Podcasts about goobers

Peanuts coated in a shell of chocolate.

  • 391PODCASTS
  • 695EPISODES
  • 57mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Jun 18, 2026LATEST
goobers

POPULARITY

20192020202120222023202420252026


Best podcasts about goobers

Latest podcast episodes about goobers

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son
Do things change...or do they stay the same?

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2026 38:45


Join Bunches and Goobers as we review recent and dive deep into our reflective question of the week!

WolfNet Radio: A Battletech Podcast
WNRP Ep.86: The "Goober" Experience!

WolfNet Radio: A Battletech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 139:35


Happy Friday! The boys are joined by the infamous Jeff "Goober" Stone. Battletech player, Pods owner and operator, and connoisseur of chaos. Buckle up for this one it gets crazy   Cast Members Host: Matthew "Bloodbath" Behrens Co Host: Aaron "Coach" Krull Co Host: Andrew "Minnow" Krull Co Host: Tommy "Silent C Raven" Kruger Co Host: Charles " Loremaster" Gideon   Special Guest: Jeff Stone   Be sure to check out our Wolfnet Radio Apparel store at https://wolfnetradio.qbstores.com/   Also be sure to follow us on our Facebook Page, Youtube Channel, and also join our Patreon. Alpha Strike 350 Rules and Tools can be found at wolfsdragoons.com   This Episode is proudly sponsored by Aries Games and Miniatures. You can find everything you need for your Battletech addiction at https://ariesgamesandminis.com/

Mornings at the Cabin
May 5, 2026: Popeyes Ponderings

Mornings at the Cabin

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 36:52


Hey, Goober, where's the Popeyes?

Joy Found Here
What Your Mother Always Said Was Right: Amy Goober on Living Boldly at Any Age

Joy Found Here

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 50:45


What if the most powerful life lessons you carry were handed down by the woman who raised you — and it took 40 years to realize it? In episode 258 of Joy Found Here, serial entrepreneur and action coach Amy Goober shares how a lifetime of her mother's wisdom became a book and a blueprint for women ready to stop waiting and start living. Amy is living proof that the best chapters don't always come first — and that the words we grow up hearing might just be the ones that change everything.In This Episode, You Will Learn:(04:44) How a Cornell grad became a secretary — and then a cake baker(06:14) Opening The Icing on the Cake at 26 with zero business experience(08:09) Reinventing herself from stay-at-home mom to action coach at 60(10:44) Why Amy's mother believes successful parenting is successful separation(12:05) The story behind My Mother Always Says and Gwen's 94 years of wisdom(13:31) The 25 lessons — including why you can only tell your adult children something once(23:48) The go-go, slow-go, no-go framework for living fully while you can(28:17) The real trigger behind Amy's coaching pivot — and the loss that shaped her(32:35) Why women need permission to put themselves first — and how Amy gives it(42:08) The loneliness epidemic and why real, in-person connection changes everythingAmy Goober is an action coach, serial entrepreneur, and author who has spent four decades proving that reinvention has no expiration date — from opening a custom cake bakery at 26, to launching her own coaching practice at 60. Based in Boston, she helps women reconnect with what they want through 1:1 coaching, community events, and her women's travel brand Wandering Women. She is also the co-author of My Mother Always Says: 25 Lessons for Finding the Silver Lining, written with her 94-year-old mother, Gwen Borden.In this episode, Amy Goober shares the story behind her book, co-written with her mother Gwen, whose life lessons — shaped by WWII and decades of resilience — form the heart of the collection. She reflects on how the mother-daughter dynamic shifts as children become adults, and unpacks the idea that successful parenting is ultimately successful separation. Amy also opens up about founding her action coaching practice after observing that too many women were talking about things they weren't doing — offering practical tools like her "go-go, slow-go, no-go" framework and her "toe dipper" approach for women hesitant to take that first step.Connect with Amy Goober:WebsiteFacebookInstagramLinkedInBook: Amy Goober & Gwen Borden - My Mother Always SaysLet's Connect:WebsiteInstagram Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Howie Carr Radio Network
California Goober-natorial Race, Plus SPLC's "Informant Program" Showcases the Fraudulent Far-Left | 4.23.26 - The Grace Curley Show Hour 1

The Howie Carr Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2026 38:28


Grace opens the show discussing the Governor's race debate and asserting that the Democrat candidates are not serious people. Then, Grace discusses her favorite news story of the week: the SPLC's "informant program" which demonstrates how fraudulent the far-left is.  Visit the Howie Carr Radio Network website to access columns, podcasts, and other exclusive content.

The Rise Guys
IT'S A BIRD, IT'S A PLANE.. IT'S A PLANE DRAWING A GOOBER?..:HOUR THREE

The Rise Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2026 28:33


Headlines Let's do more Headlines Say hello to, the SCREW WORM lol

Gangland Wire
Nicola Gentile: The Mafia's Traveling Peacemaker

Gangland Wire

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 Transcription Available


In this episode of Gangland Wire, host Gary Jenkins sits down with author and historian Gary Clemente for a deep dive into the remarkable life of Nicola Gentile, one of the most influential yet little-known figures in early American organized crime. Click here to find books by mob expert Gary Celemente Gentile was no street thug. Born in Sicily in 1884, he immigrated to the United States in the early 1900s and became a roving Mafia diplomat—trusted to mediate disputes among crime families in cities such as New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Kansas City, Pueblo, Chicago, and beyond. Known as Zio Nicola (“Uncle Nick”), Gentile operated as a stabilizing force during the most violent period of Mafia history, including Prohibition and the Castellammarese War. Clemente reveals that Gentile's story survives largely because Gentile broke the ultimate Mafia rule: he wrote memoirs. Those writings—published in Italy in the 1960s—were seized by the FBI and later translated by Clemente's father, Peter Clemente, one of the first Sicilian-born agents assigned to the FBI's elite Top Hoodlum Squad. The episode offers rare insight into those translations and the intelligence value they held for federal investigators. The discussion traces Gentile's interactions with legendary figures such as Carlo Gambino, Al Capone, Lucky Luciano, and Vito Genovese, as well as his behind-the-scenes role in shaping the Mafia's modern organizational structure—including the creation of the national Commission. The episode also explores Gentile's personal contradictions: a lifelong criminal who saw himself as an honorable man, a mediator capable of violence, and a romantic who later believed a lover betrayed him to federal authorities. After fleeing the U.S. under indictment, Gentile returned to Sicily, where he later provided intelligence to Allied forces during World War II—another unlikely chapter in an already extraordinary life. Despite being sentenced to death by Mafia leaders for publishing his memoirs, Gentile was spared due to the respect he commanded on both sides of the Atlantic. He died peacefully in Sicily in 1970, leaving behind a story so expansive it feels tailor-made for film. To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup, click here To rent ‘Brothers against Brothers’ or ‘Gangland Wire,’ the documentaries click here.  To purchase one of my books, click here. [0:00] Hey, all you wiretappers, Gary Jenkins back here in the studio of Gangland Wire. I am a former Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit detective and now turned podcaster and documented filmmaker. We record the mafia, everything we can about the mob. And today I’ve been wanting to do this story, guys, as a man named Nicola Gentile. Did I get that right, Gary? Beautiful. All right. This is Gary Clemente, and Gary’s been on before, or GP Clemente. He’s been on before. His father was Peter Clemente, who was one of the original Sicilian-born FBI agents in the United States and did a lot of translation work with Bellacci. And he’s written, he’s writing books. So we talked about the first book, but tell just a little bit more about it. And guys, I’ll have links to that book. And then tell me a little bit about the two more you have coming out. The first book that I wrote in a series of books about my father’s lengthy FBI career is called Untold Mafia Tales from the FBI Top Hoodlum Squad. [1:04] And it’s about my father’s career in the mafia from 1950 to 1976. And in 1957, he became a part of the Top Hoodlum squad, which is an elite group that J.H. Goober started as part of the Top Hoodlum program. And what happened was in 1957, they had a big mafia conclave meeting in Appalachian, New York. [1:30] And they had about 60 members of the mafia throughout the country, all the bosses that attended this meeting. And it became publicized. The cops were there. They confiscated their identification, their wallets, the money, everything. And it got released into the news. This was a big story. [1:50] So what happened was J. Edgar Hoover at that time had been denying the existence of the mafia for a number of reasons. Probably because he didn’t want to get involved with all of the muck of trying to prosecute these gangland people because he knew that they had a lot of buffers between the bosses and the guys committing the murders. So he knew it was going to be difficult, and it would blemish their conviction record and rate. So he kind of stayed away from it, denied the existence of the mafia, And along comes this Appalachian Conclave meeting. It got released into the news, and everybody was up in arms about this. That’s when Hoover decided to start the Top Hoodland program, because there was absolutely no denial of what was going on here, that there was some sort of vast criminal organization that was highly organized, and he had to do something about it. So in 1957, my father became part of the Top Hoodlum program. [2:54] And in particular, the Top Hoodlum squad in New York City, which is really a hotbed of mafia criminal activity. You couldn’t get any more hotter than what they had. They had five mafia families alone in New York. And the first book was really about how my father confronted Carlo Gambino, how Carlo Gambino became one of his original subjects for him to study and to profile. [3:24] He was ordered to do that, and he was happy to do that. The book is really about him confronting face-to-face with Carlo Gambino, and then afterwards wiretapping him at the Golden Gate Hotel in Miami Beach, Florida. He was on the other side of a wall. From Gambino for six weeks. Gambino did not know he was on the other side of the wall wiretapping him with another agent. So that’s what the first book was about. And the second book is about really the backstory of my father’s life before he got into the FBI a little bit. Then his first years in the Bureau, when he was a part of the investigation of the Communist Party and the Workers’, Party and the few offices that he was in, like the Springfield, Illinois office, and also Cleveland. And then he became a part of the New York office. He was still investigating communist activities at the time. And then he became a part of the Top Woodland squad. And his milieu, his wheelhouse, became organized crime and the mafia. So that’s generally what has happened so far. The second book is being released this coming month, and it will We’ll have book two and book three talking about these sorts of things. [4:44] Interesting. Interesting. All right, guys, I’ll have a link to the old book down there in the show notes and look for that new book coming up and we’ll get back together. I’ll get back with Gary after the book comes out sometime and we’ll do another show. And we’re not going to talk about the mafia so much. We’re going to talk about these activities, which I think is interesting, of the FBI against the Social Workers Party and the Communist Party USA because they did a lot of work. When I was growing up, Gary, do you remember I Led Three Lives, the TV show about, his last name was Phil Brick. It was a weekly TV show about an undercover FBI agent who supposedly was working as a member of the Communist Party. He would go to these meetings and things like that. Do you remember that? I Led Three Lives. I do remember that. That show goes way, way back. What year was that show? Oh, that had to be 1953, 54. I had to be like 9, 10 years old, 55. I was 10 years old, so it probably may be 1955. I do remember the show. I think I’ve seen reruns of it. Yeah, I bet it’s on YouTube. I have to look that up for fun one of these days. [5:52] Issue Machine’s show back then, we will talk about this later on at another time as regards to the second book. Back in the 1950s, J. Edgar Hoover’s main enemy was the Communist Party. It wasn’t organized crime. That was his top focus. He wrote a book called Masters of Deceit. And people, I think everybody, they should have this book in public school system, but they don’t want to do that today. Today’s public school system, they try to inculcate youngsters in more social activities and social warriors and not learning about the perils of Marxism and communism. [6:33] Okay, today we’re going to talk about Nicola Gentile. Now, 1903, he was a Sicilian immigrant that came to the United States, and he found a lot of opportunity among the other Sicilian immigrants because he was a blackhander, if you will, when he first got here. He was a criminal who came over from Sicily, but he was able to move among all the different families, all the different cities, and settle disputes and help people get organized and do things like that. Gary, start telling us a little bit about what you remember about Nicola Gentile. First of all, I want to tell people that Nicola Gentile was an uber jovelace. He was jovelace on steroids. Somebody later on in his life, toward the end of his life, he wrote his memoirs down. This was in 1963. So what happened was he published his memoirs in Italy. He had a co-author, he had another journalist write these memoirs down in Sicilia. [7:36] These memoirs were then grabbed by the FBI and they were given to my father. My father had the papers written in Sicilian. And I remember as a boy in 1963, when this happened, my father was sitting at a table translating these memoirs with my grandmother. Now, my grandmother grew up not too far away. My grandmother and my grandfather grew up not too far away from Nicola Gentile. Nicola was born in the town of Siculiana. Try to say that, Gary. [8:14] I give. I said that one real fast. So he’s writing these, translating the memoirs with my Sicilian-speaking grandmother and grandfather. My grandfather spoke, my grandparents, my father spoke Sicilian as well, too. He grew up with that as a little boy. But my grandmother and my grandfather were helping him translate these papers. These are the FBI papers. This is a copy. This is a copy of the FBI photocopy after it got translated. And my father did write some notes here and there. You can see it’s fairly light. The print is fairly light on it. I do have some post-it notes or notations, comments on it. But this is about 185 pages that were translated. And the language is quite formal, I’ll read to you a little bit of the first page What Nicola Gentile wrote as he started off Before you get started there, was that book ever translated? Is that available here in English form like on Amazon as a book you can buy today? I know a lot of people are wondering, can I find that? [9:34] That’s a good question. I haven’t gone that far yet. Okay, all right. I don’t know. I’ll take a look. That is a good question. But this is the translation that my father and my grandparents did. And whether it came out that way in these books that are out now, I don’t know. There are some books that do talk about Nicola Jantili, but I don’t know if there are any English translation books. So this is how the first page of Nicola’s book opens. Siculiana, a small town of Sicily, did not, prior to 1900, offer any opportunity for work or secondary school education for the betterment of life of its youth. [10:22] The greater portion of whom in which there existed the disposition encouraged by the family while still young frequented the shop of an artisan where they struggled to learn a trade, but at the same time often neglecting school so that illiteracy reigned supreme. So that’s the sort of language that Nicola used in it. And it’s quite interesting. It’s a bit formal. He does jump around a bit from his activities from one place to another. He talks a lot about how he knew practically everybody in the mob at that time. He knew people like Luciano. He knew he interacted with Al Capone. He interacted with Vito Genovese. He interacted with Albert the Mad Hatter, Anastasia. These were all the big shots. I’m talking about in the 1920s through the 1930s and all the way after. If you remember that in the 1920s, the 1919 prohibition happened, okay? That’s what really blew up out of everything, the prestige, the money, and the power of the mafia. That’s how it grew because of prohibition. and they were able to bootleg liquor, and Nikola was indeed a part of this. [11:51] He traveled around a lot. Now, what was the deal with that? He was in New York. I think that was his base, and that’s where he got started, but he traveled to, I think, New Orleans, or did he come up from New Orleans? I can’t remember. He was in Kansas City. He was in Cleveland. He was in Pueblo, Colorado. He made some connections. There’s a really old, early family in Pueblo, Colorado. I’ve talked to a descendant of that family, and I’ve talked to another author that knew quite a little bit about it so he traveled around to these different families what was the story with that, For whatever reason, he was a robing ambassador and a mediator. Look, you’re talking about organized crime. You’re talking about the mafia. You’re talking about vicious people who had one thing and one thing only in mind. What was it? Duh, money. Money and power. Because of that, you’re going to have disputes. You’re going to have arguments. You’re going to have people being killed as a result of it. And Gentile was the sort of individual that, think of Nicola Gentile as a Vida Colleone. [12:59] Think of him as a godfather figure. Very wise, understanding how to mediate the disputes, realizing that, as everybody else did, that if we do not mediate these disputes, what will happen? We will be at each other’s throats like animals. Yeah. And our organization cannot exist. Our universe, our world cannot exist if this happens. So we must mediate these disputes. We must have an organizational structure. We must have a boss. We must have an underboss. We must have a consigliere, an advisor, who tells, who gives words of wisdom about how to proceed with business. Whether to take somebody out, how to proceed in such a fashion. So all of that was a part of the world. And it existed for many years, for many decades because of that. [14:01] Now, let me start off a little bit to tell you the beginnings of Nicola so we can lead up to how he got to this position. So he was born in 1884. He came to America at the age of 19 and went to New York. He travels to Kansas City to meet with his brother Vincent, who lived in Topeka, Kansas, not too far away from Kansas City. He started working out in the Santa Fe Railroad, and he became a linen peddler, and he did make some money doing that. He returned to Italy in 1909. He married in 1910 and had a daughter named Maria. Now, in his papers, you really don’t hear anything more about that happening. You don’t hear anything about his wife, children, nothing. And it isn’t until later on, at the very end of his memoirs, he talks about the women in his life. We’ll get to that later. But so what happened was he returns back from Italy, gets back to America, and he goes to Canada. Then he moves to San Francisco with his brother, and he continues to sell linen until 1914. And it isn’t until he was a year or two later, maybe about the age of 19, 20 or so, he starts getting involved with the Honor Society. [15:27] Now, he knows about the Honor Society from back in Sicily. He’s been well aware of it. He’s been involved with it. At the age of 15, he had been convicted of a crime, and he had been sentenced to jail at the age of 15. So he wasn’t new to the world of organized crime. He knew it from back in Sicily. It’s a very deep fabric of the world of Sicily at that time. Why is that? Because in Sicily, in those years, in the late 1800s, you had either what? You had a sort of a feudal system where people were working for these large landowners, and the landowners were absentee landowners, okay? They delegated authority to people underneath them, and the people working for their land and working on their land were really, for example, a lot of poverty happened because of it. So to bridge that sort of gap with poverty, the Mafia started, in other words, and they called it the Honor Society. These were men of honor. And Nicola Gentile describes it as the, let me see here. [16:39] He describes the honor society, originating many years ago in antiquity, and it gives the right to defend the honor of the weak and to respect human law. With these principles as its guide, it’s still operated within the mafia. So you understand that within the honor society, here’s the code that we must be civilized, even though we’re acting like animals. [17:08] We don’t want to act too much like animals but otherwise we will destroy, the golden goose so this is what they put in the back of their minds we must act in a civilized manner, so that was the understanding of how the outer society worked so he went to New York he went to Brooklyn, and at that time the mafia probably had 2,000 2,000 members of the mafia in New York at that time, between the five families. They call them Bocate families. So he joined the Outer Society in Pittsburgh. [17:49] And soon after, he was asked by Gregorio Conte, the head of the mob boss in Pittsburgh, to do a killing for him. Okay? Now, he doesn’t say whether this was an initiation right, because that’s what they usually did in the mafia. You had to kill somebody in order to be initiated into the mafia, become a member of it. So he was ordered to do a killing, and what happened was he confronted this individual in front of a restaurant. His brother shoots the victim in front of the restaurant. He runs away before Nikola, empties his gun into the guy. Paul runs away. Nicola’s standing there with his gun. People are yelling and screaming, oh my gosh, he did it. He killed this person. Paul is running down the street. He takes his firearm. He shoots it up in the air. [18:45] Scares the crowd away. Nicola runs away. He escapes from that scene. Now, Nicola really has never, throughout his mafia career, he’s never been arrested. It isn’t until later on in his life that he actually does get under the eye of the police and he becomes indicted and will get arrested. So that’s what happens to him later on. But later, during his life in the mob, he does not get arrested in any way, shape, or form. Although he got to Italy, when he goes back to Italy, he was under the scrutiny of the police there and he had been arrested. He gets out on bail, and he was accused of crimes there. So he was pretty slippery. But in terms of what we’re talking about, his mediation skills, little by little, he becomes this sort of individual that people look at as somebody that can mediate their problems and to tamper down the situation that can become very hot. And he became somebody that the other mobsters called, they called him Uncle Nick or Zio Nicola, Zio Cola, Uncle Cola. They saw him as a sort of a vunticular figure. [20:07] That could ameliorate these disputes and these situations that they were involved with. In Kansas City, our mob boss was Nick Savella for a long time, and I was looking over some wiretaps, and people were talking about him, and one of his underlings was talking to another underling about something he was going to take to him, and he called him Zeo the whole time. They always referred to him as Zeo, so that’s a term of honor and respect throughout the mafia world. [20:37] That’s right. As I keep saying, the mafia was able to exist for as long as it did because they had an organizational structure. They had a code of honor that kept them from not acting like wild animals too much. Too much. A lot of these people, you’ve met more than your share of criminals. Gary, you know how many of these people can be. Some of them can be very business-like. Some of them can be very vicious, vicious, sick people too. And the great scarpets of the world that would kill dozens of people. These were psychopaths. You had your whole range. You had your whole range of people. And the fascinating thing about Gentile was that he knew a lot of these individuals. You talked about the Kansas City, the Kansas City entity. Yes, Pueblo, Colorado did have its problems at that time. And somebody had been killed, the Pueblo, Colorado family, and that sort of spilled over into Kansas City. Kansas City was asking to mediate the situation, and it was Chile mediated the situation because of it. [21:57] Chantina became the boss of the Kansas City family. Now, he does not get into this in great depth about what he did in Kansas City at Boston, but it was a temporary thing. He was bopping around from Pittsburgh to Cleveland to Kansas City. He went to New York. He was in Boston. He was far away, San Francisco, Los Angeles. He was all over the place. And he was very well respected. He had a lot to do with what was going on in Chicago with Al Capone. Interestingly enough, Al Capone, at that time, when Gentile encountered him, his family, if you want to call it his crime family, had a lot of international entities in it. It wasn’t an Italian thing. He had a lot of different people from different ethnic backgrounds as a part of his organization. It wasn’t until Nicola comes around and the mafia bosses came around and told him, look, this is what the mafia is like. We’re not an international group here. [23:08] It’s strictly Italian. You want to be a part of it, you need to buy into this. Okay. And that’s indeed what he did, bought into the mafia, marginalize the people that were not Italians. Booted them out and or killed them sometimes and started his own mafia italian thing in chicago which became very very well known as as a bloody place to believe bloody bloody place to be because of the the killings that they had prior to him being a part of the mafia officially there were a tremendous amount of gangland killings as you know in chicago so he had a large part to and he He did keep a lot of those other ethnicities around as players, as people he could use, though. And on into Frank Nitti’s time and on up into current modern times, up into the 50s and 60s, they had several people that were on the periphery would be associates. But I guess he had more organization of Sicilians, it looks to me like, over the years. Yes, yes, he did. What happened eventually was, as Gary, the Castellamareci War erupted in the 1930s. That’s another hard one to say, Castellamareci. Castellamareci. I can say that, Castellamareci. [24:35] Try to say that real fast. So what happened, the Castellamareci War erupted. In June, the boss mazzeria was the boss of bosses. They called him the king. Was the boss of the Capetituticape, the boss of bosses, okay? [24:53] And Mazzaria was wielding a very heavy hand that a lot of the other bosses in the country did not like at that time. And in particular, Maranzano became his chief foe. And he was originally from the Castellammare area of Sicily, okay? and his henchmen, his crew, the men around him were from that area. So they had a big war with the children past Mazaria. They wanted to assume power. A lot of people were dying. They were dropping like flies, especially over in New York. And Nicola Gentile was one of the people that were trying to mediate this situation between Mazaria and Marazano. Originally, Nicola sided with Mazaria, but then the ties changed. In turn, everybody wanted Mazaria dead. All the other bosses wanted him dead, including Capone. Mazaria was eventually executed in, I believe it was 1931. [26:05] And so Salvatore Marzano assumes power, okay? The people that Mazaria had underneath him, And Marisano said, we need to get rid of these guys. So he wound up killing all of the mazzarela boys. So everybody was saying, look, I don’t see any end of this bloodshed. We don’t need this publicity, okay? We need to operate in the shadows, okay? And Carlo Gambino was an expert at doing that. So what happened was the war ended. Marisano took over. He kills the boys. But then after that Marzano, what happens power gets to his head and easily lies the crown of the king, Marzano eventually gets killed by the other bosses and it was Vito Genovese. [27:00] It was Vito Genovese that was ordered to do the hit on Marazano with his crew. And as a result of that, Gary, the other bosses said, look, we need more structure here. There’s too much bloodshed. We can’t have this going on forever and ever. So they created a commission. Now, they did have other commissions before. They did have general assemblies like that. And so they created a commission that included Lucky Luciano, included Al Capone. [27:35] Included Joe Profaggi, included Joe Bananas as part of the commission to settle down, settle things down. Now, I said that originally, when we started that, that they had an Appalachian conclave, right? They had about 60 bosses, 60, 80 bosses there at that conclave. That’s big. Believe it or not, while the big war was going on, Al Capone had a meeting on his dime in Boston, I believe. Guess who was there? I’m sorry, about 500. They had 500 mafia guys there. And there was no publicity about it. Not what happened later on in Appalachian, New York. So here you have, you imagine, 500 mob guys meeting at a hotel in Boston, and it wasn’t covered by the media at that time. But that’s part and parcel of what Nicola was involved with, some of the people he was involved with at that time. So what happens to him later on? What stirs him to write this book? [28:44] What happened was, toward the latter part of his life, he starts to talk about a couple of women that he was involved with. He talks about, I will put all the paperwork so you can actually hear the words that he talks about. He talks about how he met this woman named Maria. [29:08] He meets this woman named Maria, and he really captures his imagination. He doesn’t talk about that he had been married, that he also had a child, too. He had a child named Maria. So he meets this woman named Maria, and she’s really stricken with him. And to the point where she tells him that she’s so smitten with him that I’m going to read what, He tried to pose as a jewelry salesman so that he could meet her. He says, I suspected that you weren’t a jewelry salesman. She says to him, she said, you did. She whispered in my ear, lightly touching my earlobe with her lips. She used to finish by kissing me on the mouth wild with love. There were moments of passion that our bodies would entwine, palpitating with love, and which would later be abandoned with languid reproves. So that’s the sort of language he used. And at one point, he talks about how he liked going to her apartment to visit her when he was feeling edgy. [30:28] You’re a mobster. You feel a little bit edgy. You’re always looking over your shoulder, right? So he was happy to go to her apartment to calm down, and she would talk to him. And she says, Mary was happy to see me. She used to tell me, Nick, that’s how she called me, you are an extraordinary man. You don’t know with what fear and respect those Boers, the Shacatani, speaker view. The Shacatani were the people of Sciacca, Sicily, that were mobsters that he associated with. It says, your name impresses everyone. Any woman alive brought to live among this rabble would be happy to be your co-worker, to wear men’s clothes, and at the necessary time of the occasion should present itself, to embrace a Tommy gun and die in your arm. [31:26] So that’s the sort of romantic verbiage that they used at the time. So what happened, too, was he sees her, then eventually he meets another woman named Dorothy. [31:41] She professes herself to be Irish to begin with, but then he finds out later as she tells him, I’m actually not Irish. I come from a Sicilian family. But she just wanted to impress him somehow to get his eyes. She was very attracted to him, to this woman, Dorothy. What happened was they have a love affair with each other, and Nikola, this is to the very end of his story here, Nikola had been involved with a gambling house in New York, and the gambling house was starting to go underwater. He needed money, so it was proposed to him by another mobster by the name of Jacono to do some narcotic trafficking down in Texas and Louisiana. [32:31] He gets the permission to do so from his bosses. Look, Nicola was still a roving asset, and he had to get permission to do things so that he could acquire enough money for investments, so he can give them money back, so he gets permission to do this. He starts getting involved with the drug trafficking trade in Texas and Louisiana, and he sees that he’s being tailed a lot. He doesn’t understand why. He says, out of nowhere, the police would show up. How did they find out? At the same time, he was trying to contact Dorothy. Before he left, Dorothy asked him. [33:11] Will I be seeing you much? She said, I don’t know. I could be gone six months or a year. She says that she’s so heartbroken about this. And he leaves and he gets involved with the drug trade. And he’s asking these questions about how is it that the cops are showing up at these different places where we are trying to transact business? What happens was he tried to contact Dorothy at different places where she said that she could be contacted. She didn’t get back to him. So he puts two and two together. He thinks that he believes that Dorothy was actually a treasury agent. She had been spying on him, that she was the Mata Hari, so to speak, and was feeding the information to the feds. to where he was. So what happened was they indicted him, got out on bail on $18,000 bail, and he was urged to be a stowaway to get to Italy. So he stows away on a ship, gets back to Italy. And interestingly enough, Gary. [34:23] He starts at World War II erupts, and he becomes an asset to the Allies in Sicily. He’s given them intelligence about what’s happening in Sicily with the mafia in Sicily. And the mafia in Sicily did not want to have anything to do with Mussolini. Mussolini was trying to bag on them big time. He’s trying to shut them down. And Nicola helped the Allies with intelligence reports on what was going on in Sicily. And that was a big part of what he was doing. And then later on, it wasn’t until 1963 or so, and he was still getting involved. He was still getting involved with the mafia at that time, doing criminal activities. But he wasn’t welcomed as much as he had been before. But he was still involved with them. What happened was the 60s came around, and he started writing his memoirs. He was an older man, and he started writing these things down on paper. [35:28] Which is what a mafia member does not do. You do not speak a word, let alone try to write it on paper. Otherwise, it’s a penalty of death. So he wrote all of these memoirs down in 1963. It got published that he was sentenced to death. But one of the mafia families in Sicily refused to do it. They refused to do it because he had a lot of respect. Members of the mafia in the U.S. And also in Sicily respected Gintilian very much because he had this godfather air about him. He had the Vita Corleone air about him. I will talk to you, and I will come up with a solution for you. Everybody’s calmed down by that. They’re not so excited and bloodthirsty when they hear that. They sense him to death. The mafia family in Sicily refused to carry out the hit. The book was published, and he lived the rest of his life in peace. He died peacefully as an old man in Sicily in 1970. Wow, 1970. That’s a hell of a story. That is a hell of a story, man. [36:44] I’m telling you you can make a movie out of this man’s life oh yeah literally the way he was jumping around from one place to the other he was really a maverick rogue sort of individual who is who did not have a higher education about him but was extremely intelligent and was able to use this and that’s what that’s why they respected him a lot of these individuals that he dealt with were boars and uneducated individuals to begin with. Many of them were highly intelligent. And as my dad always told me, his son, these individuals, especially the mob bosses, they could have been tycoons of finance. They could have been industrial tycoons, wizards of finance and economics and Wall Street if they had wanted to, but they did not want to. So they choose a life of crime. [37:40] Interesting. I’ll tell you what, that’s a hell of a story, Gary. That is a really cool story. I’d always wanted to do this guy’s story, mainly because I knew of his Kansas City connection. I talked to our local FBI agent here that has chronicled a lot of these things, got a book out there about those early days, and he’s excited. He’s looking forward to listening to this. So I really appreciate you coming on the show. Gary Clemente, GP Clemente. His father was Peter Clemente, the first Sicilian-born member of the FBI Top Hoodlum Squad. And Gary has been translating his works, is what he did. He wrote down a lot of stuff, and Gary’s been translating. He’s putting it down to a series of books. It’s called, let’s see, it is Untold Mafia Tales from the FBI Top Hoodlum Squad, I believe. I think I can read that on your event there. He does speaking events, too. If you’re back east, you’re from New York City area. Where are you from? Where do you speak at? I originally grew up in New Jersey, not too far from one of the Sopranos guys. [38:47] In New Jersey, my father was working at the New York office at that time and decided to buy a home in the suburbs of New York, not too far away from New York City. So that’s where I grew up. On the right side of the track. If somebody wants to get a hold of you to do a speaking engagement, though, how do they find you? They can get a hold of me at my email, gpclementibooks, gpclementibooks, at gmail.com. And I’m also on X, gpclementi16, I’m also on X. And the book is available on Amazon. You can pick it up there, and it’s doing quite well. I’m looking forward to the next one coming out next month. Yeah, I bet you’re looking forward to that. Yeah, and if you get his book, be sure and give him a review. Give him a good review on whatever review you want to give, but give him a good review. Please. [39:48] Because it helps these guys a lot to get a good review. More people will buy their book. And we, guys, we all want to encourage these mob historians. And Gary has done a real great job at chronicling the history, not just the blood and guts. We all like the blood and guts stories and the murder stories, but the entire history. You were talking about them being out in Pueblo, Colorado, and I just couldn’t figure that out. I just talked to a woman whose ancestors were in Pueblo, Colorado, connected to the mob out there. And she said that what it is, there was lead mines out there, and a lot of Sicilians were miners, and they went to that southern Colorado area to work in the mines. And I know we have a large group of Sicilian populations in southwest Missouri where there were strip mines down there for coal. And it’s a huge family of them down there. And so it’s, you know, where the work was is where people went to, and that’s how they ended up spread around the country. [40:45] That’s right. There were many Sicilians in San Francisco, Louisiana. Believe it or not, when Sicilians were in Louisiana when they first immigrated to Louisiana, there were several of them that had been home because they were looked upon as less than human. And the locals did not want them infiltrating their population. So it didn’t just happen to African-Americans, it also happened to Sicilians. Yeah, I’ve read about that story. So it’s an immigrant experience. Any group of immigrants that comes to the United States at first. [41:25] You know, the greater population, the English and the Irish and the Germans already have the good jobs and they keep them pushed out. And they have a different language, totally different language. And everybody else is speaking English. And so it’s really hard for an immigrant population to move in. That’s why they have to start businesses. And along with them, they brought the mafia. They had brought this tradition of the mafia that is shadow government, if you will, for them. Well, that’s true. And I must add that even though I talk a lot about the mafia and the world of the mafia, the Cosa Nostra, that my father was involved with, My father would be the first to tell you he was not proud of the criminal association and organization that these people started. He was not proud of it in any way. In fact, if you read my first book, you will read the part about how my father confronted Carlo Gambino and told him to his face that he was not proud of what Gambino and his associates were doing. And the bad name that they were bringing upon other Italian and Sicilians that had come to this country, like my grandparents, that work hard and made something of themselves. It’s not something to be proud of. Fascinating, interesting, but it’s not something that I’m certainly not proud of either. But pretty amazing, considering these people could have done something more honest. [42:51] But they chose not to. That’s a whole other story and movie to talk about. Yeah, it is. Gary Clemente, I really appreciate you coming on the show. Thanks so much. You’re welcome. Thank you, Gary. Great being here. Gary to Gary. Gary to Gary, yeah. You know, they don’t name Gary anymore. Gary, little kids, Gary anymore. That was back right after the war in the early 50s. Everybody was named Gary. I had three Garys, I think, in my class. I tell you, I went to this movie with my grandkids. It’s called Zootopia. And they had a character in there called Gary the Snake. [43:27] So that’s what we’ve devolved down to, We’re nothing but snakes, Gary Guys, I really appreciate y’all tuning in And don’t forget to like and subscribe And down in the show notes, I’m going to have links to this stuff And I’ve got links to some of the stuff that I sell My books and DVDs If you want to rent them, I’ve got a link to that You can rent my DVDs for $1.99 So thanks a lot, guys. Okay, Gary, thank you. Hey, thank you, Gary. Thank you very much. Really appreciate that you’re having me on. Really enjoy it. Anything I can do for you, please let me know. Anything I can do. You know that I’ve got your endorsement on the back of the book, right? I didn’t remember. I do so much sometimes, Gary, that I forget all what I do good. Yeah, I’ve got your endorsement on the back of the book. I gave you a good endorsement. All right. The second book, the one that’s coming out, the one that’s coming out, we’ll have the same thing on there. You got some author blurbs? You got enough author blurbs on there? Yeah, yeah. Your endorsement will be on the back of the next book, too. Okay, all right, all right. All right, Gary. Thanks a lot, my friend. Hey, thank you, buddy. Anything in Kansas City. When the other book comes out, I’ll let you know. Yeah, let me know. We’ll do that show here in a couple of months. Okay? Hey, thank you very much. Appreciate it. All right, all right. Stay safe. Okay, buddy. Take care. Bye-bye.

The Situation with Michael Brown
3-27-26 - 9am - Goobers and The Shutdown Ends?

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 33:09 Transcription Available


In this episode, we dive into the recent government shutdown and its aftermath. Michael discusses the 42-day standoff over ICE funding, highlighting the Democrats' refusal to fund Trump's deportation force and the Republicans' ability to keep ICE operational through the One Big Beautiful Bill. We explore the optics of the situation, where Trump gets credit for addressing the airport crisis without owning the ICE funding gap. Michael also touches on the Democrats' strategy, which may have set a precedent for holding security agencies hostage for policy concessions.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

UNTAPPED - Live Up To Your Potential
119. How to Design Your Next Chapter (Even If You're Scared) with Amy Goober

UNTAPPED - Live Up To Your Potential

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 43:01


What's the thing you've been talking about doing, that you still haven't started?If you're honest with yourself, you probably know exactly what it is. And you probably also know the reasons you've talked yourself out of it. The timing isn't right. You're not sure it'll work. What if you fail? What if people judge you? What if it's too late?Our guest, Amy Goober, is here to call time on all of that.Amy is an Action Coach, workshop leader, and speaker who has been building businesses, raising a family, and reinventing herself across four decades. She opened her first business, a cake bakery in Boston at 26 with zero business experience and a ponytail. She sold it seven years later to focus on her three children. Decades later, when her kids launched and life shifted, she didn't shrink her world, she expanded it.At 60, she launched Drive Your Life™, helping women stop overthinking and start taking action. Today, she runs Better Together Events & Community, leads Wandering Women Travel experiences, and recently co-authored a book with her 93-year-old mother.She is not slowing down. She is speeding up. And she wants to take you with her.What You'll Learn:Why mid-life is one of the most powerful times to start something new, and why more women in their fifties and sixties are doing exactly thatHow Amy's "open the parachute on the way down" philosophy has carried her through every major transitionThe Drive Your Life™ framework: how to figure out what you actually want, eliminate what you don't, and start taking action without waiting for perfect conditionsWhy toe dipping beats all-or-nothing thinking, and how to test an idea before you commit everything to itHow to widen your circle when life naturally shrinks it, and why in-person connection matters more than everThe accountability structure that actually keeps women moving forward (hint: it's simpler than you think) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Unf*cking The Republic
John Goober Kennedy: The Louisiana Senator Thinks Poor People Are Faking It.

Unf*cking The Republic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2026 11:16


Senator John Kennedy is a bad caricature of a southern gentleman and he masquerades around Capitol Hill as a folksy “just asking questions” kind of fella. In reality, he’s a wealthy, elite, fraud with a $20 million net worth who attended Oxford. Despite representing the poorest state in America, this Louisiana senator took his allotted time at a hearing with the Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to review how poverty is calculated and take issue with it. So this is our response. Resources Senator John Kennedy: Kennedy questions Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on poverty data in Senate Banking Committee USAFacts: What is the poverty rate in Louisiana? World Population Review: Poorest U.S. States 2026 The Data Center: Health as resilience capacity in New Orleans: The critical role of community-based collaborations Prison Gerrymandering Project: Federal Census policy harms Louisiana’s democracy — but state lawmakers can fix it Wikipedia: John Kennedy (Louisiana politician) Buzzfeed News: John Kennedy Is America’s Folksiest Senator. Some People Who Know Him Say It’s An Act. Quiver Quantitative: Senator John Kennedy has filed a new financial disclosure - here’s what we see UNFTR Resources Video: Senator Questions Poverty Calculations | Here's Why That's INSANE Essay: John Goober Kennedy: The Louisiana Senator Thinks Poor People Are Faking It. -- If you like #UNFTR, please leave us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts and Spotify: unftr.com/rate and follow us on Facebook, Bluesky, and Instagram at @UNFTRpod. Visit us online at unftr.com. Become a member at unftr.com/memberships. Buy yourself some Unf*cking Coffee at shop.unftr.com. Visit our bookshop.org page at bookshop.org/shop/UNFTRpod to find the full UNFTR book list, and find book recommendations from our Unf*ckers at bookshop.org/lists/unf-cker-book-recommendations. Access the UNFTR Musicless feed by following the instructions at unftr.com/accessibility.Support the show: https://www.unftr.com/membershipsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Shift Change: A Leadership Podcast

One of the things, Katie will tell you is that post stroke I can forget things and mess thing up more frequently. I did that early this season when I posted the wrong podcast for my friend GREG JOHNSON. This IS Greg's podcast!!! - We have been the best of friends since 1st grade and I couldn't pick a better person to mess up with than him. He is a very successful pastor, father of 3 and talks about resiliency in marrigae. Enjoy! I promise this is the right one!!! :)

Fringe Radio Network
Adventures of Captain Epoch ep 3-2: 3D Printed Ghost Goobers

Fringe Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2026 61:12 Transcription Available


Tonight we cover the 3d printer and CnC ban in Washington and New York and what that means to creativity and personal manufacturing.-=Links=-If you would like to join in on the conversation, Join me on Discord.Discord: https://discord.gg/a6UJEb5Dj3Twitter: https://twitter.com/magicsenshiRumble: (Multi-Dimensional Travels of Captain Epoch) https://rumble.com/c/c-5613161Fringe Radio: https://fringeradionetwork.com/liveSpirit Force: https://faithbucks.comIf you would like to be a guest on the show or have a topic that you want explored, please Email me with the subject "Guest"Email: captainepoch79@proton.meIf you want to support this Podcast,https://paypal.me/Magicslayer/Cashapp $CaptainEpoch

Spirit Force
Adventures of Captain Epoch ep 3-2: 3d Printed Ghost Goobers

Spirit Force

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2026 61:12 Transcription Available


Tonight we cover the 3d printer and CnC ban in Washington and New York and what that means to creativity and personal manufacturing.-=Links=-If you would like to join in on the conversation, Join me on Discord.Discord: https://discord.gg/a6UJEb5Dj3Twitter: https://twitter.com/magicsenshiRumble: (Multi-Dimensional Travels of Captain Epoch) https://rumble.com/c/c-5613161Fringe Radio: https://fringeradionetwork.com/liveSpirit Force: https://faithbucks.comIf you would like to be a guest on the show or have a topic that you want explored, please Email me with the subject "Guest"Email: captainepoch79@proton.meIf you want to support this Podcast,https://paypal.me/Magicslayer/Cashapp $CaptainEpoch

Breaking Mayberry
180: Like Hooters, But A Gas Station

Breaking Mayberry

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 64:06


In this episode, Marty has some questions about a potato chip brand and Andy Griffith tells us all why it's bad for women to have jobs.It's Andy Griffith Season 6, Episode 28 "Goober's Replacement"

Cool Weird Awesome with Brady Carlson
Axel Bjorklund, Boston's "Hot Dog Santa Claus"

Cool Weird Awesome with Brady Carlson

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2025 3:39


Merry Christmas! If you lived in Boston in the 1920s, you might have come across a hot dog vendor who decided to give hungry kids a special treat on December 25. He became known as the city's "Hot Dog Santa." Plus: one family Christmas tradition involves cataloguing everybody's weirdest mistakes and then giving out the family "Goober award." Hot Dog Santa Brings Christmas Cheer to Children (Newspapers.com) 30 People Are Sharing Weird And Wholesome Traditions That Make Their Christmas Special (Bored Panda)Thanks so much to our Patreon backers for all the gifts and support this year!

The FuMP
Tofurkey! by Trevor Goober

The FuMP

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 1:57


At last, a holiday song for vegetarians! Hear what critics are calling "the most overstimulating 2 minutes since your uncle made that concerning toast at Thanksgiving dinner".An outtake from Trevor Goober's upcoming holiday EP, "Traditional Christmas Carols for Normal People".

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Catch up with Bunches and Goobers for another episode and discuss the past week and their travel woes of the past week.

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Catch up with Bunches and Goobers as they review the week occurrences and even discuss some of the live election updates that are occurring during election night!

FMJ Podcast
This Is Halloween!

FMJ Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2025 157:10 Transcription Available


Text Us Here!Happy Halloween from the FMJ family to yours! Its that time of year to go door to door for a good old fashioned sugar rush! Join the gang as they try out different candies from across generations that we thought were no longer made or forgotten with time, and give their honest reviews!You have a limited offer you can use now, that gets you up to 48% off your first subscription or 20% off one time purchases with code: FMJPOD20 at check out.You can claim it at: https://www.magicmind.com/FMJPOD20Magic MindA mental performance shot you soon won't forget! Make 2025 your year for the best version of you!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showThanks For Listening! Subscribe for X-tra Lives!https://www.buzzsprout.com/1473904/subscribe

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Bunches and Goobers as they catch up the past week and things that are impacting them in their lives!

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Catch up with Bunches and Goobers as they discuss their past week and navigating things that are impacting their lives.

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Come and catch up with Bunches and Goobers on their weekly updates!

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Catch up with Bunches and Goobers as they discuss their current events and what has been happening in their world over this past week!

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son
Dont blame the kids for the sins of the parents...

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 59:38


Join Bunches and Goobers as they go through and provide updates from the week!

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Bunches and Goobers as they discuss the weekly events and all of the joys of the world in which we live.

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Bunches and Goobers as they navigate the recent weekly events as well as talk about updates and things that are impacting their world!

Coffee and Deathsticks
A Spooky Goober Catch-Up

Coffee and Deathsticks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2025 66:05


Danny and Kevin have now seen both Sinners and Weapons, two R rated original movies from directors on the rise and released by Warner Brothers. The similarities in the production, critical praise, and box office success of these pictures begged for a combined episode. Listen as your hosts praise a studio for having the gall to trust their directors, even letting them have characters talk about and take part in sexual activities!Follow us on Instagram at coffeeanddeathpod or email us at coffeeanddeathsticks@gmail.com

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Catch up with Bunches and Goobers as they discuss the week and the feelings and emotions between dropping children off at college.

Inspirational Women
9/7/25 - Amy Goober and Gwen Borden

Inspirational Women

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2025 29:45


Mother/daughter team Amy Goober and Gwen Borden have cowritten "My Mother Always Says: 25 Lessons for Finding the Silver Lining." Gwen is 94, a woman with a persistently great perspective on life. And many decades of life have only strengthened that attitude. As she puts it through a favorite saying: 'There are no bad experiences, only ones you don't learn from." Amy is an action and accountability coach for women, helping them to put themselves on their own to-do lists. Gwen has been a social worker in private practice, and in her 70s, put it to great use in counselling widows and families of firefighters who lost their lives in the Twin Towers. This September11th marks the 24th anniversary of that tragic day. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Story Behind Her Success
Gwen Borden & Amy Goober -320

The Story Behind Her Success

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 21:52


There are no bad experiences, just the ones you don't learn from. If you don't learn from bad experiences, you will make the same mistakes over and over and over again. -Gwen Borden & Amy Goober This week's story features a mother and daughter who have written a love story, filled with priceless advice for us all. The book, entitled My Mother Always Says: 25 Lessons for Finding the Silver Lining, explores the life and times of 94-year-old Gwen Borden, who was born during the Great Depression. Teaming up with her daughter, Amy Goober, a dynamic women's life coach and fearless entrepreneur, was kismet. Inspired to share their hard-earned wisdom, the idea for the book was hatched. Says Gwen: “ I gave birth to Amy, and she gave birth to the book. Amy did all the editing. All I had to do was tell my story, like I was talking to you in my living room. “ Packed with advice delivered with wit and humor, this book provides a mirror to the relationship between mother and daughter. Says Amy: “We were always close, but you don't appreciate your mother until you are a mother. I thought I knew her life, and then we started writing this book, and the stories she told really complete the message of the 25 life lessons in our book. For 21 minutes of mother/daughter wisdom, like “the things we regret in life are the things we don't do” and “Trust your gut, not your head” go ahead and hit that download button. You're welcome! #mothers #daughters #wisdom #advice #resilience #trustyourgut co-authors, My Mother Always Says

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Bunches and Goobers for another episode as they process through their week and all of the current events that are occurring within the world!

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Bunches and Goobers as we give you another episode focused on current events and things that are impacting our lives this week!

Whiskey Tangent
Episode #86: Stranahan's American Single Malt x 3 | There Goes Our WNBA Sponsorship

Whiskey Tangent

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2025 59:26


Whiskeys: Stranahan's Blue Peak Solera Cask Finished American Single Malt • Stranahan's Diamond Peak 2024 Rum Cask Finished American Single Malt • Stranahan's Snowflake 2024 Redcloud Peak Wine & Whiskey Finished American Single Malt Tangents: Gabe, Andy, and Drew join us on this ascent into American Single Malts from the Colorado Rockies! • The surprising history of Stranahan's • Ed gets mad at his Prohibition-era relatives • #sadsapling • Define “pants” • Butt cheek pancakes! • Blue Peak is the infinity barrel of American Single Malts • Scott overexplains a banana tasting note • Gabe goes a-grazin' • Diamond Peak is a problem waiting to happen • Sun's out, rum's out • Sling Blade love dem taters mmm-hmm • Send that to a WNBA Game • Narrator voice: Ed was, in fact, not locked in • Top 10 Fun Facts about Colorado! • Are there Gators in them thar mountains? • Prairie dogs file complaints about green dildos • #peepsrights • Miners (minors?) kept Colorado slave free • Andy curb your Drew! • Goobers is a candy AND an insult • Apparently, “Ed Sneezing” is a tasting note now • Ed and Scott got roofied at a mezcal bar • Andy got fouled by Ed (but still made the layup) • American Single Malts are great for any time of day Music Credits: Whiskey on the Mississippi, Southern Gothic, Cantina Blues, Fireflies and Stardust, and Boogie Party by Kevin MacLeod from https://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/music.html

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son
I can't remember if I cleaned that...

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2025 71:51


Join Bunches and Goobers for another episode as they catch up on current events and discuss updates from this past week!

Sharing the Heart of the Matter
Episode 120: My Mother Always Says with Amy Goober and Gwen Borden

Sharing the Heart of the Matter

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2025 31:15


In this episode, hosts Wynne  Leon and VickiAtkinson engage with authors Amy Goober and Gwen Borden, discussing their book 'My Mother Always Says: 25 Lessons for Finding the Silver Lining.' The conversation explores the wisdom passed down through generations, theimportance of reframing experiences, and the power of optimism in overcoming life's challenges. Amy and Gwen share personal stories that highlight resilience, the significance of mother-daughter relationships, and the lessons learned from both good and bad experiences. The episode emphasizes the value of vulnerability, the journey of self-discovery, and the legacy of love and adventure that shapes our lives.takeawaysThe book combines memoir and self-help, sharing life lessons.Gwen's experiences during historical events provide a unique perspective.Mother-daughter relationships are timeless and impactful.Modeling behavior is crucial in parenting and teaching.Vulnerability is essential for personal growth and connection.Optimism can be a powerful tool in facing adversity.Learning from experiences, both good and bad, is vital.Intergenerational wisdom enriches our lives and understanding.It's important to embrace change and reinvent oneself.The journey of life is filled with opportunities for growth.Links for this episode:Episode 120 show notesMy Mother Always Says on AmazonMy Mother Always Says website Amy Goober - Action CoachFrom the hosts:Vicki's book about resilience and love: Surviving Sue; Blog: https://victoriaponders.com/Wynne's book about her beloved father: Finding My Father's Faith; Blog: https://wynneleon.com

Bunches and Goobers: A Podcast between Mother and Son

Join Queen Mother and Moocow for another episode of Bunches and Goobers as they bring in Aunt Bougie and they discuss current events and navigating the workplace!

Yo, Is This Racist?
Goobers with Cody Ziglar

Yo, Is This Racist?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2025 35:59


Andrew and Cody Ziglar discuss Comic-Con, his new graphic novel Goobers and modern superheroes. Call or text with your questions at 323-389-RACE and watch the video of this episode at suboptimalpods.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sharp & Benning
Gary's Favorite Goober – Segment 3

Sharp & Benning

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2025 25:59


Eli Drinkwitz has some interesting playoff ideas.

G.I.O. Get It On
GLL Episode 2538

G.I.O. Get It On

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2025 95:51


CLL #2538 (feat. The Love Between The Two Hosts) 06/21/2005 – Tuesday Night Show Source – Tucker Stream Recording (2025)  This episode is 100% complete with a medium audio upgrade. Raisinets vs. Goobers and Toxins. The Love Between The Two Hosts – CLL on Youtube, with Video for select episodes. https://adamanddrdrewshow.com/1743-loveline-nostalgia-with-superfan-giovanni/ https://account.venmo.com/u/GiovanniGiorgio Paid Link – As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Music Provided by Rich Banks Check out His Website and Soundcloud to hear more of his awesome work and perhaps commission him for your next project. Venmo

The Situation with Michael Brown
6-20-25 - Daily Talkbacks

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2025 0:38 Transcription Available


Your daily Goober talkbacks!

The Situation with Michael Brown
6-18-25 - Daily Talkbacks

The Situation with Michael Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 1:10 Transcription Available


Time for those Goober talkbacks!

Marvel Reread Club
125 Marvel Reread Club December 1967 (part 2)

Marvel Reread Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2025 66:08


MRC finishes off December of 1967 with Fantastic Four 69, Strange Tales 163 with SHIELD and Dr. Strange, Tales of Suspense 96 with Iron Man and Captain America, Avengers 47, and a bonus fifth book: Marvel Super-Heroes 12 introducing Captain Marvel! (No, not that one. Or that one. The other one.) The Id-Receptor of the Psionic-Revelation Eavesdropper! Goobers! 180 degree manspreading! Check it out!

Inspired Conversations with Linda Joy
Put Yourself in the Driver's Seat of Your Life with Amy Goober

Inspired Conversations with Linda Joy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2025 57:02


Air Date - 10 June 2025Get ready for an inspiring conversation as Amy Goober joins us to share empowering stories, transformative insights, and real-life wisdom. From navigating life's twists to designing a life you love, this interview will leave you motivated, uplifted, and ready to take action!About the Guest: Amy Goober is an accomplished Action Coach, workshop leader, and inspiring speaker who helps women get into the driver's seat of their own lives. She guides midlife women to create connections and community.At 60, she launched Drive Your Life, empowering women with the tools they need to get into action for something that matters deeply to them. This signature program is offered virtually every Fall.Now, at 65, Amy supports her brand Better Together Events & Community, which creates connections and learning opportunities for mid-life women and support for women-owned businesses. Through her Wandering Women Travel brand, she curates and leads women's trips and experiences.She's also the author of As My Mother Always Says: 25 Lessons for Finding the Silver Lining. This memoir/self-help book shares the amazing story of her 93-year-old mother and her life lessons. Learn more at https://amygoober.com/.Social Media:Website: https://amygoober.com/Facebook Personal: https://www.facebook.com/amy.goober/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amygoober.driveyourlife/#AmyGoober #InspiredConversations #LindaJoy #Women #SelfHelp #Mindfulness #Lifestyle #InterviewsVisit the Inspired Conversations Show Page https://omtimes.com/iom/shows/inspired-conversationsConnect with Linda Joy https://linda-joy.com/ and her YouTube channel, https://www.youtube.com/@linda-joySubscribe to our Newsletter https://omtimes.com/subscribe-omtimes-magazine/Connect with OMTimes on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Omtimes.Magazine/ and OMTimes Radio https://www.facebook.com/ConsciousRadiowebtv.OMTimes/Twitter: https://twitter.com/OmTimes/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/omtimes/Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/2798417/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/omtimes/

Mad Scientist Party Hour
708 - Trevor Goober

Mad Scientist Party Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 138:47


Trevor Goober joins the show to talk playing Clint in The Second Coming of John Cooper, getting his start as a child actor and plays a round of The Randy Pooman Game with the guys.

What A Time To Be Alive
#390 Goober Regardless (w/ Bryan from 'Guys')

What A Time To Be Alive

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2025 85:53


Folks, Murder Bryan from the 'Guys' podcast joins us on this week's episode where we hear about how Japan is trying to curb weird baby names, how two pigeons snuck on a plane, how hikers on LSD accidentally reported their friend as dead, how a guy got stuck on a train looking for a lost airpod, and why the CIA ran a Star Wars fan siteListen to 'Guys' wherever you get your podcasts and follow him @murderxbryan.bsky.socialBecome a patron for weekly bonus eps and more stuff! :⁠www.patreon.com/whatatimepod⁠Check out our YouTube channel: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/c/whatatimetobealive⁠Get one of our t-shirts, or other merch, using this link! ⁠https://whatatimepod.bigcartel.com/whatatimepod.com⁠Join our Discord chat here:⁠discord.gg/jx7rB7JTheme music by Naughty Professor⁠: https://www.naughtyprofessormusic.com/@pattymo // @kathbarbadoro // @eliyudin// @whatatimepod©2025 What A Time LLC

Victory Drive Podcast
124 Goober Group Training - Jordan Johnson

Victory Drive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 102:57


Why is an Ex Navy Seal Team 6 operator in such hot water over his take on the Sig P320? We break that down a little bit along with some other internet drama in this episode with Jordan Johnson. We also talk about our journey towards our first USPSA competition! Victory Drive Merch is NOW AVAILABLE at the ⁠⁠WCB STORE⁠⁠! ⁠⁠Victory Drive Patreon!⁠⁠ Interact with me on ⁠⁠X (Twitter)⁠⁠ ⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠ ⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.workingclassbowhunter.com/victorydrive⁠⁠ Victory Drive is proudly presented by Grizzly Coolers and Supported by these Amazing Partners! ⁠⁠Grizzly Coolers⁠⁠ Code WCB ⁠⁠Huntworth⁠⁠ Code WCB15 ⁠⁠BecMar Diner⁠⁠ Don't forget to check out the other shows on the WCB Podcast Network! ⁠⁠Working Class Bowhunter Podcast!⁠⁠ ⁠⁠Tackle & Tacos!⁠⁠ ⁠⁠Hunting The Mason Dixon! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast
Episode 201 - Robert Leighton

New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 97:11


New Yorker cartoonist, Robert Leighton joins us on the second half of the podcast this week.Robert started drawing cartoons at an early age and started a comic strip, called Carl & Goober, when he was eight. The strip was very much influenced by Walt Kelly's, Pogo and Robert even used one of its characters in a strip he did for the Northwestern University Humor magazine. His first cartoon in the New Yorker was published in 2002 and he has been a frequent contributor ever since. He is also a well know puzzle maker, starting his puzzling career in the late 1980s at GAMES Magazine. You can find more about Robert at his website here:https://robert-leighton.comYou can find more of his cartoons at his instagram page:https://www.instagram.com/roberteleightonRobert and Paul talk about The Firesign Theatre, a very funny comedy group. https://firesigntheatre.comOn Part 1 of the episode, we discuss the current contests:Winning captions for New Yorker contest #939 (Medusa du jour.)Finalists for contest #941 (Piano noir.)Current New Yorker contest #943 (Couching up a hairball.) We also talk about our favorite cartoons from the current issue of the New Yorker.You can buy original New Yorker cartoon art at Curated Cartoons:https://www.curatedcartoons.comDig deep into the New Yorker cartoon caption contest data at:https://wordsbelow.app Send us questions or comments to:  Cartooncaptioncontestpodcast@gmail.com

Fantasy Footballers - Fantasy Football Podcast
The TRUTH: Top 10 Fantasy WRs + Goober Alert! - Fantasy Football Podcast for 1/30

Fantasy Footballers - Fantasy Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 70:17


The TRUTH is scary sometimes! On today's fantasy football podcast, a close look at the top 10 wide receivers from the 2024 season. Find out which final stat lines are the most deceiving! Consistency scores, boom/bust percentages, and tons more. Manage your redraft, keeper, and dynasty fantasy football teams with the #1 fantasy football podcast. -- Fantasy Football Podcast for January 30th, 2025. (00:00) - Intro (04:40) - NFL News (08:25) - The TRUTH: Wide Receivers (12:05) - Ja'Marr Chase (16:35) - Justin Jefferson (18:30) - Amon-Ra St. Brown (22:50) - Brian Thomas Jr.  (29:25) - CeeDee Lamb (34:20) - Terry McLaurin (38:05) - Malik Nabers (42:55) - Jaxon Smith-Njigba (53:50) - Drake London (55:40) - Davante Adams & Garrett Wilson (01:00:50) - Fantasy Faceoff Connect with the show: Subscribe on YouTube Visit us on the Web Support the Show Follow on X Follow on Instagram Join our Discord Check out today's sponsors: News & Notes presented by USAA. Visit https://www.USAA.com/Insurance  Fantasy Faceoff presented by DraftKings Sportsbook Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NFL: Move the Sticks with Daniel Jeremiah & Bucky Brooks
10 Takes with Kyle Brandt: Idiots and Goobers

NFL: Move the Sticks with Daniel Jeremiah & Bucky Brooks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 11:21 Transcription Available


When a running back could be the leading MVP candidate, we still only have 10 minutes:  The Cowboys might need some change The Bears have a QB The best Derrick Henry we've ever seen Throw the ball in the stands! Bribe your kids Be a goober and listen to 10 Takes with Kyle Brandt!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

nfl sports super bowl football mvp tom brady bears nfl draft cowboys throw cleveland browns green bay packers tampa bay buccaneers pittsburgh steelers aaron rodgers denver broncos new england patriots patrick mahomes atlanta falcons idiots dallas cowboys nfl playoffs kansas city chiefs monday night football russell wilson san francisco 49ers deshaun watson philadelphia eagles buffalo bills new york giants chicago bears miami dolphins bill belichick lamar jackson los angeles rams detroit lions carson wentz seattle seahawks nfl free agency frankreich new york jets nfl season dak prescott carolina panthers baltimore ravens baker mayfield minnesota vikings houston texans joe burrow josh allen arizona cardinals cincinnati bengals new orleans saints kyler murray nfl combine takes jacksonville jaguars tennessee titans jalen hurts indianapolis colts justin fields las vegas raiders trevor lawrence jimmy garoppolo kirk cousins daniel jones washington commanders matthew stafford derrick henry super bowl champion mac jones derek carr mike tomlin nfl network andy reid los angeles chargers matt ryan tua tagovailoa jameis winston justin herbert sunday night football jared goff sean payton trey lance nfl preseason mike mccarthy pete carroll bryce young mike vrabel cj stroud kyle shanahan dan campbell sean mcvay doug pederson kenny pickett ryan tannehill ron rivera josh mcdaniels robert saleh john harbaugh mitch trubisky bribe marcus mariota drew lock mike mcdaniel brian daboll sean mcdermott arthur smith bo nix jacoby brissett marvin harrison jr todd bowles matt lafleur kevin stefanski brock bowers malik nabers matt eberflus zac taylor ian rapoport rome odunze xavier worthy dennis allen jonathan gannon davis mills goobers jared verse shane steichen joe alt kyle brandt xavier legette dallas turner byron murphy mike garafolo terrion arnold quinyon mitchell chop robinson amarius mims jordan morgan olu fashanu troy fautanu jc latham zac wilson
Adam Carolla Show
Actor Emile Hirsch + Dave Dameshek

Adam Carolla Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 143:02


Dave Dameshek makes his triumphant return to ACS and the show opens with them discussing failed TV doppelgangers, how the Ferrare-Delorean family left money on the table, Goobers vs. Raisinets and a recent road rage incident that Adam was involved in. Next, actor Emile Hirsch stops by to talk about his new movie, “Dead Money”, playing high-stakes poker, growing up in Topanga, and filming at the Playboy Mansion. Then they talk about movies that were inspired by coming up with a title first, Adam's love of “Speed Racer”, and how he started painting portraits of card players to pay for his poker habit. Finally, Joe Praino reads the news including stories about Jane's Addiction canceling the rest of their tour after Perry Farrell attacked Dave Navarro onstage, and the death of Tito Jackson. For more with Dave Dameshek: INSTAGRAM: @ddameshek TWITTER/X: @dameshek Minus Three Podcast For more with Emile Hirsch: NEW MOVIE: “Dead Money” available now in theaters and streaming on-demand. INSTAGRAM: @emilehirsch TWITTER/X: @emilehirsch Thank you for supporting our sponsors: http://SimpliSafe.com/Adam https://DrinkTrade.com/Carolla http://OReillyAuto.com/Adam