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Reformed Brotherhood | Sound Doctrine, Systematic Theology, and Brotherly Love
Rejoicing in Being Found: The Divine Delight in Redemption

Reformed Brotherhood | Sound Doctrine, Systematic Theology, and Brotherly Love

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 59:34


In this theologically rich episode of The Reformed Brotherhood, Jesse and Tony delve into the Parable of the Lost Coin from Luke 15:8-10. They explore how this parable reveals God's passionate pursuit of His elect and the divine joy that erupts when they are found. Building on their previous discussion of the Lost Sheep, the brothers examine how Jesus uses this second parable to further emphasize God's sovereign grace in salvation. The conversation highlights the theological implications of God's ownership of His people even before their redemption, the diligent efforts He undertakes to find them, and the heavenly celebration that follows. This episode offers profound insights into God's relentless love and the true nature of divine joy in redemption. Key Takeaways The Parable of the Lost Coin emphasizes that God actively and diligently searches for those who belong to Him, sparing no effort to recover what is rightfully His. Jesus uses three sequential parables in Luke 15 to progressively reveal different aspects of God's heart toward sinners, with escalating emphasis on divine joy. The coin represents something of significant value that already belonged to the woman, illustrating that God's elect belong to Him even before their redemption. Unlike finding something new, the joy depicted is specifically about recovering something that was already yours but had been lost, highlighting God's eternal claim on His people. The spiritual inability of the sinner is represented by the coin's passivity - it cannot find its own way back and must be sought out by its owner. Angels rejoice over salvation not independently but because they share in God's delight at the effectiveness of His saving power. The parable challenges believers to recover their joy in salvation and to share it with others, much like the woman who called her neighbors to celebrate with her. Expanded Insights God's Determined Pursuit of What Already Belongs to Him The Parable of the Lost Coin reveals a profound theological truth about God's relationship to His elect. As Tony and Jesse discuss, this isn't a story about finding something new, but recovering something that already belongs to the owner. The woman in the parable doesn't rejoice because she discovered unexpected treasure; she rejoices because she recovered what was already hers. This illustrates the Reformed understanding that God's people have eternally belonged to Him. While justification occurs in time, there's a real sense in which God has been considering us as His people in eternity past. The parable therefore supports the doctrines of election and particular redemption - God is not creating conditions people can move into or out of, but is zealously reclaiming a specific people who are already His in His eternal decree. The searching, sweeping, and diligent pursuit represent not a general call, but an effectual calling that accomplishes its purpose. The Divine Joy in Recovering Sinners One of the most striking aspects of this parable is the overwhelming joy that accompanies finding the lost coin. The brothers highlight that this joy isn't reluctant or begrudging, but enthusiastic and overflowing. The woman calls her friends and neighbors to celebrate with her - a seemingly excessive response to finding a coin, unless we understand the theological significance. This reveals that God takes genuine delight in the redemption of sinners, to the extent that Jesus describes it as causing joy "in the presence of the angels of God." As Jesse and Tony note, this challenges our perception that God might save us begrudgingly. Instead, the parable teaches us that God's "alien work" is wrath, while His delight is in mercy. This should profoundly impact how believers view their own salvation and should inspire a contagious joy that spreads to others - a joy that many Christians, by Tony's own admission, need to recover in their daily walk. Memorable Quotes "Christ love is an act of love and it's always being acted upon the sinner, the one who has to be redeemed, his child whom he goes after. So in the same way, we have Christ showing the self-denying love." - Jesse Schwamb "The coin doesn't seek the woman. The woman seeks the coin. And in this way, I think we see God's act of searching grace... The reason why I think it leads to joy, why God is so pleased, is because God has this real pleasure to pluck sinners as brands from the burning fire." - Jesse Schwamb "These parables are calling us to rejoice, right? Christ is using these parables to shame the Pharisees and the scribes who refuse to rejoice over the salvation of sinners. How often do we not rejoice over our own salvation sufficiently?" - Tony Arsenal Full Transcript [00:00:08] Jesse Schwamb: There still is like the sovereign grace of God who's initiating the salvation and there is a kind of effect of calling that God doesn't merely invite, he finds, he goes after he affects the very thing. Yeah, and I think we're seeing that here. The sinner, spiritual inability. There's an utter passivity until found. The coin doesn't seek the woman. The woman seeks the coin. And in this way, I think we see God's act of searching grace. It's all there for us. And the reason why I think it leads to joy, why God is so pleased is because God has this real pleasure. To pluck sinners as brands from the burning fire. Welcome to episode 472 of The Reformed Brotherhood. I'm Jesse. [00:00:57] Tony Arsenal: And I'm Tony. And this is the podcast with ears to hear. Hey brother. [00:01:01] Jesse Schwamb: Hey brother. [00:01:02] Jesus and the Parable of the Lost Coin [00:01:02] Jesse Schwamb: So there was this time, maybe actually more than one time, but at least this one time that we've been looking at where Jesus is hanging out and the religious incumbents, the Pharisees, they come to him and they say, you are a friend of sinners, and. Instead of taking offense to this, Jesus turns this all around. Uses this as a label, appropriates it for himself and his glorious character. And we know this because he gives us this thrice repeated sense of what it means to see his heart, his volition, his passion, his love, his going after his people, and he does it. Three little parables and we looked at one last time and we're coming up to round two of the same and similar, but also different and interesting. And so today we're looking at the parable of the lost coin or the Lost dma, or I suppose, whatever kind of currency you wanna insert in there. But once again, something's lost and we're gonna see how our savior comes to find it by way of explaining it. In metaphor. So there's more things that are lost and more things to be found on this episode. That's how we do it. It's true. It's true. So that's how Jesus does it. So [00:02:12] Tony Arsenal: yeah. So it should be how we do it. [00:02:14] Jesse Schwamb: Yes. Yeah, exactly. I cut to like Montel Jordan now is the only thing going through my head. Tell Jordan. Yeah. Isn't he the one that's like, this is how we do it, that song, this is [00:02:28] Tony Arsenal: how we do it. I, I don't know who sings it. Apparently it's me right now. That was actually really good. That was fantastic. [00:02:36] Jesse Schwamb: Hopefully never auto tuned. Not even once. I'm sure that'll make an appearance now and the rest, somebody [00:02:42] Tony Arsenal: should take that and auto tune it for me. [00:02:44] Jesse Schwamb: That would be fantastic. Listen, it doesn't need it. That was perfect. That was right off the cuff, right off the top. It was beautiful. It was ous. [00:02:50] Tony Arsenal: Yes. Yes. [00:02:51] Affirmations and Denials [00:02:51] Jesse Schwamb: I'm hoping that appearance, [00:02:53] Tony Arsenal: before we jump into our, our favorite segment here in affirmations of Denials, I just wanted to take a second to, uh, thank all of our listeners. Uh, we have the best listeners in the world. That's true, and we've also got a really great place to get together and chat about things. That's also true. Uh, we have a little telegram chat, which is just a little chat, um, program that run on your phone or in a browser. Really any device you have, you can go to t Me slash Reform Brotherhood and join that, uh, little chat group. And there's lots of stuff going on there. We don't need to get into all the details, but it's a friendly little place. Lots of good people, lots of good conversation. And just lots of good digital fellowship, if that's even a thing. I think it is. So please do join us there. It's a great place to discuss, uh, the episodes or what you're learning or what you'd like to learn. There's all sorts of, uh, little nooks and crannies and things to do in there. [00:03:43] Jesse Schwamb: So if you're looking for a little df and you know that you are coming out, we won't get into details, but you definitely should. Take Tony's advice, please. You, you will not be disappointed. It, it's a fun, fun time together. True. Just like you're about to have with us chatting it up and going through a little affirmations and denials. So, as usual, Tony, what are you, are you affirming with something or are you denying again, something? I'm, I'm on the edge of my seat. I'm ready. [00:04:06] Tony Arsenal: Okay. Uh, it is, I thought that was going somewhere else. Uh, I'm, I'm affirming something. [00:04:13] AI and Problem Solving [00:04:13] Tony Arsenal: People are gonna get so sick of me doing like AI affirmations, but I, it's like I learned a new thing to do with AI every couple of weeks. I ran across an article the other day, uh, that I don't remember where the article was. I didn't save it, but I did read it. And one of the things that pointed out is that a lot of times you're not getting the most out of AI because you don't really know how to ask the questions. True. One of the things it was was getting through is a lot of people will ask, they'll have a problem that they're encountering and they'll just ask AI like, how do I fix this problem? And a lot of times what that yields is like very superficial, basic, uh, generic advice or generic kind of, uh, directions for resolving a problem. And the, I don't remember the exact phrasing, 'cause it was a little while ago since I read it, but it basically said something like, I'm encountering X problem. And despite all efforts to the contrary, I have not been able to resolve it. And by using sort of these extra phrases. What it does is it sort of like pushes the AI to ask you questions about what you've already tried to do, and so it's gonna tailor its advice or its directions to your specific situation a little bit more. So, for example, I was doing this today. We, um, we just had the time change, right? Stupidest thing in the world doesn't make any sense and my kids don't understand that the time has changed and we're now like three or four weeks past the, the time change and their, their schedule still have not adjusted. So my son Augie, who is uh, like three and three quarters, uh, I don't know how many months it is. When do you stop? I don't even know. When you stop counting in months. He's three and a quarter, three quarters. And he will regularly wake up between four 30 and five 30. And when we really, what we really want is for him to be sleeping, uh, from uh, until like six or six 30 at the latest. So he's like a full hour, sometimes two hours ahead of time, which then he wakes up, it's a small house. He's noisy 'cause he's a three and a half year old. So he wakes up the baby. The baby wakes up. My wife, and then we're all awake and then we're cranky and it's miserable. So I, I put that little prompt into, um, into Google Gemini, which is right now is my, um, AI of choice, but works very similar. If you use something like chat, GPT or CLO or whatever, you know, grok, whatever AI tool you have access to, put that little prompt in. You know, something like since the time change, my son has been waking up at four 30 in the morning, despite all efforts to the contrary, I have not been able to, uh, adjust his schedule. And so it started asking me questions like, how much light is in the room? What time does he go to bed? How much does he nap? And it, so it's, it's pulling from the internet. This is why I like Google Geminis. It's actually pulling from the internet to identify like common, common. Related issues. And so it starts to probe and ask questions. And by the time it was done, what it came out with was like a step-by-step two week plan. Basically like, do this tonight, do this tomorrow morning. Um, and it was able to identify what it believes is the problem. We'll see if it actually is, but the beauty now is now that I've got a plan that I've got in this ai, I can start, you know, tomorrow morning I'm gonna try to do what it said and I can tell. The ai, how things went, and it can now adjust the plan based on whether or not, you know, this worked or didn't work. So it's a good way to sort of, um, push an ai, uh, chat bot to probe your situation a little bit more. So you could do this really for anything, right. You could do something like I'm having, I'm having trouble losing weight despite all efforts to the contrary. Um, can you help me identify what the, you know, root problem is? So think about different ways that you can use this. It's a pretty cool way to sort of like, push the, the AI to get a little deeper into the specifics without like a lot of extra heavy lifting. I'm sure there's probably other ways you could drive it to do this, but this was just one clever way that I, that this article pointed out to accomplish this. [00:08:07] Jesse Schwamb: It's a great exercise to have AI optimize itself. Yeah. By you turning your prompts around and asking it to ask you a number of questions, sufficient number, until it can provide an optimize answer for you. So lots, almost every bot has some kind of, you can have it analyze your prompts essentially, but some like copilot actually have a prompt agent, which will help you construct the prompt in an optimal way. Yeah, and that again, is kind of question and answer. So I'm with you. I will often turn it around and say. Here's my goal. Ask me sufficient number of questions so that you can provide the right insight to accomplish said goal. Or like you're saying, if you can create this like, massive conversation that keeps all this history. So I, I've heard of people using this for their exercise or running plans. Famously, somebody a, a, um, journalist, the Wall Street Journal, use it, train for a marathon. You can almost have it do anything for you. Of course, you want to test all of that and interact with it reasonably and ably, right? At the same time, what it does best is respond to like natural language interaction. And so by turning it around and basically saying, help me help you do the best job possible, providing the information, it's like the weirdest way of querying stuff because we're so used to providing explicit direction ourselves, right? So to turn it around, it's kind of a new experience, but it's super fun, really interesting, really effective. [00:09:22] Tony Arsenal: And it because you are allowing, in a certain sense, you're sort of asking the AI to drive the conversation. This, this particular prompt, I know the article I read went into details about why this prompt is powerful and the reason this prompt is powerful is not because of anything the AI's doing necessarily, right. It's because you're basically telling the AI. To find what you've missed. And so it's asking you questions. Like if I was to sit down and go like, all right, what are all the things that's wrong, that's causing my son to be awake? Like obviously I didn't figure it out on my own, so it's asking me what I've already tried and what it found out. And then of course when it tells me what it is, it's like the most obvious thing when it figures out what it is. It's identifying something that I already haven't identified because I've told it. I've already tried everything I can think of, and so it's prompting me to try to figure out what it is that I haven't thought of. So those are, like I said, there's lots of ways to sort of get the ais to do that exercise. Um, it's not, it's not just about prompt engineering, although that there's a lot of science now and a lot of like. Specifics on how you do prompt engineering, um, you know, like building a persona for the ai. Like there's all sorts of things you can do and you can add that, like, I could have said something like, um. Uh, you are a pediatric sleep expert, right? And when you tell it that what it's gonna do is it's gonna start to use more technical language, it's gonna, it's gonna speak to you back as though it's a, and this, this is where AI can get a little bit dangerous and really downright scary in some instances. But with that particular prompt, it's gonna start to speak back to you as though it was a clinician of some sort, diagnosing a medical situation, which again. That is definitely not something I would ever endorse. Like, don't let an AI be your doctor. That's just not, like WebMD was already scary enough when you were just telling you what your symptoms were and it was just cross checking it. Um, but you could do something like, and I use these kinds of prompts for our show notes where I'm like, you're an expert at SEO, like at um, podcast show notes. Utilizing SEO search terms, like that's part of the prompt that I use when I use, um, in, in this case, I use notion to generate most of our show notes. Um, it, it starts to change the way that it looks at things and the way that it, I, it responds to you based on different prompts. So I think it, it's a little bit scary, uh, AI. Can be a strange, strange place. And there's some, they're doing some research that is a little bit frightening. They did a study and actually, like, they, they basically like unlocked an AI and gave it access to a pretend company with emails and stuff and said that a particular employee was gonna shut out, was gonna delete the ai. And the first thing it did was try to like blackmail the employee with like a risk, like a scandalous email. It had. Then after that they, they engineered a scenario where the AI actually had the ability to kill the employee. And despite like explicit instructions not to do anything illegal, it still tried to kill the employee. So there's some scary things that are coming up if we're not, you know, if, if the science is not able to get that under control. But right now it's just a lot of fun. Like it's, we're, we're probably not at the point where it's dangerous yet and hopefully. Hopefully it won't get to that point, but we'll see. We'll see. That got dark real fast, fast, fast. Jesse, you gotta get this. And that was an affirmation. I guess I'm affirming killer murder ais that are gonna kill us all, but uh, we're gonna have fun with it until they do at least. [00:12:52] Jesse Schwamb: Thanks for not making that deny against. 'cause I can only imagine the direction that one to taken. [00:12:57] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. At least when the AI hears this, it's gonna know that I'm on its side, so, oh, for sure. I, for one, welcome our new AI overlords. So as do Iye. [00:13:05] Christmas Hymns and Music Recommendations [00:13:05] Tony Arsenal: But Jesse, what are you affirming or denying today to get me out of this pit here? [00:13:09] Jesse Schwamb: So, lemme start with a question. Do you have a favorite Christmas hymn? And if so, what is it? [00:13:16] Tony Arsenal: Ooh, that's a tough one. Um, I think I've always been really partial to Oh, holy Night. But, uh, there's, there's not anything that really jumps to mind my, as I've become older and crankier and more Scottish in spirit, I just, Christmas hymns just aren't as. If they're not as prominent in my mind, but oh, holy night or come coming, Emanuel is probably a really good one too. [00:13:38] Jesse Schwamb: Wow. Those are the, those are like the top in the top three for me. Yeah. So I think [00:13:42] Tony Arsenal: I know where you're going based on the question. [00:13:44] Jesse Schwamb: Yeah, we're very much the same. So, well maybe, so I am affirming with, but it's that time of year and people you, you know and love and maybe yourself, you're gonna listen to Christian music and. That's okay. I put no shade on that, especially because we're talking about the incarnation, celebrate the incarnation. But of course, I think the best version of that is some of these really lovely hymns because they could be sung and worshiped through all year round. We just choose them because they fit in with the calendar particularly well here, and sometimes they're included, their lyrics included in Hallmark cards and, and your local. Cool. Coles. So while that's happening, why not embrace it? But here's my information is why not go with some different versions. I love the hymn as you just said. Oh, come will come Emmanuel. And so I'm gonna give people three versions of it to listen to Now to make my list of this kind of repertoire. The song's gotta maintain that traditional melody. I think to a strong degree, it's gotta be rich and deep and dark, especially Ko Emmanuel. But it's gotta have something in it that's a little bit nuanced. Different creative arrangements, musicality. So let me give two brand new ones that you may not have heard versions and one old one. So the old one is by, these are all Ko Emanuel. So if at some point during this you're like, what song is he talking about? It's Ko. Emmanuel. It's just three times. Th we're keeping it th Rice tonight. So the first is by band called for today. That's gonna be a, a little bit harder if you want something that, uh, gets you kind of pumped up in the midst of this redemption. That's gonna be the version. And then there are two brand new ones. One is by skillet, which is just been making music forever, but the piano melody they bring into this and they do a little something nuanced with the chorus that doesn't pull away too much. From the original, but just gives it a little extra like Tastiness. Yeah. Skill. Great version. And then another one that just came out yesterday. My yesterday, not your yesterday. So actually it doesn't even matter at this point. It's already out is by descriptor. And this would be like the most chill version that is a hardcore band by, I would say tradition, but in this case, their version is very chill. All of them I find are just deeply worshipful. Yeah. And these, the music is very full of impact, but of course the lyrics are glorious. I really love this, this crying out to God for the Savior. This. You know, just, it's really the, the plea that we should have now, which is, you know, maranatha like Lord Jesus, come. And so in some ways we're, we're celebrating that initial plea and cry for redemption as it has been applied onto us by the Holy Spirit. And we're also saying, you know, come and fulfill your kingdom, Lord, come and bring the full promise, which is here, but not yet. So I like all three of these. So for today. Skillet descriptor, which sounds like we're playing like a weird word game when you put those all together. It does, but they're all great bands and their versions I think are, are worthy. So the larger affirmation, I suppose, is like, go out this season and find different versions, like mix it up a little bit. Because it's good to hear this music somewhat afresh, and so I think by coming to it with different versions of it, you'll get a little bit of that sense. It'll make maybe what is, maybe if it's felt rote or mundane or just trivial, like you're saying, kind of revive some of these pieces in our hearts so we can, we, we can really worship through them. We're redeeming them even as they're meant to be expressions of the ultimate redemption. [00:16:55] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. Yeah, I, um, I heard the skillet version and, uh, you know, you know me like I'm not a huge fan of harder music. Yeah. But that, that song Slaps man, it's, yes, [00:17:07] Jesse Schwamb: it does. It's [00:17:07] Tony Arsenal: good. And Al I mean, it, it also ignited this weird firestorm of craziness online. I don't know if you heard anything about this, but Yes, it was, it was, there was like the people who absolutely love it and will. Fight you if you don't. Yes. And then there was like the people who think it's straight from the devil because of somehow demonic rhythms, whatever that means. Um, but yeah, I mean, I'm not a big fan of the heavier music, but there is something about that sort of, uh. I don't know. Is skill, would that be considered like metal at all? [00:17:38] Jesse Schwamb: Oh, that's a loaded question. Probably. [00:17:39] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. So like I found, uh, this is, we're gonna go down to Rabbit Trail here. Let's do it. Here we go. I found a version of Africa by Toto that was labeled as metal on YouTube. So I don't know whether it actually is, and this, this version of skill, it strikes me as very similar, where it's, ah, uh, it, it's like, um. The harmonies are slightly different in terms of like how they resonate than Okay. Other harmonies. Like I get [00:18:05] Jesse Schwamb: that [00:18:06] Tony Arsenal: there's a certain, you know, like when you think about like Western music, there's certain right, there's certain harmonies when, you know, think about like piano chords are framed and my understanding at least this could be way off, and I'm sure you're gonna correct me if I'm wrong, is that um, metal music, heavy metal music uses slightly different. Chord formations that it almost leaves you feeling a little unresolved. Yes, but not quite unresolved. Like it's just, it's, it's more the harmonics are different, so that's fair. Skillet. This skillet song is so good, and I think you're right. It, it retains the sort of like. The same basic melody, the same, the same basic harmonies, actually. Right. And it's, it's almost like the harmonies are just close enough to being put into a different key with the harmonies. Yes, [00:18:52] Jesse Schwamb: that's true [00:18:53] Tony Arsenal: than then. Uh, but not quite actually going into another key. So like, sometimes you'll see online, you'll find YouTube videos where they play like pop songs, but they've changed the, the. Chords a little bit. So now it's in a minor key. It's almost like it's there. It's like one more little note shift and it would be there. Um, and then there's some interesting, uh, like repetition and almost some like anal singing going on, that it's very good. Even if you don't like heavier music. Like, like I don't, um, go listen to it and I think you'll find yourself like hitting repeat a couple times. It was very, very good. [00:19:25] Jesse Schwamb: That's a good way of saying it. A lot of times that style is a little bit dissonant, if that's what you mean in the court. Yeah. Formation. So it gives you this unsettledness, this almost unresolvedness, and that's in there. Yeah. And just so everybody knows, actually, if you listen to that version from Skillet, you'll probably listen to most of it. You'll get about two thirds of the way through it and probably be saying, what are those guys talking about? It's the breakdown. Where it amps up. But before that, I think anybody could listen to it and just enjoy it. It's a really beautiful, almost haunting piano melody. They bring into the intro in that, in the interlude. It's very lovely. So it gives you that sense. Again, I love this kind of music because there's almost something, there is something in this song that's longing for something that is wanting and yet left, unresolved and unfulfilled until the savior comes. There's almost a lament in it, so to speak, especially with like the way it's orchestrated. So I love that this hymn is like deep and rich in that way. It's, that's fine. Like if you want to sing deck the Holes, that's totally fine. This is just, I think, better and rich and deeper and more interesting because it does speak to this life of looking for and waiting for anticipating the advent of the savior. So to get me get put back in that place by music, I think is like a net gain this time of year. It's good to have that perspective. I'm, I'm glad you've heard it. We should just open that debate up whether or not we come hang out in the telegram chat. We'll put it in that debate. Is skillet hardcore or metal? We'll just leave it there 'cause I have my opinions, but I'm, well, I'm sure everybody else does. [00:20:48] Tony Arsenal: I don't even know what those words mean, Jesse. Everything is hardcore in metal compared to what I normally listen to. I don't even listen to music anymore usually, so I, I mean, I'm like mostly all podcasts all the time. Anytime I have time, I don't have a ton of time to listen to. Um, audio stuff, but [00:21:06] Jesse Schwamb: that's totally fair. Well now everybody now join us though. [00:21:08] Tony Arsenal: Educate me [00:21:09] Jesse Schwamb: now. Everybody can properly use, IM prompt whatever AI of their choice, and they can listen to at least three different versions of al comical manual. And then they can tell us which one do you like the best? Or maybe you have your own version. That's what she was saying. What's your favorite Christmas in? [00:21:23] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. And [00:21:24] Jesse Schwamb: what version of it do you like? I mean, it'll be like. [00:21:28] Tony Arsenal: It'll be like, despite my best efforts, I've been un unable to understand what hardcore and medical is. Please help me understand. [00:21:37] Jesse Schwamb: Oh, we're gonna have some, some fun with this at some point. We'll have to get into the whole debate, though. I know you and I have talked about it before. We'll put it before the brothers and sisters about a Christmas Carol and what version everybody else likes. That's also seems like, aside from the, the whole eternal debate, which I'm not sure is really serious about whether or not diehard is a Christmas movie, this idea of like, which version of the Christmas Carol do you subscribe to? Yeah. Which one would you watch if you can only watch one? Which one will you watch? That's, we'll have to save that for another time. [00:22:06] Tony Arsenal: We'll save it for another time. And we get a little closer to midwinter. No reason we just can't [00:22:10] Jesse Schwamb: do it right now because we gotta get to Luke 15. [00:22:12] Discussion on the Parable of the Lost Coin [00:22:12] Tony Arsenal: We do. [00:22:13] Jesse Schwamb: We, we've already been in this place of looking at Jesus' response to the Pharisees when they say to him, listen, this man receives sinners and eats with them. And Jesus is basically like, yeah, that's right. And let me tell you three times what the heart of God is like and what my mission in serving him is like, and what I desire to come to do for my children. And so we spoke in the last conversation about the parable lost sheep. Go check that out. Some are saying, I mean, I'm not saying this, but some are saying in the internet, it's the definitive. Congratulation of that parable. I'm, I'm happy to take that if that's true. Um, but we wanna go on to this parable of the lost coin. So let me read, it's just a couple of verses and you're gonna hear in the text that you're going to understand right away. This is being linked because it starts with or, so this is Jesus speaking and this is Luke 15, chapter 15, starting in verse eight. Jesus says, or a what woman? She has 10 D drachmas and loses. One drachma does not light a lamp and sweep the house and search carefully until she finds it. And when she has found it, she calls together her friend and her neighbors saying, rejoice with me for I found the D Drachma, which I lost in the same way I tell you, there is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents. [00:23:27] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. Yeah. On one level, this is, uh, again, it's not all that complicated of a scenario, right? And we have to kind of go back and relo through some of the stuff we talked about last week because this is a continuation of, you know, when we first talked about the Matthew 13 parables, we commented on like. Christ was coming back to the same themes, right? And in some ways, repeating the parable. This is even stronger than that. It's not just that Christ is teaching the same thing across multiple parables. The sense here, at least the sense I get when I read this parable, the lost sheep, and then the prodigal, um, sun parable or, or the next parable here, um, is actually that Christ is just sort of like hammering home the one point he's making to the tax collectors and or to the tax collectors or to the scribes who are complaining about the fact that Christ was eating with sinners. He's just hammering this point home, right? So it's not, it's not to try to add. A lot of nuance to the point. It's not to try to add a, a shade of meaning. Um. You know, we talked a lot about how parables, um, Christ tells parables in part to condemn the listeners who will not receive him, right? That's right. This is one of those situations where it's not, it's not hiding the meaning of the parable from them. The meaning is so obvious that you couldn't miss it, and he, he appeals, we talked about in the first, in the first part of this, he actually appeals to like what the ordinary response would be. Right? What man of you having a hundred sheep if he loses one, does not. Go and leave the 99. Like it's a scenario that anyone who goes, well, like, I wouldn't do that is, looks like an idiot. Like, that's, that's the point of the why. He phrases it. And so then you're right when he, when he begins with this, he says, or what woman having 10 silver coins if she loses one, does not light a lamp and sweep the house and seek diligently until he, till she finds it. And of course, the, the, the emphasis again is like no one in their right mind would not do this. And I think like we think about a coin and like that's the smallest denomination of money that we have. Like, I wouldn't, like if I lost a, if I had 10 silver coin, 10 coins and I lost one of them, the most that that could be is what? 50 cents? Like the, like if I had a 50 cent piece or a silver dollar, I guess, like I could lose a dollar. We're not really talking about coins the way we think of coins, right? We're talking about, um. Um, you know, like denominations of money that are substantial in that timeframe. Like it, there was, there were small coins, but a silver coin would be a substantial amount of money to lose. So we are not talking about a situation where this is, uh, a trivial kind of thing. She's not looking for, you know, I've, I've heard this parable sort of like unpacked where like, it's almost like a miserly seeking for like this lost coin. Interesting. It's not about, it's not about like. Penny pinching here, right? She's not trying to find a tiny penny that isn't worth anything that's built into the parable, right? It's a silver coin. It's not just any coin. It's a silver coin. So she's, she's looking for this coin, um, because it is a significant amount of money and because she's lost it, she's lost something of her, of her overall wealth. Like there's a real loss. Two, this that needs to be felt before he can really move on with the parable. It's not just like some small piece of property, like there's a [00:26:57] Jesse Schwamb: right. I [00:26:57] Tony Arsenal: don't know if you've ever lost a large amount of money, but I remember one time I was in, um, a. I was like, almost outta high school, and I had taken some money out of, um, out of the bank, some cash to make a purchase. I think I was purchasing a laptop and I don't know why I, I don't, maybe I didn't have a credit card or I didn't have a debit card, but I was purchasing a laptop with cash. Right. And back then, like laptops, like this was not a super expensive laptop, but. It was a substantial amount of cash and I misplaced it and it was like, oh no, like, where is it? And like, I went crazy trying to find it. This is the situation. She's lost a substantial amount of money. Um, this parable, unlike the last one, doesn't give you a relative amount of how many she has. Otherwise. She's just lost a significant amount of money. So she takes all these different steps to try to find it. [00:27:44] Understanding the Parable's Context [00:27:44] Tony Arsenal: We have to feel that loss before we really can grasp what the parable is trying to teach us. [00:27:49] Jesse Schwamb: I like that, so I'm glad you brought that up because I ended up going down a rabbit hole with this whole coined situation. [00:27:56] Tony Arsenal: Well, we're about to, Matt Whitman some of this, aren't we? [00:27:58] Jesse Schwamb: Yes, I think so. But mainly because, and this is not really my own ideas here, there's, there's a lot I was able to kind of just read and kind. Throw, throw something around this because I think you're absolutely right that Jesus is bringing an ES escalation here and it's almost like a little bit easier for us to understand the whole sheep thing. I think the context of the lost coin, like you're already saying, is a little bit less familiar to us, and so I got into this. Rabbit hole over the question, why would this woman have 10 silver coins? I really got stuck on like, so why does she have these? And Jesus specific about that he's giving a particular context. Presumably those within his hearing in earshot understood this context far better than I did. So what I was surprised to see is that a lot of commentators you probably run into this, have stated or I guess promulgated this idea that the woman is young and unmarried and the 10 silver coins could. Could represent a dowry. So in some way here too, like it's not just a lot of money, it's possible that this was her saving up and it was a witness to her availability for marriage. [00:28:57] The Significance of the Lost Coin [00:28:57] Jesse Schwamb: So e either way, if that's true or not, Jesus is really emphasizing to us there's significant and severe loss here. And so just like you said, it would be a fool who would just like say, oh, well that's too bad. The coin is probably in here somewhere, but eh, I'm just gonna go about my normal business. Yeah. And forsake it. Like, let's, let's not worry about it. So. The emphasis then on this one is not so much like the leaving behind presumably can keep the remaining nine coins somewhere safe if you had them. But this effort and this diligence to, to go after and find this lost one. So again, we know it's all about finding what was lost, but this kind of momentum that Jesus is bringing to this, like the severity of this by saying there was this woman, and of course like here we find that part of this parable isn't just in the, the kingdom of God's like this, like we were talking about before. It's more than that because there's this expression of, again, the situation combined with these active verbs. I think we talked about last time that Christ love is an act of love and it's always being acted upon the sinner, the one who has to be redeemed, his child whom he goes after. So in the same way, we have Christ showing the self-denying love. Like in the first case, the shepherd brought his sheep home on his shoulders rather than leave it in the wilderness. And then here. The woman does like everything. She lights the candle, she sweeps the house. She basically turns the thing, the place upside down, searching diligently and spared no pains with this until she found her lost money. And before we get into the whole rejoicing thing, it just strikes me that, you know, in the same way, I think what we have here is Christ affirming that he didn't spare himself. He's not gonna spare himself. When he undertakes to save sinners, he does all the things. He endures the cross scor in shame. He lays down his life for his friends. There's no greater love than that. It cannot be shown, and so Christ's love is deep and mighty. It's like this woman doing all the things, tearing the place apart to ensure that that which she knew she had misplaced comes back to her. That the full value of everything that she knows is hers. Is safe and secure in her possession and so does the Lord Jesus rejoice the safe sinners in the same way. And that's where this is incredibly powerful. It's not just, Hey, let me just say it to you one more time. There is a reemphasis here, but I like where you're going, this re-escalation. I think the first question is, why do the woman have this money? What purpose is it serving? And I think if we can at least try to appreciate some of that, then we see again how Jesus is going after that, which is that he, he wants to save the sinner. He wants to save the soul. And all of the pleasure, then all of the rejoicing comes because, and, and as a result of that context. [00:31:22] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. Yeah. [00:31:23] Theological Implications of God's People [00:31:23] Tony Arsenal: The other thing, um, maybe, and, and I hope I'm not overreading again, we've, we've talked about the dangers of overreading, the parables, but I think there's a, and we'll, we'll come to this too when we get into the, um, prodigal son. Um, there is this sense, I think in some theological traditions that. God is sort of like claiming a people who were not his own. Right. And one of the things that I love about the reform tradition, and, and I love it because this is the picture the Bible teaches, is the emphasis on the fact that God's people have been God's people. As long as God has been pondering and con like contemplating them. So like we deny eternal justification, right? Justification happens in time and there's a real change in our status, in in time when, when the spirit applies, the benefits that Christ has purchased for us in redemption, right? But there's also a very real sense that God has been looking and considering us as his people in eternity past. Like that's always. That's the nature of the Pactum salutes, the, you know, covenant of redemption election. The idea that like God is not saving a nameless, faceless people. He's not creating conditions that people can either move themselves into or take themselves out of. He has a concrete people. Who he is saving, who he has chosen. He, he, you know, prior to our birth, he will redeem us. He now, he has redeemed us and he will preserve us in all of these parables, whether it's the sheep, the coin, or as we'll get to the prodigal sun next week or, or whenever. Um. It's not that God is discovering something new that he didn't have, or it's not that the woman is discovering a coin, right? There's nothing more, uh, I think nothing more like sort of, uh, spontaneously delightful than like when you like buy a, like a jacket at the thrift store. Like you go to Salvation Army and you buy a jacket, you get home, you reach in the pocket and there's like a $10 bill and you're like, oh man, that's so, so great. Or like, you find a, you find a. A $10 bill on the ground, or you find a quarter on the ground, right? Yeah. Or you find your own money. Well, and that that's, there's a different kind of joy, right? That's the point, is like, there's a delight that comes with finding something. And again, like we have to be careful about like, like not stealing, right? But there's a different kind of joy that comes with like finding something that was not yours that now becomes yours. We talked about that with parables a couple weeks ago, right? There's a guy who finds it, he's, he's searching for pearls. He finds a pearl, and so he goes after he sells everything he has and he claims that pearl, but that wasn't his before the delight was in sort of finding something new. These parables. The delight is in reclaiming and refining something that was yours that was once lost. Right? That's a different thing. And it paints a picture, a different picture of God than the other parables where, you know, the man kind of stumbles on treasure in a field or he finds a pearl that he was searching for, but it wasn't his pearl. This is different. This is teaching us that God is, is zealous and jealous to reclaim that which was his, which was lost. Yes. Right. So, you know, we can get, we can, maybe we will next week, maybe we will dig into like super laps area versus infra laps. AIRism probably not, I don't necessarily wanna have that conversation. But there is a reality in the Bible where God has a chosen people and they are his people, even before he redeems them. [00:34:52] Jesse Schwamb: Exactly. [00:34:53] God's Relentless Pursuit of Sinners [00:34:53] Tony Arsenal: These parables all emphasize that in a different way and part of what he's, part of what he's ribbing at with the Pharisees and the, and the scribes, and this is common across all of Christ's teaching in his interactions and we get into true Israel with, with Paul, I mean this is the consistent testimony of the New Testament, is that the people who thought they were God's people. The, the Jewish leaders, especially the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the scribes, the, the sort of elites of, uh, first century Jewish believers, they really were convinced that they were God's people. And those dirty gentiles out there, they, they're not, and even in certain sense, like even the Jewish people out in the country who don't even, you know, they don't know the scriptures that like, even those people were maybe barely God's people. Christ is coming in here and he is going, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Like you're asking me. You're surprised that I receive sinners and e with them. Well, I'm coming to claim that which is mine, which was lost, and the right response to that is not to turn your nose up at it. The right response is to rejoice with me that I have found my sheep that was lost, that I have reclaimed my coin that was lost. And as we'll see later on, like he really needles them at the end of the, the, uh, parable of the prodigal son. This is something I, I have to be like intentional in my own life because I think sometimes we hear conversion stories and we have this sort of, I, I guess like, we'll call it like the, the Jonah I heresy, I dunno, we won't call it heresy, but like the, the, the like Jonah impulse that we all have to be really thankful for God's mercy in our life. But sort of question whether God is. Merciful or even be a little bit upset when it seems that God is being merciful to those sinners over there. We have to really like, use these parables in our own lives to pound that out of our system because it's, it's ungodly and it's not what God is, is calling us. And these parables really speak against that [00:36:52] Jesse Schwamb: and all of us speak in. In that lost state, but that doesn't, I think like you're saying, mean that we are not God's already. That if he has established that from a trinity past, then we'd expect what others have said about God as the hound of heaven to be true. And that is he comes and he chases down his own. What's interesting to me is exactly what you've said. We often recognize when we do this in reverse and we look at the parable of the lost son, all of these elements, how the father comes after him, how there's a cha singer coming to himself. There's this grand act of repentance. I would argue all of that is in all of these parables. Not, not to a lesser extent, just to a different extent, but it's all there. So in terms of like couching this, and I think what we might use is like traditionally reformed language. And I, I don't want to say I'm overeating this, I hope I'm not at that same risk, but we see some of this like toll depravity and like the sinner is lost, unable to move forward, right? There still is like the sovereign grace of God who's initiating the salvation and there is a kind of effect of calling that God doesn't merely invite, he finds, he goes after he affects the very thing. Yeah, and I think we're seeing that here. There is. The sinner, spiritual inability. There's an utter passivity until found. The coin doesn't seek the woman. The woman seeks the coin. And in this way, I think we see God's act of searching grace. It's all there for us. Yeah, it's in a slightly different way, but I think that's what we're meant to like take away from this. We're meant to lean into that a bit. [00:38:12] Rejoicing in Salvation [00:38:12] Jesse Schwamb: And the reason why I think it leads to joy, why God is so pleased is because God has this real pleasure. Jesus has this real pleasure. The Holy Spirit has this real pleasure. To pluck sinners as brands from the burning fire. You know, it was Jesus, literally his food and drink like not to be too trite, but like his jam went upon the earth to finish the work, which he came to do. And there are many times when he says he ammi of being constrained in the spirit until this was accomplished. And it's still his delight to show mercy like you're saying He is. And even Jonah recognizes that, right. He said like, I knew you were going to be a merciful God. And so he's far more willing to save sinners than sinners are to be saved. But that is the gospel level voice, isn't it? Because we can come kicking and screaming, but in God's great mercy, not because of works and unrighteousness, but because of his great mercy, he comes and he tears everything apart to rescue and to save those whom he's called to himself. [00:39:06] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. Yeah. I love that old, um, Puritan phrase that wrath is God's alien work. And we, you know, like you gotta be careful when you start to talk that way. And the Puritans were definitely careful about everything. I mean, they were very specific when they spoke, but. When we talk about God's alien work and wrath being God's alien work, what we're saying is not, not that like somehow wrath is external to God. Like that's not what we're getting at of Right. But when you look at scripture and, and here's something that I think, um. I, I don't know how I wanna say this. Like, I think we read that the road is narrow and the the, um, you know, few are those who find it. I think we read that and we somehow think like, yeah, God, God, like, really loves that. Not a lot of people are saved. And I, I actually think that like, when we look at it, um, and, and again, like we have to be careful 'cause God, God. God decreed that which he is delighted by, and also that which glorifies him the most. Right? Right. But the picture that we get in scripture, and we have to take this seriously with all of the caveats that it's accommodated, it's anthropopathism that, you know, all of, all of the stuff we've talked about. We did a whole series on systematic theology. We did like six episodes on Divine Simplicity and immutability. Like we we're, we're right in line with the historic tradition on that. All of those caveats, uh, all of those caveats in place, the Bible pic paints a picture of God such that he grieves over. Those who are lost. Right? Right. He takes no delight in the death of the wicked. That's right. He, he, he seeks after the lost and he rejoices when he finds them. Right. He's, his, his Holy Spirit is grieved when we disobey him, his, his anger is kindled even towards his people in a paternal sense. Right. He disciplines us the way an angry father who loves us, would discipline us when we disobey him. That is a real, that's a real thing. What exactly that means, how we can apply that to God is a very complicated conversation. And maybe sometimes it's more complicated than we, like, we make it more complicated than it needs to be for sure. Um, we wanna be careful to preserve God's changeness, his immutability, his simplicity, all of those things. But at the end of the day, at. God grieves over lost sinners, and he rejoices when they come back. He rejoices when they return to him. Just as the shepherd who finds his lost sheep puts that sheep on his shoulders, right? That's not just because that's an easy way to carry a sheep, right? It's also like this picture of this loving. Intimate situation where God pulls us onto himself and he, he wraps literally like wraps us around himself. Like there are times when, um. You know, I have a toddler and there are times where I have to carry that toddler, and it's, it's a fight, right? And I don't really enjoy doing it. He's squirming, he's fighting. Then there are times where he needs me to hold him tight, and he, he snuggles in. When he falls down and hurts his leg, the first thing he does is he runs and he jumps on me, and he wants to be held tight, and there's a f there's a fatherly embrace there that not only brings comfort to my son. But it brings great joy to me to be able to comfort him that that dynamic in a, uh, a infinitely greater sense is at play here in the lost sheep. And then there's this rejoicing. It's not just rejoicing that God is rejoicing, it's the angels that are rejoicing. [00:42:43] The Joy of Redemption [00:42:43] Tony Arsenal: It's the, it's other Christians. It's the great cloud of witnesses that are rejoicing when Aah sinner is returned to God. All of God's kingdom and everything that that includes, all of that is involved in this rejoicing. That's why I think like in the first parable, in the parable of the lost sheep, it's joy in heaven. Right? It's sort of general joy in heaven. It's not specific. Then this one is even more specific. It's not just general joy in heaven. It's the angels of God. That's right. That are rejoicing. And then I think what we're gonna find, and we'll we'll tease this out when we get to the next par, well the figure in the prodigal son that is rejoicing. The one that is leading the rejoicing, the chief rejoice is the one who's the standin for God in that parable. [00:43:26] Jesse Schwamb: Right, exactly right. So, [00:43:27] Tony Arsenal: so we have to, we have to both recognize that there's a true grief. A true sorrow that is appropriate to speak of God, um, as having when a sinner is lost. And there's also an equally appropriate way to speak about God rejoicing and being pleased and delighted when a sinner returns to him. [00:43:53] Jesse Schwamb: That's the real payoff of this whole parable. I think, uh, maybe all three of them altogether, is that it is shocking how good the gospel is, which we're always saying, yeah, but I'm really always being moved, especially these last couple weeks with what Jesus is saying about how good, how truly unbelievable the gospel is. And again, it draws us to the. Old Testament scriptures when even the Israel saying, who is like this? Who is like our God? So what's remarkable about this is that there's an infinite willingness on God's part to receive sinners. [00:44:23] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. [00:44:23] Jesse Schwamb: And however wicked a man may have been, and the day that he really turns from his wickedness and comes to God by Christ, God is well pleased and all of heaven with him, and God has no pleasure in the death of the wicked, like you said, but God has pleasure and true repentance. If all of that's true, then like day to day, here's what I, I think this means for us. [00:44:41] Applying the Parable to Our Lives [00:44:41] Jesse Schwamb: Is when we come to Christ for mercy and love and help and whatever anguish and perplexity and simpleness that we all have, and we all have it, we are going with the flow. If his own deepest wishes, we're not going against them. And so this means that God has for us when we partake in the toning work of Christ, coming to Christ for forgiveness, communing with him despite our sinfulness, that we are laying hold of Christ's own deepest longing and joy. [00:45:10] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. And [00:45:10] Jesse Schwamb: Jesus is comforted when we draw near the riches of his atoning work because as his body, even his own body in a way is being healed in this process. And so we, along with it, that I think is the payoff here. That's what's just so remarkable is that not only, like you're saying, is all heaven kind of paying attention to this. Like they're cognizant of it. It's something worthy of their attention and their energies and their rejoicing. But again, it's showing that God is doing all of this work and so he keeps calling us and calling us and calling us over and over again and just like you said, the elect sinner, those estr belongs to God and his eternal purpose. Even that by itself, we could just say full stop. Shut it down end the podcast. Yeah. That's just worthy to, to rejoice and, and ponder. But this is how strong I think we see like per election in particular, redemption in these passages. Christ died for his chief specifically crisis going after the lost coin, which already belongs to him. So like you were saying, Tony, when you know, or maybe you don't know, but you've misplaced some kind of money and you put your hand in that pocket of that winter coat for the first time that season and out comes the piece of paper, that's whatever, 20 or whatever, you rejoice in that, right. Right. It's like this was mine. I knew it was somewhere, it belonged to me, except that what's even better here is this woman tears her whole place apart to go after this one coin that she knows is hers and yet has been lost. I don't know what more it is to be said. I just cannot under emphasize. Or overemphasize how great God's love is in this like amazing condescension, so that when Jesus describes himself as being gentle and lowly or gentle and humble or gentle and humiliated, that I, I think as we understand the biblical text, it's not necessarily just that he's saying, well, I'm, I'm displaying. Meekness power under control. When he says he's humble, he means put in this incredibly lowly state. Yeah. That the rescue mission, like you're saying, involves not just like, Hey, she lemme call you back. Hey, come over here, says uh. He goes and he picks it up. It's the ultimate rescue, picks it up and takes it back by his own volition, sacrificing everything or to do that and so does this woman in this particular instance, and it should lead us. I think back to there's this virtuous cycle of seeing this, experiencing this. Being compelled by the law of Christ, as Paul says, by the power of the Holy Spirit and being regenerated and then worshiping, and then repenting, and then worshiping, and then repenting, and then worshiping. Because in the midst of that repentance and that beautifulness recognizing, as Isaiah says, all of these idols that we set up, that we run to, the one thing they cannot do for us is they cannot deal with sin. They cannot bring cleanliness and righteousness through confession of sin. They cannot do that. So Christ is saying, come to the one you who are needy, you who have no money. To use another metaphor in the Bible, come and buy. And in doing so, we're saying, Christ, Lord have mercy on me, a sinner. And when he says, come, come, I, I've, I have already run. After you come and be restored, come and be renewed. That which was lost my child. You have been found and I have rescued you. [00:48:04] Tony Arsenal: Yeah. Yeah. And these, these are so, um, these two parables are so. Comfortable. Like, right, like they are there, there are certain passages of scripture that you can just like put on like a big fuzzy warm bathrobe on like sn a cold morning, a snuggy. Yeah. I don't know if I want to go that far, but spirits are snuggy and, and these two are like that, right? Like, I know there are times where I feel like Christ redeemed me sort of begrudgingly, right? Mm-hmm. I think we have, we have this, um, concept in our mind of. Sort of the suffering servant, you know, like he's kind of like, ah, if I have to do it, I will. Right, right. And, and like, I think we, we would, if, if we were the ones who were, were being tasked to redeem something, we might do it. You know, we might do it and we. We might feel a certain sense of satisfaction about it, but I can tell you that if I had a hundred sheep and I had lost one, I would not lay it on my shoulder rejoicing. I would lay it on my shoulder. Frustrated and glad that I finally found it, but like. Right. Right. That's not what Christ did. That's right. Christ lays us on his shoulders rejoicing. Right. I know. Like when you lose something, it's frustrating and it's not just the loss of it that's frustrating. It's the time you have to take to find it. And sometimes like, yeah, you're happy that you found it, but you're like, man, it would've just been nice if I hadn't lost this in [00:49:36] Jesse Schwamb: the That's right. [00:49:37] Tony Arsenal: This woman, there's none of that. There's no, um, there's no regret. There's no. Uh, there's no begrudging this to it. There's nothing. It's just rejoicing. She's so happy. And it's funny, I can imagine, uh, maybe, maybe this is my own, uh, lack of sanctification here. I can imagine being that friend that's like, I gotta come over 'cause you found your coin, right? Like, I can be, I could imagine me that person, but Right. But honestly, like. This is a, this is a situation where she's so overcome with joy. She just has to tell people about it. Yeah. She has to share it with people. It, it reminds me, and I've seen this, I've seen this, um, connection made in the past certainly isn't new to me. I don't, I don't have any specific sorts to say, but like the woman at the well, right. She gets this amazing redemption. She gets this, this Messiah right in front of her. She leaves her buckets at the well, and she goes into a town of people who probably hate her, who think she's just the worst scum of society and she doesn't care. She goes into town to tell everybody about the fact that the Messiah has come, right? And they're so like stunned by the fact that she's doing it. Like they come to see what it is like that's what we need to be like. So there's. There's an element here of not only the rejoicing of God, and again, like, I guess I'm surprised because I've, I've, I've never sort of really read this. Part, I've never read this into it too much or I've never like really pulled this out, but it, now that I'm gonna say it, it just seems logical, like not only is God rejoicing in this, but again, it should be calling us to rejoice, right? Christ is. Christ is using these parables to shame the Pharisees and the scribes who refuse to rejoice over the salvation of sinners. How often do we not rejoice over our own salvation sufficiently? Like when's the last time? And I, I don't want to, this is, this can be a lot of loss. So again, like. God is not calling every single person to stand up on their lunch table at work, or, I don't know if God's calling anybody to stand up on the lunch table at work. Right. To like, like scream about how happy they are that they're sick, happy, happy. But like, when's the last time you were so overcome with joy that in the right opportunity, it just over, like it just overcame you and you had to share it. I don't rem. Putting myself bare here, like I don't remember the last time that happened. I share my faith with people, like my coworkers know that I'm a Christian and, um, my, they know that like, there are gonna be times where like I will bring biblical ethics and biblical concepts into my work. Like I regularly use bible examples to illustrate a principle I'm trying to teach my employees or, or I will regularly sort of. In a meeting where there's some question about what the right, not just like the correct thing to do, but the right thing to do. I will regularly bring biblical morality into those conversations. Nobody is surprised by that. Nobody's really offended by it. 'cause I just do it regularly. But I don't remember the last time where I was so overcome with joy because of my salvation that I just had to tell somebody. Right. And that's a, that's a, that's an indictment on me. That's not an indictment on God. That's not an indictment on anyone else. That's an indictment on me. This parable is calling me to be more joyful about. My salvation. [00:52:52] Jesse Schwamb: Yeah. One of the, I think the best and easiest verses from Psalms to memorize is let the redeemed of the Lord say so. Yes. Like, say something, speak up. There's, there's a great truth in what you're saying. Of course. And I think we mentioned this last time. There's a communal delight of redemption. And here we see that played out maybe a little bit more explicitly because the text says that the joy is before the angels, meaning that still God is the source of the joy. In other words, the angels share in God's delight night, vice versa, and not even just in salvation itself, but the fact that God is delighted in this great salvation, that it shows the effectiveness of his saving power. All that he has designed will come to pass because he super intends his will over all things that all things, again are subservient to our salvation. And here, why would that not bring him great joy? Because that's exactly what he intends and is able to do. And the angels rejoice along with him because his glory is revealed in his mighty power. So I'm, I'm with you. I mean, this reminds me. Of what the author of Hebrew says. This is chapter 12, just the first couple of verses. Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses in this communal kind of redemption of joy surrounding us. Laying aside every weight and the sin,

The Dom Giordano Program
The Harshness of a Single Pull-Up

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2025 42:53


1 - How stupid is Maisie Hirono? What is harsh about doing one pull-up? 110 - Your calls. 120 - Our favorite CNN Analyst, Scott Jennings, joins a day after a heated exchange with Montel Jordan over the death of Charlie Kirk. What was it like to hear Montel's words and try to remain calm in that situation? Why do certain people in education celebrate the assassination of Charlie Kirk? Why won't leftists give up calling conservatives “fascist” and “Hitler”, but continue to preach for toned down rhetoric? Why is this attack different from the other political attacks in the last few months? Despite what many people will tell you about him, what were Charlie Kirk's actual political views? What is something that Scott would like to highlight that Elon Musk once shined light on? 135 - Hank Johnson pens a new line of questioning for Kash Patel. What do these left wing media pundits not get about Kash Patel's demeanor on Capitol Hill? 140 - Your calls. 150 - What event will Dom be at tomorrow? Your calls.

The Dom Giordano Program
Show of The South (Full Show)

The Dom Giordano Program

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2025 132:58


12 - It wasn't that long ago that Bill O'Reilly told Dom Giordano what the tearing down of statues was really leading towards, and we welcome him back to the program on this Constitution Day. What was it like being with President Trump at Yankee Stadium on 9/11? Why are mainstream media outlets struggling to cover the Charlie Kirk assassination? Why is Bill unrelenting in his attacks on Putin, and what does he say to those who say he should dial his warnings on him back? What kind of evil is in this country? What is something that will draw audiences to his new book? Why can we still not trust China to work with the US on something like curtailing Fentanyl production? 1220 - Side - associated with The South 1235 - Larry Krasner and his sycophants compared conservatives to Hitler supporters, 1240 - Is Randi Weingarten condoning people to use incendiary rhetoric towards Trump in order to dehumanize him in hopes people might feel emboldened to act against him? 1250 - Your calls. Is Jordan Mailata really that big? 1 - How stupid is Maisie Hirono? What is harsh about doing one pull-up? 110 - Your calls. 120 - Our favorite CNN Analyst, Scott Jennings, joins a day after a heated exchange with Montel Jordan over the death of Charlie Kirk. What was it like to hear Montel's words and try to remain calm in that situation? Why do certain people in education celebrate the assassination of Charlie Kirk? Why won't leftists give up calling conservatives “fascist” and “Hitler”, but continue to preach for toned down rhetoric? Why is this attack different from the other political attacks in the last few months? Despite what many people will tell you about him, what were Charlie Kirk's actual political views? What is something that Scott would like to highlight that Elon Musk once shined light on? 135 - Hank Johnson pens a new line of questioning for Kash Patel. What do these left wing media pundits not get about Kash Patel's demeanor on Capitol Hill? 140 - Your calls. 150 - What event will Dom be at tomorrow? Your calls. 2 - BREAKING: The Federal Reserve has dropped interest rates by a quarter! Bucks County Sheriff Fred Harran joins us today. What were the conversations at the 287 Act hearing like? Why is the opposition interested in dealing in hypotheticals? Why is the leadership in Bucks County not concerned about its citizens? What was the Commissioners' meeting like today? How much money was raised for Fred's youth boxing program? What is “Warrant Wednesday”? 210 - Your calls. 215 - Why is the Ambler Tax Collector position suddenly a big deal? 220 - Dom's Money Melody! 225 - Your calls. 250 - The Lightning Round!

This Is The G Podcast
EPISODE 248 DRAKE VERSUS THE WORLD

This Is The G Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2024 59:30


EPISODE 248 DRAKE VERSUS THE WORLD . Summary . In this episode of the G podcast, host Tommy B, Vi, Tonya B & Talib discusses various topics including the upcoming Georgia vs. Texas game, Drake's legal battle with UMG, and insights from music industry veteran Brad Davidson. The conversation delves into the implications of Drake's lawsuit, the reactions from industry insiders, and the consumer perspective on the situation. Tanya B also shares highlights from the entertainment world, including a new Tyler Perry movie. In this episode, the hosts discuss various topics including Montel Jordan's health, Cardi B's financial situation, upcoming music releases, the potential ban of TikTok, the loyalty of fans in the music industry, updates on the YSL trial, and a political roundtable on Biden's pardon of Hunter. , Chapters . 00:00 Introduction and Game Day Excitement 03:01 Drake's Legal Battle with UMG 05:49 Industry Insights and Reactions 09:10 The Impact of Drake's Actions 11:57 Consumer Perspectives on the Lawsuit 14:53 Family Dynamics and Industry Influence 17:47 Final Thoughts on Drake's Situation 21:11 Tanya B's Tea Time and Movie Highlights 28:55 Celebrating Montel Jordan and His Journey 30:20 Cardi B's Financial Stability and Brand Deals 32:44 Upcoming Music Releases and Anticipations 34:41 The Future of TikTok and Its Impact on Artists 39:48 The Loyalty of Fans and Building a Brand 40:46 YSL Trial Updates and Industry Implications 42:41 Political Roundtable: Biden's Pardon of Hunter 49:16 Reflections on Political Loyalty and Consequences . Drake, UMG, music industry, legal battle, hip hop, pop culture, podcast, entertainment news, Georgia football, Tyler Perry, Montel Jordan, Cardi B, TikTok, music releases, brand deals, political roundtable, Hunter Biden, YSL trial, artist loyalty, financial stability . SUPPORT THE PODCAST! Give $25 For 2025 https://linktr.ee/thisisthegpodcast . CARDI B ARTICLE https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/us/is-cardi-b-struggling-financially-singer-shuts-down-speculations-says-she-spends-3-million-a-month/articleshow/116082378.cms?from=mdr

Nobody’s Talking Podcast
From High School Pranks to Retro Classics

Nobody’s Talking Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 64:30 Transcription Available


Send us a textEver find yourself caught between a classic game of Mortal Kombat and the latest gossip about Puff Daddy? We've got you covered on this rollercoaster episode of the Nobody's Talking Podcast! We kick things off with a hilarious debate over our guilty pleasures in gaming, touching on how downloading games directly to consoles has changed our lives. Just as things heat up with some celebrity buzz, our resident joker Alabama Joe makes his fashionably late entrance, adding a whole new layer of humor. We also tip our hats to The Breakfast Club for their insights on handling celebrity drama with care.Shifting gears to get a little personal, we tackle some spicy topics about cultural perceptions of relationships and sexuality. From the myths about certain foods to the enlightening yet unrealistic world of adult films, nothing is off the table. Listen as we humorously recall high school memories, like a geometry class incident that had everyone laughing, and the lasting impact of hip-hop lyrics on our perceptions of love and attraction. The mix of humor and candor offers a refreshing perspective on how our views on intimacy evolve over time.Nostalgia takes center stage as we reminisce about the formative high school years, complete with legendary pranks and unforgettable football coaches. We wander through the cherished memories of childhood crushes and how they morph into more complex adult realities. Finally, our retro movie chat brings back the classic films that shaped our cultural landscape, from "Deliverance" to "Blazing Saddles." Ending on a high note, we throw in a lively discussion about upcoming old-school concerts, with Vanilla Ice and Montel Jordan promising a trip down memory lane. Grab your headphones and join us for a lively mix of humor, nostalgia, and insightful chatter!Thanks for listening to the Nobody's Talking Podcast. Follow us on Twitter: (nobodystalking1), Instagram : (nobodystalkingpodcast) and email us at (nobodystalkingpodcast@gmail.com) Thank you!

#DoorGrowShow - Property Management Growth
DGS 262: How To Make High Status Friends And Attend VIP Events

#DoorGrowShow - Property Management Growth

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2024 73:10


As business owners, we often feel imposter syndrome or worry about our status. Have you ever wanted to elevate your image and be more relevant? In this episode of the #DoorGrowShow, property management growth expert Jason Hull sits down with Michael Sartain, CEO of Men of Action Mentoring to talk about how to make high-status friends and attend VIP events. You'll Learn [03:27] How to Utilize Networking [19:03] Becoming High-Status Using Social Media [26:54] How to be Relevant [38:58] Social Media is Fake [53:21] Authenticity vs Effective Content Tweetables “You need to be the person who always solves problems for other people and ask for nothing in return.” “You're building a brand. Status is status.” “A lot of our beliefs that we're holding on to that are holding us back.” “You make millions of dollars from solving other people's problems, not by doing what you love.” Resources DoorGrow and Scale Mastermind DoorGrow Academy DoorGrow on YouTube DoorGrowClub DoorGrowLive TalkRoute Referral Link Transcript [00:00:00] Michael: Your ability to grow is based on your perceived status, your perceived trustworthiness, your perceived know how. Not your actual know how.  [00:00:11] Jason: Welcome DoorGrow property managers to the DoorGrow show. If you are a property management entrepreneur that wants to add doors, make a difference, increase revenue, help others, impact lives, and you are interested in growing a business and life, and you're open to doing things a bit differently, then you are a DoorGrow property manager. [00:00:30] DoorGrow property managers love the opportunities, daily variety, unique challenges, and freedom that property management brings. Many in real estate think you're crazy for doing it. You think they're crazy for not because you realize that property management is the ultimate high trust gateway to real estate deals, relationships, and residual income. At DoorGrow, we are on a mission to transform property management business owners and their businesses. We want to transform the industry, eliminate the BS, build awareness, change perception, expand the market, and help the best property management entrepreneurs win. I'm your host, property management growth expert, Jason Hull, the founder and CEO of DoorGrow. [00:01:10] Now let's get into the show.  [00:01:13] So I have an awesome guest today. I actually joined his program just for kicks. This is Michael Sartain. Michael, welcome to the DoorGrow show.  [00:01:22] Michael: Hey, what's going on, man? Hey, I gotta be honest with you. Two years ago, I didn't know what doors meant and then I started hanging out with Justin Waller and he's like, "yeah, man, I have 300 doors." [00:01:29] I was like, "bro, what are you talking about?" [00:01:31] And then he's like, now he's got 400 doors. And I was like, "oh, it's like all these different properties." And then my buddy Myron he's got 17 homes that he owns up in Connecticut. He told me about, and I didn't understand how this whole thing worked. And then the property management side of it, like "my company, we're like, we're buying properties because we want to use the depreciation. And we need someone to keep, you know, these places rented, blah, blah, blah." And then the property management, I don't know that much about it. So that's why I was really excited to come on here and check this out.  [00:01:57] Jason: Cool. Well, yeah. And I didn't know very much about like maintaining a presence. [00:02:03] Looking cool, like actually looking cool on social media instead of just trying to look cool. And and so I've learned some good things by being in your program. So let's get into a little bit of background about you for those that are like, who's this Michael guy? And maybe how you kind of got into entrepreneurism and I think that'd be relevant to anybody listening. [00:02:25] Michael: So I'm originally from East Dallas. I grew up on the good side of the tracks and went to high school on the bad side of the tracks. And graduated from my high school, barely like did anything. It was not a very good experience. And I got into UT Austin because I was in top 10 percent of my class. [00:02:39] Went there four years, studied astronomy and business and then got out of there. And then I ended up managing a nightclub for a while, for a couple of years because MCI Worldcom and Enron had gone out of business. So if you know, UT Austin, Enron was like a huge supply of jobs once you graduated you know, as a Longhorn. [00:02:56] Once they go out of business, none of us can find jobs. I ended up working at a strip club for like several years as a DJ. And this is the first point in my life where I'm like, "okay, there's something going on here. There's things that I've been taught growing up, but there's something different now." Of course, I want to preface this. [00:03:10] By no means am I saying that people who go to a strip club or people who work in a strip club are indicative of the median of society. They clearly aren't, clearly are not. What I am saying though is that you can see the extremes in society when you go to places like that and from those extremes, you can see overt reactions. [00:03:27] One of the things that I do in my course is I teach how people can network, get invited where the cool kids sit like that phenomenon of where the cool guys are and the not cool guys, the hot club versus the not club that the club people don't want to go to, or the party everyone's trying to get into. [00:03:42] What is it that causes that phenomenon of popularity and status? There has to be something that can explain it. And so what I've been trying to do for the last 15 years is use evolutionary studies in order to figure out a way in order to do that. And so a lot of times when you do that, you know, you can see subcommunication between a man and a woman and you don't really know what's going on. [00:04:02] They have the internal focus of what's going on, but when you see it in like a nightclub or a festival or someplace like that, you see very overt communication. And from that, you can learn a lot of cool stuff. It's like watching, you know, crows you know, pick at a carcass versus watching a giant white tiger go kill a gazelle. [00:04:18] Like that is overt examples of predation that you can see and be like, okay, this is how biology works. This is how natural selection works, et cetera. And I know for your audience, you're like, "where the fuck's he going with all this?" Yeah. The reason why, just to explain. I got fascinated. I did seven years in the military after 9 -11. [00:04:33] I joined and I flew a KC 135 as an instructor navigator. And then I was I did counterintelligence for about the last two years I was there. And then, so, in that time period, I learned how a very structured business could work and like how accountability works. Accountability and leadership, I learned very much during that time period. [00:04:49] But at that same time period, I was also going out a lot and I was like very interested to me in like, what is it that caused certain men to be phenomenally good with women and get a lot of people to show up to an event and then what caused other men to just not get it. And I always, I also noticed that there was a very small group of men that got it. [00:05:05] And then a very large group of men that didn't understand this concept whatsoever. So I became fascinated with that idea of 2011. I ended up retiring from the military and I ended up moving to Las Vegas and this is the first time when I started going out to some of these nightclubs and these venues here in Las Vegas. [00:05:19] And I meet a lot of real estate agents. I meet a lot of accountants. I meet plastic surgeons, doctors. And it was very clear to me like that some of them got it and some of them didn't get it. I threw a real estate event recently where we took a blue heron home. And then we had a charity event for animals. [00:05:33] And while we're there, I invited every single female influencer in the city to show up. Well, these, some of these girls were interested in getting into real estate, but I just want you to imagine it was just like a regular real estate event that you have, except you're doing it for animal rescue. [00:05:47] So now all these people who are in real estate, mortgage brokers, et cetera, property managers like yourself, they would show up to this beautiful three story house. It was catered. It was beautiful. And then every pretty girl in the city in Las Vegas who wasn't working that night showed up to this thing. [00:06:01] So now you're drinking champagne. There's three times as many girls as guys. Some of you guys are listening to this and you're like, "okay, now I understand. I'm starting to understand what he does." You're able to create these incredible environments and in doing so, just imagine, everyone... I try to teach networking through events. [00:06:17] That's basically how I try to teach networking through small events at your house or large events, you know, like a CES conference. I try to teach networking through those mechanisms. And then I try to show how evolution created humans throughout history. Dr. David Buss writes in his book the evolution of desire throughout history. [00:06:34] The men who have worked in groups and in tandem with one another always had access to more resources and always had access to more women. And so that's the reason why, you know, I teach these concepts. And so what happens is that blue Heron thing that we did, the guy who ran it, he's at the forefront and he goes, "I want to just thank you guys for coming out here and helping me, blah, blah, blah." [00:06:52] He had endeared so much goodwill with every mortgage broker, real estate agent. It was really crazy. All these other real estate agents wanted to train under him. People started sending him business. His business blew up. Another example I give, that's Jeremy Green's name. I have another example of my buddy, Mark Pearlberg, who's one of those also in my program. [00:07:09] Mark is an accountant. Mark started to see the way that I would use zoom calls and on the zoom calls, Mark would go on and show. How he understood accounting backwards and forwards better than everyone else who was listening, he showed himself to be a subject matter expert in the zoom calls. He was hosting in doing so, just imagine Jason, like, you know, I don't believe accounting is your specialty, but if you listen to accountant at first, it's interesting, but after like an hour and a half, you get to the realization, like, "this is interesting, but I don't want to do this." [00:07:37] And then at about the two hour mark, you're like, "This is interesting. I don't want to do this. How much do I have to pay you to do this?" And so because what we did and he started hosting a podcast and because he started hosting these zoom calls with other professionals, now he tells me, he's like, "I actually had to slow down the podcast because I can't handle all the business that I have. [00:07:55] There's not enough of me. In order for me to be able to do this." And he works from home. He just, an incredible lifestyle that he's created. So when we go back to what we're saying before, you know, I learned initially, "okay, what are the mechanisms that cause people to be cool or not cool, to be popular, not popular, to be low status or high status?" [00:08:13] I learned that when I was working in Austin, you know, nightclub, I learned that when I was in the U S military, like what good leadership and bad leadership was. And then I learned it in the last 13 years here living in Las Vegas. And I took all those lessons and I, from the last say, 25 years, and I put them into a course called the men of action course and try to concisely take this 25 years of knowledge and put it into one space so that everyone can learn how to do these kinds of things. [00:08:35] Now, here's where it might be confusing for some of your audience, the mechanisms that men use in order to show status with women in order to date them and the mechanisms that men and women use in order to pitch an idea or to sell a product are the same mechanisms. They are the same. This is difficult. A lot of people don't grasp this. if you guys ever want to see a great example of this, great book you should all read is Oren Klaff's book called pitch anything. Listen to some of the words he uses. Jason, you remember eliminate neediness. [00:09:06] Do you remember that? Eliminate neediness. Where does that come from? Where does that come from? It didn't come from self help. Eliminate neediness is a dating concept. Okay? Avoid beta behavior. Do you remember? Oren Klaff says this in his book. He goes, "avoid beta behavior." Where does that come from, Jason? [00:09:21] That is a dating concept. So where do these things come from? At the highest level Jordan Belfort, he calls it goal oriented communication. So goal oriented communication is, "will you go on a date with me?" Goal oriented communication is, "Ken, will you invest in my project?" Goal oriented communication is, "will you come work for me?" [00:09:36] Goal oriented communication. I'm doing this because this is like the apex of community of goal oriented communication. All these places meet at the apex, and that is the understanding of basically Dale Carnegie's how to win friends and influence people, get people to talk about themselves. You can find common interests, figure out ways to break rapport, all these different things. [00:09:53] And like what I teach my clients, Jason, the number one thing I teach my clients when it comes to high stats networking is you need to be the person who always solves problems for other people and ask for nothing in return. A great example is, do you remember Harvey Keitel in the movie Pulp Fiction? [00:10:08] You remember he's the wolf? Do you remember Pulp Fiction? I haven't seen Pulp Fiction. Okay, so tonight you're going to watch Pulp Fiction. Every single other person watching this has watched Pulp Fiction. [00:10:17] Jason: I know, everybody else has watched it but me, so.  [00:10:19] Michael: There's a point, there's a point where they have to clean up a dead body and they have to call this guy named the wolf and he just, he fixes things. [00:10:25] He's a cleaner. The wolf shows up in his Acura NSX, it's Harvey Keitel and he just fixes things. He goes, "are you going to listen to me or do you want to go to jail?" And he does, he just fixes everything. That's what I become. I'm the guy who fixes things for other people. I have a bunch of friends. I help them find people for their sales team. Most of my friends have met their boyfriends or girlfriends through me. I help people find their employees. I'm the hub. I'm the hub of the social wheel. And that's what I teach you to do in my course. If you cannot replace your social circle, your girlfriend, or your job in 15 minutes, you don't have enough abundance and I need to teach you how to have more abundance. [00:10:56] And so how do you do that? There's just certain mechanisms that people who have an abundance mentality and understand networking have, and when they use those techniques, then they can have anything they want. They get into any door. So another example, Jason is like the guy who goes to the Tai Lopez conference or the Taylor Welch conference or goes to see Cole Gordon or goes to see Wes Watson or goes to see whoever. [00:11:17] The guy who is like, "Hey man, thank you for your time." The one who like goes and pays Patrick bed David for his counseling. And then there's the guy who Patrick Bet David who goes to see Patrick David for his counseling. And then Patrick David was like, "Hey man, can I come visit you and hang out? Come meet my wife. Let me take you out to dinner." Does that make sense? There's a mechanism you'll see, like with a lot of people have asked me this before. Why is it that, you know, other people are like paying to listen to Justin Waller speak, but like Justin Waller and I are like close friends? [00:11:42] Why is it that other people like buy Rollo's book, but Rollo is one of my best friends? Why is it like all these other people call me and I'm not trying to say this to brag, but the reason why I'm trying to say this is there's a status line that you get to where you're a customer, and then you're his friend. [00:11:56] How do you cross that status line? This is such a key for those of you who are like, trying to get into sales or trying to understand networking. It's just like, I'm paying this guy, like how much, like I'm paying Tony Robbins. I'm a customer. I'm customer. Now Tony's like sending me messages on my birthday. [00:12:09] What is that status line? Some people's like, "well, you just need to have more money." And I'm telling you that is not what the case is. That's definitely not what the case is.  [00:12:15] Jason: Who would want to connect with people that they're only connecting with you because of money? I mean, that'd be a really shitty reason to be connecting with somebody.  [00:12:22] Michael: In the beginning, you will. But after a while you learn, whenever I go up and talk to my favorite influencer, let's say I paid for his coaching program is my voice cracking or my eyes getting big is my vocal tonality changing because I see this person as high status. [00:12:38] Am I dressing too fancy to try to show off? Am I doing too much or am I just like just the normal dude? I am. Oren Klaff, one of my favorite YouTube content creators. I don't know if you are not Oren Klaff. I'm sorry, Orion Terriban. All right. His name is Psych Hacks. Well, I had him on my show a couple of days ago. [00:12:54] He kind of converges behavioral economics with evolutionary psychology. And he basically talks about the sexual marketplace as far as economics is concerned. Okay. Really great person. Have him on my show. Ask him a bunch of stuff during the show. One of the things I talk about is like, "Hey, Orion, I know that you do some sales stuff, some coaching stuff. If you want my help, I'll help you how to, you know, put out a low ticket offer, high ticket offer, how you can like buy back your time." he's like, "yeah, you know, I can't scale myself that much." I was like, "okay, so you're going to read buy back your time by Dan Martell." [00:13:21] And then I gave him a bunch of books, you know, that would probably help him. And then at the end, I was like, bro, anytime you want to call me and you ask me about any of this stuff, I'll help you. The guy who has the world, you guys look it up. The guy with the world record in the high jump on planet earth is a guy named Darius Clark. He went to Texas A& M. He's the leading scorer in slam ball. Have you ever seen slam ball, Jason? Remember the trampolines and the basketball, they go dunk on each other. Anyways, I bumped into Darius at a slam ball game. We started talking and I'm, and then Darius is like, "Hey man, I want to level up my social media." [00:13:50] And I'm like, "Darius, let me figure out ways that I can help you level up your social media." So it's like one guys are like a professional athlete. Another guy's an accountant. You might be saying like, "why is it you're able to do all these different things?" And the reason why is because these are evolutionary problems. [00:14:04] These are evolutionary challenges that all men we're looking for. There are three things that really differentiate men from women. Three massive things. There's more than three, but these are the three biggest ones. Jason here. Number one, this is the most obvious one. It's upper body strength. Men are about two standard deviations stronger than women as far as upper body strength, meaning the medium grip strength for a man it puts them in the top, you know, 98 percent and top 2 percent of women. Makes sense.  [00:14:27] Jason: Yeah. Which also throws off our balance is higher. Yeah.  [00:14:31] Michael: Correct. Also. Yeah. It also, there's a reason why some of the reasons why men live shorter lives is because they keep their weight up here around their waist. [00:14:37] Whereas women keep it below their hips. And that's really, it's further away from their heart. There's a couple other things according to that now that's the first thing. The second one is a variety of sexual partners. Men are again, two standard deviations. Yeah. Far more like meaning the median man is interested in more women than the other way around but puts them in the top 2%. [00:14:55] But the third one, and this was a really interesting one and I knew this one, but it was Tai Lopez I was at his house last Wednesday. And he was explaining this, do you know the main thing where women just do not care that much about at all? But men are obsessed with, you know what it is? It's in your title. [00:15:09] No, it's in your title.  [00:15:10] Jason: Let's see, friends, high status, what I don't know?  [00:15:13] Michael: Status. Women in general do not care as much about status as men do, meaning women don't kill each other over status as men have been doing for the last hundred thousand years. So in fact, Dr. Buss, women care about men having status. [00:15:26] Jason: Women care about men having status.  [00:15:28] Michael: Women care about the men that they're with having status, yes. Yeah, okay. Yes. I see. Meaning they care about status as an object to obtain, but not as a something for themselves. Or rather, if you've ever, if you've ever lived on a military base, it's one of the strangest things. [00:15:41] Whoever the base commander's wife is, she's like the leader of the wives. It's so weird. She did nothing. She didn't go to officer school. She didn't do shit, but because she's married to the 06, the base commander, whenever they have engagements, she is... it's so funny. Anybody who's been in the military, you know, this is true. [00:15:58] Whoever the base commander's wife is. She's all of a sudden like the leader of all the events, even though why? Because she's married to the base commander. That's the way it works. So men, women in general in gendered into themselves, don't care as much about status as men do men severely care about status far more than women do. [00:16:16] And so because of the, these concepts, that's why you'll see like with a lot of the stuff I'm saying when it comes to sales, this is for men and women, but when it comes to dating, women do not sit there and have to show their status in order to attract men. But the other way they do. Does that make sense? [00:16:29] Yeah. And that's why it's like an important differentiation to make. And that's one of the other things I teach in my course. Like when you also, when you're selling to men versus women, it's something that you need to understand. You don't necessarily need to sell to women based on status. Like how, "Hey Sherry, how'd you like those big shoulders to show off those muscles to get those guys?" No, they don't. It's that's a status thing shoulder to waist ratio is like a male strength machismo testosterone status thing that women just aren't as interested in, you know, so there's just interesting concepts like that. [00:16:59] This divergence innate differences between men and women and where do we find these differences? We find them in evolutionary studies.  [00:17:05] Jason: So I think it's really interesting what you talked about earlier. You mentioned like this gravitation towards basically what works, right. And we see this everywhere. [00:17:14] Like I've been in lots of different programs. I've worked with lots of different mentors, coaches, read lots of different books and I'm noticing more and more I evolve as a human being. I'm noticing more and more parallels between the best ideas. Like I just read a book on kids. It was like how to talk so kids will listen and how to listen so kids will talk. And it's probably one of the best communication books I've ever read. Like anybody could learn from reading this book because to some degree, we're all little kids in bigger. [00:17:44] Michael: Even without kids.  [00:17:45] Jason: And also I was like, this is brilliant, like self talk like psychology even in this book. [00:17:51] And I'm like, this could be applied to so many different things. And it talks about empathetic, like being empathetic in your communication. I'm like, this is brilliant. This will work so effectively for sales or for anything. And people think, "oh, it's for kids." Right. And so what works works. [00:18:05] And I read another book, something about relationships by David B. Wolfe. It was a really good book, and this was for grownups, but there were so many parallels between these things. And you had mentioned also with dating and you know, for example, sales really, there's so many parallels between going out and trying to get clients and trying to get dates. [00:18:27] Michael: The higher you go, they're not parallels. They're exactly the same. When you get to the top, they're exactly like what I'm saying is when you get to the top, meaning like Hugh Hefner, like when you're at the top and then you just see, it's just a total presentation and it's nothing but just showing status. [00:18:42] Oh, it's the same thing. It's the same. I bought a Tesla that like Playboy is a brand. Tesla is a brand. You start to see they're doing the same thing to your brain.  [00:18:51] Jason: So for the business owners, listening to this, who are not trying to be Hugh Hefner. Right. They're not, and maybe they're married like me and they're not like trying to get women, but they do want to increase their sales. [00:19:03] They do want to increase their status and they want to figure out how to attract more business. What are maybe some of the things that they could do to be more attractive to the real estate investors that they're trying to get as clients?  [00:19:18] Michael: Yeah, I will tell you the first thing is you need to be a way more cognizant of how you are perceived socially and for a lot of people, one of the things you have to understand is the more things become digital and the more your image can be spread across social media platforms, the less your actual merit of your business matters and the more the perception of your business matters. [00:19:40] Jason: Yeah. How do they get an accurate view of how they're perceived?  [00:19:46] Michael: You could ask other people. I mean, generally the market is going to tell you, right? What is the price of of a commodity? The market's going to end up telling you right. In a free market economy, but it's like when you make social media content, you need to make them the content to market your business in a sexy, fun way that catches people's attention, but it doesn't have to be extremely representative. And I know this is really hard for a lot of people to do because they're like, "no, I'm just going to be myself and make content that feels organic." And I'm just telling you that doesn't work. [00:20:14] I don't care what Gary Vanderchuck told you. That is not the way the world works. Everyone else is stunting. Everyone is using FaceApp and Facetune. All these other people are just showing images and pictures of the best parts of their life. I post on social media all the time. I did not post anything about me feeding my cats this morning. [00:20:30] Like, the people want to see the cool stuff. That's just generally the way it is. So, you're, the way you are perceived on social media again, that's what we, you know, Men of Action, our group, is when you're in a community that gives you accountability and feedback to let you know, hey man, this is not a good post or this is a good post. [00:20:45] When we are on Instagram specifically instagram trades, a currency and that currency is called status. That's all Instagram is. Facebook is not like that. By the way, you guys will notice for those of you do any kind of marketing, Facebook is going to work really well for your 38- 40 year old audience and older. [00:21:01] And Instagram is going to work for your audience below 38 to maybe 28 and then maybe to 25 and below 25, it's going to be TikTok. And you'll notice, depending on which audience you're trying to get to, that's where you're going to see the most prevalence on those different platforms. Also, you're also going to see the most politically progressive of those platforms will be TikTok and the most politically conservative all those platforms will be like Twitter or X. So you, these are kind of the things that you have to learn. What you need out there is a perception that people have of your business and you have it as an entrepreneur. So you need to be trustworthy. You need to seem like, you know, more than everyone else, like you're a subject matter expert and you need to seem extremely motivated. [00:21:40] And in doing so as well, when you show images of your business and you personally, you need to show relevancy, competency, access to scarce resources, and social proof. Those are the things that will help. So what I mean by social proof? Other people in the industry following you on Instagram is a great way to almost look like a testimonial or maybe they leave comments. [00:21:59] That's a great way to show social proof, relevancy. Are you trying to use banner ads from 25 years ago? Or you're like, "Well, I'm still using email blasts." Okay. If I'm talking to a guy in real estate and he's telling me about email blasts, I know he's not relevant anymore. If I'm sitting there talking to stuff, if that's all he's talking about, right? [00:22:17] If he's sitting there being like, you know, he doesn't use Instagram, but he's got an SEO guy. I'm like, okay, he's not relevant anymore. He doesn't know. He hasn't changed things. But when I talked to a guy and he's like, "yeah, what I did was I started a podcast and in my podcast, I do 20 minute interviews with different people using restream. And then I have a guy come through and make clips and then I have, and then the best clips I end up promoting those clips on Instagram or using meta. Facebook Ad manager, meta ad manager, and in doing so, then I make the best ones and I turn them into advertisements and I put a CTA at the end." I'm like, okay, that guy's relevant, that guy gets it. [00:22:49] Jason: Then we're relevant here at DoorGrow.  [00:22:51] Michael: What you're doing is extremely relevant.  [00:22:52] Jason: If they have an AOL email address, they're like, "what's your email?" [00:22:56] Michael: That's exactly, it's not relevant.  [00:22:57] "It's aol.Com." [00:22:58] "I have a Facebook, but I don't have an Instagram." You're just not relevant. Like I can tell you're not relevant. When people are like, "well, my audience isn't on Instagram." It's like, it doesn't matter if your audience is on Instagram, you're trying to grow your audience. And by the way, the market will tell you what it wants. And every day, I'm sorry for those of you who don't want to hear this. Every day, each one of these platforms becomes slightly less relevant. Okay? [00:23:19] TikTok is on its uprise right now. Instagram is becoming less relevant because of TikTok, Rumble, YouTube, and Facebook to a certain audience is also already completely irrelevant. You'll see women below a certain age do not have a Facebook, but they do have an Instagram. [00:23:32] So the answer is to have all of them. All of you should have, you should be making 30 to 90 second content, the up and down type of content. Not landscape of profile content. You should be making that and it should be going on Snapchat. It should be going on X. It should be going on YouTube. It should be YouTube shorts, TikToks, and Facebook and Instagram reels. [00:23:50] It should be going at all those different places. You can use HubSpot or some other platform in order to post that content. And the content doesn't just have to be clips that go viral from podcasts. You can do man on the street videos. And here's a big one. All of you can do this. You can do reaction videos. [00:24:04] All of you can do reaction videos. They're so easy to do. And by the way, you don't even have to like, you're just like, "Michael, I don't know how to use OBS and I don't know how to do a reaction video." All you have to do is sit like I'm sitting right now. I'm in my den. You know, obviously I put some soundproofing behind me, but I'm in my den, I got a big ol ring light in front of me, and somebody comes up to me and goes, "Michael, what do you think about the Trump assassination attempt?" [00:24:23] Or "Michael, what do you think about, you know, Kamala Harris or whatever?" And I'm like, and I just turn my camera like this, like I'm talking, "Man, I'll tell you what I'm thinking. I'm thinking, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah." And you just say, and as soon as people watch the video and they're like, "This guy's about to tell me what he's thinking." [00:24:35] Then everyone will watch. And then some of you are listening right now and you're like, "I'm just a property manager. I don't want to talk about politics. Really go watch Ryan Pineda. Go watch Bradley, go watch Codie Sanchez, go watch Tom Bill. You go watch any of these guys who are crushing it in their fields. [00:24:51] They give their opinions on everything. Did you guys hear Alex Hormozi now talks about dating? What? Yeah. You're building a brand. Status is status. Like nobody cares. This is the other thing, Jason, a lot of your clients, and this is something I've talked to you about, and everyone in my program hears me talk about this ad nauseum. [00:25:08] Is the concept of like, I'm afraid that I'm going to post the wrong thing and nobody holds you accountable for anything you have to say, like, I was just looking at a video of Kamala Harris at a P Diddy party, walking around with Montel Jordan. No one seems to care that ever happened. No one cares about Joe Biden talking about, "I don't want to send my kids to school with the monkeys." [00:25:26] Nobody cares about it. No one cares. Like you said, like Donald Trump had sex with a porn star while his wife was pregnant and they brought it up during the debates and no one cares. Literally one of the most popular movies of all time The wolf of wall street is a about a man who did 15 months in prison for securities fraud, punched his wife in the stomach, kidnapped his own kid, did quaaludes and slept with prostitutes, and then afterwards, he is one of the top sales trainers in the world today. But you guys think anyone cares. Caitlyn Jenner runs over someone, kills them, and then four months later is named woman of the year. But you're like, "Michael, I'm a property manager. What if I post the wrong thing?" Here's another thing, Jason, and this is a poor reflection on humanity, but it's absolutely true. [00:26:09] If you get popular enough, they will forgive you for anything. And if you don't believe me right before OJ died, I had a conversation with him and they had offered him millions of dollars to do a fantasy football podcast, and I was like, OJ, what about those people you stabbed 56 times? Nobody cares. So many of you are watching this right now and you're like, you have 400 followers on Instagram and you're like so worried about posting the wrong thing, bro. [00:26:32] You don't have 400 followers on Instagram. You have four followers on Instagram and one of them's your mom. No one cares what you're doing. Most of you on social media are irrelevant and because you're irrelevant on social media, in reality, you're invisible. Listening to this, when you ask me what the advice is, your job is to become visible. [00:26:49] Some of you will be offended by what I say and the rest of you will be successful. You've got to decide which one you want to be.  [00:26:54] Jason: So I'm going to play devil's advocate for a second here, right? A lot of property managers, they think "I'm going to go start posting about property management. And maybe I'll get some investors that want to like work with me." [00:27:06] And so they start posting property management with this false assumption that people really care about property management, right? And so the analogy I'll usually share with property managers is I'll say, "how many plumbers are you following on social media?" And they'll say, "none." [00:27:23] "Why?" I said, "they want your business. Why aren't you following them?" And so there's this false reality that these social media marketers will sell to property managers. They're like wasting their time. And some of them spend a lot of money and time with these social media companies, wasting time promoting their property management business on social media, when nobody gives a shit about property management, even their clients don't wake up in the morning and go, "man, I'm thinking about property management." [00:27:50] Jason, what should they be doing instead?  [00:27:52] Michael: Yes. Jason you saying that just got me. I want someone who's watching this to do this and then tag me in the video when you do it. Jason, as a property manager, do you ever have nightmare tenants?  [00:28:03] Jason: So to be clear for those listening...  [00:28:05] Michael: yeah,  [00:28:06] Jason: I'm not managing properties. I'm coaching property management business owners, but they would say, "yes," they have nightmare tenants. All the time.  [00:28:12] Michael: Do you ever have nightmare vendors? Like guys who come like when I say vendor, what I mean is the plumber, the carpenter, the guy who comes...  [00:28:18] Jason: Yes, they have problems with vendors constantly, they have nightmare owners. [00:28:21] They're managing properties.  [00:28:22] Michael: What about, well, I wouldn't do nightmare owners cause you're trying to get business. I wouldn't talk about nightmare owners. What I would talk about is. I would start off a clip just like this. "I had a nightmare tenant. This guy was destroying," and then it would just show pictures. [00:28:34] "This guy was destroying everything in the place. I swear. He didn't know how to, he couldn't aim and hit the toilet. He has just destroyed the place. And this is what I did to fix it. And here's three tips for you to deal with a nightmare tenant." Viral. Yeah. Viral. Not only are you viral. Everyone's coming to you. [00:28:52] It's like, "man, I don't want a nightmare tenant. I just bought this two bedroom, two bathroom. I don't want a nightmare tenant. I'm going to go do what he does."  [00:28:59] Jason: I don't want it to be a meth house eviction. Like, yeah.  [00:29:02] Michael: Yes. Yeah. You know what i'm saying? Like that's what I would do. I would go over like what are these and because what you're going to do is what are the biggest fears of the people who are hiring property owners, my nightmare tenant, my tenant who doesn't pay. Like those kind of things, and I would make content. What are the three steps that I did to do with the five tips that a lot of people's in this place don't do right? I would make content like that. And you could do opus there's these ai software apps that'll basically take the clip and then they'll just inject B roll that fits whatever the words you're saying. [00:29:33] You don't have to hardly do any work when you do it and then all of a sudden it's like, "it was a nightmare. This guy's made my place look like a roach house. Roach infested." And then it'll actually pull up an image like a whatever, a stock Shutterstock image of a roach infested home, whatever. [00:29:47] Jason: Now they're using ai. Even I'm seeing a lot of AI images Just flashing. Yeah. Yeah. Or, yeah. Correct.  [00:29:51] Michael: It could actually illustrate using artificial intelligence, illustrate the image for you. You could actually do that. So you don't have run into any copyright issues. Right. Or any permission issues. [00:30:00] There's just so many ways to do this. But what are you doing? You're showing relevancy and competency. You know how to use Instagram. You know how to create a clip using artificial intelligence. You have good audio. You have good lighting. You're showing relevancy. You're showing competency. You're showing high intelligence. [00:30:15] You're showing high social status. And then in the comments, you're like "LMAO." Like people are laughing my ass off. "This happened to me." "Oh my God, Jason, same shit." "100 percent true." And now I have social status. I have all these things. Why? Because I made some content that was engaging about something that is incredibly unsexy, which is property management. [00:30:35] That's how you do it. What are those ultimate fears that your prospective clients have? And I would just do nothing but make content about that. I have a friend of mine, FedEx fearless. His name's Bismarck. And this guy, he goes, "these are three reasons why you are ugly." And I'm like, "what?" [00:30:48] And like, he really goes after people. "This is the reason why your girlfriend is cheating on you right now." And everyone just, I'm like, "what?" And I don't want to watch, but I'm like, I need to watch this video.  [00:30:57] Jason: What's going on there? Yeah.  [00:30:59] Michael: It's so great. It's so great. " No, Michael, you need to be authentic with your social..." no, you don't. You don't need to be authentic. You need to capture people's attention. You need to be attractive. Your primary job is to be attractive on social media. Now what happens is now you got them with the hook, "Here are the top three things that I do to deal with this horrible tenant that I have" And then when they come in the hook now throughout there you give those three, explanations But you also throw in a little piece of advice that shows just a little humble brag that shows "In my 27 years of property management, this is the thing that I've learned." [00:31:30] Okay, little humble brag. And at the end, it goes, "if you want to learn more, comment, the word guide below," or if you're on YouTube, you'd be like, "go down into the description and click the link. And then blah, blah, blah." And it just ends up right down your sales funnel, maybe to a low ticket offer, maybe an ebook that you wrote something like that. [00:31:45] And the next thing, you've 10xed profits. You've 10x revenue. You're selling a course on property management while writing a book on property management, while having a podcast on property management, while being a property manager, all of it at the same time. And then you got to hire a new accountant because you got too many write offs. [00:31:59] Like you don't have enough time to pay your taxes. You got to get too much money. That's it. That's how this works. And that's about what I just explained to you. It's just the difference between getting it and not getting it, being relevant and not being relevant. And so a lot of people, what they're, they listen to me and they always make me out to be the bad guy because cause what I do is I tell people, no one cares about you. And no one likes to hear that. They like to think that the rest of the world cares about property managers. But like you said, no one's following plumbers. Right. But if I was a plumber, I would do the same thing, "man, I walked into this house and this toilet had exploded and just have an image of it." [00:32:30] And it'd be like, "okay, I need to hear what this is." "And then a monster crawled out of the toilet." I'm just kidding. And like, I would just, that's what I would do just to keep people's attention.  [00:32:37] Jason: So for those listening, can we qualify you a little bit related to social media, because you've got a good following? [00:32:43] You've got a sizable business because people listening if they don't know who you are, I want them to recognize you're very qualified to talk about this. Not so humble brag about yourself for a second.  [00:32:55] Michael: I have a men of action. We have 1600 clients that have gone through there. [00:32:58] 200 video testimonials if you go on the school server. And also we have a free community a free school server. What's about 43-4,500 guys in there. You're welcome to message. One of the things that I've told people is that if I join a group and they tell me not to talk to the other people in the group, I know this is a scam. [00:33:12] You'll notice sometimes with MLMs, you'll see that. I implore you to talk to anyone, any client that's ever gone through my program and they will tell you how incredibly satisfied they were. Also you, Jason, I'm sure you've seen my course is extremely comprehensive. It's about 65 hours long. That doesn't even include the live calls. [00:33:29] And then also there's a book, there's a required book list that you have to read in order to go through the course.  [00:33:33] Jason: I'll tell you right now, like an eight figure business for you.  [00:33:36] Michael: Just today, we've done eight figures in total, but as of this month, this is the first month we'll recross the mark. [00:33:42] It was what? 833 a month or something like that. We cross that this month. So that's about, yeah. So we're doing about a little bit under eight figures in revenue per year.  [00:33:50] Jason: This is more than any property managers probably listened to my show. So just for perspective. Okay. Yeah. Got it.  [00:33:57] Michael: Yeah. I mean, because coaching is scalable. [00:34:00] That's the reason why. And like the other thing I want you guys understand is a lot of people got into real estate because they were trying to find a scalable way of making income and they're using you to make their lives scalable. So if you guys read, buy back your time by Dan Martell, they're paying you to buy back their time as real estate owners. [00:34:15] That's what their job is. And essentially you're going to eventually do the same thing. You're going to pay someone to buy back your time from them. So the main difference, and I'm sure many of you entrepreneurs already know this, but. When you start off in the workforce, you are trading your time for money. [00:34:28] You're working at Chick fil A or McDonald's and you're being paying an hourly salary later on. You're trading your money for time. I pay one guy. He comes into my house. He turns on my computer, he turns on my camera, he turns on my lights, he sits me down, and then he just starts yelling at me to talk about certain subjects, and I have no idea, I'm just like, drinking coffee, and I'm like, what up, and he goes, "what do you think about this?" And I'm like, "oh man, let me tell you something, and then they record it," and then it's just a reaction video, and I do nothing. [00:34:53] I pay to get my time back. I have several editors that live in Romania and Nigeria and all these, because I don't want to edit videos anymore. I used to be a video editor and a videographer. I don't want to do it anymore. I pay one place to do the live editing for my podcast. I don't want to do that anymore. [00:35:07] I pay to get my time back. For those of you who are considering hiring a personal assistant, once again, highly recommend Dan Martell's book, Buy Back Your Time. In the book, he talks about taking your yearly salary and divided by 8, 000. And that's what you pay the guy hourly. Take your yearly salary, how much you make in a year, your yearly income divided by 8, 000. [00:35:24] That's it. They go over the reason why, but it ends up becoming like a 40 hour work week. You end up paying him one, you pay him half of what one hourly wage for years. So if your time is worth a thousand dollars an hour, you might pay him 500 an hour to get certain things done for your life. And one of my favorite sayings in that book is something done 80 percent right is 100 percent awesome. [00:35:43] And like, it was one of the hardest things to give up. The guy who does my timestamps, that was really hard. I love doing timestamps because timestamps were giving me clips and those clips would go viral and the virality would make me money, but I had to give that up. And eventually you're going to give up all these processes. [00:35:57] Another thing I'll explain for you guys who are entrepreneurs, one of the greatest tools you will ever find is an app called loom. Look up loom. What loom is allows you to make videos, but the video it's like, it's showing the screen on your phone or it's showing the screen on your computer while they're listening to your voice and you send it to your person. [00:36:12] So like, for instance, I do mass invites for certain events that I do. So I'll go on loom and I'll have a guy, maybe he speaks you know, Farsi or maybe this guy speaks like his English. Isn't that great? What I'll do is I'll go through my invite slowly and I'll do it like for 30 minutes, I'll just do invites and I'll show so he can see what it looks like. [00:36:28] And then I send it to him and then he looks at it and he has no questions. And my invites are done like that. Loom is one of the greatest way of passing along SOPs to people and then using them in order to buy back your time. So understanding all these concepts, it makes you more relevant, makes you more competent. [00:36:43] It gives you higher status. It gives you more access. And these are the things that you're looking for. In any walk of life, but especially in something like property management and you guys also understand as property managers Your job isn't sexy So what you have to do is you have to show the sexy parts of your job, right? [00:36:57] When I my favorite one are accountants and dentists. They're not my friend my friends who are dentists who know what they're doing, they show the fucking horror job teeth, You know car accident, messed up teeth, meth addict, whatever, and then they get the teeth back to 100%. And like me, as someone who doesn't care that much about dentistry, I'm just like staring like, "Oh my God, that was incredible." [00:37:17] Yeah. what you do is you figure out people's primary driver emotion and their biggest fear. And then from those things, from the primary driver emotion and their biggest fear and from those things then you make your content attacking those primary driver emotions and those biggest fears, okay. And when you do so it doesn't make any difference if you're an accountant It doesn't make any difference if you're a property manager doesn't make any difference what it is that you sell people will watch and they will be obsessed. [00:37:42] My brother, he watches videos of horseshoes. They basically, you know, they shave off the end of the horse's hoof and then they put the shoes on. He said it's like the most relaxing thing in the world to watch. And I wouldn't even think about that, but why is it? It's like something we don't even think about that much, but it's pretty amazing. [00:37:56] Like when you see, it's like very relaxing to watch stuff like that. You can do stuff like that.  [00:38:00] Jason: There's a guy that's viral for just, he finds distressed houses. And he just cleans up their lawn and the sidewalk. He's like, "Hey, could I mow your lawn? And it's like relaxing to watch the transformation." [00:38:12] Yeah.  [00:38:12] Michael: Another one that's great was if you guys watch the early Ryan Pineda stuff, what was he doing? He was flipping couches. He would find crappy couches, clean them up, and then he would sell them again. And he made a living from flipping couches. There's just all these different things. And like the concept of it sounds so boring, but I want to watch someone do it. [00:38:28] Right. It was the one where you'd buy those storage units and then you'd see whatever's in this. Oh, I forgot what that was. It was pawn shop, pawn stars or something where the people would buy storage units and open up in there. And there's like, sometimes there'd be nothing in the storage unit. Sometimes there'd be like a dead body in there or some crazy shit. [00:38:41] Like they find like a skull and like all of a sudden. Bag full of money. Yeah. Yeah. By the way, you guys know the producers were putting that bag of money in there, right? Like that wasn't real. That wasn't real.  [00:38:52] Jason: Reality TV isn't real either. You like to say social media isn't real and that's okay or something. [00:38:58] Michael: So rule number four in men of action is social media is fake and I'm okay with that because the money's real. And the world isn't fair. And I'm okay with that.  [00:39:05] Jason: Yeah.  [00:39:06] Michael: The world isn't fair and I'm okay with it. Rule number four in a, in social and of action is about acceptance. It's about accepting the world the way it is and never being a victim. [00:39:14] It's sure things are hard for you, but you're never a victim. You might be too short. English might not be your first language and you're having a hard time speaking it. You might be born poor. You might be born with some kind of ailment or disability that you feel like holds you back, but that's where you are. [00:39:27] You start from where you are. And then you create from there. Okay. You were saying something before about how you notice like all these books kind of converge in to the same place, three books that have nothing to do with each other, but it's the same concept. Ready? The power of now by Eckhart Tolle, the subtle art of not giving a fuck by Mark Manson and sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari. [00:39:45] You're like, wait a second. It's all the same thing. It's all the same. It's all this. I get to choose how react. I get to tell myself stories that change my behavior. It's all three of these books that have nothing to do with each other end up being the same book, not exactly the same book, but similar books. [00:40:00] Because once you get to the highest levels of enlightenment, transcendence, goal oriented communication ends up being the same thing for everyone.  [00:40:07] Jason: There's a one of my favorite books is by Byron Katie called Loving What Is. And basically, she takes you through this process of just asking yourself these four sort of questions to challenge your current view of reality. [00:40:21] And it takes you out of this victim sort of view. It's very much like cognitive behavioral therapy, maybe, or something like this, right? Yes. Or CBT or something. But yeah, so asking this question, is this belief that I have actually true? And a lot of our beliefs that we're holding on to that are holding us back. [00:40:36] And like, if we're not getting results in life, it's because we currently have beliefs that are not working for us. And so, if you see people that things are working well for them, even though you think, like, somebody might be watching right now going, "Michael is completely full of shit. He's throwing out all these crazy stuff and he's, he worked at a strip club" and somebody's like, so against that or whatever. [00:40:56] They're like their own stumbling block and they're in their way and they won't pay attention to the truth or the things that you're sharing that are good because they're so stuck on everything in the universe having to look a certain way that they are not even open to receiving more, they're not willing to challenge their own thinking. [00:41:13] They're not going to progress. They're going to stay stuck.  [00:41:16] Michael: They identify more with their identity than they identify with success.  [00:41:20] Jason: Yeah. Good way of saying it. And I love how you talked about kind of these currencies. One of my mentors in the past was Alex Charfen. And he's from here in the Austin area as well. [00:41:30] And he was talking about time, energy, focus, cash, and effort. He calls the five currencies. And Hormozi went through Alex Charfen's like coaching with me. I met Layla and Alex in this. And one of the things that I then saw Alex talk about these currencies. But what I thought was interesting is Alex said the most significant of those five currencies in order to scale and grow your business is focus. [00:41:52] It's the most important to scale, grow a company. And then Dan Martell, I once saw him teach this framework that was, it was like about the power of one. He's like, "the most effective business is a business has one sales funnel, one product, one..." it was like all ones, like, And I see property managers, a lot of times they'll try and like start five different businesses. [00:42:14] They're like, I'm going to start a cleaning company, a maintenance company, like all these other things.because they're complimentary real estate brokerage. And then they wonder why none of them are growing because they lack focus. And so all these things kind of converge, making sure that we have focus. [00:42:28] You also mentioned Dan Martell, who I think is a brilliant entrepreneur, he generally was coaching like software companies, SAS companies to help them grow and scale, but his stuff's applicable to coaching businesses. I've noticed it's applicable to anything because the principles are valid. [00:42:44] And one of the things I've had my clients do to get them to that next level, to basically get their time back is to have them do a time study to where they become accountable for their time, which things are positive and which things are negative, like plus or minus, which things give them energy in life and which things take it away in their own business. [00:43:00] And I have them do this like usually once a quarter. And when I did my first time study, I realized I was doing like four hours of podcast production in a week. It all added up and I was like, holy shit. So then I just hired a company to do it. It was a no brainer to let that go because it was stupid at that point for me to hold on to that once I could see that challenge. [00:43:20] And you mentioned loom, awesome tool for like one of my favorite tools, like it, which is next level. It's like loom, but it's Wistia's video recorder. It lets you actually record the screen and yourself. And then after the recordings made. You can then have it mid recording. You can switch which parts are showing and have segues between the two. [00:43:42] And it's super fast. It's like super cool. But we use tools like that.  [00:43:46] Michael: Productivity. Yeah, definitely.  [00:43:47] Jason: Yeah. So, I love all these ideas for collapsing time. Michael has dropped several awesome tools, knowledge bombs, ideas for those that are listening and also how to leverage content social media wise. [00:43:59] So what you know, if we were to bring this full circle what would you say is the most important thing that maybe business owners or property managers could be doing to scale and grow their business?  [00:44:13] Michael: Right now? Again, one more time. It is: understand, your ability to grow is based on your perceived status, your perceived trustworthiness, your perceived know how. Not your actual know how. Like, I can tell you so many guys that I know that are real estate experts on YouTube. And then I have my friends of mine that are real estate agents. And they're like, "that guy doesn't know shit." And I'm like, "no, he's coaching the white belts." That's the why, the reason why he says the things that he says. [00:44:39] And they have a hard time dealing with it. So, understanding that concept. And then. You have to leave yourself. You have to subvert your own ego, go on places like TikTok or Instagram places you'd never think to go to, and then look at who's going viral, who's in your exact industry, and you're going to need to take pieces from what you see. [00:44:56] Like, what are the kinds of videos that do really well? And you're going to be able to find those very quickly. You can literally right now would go on Tik Tok and look up property management and you'll find a bunch of videos, like just pick the ones that go the most viral or a real estate, a podcast, and then pick the topics that go the most viral and just blatantly steal them, steal, blatantly steal everything. [00:45:19] You in the beginning, no creativity necessary, just steal. Okay, and you do that for a while and then you start to sort of get your footing And then you start to realize wait a second, I've been running ads and my ROAS per dollar my ads is x 1. 2 or 2. 0 or whatever but in organic my cost per lead is like nothing because my organic traffic, it costs me so much less to get a lead. [00:45:44] It's incredible. Then I go on someone else's podcast because my content is getting better and better. And then all of a sudden now, you know, Rich Summers and Ryan Pineda want me to come on their show to talk about, you know, maybe I'm on ice coffee hour or whatever, talking about real estate. [00:45:58] And then I get on bigger and bigger shows and now my cost per lead decreases even more because I just had this simple understanding that the way it works is my perceived status my perceived know how and my perceived trustworthiness to other people are the reasons why people will buy my product. Now you may already obviously everyone who's listened to this if you have any success in property management You already have your funnel is probably dealing with either word of mouth shaking hands, or it's dealing with some sort of paid advertisement, but I implore you try organic. Try to use organic and then organic meaning using Instagram posts or Facebook posts. [00:46:33] And then once you do that, try to take your best content and turn your best content in an advertisement and promote those, promote that content. That's something we've also been doing. And if you want examples on everything I just said, a great book, a great place to start is the 100 million offer series by Alex Hormozi. He goes over every single thing that I just talked about. It's absolutely fantastic. It's really great stuff. The difference is with my program, MOA, we're a little bit more bespoke for what it is exactly that you're doing. But we're mostly talk about networking. And then the other thing is, When you actually meet that person in person that you want to work with, do you come off as a fan boy? [00:47:06] Do you come off as too eager? Do you, does your body language show signs of neediness or signs of low status? Are these things that you can watch? And then how do you figure that out? You watch yourself on camera. Do you watch yourself on other people's podcasts? Because that's one of the things is like as social media grows and more people are exposed to more people, just remember like if you consider in the plasticine, you know, we live in hunter gatherer societies of 150 people and now we can legitimately have a hundred thousand friends on social media in that kind of situation because we're exposed to more people, we are more attuned to status, physical appearance, et cetera. And so now what happens is humans essentially become more shallow. [00:47:46] They become more attuned to other people's status and rightly or wrongly. Is it a negative commentary on humans? Yes, it probably is, but it's the world you live on. And if you want to get rich, you need to listen to what I'm saying. And if what I'm saying, offends you, get ready to stay poor. Like, I'm sorry. [00:48:01] If you guys are listening to this right now, and you're like, "No, social media is going to go away and we're going to go back to walking up to doors and do an email blast and buying banner ads." If that's what you think, go back to your AOL. com email and just keep believing that's the case. [00:48:16] It's all about the handshake. It's like, if that's what you believe, that's fine. But for the rest of you who are ready to understand that if you think things are bad, I got news for you. They're only going to get worse. Meaning people aren't going to put their phones down at dinner. People aren't going to take fewer photos. [00:48:30] People. I was reading something. It was like, like in one day, now more photos are taken in like an hour than were taken during the entire year of 1985 or something like that. It was like the amount of photographic and video data that's uploaded in one hour exceeds the total photographs taken in an entire year back in the 1980s. [00:48:49] Some absurd number like that. If you think things are going in one direction, things are getting faster. They're more virtual. They're more digital. Digital, they're going to be controlled by artificial intelligence and they're going to be more scalable. You need to get on that train. The train is leaving. [00:49:05] You need to get on the train. Now, if you don't want to get on the train, that's fine, but notice as the world passes you by and the rate at which it passes you by only increases every year. If you want to learn about that, read Ray Kurzweil series called the singularity is near, and you can see how he talks about the rate of change is increasing, and then the rate of change is also increasing. [00:49:24] Jason: Okay, so this is awesome stuff. So Michael one thing I want to point out for those that are listening. Because I think you've sold your Men of Action short a little bit. So I'm gonna, I want to say something about it because what I think is in, what people think is in there probably based on what you're saying is it's a bunch of social media stuff and it's like how to, maybe how t

Holmberg's Morning Sickness
07-22-24 - No Kamala Harris Didn't Once Date Montel Jordan And Other Things Men Will Have To Be Cautious Of Until November Avoiding Traps

Holmberg's Morning Sickness

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 15:54


Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Monday July 22, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona
07-22-24 - No Kamala Harris Didn't Once Date Montel Jordan And Other Things Men Will Have To Be Cautious Of Until November Avoiding Traps

Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Arizona

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 15:54


Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Monday July 22, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Dark Roast Project - Hosted by DJ Oz
E206 - TUESDAY TRAFFIC VIBES W/DJ OZ (TOP 40 CLUB BANGER MIX)

The Dark Roast Project - Hosted by DJ Oz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 43:43


WE ARE BACK WITH TUESDAY'S TRAFFIC VIBES FOR SEASON 4, EPISODE 206, ON THE DARK ROAST PROJECT…MY NAME IS DJ OZ, AND I'M GONNA JUMP IN THE MIX WITH AN UPTEMPO TOP 40 MIX THAT HAS AMERICAN AUTHORS, SAINT JOHN, MONTEL JORDAN, AND KESHA PARTY BANGERS…

LBR - THE OFFICIAL PODCAST
DJ LBR best of rnb 1995

LBR - THE OFFICIAL PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2024 62:24


One of the most played episode in my podcast.Best of rnb around 95, an ooooold school mix.....from 1998....

Brenda Moss's Podcast
Artist King Kendrick is spreading Soul music & Good times thru Voice

Brenda Moss's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 27:25


 Artist King Kendrick is spreading Soul music & Good times thru Voice King Kendrick - aka King Sr. Born in Rock Hill, South Carolina . King Kendrick's role models were singers like James Brown who was also born in South Carolina, Usher, King George, Micheal Jackson, Montel Jordan, Calvin Richardson, and Ann Eebles. Following the lead of such vocal trailblazers, the talented songster is on his way. As a youth kingkendrick grew up singing in the church choir with his other then soon after began performing in talent shows. Shortly after graduating high school, he had an opportunity to audition for LaFace Records in collaboration with the singing group that he was a member of at the time. Years later King Kendrick branched out on his own to become a solo artist. After years of attempting to break into the music industry full-time, he released his first Southern soul music single in July of 2022. During the process of trying to discover his signature style of voice and genre, he released several R&B albums. Now, finding his staple, he will present a catalog of several distinguished R&B soulful melodies. Some of King Kendrick's live on-stage performances include: the Foster Festival in Dothan, AL-Juneteenth celebrations in Troy, AL and York, SC- Troy festival in Troy, AL- Tuskegee Festival in Tuskegee, AL- The Ranch in Wetumpka, AL and more. Support the showMusic Artist interview

LADYDIVA LIVE RADIO
Artist King Kendrick is spreading Soul music & Good times thru Voice

LADYDIVA LIVE RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 25:03


Artist King Kendrick is spreading Soul music and good times through Voice King Kendrick - aka King Sr. Born in Rock Hill, South Carolina. King Kendrick's role models were singers like James Brown who was also born in South Carolina, Usher, King George, Micheal Jackson, Montel Jordan, Calvin Richardson, and Ann Eebles. Following the lead of such vocal trailblazers, the talented songster is on his way. As a youth kingkendrick grew up singing in the church choir with his other then soon after began performing in talent shows. Shortly after graduating high school, he had an opportunity to audition for LaFace Records in collaboration with the singing group that he was a member of at the time. Years later King Kendrick branched out on his own to become a solo artist. After years of attempting to break into the music industry full-time, he released his first Southern soul music single in July of 2022. During the process of trying to discover his signature style of voice and genre, he released several R&B albums. Now, finding his staple, he will present a catalog of several distinguished R&B soulful melodies. Some of King Kendrick's live on-stage performances include the Foster Festival in Dothan, AL-Juneteenth celebrations in Troy, AL and York, SC- Troy festival in Troy, AL- Tuskegee Festival in Tuskegee, AL- The Ranch in Wetumpka, AL and more.

LADYDIVA LIVE RADIO
A Journey in music with Singer Songwriter Kendrick Pratt Sr. on new single

LADYDIVA LIVE RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 28:45


Singer-songwriter Kendrick Pratt Sr's soul music infuses smooth R&B vocals, blues, and gospel harmonies into Southern soul music- creating a unique brand of conscious music and soulful good times that uplifts and touches the soul of the listeners. King Sr's upcoming single, Friday, EP Grown Man "Party on the Weekend" will be followed up by a second single, Love guaranteed to bring sensuality and romance. Background Born and raised in Rock Hill, South Carolina - home of football USA- King Sr role models were singers like James Brown; who was also born in South Carolina, Usher, King George, Micheal Jackson, Montel Jordan, Calvin Richardson, Ann Peebles, and Sir. Charles Jones. Following the lead of such vocal trailblazers, the talented songster is on his way. As a youth, King Sr grew up singing in the church choir with his mother-then soon after began performing in talent shows. Shortly after graduating high school, he had an opportunity to audition for LaFace Records in collaboration with the singing group that he was a member of at the time. Years later King Sr branched out on his own to become a solo artist. After years of attempting to break into the music industry full-time, he released his first Southern soul music single in July of 2022. While trying to discover his signature style of voice and genre, he released several R&B albums. Now, finding his staple, he will present a catalog of several distinguished soulful melodies.

Nostalgic Jukebox Podcast
Songs we thought would go over better

Nostalgic Jukebox Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2023 28:56


Nic and Vince talk about some of their song failures and experiences that didn't go over very well.  The Key to Connection Podcast @thekeytoconnectionpodcastFind us on: Instagram : @nostalgicjukeboxpodcast  Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1W5xn11CxwCZDG32GCf6II Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nostalgic-jukebox-podcast/id1661588683

Nostalgic Jukebox Podcast
Montell Jordan This Is How We Do It & 69 Boys Tootsee Roll

Nostalgic Jukebox Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 17:11


 Nic and Vince talk about Montell Jordan's hit single This is how we do it and the 69 Boys instant classic Tootsee Roll. We talk about the history of the songs and how they made us feel plus our experience with them over the years and Karaoke singing. Find us on: Instagram : @nostalgicjukeboxpodcast     https://www.instagram.com/nostalgicjukeboxpodcast/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCA04mfG6q-kOj0o7aWvZhIgSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1W5xn11CxwCZDG32GCf6IIApple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nostalgic-jukebox-podcast/id1661588683 

We Have A Take: A Portland Trail Blazers Fan Podcast
WHAT 2022-23 Trail Blazers Season Play List

We Have A Take: A Portland Trail Blazers Fan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 69:38


We got together a powerhouse lineup of Trail Blazers podcasters to start our annual 2022-23 Trail Blazers Podcast. Thanks to all these guys for joining us! Tim & Gary, Busted Bucket Podcast Rob, Blazing the Path Alex, Unbiased Blazer Podcast 1:00 Icebreaker: How do you cope with a tough Trail Blazer loss? Comfort food talk 7:00 Bonus icebreaker - comfort food! 8:30 Getting to know Alex and Unbiased Blazers Podcast. 10:45 Getting to know Rob and Blazing the Path 13:30 Getting to know Tim, Gary and Busted Bucket Podcast 17:30 Anfernee Simons stepping into his role 18:30 Are Josh Hart and Jerami Grant going to play good cop and bad cop in the first half and second half of games this season? 19:30 Shaedon Sharpe gaining confidence 20:30 Damian Lillard's calf. No big deal? 25:30 Will the Blazers keep Jerami Grant and Josh Hart after their contracts expire? 34:30 Justise Winslow running the second unit and playing every position. 37:45 Still need more dunks 45:00 Playlist, first pick! Twisted Sister, We're Not Gonna Take it. 46:00 Queen, The Show Must Go On 47:00 Montel Jordan, This is How We Do It 48:00 Epic High, Encore 49:00 Nina Simone, Feelin' Good 50:00 Motion City Soundtrack, Don't Call it A Comeback 52:00 Foreigner, Jukebox Hero 53:30 Men at Work, Dr Heckyll and Mr Jive 56:30 ZZ Top, Sharp Dressed Man 57:00 Dr Hook, You Make My Pants Want To Get Up and Dance 1:01:00 Outros 1:05:00 Final Takes YouTube Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfje1m6I_TpIaBH4jYX_0qJjg80-NEpjb Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6polSwdSAyFwCwu4YfTYJp?si=ec4ccf162fae4b39

That Angry Black Man
My Love Letter to Portland

That Angry Black Man

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 53:00


In this episode I speak on an experience I had at a local club and how it relates to my entire experience of Portland in Oregon. I talk about manifesting “being”. Thoughts on BLM in the city and how I feel about the Montel Jordan song I hated for so long and now love because of the gift that these kids in a Portland club gave me. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Dave & Jenn in the Morning
Dave Apologizes to Montel Jordan / Show Wrap 01/21/2022

Dave & Jenn in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 4:47


Dave Apologizes to Montel Jordan / Show Wrap 01/21/2022

Traveling Culturati
Capable Travel

Traveling Culturati

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 53:57


On TRAVELING CULTURATI this week: Capable Travel with Temeka Norris! According to the U.S. Census,19 percent of the U.S. population has a disability and 49 percent of U.S. seniors have a disability. How are the needs of Travelers with special needs being met? Ja'Vonne has a provocative conversation with Temeka Strange Norris, CEO and founder of Capable Clothing, on the needs of travelers and the challenges they face. Capable Clothing is designed for individuals with special needs to provide them with comfort and function. On The Culture Report: Executive Producer, Gene Harley joins Ja'Vonne to share travel preferences. Montel Jordan's song comes to mind... "This is how we do it" Plus Travel News with the latest travel news, and Ja'Vonne's Travel Minute.

Moral Bastards
Episode 044 | “5 More Than 100”

Moral Bastards

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 89:09


The Bastards discuss Bio Pics, JD vs Puff, and the great MONTEL JORDAN once again! ENJOY the show YA BASTARDS! | Follow us on IG & Twitter @MoralBastards

NLE MIXES
R&B THROWBACKS V1 - MIXED BY MAUI DJ JOE CORTEZ

NLE MIXES

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 60:40


YOUR FAVORITE RNB THROWBACKS IN THE MIX FEATURING, ALL 4 ONE, BRANDY, NEXT, MONTEL JORDAN, KEITH SWEAT AND MORE.. 6O MIN OF NON STOP RNB VIBES MIXED BY MAUI DJ JOE CORTEZ NEXTLEVEL808.COM

SUBLIME Terugluisteren
The Groove Rob Manga 05-06-2021

SUBLIME Terugluisteren

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2021 163:55


The Groove Episode 18th features: Armenta, Atjazz ft Domiqique Fils Aime, BB Boogie ft Vanessa Freeman, Beyonce, Cece Peniston, Cherrelle, Colonel Abrams, Common ft PJ, Cee ElAssaad, Curtis Hairston, Dazz Band, Diephuis & Eastar ft Tracy Hamilton, DJ Jazzy Jeff & De La Soul, Donna Summer, Dynasty, Earth, Wind & Fire, En Vogue, Erik Rico, Evelyn Champagne King, Fat Larry's Band, Funkadelic, George Michael, GQ, Grand Puba, Gwen Guthrie, Horse Meat Disco ft Amy Douglas, Incognito, India & Nuyorican Soul, Jamiroquai, Janelle Monae ft Solange, Joe Smooth , Julius Jordan & Tree, Kashif, Lemelle, Luke Solomon, Lil Louis, Loose Ends, Lord Of Storm, Adeva, Louie Vega & Josh Milan, LTD, Mariah Carey, Marvin Gaye, Mary J Blige, Mass Order, Me'Shell Ndegeocello, Midas Hutch ft The Kount, Milton Wright, Mofak ft Temu, Montel Jordan ft Slick Rick, One Way ft Al Hudson, Patti Labelle, Paul Hardcastle, Peven Everett , Pockets, Prince, Quincy Jones ft Ashford & Simpson, Chaka Khan, Raphael Saadiq, Rick James, Rufus ft Chaka Khan, SAULT, Shalamar, Shannon, Snoop Dogg, Soul II Soul, Soul Supreme, Sylvester, Ten City, The Braxtons, The Conway Brothers, The Jacksons, The Muthafunkaz, Ron Hall ft Marc Evans, The O'Jays, The Temptations, The Tramps, Titiyo and Whitney Houston See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The E-Spot With Camille
#96 Ian Von on The E-Spot with Camille #CamilleKauer #IanMusic

The E-Spot With Camille

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2021 59:28


Talent runs in his family, performed with his brothers and his cousin is gospel-recording artist, Micah Stampley. He was trained by legendary gospel great, Betty Nelson, who also mentored the mighty Kim Burrell. Growing up in the urban culture, he was also greatly influenced by the Child. They spent several years cultivating their artistry in the underground circuit of Louisiana and became regional indie phenom's. During this time they sold over 12,000 albums independently and were featured on television platforms, VH1 and MTV. Ian Von has taken ownership of these words and has definitively stewarded the great gift of music with great attention and care. Raised and reared in a generationally gifted music culture, he is forging his way as a critically acclaimed solo artist, songwriter and musician. Ian Vons fate as a solo artist has since arrived, propelling him toreflect, study, and focus on the dream and the great gift he has been entrusted with. As it should happen, the right people at the right time were put into his life, resulting in a unique and creative collaboration. Insightful and intuitive, Ian has a noteworthy purpose. As he says, “I am at my core, an R&B artist, here to impact my culture by touching the hearts of people through my music.” Born in Baton Rouge, La., Ian grew up with deep roots firmly planted in the church, where he honed his skills as a musician and singer. As a youth, Ian and his brothers recorded their first professional project and performed in North American and European tours. These trips would serve to expand Ian's musical appetite and expose him to a bigger world. Opening the doors to his gifts and inspiring his vision. While in high school,Ian joined an R&B boy group that eventually afforded him the opportunities to perform on tour with New Edition, Joe, Montel Jordan and Destiny's Child. A music venture, uniting R&B, soul, and alternative sounds and acoustic rhythms that also merge with his spiritual tenets to create that equilibrium that he has searched years to find. Now standing on the brink of fulfilling his destiny, Ian Von, is taking responsibility! "I am at my core, an R&B artist, here to impact my culture by touching the hearts of people." --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/camillekauer/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/camillekauer/support

Uncensored Truth Podcast!
Former Dej Jam Manager Paul Stewart Gets Raw & Uncut About His Time In the Music Industry!

Uncensored Truth Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 71:31


Former Def Jam Manager & right hand man to John Singleton Paul Stewart talks about his career, managing Montel Jordan and Warren G. He also goes into working with Russell Simmons and Lyor Cohen. Make sure to like comment share & subscribe!Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/mep/dashboard)

Post Soul
Shout Out to Lynese

Post Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 126:05


On today’s episode, Ajay and Lindsay are talking bout Universoul Circus, utopian visions of Black art schools, the elastic nature of hip hop, and Montel Jordan’s real height. Opening song by Iblss (https://open.spotify.com/artist/3Ao81LRIB4yP879FL53b5a?si=Rg4uxl23R7akzoYh97ujFQ).

Prolly Shoulda Known Better
THE NUTTY PROFESSOR (or, Klumping Toward Bethlehem)

Prolly Shoulda Known Better

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 86:04


It’s a new season of Prolly Shoulda, and Nadia and Tony are dedicating this season exclusively to films that landed in the box office top 10 of their respective years. Unfortunately, they started with this Academy-Award-winning (!) piece of crap from 1996, starring Eddie Murphy six different times. Nadia takes us through the history of fatphobia. Tony comes up with a new t-shirt design for the eventual merch shop. Our theme music is “Hey Allison!” by Jeff Rosenstock, distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 license, and available at quoteunquoterecords.com. Today’s outro music is Montel Jordan’s “This is How We Do It” as covered by The Ukulele Revolution.

That's What We Called Music?
That's What We Called Music? - 65 - Get It On Tonight

That's What We Called Music?

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2020


This week we discuss the song by Montel Jordan where he gives his mistress a fancy two way text messaging pager..This item has files of the following types: Archive BitTorrent, Columbia Peaks, Item Tile, Metadata, PNG, Spectrogram, VBR MP3

MOCRadio.com Podcasts
MOC Old Skool Mix Party (In Da 90z) (Aired On MOCRadio.com 10-10-20)

MOCRadio.com Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 118:24


This week on the 'MOC Old Skool Mix Party', Metro Beatz takes you back 90s style with music from Outkast, Montel Jordan, Robin S, Boogie Down Productions, Bobby Brown and more!! Listen live every Saturday at 6pm (EST) on mocradio.com

MOCRadio.com Podcasts
MOC Old Skool Mix Party (In Da 90z) (Aired On MOCRadio.com 10-10-20)

MOCRadio.com Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 118:24


This week on the 'MOC Old Skool Mix Party', Metro Beatz takes you back 90s style with music from Outkast, Montel Jordan, Robin S, Boogie Down Productions, Bobby Brown and more!! Listen live every Saturday at 6pm (EST) on mocradio.com

MOCRadio.com Podcasts
MOC Old Skool Mix Party (In Da 90z) (Aired On MOCRadio.com 10-10-20)

MOCRadio.com Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 118:24


This week on the 'MOC Old Skool Mix Party', Metro Beatz takes you back 90s style with music from Outkast, Montel Jordan, Robin S, Boogie Down Productions, Bobby Brown and more!! Listen live every Saturday at 6pm (EST) on mocradio.com

Viernes Social
Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 23

Viernes Social

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2020 21:02


Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 23 Reggaeton - Cumbia - Salsa DJ Allex 01-Intro (DJ AlleX) 02-This is how we do it (Montel Jordan) 03-Mamacita (Black Eyed Peas Feat Ozuna) 04-En la cama (Nicky Jam) 05-Todas las mujeres (Pitbull) 06-Feel the beat (Black Eyed Peas Feat Maluma) 07-Eres top (Ozuna Feat P Diddy) 08-Gonna make you sweat (C&C Music Factory) 09-Ritmo (Black Eyed Peas Feat J Balvin) 10-Yo perreo sola (Bad Bunny) 11-Pobre diabla (Don Omar) 12-Still Dre (Dr Dre Feat Snoop Dogg) 13-A mover la colita (DJ Refresh) 14-Matador (Los Fabulosos Cadillacs) 15-Tus jefes no me quieren (Grupo Ensamble) 16-Nunca es suficiente (Los Angeles Azules Feat Natalia Lafourcade) 17-Tumba el quinto (Linda Leida) 18-Moliendo Cafe (Moncho Rivera) GRACIAS.............

Viernes Social
Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 23

Viernes Social

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2020 21:02


Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 23 Reggaeton - Cumbia - Salsa DJ Allex 01-Intro (DJ AlleX) 02-This is how we do it (Montel Jordan) 03-Mamacita (Black Eyed Peas Feat Ozuna) 04-En la cama (Nicky Jam) 05-Todas las mujeres (Pitbull) 06-Feel the beat (Black Eyed Peas Feat Maluma) 07-Eres top (Ozuna Feat P Diddy) 08-Gonna make you sweat (C&C Music Factory) 09-Ritmo (Black Eyed Peas Feat J Balvin) 10-Yo perreo sola (Bad Bunny) 11-Pobre diabla (Don Omar) 12-Still Dre (Dr Dre Feat Snoop Dogg) 13-A mover la colita (DJ Refresh) 14-Matador (Los Fabulosos Cadillacs) 15-Tus jefes no me quieren (Grupo Ensamble) 16-Nunca es suficiente (Los Angeles Azules Feat Natalia Lafourcade) 17-Tumba el quinto (Linda Leida) 18-Moliendo Cafe (Moncho Rivera) GRACIAS.............

Viernes Social
Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 13 (ON FIRE)

Viernes Social

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 22:51


01-Intro (DJ Allex) 02- Con todos menos conmigo (Timbiriche) 03-Good Feeling (Avicci) 04-Its my life (Dr Albin) 05-In my mind (Dynoro) 06-P.I.M.P (50 Cent) 07- Saltando sin parar (King Africa) 08-Morado (J Balvin) 09-Tu sin mi (Dread Mar) 10-Playero Medley (Playero) 11-Tusa (Karol G Feat Nicki Minaj) 12-Girl (Myke Towers) 13-I Love it (Starjack) 14-This is how we do it (Montel Jordan) 15-Fariana (Blueface Feat Farina) 16-Como antes (Bad Bunny) Thanks for all the love Family, and this week we have another banger, gracias por el seguimiento mi gente, se les quiere. Next week we have a super special show, all the way from Amsterdam we have a new banger from my bog Slim Kofi, primicia la proxima semana con Slim Kofi que nos trae su exito mas reciente desde Amsterdam, thank you for reaching out to me. Hope you all are doing great in this time and don't forget Music is freedom. DJ Allex

Sammy
167_PnM_003

Sammy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 55:00


PnM are new series of Disco, 80s, 90s, 2000s and mid tempo music designed for your comfort of dancing and relaxing at the same time. This first series includes music from Michael Jackson, EMF, Five, The Venga Boys, Tina Turner, DeLa Soul, Montel Jordan, Toni Tone, Gazebo, BeeGees and the likes. Don't forget to like and share: facebook and twitter: @fortitudeOnline facebook: @MrDjaySammy

Viernes Social
Viernes Social - Season 2 - Episode 13 (ON FIRE)

Viernes Social

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 22:51


01-Intro (DJ Allex) 02- Con todos menos conmigo (Timbiriche) 03-Good Feeling (Avicci) 04-Its my life (Dr Albin) 05-In my mind (Dynoro) 06-P.I.M.P (50 Cent) 07- Saltando sin parar (King Africa) 08-Morado (J Balvin) 09-Tu sin mi (Dread Mar) 10-Playero Medley (Playero) 11-Tusa (Karol G Feat Nicki Minaj) 12-Girl (Myke Towers) 13-I Love it (Starjack) 14-This is how we do it (Montel Jordan) 15-Fariana (Blueface Feat Farina) 16-Como antes (Bad Bunny) Thanks for all the love Family, and this week we have another banger, gracias por el seguimiento mi gente, se les quiere. Next week we have a super special show, all the way from Amsterdam we have a new banger from my bog Slim Kofi, primicia la proxima semana con Slim Kofi que nos trae su exito mas reciente desde Amsterdam, thank you for reaching out to me. Hope you all are doing great in this time and don't forget Music is freedom. DJ Allex

The Reverb Live Show
RLS 456 - Christian ChaCha Slide Montell Jordan And Interview With Denise Dixon

The Reverb Live Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 59:54


WARNING!!! You have to pull over before you hear this song. We take a listen to the very first every Christian Cha Cha Slide. Montel Jordan is back on the scene, this time with a new album. We interview online Hair Store owner Denise Dixon with Harden Beauty Supply. She will show you how to start your drop ship Hair business for FREE!!!

MOCRadio.com Podcasts
MOC Mix Party (Aired On MOCRadio.com 8-2-19)

MOCRadio.com Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2019 59:27


This week on the 'MOC Mix Party' with Metro Beatz, you'll hear music from Nas, Wiley, Afro B, Beyonce, Montel Jordan and more..Listen live every Friday afternoon at 2pm on mocradio.com

Big Dog Lakers Pod
Big Dog Tanking Pod (ep 23)

Big Dog Lakers Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 58:02


In this week’s episode of the Big Dog Lakers Pod, the Big Dogs discuss: 1 Win against the Bulls 3 losses against the Raptors, Pistons, and Knicks Our beef with Dolan Musical halftime performances suck (except for Montel Jordan and Soulja Boy) Radio bloc party vs TV marathon Ingram’s successful blood clot surgery Possible Offseason Moves (trades and signing a superstar)

Freedom House Church
House Party: Montel Jordan

Freedom House Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2018 53:56


House Party: Montel Jordan by Freedom House Church

house parties montel jordan freedom house church
Fred Ilano prés. ILANOCAST
ILANOCAST #15 (RnB of yesterday)

Fred Ilano prés. ILANOCAST

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2018 57:47


Un retour dans la passé qui ravira les amateurs du genre.. Avec Shaggy, Ne-yo, Beyoncé, B2K, Montel Jordan, R Kelly, Mark Morrisson, Warren G, Faith Evans, Xzibit, Jenifer Lopez.....

Dumb it down podcast
020 RACISM with Yahosh Bonner

Dumb it down podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2018 29:10


At first I was kind of nervous to do this interview , because just like Yahosh told me, "racism in America has been kind of a roller coaster". Yahosh was so kind that I was able to ask questions that might seem a little awkward in other situations. But I learned that when people are really friends, honest questions aren't offensive.  You should follow him on Youtube and Instagram @Yahoshb.  If you don't happen to be black, have you ever wondered whether to say "Black" or "African American?" I asked.  Or have you ever wondered if your actions are somehow offensive, even if it's on accident?  Yahosh shared some personal stories that were not fun to talk about I'm sure. Thank you.  This episode took a ton of work from a lot of people.  You'll hear music throughout, most of it sung by Yahosh. You'll also hear:  The Debra Bonner Unity Gospel Choir- soloist Tierra Custer.  Rashida Jordan Call- soloist on "Will the Circle Be Unbroken". Yahosh was singing with her on it.  The Bonner Family is also at the end singing "I need Thee Every Hour" * we also used "This is How we Do it" by Montel Jordan. Because we figured that any party in the 90's had that song.  One thing I forgot in the intro to the episode is that Yahosh is a teacher and basketball coach at American Leadership Academy. He has his Masters Degree in Communications.  Special thanks to my super editor Brianna. Who always treats my podcast with great care... but this one she did even more. If you're wondering who the cool Australian is at the very beginning, it's Brianna. G'day! **Accent is real. 

Talking Smooth Jazz
SAXOPHONIST AHMAD JOHNSON

Talking Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2017 62:00


Talking Smooth Jazz welcomes saxophonist Ahmad Johnson.  Ahman has opened for/played with: Larry Carlton, Montel Jordan, Gerald Albright, Will Downing, Spyro Gyra, Joseph Vincelli, Richard Elliot, Peter White, Kem, The Blind Boys of Alabama, Norman Brown, Mindi Abair, Warren Hill, Jeff Golub, & Wayman Tisdale, and Faces The Band. I'll talk to him about his Notes: The Saxophone Edition cd and band, The Usual Suspects. Follow Ahmad on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

IN-DA-MIX'S Podcast
In-Da-Mix Radio Experience 5-6-17

IN-DA-MIX'S Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2017 159:55


Welcome to the first show of this lovely month of May. This week's musical selection consist of: Monica, Montel Jordan, Jill Scott, some B2K and a double play of Sade!!! Plus Big Baller Brand and Adele makes the news segment!!! Hit that PLAY button and make those ears happy!

Rockwell Radio
Rockwell Radio presents DJ Livitup Live from The Clevelander South Beach

Rockwell Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2016 46:56


DJ Livitup - One of our newest additions to the roster, drops a special LIVE mix from The Clevelander South Beach. #WEROCKWELL Tracklist: 1. Ja Rule Feat. Case - Living It Up 2. Outkast - Rosa Parks INTRO 3. Missy elliot - Work It 4. 112- PEACHES AND CREAM 5. Bobby Brown - Every Little Step 6. TLC - What About Your Friends 7. TLC - All That Theme Song 8. Soul 2 Soul - Back To Life 9. P.M. Dawn - Set Adrift On Memory Bliss 10. Lloyd ft Lil Wayne - Girls Around The World 11. Bobby Brown - Don't Be Cruel 12. Lisa Stanfield - All Around the World (American Edit) 13. Sleepy brown - Can't Wait 14. Nu Shooz - I Can't Wait 15. Ce Ce Peniston - Keep On Walking 16. Caron Wheeler - I Adore you 17. Brandy - Top of the World (feat. Mase) 18. Jade x Diplo x Sleepy Tom - Don't Walk Away vs Be Right There (Deville Throwback Trans 105-125) 19. Beyonce vs Dan Corco - Formation (Deville Warm-Up House Bootleg) Clean 20. Lathun - Freak it 21. DJ Taz feat. Raheem - That's Right 22. Lloyd - Get It Shawty 23. Sammie - I Like It 24. Ghost Town DJ's - My Boo 25. Destiny's Child - Bills, Bills, Bills 26. Montel Jordan ft Master P & Silk The Shocker - Let's Ride 27. Usher ft Twista Nice n Slow (remix) 28. Inoj - Let Me Love You Down 29. KP & Envyi - shorty swing my way 30. Fetty Wap - My way 31. Soulja Boy - Kiss me Thru The Phone 32. Chris Brown ft T-Pain - Kiss Kiss 33.Monica - My First Night 34.Lil Bow Wow Feat Xscape - Bounce With Me 35. Ginuwine - What's So Different? 36. Aaliyah - Are you that Somebody

TV Guidance Counselor Podcast
TV Guidance Counselor Episode 123: Guitler Raphael

TV Guidance Counselor Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2016 89:53


September 13-19, 1997 FALL PREVIEW Today Ken welcomes comedian Guitler Raphael to the show. Ken and Guitler discuss the official Team Reid pizza, spinach, Haiti, Fall Preview, sibling bargaining, The Pretender, COPS, Maurice the Pants Man, Garth Brooks, The Real World, Xena, Miss America, Wet T-Shirts, being a bouncer, fooled by strippers, The New England Patriots, The Omega Man, the golden age of Video Stores, Malden, In the House, doing your best to identify with bad TV, the best "black" show, LL Cool J's Radio, Dateline NBC, Football vs. Wrestling, learning comedy via TV, past life regression, Malcolm and Eddie, good business ideas, teenage hangouts, B.L.L.T's, Step Dad murder, Brian De Palma, Breakin' Boobs, Cannon Films, Keeping Up Appearances, PBS, Ken's David Bowie, Toys, wall posters, Janet Jackson, Spin City, Isaac Mizrahi, Sister Sister, Jackee Harry, Smart Guy, .com bubble, cops teaching history, buying stocks, Keith Sweat, The Wayans Brothers, OJ, Steve Harvey, twins causing racism, Must See TV, Living Single, Martin, how Montel Jordan do it, Will Blacksmith, Beauty and the Beast, Fraiser, the sad death of Brandon Lee, Family Matter moving to CBS, Sabrina and the Little People, Boy Meets World, and the illustrious acting career of Shaq.

Rebel Radio
Can you recognize greatness immediately? Paul Stewart on House of Pain, Pharcyde, & Warren G

Rebel Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2015 98:30


As an entertainment business entrepreneur, Paul Stewart has done it all. He’s started multiple companies. He’s worked in music, film, fashion, and now books. He’s had years with multiple mega-hits, and years where he just barely scraped by. His story is about the struggle: Wake up everyday and hustle. Stay true to what you know. Connect with good people. Be generous. Never stop fighting. Here are just a few of the gems that come out of our interview: On the keys to his success: “I got down differently than other people. I thought the parties were important. I do some of my best networking running the streets at night and connecting with people.” On the people running major record labels: “They are not creative people, so they hire uncreative people underneath them and its like, ego driven maniacs, nepotism and just unqualified.” The problem with book publishers: “There is just so much institutionalized racism in regards to urban culture and hip hop and things like that. It’s just a lack of understanding of what people are interested in because they are not in touch with this world. Most of the people that are the decision makers have a total disconnect to urban culture. Basically just the wrong people making decisions.” On the artists he’s worked with: The Pharcyde, House of Pain, Warren G., Coolio, Montel Jordan, Freestyle Fellowship, and so many more And movies he music supervised: Poetic Justice, Dear White People, Barbershop, 2 Fast 2 Furious, Four Brothers, Hustle and Flow we won the Oscar Subjects featured in his books: Murder Dog Magazine, Pimp C, Curtis Snow, Kendrick Lamar, ASAP Rocky, Drake, Lil Wayne, Bobby Brown, Too Short, Iceberg Slim, E-40, Marcus Garvey, Bushwick Bill, Scott La Rock, Tupac, Eazy E, Snoop Dogg, Cypress Hill, and many many more. The EDM.com track of the week is: https://soundcloud.com/your_secret/badflite-falling-down-ft-anuka If you enjoyed the music you heard in this episode, here's the list: Mista Grimm, Indo Smoke https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/indo-smoke/id192999606?i=192999894 Run-DMC, Rock Box https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/rock-box/id255372435?i=255373612 Three Times Dope, Funky Dividends https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/funky-dividends/id945454956?i=945454963 House of Pain, Jump Around https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/jump-around/id121050245?i=121049658 The Pharcyde, Passin Me By https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/passin-me-by/id912597149?i=912597179 Greg Hein, Down https://soundcloud.com/greg-hein/down WC and the Madd Circle, West Up https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMFvmgR6G3U Problem, Like Whaaat https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/like-whaaat-feat.-bad-lucc/id600041534?i=600041829

Chris Bresemann's Podcast
September 2015 Podcast

Chris Bresemann's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2015 68:17


This set was inspired by my recent trip to Mykonos. The sun, the beach, the music, and a slower pace of life! What a way to bring an end to the summer! I snapped the picture for this podcast after dancing all night to some amazing music and then realizing the sun was rising! Hope you all had a great summer! Cheers, Breezy Tracks: 1. Family Affair (Instrum Remix) – Mary J. Blige @ 0:00 2. Marvin Gaye (Boehm Club Mix) – Charlie Puth feat. Meghan Trainor @ 3:30 3. Special - Bojan @6:25 4. Sugar (Broiler Remix) – Maroon 5 @ 10:25 5. Chocolate Sensation (2015 House Vocal Mix) – Lenny Fontana @14:45 6. Ice Princess (Barry Harris Remix) – Azealia Banks @ 20:35 7. The Party (Audio Bastardz Edit) – Joe Stone vs. Ummer Ozcan feat. Montel Jordan @ 26:05 8. Don’t Stop The Music Motherfucker (Mar10n K Mash) – Angel Heredia vs. Rihanna @ 30:15 9. Ghost Town (Alex Taylor Remix) – Adam Lambert @ 34:40 10. Temporary Hero Rich B. vs Motorcycle Ashamed As The Rush Comes (Bret Law Mashup) @ 38:45 11. Don’t Be So Hard on Yourself (DJ SKT Remix) – Jess Glynne @ 44:05 12. Your Song feat. Hannah Gold (Toy Armada & DJ Grind Big Room Mix) – GSP & Noor Q @ 48:55 13. Another You (Pretty Pink Remix) – Armin van Buuren feat. Mr Probz @ 54:10 14. Fight Song (Disco Suckz Remix) – Rachel Platten @ 57:50 15. In Love (Robin Schulz Remix) – Yo-c & David K. @ 1:01:30

That Awful Sound
24 - Shirley Manson Can't Be Serious (Dope Show & Celebrity Skin)

That Awful Sound

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 88:22


On today's episode I'm joined by Shaina to talk about our middle school years and dissect Marilyn Manson' Dope Show and Hole's Celebrity Skin. My guest talks about her transformation fom Xena superfan into goth kid, being called a poser at the mall, and her dispute with Montel Williams (or possibly Montel Jordan). We also talk about one of my weirder ex-girlfriends and solve the murder of Kurt Cobain with the help of some plucky YouTube commenters.

Boom Bap Radio
Smoothed Out On the R&B Tip Too - Boom Bap Radio - Nov. 22, 2014

Boom Bap Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2014 194:16


In anticipation of the ruling in Ferguson, Mo., the BBR Crew – Angry Engineer, J-Crush, The C.O. and Masta Talka – finally put a pony-tail on the game and delved into the buttery smooth songs of R&B and its role in Hip-Hop. This time focusing on male R&B stars, the crew put this whole episode on chill and given the uproar from Missouri it couldn’t have come at a better time. We talk about murderous officer Darren Wilson, King Obama’s royal proclamation on immigration reform, Winnie The Pooh’s questionable sexuality and of course Kim K’s butt in this sex filled edition. But, ha,ha – get it? Male R&B’s stars were the story this week. We hear from Jodeci, Case, Ne-Yo, Montel Jordan and Nate Dogg along with the likes of LL Cool J, Ghostface Killah, Missy Elliott and the Force MD’s. We also hear from Bill Cosby’s many, many sultry “dates.” Care for a pudding pop? It’ll make you feel good. Just put it in your mouth. It’s Boom Bap Radio.

DJ AL V Podcast
Episode 2 Forgotten Jemz Part 1 Repost

DJ AL V Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2013 78:32


1. Nicole Wray f/ Missy Elliot - Make It Hot 2. Missy Eliot - The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly) 3. Brandy - I Wanna Be Down 4. Puff Daddy f/ SWV - Someone 5. SWV feat.Missy & Timberland - Can We Get Kinky Tonight 6. Total f/ Notorious B.I.G. - Can't You See 7. K-Ci & JoJo - You Bring Me Up 8. Jay-Z f/ Amil & Ja Rule - Can I Get A 9. Busta Rhymes f/ Zhane - Its a Party 10. Da Brat - Funkdafied 11. Total - What about us 12. Usher - My Way 13. 702 f/ Missy Elliot - Steelo 14. Total - No one else (Puff Daddy remix) 15. Notorious B.I.G. - Dreams 16 Horace Brown - Horace Brown 17. Mase f/ Total - Tell Me What You Want 18. Paid & Live f/ Lauryn Hill - All My Time 19. Janet Jackson (feat. Q-tip And Joni Mitchell) - Got til It's Gone 19. Junior Mafia f/ Aaliyah - I Need You Tonight (Remix) 20. Gina Thompson f/ Raekwon, Craig Mack - The Things That You do 21. Groove Theory - Tell Me (Reggae Remix) 22. Toni Braxton f/ Mad Cobra - Making Me High 23. Foxy Brown f/ Blackstreet - Get you home 24. LL Cool J - Doin It 25. Notorious B.I.G. - One more chance 26. Horace Brown - One for the money 27. Soul For Real - Candy Rain 28. Allure f/ Nas - Head over Heals 29. Fugees - ready or not 30. Nas f/ Lauryn Hill - If I Ruled The world 31. Outkast - Atliens 32. Warren G. f/ Nate Dogg - Regulate 33. Twinz - Round and Round 34. Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz - Deja vu 35. Lost Boys - Music Makes Me High 36. Junior Mafia - Player's Anthem 37. Adina Howard - Freak like me 38. Destiny's Child - No, no, no (part II) 39. Jermaine Dupri f/ Jay-Z - Money Ain't A Thang 40. Busta Rhymes- Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See 41. Tanya Stephens -Goggle (Remix) 42. Da Brat f/ Notorious B.I.G. - Da B Side 43. LL Cool J f/ Total - Loungin 44. Dru Hill f/ JD and Da Brat - In My Bed 45. Montel Jordan f/ Slick Rick - I like 46. 112 - Only You 47. Soul For Real - Every little thing 48. Tatiyana Ali - Daydreaming 49 . Camron f/Mase - Horse and Carriage 50. Dru hill - real Freak 51. LLCool J f/ Boys 2 Men - Hey lova 52. Something for the people - My Love is the Shhh 53. Usher - Nice Slow 54. Ginuwine - Pony 55. Jodeci - Freak 'n You (Pony Remix) 56. Montel Jordan, Master P. Silk - Let's Ride

D-Hour Radio Network
Celebrity Tuesday Morning with Montell Jordan

D-Hour Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2012 91:00


Check your watch, no doubt its that time! It's celebrity Tuesday morning on the D-Hour Show radio network. Im joined with my special guest co-host Diva Ebony B from Diva Spot Radio! Today on the show we will be talking to R&B  superstar singer Montel Jordan about music and what he's working on right now. We will also be playing all your favorite celeberity and indie artists hits! It's the Home of  the Independent artist!

Dj Divsa Podcast
Eclectica II

Dj Divsa Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2011


The second instalment of classics from the 90s and 2000s. This jam packed mix of RnB and Hip Hop by DJ Divsa features artists such as Alicia Keys, Nick Canon, Montel Jordan and Bobby Valentino.