POPULARITY
Episode 504 New Facebook likes. A birthday shout out to my friend Cindy in Florida. A review of "Network". Sports - Jim Rome on the NCAA. Chelsy Wolf rant. New Roger Waters themed bit, and a new Josh Dugger song. South Park's shit themed episode retrospective. Is the term "hate crime" a buzz word? Recapping an experience with broken glass and blood. The President's dog died, a clip of Casey Kasum getting frustrated over a dead dog story. Weird History on the death of a beer man. Woman reunited with fishermen who saved her life. George Carlin's "Shoot" monologue closes the show.
SHOW 100! - Part 2 Countdown #10 - #1 - The Most Watched Topics on The Nisha Jackson Podcast It's the 101st episode of The Nisha Jackson Podcast and on this show Nisha and co-host Rusty Humphries countdown, (Casey Kasum style), the Top 20 shows based on your views and listens. This week we countdown the Top #10 - #1 For more info go to www.NishaJackson.com or www.OnePeakMedical.com Try Nisha Jackson's new supplement, created with football superstar Odell Beckham Jr, (@OBJ) Brand X - https://takebrandx.com/ Go to www.NishaJackson.com for more info information on how to treat your health and hormones. Try Nisha Jackson's newest supplement line, created with football superstar Odell Beckham Jr, (@OBJ) Brand (X) -https://takebrandx.com/ #TakeBrandX #DrNishaJackson Nisha Jackson is a nationally-recognized hormone expert and gynecology health specialist. Her private practice in primary care medicine specializes in the area of women's health and gynecology and treatment for hormone imbalances. These imbalances leave women and men experiencing the effects of insomnia, depression, fatigue, brain fog, and weight gain. Through unique and cutting edge testing, Nisha often finds that most of these problems are associated with an underlying hormonal imbalance. Nisha Jackson is renowned as a lecturer, motivational speaker, radio host, columnist, and author. She has founded many prestigious medical establishments in the past 25 years, including -One Peak Medical – specialized medical practices focusing on healthy aging and hormone balancing for men and women. Current locations are in Medford OR, Eugene OR, Roseburg OR, and Klamath Falls OR - www.onepeakmedical.com - Balance Docs, Inc. - a national supplement corporation specializing in natural products, including our skincare line that helps keep women and men looking and feeling their absolute best - www.balancedocs.com - Nisha's newest book, Brilliant Burnout, sold in local bookstores and Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Brilliant-Burnout-Successful-Rewiring-Hormones/dp/1632992108/ref=sr_1_2?crid=1QSD5KCDKNWIR&keywords=brilliant+burnout+nisha+jackson&qid=1568144094&s=gateway&sprefix=brilliant+burnout%2Caps%2C144&sr=8-2 In Brilliant Burnout, Nisha Jackson reveals proven and successful testing and treatment strategies, with step-by-step instructions for optimal hormone, brain, and body balance and compelling insights that have helped women all around the world change their lives and step up their game. Learn and use the very tactics explained in this book to beat the big snooze of burning out! Find out more about health, hormones, and supplements by going to www.NishaJackson.com or www.onepeakmedical.com.
SHOW 100! - Part 1 Countdown #20-#11 - The Most Watched Topics on The Nisha Jackson Podcast It's the 100th episode of The Nisha Jackson Podcast and on this show Nisha and co-host Rusty Humphries countdown, (Casey Kasum style), the Top 20 shows based on your views and listens. This week we countdown the Top #20-#11. For more info go to www.NishaJackson.com or www.OnePeakMedical.com Try Nisha Jackson's new supplement, created with football superstar Odell Beckham Jr, (@OBJ) Brand X - https://takebrandx.com/ Go to www.NishaJackson.com for more info information on how to treat your health and hormones. Try Nisha Jackson's newest supplement line, created with football superstar Odell Beckham Jr, (@OBJ) Brand (X) -https://takebrandx.com/ #TakeBrandX #DrNishaJackson Nisha Jackson is a nationally-recognized hormone expert and gynecology health specialist. Her private practice in primary care medicine specializes in the area of women's health and gynecology and treatment for hormone imbalances. These imbalances leave women and men experiencing the effects of insomnia, depression, fatigue, brain fog, and weight gain. Through unique and cutting edge testing, Nisha often finds that most of these problems are associated with an underlying hormonal imbalance. Nisha Jackson is renowned as a lecturer, motivational speaker, radio host, columnist, and author. She has founded many prestigious medical establishments in the past 25 years, including -One Peak Medical – specialized medical practices focusing on healthy aging and hormone balancing for men and women. Current locations are in Medford OR, Eugene OR, Roseburg OR, and Klamath Falls OR - www.onepeakmedical.com - Balance Docs, Inc. - a national supplement corporation specializing in natural products, including our skincare line that helps keep women and men looking and feeling their absolute best - www.balancedocs.com - Nisha's newest book, Brilliant Burnout, sold in local bookstores and Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/Brilliant-Burnout-Successful-Rewiring-Hormones/dp/1632992108/ref=sr_1_2?crid=1QSD5KCDKNWIR&keywords=brilliant+burnout+nisha+jackson&qid=1568144094&s=gateway&sprefix=brilliant+burnout%2Caps%2C144&sr=8-2 In Brilliant Burnout, Nisha Jackson reveals proven and successful testing and treatment strategies, with step-by-step instructions for optimal hormone, brain, and body balance and compelling insights that have helped women all around the world change their lives and step up their game. Learn and use the very tactics explained in this book to beat the big snooze of burning out! Find out more about health, hormones, and supplements by going to www.NishaJackson.com or www.onepeakmedical.com.
Pod-Crashing Episode 43 Love StoriesToday while sharing a conversation with published author Allison Ashley we spent a little time discussing the digital process. With the enormous amount of success murder and suspense podcasts have been experiencing, how far are we from everlasting love stories from becoming podcast seasons and episodes?It doesn’t seem like anything knew right? Books on Tape was huge four decades ago whereas today Audible has picked up the reins. Kindle Unlimited has their connection and off to the side are the little guys like Chirpbooks.com who promise audio books up to 95% off. Ronan Farrow has lifted the level of the experience. Rather than dropping words and paragraphs onto the vocal tracks, his podcast The Catch And Kill totally breathes new life into the soul of published books. Ronan shares the story. He’s not reading it. He’s developed a solid relationship with his followers in the way of saying, “This is not only how I lived it but why, when and where.” Can that same approach be used with a love story? The narrator actually being a fly on the wall. The author discussing their story rather than reading it by way of well edited structure. Bill Burr is very good at taking his podcast into an area of, “Hey how are ya! Welcome to my house. Want a beer? Damn I’ve got a lot on my mind. Pull up a chair and let’s swap some talk.” Radio Hall of Famer John Hancock once said to me, “Formatics and structure are there if you need it. Connections begin with trusting your research and show prep then do nothing more than talk about it. Don’t force it. Don’t try to impersonate someone you like listening to. Just talk about it. You and that person on the other side. You don’t need to know their name. Maybe one day. Right now you’re just trying to have a conversation.”While in a moment with Allison Ashley the edge of my universe was interrupted by a fear for love story authors’ gone podcast. Can you sell a book if what you’re pouring the energy of the storytelling into a pair of earbuds? Part of what drew me closer to podcasting was having the free spirit to promote promote promote. In late 2012 I announced to my blogging community that I was leaving to write a book. I invited them to tag along by way of this thing I just learned about. They call it podcasting. I’m not sure. Yet I feel a huge pull to begin from a seed and let something I can’t see grow. As the chapters were coming together I used the digital talk box to not only share the uphill struggles, out of control inner visions but to take my sentences and set them on this new platform all in the name of seeing if a strong love story can actually be the subject of conversation without it sounding like its being read?Not an easy task. Mainly because of the radio background I was carrying. Radio people and Podcasters are two completely different performances and expressions. The book is titled Scrambled Eggs. Because I’m all about branding. Everything had to somehow feature the title. So I dubbed the podcast Scrambled Egg Shells. It lasted thirteen episodes and or thirteen of the fifty three chapters on the View from the Writing Instrument platform.I returned to it today. The first time I’ve heard it in seven years. As a radio person we were painstakingly trained to turn a liner card into a conversational subject. Liner cards versus chapters paints the perfect picture of me standing next to Godzilla and he’s in the mood to battle. I do believe love stories can be talked about rather than read. I strongly feel the next level of podcast play should be where readers want to take their imaginations. Not by hearing their own voice reading the story but to experience by showing up as a listener. Less work when that’s all you have to do. Back to the fear I had for Allison Ashley. While in the midst of creativity sharing my heart spoke out, “Get off the subject.” Ok here’s the reason why. Podcasting is listening on demand. How much money are listeners putting in the jukebox to hear your art? Yeah I know, let’s get sponsors! I mean Jack Brennan has them with Disgraceland. So can we! Not an easy of a task. Putting the book out there on a podcast at no cost is a hardcore first step toward bringing an injury to the inner core of why the book even exists. I know why I stopped recording. I wasn’t convinced that I was selling books. Wait! Wait! We’ve gotta break it down. The thirteenth episode was posted on April 28, 2014. The digital world wasn’t anywhere near what we’re experiencing today. I remember sitting in the production room with my face in my hands. I was screwing up the process of connection. In looking back the author who had spent two years writing the book wasn’t liking the idea of sharing it as a podcast. How dare the radio person try and dominate this project!Through inflection readers turned listeners could hear my interpretation of Scrambled Eggs. They didn’t see the pictures hung on the walls of their imagination through their eyes meeting the page. Until I came across Ronan Farrow the idea of gripping onto a listener’s heart and lightly tugging on it was something Casey Kasum had mastered on American Top 40. It never felt like he was following a script. He was sharing a story. Evolution is a cool thing. Moving through the emotional mountains podcasters make then detonate requires honesty, persistence, perseverance, loyalty and more importantly patience bathed in forgiveness. The writer in me had to figure it out. To make nice with the radio guy. To have playdates while taking long walks through late night battles with ideas and failures. Here’s the fun part about all of this. If you want to podcast do it. You don’t have to be as passionate. That’s my sickness. But somewhere along the journey. Right before you say I quit. The chewed up seed in your stomach is gonna pop out a tiny little green leaf. Suddenly it’s no longer about reading but sharing a story. Test the waters endlessly. Build and rebuild constantly. Gift yourself with a mental bikini wax then rip out the stuff you don’t need.What’s the moral of the story? Not everybody is blessed to have writers, producers, promoters and managers pushing your name and branding through the eye of a needle. Joe Rogan announced last week that there are 900,000 different podcasts out here to choose from. It’s not slowing down.Yes love stories will make it to podcasting. Guys will secretly listen to them. When any story is shared right. There’s always going to be an attraction. Live in the moment. While there do all you can to share some love with the podcasters that show up to bring you an incredible place to escape.
Pod-Crashing Episode 29: Shapes and shadesThe many shapes and shades of this thing called podcasting. The new age way to blog. No really! That’s how it got started. A ton of words were being tapped into the face of a computer. Everybody was doing it. The postal worker, the sewing machine lady, the ice cream teen. We were communicating! Yeah… maybe a little. There they were! The writer’s thoughts! Nicely crafted paragraphs. But you weren’t picking up their vocal inflections. The reader was forced to use their own interpretation. I endlessly received daily emails from readers that couldn’t figure out my mess. A trainload of research hitting a brick wall. Before podcasting I tried V-logging. Taking my blogs and reading them on video. I totally sucked at that! I tried too hard to create a connection. Plus the amount of time that goes into editing. Especially when the screw ups were total bonehead moments. It was making the videos bumpy and pretty small town market uncool. Everybody’s got their own story as to how they got hooked up with a podcast. I was a terrestrial radio junky with an ego the size of every holiday and I needed a stage. A performance. An outlet! Being there in 2012 felt like the moment my daughter and I shared while riding horses on my Uncles ranch in Ranchchester Wyoming. She asked, “Where are the trails we’re supposed to follow?” My only reply was, “Make it up as you go.” Oh I can’t gp back and listen to the early day podcasts. I had one of those fake disc jockey voices. If I was telling the story of a musician or actor it sounded like a Casey Kasum reject project. I knew how to talk over the intro of a song on the radio but damn this new level of podcast play where there’s no music had turned into a beast! Honestly it’s been fun. To physically explore newer ways to perform by way of creating a listening community has been incredibly engaging. But there are many shapes and shades in the game of podcasting. Just as there were in Blogging. You can get on there and say pretty much whatever you want. To rely on improv requires skill and craftsmanship. Even with those two tools in the box, I’ve heard some brilliantly funny comedians totally suck with the podcast. I think its body language. When we see the funny people on stage their facial expressions and body movement sell the punch line. Comedian Jared Freid knows of the separations. He won’t take his podcast to a live public performance. He doesn’t want fans and followers of the podcast to suddenly be thrusted into an atmosphere that’s based heavily on the performance and not a conversation. Which you can clearly hear when Dax Shephard and Chelsea Handler take their podcasts outside the comforts of four walls and a dog or cat lying next to your feet. As much as I love their podcasts I usually don’t make it to the end because as a listener I feel like the Uber driver that can’t stop the car and party with you.Let’s get back to the body language. If your episodes sound a little flat and out of tune. Let’s put a mirror in front of your microphone and study your patterns of delivery. My studio overlooks a beautiful forest in south Charlotte, NC. Everything is facing the window. I can see my reflection. No conceit. I’m talking to that person. I’ve made them part of my conversation. The best part is? I can have earphone hair and they can relate. They have it too! Keeping track of your body language allows you to shape your thoughts and how they’re being delivered. Too much energy can easily be seen as well as heard. 99.8% of all podcasts are listened to by one person. Not a group. It isn’t the family hour year 1933. One person. Your voice. Their ears. Share a conversation. Don’t blast their eardrums. Which I kind of do when I’m hosting motivational episodes on The Choice, Lyrics From Billy’s Forest and The Daily Mess. There are times I get so emotional that it feels like my hearts about to implode. Keeping it under control requires an honest man’s walk. Really! I take a two mile hike with my dog Jazzie and listen to the episodes. I study their behavior outside the studio. Am I yelling or getting too preachy? How will followers react? The many shapes and shades of this thing called podcasting. Bob Pittman totally utilizes the strength of his one on one-ness. The CEO of iHeart Radio has this way of developing a relationship with his weekly guests and mindfully includes the listener. He’s very much aware of our existence. Whereas many podcast hosts think along the line of I’m here and you are living vicariously through my performance. For Bob Pittman it’s almost as if we can see him embracing each question and or reaction with nothing but body language and total awareness of where his fans and followers are in their day or night. The microphone is part of him. He’s not sitting behind a large silver cylinder projecting his baritone vocals. It’s almost like there’s no mic in the studio. Which allows his emotional connection to paint pictures on this side of the podcast. The reason why I bring up the microphone is because it’s a serious game changer. You’ve seen the pictures of the performers with desktop stands or the long arms stretching across studio boards. That microphone sits right there in front of their face. All things being shared must move through it and you’ll turn off your body language to make sure those vocals are perfectly pushed forward. Those speaking think you have to sit up straight, pull your stomach in, uncross your legs and don’t lean on the table. Do all you can to break that habit. While watching the classic sitcom Cheers did you ever see Woody Harrelson reaching for the microphones above? Sports announcers wear headsets for a reason. Let the body do what comes natural. That doesn’t mean to go out and buy a pair. Great quality at that level of play means you’re gonna pay. Go to a comedy club and study them there people on that microphone. Headliners make the vocal catcher part of their movement. Openers and features are still trying to muster up a plan to somehow get the other hand in on the job. So what’s the moral of the story? Be yourself without making listeners feel like you’re in a can. Constantly ask, “Do I sound natural?” Be confident without forcing it. If you’re taping yourself during a podcast such as Facebook Live. Someone’s being cheated on. Viewers want to be looked at and listeners need you to talk to them. You can try to do both. But it sounds like it. Besides, those that Facebook live it have the worst microphones! Most of the time you can barely hear the conversation. Don’t be just the performer. Be greater in post production.
Pod-Crashing Episode 25: The Seven Truths Of PodcastingThis past week I was invited to break out of the studio and sit with future Broadcasters. The subject? Podcasting! The importance of investing your personal time and creative space to what’s quickly becoming a good sized puzzle piece in the world of content connection.Each lecture was four hours long. Oh yeah. When you call me to the stage we’re gonna plant the seed and wait for the first leaf to leap out of the soil. During those ticks on the clock we covered seven main areas that most podcasters never tap into. My father used to shout, “No matter how much it might hurt or comes across as being boring. The truthis always the best way to lead.”Truth number one of the seven. When it comes to podcasting it’s easy to start. Even easier to quit. It’s like looking at a really cool bottle of ice cold beer on a very hot Carolina day. You can’t wait to pop thattop and pour those natural juices through your system of choice. The biggest mistake always takes place during the first big gulp. Podcasting comes across as being free spirited and fun until you need toget the work done. Suddenly that bottle of beer become funny tasting earth water. You forgot to read the label. It’s strawberry flavored with a twist of lime.Easy to start. Easier to quit. I love listening to the stories of those getting started. They’re so excited about launching the episodes and instantly there’s 150 to 200 listens. That’s right Captain that oh wowfactor of making the right decision to be a podcaster has pumped up the volume in your heart. You’re gonna make money! But now you’ve got to plan and execute shows number two, three, four and so on. What? The analytics are showing a huge drop in the numbers. That vision to hit one million quickly begins to fizzle and those well invested ten hours have started sending out invitations to find a new sport.Easy to start. Easier to quit. This totally leads me into the second of the seven truths. Just because I’ve seen many people kick off a podcast then drop it off like a dirty diaper doesn’t mean you’re gonna feelthe same storm. The second truth? You are your own story. How I reached my first million can’t be compared to your journey. The layout of decisions and reasons for each season are completely in tune with your own universe. Podcasting is a beast blessed with many faces. We might see eye to eye on which platforms to use and what it’s like to watch a totally nothing episode become your biggest attraction in months but ultimately your story as a podcaster will walk it’s own path. This is why it’s wise to join a podcast community. To compare the bumps and bruises. To try new ways to produce or interview. Social media techniques versus just posting it to Blogger.com The podcast adventure is a wild ride that always has a story of its own. It’s yours. And I have mine. I keep a journal. Documenting what I’ve tried and why. When it doesn’t work out I go back into the journal and locatethe areas of weakness. The best way to build a skyscraper is from the ground up. If you think you’re starting out on the 13th floor then you should also expect there to be no elevator. All things that move in anupward motion start beneath the surface of dirt. Truth number three. Practice, practice, fail, practice. The only way you’re gonna bring light to an otherwise silent spot on the wall is to figure it out. Podcasting is like sex. A lot of people show up thinkingthey know how to use the tools. You’ve got to practice. To locate that voice. This isn’t terrestrial radio. Developing the right pitch volume and tone demands a little love and affection. Practice, practice, fail practice. Be nice to your creative self! When it’s not paying off like you dreamed that’s not a red flag for you to pick up a country song and play it backwards. You’re not getting anything back. When new ideas hit me. I write them down. I plan out what could be the execution. The first attempt never makes it to the air. I listen to the episode in the car. I listen to it in a stinky burger laced placewith a food rating of 83%. You are judged by what’s listened to in the moment. The moment it drops then you’ve got to know in your masterful soul that this is a new podcast that will have lots of episodes. Don’t quit it before it’s time because its evolution no longer matches the original vision. Truth number four. Don’t let your friends critique your podcast. The further you keep your art away from those who love you most the more fun you’re gonna have putting it out there. Friends try to be nice.Friends think you can handle the truth. Friends will lie when something is out of tune or over baked. If they want to hear your craftsmanship let me locate it on their own. Google is a wonderful tool. If they bring it up in a conversation do all you can to break free of it. Save your friends for other occasions such as crashing a new Cheesecake Factory. Truth number five. Weekly versus daily episodes. I do them both. That doesn’t mean I like it. Two truths already discussed come into play. You are your own story and practice, practice, fail, practice. I comefrom terrestrial radio. We do shows everyday! You get used to the energy. I have three podcasts that get attention once a week. The numbers are high but individually they aren’t generating enough steamto keep this engine on the tracks. I grasp the idea of why so many prefer to use the once a week approach. I do love it though when I go to Marc Maron and Dax Shepherd and the boys have brought mesome quality content and conversation several times during the week. What do I do? I keep going back to them. The more we listen the more advertisers enjoy sponsoring them. Truth number six. Never too early to start but you’re fifteen years behind. Think about that for a moment. When I first jumped into podcasting in 2012 it was already in forward motion. No matter how hardI worked on developing my own voice and style I was still fifteen years behind. I totally respect those that took huge chances in the years before me. It prepared my 2012 stage. This was way beforeiHeart Radio began to support it. Long before Spreaker and Anchor.fm. Before those platforms began to unfold I spent a ton of time searching for radios to post the interviews and features. I gave my stuffaway just so I could learn how to play. Today’s new podcasters have it a little sweeter. Everything you need is right there for the taking. Oh wait. That brings me to a truth. Easy to start. Easier to quit. I’ve always looked at this cool way to shareconversation as being our KDKA in Pittsburgh. That little torch knew it could and proved it. It hit the air in 1920. Alan Freed, The Real Don Steal, Wolfman Jack, Casey Kasum, Dick Clark, Howard Stern and every local small town hero wouldn’t have been heard if someone hadn’t planted the seed. Truth number seven. The very second you begin a podcast your longterm vision is to reach 100 plus episodes. You have to think like this! You aren’t going to get valuable advertisers by sluggishly playingalong. Someone’s gonna ask, “How many episodes have you posted? What’s in your catalog? How long did you say you’re going to do this?” They always told us in martial arts that we can’t master thepunch, kick or block until we’ve done it 100,000 times. There was a time in radio when the old timers would tell the young bucks, “You’ll never be looked at as a pro in radio until you’ve been fired threetimes and divorced just as many.” The longer you spend in between these sheets the more you’ll understand what they mean. There you have it! Seven podcasting truths. Grab your light sabers and take up sides during this battle in the galactic core of a universe that looks brighter than the Northern Lights. I’m Arroe and that’s pod-crashing
Jinkies! A TV-G movie that features a beloved group of childhood characters versus confederate pirate ghosts? It must be 1998's Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island! Alix's birthday month gives us our first animated film that doesn't feature murderous bunnys/idols. The team looks at the history of the Scooby-Doo franchise, and what led to the decision to update the characters for Zombie Island. There's is also a ton of nostalgic asides because, well... 1998. Why did Casey Kasum drop out of his role as Shaggy? Just how much does Anthony hate Scrappy-Doo (Spoiler alert: A lot)? What part still stand out as scary? Grab some Scooby Snacks and find out! As always, rate, subscribe, share with your buds, and let's all try to forget Scrappy-Doo existed. Classic Horror 2 by Kevin MacLeodLicensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
"The Power Pirate" Aired: September 8, 1973 The premiere of The World's Greatest Super Friends Podcast debuts with a look at the very first episode from 1973. Strange power drains have the Super Friends gathered to investigate and help in rescue caused by the power failures. What is causing it and how does Sir Cedric Cedric of Scotland Yard fit into all of this? John is joined by 13th Dimension webmaster Dan Greenfield to discuss each and every episode of The Super Friends from 1973 to its conclusion in 1985 (strangely enough 93 episodes in total). In the premiere podcast, the two discuss the voice actors involved in the show, the tonal shift of Olan Soule and Casey Kasum in playing Batman and Robin compared to their run on Filmation's 68 Batman show, and the iconic theme song that still gets the heart racing with it plays. Dan Greenfield is the editor and co-creator of 13thDimension.com, a website devoted primarily to comics and pop culture, past and present. To him, the basic food groups are Batman, Planet of the Apes, Star Trek (the Original Series), James Bond, the Beatles and the Stones. But if he had to he'd be able to subsist on Batman alone. Channel 11 in New York was his favorite syndicated channel as a kid -- you can guess why -- followed closely by Channel 5. Channel 9 didn't really enter into it unless he was home sick and there wasn't much else on. He's married to his remarkably patient wife Wendy and his best sidekick is his son, Sam. They have two cats,Lex and Zod. Links 13th Dimension Website Facebook page Twitter
"The Power Pirate" Aired: September 8, 1973 The premiere of The World's Greatest Super Friends Podcast debuts with a look at the very first episode from 1973. Strange power drains have the Super Friends gathered to investigate and help in rescue caused by the power failures. What is causing it and how does Sir Cedric Cedric of Scotland Yard fit into all of this? John is joined by 13th Dimension webmaster Dan Greenfield to discuss each and every episode of The Super Friends from 1973 to its conclusion in 1985 (strangely enough 93 episodes in total). In the premiere podcast, the two discuss the voice actors involved in the show, the tonal shift of Olan Soule and Casey Kasum in playing Batman and Robin compared to their run on Filmation's 68 Batman show, and the iconic theme song that still gets the heart racing with it plays. Dan Greenfield is the editor and co-creator of 13thDimension.com, a website devoted primarily to comics and pop culture, past and present. To him, the basic food groups are Batman, Planet of the Apes, Star Trek (the Original Series), James Bond, the Beatles and the Stones. But if he had to he'd be able to subsist on Batman alone. Channel 11 in New York was his favorite syndicated channel as a kid -- you can guess why -- followed closely by Channel 5. Channel 9 didn't really enter into it unless he was home sick and there wasn't much else on. He's married to his remarkably patient wife Wendy and his best sidekick is his son, Sam. They have two cats,Lex and Zod. Links 13th Dimension Website Facebook page Twitter
In the first BeyondPodcasting episode, Allan Tépper and guest Memo Sauceda discuss sacred terminology and its proper use: podcast, radio and television… on-demand, by appointment, prerecorded and truly live. References are made to Casey Kasum’s and Javier Romero’s musical countdown … Continued
Catwoman finds a ringer for Robin and manages to get him to replace the real deal. But Batman doesn't appear to be buying it. Can it proves his suspicions before this ringer can reveal Batman's identity to Catwoman? Plus, Mr. Freeze kidnaps a maharaja, right under the noses of the GCPD and Batman and Robin. Can they rescue him before he is frozen and tossed into Gotham Harbor? In addition, John and Dan Greenfield, creator and author of the 13th Dimension discuss the gaping plot hole of what is one of the best stories of the series, the voice work of Casey Kasum, and the Bat Midget Car. Comment on the episode here or write thebatcavepodcast@gmail.com. Dan Greenfield is the editor and co-creator of 13thDimension.com, a website devoted primarily to comics and pop culture, past and present. To him, the basic food groups are Batman, Planet of the Apes, Star Trek (the Original Series), James Bond, the Beatles and the Stones. But if he had to he'd be able to subsist on Batman alone. Channel 11 in New York was his favorite syndicated channel as a kid -- you can guess why -- followed closely by Channel 5. Channel 9 didn't really enter into it unless he was home sick and there wasn't much else on. He's married to his remarkably patient wife Wendy and his best sidekick is his son, Sam. They have two cats,Lex and Zod. Links 13th Dimension Website Facebook page Twitter
Episode Notes Here we go again! We're back at it answering all of the burning questions of yesteryear with a hip new fidget spinning, bottle flipping, Heely wearin, perspective. I edited this a week ago so I don't remember the goofs but there is a bit about Casey Kasum so hey can't be all bad right? This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
The Drunken Disney Matinee Edition. Some people have no Twitter etiquette. Kirstie Alley tweets and eats. The movie theater that encourages drunken pedophiles. One final plea for Casey Kasum. Jason Biggs got mad Malaysian Airline jokes. Plus, Tim McGraw, Jennifer Lopez, The Hollywood Dime, Black People Newz, Un-Fun Fact Trivia, and much more! www.beyondserious.com