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00:32 Birthday Week: It's official. All our kids are now Facebook-legal (13 and up).8:16 Self-Care Stagnation: With all these grown-up, independent kids, we should be doing great at exercising, scheduling medical appointments, and other important tasks. Just guess how that's going!23:35 Speed Round: Paw Patrol: Jeff Goldblum and Bill Murray suggest you bring your pooch along when you see their movie, Isle of Dogs. For the sake of everyone's sanity, we're going to pass. (Mentioned: Selma Blair on Kevin Pollak's Chat Show)31:15 Roundabout Roundup: Apple Music Radio, Jesus Christ Superstar, the Habitica app.42:04 Shameless Self-Promotion: Polls on our Twitter feed, "How to Boost Little Kids' Interest in STEM," and Nicole's Facebook Live chat with Visions and Voices Together.Thanks as always to Jon Morin for our fun in-and-out music. If you're reading this somewhere without hyperlinks, come to http://parentingroundabout.com for the full recap experience.
Support the podcast Recently I was listening to the actor and comedian Dan Van Kirk being interviewed on Kevin Pollak's Chat Show podcast. Dan told the story of his career path, moving from rural Illinois to LA, then to Chicago, and finally back to LA where he ultimately found success. Dan described the choices he made early in his career and why he made them: I have this thing, if it's not true north, get the arrow going that direction as much as you can. Conan O'Brien was on Charlie Rose...and he said "Identify the thing you want to do with your life and go to the place they make that, whether it is crayons or kool aid. It doesn't matter. When you get there, do whatever you can to be around that, whether that is making coffee or taking out the trash." Because he just believed in the proximity to molecules. And if you’re a good person and you work and you can get the arrow in the direction of north as much as possible, it's gonna work out. There is nothing that is going to say you’re going to get to be on stage at the Golden Globes, but you probably won't hate your life either." I love the idea that if there isn't an obvious path to your goal, find the path to the place that is closest to your goal and follow it. The problem is that taking action in the direction of something that isn't our goal and isn't certain can be scary. This week I have a tap-along to help you to take action in the direction of your goal, even when you aren't sure it is the right step. You can find the full tapping script below the audio player. Apple | Android | Spotify
Welcome to the last of the four special episodes recorded in the Podcast Lab during the 6th annual Los Angeles Podcast Festival at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles, CA, October 6-8, 2017. As was the case in 2015 and 2016, I had an amazing time at the festival and am extremely grateful to Graham Elwood, Chris Mancini, Dave Anthony and the whole LA PodFest crew, for all the time and effort they put into creating this annual highlight of the podcasting year. I'll continue to hold out hope for a 2018 festival, so I can again enjoy a weekend of collaboration to bring you these fun special episodes. I spent the weekend recording in the Podcast Lab with fellow podcasters and special guests. I asked new friends to tell me about one film that influenced them to be who they are, and had old friends sit down to catch-up with me. In this episode, you'll hear from: Darcy Staniforth, LA PodFest volunteer, writer for Cinema Sentries, and voice actor on Puppet Hunt podcast. Hear her influential films on episode 68 of Movies Made Me. Chris Mancini, comedian, co-founder of the Los Angeles Podcast Festival, co-host of Comedy Film Nerds podcast, and Conversations from the Abyss podcast . Levi Burns, host of Real Life With Levi podcast. Tarik Naylor, podcast fan, aspiring comedian, and host of Randomly Relevant podcast. Joe Meyers, co-host of Podcast Macabre. Samm Levine, comedian, actor, star of Crunch Time (available on iTunes), and co-host of Kevin Pollak's Chat Show. Ali Handal, recording artist, and author of Guitar for Girls. Martin, host of Frightfully Uninformed podcast. Finally, we teamed with Brendan Creecy of Radio Brendoman podcast to bring you an end-of-festival conversation with Todd Glass, comedian, and host of The Todd Glass Show podcast. Be sure to check out all the terrific podcasts and projects mentioned in this episode! What do you think of the films chosen by my guests in the Podcast Lab? Visit the Contact Us page to send me your thoughts. Or you can send me a message directly by emailing moviesmademepod@gmail.com. I'd love to hear from you! Love Movies Made Me? Please help spread the word about the show! I count on my most avid listeners to help reach new fans. Just click one of the images below to reach the show page on the social media or listening service of your choice, then share the page with your friends. It'll just take a moment and you'll be making a big difference for me! Be sure you follow the show on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for all the latest Movies Made Me information, DVR alerts, and unique content. Whether you subscribe to the show on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, or iHeartRadio, your ratings and reviews matter! Provide a rating and your comments about the show on any of those services and I'll be sure to give you a shout-out on an upcoming episode! Mark your calendar to download all the upcoming Movies Made Me episodes to enjoy! Here's a schedule of a few upcoming shows: January 22 - Episode 76 featuring film composer/violinist Emer Kinsella. February 5 - Episode 77 featuring Micah Gallo, director/writer of the upcoming creature feature Itsy Bitsy.
Welcome to episode 354 of Hit the Mic with the Stacey Harris. Hello. We are going to talk podcasting today because I'm guessing that if you listen to this podcast, you probably enjoy podcasts. You might think to yourself, "Should I have a podcast?" The answer is maybe, all right? However, the answer is definitely no if you don't do the things first, we are going to talk about. Some of these are lessons learned through doing it the wrong way. Some of these are lessons learned through doing it the right way, but all of them are lessons. They're lessons that I hope that you can learn earlier than I learned them, all right? Let's jump right in. I want to keep this brief because again, I want to keep this actionable. If you do not know yet, FYI, there is a free Launch Your Podcast training at thestaceyharris.com/launchyourpodcast that takes some of the stuff we're going to talk about today and amplifies it. Even better, you want to go all the way in, there is a full-on five-module podcast program inside of Hit The Mic Backstage, as well as some podcasting trainings on growing your audience, et cetera, et cetera, so hitthemicbackstage.com to get those. If you're not sure, you're still feeling this out, stick with me, and let's talk about some things. Number one thing that I think everyone should do and something that I didn't do nearly early enough in my own podcast was build a plan to repurpose, meaning audio is great. Podcasting is amazing. We all hear the stats of how podcasting is the only way to go, but here's the deal. It might not be for you. For me, it definitely isn't. In fact, a lot of people who consume this show don't listen to it. They actually read the transcript that goes up on the show notes page every week. I have a lot, a lot of people who consume the content that way. They don't actually listen to the show. They read it, and that's cool. How ever you best receive the value, as long as you take action on it, I don't care. On the flip side, some people prefer to produce video even though they want to have an audio podcast. Great. Record videos. Rip the audio. Make them a podcast. Get the whole thing transcribed, and do a blog post. Now you've taken one piece of content you've created, and it's consumable in three ways. We've talked a lot about doing this with Facebook lives. You can do it that way. You can do it prerecorded so you can still batch. Either one is fine. Some combination of the two is okay, but when you're building your podcast plan, when you're thinking about launching your show, I want you to take a beat and think about the repurposing of it. Think about how you can evolve it into being multiple things. Another example with this show and you may have heard me talk about this in the past, but you may not have, in addition to the podcast being transcribed and it being in full transcript on the show notes of my own website, this gets edited into guest posts. Every Wednesday, a version of this podcast, an abbreviated version of this podcast goes live on LinkedIn. Also, those get submitted to sites like YFS Magazine and Huffington Post and places like that where I can regularly supply additional value. Now, as I was saying, it's one of the words you've heard me say a couple of times is plan. The next thing I want to talk about is really building a plan. This is something we talk a lot about in the Launch Your Podcast free training, so if you hear me say build a plan, and you're freaking out, be sure you check out that free training because we actually walk through it over the course of four days, so that you can really actually figure out how to build your plan and actually do it. When I talk about planning, the first step is always knowing who your audience is, because real talk, all of the other information comes from that piece of information. If you want to know how frequently you should be sending out new episodes, how long your episodes should be, if you should have guests, all of that comes from knowing who's listening. A really good real-life experience for me with that was when I first launched this show in 2012. Oh my gosh. In 2012, I had no freaking idea who was really listening. I really didn't. I had an idea of who my ideal client was, certainly not in the same specific way I do now, so this is one of those lessons I learned the hard way. I just made it up. I just made a choice, and we did 30 to 60-minute episodes twice a week, so people could, I don't know, listen to them from me, listen to me ramble for a really long time, I guess. I don't know. As the clarity around who my ideal client was and who my ideal listener was and how I wanted to connect and serve and my goals for what they did with this content became more clear and in all honesty evolved a little bit, I realized that I really prefer to air on the side of brevity. I preferred to keep these short and actionable because that's what my ideal listener prefers. Now, there might be some of you who wish I went live or I put out more episodes. Now, we only have one episode a week now. We used to have two episodes a week up until this year, actually. That's why there's so many past episodes I'm guaranteeing. I can't think of anyone who has every told me they listen to all 300 and, well now, 54 episodes of this show. If you have, send me a note. I will send you a price because I'm genuinely curious of just anyone who has listened to every single episode of the show. There's a ton of past content now, so if you need more me, listen to that. Check out the YouTube channel. All of those things. There's just lots of different ways I'm getting value. Again, it came down to knowing who my listeners were and knowing what I wanted them to do and how I wanted them to consume that. Not just this value but all of the value in my business. Be really clear on that because that will help you all the other questions. The other reason I told that story is you'll notice that it's not the same now. Like I mentioned, we used to do two episodes a week. One with a guest, one just me. They were somewhere between 30 minutes and an hour long. I don't think we ever had any that were longer than an hour. We may have had a couple that were. We may have had a couple that were like an hour and five minutes that were interviews, but I can't think of any stand-alone episodes I did where it was any longer than 45 minutes. That's just really long. That's like three of today's episodes. That's a lot. Again, it was twice a week. Now, we very, very, very, very rarely have guests. We go live or we put out new episodes just once a week. They're usually again just me because we don't have guests. They usually are somewhere between 10 and 20, usually somewhere between 10 and 15 minutes long, because again, I want this to be consumable. I want this to be actionable. The other thing I have learned about my podcast listeners, this is not the only show you listen to, and so I want you to have time to listen to all the shows you want to be listening to each and every week so that you can keep up, all right? All right, so build a plan to repurpose. Number two, just build a plan. The last thing I want to talk about is feeding off number two. You need to know why you want a podcast. Now, on a completely appropriate answer to this question is I want to entertain people. My favorite podcast in the world is actually not a business podcast. It's actually one of the few podcasts I listen to that isn't a business podcast. It's called The West Wing Weekly. It's fantastic. The other favorite podcast of mine is the Kevin Pollak's Chat Show. I'm a big fan of storytelling. I'm a big fan of the West Wing, and so those two are my go-to's. They have a much different format than this show does because the goals of those shows are different than the goal of my show. Me setting up something like a West Wing Weekly or a Kevin Pollak's Chat Show is completely not in line with the why I podcast. Why I podcast is to, and I've said these words several times now, we could turn it into a drinking game, for you guys to consume this and then take action on it. I don't want consumption for consumption's sake. If you are going to listen to this and then literally do nothing with it ever, just stop listening. Seriously, because my goal for you is for you to see movement, for you to see change, for you to grow and evolve and progress and get more comfortable with content marketing and e-mail marketing and social media marketing. All the different pieces that are digital marketing. I want you to make changes. That means you have to take action. That means I need to set you up for success by making this really actionable, really easy to follow, giving you very logical next steps and giving you all the tools I can to get you to take that action, to get you to implement, all right? That's my why. Again, that's very different from a West Wing Weekly or a Kevin Pollak's Chat Show or even some of the other business podcasts I listen to. Know what your why is. Know the purpose for you in building this show. Now, on the flip side of that, my other why, of course, is this is a piece of my marketing. This is a preview of the kind of content and feel and vibe you get from working with me, especially for those of you who are interested in Hit the Mic backstage. That is the next logical step, the next upgrade to this show. It's the VIP version of this show. Obviously, that's a factor as well. Again, even the existence of Hit the Mic Backstage feeds into my overall why which is to get people to take action. That's why the trainings in there are also really easy to implement, really easy to take action on and really clear. You notice I don't have a lot of fluff. I don't try to make things particularly complicated. In fact, I try to make them as simple as internet marketing will allow me to make them, because social media networks like to have a certain amount of in-built difficulty. I don't know. For funsies, I guess. I try to make things as simple and as clear as I can, so again, people are taking that action. They're seeing those results. Even my marketing funnel kind of why feeds back to that general core why, which succinctly as I can make it, I want people to stop telling me their dumb. It really is. I do not want to hear anyone every tell me again that they are dumb when it comes to this stuff, because you're not dumb. You just don't know this stuff yet. We can fix that. I cannot fix dumb. I can fix you not knowing something, all right? That's it. Powered through. Now, go take action since I just went on a total soapbox moment about you guys taking action when listening to this show. Next logical step, check out thestaceyharris.com/launchyourpodcast. If you're on the show notes page, there's a link to it here. Here you go. Go check that out. It's totally free, four-day training. In addition to that four days, spoiler alert, in the very first e-mail I send you after you sign up, there is a ... I think it's 60 minutes. It might be half an hour. There's a full-on webinar master class version of the four-day training, so you can get it all now. Then, work through it with me over the course of the four days. If you have questions, facebook.com/TheStaceyHarris, twitter.com/thestaceyharris. Let me know there. I'm happy to answer them. If you really want to jump in, you really want to take action, you really want the VIP experience to this very show, Hit The Mic Backstage is the place to go. Check it out. We have a brand new training launch this month all about prepping your business for a time off, whether that time off was totally intended or not and, and, and, and we've got ask me anything coming up, so be sure you don't miss out on that. I will see you backstage. Bye.
Welcome to the final of our three special episodes recorded in the Podcast Lab during the 5th annual Los Angeles Podcast Festival at the Sofitel hotel in Beverly Hills, CA, Sept. 23-25, 2016. We're already looking forward to next year's festival and invite you to join us! Keep an eye on the L.A. Podcast Festival website for more information and make your plans to be there! It's an amazing and extremely entertaining weekend for podcasters and fans, alike. Our continued thanks to Graham Elwood, Chris Mancini and Dave Anthony for creating and producing this annual highlight. We spent the weekend recording segments with our fellow podcasters and special guests, who we asked to tell us about one film that influenced them to be who they are. In this episode, you'll hear from: Perla X. Caballero-Hoblit, dedicated Movies Made Me listener and future podcaster Marc Hershon, host of Succotash: The Comedy Soundcast Soundcast Samm Levine, actor and star of Freaks and Geeks and Inglorious Basterds and co-host/producer of Kevin Pollak's Chat Show podcast Alice Fraser, comedian and host of Tea With Alice podcast Wayne Federman, comedian, actor, creator of the Wayne Federman International Film Festival, and host of Human Conversation podcast Matt Rehm, creator of PodXRef: better podcast search and discovery. Todd Glass, comedian and host of The Todd Glass Show podcast Dave Anthony, founder of the Los Angeles Podcast Festival, comedian, actor, co-host of The Dollop podcast, and author of the upcoming book The United States of Absurdity: Untold Stories from American History Be sure to check out all the terrific podcasts and projects mentioned in this episode! Join us again January 9 for episode 49 with PJ Haarsma, author of The SoftwireSeries, Rings of Orbis books and Executive Producer of Con Man starring Alan Tudyk and Nathan Fillion on Comic-Con HQ (season 2 now available!). Be sure to check out the Spectrum comic book and Con Man: The Game! Also, be sure to join us January 23 for episode 50 with Hal Lublin, voice-over actor currently appearing in The Mighty Magiswords on Cartoon Network, Thrilling Adventure Hour podcast and Welcome to Nightvale podcast, and co-host of We Got This With Mark and Hal podcast and Tights and Fights podcast. What do you think of the films chosen by our guests in this episode? Visit our Contact Us page to send us your thoughts. Or you can send us a message directly by emailing moviesmademepod@gmail.com. We'd love to hear from you! Be sure you follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for all the latest Movies Made Me information, DVR alerts, and unique content. Whether you subscribe to the show on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, or iHeartRadio, your ratings and reviews matter! Provide us a rating and your comments about the show on any of those services and we'll be sure to give you a shout-out on an upcoming episode!
Welcome to the second of three special episodes recorded at the 5th annual Los Angeles Podcast Festival, which took place at the Sofitel hotel in Beverly Hills, CA, Sept. 23-25, 2016. After last year's festival, we didn't dare dream our second visit could match the excitement and amazingly good time we'd had. But, it did! Whether you are a podcaster or a podcast fan, we urge you to make your plans now for next year's L.A. Podcast Festival. We guarantee we'll be there! In the boisterous Podcast Lab, we recorded segments with our fellow podcasters and special guests throughout the weekend. Each guest was asked to tell us about one film that influenced them to be who they are. In this episode, you'll hear from: Matt Slayer, co-host of the 288 Podcast Lance Voellger, host of Terrifically Tough Tuesday Trivia Priya Wellington, Sparemin.com Jud Wellington, Sparemin.com Oliver Wellington, Sparemin.com Janet Varney, star of Stan Against Evil on IFC and host of The JV Club podcast Brock Powell, co-host of Unpop Podcast, voiceover artist, and past Movies Made Me guest Mike Blejer, comedian and star of Haze Chris Mancini, one of the founders of the Los Angeles Podcast Festival, comedian, co-host of Comedy Film Nerds podcast, and writer/star of Ear Buds: The Podcasting Documentary Darcy Staniforth, Writer for Cinema Sentries Murray Valeriano, Comedian and host of the Road Stories podcast Be sure to check out all the terrific podcasts and projects mentioned in this episode! Join us again December 26 for episode 48, our third and final episode from this year's Los Angeles Podcast Festival, featuring Samm Levine (co-host of Kevin Pollak's Chat Show and star of Freaks & Geeks), Wayne Federman (comedian, actor, and host of Human Conversation podcast), Todd Glass (comedian and host of The Todd Glass Show), and Dave Anthony (co-founder of the Los Angeles Podcast Festival, comedian, actor, and host of The Dollop podcast). Also join us January 9 for episode 49 with PJ Haarsma, author of The SoftwireSeries, Rings of Orbis books and Executive Producer of Con Man starring Alan Tudyk and Nathan Fillion on Comic Con HQ (season 2 now available!). Be sure to check out the Spectrum comic book and Con Man: The Game! What do you think of the films chosen by our guests in this episode? Visit our Contact Us page to send us your thoughts. Or you can send us a message directly by emailing moviesmademepod@gmail.com. We'd love to hear from you! Be sure you follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for all the latest Movies Made Me information, DVR alerts, and unique content. Whether you subscribe to the show on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, or iHeartRadio, your ratings and reviews matter! Provide us a rating and your comments about the show on any of those services and we'll be sure to give you a shout-out on an upcoming episode!
What could cause a 10 day traffic jam? Just what the hell is in Worcestershire sauce anyway? What kind of cards are best for slicing watermelons? Samm Levine (Freaks and Geeks, Kevin Pollak's Chat Show, Inglorious Basterds) joins the guys in the studio to find all these answers and more.
Actor Samm Levine and I talk about acting, how he got his break in show business and what kind of movies we like. Before the interview, I talk about my upcoming kickstarter project and how it expands on my fun theory. I also give my opinion on why I think figuring out what “fun” is, is such an important endeavor.Check out Samm on the Kevin Pollak Chat Show! : Kevin Pollak's Chat Show!
Jon Hamm, Paul Rudd, Paul Scheer, and the Sklar Brothers are among the guests who have appeared on Kevin Pollak's Chat Show. In this episode of highlights, we hear some of the show's most memorable guests and moments. Check out the video version of this episode at YouTube.com/Earwolf . Kevin Pollak's Chat Show joins Earwolf this Thursday, March 14 with guest Mark Duplass. New episodes will be released every other Thursday.
Cole, Vanessa, and our favorite Usual Suspect Kevin Pollak ("Casino," "A Few Good Men," and "Kevin Pollak's Chat Show") talk Game of Thrones, Ryan Dunn vs. Roger Ebert, Doug Hutchison's craddle robbing, poker, meeting William Shatner, an Oscar party with Lemmon & Matthau, Hugh Hefner, keys to doing impressions, chunky Prefontaine, the Million Dollar Mystery [...]
Kevin Pollak has carved himself a very successful career as a top-notch character actor in comedies and dramas: The Usual Suspects, A Few Good Men, The Whole Nine Yards, Hostage, Grumpy Old Men, Casino, L.A. Story, and Willow, to name a few. He's also a longtime stand-up comic, and one of the best impressionists on the planet. Recently, Kevin has become somewhat of a New Media trailblazer, starting Kevin Pollak's Chat Show, a great weekly online talk show with in-depth interviews and silly bits. After some scheduling conflicts prevented an in-person interview in Los Angeles, Paul Little spoke with Kevin over the phone this week about the start of his career, his impressions (listen for a new one he's been working on), his latest movie role, and of course, Kevin Pollak's Chat Show.