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On the latest episode of the podcast, Doug would like nothing more than to 'Butt Slide' with Lori Loughlin, Jamie can respect bike tricks while not being impressed by them, and we both think was a misstep in Talia Shire's career. Be sure your male stunt double covers his junk while facing the camera, talk shit about the clothing at your local thrift store, and join us as we try and understand anything at all about the competition and very simple plot of, Rad!Rad is a 1986 film directed by Hal Needham and starring Bill Allen, Lori Loughlin, Laura Jacoby, Bart Conner, Ray Walston, Jack Weston & Talia Shire.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
Henry Crawford perseveres, despite Fanny's repeated rejections, and the aunts learn about the proposal. Edmund returns, and he has opinions about the proposal as well. Henry reads some Shakespeare aloud, and Fanny thinks it's hot.Topics discussed gray morality, growing out of being Team Jess, Sir Wobbles's gender, surprise proposals, Shakespeare as a part of English society, and actions speaking louder than words.Patron Study Questions come from Avi and Angelika. Topics discussed include Lady Bertram's offer of a puppy for Fanny, gender-neutral icon Mx. Wobbles, the significance of Henry VIII, and Edmund's behavior after finding out about Henry's proposal.Becca's Study Questions: Topics discussed include the aunts' response to the proposal, Fanny's enjoyment of Henry's acting, and what Henry means about his actions speaking for him.Funniest Quote: Lady Bertram took it differently. She had been a beauty, and a prosperous beauty, all her life; and beauty and wealth were all that excited her respect. To know Fanny to be sought in marriage by a man of fortune, raised her, therefore, very much in her opinion. By convincing her that Fanny was very pretty, which she had been doubting about before, and that she would be advantageously married, it made her feel a sort of credit in calling her niece."Well, Fanny, I have had a very agreeable surprise this morning. I must just speak of it once, I told Sir Thomas I must once, and then I shall have done. I give you joy, my dear niece.” And looking at her complacently, she added, “Humph, we certainly are a handsome family!”Questions moving forward: Will something happen with Julia? Will Henry go away? Will he prove himself?Who wins the chapters? Lady Bertram and Mx. WobblesGlossary of Terms and Phrases:importunity (n): persistence, especially to the point of annoyance.Glossary of People, Places, and Things: Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Schitt's Creek, The Good Place, Gilmore Girls, Henry VIII, The Thing About AustenNext Episode: Mansfield Park Volume III Chapters 4-5Our show art was created by Torrence Browne, and our audio is produced by Graham Cook. For bios and transcripts, check out our website at podandprejudice.com. Pod and Prejudice is transcribed by speechdocs.com. To support the show, check out our Patreon! Check out our merch at https://podandprejudice.dashery.com.Instagram: @podandprejudiceTwitter: @podandprejudiceFacebook: Pod and PrejudiceYoutube: Pod and PrejudiceMerch store: https://podandprejudice.dashery.com/
Ew, David! This week on The Art of Costume Podcast, Spencer and Elizabeth are packing their bags and heading to Schitt's Creek to spend some time with the one and only Rose family. Join us as we celebrate the incredible work of costume designer Debra Hanson, unpack Moira Rose's seemingly endless collection of wigs and extravagant pajama suits, admire David Rose's impeccably curated wardrobe, and pay a visit to Jocelyn's beloved Blouse Barn. Along the way, we discuss how costume became an essential part of each character's journey and why the legendary Catherine O'Hara gave us one of television's greatest style icons.
Ew, David! This week on The Art of Costume Podcast, Spencer and Elizabeth are packing their bags and heading to Schitt's Creek to spend some time with the one and only Rose family. Join us as we celebrate the incredible work of costume designer Debra Hanson, unpack Moira Rose's seemingly endless collection of wigs and extravagant pajama suits, admire David Rose's impeccably curated wardrobe, and pay a visit to Jocelyn's beloved Blouse Barn. Along the way, we discuss how costume became an essential part of each character's journey and why the legendary Catherine O'Hara gave us one of television's greatest style icons.
Ep 261 | True or false: most "fresh" fish has actually been frozen and the salmon at your grocery store isn't what the label says it is. This week, Natalie and Tara go behind the scenes of their trip to Florida for the Red Snapper episode of Discover Ag on the Road. They talk to a 30-year veteran and a Florida fishing captain about what most people don't know about the industry, from the quota system crushing American fishermen to the truth about frozen fish. Learn why most fishermen only make $2 on an $80 haul and how to spot mislabeled salmon at the grocery store. What We Discovered This Week
Wines We're Drinking: Jessica: 2019 Robert Hall Merlot, Paso Robles Erika: Apothec (red) May has felt like the longest month of the year, and your two favorite chismosas needed a release. This month's chisme episode is a full-on bitch session, no prepared topics, no political rabbit holes, just two real friends talking how they actually talk. Jessica is recording from her parents' place in Orange County, Erika can't wait to sip on her glass, and the conversation goes everywhere, mi gente. From curly hair frustrations to house hunting reality checks, wedding planning advice for people who don't want to go broke, the Gen Z vs. Millennials debate on writing papers without AI, and the wildest movie theater experience you'll ever hear described, this one is all vibes and zero filter. Plus: Jessica shares a major podcast milestone announcement and a heartfelt ask from the comunidad. In This Episode We Cover: [00:00] Welcome and setting the scene (Jessica recording from her parents' house) [00:04] Wines we're drinking: Robert Hall Merlot and Apothec [00:05] Curly hair struggles, DIY trims, and the art of finding a stylist who actually gets curly hair [00:10] Bored woman energy: cleaning, decluttering, and the urge to redecorate everything [00:19] House hunting update: Jessica and Antonio's open house adventures and planning timeline [00:24] Why paying off the car first is the move, and the true cost of moving into a new home [00:27] Handymen are attractive. Period. Girl math, marriage savings, and real talk [00:28] Movie review: The Devil Wears Prada 2 (worth seeing or not?) and the plan to watch Michael next [00:34] The wildest movie theater moment featuring a very loud old man and an almost-altercation [00:36] CVS pharmacy chaos, a racist man in a wheelchair, and just a whole day being odd [00:38] A one-woman show by Biz Bruja and a surprise visit to see Jessica's son at work [00:40] What they've been watching: Schitt's Creek, The Boys, and why it's okay to rewatch comfort shows [00:43] On collective exhaustion: why this episode has no political chisme and zero guilt about that [00:44] Finding joy wherever you can grab it [00:45] Wedding planning advice from someone who did it beautifully for $13,000-$15,000 all-in [00:54] Jessica's mom and the Pop Warner bake sale that sold out in two hours: Marketing 101 from a legend [00:56] Gen Z vs. Millennials: Did we write 10-page papers without AI? (We did. At the library. In the encyclopedia era.) [00:58] Real talk on AI as a tool vs. AI replacing human creativity, and how Jessica uses it for the podcast [01:03] AI customer service rants, the joy of pressing zero, and why real humans will always win [01:05] MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT: A top podcast hosting company reached out to Wine & Chisme [01:08] Newsletter guilt, world-weariness, and why joy is the resistance [01:10] Exploring voiceover work and the reality of doing what you gotta do in these times [01:12] A soft launch: Wine & Chisme now accepting listener donations through Square (only if you're in a position to give, mija) [01:15] Shoutout to Christina Cervantes and all the listeners who keep showing up [01:16] Call, text, or DM: Jessica and Erika want to hear YOUR stories for the run to Episode 300 [01:17] How to reach the show: (858) 304-0266 or hola@thewineandchismepodcast.com Connect with Wine & Chisme: Website: thewineandchismepodcast.com Instagram: @wineandchisme TikTok: @wineandchisme Threads: @wineandchisme LinkedIn: Wine & Chisme Podcast YouTube: Wine & Chisme Email: hola@thewineandchismepodcast.com Phone/Text: (858) 304-0266 Latiné podcast. Chicana stories. Wine & Chisme has been building since 2019 and we're on our way to 300 episodes. Thank you for being part of this comunidad.
On the latest episode of the podcast, Jamie discusses a series of books she calls 'Diary of a Wimpy Pants Kid', Doug thinks about a romantic encounter involving a karate routine way more often than he should, and we both thought we were watching the wrong movie for the first 5 minutes. Don't jerk off your mentally challenged camp counselor, be sure to get your poison ivy shots before going to camp, and join us as we try and understand the appeal of this character while discussing, Ernest Goes to Camp!Ernest Goes to Camp is a 1987 film directed byJohn Cherry III and starring Jim Varney, Victoria Racimo, John Vernon, Lyle Alzado & Iron Eyes Cody.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
Have you ever seen Schitt's Creek? No? You really need to watch it. That's advocacy. And it's older than marketing itself - somebody took a bite of something and said, “You gotta try this.” Jason Grunberg, CMO of Forter, didn't watch the show until he got sick and had nothing else to do. By the time he was better, he was binge-watching instead of resting. In this episode, he breaks down what Schitt's Creek teaches B2B marketers about pointy characters, ownable positioning, brand as a bank, and why the transformation story is the only story worth telling. Together, we dig into why “safe is not where we make really strong emotional bonds,” what the Rosebud Motel's rebrand can teach any B2B company trying to differentiate, and why AI inflation has already made “AI” a meaningless differentiator. About our guest, Jason Grunberg Jason Grunberg is CMO at Forter, the identity intelligence platform for digital commerce. With a background spanning agency and in-house roles across B2C and B2B, he brings a rare perspective on what it means to treat every buyer as a consumer - because at the end of the day, a wrong decision costs someone their job, and nothing is more personal than that. What B2B Marketers Can Learn From Schitt's Creek Advocacy is the root of every decision. Jason didn't watch Schitt's Creek because of the awards or the marketing. He watched it because people he trusted kept telling him to. His takeaway for B2B: “Advocacy has been a core part of marketing and brand forever for anything. This is coded almost into the human experience - advocacy is the root of like how we end up making decisions and choices.” Before you chase the next channel, ask whether you're creating the conditions for your customers to tell their colleagues, “You really need to try this.” Pointy characters resonate more than representative ones. The safest instinct in B2B marketing is to round off your personas until they feel inclusive. Schitt's Creek did the opposite - and it's why strangers kept telling Jason the show was basically his family. Ian's takeaway: “The more pointy you make it, the more weird, the more absurd, it actually will resonate that much better.” Stop asking whether every CIO will see themselves in your story. Make the character want something specific, and trust the audience to find themselves in it. Brand is a bank - and technology is never the real differentiator. The Rose Apothecary didn't succeed because of its product formulas. It succeeded because of the experience, the distinctiveness, the emotional value. Jason connects it directly to his work at Forter: “Quality is replicable, at least now more so than ever. The brand has to mean something.” On technology positioning, he's blunt: “If there's always the push from your product team to be like, ‘This is the core differentiator,' I'm like, ‘Cool. That is 2,000 lines of code deep. That sounds really replicable. And it doesn't say I'm getting a raise if I buy this.'” “Safe is not where we make really strong emotional bonds. On the edges is where we do that - because on the inside, there's a lot of edge. We've just been conditioned to not show it all the time.” - Jason Grunberg Time Stamps [1:25] Meet Jason Grunberg, CMO of Forter [2:17] Why Schitt's Creek? The Show That Felt Like His Family [4:53] Jason's Role at Forter: Decisions AI and Customer-Centric Marketing [5:56] What Is Schitt's Creek? Character Development as a Foundation [12:11] Marketing Lesson #1: Advocacy Is Coded Into the Human Experience [15:56] Marketing Lesson #2: Pointy Characters Win — Stop Regressing to the Mean [23:14] B2B Is Still Consumer: Everyone Is a Person Making a Personal Decision [26:35] Marketing Lesson #3: Brand Experience — Rose Apothecary and the Bank Analogy [29:11] Marketing Lesson #4: The Rosebud Motel and the Power of Positioning [32:18] The Name, the Pun, and the Juxtaposition of Lowbrow and Highbrow [36:21] The Audacity of the Arc: Why Schitt's Creek Ended on Purpose [39:07] Final Thoughts and Takeaways Links Connect with Jason on LinkedIn Learn more about Forter About Remarkable! Remarkable! is created by the team at Caspian Studios, the premier B2B Podcast-as-a-Service company. Caspian creates both nonfiction and fiction series for B2B companies. If you want a fiction series check out our new offering - The Business Thriller - Hollywood style storytelling for B2B. Learn more at CaspianStudios.com. In today's episode, you heard from Ian Faison (CEO of Caspian Studios) and Meredith Gooderham (Head of Production). Remarkable was produced this week by Meredith Gooderham, edited by Jon Goldberg, and our theme song is “Solomon” by FALAK. Create something remarkable. Rise above the noise. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Hoy despedimos a la única mujer capaz de olvidar a su hijo en tres países distintos y seguir siendo considerada la madre del año. Hoy recordamos a la dama que no necesitaba efectos especiales porque su cara ya venía de serie con más ángulos que un examen de geometría; la mujer que podía asustar a un fantasma y luego invitarlo a una copa de vino. Hablamos de Catherine Anne O'Hara, la única persona en Hollywood que sabía gritar "¡Kevin!" de una forma que hacía que hasta los niños de los vecinos recogieran el cuarto. La pequeña Catherine nació en Toronto el 4 de marzo de 1954, en una familia tan numerosa que para pasar lista tenían que llamar a un censor del ayuntamiento. Eran siete hermanos, así que Catherine aprendió pronto que, o eras graciosa, o no te llegaban ni las sobras del guiso. De joven tenía ese aire de "niña bien" de Canadá, que es como ser de Valladolid pero con más nieve y pidiendo perdón hasta por si acaso. Empezó en el mundillo del humor con los de Second City, donde se juntó con gente como John Candy, el Juanito el Golosinas de ellos, formando un grupo que hacía que los Monty Python parecieran una reunión de vecinos de una comunidad de bienes. Allí demostró que podía imitar a cualquiera, desde una estrella de cine acabada hasta a tu tía la que se pasa con el anís en Navidad. En los 80 le llegó la fama mundial haciendo de Delia Deetz en Beetlejuice. Allí salía con unos pelos que parecían un nido de cigüeñas electrocutadas y unas esculturas que daban más miedo que una inspección de trabajo. Fue la única capaz de cenar con unos langostinos que cobraban vida y no perder la compostura, demostrando que para ser una artista moderna solo hace falta mucha laca y tener muy poca vergüenza. Pero el papel que la jubiló antes de tiempo en la mente de todos fue el de Kate McCallister en Solo en casa. Catherine se pasó media película corriendo por aeropuertos como si estuviera persiguiendo el último autobús de la noche para volver al pueblo. Logró que medio planeta se sintiera mejor padre, porque por muy mal que lo hicieras, al menos tú no te habías ido a París dejando al niño a merced de dos cacos que parecían salidos de un chiste malo. En esta época ya tenía la mandíbula que parecía un monedero grande donde te caben hasta las llaves y las cejas con vida propia, que se movían más que una menopáusica por la noche. Después de unos años haciendo de todo, se reinventó como Moira Rose en Schitt's Creek, donde llevaba más pelucas que una comparsa del Carnaval de Cádiz. Hablaba con un acento que no existía en ningún mapa y vestía como si hubiera asaltado el armario de una villana de Disney con presupuesto ilimitado. Se convirtió en un icono para los modernos, que no sabían si querían ser ella o que ella les adoptara para heredar sus sombreros. Se casó en 1992 con Bo Welch, un diseñador de producción, lo cual es muy práctico porque así si se aburría de los muebles del salón, el marido le montaba la casa de Psicosis en un momento. Tuvieron dos hijos a los que, según las malas lenguas, nunca se olvidó en ningún vuelo transatlántico, rompiendo así la magia del cine. Desgraciadamente, Catherine nos dejó el pasado 22 de abril de 2026 a los 71 años. Se ha ido dejando un hueco enorme y un montón de actrices jóvenes intentando imitar sus gestos sin que les dé un tirón en la cara, aunque ustedes siempre podrán recordarla cada vez que su tía se pase con el anís en Navidad o vean a una madre al borde del colapso nervioso.
The Swinging Wake Podcast – Episode 32 A Tribute to Catherine O'Hara In this heartfelt and haunting episode of The Swinging Wake Podcast, Alex and Kris gather in the séance room to celebrate the life, career, and Disney legacy of the incomparable Catherine O'Hara — the beloved voice of Sally in The Nightmare Before Christmas and one of the most influential character performers of her generation. Before entering tonight's main tribute, the hosts open the crypt doors with the latest spooky Disney news, including the return of Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party, a first look at Disney's 2026 Halloween merchandise collections, and breaking news about a darker live-action Casper series coming to Disney+ with executive producer Steven Spielberg. The main discussion explores Catherine O'Hara's legendary career — from SCTV and Beetlejuice to Home Alone and Schitt's Creek — while taking a deep dive into why her portrayal of Sally became such an enduring part of Disney spooky culture and Haunted Mansion fandom. Alex and Kris discuss: Why Sally remains the emotional heart of The Nightmare Before Christmas Catherine O'Hara's haunting performance of “Sally's Song” Her dual role as both Sally and Shock The connection between Sally and Haunted Mansion Holiday How Catherine O'Hara helped shape gothic Disney storytelling with warmth, humor, and emotional depth The episode also reflects on O'Hara's influence on comedy, character acting, and spooky fandom as a whole, while honoring the lasting emotional impact she left on generations of Disney and Halloween fans. Featured News Stories Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party 2026 Dates & Details: “Shriek Peek” at Disney's 2026 Halloween Merchandise: Casper Live-Action Disney+ Series Report Plus: Disney Halloween 2026 news Catherine O'Hara Tribute Billie Eilish Video “There's always room for one more…” — and tonight, the mansion makes room to honor one of Disney's most beloved spooky voices. Follow & materialize with us:
On the latest episode of the podcast, Doug laughs at the worst tragedy two parents could ever experience, Jamie questions if Billy Zane is a human being or just a smooth, sweaty mannequin,, and we both realize that we'd rather have sex with a murderer than try and repair a sinking ship. Don't take your dog out to sea with you, be sure to keep bottles of sleeping pills handy in all situations, and join us as we discover the doorway to the sexy thriller genre that plagued the 90's with, Dead Calm!Dead Calm is a 1989 film directed by Phillip Noyce, written by Terry Hayes and starring Nicole Kidman, Sam Neill & Billy Zane.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
Dan Levy joins Backstage's In the Envelope: The Actor's Podcast for a deep dive into his new Netflix series, "Big Mistakes." Levy also looks back on the lasting impact of "Schitt's Creek," explains how he creates a collaborative set, shares what he's learned from on-screen moms Catherine O'Hara and Laure Metcalf, and much more. ... Backstage has been the #1 resource for actors and talent-seekers for 60 years. In the Envelope, Backstage's podcast, features intimate, in-depth conversations with today's most noteworthy film, television, and theater actors and creators. Full of both know-how and inspiration, In the Envelope airs bi-weekly to cover everything from practical advice on navigating the industry, to how your favorite projects are made and personal stories of success and failure alike. Join host Vinnie Mancuso, senior editor at Backstage, for this guide on how to live the creative life from those who are doing it every day: https://bit.ly/2OMryWQ ... Follow Backstage and In the Envelope on social media: - https://www.facebook.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/backstage - https://www.twitter.com/intheenvelope - https://www.instagram.com/backstagecast Looking to get cast? Subscribe here: www.backstage.com/subscribe Browse Backstage casting listings: https://bit.ly/3mth68e Special thanks to... - Host: Vinnie Mancuso - Producer: Jamie Muffett - Social media: Karen Jenkins, Sky Silverman - Design: Jay Pollino - Additional support: Kasey Howe, Suzy Woltmann, Jenn Zilioli
“Jennifer Foster's new album Powerline is a wonderful collection of songs. No shortage of sweet melodies or intimate lyrics, and all sung in a voice that is lovely and unpretentious” – Ron Sexsmith Jennifer Foster is a Canadian singer-songwriter whose music blends classic pop-folk songwriting with warmth, curiosity, and emotional honesty. Her songs are hooky and heartfelt, inviting listeners in with melody and drawing them closer through her vivid storytelling. Her new album, Powerline, out in April, is an acoustic-driven collection that offers Foster's most personal songwriting to date. Part love letter, part map, many of the songs were inspired by the New Brunswick farm where she grew up – colourful snapshots of the landscape that shaped her, and of her rich inner world as she navigates relationship, loss, and change. It's a goodbye to a time, place, and version of herself. Powerline marks Jennifer's fourth release; her previous album earned a JUNO nomination for Producer of the Year (Michael Phillip Wojewoda). She has collaborated widely across the Canadian music landscape, working with artists such as Ron Sexsmith, Carole Pope, Lori Cullen, Kevin Hearn (Barenaked Ladies), Moe Berg, and The Pursuit of Happiness. You might also recognize her from her five seasons singing as a “Jazzagal” on Schitt's Creek. Whether she's playing with her four-piece band or holding a room solo, it's her warmth and authenticity that draw audiences in. “It was my dad's dream to have a farm. But he was learning as he went, so my whole upbringing was about experimentation and play”. Like a hobby farm where you find your way and make things up as you go along, Jennifer's songs have a way of taking listeners to unexpected places – disarming, soul-deep, and very satisfying. Social Links:FacebookInstagramBlueskySpotifyApple MusicYouTubeBandcamp Checkout my YouTube Channel with long form interviews from the Subversives | the History of Lowest of the Low. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9d1VSeOHYuxFWKuRdmn9j8UTW6AHwS_fAlso my Weekly Tour Vlog is up an live on the YouTubeshttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9d1VSeOHYuwphwhc4zd0VgY66f1OUQZp Pledge monthly with Patreon https://www.patreon.com/apologueShop Apologue products at http://apologue.ca/shopCheck out new Four Square Here: https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/foursquare/brighton-beach-ephttps://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/foursquare/seven-oh-sevenhttps://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/foursquare/industry-at-home–21st-anniversary-remix-remasteredhttps://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/foursquare/when-weeks-were-weekends
Due to a technical error, we're releasing an old Patreon episode that was never released during our 10th year of the podcast where we released (nearly) all of the paywall material. I knew I held onto this one for a reason.On the latest episode of the podcast, Jamie mentions that Doug's just a 'Little Girl From Nebraska', Doug has a real problem keeping Fay Dunaway and Lauren Hutton straight...and this movie's not helping, and we both have a real problem believing that anyone would say that a 1986 Robin Givens looks terrible. Give your boss a cigarette when she asks, try your best to juggle a life of prostitution and law school and join us as we wast a Lifetime movie before the invention of Lifetime, Beverly Hills Madam!Beverly Hills Madam is a 1986 made-for-television film directed by Harvey Hart and starring Faye Dunaway, Melody Anderson, Donna Dixon, Terry Farrell, Louis Jourdan, Marshall Colt & Robin Givens.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
This week, Monz, Amelia and Stacey explore the ‘performance’ of public parenting, inspired by Elin Strong’s viral article. So, are you actually parenting for the other people at the park? If the answer is yes, you might be a popcorn mum. The swaddling fail by TV’s favourite doctor has ignited a firestorm amongst fans of medical drama The Pitt and we have thoughts. Also, we discuss Schitt’s Creek actor Dan Levy’s controversial take on planes and babies, and why even most parents are onboard. Plus, Prince Harry and Hamish Blake are opening up about men’s mental health postpartum. It has us asking, who’s looking after the dads? Also, Amelia has a new slang term for us that you’ll ‘low-kenuinely’ love. And, Stacey shows us what’s inside her smug ‘analogue bag’.
Dan Levy's follow up to "Schitt's Creek" is entertaining, if under-watched, says Keith.
Actor, director, and writer Dan Levy feels thrilled, titillated, excited, and stimulated about being Conan O'Brien's friend. Dan sits down with Conan to discuss memories of the great Catherine O'Hara, how Canadian self-awareness creates a unique sense of comedy, producing six seasons of Schitt's Creek without the pressure of audience expectations, and the bombastic cast of his newest show Big Mistakes. Later, Conan brings in his lawyer David Melmed to consult on Aaron Bleyaert's questionable tax write-offs. For Conan videos, tour dates and more visit TeamCoco.com. Got a question for Conan? Call our voicemail: (669) 587-2847. Get access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the SiriusXM App! Get 3 months free using this show link: https://siriusxm.com/conan. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
If you love "Schitt's Creek," Colleen thinks you'll love "Big Mistakes," Holly believes the "Euphoria" Season 3 opener should be avoided at all costs, Jason wants you to get into "Next Level Chef," and we're sad that "Born to Bowl" is over, but hope a Season 2 will happenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dan Levy co-created and starred in the beloved Schitt's Creek. And now he's back with a new comedy on Netflix that's got a very different vibe. In Big Mistakes, Levy and Taylor Ortega play dysfunctional siblings who get drawn deeper and deeper into the world of organized crime, even as their mom – the great Laurie Metcalf – runs for public office.Subscribe to Pop Culture Happy Hour Plus at plus.npr.org/happyhour To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
On the latest episode of the podcast, Doug makes it clear as to exactly what kind of space cop he'd be, Jamie considers a more fun 'family member is a robot' twist to the film, and we both struggle to understand exactly what the big deal is about a little meth in space. Hide your shotguns in various crawlspaces, take a walk around the greenhouse while it's still around, and join us as we have differing opinions on the space western, Outland!Outland is a 1981 film written and directed by Peter Hyams and starring Sean Connery, Peter Boyle, Frances Sternhagen, James Sikking & Clarke Peters.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
The Artemis II crew is set to splash down in the Pacific Ocean on Friday after their history-making journey around the far side of the moon. Mark Strassmann explains the risks as the four astronauts reenter Earth's atmosphere. Tiffani McInnis was a teenager in Texas when her mother, Kimberly Langwell, failed to return home from work, leaving her family searching for answers. More than 20 years later, detectives investigating the case received critical information that would finally reveal Langwell's fate. Peter Van Sant has a preview. CBS News has been investigating allegations of sweeping hospice fraud in California. Prosecutors say bogus payments cost the state's Medicaid program $267 million. Adam Yamaguchi reports. Brian Hooker, who was arrested by Bahamian officials in connection to his wife's disappearance, sent texts to his friend after he alleged his wife fell off their boat. Hooker's account to his friend differs some from the statement he gave police. Cristian Benavides reports. A recent CBS News poll found 66% of Americans believe AI will decrease jobs. LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky and chief economic opportunity officer Aneesh Raman share insights on the skills that professionals need to stay ahead of AI at work. Videos circulating on social media showing parents saying the name "Jessica" to calm their toddler are going viral. Developmental psychologist Aliza Pressman breaks down the trend and what parents need to know before trying it. Dan Levy talks to "CBS Mornings" about the comedy series "Big Mistakes," which is about organized crime. Levy explains how he used his own life to help shape his character's relationships and reflects on the beloved series "Schitt's Creek." To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Email your problems to Badadvice973@gmail.com - we can (probably) help! ‘The Miniature Wife' premieres tonight. Schitt's Creek fans have a new Dan Levy show to watch! The final season of ‘Hacks' is here. Matthew Perry's “Ketamine Queen” has been sentenced. Once we're all adults, does an age gap still matter? Are we on board with 4D movies? Scott Budman is on the show, and he's pumped up about the Artemis II mission. It's inspiring the next generation of astronauts, and we want our kids to chase their dreams! Apple's launching a foldable phone. Will AI really reduce how much we need to work? No chance.
Hour 1: Bob took Susan out last night. Can you guess what happened next? Plus, we have our next Bob's Movie Club assignment: The Notebook! Vinnie can't wait. Tiger Woods has been charged. Keanu Reeves is giving us some inspiring words, as told by Sarah. Post Malone closed out the March Madness music festival with a spirited speech. PSA: Michael J Fox is still kicking it. The guy who invented the Operation board game got ripped off. A fun fact about brunch. Everybody farts, but are you smarter than your mom? Hour 2: Email your problems to Badadvice973@gmail.com - we can (probably) help! ‘The Miniature Wife' premieres tonight. Schitt's Creek fans have a new Dan Levy show to watch! The final season of ‘Hacks' is here. Matthew Perry's “Ketamine Queen” has been sentenced. Once we're all adults, does an age gap still matter? Are we on board with 4D movies? Scott Budman is on the show, and he's pumped up about the Artemis II mission. It's inspiring the next generation of astronauts, and we want our kids to chase their dreams! Apple's launching a foldable phone. Will AI really reduce how much we need to work? No chance. Hour 3: Nikki Glaser is fine if her boyfriend hooks up with other people. The author of ‘The Housemaid' has revealed themselves! The Euphoria premiere was last night. Is it just a coincidence that Zendaya and Sydney Sweeney didn't take a single picture together? The dad on the show is discovering how big of a deal unicorns are. Balancing on one leg might tell you more about yourself than you think. Drinks at the bar, Netflix, red meat: People are DONE paying for this stuff. Do we miss the days when you had to camp out for concert tickets? Let's talk about how great In-N-Out Burger is. Hour 4: Artemis II is waking up to a great song every morning. Olivia Rodrigo has announced her next single! Coleman Domingo is popping off. The rest of the SNL season is stacked. If someone hates your art, does that mean they hate you? ‘The Price is Right' is getting a drama. GoPro is laying off 20% of its staff this year. Mosquitoes are no joke. Plus, How Old Is That Guy?
Dan Levy is returning to TV with his new show Big Mistakes, which follows siblings who get mixed up in an organized crime ring. Dan joins Tom Power in the Q studio to talk about why family dynamics were on his mind, and how his own lineage has shaped his path in the industry. Plus, he'll reflect on his early days at MTV, and his award-winning show Schitt's Creek.
(Intro) Underrated Wiz Khalifa Songs (5TYNTK) Ceasefire Deal, Collins Criticism, River Escape, Expo Future, Artemis Milestone (Dirty) Tjay Offset Feud, Vrabel Photos, 50 Cent Doc, Kanye Banned, Schitt's Future, Kim Hamilton (Topic) If you got to pick a wake up song for the Artemis II crew, what song would you choose? (Outro) Brains For Bank
Dan Levy, the Emmy-winning co-creator and star of "Schitt's Creek", talks with Anthony Mason about his new Netflix series, "Big Mistakes" , and how being "riddled with anxiety and self-doubt" was a driving force for his creative process. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We needed more spookies because the spookies we had made us feel spooked. So we did a roundup, but nobody wanted to try and edit this in a week to get it out with the others, so here we are, hanging out in April and wishing it was October.Buckle up for reviews on:The under-seen John Carpenter banger starring Sam Neil, "In the Mouth of Madness (1994)" in which a Stephen King type is unleashing an eldritch horror upon the world and the only question we have is DO YOU READ SUTTER KANE.Na Hong-jin's 2016 "The Wailing" follows a goofy police officer (Kwak Do-won) dealing with a village being overtaken by evil and fake prophets lurk in the wings to make things worse. What happens when the evil infection gets to his family? Find out, but also marvel at having to get intimate with your wife in your car in the driveway because too many people live in your home.The spanish language When Evil Lurks (Cuando acecha la maldad), follows a demon outbreak in a world where everyone knows about "The Rotten" and the dangers associated with them. In a film full of brain eating, what's the spookiest thing? Perhaps it's not listening to your elders, and Demián Salomon, Luis Ziembrowski, Silvia Sabater, Marcelo Michinaux all find out the hard way in Demián Rugna's 2023 gore fest.Joe DeBoer and Kyle McConaghy's 2024 "Dead Mail" follows wildly cool Jasper (Tomas Boykin), who traces dead mail in order to return it to the sender. After getting a blood soaked letter turned over to him, he gets moving on solving where it came from. Is it a hoax? Sterling Macer Jr. and John Fleck round out a low budget and infinitely creative horror flick.Scott Beck and Bryan Woods brought us the Hugh Grant showcase that is 2024's "Heretic". After two young missionaries (Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East) visit Grant's home in order to spread the good word, they realize they're locked in and have to have a face off to escape or else find out if there's a god monster in the basement or if the monster is right in front of them. At least there's blueberry muffins? Rounding out the Spooky Roundup is Oz Perkin's "The Monkey", a splatter fest full of comedy. Twin brothers find their missing dad's toy monkey and quickly realize it kills when it is wound up. The consequences follow them into their adulthood as they're both played by Theo James (from "The Gentlemen" show on Netflix) and an unbelievable mountain of death falls upon a town. Based on a short story from Stephen King, Tatiana Maslany ("Orphan Black"/"She Hulk"), Sarah Levy ("Schitt's Creek") and Adam Scott ("Severence") are along for the ride in Perkin's follow-up to the smash hit "Longlegs".If you like this, subscribe, rate, and if you review it on a podcasting platform, mention a movie you want us to cover in said review and you get a video just like this one. Tell your friends!#adamscott #themonkey #mouthofmadness #johncarpenter #samneil #thewailing #whenevillurks #therotten #ozperkins #deadmail #podcast #horror #horrormovies #horrorreview #spooky #halloweenmovies #heretic #sophiethatcher #hughgrant
*Timestamps are approximate* 0:01 Podcast intro with Dave & Chuck "The Freak"0:01 - - - AD MARKER - - -0:01 Easter Monday/New Beers Eve/Sorry Charlie Day0:05 Dave saw a momma and baby skunk on the way into work this morning0:09 Introducing Ryan Logan to the show0:15 Chuck saw the Artimus launch/Video of young kid excited about the launch0:22 Astronaut caught on camera taking a space shower0:26 American Airlines swapped some shorter flights to buses without telling anyone0:33 NEWS0:33 Good Samaritan was victim of ambush attack when he pulled over to help a crashed car0:43 Dash cam footage of small plane's emergency landing on highway0:45 Hot woman in bikini had to be rescued from the side of a cliff0:47 Wind surfer ran into a whale0:49 Jason finds the "hot chick" from the cliff…is she really hot?0:54 GoFunMe for pizza delivery guy who stopped at store to get customer's drink1:01 - - - AD MARKER - - -1:03 CELEBRITY DIRT1:03 NCAAB tournaments1:10 Body cam footage of Tiger Woods arrest1:15 Camera crew at ballgame put people working on laptops on TV1:16 Old Dodgers fan upset that the team tickets will be all digital1:19 Judge threw out most of Blake Lively's claims against Justin Baldoni1:22 Tori Spelling and her kids taken to hospital after car accident1:23 Arnold's son won his first body building competition1:26 Security protecting Taylor Swift wax statue1:28 Dan Levy will no longer be doing follow up to Schitt's Creek1:29 Bakery business is booming after Ryan Gossling shoutout1:33 Mozart's kinky songs that he wrote1:39 - - - AD MARKER - - -1:41 MALICIOUS FECAL DISTRIBUTION1:41 Old lady pooped on the shelf of a store1:47 Man accused of groping and exposing himself to women in a park1:54 Old bus driver peed on the bus with students on board1:58 Woman moved back in with husband, lit his house on fire2:00 A woman's Houdini-like escape from a police car2:07 Chick Fil-A fire entire staff for performing a dance for TikTok2:11 Allegations that husband of Christy Knowings' husband's double-life2:22 The location of the male G-spot2:29 - - - AD MARKER - - -2:31 DOUCHEBAG OF THE DAY2:31 Guy arrested for riding drunk on horseback in residential area2:33 Update on the quadruple amputee cornhole campion who allegedly shot someone2:43 Woman still got into a Waymo after it drove the wrong way through a drive-thru2:45 Family fought off a raccoon to save their dog2:47 Footage of fox attacking a womabn2:50 News story on loofah code at The Villages2:58 - - - AD MARKER - - -3:00 NEWS3:00 PERVERT OF THE DAY3:00 Guy accused of groping a woman who was in Easter Bunny costume3:05 Guy arrested for third time since winning the Power Ball3:10 - - - AD MARKER - - -3:13 Tip jar theft caught on live stream, thief's mom returned the money3:17 Using sound waves to fight fires3:19 Toddler sat with old guy who was eating alone at a McDonald's3:23 - - - AD MARKER - - -3:24 SUCKS TO BE OLD3:24 99-year-old woman got visit from firefighters for her birthday END OF SHOWSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Good Morning and E News: Tori Spelling was in a car accident, Taylor Swift's wax figure needs security, Dan Levy was considering a "Schitt's Creek" follow-up, Jay-Z says not all billionaires are bad, and more... See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Jeff and Jenn: The Full Episode... Good Morning and E News: Tori Spelling was in a car accident, Taylor Swift's wax figure needs security, Dan Levy was considering a "Schitt's Creek" follow-up, Jay-Z says not all billionaires are bad, Fake or For Real, Jeff's Italian Word of the Day: Grand Opening, and John Matarese: Buc-ee's is here!, News That Didn't Make the News: Things that Boomers say that we can all agree on!, Are humans supposed to be monogamous by nature?, Easter "horror" cake, Chick-fil-A fired an entire shift, Second Date Update: I think the might be illegal, 1K Letter of the Day, and more… See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Twinkie was invented on this day and Dan Levy shuts down hopes of a Schitt's Creek reunion.
We finally know why the heck Andy is returning to RUNWAY thanks to the new DWP2 trailer, plus a wedding date for Taylor Swift, and Dan Levy's emotional return to Schitt's Creek. ☕ The final Devil Wears Prada 2 trailer drops ☕ The UK music festival in a freefall after announcing Kanye on the lineup ☕ We have a very unsurprising date for Taylor Swift's wedding ☕ Rumours swirl around Karl Stefanovic's future ☕ Dan Levy makes a tearful return to Schitt's Creek THE END BITSOnce you’ve devoured this morning’s celeb stories, get your daily news headlines from The Quicky here.You can now watch some of our episodes in full length video on the Apple Podcast app - make sure your phone is up to date and we can't wait for you to seeLINK: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/the-spill/id1473523403Support independent women's mediaFollow us on TikTok, Instagram and Facebook. And subscribe to our Youtube channel.Read all the latest entertainment news on Mamamia... here.Discover more Mamamia Podcasts here.CREDITSHost & Producer: Ash LondonExecutive Producer: Monisha Iswaran Mamamia acknowledges the traditional owners of the land on which we have recorded this podcast.Become a Mamamia subscriber: https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Anthony Mason catches up with actor Dan Levy to talk about his new Netflix series “Big Mistakes", working with the late Catherine O'Hara on “Schitt's Creek” and more. Tracy Smith visits the set of the hit HBO series “Hacks” to talk with stars Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder, along with the show's creators. On Easter Sunday, Chris Livesay goes deep inside the Vatican to explore the centuries-old mosaics and the workshop where they are maintained and restored. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On the latest episode of the podcast, Jamie has a real problem with Kim Basinger's performance, Doug has a real problem with Bruce Willis's performance, and we both have a real problem with the script. Take your date to watch your friend noodle around on a guitar, practice your southern accent, and join us as we try and figure out where the laughs are supposed to be in, Blind Date!Blind Date is a 1987 film directed by Blake Edwards and starring Kim Basinger, Bruce Willis, John Larroquette, William Daniels, George Coe, Mark Blum, Stephanie Faracy & Phil Hartman.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
“I was seriously considering taking a beta blocker before this interview,” Dan Levy told guest hosts Hannah Jackson and Margaux Anbouba on the Run-Through Podcast, “the first time I ever took a beta blocker was like an hour and a half before hosting the Emmys.” Luckily for this anxious trio, the stakes of this episode were much lower than on the stage of a prominent awards ceremony. Levy came onto the show a few weeks before the release of his latest show Big Mistakes, co-created by Rachel Sennott, which comes to Netflix April 9th and is about two siblings who accidentally find themselves entrenched in a world of organized crime. This show, like Schitt's Creek, is a family drama, but this time the stakes are a little higher. “Committing to an idea that you feel excited to tell in a long form format is an intense thing,” Levy told the hosts, “And I have a very irrational fear of being blackmailed into organized crime.” For his sake, one hopes he never ends up in that situation because as he confessed, “I would be instantly murdered.” Reflecting on who might also not do so well in such circumstances, he thought of Sennott, who he first met while working on The Idol. “That's a compliment,” he clarified. The pair went on to write the pilot together and “the rest is history!”His style was also a big topic of conversation. His earliest sartorial days involved shopping at Club Monaco, apparently a brand coveted by Toronto teens, and folding clothes in the Gap Kids to the songs of Nelly Furtado and New Radicals. It was a bit later on that he first discovered and made purchases at JW Anderson and Rick Owens. Now, around a decade later, he's good friends with the likes of Jonathan Anderson and Michael Rider. Also on the episode, Chioma Nnadi and Laura Ingham sat down in the British Vogue studios to discuss the latest goings on from across the pond. This past weekend, the pair attended London's Vogue co-hosted by Alexa Chung and Lila Moss which helped support the UK based charity Give Your Best. They gushed about the latest very beachy cover of Olivia Rodrigo, bare feet and all. The vintage pulls for that shoot complimented Rodrigo's personal style well and were an instant wish list for the rest of us. They closed out their chat with some big news: their dear friend Christopher Kane is stepping into the role of Creative Director at the House of Mulberry—bravo!The Run-Through with Vogue is your go-to podcast where fashion meets culture. Hosted by Chloe Malle, Head of Editorial Content, Vogue U.S.; Chioma Nnadi, Head of British Vogue; and Nicole Phelps, Director of Vogue Runway, each episode features the latest fashion news and exclusive designer and celebrity interviews. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
What if the secret to a well-behaved child isn't more control, but less? In this grounded and eye-opening recap, Lesley Logan and Brad Crowell break down key takeaways from Gail Hugman, an educator with over 50 years of experience helping parents and children grow together. This episode challenges the traditional “because I said so” approach, offering a fresh perspective on how teaching executive function skills—like self-control and focus—can help kids take ownership of their actions. Whether you're navigating homework struggles or leading a team, this conversation offers tools to build responsibility and independence. If you have any questions about this episode or want to get some of the resources we mentioned, head over to LesleyLogan.co/podcast https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/. If you have any comments or questions about the Be It pod shoot us a message at beit@lesleylogan.co mailto:beit@lesleylogan.co. And as always, if you're enjoying the show please share it with someone who you think would enjoy it as well. It is your continued support that will help us continue to help others. Thank you so much! Never miss another show by subscribing at LesleyLogan.co/subscribe https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/#follow-subscribe-free.In this episode you will learn about:Explaining the "why" behind tasks improves cooperation and understanding.Children are intuitively born to grow and desire more responsibility.Transitioning from controlling children to teaching them internal self-control. Using natural consequences to help children process their own choices. The essential order for teaching executive function skills to children. Episode References/Links:Contrology Pilates Conference (Wroclaw, Poland) - xxll.co/polandPilates Workshop (Bruges, Belgium) - xxll.co/brusselsPilates On Tour® (London, UK) - xxll.co/potOPC Spring Training (Virtual Event) - opc.me/eventsGail Hugman's Website - https://www.lessonsalive.comCan Contemporary Pilates Be Done on Classical Equipment - https://beitpod.com/classicalequipmentWhat are the Best Pilates Books - https://youtu.be/JhBVaT2Umfw?si=ieeWA5_L-gvzrq5EBest Pilates Books from Lesley Logan - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exampleEp. 262 with Adrian Koehler - https://beitpod.com/ep262Contrology Handbook by Sandy Shimoda - https://www.pilates.com/products/contrology-handbookGet to Know Joe Pilates by Cathy Strack - https://cathystrack.com/product/get-to-know-joe-pilatesGail Hugman's Website - https://www.lessonsalive.comGail Hugman's Books - theendlessbookcase.com If you enjoyed this episode, make sure and give us a five star rating and leave us a review on iTunes, Podcast Addict, Podchaser or Castbox. https://lovethepodcast.com/BITYSIDEALS! DEALS! DEALS! DEALS! https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/memberships/perks/#equipmentCheck out all our Preferred Vendors & Special Deals from Clair Sparrow, Sensate, Lyfefuel BeeKeeper's Naturals, Sauna Space, HigherDose, AG1 and ToeSox https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/memberships/perks/#equipmentBe in the know with all the workshops at OPC https://workshops.onlinepilatesclasses.com/lp-workshop-waitlistBe It Till You See It Podcast Survey https://pod.lesleylogan.co/be-it-podcasts-surveyBe a part of Lesley's Pilates Mentorship https://lesleylogan.co/elevate/FREE Ditching Busy Webinar https://ditchingbusy.com/Resources:Watch the Be It Till You See It podcast on YouTube! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq08HES7xLMvVa3Fy5DR8-gLesley Logan website https://lesleylogan.co/Be It Till You See It Podcast https://lesleylogan.co/podcast/Online Pilates Classes by Lesley Logan https://onlinepilatesclasses.com/Online Pilates Classes by Lesley Logan on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjogqXLnfyhS5VlU4rdzlnQProfitable Pilates https://profitablepilates.com/about/Follow Us on Social Media:Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lesley.logan/The Be It Till You See It Podcast YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq08HES7xLMvVa3Fy5DR8-gFacebook https://www.facebook.com/llogan.pilatesLinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/lesley-logan/The OPC YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@OnlinePilatesClasses Episode Transcript:Brad Crowell 0:00 Listening to her stories, you know, she is intentional about giving people the tools, like you were just talking about the tools to develop as a child, to grow into the adult that joins the the pack, right, the society, right? And when you are empowering them with the tools, then they can make decisions that are logical and all those kinds of things, instead of just be like, I guess, like, like, think about it. If you're just like, do it. Why? Because I said so. What are you doing? You're actually, you're actually molding a human to always be told what to do.Lesley Logan 0:37 Welcome to the Be It Till You See It podcast where we talk about taking messy action, knowing that perfect is boring. I'm Lesley Logan, Pilates instructor and fitness business coach. I've trained thousands of people around the world and the number one thing I see stopping people from achieving anything is self-doubt. My friends, action brings clarity and it's the antidote to fear. Each week, my guest will bring bold, executable, intrinsic and targeted steps that you can use to put yourself first and Be It Till You See It. It's a practice, not a perfect. Let's get started.Lesley Logan 1:19 Welcome back to the Be It Till You See It interview recap where my co-host in life, Brad, and I are going to dig into the grounded convo I have with Gail Hugman. Hugman. Brad Crowell 1:27 Hugman. Lesley Logan 1:28 Yeah, that's right. I'm like, sorry, Gail. I know you're listening, but you know when you're like, oh, all of a sudden, hold on. Did I miss a G, H, whatever. Gail Hugman, she's fucking the best it was in our last episode.Brad Crowell 1:38 The two of you. So I listen everything on like, 2x speed. And if I could, I'd probably try to listen to it on 3x speed. And the two of you were like, giggle monsters.Lesley Logan 1:47 I'm obsessed with her. Like, I and I was like, when Brad came up, he was halfway through her interview, and he's like, this is amazing. And I was like, Oh, good, because I did go for a second going, am I about to, like, get all the parents to hate me out there, like, like, I don't want to be, because here's the deal, I understand, I don't have children. I get that. I don't understand the day to day. I can't even imagine the cell phone conversation I my kids. I'll just tell you right now, here's where I'd be. They would hate us. They would have a flip phone with those heavy batteries so big it wouldn't fit in their pocket. Like, no internet, you know, like, because there's so much research on, like, how it's, like, affecting people's ability to focus. So, like, this interview, to me, was so amazing, and we are buying all of her books for, sorry, Meredith and Kyle, you're getting them all.Brad Crowell 2:39 True, yeah, but actually, we had a chance to meet Gail in real life last year when we were in England, and it was so interesting. I was just chatting with her on the side of class, and the conversation was so like, she was so inspiring in the five minutes that we were talking that I was like, holy cow, you need to be a guest on Lesley's pod.Lesley Logan 3:02 Gail, I don't know if you believe in past life, but in a past life, I feel like we were family.Brad Crowell 3:07 Yeah, seriously. Well, I'm really, really glad that we were able to have Gail on, and I love that the very first thing that she said is, I don't think I fit the Be It mold, you know, and you two agreed that this would be inspiring the parents, for the kids, so that the kids can be it. Lesley Logan 3:25 I well, that's just it. I mean being it till you see it. Brad Crowell 3:28 I disagree with her in that she did break the Be It mold, but you know, I love the conversation. Lesley Logan 3:33 You don't think she broke them all? Brad Crowell 3:34 No, I think she was being it till she saw it all day, every day. You know like she was very innovative in her career. Fifty years as a teacher, y'all.Lesley Logan 3:42 Especially as she was talking about how she, like, got into what she's doing, it's a be it till you see it kind of a story. So Gail, so sorry you didn't. But also sorry, honey, didn't hate to break it to you. But also, I can't just have people who just tell me stories about themselves all day. We are four and a half. I would have five, almost five years in on this pod. Like crazy. I want to be entertained as well. I want to learn something, and sometimes it's bringing in experts who help us get to where we're going. You can't just be inspired all the time. You have to have information that you can integrate. So I really felt like that's what she did. But anyways, before we keep going and just complimenting Gail Hugman. Lesley Logan 4:19 Today is March 26th 2026 and it's wear a hat day. Brad Crowell 4:24 Wear a Hat Day. Lesley Logan 4:26 We celebrate Wear a Hat Day on March 26th is a fun and fabulous way to raise awareness for brain tumor research and raise funds while we're at it. The holiday was created as a way to get our heads and our hats together to advance research and find a cure for brain tumor so you don't need to have it affected to make a difference. We've got some ideas to get you ahead to this wear hat day. Do they? Did they give us any ideas? Brad Crowell 4:49 No. Lesley Logan 4:49 They didn't give us anything. No links. There's not a charity on this not further down. Okay, before we just start talking about a charity we have not researched, I highly recommend you Google in your area what local charities are doing with brain tumor research or state charities that are doing it because.Brad Crowell 5:08 Hold on, I'm going to read you more. Occurring in around 250,000 people global each year, we're still a long way to go in the study of brain tumors, but thankfully, due to science advances, scientific advances in the fields of chemotherapy and radiation, the survival rate is higher than ever before. Once, brain tumors meant the end of the unfortunate individuals who were who developed them. It wasn't until 1879 that a Scottish surgeon became the first person to successfully remove a brain tumor. His patient, young woman, fully recovered, and the tie was turned in the fight against the illness. So Wear a Hat Day is about brain tumors.Lesley Logan 5:42 You just said 1879. Brad Crowell 5:45 1879 Lesley Logan 5:46 Was there, so and also, you're not under anesthesia for brain tumors. You are awake. Brad Crowell 5:50 Could you imagine? Lesley Logan 5:51 Home girl was like, I'm gonna die. So you may as well open up my head. I trust you. They didn't even have I was but did we have pasteurization yet? Like, Oh my god. Like. Brad Crowell 6:02 I have no idea. Lesley Logan 6:02 Oh my god, definitely don't like brain tumors, but I am a little brave ass woman. Way to fucking go.Brad Crowell 6:08 So the scientific process that was developed though the following years meant a speedy advancement for understanding and treatment of the condition. The discovery of X rays meant that it became possible to locate tumors in the brain accurately through scanning, probably, instead of just cutting their head open, this has continued to be the best way to identify brain tumors ever since, and in the 70s, the development of computed tomography, or CT scanning, allowed physicians to see a clear image of the brain for the very first time. So it's only been 50 years that we've been able to actually see a vision like a full scan of the brain. But however, despite these significant advances in the last 150 years, there still is no fail safe cure for brain tumors. As a result, we get together on Wear a Hat Day to raise money and awareness for brain tumor research. Typically used as a form of protection from external elements. Hats are worn as a symbol of internal protection on this day as well. By talking more about this condition, we help each other to spot symptoms early on. By raising funds, we help support a scientist who are working on a cure.Lesley Logan 7:11 So we don't have any they didn't give us any charity just so, so go look one up. Okay, so go look one up. Here's the deal. There's someone in your life who has one. I have. My grandmother died of a brain tumor. Brad Crowell 7:21 She did. Lesley Logan 7:22 It's not genetic, so don't freak out when you hear that I have another family with a brain tumor. Brad Crowell 7:25 My grandmother almost died of a brain tumor. They were able to successfully remove it. And literally, it was as if she got 10 years younger during her recovery. It's crazy. Lesley Logan 7:35 Oh, my God. Oh, it was amazing. But my grandmother had one, and it was quite fast by the time we knew about it. And then my cousin, he's actually had brain tumors for almost 20 years. Maybe, I think we're at 20 years. They've done because of experiments and charities and and people raising money for research. He's actually been able to benefit from these experimental surgeries and and like ways of treating it, to shrink them. And so I just want to say, like, if you are looking for a cause, and this touches you because you know someone, you've heard about it, this is if we all have a cause. Just imagine, like, how many people get helped? So I think there's a lot of pressure on picking, like, I've helped everybody. No, you can just help one. But in any way there's, it touches all of us, and it's there's not always a rhyme or reason. So anyways, that's why we're wearing hats right now. Brad Crowell 8:22 That is why we're wearing hats right now. Lesley Logan 8:23 If you're watching on YouTube, if you're listening, we're wearing hats right now. Okay, Brad is wearing a podcast hat. Brad Crowell 8:29 I am. Lesley Logan 8:30 Last week we were in Poland, and I forgot that the 26th also we're, we'll be in Bruges. Oh, my God, it's gonna be so much fun. And, then. Brad Crowell 8:39 Yeah, we're probably in Amsterdam right now. That would be my guess. So maybe we're pulling into Bruges early. A night early. Yeah, possibly. Lesley Logan 8:47 It's gonna be so much fun with Karen Frischmann. It's a great time. And then we'll actually spend the after Bruges is over. We're actually about nine days in France. Then we're gonna pop on the train to London and you can check out and see if there's any tickets left at xxll.co/potlondon, super excited about that. I know that their Fridays and Saturdays are sold out, but there's some spots on Sunday, it's really worth going to. And by the way, we said in the last weekend, not sure we'll be back to Europe, guys, just got other places we got to see, too. Spring Training is a thing that anyone can join, and you'll be on plane two. You can actually join yeah, May. Brad Crowell 9:22 So after POT London. Lesley Logan 9:24 May 12th through the 17th, you can join from the comfort of your own Pilates space, wherever that is, all levels are welcome. Yes, the theme is about getting overhead. But we actually have people who will teachers on our team who do not do overhead exercises. We have a teacher on our team who are going to show you how, if you have, if you're in a larger body, booty abundance, chest abundance, like best ways to get overhead. And then we'll have hyper mobile teachers showing how you get overhead. And then we'll just be getting overhead, and you will have the tools you need to do the best thing for you. And that's the goal of spring training. So opc.me/events.Brad Crowell 9:58 Yeah, come join us. Before we get into it, though, with Gail, we had a question, so this is a bit of a long one. So bear with me here. Kendra @KennySwan on Instagram asks, Hey, Lesley, I watched your YouTube video on teaching contemporary on classical equipment. I'm a stat instructor. I've loved classical equipment, especially the Reformer. I would love to have classical equipment in my studio, but I've had some backlash from classical instructors that I'm quote, unquote not qualified to teach on classical equipment, so fuck the Pilates Blaze is what I would say. I don't think that's so crazy, though, sorry, I don't think that's so crazy though, any well trained instructor should be able to adjust for the equipment that they're using. I know there's some exercises that can't be done, not that many, really, though, right, like between the classical and contemporary. My question is, in your expert opinion, is it acceptable for a contemporary teacher to teach on classical equipment?Lesley Logan 10:51 Oh, my God, I. Brad Crowell 10:52 What the fuck. Lesley Logan 10:53 The fuck. First of all, just so you know, I hired many a contemporary trained teacher when I worked for Equinox. And guess what the equipment is? Classical. If you had to be able to manage it, don't, don't break it, but. Brad Crowell 11:06 I am so sad that that you've had classical instructors giving you a hard time, for even wanting to buy the equipment, they can just take a long fucking walk. That is so ridiculous.Lesley Logan 11:17 I know if you're a classical instructor who like, is like, can't believe this is how I'm answering. I we have to have a talk about the cult that you're in. I'm just gonna say it right now. I know that's not how you're supposed to help people out of a cult, but like, I teach on contemporary equipment all the time. Like, that's what I teach. I'm on a Pop Up Tour. You know what my classical instructor told me in my first training? She said, You need to make sure that you take the time to understand how to work on any piece of equipment you're at, because when you teach classically on different pieces of equipment, it will change the exercise. But you can't be limited to the equipment the studio has. So if you want to be a great instructor, you got to figure it out. And so every studio I ever went to, I would get on the equipment, I would make sure, I would figure what springs felt the same way. How do I set the ropes up so they feel the same way? I am so proud that I know how to do that, and no contemporary instructor says, Oh, she can't come in here. She doesn't know how to use these risers. She only uses the ropes on the bottom level. No one says that to me. So how dare these classical people say that? It grosses me out. So, just so, you know, anyone can buy equipment, just so we're clear, you don't have to be a trained person. Do I wish that people who call themselves teachers went through proper trainings? Fuck yeah, I do. I wish there was some sort of regulation making sure that, because there's a lot of people calling things polite that are not polite, like that's kind of where that comes from, that does not come from this. You're a trained person on how to teach. So here's the deal, Kendra, you've done the thing how to learn how to teach Pilates, right? Your first training taught you how to teach. Plus, it doesn't actually matter to me what it is. You can buy classical equipment. You can absolutely teach what you can translate over on the classical equipment. I don't think that's wrong. Sometimes you might need those tools in your tool belt for a client. And then you can, through my YouTube videos, through a lot of people's YouTube videos, teach yourself classical I do think you should read classical educated books. Not all of them are good. So here's a couple. We have a YouTube video that I'll go into, deeper books that I like about Pilates, and they're all, so the Caged Lion John Steel, Contrology Handbook by Sandy Shimoda, Get to Know Joe Pilates with Cathy Strack, incredible books that you should read that will help educate you about the why behind classical. Because I, what I don't like is when people just like watch a classical video, teach it in the order, but not really understand the why behind the what. Because that's why you want to change some things. So I do think if I was to teach contemporary I'd want to know the why behind the what, right. So I think that. But do I.Brad Crowell 13:42 That YouTube video, by the way, is called, What are the Best Pilates Books from Lesley Logan on Online Pilates Classes?Lesley Logan 13:49 So I I'm sorry, like anyone telling I don't care what school you're at. Brad Crowell 13:54 I don't think, I don't think those classical teachers are qualified to teach on classical equipment. That's what I have to say.Lesley Logan 14:00 I mean, like these, I bet you can, I bet you, Kendra, if you ask those people if I'm a classical teacher, those same people would say no, because the only people who talk like that are people who think, because who train me that I'm not classical. So, like, there's this weird group of people. So what you just met is you just saw big red flag run away from these people. These are not my people. So in the Pilates world, everyone's got to find their people, and I might not be the people for you. What I do have to offer if you want to invest in like an actual I would call, this is where, for teachers, I would call, you're looking for a bridge or a mentorship. If you've already done a comprehensive training, I think it's a little weird to go do a comprehensive training in the other style, where you're with people who've never taught before. Because one, they're going to be like, oh my God, this person is like, knows what they're doing, and you're going to be like, these, I'm coaching these people more than I'm getting helped. I like a mentorship program where it's, it is people who've all been taught but now you want to dive deeper into a study of Pilates. I have one. It's called eLevate. It's more than half fill for next year. It's lesleylogan.co/elevate, but you don't have to pick mine. There are other ones out there. Karen Frischmann is a dear friend of mine who has one she has hers like 18 months you just you're looking for a classical Pilates mentorship but you don't even need to do that to go buy the classical equipment and start doing classical work. You can have an OPC membership and learn a bunch of stuff. Everyone's following the order. Everyone's doing things based on Joe's intentions and using variations as needed. So you're good, Kendra, in my book, you're good. Those people can suck it. You know, in the words of pumps from my favorite podcast, they can fuck off.Brad Crowell 15:41 Well, if you have a question, just text us at 310-905-5534, or if you're international, feel free to submit a question at beitpod.com/questions, and also leave us a win.Lesley Logan 15:54 If you want me to get angry for you clearly, I will.Brad Crowell 15:58 Yeah. You want Lesley to tell someone to fuck off. Brad Crowell 16:00 All right, stick around. We'll be right back. We'll get a dig into this conversation.Lesley Logan 16:05 Hold on. Brad Crowell 16:05 All right. What? Lesley Logan 16:06 That co host, also, I've said it on the podcast before, but she did it again today, when I was listening twice, she says, in 2000 and 2026.Brad Crowell 16:17 2000 and 2026 yeah, that's so funny.Lesley Logan 16:20 I die every time. Like, she is making it worse. I like, love it. I'm like, what if that's how he said it? Oh, it's January, 2000 and 2026. Okay, now we're on a break. Brad Crowell 16:31 All right, we'll be right back.Brad Crowell 16:33 Okay, welcome back. Let's talk about Gail Hugman. Gail has been teaching for over 50 years, y'all, 50 years she's been teaching. She works with children and parents to help them flourish together. After spending decades in London schools, she shifted it into private practice to focus on motivation and self-development, helping children build self-control, confidence and independence, and helping parents rethink how they guide and support their crazy kids.Lesley Logan 17:06 Well, I mean, I just really am obsessed with this because, like, I remember listening to Seth Godin say that, like, parents roles after kids are home from school is not to help them, like, really do homework. It's to help them learn how to be analytical. Because if they could be analytical, then they can probably, this is before, AI guys, this is like, I don't know, I think there's like, 2015 when I heard him say this, he says, then they're they're irreplaceable, right? Like, if they can be analytical, and then I remember who's the host of Survivor? Jeff? Is it Jeff? Feels like a Jeff. Anyways, he he. Brad Crowell 17:45 Jeff Probst. Lesley Logan 17:45 Yes, him. He was talking about raising kids, and he said, you know, my daughter was talking about how she wants to be a large animal vet and she wants to be a tennis photographer, pro tennis photographer. Brad Crowell 17:58 These things go hand in hand. Lesley Logan 18:00 Correct. Exactly. That's exactly what his thought is. But you can't react, because then you can, like, affect them. So he just so his job is not to be like, oh, you can't do you have to pick one. That's what the world would do. He said, my job as her parent is to challenge her to tell me how she's gonna do that. So I said, Oh, that's interesting. How are you going to learn both those skills and do that? Do you think? What do you think? And she goes, oh, there's these two schools here that have really high performing tennis teams, photography as a degree and large animal vet. And so I can actually go to this school on a scholarship and get these two degrees, and then, because tennis is seasonal, I'll be a seasonal photographer when I'm not in seasonal work at this place over here in the large animal vet thing, like, she had it all figured out. Brad Crowell 18:48 Holy cow. Lesley Logan 18:48 So had he said, You have to pick one. Brad Crowell 18:51 Right. Lesley Logan 18:52 It would have just killed the re she did research. She figured out a plan. And look, whether or not I haven't looked, and see what Jeff Probst's daughter is doing. Because, like, you know, there's enough time that she might be able to figure this out, but that's not the job, right? And so that goes into what Gail's talking about here that I love. She said, I mean, you'll see how it fits in. When we talk about listening to children, we don't talk about the process. I will say, are you listening? And what they're thinking is, I'm hearing you. So, like, I've even done this. Like, are you listening? I'm like, I heard words. Brad Crowell 19:21 Right. Yeah, totally listening. Didn't process any single bit of it but. Lesley Logan 19:26 Anything. She said that, you know, even as adults, we are taught listening skills like, we're like, we'll go to events, schools, trainings, and they'll like, teach you how to like, process the thing that you're about to do. But we just expect children to know how to listen and like, what to pay attention to? Remember in Schitt's Creek when, like, Alexis, like, went back to school and then she highlighted the whole page. And they're like, Oh, you didn't highlight this. She's like, Oh, okay, like she was highlighting, like, what she was reading, like she wasn't taught, like, when do you put the highlighter on the page? Like, what's the point of highlighting? Right? And so it's funny, but like, it goes to this. And, like, I think this is where, like, as people with younger people in our lives, we don't have children, we're, like, when our nieces and nephews are around us, I'm trying to be really conscious of, like, Am I answering the question for them, or I'm giving them? Am I? Am I giving them ample time to, kind of like, process what what's happening and then tell me back what's going on. And that does take time. I just want to know. I just want to know I understand that takes so much time. I just wanted to tell them what to do. But I think you might have people who listen when they're older.Brad Crowell 20:32 Well, I found it interesting that she was talking about the process, because for me, I found she started talking about process in the same way that I've always talked about the why, you know, and when, like, I don't have children, but we run a company with people in it, and I've always found that when, especially when there's something that someone does not want to do, if I'm able to clearly convey why it always goes over better with them still grudgingly doing the thing, than if I'm just, like, just because I fucking said so do it? No, that doesn't work, right? I mean, they, you know, they might still do it and they might also quit, but, but like when people understand the why behind the what, now all of a sudden they're like, Oh, that makes sense. I get it. Okay, yeah.Lesley Logan 21:27 I completely agree. I think. Like, sometimes even just when we tell people like, oh, you know, like, it's really simple, you have too many clients, we need to raise your rates, and they're like, so scared, and it's like, okay, hold on. Let me paint the picture of why this is, how this is going to help? Like, I do think that you're right there. And I remember when you were training with Adrian Kohler, who's been on the pod, and you were frustrated, just even within a with one of the people who's not on our team anymore, but we'd hired for a specific project, and you were frustrated. And he taught you to even ask, like, Okay, after you tell them what you want them to do, ask them what it is that they're going, what are their action steps going to be? Because that helps you understand. Did they hear or listen? Did they process it? Did they hear what you said to do? You know, like, it's really easy for us to, like, say the right words, and then they interpret it incorrectly, just based on, like, It's the game of telephone, like, where people are, what words stuck out to them? What words triggered them?Brad Crowell 22:22 Yeah, Adrian was episode 262, by the way. Lesley Logan 22:25 That far back? Brad Crowell 22:26 I know.Lesley Logan 22:28 Did the year did like there was like two was there one year that was like two years long.Brad Crowell 22:32 But I agree, you know, like when we are willing to explain the process that suddenly really can be the catalyst that shifts behavior in a child, you know, or in a teammate. Lesley Logan 22:45 I'm just gonna say I don't think that I'm in a rebel at heart. That's not how I think I was born as a child, like I'm quite the perfectionist, overachiever. But anytime I heard because I said so, or because I told you to, I can go back to, like, 17 memories in my brain of me in my head, going. Brad Crowell 23:06 Yeah, exactly. Lesley Logan 23:08 And then doing enough to not get yelled at for doing not doing it the right way. Like, like you, you catch more flies with honey, but you also create people who you want to be around, if you kind of give them the chance to be in the process, learn the process.Brad Crowell 23:24 Yeah, and that, that actually feeds exactly into what I wanted to talk about, which was she told the story about this four year old who, when she was like, when Gail was putting the pencils away, the four year old was like, me, I want to do it. I want to I want to do it right. And she said something really intriguing. She said, kids want responsibility. They are intuitively born to grow. They are born to develop. They want more. They want to be part of the pack, a society. They see what adults are doing, and they're like, Well, I want to do that too. You know, how many of us remember thinking back to when we were a child and being like, I can't wait till I'm an adult. Why? Because I can make my own decisions, or I can do my own thing, or whatever the thing was, you know, and, and so, so, so interestingly, you know, actually, one thing that I found really interesting about Gail that was not explicitly said, is, obviously she is a patient person. Patience, right? And she's willing. She understands the she understands the kid. She understands what they're doing, why they're doing it, and she also understands when they're processing or not processing, the the information that they're receiving. She told another story about asking someone nine times to repeat back to her what she just told them to do right nine times. That takes so much patience to not get frustrated.Lesley Logan 24:47 I think that goes back to it doesn't matter what the goal is. If you're really clear on the goal, it allows you to to have I don't have patience inherently.Brad Crowell 25:00 For her, the goal was not for the kid to go do the thing she asked him to do. The goal was for the kid to learn how to listen and process what she what they were listening.Lesley Logan 25:10 But I wanted to say because we, I know we have some Pilates instructors who are listening, and they, they get frustrated when their clients don't remember the names of the exercises, or they're how to do things. And I'm a person who believes in like, radical responsibility. My clients are going to learn their exercises, and they're capable of it. I work out at gyms at a hotel. These are people on vacation who manage to come into a gym and figure out how to do something in there, which means they someone taught it and they figured how to do it. So I am willing to be patient enough to not over correct someone, or to do it for them instead, to go, okay, the 100 and like, you know, this one, it's, it's this. And like, Oh, it's this, okay, like, giving them the the time, the space. And everyone's like, like, I don't have my job is to entertain them. It's to help them know how to move their own body. And so it's really funny, because I have these clients who told my dad year, this is back when I was first teaching she is the most patient woman. And my dad was like, my daughter is patient, and I will say, loves, I am not patient. I am one of the most impatient people when it comes to the things I want, how I want things to go, but when it comes to someone else's process, I am very patient, because I know the end result is they'll have radical responsibility, autonomy over their body. They'll understand how to move it. I'm not going to be there when they trip or have to catch or grab something. I might be like, oh, right, arm up reach. I won't be there. So I think that I have no idea. I think actually, I haven't met Kate Gayle and been spent some time with her, there is a lot of patience to her. But also, maybe not, maybe she's just really clear on when I'm with this child, the goal is to give them time to process.Brad Crowell 26:57 Yeah, and for her, it sounds like like listening to her stories, you know, she is intentional about giving people the tools, like you were just talking about the tools to develop as a child, to grow into the adult that joins the the pack, right, the society, right? And if you when you are empowering them with the tools, then they can make decisions that are logical and all those kinds of things, instead of just be like, I guess, like, like, think about it. If you're just, like, do it. Why? Because I said, So, what are you doing? You're actually, you're actually molding a human to always be told what to do. Lesley Logan 27:38 Right. And guess what? They won't need those people in the future, because that's what robots will do. They could be programmed. People are not people will be rebellious. And I, I know y'all have heard me say this, I'm a little worried about who the fuck is going to take care of me, because their mom won't be around to tell them what to do, and I might need someone to take care of me because I didn't have children. So just saying.Brad Crowell 27:59 Well, well on that note, stick around. Lesley Logan 28:03 In case you need a motivation to make your child not an asshole, Lesley, your podcast host, is a little worried about her, like, end of life care, okay?Brad Crowell 28:14 All right, we'll be right back. We're gonna take it to those Be It Action Items that we had with Gail. So stick around. Brad Crowell 28:21 Welcome back. All right. So finally, let's talk about those Be It Action Items. What bold, executable, intrinsic or targeted action items can we take away from your convo with Gail Hugman? She said straight up, you cannot control children. You cannot control them. You have to teach them how to control themselves.Lesley Logan 28:40 I I have chills, and I love this so much, I feel like that has to be very freeing, doesn't you think it's freeing?Brad Crowell 28:47 Oh my gosh, so freeing. Like I freeing is a good word for it, but, but I, but I also think that it's, I guess freeing is the right word, because when people are feel like they have they will lose control. And what does it do for you as the person trying to have control? You get angry, freaked out, like, like.Lesley Logan 29:06 You're embarrassed. Yeah, all these things, so embarrassed, this, this, this child is like, like, doing the they're normally really good, like, all the things. Brad Crowell 29:14 Which are forms of narcissism, by the way. But basically it's, it's what you are when you're teaching them to control themselves, you know now it's not your responsibility if they control themselves in that way. You've taught them how to do the thing, and if they're not doing it, then that's some there's another. There's another thing going on there, because they know how to control themselves.Lesley Logan 29:35 Oh my gosh, you guys, if you did not listen to the episode, you have to listen to it, because it was very there was a whole point about the homework, the homework that made me like, I just was like, Oh, my God, I wish. I wish this was something my parents knew. I wish. I think my mom, who's a school teacher, would love this like my mom, I know would, because she, like, she took the homework away from kids because the parents were doing it. But like, this whole thing about, like, if the kid doesn't do the homework, at the time the teacher said it should take then instead of doing it for them or fighting with them, you take it away. The homework is done. It was supposed to take 30 minutes. It it's been 30 minutes, and I will go to school with you tomorrow, while you explain why it you couldn't get it done 30 minutes. Because then they have to have they have to actually think about why did it, oh, I was playing a video game. Well, now they have to admit that, or Oh, I didn't understand the lesson. Okay, well, then the teacher needs to know, because the teacher should make sure you can understand the lesson before you leave.Brad Crowell 30:27 Because they're teaching you how to do the lesson, not doing the lesson for you, like it's this is a perfect parallel. The teacher would never do your homework for you. The teacher is going to do teach you how to do the homework. So why do we feel like we are supposed to control children. No, we're supposed to teach them how to control themselves. Lesley Logan 30:44 Right. For example, I tell eLevate members, like the homework for eLevate is not mandatory. If you do it it helps me understand the learning style you are. It also helps me understand what you understood from the weekend I just taught you, which gives me feedback that I could never get from a survey, in understanding that I know what I said that weekend, but what did you hear? Right? Like, what did you take in? What did you understand? And this past homework thing, someone filled the form in a way that I've never seen before. And I was just like, hey, I think that, like, you might have misunderstood what's going on. Here's what I was expecting. She redid it, and then she explained why she understood the way she did. Crazy reason why. But it was like, you know, it was really simple for us to just do an example, and then people would know how to do it, and then, so, like, it also the teacher will learn I wasn't good. I didn't give good enough instruction. So I just, I love that. Go listen. The whole thing is so good. But it goes back to what you were saying. Brad Crowell 31:37 Yeah. And the two of you then got into a conversation about saying, you know, don't do this, or no, or all those kinds of things. And I'm not saying that you should never say no, but your example was that Joe Pilates wouldn't tell you what not to do. He would tell you what to do, right? So how should you control yourself in public? Not control yourself.Lesley Logan 31:59 Well also, like we just watched Crazy Stupid Love, because I love that movie so much. And Joe would also choose exercises that you needed to teach you teach your body what it was not capable of doing yet. And in Crazy, Stupid Love, Ryan Gosling, like Miyagi's, you know, Steve Carell, and I think that, like, that's all, like, the modeling of it is, like, you know, is really important. So there's so much, yeah, go listen to it.Brad Crowell 32:27 So she concluded this thought by saying, so instead of me trying to control them, the kids, I'll tell them the consequences of what they're doing. And this was also really interesting to me, she said, she said, look, talking to a child, if you continue to do this, I will get upset. Is it okay if I get upset? Because that is what is going to happen. And so the kid now has the choice to continue down this path, which they now know what it will bring or not, right? And she often, she said often, they'd be like, No, I don't want you to get upset. Okay, great, then please stop doing this thing, right? Fascinating. Again, patience. Lesley Logan 33:11 Like, it's like, I think of like, parents are like, don't eat that. You'll ruin your dinner. The kid doesn't care if the dinner is ruined, you know, like, they don't care. They want the thing. So, like, you have to come up with, like, Okay, if you eat that, it's gonna really make me sad, because I spent hours on making this dinner for you. That's maybe manipulation. Sorry, Gail, but like, I want to have dinner with you. It's important that I have quality time with you. I want you to enjoy the dinner that I made. Like, if you eat that, and then is it okay if I'm disappointed that you didn't enjoy the dinner I made. Okay, like there's, I'm sure Gail's books are going to be more articulate than I am. So go get them all.Brad Crowell 33:46 Well, that said, what about you? What Be It Action Items did you love from your convo?Lesley Logan 33:50 How to choose? Okay, when we are born, that's what Gail says. When we're born, we have something called executive function skills. Gail said we need, we all need these skills for learning and for living, but in school and often at home, we expect children to have them instead of teaching them. So for Gai.,Brad Crowell 34:06 So that we expect the kids to have the executive function skills instead of teaching them executive function skills.Lesley Logan 34:11 Yeah, so she said. Gail said, the first one we have to teach is self-control, then the next one is focus and attention and then organization. So if parents would focus on teaching these skills, children would do better. And I think, I know that sounds it's easy, clearly, in order, yeah, it's, it's first control, then you can teach focus, and then you can teach organization. And I think, like, what's so cool about that? It's one it gives you, it gives you a map, start with self-control, and then focus and attention, but and then organization. But I think it's instead of like, I gotta teach them how to like do their homework. It's like, you got to teach them self-control so that they can sit down to do the homework. Then you can teach them focus and attention so they can do the homework. And then organization so they know what time to do the homework. When can they figure this what is the best time for them? How do they manage their day? These are important things. I I am really sad for people who like, don't know how to like, put their schedule together. That's sad, you know, because it's clearly frustrating them. We have adults that we work with who, like, have a really hard time figuring out how to organize the things that they're doing or learning, and it's like, oh, they just weren't taught. And to learn that an older age is, like, really difficult.Brad Crowell 35:33 So anyways, yeah, well, just a lovely again, a lovely conversation, and I'm so excited that we were able to have Gail join the pod.Lesley Logan 35:42 If you did all this when you were a parent, I hope you pat yourself on the fucking back like, I hope you go this was the best episode for helping me celebrate how amazing I was as a parent, because I do think that most parents do not give themselves enough credit either. So I'm not here to, like, harp on like you're doing a bad job, but like. Brad Crowell 36:00 It did make me wonder if my parents had a method to the madness. Like, you know, they're pretty analytical. Maybe they were intentional about some of this stuff, but if they did, I'd never had a conversation with them about it as an adult. But, you know, it's intriguing. It's interesting.Lesley Logan 36:14 I mean, they might have because they're analytical. I think, like, there is something a little different about those of us who are raised to, like, go outside and play till the lights turn off. And there's definitely something about, like, there's that real people like, why are you guys drinking from hoses? Like, it's like, because that's we were had to play outside. What are you talking about? Of course, we drink from a hose, you know, like, like, but I like the fact that people don't realize that like, I think that there was something about the plane outside that definitely created a lot of this executive function, because, like, you have to negotiate with other children, of like, who's in charge, who's playing now it's my turn, like,Brad Crowell 36:49 Danger crossing roads by yourself. Lesley Logan 36:52 Yeah, I do I do think that there's a difference now than there was in like, oh, my God. We're 43 so, you know, like, I do, I do see a difference. And I just what I what I really wanted is for people who have younger children, wanting to empower you about what to stress about and what not to stress about. Like, Gail said it you shouldn't stress it if the homework gets done, like, that's not a thing, like, this is where they're gonna okay, let's go figure out why it didn't get done. Let's help you figure that out. And then if you did this, then pat yourself on the back. And if you didn't. Brad Crowell 37:24 We still love you. Lesley Logan 37:24 We love you, and they're taking care of you and not me. So. I'm kidding. I'm Lesley Logan. I love you guys so much. I'm Lesley. Go buy her books. Gail Hugman has a ton of books. Brad Crowell 37:39 Yeah. She had a couple of websites. We're gonna put those in to the show notes, because I can't remember off the top of my head, but actually, I'm just gonna look Gail Hugman her oh yeah, lessonalive.com, lessonalive.com, she's also on Instagram.Lesley Logan 37:54 (inaudible) how she did this stuff are enjoyable to listen to. She also has an accent, so my American friends, I know you'll love it.Brad Crowell 38:00 Yeah. And you can find her books at the endlessbookcase.com. Lesley Logan 38:02 Oh, perfect. Brad Crowell 38:04 Yeah, but I'm sure, I'm sure they're also on her lessonalive.Lesley Logan 38:06 So we're gonna order, to the Crowells. You are getting some books. We love you so much. All right, I'm Lesley Logan. Brad Crowell 38:14 And I'm Brad Crowell. Lesley Logan 38:15 Thank you so much for listening. Share this with a friend who needs to hear it. Share with a friend who's struggling with their kids right now. Hopefully this helps them and Gail, thanks for being here. You didn't break the mold. Sorry, babe, but you're still a badass in our eyes. Have an amazing day.Brad Crowell 38:28 Bye for now. Lesley Logan 38:30 That's all I got for this episode of the Be It Till You See It Podcast. One thing that would help both myself and future listeners is for you to rate the show and leave a review and follow or subscribe for free wherever you listen to your podcast. Also, make sure to introduce yourself over at the Be It Pod on Instagram. I would love to know more about you. Share this episode with whoever you think needs to hear it. Help us and others Be It Till You See It. Have an awesome day. Be It Till You See It is a production of The Bloom Podcast Network. If you want to leave us a message or a question that we might read on another episode, you can text us at +1-310-905-5534 or send a DM on Instagram @BeItPod.Brad Crowell 39:12 It's written, filmed, and recorded by your host, Lesley Logan, and me, Brad Crowell.Lesley Logan 39:17 It is transcribed, produced and edited by the epic team at Disenyo.co.Brad Crowell 39:22 Our theme music is by Ali at Apex Production Music and our branding by designer and artist, Gianfranco Cioffi.Lesley Logan 39:29 Special thanks to Melissa Solomon for creating our visuals.Brad Crowell 39:32 Also to Angelina Herico for adding all of our content to our website. And finally to Meridith Root for keeping us all on point and on time.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
On the show today, Laura is back from a whirlwind trip to New York City for the premiere of Taylor Sheridan’s massive new series, The Madison. We have the exclusive debrief on what it’s like to interview Hollywood royalty like Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell, including the awkward moment Laura had to explain her "origin story" to Kurt (let’s just say he has some... interesting thoughts on the Gold Coast).Plus, we’re diving into why the show is basically a more dramatic, high-stakes Schitt's Creek and how the cinematography makes the Madison River Valley feel like a living, breathing character. Laura also reveals a mind-blowing behind-the-scenes secret about those epic Michelle and Kurt love scenes and we break down the editing magic that stopped us in our tracks.And, we need to debrief our absolute favourite sub-genre: the high-society "Fish Out of Water." From the rich girls forced to milk cows to the high-powered consultants accidentally falling for the local union leader, we are obsessed with a city mouse in a country house. We’re deep-diving into the movie gems that prove moving to a small town is the ultimate cure for a bratty attitude.See more of Laura's dress debacle in New York here. Listen to The Spill New episodes drop every Monday–Friday!Mamamia: https://www.mamamia.com.au/podcasts/the-spill/Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3mjNFVvJp1irXNVxKXXABOApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/the-spill/id1473523403Follow The Spill:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thespillpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thespillpodFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/thespillpodcast/Read all the latest entertainment news on Mamamia: https://mamamia.com.au/entertainment/Support Independent Women’s Media:https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribe/Your subscription helps us continue to tell the stories that matter to women.Want to join the conversation?Have feedback or a topic you want us to discuss? Send us a voice message or email us at thespill@mamamia.com.au and we’ll get back to you ASAP!Discover more Mamamia podcasts here: https://www.mamamia.com.au/podcasts/CREDITSHosts: Laura brodnik & Em VernemExecutive Producer: Monisha IswaranAudio Producer: Scott StronachGet 25% off Nala with your Mamamia subscription. Click here to get your code ends April 1st.Mamamia acknowledges the traditional owners of the land on which we have recorded this podcast.Become a Mamamia subscriber: https://www.mamamia.com.au/subscribeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The guys were on hiatus when two prominent entertainers passed away – Rob Reiner and Catherine O'Hara – so today Ali and Asif discuss their careers. They guys start of by discussing Rob Reiner (3:43), his early career and when they both first heard of him. They discuss ‘All in the Family', This is Spinal Tap', and Rob Reiner's unprecedented run of movies beginning with ‘Stand By Me' to ‘A Few Good Men'. Finally they discuss Reiner's life outside of entertainment, including his political activism.Then they discuss Catherine O'Hara's comedy legacy (19:17). The guys chat about seeing O'Hara originally in ‘SCTV', ‘Beetlejuice' and ‘Home Alone'. Then they talk about her roles in Christopher Guest's mockumentaries, ‘Schitt's Creek', ‘The Last of Us' and ‘The Studio'. O'hara suffered from situs inversus (although she died from complications of rectal cancer), so in the last part of the podcast, Ali asks Asif about this disorder (33:51). He chats about when it was discovered, as well as how most people can live their whole lives without knowing they have it. He then discusses the potential complications as well as its relation to Kartagener syndrome. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts, and do not reflect those of any other organizations. This podcast and website represents the opinions of the hosts. The content here should not be taken as medical advice. The content here is for entertainment and informational purposes only, and because each person is so unique, please consult your healthcare professional for any medical questions. Music courtesy of Wataboi and 8er41 from PixabayContact us at doctorvcomedian@gmail.comFollow us on Social media:Twitter: @doctorvcomedianInstagram: doctorvcomedianShow Notes:Rob Reiner, Actor Who Went on to Direct Classic Films, Dies at 78: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/15/movies/rob-reiner-dead.htmlCatherine O'Hara, ‘Home Alone' and ‘Schitt's Creek' Actress, Dies at 71: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/arts/television/catherine-ohara-dead.htmlJiminy Glick Interviews Catherine O'Hara: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LwlPI9KpkTsSitus Inversus Totalis: A Clinical Review: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8901252/Mitch & Mickey - A Kiss At The End Of The Rainbow: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QwLZfPPM7GQ&list=RDQwLZfPPM7GQ&start_radio=1 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Send us Fan MailOn today's episode, we're sitting down with Patricia Hoppmann — a Peer Support Program Assistant here at PSI and, as she puts it, the team's unofficial 'sweeper.' That's a sports reference … sigh … nevermind. We'll chat about how Patricia's journey into motherhood was unplanned. The road that followed included early labor, the NICU, breastfeeding challenges, PPD, and the very real fear of being honest about how she was feeling. What changed everything? Peer support — and finding the right therapist. This one is honest, heartfelt, and full of the kind of realness that makes you feel less alone. So, without further ado, please sit back, relax, and enjoy this episode with our good friend, Patricia.Mentioned on today's episode:PSI's Postpartum Planning ClassPSI's Peer Support GroupsPodcast: Good HangWatching: 30 Rock; Parks and Recreation; Seinfeld; Schitt's Creek; Severancewww.doesthedogdie.comConnect with Patricia: ppclass@postpartum.netInterested in sharing your story?Fill out our podcast interest form here! Questions about the I AM ONE Podcast?Email Dani Giddens - dani@postpartum.net--------------------------------------------------------------------Connect by PSI - Download PSI's New App!Apple VersionAndroid Version Visit PSI's website: https://www.postpartum.netFind free resources & info on certification, training, and other incredible programs!Call or text 'HELP' to the PSI Helpline: 1-800-944-4773 Not feeling like yourself? Looking for some support? You never need a diagnosis to ask for help.National Maternal Mental Health Hotline (U.S. only): 1-833-852-6262Free and confidential Hotline for parents, providers & support people in English and Spanish.Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (U.S. & Canada): 988Free and confidential support for people in distress, prevention and crisis resources for you or your loved ones, and best practices for pro...
On the latest episode of the podcast, Doug has no trouble picking the two hotties out of this group of friends, Jamie isn't exactly sure why there is both a Meg Tilly and a Jennifer Tilly working at the same time, and we both acknowledge how dumb their privileged white people problems are...even though we can relate. Put on your new running shoes, don't break that quaalude in half, and join us while we discuss a movie that is 99.9% dialogue, The Big Chill!The Big Chill is a 1983 film written and directed by Lawrence Kasdan and starring Tom Berenger, Glenn Close, Jeff Goldblum, William hurt, Kevin Kline, Mary Kay Place, Meg Tilly, JoBeth Williams, Don Galloway & Kevin Costner.Visit our YouTube ChannelMerch on TeePublic Follow us on TwitterFollow on InstagramFind us on FacebookDoug's Schitt's Creek podcast, Schitt's & Giggles can be found here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/schitts-and-giggles-a-schitts-creek-podcast/id1490637008
The Anime Addicts have a discussion about what it would be like if some of the more popular western media franchises were made into anime! The Office, Schitt's Creek, Battlestar Galactica and more! Then a review of yet another Villainous anime, it's "May I Ask For One Final Thing!" An anime with of course a very silly title. Hopefully this will indeed be the final one! You can support the podcast in the following ways: Patreon: www.patreon.com/AAAPodcast Discord: www.AAADiscord.com Subscribe: www.aaapodcast.com/join Donations: www.aaapodcast.com/donate Thank you for your generosity and kindness
What's the first thing that hooks you? Before the vocals kick in, before the chorus lands — it's that opening riff that either grabs you by the collar or lets you walk away. This week, your ever-enthusiastic host Jamie Ray sits down with the legendary Dame Judy D. to count down their Fave Five opening song riffs that stop you dead in your tracks.And here's the twist: we're keeping it off the fretboard entirely. No guitar heroes here — this episode is a love letter to the keys, the brass, the bass lines, and every other instrument bold enough to open a song without a six-string in sight.From the iconic to the unexpected, Dame Judy D. brings her signature wit and encyclopedic music knowledge to a list that might just change the way you listen to the first five seconds of a song.(And yes — we know. "Stairway to Heaven" is not on this list. Move on.)
Henry is gone, and a gloom falls over the house. Sir Thomas suspects that Maria doesn't want to marry Rushworth, but she marries him anyway. Fanny and Miss Crawford start hanging out, and Fanny secures a dinner invitation. Topics discussed include Fanny's glow-up, how Fanny and the Bertrams feel about the slave trade, Maria's revenge plot, flirt-harping, the Brontës' use of the word "ejaculate," Fanny's love of nature, the Doge at the court of Louis XIV, and Edmund and Mary's fundamental incompatibility.Patron Study Questions this week come from Avi and Linnea. Topics discussed include Fanny's question about the slave trade and our characters wanting to change each other.Becca's Study Questions: Topics discussed include Fanny cozying up to Sir Thomas, the retiring of the WTF Maria Tracker, zeroing in on the love triangle, and Mary and Fanny's friendship.Funniest Quote: "It was a very proper wedding. The bride was elegantly dressed; the two bridesmaids were duly inferior; her father gave her away; her mother stood with salts in her hand, expecting to be agitated; her aunt tried to cry; and the service was impressively read by Dr. Grant."Questions moving forward: Is this the last we're seeing of the Bertram sisters? What will happen between Mary and Fanny?Who wins the chapters? Maria!Glossary of People, Places, and Things: Avatar: The Last Airbender, Heated Rivalry, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, the Doge at the court of Louis XIV, Schitt's CreekNext Episode: Mansfield Park Volume II Chapters 5-6Want an alternative to marrying rich? Try learning to invest your own money and grow your own wealth! Molly's partner Mel is teaching an online investing workshop for beginners on March 7. Tickets and details can be found at https://moneywithmelmarch7.eventbrite.com. And follow her on instagram at @money.with.mel. Our show art was created by Torrence Browne, and our audio is produced by Graham Cook. For bios and transcripts, check out our website at podandprejudice.com. Pod and Prejudice is transcribed by speechdocs.com. To support the show, check out our Patreon! Check out our merch at https://podandprejudice.dashery.com.Instagram: @podandprejudiceTwitter: @podandprejudiceFacebook: Pod and PrejudiceYoutube: Pod and PrejudiceMerch store: https://podandprejudice.dashery.com/
We're taking a moment to remember actress and comedian, Catherine O'Hara, who died on January 30, 2026. She was 71 years old. Catherine O'Hara is a comedy legend. She helped launch SCTV. She starred in blockbuster comedies. For all of its six seasons, Catherine played Moira Rose on Schitt's Creek, a comedy that follows a wealthy family who are forced to relocate to a rural town after losing their entire fortune. When Catherine joined Bullseye in 2013, she talked about the difficulties of being a woman in the SCTV writers' room. Plus, creating memorable characters with Eugene Levy, and her own secret comedic formula.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Paul and Amy sit down to celebrate the incomparable life and career of Catherine O'Hara, whose brilliance shaped comedy for more than five decades. From her fearless work on SCTV to iconic turns in Beetlejuice, Home Alone, and her late-career renaissance on Schitt's Creek, they reflect on her unmatched versatility, emotional precision, and the indelible characters that made her one of a kind. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
1. Grammys 2026 Recap (11:33) 2. Catherine O'Hara, Schitt's Creek Star and Comedy Legend, Dies at 71 (PEOPLE) (44:56) 3. Kim Kardashian and F1 star Lewis Hamilton secretly dating, spend romantic weekend together in UK (Page Six) (47:52) 4. Groundhog Day 2026: Punxsutawney Phil Predicts 6 More Weeks of Winter (PEOPLE) (54:27) 5. Original ‘RHONY' cast defects from Bravo with new show for rival network (Page Six) (58:37) - The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Recap (1:01:47) The Toast with Jackie (@JackieOshry) and Claudia Oshry (@girlwithnojob) The Toast Patreon Toast Merch Girl With No Job by Claudia Oshry The Camper & The Counselor Lean In Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Click this link https://www.boot.dev?promo=KINDAFUNNY and use my code KINDAFUNNY to get 25% off your first payment for boot.dev. Thank you Boot.Dev for Sponsoring! Last of Us HBO might be done after season 3, a hugely successful Kickstarter MMO just had its studio implode, and Highguard makes huge changes to counter complaints. Thank you for the support! Run of Show - - Start - Season 3 of The Last of Us could be its last, HBO boss hints - Catherine O'Hara, ‘Home Alone' and ‘Schitt's Creek' Actress, Dies at 71 - Ad - Steam MMO That Raised $3.2 Million On Kickstarter Implodes Just Two Months After Launch - Just 4 Days After Launch, Highguard Gets 5v5 Limited Time Game Mode to Counter Those 3v3 Complaints - Jeffrey Epstein was permanently banned from Xbox Live - This Super Mario medley just won a Grammy Award - Wee News! - SuperChats & You‘re Wrong Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott open Super Bowl week pleading for the rarest gift in sports: a wire-to-wire Seahawks blowout with zero anxiety attached. Instead, they confront history, betting lines, and the uncomfortable reality that Seahawks–Patriots games almost never come easy, dissecting spreads, totals, MVP odds, and prop bets surrounding Sam Darnold, Kenneth Walker, and the Seattle defense. ESPN insiders Mike Reiss and Brady Henderson join Mitch to trace the improbable parallel journeys of the Patriots and Seahawks from offseason uncertainty to Super Bowl 60. Reiss details how Mike Vrabel reshaped New England's culture around connection and accountability, while Henderson explains why Mike Macdonald's Seahawks are thriving on trust, depth, and collective buy-in rather than star power. The discussion zeroes in on Drake May's health, New England's offensive line vulnerabilities, Seattle's defensive front, and why the Seahawks are favored — while acknowledging that Patriots fans view this matchup as dangerous, not nostalgic. Mitch and Jason Puckett wrestle with the strangest part of Super Bowl 60 week: the complete absence of a believable reason the Seahawks should lose. They debate conspiracy theories, historical heartbreak, and why this matchup feels more like a gift than a grind, with comparisons to past Seattle sports collapses adding a layer of unease. Mitch reconnects with Dave Grosby to reflect on a defining week in Seattle sports history, Grosby's decades-long presence behind the microphone, and his upcoming honor from the American Parkinson Disease Association at the March 14 Magic of Hope Gala. Grosby shares a candid, deeply personal look at living with Parkinson's, the lack of a cure despite years of advocacy and fundraising led by figures like Michael J. Fox, and why continued research is critical. Peter King joins Mitch to unpack the shock of Bill Belichick not being a first-ballot Hall of Famer, offering rare insight into how Hall of Fame voting dynamics, strategic ballots, and a flawed system can produce surprising outcomes. The conversation shifts to Super Bowl 49 memories, lingering fallout inside the Seahawks locker room, and why the Seahawks–Patriots rematch echoes past championship blind spots where favorites felt inevitable — until they weren't. GUESTS Brady Henderson | Seahawks Insider, ESPN Mike Reiss | Patriots Insider, ESPN Jason Puckett | Seattle sports radio host and founder of The Daily Puck Drop Dave Grosby | Seattle sports broadcasting fixture and longtime radio voice, Groz with Gas "Take 5" Peter King | Hall of Fame voter, longtime NFL writer, Football Morning in America founder TABLE OF CONTENTS 0:00 | No Stress, No Drama? Seahawks Fans Beg for a Blowout as Super Bowl 60 Arrives 16:15 | GUEST: Seahawks v Patriots; Two Paths, Same Destination — How Seattle and New England Landed in Super Bowl 60 40:00 | GUEST: Jason Puckett; Nothing Makes Sense — And That's Why This Super Bowl Feels Inevitable 59:10 | GUEST: Dave Grosby; A Voice That's Always Been There — Dave Grosby, Parkinson's Advocacy, and a Super Bowl Run That Feels Unreal 1:17:49 | GUEST: Peter King; Peter King on Belichick, the Hall of Fame Mess, and Why This Super Bowl Feels Familiar 1:36:53 | Other Stuff Segment: Epstein file reactions and viral AI prank video, Seahawks offensive coordinator vacancy and Clint Kubiak leaving for the Raiders, skepticism about Raiders coaching stability, Pepsi Super Bowl ad parodying Coldplay concert affair, Diet Coke vs Diet Pepsi rant, NFL fine issued to Riq Woolen for NFC Championship taunting penalty, Puka Nacua publicly flirting with Sydney Sweeney on social media, athlete celebrity dating culture, Rick Rizzs announcing retirement after 2026 Mariners season, Jarrell "Big Baby" Miller's toupee flying off during boxing match, NBA suspending Paul George for violating drug policy tied to mental health medication, Lou Holtz reportedly entering hospice care, Sha'Carri Richardson arrested for excessive speeding RIPs: Demond Wilson (Sanford and Son actor), Catherine O'Hara (actress, Schitt's Creek and Home Alone) HEADLINES: Malaysian minister claims work stress can make people gay, man arrested for exposing himself and having sex with a vacuum, mother slaps daughter and is attacked back with a pork chop, woman gives birth and develops a third breast
We are heartbroken by the news of Catherine O’Hara’s sudden passing at the age of 71. Her brilliance, humor, and kindness touched so many of us, and we’ve taken comfort in listening back to Julia’s conversation with her from last year. We’re sharing it now as we mourn her loss and celebrate the sheer joy she brought to millions around the world. On this episode of Wiser Than Me, Julia sits down with 71-year-old comedy icon – and star of The Studio, Beetlejuice, and Schitt’s Creek – Catherine O’Hara. Catherine and Julia share their improv origin stories and reminisce about the freedom and experimentation of their early comedy careers. They also swap stories about visiting the Vatican, over-apologizing, and how they both find laughter incredibly sexy. Plus, Julia’s mom Judith tries very hard to tell a joke. Follow Wiser Than Me on Instagram and TikTok @wiserthanme and on Facebook at facebook.com/wiserthanmepodcast. Find out more about other shows on our network at @lemonadamedia on all social platforms. Joining Lemonada Premium is a great way to support our show and get bonus content. Subscribe today at bit.ly/lemonadapremium. For exclusive discount codes and more information about our sponsors, visit https://lemonadamedia.com/sponsors/. For additional resources, information, and a transcript of the episode, visit lemonadamedia.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Catherine O'Hara was a beloved, award-winning actress whose career spanned more than five decades, with unforgettable performances in films like Best in Show, Home Alone, and Beetlejuice, along with her standout role as Moira Rose on Schitt's Creek, which earned her Emmy recognition and a lasting place in comedy history. In this conversation from February 2024, O'Hara sat down with Willie Geist to discuss her role in Argylle, reflect on the legacy of her most iconic characters, and share stories from her early days in comedy that shaped her remarkable journey. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.