POPULARITY
Court TV's Ashley Wilcott has a new podcast called, "The Deadly Seven"Ashley talks podcast segments:-Where were you during the OJ Bronco chase? Where were you during the OJ verdict-Scott Peterson conviction-The Menendez brothers - "Gov Newsom said they can go before a parole board and they have that opportunity now...I don't see them getting out of jail - that's just my gut"-Mary Kay Letourneau -Were the LA Fires arson To subscribe to The Pete McMurray Show Podcast just click here
Pedro is joined by Johnny Cochrane and Matt Kandela in this Arsenal Opinion special, breaking down Arsenal's triumphant North London derby win. The team dives into the key moments that secured six points against Spurs this season and keeps the Gunners hot on Liverpool's heels in the title race. Johnny delivers his unmissable player ratings—full of sharp insights and signature flair—while Matt reflects on what this victory means for Arsenal's momentum heading into the business end of the season. From tactical masterstrokes to moments of individual brilliance, no stone is left unturned. Want more Arsenal content? Don't miss the LE GROVE Newsletter for weekly deep dives and exclusive insights into the world of Arsenal. Plus, join our growing community of members to access PATREON bonus episodes, live match reaction pods, and more. Subscribe, read, and join the movement today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Join Pedro, Jacob Hawley, Matt Kandela, and Johnny Cochrane as they dive into Arsenal's devastating FA Cup exit to Manchester United. This intense discussion covers the aftermath of an exhausting extra-time battle and the missed opportunities that defined the match. From injuries and squad depth concerns to tactical choices and recruitment frustrations, no stone is left unturned. Expect fiery debates, tactical breakdowns, and the hottest of takes as the crew navigates the implications of this result for the season ahead. Is the squad too stretched? Are reinforcements essential? And what does the future hold for key players and Arteta's approach? Bonus Content: Don't miss exclusive episodes on Patreon. Stay Updated: Get the latest Arsenal insights at Le Grove. This episode is a must-listen for Gooners looking for insight, catharsis, and a glimpse at what's next for the club! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The boys from The Arsenal Opinion get together to share their mystic meg views on the season ahead. Jacob Hawley, Matt Kandela, Johnny Cochrane, and Pedro put it all on the line. They cover: First manager to get fired Dark horse of the season Player most likely to cross the manager WHO WILL WIN THE TITLE ... and much, much more. If you want premium writing and all the podcasts ADVERT FREE sign up here: https://www.le-grove.co.uk/ If you want just the audio and bonus content, sign up here: https://www.patreon.com/TheArsenalOpinion Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Johnny Cochrane has been on podcast FIRE this week - today, he interviewed David Hillier. It's a great listen, below is the summary for you to gorge on! x **Podcast Summary:** **00:00:01 - Introduction and Welcome** - Introduction to the podcast and its special guest, former Arsenal Premier League player David Hillier. - David expresses excitement for the new football season and reflects on his lifelong involvement in football. **00:03:01 - Collecting Panini Stickers** - Host shares a childhood memory of collecting Panini stickers and having multiple David Hillier stickers but not Ian Wright. - Humorous exchange about the rarity of Ian Wright stickers and the exchange rate among friends. **00:03:22 - Hottest of Takes: David Hillier** - David Hillier discusses his "hottest of takes" about the current state of football. - Criticism of referees seeking celebrity status and their impact on the game. **00:07:05 - Arsenal's Upcoming Season** - Optimistic outlook for Arsenal's upcoming season, comparing it to Liverpool's turnaround. - Confidence in Arsenal's potential to be "absolute killers" next season and win the league. **00:11:01 - Personal Reflections on Football Career** - David reflects on his football career, training with Arsenal from a young age, and the privilege of signing with the team. - Discussion on the difference between the old system of selecting players and the modern academy system. **00:18:02 - Premier League vs. Division One** - Comparison between playing in Division One and the Premier League. - Insights into the transition period and the financial aspects of football during that time. **00:21:01 - Footballing Regrets** - David shares his regrets, including not staying with Arsenal under Arsene Wenger and missing the opportunity to be part of Wenger's team. - Reflects on decisions made during his career and their impact. **00:26:00 - Comparing Managers: George Graham, Arsene Wenger, and Mikel Arteta** - Analysis of the managerial styles and successes of George Graham, Arsene Wenger, and Mikel Arteta. - Discussion on how each manager fits into Arsenal's history and their unique contributions. **00:31:00 - Mikel Arteta's Greatness** - Debate on whether Mikel Arteta is already great or becoming great. - Arteta's attention to detail and tactical approach, and how it compares to previous managers. **00:37:00 - Dressing Room Dynamics and Team Harmony** - Impact of a player becoming a problem in the dressing room and how it affects team dynamics. - Reflection on modern players' attitudes and how it contrasts with the past. **00:40:04 - Era Exchange: Modern vs. Past Players** - Discussion on how modern players like Martin Ødegaard would fit into past Arsenal teams and vice versa. - Evaluation of the physicality and playing styles across different eras. **00:51:00 - Player Wish List and Areas of Improvement** - Areas of concern for the current Arsenal squad and the potential impact of new signings. - Ivan Toney as a potential signing and the benefits and risks associated with his character. **00:56:22 - Arsenal Super Soldier: Building the Perfect Player** - David Hillier builds his perfect Arsenal player using characteristics from past and present players. - Choices include Thierry Henry's right foot, Mesut Özil's left foot, Alan Smith's heading ability, and Gervinho's hairstyle. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Johnny Cochrane invites one of his friends to the podcast to chat Arsenal things. Luke Kempner - actor / impressionist / comic - chats to Johnny about: They react to the Saliba OUT stories Arteta and his impact at Arsenal Super Soldier Arsenal player Let us know what YOU think with a lovely review! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Chris is joined by Johnny Cochrane from the Arsenal Opinion Podcast and Merv Dinnen, to give their thoughts on who might be the difference makers for next season, as part of our summer series. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
O.J. dies. Ben riffs. Trial lawyer Jim Coogan talks all things law. Including…how Trump is using Johnny Cochrane's legal strategy. Ironically, since MAGA will never get over the O.J. Simpson verdict. Also, an analysis of Trump's hush money case. Starting next week. And a bold prediction. Also, a few words about Anatomy of a Fall. Jim is the host of the podcast Coogan Knows the Law. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Maisie Adam, Stevie Martin and Johnny Cochrane prise open the coffin to assess Count Dracula in the cold light of day. Superhero powers, seductive charm and also looks great in a cape. Genius, surely?Producer: Beth O'Dea Evil Genius with Russell Kane is a BBC Audio Bristol production for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds
Unleashing the Power of Language: Crafting Magnetic Marketing Strategies with James Ian Bond In this episode, we dive into the world of marketing and sales with James Ian Bond, the author of "Brain Glue: How Selling Becomes Much Easier by Making Your Ideas Sticky." Bond unveils the captivating influence of language techniques in the realm of marketing, shedding light on how iconic figures such as Snoop Dogg, John F. Kennedy, and Johnny Cochrane have harnessed these methods for success. With a keen focus on understanding the brain's patterns and triggers, Bond reveals how entrepreneurs and marketers can rise above the noise to create a lasting impact. Discover the art of crafting memorable marketing messages using metaphors, rhymes, and humor to capture attention and boost sales. Join us for an illuminating conversation that will transform the way you approach marketing and sales strategies.
There's baby talk! Ahh! And obviously we have to talk about Russell Brand. Former guests Johnny Cochrane and Quincy get a shout out too (but for the right reasons). Darren Griffiths on Insane In The Men Brain podcast. His “Inconceivable” tour is coming! Find out more @DarranGriff on Instagram and at darrangriffiths.com Become a "Men Brain Member"*join the show recordings *get 50 archive interviews via your own private RSS link*get early access to our FILMED interviewsGo to https://www.patreon.com/menbrainpodcast or click the LinkTree for ALL for YouTube videos, live comedy dates, socials, contact Producer Paul and everything else https://linktr.ee/MenBrain Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Johnny Cochrane bringing his traditional rap skillz to the feed - it is mostly focused on rival fans. Enjoy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Show Notes Episode 410: “Everything's Coming Up Kato!” Part 2 of Wheezing the Juice This week Host Dave Bledsoe wakes up in what he thought was the pool house of a D List celebrity with a brutal hangover and pair of shoes three sizes too big with some kind of red liquid on them only to realize he has passed out on a Wendy's ketchup dispenser. (Again) This week we continue our Summer Series “Wheezing the Juice” (Again, we apologize for that name, it was NOT our idea) with the sensation that swept the nation in 1994, OJ Simpson! We pick up with the infamous Bronco Chase that 95 MILLION Americans watch live and jump from that insanity to the even bigger madness that followed. From the initial feed frenzy in the news to the long trudge toward trial. (You think this show is long, you should have been around for the period between his arrest and the trial!) We check in with all the characters who would go on to take center stage, be they Howard Stern, racist Broadway dancers in judicial robes, Jay Leno's terrible jokes, and of course white people in blackface. (It never gets old does it America?) Then we meet the players, from Al Cowlings, to Faye Resnick, to Johnny Cochrane and of course the only one who came out ahead in all of this: Brian Gerard Kaelin! (You know him better as Kato!) So grab you OJ Pogs, and get ready to get disgusted as we talk about OJ Mania! Our Sponsor this week is Roomies, finding roommates for people who no one would ever want to live with. We open with new reports from the night of OJ's Last Run and close with the glorious Ethel Merman! Show Theme: Hypnostate Prelude to Common Sense The Show on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheHell_Podcast The Show on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whatthehellpodcast/ The Show on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjxP5ywpZ-O7qu_MFkLXQUQ www.whatthehellpodcast.com Give us your money on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/Whatthehellpodcast The Show Line: 347 687 9601 Closing Music: https://youtu.be/aGyiuFZ7cs8 We are a proud member of the Seltzer Kings Podcast Network! http://seltzerkings.com/ Citations Needed: ‘The Juice is loose': How the O.J. Simpson white Bronco chase mesmerized the world https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-oj-simpson-white-bronco-chase-timeline-20190617-story.html Officers recall night spent chasing O.J. Simpson and a white Ford Bronco https://www.foxsports.com/stories/nfl/officers-recall-night-spent-chasing-o-j-simpson-and-a-white-ford-bronco A Year in O.J.: How Popular Culture Responded to the Trial of the Century https://www.vulture.com/2016/01/oj-simpson-how-popular-culture-responded.html Apocalypse Later: CD-ROMs 1991 to mid-1994 http://www.cnn.com/EVENTS/1996/anniversary/flashback.machine/flashback1.html O.J. Simpson Masks a Macabre Halloween Sensation : Costumes: Store operators say wigs, football jerseys and other items are selling briskly. Sociologists call sales trend disturbing. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-10-08-mn-47798-story.html Judge in Simpson Trial Allows TV Camera in Courtroom https://www.nytimes.com/1994/11/08/us/judge-in-simpson-trial-allows-tv-camera-in-courtroom.html How O. J. Simpson Killed Popular Culture https://www.vanityfair.com/style/society/2014/06/oj-simpson-trial-reality-tv-pop-culture Frontline: The OJ Verdict https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/oj/themes/media.html Juice-o-nomics: The economic value of the O.J. Simpson trial https://financialpost.com/news/juice-o-nomics-the-economic-value-of-the-o-j-simpson-trial THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Simpson Case Gives Cable An Edge on the Networks https://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/20/business/the-media-business-simpson-case-gives-cable-an-edge-on-the-networks.html Squeeze the Juice (1995) https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/7283/squeeze-juice Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Chris is joined by Johnny Cochrane from the Arsenal Opinion Podcast, as well as Kay Kaynak from Football.London to discuss the latest ins and outs at The Arsenal in this summer series we're calling 'one in, one out, one 'bangs'. See what Johnny and Kaya think lies ahead for The Arsenal this summer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
If Blackburn Signed Zidane explores football's greatest ‘what if' moments and dives into the multiverse to put things right on the timeline. In this episode, host Specs Gonzalez is joined by comedian Johnny Cochrane along with co-host Tego Sigel to ask 'What if Roy Keane hadn't walked out on the Republic of Ireland in 2002?' Roy Keane was Ireland's captain and best player at the time. But he was unhappy at their preparation ahead of the World Cup which led to that famous showdown with then manager Mick McCarthy. However, imagine if Keane had been happy and had stayed with the squad, how far would the Republic of Ireland have gone at the World Cup? Would Irish football have become a dominant force in Europe? And how does Irish culture influence the world? In the final episode of the series, Specs works his magic to change football history.
Around the year 300 A.D., a teenager named Agnes was killed because of a choice that rejected a culture that elevated sex and power over the wholeness of body and soul. She represented a major threat to a sick empire because she would not play along. And simply by using the word, “No,” like a pin she punctured a gaping hole in the puffed-up and bloated world that she lived in. As punishment, Agnes was forced into prostitution and eventually murdered for not partaking in the expected behavior of her time. This is heroic. This is real heroism, not the Marvel kind, and not the self-declared kind done by those carry their sins on signs like a trophy. The teenage Agnes stared down the peer pressure of an entire empire. This was not like a crafted Greta Thunberg media story. This was not manufactured by a massive marketing campaign that pretends to be a lonely voice crying out in the wilderness. This is not like James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause. This is not like a young Marlon Brando in The Wild One who is asked, “What are you rebelling against?” and replying, “What have you got?” No, this was real. This was one single girl, saying “No” to personal sin in a fallen world. By sticking to her convictions, Agnes was killed, but in doing so she gave the bully a black eye. The ego of a bully that celebrates sin never recovers from these kind of heroic refusals to submit. The courage of Agnes is pure and beautiful, and she is not the only one. There is also Philomena, Lucy, and the thousands of others all the way to Joan of Arc and Maria Goretti. A multitude of the early Christian martyrs were teenage girls. There are so many of them in the four-volumes of Butler's Lives of the Saints that it should give you pause to ask: if Catholics hate women so much, why are so many of our churches and hospitals and universities named after them? Seems an odd brand of “hate” to dedicate buildings and millions of prayers to them. But let's move on. Agnes' simple act needed no explanation or intellectual interpretation to understand. It's power is in its simplicity. As Jesus said, don't worry about that which can kill the body - worry about that which can destroy the soul. Death in this life brings you home if you believe in Christ. The body will follow the soul. We can worry about that reconnection later, in the last judgment. After all, governments and peer pressure cannot kill the soul. They can only kill the body and maybe delete a row in database. The modern “cancelling” does not kill the soul, because souls do not abide in the cloud or in databases. As for the body of Agnes that they thought they killed, it will be resurrected on the last day. Agnes understood this perfectly well. (Note: Is there anything more difficult to understand in Christian theology than “The Resurrection of the body”? Ok, fine, maybe “He descended into hell…” and “The Communion of Saints.” I will need to have whole series on the twelve lines of the Apostles' Creed at some point.) Here's a prophecy: A teenage girl has changed Christian history many times. Probably more than we even know. And another will be along to do it once again. I suspect this will happen soon, once the youth tires of TikTok and other current fads, which all have the shelf life of a can of soup; it's good for a few years, but then you forget about it, and eventually just throw it out. The only difference is that soup is actually good for your body. The sense of permanence that people have about our current cultural fads should give us all a good belly laugh. Mary, the Mother of God, was also a teenager, who most famously changed the world. How did she do it? She said “Yes.” She said “Yes” to God, not to the world, the flesh, or the devil. So did Agnes. Saint Agnes is another one of these teenagers from the early Church that rocked and shocked the world because chastity is always counter-cultural. The reason people resent and mock chastity is the same reason we resent anything: resentment masks our own guilt. Resent rhymes with repent. To all that you resent, you must repent. That's kind of like a Johnny Cochrane line, one of OJ's lawyers, who said “If the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit.” The increase in American anger over the past seventy years is in direct proportion to our sins, because the conscience knows our past, and we resent the outside world because we can't resolve our sins alone. Did I say we? I mean “I”. “Me”. Let me stop projecting. Because of sin, I have the vitriol and blame, honor and shame, because if I cannot honestly forgive, I must have an outlet, and that outlet is fear, the resentment of institutions, God, and other people. I have to blame something to drown the conscience. It's not rocket science. This is why the most vociferous pro-abortion people have usually had abortions, and why the loudest conservatives against sexual immorality have an immoral sexual past of their own. National pride and Gay Pride are both forms of the worst sin, which is…pride. It's so basic that it's comical. If you merely read the Bible up to Genesis chapter 3, you can stop and know that sin leads to fig leaves. Sin leads to hiding, blame, anger, and suffering. The modern declaration of “Don't tell me what to do” is the new version of “I will not serve,” which is what the devil uses for a motto (Non serviam). Humility is the antidote, but who wants to hear about the way of the Cross? We don't want to listen to the conscience. All of the noise in the culture is cranked up so that we can't hear the “still, small voice.” But soon a St. Agnes will come along, and her little “No” to the culture, and her “Yes” to God, will pull the plug on the babbling nonsense coming out of the speakers. Only in silence can the conscience again be heard. This is why regret for what happened at the party only comes to the party-goer in the quiet of the following morning. (I will resist re-discussing the Prodigal Son.)We tend to resent most what we ourselves have done, and if we never openly repent, it eats at the heart like acid. Did I say “we” again? I mean, “I”. Me. Consider your most vocal online friends, and I would be willing to bet that what they are ranting about is a spiritual mirroring of their own sins, which they have yet to confess. Don't laugh, because it's difficult work to do, and it takes years, or a whole lifetime to process. Humility is the most difficult virtue. The onion is thick on so many lives grown in the inorganic fertilizer of the 20th and 21st centuries, where we have been told to love ourselves rather than to love God and love others. The cult of “self-love” is strong and it is an education that comes from the father of lies, not from God. Sin is disorder, and we want order, and unless we address our sins, we remain disordered. In our strange attempts to find the good, we talk ourselves into sin. No one sins thinking it will lead to disorder. We sin with the hope that all will turn out well. No one lies thinking, “I reject God.” We lie to protect ourselves, thinking that it will keep us safe from harm, criticism, insecurity. But sin is like an illness that moves us away from the good, and becomes a disease that always results in tragedy over the long term, particularly if you persist in it until death. Refusing to address our sins leads to strange outlets, and one way or another we want to take control, because we think we can order the world. Our woundedness terrifies us. Thus, control of people and the world is born of our desire to play God. And we are not God. Hence, what I hate is most often a symptom of sins I have never confessed, and the conscience is the one thing that cannot be controlled. I may be able to have some control over finances, friendships, family, companies, politics, food, news, sports, and even the weather, but I cannot control the conscience. Yes, I can pretend it's not there, and even believe that I am not burdened by it, but I am, and the more I deny it, the harder I am trying to play God. This is exactly what the devil wants, and has always wanted of us all. The term “hard-hearted” used so often in the Bible is just what we call today “self-love”. But self-love is not healing if it's merely a smokescreen for unrepented sins. Modern culture yearns for authentic voices, but we doubt such a thing exists, and mock purity and weakness. The condemnation that erupts when we hear of someone's error or fall is a massive chorus of people who have not addressed their own brokenness. No matter how many Oprah magazines or mindfulness sessions we attend, our sins will not be forgiven outside of Jesus. So the sick culture coughs and ambles along like an angry tyrant. But another Agnes will arrive and the world of sex, drugs, and anything-goes will be stunned by her authenticity, by one young woman who refuses to agree to the lies about sex and power. And she will be martyred for her choice. She already may be alive today. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.whydidpetersink.com
Stevie Martin, Rachel Fairburn and Johnny Cochrane ask how super the superhero really is. Is the caped crusader the sexiest superhero of all? Or a weirdo in a cave who makes it all worse, actually? Producer: Beth O'Dea Evil Genius with Russell Kane is a BBC Audio Bristol production for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds.
Stevie Martin, Rachel Fairburn and Johnny Cochrane ask how super the superhero really is. Is the caped crusader the sexiest superhero of all? Or a weirdo in a cave who makes it all worse, actually? Producer: Beth O'Dea Evil Genius with Russell Kane is a BBC Audio Bristol production for BBC Radio 4 and BBC Sounds
All music used with permission by Hubbs Groove. O' Christmas Tree - Traditional Linus and Lucy - Guaraldi Christmastime is Here - Guaraldi The First Noel - Traditional Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto - Ellis/Bobbit/Ballard My Favorite Things - Rodgers/Hammerstein II Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas - Martin/Blane Merry Christmas, Baby - Baxter/Moore Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! - Cahn/Styne Mary, Did You Know? - Lowry/Greene O Holy Night - Adams/Cappeau Heart Like Mine - Rasheed This Christmas - Hathaway/McKinnor Normally, Hubb's Groove joins us for an evening of classic R&B-Soul-Smooth Jazz and Gospel. But this week they join us for an evening of holiday classics. With a lineup including Robert Hubbard Jr on drums- Cliff Coleson on bass – and Johnny Cochrane on saxophone and from a sold-out show on December 19th, 2021, enjoy an evening of holiday soul with Hubb's Groove-Live at the Bop Stop. This program is recorded at the Robert Conrad Studios at the Bop Stop in Cleveland, Ohio with additional production by Graham Rosen and editing for WOBC and WNPA provided by Dr. Pete Naegele and for our podcast and other affiliates by Shawn Gilbert and Carsen Gilbert at GilAzar Media. The Executive Producer is Daniel Peck. For extended versions of all our shows –our Live at The Bop Stop podcast can be found on your favorite podcast app. Want to Support The Bop Stop? Donate here! Contact us here
When Cartman comes into school singing the new hit song, "Stinky Britches," Chef realizes that the song he wrote 20 years earlier has been stolen. When he goes to the record company to show the song is his and asks for attribution, the record executive instead hires Johnny Cochrane to sue Chef for millions of dollars. Facing prison if he can't pay the fine, the kids look up all Chef's old music buddies to raise the money.
KING OF THE SALUBA ULTRAS, JOHNNY COCHRANE, SPEAKS TO HIS PEOPLE ON THIS VERY SPECIAL DAY.PEDRO JOINS.THEY ALSO TALK ABOUT:ZINCHENKOSCAMACCATHE NUMBER 47WINNERS AND LOSERSENJOY! Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Decisions, Decisions, Decisions. We all have to make them every day but how decisive are you?On Man Baggage this week comedian Johnny Cochrane and Member of Parliament Jess Phillips join Russell to discuss if men are really more decisive than women. Subscribe now and never miss an episode! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Decisions, Decisions, Decisions. We all have to make them every day but how decisive are you?On Man Baggage this week comedian Johnny Cochrane and Member of Parliament Jess Phillips join Russell to discuss if men are really more decisive than women. Subscribe now and never miss an episode! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Alison, Lauren, Johnny and listeners share stories of nightmare exes.
Mark Chapman is joined by Chris Sutton, Rory Smith and Micah Richards for the Monday Night Club. After clearing up Micah's antics on TV on Sunday, attention turns to Manchester United's failings at the Etihad with Chris suggesting a total overhaul at the club is needed. Johnny Cochrane from the Arsenal Opinion podcast drops by to discuss whether Arsenal have turned a corner and are now favourites for fourth. Finally Philippe Coutinho's form and future is up for debate after another impressive performance for Aston Villa. TOPICS: 00:25 – Micah “disrespecting” Roy Keane 04:26 – Overhaul needed at Manchester United? 27:00 – Arsenal on the up 38:50 - Philippe Coutinho's future at Villa
Johnny Cochrane, Thanyia Moore and Olga Koch knock down the man behind the big statues controversy currently raging - should statues of evil geniuses from history stay up?
Olga Koch, Thanyia Moore and Johnny Cochrane uncover some truths about The Purple One
Rich Wilson talks to comedian Johnny Cochrane…about:*plumbing*protesting*Jacob Rees-Mogg (yep, really) Vs. humanity*and his Arsenal football podcastInstagram - @iJohnnyCochraneTwitter - @iJohnnyCochraneand check his #ArsenalOpinion and @hyfpodcastProduced by producerpaul.co.uk freelance podcast producer for hire!Watch UNCUT interviews on our YouTube channel. Available on Apple, Spotify and all good platforms.Check our stylish “Insane In The Men Brain” T shirts and hoodies from https://buythatmerch.co.uk.Get your limited edition “Insane In The Men Brain” coffee beans from wogancoffee.com in Bristol. Use the exclusive Men Brain listener promo code MENBRAIN for 10% off our podcast packs.Please consider supporting us though our Patreon page.Sign up for priority access to our LIVE events (LIVESTREAM and IRL) darkhorsedigital.co.uk.Listen to our spin-off pod Insane In The Fem Brain now!Thank you for listening! Tell your friends.Follow this podcast on Twitter + Instagram + Facebook! Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Perry Groves joins Pedro and Johnny Cochrane for a very special On The Whistle Podcast. We talk about the red thread between George Graham's rebuild and the one Arteta is overseeing We talk about character in football and what that means We have a chat about why Matteo G probably isn't part of future plans There's a big tactical discussion about where we are right now This is one of the best podcasts we've had the pleasure of recording!
All music is used with permission from Hubb's Groove. Track listing Oleo - Davis All Blues - Davis Bye Bye Blackbird - Henderson/Dixon Naima - Coltrane So What - Davis Blue in Green - Davis Normally, Hubb's Groove joins us for an evening of classic R&B-Soul-Smooth Jazz and Gospel. But this week they joined us for a tribute to the legendary drummer Jimmy Cobb. With a lineup including Robert Hubbard junior on drums- Cliff Coleson on bass – and Johnny Cochrane on saxophone and from a sold out show on may 14th, 2021 here's Hubb's Grove-Live at The Bop Stop. This program is recorded at the Robert Conrad Studios at the Bop Stop in Cleveland, Ohio with additional production by Graham Rosen and editing for WOBC and WNPA provided by Dr. Pete Naegele and for our podcast and other affiliates by Shawn Gilbert and Carsen Gilbert at GilAzar media. The Executive Producer is Daniel Peck. For extended version of all our shows –our Live at The Bop Stop podcast can be found on your favorite podcast app. Want to Support The Bop Stop? Donate here! Contact us here
We're milking the shaft of a topic that's often associated with the male species, stubbornness. Is being stubborn a bad character trait? Does stubbornness show strength? Should Women be more stubborn than Men? Joining Russell to discuss just that is Johnny Cochrane and female moderator Grace Campbell. Don't forget to leave us a review while you're here! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We're milking the shaft of a topic that's often associated with the male species, stubbornness. Is being stubborn a bad character trait? Does stubbornness show strength? Should Women be more stubborn than Men? Joining Russell to discuss just that is Johnny Cochrane and female moderator Grace Campbell. Don't forget to leave us a review while you're here! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Birthday boy Johnny Cochrane, mic'd up Matt Kandela, and Pete Wood all gather to chat through a tough game away at Brighton. We discuss the timid performances of Sambi and Partey We do a heat check on Aaron Ramsdale We discuss whether the result was good or bad given the context of the season so far We set the tone for post-international break. Arteta goes into round 3 of the season, can he win? Thank you for listening, leave a review if you like what you are hearing!
Mark Chapman brings you the Monday Night Club with Micah Richards, Chris Sutton and Rory Smith reflecting on the weekend's big Premier League talking points. The boys discuss Arsenal's worst ever start to a season with two defeats and no goals in their first two games. They're the biggest spenders in the top flight this summer so who's to blame for the rut they find themselves in? Johnny Cochrane from the Arsenal Opinion podcast joins us to give the fans' perspective on the situation and Arteta's future. Micah and Chris share the bizarre things opposition supporters have done to try and put them off after some interesting antics from Leeds fans during their draw with Everton. Jurgen Klopp and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer vented their frustrations at some of the refereeing performances over the weekend. Are referees being more lenient this season compared to last? Is that what the fans want so they can see more free-flowing games? And with Brighton winning both their opening matches, will Graham Potter's side finally get the rewards for their attractive style of play this season? TOPICS 04.16 – Arsenal's worst ever start 11.40 – Johnny Cochrane from Arsenal Opinion podcast 22.30 – Pablo Mari's battle with Romelu Lukaku 34.00 – Change in refereeing this season 39.50 – Brighton's winning start
Once upon a frenzied time, Beer meets Man. Beer dances with Man. Man kisses Beer. Man grips Beer. Beer escapes Man. Man chases Beer - nothing new. Or is there? Episode 471 is our latest Patreon Takeover show programmed by long time supporter and friend Dane Under! Dane picks some flicks rife for discussion with the Shudder exclusive flick Hunted, and the Aussie Horror/Comedy Two Heads Creek! We also get some Australian Flash Facts, find out what it's like to mess up the future, and manage to fit in some semblance of intelligent conversation! So grab your red hoodie, a decent knife, and strap on as you journey to the outback with the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: Australia, RTO WFH or GTFO?, stepping on a butterfly in the future, Patreon Takeover, Australian Future Flash Facts, Suicide Squad, Vegan Samurai, stylists or barber?, biggest fence in the world, Vegemite, Crocodile Dundee, Mad Max, Mount Disappointment, Nation of Procrastination, Australia is dangerous, journalistic integrity, Clarksucker, Dr. Loomis can park anywhere, Olympics, pro bowling, Olympic sports where you can smoke, boxing glove arrows, Hawkeye, Green Arrow, Y: The Last Man, Superstore, Ravenshadow Loves Dick (Grayson), Wellington Paranormal, What We Do in the Shadows, Hunted, Vincent Paronnaud, Lucie Debay, Nicodemus, pretend girlfriends, huge boars, patriarchal society, feminism, dominance, revenge films, America Online, $86 treatment, the morning catch, Johnny Cochrane, Isle of Dogs, Titans, Two Heads Creek, lost in australia, post-Brexit world, Freddy Nitch, Twin Peaks, Murder She Wrote, non-compassionate vegans, Wolf Creek, Edgar Wright, Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz, Drive Jacket Mark, Queen of the Ring, Love and Rockets, Star Wars, 4-LOM, Zuckuss, MonsterFest, Digital Cinematopgraphy, nine year anniversary, Fear Street Trilogy, Ares' weird kinks, Boar, Razorback, Welcome to Woop Woop, Skyhooks, Naivety Scene, and Crisis on Infinite Australia.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioJoin our Discord Community: https://discord.gg/ETE79ZkSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comStart your own podcast: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=386Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TrickOrTreatRadioInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradio)
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedians Helen Thorn and Ellie Gibson "The Scummy Mummies". Find them at scummymummies.com @scummymummies and Helen's book "Get Divorced, Be Happy" is on pre-order now. | podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Paul Tonkinson.| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Marlon Davis.| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to ex professional footballer and Arsenal legend, Nigel Winterburn. | podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to actor, comic, writer and lovable cockney geezer Lenny Sherman.| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ross and Jessie talk about Michael Rapaport’s feud with Kevin Durant and the DMs he leaked, Jessie breaks down how she wants to explain her plan to murder Ross to detectives to see if she could get away with it and Ross misses that there are no badass lawyers anymore who can definitely get you off for murder when you’re guilty, like Johnny Cochrane — plus a CRIME CORNER involving a man lying about murder to get his snow plowed. ghostbed.com/drinkinbros Go to EXPRESSVPN.com/nooners to get an extra three months of ExpressVPN for free! Go to HelloTushy.com/revolution to get 10% OFF plus FREE shipping!
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Garrett Millerick. | podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Will Jon Richardson, Johnny Cochrane and Susie McCabe give Maradona the red card?
Tom - Main Writer at 101 Great Goals: https://101greatgoals.com/author/tcanton/ SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/the-gooner-talk Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1dThyaKjTVTqZALEtDkt4q?si=1Erm_quWRdW6PXSZlyZDqg&nd=1 iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-gooner-talk/id1555266302 Please leave us a nice review! Contact: DM open @TomCantonMedia Thanks to our sponsor Football Prizes: https://footballprizes.co.uk/competitions/ Visit our website http://thegoonertalk.com for amazing articles, news and more! Become a member, help support the channel and get access to exclusive content and logos. https://youtube.com/channel/UChxMBYdQ6ixNQk0b8rAuNRw/join Follow us on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheGoonerTalkTv Instagram: https://instagram.com/thegoonertalk?i ... Logo design: Koaladesigns (http://koaladesignss.com ) Web Designer: Kieran Walker (https://facebook.com/kieranwalkerdesign/ ) Video Editor: Joel Blundell (https://screenskills.com/profile/671d9431-4913-4a9e-9458-439c5601668c/ ) #LetsTalkArsenal intro clip: https://linktr.ee/attractionpro.co https://instagram.com/attractionpro.co/?hl=en https://fantasy.premierleague.com/leagues/auto-join/vfeqfo League Code: vfeqfo
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Jeff Innocent.| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to visually impaired father Dr Amit Patel. Find his new book Kika & Me on Amazon | podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Jayde Adams @jaydeadams about her dad| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Babatunde Aleshe.| podcast by producer paul | More about Johnny Cochrane: Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane and Instagram @ijohnnycochrane | See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome to the latest edition of From Dial Square to Where LIVE. Joining Chappers (@CapnChapman) & I are 2 excellent guests, Adrian Clarke (@adrianjclarke) ex Arsenal player, presenter of the Arsenal Tactical Breakdown, Journalist & podcasted, plus Johnny Cochrane (@iJohnnyCochrane) Comedian, Actor, Writer and host of the Arsenal Nation Podcast and his own How's your Father podcast which is available on all the major podcast platforms, and his YouTube channel "Ooh to be". (https://youtube.com/channel/UCdHmrniYK0HAHyFtIXN_7aQ). On this edition we discuss William Saliba, Nicolas Pepe, Mikel Arteta and finish with a short version of "Let's get Quizicle!! Please LIKE and subscribe to the YouTube channel www.youtube.com/c/fromdialsquaretowhere and hit the notification button so you don't miss any upcoming shows which include the second guest appearance of Graham Rix Arsenal Legend very soon. Please also give us a 5 star review on Apple Podcast or your favourite podcast platform that allows it! Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/from-dial-square-to-where. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Darren Harriott, Sikisa and Johnny Cochrane examine the civil rights leader.
Do men spend more money on gifts? What's the worst present you can give someone? This week, Russell's panel of Laura Smyth and Johnny Cochrane are chatting about present buying. From chocolate bribes and the most hated gift vouchers to card chaos and naughty birthday surprises, this episode is revealing which gender is the best at gift giving.Take a look at this week's guestsLaura Smyth Johnny CochraneSubscribe today so you never miss an episode. New episode every TUESDAY!! Hosted By Acast#BoysDontCry See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Do men spend more money on gifts? What's the worst present you can give someone? This week, Russell's panel of Laura Smyth and Johnny Cochrane are chatting about present buying. From chocolate bribes and the most hated gift vouchers to card chaos and naughty birthday surprises, this episode is revealing which gender is the best at gift giving.Take a look at this week's guestsLaura Smyth Johnny CochraneSubscribe today so you never miss an episode. New episode every TUESDAY!! Hosted By Acast#BoysDontCry See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Pete speaks with Johnny Cochrane about Mikel Arteta and it's a bit of an intervention.We talk about whether there is anything worthwhile in the hunt for positivity as Arsenal nosedive to hell, we discuss what the best move would be to save Arsenal, and we do a bit on the Southampton game.
I talk with Dom and new guest Johnny Cochrane about the things that matter at Arsenal. We cover our faith in David Ornstein, we muse on whether Ceballos is good for the squad or a rascal, and we get passionate about boring tactics.Excuse the lack of intro music. I lost 3 laptops this week. I could not make it happen!
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Jeff LeachInstagram.com/jeffleachTwitter.com/jeffleachFacebook.gaming/jeffleachcomedianSavage Snowflake Podcast: linktr.ee/jeffleachMore about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Paul Daniels at pauldaniels.tv See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Ed Petrie @edpetrie on Twitter.Check https://www.basisonline.org.uk/how-babies-sleep/ for further reading on understanding how babies sleep.More about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Paul Daniels at pauldaniels.tv See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In THIS Episode: DFW Sports Radio LEGEND Colby Sapp joins us at the Drunk Sports table as we discuss the Dak Prescott signing of his franchise tag, and what that means going into the July 15 deadline and beyond. Also, the 'Jamal Adams to Dallas' talk is heating up again, but do we really want him in Dallas? Major League Baseball announced plans for a shortened season of 60 games, but at what cost?? And we'll look at Bleacher Report's MLB Power Rankings and see what the Rangers' chances might be for an AL West title. Then we'll tell you why it's apparent that Brett Favre has been hit in the head one too many times, and our Top 9 at 9 follows with the best NFL comebacks out of retirement. And a very special segment as it's the return of Colby Sapp's News & Notes! We're honored! George Teague comes on to share some special news about something you'll be hearing a lot of soon: #TeaguesTake Please follow the conversation on Twitter! @IndyCarTim, @BigRedBlitz, and @DrunkSportsDFW
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian David Fulton. Find Dave at https://ko-fi.com/davefultonisnotright and check out davidfulton.com to read his fatherhood blog.More about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Paul Daniels at pauldaniels.tv See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to comedian Nico Yearwood @neeksmanMore about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Paul Daniels at pauldaniels.tv See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to awesome comic, Spencer Jones. @spendalsMore about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Paul Daniels at pauldaniels.tv See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane talks to Carl Donnelly about vintage prams and IVF.For evidence-based info on IVF in England – availability, getting started, what happens etc. start here: https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/ivf/ for in Paternity pay & leave: https://www.gov.uk/paternity-pay-leave/pay for info. Shared parental leave & pay: https://maternityaction.org.uk/advice/shared-parental-leave-and-pay/ for info. How maternal age might affect pregnancy: for most women it won't at all. Nearly one birth in five is to women over the age of 35 and most have perfectly healthy pregnancies and babies. There are some differences though in the care a woman will receive and possible considerations for a woman over 35 and again over 40 than for a woman, say, in her 20s. Go tohttps://www.babycentre.co.uk/a538711/how-age-affects-pregnancy to find out more. Carl and Johnny talked about increased anxiety that surrounds modern birth. The Positive Birth Movement is a global network of antenatal groups, linked up by social media who aim to counteract all that fear by bringing parents together to share and learn evidence-based information in a positiveway. Find your local group & how to follow on social media by visiting their website: https://www.positivebirthmovement.org for more. More about Carl Donnelly: - 2 Vegan Idiots Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/two-vegan-idiots/id1438770952- Visit Carl's Website: http://www.carldonnelly.co.uk- Follow Carl on Twitter @CarlDonnelly https://twitter.com/CarlDonnelly- Follow Carl on Instagram @carldonnelly https://www.instagram.com/carldonnelly/ More about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Dark Horse Digital: http://www.darkhorsedigital.co.uk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane chats to Russell Kane about getting a bit of shut eye.The views expressed in this episode are personal, not evidence-based. For evidence-based safe-sleeping guidelines, as well as information to understand how babies sleep visit: https://www.lullabytrust.org.uk and https://www.basisonline.org.uk. More about Russell Kane: - Buy Russell's book, Son of a Silverback: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Son-Silverback-Russell-Kane/dp/1787632148/ref=nodl_- Visit Russell's Website: https://www.russellkane.co.uk- Follow Russell on Twitter @russell_kane https://twitter.com/russell_kane- Follow Russell on Instagram: @russell_kane https://www.instagram.com/russell_kane/?hl=en More about Johnny Cochrane: - Follow Johnny on Twitter @iJohnnyCochrane: https://twitter.com/iJohnnyCochrane- Follow Johnny on Instagram @ijohnnycochrane https://www.instagram.com/ijohnnycochrane/ Produced by Dark Horse Digital: http://www.darkhorsedigital.co.uk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Will Colin Murray,Johnny Cochrane and Neil Delamere have suspicious minds about The King?
Arsenal legend Lee Dixon joins us for a special live recording of the pod. He lifts the lid on Tuesday Club, tells a great story about Tony Adams and tries to remember the answers to an interview he did 15 years ago. He also complains about pizza... a lot. In JereME JereYOU, we find out from Jeremie Aliadiere what really happened at the Arsenal players' Christmas party, and the night Freddie Ljungberg showed up in a suit and a limo. Simon Miller pops in as well to dish out some love for Ian Wright, and Johnny Cochrane takes on a 100-Club challenge in the quiz See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Guilty FeministPresented by Deborah Frances-White and Johnny Cochrane Episode 176: Fatherhoodwith special guests Elliot Rae and JJ Recorded 21 October 2019 at Kings Place in London. Released 18 November 2019. The Guilty Feminist theme by Mark Hodge and produced by Nick Sheldon. More about Deborah Frances-White http://deborahfrances-white.com https://twitter.com/DeborahFW https://www.virago.co.uk/the-guilty-feminist-book More about Johnny Cochrane https://twitter.com/JohnnyICochrane https://johnnycochrane.co.uk More about Music Football Fatherhood https://twitter.com/mffonline_ http://musicfootballfatherhood.com https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCliRtN3_P96BnwHRn2r6L4A For more information about this and other episodes… visit guiltyfeminist.com tweet us twitter.com/guiltfempod like our Facebook page facebook.com/guiltyfeminist check out our Instagram instagram.com/theguiltyfeminist or join our mailing list eepurl.com/bRfSPT Guilty Feminist jewellery is now availablehttps://www.road-from-damascus.co.uk The Negotiations special episode of the podcast is now available to purchase.http://guiltyfeminist.com/product/include-yourself-podcast/ Come to a live recording! Tuesday 3 December, Secret Policeman’s Ball in Manchester. Tickets on sale now. Monday 9 December, Kings Place in London. Tickets on sale now. 2-22 January, North American Tour. Tickets on sale now. 7-22 February, Australia and New Zealand Tour. Tickets on sale now. Leave us a review and rate us on Apple Podcasts!
I caught up with Essex comedian, the voice of MTV and father to be Johnny Cochrane before his set at Latitude's Cabaret Theatre. It was great to talk to him about his regular pilgrimage to Latitude and adapting his talents to kids comedy with Beano and CBBC. Plus a few tips for new comedians facing “The Blackout” and a top tip for pulling at festivals!
Mae Martin, Bisha K Ali, Bobby Friction and Johnny Cochrane join Ned Sedgwick in this Best Of episode on ‘adventure’. If GrownUpLand is a place, then we got a bit lost along the way. Each week on GrownUpLand, a special guest helps to answer listener questions and candidly shares their experiences, from failed dates and bizarre confrontations to guilty pleasures and worst nightmares. Co-created by Deborah Frances-White for The Spontaneity Shop and BBC Radio 4. Producer: Al Riddell
Summary These five names represent people who have been much in the news, in part due to alleged crimes. Unless you count OJ’s conviction for stealing sports memorabilia, none were convicted in criminal court. They also represent the sad state of affairs in American politics, and gross imbalances in our vaunted system of justice and highly touted national meritocracy. For the next 10 minutes, we will talk about imbalances in our politics, justice system and merit system. Continuing Let’s start this conversation with what our roles are in all of these instances. Yes, everyone knows that both OJ and Jussie are guilty. There is abundant evidence, including eyewitnesses and mounds of corroborating testimony and other evidence to remove any rational doubt. OJ was let off after committing two murders by a clearly biased jury. But we, all of us, including the jury, know that OJ is an unconvicted double murderer. After the trial, Johnny Cochrane, OJ’s defense attorney, was asked if justice was black or white, referring to race, not clarity. His answer, “Justice has a color, and it is green.” Jussie was let off after being charged with 16 felonies by an apparently rogue Chicago prosecutor. As I write this podcast, an enraged Chicago Major and Police Superintendent are both calling Jussie a liar. Both are furious that Jussie continues to throw the Chicago Police Department under the bus by continuing to maintain his innocence. And we also know that Brett (Kavanaugh, in case you forgot) was defending himself against an uncorroborated accusation. There was even testimony that conflicted with his accuser’s claims. Yet one side of the political aisle wanted his head. Donald was investigated for the better part of two years, with the Special Counsel using every tool available to his powerful office. The result, as summarized by the US Attorney General, was that Donald did not collude with a foreign power to tilt a Presidential election, and there was no conclusion on obstructing justice. Has Donald, The Donald, done other things outside of what he was investigated for that could be worthy of criticism? Yes, but my guess is that so have all the others on today’s list, including Hillary. But let’s stick to what we know. Oh, yes, Hillary. We all know that she spent considerable time and expense to be able to have her own local server, instead of having the State Department’s IT folks take care of her. And as the head of the State Department, she would have been well taken care of; likely better and faster than handling it on her own. With 24/7 online help and IT people who would have been more than happy to show up in person at any time. And we all know that Hillary erased tens of thousands of emails, using specialized techniques to insure they could not be recovered as is usually the case with computer erasures. Isn’t it clear to all of us that the only reason anyone would bother with the cost and inconvenience of having one’s own server, rather than using the one at work where you are the boss, would be to maintain privacy, including being able to permanently erase information? In each case, all five names, it is easy to see money and influence raising its ugly head, unfairly affecting the outcomes. Money and influence got OJ and Jussie off the hook, and seems to be protecting Hillary. Money and influence almost derailed, Brett. And I see it on both sides of Donald’s investigation by the Special Counsel. Today’s Key Point: As important as it is, today’s key point is not the massive and unfair advantage conferred by money and influence; it is our role in all of these examples--and our role in how we allow ourselves to be governed. We, you and I, are responsible for whatever negatives are represented in Donald’s investigation, Jussie and OJ going scot free, Brett’s time at the stake and whatever excesses Hillary might have committed. “In a democracy, we get the government that we deserve.
Lou Sanders, Johnny Cochrane and Tom Lucy find out how James Brown Got On Up to no good.
Lou Sanders, Johnny Cochrane and Tom Lucy bandy words about singing and civil rights.
Global PillageSeason 7. Episode X: "Christmas Yuletide Winterval Special 2018"Recorded 8 December 2018 at Kings Place in London. Released 24 December 2018. Yasmine Akram and Yassmin Abdel-Magied vs Johnny Cochrane and Sarah Keyworth vs the Hive Mind of the Audience.Hosted and created by Deborah Frances-White. Questions set by Ned Sedgwick. Programme Associate Jessica Fostekew. Music by Samuel Woolf. The Global Pillage theme composed by Mark Hodge. Recording engineer: Grundy Le Zimbra. Produced by Tom Salinsky for The Spontaneity Shop.Follow our lovely panellists on Twitter.@yasmlneakram@yassmin_a@johnnyicochrane@sarahkcomedy@DeborahFWFor more information about this and other episodes go to www.globalpillage.net.Sign up to our mailing list so you never miss an episode.Leave us a review and rate us on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Johnny Cochrane is a comedian, writer, presenter and actor. You could consider him an entertainment powerhouse, and you'd be right in doing so. Johnny performed his show 'Appeal' at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2016 and had a show on CBBC called 'The Johnny and Inel Show'. This episode of Creative Connection discusses Johnny's creative process around writing 'Appeal' as well as his perspective and insights into the comedy industry. Creative Connection is created and hosted by JaredMC
Global PillageSeason 6. Episode 6: "Alliums"Recorded 29 April 2018 at Kings Place in London. Released 4 June 2018. Grainne Maguire and Opehlie Hocquard vs Johnny Cochrane and Sterling Butler vs the Hive Mind of the Audience.Hosted and created by Deborah Frances-White. Questions set by Ned Sedgwick. Programme Associate Jessica Fostekew. Music by Mark Hodge. Recording engineer: Chris Sharp. Produced by Tom Salinsky for The Spontaneity Shop.Follow our lovely panellists on Twitter@GrainneMaguire@opheliecomedy@JohnnyLCochrane@sterling_butler@DeborahFWFor more information about this and other episodes go to www.globalpillage.net.Sign up to our mailing list so you never miss an episode.Leave us a review and rate us on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Global PillageSeason 6. Episode 5: "Alcohol"Recorded 29 April 2018 at Kings Place in London. Released 28 May 2018. Jessica Fostekew and Rosie Jones vs Johnny Cochrane and Gavino di Vino vs the Hive Mind of the Audience.Hosted and created by Deborah Frances-White. Questions set by Ned Sedgwick. Programme Associate Jessica Fostekew. Music by Mark Hodge. Recording engineer: Chris Sharp. Produced by Tom Salinsky for The Spontaneity Shop.Follow our lovely panellists on Twitter@jessicafostekew@josierones@JohnnyLCochrane@GavinodiVino@DeborahFWFor more information about this and other episodes go to www.globalpillage.net.Sign up to our mailing list so you never miss an episode.Leave us a review and rate us on iTunes! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
How are dating apps changing our love lives? Is single life underrated? Which GIF is the best/worst conversation starter? Join Mae, Bisha, Ned and Steve to answer these highly complex questions. This week, the gang reveal some of their dodgiest dating stories. Comedian, actor, radio & TV presenter Johnny Cochrane tries to help solve your dilemmas and Steve Ali puts everything into perspective with tales of the Calais Jungle dating scene. Co-created by Deborah Frances-White for The Spontaneity Shop and BBC Radio 4. Produced by Al Riddell Music by Mark Hodge and Omahrose, produced by Nick Sheldon. Featured in this episode: You & Yours (03/11/2017) You & Yours (04/02/2016) You & Yours (22/05/2017)
Episodes 127-248 of On the Mic contain original music. In order to comply with copyright law, these episodes are not available to download. You can stream these episodes on Mixcloud: https://www.mixcloud.com/OntheMic/ or skip to Episode 249. This episode: The self confident Essex boy is one half of TV's popular 'Johnny and Inel Show'. Johnny, acts, writes, tells jokes and is impossibly good looking. In Edinburgh, he gets to show what he can do. First broadcast on Broadway Baby Radio in 2016. © 2016 On the Mic. For more info visit: http://onthemic.co.uk Produced by Voice Republic For more podcasts visit http://voicerepublic.com
In the fourth episode about The People vs. O. J. Simpson, Jim Clemente, Laura Richards and Lisa Zambetti analyze how O. J. and his lawyers tried to make Simpson the victim in the case.
Ray is in great form as he receives a very special gift from illustrator Roger Langridge that momentarily leaves him lost for words. Tom Stade also rings up for a chat, and Ray gets his hands on Nat’s phone and sends a tweet that she’s really not happy about. They have a bit of a do, so Adam comes in for some conflict resolution and they’re all friends again by the end of the show.
Woody Overton and Jim Chapman of Bloody Angola Podcast tell the story of Clifford Etienne and the Louisiana Prison Boxing Program at Louisiana State Penitentiary and other prisons.#cliffordetienne #theblackrhino #bloodyangolapodcast #podcastFull TranscriptBloody Angola Podcast ( THE BLACK RHINO)Jim: Hey, everyone, and welcome to another edition of Bloody-Woody: -Angola.Jim: A podcast 142 years in the making.Woody: The Complete Story of America's Bloodiest Prison.Jim: And I'm Jim Chapman.Woody: And I'm Woody Overton. Welcome, y'all, back to another episode of Bloody Angola. And we appreciate you listening and liking, subscribing, and all that good stuff.Jim: Yeah.Woody: We want to thank our Patreon members who are very instrumental in the show. Y'all stay tuned at the end of the show and we're going to talk about that some more. But, Jim, today we've got something-- We always said it'd be different. Today, this is a very, very interesting story, which I do have a lot of personal connection with.Jim: I think we can title this one The Black Rhino.Woody: The Black Rhino. Absolutely. I knew the Black Rhino when he was becoming the Black Rhino. This guy's name was Clifford Etienne. And that's, y'all, not from South Louisiana. It's E-T-I-E-N-N-E. Clifford Etienne grew up in New Iberia, Louisiana, home of tabasco. We call it affectionately the Berry. If you're from South Louisiana, they just call it the Berry. I got paternal brothers from down there and Bobby [unintelligible 00:03:03], if you're listening, shoutout, Probation And Parole, State of Louisiana.Jim: But there's not much out there either. It's the tabasco plain if you're going to New Iberia pretty much.Woody: It's growing up a lot over the years, but back then, and specifically in this time frame that I'm going to be talking about, Clifford Etienne was coming up and he was truly, basically a stud.Jim: Yeah. He dominated in wrestling. He played baseball. Woody: Linebacker in football.Jim: Track and field. He threw the disc and the shot. Woody: 6'2", 290 pounds.Jim: Big boy. And was recruited by LSU, Nebraska, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, which these days are dominant, but back in those days were extremely dominant.Woody: And recruited as a linebacker. And he just was a stud-stud. But sometimes, life happens and people try cocaine or different things or they hang with the wrong crowd. And that's what Clifford started to do. He could have had the world as his oyster, and he would it in later years and seems like history repeats itself, unfortunately. Back then, on a certain day in Lafayette, Louisiana, when Clifford was a young man--Jim: Yeah, he was 18. As most 18-year-olds do, he was getting away with what he could, and him and four friends decided it would be a good idea to rob some customers at a shopping mall in Lafayette.Woody: It was the only shopping mall in Lafayette at the time. And that was in 1988. I was there in 1989. And when USL was USL, now it's ULL. Go, Cajuns.Jim: Yes.Woody: But they robbed some people. And ultimately, he got busted.Jim: Yeah, he got sentenced to 40 years. The first stint was Bloody Angola. That was where he first went.Woody: And 40 years, y'all, would have been the minimum on armed robbery. It carries up to 99 years in the state of Louisiana. I think he was like 18 years old, he gets sentenced and they ship him to Bloody Angola.Jim: That's right. Eventually, after a few transfers, he ends up at DCI.Woody: That's Dixon Correctional Institute, y'all. That's where I would come to know him. What happened was I was working the working cell block, which y'all heard me talk about before. It's different than admin seg, because there's two men to a cell. But working cell block is where you only get sent for major rule violations. Basically, for street charges, whether you're smuggling, dope, you attack an officer, you rape somebody, or you fight with weapons. Now, I had two tiers of the working cell block that I ran and I can remember distinctly, Clifford Etienne was in the cell with a guy from Livingston Parish, a white guy from Livingston Parish. Now, Clifford Etienne is a black man, and they were in the next to the last cell at the end of the tier. The tier only had cells on one side, y'all, face the screen windows. They had a couple of black and white TVs down the tier.But I would stop and talk to them all the time because the guy from the LP, I knew him from the street, and I knew him back from the club days. We knew some of the same people. You're not supposed to become friends and stuff with the convicts, which I submit to you that when you are working 12-hour shifts in two on, two off, three on, two off, two on, three off, but even on my days off, the Department of Corrections was always short and they had an on call list. Basically, I could work 30 days a month.But I'm doing time just like they're doing time. I was doing time just like they were doing time. They locked those doors behind you on that 12-hour shift, you can only shower them and feed them and have nurse calls so much and shit gets a little boring. So, I would stop, and I did a couple of years back there-- and I say it, I'm like a convict, but it [Jim chuckles] really was like doing time. Did a couple of years back there. When you get locked up on the working cell block, once you get locked up, you have to do 90 days without a low court or a high court write-up. You go back before the board and they basically hear your case as to whether or not you can be released in general population. Well, the problem with that is, y'all, in the working cell blocks, basically, they're worst of the worst because these are people that can't even follow the basic rules in prison, even the small rules, and the ones that, like I said, were back there for serious charges. Now, the white guy in the cell was back there for having or suspicion of having sex with a female guard. That's a no-no, but it is what it is, right?[laughter]Woody: If you can get over and do what you do, that's what they're going to do. Now, his cellie was Clifford Etienne. So, I began to talk to him. Look, this is a massive dude. Now, I was 6'2", probably 250 at the time. And he's 6'2", 300 pounds but he was all muscle. I mean, like solid as a rock. But he was a really cool dude, and I say that. I know he robbed people and shit like that, but he could have been an asshole to me or anything else, but I would hang out and stand in front of the cell late at night and shit. I'm entertainment for them also. We were talking and I found out that Etienne was a boxer, and he was actually on DCI's boxing team, but also found out that he was an accomplished artist.He asked me when we're talking one night, said, "You married? You dating someone?" I said, "I'm dating someone." "Can you give me a picture of her?" "Bro, I'm not bringing you a picture of my girlfriend." [Jim laughs] He said, "No. I'm an artist. I'm going to draw a picture and you can give it to her." So, the next time I came back to work, I got a little snapshot and I gave it to him. The next evening, I came back to work, and he had hand sketched an exact likeness of this girl. And I can't remember her last name. I think her first name was Debbie. It was just fucking piece of artwork and I was blown away. It's on a basic piece of paper done in pencil. I'm like, "Bruh, you got talent." I didn't know what I would come to find out later on and what we're going to talk about.Also, I talked to him about boxing because I like boxing, and I like to box. Both of my grandfathers went to college for boxing, one at USL and one for LSU. They boxed on the college boxing teams. I asked him, I said, "You get into a fight--" just more like bullshit. I said, "If you're going to hit somebody." He said, "Woody, if you're going to hit somebody, I want you to hit him hard as you can in the stomach. Don't let him know it's coming. You rear back, full body swing. Hit him in the stomach." And I said, "Why is that?" He said, "Because if you do it right, you're going to knock the air out of him. Then, they're defenseless. You can just beat him to a pulp."Jim: Yeah.Woody: He would go on to become the Interprison Boxing Champion for the state ofLouisiana. Y'all, each prison has their own boxing team, and it's big shit.Jim: Yeah. I'm going to tell you about his reputation in prison and a little bit about a trainer that had actually started working with him in prison. There was a guy named Valrice Cooper. And Valrice Cooper had a nickname. It was Whoop. They called him Whoop because of boxing. Whoop, whoop. That's how he would say when you punch. It was a whoop. Everybody knew Whoop in the prison system. He was a steward of the Louisiana prison boxing scene. He was an inmate himself. Whoop, he didn't have the pleasure of meeting Etienne until after the boxer-- He was already the most dominant prison fighter in Louisiana. As Woody said, these different prisons have their own boxing teams. Angola has one, DCI has one. There's one in North Louisiana.Woody: Hunt.Jim: Hunt has one. This is a big deal in prison, these boxing teams. Whoop was the guywho kind of managed that, even as an inmate.Woody: Basically, helped Etienne perfect his craft better.Jim: Absolutely. He had heard about this guy, this 6'2", 290-pound fighter, and he started working with Etienne. From the first second he saw him, he could tell from his movement, he had a ton of natural talent. He countered right, he stepped back right, he circled correctly. As a matter of fact, Whoop would describe him as a prison version of Muhammad Ali, y'all. That's how good he was. Anybody describes you as Muhammad Ali, you're good. But theprison version of Muhammad Ali from a guy who really knew that sport was amazing. Etienne continued to dominate in the prison world. He actually won 30 bouts, never lost.Woody: Y'all, real quick. Certainly, they would practice amongst themselves at Dixon Correctional Institute, etc.Jim: Shadow box.Woody: Right. Well, you're locked in a cell, you got a lot of time to shadow box. Jim: [laughs] That's right.Woody: These bouts we're talking about that, they would actually go to other prisons, or sometimes they would host it there, and they would fight against other prisoners in the state. At the end of the year, whoever had the most wins got the banner.Jim: That's right. And these were big deals. As a matter of fact- Woody: Huge.Jim: -family of these prisoners would go to the boxing matches and they would have to pay. They would have to buy tickets. It was $5 for adults, $3 for children back then, and you would watch as if you were watching sanctioned event on HBO.Woody: Even though they wore headgear, the bouts were three 3-minute rounds. I would bet you people love to go see the radio because they care about getting hurt and laying up in an infirmary in the air conditioner rather than a cell block. I bet you these guys got in there-- I wish I would have got to see one and just tried to absolutely annihilate each other.Jim: I'm sure there was a lot of first-round knockouts. Headgear or no headgear. Woody: Headgear really doesn't mean shit.Jim: [laughs]Woody: It's not like you're wearing the NFL helmet.Jim: Oh, yeah. Some of these people are lifers, y'all. Look, they're in there and they're swinging. You've heard on Real Life Real Crime, Woody described like prison muscle. It's a totally different type of muscle and all these guys had it. He fought in the heavyweight and the super heavyweight divisions. So, he was fighting the baddest of the bad, the biggest of the big-Woody: And beating them.Jim: -and beating them. Just never losing, 30 bouts inside. And that gets around. Outside of the prison system, Don King and all these guys are hearing about this Clifford Etienne and how he is the toughest man in prison and winning all these bouts. After his 10th year in prison, he gets paroled.Woody: Right, which is basically, y'all, I would tell you that that's because of the outside influences from these promoters. They were like, "This guy can be heavyweight champion of the world." They go in for the parole board, "Look, we got contracts. We're going to train him. We're going to keep him on the straight and narrow. He can be on parole if need be, but we need permission to get his boxing license and everything else."Jim: Well, let me tell you how promoters think. Number one, you've got an extremely talented individual to start with. He's getting paroled from prison. Here's your chance. I don't know if this is fact, but I would imagine his success helped with his parole because in a parole board's mind, this guy can probably actually rehabilitate and change his life because he's going to have unique opportunities not everybody is going to have when they're released from prison. He was well known.Woody: Let me digress for a second. The reason he was on the working cell block, he got in a fight with a guard, with a correctional officer--Jim: Named Woody Overton.Woody: No, it wasn't me.[laughter]Woody: I wouldn't have fought that dude. [laughter]Woody: He got in a fight with a correction officer. Now, when they went to the board hearing, and I remember telling me this, he had already been on the boxing team. So, the board considered his hands deadly weapons. So, they charged him with fighting with deadly weapons on a correction officer.Jim: Oh, wow.Woody: That's why he got sent to the hole for that. Now, he did his 90 days, maybe a little bit longer, maybe he went twice, I don't remember. But he got out while I was still there. He was good. He was locked on the block. He was good. He was never any problem. He was actually a pretty cool dude. He got out. You know why he got out too? He wanted to box again. He was like, "Fuck that. Imma going to behave. I know my future is in boxing."Jim: Yeah, he was just the shit, y'all, in the Louisiana prison system and really the national-- He was well known in prisons all over the country as probably the best boxer to ever come out of prison. You're talking about-- look, Sonny Liston came out of prison, and he was getting a lot of comparisons to Sonny Liston. These promoters, they're not only salivating at the chance to get a hold to a guy who has an extreme amount of talent, he also had a hell of a story, and they loved that. He had a nickname in prison, which was the Black Rhino. Come on, y'all, if that don't scare you before you fight the 6'2", 290-pound boxer, I don't know what does.Woody: Basically, he got that because the most dangerous animal in the world, the Black Rhinoceros or the Black Rhino was the name that he embraced. Like Jim said, these promoters, holy shit, now you got the Black Rhino coming out of prison that would sell tickets regardless.Jim: Look, you can't spin a better story with all this. He gets out and he turns pro in 1998. Woody: That was five years after I left him or after the last time I saw him.Jim: So, how does he do? Well, his first four opponents, he knocked them out. As a matter of fact, three of those first four was inside of the first ring.Woody: He's cold cocking people.Jim: Cold cocking people. Ring Magazine actually named him-- believe it or not, y'all, hewas later named The Most Exciting Heavyweight Fighter of the 2000s. Woody: That's true.Jim: How about that?Woody: He absolutely was destroying people. I remember late 80s, early 90s, when Tyson was coming up, and when pay per view had first come out, and we had all put up $20 and got a keg of beer, and he knocked out Spinks in like 30 seconds or whatever it was. Black Rhino was doing the same thing. A lot of the times, when big guys fight, they'll get tired and they'll hug on each other and stuff. Black Rhino didn't have time to get tired. He was annihilating people, like Tyson did when he was young.Jim: Yes. And loving it. And what's he doing? He's living his best life, y'all. He's making tons of money. He's knocking people out for a living. Everybody's courting him. And he does what sadly, a lot of-- seems like it's not just athletes, but it seems like they struggle with this because there's so much of an influx of money under such a short period of time.Woody: And fame.Jim: And fame and all of that, that he starts dabbling in cocaine. Woody: Right. A line here, a line there.Jim: Yeah. Give me a little bit of that sugar, whatever you tell them.Woody: In the beginning, you think you can handle, it makes you feel even better. You're already on top of the world. Remember, you came from a working cell block. First of all, you got out in 10 years instead of 40. You come from a working cell block. You build yourself up to the prison boxing system, and now you're building yourself up as one of the top heavyweights in the world.Jim: That's right. And he continues on. He continues knocking people out, and eventually he scoops up the IBA Continental heavyweight title. He actually won that title in Baton Rouge.Woody: In Baton Rouge. It was at the Belle of Baton Rouge in the atrium. I didn't get to go for whatever reason, but I remember when it was happening and the white guy from the cell reached out to me, said, "I can get you tickets. Do you want to come see him?" And I couldn't go for whatever reason. But yeah, he won that there. Even though that's not like the biggest championship in the world, it's still a championship belt.Jim: That's right. And continues on. Eventually, he suffers his first loss, that was in March of 2001, and y'all, it was a beating. He actually got floored seven times in that bout.Woody: Knocked down seven times, and on the eighth, I think the referee finally stopped it, but he said it was just basically like a blood bath. But Black Rhino never gave it up. You knocked me down two times, I'm probably going to stay down. Seven times, but he kept getting up and fighting back.Jim: That's it.Woody: Finally, the ref is like, "Number eight, I got to stop this shit, he's going to kill him."Jim: Yeah, he went out on his shield and never quit. After that bout, you may start to think, "Well, that was it." Well, no. Etienne couldn't be stopped. He ended up fighting six more bouts after his loss and knocked everybody out. He was again the talk of the boxing scene. When you become that much of the talk of the boxing scene, eventually you're going to run into somebody you got to fight.Woody: When he was talking to the boxing scene, basically, besides being the Black Rhino, and he was always compared to young Mike Tyson.Jim: Yeah. They actually knew each other before the opportunity showed its face and always got along. If you're a Tyson fan, you would know that he grew up very rough. He was very similar to Etienne, except for Cus D'Amato discovered Tyson before he had gotten so far out of hand that his whole life would have been spent in prison. Much younger when Tyson got discovered at 12 years old by Cus D'Amato. Etienne and Tyson had a respect for each other because they both came from the streets, they were both super tough, both amazing boxers. And in 2003-Woody: Memphis, Tennessee. Jim: That's it. Tyson come a calling.Woody: Tyson came calling. That was the first fight-- if y'all remember this, that was the first fight that Tyson had the tribal tattoos on his face.Jim: Yes. If Tyson wasn't scary enough, he comes out-- and look, Etienne, I'm sure, was intimidated just like-- Tyson can intimidate anybody. I don't care how tough you are. Yeah. Except for Holyfield maybe. [laughs]Woody: Yeah, he bit his ear off.Jim: He did do that. In 2003, Tyson, the pinnacle of boxing and the Etienne fight, and Tysonbeats the shit out of Etienne in 48 seconds.Woody: Now, the same guy from the LP, I talked to him after that, and he told me that what happened is one of the first punches that Tyson landed hit the Black Rhino on his eardrum and it busted his inner ear. So, Etienne's equilibrium was off, and he couldn't even defend himself.Jim: Yeah. Could you imagine how hard Tyson hits to bust your freaking inner eardrum? Woody: In one punch. To Etienne's credit, he tried to stand and do whatever, shit, your roomspinning. I can't imagine that. Tyson, he ain't going to quit punching.Jim: [laughs] No, he ain't. And I will never forget the interview, because actually, I can distinctly picture myself when I watched that live. I actually watch that fight live. After the broadcast, Jim Gray, who was a famous interviewer in boxing, pulls Tyson and he says, "What did you think of Etienne?" and all that, "And how did your training go?" Tyson says, "I broke my back last week." [laughs] And I'll never forget. I was like, "What?" It was bizarre, y'all.Woody: That's crazy.Jim: He supposedly broke his back in training.Woody: The reason they were fighting in Memphis, Tennessee, Tyson couldn't get licensed in Nevada or anywhere else because of the rape allegations and all that.Jim: Yeah. If you're getting a little upset about Etienne because he lost and all that, don't cry for him too much.Woody: He made a million bucks.Jim: [chuckles] Literally a million bucks in 48 seconds.Woody: Paid for 48 seconds, I think I could last for 48 seconds. He might have hit me in the back of the head, but I'm running around like a chicken with my head cut off. For 48 seconds, I'm going to give you a show for a million dollars.Jim: For a million dollars.Woody: I'll fight Tyson a day for a million dollars.Jim: I'm telling you. Yeah. Etienne gets that million bucks. He unfortunately does what a lot of people who get money that never had money do. And that is he blows it. He buys sports cars, jewelry, multiple houses, and he actually got into a couple of businesses that suffered. He was in a busing company. It went nowhere. He opened a restaurant-- or he actually started a restaurant that never opened. He did the cardinal sin in any business which is, didn't pay his taxes.Woody: Right.Jim: I don't care who you are, ask Al Capone about that.Woody: Tax man cometh.Jim: Tax man cometh. So, he's spiraling downward.Woody: Yeah. He's not surrounded by the best people either, taking advantage of him. Like I said, he never had so many cousins.Jim: Okay. He's going along in life, Etienne, and he's making a lot of bad decisions. At some point, he decides it is a good idea to go get some money as he was spending all of his. [crosstalk] He figures, what better place to get money than a check cashing place, right?Woody: Genius idea.Jim: The only problem was he didn't have no checks. Woody: He didn't have a checkbook.Jim: He didn't have anything to cash.Woody: I'll tell you what he did have, he had a pistol. Jim: He had a pistol.Woody: He had a cocaine habit.Jim: And a bad cocaine habit.Woody: Getting as high as fuck, yeah.Jim: That's right. Etienne goes to a check cashing place in Baton Rouge with a gun, and he pulls the weapon, and he decides he's going to hold up this check cashing place, and he gets a little-- I guess you could say a little pushback on that from the check cashing people. He takes a gun, and he shoots it in the air, and he says, "I will kill you, bitch." That's exactly what he said, because they have it on recording because she was dialing 911 while this was going on.Woody: She was an African American.Jim: African American female. Eventually, he gets in his hands $2,000 after he fires thatthing in the air, and he hauls ass out of there.Woody: Right. Unbeknownst to him, the silent alarm had been hit and Baton Rouge PD was responding in force. They met him in the parking lot.Jim: They did. They were there really fast for a specific reason. And that was that same day, sadly, an officer in Baton Rouge named Terry Melancon who was serving a warrant with some other officers in Baton Rouge was tragically killed.Woody: They were making the entry-- we call it a high-risk warrant. It was a narcotics warrant. They were making entry in the door, and he was shot and killed. Rest in peace, brother. I was on the SWAT team at the time that happened. We went from serving high-risk warrants narcotics-- We used to do them every day without the SWAT team because the SWAT because it took so long. The policy got changed after that. Any high-risk entry warrant, you had to use the SWAT team. Rest in peace, brother.Jim: Yeah. It was really just more bad timing for Etienne as this was going on, they were able to easily get there.Woody: Before they got there, he's trying to make an escape. Well, you know what? I think he [unintelligible 00:31:37] this time, he goes rob a check cash in place with a piece of shit pistol, and he leaves, and he's trying to make his getaway, and he makes two attempts.Jim: That's right. An officer with the Baton Rouge City Police Department, who was in an Exxon station across the street from the cash door, received a report of an armed robbery in progress. Comes over his radio, and the officer observed one of the check cashing employees actually outside of the business at this point, and he could tell she was panicking. At this point, he goes across the street and he starts talking to her and he says, "Did you report an armed robbery?" And she says, "Yes." A bunch of police officers at this time are pulling up. It becomes pandemonium. Etienne escapes into a little wooded area, and when he comes out of that wooded area, he sees a vehicle, and he just jumps in the vehicle. I guess he thought he was going to hot-wire it or whatever. He didn't realize when he jumped in there were two children in the back of that vehicle.He goes to start it, realizes, "Oh, shit, there's no keys." The lady had ran into this beauty supply place and just left her kids in there while, I guess, she was quickly grabbing shampoo or something. He goes to steal that vehicle, realizes the keys aren't on in it, and the cops are kind of on to him at this point. They're pursuing him through the woods, and he's panicking. He's in a bind and--Woody: Still armed.Jim: Yeah, still armed. He immediately exits the vehicle, and he has his weapon in his hand, and he aims it at two police officers.Woody: Not only does he aim it- Jim: He pulls the trigger. Woody: -pulls the trigger.Jim: And the gun jams.Woody: Click. It's probably a piece of shit, high-tech 9-millimeter or whatever. I'm sure if it was an expensive weapon, he could have traded for coke instead of trying to rob a cash store. He pulled it and pulled it again.Jim: He panics again, obviously, because at this point, y'all, Etienne just tried to shoot two police officers. If it wasn't for that gun jamming, he would have shot them, possibly killed them. So, he panics. He runs to a gold Pontiac Grand Am. He opens the door, and there's a driver in there. He puts the gun to the driver's head. He says, "Get out." The driver, he protests this. Why? Because his two young children are in the vehicle.Woody: It's kiddie daycare around there.Jim: That's it. Etienne pulls him out of the car physically, throws him to the ground, jumps in the car, and starts to drive away in reverse at a high rate of speed. He just basically goes backwards. He gets about 60ft. The vehicle hits a curb, and it stalls. Officers approach the vehicle with the weapons drawn, and they apprehend Etienne. How do you think that apprehension went?Woody: I don't know, man. I mean, his weapon's jammed, and what we call a felony stop, I'm sure Black Rhino ended up getting some dirt in his face.Jim: Oh, I can look. And then, don't forget, they are already dealing with that day a police officer getting shot and killed.Woody: Absolutely. And you just tried to kill--Jim: And you just tried to kill two more. If I'm a police officer, you're getting a fist to the face. Woody: Yeah, well, definitely.Jim: Swim would have punched him.Woody: Yes, Swim.Jim: [laughs]Woody: Swim would have gave him some justice, that was just us. But he might have sprung a leak too. Anyway, he gets arrested, armed robbery, two counts of attempted first-degree murder on police officers. So, God or somebody was taking care of them and those officers letting that pistol jam.Jim: Amen.Woody: He gets prosecuted, y'all, by the Baton Rouge's DA's office. And the prosecutor was Prem Burns. Now, I don't think we've ever talked about her on Bloody Angola, but I know her. I've been in the courtroom with her. She is fire. They had their best prosecutor on it, Hillar Moore's best prosecutor. The DA generally, in bigger parishes, is a political figurehead who oversees all the cases, but they have their top lieutenants or generals, whatever you want to call them, that handle the big cases. Prem Burns was the one.Jim: And well known for the serial killing.Woody: Yeah. For Derrick Todd Lee. As well as every top case in East Baton Rouge. She said that across 34 years and 100 plus felony cases and even taking down meddling cartel members and serial killers that she recalls looking at Etienne and thinking, that dude is huge, she remembers the day he was sentenced, he said something to her like, "I'm so sorry. The drugs were just really bad for me." But Burns also remember the 911 call and the words Etienne barked out that were recorded on security footage says, "I'm going to kill you." She remembers using that against him in her opening remarks. She remembers the jury convicting the boxer quickly and easily.Years later, the prosecutor picked apart Etienne's processing the trial, and he said he received insufficient representation. She was like, "Dude, you could have Johnny Cochrane and you weren't getting off on this charge." And the jury are possibly in prejudice. She was like, "Your victims were black. You're black. It's not a racial issue." Anyway, he got sentenced to forever this time, but for luck, he would have been on death row. Y'all, he got 160 years. And guess where he was going? Bloody-Jim: -Angola.[chuckles]Jim: No doubt about it. And look, let's recap real quick. This is a guy that just a couple of years-- as a matter of fact, a year before this, had just gotten a million dollars and fought arguably the most-- I would say the second most popular boxer of all time outside of Muhammad Ali, which was Mike Tyson. Definitely the most popular boxer in my era, by far. And now, you just got sentenced to forever, as Woody aptly put it, the rest of your life, pretty much in Angola. Etienne actually, in 2004, for whatever reason, applied for a pardon to Mike Foster, the then governor, which was denied, obviously. I don't know if he thought his popularity might get him a pardon, but it wasn't working with Mike Foster.Woody: I think he was also trying to say stuff about traumatic brain injury and CTE and all that other bullshit.Jim: Right. Look, here's why I don't buy that at all. I definitely think that brain injury from boxing or pro football, absolutely, it affects your decision making and all those sorts of things. But you were doing this at 18. I mean, you were robbing people at 18.Woody: This lawyer said he's entitled to a new sentence because the CTE should be a major consideration. He said, "It's not his fault. The science wasn't there ahead of time. So, he did not do all this bullshit." I'm not even going touch on that anymore.Jim: Yeah, that's ridiculous. Now, one thing we haven't mentioned to you is a unique-- and when I tell y'all this is a unique and an absolutely God-given talent is his ability in the painting world. Art, paintings, canvas.Woody: I told you about the drawing. I didn't know that he was a painter also, but he drew that picture of that girl for me.Jim: Yeah. If you're a Patreon member of any sort, we're going to put this on Patreon. It's just some examples of his artwork. It is unbelievable, y'all. God definitely touched him and gave him a talent with artwork. So, we're going to put that up there. Look, Woody mentioned this earlier, and I want to read this to y'all. Woody had mentioned, "Hey, he was a nice guy."Woody: Yeah. He was cool.Jim: Great personality. Cool dude. I'm going to read you a letter that he wrote to a fan. This is in 2019, so this is fairly recent. I'm also going to put this up on Patreon. But a fan had just wrote to him and asked him for an autograph, basically, a boxing fan. He said, "Sorry I took so long getting back to you. Just rediscovered the letter you sent me at the end of May. I always take time writing anyone back since they took time to write me. All letters are screened for contraband, and because of some drug heads attempts to smuggle contraband in here, the mailroom discarded the index card you sent me to sign. So, I'm sending you this large piece of paper signed by me. To answer your questions, I am still healthy, and I look forward to a better future. I WILL GET OUT OF HERE." And he says that in all caps."I paint and I cut hair almost every day. Number three, I'm not in a cell. I'm in a dormitory with a bit over 100 guys. I do watch TV sometimes, mostly news and sports. I have a TV in the barber shop where I work. Number four, my whole boxing career was an interesting story. Started writing a book about it, but I haven't finished. Number five, fighting Mike Tyson was like fighting the other 30 fighters I fought. It was a job that took care of my family. I never got into all the hype. I met Tyson years before they even talked about us fighting each other. Number six, the most fun I had in boxing ring was every time the referee raised my hand as the winner after all that hard training. You take care of yourself, and I wish you and yours all the best. Clifford Etienne."Woody: Pretty cool.Jim: Reading that letter, that don't sound like a guy they tried to kill two police officers, rob a check cashing place. So, when Woody mentioned that, "Yeah, he seemed like a cool, nice guy," reading that letter that sounds like a guy that is out of prison right now, is living his best life, just doesn't sound like that type of character, does it?Woody: But that cocaine shit, does funny shit, even less [crosstalk] to people and will never take away the fact.Jim: Nose gold.Woody: Not only did he try to kill those two officers, but who knows what would have happened to those kids in the car, etc., had he not wrecked it, and stalled it out. But when he went back in the prison this time, y'all, it wasn't without incident. He had issues, he survived an attack. He would start painting, but we'll talk about that. He would start painting. The last I had heard of him before we talked about this, was I was watching something on the Rodeo about Angola Radio and they had him selling his paintings and they were street scenes and murals. Now, you're not allowed to make money off your crimes. He's not painting trying to kill two cops, but he's painting like murals-- Not murals, but like oil paints. Shit would cost you $20,000 in a gallery, and it was fantastic. The one I saw was of a second line that's a funeral procession for those from Louisiana where they play the music, the jazz band does it and they go behind the coffin and all that. But he was very, very good at it. And his paintings are hanging all across the world, people commissioned to do paintings, etc. But even when he was in the painting room one time, somebody tried to kill him.Jim: Yeah. So bad in fact that he had to get transferred.Woody: Right.Jim: I do want to mention on those paintings, a lot of people may be surprised to know thatone of his paintings hangs in the New Orleans Police Department. Woody: Oh, I didn't know this.Jim: Sure enough, yeah, I found that somewhere. [laughs] Woody: Only Jim Chapman can get that shit up.Jim: I found that somewhere. There's a picture online where the two New Orleans PD officers are posing in the police department and his painting is hanging. I guess to them, it's an example of convicts have talent too somewhere. God touches us all, gives us all unique talents, and that was his. And it's just a shame. In addition to his boxing, which was also a unique talent.Woody: I'm going to digress for a second when I said he attacked a correctional officer with fists, I believe now, I'm thinking back on-- I think it was just another inmate. But instead of being charged with a regular fist fight, which wouldn't send you to working cell block, they charged him for fighting with weapons because his hands were considered deadly weapons because he's such a renowned boxer.Jim: I believe it.Woody: Y'all, he would go on-- after that attack, he talks about surviving COVID when they put them all in cells. When everybody else in the world is trying to be separated, they were locking them down. He talks about that, but at some point after the attack, another inmate, a friend of his, told him, say, "Hey, man, basically you got to get shit together." I mean, he'd let himself go, he'd gained weight, he was dressing sloppily. And Etienne listened to him. So, he started dressing better. He shaved his head bald. He started to exercise every day at 5:00 in the morning. He said he stayed away from rats or dudes, they would never amount to shit in their lives. That friend asked him, "What do you need to start painting again?" Etienne told him. Two weeks later, the supplies arrived like magic, canvas boards, paints and brushes. The friend told Etienne, "You're the Black Rhino. The man who went from prison to pinnacle boxing." Eventually, Etienne returned to the painting room, hearing or no hearing, he had to move forward. Now, talk about his hearing, y'all, I told you his eardrum got busted.Jim: By Mike Tyson.Woody: By Mike Tyson, and his equilibrium was still off and all that. But he to this day paints. Jim and I have had several offers to attend the Angola Radio, and I said that's the last fucking place you'll ever catch me on the face of this earth because of all the people I've put up there. But if I ever do go, I'm going to go see the Black Rhino.Jim: There you go.Woody: And I guarantee he remembers--[crosstalk]Jim: We need to do that trip soon, and that would make for a great episode. Incidentally, we do want to welcome Woody back. Last week, of course, I flew solo for you Patreon members.Woody: I appreciate you doing that.Jim: So, we did a bonus episode. It's only up on Patreon, so if you're curious to hear about it was called Iron Mike.Woody: Iron Mike.Jim: It's about a guy that could fight in prison for sure, but it's just an absolutely crazy story of a guy who killed three inmates inside of Angola and just some amazing stuff there. But Woody was on a special assignment, which in the future we'll be able to tell everybody about. And I also recorded another episode that I'll be dropping as a bonus episode. It's Boss Bitches Part 2. But I'm glad to have Woody back now because I have to freaking think all by myself, brother. [laughs]Woody: I appreciate it but tell them about Boss Bitches 2.Jim: Yes, Boss Bitches 2. Of course, if you listen to the first one, we feature Martha Stewart, M. Diddy, and a bunch of other lady convicts. And this one, much of the same. It's four other lady convicts. Look, join Patreon and you'll find out who they are. How about that?Woody: Y'all, you go and check it out. We have numerous bonus episodes. Jim, I appreciate you covering me while I'm gone.Jim: No worries, man.Woody: The bonus episodes are fire, and as are all Bloody Angola. But the Patreon, wehave different tier levels now each, go look it up. It'll be in the show notes.Jim: Yeah, and I'm glad you mentioned it, because I want to shout out-- We've got over 130 members now. We're blessed to have that. They support us. We couldn't do this without them. So, we're going to read out real quick each of our Tie Down and Warden Team members, give them of a shoutout. Just to tell you really fast are what our teams include. The Warden Team is our top tier. You get ad-free episodes, obviously, early access to these episodes. You get full transcripts of all the Bloody Angola Thursday regular drops. Any shows that we do that are live, you get automatic VIP access. And you get a free piece of Bloody Angola of merch every quarter. So, four times a year, we're sending you something. I know I've sent out a bunch of merch lately to a bunch of people that are our Warden Team members, I appreciate y'all so much. If you're a Warden Team member, you haven't got that first piece of merch, please just message me and we'll get it to you.Woody: If you're a Patreon member on any level-- because it's a lot y'all, but it's very important to us. If we miss something, we're human beings. Please, please message us, check into it.Jim: Yes, that's our Warden Team. We also have our Tie Down Team, which they get ad-free episodes, early access, full transcripts of those Thursday drops, and they also get our Sally Port companion episodes like the Boss Bitches that we're going to drop as a bonus for them. Woody is going to read our Tie Down Teams, and I'm going to read our Warden Teams today.Woody: And the Tie Down Team gets you--Jim: That gets you the ad-free episodes, the early access, the full transcripts, and the Sally Port companion episodes.Woody: Carol Hagen, you are a love. We appreciate you for being a Tie Down Team member. I hope you're enjoying your benefits. We appreciate you so much. All right, Kirsten Dahl. Now, Kirsten has been a Lifer forever, and she used to send me pickles and all kinds of stuff, Jim.Jim: There you go.Woody: But thank you, Kirsten, for supporting Bloody Angola also. We really, really love and appreciate you. You're awesome. Lisa Stevens, I know who you are. Thank you for being a Tie Down Team member. We love and appreciate you so much. And Tina Johnson. Tina, thank you for being a Tie Down team member. You rock. You kick ass. And we appreciate you. We couldn't do without you. Ms. Julie Easterday. Julie, thank you so much for being a Tie Down Team member. Enjoy those benefits, sweetie.Jim: All right. We also want to thank our Warden Team members. Our Warden Team is our top tier. You just can't get any more than what we give those Warden Team members. They are high support. Look, if you can't even be a Patreon member, we still love you and appreciate you.Woody: Absolutely.Jim: But we really, really appreciate the support of all our Patreon team, especially ourWarden Team members.Woody: Especially in these hard times when eggs are $9 a dozen and you take the time to subscribe, we're going to hook you up.Jim: That's right. So, Melissa Jewel, thank you so much for being a Warden Team member. Ms. Christine Spence.Woody: Thank you, Christine.Jim: Thank you so very much for being a Warden Team member. And how about Ms. AmberMorrow?Woody: Ms. Amber. Thank you. We love you. We appreciate you.Jim: 100%. Ms. Lisa Marks.Woody: Ms. Lisa Marks, we don't even have a term for you. You know we love you.Jim: Double Warden Team member. [laughs] She's just amazing. Thank you so much. Love you. Mandy Oliver.Woody: Mandy Oliver.Jim: Ms. Mandy.Woody: Thank you so much. She's awesome.Jim: Leah [unintelligible [00:53:53].Woody: A part-time researcher, full-time crime junkie. Jim: And hellraiser. [laughs]Woody: You don't want to mess with Leah. Leah, thank you so much.Jim: That's right. That's our Warden Team and we really appreciate the support of all of those members. We're going to be shouting out as many as we can every week here going forward. Thank you so much. And until next time, I'm Jim Chapman.Woody: I'm Woody Overton.Jim: Your host of Bloody-Woody: Angola.Jim: A podcast 142 years in the making.Woody: A Complete Story of America's Bloodiest Prison. Jim and Woody: Peace.[chuckles]Jim: Bloody Angola is an Envision Podcast Production in partnership with Workhouse Connect. Music produced and composed by Alfe Derouen in Studio 433, with vocals by Thomas Cain. Created and hosted by Jim Chapman and Woody Overton.[Bloody Angola theme]Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy