Podcasts about edgelord

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Best podcasts about edgelord

Latest podcast episodes about edgelord

Jim and Them
Corey Feldman's First Performance - #863 Part 1

Jim and Them

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2025 109:23


Streamathon: We are less than one week away from the Streamathon! Get ready for NON STOP JIM AND THEM FILTH PIGS! Love Left Video Scrapbook: We've had this Love Left box set burning a hole in our pocket, lets take a look at the digital scrapbook. Featuring Corey's debut performance at the Nickelodeon Kid's Choice Awards. Friendship Arc: We were at Universal Studios Fan Fest Nights recently and we ran into a member of Corey's entourage! Who could it be!? COREY FELDMAN!, SHOW STOPPER!, LET'S JUST TALK!, DON CHEADLE!, BOOGIE NIGHTS!, JIM AND THEM IS POP CULTURE!, YOU KNOW THAT!, 1K LIKES!, NMAN!, STREAMATHON!, SILENT 50!, SHOUT OUTS TO THE POPE!, AMERICAN POPE!, 1 WEEK COUNTDOWN!, DIGITAL SCRAPBOOK!, LOVE LEFT 2.1 BOX SET!, EARLY FOOTAGE!, FELDMAN!, RUNAWAY MUSIC VIDEO!, BLACK GUY!, MUSICIAN!, TEDDY RUXPIN!, DIC!, DISNEY SEX!, ALADDIN!, LITTLE MERMAID COVER!, KING ALI!, RAJAH!, TAKE YOUR PANTS OFF!, INNUENDO!, SNOPES!, YAHOO SERIOUS!, YOUNG EINSTEIN!, CORNBALL!, YOUNG!, NICOLE EGGERT!, WIL WHEATON!, NICKELODEN!, KIDS' CHOICE AWARDS!, BOBBY HEENAN!, 80S!, PREQUEL!, ROOTS!, FEELING IT!, WAP WAP WAP!, MEATBALLS 2!, ALIEN!, MEATHEAD!, GENUINELY HAPPY!, CHEESING!, UNIVERSAL!, FAN FEST NIGHTS!, DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS!, ONE PIECE!, BACK TO THE FUTURE!, WICKED!, GLINDA!, RECOGNIZED!, TRAM!, BACKLOT!, NEPO BABY BODYGUARD!, CHRIS!, COREY!, IRL!, TALK!, COOL!, DISARM!, JAWS!, COLLECTION!, COREY'S BODYGUARD TO THE STARS!, HARPOON GUN!, SPIELBERG!, SLASH!, STARCRUISER!, STRICKLAND!, SLACKERS!, BIFF!, GTA!, VICE CITY!, YE!, HH!, EDGY!, 4CHAN!, EDGELORD!  You can find the videos from this episode at our Discord RIGHT HERE!

Anime Death Spiral
Ep 105 - Edgelord Podcasters

Anime Death Spiral

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 87:41


The Only Anime Podcast explores the darkest recesses of their twisted minds and find nothing but disturbing imagery and intrusive thoughts before shaking it off and breaking down three more spring 2025 anime spring premiers 2025.LazarusKowloon Generic RomanceUmamusume: Cinderella GreyZatsu Tabi: It's Journey!

Double Threat with Julie Klausner & Tom Scharpling
The Edgelord and Edgelady of the Manor

Double Threat with Julie Klausner & Tom Scharpling

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 100:28


On this week's goddamn show Tom and Julie celebrate SNL50 by watching an old commercial for Dan Aykroyd's Crystal Head Vodka, and taste testing it for themselves. Plus they sang some player piano karaoke, watched the AI deepfake anit-Kanye video, a commercial for Furniture City featuring Head from Korn, and a clip of a Branson Kiss cover band gone wrong. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/tomandjulie and get on your way to being your best self. CLIPS FROM THIS WEEK'S EPISODE: Sherman the Player Piano Karaoke https://www.tiktok.com/@sherman.the.player.piano?_t=ZT-8tv0e6vsKmU&_r=1 Crystal Head Vodka Commercial https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arJSoKZYmfk AI Deepfake Anti-Kanye Video https://x.com/Ostrov_A/status/1889422104736702599 Head (from Korn) for Furniture City https://www.youtube.com/shorts/UcGtCDOculA Branson Kiss Cover Band Gone Wrong https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIwwJwdvprc SUPPORT DOUBLE THREAT ON PATREON Weekly Bonus Episodes, Monthly Livestreams, Video Episodes, and More! https://www.patreon.com/DoubleThreatPod WATCH VIDEO CLIPS OF DOUBLE THREAT https://www.youtube.com/@doublethreatpod  JOIN THE DOUBLE THREAT FAN GROUPS  *Discord https://discord.com/invite/PrcwsbuaJx  *Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/doublethreatfriends  *Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/doublethreatfriends   DOUBLE THREAT MERCH https://www.teepublic.com/stores/double-threat   TOTALLY EFFED UP T-SHIRTS  https://www.teepublic.com/user/dttfu   SEND SUBMISSIONS TO  DoubleThreatPod@gmail.com   FOLLOW DOUBLE THREAT  https://twitter.com/doublethreatpod  https://www.instagram.com/doublethreatpod   DOUBLE THREAT IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/double-threat   Theme song by Mike Krol Artwork by Michael Kupperman 00:00 Intro 20:05 Sherman the Player Piano Karaoke 27:59 SNL50 - Crystal Head Vodka Commercial 45:44 AI Deepfake Anti-Kanye Video 59:14 Head (from Korn) for Furniture City 1:07:46 Crystal Head Vodka taste test 1:13:12 Branson Kiss Cover Band Gone Wrong 1:26:44 Outro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Parking Lot: The Podcast
S5E1 - Sonic The Edgelord (Sonic the Hedgehog 1-3)

Parking Lot: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 102:34


A series we've ranted about off-hand for years just about any time Easter or James Marsden come up in conversation has come out with it's latest installment and we had to go check it out. Charlie had some catching up to do so he watched Sonic The Hedgehog 1 and 2 first. Somehow, Kevin convinced him to continue this journey and they both watched Sonic 3, definitely NOT the ending for this increasingly ridiculous (in a good way?) movie franchise. Grab your chili dogs and lets go fast!   Alternate titles* - Sonic 3 For Best Picture - Jim Carrey Plays Jim Carrey Playing Jim Carrey - Big The Cat Post Credits?  - Smashin Shadow? - Sonic and Shadow's Excellent Adventure   You can listen to a new episode of our show on Spotify, iTunes, and Podbean every Tuesday night at 8:30 PM EST! Also, our YouTube page is hosting our shows on a slight delay if that's more your speed! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJkezUs5nq2KtUh8F9oQJuQ

Luke Ford
Decoding Curtis Yarvin: The Edgelord's Guide to Monarchy (12-26-24)

Luke Ford

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2024 299:09


01:00 I distrust people who overstate their claims & expertise 06:00 Curtis Yarvin: The Edgelord's Guide to Monarchy 40K, https://decoding-the-gurus.captivate.fm/episode/curtis-yarvin-the-edgelords-guide-to-monarchy-40k 34:00 Dennis Prager is paralyzed from the neck down, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=158402 40:00 Joshua Prager Still Claiming He Was Nominated For A Pulitzer Prize, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=44569 1:13:30 Things Hidden: The Life and Legacy of René Girard, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-vB1HaBsog 1:52:40 Elliott Blatt joins to say he's less interested in politics 1:55:00 Elliott is sick of Elon Musk 1:57:20 Mark Halperin 1:59:00 Don Imus 2:02:10 Bronze Age Pervert, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_Age_Pervert 2:16:20 Ricardo joins the show to discuss taking Trump at face value https://decoding-the-gurus.captivate.fm/episode/dtg-christmas-quiz-2024-with-helen-lewis-badstats 2:22:15 Dooovid joins the discussion with Ricardo, Elliott Blatt 2:38:00 Ricardo doesn't know what is true in politics 2:42:00 Did our elites do a good job responding to covid? 3:52:00 Kip joins to ask me questions about suffering and will 4:30:00 Taylor Sheridan's World, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKhZvufgEEw 4:39:00 Boomtown podcast is the inspiration for Landman, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtOa2XmOP-4 4:40:00 Sex work vs sex trafficking

Decoding the Gurus
Curtis Yarvin: The Edgelord's Guide to Monarchy 40K

Decoding the Gurus

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 161:47


In this long-anticipated episode, Matt and Chris venture into the peculiar world of Curtis Yarvin—a reactionary blogger, tech entrepreneur, and self-proclaimed monarchist. Known to his early followers by the pseudonym "Mencius Moldbug," Yarvin has become a prominent figure in the "dark enlightenment" and neo-reactionary circles. Some have even hailed him as an "intellectual powerhouse" of the modern far-right, with endorsements from influential figures like Peter Thiel and J.D. Vance.But what is Curtis really all about? In this episode, the decoders revisit the Triggernometry swamp to examine the political insights unearthed by the hard-nosed journalists Konstantin and Francis during their ferocious intellectual exchange with Yarvin.Prepare for thrilling revelations, including the historical figures and movements Yarvin has catalogued in his encyclopedic memory, his pick for the best Elizabethan monarch, and the surprising number of non-monarchs he believes are secretly running monarchical regimes. True to form, Yarvin's rhetorical style is nothing if not meandering. So get ready for a whirlwind tour through his "mind palace," exploring topics like Soviet Russia, Elizabethan England, Shakespearean conspiracy theories, and a fantasy world of reactionary and techno-libertarian musings—not to mention the obligatory lab-leak narratives.Is Yarvin an edgy intellectual, a provocative contrarian, or just a verbose windbag with run-of-the-mill conspiratorial takes and a moody teenager's perspective on history? Matt and Chris tackle these questions, striving to decode Yarvin's vision for society—and hoping, against all odds, that he might in the end just answer a single question.LinksTriggernometry: Curtis Yarvin- The Case Against DemocracyUnHerd: Curtis Yarvin: Welcome to the Dark EnlightenmentBehind the Bastards Part One: Curtis Yarvin: The Philosopher Behind J.D. VanceBehind the Bastards Part Two: Curtis Yarvin: The Philosopher Behind J.D. VanceThe Guardian: He's anti-democracy and pro-Trump: the obscure ‘dark enlightenment' blogger influencing the next US administration

Farrand On Film
Ollie's Quiz Takeover!

Farrand On Film

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 65:39


It's the end of the year so how about quiz from our resident Edgelord?

Soul Provider Speaks - CASE FILES
The Game Awards | Sasuke is a Edgelord | Sony FromSoftware Deal | Elden Ring Anime - Otaku Jump #69

Soul Provider Speaks - CASE FILES

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 102:08


#nintendo #nintendoswitch #mortalkombat1 #kraven #venom3 #duneprophecy #wicked #disney #starwars #anime #manga #movies #film #marvel #dcu #batman #mcu #sony #playstation #xbox #microsoft #thegameawards #hype #viral #podcast #virtualfighter #streetfighter6 #tekken8 #callofduty #sasuke #naruto #dragonball #onepiece #eldenring #fromsoftware CashApp : $SoulProviderZ

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword
Friday, October 11, 2024 - Be nice, lest you end up in the SINBIN

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2024 20:34


There was a lot of sparkle in today's crossword - the 10th for the NYTimes by Billy Bratton. We were impressed by the inclusion of 22A, Online provocateur, in slang, EDGELORD (it felt like a debut, and it was); 13D, Prepares for a bomb, GOESDEEP (brilliant!); and we especially appreciated the clue in 23D, Lugubrious, GLUM.  In related news, we have a delicious Fun Fact Friday segment, so check it out, and then let us know what you think: crosswordpodcast@icloud.comShow note imagery: BOCK beer, the favorite of quarterbocks everywhere

Men, Sex & Pleasure with Cam Fraser
Quicky #80 Edgelord Cinema (with Brad Gage)

Men, Sex & Pleasure with Cam Fraser

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 4:54


From episode #80 with Brad Gage. More from that episode: - Brad shares about his upbringing - How do media images of men affect our lives? - Toxic vs positive masculinity - Stereotypical portrayals of men - Representations that challenge stereotypes - Critically thinking about media - The importance of diverse representation

Film Vs Film
S7E1 Edgelord: "Fight Club" Vs "Deadpool"

Film Vs Film

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 56:06


We're kicking off the new season with comedian Lisa Wallen, who joins us to discuss all things ~EdGeLoRd~! Also! Quinn says in the intro that it's Season 6 when actually it's Season 7. It's very embarrassing for him.

The Labours Of Hercule
Lord Edgware Dies

The Labours Of Hercule

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2024 108:27


It's intrigue time once more as Poirot, Hastings, Japp and Miss Lemon are on the mysterious trail of the killer of the original Edge Lord himself, Lord Edgware - the ultimate pain in the neck who's been found with a dagger sticking from his jugular... Could the culprit be a disgruntled theatre writer, a "remarkable" impressionist, a jealous duke, or something far more sinister? Our Patreon page is filled with all kinds of wonderful bonus materials, including videos of interviews, quizzes, bonus shows, and our deep dive into the Poirot movies! Find it at https://www.patreon.com/CosyAF If you'd like to get in contact with us, you can follow us on Twitter at @labourshecule On Instagram at @laboursofhercule On Threads at @laboursofhercule Or you can email us at bonjour@thelaboursofhercule.com Our amazing music was composed and produced by the fabulous Cev Moore Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

TDA Live Presents: Late Night Wargaming with Adam & Jon
Late Night Wargames - Episode 153: Operation Edgelord Update!

TDA Live Presents: Late Night Wargaming with Adam & Jon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024 125:38


Come join us as we cover the last two months of Operation Edgelord and Infinity N5 rumors! Support The Dice Abide LIVE on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thediceabide Support Our Sponsors: Shiv Games, online and in Keizer, OR https://www.ebay.com/str/shivgames Board and Brew https://www.boardandbrew.games/ Corvus Belli https://corvusbelli.com/ Dream Pod 9 https://store.dp9.com/ Brutal Cities https://brutalcities.com/ Contact Us: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thediceabide Email: Adam @ thediceabide.com, Wisekensai @ bromadacademy.com Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/thediceabide YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/thediceabidelive Instagram: @TheDiceAbide, @WiseKensai Twitter: @TheDiceAbide @WiseKensai Our Blogs: https://www.thediceabide.com/ https://www.mercrecon.net/ https://www.bromadacademy.com/ Our Patreon Supporters: D6 Tier: AgendaBot, Ben, Brian, David, Dawid, Ian, Jacob, James, MechMerc, Sporkie Arts, and Steven D10 Tier: Adam, Alexander, Amara, Bob, Erin, Frank, Jordan, Matt, Michael, Race, and Tristan D20 Tier: Alfredo, Dexter, Matthew, Melanie, Pete and Obadiah Audio Attribution: https://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music http://www.nihilore.com/license Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com/) "Apero Hour" - Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Local Forecast - Slower by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3988-local-forecast---slower License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Applause by Halleck: https://freesound.org/s/18665/ https://soundsilk.com http://www.orangefreesounds.com/

TDA Live Presents: Late Night Wargaming with Adam & Jon
Late Night Wargames - Episode 150: Infinity Campaign Operation Edgelord

TDA Live Presents: Late Night Wargaming with Adam & Jon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 137:11


Tonight we announce the official launch of Operation Edgelord, a community global campaign for Infinity the Game! Pete joins us tonight to talk about the lore, as well as the missions and rules for this worldwide event. Support John Liebee: Airaghardt Support The Dice Abide LIVE on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thediceabide Support Our Sponsors: Shiv Games, online and in Keizer, OR https://www.ebay.com/str/shivgames Board and Brew https://www.boardandbrew.games/ Corvus Belli https://corvusbelli.com/ Dream Pod 9 https://store.dp9.com/ Brutal Cities https://brutalcities.com/ Contact Us: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thediceabide Email: Adam @ thediceabide.com, Wisekensai @ bromadacademy.com Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/thediceabide YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/thediceabidelive Instagram: @TheDiceAbide, @WiseKensai Twitter: @TheDiceAbide @WiseKensai Our Blogs: https://www.thediceabide.com/ https://www.mercrecon.net/ https://www.bromadacademy.com/ Our Patreon Supporters: D6 Tier: AgendaBot, Ben, Brian, David, Dawid, Ian, Jacob, James, MechMerc, Sporkie Arts, and Steven D10 Tier: Adam, Alexander, Amara, Bob, Erin, Frank, Jordan, Matt, Michael, Race, and Tristan D20 Tier: Alfredo, Dexter, Matthew, Melanie, Pete and Obadiah Audio Attribution: https://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music http://www.nihilore.com/license Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com/) "Apero Hour" - Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Local Forecast - Slower by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3988-local-forecast---slower License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Applause by Halleck: https://freesound.org/s/18665/ https://soundsilk.com http://www.orangefreesounds.com/

Grimerica Outlawed
#230 - Dustin Nemos - Censored End Times Edgelord Sage - The Archivist

Grimerica Outlawed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2024 59:01


Dustin Nemos joins us for a chat about his journey from Atheism to Christianity and Truther. We chat about the Seed War, King Charles and the Symbolism, Satanism, the Antichrist, Trump, threat assessment, how they all 'touch' the wall, baby foreskin onion rings, the Chosen One, Crypto Joos, war of Islam, God wins in the end, Nimrod, Prophecy, the Lawkeeper and the Catholic Church killing the Christians.   In the last part - extended even more than half we get into atrocity propaganda, 109 Nations, the 12 Tribes of Israel, the trans agenda, Old Testament claims, the Bloodline, Roman hate speech laws, Anunnaki Prince, cannibalistic Giants, Titans, the Flood and the vapour canopy, The possession confession, types of Bibles, The Septuagint, Gog and Magog, Fallen Angels, Crowley and Jack Parsons, Supernatural Powers and the reconnecting the lost empire.   The lazy incompetent over confident elite have lost the narrative....   uncensored.church Greatest Works: https://theserapeum.com/hisstoryrevealed/ Debate Challenge: https://nemosnewsnetwork.com/let-iron-sharpen-iron-ultra-debate-challenge/ www.NemosNewsNetwork.com - Independent Media Is The News Now - Break the MSM www.TheSerapeum.com - The Hidden History of Man, and the Mystery Babylon Religion of The Deep State. www.DustinNemos.Com -  Author, Speaker, Journalist. Host of The Silent War   To gain access to the second half of show and our Plus feed for audio and podcast please clink the link http://www.grimericaoutlawed.ca/support.   For second half of video (when applicable and audio) go to our Substack and Subscribe. https://grimericaoutlawed.substack.com/ or to our Locals  https://grimericaoutlawed.locals.com/ or Rokfin www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica Patreon https://www.patreon.com/grimericaoutlawed   If you would rather watch: https://rumble.com/v4ysejf-dustin-nemos-censored-end-times-edgelord-sage-the-archivist.html https://rokfin.com/stream/49199 https://grimericaoutlawed.locals.com/post/5699839/dustin-nemos-censored-end-times-edgelord-sage-the-archivist   Support the show directly: https://grimerica.ca/support-2/ Outlawed Canadians YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@OutlawedCanadians Our Adultbrain Audiobook Podcast and Website: www.adultbrain.ca Our Audiobook Youtube Channel:  https://www.youtube.com/@adultbrainaudiobookpublishing/videos Darren's book www.acanadianshame.ca Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin www.contactatthecabin.com Other affiliated shows: www.grimerica.ca The OG Grimerica Show www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica Our channel on free speech Rokfin Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimericans  Https://t.me.grimerica https://www.guilded.gg/chat/b7af7266-771d-427f-978c-872a7962a6c2?messageId=c1e1c7cd-c6e9-4eaf-abc9-e6ec0be89ff3   Get your Magic Mushrooms delivered from: Champignon Magique  Get Psychedelics online Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/grimerica-outlawed http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/grimerica-outlawed Sign up for our newsletter http://www.grimerica.ca/news SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/  Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ ART - Napolean Duheme's site http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/  MUSIC Tru Northperception, Felix's Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com

Chatty AF
Chatty AF 208: Monogatari Watchalong Part 3 - Kizumonogatari

Chatty AF

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2024 65:10


Toni, Vrai, and Peter return to their Monogatari watchalong with the ultra-violent 3-part movie trilogy Kizumonogatari! 0:00:00 Intros 0:01:25 Watch order 0:02:25 Suffering and gore 0:06:20 Visual style 0:12:35 Impressions 0:15:44 Hanekawa 0:22:35 Araragi's savior complex 0:28:14 THAT scene 0:36:44 Sexualizing Hanekawa and Shinobu 0:41:33 Ending 0:44:44 Self-sacrifice vs self-destructiveness 0:47:41 Bodily autonomy 0:51:37 Scars/bonds 0:53:17 Edgelord deconstruction 0:55:52 Vampire mythology 0:59:22 Buddhist themes 1:02:26 Final thoughts 1:03:48 Outro Toni: bsky.app/profile/poetpedagogue.bsky.social Vrai: bsky.app/profile/writervrai.bsky.social Peter: bsky.app/profile/peterfobian.bsky.social AniFem Patreon: www.patreon.com/animefeminist AniFem Twitter: twitter.com/AnimeFeminist Recorded Friday 17th May 2024 Music: Open Those Bright Eyes by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Been Awake with L.B.
Ep 98 Why an edgelord will never rule

Been Awake with L.B.

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 21:03


Welcome to the show! I go live every tuesday and wednesday to talk about the news and important cultural and philosophical concepts missing from the discourse. Go follow me on X @thelbmuniz to join one of the spaces live and add your voice! In this episode I have a monologue or prepared piece about something that has been rattling in my mind for awhile now. It has to do with how we on the right should be orienting ourselves. I think too many have become comfortable being cast out to the edges of acceptable discourse, and unless we march to the center we will never take the appropriate place as guarantors of order. Listen to learn more and please let me know your thoughts in the comments or by reaching out directly. This is something I want feed back on.Watch And listen on your favorite platformRUMBLE | YOUTUBE | SUBSTACK | SPOTIFY | APPLEContribute to the mission of Better SensemakingSUBSTACK | PATREON | LOCALSOther Social Platforms@TheLBMuniz on X | Instagram | Facebook This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit beenawake.substack.com/subscribe

444
BH #171 [rövid változat]: Az edgelord vibe shiftje, a NER Szász Endréje és egy Herendi-teknős az iráni Bibóban

444

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 50:46


Az előfizetők (de csak a Belső kör és Közösség csomagok tulajdonosai!) már szombat hajnalban hozzájutnak legfrissebb epizódunk teljes verziójához. A kedden publikált, ingyen meghallgatható verzió tíz perccel rövidebb. 00:34 Klubturné után ismét a stúdióban. Hülyeség az élő podcast vagy sem? 02:38 Szolgálati közlemények podcastügyben. 444.hu/pod05:21 Giro d'Italia vs. Tour de Hongrie. Mark Cavendish megnyeri a barcikai sprintet. 10:15 Szőke Gábor Miklós, a NER Szász Endréje. Az SZGM X Kolodko kollab. Az óriás Herendi-teknős és az atlantai sólyom. A rákayfülöp-szindróma, 14:37 Az Ahmedinezsád-rejtély. Mahmúd az iráni Bibó ellen. 18:51 Ahmedinezsád a Twitteren. Zsigeri antiszemitizmus vs. politikai antiszemitizmus. 24:07 Amikor kihal a forradalom első generációja. 29:07 Magyar Péter régi-új napszemüvege. 32:15 Steve Albini-nekrológ. Big Black és Shellac. Pixies és Nirvana. 36:21 Albini híres cikke a zeneiparról. Albini a pókerjátékos. Az edgelord vibe shiftje. Albini Joe Roganról. A Guardian cikke Albiniról. 43:08 Hogy kell különbséget tenni a néppártosódó exfasiszta politikai formációk közt? Miért nincs Parizer Párt?  46:33 A hercegnőburgonya titka. A Hszi-menü. A teknős jelentősége Kínában.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Platformers Podcast
Episode 307 - PAX West, Prince of Persia, Balatro, & Giant Robots OR "The Good Kind of Degeneracy"

The Platformers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 105:28


In this episode, Brian, Kris and Lucas talk about conventions and travel. We also talk about Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown, Balatro, What The Golf, Super Robot Wars and a smattering of other topics. Pay no attention to the fact that Brian opens the show with the wrong episode number, it's definitely 307. Enjoy. TOPICS AND TIMESTAMPS Mental Health - 5:30 | Brian at Capcom Cup - 12:00 | (PAX West) Visions of Mana - 19:25 | (PAX West) LUCID - 27:10 | (PAX West) Freaked Fleapit - 31:37 | Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown - 39:39 | Like A Dragon: Infinite Wealth - 49:30 | Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth - 55:05 | Balatro - 1:04:02 | What The Golf - 1:18:47 | Dragon's Dogma 2 (and Capcom Microtransactions) - 1:21:47 | Super Robot Wars 30 (and Original Generations) - 1:25:34 | Conclusion - 1:41:09 | POTENTIAL EPISODE TITLES (EACH "+" IS A HOST VOTE): It's Not A Horse, It's A Bicycle +Getting A Cast For A Broken Ankle While A Spear Is Stuck In Your Chest You Have An ADHD Butt + Fighting A Four-Year-Old on Dynamic Controls There's Literally Dozens of Mana Fans A Game Far More Degenerate Than The First Two + NEKUTAI! + The Horrific Necktie From Disco Elysium Lives On + The Only Way I Can Describe It Is "Unhinged" + The Good Kind of Degeneracy + I Was Today Years Old When I Found Out About Muv-Luv + The Balls It Takes For Those Developers To Gaslight Their Playerbase For An Entire Game + "It's Edgelord-y" Is Not An Argument You Can Sit Down And Wait Until I've Recovered From Like A Dragon + You Sat Down To Play Poker With A Yu-Gi-Oh Deck I've Also Been Playing Capcom's Dragon Slaying Game... By Which I Mean Replaying Monster Hunter World What The Hell Do You Know About Super Robot Wars + Can A Series Really Be Trash If They Have Robots In Them? + There's Trash, There's Trash With Robots, There's Good Stuff With Robots, It's A Sliding Scale There Absolutely Is Such A Thing As Bad Pizza + Super Robot Wars 30 Is Not A Misnomer, There's 30 Of Them + This Is Fan Service, We Know What You're Here For, You Will Be Serviced, It Will Be Great + I Need To Kill My Perfectionism, Because It's Killing My Time [The Platformers Video Game Podcast is created, hosted, edited, written, & streamed by Brian Barnett on Twitch.tv/Ribnax. This episode edited by Kris Cornelisse.]

Bard Advice
Bard Advice - 065 - Edgelord Druid

Bard Advice

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2024 60:00


Archetypes, Supplements, Community, and Basketball

The Nerdpocalypse
Episode 595: Edge Lord Showdown

The Nerdpocalypse

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2024 92:37


This week on The Nerdpocalypse Podcast, the guys return to discuss Patty Jenkins (Wonder Woman, Wonder Woman 1984) is back on to direct "Rogue Squadron" for Lucasfilms, "Ready Player Two" is moving forward with Spielberg now producing, Oscar Winners, "The Batman" sequel is being pushed back to 2026 because of the dual strikes, "The Bear" is renewed for a 4th season ahead of season 3 premiere, "X-Men 97" showrunner fired before the show's premiere on March 20th, trailers for "Atlas" starring Jennifer Lopez, remake for "The Crow," and much more!TOPICS - Section 1Patty Jenkins is back on for “Rogue Squadron” for LucasfilmsReady Player Two is moving forwardOscar WinnersTNP STUDIOS PREMIUM$5 a month or $50 for the yearAccess to premium slate of podcasts incl. The Airing of Grievances, No Time to Bleed, The Men with the Golden Tongues, Upstage Conversation, and full episodes of the Look Forward political podcastTOPICS - Section 2The Batman sequel pushed back to 2026 because of the dual strikesThe Bear quietly renewed for a season 4, shooting back to back with season 3X-Men 97 showrunner fired right before the show's premiereWTF? by JayTeeDee from the “Edit That Out” PodcastMicah: https://tinyurl.com/ThrtgotTerrence: https://tinyurl.com/farchisJay: https://tinyurl.com/yellastneTRAILERSAtlasThe Crow

Auf ein Bier von Gamespodcast.de
Runde #463: Ein Streifzug durch die Edgelord-Sandbox

Auf ein Bier von Gamespodcast.de

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2024 95:44


Auf Steam gibt es ein Spiel mit mehr als 200.000 begeisterten Reviews in dem es auf den ersten Blick darum geht, humanoide Figuren zu foltern. Auf den zweiten Blick gibt es sogar ein ganzes Subgenre, in dem es darum geht humanoide Figuren zu foltern. Auf den dritten Blick steckt aber in einigen Fällen noch viel mehr hinter diesen Titeln. Dom und Andre unternehmen einen Streifzug durch eine kleine Auswahl und diskutieren über ihre Erlebnisse beim Grenzübertritt im Physikbaukasten. Ist das schon Dark Tourism? Timecodes: 00:00:00 - Biertalk 00:08:13 - Das Thema 00:21:55 - Das allgemeine Spielerlebnis 00:43:39 - People Playground 01:13:36 - Happy Room 01:30:07 - Fazit

I Saw What You Did
I Was A Teenage Edgelord

I Saw What You Did

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 96:13


This week, Danielle and Millie discuss SE7EN (1995) and NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN (2007), their trip to Maine, adventures in L.L.Bean, and the dire hotel pillow situation in this country.To see a full ISWYD movie list, check out our Letterboxd here:https://letterboxd.com/isawwhatyoudid/films/diary/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Baroque B*tches - An Art History Gossip Podcast
Caravaggio: Tries to Cut a Guy's Dick Off, Misses and MURDERS!

Baroque B*tches - An Art History Gossip Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 82:11


Join us as we travel to 17th Century Rome to deep dive into the HOT JUICY GOSS surrounding Baroque painter Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio! Come find out about how prostitutes ended up in paintings that priests were paying for, what the burns were in 17th century Rome, and why Joe Pesci is the perfect "Person at the Party" to describe this Edge Lord painter! Love you!Xoxo - the Baroque B's 

Remap Radio
Remap Radio 23 — An Edgelord in the Eyes of the Lord

Remap Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 110:44


We're thrilled to welcome back Janet Garcia, in which we spend a depressingly long time unpacking the shocking and wide-ranging layoffs at Bungie, and what it says about a year of incredible games clashing with a year of incredible labor turmoil. In-between discussions of 90s Chicago sports, we talk about the highs and lows of Super Mario Bros. Wonder multiplayer, trying to crack long RPGs, and more exploits in buying unnecessary arcade machines.Discussed: Rolling Layoffs at Sony hit Bungie 21:49, Baldur's Gate 3 51:34, Super Mario Bros. Wonder 1:07:58, The Question Bucket 1:23:13, Outro and Announcements 1:41:10See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Polyester Podcast
Doja Cat & The Problem With People Pandering to Edgelord Celebrities

The Polyester Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2023 31:32


It seems impossible to go a week without Doja Cat stirring up a new controversy; from sporting a tshirt featuring an alt-right figurehead, to appearing in racist chatrooms and isolating her fanbase. As her behaviour appears to veer away from simple trolling and towards an actual endorsement of alt-right views, Ione and Gina are digging into why we continue to pander to celebrities that act in ways we don't agree with. From parasocial relationships and whether controversy helps or hinders celebrities, to what it means to be red-pilled and the conspiracy theories that emerge surrounding contentious figures. Support our work and become a Polyester Podcast member

Chasing Tone - Guitar Podcast About Gear, Effects, Amps and Tone
482 - There's a new sheriff in town - the Fender Tone Master pro

Chasing Tone - Guitar Podcast About Gear, Effects, Amps and Tone

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 57:05


Brian, Blake, and Richard are back for an all-new episode of the Chasing Tone Podcast!Blake's ready to become cybernetic so he ponders his potential upgrade path before the guys  discuss a huge new release  announcement from Fender, the Tone Master pro. Its a full scale digital modeling solution and it has the guys attention. Meanwhile, Richard is made to eat his words about who is the biggest fender fan on the show. But he is impressed with the marketing power of the aforementioned Californian guitar sculptors and believes it will be a big seller. Who do you think are the three biggest brands in the guitar space? Richard has views and the guys make foolish and severely dangerous suggestions and at some point Brian summons the magic jazz bong before he laments the interface for his switcher again.  Going back to the Tone Master, the guys talk about the processing power, the interface, and all the exciting bits in-between.Mark Tremonti has announced he is getting into pedal building and Brian offers him some insight and encouragement and the guys imagine how the meetings might go down with his development team. There are inventions too - the new multi-surround amp from England's new king of fuzz amongst them - and it degenerates into further unwarranted idiocy before we look at Blake's new guitar. Richard gets label rage and we discover Brian is an Edgelord and is selling more guitars and contemplating upgrades. Ai Hank Hill reads the credits.New Boot Goofin', Kung fu fightin', The ultimate something something, Richard's new guitar, Nut oil and gangle pins, Piracy on the high seas...it's all in this week's Chasing Tone!This episode is sponsored by the fine folk at Stringjoy.comThanks to all our supporters - you are awesome!We are on Patreon now too!Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/chasingtonepodcast)Awesome Merch and DIY mods:https://modyourownpedal.com/collections/booksFind us at:https://www.wamplerpedals.com/https://www.instagram.com/WamplerPedals/https://www.facebook.com/groups/wamplerfanpage/Youtube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdVrg4Wl3vjIxonABn6RfWwContact us at: podcast@wamplerpedals.comSupport the show

The Fanzine Podcast
Ep. 17: Confessions of an Ex-Zine Editor

The Fanzine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 57:49


Ten years after she ceased publishing her 2000s rock'n'roll fanzine Bubblegum Slut due to the lifestyle it induced (i.e. drug addiction), Alison B. found herself producing a new zine about her old zine, the lifestyle it induced and the year she spent in limbo before getting clean. That zine is entitled Confessions of an Ex-Zine Editor and it is astonishingly original and entertaining. Partly a “trainwreck memoir” in zine format, it has the benefit of additionally being side-splittingly funny, what with its reviews of old clubs that are now train stations and of snail mail that no longer brings free CDs. With Confessions now up to Issue 3, Alison is also the first ongoing fanzine editor to be featured on this podcast.Alison is joined by Jane Appleby, who produced multiple different zines in the 1990s and early 2000s, including Jezebel, Bambi, This Is Our Truth, Pretty But Schizo, Pussy Rock, Jezebel, and Trophy F*ck. In conversation with Tony, Jane and Alison talk about their zines and the scenes from which they sprang, about sex and sexual stereotypes, about publishing and printing, about how the Manic Street Preachers inspired more zines than any other band of the era, about recovery Bingo and receiving explicit fetishist letters in the mail.Bands mentioned in this episode include Hanoi Rocks, Guns ‘n' Roses, the Manic Street Preachers, the Glitter Band, Sheila E, Shampoo, and We've Got A Fuzzbox and We're Gonna Use it.Franchises mentioned in this issue include Taco Bell and Trust House Forte.Plus, Tony learns a new word: Edgelord.Alison's current Confessions of an Ex-Zine Editor and Bubblegum Slut can be found at https://www.instagram.com/bubblegumzinearchive/And copies can be ordered via:https://linktr.ee/bubblegumzinearchiveJane Appleby's fanzine archives can be found at: http://pussyrockfanzine.blogspot.com/She is active on http://tumblr.com/jaynedolluk The Best Of Jamming! can be found here and signed copies are available in the USA direct from https://tonyfletcherauthor.bandcamp.com/merch/ For Tony Fletcher's weekly newsletter, long weekend read, and for exclusive access to archived interviews, just visit tonyfletcher.substack.com. Theme music by Noel Fletcher. Logo by Greg Morton. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Left Hand Right Brain Podcast
LHRB 308: Thoughtful Edgelord w/ Jeff Nelson

Left Hand Right Brain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 72:48


This week JD chats with guest Jeff Nelson. Jeff is a stand-up comedian. Topics discussed include but are not limited to: overcoming preconceived notions, ideal relationships, and good BBQ. Please remember to like, subscribe, rate, review, and tell a friend!Follow LHRB on Facebook, Instagram @lefthandrightbrain, Twitter @LHRBpodcast, or just hit us up old school on the website lefthandrightboainpod.comCheck out all the other podcasts on The Mile High Life Network!

The Next Level
Countdown to the Edgelord Announcement

The Next Level

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 49:45


It's all about Ron DeSantis and his upcoming announcement on Twitter Spaces tonight. What does the gang think of the move to launch his campaign with Elon Musk? Plus, a riff on Tim Scott's inconsequential run for president and a rant on Nate Silver's Never Trumper critiques. And tune in tonight on YouTube to watch all your favorite Bulwark personalities react to DeSantis' announcement live! Join here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPz-zmDUiuw Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Lit Lit
165 Lit Lit - Edge Lord Farquaad

Lit Lit

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 72:13


Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin Andy and Dani talk about building video games? Well we really don't know how to build video games but after reading this maybe we do… nope… we don't. Is this book a top contender? Who is the main character? And how heavy can a book about video games be? Spoiler alert: VERY.

Left Hand Right Brain Podcast
LHRB 308: Thoughtful Edgelord w/ Jeff Nelson

Left Hand Right Brain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 77:23


This week JD chats with guest Jeff Nelson. Jeff is a stand up comedian. Topics discussed include, but are not limited to: overcoming preconceived notions, ideal relationships, and good BBQ. Please remember to like, subscribe, rate, review, and tell a friend!Follow LHRB on Facebook, Instagram @lefthandrightbrain, Twitter @LHRBpodcast, or just hit us up old school on the website lefthandrightboainpod.comGet tickets for Comedy Saved The Video Star!Check out all the other podcasts on The Mile High Life Network!

Remakes, Reboots, and Revivals Podcast
Dead Ringers - Cronenberg: Edgelord?

Remakes, Reboots, and Revivals Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2023 58:21


Join Nicole and Rolando in this thought-provoking episode as they explore the intriguing world of the 1988 film "Dead Ringers" and compare it to its 2023 remake, now available on Amazon Prime. The hosts delve into the fascinating choice of casting non-twins to portray identical twins in Hollywood films, examining the impact it has on the story and performances. Additionally, they delve into the enigmatic character of the gynecologist in both versions, discussing the reasons behind their unsettling nature. Don't miss out on this captivating discussion as they analyze the cinematic choices and delve into the psychological depths of "Dead Ringers" and its contemporary adaptation. Tune in now for a compelling conversation! FOLLOW US: Be sure to follow us on social media for news, polls, and fun behind the scenes content. FACEBOOK: facebook.com/remakesrebootsrevivals INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/remakesrebootsrevivals YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEw7r_fZuVfxLNo3uEwlPJQ  And we always want to hear from you! Email us at remakesrebootsrevivals@gmail.com

TACT Lab
EP 146 The Balenciaga of Taco Bell

TACT Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 73:08


Today in the lab we talk about Balenciaga and AI tools, Harry potter AI, Taco Bell favorites and poop, Mr. Beast fail, memes and more. Full episode with video on YouTube!!!https://linktr.ee/TactLabThis is TACT Lab, a podcast where nothing is off limits. Join four guys as they talk about the greatest accomplishments and problems in life. Hosted by Tyler, Alex, Chris, and Thomas. Check us out on all social media by searching TACT Lab or click the link above. New episodes every Wednesday. Help Support us at our Patreon. Like, follow, comment and let us know how we are doing!

War College
How a 21-Year-Old Edgelord Stole Pentagon Secrets

War College

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 54:55


How is that a 21-year-old Air National Guardsman posted government secrets to a private Discord group for almost a year before anyone noticed? On today's episode of Angry Planet, Bellingcat's Aric Toler walks us through the culture that created poster and edgelord Jack Teixeira.Toler also talks about working with The New York Times, dodging phone calls from the FBI, and the digital forensics he used to identify Teixeira. We talk about the Something Awful Forums, 4chan and KiwiFarms, and why Teixeira isn't a “leaker” at all, he's a poster.Angry Planet has a Substack! Join to get weekly insights into our angry planet and hear more conversations about a world in conflict.https://angryplanet.substack.com/subscribeYou can listen to Angry Planet on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play or follow our RSS directly. Our website is angryplanetpod.com. You can reach us on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/angryplanetpodcast/; and on Twitter: @angryplanetpod.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Welcome to The Midside
The Rightwing Edgelord Edition

Welcome to The Midside

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2023 83:16


Justin and William witness a mortage rate rule change, the attempt to cancel Picasso, and the threat to national security that rightwing edgelords present. Justin also reviews Chevalier.

Minds Almost Meeting
Edgelord Energy (Robin Hanson & Agnes Callard, with Rory from The Violet Hour)

Minds Almost Meeting

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 69:04


View the transcript for this episode here: ⁠⁠https://mindsalmostmeeting.com/episodes/edgelord-energy Imagine two smart curious friendly and basically truth-seeking people, but from very different intellectual traditions. Traditions with different tools, priorities, and ground rules. What would they discuss? Would they talk past each other? Make any progress? Would anyone want to hear them? Economist Robin Hanson and philosopher Agnes Callard decided to find out. Visit the Minds Almost Meeting website here: ⁠⁠https://mindsalmostmeeting.com⁠⁠

Pod Damn America
Jake The Edgelord

Pod Damn America

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 55:58


We discuss Jake's "earlier material." WALLETCHAIN LOS ANGELES https://www.eventbrite.com/e/walletchain-tickets-584040279197 MERCH poddamnamerica.bigcartel.com PATREON + DISCORD patreon.com/PODDAMNAMERICA

The Dan Gheesling Podcast
Edge-Lord Humor | This Comment Almost Made Us Rage

The Dan Gheesling Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2023 8:52


On today's episode of the mini podcast Dan talks to FrostPrime about his thoughts on negative comments and edge-lord humor. Thank you for dialing in, I hope you enjoy.   https://www.Twitch.tv/FrostPrime_ https://www.Twitch.tv/DanGheesling https://www.Discord.gg/DanGheesling https://www.YouTube.com/DanGheesling https://www.Twitter.com/DanGheesling https://www.Instagram.com/DanGheesling https://www.Linktr.ee/DanGheesling

The Weedsmen Potcast
Over the Edgelord

The Weedsmen Potcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2023


On this week’s show Chris and Aaron talk about: Scott Adams' final cancellation, Wu-Tang: An American Saga, The Beastie Boys, RIP Dave Jolicoeur aka Trugoy the Dove from De La Soul, Digable Planets, Kevin Smith stops smoking cannabis, Woody Harrleson is still smoking, the White House clemency application, and Blumenauer pushes WH to reschedule. Please... The post Over the Edgelord first appeared on Christopher Media.

Joey Hates Everything W/ Max Parise & Joey Capuana
Ep. 74 - Tom Brady: EdgeLord Comedian (W/ Dennis Jr and Cousin RJ)

Joey Hates Everything W/ Max Parise & Joey Capuana

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2023 72:03


It's a PA family reunion on zoom. Joey's cousin Dennis Jr (RJ's stepbrother) makes his first appearance on the show. SUBSCRIBE AND FOLLOW THE SHOW ON ALL AVAILABLE PLATFORMS- @JoeyTheViking on Twitter - @ Joey Capuana on YouTube.

Lima Time Time
Ep. 192: Edgelord Jackie Robinson

Lima Time Time

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 46:25


Ep. 192: Edgelord Jackie Robinson by Lima Time Time

The Hustle Season Podcast
The Hustle Season: Ep. 270 Jazz Edgelord

The Hustle Season Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 73:43


Topics include:Branford Marsalis tells jazz snobs to pull their pants up Kevin Gates likes drinking urines from ladies Black rappers Inc. make a point Mad Big Ups: Jeff Beck, Lisa Marie Presley, Robbie Buchanan SLAPS: Noel Gallagher, Gucci Mane ft. Kodak Black, PARTYNEXTDOOR, Shakira, Miley Cyrus Does It Slap Playlist The Hustle Season on Patreon Our Linktree:::::ADVERTISE ON THE HUSTLE SEASON PODCAST:::::Have a business/event you want to get out to listeners?Are you an out of town band coming to Richmond and want to promote your gig ?? Buy a spot on the Hustle Season Podcast, starts at $25. So easy!! Contact us: thehustleseason@gmail.com

rSlash
r/AmITheA--Hole for Being a SUPER COOL Edgelord?

rSlash

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2022 16:10


https://www.youtube.com/rslash

No Agenda
1501 - "Under Salt"

No Agenda

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2022 222:27 Transcription Available Very Popular


No Agenda Episode 1501 - "Under Salt" "Under Salt" Executive Producers: Marcel van Dongen Mark Shonka Sir Moses Maria Triantafylli & Mark Bucherl Peter DeVries Matt Vegdahl Sir Mark Duke of Japan, Japan Sea and all disputed Islands Curtis Rose SUZZANNE TETZ Maksim Belousov Christopher Willis Paul Bowser Mister Browne Christopher Preusse Anonymous Micah Lovell peter smith Kiski Technical Services CK Chris Marble Chris Wietrzykowski Sean Collier A. K. David Cox Chris Hollman Daniel Posselt Brandon Tochisaka Michael Cislo Darren Fizz Dispense CompuPro Joe Grillo Anonymous Sandra Ferreira Herman Stuurman lawrence abele Brandy Lees Anonymous Tal Sales Shaun Cavanaugh Kyle Rank Dame Trish of Detroit Malmalabaduge Fernando Paul Laster Black Knight Sir Lastro darren blocklinger Anonymous Scott Barrell Scott Smith Jason Babcock Andrew Spiehler Jessica Barrett Fowler Kendrick Hobbs Tim DelVecchio American Democracy, LLC Associate Executive Producers: S Andrew Vecci David Wicker Sir Sander Hoksbergen Jason Petri Colin Talia Douglas Brian Aguilar Wayne Hymen Rowan Pike Erickson Carey Jackson David Wicker Sir Sander Hoksbergen Jason Petri Colin Talia Douglas Brian Aguilar Wayne Hymen Rowan Pike Erickson Carey Jackson Become a member of the 1502 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Sir Donald Earl of Mills -> Sir-fer Baron of the State of Jefferson Sir Rotonin Patron Saint of Hierarchies -> Baron of the Mariner Valley (Mars) Sir Moses -> Baron of Parts Unknown Sir Sander Hoksbergen -> Duke of Switserland Knights & Dames Maria Triantafylli -> Dame Maria of the Greek Kingdoms Ako Shiffer -> Dame A. Bell of the 445 Shades Pixel Art Club Milla -> Dame Milla Mark Bucherl -> Sir Mark of the Crossroads, Warden of the Greenwood Tim Hertig -> Sir Maestro of his own symphony, Black Knight Mike Turic -> Sir L.E.Phonts of have tools will travel of the nomads, Black Knight Ben Truman -> Sir Truman de la Zouch (pronounced zoosh) Michael Sean Becker -> Sir Michael of the Burbank Junction, Black Knight Scott Reilly -> Sir Vayer of the Fantasy Realms Matt Shellnut -> Sir Matthew Shellnut Andrew Echternach -> Sir AndyDrew Knight of the Southwest Minnesota Archers, Black Knight Jason Shiffer -> Sir Lee of the Polymath Engineers Matt Vegdhal -> Sir Matt the Tolerated Curtis Rose -> Sir Geothermal of the Surprise Valley Hot Springs Maksim Belousov -> Knight Max Paul Bowser -> Sir Bigdog of Bowser's Doghouse Mister Browne -> Sir Alfred, Original Sinner & Edgelord of the Twilight Throne Christopher Preusse -> Sir SpruceyUSA Anonymous -> Sir No One The Great Peter Smith -> Sir Strongbow Longfellow of the Last Frontier Kiski Technical Services -> Knight of the Hole-Up-Kee" Sean Collier -> Sir Sean, of the Hydrologic Cycle A. K. -> Sir Yeah of There David Cox -> Sir Dave of Western North Carolina Chris Hollman -> Sir Chris or the Mortar and Pestle Daniel Posselt -> Sir Daniel Posselt Darren -> Sir Darren Fizz Dispense -> Sir Nitrogen Lord of Gases Herman Stuurman -> Sir Jan the Innkeeper of Amsterdam Anonymous in VA-> Sir Charged Kyle Rank -> Sir KR of NC Jason Petri -> Sir Awl Soran, Knight of the Wire Phone Christian Andrew -> Black Knight Sir Christian Coffins of DarkDox.com Anonymous - Sir Captain Caveman Art By: Nessworks End of Show Mixes: Clip Custodian Neal Jones - Sir Michaelanthony Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Aric Mackey Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda No Agenda Social Registration Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1501.noagendanotes.com New: Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format NoAgendaTorrents.com has an RSS feed or show torrents Last Modified 11/06/2022 17:10:52This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 11/06/2022 17:10:52 by Freedom Controller

Screaming in the Cloud
Computing on the Edge with Macrometa's Chetan Venkatesh

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 40:29


About ChetanChetan Venkatesh is a technology startup veteran focused on distributed data, edge computing, and software products for enterprises and developers. He has 20 years of experience in building primary data storage, databases, and data replication products. Chetan holds a dozen patents in the area of distributed computing and data storage.Chetan is the CEO and Co-Founder of Macrometa – a Global Data Network featuring a Global Data Mesh, Edge Compute, and In-Region Data Protection. Macrometa helps enterprise developers build real-time apps and APIs in minutes – not months.Links Referenced: Macrometa: https://www.macrometa.com Macrometa Developer Week: https://www.macrometa.com/developer-week TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Forget everything you know about SSH and try Tailscale. Imagine if you didn't need to manage PKI or rotate SSH keys every time someone leaves. That'd be pretty sweet, wouldn't it? With Tailscale SSH, you can do exactly that. Tailscale gives each server and user device a node key to connect to its VPN, and it uses the same node key to authorize and authenticate SSH.Basically you're SSHing the same way you manage access to your app. What's the benefit here? Built in key rotation permissions is code connectivity between any two devices, reduce latency and there's a lot more, but there's a time limit here. You can also ask users to reauthenticate for that extra bit of security. Sounds expensive?Nope, I wish it were. tail scales. Completely free for personal use on up to 20 devices. To learn more, visit snark.cloud/tailscale. Again, that's snark.cloud/tailscaleCorey: Managing shards. Maintenance windows. Overprovisioning. ElastiCache bills. I know, I know. It's a spooky season and you're already shaking. It's time for caching to be simpler. Momento Serverless Cache lets you forget the backend to focus on good code and great user experiences. With true autoscaling and a pay-per-use pricing model, it makes caching easy. No matter your cloud provider, get going for free at gomomento.co/screaming That's GO M-O-M-E-N-T-O dot co slash screamingCorey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Today, this promoted guest episode is brought to us basically so I can ask a question that has been eating at me for a little while. That question is, what is the edge? Because I have a lot of cynical sarcastic answers to it, but that doesn't really help understanding. My guest today is Chetan Venkatesh, CEO and co-founder at Macrometa. Chetan, thank you for joining me.Chetan: It's my pleasure, Corey. You're one of my heroes. I think I've told you this before, so I am absolutely delighted to be here.Corey: Well, thank you. We all need people to sit on the curb and clap as we go by and feel like giant frauds in the process. So let's start with the easy question that sets up the rest of it. Namely, what is Macrometa, and what puts you in a position to be able to speak at all, let alone authoritatively, on what the edge might be?Chetan: I'll answer the second part of your question first, which is, you know, what gives me the authority to even talk about this? Well, for one, I've been trying to solve the same problem for 20 years now, which is build distributed systems that work really fast and can answer questions about data in milliseconds. And my journey's sort of been like the spiral staircase journey, you know, I keep going around in circles, but the view just keeps getting better every time I do one of these things. So I'm on my fourth startup doing distributed data infrastructure, and this time really focused on trying to provide a platform that's the antithesis of the cloud. It's kind of like taking the cloud and flipping it on its head because instead of having a single region application where all your stuff runs in one place, on us-west-1 or us-east-1, what if your apps could run everywhere, like, they could run in hundreds and hundreds of cities around the world, much closer to where your users and devices and most importantly, where interesting things in the real world are happening?And so we started Macrometa about five years back to build a new kind of distributed cloud—let's call the edge—that kind of looks like a CDN, a Content Delivery Network, but really brings very sophisticated platform-level primitives for developers to build applications in a distributed way around primitives for compute, primitives for data, but also some very interesting things that you just can't do in the cloud anymore. So that's Macrometa. And we're doing something with edge computing, which is a big buzzword these days, but I'm sure you'll ask me about that.Corey: It seems to be. Generally speaking, when I look around and companies are talking about edge, it feels almost like it is a redefining of what they already do to use a term that is currently trending and deep in the hype world.Chetan: Yeah. You know, I think humans just being biologically social beings just tend to be herd-like, and so when we see a new trend, we like to slap it on everything we have. We did that 15 years back with cloud, if you remember, you know? Everybody was very busy trying to stick the cloud label on everything that was on-prem. Edge is sort of having that edge-washing moment right now.But I define edge very specifically is very different from the cloud. You know, where the cloud is defined by centralization, i.e., you've got a giant hyperscale data center somewhere far, far away, where typically electricity, real estate, and those things are reasonably cheap, i.e., not in urban centers, where those things tend to be expensive.You know, you have platforms where you run things at scale, it's sort of a your mess for less business in the cloud and somebody else manages that for you. The edge is actually defined by location. And there are three types of edges. The first edge is the CDN edge, which is historically where we've been trying to make things faster with the internet and make the internet scale. So Akamai came about, about 20 years back and created this thing called the CDN that allowed the web to scale. And that was the first killer app for edge, actually. So that's the first location that defines the edge where a lot of the peering happens between different network providers and the on-ramp around the cloud happens.The second edge is the telecom edge. That's actually right next to you in terms of, you know, the logical network topology because every time you do something on your computer, it goes through that telecom layer. And now we have the ability to actually run web services, applications, data, directly from that telecom layer.And then the third edge is—sort of, people have been familiar with this for 30 years. The third edge is your device, just your mobile phone. It's your internet gateway and, you know, things that you carry around in your pocket or sit on your desk, where you have some compute power, but it's very restricted and it only deals with things that are interesting or important to you as a person, not in a broad range. So those are sort of the three things. And it's not the cloud. And these three things are now becoming important as a place for you to build and run enterprise apps.Corey: Something that I think is often overlooked here—and this is sort of a natural consequence of the cloud's own success and the joy that we live in a system that we do where companies are required to always grow and expand and find new markets—historically, for example, when I went to AWS re:Invent, which is a cloud service carnival in the desert that no one in the right mind should ever want to attend but somehow we keep doing, it used to be that, oh, these announcements are generally all aligned with people like me, where I have specific problems and they look a lot like what they're talking about on stage. And now they're talking about things that, from that perspective, seem like Looney Tunes. Like, I'm trying to build Twitter for Pets or something close to it, and I don't understand why there's so much talk about things like industrial IoT and, “Machine learning,” quote-unquote, and other things that just do not seem to align with. I'm trying to build a web service, like it says on the name of a company; what gives?And part of that, I think, is that it's difficult to remember, for most of us—especially me—that what they're coming out with is not your shopping list. Every service is for someone, not every service is for everyone, so figuring out what it is that they're talking about and what those workloads look like, is something that I think is getting lost in translation. And in our defense—collective defense—Amazon is not the best at telling stories to realize that, oh, this is not me they're talking to; I'm going to opt out of this particular thing. You figure it out by getting it wrong first. Does that align with how you see the market going?Chetan: I think so. You know, I think of Amazon Web Services, or even Google, or Azure as sort of Costco and, you know, Sam's Wholesale Club or whatever, right? They cater to a very broad audience and they sell a lot of stuff in bulk and cheap. And you know, so it's sort of a lowest common denominator type of a model. And so emerging applications, and especially emerging needs that enterprises have, don't necessarily get solved in the cloud. You've got to go and build up yourself on sort of the crude primitives that they provide.So okay, go use your bare basic EC2, your S3, and build your own edgy, or whatever, you know, cutting edge thing you want to build over there. And if enough people are doing it, I'm sure Amazon and Google start to pay interest and you know, develop something that makes it easier. So you know, I agree with you, they're not the best at this sort of a thing. The edge is phenomenon also that's orthogonally, and diametrically opposite to the architecture of the cloud and the economics of the cloud.And we do centralization in the cloud in a big way. Everything is in one place; we make giant piles of data in one database or data warehouse slice and dice it, and almost all our computer science is great at doing things in a centralized way. But when you take data and chop it into 50 copies and keep it in 50 different places on Earth, and you have this thing called the internet or the wide area network in the middle, trying to keep all those copies in sync is a nightmare. So you start to deal with some very basic computer science problems like distributed state and how do you build applications that have a consistent view of that distributed state? So you know, there have been attempts to solve these problems for 15, 18 years, but none of those attempts have really cracked the intersection of three things: a way for programmers to do this in a way that doesn't blow their heads with complexity, a way to do this cheaply and effectively enough where you can build real-world applications that serve billions of users concurrently at a cost point that actually is economical and make sense, and third, a way to do this with adequate levels of performance where you don't die waiting for the spinning wheel on your screen to go away.So these are the three problems with edge. And as I said, you know, me and my team, we've been focused on this for a very long while. And me and my co-founder have come from this world and we created a platform very uniquely designed to solve these three problems, the problems of complexity for programmers to build in a distributed environment like this where data sits in hundreds of places around the world and you need a consistent view of that data, being able to operate and modify and replicate that data with consistency guarantees, and then a third one, being able to do that, at high levels of performance, which translates to what we call ultra-low latency, which is human perception. The threshold of human perception, visually, is about 70 milliseconds. Our finest athletes, the best Esports players are about 70 to 80 milliseconds in their twitch, in their ability to twitch when something happens on the screen. The average human is about 100 to 110 milliseconds.So in a second, we can maybe do seven things at rapid rates. You know, that's how fast our brain can process it. Anything that falls below 100 milliseconds—especially if it falls into 50 to 70 milliseconds—appears instantaneous to the human mind and we experience it as magic. And so where edge computing and where my platform comes in is that it literally puts data and applications within 50 milliseconds of 90% of humans and devices on Earth and allows now a whole new set of applications where latency and location and the ability to control those things with really fine-grained capability matters. And we can talk a little more about what those apps are in a bit.Corey: And I think that's probably an interesting place to dive into at the moment because whenever we talk about the idea of new ways of building things that are aimed at decentralization, first, people at this point automatically have a bit of an aversion to, “Wait, are you talking about some of the Web3 nonsense?” It's one of those look around the poker table and see if you can spot the sucker, and if you can't, it's you. Because there are interesting aspects to that entire market, let's be clear, but it also seems to be occluded by so much of the grift and nonsense and spam and the rest that, again, sort of characterize the early internet as well. The idea though, of decentralizing out of the cloud is deeply compelling just to anyone who's really ever had to deal with the egress charges, or even the data transfer charges inside of one of the cloud providers. The counterpoint is it feels that historically, you either get to pay the tax and go all-in on a cloud provider and get all the higher-level niceties, or otherwise, you wind up deciding you're going to have to more or less go back to physical data centers, give or take, and other than the very baseline primitives that you get to work with of VMs and block storage and maybe a load balancer, you're building it all yourself from scratch. It seems like you're positioning this as setting up for a third option. I'd be very interested to hear it.Chetan: Yeah. And a quick comment on decentralization: good; not so sure about the Web3 pieces around it. We tend to talk about computer science and not the ideology of distributing data. There are political reasons, there are ideological reasons around data and sovereignty and individual human rights, and things like that. There are people far smarter than me who should explain that.I fall personally into the Nicholas Weaver school of skepticism about Web3 and blockchain and those types of things. And for readers who are not familiar with Nicholas Weaver, please go online. He teaches at UC Berkeley is just one of the finest minds of our time. And I think he's broken down some very good reasons why we should be skeptical about, sort of, Web3 and, you know, things like that. Anyway, that's a digression.Coming back to what we're talking about, yes, it is a new paradigm, but that's the challenge, which is I don't want to introduce a new paradigm. I want to provide a continuum. So what we've built is a platform that looks and feels very much like Lambdas, and a poly-model database. I hate the word multi. It's a pretty dumb word, so I've started to substitute ‘multi' with ‘poly' everywhere, wherever I can find it.So it's not multi-cloud; it's poly-cloud. And it's not multi-model; it's poly-model. Because what we want is a world where developers have the ability to use the best paradigm for solving problems. And it turns out when we build applications that deal with data, data doesn't just come in one form, it comes in many different forms, it's polymorphic, and so you need a data platform, that's also, you know, polyglot and poly-model to be able to handle that. So that's one part of the problem, which is, you know, we're trying to provide a platform that provides continuity by looking like a key-value store like Redis. It looks like a document database—Corey: Or the best database in the world Route 53 TXT records. But please, keep going.Chetan: Well, we've got that too, so [laugh] you know? And then we've got a streaming graph engine built into it that kind of looks and behaves like a graph database, like Neo4j, for example. And, you know, it's got columnar capabilities as well. So it's sort of a really interesting data platform that is not open-source; it's proprietary because it's designed to solve these problems of being able to distribute data, put it in hundreds of locations, keep it all in sync, but it looks like a conventional NoSQL database. And it speaks PostgreSQL, so if you know PostgreSQL, you can program it, you know, pretty easily.What it's also doing is taking away the responsibility for engineers and developers to understand how to deal with very arcane problems like conflict resolution in data. I made a change in Mumbai; you made a change in Tokyo; who wins? Our systems in the cloud—you know, DynamoDB, and things like that—they have very crude answers for this something called last writer wins. We've done a lot of work to build a protocol that brings you ACID-like consistency in these types of problems and makes it easy to reason with state change when you've got an application that's potentially running in 100 locations and each of those places is modifying the same record, for example.And then the second part of it is it's a converged platform. So it doesn't just provide data; it provides a compute layer that's deeply integrated directly with the data layer itself. So think of it as Lambdas running, like, stored procedures inside the database. That's really what it is. We've built a very, very specialized compute engine that exposes containers in functions as stored procedures directly on the database.And so they run inside the context of the database and so you can build apps in Python, Go, your favorite language; it compiles down into a [unintelligible 00:15:02] kernel that actually runs inside the database among all these different polyglot interfaces that we have. And the third thing that we do is we provide an ability for you to have very fine-grained control on your data. Because today, data's become a political tool; it's become something that nation-states care a lot about.Corey: Oh, do they ever.Chetan: Exactly. And [unintelligible 00:15:24] regulated. So here's the problem. You're an enterprise architect and your application is going to be consumed in 15 countries, there are 13 different frameworks to deal with. What do you do? Well, you spin up 13 different versions, one for each country, and you know, build 13 different teams, and have 13 zero-day attacks and all that kind of craziness, right?Well, data protection is actually one of the most important parts of the edge because, with something like Macrometa, you can build an app once, and we'll provide all the necessary localization for any region processing, data protection with things like tokenization of data so you can exfiltrate data securely without violating potentially PII sensitive data exfiltration laws within countries, things like that, i.e. It's solving some really hard problems by providing an opinionated platform that does these three things. And I'll summarize it as thus, Corey, we can kind of dig into each piece. Our platform is called the Global Data Network. It's not a global database; it's a global data network. It looks like a frickin database, but it's actually a global network available in 175 cities around the world.Corey: The challenge, of course, is where does the data actually live at rest, and—this is why people care about—well, they're two reasons people care about that; one is the data residency locality stuff, which has always, honestly for me, felt a little bit like a bit of a cloud provider shakedown. Yeah, build a data center here or you don't get any of the business of anything that falls under our regulation. The other is, what is the egress cost of that look like? Because yeah, I can build a whole multicenter data store on top of AWS, for example, but minimum, we're talking two cents, a gigabyte of transfer, even with inside of a region in some cases, and many times that externally.Chetan: Yeah, that's the real shakedown: the egress costs [laugh] more than the other example that you talked about over there. But it's a reality of how cloud pricing works and things like that. What we have built is a network that is completely independent of the cloud providers. We're built on top of five different service providers. Some of them are cloud providers, some of them are telecom providers, some of them are CDNs.And so we're building our global data network on top of routes and capacity provided by transfer providers who have different economics than the cloud providers do. So our cost for egress falls somewhere between two and five cents, for example, depending on which edge locations, which countries, and things that you're going to use over there. We've got a pretty generous egress fee where, you know, for certain thresholds, there's no egress charge at all, but over certain thresholds, we start to charge between two to five cents. But even if you were to take it at the higher end of that spectrum, five cents per gigabyte for transfer, the amount of value our platform brings in architecture and reduction in complexity and the ability to build apps that are frankly, mind-boggling—one of my customers is a SaaS company in marketing that uses us to inject offers while people are on their website, you know, browsing. Literally, you hit their website, you do a few things, and then boom, there's a customized offer for them.In banking that's used, for example, you know, you're making your minimum payments on your credit card, but you have a good payment history and you've got a decent credit score, well, let's give you an offer to give you a short-term loan, for example. So those types of new applications, you know, are really at this intersection where you need low latency, you need in-region processing, and you also need to comply with data regulation. So when you building a high-value revenue-generating app like that egress cost, even at five cents, right, tends to be very, very cheap, and the smallest part of you know, the complexity of building them.Corey: One of the things that I think we see a lot of is that the tone of this industry is set by the big players, and they have done a reasonable job, by and large, of making anything that isn't running in their blessed environments, let me be direct, sound kind of shitty, where it's like, “Oh, do you want to be smart and run things in AWS?”—or GCP? Or Azure, I guess—“Or do you want to be foolish and try and build it yourself out of popsicle sticks and twine?” And, yeah, on some level, if I'm trying to treat everything like it's AWS and run a crappy analog version of DynamoDB, for example, I'm not going to have a great experience, but if I also start from a perspective of not using things that are higher up the stack offerings, that experience starts to look a lot more reasonable as we start expanding out. But it still does present to a lot of us as well, we're just going to run things in VM somewhere and treat them just like we did back in 2005. What's changed in that perspective?Chetan: Yeah, you know, I can't talk for others but for us, we provide a high-level Platform-as-a-Service, and that platform, the global data network, has three pieces to it. First piece is—and none of this will translate into anything that AWS or GCP has because this is the edge, Corey, is completely different, right? So the global data network that we have is composed of three technology components. The first one is something that we call the global data mesh. And this is Pub/Sub and event processing on steroids. We have the ability to connect data sources across all kinds of boundaries; you've got some data in Germany and you've got some data in New York. How do you put these things together and get them streaming so that you can start to do interesting things with correlating this data, for example?And you might have to get across not just physical boundaries, like, they're sitting in different systems in different data centers; they might be logical boundaries, like, hey, I need to collaborate with data from my supply chain partner and we need to be able to do something that's dynamic in real-time, you know, to solve a business problem. So the global data mesh is a way to very quickly connect data wherever it might be in legacy systems, in flat files, in streaming databases, in data warehouses, what have you—you know, we have 500-plus types of connectors—but most importantly, it's not just getting the data streaming, it's then turning it into an API and making that data fungible. Because the minute you put an API on it and it's become fungible now that data is actually got a lot of value. And so the data mesh is a way to very quickly connect things up and put an API on it. And that API can now be consumed by front-ends, it can be consumed by other microservices, things like that.Which brings me to the second piece, which is edge compute. So we've built a compute runtime that is Docker compatible, so it runs containers, it's also Lambda compatible, so it runs functions. Let me rephrase that; it's not Lambda-compatible, it's Lambda-like. So no, you can't take your Lambda and dump it on us and it won't just work. You have to do some things to make it work on us.Corey: But so many of those things are so deeply integrated to the ecosystem that they're operating within, and—Chetan: Yeah.Corey: That, on the one hand, is presented by cloud providers as, “Oh, yes. This shows how wonderful these things are.” In practice, talk to customers. “Yeah, we're using it as spackle between the different cloud services that don't talk to one another despite being made by the same company.”Chetan: [laugh] right.Corey: It's fun.Chetan: Yeah. So the second edge compute piece, which allows you now to build microservices that are stateful, i.e., they have data that they interact with locally, and schedule them along with the data on our network of 175 regions around the world. So you can build distributed applications now.Now, your microservice back-end for your banking application or for your HR SaaS application or e-commerce application is not running in us-east-1 and Virginia; it's running literally in 15, 18, 25 cities where your end-users are, potentially. And to take an industrial IoT case, for example, you might be ingesting data from the electricity grid in 15, 18 different cities around the world; you can do all of that locally now. So that's what the edge functions does, it flips the cloud model around because instead of sending data to where the compute is in the cloud, you're actually bringing compute to where the data is originating, or the data is being consumed, such as through a mobile app. So that's the second piece.And the third piece is global data protection, which is hey, now I've got a distributed infrastructure; how do I comply with all the different privacy and regulatory frameworks that are out there? How do I keep data secure in each region? How do I potentially share data between regions in such a way that, you know, I don't break the model of compliance globally and create a billion-dollar headache for my CIO and CEO and CFO, you know? So that's the third piece of capabilities that this provides.All of this is presented as a set of serverless APIs. So you simply plug these APIs into your existing applications. Some of your applications work great in the cloud. Maybe there are just parts of that app that should be on our edge. And that's usually where most customers start; they take a single web service or two that's not doing so great in the cloud because it's too far away; it has data sensitivity, location sensitivity, time sensitivity, and so they use us as a way to just deal with that on the edge.And there are other applications where it's completely what I call edge native, i.e., no dependancy on the cloud comes and runs completely distributed across our network and consumes primarily the edges infrastructure, and just maybe send some data back on the cloud for long-term storage or long-term analytics.Corey: And ingest does remain free. The long-term analytics, of course, means that once that data is there, good luck convincing a customer to move it because that gets really expensive.Chetan: Exactly, exactly. It's a speciation—as I like to say—of the cloud, into a fast tier where interactions happen, i.e., the edge. So systems of record are still in the cloud; we still have our transactional systems over there, our databases, data warehouses.And those are great for historical types of data, as you just mentioned, but for things that are operational in nature, that are interactive in nature, where you really need to deal with them because they're time-sensitive, they're depleting value in seconds or milliseconds, they're location sensitive, there's a lot of noise in the data and you need to get to just those bits of data that actually matter, throw the rest away, for example—which is what you do with a lot of telemetry in cybersecurity, for example, right—those are all the things that require a new kind of a platform, not a system of record, a system of interaction, and that's what the global data network is, the GDN. And these three primitives, the data mesh, Edge compute, and data protection, are the way that our APIs are shaped to help our enterprise customers solve these problems. So put it another way, imagine ten years from now what DynamoDB and global tables with a really fast Lambda and Kinesis with actually Event Processing built directly into Kinesis might be like. That's Macrometa today, available in 175 cities.Corey: This episode is brought to us in part by our friends at Datadog. Datadog is a SaaS monitoring and security platform that enables full-stack observability for modern infrastructure and applications at every scale. Datadog enables teams to see everything: dashboarding, alerting, application performance monitoring, infrastructure monitoring, UX monitoring, security monitoring, dog logos, and log management, in one tightly integrated platform. With 600-plus out-of-the-box integrations with technologies including all major cloud providers, databases, and web servers, Datadog allows you to aggregate all your data into one platform for seamless correlation, allowing teams to troubleshoot and collaborate together in one place, preventing downtime and enhancing performance and reliability. Get started with a free 14-day trial by visiting datadoghq.com/screaminginthecloud, and get a free t-shirt after installing the agent.Corey: I think it's also worth pointing out that it's easy for me to fall into a trap that I wonder if some of our listeners do as well, which is, I live in, basically, downtown San Francisco. I have gigabit internet connectivity here, to the point where when it goes out, it is suspicious and more a little bit frightening because my ISP—Sonic.net—is amazing and deserves every bit of praise that you never hear any ISP ever get. But when I travel, it's a very different experience. When I go to oh, I don't know, the conference center at re:Invent last year and find that the internet is patchy at best, or downtown San Francisco on Verizon today, I discover that the internet is almost non-existent, and suddenly applications that I had grown accustomed to just working suddenly didn't.And there's a lot more people who live far away from these data center regions and tier one backbones directly to same than don't. So I think that there's a lot of mistaken ideas around exactly what the lower bandwidth experience of the internet is today. And that is something that feels inadvertently classist if that make sense. Are these geographically bigoted?Chetan: Yeah. No, I think those two points are very well articulated. I wish I could articulate it that well. But yes, if you can afford 5G, some of those things get better. But again, 5G is not everywhere yet. It will be, but 5G can in many ways democratize at least one part of it, which is provide an overlap network at the edge, where if you left home and you switched networks, on to a wireless, you can still get the same quality of service that you used to getting from Sonic, for example. So I think it can solve some of those things in the future. But the second part of it—what did you call it? What bigoted?Corey: Geographically bigoted. And again, that's maybe a bit of a strong term, but it's easy to forget that you can't get around the speed of light. I would say that the most poignant example of that I had was when I was—in the before times—giving a keynote in Australia. So ah, I know what I'll do, I'll spin up an EC2 instance for development purposes—because that's how I do my development—in Australia. And then I would just pay my provider for cellular access for my iPad and that was great.And I found the internet was slow as molasses for everything I did. Like, how do people even live here? Well, turns out that my provider would backhaul traffic to the United States. So to log into my session, I would wind up having to connect with a local provider, backhaul to the US, then connect back out from there to Australia across the entire Pacific Ocean, talk to the server, get the response, would follow that return path. It's yeah, turns out that doing laps around the world is not the most efficient way of transferring any data whatsoever, let alone in sizable amounts.Chetan: And that's why we decided to call our platform the global data network, Corey. In fact, it's really built inside of sort of a very simple reason is that we have our own network underneath all of this and we stop this whole ping-pong effect of data going around and help create deterministic guarantees around latency, around location, around performance. We're trying to democratize latency and these types of problems in a way that programmers shouldn't have to worry about all this stuff. You write your code, you push publish, it runs on a network, and it all gets there with a guarantee that 95% of all your requests will happen within 50 milliseconds round-trip time, from any device, you know, in these population centers around the world.So yeah, it's a big deal. It's sort of one of our je ne sais quoi pieces in our mission and charter, which is to just democratize latency and access, and sort of get away from this geographical nonsense of, you know, how networks work and it will dynamically switch topology and just make everything slow, you know, very non-deterministic way.Corey: One last topic that I want to ask you about—because I near certain given your position, you will have an opinion on this—what's your take on, I guess, the carbon footprint of clouds these days? Because a lot of people been talking about it; there has been a lot of noise made about, justifiably so. I'm curious to get your take.Chetan: Yeah, you know, it feels like we're in the '30s and the '40s of the carbon movement when it comes to clouds today, right? Maybe there's some early awareness of the problem, but you know, frankly, there's very little we can do than just sort of put a wet finger in the air, compute some carbon offset and plant some trees. I think these are good building blocks; they're not necessarily the best ways to solve this problem, ultimately. But one of the things I care deeply about and you know, my company cares a lot about is helping make developers more aware off what kind of carbon footprint their code tangibly has on the environment. And so we've started two things inside the company. We've started a foundation that we call the Carbon Conscious Computing Consortium—the four C's. We're going to announce that publicly next year, we're going to invite folks to come and join us and be a part of it.The second thing that we're doing is we're building a completely open-source, carbon-conscious computing platform that is built on real data that we're collecting about, to start with, how Macrometa's platform emits carbon in response to different types of things you build on it. So for example, you wrote a query that hits our database and queries, you know, I don't know, 20 billion objects inside of our database. It'll tell you exactly how many micrograms or how many milligrams of carbon—it's an estimate; not exactly. I got to learn to throttle myself down. It's an estimate, you know, you can't really measure these things exactly because the cost of carbon is different in different places, you know, there are different technologies, et cetera.Gives you a good decent estimate, something that reliably tells you, “Hey, you know that query that you have over there, that piece of SQL? That's probably going to do this much of micrograms of carbon at this scale.” You know, if this query was called a million times every hour, this is how much it costs. A million times a day, this is how much it costs and things like that. But the most important thing that I feel passionate about is that when we give developers visibility, they do good things.I mean, when we give them good debugging tools, the code gets better, the code gets faster, the code gets more efficient. And Corey, you're in the business of helping people save money, when we give them good visibility into how much their code costs to run, they make the code more efficient. So we're doing the same thing with carbon, we know there's a cost to run your code, whether it's a function, a container, a query, what have you, every operation has a carbon cost. And we're on a mission to measure that and provide accurate tooling directly in our platform so that along with your debug lines, right, where you've got all these print statements that are spitting up stuff about what's happening there, we can also print out, you know, what did it cost in carbon.And you can set budgets. You can basically say, “Hey, I want my application to consume this much of carbon.” And down the road, we'll have AI and ML models that will help us optimize your code to be able to fit within those carbon budgets. For example. I'm not a big fan of planting—you know, I love planting trees, but don't get me wrong, we live in California and those trees get burned down.And I was reading this heartbreaking story about how we returned back into the atmosphere a giant amount of carbon because the forest reserve that had been planted, you know, that was capturing carbon, you know, essentially got burned down in a forest fire. So, you know, we're trying to just basically say, let's try and reduce the amount of carbon, you know, that we can potentially create by having better tooling.Corey: That would be amazing, and I think it also requires something that I guess acts almost as an exchange where there's a centralized voice that can make sure that, well, one, the provider is being honest, and two, being able to ensure you're doing an apples-to-apples comparison and not just discounting a whole lot of negative externalities. Because, yes, we're talking about carbon released into the environment. Okay, great. What about water effects from what's happening with your data centers are located? That can have significant climate impact as well. It's about trying to avoid the picking and choosing. It's hard, hard problem, but I'm unconvinced that there's anything more critical in the entire ecosystem right now to worry about.Chetan: So as a startup, we care very deeply about starting with the carbon part. And I agree, Corey, it's a multi-dimensional problem; there's lots of tentacles. The hydrocarbon industry goes very deeply into all parts of our lives. I'm a startup, what do I know? I can't solve all of those things, but I wanted to start with the philosophy that if we provide developers with the right tooling, they'll have the right incentives then to write better code. And as we open-source more of what we learn and, you know, our tooling, others will do the same. And I think in ten years, we might have better answers. But someone's got to start somewhere, and this is where we'd like to start.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking as much time as you have for going through what you're up to and how you view the world. If people want to learn more, where's the best place to find you?Chetan: Yes, so two things on that front. Go to www.macrometa.com—M-A-C-R-O-M-E-T-A dot com—and that's our website. And you can come and experience the full power of the platform. We've got a playground where you can come, open an account and build anything you want for free, and you can try and learn. You just can't run it in production because we've got a giant network, as I said, of 175 cities around the world. But there are tiers available for you to purchase and build and run apps. Like I think about 80 different customers, some of the biggest ones in the world, some of the biggest telecom customers, retail, E-Tail customers, [unintelligible 00:34:28] tiny startups are building some interesting things on.And the second thing I want to talk about is November 7th through 11th of 2022, just a couple of weeks—or maybe by the time this recording comes out, a week from now—is developer week at Macrometa. And we're going to be announcing some really interesting new capabilities, some new features like real-time complex event processing with low, ultra-low latency, data connectors, a search feature that allows you to build search directly on top of your applications without needing to spin up a giant Elastic Cloud Search cluster, or providing search locally and regionally so that, you know, you can have search running in 25 cities that are instant to search rather than sending all your search requests back in one location. There's all kinds of very cool things happening over there.And we're also announcing a partnership with the original, the OG of the edge, one of the largest, most impressive, interesting CDN players that has become a partner for us as well. And then we're also announcing some very interesting experimental work where you as a developer can build apps directly on the 5G telecom cloud as well. And then you'll hear from some interesting companies that are building apps that are edge-native, that are impossible to build in the cloud because they take advantage of these three things that we talked about: geography, latency, and data protection in some very, very powerful ways. So you'll hear actual customer case studies from real customers in the flesh, not anonymous BS, no marchitecture. It's a week-long of technical talk by developers, for developers. And so, you know, come and join the fun and let's learn all about the edge together, and let's go build something together that's impossible to do today.Corey: And we will, of course, put links to that in the [show notes 00:36:06]. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Chetan: My pleasure, Corey. Like I said, you're one of my heroes. I've always loved your work. The Snark-as-a-Service is a trillion-dollar market cap company. If you're ever interested in taking that public, I know some investors that I'd happily put you in touch with. But—Corey: Sadly, so many of those investors lack senses of humor.Chetan: [laugh]. That is true. That is true [laugh].Corey: [laugh]. [sigh].Chetan: Well, thank you. Thanks again for having me.Corey: Thank you. Chetan Venkatesh, CEO and co-founder at Macrometa. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with an angry and insulting comment about why we should build everything on the cloud provider that you work for and then the attempt to challenge Chetan for the title of Edgelord.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

I Saw What You Did
Chucky Is An Edgelord

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Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2022 109:48 Very Popular


Danielle and Millie discuss BROADCAST NEWS (1987) and LÉON MORIN, PRIEST (1961), the sexual nature of confessionals, himbos in the workplace, and the wrestler who does the X over his crotch. Plus, they are joined by the wonderful Scott Youngbauer and Peter Lozano from the podcast Movies That Made Us Gay, to discuss a spooky season-themed FMK. To see a full ISWYD movie list, check out our Letterboxd here:https://letterboxd.com/isawwhatyoudid/films/diary/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Theory of DFS - Daily Fantasy Sports Strategy

Jordan Cooper & Neil Orfield discuss rethinking your day-to-day bankroll allocation & contest diversification, how lineup salary dynamics affect duplication & win probability, and DraftKings experimenting with flatter GPP payout structures. ➜ Learn the fundamental concepts of expert-level DFS gameplay that will completely revolutionize your process and put yourself on the same footing as the pros! ➜ Buy the 15-hour audio course: https://www.theoryofdfs.com/masterclass ➜ Subscribe to YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/jordancooper ➜ Questions or feedback, e-mail questions@theoryofdfs.com

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Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 65:09 Very Popular


Beloved Patreon backer Ryan McClelland kicks of an all-request episode in the Gaming Hut, seeking advice on how to convincing players to treat former adversaries as questionable allies. In the History Hut, estimable backer Derek Hiemforth has discovered that two doomed airships, the R101 and the Hindenburg, used the exact same Duralumin, and naturally asks […]