/24/25
Unboxing packages from Path Projects, Harrier, Atreyu (which led to a lengthy discussion of both Neverending Story and Atreyu the band), and Puma
This week, we're scratching The Itch to keep celebrating! Our Shiprocked coverage continues, as the guys wrap up the week with 80s covers, a pair of epic sets on the beach, a slippery stage, a late night call to Halestorm, and ... Ace Ventura? Plus, Dan goes snorkeling, KC is rewarded for resisting the soft serve machine, and Aaron meets a brother in curls... who also happens to be in Kid Kapichi. Mentioned in this episode (and/or episode 250): Parkway Drive, Hollywood Undead, Nothing More, The Struts, 10 Years, Atreyu, Austin Meade, Buckcherry, Calva Louise, Ded, Des Rocs, Devour the Day, Diamante, Flat Black, The Ghost Inside, Ghostkid, The Glorious Sons, Goodbye June, Hawk, Jigsaw Youth, Jinjer, Kid Kapichi, Lansdowne, The Native Howl, Nevertel, Oxymorrons, Plush, P.O.D., Rivals, Silly Goose, Spiritworld, and Rubiks Groove, plus Itch guests Keith Wallen of Breaking Benjamin and Taylor Carroll of Lit and KemikalFire among the all-star Stowaways! Enjoy. If you like what you hear, you can hear more of us every Sunday night broadcasting rock to the masses from 6-9pm CST on KCLC-FM. If you're not in the St. Louis area, you can stream the show from 891thewood.com, TuneIn, Radio.net, and OnlineRadioBox! And if you have the itch to hear some of the best new tracks in rock, follow our New Rock Roundup playlist! For any and all friendship, questions, inquiries, and offers of pizza, The Itch can be found at the following: Website: itchrocks.com Facebook: Facebook.com/itchrocks Instagram: Instagram.com/itchrocks Email: itchrocks@gmail.com Thank you so much for listening. If you like what you hear, please subscribe and leave a positive review and rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Podchaser to help our audience grow. If you don't like what you hear, please tell us anyway to help our skills grow. Our theme song "Corrupted", is used with permission from the amazing Skindred. All other content is copyright of The Itch. All rights reserved, including the right to rock on.
This week, we're scratching The Itch for a birthday celebration! Our radio show was born 21 years ago this month, and to celebrate that milestone (and 250 episodes), the guys spent a wild week on the water with 31 bands on Shiprocked! Join us to kick off a new "season" with tales of broken lights, budding friendships, on-stage pranks, and the game show that created an unlikely legend. Oh, and those 31 bands we saw/met/discuss in this episode? Parkway Drive, Hollywood Undead, Nothing More, The Struts, 10 Years, Atreyu, Austin Meade, Buckcherry, Calva Louise, Ded, Des Rocs, Devour the Day, Diamante, Flat Black, The Ghost Inside, Ghostkid, The Glorious Sons, Goodbye June, Hawk, Jigsaw Youth, Jinjer, Kid Kapichi, Lansdowne, The Native Howl, Nevertel, Oxymorrons, Plush, P.O.D., Rivals, Silly Goose, and Spiritworld, plus Itch guests Keith Wallen of Breaking Benjamin and Taylor Carroll of Lit and KemikalFire among the all-star Stowaways! Enjoy. If you like what you hear, you can hear more of us every Sunday night broadcasting rock to the masses from 6-9pm CST on KCLC-FM. If you're not in the St. Louis area, you can stream the show from 891thewood.com, TuneIn, Radio.net, and OnlineRadioBox! And if you have the itch to hear some of the best new tracks in rock, follow our New Rock Roundup playlist! For any and all friendship, questions, inquiries, and offers of pizza, The Itch can be found at the following: Website: itchrocks.com Facebook: Facebook.com/itchrocks Instagram: Instagram.com/itchrocks Email: itchrocks@gmail.com Thank you so much for listening. If you like what you hear, please subscribe and leave a positive review and rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Podchaser to help our audience grow. If you don't like what you hear, please tell us anyway to help our skills grow. Our theme song "Corrupted", is used with permission from the amazing Skindred. All other content is copyright of The Itch. All rights reserved, including the right to rock on.
Episode 370 – Brandon Saller of Atreyu returns to the show! We talk about revisiting old material at When We Were Young, being the frontman of the band and having to perform Alex's parts. We also go through their process writing & recording for their recent album as well as an upcoming release they're currently working on. The re-imagined album "The Pronoia Sessions" is out now everywhere, go check it out! Shampoo sucks! It dries out and strips your hair of essential oils. I quit Shampoo and I now use products from Modern Mammals instead! You should too. Get 10% off at modernmammals.com/pages/lss when you use code LSS! How are those New Years Resolutions coming? FACTOR can help! With delicious and nutritious meals sent directly to your door and ready in just 2 mins, you'll be reaching your goals in no time. Get an amazing deal right now Visit FACTOR MEALS dot com slash lss50 and use code lss50 to get 50% off. NEED SOME GREAT NEW MUSIC!? Open Your Ears has you once again with the new split release from House & Home and Suntitle ! If you're a fan of 2000's Emo and 90's Punk Rock, you're going to love this. Head over to OYErecs.com for more info! It's out now wherever you stream your music! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
MUSIC U2 have released "Happiness," a previously unheard song off their upcoming How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (20th Anniversary). Bruce Springsteen's latest documentary, Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, premieres this Friday on Hulu and Disney+. A documentary on Warrant is in the works. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland will honor November 1st's 30th anniversary of the release of Green Day's Dookie, as well as the 20th anniversary of American Idiot (released on September 24th, 2004), with “artifact spotlights, photo-ops, exclusive giveaways and more.” The band's 1968 Mercury Monterey convertible – featured in the “Holiday / Boulevard of Broken Dreams” video and currently on display outside the museum – will be given away via a charity sweepstakes to benefit Make-a-Wish. A new guitar has been added to Fender's The Jack White Collection. It's called a Triplecaster and boasts lots of bells and whistles, so much so that Fender calls it the “jewel of the collection.” White himself stars in a six-minute video in which he talks about and plays the Triplecaster, and explains how it got its name. A new Triplecaster will set you back $3500. IN RECORD STORES AND STREAMING: Green Day's American Idiot: 20th Anniversary Edition adds demos, outtakes and a 2004 concert. Atreyu's The Pronoia Sessions, which includes cover of songs by Tom Petty and Audioslave, is out digitally. 311's Full Bloom is their 14th studio album. Queen's first album, Queen I, gets expanded and remixed in this six-CD and one-LP box set. TV L.A. County District Attorney announced that he will ask a judge to free Erik and Lyle Menendez, the 2 brothers convicted of murdering their parents. If you're a fan of Friends" you may remember the episode when Rachel tries to make a tradition English trifle for Thanksgiving dessert? Well, you can recreate Rachel's concoction this Thanksgiving with a Rachel Green Trifle Kit from Hello Fresh. Check out a trailer for Amazon's "Cruel Intentions" series. MOVING ON INTO MOVIE NEWS: Timothée Chalamet put his heart and soul into playing Bob Dylan. IN THEATERS: Conclave (Ralph Finnes, Stanley Tucci) Venom: The Last Dance (Tom Hardy, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple) AND FINALLY If you're looking for something more recent, "USA Today" put together a list of the 75 best horror movies of THIS CENTURY. Here's the Top 15: AND THAT IS YOUR CRAP ON CELEBRITIES! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
MUSICU2 have released "Happiness," a previously unheard song off their upcoming How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb (20th Anniversary).Bruce Springsteen's latest documentary, Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, premieres this Friday on Hulu and Disney+. A documentary on Warrant is in the works. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland will honor November 1st's 30th anniversary of the release of Green Day's Dookie, as well as the 20th anniversary of American Idiot (released on September 24th, 2004), with “artifact spotlights, photo-ops, exclusive giveaways and more.” The band's 1968 Mercury Monterey convertible – featured in the “Holiday / Boulevard of Broken Dreams” video and currently on display outside the museum – will be given away via a charity sweepstakes to benefit Make-a-Wish.A new guitar has been added to Fender's The Jack White Collection. It's called a Triplecaster and boasts lots of bells and whistles, so much so that Fender calls it the “jewel of the collection.” White himself stars in a six-minute video in which he talks about and plays the Triplecaster, and explains how it got its name. A new Triplecaster will set you back $3500. IN RECORD STORES AND STREAMING:Green Day's American Idiot: 20th Anniversary Edition adds demos, outtakes and a 2004 concert.Atreyu's The Pronoia Sessions, which includes cover of songs by Tom Petty and Audioslave, is out digitally.311's Full Bloom is their 14th studio album.Queen's first album, Queen I, gets expanded and remixed in this six-CD and one-LP box set.TVL.A. County District Attorney announced that he will ask a judge to free Erik and Lyle Menendez, the 2 brothers convicted of murdering their parents. If you're a fan of Friends" you may remember the episode when Rachel tries to make a tradition English trifle for Thanksgiving dessert? Well, you can recreate Rachel's concoction this Thanksgiving with a Rachel Green Trifle Kit from Hello Fresh.Check out a trailer for Amazon's "Cruel Intentions" series.MOVING ON INTO MOVIE NEWS:Timothée Chalamet put his heart and soul into playing Bob Dylan. IN THEATERS: Conclave (Ralph Finnes, Stanley Tucci) Venom: The Last Dance (Tom Hardy, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple) AND FINALLY If you're looking for something more recent, "USA Today" put together a list of the 75 best horror movies of THIS CENTURY. Here's the Top 15: AND THAT IS YOUR CRAP ON CELEBRITIES! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Tuesday October 22, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices