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Christopher Knight aka Peter Brady is headed to the Philly Home and Garden ShowChris talks:-Christopher Knight Brands - is there a barca-type-lounger-The Brady House on TV is now a REAL House that they built for HGTV-Where did they cast go when they walked up the stair because there was no second floorFollow Chris on Instagram PhillyHomeandGarden.com To subscribe to The Pete McMurray Show Podcast just click here
NBC's Kaylee Hartung shares an exclusive look at the NFL's broadcasting boot camp that helps players prepare for their next careers. Also, members of the cast of ‘The Brady Bunch' join to reflect on 55 years of their series and share details on a special new project they've created to help others. Plus, discover some holiday home décor from Target to take your festive decorations to the next level.
Brady Bunch House with Meg and ChrisSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A same-sex Kentucky couple denied a marriage license from the county clerk, Kim Davis, has their day in court. Then, Grindr loses half its workforce when the company told them to return to the office. And the new owner of the Brady Bunch house says even though the house is not operational, she views it as art. Finally, it's Criterion Month on TFG Unbuttoned. Listen for your chance to win on Pick that Flick.Apple Podcasts: apple.co/1WwDBrCSpotify: spoti.fi/2pC19B1iHeart Radio: bit.ly/2n0Z7H1Tunein: bit.ly/1SE3NMbStitcher: bit.ly/1N97ZquGoogle Podcasts: bit.ly/1pQTcVWPandora: pdora.co/2pEfctjYouTube: bit.ly/1spAF5aAlso follow Tim and John on:Facebook: www.facebook.com/focusgroupradioTwitter: www.twitter.com/focusgroupradioInstagram: www.instagram.com/focusgroupradio
In this episode the guys discuss Colon Cancer testing, Cutoff Gym Shirts, Crepes, The Brady Bunch House, A true Death Trifecta, Dumb Money, The New York Jets, The Blue Ridge Rock Festival, Pantera, Kix, and much more.....
6pm - White House to send letter urging news outlets to ‘ramp up scrutiny' of Biden impeachment inquiry // ‘The Brady Bunch' House Sells for $3.2 Million // Fans who ran up tabs left stunned after Wisconsin bar offered free beers if Aaron Rodgers' Jets lost // The heartwarming moment rookie Xavier Gipson learned he made Jets roster // In this small Ohio town, troll dolls outnumber peopleSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We need to have a show meeting on the air about Project Down & Dirty: Pickleball, BOOB TUBE BONANZA: We're here for the latest episode of "Ashoka," we play a round of THE MASTER DEBATORS and someone bought "The Brady Bunch" house in LA! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wednesday September 13, 2023 *** NSYNC reunites at MTV VMA's *** Brady Bunch house sells for $3.2M *** High Five - Man breaks Guinness record on pogo stick to benefit charity *** KFIN BREAKFAST CLUB: *** Doc Talk with Dr. Shane Speights: Using grip strength as a gauge for physical fitness & associated risks of highly processed foods *** Beverly Parker w/ Keep Jonesboro Beautiful & The Great Arkansas Clean Up *** Taylor Kelso gets us ready for Heart & Soul 5K, 10K & Half Marathon benefitting CHEFJonesboro.org *** Rodney Poff w/ Occasions Magazine joins us to ROAST Brandon *** Wet Nose Wednesday w/ Dr Kevin Reed & VetCare *** Pat Farmer w/ St. Bernards tells us what we need to know for Pink Warrior Walk/Run.
The Studio City property that served as the exterior for “The Brady Bunch” — lovingly restored by HGTV to its '70s TV glory — has sold for $3.2 million. The Central Valley Honor Flight will return to Fresno where it's expected to arrive at 6:00 p.m. Tuesday - 9/12/2023 - Hour 4 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jessica discusses the Aaron Rodgers ankle injury, talks Team USA men's basketball with Mike Wallace and more.start breakfast burritos/setting the show:05 Aaron Rodgers ankle injury:13 Jets knockoff Bills:26 Mike Wallace:26 More from Jets v. Bills:36 Team USA's FIBA performance:57 Achilles injury starter pack1:03 Never Forget parlay1:08 Grammar matters1:15 Ashton and Mila defend serial rapist1:22“The Drew Barrymore Show” is returning1:25 "Brady Bunch" House finally sold1:28 Southern Heritage Classic highlights
Season 9 of Million Dollar Listing cast member, and real-estate queen, Tracy Tutor joins Pol' and Patrik this week for a luxurious conversation about the most expensive and legendary estates and properties in LA and abroad! From the Brady Bunch house to The Royal Atlantis in Dubai, Tracy gives us the inside scoop on some of the world's richest celebrities and their to-die-for real estate properties. Pol' and Patrik test Tracy's pop-culture and entertainment knowledge, and dish the trending Haute Topics of week: Meghan Markle and Prince Harry's $25M Spotify deal, Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, Tori Spelling's divorce, Kevin Costner's ex-wife demanding $250K in child support, and of course, so much more. For Runway Rundown, Patrik pulls looks from 2023 red carpet's including Dove Cameron's unconventional look from the 2nd Annual Cameron Boyce Foundation Gala, Elizabeth Olsen's sexy and elegant red gown from the premiere of her new show ‘Love & Death', Simone Ashely's hideous hot pink and lace assemble from the Little Mermaid Premiere, and for fun, Patrik pulls looks from Tracy Tutor on-and-off screen of Million Dollar Listing. The guys play ‘This or That' with Tracy, giving her two options to choose from. From Selling Sunset to Buying Beverly Hills to Kyle Richards Aspen Ski Chalet or Kim Kardashian's Malibu Beach estate to Barbie's Dream House or Brady Bunch House to Chanel's Diamond Forever Purse or a Himalayan Birkin bag– the guys pull out their notepads (and pocket books) as they get a sense of Tracy's expensive habits and tastes! Later, Pol reads Tracy's Armenian coffee cup. Did you know that Tracy is Armenian?!? There's a trip full of “success” in her near future. But someone in Tracy's circle is hiding something from her... Pol' also sees that Tracy will be receiving gifts soon– is it a Himalayan Birkin bag?! Will Tracy be offered a new show deal with Bravo?! Will she close on a $2 Million dollar listing?! Will the gifts be there when Tracy gets back from her trip?! You do not want to miss this fortune! Chapters: [0:00] Who is Tracy Tutor? [8:00] Tracy Tutor on joining Season 9 of Million Dollar Listing Cast & Becoming a woman in real estate [12:47] Tracy Tutor on being the US ambassador for The Royal Atlantis in Dubai [15:07] Tracy and Pol' on legendary estates including Betty White's mansion [18:58] Tracy and Pol's Armenian heritage [22:03] Which Real Housewives franchise would Tracy like to join? [24:23] Haute Topics (Scandoval, Harry & Megan Markle Spotify deal, Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, Tori Spelling's Divorce, Kevin Costner's Ex-Wife, and more!) [43:34] Tray Tutor on Divorce, dating, and having kids over 40. [47:28] Runway Rundown [59:39] This or that game [1:15:30] Armenian Coffee Reading Show Notes: Subscribe to our audio: linktr.ee/undressedpod Follow our guest, Tracy Tutor: Instagram: @tracytutor Twitter: @thetracytutor For updates on the premiere of Season 15 of Million Dollar Listing click here Follow Pol Atteu: Instagram: @polatteu Tiktok: @polatteu Twitter: @polatteu Follow Patrik Simpson: Instagram: @patriksimpson Tiktok: @patriksimpsonbh Follow Snow White 90210: Instagram: @snowwhite90210 Twitter: @SnowWhite9010 Watch Season 4 of Gown and Out In Beverly Hills on Prime Video. Pol' and Patrik have been nominated for The American Reality TV Awards (ARTAS)! Vote daily here. (Public Vote is live now through July 20, 2023) Follow Vocal Podcast Network: Instagram: @vocalpodcasts Twitter: @VocalPodcasts #VocalPodcasts #VocalPodcastNetwork #UndressedPodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today I go solo and dive into Taking a tour of The Brady Bunch House, People being scammed on the Phone from AI and the great Josh Freese joining the Foo Fighters. Have a great week. Episode is brought to you by Eargo Hearing Aids Use the code Dean360 https://get.eargo.com/dean
This week on Episode #245 of The #GMTEPodcast, We're at the end of May & The Express Takes aren't slowing down. The Express Take Topics include... My Full Honest Recaps and Report Card Grades for WWE Night of Champions (Reaction since I didn't watch), WWE NXT Battleground 2023 & AEW Double or Nothing 2023 starts things off. I then give you my Full Recap/Thoughts for WWE Monday Night Raw following Night of Champions. It's then the breakdown of the ratings/numbers for AEW & WWE from the past week (excluding Raw & NXT from this week due to Memorial Day). The Latest Discussion about the A's plans to move to Las Vegas, Bars & Restaurants will still get NFL Sunday Ticket through Directv, & The Brady Bunch House in Studio City, CA hits the market for sale. I hope you are all doing well. Sit Back, Grab a Cold Water, & Keep It In Full Drive for Episode #245 of The #GMTEPodcast. Thanks Everyone!!!
Chances are really good that you know The Brady Bunch and by extension, their house. What are the chances that you could own that same house? Well if you've got $5.5 million and a willingness to part with it, those chances are a lot better than many of us! Guest: Danny Brown, Principal, Luxury Estates Division & Evangelist West Coast, Compass
The housing market sways from being friendly towards sellers and then buyers, where is it at now? Guest: Rob Golfi, Sales Representative, RE/MAX Escarpment Realty, The Golfi Team - Chances are really good that you know The Brady Bunch and by extension, their house. What are the chances that you could own that same house? Well if you've got $5.5 million and a willingness to part with it, those chances are a lot better than many of us! Guest: Danny Brown, Principal, Luxury Estates Division & Evangelist West Coast, Compass - As foreign interference gets investigated and foreign nations get blamed for said interference, are we finding that our elections are getting more difficult to hold without anyone claiming a problem with the process? Guest: Kate Harrison, Vice-Chair of Summa Strategies, Director of Abacus Data
A Washington, D.C., man is fighting to keep the giant Transformers statues outside his home -- and he's involved actors from the franchise in his efforts. Newton Howard, a renowned brain scientist, commissioned an artist to create the massive statues of Autobots Bumblebee and Optimus Prime from old car parts in January 2021, and the installation of the two Transformers sculptures quickly received complaints from neighbors. A southern Illinois man has been charged with theft for allegedly stealing a backhoe to drive about 10 miles (16 kilometers) to an airport to catch a flight, authorities said. Security camera footage shows a Carbondale man arriving at Veterans Airport of Southern Illinois atop a backhoe and leaving it in the airport parking lot Thursday. The iconic North Hollywood, CA Brady Bunch House is now up for sale with a price tag of $5.5 million ... and the property's been transformed into a replica of the sitcom's set, following HGTV's purchase back in 2018. You'll recall, the channel bought it for $3.5M for its series, "A Very Brady Renovation." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Shot of the Day, Profile This, TV Time with Ted and Headlines!
ONLY 5.5 Million.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
About This EpisodeBeing bold to Abbi McCollum means taking chances and being willing to try. No matter the outcome, you'll learn, grow, and have additional insight to help you moving forward. This has especially been relevant to her work in the digital space, as the Vice President of Digital and Social Media for HGTV, staying up to date on the latest social media platforms and trends, while also staying true to herself and the brands she represents. In this episode, Abbi describes her professional journey in social media and marketing, a passion she had early on, and draws from her vast experience in the field to provide tips and advice for growing your own brand and staying authentic and relevant in an ever-changing digital world. Abbi also gives us an inside scoop on some of HGTV's exciting endeavors, from their earlier work on The Brady Bunch House to their upcoming Barbie House project this summer. Tune in for a fun episode around staying adaptive, being open to change, and following your passion. About Abbi McCollumAs the Vice President of Digital and Social Media for HGTV, Abbi McCollum creates a bridge between the on-air programming team, the marketing team and the digital team. As the digital lead for the brand, Abbi manages a team that creates a digital and social presence for all HGTV shows and talent and promotes to an audience of over 33 million. She helps manage partnerships, create original video content, produce live events and coordinates influencer campaigns. Abbi also oversees content for HGTV.com and creates content strategy to grow the brand across the ever-changing landscape of social media. Additional ResourcesLinkedIn: @AbbiMcCollumInstagram: @AbbiMcCollumLearn More About HGTV's Latest Barbie House Project
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Thursday May 25, 2023 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
E News: Tom Hanks was not yelling, The Brady Bunch House, Taylor Swift releases a remix, and Fake or For Real... 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.
E News: Tom Hanks was not yelling, The Brady Bunch House, Taylor Swift releases a remix, and Fake or For Real... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Thursday May 25, 2023 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
THURSDAY HR 5 K.O.D. His highness breaks down cruise rules. Which bar do you hit first? Brady Bunch House. Best or coolest TV show house? Monster Messages & Hot Takes oooohhhhhh sick burn.
In case you missed it, we're re-releasing an episode from last season, chosen by our Save As intern, Emily Kwok. It's an Emily's Pick! Should the Brady Bunch House be in the National Register of Historic Places? Why not? asks alum Jonathan Kaplan. In his master's thesis, the TV writer-turned-heritage conservationist makes a case for designating sites specifically for their use in movies and TV shows. Along with literary precedent dating back to Chaucer, Jonathan cites the deep meaning and shared cultural experiences these places create. If a place inspires meaning, does it matter where that meaning comes from? Does reality matter in these fact-fluid times? Join us for a fascinating conversation that's just the tip of the iceberg. Photos, links, and thesis on episode pageConnect with us @saveasnextgen on Instagram and Facebook
Today on the Tom Kelly Show, I walk from the Beverly Garland in Studio City to the historic CBS Radford Lot. We discuss Mike Tyson getting into a fight on a plane. We walk past the exterior of the Brady Bunch House from A Very Brady Renovation and explore some of Tom' personal truths.
Should the Brady Bunch House be in the National Register of Historic Places? Why not? asks alum Jonathan Kaplan. In his master's thesis, the screenwriter-turned-heritage conservationist makes a case for designating sites specifically for their use in movies and TV shows. Along with literary precedent dating back to Chaucer, Jonathan cites the deep meaning and shared cultural experiences these places create. There's a reason the Christmas Story House is one of the top tourist attractions in Cleveland. If a place inspires meaning, does it matter where that meaning comes from? Join us for a fascinating chat that's just the tip of the iceberg. For much, much more, check out Jonathan's thesis on the Save As website, From Ramona to the Brady Bunch: Assessing the Historical Significance of Sites Used in Movies and Television Shows.
The six actors at the center of one of the most beloved sitcoms in TV history reconvene for a rare group interview to discuss how they wound up on that show, what really went on behind the scenes and why an HGTV special reunited them 50 years later.Credits: Hosted by Scott Feinberg and produced by Matthew Whitehurst.
Loren Ruch is an extraordinary producer for HGTV, fantastic host and most importantly one of my best friends! In this episode we talk about how we met in our early days at FOX Good Day LA, we had some incredible times! The stories of traveling together on our trips to Vegas first as Pamela Anderson's guest then to see Celine Dion, and how I reluctantly became a huge fan! Loren took me as his date to his High School Reunion that we turned into our own personal prom. Loren reminded me of a crazy drunk speech I gave at his wedding which I don’t recall at all but I do remember the hot braless dress I wore! Loren has worked on some fantastic HGTV projects, most recently the iconic Brady Bunch House in “A Very Brady Renovation” which was amazing! Also Liz, Loren and I reminisce about our karaoke history, it’s mostly embarrassing!LOREN’S INSTAGRAM www.instagram.com/lorenruchLOREN’S TWITTER www.twitter.com/LorenRuchHGTV www.hgtv.com
Dylan Eastman, design and project manager for ‘A Very Brady Renovation’, and I chat about our time working to renovate ‘The Brady Bunch’ House for HGTV.
Finishing up this weeks Democratic Debates, Tinder's most "swiped-right" man tells you how to get girls on the app, Strange Science, Tech Talk with Marc Saltzman, F-18 Fighter Jet crashed in Death Valley, Your chance to stay at the Brady Bunch House, and more!
The Midcentury KitchenBy Sarah Archer Intro: Welcome to the Cookery by the Book podcast, with Suzy Chase. She's just a home cook in New York City, sitting at her dining room table, talking to cookbook authors.Sarah Archer: I'm Sarah Archer, and my latest book is The Midcentury Kitchen.Suzy Chase: Remarkably, kitchens changed very little from the ancient world through the Middle Ages. First off, what did the medieval kitchen look like?Sarah Archer: Really, until industrialization, the kitchen was kind of all about the hearth and it was all about the sort of heat source for, to some extent, the house, or the castle. The estate. And kitchens were workspaces. They were, even in the most luxurious houses you can imagine, they were kind of like the stables, like the domain of the household staff. So they may have been extremely well equipped, and that would have meant having lots of tools and having a very large hearth, and a spit to make delicious roasts. All that sort of thing. But they would not have been ever considered kind of comfortable places to be or pleasant places to be. They were extraordinarily hot, they were smoky, and this condition is really one of the things that led inventors to try to develop stoves, because that kind of billowing smoke, you know, is sort of not pleasant for anybody. And it actually sort of inspired the design of houses, with sort of a separate chimney that would sort of whisk the smoke away from the living space.Suzy Chase: And then, in the mid 18th century, Benjamin Franklin invented the Franklin Stove, which was the beginning of enclosed fire.Sarah Archer: That's right. And there were a few iterations of enclosed stoves. Basically it was sort of the cast iron revolution that led to this, and there was the Oberlin Stove, there were all sorts of variations of this that kind of, there were increasing refinements in efficiency and even decoration. They were in some cases very beautiful, and kind of a lovely thing to have in the kitchen, which was sort of a new idea. You know, we think of appliances looking cool or looking nice as just part and parcel of kitchen design, but this was kind of a new lovely thing, that you would sort of have this decorative cast iron object in your kitchen and be freed to some extent from all that smoke. And making that room a more pleasant place to be.Suzy Chase: And then we go to the first refrigerator for the home in 1913. And now that was the real game changer.Sarah Archer: It was a total game changer because it really revolutionized the way people could shop, and the idea that you could stash leftovers, you could sort of plan ahead a little bit. It was normal to sort of have to go shopping for produce or meat or dairy products every day, and the idea that you could kind of, you know, sort of plan your week a little bit with the advent of a refrigerator was revolutionary. Not everybody had them, it was pretty rare to have one when they first came out, just like television or anything else. But yeah, that completely revolutionized shopping and cooking.Suzy Chase: I remember my grandma used to call it the ice box.Sarah Archer: Yes. My mother grew up with an ice box, and it was literally like, the ice man would come to the door.Suzy Chase: Yes.Sarah Archer: With a gigantic block of ice. And that was, you know, I mean, it was probably not as efficient as today's Frigidaire, but it was, yeah. I mean that completely was just a fixture of a lot of peoples homes. And not having a freezer, also, which was rare in the '40s and '50s.Suzy Chase: I love the idea of home economics. Describe domestic science.Sarah Archer: Domestic science is this wonderful, I think of it as being kind of, it's sort of the ancestor of Martha Stewart. Kind of a whole field of study that was very serious, that was taken very seriously, and we tend to kind of giggle at it nowadays, the idea of, we remember our moms or grandmas in home economics class and you think of people with beehive hairdos, making cookies, and it's kind of the idea that you would do that in school seems odd to us nowadays. But domestic science was an outgrowth of a couple of fields of chemistry and food science and hygiene, and there was a lot of concern in the second half of the 19th century. There were people like Catharine Beecher who was the sister of Harriet Beecher Stowe, with her sister designed kind of the ideal rational kitchen with the idea that increasing industrialization and more people living in cities, it would be, women would really need optimal work spaces. And the idea of kind of separating things, just at the moment when germ theory was coming into play, that kind of, "Oh, maybe it's not a good idea to have raw meat kind of sitting around, where you're also, you know, making bread, and you want to separate these things." And it entered into the school system.Sarah Archer: It also borrowed some logic from the factory. So there's this funny thing where on the one hand, the Victorian home is the sanctuary and it's the place where you come home, you know, your wife and, if you're a man, your wife and children are there and it's cozy and it's sort of away from the dirty outside world of politics and business and all that stuff, and the home is your, you know, kind of peaceful sanctuary from all of that. But a woman named Christine Frederick, around World War I, studied the work of an industrial scientist named Frederick Taylor, I always trip on that a little bit because their names are-Suzy Chase: Frederick Frederick.Sarah Archer: Frederick, there's a lot of Fredericks. Who did motion studies and would kind of work with companies like Bethlehem Steel and kind of say, "Okay, you have workers doing this and that, and you need to kind of, reduce this space by two feet, it'll make it more efficient," and kind of almost look at the choreography of work and say, you know, how can we set up this factory so that it's fewer steps or it's, you know, easier for the workers to do this or that. She applied that to the kitchen, and designed an ideal modern, you know, circa 1916, kitchen that would make it easier for women to get everything done that they needed to do. And this was kind of considered feminism. I mean, we would think of that as being kind of like, you know, regressive, like, why is it making life better for women, because really everybody should pitch in in the kitchen, regardless of gender. But this was really a revolutionary idea at the time. And it paves the way for kind of the work triangle, if you have ever heard of that term for the optimal position of the stove, the sink, and the work top.Suzy Chase: I have to wonder about the fact that she said housework was a profession back in 1912. And how was it received by everyone?Sarah Archer: I think-Suzy Chase: Seems radical.Sarah Archer: It seems radical. It seems, I mean, and it's with the hindsight of 100 years, it's also we see it so differently that it's almost, you know, I mean, she was extremely popular. People loved her book. I don't believe, I have not run across any commentary about her that suggested people thought she was some sort of feminist radical at the time. People didn't, it wasn't kind of like she was a suffragette, in a sense. It was more kind of like, oh, this really smart young women is doing this really cool design. And of course there's the irony that she herself was a professional. Like, she was doing non-domestic work. You know, that was kind of the work of her life, but that was kind of, and that was true for a great many women designers, scientists, chemists, who devoted their professional lives to home economics.Suzy Chase: So, you can't understand the mid-century without looking at the '20s and '30s. Describe the ideal 1920s kitchen.Sarah Archer: So that is really like the golden age of [inaudible 00:08:12]. There is this moment in the '20s when, a couple things are happening. One, after years and years and years of everything being made of wood, maybe kind of a hodge podge of kitchen quote on quote "furniture," you might have sort of a work top, a hoosier cabinet where you kept your flour and sugar, that kind of thing. Suddenly there start to be these kind of bright white enameled surfaces. And it's almost like kitchens start to look like hospitals. There's this real concern around the time of sort of following World War I and the Spanish Flu and real robust understanding of germ theory thinking like, okay, we really need to turn kitchens from these kind of homespun spaces into almost like little laboratories. So the ideal kitchens that you often see in magazines if you look at, you know, House Beautiful and print ads for appliances are kind of almost clinical, and they're not usually brightly colored. So you see lots of tile, lots of surfaces that are easy to clean. And it's funny because they also retain a connection to furniture. So you might see a sink that has sort of lovely tapered capriole legs as though it were a chair or a table. So it doesn't yet look kind of mechanized in the way that it starts to later.Sarah Archer: In the 1930's, all of that changes because streamlining transforms the look of, you know, everything from toasters and pencil sharpeners to cars and refrigerators. And it comes from the automotive industry. The designers of appliances start to borrow the look and feel of streamlining to give these devices the look of something high tech and new. And it's Raymond Loewy's refrigerator, the Cold Spot for Sears, Norman Bel Geddes's designs. A stove that kind of conceals all of the guts so instead of things like the monitor top refrigerator, which is one of the very early sort of popular refrigerators from GE, you can kind of see there's a giant condenser on the top of it and it's kind of this, it looks to our eye very clunky. The '30s appliances conceal all of that, so you don't see kind of all of the machinery. And it has, they have very smooth, you might say elegant, sort of casings. They look almost like the components of a train car, they're kind of styled to look that 1930s deco glam silhouette.Sarah Archer: And this is also the moment when standardized counter heights come into play, and standardized cabinets. So that instead of your kind of personal collection of furniture that can store things, and work tops, you have a kitchen that is kitted out with kind of an intentionally uniform set of cabinets. And that totally transforms the look of the space, and you know, gives it that kind of signature look that we are used to.Suzy Chase: So fast forward to July 24, 1959, where Richard Nixon and Soviet Primer Nikita Khrushchev got into an argument about women, kitchen appliances, and the American way of life. This cracked me up. So during a World's Fair style exhibition in New York City, the two leaders had this conversation.Sarah Archer: It was actually in Moscow, sorry.Suzy Chase: Oh, it was?Sarah Archer: FYI. Yeah.Suzy Chase: That's even funnier.Sarah Archer: It's even funnier, I know.Suzy Chase: So Nixon wanted to show off this spiffy new kitchen and Khrushchev shot back, "We have such things." And then Nixon said, "We like to make life easier for women." And then Khrushchev said, "Your capitalistic attitude toward women does not occur under communism." Talk a bit about this exchange.Sarah Archer: I love this exchange so much. And it's just, it, I think if you look at it in the context of even kind of looking back a few decades to Christine Frederick, you know, Nixon is kind of echoing the home economics theory that all of these new devices and all this industrial innovation is good for women. And of course in the 1950s it is the pinnacle of, you know, men are home from the war, people are buying Levittown houses and nesting and women are at home. Like, capital H, Homemaker. You know, the idea of being, professional is considered a little eccentric at this time period, at best. And Khrushchev is, you know, giving him almost what we would think of as like a feminist argument, that like, you know, you're essentializing. Like, who says women belong?Sarah Archer: And I think it's fair to say that Soviet women, although they were fairly well represented in the sciences, there actually was a fairly high proportion of women working in kind of what we would call STEM, medicine and the natural sciences, in the Soviet Union. It was just as sexist as any place else on Earth, you know, in the 1950s. So the idea that Soviet women were all relying on their husbands to load the dishwasher or what have you, the communal dishwasher, is probably totally ridiculous. But I thought it was very savvy of Khrushchev to kind of zero in on that as a weak point in the conversation.Suzy Chase: In the 1930s, working class women left domestic service in droves, leaving middle class women to take on their own housework. Julia Child described these middle class women as servantless. How did this effect the way households were run?Sarah Archer: So it's a couple things. It's, one is that people who had lots of help before then probably continued to have lots of help. Or, help to some extent. And the idea, this kind of mythical population of people who kind of used to have lots of help and then suddenly didn't and then were left, you know, helpless, not knowing how to, you know, work the stove, I think was relatively small. What was more common was for people who had been working class or working poor to start to become more successful and have more means in the post war period. And to have a brand new kitchen, if they bought, you know, a Levittown house, or were living out in the burbs somewhere. And suddenly be living a new lifestyle, and in a sense they were a new kind of person. They were the American middle class, that kind of bedrock of middle class people that was booming in the post war era.Sarah Archer: So servantless is kind of a brilliant term because it describes, in a sense, a new kind of person. So, somebody who perhaps, you know, would not have thought to entertain a lot decades earlier. Maybe in the 1950s and '60s they're reading about fondue and maybe think it would be fun to have people over, and their kitchen is attractive and maybe in kind of a fashion color, so you can sort of have people over for informal dining in your kitchen in this kind of new way. So it transformed the lady of the house, shall we say, to use an antiquated term, into a new kind of hostess, I would say. And women's magazines really played into this. There is a lot of advice in the '50s and '60s about entertaining in this kind of way. Things that you can do ahead, if you're kind of doing it all yourself. And you know, foods that keep, which is the signature culinary innovation of the post war era. Things that you can kind of leave for a couple days.Sarah Archer: And ways that you can kind of dazzle people, you know. Sort of exploring different kids of culinary traditions that we would not think of as terribly exotic now, but you know, 70 years ago were magazine worthy because of their novelty.Suzy Chase: Speaking of foods that will keep, talk about the innovation of Tupperware.Sarah Archer: Oh my goodness. This is one of my favorite things. I was fascinated by the idea of the Tupperware party. Because this is something that, by the time I was a kid, I was, that had, all that stuff had kind of fallen out of favor and it was kind of getting back to, let's use glass because it's better for you, or better for the environment. And of course as a child of the '80s I was kind of like, obsessed with plastic and thinking, what are these Avon ladies and Tupperware parties, what is this world that existed 20 years ago?Suzy Chase: Yeah.Sarah Archer: The plastic that is used to make them was a World War II innovation, and it had originally been used to protect wires in telecommunications. And like so many things, it was kind of like at the end of the war, what do we do with this? You know, what civilian peace time application can we come up with? And Earl Tupper designed the first Tupperware. And one of the reasons for the parties is because that smell of that sort of plasticy smell that we are all very used to because it's all around us all the time was totally alien to people in this time period because there just was not a lot of plastic on the market. People were kind of not super into it. They were kind of like, oh, I don't know, is this safe, or it's just weird, it doesn't really go well with food. So the parties were a way of showing it and kind of almost like, playing with it in a domestic setting. Like you can, you know, this is how you could use it if you bought some, in somebody's house. And so it became kind of like Avon, sort of a kind of domestic retail fixture of the time period.Suzy Chase: So I thought this was another game changer. Describe the change in mentality in terms of thinking about durable goods as consumable.Sarah Archer: Oh yeah. This is another big one that actually is like, like so many things about the post war era, is secretly really from the '20s, and there's this long kind of decades long gap between the modernism and kind of industrial thinking of the '20s because of the Depression and the World Wars. There was an advertising man, sort of a mad man, so to speak, of that era, the 1920s, named Earnest Elmo Calkins who wrote a book called Consumer Engineering during the Depression. And basically it was a manifesto for planned obsolescence. And he was arguing that things like toothpaste and shaving cream that you kind of naturally use up, we need to start thinking of durable goods as things that you can use up. So a new color or a new shape or a new feature, you know, new and improved, all of that stuff. We have to start kind of baking in those qualities, otherwise people won't buy things as often as we would like them to. So the advent of annual styling, which was really big early on in the auto industry, where you would have, you know, a whole new pallette of cool colors every year and new fins, or new features, cup holders, you know, in cars, takes over kitchen appliances.Sarah Archer: And this is partly because weird though it may sound, there was a strong connection between the auto industry and the world of kitchens. General Motors owned Frigidaire during this time period. And if you went to Motorama to see all the new concept cars you might also see the Kitchen of Tomorrow and see, you know, all the features. So they were presented as being kind of part and parcel of the design innovation and the new styling and the idea that there's a new color palette that's must-have for the kitchen. And as a result of that, if you're looking at old houses, which we were a couple years ago in Philly and it was sort of immediately like, oh, this is like 1968. Or this is 1972. You can tell because of the appliances, because there was such a kind of, it's like archeological layers. Like you can tell when a kitchen was done just by looking at the color.Suzy Chase: On page 206 you have an incredible photo of the classic brown and orange kitchen in the Brady Bunch House.Sarah Archer: Oh, I love Brady Bunch House.Suzy Chase: I was so excited to hear that HGTV was going to renovate the home to its original splendor. That show kind of brings home the fact that life happens in the kitchen, don't you think?Sarah Archer: Absolutely. And that is, when I was working on this book I immediately, I started thinking a lot about all the different TV shows where that, the standard kind of set where you have like, a bisected apartment or house, very often features the kitchen. And if you go way back to like, I Love Lucy, there's you know, a lot of like, the funny gags happen in the kitchen. But the Brady Bunch to be is quintessential because it's almost at the center. And because there are so many kids, it is a perfect illustration of the way that the kitchen became a living space. And so it wasn't just a place to make toast in the morning or make dinner, it was, you know, science experiments and homework and having a heart to heart talk, and you know, playing games. And you know, doing baking experiments and all that, all the kind of shenanigans that the kids get up to on the show, so much of it happens in that kitchen. And becomes kind of almost like a creative lab for the kids to kind of do their thing. Which I think was true for a lot of people, and still is.Suzy Chase: I want to talk to you about a couple of the cookbooks featured in this book. There's the Can Opener Cookbook.Sarah Archer: Mm-hmm (affirmative).Suzy Chase: A guide for gourmet cooking with canned or frozen foods, and mixes. By Poppy Cannon. I love that name.Sarah Archer: Cannon. The great, do you know her backstory?Suzy Chase: No.Sarah Archer: She has a fascinating backstory. She honestly is worthy, I feel like, of a Netflix series. Her life, she's from South Africa, or she was from South Africa. She was a white South African who moved to the US. She ended up in a romantic affair with a man who was very high up in the NAACP, and this was considered very, he was African American.Suzy Chase: Oh.Sarah Archer: It was, yeah. So she was kind of in, not exactly in the scandal pages, but she was kind of a person of note in the news, on top of being a cookbook editor, or a food editor, and writing all these books. And it was all about kind of being glamorous and saving time. And she, you know, if there are photos of her that she was very chic and you know, always had really cool hairstyles, and it is in certain ways like the anti-1950s cookbook. But at the same time it's almost perfect. So on the one hand, and it gets to this tension between, you know, we want you to be in the kitchen all the time because that's your job as an American housewife and mom, but all of these innovations that we want you to buy are going to make it easier for you. So it's sort of like, walking that line between making it, you know, not too easy. Just a little bit more easy. And Poppy Cannon is, takes it to the Nth degree and just says, like, why? Why bother making things from scratch when you can just create, you know, a complete meal from shelf stable food?Suzy Chase: A cookbook that I have: Dishes Men Like, from 1952. And I made the 30 minute noodle goulash that's on page 39.Sarah Archer: And was it good?Suzy Chase: It was kind of bland.Sarah Archer: I'm not surprised, yeah, in 1952. I mean it's, this is sort of the era when people maybe had salt and pepper in the house and not a lot of other spices and flavors.Suzy Chase: But this cookbook was kind of weird. Because I thought the premise was cooking for your man. But in the introduction, they wrote, "If you have a husband who likes to cook, pamper him." I thought that was a weird way to kick off a book for that era.Sarah Archer: Yeah. Yeah. It's almost like they kind of weren't sure what they were trying to say, in a way. It was like, we want to sell this and we know that men like to eat. So let's, right.Suzy Chase: So then there was the advent of foreign or exotic cookbooks, like the Art of Chinese Cooking from 1956, or Good Housekeeping's Around the World Cookbook from 1958.Sarah Archer: Around the World.Suzy Chase: Or, Simple Hawaiian Cookery, from 1964. That cracked me up.Sarah Archer: Isn't that fascinating? Yeah. And there are oodles of these, and there are all sorts of, it is, it's kind of the confluence of the Worlds Fair culture of kind of sampling these quote on quote exotic foods that you might try at the different pavilions. Which I think is made permanent at Disneyland and Disney world. Those are kind of like permanent Worlds Fairs that never close. And this idea that you could kind of travel the world by, you know, going to Queens for an afternoon. And you know, sampling all these things, which were of, you know, probably dubious authenticity. But that kind of to me really fits into the kind of gamesmanship of being a hostess. And like, this is new and different, you haven't had this before.Sarah Archer: And also kind of the legacy of World War II geographically, because so much of it is about the South Pacific and what would have been called the Far East at the time. Looking at Asian cuisine. And nowadays, there's practically, you have multiple options for hipster Korean fast food, you know. Like we have so much, you know, such an array of incredible food that we can get, even in medium sized cities and towns in this country. That the idea of being able to order, you know, Cambodian takeout in 1950 would have been unheard of. But I think it speaks to a real curiosity, and I think that it was kind of like, I think of the post war kitchen as kind of a stationary laboratory for exploring the world.Suzy Chase: So let's talk a minute about Julia Child. In the book you wrote, "Child traveled the world, lived abroad, worked for her country during wartime, and learned to cook in one of the strictest culinary traditions on earth. So for her, the mid century kitchen was not a place where industrial designers had shown mercy on her. To make her inevitable lot in life easier. To save her from becoming a worn out Mrs. Drudge. It was a creative place full of exciting challenges and good smells, good tastes, and it was where she wanted to be." Talk a bit about that.Sarah Archer: So she has, to me, one of the most fascinating life stories. And I think, it's also an example of this kind of intersection of kitchen and class. She did not grow up cooking, because her family had help. She came from a very well to do background in California, and had, was highly, highly educated and was, you know, in the precursor to the CIA during the war. And so had kind of a world view that was very uncommon for an American, much less an American woman of her generation. You know, a degree of travel and kind of cosmopolitanness that was very unusual. But then decided to bring that to the masses by kind of putting her kitchen on TV. And I think one of the things that I love about her kitchen, which you can visit at this Smithsonian, and it's amazing.Suzy Chase: I love it.Sarah Archer: It's so great. It's just, everybody should go there. Is that it was actually not, it was really not like a kitchen of tomorrow or a kitchen of the future. You know, it didn't have that kind of Jetsons feeling of kind of the latest and greatest. She had, you know, the iconic peg board. All her different kind of nifty kitchen tools that were, some of them quite low tech, you know, just the old fashioned whisk. All that kind of good stuff. And it was not about innovation so much as mastery. And I think that she's an example of somebody who showed women that there was a real kind of pleasure, sensory pleasure, and kind of cultural interest in learning to cook. That it wasn't, it didn't have to be about, I mean, to some, it does have to be about getting dinner on the table at a certain, you know, hour, if you have lots of kids, but that it could also be intellectual. It could be challenging. It could be fun for you. And I think that certainly my mom responded to that, watching the show when it was on PBS, and that was, you know, it's a way of learning about another culture, to learn through their food.Suzy Chase: In 1963, the same year the French Chef premiered, Betty Friedan identified the housewife as the chief customer of American business.Sarah Archer: I find it so interesting that this happened in the same year. And not too far after the Nixon Khrushchev debate. So Friedan was looking at kind of the consumer industrial complex and essentially that same planned obsolescence scheme that Earnest Elmo Calkins devised during the Great Depression. It was that you must always be, for the market economy to work, waiting and wishing for the next thing. In order for, you know, sales to be robust, you have to always be longing for a better dishwasher. Or waiting for a washer dryer. Or hoping that you can, you know, change out the light fixtures in your kitchen, or whatever it is. And that that, getting swept up in that longing, is, you know, kind of, if you're not interested in that sort of thing, which a lot of people are not, you know, naturally, is not a substitute for a full life. And she was sort of making the point that, you know, there is more to life than, you know, this kind of obsessive perfectionisms around food and design.Sarah Archer: The irony of this is that she became an avid amateur cook throughout the '60s and early '70s. And there's actually an article called Cooking with Betty Friedan, and it's about her, you know, rediscovering the joy of making soup or something. Really it's kind of, and it's presented as this kind of, you know, like, really? Her of all people? But I think that speaks also to this tension around women in that era who were chafing against the kind of, the societally prescribed roles for women, but also maybe really loved food and loved to cook. And you know, can you do both, can you be both?Suzy Chase: So now for my segment called My Last Meal, what would you have for your last supper?Sarah Archer: Oh wow. That's such a great question. I probably, I think my desert island food genre is probably Italian food. And I think if I had to choose, I have a, we have a, we make Marcella Hazan's bolognese sauce, that was kind of our go to sauce. So probably I would do the tagliatelle with bolognese. Maybe a nice salad to go with it.Suzy Chase: Where can we find you on the web and social media?Sarah Archer: So my website is www.sarah, S-A-R-A-H,-archer, A-R-C-H-E-R, .com, you can find me on Twitter at S-A-R-C-H-E-R, sarcher, or on Instagram at sarcherize, S-A-R-C-H-E-R-I-Z-E.Suzy Chase: Thanks Sarah, for this fascinating glimpse into the mid century kitchen, and thanks for coming on Cookery By the Book Podcast.Sarah Archer: Thank you so much for having me, it was really fun.Outro: Follow Suzy Chase on Instagram, at cookerybythebook, and subscribe at cookerybythebook.com or in Apple Podcasts. Thanks for listening to Cookery By The Book Podcast. The only podcast devoted to cookbooks since 2015.
FANS: Rebecca Markus (TV Tangents) joins us to interview Robbie Rist (The Brady Bunch, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles), who opens up about "Cousin Oliver Syndrome," recounts why he wasn't on HGTV's recent Brady Bunch House renovation special, discusses his voiceover career and reveals his proudest work. Our most in-depth 'Fans' segment to date. FILMS: Robbie Rist voiced Michaelangelo in our film of the week, 1990's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The film's tone, success, and product placements are all touched upon along with that anticlimactic ending. What will Robbie, Rebecca and the CF3 gang rate TMNT on the Cultfilmometer?? FINDS: Rutger Hauer, Friday the 13th fan films, Halloween sequels, Fred Durst directs John Travolta, and a shout out to Mary at Frog of La Mancha!
Greg Brady says HGTV paid was to much for the Brady Bunch home. Dirt Alert with Elizabeth Ries. Google Trends this week include: Bindi Irwin, In and Out Burger, and Leo Season.
PLUS: How can Team CoBra be more diva-like?! Elizabeth has the Dirt Alert AND :30 Pop Culture Challenge and Blinded by the Item.
A notable obit in the sports world. Lori is loving the show about the history of "Soul Train" on BET. A major scandal in the book world, and we interviewed the author one year ago, Guest is KSTP/Ch. 5 newscaster Matt Belanger. The Brady Bunch House.
This week, Natalie, Rachel, and Erik sound off on the status of “The Brady Bunch” house renovation and whether or not Lance Bass is still involved; an underwhelming first look at the home “The Bachelorette’s” JoJo Fletcher and Jordan Rodgers are currently renovating and whether or not they’re trying to be the new Chip and Joanna Gaines; the mirky etiquette of housewarming parties (gift registries are tacky, people!); and this week’s celeb winners and losers in real estate.
Heather's been making the rounds on the TV circuit with an empty fridge and handling Max's decision to go vegetarian while wondering if a prenup ruins the magic of a marriage. Meanwhile, real-life besties Jamie-Lynn and Lance pop by (after popping a bottle of champagne) pop into the studio to talk about Lance's adventures into IVF and their plans for the holidays! The Heather Hotline is here! Ask Heather your questions at 949-439-5159 anytime, anywhere! And thank you to today's sponsors: Amazon = Shop using Amazon.com/shop/HeatherDubrow to keep the podcast FREE! Dancing Queen = Order Cher's latest album and buy tickets to see Cher live at Cher.com Leesa Mattresses = Get up to $235 off and free shipping at Leesa.com/Heather and use promo code HEATHER at checkout ThirdLove = Go to ThirdLove.com/heather now to find your perfect-fitting bra and get 15% off your first purchase
On this week’s episode of This Week’s Episode, Karen, Kris and Evan face the warped wall in an episode of AMERICAN NINJA WARRIOR! Plus, more conclusive evidence that the internet can be a vile place, Legends of Tomorrow gets a recurring wolf creature, Chris Hardwick’s less than flawless return to TV, and more! This week’s episode American Ninja Warrior - Los Angeles City Finals (S10E07) Next week’s episode Angel - Smile Time (S05E14) Show Notes ‘The Daily Show With Trevor Noah’ Set To Cover Midterm Elections From Florida Ruby Rose Cast as Batwoman for CW Ruby Rose Quits Twitter Following 'Batwoman' Backlash 'American Gladiators' Eyeing Another Revival HGTV Outbids Lance Bass to Buy the Brady Bunch House—and Will 'Restore' it to '1970s Glory' Plain White T's Song "Hey There Delilah" Is Being Turned Into a TV Series Former ‘Today’ Host Tamron Hall Developing Daytime Talk Show After Striking Deal With Disney Oscars Won't Televise All Awards Live, Adds "Popular" Film Category Grant Gustin Defends Leaked Flash Suit, Puts Body Shamers in Their Place A Clever Rick and Morty Tattoo used Green Screen to Make a Real Portal The Office! A Musical Parody Launches Nationwide Search to Cast Michael Scott Amazon Debuts Trailer for ‘Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ Season 2 ‘Queer Eye’ Star Antoni Porowski Talks New Restaurant Venture, Karamo Brown Launching a Line of Bomber Jackets Kiernan Shipka Unveils 'Sabrina' in First Photos of Netflix Series ‘Talking Dead’ staff quit over Chris Hardwick’s return Legends of Tomorrow Season 4 adding a recurring wolf creature Tearful Chris Hardwick Returns to ‘Talking Dead,’ Thanks Fans But Doesn’t Address Allegations Social Stuff TWEP Facebook page Geekade Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Tumblr Twitch Website Contact Us Support This Week's Episode by donating to the tip jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/this-weeks-episode
ON With Mario - Bachelor in Paradise's Grocery Store Joe stops by with the scoop on the new season & how it felt to be sent home night one on the Bachelorette! Plus, Courtney's got a back to school life hack to share, more Brady Bunch house drama, and do we now know when Bieber is getting married? (August 14, 2018) Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
In this 117th episode of “Elton Jim” Turano’s “CAPTAIN POD-TASTIC,” Jim Turano details how he solved the “mystery” of how his car battery recently drained and died in the garage for the second time in less than a year. It’s worthy of a Sherlock Holmes case! And in the “Pop Culture Club,” regular contributor, Emily […]
In Episode 9, we chat about the famous Brady Bunch House being sold to HGTV (and the stir the purchase caused), changes to MoviePass, a former Bachelorette's reaction to Becca's final episode and a BIG change coming to The Academy Awards. For our Marquee Topic, we talk through some of the best "will they/won't they couples" on TV and which of them went on a bit too long for our tastes. PLUS, our Teasers this week can be streamed for free everywhere - Josh shares a YouTube favorite and Maureen highlights a great watch from BuzzFeed. And be sure to stay tuned until the VERY end for a very special language lesson from Maureen (and a skeptical, though ultimately wrong, Josh). Email us at thepoppedcast@vernacularpodcast.com! Find links for this episode in the show notes at https://www.vernacularpodcast.com/poppedcast/! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thepoppedcast/support
We have questions for Dean Sharp, 'The House Whisperer,' regarding The Brady Bunch House!Can we design our own Brady Bunch House?
Lance Bass of N*Stink thought that his bid on the Brady Bunch house was a done deal, but lo & behold HGTV outbid him and will be sealing the deal!
Welcome to Last Row! This week we talk about two legendary music fans who escaped from a nursing home to attend a heavy metal festival, what songs should be adapted for the screen instead of Hey There Delilah (3:29), Max Martin’s musical (7:45), Lance Bass trying to buy the Brady Bunch house (10:20), Travis Scott and Mac Miller’s new music (14:05), and Russ Marshalek joins to tell us what happens when Robyn shows up to your Robyn party in Brooklyn and makes you the face of her short film (16:47) Hosted by Josh Morrissey and Christine Werthman Theme music by Bobby Slay
Marley breaks down the Bachelorette finale; Elizabeth has the real reason why Lance Bass lost the Brady Bunch House; Jason vs Broccoli Cheese and Chili
PLUS: Colleen wants us to get John Stamos. CSI - Corn dog. AND Throwback Live at 2:45.
#041 - Scott's Hard Lesson on His Daddy Daughter Date, Lance Bass and Brady Bunch House, Are You a Character or Method Actor, 66 People Shot in Chicago Over Weekend, Ebola Outbreak, Is Racism Funny, Much More #GiveLanceBassBradyHouse 2 Rational Bastards - #2RB | Rose Garden Studios - 8/7/2018 Youtube http://bit.ly/Youtube_2RB FaceBook https://www.facebook.com/2RationalBastards/ iHeart Radio https://www.iheart.com/podcast/2-rational-bastards-28595405/ iTunes http://bit.ly/iTunes2RB Google http://bit.ly/Google2RB Stitcher http://bit.ly/Stitcher2RB Web http://2rationalbastards.com Email 2rationalbastards@gmail.com Old Show: Exposing Real Estate and Damn Near Anything Else iTunes http://bit.ly/iTunesERE Google http://bit.ly/GooglePlayERE Web www.exposingrealestate.com
1. Demi Lovato Speaks Out For The First Time Following Overdose (@ddlovato) 2. Kourtney, Kim and Khloe Kardashian Battle It Out on Twitter After KUWTK Fight (E! News) 3. Lance Bass: "They Accepted My Offer on the Brady Bunch House" (E! News) 4. 395 people sickened in McDonald's salad outbreak (CNN) 5. Peloton raises $550M at a valuation of $4 billion (Tech Crunch) Dear Toasters Advice Segment Special Guest: Dominique Penn, WAGS LA The Morning Toast with Claudia (@girlwithnojob) and Jackie Oshry (@jackieoproblems) The Morning Toast Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themorningtoast
Lance Bance of some crappy boy band from the 90's was trying to purchase the Brady Bunch house to flip it...
On this episode the Brady Bunch house sells for more than $2 million dollars, the NYSE announces it will embrace cryptocurrency, how to spend Bitcoin with a debit card, why now is the time to buy Ethereum Classic, and how sports gambling will affect the crypto markets.
Saudi Arabia-Hug a singer and go to jail, Zimbabwe's own Robert Mugabe compares himself to Hitler and the Brady Bunch house goes on sale. Follow us at: TWITTER: @BaboonYodel FACEBOOK: @BaboonYodel WEB: www.baboonyodel.com INSTAGRAM: BaboonYodel
The Brady Bunch House goes up for sale and we rank our Big 5 fictional places we'd love to live. The Weird World This Week features a naked gym goer, a dishonest zoo, and straight guys duped into gay porn. Nerd Stuff is jam packed with Matthew McConaughey's guttural stridency, plus, Disney takes over Fox, Princess Leia returns, the Guardians of the Galaxy come to James Gunn's defense, and no-spoiler reviews of Teen Titans Go! To the Movies and Won't you be my Neighbor. "House" is our musical theme with songs by Talking Heads, Warren Zevon, and Blind Melon.
PLUS Michelle Williams weds in an intimate ceremony. The new season of Orange Is The New Black drops today on Netflix. Also this weekend the Roast of Bruce Willis on Comedy Central and Who Is America? on HBO.
The Brady Bunch House is up for sale what famous tv house did you like growing up?
The Brady Bunch House is up for sale what famous tv house did you like growing up?
PLUS: Bad Mom's Club - Where did Colleen's kid sleep? D-Bags: Khloe and Leslie. AND do you pre-game your appointments?
August 13-19, 1988 Today Ken welcomes model, art curator, casting director and kindred spirit Lenora Claire to the show. Ken and Lenora discuss being a Reading Rainbow kid, appearing on Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?, growing up in the Valley, The Sherman Oaks Galleria, The Brady Bunch House, Star 80, suave ALF, furries, a love of movies, growing up the daughter of a Dr, The Comish, being a Police Surgeon, Bachelor Party, Adrian Zmed, Revenge of the Nerds, Oingo Boingo, The Cramps, Tom Selleck as PT Barnum, Lonnie Anderson as Jane Mansfield, Lynda Carter as Rita Hayworth, Chopping Mall, Nightmares, earthquakes, the proper way to display samurai swords, Ninja III: The Domination, Farrah Fawcett, Extremities, The Burning Bed, Haunted Honeymoon vs. High Spirits, Howard the Duck, Messiah of Evil, condoms, Near Dark vs The Lost Boys, Joshua Miller, Malibu Bikini Shop, USA Up All Night, the rapey-ness of Revenge of the Nerds, Mel Brooks, Spaceballs, an insomnia fueled pop culture education, Night Flight, Another State of Mind, being one of the USA Network's Characters that are welcome, Creepshow, Tales from the Darkside, being paid to be in the audience, Goth Teens, pranking the Hughleys, appearing in Marilyn Manson and George Michaels music videos, Steven Spielberg's aversion to sex, casting MTV's True Life, She's the Sheriff, The Thighmaster vs. The Gutbuster, My So-Called Life, Zoobilie Zoo, SCTV, Elvira : Mistress of the Dark, Paul Reubens, Reality TV, The Real World, the educational power of television, creating anti-stalker laws, Fight Back! with David Horowitz, Wally George, DC Follies, and Beverly Hills Teens.