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If you never made your FB profile picture that “I made you a cookie, but I eated it :(“ meme in 2008, were you even living? In this episode, Hannah and Maia recall the long lost emo subculture - which took the world by storm in the mid aughts and fell quickly into obscurity thereafter. Emo emerged as a musical non-genre from the DIY hardcore punk scenes of San Fran and Detroit, and two decades later it would transform into completely unrecognizable pop punk radio hits resounding in every mall you ever walked into. But thanks to the no-holds-barred, cost-effective utopias that were MySpace and LiveJournal, it seemed the emo subculture was stronger than ever - as socially-anxious teens bonded over their love for Pete Wentz and their own self-loathing. What could possibly go wrong? Are subcultures a form of teenage sovereignty? And do we have Twilight because of 9/11? Listen, for these pressing questions and more. Tangents include: Hannah's parents' perfect marriage, Orson Welles vs. Woody Allen beef, and Maia's online relationship with Gerard Way. Get a whole month of great cinema FREE: mubi.com/rehash Support us on Patreon and get juicy bonus content: https://www.patreon.com/rehashpodcast Intro and outro song by our talented friend Ian Mills: https://linktr.ee/ianmillsmusic SOURCES: Peter C. Baker, “When Emo Conquered the Mainstream” New Yorker (2023). Tom Connick, “The beginner's guide to the evolution of emo” NME (2018). M. Douglas Daschuk, “Messageboard Confessional: Online Discourse and the Production of the "Emo Kid"” Berkeley Journal of Sociology, Vol. 54, Knowledge Production and Expertise (2010). Judith May Fathallah, Emo: How Fans Defined a Subculture, University of Iowa Press (2020). Andy Greenwald, Nothing Feels Good: Punk Rock, Teenagers, and Emo, St. Martin's Publishing (2003). Rosemary Overell, “Emo online: networks of sociality/networks of exclusion,” Perfect Beat (2011). Dan Ozzi, Sellout: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore, Mariner (2021). Carla Zdanow and Bianca Wright, The Representation of Self Injury and S*icide on Emo Social Networking Groups” African Sociological Review, Vol. 16, No. 2 (2012).
Keith sits down with Jared Cortland to discuss growing up in Santa Rosa California, discovering the local scene, early music influences, the early days of Brother Bear who eventually became State Faults, all of the work that goes into developing a new band and some on-stage mess up stories. We also discuss State Fault's hiatus due to personal and creative exhaustion and the subsequent formation of Slow Bloom, the return of State Faults partially inspired by an article written by Dan Ozzi, their return LP "Clairvoyant", the band's new momentum being sidelined by the pandemic, the writing and recording of their 2024 LP "Children of the Moon" which began during lockdown in 2020, the themes behind the record, the band's creative process and more.
Help Wanted: Someone with a good ear for details and vast video game knowledge. Successful candidate should be able to discern clues, make informed guesses, and doesn't mind being occasionally wrong. Interested applicants should tune in, specifically around the 30:27 mark. Before then, be prepared to hear about what Vicki, Doug, and Katie have been reading, listening, and thinking about. Reading 'Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be' by Becky Kennedy 'Sellout: The Major-Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994–2007)' by Dan Ozzi 'Iron Flame' by Rebecca Yarros Watching Twisted Metal (Peacock) Pokémon Concierge (Netflix) Pokémon: Path to the Peak (Pokémon YouTube Channel) PokéNational Geographic (Elious Entertainment YouTube Channel) Thinking About Pokémon Unite God of War Ragnarök: Valhalla DLC 2024 Goals Find us on Twitter: @NovelGamingPod Send us an e-mail: novelgamingpodcast@gmail.com Logo by: Katie! Theme song: "Bit Bossa" by Azureflux
Welcome to PlaylistMakers: a new Indie Basketball Podcast episode where a group of folks collaboratively make a playlist together, fantasy draft style. I am joined by Dan Ozzi, Ian Cohen, and Josh Terry to collectively create a playlist of Album Openers / Track 1's. Want to listen to the final output playlist? Check it out here: https://spoti.fi/3sYmrgF ---- All merch is on sale until December 15th at http://www.indiebasketball.com Half Court Sessions with Ratboys is now up on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@indiebasketball Support Indie Basketball on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/indiebasketball Join the conversation on Discord: https://discord.gg/HJaDNwxSbe Instagram | YouTube | TikTok Theme music courtesy of Empty Heaven. Outro courtesy of Mother Evergreen.
We made it! Who knew that this podcast, birthed out of a random DM from John to Bryan after they effectively hijacked his episode of Blocked Party and made it the de facto first episode of POD Kast, would make it all the way to damn Episode 50! And we thought, what better way to celebrate than by bringing on some of our friends to talk about their favorite nu-metal songs, what makes the genre great (or bad, according to one of our guests), and then at the end of the episode, Bryan and John reveal their all-time favorite nu-metal songs and we go all the way deep with this 2.5-hour classic. So please join us, Raina Douris (NPR), Dan Ozzi (Sellout), Ed Zitron (Where's Your Ed At?) and Andy Anaya (Pool Kids) for what was one of our most fun episodes yet. And if you want more fun episodes, head on over to patreon.com/thepodkast, where $4/month gets you THREE bonus episodes every single month. Last month, Luke Owen from WrestleTalk joined us to discuss the Daredevil 2003 soundtrack, and it was a real 20-track, Wind-Up Records-curated doozy. And for $7/month, you get access to every single bonus episode in video format, plus you'll get to vote in this month's exclusive Poll, only available to our donors. Plus, there's merch discounts, access to our Discord, and you'll get every bonus episode we've ever recorded immediately upon donation. Get it!
What's the craziest interaction you've ever had with someone online that led to you being blocked? We answer that question and more as Dan Ozzi (writer) joins the show for the first time to give us the scoop on being blocked by everyone's least favourite Twitter question-asker, Eric Alper. We start the show by talking about UFC's preeminent crazy person, Bryce Mitchell, and then we move on from there to commiserate with Dan about the state of online, as he told us before the episode he was grateful to finally have people to talk about it with. So of course, we touch on Bluesky's emerging prominence, Elon's stupid tweet reply to Taylor Swift, his potential decision to make everyone pay to use the site, TikTok stickers, and comedy club menus. Plus, Dan is mad at the "20 songs" tweet, John brings up some rough content from Jimmy Carr and Andre Iguodala, and Stefan finds the Naked Lego subreddit. What is your favourite podcast to help support, while also getting access to bonus episodes, ad-free episodes, an exclusive Discord, and merch discounts? Well that must be Blocked Party! And you can support the show by heading over to patreon.com/blockedparty, where $5/month will get you THREE of those bonus episodes PLUS access to the whole damn back catalogue, over 100 episodes worth! Rot your brain! Which music writer is the one that you would say most reminds you of riding in the backseat of your dad's car through the woods at Christmastime? It's gotta be Dan Ozzi, who wrote the wonderful book Sellout, about punk and emo's major-label feeding frenzy in the late 90s and early 00s. It's available wherever you get your books. You can also subscribe to Dan's Substack at danozzi.substack.com, and you can follow him on Twitter and Instagram at @danozzi. This episode is also available in video format on YouTube. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Friend of the show Dan Shulman makes his return to Tall Can Audio to talk to Matt Robinson about how he got involved with the Left Field Brewery, what his schedule was like while he called games for Team Canada at the FIBA World Cup and the Toronto Blue Jays at the same time, why this Canadian squad seemed to register with fans more than previous groups, whether he'll be calling playoff games for the Jays this year, why fans have been so annoyed with this edition of the Jays and why Toronto, if they make the playoffs, is a group that other teams might not be happy to face off against.Interested in any of the books we've discussed on the show lately? You can support the podcast by using our affiliate links below."Smash" by Ian Winwood. https://amzn.to/3RABDKK”Sellout” by Dan Ozzi. https://amzn.to/3tdXZHD”Deliver Me From Nowhere” by Warren Zanes. https://amzn.to/3ZxRr2HFollow TCA on bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/tallcanaudio.bsky.socialFollow TCA on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@tallcanaudioFollow TCA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tallcanaudioFollow TCA on Instagram: https://instagram.com/tallcanaudio?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Follow TCA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tallcanaudio
Matt Kaunisviita from TSN 1200 makes his Tall Can Audio debut as he joins Matt Robinson in studio to discuss whether the Ottawa REDBLACKS need to make changes, the season ahead for the Sens, some craft beer musings, adding some musical personality to sports talk radio, trivia and tons more.Here's some links to the music books discussed on the show. If you purchase them through our links, you pay what you'd always have paid but we get a small kickback. It's a great way to support the podcast."Smash" by Ian Winwood. https://amzn.to/3RABDKK”Sellout” by Dan Ozzi. https://amzn.to/3tdXZHD”Deliver Me From Nowhere” by Warren Zanes. https://amzn.to/3ZxRr2HFollow TCA on bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/tallcanaudio.bsky.socialFollow TCA on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@tallcanaudioFollow TCA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/tallcanaudioFollow TCA on Instagram: https://instagram.com/tallcanaudio?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y= Follow TCA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tallcanaudio
I talked to Dan Ozzi, author of the book Sellout, about his recent Fader piece about The Armed—a band/collective/cult from Detroit. We jump from there into early 2010s music writing, hearing new music as you get old, editing Noisey in the early 2010s, getting nostalgic about Chumped, media now vs. media then, when the label or publisher asks you to do corny stuff, selling out, "lying Lydia Tár" ...and then we close out by reacting to Barack Obama's summer playlist, which dropped right before we recorded. patreon.com/afterthedeluge -- https://twitter.com/routinelayup https://twitter.com/danozzi -- https://danozzi.bigcartel.com/ https://www.thefader.com/2023/06/27/cover-story-the-armed-perfect-saviors-interview-profile-2023 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/afterthedeluge/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/afterthedeluge/support
Episode 125 Some thoughts that come from greater minds than mine. With the summer comes everyone too busy to come on a podcast so I had been pulling together some ideas when Norman Brannon's relaunch of Anti-Matter as a substack spurned some real energy into my brain for the first time in awhile in a way that only someone like Norm and his words could inspire. For those of you who don't know what a substack is, its a way writers can offer their time and craft and be supported by those who wish to support them. www.antimatter.substack.com Follow and support the relaunch of one of the most pivotal zines of the 90's hardcore zines For most of episode I try to pull together some ideas from my library to engage you all to think further on the subject of hardcore and selling out etc, but I don't feel like I put it together tight enough. In time I'll get better at it, but it was fun to chat with you all for a bit. Sellout by Dan Ozzi - available on Amazon www.amazon.com/Sellout-Feeding-Frenzy-Hardcore-1994-2007/dp/0358244307 Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=31319963456&ref_=ps_ms_370713412&cm_mmc=msn-_-comus_shopp_used_trade-_-naa-_-naa&msclkid=8ee1eedc9aca1f590a698a6c2e9ec74c">Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation NYHC 1980-1990 by Tony Rettman available via amazon www.amazon.com/NYHC-York-Hardcore-1980-1990/dp/1935950126 Punk: The Definitive Record of a Revolution by Stephan Colgrave and Chris Sullivan www.amazon.com/Punk-Definitive-Revolution-Stephen-Colegrave/dp/1560257695 The Anti-Matter Anthology: A 1990s Post-Punk & Hardcore Reader by Norman Brannon Opening Track of the Episode: Berthold City - Until I Fade Away from the upcoming LP "A Moment in Time." Preorders for A Moment in Time are available now (Friday 7/14) from www.war-rec.com
Part 2 of my conversation with guest Phil Stacey about the music of 2000. Show notes: Jay's non-top 5 picks: Hot Snakes, Rollins Band, Fu Manchu, Pearl Jam Phil's and Jay's #5: Diverse offering from the Tragically Hip Phil's and Jay's #4: More accessible effort about living in NYC by PJ Harvey Phil's #3: Bluesy debut album from North Mississippi All-Stars Jay's #3: Electrifying major-label debut from At the Drive-In Featured in Dan Ozzi's book Sellout about indie acts who sign with majors Phil's #2: Phish blends some different styles into their jam band formula Jay's #2: Queens of the Stone Age's second album takes a big leap onto the rock scene Phil's #1: U2 bounces back with a back-to-basics release Phil: Feeling down about what was once his favorite band How bands age The last really good U2 album Jay's #1: Radiohead totally reinvents their sound, embracing electronics Phil's not feeling it Favorite songs: "Optimistic" (Jay), "Stuck In a Moment You Can't Get Out Of" (Phil) Completely Conspicuous is available through Apple Podcasts. Subscribe and write a review! The opening and closing theme of Completely Conspicuous is "Theme to Big F'in Pants" by Jay Breitling. Voiceover work is courtesy of James Gralian.
Welcome to You Haven't Blanked That! This week, we watched Maniac. We talk about not getting a boner during the movie, Who Frank Zito is, Tom Savini, the first murder at the beach, hooker questions, changing actress mid strangle, Visitor Q situation, subway chase, the photo shoot, heavy breathing, a cross between Norman Bates and Jack the Ripper, Who would Corey Feldman Play?, the remake, Texas Chainsaw Massacre. What are you blanking?: Godzilla movies, Police Story 2, House of Hammer, Champions, The Fabelmans, Sellout by Dan Ozzi, Muppet Mayhem, Opening theme by the Assassins Closing theme by Lucas Perea For more info, click the link in the bio. https://linktr.ee/yhblankthat --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/blanked-that/message
Spinning Out (another music podcast) We talk to artists about their favorite albums and go on wild tangents. This is a podcast where we talk to guests about their favorite albums. Today we're talking with sometimes co-host Sarah Blumenthal. We talked about Thursday's 2001 album "Full Collapse." We also talk about the popularity of Korn, Victory Records & Dan Ozzi's book Sellout. Subscribe to our Patreon here: www.patreon.com/spinningoutpod Follow us on social media -- twitter and instagram (@Spinningoutpod)
Exploramos la trayectoria de algunas de las bandas más influyentes del rock en español en Colombia: La Pestilencia, Tr3s de Corazón, Doctor Krapula y Don Tetto. En este episodio, tomamos inspiración del libro “Sellout” de Dan Ozzi para discutir cómo estas bandas han navegado por el difícil camino de mantener su autenticidad y al mismo tiempo alcanzar el éxito comercial. Lee Sellout y conóce mas a Dan Ozzi: Web | Instagram | Twitter | LinkedIn La Pestilencia, por ejemplo, ha sido una de las bandas más emblemáticas del punk rock en Colombia desde la década de 1980. Han sido conocidos por su estilo agresivo y su postura política, y han mantenido su identidad en una escena musical que a menudo ha favorecido la comercialización sobre la integridad artística. Sin embargo, como se discutió en el podcast, La Pestilencia ha encontrado una manera de llegar a nuevas audiencias sin comprometer su mensaje, lo que demuestra que es posible tener éxito sin venderse. Sigue a La Pestilencia: Web | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube Por otro lado, Tr3s de Corazón ha sido reconocido por su capacidad de evolucionar su sonido y su imagen con el tiempo. Aunque inicialmente se les asociaba con el punk rock, la banda ha incorporado elementos de pop y rock alternativo en su música, lo que les ha permitido ampliar su base de fans y explorar nuevos métodos para explotar su marca. Sigue a Tr3s De Corazón: Web | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube Doctor Krapula también ha experimentado una evolución en su sonido, pero su compromiso con su mensaje político ha sido constante. Aunque han alcanzado un gran éxito comercial en Colombia, nunca han renunciado a su identidad como una banda que usa su música para abordar temas sociales importantes. Como se discutió en el podcast, este equilibrio puede ser difícil de mantener, pero Doctor Krapula ha demostrado que es posible. Sigue a Doctor Krapula: Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Instagram Finalmente, Don Tetto ha sido una de las bandas Colombianas más exitosas del rock en español en los últimos años. Como se discutió en el podcast, algunos críticos han acusado a la banda de venderse y abandonar su sonido pop punk original en favor de un sonido más comercial. Sin embargo, como se señaló, también han mantenido su lealtad a su base de fans, le han abierto el camino a otras bandas y han construido un imperio musical lo cual ha ayudado a mantener su marca vigente. Sigue a Don Tetto: Web | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube
Chris Farren doesn't know a lot about ska, despite his claim that he "practically invented modern ska guitar playing." However, he IS an amazing ska podcast guest. We discuss the various ways his non-ska career has intersected with ska and ska people. We also just wanted to hear Chris' amazing stories! Chris starts by reading us his texts from TikTok celebrity Mike Park. We also learn what it was like for Chris to collaborate with Jeff Rosenstock. Chris tells us about sharing a Cameo with Brian Fallon, performing on the Chris Gethard Show. And, Chris tells us the one, single ska album he owned back in the day. You will never guess which one it was. (Hint: It was The Aquabats' Myths Legends, and Other Amazing Adventures Vol 2). We also learn why best-selling author Dan Ozzi takes Chris' press photos (And also photos of Chris in front of Glenn Danzig's house). We also talk about Chris' iconic Smiths t-shirt (As seen on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon), The Cup (ie the greatest piece of merch ever invented), we hear his Martin Starr/hip hop story, and we learn why Chris took down his Born Hotline after 2 years! Plus Chris updates his "How to be a punk celebrity" Vice article for inquiring punks in 2023. Support the show
Join our PATREON for bonus episodes. This week we have Geoff Rickly from Thursday, No Devotion, United Nations, and author of Someone Who Isn't Me on to discuss the first two Ink & Dagger 7"s. We talk about: jersey boys on the pod, RIP Earth, the podcast industrial complex, Geoff at fashion week, the new book, Mark McCoy, the book writing process, Ibogaine treatment, Turkish hair plugs revisited, the New Brunswick basement scene, the Ink & Dagger beat, collective experience, fighting on LSD, earworm lyrics, the halloween shows, getting jokerfied, overlooked parts of the Thursday catalog, the No Devotion curse, Dan Ozzi's Sellout, those nights in the basement, writing in the process of "we", Andrew doesn't mention Initial Records, and much more. // Follow us at @danbassini, @mysprocalledlife, @geoffrickly and @runintotheground. Pre-order Geoff's book here. Listen to our RITG Mixtape Vol. 12 Best of 2022 here.
Dan Ozzi - author of the national bestseller SELLOUT - The Major-Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore 1994-2007 - is our guest for episode #24. He also co-authored (with Laura Jane Grace) TRANNY - Confessions of Punk Rock's Most Infamous Anarchist Sellout. He joined us to talk about those books, how he got started as a music writer and his thoughts on Chicago. Plus he shares his love of soda. Time stamps:2:45: How did you get started in music writing?6: Was music something you'd ever written about before?8:30: How did the book with Laura Jane Grace come together?11:20: When did you zoom out and realize this era was worth writing a book about?12:20: Where do you jump in and follow the scene in real time?20:38: When you were writing Sell Out were there any bands that you hadn't intended to write about that during research really stood out, and you had to write about?21:52: Where do you start when you start writing a book?27:41: Any surreal moments working on the book?31:20: How does it feel to write about someone who did something that wasn't always the best thing to do?33:45: Any revelatory moments from anyone interviewed in the book?35: The idea of selling out seems like an outdated concept, do you think this is a good thing to not be held to the same standard as those bands from the past?40:38: Was there a band you appreciated more after writing about them?44:31: What has the response to the book been like?48:30: What are you working on next?49:20: When you think of Chicago music, what do you think about?53: Think or thin crust pizza fan?55:10: Favorite spot to see a show in Chicago?56: What makes the Chicago music scene unique to you?58:45: What have you been listening to lately?61:49: What is your go to cheap drink?
It's a tale as old as Nirvana. A band (ideally punk or punk influenced) forms and gets some buzz. Major labels swarm. The kids sign on the dotted line…and are promptly thrown to the wolves. Fade to black. And while that often-repeated story isn't exactly false, it doesn't do much to capture the shifting dynamics that shaped the economies of rock over the 90's and 2000's—an era when the relationship between independent artists and the major label mainstream was central to American musical culture. Luckily for us, we have Dan Ozzi, whose excellent book “Sell Out: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy that Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore, 1994-2007” is a vital guide to a complex and frequently oversimplified moment. We talk Green Day and At The Drive In, Thursday and Jimmy Eat World as we try to figure out why major labels threw so much money at emotionally-literate post-hardcore bands when there was still a bumper crop of Nu Metal—and how those practices shifted as the internet began to remake the industry. Talk about understanding in a car crash, amirite? Subscribe to our newsletter! Follow us on Twitter! Music: Jets to Brazil - "Chinatown"
This week the Bayers are joined by bestselling author, Dan Ozzi whose book "Sellout" comes out on paperback tomorrow! To celebrate we reminisce about the time Dan had a VIP experience with Jonah and his parents at a New York Yankees game (thanks to Vanessa and Lorne Michaels) and which corporations have the best snacks, ranging from free Luna bars at Dan's ex-employer VICE to the time he loaded up on free desserts at Google. From there we get into our topic, where Dan compares his job working at a Toys "R" Us on Staten Island to Jonah's experience of working at a Kids "R" Us in suburban Ohio. It turns out Dan's job was like a Coen Safdie brothers movie with Simpsons figurines while Jonah's job was more like a movie directed by a very boring director that ends with him getting fired for playing a Tori Amos song on the local news. Finally, we play another round of "Legit Moan or Unnecessary Groan" where we debate if the United States are Un-united, discuss how littering with garbage is different than littering with language and recap the basic tenets of tipping for those Cleveland Plain Dealer readers who feel that working at Pizza Hut for minimum wage is a job that you should be grateful to have. Did we mention Dan's book is coming out in paperback? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Brian comes clean about his lifelong love of the immature punks that call themselves Blink-182 and talks with Murdock about that time they saw them play, their shared love for other punk bands, and what might happen to Matt Skiba. SHOW NOTES: Songs used in this episode: Blink-182 "Dumpweed", "Dammit," "Built This Pool"; Alkaline Trio "Stupid Kid"; Alex Melton - "If Blink 182 wrote A Thousand Miles by Vanessa Carlton" Dan Ozzi book: https://www.amazon.com/Sellout-Feeding-Frenzy-Hardcore-1994-2007-ebook/dp/B08B32P5B2
Zach Blair of Rise Against joined us for this one. We went over so much during this interview! Blair is someone who is always focusing on music in some capacity. Whether it's his podcast, seeing his brother Doni's band (Toadies) on the road, or playing in his band - he's always moving. His podcast, Anti-Hereos, started this year. In some ways, his father served as a hidden inspiration for his current podcast. His father's all night request hour was his own corner of the show biz. Now, Zach is behind the mic for his podcast. Zach wanted to be involved in music from day one. He knew from the start that he was going to play music or die trying. It would one day become his main source of income. We discussed the music scene with a full conversation about the evolution of punk and how touring has changed from the days when he had to use payphones and road maps to get around. Additionally, we reviewed the term "sellout," and discussed Dan Ozzi's hit book since Rise Against had a chapter in it. Last year Blair had a full circle moment when Rise Against went on tour with the Descendents. To this day they are one of his favorite bands and a big influence for his first band, Hagfish. His journey in music has been filled with countless connections. One that eventually led to meeting the members of Rise Against, clicking with them, and joining the band.
Author Dan Ozzi discusses "Sellout: The Major-Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994–2007)", newly available in expanded paperback edition. Hear a follow-up pod exploring music from Dan's book at Patreon.com/MikeTully
Keith and Rob talk with Dan Ozzi about his book SELLOUT: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994-2007).
Darrin chats with writer of the book SELLOUT Mr. Dan Ozzi
Dan Ozzi, the author of the book Sellout, joins us again and Rob recaps his week staying with Dan in Los Angeles, all the awesome food they ate, and their beach day. Rob discusses his trip to Vegas and sitting front row at an AEW PPV. We watch the trailer for the new Machine Gun Kelly movie, Good Mourning. Rob goes on a rant on Hershey's chocolate. And, stick around for the end for Rob's Italian accent. Watch the video version on our Twitch and Youtube. Join our Patreon and get two bonus episodes each month, and other behind-the-scenes goodies. More info here. Follow us on: Twitch, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and our Discord Chat. Also don't forget about our Spotify playlist. We also have merch if you're into that kind of sharing See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we have America's Only Music Writer, the author of Sellout, Dan Ozzi to talk about Against Me!'s As The Eternal Cowboy. We dig into some hot topics like leaf blowing neighbors, Dan's palatial estate with two wifi networks, audiobook narrators, rock voice, getting Charles Bronson in a best selling book, eulogizing Vintage Vinyl, soda chat, nitro Pepsi, a lot of fast foot talk, Taco Bell's half life, midnight Jack in the Box family style, feed the beat for podcasters, unlimited Chipotle Card, fast food scams, the Quiznos Layover, preparing for the upcoming grain shortage, explaining Atom and His Package to John Mulaney, how Andrew pitches perspective guests, riding in vans with boys, the special interest dvd section at Best Buy, Condoleezza Rice, email songs, and spatial awareness. // Follow us at @danbassini, @mysprocalledlife, @danozzi and @runintotheground. Listen to our RITG Mixtape Vol. 4 here and our Best of RITG Vol. 1 playlist here.
Pat & Seb are reading the book "Sellout" by Dan Ozzi, which springs a good conversation about the punk rock scene, it's origin and it's current state.
Spinning Out (another music podcast) We talk to artists about their favorite albums and go on wild tangents. Today we're talking with author Dan Ozzi. We talked about Jimmy Eat World's third album "Clarity," and also about his journey as a writer and his new book, Sellout. If you haven't checked out Dan's book, I would highly recommend it. We've brought it up on several previous episodes -- And if I do say so myself, it's up there with books like Our Band Could Be Your Life, which if you know me, that's saying a whole hell of a lot. The book documents the major label debuts of bands like Green Day, Jawbreaker, Jimmy Eat World, Against Me! and so many more. Check it out here: https://www.danozzi.com/books Subscribe to our Patreon: www.patreon.com/spinningoutpod
Keith and Tommy sit down with Dan Ozzi to discuss growing up in New York City, discovering punk rock, how Dan established his career as a writer and author, collaborating with Laura Jane Grace on her autobiography and the inception of "Sellout", Dan's latest best selling book. We also discuss the leadup to and release of Sellout, some of the bands detailed in the book and what Dan is working on next.
Geoff and Bo talk Memphis ice storm, Dan Ozzi's new book “Sellout”, “Pam & Tommy”, “The Righteous Gemstones”, Joe Ingles, Toronto Raptors, Cleveland Cavs, trades, our Pick Game of the Week between the Charlotte Hornets and Boston Celtics, Lowered Expectations, and we pick a game for next week. Thank you for listening.
LINER NOTES: Happy New Year! Welcome as we kick off another year of tracks of TPR... This week, Kris debuts 2022 with a conversation with author Dan Ozzi to talk about punk rock and his book, Sellout: The Major-Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994–2007)About the book: A raucous history of punk, emo, and hardcore's growing pains during the commercial boom of the early 90s and mid-aughts, following eleven bands as they “sell out” and find mainstream fame, or break beneath the weight of it allPunk rock found itself at a crossroads in the mid-90's. After indie favorite Nirvana catapulted into the mainstream with its unexpected phenomenon, Nevermind, rebellion was suddenly en vogue. Looking to replicate the band's success, major record labels set their sights on the underground, and began courting punk's rising stars. But the DIY punk scene, which had long prided itself on its trademark authenticity and anti-establishment ethos, wasn't quite ready to let their homegrown acts go without a fight. The result was a schism: those who accepted the cash flow of the majors, and those who defiantly clung to their indie cred.In Sellout, seasoned music writer Dan Ozzi chronicles this embattled era in punk. Focusing on eleven prominent bands who made the jump from indie to major, Sellout charts the twists and turns of the last “gold rush” of the music industry, where some groups “sold out” and rose to surprise super stardom, while others buckled under mounting pressures. Sellout is both a gripping history of the music industry's evolution, and a punk rock lover's guide to the chaotic darlings of the post-grunge era, featuring original interviews and personal stories from members of modern punk's most (in)famous bandsFor more from Dan and SELLOUT - visit his website. --About the Podcast: ‘TEXT PROSE AND ROCK N ROLL'- is the only podcast dedicated to the written account of musicians. From artist memoirs to band bios, and anything in between. You'll hear first accounts from those who lived the lifestyle; a Book Club that rocks - literally. It was Created, Hosted & Executive Produced by Kris Kosach. It was Produced & Edited by Charlene Goto of Go-To Productions. For more on the show, visit the website. Or follow us on Instagram and Facebook @TextproserocknrollFollow Kris on Social Media: @KrisKosachFollow Producer Char on Social Media: @ProducerChar
We are back with Part II of our conversation with Dan Ozzi. Mike and Sterling talk music, workouts and how Dan and the rest of Mike's family almost derailed his career in the stands of a preseason game in 2008. Buy Dan's book Sellout here or wherever you buy books!
OK, not really a holiday episode, but Dan's new book makes a great "holiday gift." As for the interview, it's real and it's spectacular. DAN OZZI is a New York-raised, LA-based writer. He's got a new book called “Sellout: The Major-Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994–2007)". He's written for outlets you've read and interviewed bands you know (Blink 182, anyone?). We talk about his own evolution, cultural trends, and of course, what it means to sell out.
Ahead of his induction to Canada's Walk of Fame, iconic Canadian singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburn joins us to look back on his illustrious career. Author Dan Ozzi talks about his latest book, Sellout, which traces the history of 11 punk bands that were branded as sellouts after they signed major label deals. Art collector and dentist Dr. Kenneth Montague discusses his new book of photos from his collection of works by Black photographers, As We Rise: Photography From The Black Atlantic.
Guest host and Spin magazine editor, Daniel Kohn, sits with Dan Ozzi to talk about his new book, Sellout, which describes the major label feeding frenzy that swept Punk, Emo and Hardcore from 1994-2007. They get into the idea behind the book as well as the bands that were part of this movement including Green Day, Jawbreaker, Jimmy Eat World , Blink-182 and many more…. Tune in to this bonus episode with Daniel Kohin and Dan Ozzi!
This week, Tom is joined by Dan Ozzi, author of the new book SELLOUT: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994-2007)
tOp FiVe ReAsOnS tO LiStEn tO tHiS ePiSode... // Check out the article by Dan Ozzi at Vice: https://www.vice.com/en/article/d35qkw/high-fidelity-created-a-hero-for-a-generation-of-sociopathic-nice-guys // Follow @didthatagewell @mollybirdsmith on Twitter and Instagram --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/didthatagewell/support
This week on Albummer! we're talking about Joe Pesci's fully immersive lounge singer experience, "Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just for You" with our special guest, music writer and chicken parmigiana activist Dan Ozzi! Two people on this album have Ac
Mike's cousin is a best selling author, (that's right!) Dan Ozzi (@DanOzzi) joins Mike and Sterling in part one of a punk rock episode of 3 Point Stance. We discuss his new book Sellout: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo and Hardcore, 1994-2007. Whether you are a diehard punk or the hardcore of the hardcore, this is a fantastic look at music in the 90's and early 2000's, bands like Green Day, Blink 182, Jimmy Eat World and many more! This is part one of our conversation with Dan, check back soon for part II where we dive deep in family history and tell some stories that can only be told now because the statute of limitations has to have run out. (We hope!) Order your copy here or watch out social media for a chance to win one!
Dan Ozzi is a journalist and author of the new book SELLOUT which chronicles the journey of 11 bands over 11 chapters, from gGreen Day to Against Me! as they signed to major labels . It is a fascinating and insightful dive into some of the most influential records to us. I also found it to be a storied and well researched exploration of moral choices in art and how that fits into our economy and society here in our subcultural's corner of the world. Can't recommend it enough. You can find him on twitter and such at @Danozzy This was recorded the first week of november 2021 in the basement of 89 North in Patchougue Long Island. The intro song is Not The Only One by The Chisel. The outro music is by Pat Brier of Queen Jesus. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dan is affectionately known as “America's only music writer” and when you glance at his impact, it's easy to know why. Throughout the years he's told brilliantly human stories about artists like Jimmy Eat World, Laura Jane Grace, and PUP, while also gracing publications like VICE, Noisey, The Guardian, Billboard, etc. On today's special bonus podcast, I chat with Dan about both REPLY ALT, his successful wild card of a newsletter, and his new book SELLOUT: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994-2007). Be sure to get a copy of SELLOUT after you hear today's chat; the book is out now!
Here is some unlocked content from our Patreon! Last week's interview with Dan Ozzi plus a prolonged discussion about Pete Davidson's magic dick. DESCRIPTION: It's time for your weekly pour of content slop from your favorite podcast The Filmdrunk Frotcast. This week, Matt and Vince welcome Dan Ozzi back to the pod. Last time you … Continue reading [UNLOCKED] Frotcast 492 – Pete Davidson Did 911 with Dan Ozzi →
This week Jeremy interviews writer and music journalist Dan Ozzi In celebration of the release of SELLOUT: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore (1994-2007) Jeremy sat down with Dan and talked becoming an LA resident, his high school grindcore band, playing bass, giving himself a physical, Michael Jackson's “Bad”, Staten Island's DIY scene, college class requirements, pursuing journalism, writing obituaries for the Staten Island Advance, reviewing Vin Diesel's “The Pacifier”, first experiences pitching articles, the quest for free CDs, his time in book publishing, pursuing freelance writing, getting hired at Noisey, what he learned about doing publicity, co-writing “Tranny” with Laura Jane Grace, focusing on the tasks in front of you, the inception of Sellout, the interview process for each chapter and how deep the research went, the juxtaposition between writing the Rise Against chapter vs try At the Drive-In chapter, how he chose the bands for the book, Cave In's “Antenna”, Indie labels vs Majors, suits disguised as punks, Tony Victory, the impact of labels today, and so much more! Discuss this episode with Jeremy and other listeners: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thefirsteverpodcast Twitter - https://www.twitter.com/thefirsteverpod Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thefirsteverpatreon
Tracking their evolution from the Berkeley punk scene to rock stardom, and all of the sell-out discourse in between, Dan Ozzi joins us this week to talk about Green Day. Follow Dan Ozzi on Twitter at @danozzi and pre-order his book, Sellout: The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk, Emo, and Hardcore, out Oct. 26, 2021. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The long-awaited conclusion to the Carpet's year-by-year discussion of 1990s favorites has Thom and Tom welcoming Matt Siblo and Noisey's Dan Ozzi to discuss Toy Story, Jackie Brown, The Big Lebowski, Heat, Being John Malcovich, and many, many more.
Do I listen to the Carpet because I'm rad? Or am I rad because I listen to the Carpet? Any way you slice it, Siblo and Whalen are here to reappraise the beloved 2000 record store romcom High Fidelity (3:30), with special guest Dan Ozzi from Noisey in the mix to comb the stacks and wallow in the Cusackian angst. Plus, your Carpeteers continue their month-long dive into the work of erstwhile New Hollywood luminary Peter Bogdanovich, this time falling hard for the Depression-era charmer that is 1973's Paper Moon (43:30). Don't get conned--get rad!
The VICE Magazine Podcast is your definitive guide to enlightening information. Since this is the last episode on our Music Issue, I wanted to tackle questions about how changes in technology have affected the state of the music industry today—for better or worse. In the age of streaming, with access to millions of songs, how do you figure out what to listen to? And how is that process different than it was ten years ago? What role will vinyl play in the future of music? What effect, if any, will streaming have on traditional notions of artistry? To answer these questions and more, Iinvited Eric Sundermann, editor-in-chief at Noisey; Emilie Friedlander, senior features editor at VICE and former editor-in-chief of Thump; and Dan Ozzi, writer and editor at Noisey, to join me in a roundtable discussion. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to the VICE Magazine Podcast, your definitive guide to enlightening information. Our monthly podcast is now a weekly podcast. We kicked off our new format last week with a discussion on race and toxic masculinity, and this time around, we have a lighter (and much) beloved topic: The Simpsons. Noisey, VICE's music site, recently ran a theme week on the intersection of music and TV. It covered everything from Chapelle's Show to Beavis and Butt-Head and even managed to work in an article on Law & Order's “dun dun” sound. For the theme week, Dan Ozzi, an editor at Noisey, co-wrote a feature with Alex Robert Ross about the iconic 1996 episode of The Simpsons, “Homerpalooza,” which had tons of rock stars, like the Smashing Pumpkins and Peter Frampton, playing themselves. So we had Dan on the show, to talk about the episode's relevance and lasting impact. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Trump administration is still going after an undocumented woman's right to choose, Spain's vow to take control of Catalonia, and we'll hear from Noisey writer Dan Ozzi on 90s punk rock compilation CDs. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Colin Kaepernick's lawsuit against the NFL, claims of the DEA cozying up with Big Pharma, and we'll hear from Noisey writer Dan Ozzi on the iconic 1996 Simpson's episode “Homerpalooza.” See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.