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On this week's edition of Hat Trick City, Johnny MacDonald of the Hat Tricks comes on to tell us a few stories about his path to Danbury, as well as how he got a star rookie to join the team. WestConn Captain, Mason Peragine comes on to talk about this second semester of games and what next season is aiming to look like. Finally, Justin Schmitt of the Columbus River Dragons, tells us about an interesting upbringing, as well as his Cruiser-Weight Title in Ice Wars II.
WHAT AN INSANE EPISODE! Steve Rocco Parrillo and Travis Grant are joined by Comedian Johnny MacDonald! We discuss Power-bombing Old Ladies Through Tables, Having Sex on Stranger's Boats, Getting almost Shanked at Dive Bars, Furries, Dead Cats, Jamacian Food, Jamacian Ladies and MUCH MORE! Make Sure you FOLLOW US on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Youtube, Facebook and Instagram!Theme Music: FamilyJules
On this episode I discuss the booker of JFL resigning. As well as being selected for the first ABFF Comedy Festival. Plus Katt Williams commenting on Cancel Culture. Im then joined by comedian Johnny Macdonald and we discuss the NBA Playoffs as well as comedy.
TOPICS: Outrage Over Death of Black Man Shot by Ohio Deputy. Casey Christian Goodson Jr. was shot and killed by an Ohio sheriff's deputy on the afternoon of Friday, December 4th. The 23-year-old Black man was allegedly shot three times in the back. Authorities claimed he was waving a gun from his car in Northeast Columbus. The young man was shot as he was returning home from a dentist appointment while carrying a Subway sandwich. Vaccine Rollout Are you taking it? Heroes of the Crisis: A Nine-Year-Old Who's Helping Veterans. Tyler Stallings is inspired by three generations of family members who've served in the armed forces. He makes “hero bags” and “hero boxes” for homeless veterans, featuring toiletries and clothing along with pandemic-related supplies such as hand sanitizer and masks. Tyler, who lives in Halethorpe, Maryland, launched the initiative after watching a video about veterans living on the street. “It all started when I said I wanted to build them houses. Mom said, ‘Well, we can't do that.' ” Tyler's mom, Andrea Blackstone, often drives him to multiple stores, sometimes traveling an hour from home. At the start of summer, he donated two new AC units to Patriot House, a home for veterans getting back on their feet. “I knew the veterans would have a good air conditioner and they wouldn't have to suffer with the heat.” Holiday Feeling. How will your holidays differ during these trying times?
TOPICS: Outrage Over Death of Black Man Shot by Ohio Deputy. Casey Christian Goodson Jr. was shot and killed by an Ohio sheriff's deputy on the afternoon of Friday, December 4th. The 23-year-old Black man was allegedly shot three times in the back. Authorities claimed he was waving a gun from his car in Northeast Columbus. The young man was shot as he was returning home from a dentist appointment while carrying a Subway sandwich. Vaccine Rollout Are you taking it? Heroes of the Crisis: A Nine-Year-Old Who's Helping Veterans. Tyler Stallings is inspired by three generations of family members who've served in the armed forces. He makes “hero bags” and “hero boxes” for homeless veterans, featuring toiletries and clothing along with pandemic-related supplies such as hand sanitizer and masks. Tyler, who lives in Halethorpe, Maryland, launched the initiative after watching a video about veterans living on the street. “It all started when I said I wanted to build them houses. Mom said, ‘Well, we can't do that.' ” Tyler's mom, Andrea Blackstone, often drives him to multiple stores, sometimes traveling an hour from home. At the start of summer, he donated two new AC units to Patriot House, a home for veterans getting back on their feet. “I knew the veterans would have a good air conditioner and they wouldn't have to suffer with the heat.” Holiday Feeling. How will your holidays differ during these trying times?
TOPICS: Outrage Over Death of Black Man Shot by Ohio Deputy. Casey Christian Goodson Jr. was shot and killed by an Ohio sheriff's deputy on the afternoon of Friday, December 4th. The 23-year-old Black man was allegedly shot three times in the back. Authorities claimed he was waving a gun from his car in Northeast Columbus. The young man was shot as he was returning home from a dentist appointment while carrying a Subway sandwich. Vaccine Rollout Are you taking it? Heroes of the Crisis: A Nine-Year-Old Who's Helping Veterans. Tyler Stallings is inspired by three generations of family members who've served in the armed forces. He makes “hero bags” and “hero boxes” for homeless veterans, featuring toiletries and clothing along with pandemic-related supplies such as hand sanitizer and masks. Tyler, who lives in Halethorpe, Maryland, launched the initiative after watching a video about veterans living on the street. “It all started when I said I wanted to build them houses. Mom said, ‘Well, we can't do that.' ” Tyler's mom, Andrea Blackstone, often drives him to multiple stores, sometimes traveling an hour from home. At the start of summer, he donated two new AC units to Patriot House, a home for veterans getting back on their feet. “I knew the veterans would have a good air conditioner and they wouldn't have to suffer with the heat.” Holiday Feeling. How will your holidays differ during these trying times?
TOPICS: Outrage Over Death of Black Man Shot by Ohio Deputy. Casey Christian Goodson Jr. was shot and killed by an Ohio sheriff's deputy on the afternoon of Friday, December 4th. The 23-year-old Black man was allegedly shot three times in the back. Authorities claimed he was waving a gun from his car in Northeast Columbus. The young man was shot as he was returning home from a dentist appointment while carrying a Subway sandwich. Vaccine Rollout Are you taking it? Heroes of the Crisis: A Nine-Year-Old Who's Helping Veterans. Tyler Stallings is inspired by three generations of family members who've served in the armed forces. He makes “hero bags” and “hero boxes” for homeless veterans, featuring toiletries and clothing along with pandemic-related supplies such as hand sanitizer and masks. Tyler, who lives in Halethorpe, Maryland, launched the initiative after watching a video about veterans living on the street. “It all started when I said I wanted to build them houses. Mom said, ‘Well, we can't do that.' ” Tyler's mom, Andrea Blackstone, often drives him to multiple stores, sometimes traveling an hour from home. At the start of summer, he donated two new AC units to Patriot House, a home for veterans getting back on their feet. “I knew the veterans would have a good air conditioner and they wouldn't have to suffer with the heat.” Holiday Feeling. How will your holidays differ during these trying times?
This episode was recorded at the inception of this podcast. I recorded episodes back to back and never got a chance to put this episode out. This week's guest is Comedian Johnny MacDonald. I made him watch the movie "A Thousand Words". This movie isn't particularly a funny movie but it does have heart. It's also a movie that made me change the way I view Eddie's body of work. I judge him based off his performance and not particularly the movie. Also.. In this Episode.. I get to the bottom of the rumor that Johnny is related to Eddie Murphy. Do they both have Aunts named "Bunny"?? Find out in this lost episode.Support the show (https://cash.app/$TheFully)
Episode 135 of The WW Bro Podcast, this week Anthony is talking with friend and comedian Johnny MacDonald. Anthony and Johnny talk everything from comedy, sports, eating vegan, staying healthy in the pandemic, and more!! Join The WW Bro Podcast Group on Facebook at www.facebook.com/wwbropodcast Become a Patreon WW Bro Podcast Member at www.patreon.com/wwbropodcast Instagram: @ComicAnthonyD @WWBroPodcast Please 5 start rate and review us on iTunes!! Disclaimer: This is not an official WW group or podcast!! Thank you, Anthony DiDomenico @ComicAnthonyD www.anthonydlive.com #WW #MyWW #WeightWatchers #ThisIsMyWW #WWBros #WWFamily #Comedian #AnthonyDiDomenico #WeightLossJourney #WWStrong #IAmAWeightWatcher #TeamNoExcuses #PPW #ProvePeopleWrong #WWFreeStyle #WWBroPodcast #GuysOnWeightWatchers #WWGood #WWInstagram #WWInstaFamily #WeAreWW #IAmWW #WellnessWins #WellnessThatWorks #WWForEveryBody #WWLifestyle #WeightWatchersReimagined #OnTrackForEvan
Fariaz's Facebook post hit a nerve with many and drew me in to request a therapy session with actor and comedian Fariaz Rabbani. This session with him helped me understand the emotional trauma of being an undocumented immigrant. It also made me realize how there are people around me that i know that can be in this situation and I might not even realize it. FARIAZ RABBANI writes: Being undocumented - especially while growing up here, is not something I'd wish on my enemy. It's psychological torture. I can't express it in words. It's been a never-ending self quarantine from society. COVID is the closest example I can give. You look out and see all the things you could do, all the ways you're wasting your time on this earth, but you're stuck in a space. But before DACA it was worse - can't travel, constant paranoia about where you are and what could go wrong, because bad luck doesn't mean just going to jail - but possibly having to leave the country and go to a place that you hardly know. All the while life is passing you by with no end in sight. I graduated from college in 2006 (with zero financial aid) and then 2006 ended, 2007 ended, 2008 ended, 2009, ended, 2010 ended, 2011 ended - all these years I couldn't work a job on the books, or a even apply to a job I wanted to do, or drive, or travel - I didn't even have an ID card (I cried the day I got my first ID in the mail). Even getting on a Greyhound was out of the question because there were news reports about ICE checking documents at random stops. In all this I tried to stay positive but eventually I grew angry and bitter. Even my stand up got very angry and not very funny. I would just go on stage and say the most horrible thing I could think of - because I stopped caring. I had no future, no agent, manager would be interested in me, it was my way of self-sabotaging. When I started stand up people would say you're very likable - but by 2011 the common feedback was "you need to be more likable on stage". I just had no outlet for any of the frustration, I was experiencing. I still remember when I read in June 2012 that Obama was signing an executive order creating the DACA program. I think I read it 4-5x just to make sure what I was reading made sense and I wasn't dreaming. It really opened up my life - but like COVID - it was like a phase 3 opening. You can now do a lot of things you couldn't before but you know you're still not living a normal life. I still worry every time I go to an audition when they ask for citizenship status. I know I can't audition for jobs outside the US. I worry if my rep will drop me b/c my opportunities are so limited. The cruelty of keeping so many people in limbo by the government is hard to justify. Due to DACA I am able drive, work, travel in the US - but I can't leave the US, and visit my parents in Bangladesh. Why? I don't know. What does US gain by keeping 700k ppl trapped? Not to mention the cruelty of using this population as political pawns. Let's hope Nov brings about a change, and 2021 is a good year. 263You, Michael Adam Kaplan, Johnny MacDonald and 260 others 45 Comments18 Shares MORE ABOUT FARIAZ HERE: http://fariaz.com/
Who are you gonna vote for- Peter in an Adidas onesie or Alex with a buzzsaw? Only one can survive as they discuss the Running Man with comedian Johnny MacDonald. Who loves you and who do you love? Follow Johnny on Instagram: @heresjohnnymac Follow the podcast on Instagram: @killyoulastpod Follow Alex on Instagram & Twitter: @alexpischera Follow Peter on Instagram & Twitter: @theguarraci (IG) / @guarraci (Twitter)
Johnny Macdonald is a NYC comedian. He attended Hillcrest High School in Jamaica Queens. Follow him at @heresjohnnymac! We talk about Johnny's kid becoming evil, difficulties in trying to work out with a kid or pet around, dealing with racism in your hometown, losing your best friend because of their parents, old dangerous NYC, being told you joke around too much, going to an 80% female school, the non logic of making decisions when you're a kid, Knicks season tickets, graduating with a 65, & joking about other people's mothers while we read from his high school yearbook! Come see both Johnny and I at Governors Levittown this Friday! Follow me @camachbro. Follow the podcast page @imjustakidpodcast. Also please give the pod a 5 star rating and a nice review!
We got a throwback joint for ya! In tribute to the passing of one of the greatest MC's, Sean Price, we are hittin you with our recap of Mic Tyson. Our homey and good friend of the show Johnny MacDonald(IG: @heresjohnnymac) was rockin with us recapping our visit to Sean P's mural as well as all the dopeness this album brought. So buckle in. P!
On this episode of The Mad Hen, your host Christie and Vanessa get to chat with NY Comedian, Johnny MacDonald. We start with some hilarious ice breakers, some questions, and Johnny’s experience of being a comedian in NYC. Although doing something you’re passionate about can have it’s trial and errors, Johnny MacDonald manages to shine such a positive outlook on following ones dreams by never giving up. Be sure to follow Johnny MacDonald on instagram and twitter so you can find out where he will be next! IG: Heresjohnnymac Twitter: Heresjohnnymac Host/Editor/Bookings: Christie Henriquez: (IG: christie_ashley) Host/Recording Engineer: Vanessa Cajucom (IG: @itsmeevee)
YO! We are back at it! And when we come back...we come back officially. We have the Hip-Hop legend Ralph McDaniels(@VideoMusicBox) in the booth to talk about his career, the 35th anniversary of Video Music Box and the impact of music videos on the world of Hip-Hop. It's beyond classic, you should download it and listen twice. So many jewels on this one. Special shout to Johnny MacDonald(@heresjohnnymac) for making all this possible! Salute!
NATIVE NEW YORKER JOHNNY MacDONALD TALKS WITH HOST PAT DIXON ABOUT CRIME, DRIVING A NYC CAB, AND WHAT IT'S LIKE WORKING IN A RESIDENTIAL HOME FOR THE MENTALLY ILL.
Our Christmas show! (Not really) Johnny MacDonald joins us eventually but first Joe completely eviscerates MTV and then we talk about some Brooklyn venue that closed under controversial circumstances. Once again we must guffaw at the term "Comedy Community". When Johnny arrives we talk about comedy club Christmas parties, starting and re-starting comedy, and the world's deadliest roller coasters for some reason.
Jim Search(@jimsearch) and Neil Charles(@NeilCharlesFTW) are rap fans...especially from the 90's. So they have joined forces to bring on guests to unpack some of the classic albums some say the golden era of rap produced. So grab your drink, split your bl
NYC comic Johnny MacDonald talks about 90's rap, UFC, MSG, working with Max Kellermen, driving cab in NYC,comedic influences and ROBOCOP! http://www.facebook.com/johnny.macdonald330 https://twitter.com/heresjohnnymac