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Bears hibernate for the winter, sometimes podcasts hibernate for the spring. What'd we miss? This week: escape room Google Sheets, demo day for real this time, and a quick check in with everyone's favorite increasingly problematically monopolistic fruit company.
CV LA OPINIÓN 28 ABRIL 2025 CON C.P. JUAN CARLOS GOMEZ SANCHEZ
Comic Reviews: DC Absolute Green Lantern 1 by Al Ewing, Jahnoy Lindsay Resurrection Man: Quantum Karma 1 by Ram V, Anand Rk, Jackson Guice, Mike Spicer Marvel All-New Venom 5 by Al Ewing, Carlos Gomez, Frank D'Armata Concert of Champions 1 by Jason Loo, Rafael Loureiro, Ruairi Coleman, Yen Nitro, Fer Sifuentes-Sujo Daredevil: Cold Day in Hell 1 by Charles Soule, Steve McNiven Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe One Last Time 1 by Cullen Bunn, Dalibor Talajic, Lee Loughridge Ironheart: Bad Chemistry 1 by John Jennings, Jethro Morales, Andrew Dalhouse Marvel Rivals 1 by Paul Allor, Luca Claretti, Dee Cunniffe Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur 10th Anniversary Special by Brandon Montclare, Natacha Bustos, Luis Guerrero; Justina Ireland, Luca Claretti, Andrew Dalhouse Marvel Unlimited It's Jeff 45 by Kelly Thompson, Gurihiru AWA Polis 1 by Mark Russell, Vladimir Krstic-Laci IDW Star Trek: Lore War 1 by Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly, Christopher Cantwell, Davide Tinto Monster High: Bull's Eye by Heather Nuhfer, Kellee Riley Image Black Ritual: The Book of Nyx 1 by Thomas Healy, Nat Jones G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero – Beach Head 1 by Phil Hester, Travis Hymel, Lee Loughridge I Was A Fashion School Serial Killer 1 by Doug Wagner, Daniel Hillyard, Michelle Madsen Mad Cave Past Time 1 by Joe Harris, Russell Olson Oni Plague House 1 by Michael Conrad, Dave Chisholm OGN Countdown Sib Squad by Steve Breen Rebis Born and Reborn by Irene Marchesini, Carlotta Dicataldo Jimmy Olsen's Supercyclopedia by Gabe Soria, Sandy Jarrell Around the Spider-Verse by Pablo Leon, Justin Reynolds, Roseanne Brown, Penelope Rivera Gaylord, Maca Gil Coven by Jennifer Dugan, Kit Seaton Magda, Intergalactic Chef Vol 1: The Big Tournament by Nicolas Wouters, Mathilde Van Gheluwe, Ann Marie Boulanger Squeak Chatter Bark: An Eco Mystery by Ali Fitzgerald Golem of Venice Beach Vol 2 by Chanan Beizer, Vanessa Cardinali, Jae Lee, David Mack, and Friends Maxwell Dark Nightmare Hunter by Brady Smith Cartoonist's Club by Raina Telgemeier, Scott McCloud Renegade Girls by Nora Neus, Julie Robine Additional Reviews: Gamma Flight Heathen Blue Harvest Daredevil: Born Again ep7 A Minecraft Movie News: Val Kilmer, Spider-Man 4 title and Spider-Verse 3 release date, Once Upon A Time in Hollywood sequel, Fox animated sitcoms renewed for four more years, Tim Seeley Godzilla ongoing, live action HTTYD2 announced, Tangled remake on hold, Love Everlasting film in development, AI controversy at AWA, Amphibia graphic novel series announced, Peacemaker air date, Death Standing movie announced, Diamond bankruptcy issues, Seven Sisters Trailers: Tales From the Underworld, Megan 2.0, Naked Gun, Superman, Tron: Ares, Five Nights at Freddies 2, Zipped Up Comics Countdown Countdown (Most Appearances in CC) Jeff Lemire (347) James Tynion IV (294) Tom King (228) Scott Snyder (181) Chip Zdarsky (169) Joshua Williamson (158) Tom Taylor (133) Donny Cates (121) Al Ewing (100) Rick Remender (97) Jonathan Hickman (83) Geoff Johns (76) Kelly Thompson (71) Cullen Bunn (70) Kieron Gillen (65) Charles Soule (64) Skottie Young (62) Dan Slott (59) Christopher Priest (55) Kyle Higgins, Ed Brubaker Comics Countdown (02 April 2025): Absolute Superman 6 by Jason Aaron, Carmine Di Giandomenico, Ulises Arreola Absolute Green Lantern 1 by Al Ewing, Jahnoy Lindsay Two-Face 5 by Christian Ward, Fabio Veras, Ivan Plascencia Daredevil: Cold Day in Hell 1 by Charles Soule, Steve McNiven Resurrection Man: Quantum Karma 1 by Ram V, Anand Rk, Jackson Guice, Mike Spicer Hyde Street 5 by Geoff Johns, Francis Portela, Brad Anderson Batgirl 6 by Tate Brombal, Takeshi Miyazawa, Mike Spicer Immortal Thor 22 by Al Ewing, Jan Bazaldua, Matt Hollingsworth Let This One Be A Devil 2 by James Tynion IV, Steve Foxe, Piotr Kowalski, Brad Simpson; Steve Orlando, Levi Hastings Hornsby and Halo 5 by Peter Tomasi, Peter Snejbjerg, John Kalisz
16 03 2025 03 Abc Rural Carlos Gomez Gerente de Imnovar by ABC Color
Every year we think we've hit ‘peak tenuously-linked brand integration' and year after year we're shown that no, there's no lemon that a David Zaz-type won't try to squeeze into a diamond. This week: dank memes, TV for boomers, and asking Alexa+ to pour one out for Skype.
23 02 2025 03 Abc Rural Carlos Gomez Gerente General De Innovar by ABC Color
At this point, we're like eighteen months away from the Property Brothers having their own cereal. Honestly it's been a slippery slope ever since Reese's Puffs. This week: TCL's bush league OLED fear-mongering, Detroit style cookware, and the predictable end of the fast casual city challenge.
This Sonos shakeup is the biggest corporate drama to hit the Santa Barbara area since the Silvergreens in Isla Vista closed. This week: a change of Venu, entertainment centers frozen in time, and more intrigue in the fast casual running challenge world.
Why aren't business deals related to streaming services more like pro athlete deals? Fubo, you're heading to Disney. Venu? You're cut. Elmo? You're the new power forward for the Pelicans. Hope you like humid summers buddy. This week: running for a [fast casual] cause, robot on robot crime, and EV showrooming.
Comic Reviews: DC DC's Batman Smells, Robin Laid An Egg by Dorado Quick, M.L. Sanapo, Arif Prianto; Drew Maxey, Marianna Ignazzi, Giovanna Niro; Ricardo Sanchez, Aaron Conley, Ivan Plascencia; Alexis Quasarano, Marcial Toledano Vargas; Marv Wolfman, Paul Pelletier, Norm Rapmund, Eren Angiolini; James Reid, Francesco Francavilla; Zipporah Smith, Andrew Drilon; Calvin Kasulke, Anthony Marques, Wil Quintana Two-Face 1 by Christian Ward, Fabio Veras, Ivan Plascencia Marvel All-New Venom 1 by Al Ewing, Carlos Gomez, Frank D'Armata Deadpool/Wolverine: X-Traction by Ryan North, Javier Garron, Edgar Delgado Marvel Holiday: Tales to Astonish by Gerry Duggan, Phil Noto; Daniel Kibblesmith, Pat Olliffe, John Kalisz; Gene Luen Yang, Dylan Burnett, KJ Diaz Marvel Unlimited Astonishing X-Men 1 by Alex Paknadel, Phillip Sevy It's Jeff 38 by Kelly Thompson, GuriHiru Ahoy Archaic 1 by Melissa Olson, Sally Cantirino, Gab Contreras Archie Archie Christmas Spectacular by Ian Flynn, Holly Golightly, Jim Amash, Glenn Whitmore Boom Flavor Girls: Return to the Mothership 1 by Loic Locatelli-Kournwsky, Angel De Santiago Dark Horse Christmas 365 1 by Mikey Way, Jonathan Rivera, Piotr Kowalski, Brad Simpson Dynamite Powerpuff Girls: Winter Snowdown Showdown 1 by Daniel Kibblesmith, Carlo Lauro, Nicolo Laporini ThunderCats: Apex 1 by Ed Brisson, Rapha Lobosco, Roshan Kurichiyanil IDW Monster High: Howliday Haunt by Ben Kahn, Sonia Liao Image Dread the Halls 1 by Jordan Hart, Chris Ryall, Lee Ferguson, Jimmy Kucaj, Walter Pax, Fabio Veras Juvenile 1 by Jesus Orellana Top Cow Holiday Special: All Through the House by Marguerite Bennett, Giuseppe Cafaro, Juan Fernandez; Marv Silvestri, Tina Valentino, Fabio Mantovani, Ellie Wright; Matt Hawkins, Atilio Rojo Mad Cave Long Cold Winter 1 by Francesca Perillo, Stefano Cardoselli OGN Countdown Legend of Vox Machina: The Whitestone Chronicles Vol 1: Ripley by Marieke Nijkamp, Tyler Walpole Blake Laser by Keith Marantz, Larissa Brown Kill Me and Other Curiosities by Chad Lambert, Apri Kusbiantoro, Christine Larsen, Tom Williams Slightly Exaggerated by Curtis Clow, Pius Bak, Roman Titov Birdking Vol 3 by Daniel Freedman, Christian Ortiz Backflash by Mat Johnson, Steve Lieber, Ryan Hill Additional Reviews: Penguin (Max) First two episodes of Creature Commandos That Christmas News: Omninews, new Lemire by OGN, Mandalorian and Grogo casting Trailers: Section 31 Comics Countdown (04 December 2024): Absolute Superman 2 by Jason Aaron, Rafa Sandoval, Ulises Arreola Two-Face 1 by Christian Ward, Fabio Veras, Ivan Plascencia Batgirl 2 by Tate Brombal, Takeshi Miyazawa, Mike Spicer Ultimates 7 by Deniz Camp, Juan Frigeri, Federico Blee JSA 2 by Jeff Lemire, Diego Olortegui, Luis Guerrero Birds of Prey 16 by Kelly Thompson, Sami Basri, Vicente Cifuentes, Adriano Lucas Kosher Mafia 4 by David Hazan, Sami Kivela Christmas 365 1 by Mikey Way, Jonathan Rivera, Piotr Kowalski, Brad Simpson Dick Tracy 6 by Alex Segura, Michael Moreci, Geraldo Borges, Mark Englert Batman 155 by Chip Zdarsky, Jorge Fornes, Tomeu Morey
On the third day of Christmas my true love sent to me, Three inflatable snowmen Two sets of string lights And a home improvement store finally rolling out support for contactless payments. That's right folks, it's the 2024 Holiday Spectacular. This week: Inside Bob Iger's NBA, Italian smart lights, and the lump of coal that is Apple Intelligence (so far).
Based on your suggestions, we caught up with this five-issue romp by Leah Williams and Carlos Gomez. Is it spooky? No. Is it fun? Yeah! Is it good? Listen and find out!We make our show on Zencastr, and you can too! Follow this link to sign up now!
“Dear Mr. Hanks, As you know, our Client owns all intellectual property rights globally in and to the concept of “your body breaking down and becoming a slow healing, creaky pile of mush after the age of 28.” Your blatant alteration and repurposing of this concept in the media constitutes unauthorized use and dilution of our Client's prior art. We immediately demand you cease and desist all future activity related to conveying a specific date as to when aging really hits you like a ton of bricks. Or give us some of that Forest Gump money.” This week: make it a Blockbuster night.
Kinda nice of Apple to spend the week before the election giving us all little bite size Mac updates as a distraction. Wait, new notification hold on. From the NYT: “Here's why the Mac mini power button is bad news for Harris amongst undecided voters.” ffs. This week: cracklin' lattes, Excel productivity, and defunct startups. ☕
How long until we have the Chipotle Burrito Assembly Line by Fisher Price® on every five year old's Christmas list i mean really now. This week: Bay Area childless dog man parenting corner, EV door handles as a troubling metaphor, and Ryan backslides into his dangerous case-free lifestyle.
The kids want media that's quicker, more concise, and timely. That's why we're introducing the podcast equivalent of baseball's pitch clock: “one quick thought”. Judging by the episode length, it's a work in progress. This week: spiced is the new spiked, freemium is the new spon-con, and brining some Barlow energy to Waterloo.
Comic Reviews: DC o Absolute Power: Task Force VII 6 by Stephanie Williams, Khary Randolph, Ales Guimaraes o Nightwing Uncovered Marvel o Avengers Assemble 1 by Steve Orlando, Cory Smith, Oren Junior, Elisabetta D'Amico, Sonia Oback o Venom War: Wolverine 1 by Tim Seeley, Tony Fleecs, Kev Walker, Java Tartaglia o Wolverine 1 by Saladin Ahmed, Martin Coccolo, Bryan Valenza o Marvel Unlimited § Venom Original Sin by Steve Orlando, Scott Koblish § Alligator Loki 38 by Alyssa Wong, Bob Quinn § Lovable Lockheed 2 by Nathan Stockman Dark Horse o Groo: Minstrel Melodies 1 by Sergio Aragones, Mark Evanier, Carrie Strachan o Midst: The Valorous Farmer 1 by Matt Roen, Sara Wile, Xen of Third Person, Jasmine Walls, Aviv Or, Quinton Winter o Summer Shadows 1 by John Harris Dunning, Ricardo Cabral, Brad Simpson DSTLRY o Time Waits 1 by Chip Zdarsky, David Brothers, Marcus To, Marvin Sianipar, Matt Wilson Image o Dead Eyes: The Empty Frames 1 by Gerry Duggan, John McCrea, Mike Spicer Mad Cave o Dark Empty Void 1 by Zack Kaplan, Chris Shehan, Francesco Segala Dynamite o Red Sonja: Death and the Devil 1 by Luke Lieberman, Alberto Locatelli OGN Countdown o Justice Warriors: Vote Harder by Ben Clarkson, Matt Bors, Felipe Sobreiro o Arty by Penny Schneider o Mr. Smarty Pants: Aww Nuts! by Charity Reid, Astronym o Pencil and Eraser: We Have a Dull-Emma! by Jenny Alvadaro o Vyper: Crimson Dawn by Dan Butcher o Scoop Vol 1 and Vol 2 by Joe Clark, Richard Ashley Hamilton o Shock City by Aaron Alexovich o I Felt Myself Slipping by Ray Nadine Additional Reviews: Lego Star Wars – Rebuild the Galaxy, Baby Reindeer News: John Cassaday and Karl Moline, Norman Reedus reportedly playing Knull in Venom 3, Grant Morrison doing something with Ice Cream Man, Magik solo series, Hellhunters by PKJ and Adam Gorham, Jeffrey Brown Marvel/Scholastic book, Rogue in the Savage Land by Tim Seeley, Soule and Browne announce next project: Lucky Devils, Mickey/FF mashup Longbox 2024 Announcement Trailers: Twilight of the Gods, Salem's Lot, Venom 3, Megalopolis, Flow Comics Countdown (11 September 2024): 1. Department of Truth 25 by James Tynion IV, Martin Simmonds 2. Ain't No Grave 4 by Skottie Young, Jorge Corona, Jean-Francois Beaulieu 3. Time Waits 1 by Chip Zdarsky, David Brothers, Marcus To, Marvin Sianipar, Matt Wilson 4. Green Lantern 15 by Jeremy Adams, Fernando Pasarin, Oclair Albert, Romulo Fajardo Jr. 5. Fantastic Four 25 by Ryan North, Carlos Gomez, Jesus Aburtov 6. Geiger 6 by Geoff Johns, Gary Frank, Brad Anderson 7. Uncanny X-Men 2 by Gail Simone, David Marquez, Matt Wilson 8. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 by Jason Aaron, Rafael Albuquerque, Marcelo Maiolo 9. Space Ghost 5 by David Pepose, Jonathan Lau, Andrew Dalhouse 10. Batman and Robin 13 by Joshua Williamson, Juan Ferreyra
Two great tastes that taste great together, or a sign of a nation on the decline? The proof is in the faux-crème filling. This week: Steve Ballmer wants your face, Tim Cook wants your money, and Mela wants your recipes.
Half of this pod is now just stanning for future Cy Young award paw-cipiant Decoy Ohtani. The other host is uh, not a fan. This week: everyone's now all caught up on The Bear, Jim Farley personally cancels development of Ryan's future car, and your perfunctory Apple event speculation.
While the official gold medal count for Team USA sits at 40, let's make it 41 since Peacock stuck the landing. This week: Double Stuf collabs, Diners Target Drive Ups and Dives, and the triumphant return of Still or Sparkling.
Behind every world class athlete is that friend who starts an Apple Watch workout during boozy brunch. Olympians each in their own right. This week: Peacock-ing, spritzing, and legacy purchasing.
We're back from summer break. What'd we miss? This week: made-up holidays, political realities, and knowing when to walk away.
This week a long-time friend, Carlos Gomez, is joining me to talk about fasting and the importance of fasting in the life of a believer! Carlos had not done a ton of fasting in the past, so this was a newer thing for him, but he found that by having a regular day each week where he fasted, he was able to better focus on God without the distraction of food. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/anna-nail/support
“Siri, use Apple Intelligence to make this episode sound 30% more erudite.” “Here's what I found on the web for Eurovision...” Worth a shot… This week: chocolate flavored sandwich cookies with creme filing, spendy so-so automobiles, and sure — Apple's take on AI.
Honestly at this point all the ‘will they won't they' between Adam Silver and his media partners has gone on about almost as long as Jim and Pam and we do not have the same attention span we did in 2008, b-ball guy. This week: Rent-A-Hue®, more Sonos haterade, and a preview of Tim's developer symposium.
The first restaurant in California to be fined over the new surcharge and fee ban? Surprisingly, it's Ryan's new Detroit Style Pizza Parlor and Play Place. What even is a “Marin County smart lighting surcharge”? This week: Barkley v. Zaz, Carlos' continuing dedication to making big mistakes, and Sonos' courageous app update.
Comic Reviews: DC Boy Wonder 1 by Juni Ba, Chris O'Halloran Marvel Blood Hunters 1 by Mark Russell, Bob Quinn, Matt Milla; Christos Gage, Javier Garon, Morry Hollowell; Erica Schultz, Bernard Chang, Marcelo Maiolo Dracula: Blood Hunt 1 by Danny Lore, Vincenzo Carratu, David Curiel Giant-Size X-Men by Ann Nocenti, Lee Ferguson, KJ Diaz Strange Academy: Blood Hunt 1 by Daniel Jose Older, Luidi Zagaria, Edgar Delgado, Eric Gapstur, Scott Hanna, Erick Arciniega Marvel Unlimited Infinity Paws 6 by Jason Loo, Nao Fuji Dark Horse Witcher: Corvo Bianco 1 by Bartosz Sztybor, Corrado Mastantuono, Matteo Vattani Image Ain't No Grave 1 by Skottie Young, Jorge Corona, Jean-Francois Beaulieu Energon Universe 2024 Special by Daniel Warren Johnson, Ryan Ottley, Annalisa Leoni; Robert Kirkman, Lorenzo De Felici, Matheus Lopes; Joshua Williamson, Jason Howard, Mike Spicer Boom Amory Wars: Good Apollo, I'm Burning - No World For Tomorrow 1 by Crocodile Black 1 by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Som, Patricio Delpeche IDW TMNT: Black, White, and Green 1 by Declan Shalvey; Dave Baker, Jesse Lonergan; Gigi Dutreix, Lorenzo Hall; Paulina Ganucheau Mad Cave Mugshots 1 by Jordan Thomas, Chris Matthews Valiant Faith Returns 1 by Jody Houser, Aleta Vidal, Ludwig Olimba Valiants 1 by Ryan Cady, Al Barrionuevo, Nobi OGN Countdown Punk Mambo: Punk Witch Project by Peter Milligan, Andres Ponce Tryouts by Sarah Sax Nomads: The Sky Kingdom Vol 1 by Captain Juuter Devour by Jazmine Joyner, Anthony Pugh Sunhead by Alex Assan Hotelitor by Josh Hicks Curve Ball by Pablo Cartaya, Miguel Diaz Rivas Mulan and the Palace of Secrets Anzu and the Realm of Darkness by Mai K. Nguyen Karate Prom by Kyle Starks Singularity by Mat Groom, Bear McCreary, Rod Reis, Eleonora Carlini, Ramon Perez, Matias Bergara, Danilo Beyruth, John Pearson Plain Jane and the Mermaid by Vera Brosgol FCBD 2024 Ablaze: Gannibal by Masaaki Ninomiya, Alex Kon Dark Horse: Star Wars Young Jedi Adventures/Plants vs. Zombies by Daniel Jose Older, Andy Duggan, Dan Jackson, Paul Tobin, Luisa Russo, Heather Breckel Dark Horse: Hellboy/Stranger Things by Mike Mignola, Mark Laszlo, Dave Stewart; Derek Fridolfs, Jonathan Case DC: Absolute Power by Mark Waid, Mikel Janin, Trish Mulvihill DC: Barda by Ngozi Ukazu DC: Barkham Asylum by Yehudi Mercado IDW: Monster High by Jacque Aye, Siobhan Keenan IDW: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles by Juni Ba, Fero Pe, Luis Antonio Delgado; Paul Allor, Andy Kuhn, Ronda Pattison Mad Cave: Flash Gordon by Jeremy Adams, Will Conrad, Lee Loughridge Mad Cave: Gatchaman 1 by Cullen Bunn, Chris Batista, Carlos Lopez; Tommy Lee Edwards, Daniel Hansen; Steve Orlando, Katherine Lobo Marvel: Spider-Man/Ultimate Universe by Zeb Wells, Ryan Stegman, JP Mayer, Sonia Oback; Deniz Camp, Juan Frigeri, Federico Blee; Al Ewing, Iban Coello, Frank D'Armata Marvel: Marvel's Voices by Nikesh Shukla, Tadam Gyadu, Neeraj Menon Titan: Conan – Battle of the Black Stone by Jim Zub, Jonas Scharf, Joao Canola Valiant: The Valiants by Ryan Cady, Al Barrionuevo, Nobi; AJ Ampadu, Emiliano Correa Additional Reviews: Monsters at Work s2, Doctor Who ep 1 & 2, May the 12th Be With You, Black Panther by Priest vol 1, X-Men '97 ep 8 & 9 Glenn found an animated series (House on the Outlands) News: Gollum movie, Batman Caped Crusader release date, Gotham City Sirens miniseries, Esposito and Malkovich joining the MCU, Revival adaptation, Galactus cast, Heir of Apocalypse roster, Dazzler ongoing series Comics Countdown (08 May 2024): 1. Ain't No Grave 1 by Skottie Young, Jorge Corona, Jean-Francois Beaulieu 2. Deviant 5 by James Tynion IV, Josh Hixson 3. Birds of Prey 9 by Kelly Thompson, Jonathan Case, Gavin Guidry, Jordie Bellaire 4. Crocodile Black 1 by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Som, Patricio Delpeche 5. Batman 147 by Chip Zdarsky, Jorge Jimenez, Tomeo Morey 6. Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees 6 by Patrick Horvath 7. Devil That Wears My Face 6 by David Pepose, Alex Cormack 8. Geiger 2 by Geoff Johns, Gary Frank, Brad Anderson 9. Fantastic Four 20 by Ryan North, Carlos Gomez, Fernando Sifuentes, Jesus Aburtov 10. Spider-Man: Shadow of the Green Goblin 2 by J.M. DeMatteis, Michael Sta. Maria, Chris Sotomayor
Stop me if you've heard this one before: it's our most powerful iPad ever, and we just can't wait to see what you do with it. This week: Adam Silver pulls an Equator, cookie cocktails, and 94123 it's all about me.
Do bad reviews kill good products? For the love of God please don't test that hypothesis out on this show. This week: the capitalist haunted house that is TurboTax, conical burrs, and proof one of your hosts is out of touch with the common philatelist.
Comic Reviews: DC Action Comics 1064 by Joshua Williamson, Rafa Sandoval, Alejandro Sanchez Marvel Edge of Spider-Verse 3 by Justina Ireland, Pete Woods; Steve Foxe, Kei Zama, Antonio Fabela Marvel Unlimited Infinity Paws 2 by Jason Loo, Nao Fuji Avengers United Dark Horse Monsters Are My Business (and Business is Bloody) 1 by Cullen Bunn, Patrick Piazzalunga, Marco Brakko Image Rat City 1 by Erica Schultz, Ze Carlos, FCO Plascencia, Jay David Ramos, Marcello Iozzoli Sam and Twitch Case Files 1 by St. Mercy Vol 2: Godland 1 by John Zuur Platten, Astilio Rojo Boom Uncanny Valley 1 by Tony Fleecs, Dave Wachter Dynamite Disney Hercules 1 by Elliott Kalan, George Kambadais IDW Dungeons and Dragons: The Thief of Many Things 1 by Jim Zub, Ellen Boener, Eduardo Mello, Joana Lafuente Mad Cave When the Blood Has Dried 1 by Gary Maloney, Daniel Romero Ahoy Deadweights 1 by Tyrone Finch, Sebastian Piriz Oni Akogun: Brutalizer of Gods 1 by Murewa Ayodele, Dotun Akande, Dee Cunniffe OGNs The Horror by Lars Jacobson, Eduardo Francisco, Phillip Sevy, Frank Cvetkovic Eternal Warrior: Scorched Earth by Tres Dean, Alberto Taracido Eden by Christopher Sebela, Alain Bismut, Abel Ferry, Marc Laming, Lee Loughridge Wild Ones by Megan Lacera, Jorge Lacera Blood City Rollers by V.P. Anderson, Tatiana Hill Additional Reviews: X-Men '97 Ep5, Strange Adventures, Another Giant Mall, Big Ethel Energy, Westworld News: Quantum Leap cancelled, creative teams for X-Force/Phoenix/NYX, Jeff Lemire takes next big solo series to Boom, Monopoly movie produced by Margot Robbie, another Blair Witch in development, Duckverine, Avatar the Last Airbender movie title and casting, Running Man adaptation from Edgar Wright, R-rated Last Ronin movie, IDW, Source Point Press, Dynamite Originals, new OGN from the Die creative team (Gillen and Hans) Trailers: Maxxxine, Joker 2 Comics Countdown (10 Apr 2024): 1. Uncanny Valley 1 by Tony Fleecs, Dave Wachter 2. Action Comics 1064 by Joshua Williamson, Rafa Sandoval, Alejandro Sanchez 3. Bat-Man: The First Knight 2 by Dan Jurgens, Mike Perkins, Mike Spicer 4. Resurrection of Magneto 4 by Al Ewing, Luciano Vecchio, David Curiel, Jesus Aburtov 5. Fantastic Four 19 by Ryan North, Carlos Gomez, Jesus Aburtov 6. Dark Spaces: Dungeon 5 by Scott Snyder, Hayden Sherman 7. Ultimate X-Men 2 by Peach Momoko 8. Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees 5 by Patrick Horvath 9. I Hate Fairyland 13 by Skottie Young, Brett Bean 10. Outsiders 6 by Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly, Robert Carey, Valentina Taddeo
Fun fact! More people decide to build a cabin off the grid after using Google Nest products than successfully get it working with the rest of their smart home. This week: Amazon walks out on Just Walk Out, pouring one out for Logitech Harmony, and the doom loop narrative comes for EVs.
In this episode I talk to two visual artists: Gabriel Treviño and Antonio (Tony) Antinori. Their bios are as follows: . . Gabriel Trevino is a self taught artist living in Brownsville, TX.His early work began in a solo exhibition at the University of Texas at Brownsville in 1998 recognized by artist Carlos Gomez. For over 23 years his work has been part of several group and solo exhibitions throughout South Texas and Northern Mexico. The art of Gabriel Trevino has also been published in news papers, books & magazines including the UNAM about border history and culture. His works are in several private collections and public displays including ongoing exhibition at ROCA at George Ramirez Performing Arts Academy - Downtown Brownsville, Texas - 2023 - 2024.You can follow Gabriel Trevino at on Facebook and Instagram.https://www.facebook.com/art.gabriel.trevino?mibextid=LQQJ4d https://www.instagram.com/brownsvilleartform?igsh=MXFmbm5ianlmMTk5eg%3D%3D&utm_source=qr . . Anthony Antonio Antinori Hernandez: My iconography and my technique have changed along with the mishaps that have happened in the world where I now live. The laws of my paintings have a story that is followed from phase to phase; like a chess game or like a poem, they are executed with great science. At times my artwork is seen and spoken with irrepresentable icons; it's like if I was alone all by myself, it's like if I was running an errant, it's if I see and at the same time don't see things, as if I was surrounded by large transparencies and layers. We must understand that my function as an artist / painter is to make things been seen by the receptor. I try to be like an alarm that enjoys my paintings or that it enjoys knowing their aesthetics, but enjoys more the responsibility of a needed consciousness . In my paintings there is a kind of a dialogue or feedback between representing my feelings and emotions and portraying the other side of me as an artist / painter. I almost always try to present the form of things, and that form is just a moment of the history of those things. Like portraying a frozen world; meanwhile, in reality everything flows and be able to see that those things are transforming and living. As Human beings, we must give value to the differences and not to the similarities. The more diverse our expressions are portrayed, the more cultured a society becomes. Thus, to me art is the highest expression of freedom . You can follow Antonio Antinori on Facebook and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/antinoritony/ https://www.facebook.com/aaantinori.180 . . . Thank you to our sponsor Backdoor Modern Vintage - make sure to follow them on Instagram and Facebook - they are your go to place for content creation and are located at 907 W Business 83 Weslaco, Tx . . https://www.instagram.com/backdoor_modernvintage/ . . https://www.facebook.com/backdooratbugambilias . . . Thank you for listening to Cuadros Corner if you would like to book a podcast session please click the link below or send me an email to cuadros92@gmail.com . . https://linktr.ee/storystormaker . . . #artists #painters #956 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cuadroscorner/support
June 2024 Solicitations (Remaining) Comic Reviews: DC Ape-Ril Special by John Layman, Karl Mostert, David Baron; Joshua Hale Fialkov, Phil Hester, Eric Gapstur, Dee Cunniffe; Gene Luen Yang, Bernand Chang, Marcelo Maiolov Marvel Star Wars: Jango Fett 1 by Ethan Sacks, Luke Ross, Nolan Woodard Star Wars Visions: Takashi Okazaki 1 by Takashi Okazaki, Aki Yanagi Web of Spider-Man 1 by Zeb Wells, John Romita Jr., Scott Hanna, Marcio Menyz; Cody Ziglar, Eleonara Carlini, Arthur Hesli; Steve Foxe, Ig Guara, Arif Prianto; Zeb Wells, Ed McGuinness, Mark Farmer, Marcio Menyz; Stephanie Phillips, Eric Gapstur, Matt Milla; Steve Foxe, Greg Land, Jay Leisten, Frank D'Armata; Greg Weisman, Joey Vasquez, Edgar Delgado; Steve Foxe, Greg Land, Jay Leisten, Frank D'Armata; Alex Segura, Salvador Larroca, Guru eFX X-Men Forever 1 by Kieron Gillen, Luca Maresca, Federico Blee Marvel Unlimited It's Jeff 35 by Kelly Thompson, GuriHiru Dark Horse Dawnrunner 1 by Ram V, Evan Cagle, Dave Stewart Image Bone Orchard Mythos: Tenement 10 by Jeff Lemire, Andrea Sorrentino, Dave Stewart Boom Dune: House Corrino 1 by Kevin J. Anderson, Brian Herbert, Simone Ragazzoni, Dan Jackson Man's Best 1 by Pornsak Pichetshote, Jesse Lonergan IDW My Little Pony: Mane Event by Robin Easter, Shauna Grant, Stephanie Cooke, Abigail Bulmer, Heather Breckel, Jack Lawrence TMNT: Untold Destiny of the Foot Clan 1 by Erik Burnham, Mateus Santolouco, Marco Lesko Oni NacelleVerse 0 by Melissa Flores, Diogenes Neves, Francis Portela, Rahmat Handoko Valiant Bloodshot Unleashed: Reloaded 1 by Deniz Camp, Al Barrionuevo, Exequiel Fernandez Roel ComiXology Tormented 1 by Chuck Austen, Pat Olliffe, Lee Loughridge Archie Chilling Adventures Presents Pop's Chocklit Shoppe of Horrors: Fresh Meat by OGNs Flying Ship Vol 2 by Jem Milton Travis Daventhorpe Vol 2: Powers Up by Wes Molebash Taka by Ryan Jampole Star-Crossed by Jerry Frissen, Roberto Zaghi Great Puptective by Alina Tysoe Next Stop by Debbie Fong Additional Reviews: X-Men '97, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, Dahmer News: Joe Casey relaunching Johnny Quest for Dynamite, Cat in the Hat casting, Omninews, Sims movie, Disney honoring Steve Ditko, Teen Titans/Young Justice relaunch rumors, Spider-Verse short, Moffat returns to Who Trailers: Acolyte, KAOS, Alien Romulus, Harold and the Purple Crayon, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, Doctor Who, Penguin Comics Countdown (20 Mar 2024): 1. Wonder Woman 7 by Tom King, Guillem March, Arif Prianto 2. Bone Orchard Mythos: Tenement 10 by Jeff Lemire, Andrea Sorrentino, Dave Stewart 3. Man's Best 1 by Pornsak Pichetshote, Jesse Lonergan 4. Superman 12 by Joshua Williamson, Norm Rapmund, David Baldeon, Rex Lokus 5. Fantastic Four 18 by Ryan North, Carlos Gomez, Jesus Aburtov 6. Midlife 5 by Brian Buccellato, Stefano Simeone 7. Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees 4 by Patrick Horvath 8. Resurrection of Magneto 3 by Al Ewing, Luciano Vecchio, David Curiel 9. Displaced 2 by Ed Brisson, Luca Casalanguida, Dee Cunniffe 10. Duck and Cover 3 by Scott Snyder, Rafael Albuquerque
Yeah, I mean it's not too much of a stretch that automakers are selling your data and snitching on speeding to your insurer, but sending a report to Lin Manuel Miranda about how off key I sing “It's Quiet Uptown” is a bridge too far. This week: EV surprises, NAS surprises, with a dash of regulatory scrutiny surprises via one Merrick Garland.
David & Eric welcome on one of the great catchers in Braves history, Brian McCann, who appeared in seven All Star games and won six Silver Slugger Awards. They begin with his thoughts on how Atlanta stacks up with Los Angeles and Philadelphia in the National League pecking order. This leads to Brian's observations on the ill effects of the long layoff between the regular season and Division series as he recalls returning to the field after the All Star break. (10:00) McCann shares the best highlights of his career. He and Eric were teammates with the Braves from 2009-2013 and remember their fond collective memories from the clubhouse. Hear about his first big Postseason in his rookie season against an all time great pitcher. (29:45) Full discussion about the unforgettable evening when McCann and Carlos Gomez famously got into it in between third base and home plate in September of 2013. Brian explains what happened that night and why he has been unfairly tagged with the reputation as being a member of the "Fun Police". (43:00) "BMac" talks about the Braves loaded lineup and all the challenges that they present. This includes a conversation on just how special Ronald Acuña Jr. truly is. (50:00) The best player Brian McCann ever played with and an explanation as to why that is his choice. (57:30) Just how hard is it to face Chris Sale, especially as a left handed hitter? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We know it's been a while since Econ 201 but Jiminy Christmas are Hue bulbs the new Veblen good? What are these things made out of avocado toast? Come on. This week: dust covered Vision Pros, NACS snaccs, and a peppering of Spring Apple news.
After three weeks off since their last podcast, Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman are back with the latest episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, now on the Yahoo Sports network. So many exciting baseball things have happened in the last few weeks as spring training gets off the ground, and of course we have nowhere else to start but the pants.Yes, we need to lead off the show with the ongoing controversy around the new uniforms supplied to the MLB players by Nike and Fanatics. Players hate how they feel around their rear-ends, the lettering looks cheap and weird, and they may be see-through in the groin area. It's a real perfect storm of where baseball silly meets baseball business in the weirdest way possible.In transaction news, the Chicago Cubs signed OF Cody Bellinger this Saturday to a reported 3-year, $80 million dollar contract with opt-out clauses after each year. The guys explain what this means for Bellinger, the Cubs and for super-agent Scott Boras.In the second half of the show, Jake & Jordan discuss their myriad spring training visits from the past week, including stops at the Phillies, Orioles, Dodgers, Yankees, Red Sox, Twins, Braves & more. What's the deal with Bryce Harper wanting a contract extension? Is the circus around Shohei Ohtani's move to the Dodgers upstaging their other stars? How about Rafael Devers calling out the front office for Boston's lack of pitching depth?Wrapping up the show, the guys discuss two upcoming musical tour dates for former St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Adam Wainwright & Jake has an update on the scoop that former Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Carlos Gomez is training for the 2024 Olympics in cycling.[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2024 MLB season]2:45 - See-through pants controversy keeps on giving11:00 - Cody Bellinger's 3-year deal to stay in Chicago23:40 - Spring training visits to Phillies, Orioles, Dodgers, Yankees, Red Sox, Twins & more53:50 - Adam Wainwright's musical career takes off with two tour dates57:35 - Carlos Gomez, Olympic cyclist?
We didn't get a ballot but that ain't stopping us. A fruit company year in review. This week: hi Barbie, football (the non-Messi one), and a bit more on VR.
Comic Reviews: DC Batman 142 by Chip Zdarsky, Giuseppe Camuncoli, Andrea Sorrentino, Stefano Nesi, Alejandro Sanchez, Dave Stewart How to Lose a Guy Gardner in 10 Days by Kenny Porter, Nick Robles, Nick Filardi; Aaron Waltke, Ivan Shavrin; Danny Lore, Brandt & Stein; Marguerite Sauvage; Alex Galer, Derek Charm; Dennis Hopeless, Baldemar Rivas; Brendan Hay, M.L. Sanapo, Enrica Angiolini; George Mann, Leonardo Rodrigues, Joe Prado, Jonas Trindade, Hi-Fi Red Hood: The Hill 0 by Shawn Martinbrough, Tony Akins, Stefano Gaudiano, Paul Mounts Suicide Squad: Kill Arkham Asylum 1 by John Layman, Jesus Hervas, David Baron Marvel Star Wars: Mace Windu 1 by Marc Bernardin, Georges Jeanty, Dexter Vines, Andrew Dalhouse Ultimate Black Panther 1 by Bryan Hill, Stefano Caselli, David Curiel Wolverine: Madripoor Knights 1 by Chris Claremont, Edgar Salazar, Carlos Lopez Marvel Unlimited Alligator Loki 35 by Alyssa Wong, Robert Quinn Image One Hand 1 by Ram V, Laurence Campbell, Lee Loughridge Saucer Country: The Finale by Paul Cornell, Ryan Kelly Boom Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Return 1 by Amy Jo Johnson, Matt Hotson, Nico Leon, Francesco Segala, Gloria Martinelli IDW Godzilla Valentine's Day Special 1 by Zoe Tunnell, Sebastian Piriz, Rebecca Nalty Dynamite ThunderCats 1 by Declan Shalvey, Drew Moss, Chiara Di Francia, Martina Pignedoli Valiant/Alien Books A Very Valiantine's Special by Will Pfeifer, Buddy Scalera, Lysa Hawkins, Ryan Cady, Aj Ampadu, Andres Ponce, Emiliano Urdinola, Emilano Correa AWA U and I 1 by J. Michael Straczynski, Mike Choi ComiXology She's Running on Fumes 1 by Dennis Hopeless, Tyler Jenkins, Hilary Jenkins Scout Von Bach 1 by Owen Hammer, Mariano Navarro OGNs Fall Through by Nate Powell Wildful by Kengo Kurimoto Art Club by Rashad Doucet Arden High: Twelfth Grade Night by Molly Horton Booth, Stephanie Kate Strohm, Jamie Green Arden High: King Cheer by Molly Horton Booth, Stephanie Kate Strohm, Jamie Green Additional Reviews: A Study in Scarlet, Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur on Disney+, Lisa Frankenstein, All the Marvels News: Ain't No Grave – a new series from Skottie Young and Jorge Corona, next Michelinie Venom mini announced, Disney news (Moana sequel, massive video-game investment, release dates for Frozen, Zootopia, Toy Story), Ennis returning to Punisher for “Get Fury”, Coyote vs. Acme cancelled again, Doom one-shot from Hickman and Sandford Greene Trailers: Quiet Place Day One, Knuckles Comics Countdown (06 Feb 2024): 1. Love Everlasting 10 by Tom King, Elsa Charretier, Matt Hollingsworth 2. Birds of Prey 6 by Kelly Thompson, Leonardo Romero, Jordie Bellaire 3. Ultimate Black Panther 1 by Bryan Hill, Stefano Caselli, David Curiel 4. Batman 142 by Chip Zdarsky, Giuseppe Camuncoli, Andrea Sorrentino, Stefano Nesi, Alejandro Sanchez, Dave Stewart 5. Fantastic Four 17 by Ryan North, Carlos Gomez, Jesus Aburtov 6. Poison Ivy 19 by G. Willow Wilson, Marcio Takara, Arif Prianto 7. Doctor Strange 12 by Jed MacKay, Danilo Beyruth, K.J. Diaz 8. Rogue Sun 18 by Ryan Parrott, Abel, Natalia Marques 9. Nice Jewish Boys 4 by Neil Kleid, John Broglia, Ellie Wright 10. Dark Spaces: Dungeon 3 by Scott Snyder, Hayden Sherman, Patricio Delpeche 11. Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees 3 by Patrick Horvath
New ways to watch sports from ESPN, Fox, and Warner Brothers. All without a cable subscription. Sports from ESPN. FOX. Warner Brothers. Are you getting it? These are not three separate services. This is one device, and we're calling it - Iger-ulu. This week: plug in hybrids, old movies, and an update on the Chicago food scene.
Chris Nolan gets roasted by Peloton instructors and Soulcycle stays mum on Wes Anderson making the same movie over and over again for three decades. Hmm. This week: cursed airports, (smart) locks of love, and area Cinnabon manager snubbed for the umpteenth time by the Emmys.
Did each engineer designing the Chevy Blazer EV's infotainment software spend at least 10,000 hours on it before it went into production? Okay, this is a very funny joke about Malcolm Gladwell, trust me. This week: Taylor's concert film, Ryan's sports dilemma, and Tim's headset.
Visit our Patreon page to see the various tiers you sign up for today to get in on the ground floor of AIPT Patreon. We hope to see you chatting with us on our Discord soon!NEWSMarvel Comics October 2023 solicitations are here!The death of Moon Knight begins October 18thNew Marvel variant cover program showcases heroes reading top comicsWerewolf Captain America returns in 'Capwolf & the Howling Commandos' #1Marvel scares up 'Crypt of Shadows' #1 anthology for HalloweenNew 'Spine-Tingling Spider-Man' #1 launching October 18th'Superior Spider-Man Returns' October 11th'Rom: The Original Years Omnibus Volume 2' coming June 2024'Hack/Slash: Back to School' gets Zoe Thorogood headliningNew details emerge for DSTLRY series 'Gone' by JockArmy of Darkness sequel in the worksA supernatural road war ignites in 'Drive Like Hell' #1Dynamite reveals 'Savage Red Sonja' coming November 2023Digital Comics Platform GlobalComix Announces $6.5M Investment Led By Point72 VenturesMike Mignola and Duncan Fegredo's 'Giant Robot Hellboy' coming October 2023Our Top Books of the WeekDave:A Vicious Circle #2 (Lee Bermejo, Mattson Tomlin)Tales of Titans #1 (Shannon Hale, Dean Hale, Javier Rodriguez)Nathan:Hawkgirl #1 (Jadzia Axelrod, Amancay Nahuelpan)Blade #1 (Bryan Hill, Elena Casagrande)Standout KAPOW moment of the week:Nathan - Harley Quinn: Black, White, and Redder #1 (Chip Zdarsky, Kevin Maguire)Dave - Knight Terrors: Superman #1 (Tom Reilly, Josh Williamson)TOP BOOKS FOR NEXT WEEKDave: Hellfire Gala 2023 (Gerry Duggan, Adam Kubert, Luciano Vecchio, Matteo Lolli, Russell Dauterman, Javier Pina, R.B. Silva, Joshua Cassara, Kris Anka, Pepe Larraz)Nathan: Superman: The Last Days of Lex Luthor #1 (Mark Waid, Bryan Hitch)JUDGING BY THE COVER JR.Dave: Storm #3 (Russell Dauterman Hellfire Gala Cover)Nathan: Knight Terrors: Angel Breaker #1 (Chuma Hill)Segment: SDCC extravaganza! Eisner Award 2023 winners!Trick-bowling and vigilantism combine in ‘The Holy Roller'DC Comics news:Gotham Panel (Thursday) – Embargoed until 1:45pmPTBatman: Outlaw (new story arc in Detective Comics)Outsiders (new series by Collin Kelly and Jackson Lanzing)(AIPT link) Jim Lee & Friends panel (Friday) – Embargoed until 7:00pmPTBeast World (Tom Taylor, Ivan Reis, Travis Moore)Superman 30th Anniversary SpecialJustice League vs. Godzilla vs. King Kong (AIPT link) World of Metropolis (Saturday) – Embargoed until 1:30pmPTKneel Before Zod (Joe Casey) Return of Joe Casey to DC Dawn of DC Knight Terrors (Saturday) – Embargoed until 2:45pmPTAmazons Attack (new Josie Campbell series following Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman, not spinning out of)Marvel Comics news:Designing the X-Men: A This Week in Marvel Special Event (Thursday, 7/20, 4:00-5:00pm PT)X-Men Blue: Origins #1 New One-Shot, On Sale November 2023 Written by Si Spurrier, Art by Wilton Santos, Cover by Francis Manapul Asset: Main Cover THE DEFINITIVE NIGHTCRAWLER ORIGIN STORY! This is the one you can't miss, True Believer! You think you know how the beloved blue devil came into this troubled world? You think you know the tale of his mendacious mamma Mystique? You don't! Mother and son reunite in a mold-shattering tale that exposes secrets held for decades and redefines both characters forever. A collector's item in the making. "Who Are The New X-Men?” Teaser X-Men #29 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale December 2023 Written by Gerry Duggan, Art by Joshua Cassara, Cover by Joshua Cassara ENTER: DOOM'S X-MEN! With the X-Men at their lowest point, yet another group has moved to claim their title…this one a band of patriotic Latverian mutants loyal only to the great and terrible Doctor Doom! Beloved and celebrated by the nation they are bound to protect, this is one squad of X-Men for whom the Fall of X has given way to glorious summer. https://aiptcomics.com/2023/07/20/sdcc-2023-designing-the-x-men-panel/RETAILER PANEL (Friday, 7/21, 12:00-2:30pm PT)Superior Spider-Man #1 New Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Dan Slott, Art by Mark Bagley, Cover by Mark Bagley A Superior Reckoning! SPIDER-MAN faces a NEW VILLAIN from his SUPERIOR past. As she fries New York with all the power of a living star, DOC OCK makes a life-changing discovery! MARK BAGLEY and DAN SLOTT continue their Spider-Man run with this 10th-ANNIVERSARY celebration of everything that made Spider-Man Superior. (AIPT article)Wolverine #37 Variant Cover by Greg Capullo Variant Cover for Upcoming Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale September 2023 Art hereDeadpool: Seven Slaughters #1 New One-Shot, On Sale November 2023 Written by Rob Liefeld, Cullen Bunn, Cody Ziglar, Marc Guggenheim, Justina Ireland and Gail Simone; Art by Rob Liefeld, Greg Land, Whilce Portacio, David Baldeon and Phillip Sevy; Cover by Greg Capullo Seven kills in seven days! Welcome to a week in the life of Wade Wilson, the best mercenary Marvel's ever had (just ask him)! From facing off with rival killers to top secret assassinations, DEADPOOL has a lot of work to do in this blood-soaked oversized issue full of fan-favorite creators past and future!https://aiptcomics.com/2023/07/21/marvel-teases-two-new-rob-liefeld-projects-at-sdcc-2023/Daredevil: Black Armor #1 New Limited Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by D.G. Chichester, Art by Netho Diaz, Cover by Mark Bagley BACK IN BLACK! D.G. Chichester returns to Hell's Kitchen to spin an all-new DAREDEVIL story set during his landmark run with the character! Joined now by rising star NETHO DIAZ with covers by industry legend MARK BAGLEY, this is one DAREDEVIL series you can't afford to miss! Peach Momoko's Demon Saga: Demon Days Black & White Edition New Collection, On Sale 2024 Written by Peach Momoko, Art by Peach Momoko, Cover by Peach Momoko Artist phenom Peach Momoko's acclaimed reimagining of the Marvel Universe - presented in stunning black and white! A wandering swordswoman with a psychic blade arrives at a village targeted by demons. One is black-and-white with a horrifying tongue, and another may be the strongest demon there is! Mariko Yashida hears mysterious voices and has strange dreams that feel real. Maybe her redheaded maid who dresses all in black might know more than she lets on? But as Mariko embarks on a wondrous journey, deadly creatures lurk in the woods — including a mysterious blue-skinned woman and a giant with super-strength and claws! Enter a creative and mysterious new world of demons, monsters, mutants and magic! COLLECTING: Demon Days: X-Men (2021) 1, Demon Days: Mariko (2021) 1, Demon Days: Cursed Web (2021) 1, Demon Days: Rising Storm (2021) 1, Demon Days: Blood Feud (2022) 1, King in Black 4 (Demon Days Prelude), Elektra: Black, White & Blood (2021) 4 (Demon Days story) Howard the Duck #1 New One-Shot, On Sale November 2023 Written by Chip Zdarsky, Daniel Kibblesmith, Merritt K & More; Art by Joe Quinones, Annie Wu & More; Cover by Ed McGuinness CHIP ZDARSKY, JOE QUINONES & FRIENDS HELP HOWARD CELEBRATE HIS 50TH ANNIVERSARY IN THIS ALL-NEW ONE-SHOT! Meet Howard. He's a hard-boiled P.I. with problems by the duckload. But a cosmic, all-seeing friend(?) known as the Peeper(!) is giving him a chance to see what his life COULD be! The joys he COULD have! All the ways his life COULD suck way less than it does now! In other words: “Whaugh If?” Nightmare Variant Covers by Peach Momoko New Variant Cover Program, On Sale December 2023 Art by Peach Momoko Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars: Battleworld #1 New Limited Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Tom Defalco, Art by Pat Olliffe, Cover by Giuseppe Camuncoli AFTER NEARLY FORTY YEARS, THE MYSTERIES OF THE SECRET WARS DEEPEN! Get ready for an ALL-NEW cataclysmic battle from when SPIDER-MAN first got his ALIEN COSTUME, when a mysterious being called the BEYONDER assembled super heroes and villains from Earth to do battle on a patchwork planet – yes, witness now an untold adventure set during the original SECRET WARS! MARVEL SUPER HEROES SECRET WARS set the standard for Marvel Comics events (as well as action figures and the characters existing on the forefront of pop culture), and this new story will at last reveal some secret connections and MISSING CHARACTERS going back to the 1984 original series, just in time for its 40th Anniversary! What SECRET TEST are the BEYONDERS conducting…and how will SPIDER-MAN, the HUMAN TORCH and the whole cast determine the fate of the universe? (PLUS: Surprise super-villain appearances inside!) MARVEL: Heroes, Hulks and Super-Soldiers (Friday, 7/21, 3:00-4:00pm PT)Punisher #1 (New Character) New Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by David Pepose; Art by Dave Wachter; Cover by Rod Reis Is this the return of Frank Castle—or the start of something else?Frank Castle has disappeared, but evil will always need to be punished. With all-new threats rising to claim innocent victims, criminals will need to beware of a dangerous vigilante hunting them from the shadows. Who is the new Punisher? What put him on his path of vengeance? And when the smoke clears, will he even make it out alive? (AIPT article) Cover & Trailer RevealsCaptain America #1 Previously Announced Upcoming Ongoing Series, On Sale September 2023 Written by J. Michael Straczynski, Art by Jesus Saiz, Cover by Jesus Saiz (AIPT Article) Captain America #3 New Issue of Upcoming Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by J. Michael Straczynski, Art by Jesus Saiz, Cover by Jesus Saiz Misty Knight has uncovered a string of murders with seemingly supernatural origins – and Captain America's been marked as the next target. Something about the crime scene strikes Steve as familiar…but can he find the connection between the murders and his past before this mysterious new threat finds him? Incredible Hulk #6 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Art by Nic Klein, Cover by Nic Klein ATTACK OF THE ZOMBIE GHOST RIDER! Charlie reminds Bruce that he's more than a man on the run – he's an Avenger, a hero. And heroes help people. When their travels lead them to a Texas town under attack by dreaded monstrosities known as war devils, it's time for the Hulk to step in... but he rouses an undead Spirit of Vengeance from his eternal slumber, summoning a 100-year-old Ghost Rider to ride down the Hulk! (AIPT article) Moon Knight: City of the Dead #5 New Issue of Limited Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by David Pepose, Art by Marcelo Ferreira, Cover by Rod Reis Having fulfilled his sinister ritual, the JACKAL KNIGHT's ultimate ascendance is at hand – by conquering the land of the living with the endless hordes of the City of the Dead! Outnumbered and overwhelmed, can Moon Knight dig deep within himself to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat? With all the blood on his hands, can a man like Marc Spector find redemption even at the end of the world? And what might the future hold for the Scarlet Scarab? Don't miss the thrilling conclusion of Moon Knight's most death-defying adventure yet! Rob Liefeld projectsMARVEL: Next Big Thing (Saturday, 7/22, 3:00-4:00pm PT)Timeless #1 2023 New One-Shot, On Sale December 2023 Written by Collin Kelly & Jackson Lanzing, Art by Juann Cabal, Cover by Kael Ngu BEHOLD THE FUTURE OF THE MARVEL UNIVERSE - FEATURING THE DEBUT OF TWO NEW MARVEL ICONS! In a devastating future borne from the choices of today, all of time and space is threatened by the ascension of an ancient evil. The MOON KNIGHT UNENDING has risen - a nightmare borne of StarkTech, the Eternal Machine, and the God of the Moon - and now all of Earth bows before his overwhelming power! But one man stands against Khonshu's coming tide of chaos: POWER MAN, the Marvel Universe's final living superhero. But who is Power Man - and how did he come to wield the unstable powers of the Sentry, the Hulk, and the Iron Fist? What dark, deeply personal conflict underpins this mind bending apocalypse? And at the end of the line, can the Marvel Universe ever truly be saved? Featuring shocking glimpses into the next year of Marvel stories! Ms. Marvel: The New Mutant Previously Announced New Limited Series, On Sale August 2023 Written by Iman Vellani & Sabir Pirzada, Art by Carlos Gomez, Cover by Sara Pichelli KAMALA KHAN IS BACK…AND SHE'S AN X-MAN! That's right - the good news is that fresh off her world-saving death, Kamala has been brought back via Krakoan Resurrection Technology! What a way to learn she's a mutant! The bad news is her debut at the Hellfire Gala didn't go exactly as planned, and now all of mutantkind are being hunted worldwide! Into this world of hate and fear, Kamala has a secret mission to pull off for the X-Men, all the while struggling to acclimate to this new part of her identity! PLUS: This huge new chapter of Kamala's story is being co-written by the MCU's own Kamala, Iman Vellani, and Sabir Pirzada of both DARK WEB: MS. MARVEL and her Disney+ series! Amazing Spider-Man: Gang War (Crossover)New Crossover, On Sale November 2023 Amazing Spider-Man Gang War: First Strike #1 New One-Shot, On Sale November 2023 Written by Zeb Wells, Art by Joey Vasquez, Cover by John Romita Jr. PRELUDE TO GANG WAR! The super-crime landscape of New York has been on edge. This issue, they jump over that edge. What incites the war?! Who hired Shotgun and took out Tombstone? What, if anything, can Spider-Man do about it? Everything you need to know before GANG WAR officially kicks off next month is HERE. Luke Cage: Gang War #1 New Limited Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Rodney Barnes, Art by Ramon F. Bachs, Cover by Caanan White GANG WAR: FIRST STRIKE! In the wake of the Anti-Vigilante Act, Luke has been trying to save the city from behind a desk. But a meeting with old friend DANNY RAND reminds him of the good old days when problems could be punched in order to solve them. As New York descends into a GANG WAR, Luke must use every power he has to protect the innocent and save his city! Spider-Woman #1 New Limited Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Steve Foxe, Art by Carola Borelli, Cover by Leinil Francis Yu GANG WAR: FIRST STRIKE! The Web of Destiny restored Spider-Woman's life, but even CAPTAIN MARVEL and MADAME WEB can tell something's changed. Now SPIDER-MAN wants to recruit her for a new team because VIPER has engineered a deadly union between HYDRA and DIAMONDBACK that's about to tear the city apart, bringing forth a new foe powerful enough to destroy the city while burning Spider-Woman's world to the ground. DON'T MISS OUT on this action-packed premiere that features CAPTAIN MARVEL, SPIDER-MAN, VIPER and DIAMONDBACK…and introduces a terrifying new force of evil in SPIDER-WOMAN's world! Miles Morales: Spider-Man #12 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Cody Ziglar, Art by Partha Pratim, Cover by Federico Vicentini GANG WAR: FIRST STRIKE! SPIDER-MAN is on the hunt to find a terrifying new foe before they sink their fangs into Miles' best friends. Only the vampire hunter BLADE and his daughter, BLOODLINE, may know the secret of the villain's past – but are the vampire hunters keeping secrets of their own? And what is Hobgoblin secretly scheming while Spidey is completely overwhelmed? Last issue before GANG WAR! Amazing Spider-Man #37 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Zeb Wells, Art by Ed McGuinness, Cover by Ed McGuinness GANG WAR: FIRST STRIKE! Rek-Rap returns! Spider-Man's fun-house reflection might just be the thing to help the wall-crawler out of the darkness he can't seem to shake. Well, Rek-Rap MIGHT help if he weren't targeted by the scariest new Spidey-Villain in decades! GANG WAR IS COMING! Amazing Spider-Man #38 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale November 2023 Written by Zeb Wells, Art by Ed McGuinness, Cover by Ed McGuinness GANG WAR: FIRST STRIKE! Can Spider-Man and Rek-Rap both survive the repulsive REPO?! THE LAST ISSUE BEFORE GANG WAR! Amazing Spider-Man #39 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale December 2023 Written by Zeb Wells, Art by John Romita Jr., Cover by John Romita Jr. GANG WAR STARTS HERE! Super-crime is running rampant, and Spider-Man can't solve just one problem at a time. So Spidey builds a team to take down ALL the super-criminals of NYC in 48 hours. Good luck, Spidey. Miles Morales: Spider-Man #13 New Issue of Ongoing Series, On Sale December 2023 Written by Cody Ziglar, Art by Federico Vicentini, Cover by Federico Vicentini AMAZING TEAM-UP AS THE GANG WAR RAGES ON!!! New York is under siege as super villains and criminal gangs violently carve the city up like pie. Miles Morales' job? Save all of Brooklyn from destruction! But there are too many fires for the Spider-Man to put out on their own. The most unlikely super-allies will rise on BOTH sides. And while Miles has his hands full fighting criminals and escaping Scorpion and the anti-super Cape Killers taskforce, HOBGOBLIN is making his big move!!! Deadly Hands of Kung Fu: Gang War #1 New Limited Series, On Sale December 2023 Written by Greg Pak, Art by TBD, Cover by TBD
Brewers great Carlos Gomez walked LOUDLY so today's players can run with authentic entertaining emotion on the diamond. "Go-Go" names the star in today's game who is most fun to watch.The 2-time All Star tells Scott Braun and Erik Kratz why he got up for playing the Yankees, reveals the background story on the nixed Wilmer Flores trade & spills all of the juicy soundbites from his famous exchange with Brian McCann.Tap here to watch all Legends Territory episodes and clips on Foul Territory's Youtube channel.Follow @MLBPAA on Twitter and IG or go to baseballalumni.com for more info on your favorite former players!
Brewers great Carlos Gomez walked LOUDLY so today's players can run with authentic entertaining emotion on the diamond. "Go-Go" names the star in today's game who is most fun to watch. The 2-time All Star tells Scott Braun and Erik Kratz why he got up for playing the Yankees, reveals the background story on the nixed Wilmer Flores trade & spills all of the juicy soundbites from his famous exchange with Brian McCann. Tap here to watch all Legends Territory episodes and clips on Foul Territory's Youtube channel. Follow @MLBPAA on Twitter and IG or go to baseballalumni.com for more info on your favorite former players! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Glass half empty: The Brew Crew are reeling after the miserable sweep against the A's. Glass half full: the Corbin Burnes/Victor Caratini tandem is blossoming. Scott and LoCain catch you up on the latest heat surrounding the Crew. Brew Crew basher Rowdy Tellez jumps on with a loud shirt and louder disses for everyone in sight: his teammates don't give him enough sh**, playing in the Bay Area is no bueno, MLB's new overpriced fashion item is trash & LoCain is "cheap" lol. Also catch a bit of Brew Crew Wall of Honor member Carlos Gomez from his Legends Territory convo, including his love for Milwaukee & his passion that pissed off other players. That full "Go-Go" Gomez convo lives here Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Glass half empty: The Brew Crew are reeling after the miserable sweep against the A's. Glass half full: the Corbin Burnes/Victor Caratini tandem is blossoming. Scott and LoCain catch you up on the latest heat surrounding the Crew. Brew Crew basher Rowdy Tellez jumps on with a loud shirt and louder disses for everyone in sight: his teammates don't give him enough sh**, playing in the Bay Area is no bueno, MLB's new overpriced fashion item is trash & LoCain is "cheap" lol.Also catch a bit of Brew Crew Wall of Honor member Carlos Gomez from his Legends Territory convo, including his love for Milwaukee & his passion that pissed off other players. That full "Go-Go" Gomez convo lives here
Brewers great Carlos Gomez walked LOUDLY so today's players can run with authentic entertaining emotion on the diamond. "Go-Go" names the star in today's game who is most fun to watch.The 2-time All Star tells Scott Braun and Erik Kratz why he got up for playing the Yankees, reveals the background story on the nixed Wilmer Flores trade & spills all of the juicy soundbites from his famous exchange with Brian McCann.Tap here to watch all Legends Territory episodes and clips on Foul Territory's Youtube channel.Follow @MLBPAA on Twitter and IG or go to baseballalumni.com for more info on your favorite former players!
Brewers great Carlos Gomez walked LOUDLY so today's players can run with authentic entertaining emotion on the diamond. "Go-Go" names the star in today's game who is most fun to watch. The 2-time All Star tells Scott Braun and Erik Kratz why he got up for playing the Yankees, reveals the background story on the nixed Wilmer Flores trade & spills all of the juicy soundbites from his famous exchange with Brian McCann. Tap here to watch all Legends Territory episodes and clips on Foul Territory's Youtube channel. Follow @MLBPAA on Twitter and IG or go to baseballalumni.com for more info on your favorite former players! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tune in as Michael Jamin talks with his good friend, actor Rick Negron who plays King George in Hamilton. Discover what he has to say about being the first Latino King George, doing his first show in his home country of Puerto Rico alongside Lin-Manuel Miranda who was acting as Hamilton, and his overall Hamilton touring and acting career experience.Show NotesInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rick_negron/?hl=enIMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0624508/?ref_=nmmi_mi_nmIBDB: https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-cast-staff/rick-negron-107348The Spokesman-Review: https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2022/apr/28/youll-be-back-in-playing-king-george-iii-in-hamilt/Michael's Online Screenwriting Course - https://michaeljamin.com/courseFree Screenwriting Lesson - https://michaeljamin.com/freeJoin My Watchlist - https://michaeljamin.com/watchlistAutomated Transcript:Rick Negron (00:00:00):That's still the case nowadays for a lot of young dancers and, and musical theater types. They go to New York and they take dance classes and they take voice lessons, and they take acting classes, and they get that picture and resume ready, and they go to open calls. And if you're talented and you're lucky sometimes you, you get an equity show, a, a union show from an open call. It's tough. And you have to, you have to hit that pavement. And sometimes, you know, getting to know, being in the right place at the right time. I, I, I was mentioning to you before that I, I booked this H B O commercial and I met more a dancer on that show who said, Hey, you'd be right for the show. And one of the guys is leaving the show and they're having auditions at the theater, and you should go. And that's how I got my first Broadway show.Michael Jamin (00:00:50):You're listening to Screenwriters. Need to hear this with Michael Jamin.Michael Jamin (00:00:58):Hey everyone, it's Michael Jamin. Welcome to Screenwriters. Need to hear this. If you are an aspiring theatrical actor, I got a present for you and we're gonna unwrap him right now. And his name is Rick Negron. And he's been my buddy for many years. He's at my wedding. We go back, Rick. Now Rick is most famous for probably, he's done a ton of stuff though, but he's probably most famous for playing the role of king George in the touring company of Hamilton, which he's been doing for four years. But he's done a ton of Broadway stuff. We're gonna talk about him. He's also done voices. I didn't know this, but he was also he does vo he did some voices in Red Dead Redemption as well as grand Theft Auto, which I wanna know all about that as well. But mostly I wanna talk about his incredible theatrical acting career. Rick, thank you so much. Thank you so much for . ForRick Negron (00:01:47):What? Michael Jamin? I'm in the room. I'm, I'm in the room where it happens, man.Michael Jamin (00:01:52):, this is the room. This, what people don't realize is that I recorded some of this and I bone, I didn't, I didn't record, so, yeah. And this is, this is part two of our interview. I had a record over cuz I wasn't recording. StuffRick Negron (00:02:03):Happens. And you know what, Michael, you, you and I can talk till the cows come home. This is not a problem.Michael Jamin (00:02:09):This Rick's great guy, and he's gonna tell us all about. I, I, I had, so there's so much I wanted to get outta you, but first of all, what I, we were talking about is, you've been doing Hamilton, you've been King George and Hamilton, the first Latino King George, I might say, which is a big deal. And so yeah, you've been touring the country from city to city, and I kind of really wanted to talk to you about like, what is your, what is your day like when you go up on stage, you know, what are you doing before, what you're doing all before that, before you got on stage, because it's a, you've been done. How many performances have you said you're done? This,Rick Negron (00:02:44):I'm over 900 easily. I'm close to like nine 50. I, I, I don't count 'em, but every time the, the company management has like, oh, this is our 900th performance, I just kind of go, well, I've only missed maybe about between vacations and days that I've been sick. Maybe I've missed 30 at the most over a four year period. , that's, I've, I've done a lot of performancesMichael Jamin (00:03:11):And, and we were talking about this and your character, like I, I've, I hate to make you repeat it, but how do you get, like, how do you get psyched up before each show when you do that many shows? How are you, what's your process before you, you run on stage?Rick Negron (00:03:27):Well, this, this character is a real gift in the sense that it's beautifully written. Mm-Hmm. , it's just three songs. honestly, Uhhuh . I'm on stage for a little over 10 minutes, but it's so well written that if I just hook into the words of, of the songs, I got 'em. Uhhuh you. I, I, I can, I can hook my myself into that myself, into that character very easily, just with the words. But the other gift is that I have time to get ready. So when every, when the show, when we are at places and the show starts, that's when I get my wig on. Mm-Hmm. I still have 15 minutes to do some vocal warmups and get dressed. And are youMichael Jamin (00:04:12):To being like tea with lemon? What are you sit, what are you doing that day?Rick Negron (00:04:16):Nah, nah. I, I mean, I'm not a huge tea guy unless, unless I'm having some vocal distress. And then I do like a nice warm tea with honey and lemon if I'm, if, if my voice is a little wonky or my throat's a little sore. But the main thing for me for vocal capacity is sleep. If I get less than seven hours, my voice suffers. If I eat a lot of cheese and dairy, that's gonna be a lot of gunk on the vocal courts.Michael Jamin (00:04:45):But if you're nervous the nightRick Negron (00:04:46):BeforeMichael Jamin (00:04:47):Hmm. But if you're nervous, if you have, if you get stage nerves and you can't sleep the night before , right? I mean, no. Are you, are you beyond that?Rick Negron (00:04:55):Yeah, I'm beyond that. I mean, I've been in the business long enough that, that I, I get nervous. Uhhuh and God knows, I was nervous the first time I did the show in front of an audience in Puerto Rico of all places. Right. That's where we opened, right. With Lynn Manuel Miranda back in the role of Hamilton after being a away from it for a few years. That was a dream job because I'm from Puerto Rico and I literally went back homeMichael Jamin (00:05:23):To a heroRick Negron (00:05:23):Welcome star and one of the biggest shows on Broadway with Lynn Manuel Miranda and me playing the king. Yeah. I was born like four blocks away from the theater that we were at. It was just crazy sauce. So yes, I was incredibly nervous opening night. And there was my wife, my sister-in-law, in the audience you know, yes. Really nervous. But did I lose sleep the night before? No. I slept like a baby. No, really? My nerves don't really hit me until I start putting on that costumeMichael Jamin (00:05:51):. Really? Yeah. I see. I would imagine to me, I mean, I know it's a big deal to be star of a movie, but to me this to me seems like a bigger deal. What you, what you're doing in terms of, it seems like a you are lead in this giant freaking play that, I mean, one of the biggest plays, you know, of our, of our time on. Seriously. Yeah. Yeah. And you are these, you play this character who the minute he walks on stage, the place goes nuts cuz you hit a home run and then you walk out, you're the home run guy. Exactly. Bye. Hello. No. ExpectRick Negron (00:06:21):Bye. And by the way, no expectation. I'd literally walk on stage and the place goes bananas. And I haven't saidMichael Jamin (00:06:26):A word. Right. They love you before. You haven't even said anything. I mean, what a huge, I don't know. I just think this is like, I don't know, if I were an aspiring actors, that would be the part. I don't see how you, I don't know how, where you go from here, Rick Rick Negron (00:06:41):. It's all downhillMichael Jamin (00:06:43):.Rick Negron (00:06:45):No, I guess listen, it, the beauty of it is also that I've had this really long career mm-hmm. and, you know, I started out as a chorus boy on Broadway and then worked myself into understudy and then did some roles. And then finally at, at a ripe old age. I've gotten this great job and I've really, I'm at the point in my life where I'm really enjoying it. Yeah. I'm enjoying the process. I'm enjoying the traveling cuz I, I, I've toured some, but I haven't toured a lot. And this tour has been to some really great cities all on the west coast up and down the west coast. Yeah, the mountain west. In the winter I got some snowboarding in, in Salt Lake City, Denver. I,Michael Jamin (00:07:33):Where are you supposed to do that with you if you break your leg?Rick Negron (00:07:36):Yeah, I'm not supposed to do that. Can we delete that from the podcast? ? We can take that out. . It's in the past. I don't care. Okay. I, I stayed on the bunny slopes. I Right. I really took it easy. But then we spent summer in Canada, which was amazing. I was up in Calgary in the summer and went up to band for the first time in my life. And my wife, Leslie, who you know well, came up to visit and we stayed on Emerald Lake and I just spent two months in Hawaii. So this tour has just been amazing. Well, it started out in Puerto Rico, as I said, right. For a month with Manuel Miranda. And then we went to San Francisco and sat for a, a year in San Francisco. So I got to live in San Francisco Right. For a year and experienced that incredible city until the pandemic. And then we shut down for a year and four months before we started up again.Michael Jamin (00:08:27):And then, and then So how did you start? We, how did you start? Like, you know, take me back. I know you, I know you were, take me back to when you were a child. Did you, I mean, this is, did you dream of being a Broadway star like this? Like, what happened? Who, who dreams of that? Like who, how, I mean, you all dream of that, but who achieves it, I guess?Rick Negron (00:08:46):Well, a lot of people do. A lot of people do. And, and, and not everybody has the path that I had, but some of us get bitten by the bug early on. And I got bitten by the bug when I was 10. Right. And my mom was the drama teacher at school. And I guess I blame her for everything. But this mustMichael Jamin (00:09:06):Be the be like, you must be the, the crowning achievement in her, in her in her life.Rick Negron (00:09:12):Yeah. She's, but I did, she's pretty proud. And I have ano another sister who also went in into theater and and so the whole family kind of w it was the family thing we all sang. Right. we all did mu mu musicals in the local community theater and children's theater. So it was a family thing for us growing up. But I'm the one that sort of got bitten hard. And then I got involved, like at 14 mm-hmm. a choreographer. I was doing a, a mu a children's theater show, said, Hey, you've got some talent as a dancer. Come take, I'll give you a scholarship at my little dance school. And so after school at 14, I would go take ballet, jazz, tap and acrobatics after school with Susan Cable, who luckily was a great dance teacher. She had been a, a chorus person on Broadway.(00:10:05):Wow. And, and, and that's what, how I started in my dance career. And then it kind of took off. And by the time I got to college I thought I was gonna be a, a concert dancer. I was in college, I was sort of groomed to, to, to possibly go into the Paul Taylor Dance company. And I actually was not on scholarship. I was a intern with a Paul Taylor dance company for a while until I realized I'm making no money. I'm working super hard and I've always wanted to be on Broadway. That was my realMichael Jamin (00:10:42):Dream. So those people don't interchange those concert dancers. Don't, they don't.Rick Negron (00:10:46):Some do it. Usually the concert dancers, if they can sing.Michael Jamin (00:10:52):Right.Rick Negron (00:10:54):Will, will sort of move into the musical theater world and sometimes move back into the concert dance world. One of the great concert dancers of all time who I met when he was super young, Desmond Richardson mm-hmm. he was a lead dancer with the Alban AI company for many, many, many years. I mean a God in the dance world. And now he owns his own owns, he runs his own dance company, complexions. And he's a great choreographer. And he was in the bad video with me back in the day with Michael Jackson. Right.Michael Jamin (00:11:30):So Rick was in the, I should say for the, I don't wanna gloss over this. Rick. Rick was in the a dance for, in the Michael Jackson's bad video directed by Martin Scorsese. Yeah. Was Quincy Jones produced?Rick Negron (00:11:41):Yeah, 1985. I was, I was a chorus dancer at the time. I was in I was doing my second Broadway show. The mystery of Evan, Dr. My dance captain was Rob Marshall. went on to direct Chicago, the movie and many other movies since then. And, and while I was doing the show, there was this audition for the bad video and yeah, it was, it was really surreal. I took vacation from, from the Broadway show to do the video and, and, and got to meet Michael who was really sort of like, it was two people in that body. I mean, he was super shy and, and sort of very reserved, but the minute the cameras went on it, he was, he became somebody else. Right. And he was a perfectionist. 25 takes sometimes e every setup. And Scorsese was famous for just burning through film. Easy 20 Takes the video was supposed to shoot for two weeks, and I think it went for four. And this is a music video. It was the first SAG music video at the time, by the way.Michael Jamin (00:12:44):Really?Rick Negron (00:12:45):Anyway, Desmond Richardson was a young dancer at the time. There were a lot of young New York dancers in, in that show. And he famously went into the Avid Ailey company, but then he also worked on Fosse the Musical. And he also worked on Chicago. The, the movie with me. I, I got to work on Chicago, the movie cuz I had this great relationship with Rob Marshall and, and I was invited to audition. I didn't get, the dancers don't usually just get the job. You still have to come in and audition. Right. But even though, you know, the people involved it just is the way it is. And, and there was, and, and Desmond and, and I, we bump into each other all the time and we have so many memories. You know, going back 20, what is that, 85? 1985 was the bad video.(00:13:35):And I, I still bump into 'em. I I've been into 'em at the opening of the new USC school a few years ago. The School of Dance there at usc, the Kaufman School of Dance, I think it's called. But anyway yeah, people go in in from the dance world into musical theater and they go back and forth. Not a lot. Actually. We have one member of our, our of our of our Hamilton company, Andrew who was a modern dancer in the dance world and then moved into musical theater. And,Michael Jamin (00:14:04):But you were telling me how, and this is kind of important cause people are gonna be like, well, how do I break in? And you were, I mean, what, as you were explaining, it's like, it's basically you had this, you were just, you were in the circle, you were just there, and then things le one thing leads to enough simply because you put yourself there. Right. So how did you, what was your first break? How did you get that? I mean,Rick Negron (00:14:24):Every, everybody, everybody has a, a different story about first breaks. And when I was starting out, it was really different. Things have changed, you know, in all these years. Now, if you go to the right school, you can get into the right you know casting director workshop. And they see, oh, really? You, and, and maybe you get an agent out of that workshop and, and you know, it's, it, when I started out it, that wasn't the case when I started out. You go to New York, you start taking dance class at all the big dance studios where all the other Broadway dancers are taking dance class mm-hmm. . And then you pick up Backstage. Mm-Hmm. newspaper, and you go to the open equity calls for every show. I remember my first open equity call was for cats, the national tour, right after Cats had opened on Broadway.(00:15:14):And I, I had four callbacks. I got really close to booking cats, but I didn't. And and I just kept going to open calls. And that's still the case nowadays for a lot of young dancers and, and musical theater types. They go to New York and they take dance classes and they take voice lessons and they take acting classes and they get that picture and resume ready and they go to open calls. And if you're talented and you're lucky sometimes you, you get an equity show, a a union show from an open call. It's tough. And you have to, you have to hit that pavement. And sometimes, you know, getting to know, being in the right place at the right time. I, I, I was mentioning to you before that I, I booked this H B O commercial and I met one, a dancer on that show who said, Hey, you'd be right for the show. And one of the guys is leaving the show and they're having auditions at the theater and you should go. And that's how I got my first Broadway show by somebody suggesting that I go audition and I showed up at the theater and auditioned. And that night I got the job. And that's how I got my first Broadway show. The moreMichael Jamin (00:16:24):People, you know, the more you work, the more you hear andRick Negron (00:16:27):The more you Exactly. Yeah. You're in the mix. You have to in be in the mix and you have to network. And nowadays that involves, as you know social media and getting, getting followers and, and and, and putting out videos of yourself, singing and putting out videos of yourself, dancing and putting out videos of yourself, acting. I mean there's all that stuff that's going on now that wasn't going on when I started. But is, is is the new reality of how do you get into the business really. Okay. And, and when young, when young people ask me how, you know, how do I get started? And I say, well, in your hometown, get involved. Do the, do the school musicals, but get involved with the community theater. In any way you can. If, if you want to be an actor, but you know, there isn't a role for you do the work on the sets.(00:17:19):I worked on sets in community theater. Mm-Hmm. , I helped my mom. She, she was makeup artist too. And so I helped with makeup and I, I did lights. I, you know, I did all kinds of stuff just to be in the room. Right. Just to see other people work, to, to network, to meet people. And and I'm glad I did because I kind of know my way around all the different elements of theater. You know, I know what Alico is. I know, you know what all the different microphones are that they use in theater. And I, I always, I always befriend the crew. I think , as an actor, we can tend to be insular andMichael Jamin (00:17:57):Oh reallyRick Negron (00:17:58):Hang out with just the actors. I hang out with the crew. The crew knows what's up. Uhhuh , the crew knows where the good, the good bars are in town. They, you know, the crew is, and, and they're the ones that watch your back. When you're on the road.Michael Jamin (00:18:13):Now you were explaining to me the, and I didn't know the difference between, cuz you as the king, king, king George, you have two understudies, but there's also swing actors. Explain to me how that all works.Rick Negron (00:18:24):So in the show, you usually, you have the ensemble, which is what we used to call the chorus. Yeah. And then you have the leads. And in the ensemble you usually have two male swings and two female swings. So those individuals are not in the show nightly, but they literally understudy all the f the, the females understudy, all the females and the males understudy. All the males. And that's usually a case. They have two male and two female. In Hamilton, we have four female swings and four male swings. I think I'm right. Three or four. We have a lot. And that's because Hamilton is such a, a beast of a show. It's so hard. Physically. People get injured, people get tired.Michael Jamin (00:19:06):It's like being a professional athlete. It's no different.Rick Negron (00:19:08):Yeah. Yeah. And you're doing it eight times a week. And after a year it's repetitive motion for a lot of dancers. Oh. So I always tell those dancers, don't just do the show. Go, go and do yoga. Go do a dance class cuz you have to work your muscles a different way. Otherwise you're gonna get repetitive motion injuries. Wow. You know, like the same person that that screws on the, you know, back in the day when they screwed down the, the toothpaste cap every day that those muscles every day, all day long are gonna get messed up.Michael Jamin (00:19:37):But do they have like a trainer or doctor on set at all times?Rick Negron (00:19:40):We have a personal train PT, physical therapist right on tour with us. Most heavy dance shows will have that on tour. Because they need, they need the upkeep. The dancers, especially in this show work so hard. They, they need somebody to help them recover from injury. And, and just keep their bodies tuned up.Michael Jamin (00:20:04):And so let's say you get, you're in Hamilton, let's say you're, you're a swing or whatever, but, and then you're on tour, they what, give you a per diem? Or do they put you up in housing? How, like what is the, what is that really like to be?Rick Negron (00:20:15):So let me I'm, I'm gonna finish the whole understudy thing because Oh yeah. You have the swings and then you have the understudies, which are people in the chorus who understudy the leads. But then you also have standbys. And the standbys aren't in the show. Right. But they're backstage and they understudy anywhere between 2, 3, 4, 4 different characters. And so at the drop of the hat, they can say, Hey, you're on tonight for Burr, or you're on tonight for Hamilton. It, it can happen five minutes before the show. You can know way in advance cuz you know that character's going on vacation and stage management has told you, oh, you're gonna do the first five of, of, of the, of the vacation or the first four and somebody else is gonna do the other four. So you may know ahead of time and you can ask or tell your friends and family to come see you do that role. Right. Cause you know, ahead of time. But many times you, you find out last minute that somebody is sick or, or doesn't fe or hurt their knee or whatever. Or even in the middle of the show, sometimes somebody will twist an ankle and boom, we have a new bur in act two. It, it's, it's happened not a lot, but it's happened often enough that the understudies come in, warmed up and ready to go.Michael Jamin (00:21:26):But you explained to me even before every performance, even though you've done the same freaking songs for 900 times, you still mentally prepare yourself. You go through, you rehearse each, each song that you go through. So you walk yourself through it. But I can't even imagine if, like, if you, how do you prepare yourself for four different roles possibly. You know, like how do you do that? It's like you, it'sRick Negron (00:21:49):Crazy. Yeah. They, they, I know some of them will go over like difficult passages in the show because there's, there's moments in the show, like for Lafayette he's got in guns and ships. He's got some, some rap that are so fast. Yeah. That I, I know the understudies will go over those, what, what we called the, the, the moments when you can trip up. You go over those moments before you go on, but the rest of you can't go through the entire show. Right. Just pick and choose those moments where you can like go backstage and just go over your words and make sure they're, they're, you know, under your belt. I go over my words because I sing the same tune three times, but with different lyrics. Right. And the, and the trap is to sing the wrong lyric in the wrong song, which I had done. And it's, there's nothing more embarrassing and gut wrenching than to sing the wrong lyric in the wrong song. And you just have to find your way back. And it, they call it walking into the white room. And because literally what does that will happen and your mind will, your mind will explode, your armpits will explode with sweat. Your eyeballs will get this big, your throat will dry. It is flight or flight or flight moment.Michael Jamin (00:23:07):Yeah. AndRick Negron (00:23:08):It's so hard to, to like try to grasp the right lyric. And, and you're in, you're literally in a white room. Yeah. And you're going, oh shit. How, how do I get back?Michael Jamin (00:23:20):Right.Rick Negron (00:23:21):And for me it's a little easier cuz my song is nice and slow, but can you imagine being Hamilton and you're rapping a mile a minute and you go into the white roomMichael Jamin (00:23:29):And do you guys talk about that? OhRick Negron (00:23:32):Yeah. Yeah. Famously on Broadway, there, there, there was a something called Burst Corner. Uhhuh which was, I, I forget who started it, but I think , they, they told 'em not to do it anymore. It was something where they post on Instagram or Facebook. Oh. so-and-so, you know, said this instead of what they should have said, you know, basically coming out and, and owning your faux PAs during a live show. Right. I remember when I did Manda La Mancha with Robert Gole on tour. He used to make up lyrics sometimes. And we, and one of the guys in the show started jotting them down. And at the end of the tour, they basically roasted him at a, at the closing night party with all the lyrics that he made up throughout, throughout the entire thing. And he was not amused.Michael Jamin (00:24:20):He was not amused. I was gonna say, IRick Negron (00:24:23):Was not amused with that one. Okay. But my favorite faux pod of his was we were in Nashville and he started singing Impossible Dream. And he's sang to dream the Impossible Dream to fight the unat of a fo to carry Moonbeams home in a jar.Michael Jamin (00:24:41):And there was like, what?Rick Negron (00:24:44):That's a big Crosby song. Oh, funny. Carry Moon Beams Home in a Jar. It's an old Bing Cosby song. And he just pulled that lyric outta nowhere and inserted it into the impossible dream. And everybody backstage just went,Michael Jamin (00:24:59):What do he say? Oh my God. That's hilarious.Rick Negron (00:25:03):But you know, I I'm, I'm, I might be roasting Robert Gole at the moment, but everybody's had those moments. Yeah. Especially in Hamilton, it happens cuz the, the words are coming fast and furious and boy, if you miss that train or you screw up, oh, it's hard to get back on.Michael Jamin (00:25:18):And I imagine ifRick Negron (00:25:20):You do, everybody does. Everybody, if youMichael Jamin (00:25:21):Do it one too many times, are you looking at unemployment?Rick Negron (00:25:24):Mm-Hmm. ? No. Really? No. Yeah. I mean, nobody does it one too many times. Uhhuh, . I mean, some understudies have more bumps in the road than others. Uhhuh. . But you, you, you know, we give them a lot of grace because being an understudy is really hard. Yeah. And so when somebody's honest and understudy you, everybody has their, their, their side view mm-hmm. just because they, they might be in the wrong spot in a certain moment or cross a little differently than the usual guy. So you just have to have some grace. Don't get upset if they're in the wrong spot. You know, just maybe nudge them a little bit or pull them or, or, or just watch out for them and don't bump into them because, you know, somebody is on. I, because I've understudied so many in so many shows, I have a lot of empathy for, for understudies and swings and, but I, I, I don't, in my experience, and I've been in a ton of shows, I haven't been around somebody who's messed up so much that they've got gotten fired. Usually when somebody's not up for the task creatives know during rehearsals that they're not cutting it. Uhhuh . And then so somebody will get, will get let go. Right. the only other time I, I remember somebody lost their voice and, and took time off and came back and lost their voice again. And it was just a situation where they couldn't do the job. Their voice just, wow. Their voice just couldn't ha hack it. And so, you know, those are tough and difficult moments. They don't happen often, but it happens.Michael Jamin (00:27:09):Wow. Yeah. And now you were also telling me, which I thought was fascinating, is that your character, because he's the king, you were talking, you know, how, how your character has evolved, you playing the same exact part has evolved over, over all these years of you playing it.Rick Negron (00:27:24):Yeah. It's, it's been a gift. I'm, I'm, you know, I've realized early on that theater really is my thing. Even though I did some TV and film when I moved to la I, I didn't, I didn't really love the work. Right. It sort of felt a little bit empty just in the sense that, you know, you sit in a trailer for hours and hours and then you get a couple of rehearsals and you shoot and you're done. And that's it. You know, and it's on, it's out there for posterity and you walk away from the, from the gig going, oh, I could have done this, I could have done that. But in theater, you get to redeem yourself every night. You know, if you screwed up the night before, you, you make it better the next night. And I love that about theater.(00:28:07):And and so for, for me I just get better over time and people say, oh, but don't you get tired eight times a week a year. I don't. I I like to, I like to tell people that it's, it's almost like being a potter. You have the same, you know, square block of clay and you're making that same pot. But every time you're doing something a little bit different and you're learning from the, the, the, yesterday when you made that pot, today you're making the same pot, but you learn something new, you discovered something new, making this pot, it's still the same pot, but you're, you may be doing a little filigree or a little curve here, or a little something different. So every night you get to shape this pot a little bit differently. And that's, for me, that's the, the beauty of it.(00:28:59):That's the challenge. I remember early on with, with this, with this character, I was in rehearsals and the the associate director Patrick Vassell said, you know, Rick, this is interesting. Most guys come in with a really large, over the top take on the king. Mm-Hmm. , you're coming in with a very spare low-key take on it. I mean, we're gonna build you up, which is usually not the case with this character. And build, build him up. Not make him bigger, but just give him more depth. Okay. And that was the rehearsal process for me. And then when I started working with Thomas Kale the, the director of Hamilton right before we opened in Puerto Rico, he said, the trick to this guy is to make him, make him as simple and as small as possible because the king can, with one finger kill a whole community. Right. Know, he just has to say, those people are gone and they're gone. So he doesn't have to do much. He has all this power. So that, that was like the best bit of information for me. And so the challenge is over time is to do less.Michael Jamin (00:30:14):Right. AndRick Negron (00:30:14):Still with all the homework that you've done and the character work that you've done, but do less. And I, and I was telling you this before, that you walk out on stage Yeah. And the audience goes crazy. And, you know, there's all this expectation and sometimes you get suckered in by this adoring audience to do more. Right. But you have to fight that feeling and do less. And that's,Michael Jamin (00:30:38):It sounds like though you got conflicting notes though. No. They directed the eight. Well,Rick Negron (00:30:43):I think because in rehearsal I was still sort of finding my way with him. Uhhuh . And instead of making this broad fabish character, which is how somebody who starts with King George and thinks, oh, I'm just gonna do this and make him big and fabish. Right. that's sort of a two-dimensional view of, of the king. And I came in with a lot of research about the guy and thinking, I, I, I don't wanna make him this two-dimensional caricature. Right. I really wanna make him a, a guy who is number one dangerousMichael Jamin (00:31:21):Uhhuh ,Rick Negron (00:31:21):Who has a lot of power and who, who is feeling jilted, but won't allow you, you can't break up with me. Right. I'm breaking up with you. You know, that kind, that kind of dynamic in this, in the first song specifically. And so I came in with that and he said, that's great. Now we're gonna just work and put more layers on him, but not necessarily make him bigger, but just give him more layers.Michael Jamin (00:31:52):Let me ask you the, because when you're in, when you say, you know, you're the analogy of making a pot, are you going into the performance thinking, I wanna try this today? Or are you so into character you forget and, and somehow it it organically arises?Rick Negron (00:32:10):I try to stay in, in the more organic realm.Michael Jamin (00:32:13):Uhhuh, ,Rick Negron (00:32:14):Because I think that's where the really good stuff is. The stuff that just pops out of you.Michael Jamin (00:32:20):But you can't make that happen. That's the problem. Yeah.Rick Negron (00:32:23):If, if, if I plan somethingMichael Jamin (00:32:26):Mm-Hmm.Rick Negron (00:32:26):, I, I feel like it, it feels fabricated a little bit. Right. And so I, I try not to, but sometimes I'll get a note from, we have a resident director that travels with us, and also sometimes the director or the associate director will show up to whatever city we're in and will watch the show and give us notes and say, you know, in this moment, maybe try this or try that. And so I really pay attention to those notes and I try to implement them, but I try not to I try not to quote unquote fabricate them or, or, or think too much on it. I try to, maybe, maybe the best thing that I can say is I'll tr I'll try on my own four or five different ways to achieve that note. Mm-Hmm. . Okay. I can, I can, I can make it more dangerous in this section if I lean into this word or if I, you know, take a pause or whatever it is. I'll come up with four or five different ways to get the note across and then let whatever which one pops out pops out when it, when I do the performance. So I give myself some choices. So I don't, so I don't get, I don't pigeonhole myself into a specific choice, which then feels fabricated and fake.Michael Jamin (00:33:51):Right. But do you ever get into the part and then n notice, oh, I, I just slipped out of it. I, I'm, I'm, I'm observing myself now. I'm not in the partRick Negron (00:34:00):Happens all the time.Michael Jamin (00:34:02):And what do you do? How do you get back inRick Negron (00:34:04):The words the text will save you for every writer out there. Thank you. Because the text will save you. You have to get back into, into what it is you're saying. When, whenMichael Jamin (00:34:16):You, but the words are in your head that you don't, you're not reading something, they're in your head.Rick Negron (00:34:19):You're in your head, but in your head. I've been doing this so long that I can be in the middle of my performance and going, Hmm. That wasn't good. Right. Like, I'll be criticizing myself while I'm doing it,Michael Jamin (00:34:31):But that's not good. Now you're out of character.Rick Negron (00:34:33):Now I'm out of character. Now I'm in my head. Right. And the first thing that I'll do is I'll, I'll bite something. I'll bite a word or I'll, I'll make a gesture. Or basically I'll snapped my myself out of that.Michael Jamin (00:34:47):Do it.Rick Negron (00:34:48):I guess. I didn't silence my phone.Michael Jamin (00:34:51):That's okay. So,Rick Negron (00:34:52):Interesting enough. That's, that's the resident director of Hamilton just texted me.Michael Jamin (00:34:57):. He can wait. It's not important.Rick Negron (00:34:59):No. She, she, luckily this is she. Yes. Better. Sherry Barber. Amazing director.Michael Jamin (00:35:05):So we that's my next question though. I wanna talk about that. But, so, all right. So you snap so you, you, you get back into it with a physical, something physical, a gesture or something.Rick Negron (00:35:14):Physical or, or, or, or vocal. Yeah. Or some different intention. Yeah. Just mix it up. Right. Mix it up. Yeah. Do something different that, that's gonna get you outta your head.Michael Jamin (00:35:27):Right. I mean, I mean, I would think that we, that way my fear is going up, going up, forgetting, oh, what, what's my line? Line? Oh,Rick Negron (00:35:34):It is, that's every actor's fear. And, and, and if anything keeps me nervous, it's that, it's the fear of, of messing up. But the, and people say, oh, how do you get over being nervous? And I always say, you, how, how do you get to Carnegie Hall? Yeah. Practice, practice, practice. Confidence comes from being, I can sing that song with another song, playing over a loud speaker. That's how well I know that song.Michael Jamin (00:36:04):Really. With another song playing. There'sRick Negron (00:36:05):Another song playing over the loud speaker. And I can sing my song while that song is playing. That's how much in the bones in my cell that song is. See, I just have to, I, I rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse, rehearse.Michael Jamin (00:36:18):Do you think it's possible to over rehearse?Rick Negron (00:36:21):Yeah.Michael Jamin (00:36:22):Uhhuh. . Yeah.Rick Negron (00:36:24):But I mean, for me, you know, every actor's different. For me, my comfort, what gives me my comfort zone is, and, and gives me confidence, is feeling like I, I know this inside out, left, right. I, I know ev Yeah, I know this. I got this Uhhuh . That's how I getMichael Jamin (00:36:46):There. But, but you don't feel that way in opening night cuz you haven't done it 900Rick Negron (00:36:49):Times. No, no, no. You haven't done it 900 times. So you just, you you, I go back to my yoga and I, I I do some deep breathing mm-hmm. and I try to focus on the intentions of the character. What is he trying to do?Michael Jamin (00:37:05):Do you, do you sometimes kick yourself? Like, do you feel like, oh, I wasn't in the Tonight Show. I was, I tried. I wasn't in it. I wasn't in it. OhRick Negron (00:37:14):Yeah. I walked out, I walk off stage sometimes and go, Ooh, that was terrible. Or whatev, you know, I'm, I'm my worst critic. Right. And sometimes I walk away and go, oh, that was good.Michael Jamin (00:37:26):Right. Because you're justRick Negron (00:37:27):Lost. I don't pat myself on the back as often as I should. Uhhuh , I'm usually more critical of myself. And, you know, and now I try, I try to not beat myself up as much as I used to. I try to be a little kinder to myself, but yeah, I totally walk away sometimes going, oh, that was, that was not your best.Michael Jamin (00:37:46): . And, and so these, these directors, like, what do they, what's their job? Because they didn't direct the show. The show has been choreographed. It's been directed. Now they're just jo they're just there every night to make sure it doesn't go off the rails.Rick Negron (00:37:59):Yeah. PrettyMichael Jamin (00:38:00):Much tune things.Rick Negron (00:38:01):Yeah. And the really good ones, like, like sh like our our resident director Sherry they're there to keep it fresh. And so she's constantly feeding you ideas. Hey, what, what if we do this? What if we do that? How about, how about, you know, and, and that's, she, she's great at bringing new ideas to something that we've been doing for four years,Michael Jamin (00:38:27):But I'm not sure how much I would wanna hear that if I were you. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like, oh, I love it. This is what I You love that.Rick Negron (00:38:34):I love it. I love trying new stuff. I love messing about with that pot that I'm creating. Oh, what about, why, why don't you do a lip on, on, on the top? Oh, yeah, yeah. Do it. We'll curl out the lip on the top. I've never done that before. Right. Why don't we do that? You know, I did something a few months ago at the end of the song, the song I famously go, famously I should say the, the king famous famously says, and no, don't change the subject. And he points at somebody in the audience and he gets, he, it's a rare moment where he gets upset. Uhhuh . And that's, and, and if you've seen the Disney Plus, Jonathan Gruff famously just spits all over the place. It just is, it's, it's an explosion of saliva. And it's, it's a brilliant moment. I think. I think his take on the king is, is wonderful and he sings it so well. And and I usually point, they want you to usually point in sort of the same area of the, you can point anywhere, but they, they usually take point over here. And I always point over there, and one night, man, this is maybe about four or five months ago, one night at the end of the song, I went, I went,Michael Jamin (00:39:45):I'm watching youRick Negron (00:39:46):Uhhuh . Like, I pointed to my eyes and I pointed to that person who I had pointed to earlier in the song. And no, don't change the subject as if that's my one nemesis in the room. And I'm just saying, I'm watching you . And it got such a reaction, right. That I kept it, it's been my new little bit until I, until I decide I don't want to, or until, you know, the associate director walks in and goes, you know what? I don't like that thing that you do at the end, cut it. And I'm like, okay, it's gone. Right. Well, think of something else. You know, unless there, there's always, there's always something right. That I can think of. And that's, that's the fun part that I can always improve it, I can always make it better. I can always have fun with it.Michael Jamin (00:40:29):Hey, it's Michael Jamin. If you like my videos and you want me to email them to you for free, join my watch list. Every Friday I send out my top three videos. These are for writers, actors, creative types. You could unsubscribe whenever you want. I'm not gonna spam you and it's absolutely free. Just go to michaeljamin.com/watchlist.Michael Jamin (00:40:53):I'm surprised you, I mean, I, I would wa I'm curious like, but you allowing yourself to watch, you know, Jonathan Grots version as opposed, you know, is that, are you, do you, you know, what's that like, you know, cause character yoursRick Negron (00:41:08):Now. Yeah. I saw him do it originally on Broadway when I saw the show in previews. And then of course I saw him do the Disney Plus version. And then when we were in rehearsals in 2018 for our company, we were the third national tour to go out when we were in rehearsals, they said, oh, you you know, you can go stand back in the, at the back of the house at the Richard Rogers and watch the Broadway company. And at that point, the king was Ian I'm forgetting Ian's last name, but he's, I think he's still the king right now. He's been there for a long time. He's brilliant. Uhhuh as the king. And I watched him play the King while I'm in rehearsals for the King. Right. And for me, I wish I could see all the kings really? Because really they all do something different. And, and you, and, and the stuff that's really good. You wanna steal it, man. You wanna, but can you, I mean, love that,Michael Jamin (00:42:00):But can youRick Negron (00:42:00):Take it from the best baby steal from theMichael Jamin (00:42:02):Best stuff from the best.Rick Negron (00:42:04):Interesting. Yes. I mean, you gotta make it your own. You can't do the exact same thing. Right. But, but it, for me, it feeds me as an actor. I'm like, oh, what a cool idea. I should, I can do a version of that or Right. Or so. Oh, that makes me think of something else. You know, I, I I, yeah. I I love it. DoMichael Jamin (00:42:20):You get together and talk with the other kings at all? Yeah.Rick Negron (00:42:23):I've met the king that's on on Zoom, actually. I haven't met him in person, but the guy Peter Matthews who, who does the Angelica tour and he's been doing it for a while. Most of the Kings. It's a, it's a nice gig. So yeah, you stick around right. As long as you, you know, want to, or as long as they'll have you. Right. And Hamilton's been really great about, you know, letting us stay. But Peter Peter's really a funny guy and I haven't gotten to see his king because obviously I'm doing it at another part of the country while he's doing it. But I would love to see him play the King. Really. yeah. And Rory O'Malley, who played it here in la, he did the first national, he I think Tony Winter for book of Mormon. Fantastic guy. I met him in San Francisco when he came to see our company. I'd love to see his cane cuz he's a great singer and, you know, everybody's got their, their their take on him. And I, I find it fascinating to see what somebody does with, with this character.Michael Jamin (00:43:25):Right. Cuz there's so much, there's so much. Yeah. That's so much how much constantly reinvented fun,Rick Negron (00:43:29):Fun role and,Michael Jamin (00:43:30):But by still, but you still gotta remain true to what the words are and what the intention of the words. But it still can be interpreted while still being true to thoseRick Negron (00:43:38):Words. Which, which is the beauty of, of, of, of Hamilton and, and I give a lot of credit to the creative team, is that yes, you have to sing the words and sing the melody, but you get a lot of creative license to, to make it your own Uhhuh . And so if you see our company of Hamilton and then you see the Broadway company of Hamilton, it's almost like two different shows. Right. It's the same show. But because you have different actors in those roles, it's pretty remarkable the difference in the companies.Michael Jamin (00:44:10):And tell me a little bit more about some of the other Broadway and traveling, because you've had such a resume, man, such a resume.Rick Negron (00:44:17):. Well, you know, I, I started back in the eighties as a, as a Chorus Boy and, and doing some really cool shows. Man La Mancha, the Goodbye Girl, theMichael Jamin (00:44:27):GoodbyeRick Negron (00:44:27):Girl leader of the Pack. I, I did, I did In The Heights on Broadway Right. For a couple of years. That's when I, I actually did a workshop of In the Heights in 2005 with Li Manuel Miranda and the whole gang, and I got to meet them back then. So they've been good loyal friends since then. Yeah. And, and have kept me employed for many years. I hand, you know, hats off to them . Oh, I do have hair by the way, but it was kinda messy. So I put on my, my hat. YouMichael Jamin (00:44:58):Could have worn your wig, your powdered wigRick Negron (00:45:01):. Oh yeah. IMichael Jamin (00:45:02):Used to wear, Hey, I'm always in characterRick Negron (00:45:04):. Yeah, A actually I have I'm, I have a few weeks off right now, which is why I'm home in la Right. Because we just did Hawaii and, and the show had to pack up and, and be put on the ship to come back to the us So they shipped, the show changed and that's how we, how it got to Puerto Rico too, which is why it makes it kind of difficult to send those shows to the, the Islandss because they have to ship it.Michael Jamin (00:45:29):But even still, how long does it take to set up for them to build, you know, build the set?Rick Negron (00:45:36):Well the shipping of it took a, takes about two weeks.Michael Jamin (00:45:40):All right. But once you're,Rick Negron (00:45:41):But then once it all gets there, our crew can, can put the set up in day and a half.Michael Jamin (00:45:47):Wow. Okay.Rick Negron (00:45:48):It's, it's like, it's all been carefully crafted. It's like Lincoln Logs, everything fits together, butMichael Jamin (00:45:54):Stages are different sizes. That's what I don't understand.Rick Negron (00:45:57):Well, they ahead of time, the, the production management and, and, and, and company management, they sit together and they go, okay, these are the cities that we're doing, which is the smallest theater we're in Uhhuh , that, those are our dimensions. We can't, we can't get bigger than that.Michael Jamin (00:46:15):But you can put a smaller on a bigger, on a stage, you can put a small,Rick Negron (00:46:19):Yeah, yeah. And the show, I mean, the show was made for the Richard Rogers, which is a pretty small theater. I mean, it's an old 1920s Broadway theater, Uhhuh , that seats about 1300. So it's pretty small. And the stage backstage is kind of small too. So most of the theaters that we do on, that we go to on the road are much bigger than the Richer Rogers. Okay. So they just, you know, they just do black baffling on the sides and just make it more of a letter box. And it works. It works. As long as we're not in a place that's smaller than our set. And some shows have what they call a jump set, which means that while we're in one city, we have a, a second set that goes to the next city and gets built. And so that we close in, in Boise on a Sunday and we open in Salt Lake City on a, on a Tuesday, you know, but let's say one day.Michael Jamin (00:47:13):But let's say that you're doing a dance number and the stage is this big and your's, the dancer, you know. Okay. Six pace steps to get my next mark on a bigger stage. It's, isn't it more steps or No,Rick Negron (00:47:23):No, no, because you're, you're, regardless of the size of the stage you are set. It remains the same.Michael Jamin (00:47:30):Okay. So no one will go out of that.Rick Negron (00:47:32):Yeah, no. Yeah. We'll, we'll we'll never stretch it. Right. The set itself never gets stretched. If anything, the, the theater will come in with, with black you know what the, what they call the legs, those are, you know, a break a leg comes fromMichael Jamin (00:47:48):No,Rick Negron (00:47:48):Literally they, you know, break a leg is good luck. But it literally means the legs are those black drapes that come down in the front and also in each wing.Michael Jamin (00:47:59):Okay. SoRick Negron (00:47:59):When you, when you, when you go on stage, sometimes you have to move that drapery to get on stage or to, if you're gonna go in front of the, the, the in front of the curtain, you, you, you move it with your arm, you break the leg.Michael Jamin (00:48:15):So you're not, so you're not literally break. Okay. So you're,Rick Negron (00:48:18):You're not literally breaking the leg, you're not breaking anything. Parting, parting the drapery to go on stage.Michael Jamin (00:48:23):Oh. So this is very interesting. This is gonna be, yeah.Rick Negron (00:48:25):Yeah. It's a little theater trivia for Yeah. The, the folks out there.Michael Jamin (00:48:30):Fascinating. Now. Okay, so on a regular day, you go to a town, your new, your your new city or whatever, and they give you a per diem to Yeah. Goodbye lunch and get out apartmentRick Negron (00:48:42):Diem. The union sets a weekly per diem. And that is for you to spend as you wish. Uhhuh, . And then also company management way ahead of time will say we have three or four different hotels that we've negotiated a special deal for and choose which one you want to stay in. And these are the prices and these are the amenities and people choose from that list of hotels. But a lot of people nowadays are doing Airbnb, especially on a tour where you sit in a city for four weeks, five weeks, six weeks. The shortest stays we've ever had have been two weeks. But we've, we've done six weeks. And so a lot of people do Airbnbs cuz you have a kitchen and you have a washer dryer and more, you know. But isMichael Jamin (00:49:26):It, is staying in a hotel more fun? Is that dorm living, is that more fun for the cast?Rick Negron (00:49:31):Some, no, I don't think it's more fun for them. Some stay in the hotel cuz it'll be right next to the theater. And that's convenient. Yeah. Especially if we are in Denver and it's seven degrees outside. Being, you know, li living right near the theater is really cool when it's, when the weather's bad. But most people, a lot of people nowadays, they're getting Airbnbs and they're rooming together. So three or four people can get a really cool house.Michael Jamin (00:49:57):But I'm picturing Rick Negron (00:50:00):And, and they save money because they're rooming together. Right. So, you know, the rent, their ability to pay rent, I mean now they can use their per diem to live on, not just for their place to stay. They canMichael Jamin (00:50:12):Have you shared, have you shared apartments or No. Does the king, does the king have his own place now?Rick Negron (00:50:16):, I'm too old to have roommates. You're tooMichael Jamin (00:50:18):That crap.Rick Negron (00:50:18):I had roommates in my twenties and thirties. I'm done. But the only roommate I have is my wife. And CauseMichael Jamin (00:50:24):You're right.Rick Negron (00:50:24):But she's not really my roommate. SoMichael Jamin (00:50:26):My like, my naive opinion of what it must be like is like in high school when you're in the play it's like, you know, or even at a high school, you know, community, you are like, Hey, it's the, we're all the, it's the group, we're the gang, we're doing everything together. But once you become a pro, that's not the way it is. Huh? It's not likeRick Negron (00:50:45):It is at first it is, it's the honeymoon phaseMichael Jamin (00:50:49):Real. Okay. Where you're like hanging out togetherRick Negron (00:50:51):Where we all just meet and Oh, I know that person. We did a show together a long time ago. And so we become a little bit of a clique and then the, the cliques start happening early on. But we're one big happy family. Right. And we have opening night parties and you know, and all that occurs early on. But then the clicks really start creating Right. You know, the, the peop certain people start to hang out together. We had the, an our, our company's called an Peggy cuz each separate tour has a different name. There's the Angelica tour, the Philip Tour. These are characters in the show. Right. And Peggy is the third Skylar sister. So we became the third company. So we are called the An Peggy tour and we're, and there's a group of us we're called the, an Peggy Alpine Club. And literally, literally a bunch of us who like to hike and, and do outdoorsy stuff. We went snowboarding and skiing a lot in the winter. We, a lot of us got scuba cert certified for our Hawaii stay. Wow. And we've done incredible hikes all over the place. So that's our little clique. But also, you know, people that have, are married and right on tour together or have ki there's a few people that have kids on tour. They get together a lot.Michael Jamin (00:52:07):So and they bring their fam, they bring their kids on onto tour with them.Rick Negron (00:52:10):Yes. There's some people that do that. Yes. But some, some, someMichael Jamin (00:52:16):Like little kids are like high school age. Like you can't be like a high school-aged kid.Rick Negron (00:52:20):No. Most, most of 'em have young kids. You gotta understand. I, I'm working with a bunch of 20 and 30 year olds. Right. And I'm the oldest guy by far in, in, in, in, in the, in the company.Michael Jamin (00:52:30):What's that like being the oldest guy in the company?Rick Negron (00:52:33):Oh, I love it. Love. I used to be the youngest guy then I was, you know, in the same age as everybody. I love it because I as a king too. I, I have plenty of time to sort of mentor everybody. Yeah. And so I've become a little bit of, I, I'm the cheerleader. I check in on everyone and say, how you doing? I'm, I used to be a ma massage, massage therapist. So a anytime peop people are having issues. I, I'm close friends with our, our physical therapist that tours with us. So we work on people sometimes together in tandem.Michael Jamin (00:53:03):What is it they're worried? What is it they want mentoring at the, the career strategy? Like what, youRick Negron (00:53:08):Know, that this career strategy, sometimes it's just dealing with personalities in theater sometimes there's some, some headbutting. Um-Huh. sometimes people are just having problems with a, a particular, an understudies having a problem with a new character that they're understudying or, you know, there's issues on stage with somebody who doesn't quite know where they're supposed to stand at a certain point. Right. And all that is internal stuff that should be worked out with the dance captains and the stage management and, and the resident director. But you know, unfortunately, actors, you know, we have huge egos and, and they're also very fragile egos. And so there's a, a, a bit of nuance involved and people get their, their panties in a twist. And I'm, I'm usually the guy that comes around and, and talks people off the ledge sometimes. AndMichael Jamin (00:54:02):I would imagine we be very hard even, especially for the new guy or the new woman coming in, youRick Negron (00:54:06):Know? Yeah. And I, I I, I, I tend to be the welcome wagon too. Right. You're the new ones. Come on, I'm the king. You know, I'll show you the ropes.Michael Jamin (00:54:13):Wow.Rick Negron (00:54:14):So, so that's, I, I like taking that mantle, not just because I'm the king, but also because I'm sort of the senior member of the Right. And I've been around the block and people have asked me, you know, I'm sick and tired of show business. I want to do something else. And I'm like, you know, that's, I hear that I've, I've had that conversation many, many times in my career.Michael Jamin (00:54:34):Interesting. So why, yeah. I would think, see, right, you've made the touring company of Hamilton, it's pretty much the peak, you know, like, you know, forRick Negron (00:54:41):A lot of 'em want to do Broadway. So they're, you know, they're still focused on doing that Broadway show. And some of them have done Broadway, have done the tour, and, you know, they wanna settle down and meet somebody and have a Right.Michael Jamin (00:54:53):So they want to, is that, is that what the problem is? They, you know, they're done with the business. What, what's the problem?Rick Negron (00:55:00):Well, I mean, you know, you, we've got the new kids who are just starting out who wanna know about, you know, how do I get my, my foot in Broadway? You know, and there's those kids, and then they're the ones that have been around for a while who wanna maybe transition out of, out of the business and, and want some there was one girl who was interested in massage therapy. Oh, wow. And I said, you wanna become ao? Okay. Well, this is what you need to do. And matter of fact the union has something called what is it called? Career Transition for Dancers, which is a, a, a program where you can get grants to do some further education. So if you wanna learn how to be a massage coach, wow. Get a grant through the union. And, you know, I know some of this stuff so I can impart some of that knowledge. And for the young kids who, you know, I wanna get on Broadway, I'm like, okay, well, to get on Broadway, you have to be in New York. And while you're on tour, you know, can't do that. It's hard to get into that audition for that Broadway show. ButMichael Jamin (00:55:57):Are you still in those circles? I mean, it seems like you, I don't know. It seems like you must know. I don't know. You're, I, I guess I'm completely wrong. If you were you know, a dancer on the touring company, Hamilton seems like it wouldn't be that hard to, to find out about an audition on Broadway. And certainly wouldn't be that hard to get a job, because you're obviously really good.Rick Negron (00:56:18):Yeah. and we've had a few people leave our tour to go do a Broadway, Broadway show. I mean, actually, we just lost like two or three people to, one Girl is doing Bad Cinderella. She left our show to Do Bad Cinderella, which is a new Broadway show, a new Andrew League Webber show. Mm-Hmm. . Another guy just left our show to do the, the Candor Nbb, New York, New York that's opening on Broadway soon. So that does happen luckily with the advent of auditioning remotely via video that's helped things out a lot nowadays, so that if you're in Portland on tour, you can send in an audition via video for something back in New York.Michael Jamin (00:57:02):Even dancing. You can, like, you pull the camera back and you do some dance steps. I mean,Rick Negron (00:57:06):Is that what you do? Yeah. Or sing a song or, or, or, or read a scene. Okay. depending on what's needed. And sometimes you, you are able to take a personal day and fly back to New York and audition for something. Right? Yeah. Michael Jamin (00:57:23):Cause I would think, and I, I don't know. Obviously, I don't know it, I would think that if you're in Ham, the touring company of Hamilton, you're practically on Broadway and it's like, it's almost the same circles, except this is where the job is, you know?Rick Negron (00:57:34):True. But if you've been on tour for a year, you'd like to settle down and stop living out of a suitcase. I It'sMichael Jamin (00:57:39):Hard to be on the road.Rick Negron (00:57:40):Yeah. Or you've been doing Hamilton for a while and you just wanna do something different. Yeah. There's those, those kids, you know, they're hungry, they wanna do different stuff. Yeah. They don't wanna be on tour on Hamilton for four years like I have, but I've done a lot of stuff andMichael Jamin (00:57:53):Yeah. What, let's talk about what other, what, yeah, let's talk about some other, we, we, I think we got off track of your other Broadway shows and, and Off Broadway and not touring shows, rather.Rick Negron (00:58:01):Well, you know, I started, I started out young in the biz at 10 cuz my mom was a drama teacher. And then I sort of worked my way through community theater and children's theater and all that. And, and then I was a concert dancer in college and studied for who? Well, I, in college I studied modern dance in, in ballet. But when I got outta college, I, I was an