Podcasts about something like summer

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Best podcasts about something like summer

Latest podcast episodes about something like summer

Smooth Jazz Top 100
Smooth Jazz TOP 100 | 27.10.2025

Smooth Jazz Top 100

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2025 60:00


๐“๐ก๐ž ๐Ž๐Ÿ๐Ÿ๐ข๐œ๐ข๐š๐ฅ ๐’๐ฆ๐จ๐จ๐ญ๐ก ๐‰๐š๐ณ๐ณ ๐’๐ข๐ง๐ ๐ฅ๐ž๐ฌ ๐‚๐ก๐š๐ซ๐ญ ๐…๐จ๐ซ ๐’๐ฉ๐š๐ข๐ง ๐‹๐š๐“๐š๐ฆ ๐’๐ž๐ฆ๐š๐ง๐š ๐๐ž๐ฅ ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ• ๐๐ž ๐Ž๐œ๐ญ๐ฎ๐›๐ซ๐ž | ๐Ž๐œ๐ญ๐จ๐›๐ž๐ซ ๐Ÿ๐Ÿ•๐“๐‡ Congratulations ๐๐– ๐…๐‘๐๐๐‚ our new TOP 1 Congratulations to everyone that made it into this weekโ€™s Top 100 ๐๐„๐– ๐“๐Ž ๐“๐‡๐„ ๐“๐Ž๐ ๐Ÿ๐ŸŽ๐ŸŽ ๐Ÿ”Š 099.- IT JUST FEELS RIGHT โ€“ Rob Zinn ๐Ÿ”Š 097.- FUNKY KAHUNA โ€“ Michael Paulo ๐Ÿ”Š 096- SOMETHING LIKE SUMMER โ€“ Ultrablue Ft. Gabriela Anders ๐Ÿ”Š 094- HOT BODY โ€“ Brendan Ross ๐Ÿ”Š 091.- LUSH โ€“ Kayla Waters ๐Ÿ”Š 089.- SMOOTH LOVE โ€“ karlton Jones ๐Ÿ”Š 087.- SINERGY โ€“ Althea Rene Ft. Jordan Love ๐’๐Œ๐Ž๐Ž๐“๐‡ ๐‰๐€๐™๐™ ๐’๐ˆ๐Œ๐Œ๐„๐‘๐ˆ๐๐† ๐Ÿ๐ŸŽ Justin-Lee Schultz โ€“ Toxic Joel Del Rosario โ€“ Chasing Sunset Steve Bach, Alisha Patillo โ€“ The Diamond James Bratton โ€“ Velvet Nights Gianni Vancini โ€“ Shuffled Up Jeremy Benoit โ€“ Deep Sensation Brian Simpson โ€“ Blue Mystique Byron Miller โ€“ Any Time Any Place Ft. Ragan Whiteside Call Harris Jr. โ€“ Live nโ€™ Learn The Allen Carman Project โ€“ Joy Jam Ft. Philippe Saisse ๐๐„๐– ๐“๐Ž ๐“๐‡๐„ ๐“๐Ž๐ ๐Ÿ๐ŸŽ ๐Ÿ”Š 017.- ONLY LOVE IS REAL โ€“ Alan Darcy ๐“๐Ž๐ ๐Ÿ ๐Ÿ”Š 001.- NEW FREQUENCY - NW FRQNC ๐Ž๐๐‚๐„ ๐”๐๐Ž๐ ๐€ ๐“๐ˆ๐Œ๐„ Fredie Fox by Yolanda Ce ๐’๐”๐๐‘๐„๐‚๐‹๐€๐’๐’๐ˆ๐‚๐’ Take 6 by Capitan Jazz ๐Œ๐”๐’๐ˆ๐‚ ๐๐ˆ๐‹๐‹๐’ Castella by Luz Bianchi

live congratulations top100 jordan love lush smooth jazz castella sinergy jazz top something like summer brendan ross only love is real michael paulo
Why Did We Watch This
124.5 โ€“ Fiction Flashbacks

Why Did We Watch This

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2025


Summer, alas, is over (even though itโ€™ll still be like 80 degrees for a while but now with the added fun of 7:00 pm sunsets, such fun) and with it our unhinged musicals miniseries. So long, Something Like Summer! Hello, โ€ฆ Continue reading โ†’

movies fiction flashbacks something like summer
Look What You Made Me Read
Something Like Summer - Jay Bell

Look What You Made Me Read

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2025 86:52


We deep dive into some iconic love triangles and also discuss what could potentially be our worst book of the year.

jay bell something like summer
Why Did We Watch This
123.5 โ€“ Something Like Summer Movies

Why Did We Watch This

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2025


What would summer be without summer movies to accompany it? Well, probably just insufferably hot. Thankfully, we have summer movies to distract us from (insert horrific woe here)! Leigh, Brendan, and Chris have a nice liโ€™l chat about some of โ€ฆ Continue reading โ†’

movies summer movies something like summer
Why Did We Watch This
123 โ€“ Something Like Summer

Why Did We Watch This

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2025


The Summer of Unhinged Musicals continues with perhaps one of the most unhinged movies we have ever covered, period. For your pleasure (?), we present 2017โ€™s Something Like Summer, an adaptation of a self-published absurdly long young adult novel that โ€ฆ Continue reading โ†’

movies something like summer
Portland at the Movies
“Something Like Summer” (2017)

Portland at the Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 64:36


This month we're joined by Nicholas Beatty to unwrap this gay coming of age film/black box musical theater journey that spans 12 years of time and dares to ask the question "why does a movie that takes place over the span of 12 years have the singular word 'summer' in the title? And why did nobody's clothing or hair style change in those 12 years?" Did we find a Christmas miracle, or did we get another lump of coal? Find out on this episode.

christmas something like summer
Writing Break
Is Hybrid Publishing Right for You?

Writing Break

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 13:37 Transcription Available


If traditional publishing and self-publishing don't feel quite right for you, this episode presents a third option: hybrid publishing. We also learn about a new subscription platform for writers, rising POD costs, and more. All this while slowly making our way to the beach.Something Like Summer by Jay Bell - Featured AuthorHello Again Books, Cocoa Village, FL - Featured BookstorePrinting cost changes FAQ | Amazon KDP ReamRecord Sales for Bloomsbury | Financial TimesFree Style Sheet TemplatesFree Writing TipsMusic licensed from Storyblocks:โ€œMore Jam Pleaseโ€ by Raighes Factory"Stay Right There" by Humans Win"Romantic Beach Weekend (30 Seconds)" by The Turqoise Moon"Sea Ambient" by jabameister

hybrid publishing cocoa village something like summer
forthenovellovers
Something Like Summer by Jay Bell

forthenovellovers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2022 6:22


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://forthenovellovers.wordpress.com/2018/10/22/something-like-summer-by-jay-bell/ --- This episode is sponsored by ยท Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

jay bell something like summer
Progressive Podcast Australia
#252: Pop Culture and Animal Rights. Farmer Wants a Pescatarian

Progressive Podcast Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2020


- On this episode we analyse the shows Farmer Wants a Wife and Killing Eve from an animal rights perspective.- We also discuss a bunch of other random shit including: COVID aliens and intergalactic students, our latest finds from the street, The Matrix as a trans allegory, leaves are problymatic, The Chaser article: I am being silenced! claims most published woman alive (about JK Rowling) and the movie Something Like Summer.- Book recommendation: Too Much and Never Enough How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man by Mary L Trump.- For more information on this episode and for links to all of the stories and clips from it, go to: https://progressivepodcastaustralia.com/2020/08/18/252/

BeaBabbles
BeaBabbles #19: Something Like Summer (& how it broke us)

BeaBabbles

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2019 74:02


More BeaBabbles! Today we're talking about a game we recently played. The Forest. And why we hated it. Oh boy. Support BeaBabbles on Patreon: http://patreon.com/basicallybea

broke something like summer
Big Gay Fiction Podcast
Ep 185: Interviews with Julian Winters, Kim Fielding, Venona Keyes & S.A. Stovall

Big Gay Fiction Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 46:56


New movie and TV deals are discussed with both Casey McQuistonโ€™s Red, White & Royal Blue coming to Amazon and a Love, Simon series to the Disney+ streaming service. Jeff talks about seeingย The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical. New patrons Rhonda and Regi are welcomed. Will reviews the Netflix originalย Special. Jeff reviews Jay Bellโ€™sย Straight Boy. Jeff & Will discuss their trip to the LA Times Festival of Books. They also share the interviews they did at the festival with Julian Winters, Kim Fielding & Venona Keyes and S.A. Stovall. Julian talks about his upcoming bookย How to Be Remy Cameron. Kim discusses her Stars in Peril series and Venona also tells Jeff about her co-writing with Kim. S.A. gives the origin story of herย Vice City series and how she uses caricature to encourage people to read the first chapter (she also did a super cute caricature of Jeff & Will). Complete shownotes for episode 185 are at BigGayFictionPodcast.com. Hereโ€™s the text of this weekโ€™s book review: Straight Boy by Jay Bell, narrated by Kirt Graves. Reviewed by Jeff. I went into Straight Boy without knowing much about it other than it was a young adult story involving Andrew, a gay high school student, who develops a crush on Carter, a straight (or maybe not-so-straight) boy. What made me buy the audiobook was the fact Iโ€™m a huge Jay Bell fan because of Something Like Summer and also for Kirt Gravesโ€™s narration. I knew these two together would give me a great read. And they did. With Something Like Summer and its sequels, Jay proved a master of telling a story with many characters and many plot lines that involve an array of emotions. Heโ€™s upped his game with Straight Boy. Two things happen right awayโ€“Andrew, a recent transplant to Chicago, discovers a boy who lives down the street having an argument with his parents and saying things like โ€œI was born this way.โ€ Andrew thinks heโ€™s found a gay friend. The next dayโ€“his first day at his new schoolโ€“Andrew comes out as he introduces himself in class. This makes him a target of the school bully, Bobby. Andrew goes off on Bobby, despite the bullyโ€™s threats and ends up getting sent to the guidance office. Here he meets Carter and discovers thatโ€™s the boy he heard arguing. Both of them end up in a special program at the school where learning happens outside a traditional classroom Andrewโ€™s year is now set. Everyoneโ€“gay, straight or otherwiseโ€“inevitably has that phase where you want a romantic relationship that you canโ€™t have. Andrew longs for Carter but also doesnโ€™t want to wreck their friendship, which seems to grow stronger by the minute. The thing is, Carter seems to be a little experimental too and that only makes things more confusing for them both. In the hands of a lesser writer, this would end up a disaster on the page, but Jay deftly weaves the emotions and circumstances for both guys as they figure out the place theyโ€™ve got in each otherโ€™s lives as it evolves through the school year. I cheered for the good and wanted to protect them through the bad since my fifty-year-old self could vividly recall how confusing seventeen was. Bobbyโ€™s integrated deeply into their year too. Heโ€™s a friend of Carterโ€™s and that meanโ€™s Andrew is around Bobby far more than he likesโ€“and he ends up putting up with more crap that he should. Andrew accepts dealing with that because he doesnโ€™t want to lose Carter. Itโ€™s made even harder when Carter starts dating Bobbyโ€™s ex, Olivia. Along the way another of Bobbyโ€™s friends, Jackson, becomes tight with Andrew too, creating more bonds in the group. The evolution of Andrew and Jacksonโ€™s friendship is as interesting as Andrew and Carterโ€™s. Things get rough in the last quarter of the book. Bobby doesnโ€™t like the changes happening to his group and he plots revenge. I have to warn here that not only does bullying happen throughout the story at varying levels but as we get into the last act thereโ€™s also off-page sexual assault and a pretty epic final battle where Andrew, Carter and the group are in way over their heads. Again, Jay does an excellent job of telling the story, ratcheting tensions and putting charactersโ€“and readersโ€“through the wringer. The epilogue was the icing on top of this cake. Jumping twenty years into the future, we find out where everyone ended up. There were some surprises here that made me go โ€œawwww.โ€ It provided the perfect ending. What this book excelled at was showing friendships up closeโ€“what makes them grow, what rips them apart, and most importantly, what can make a true friend for life. It also shows, perhaps too intensely for some readers, the lengths people can go to in order to protect a relationship even if itโ€™s toxic. I canโ€™t commend Jay enough for how well he did all of this. Kudos to Kirt Graves too. I know well from TJ Kluneโ€™s Green Creek series that Kirt can handle a large cast of characters and high emotional impact. Kirt is perfection here handling the emotional rollercoaster without sending it over the top. His performance adds perfectly to what Jay had on the page. I highly recommend Straight Boy by Jay Bell, just make sure youโ€™re ready for the ride. Interview Transcript - Julian Winters, Kim Fielding & Venona Keyes, S.A. Stovall This transcript was made possible by our community on Patreon. You can get information on how to join them at patreon.com/biggayfictionpodcast. Interview with Julian Winters Jeff: We are at the LA Times Festival of Books with Julian Winters. Julian: Hi. Jeff: Who Iโ€™ve just had a major fanboy moment over. Julian: I had fanboy moments. Jeff: Okay. We kinda both had the fanboy moment. Julian: Yes, yes. It is equal. Jeff: Because I had to get him to sign my โ€œRunning with Lions.โ€ Podcast listeners know that was one of my favorite books of last year. Julian: Thank you. Jeff: And youโ€™ve got a little sneak peekโ€ฆ Julian: I do. Jeff: Right now of โ€œHow To Be Remy Cameron,โ€ which comes out September 10th. Julian: Yes, yes. September 10th, yes. Jeff: Tell us what this is about. Julian: Remy is a very personal book. Itโ€™s about an out and proud teen in high school, who has always felt like heโ€™s known himself until he has this AP lit course. And one of the final grades he has to write an essay about who am I and itโ€™s like the make or break essay. Heโ€™s trying to get into Emory University, and he needs this course in order to get there. And so, he has this kind of panic mode of, โ€œOkay, but who am I?โ€ Because heโ€™s always been defined by, โ€œOh, heโ€™s the gay kid who came out at 14,โ€ or, โ€œOh, heโ€™s one of five black students that go to our school,โ€ or โ€œOh, heโ€™s the big brother to this character,โ€ and heโ€™s just all these labels he wears all the time. Heโ€™s, โ€œThis is who I am.โ€ But then he starts to realize, โ€œIs that all I am and do these labels really define exactly who Remy Cameron is?โ€ So, itโ€™s kinda an exploration of what labels mean to us, but it also has a great family dynamic. A couple of secret mystery parts I canโ€™t tell you about but thereโ€™s a lot of guessing games going on in it. And of course, it wouldnโ€™t be me if I didnโ€™t have like a dorky romance in there. So, thatโ€™s in there too. Jeff: A dorky romance? I like that because thatโ€™sโ€ฆ Julian: Yes, thatโ€™s exactly what I promise you. Itโ€™s so geeky, itโ€™s so dorky. Jeff: Thatโ€™s kind of what โ€œLionsโ€ was as well for sure. Thatโ€™s a good label for it. How would you say that your writing has evolved from first book to second? Julian: Oh, itโ€™s a lot. A lot. With the first book, I just kinda wanted to write the feel-good story, and that was my goal, and touching on certain issues throughout the book. And it also was written in third person and โ€œRemyโ€™sโ€ written in first person. Iโ€™ve never, not even when I was like a small child, wrote in first person. I love reading books like that, but I thought, I just canโ€™t do that, itโ€™s just too personal. And so, it was a challenge doing that, but it was a lot of fun. And โ€œRemy,โ€ like I said, itโ€™s very personal, so exploring parts of myself and things that I see throughout, you know, our community and things like that. It really helped me grow as a writer to really say, Okay, you can challenge yourself and you can fail at it, but you can also improve. And that was great. So, to fail, I struggled so much in the beginning, but to have that under my belt now, itโ€™s I think I could write a lot of different stories. Jeff: So, you think youโ€™ll visit first again sometimes? Julian: Oh, yeah, yes, yes. The next book Iโ€™m working on, first might be where Iโ€™m stuck now. I think this might be my calling. I donโ€™t know. Jeff: Okay. I could tell you, first is a nice place to be. Julian: Yeah, it is. Jeff: What are some elements of this book that are so personal to you? Julian: Growing up. So, I grew up in Upstate New York where I was one of five black students at my school. And then when we moved to Georgia, I was one of 400 that went to my school. So, itโ€™s very personal in the sense of, I went through a lot of phases of am I too gay? Am I black enough? Am I too perfect as a friend? Am I good enough friend? A lot of things that I went through, Remy goes through in the book. It also explores my love for a lot of geeky things and how for a while I wouldnโ€™t let that define me because I thought, โ€œOh, no, this is bad, people are gonna make fun of me.โ€ And Remy goes through that because he had a lot of geeky moments, but itโ€™s almost like heโ€™s scared to show them now that he knows that these are the things that Iโ€™m defined by. Jeff: I love that you point out the geeky thing because I saw on your Instagram earlier today of the comic books that you read into here at the Festival. Julian: Listen, I almost had to leave, you know, our booth just to go, you know, bow down at the comic book booth and just say, โ€œListen, thank you. I love it.โ€ Jeff: Now, letโ€™s talk about โ€œLionsโ€ for a second because youโ€™ve had an amazing year. I mean, you started out of the gate that the book was blurbed by Becky Albertalli. Julian: Yeah. Jeff: And now, just within the last week or two, youโ€™ve won an award for it. So, tell us a little bit about that. Julian: Itโ€™s been a wild journey because, first of all, like, I never thought Iโ€™d meet Becky Albertalli, I never thought Iโ€™d talk to her, I never thought, you know, I would become friends with her. And then just meeting all the other people along the way that Iโ€™ve met and growing in that areaโ€ฆ I always felt like I was the kid sitting at the table in the corner where I peek over at all the cool kids and say, โ€œYeah, Iโ€™m never sitting at that table,โ€ but itโ€™s been kinda really awesome being taken in by so many different people and I never thought Iโ€™d be an award-winning author. Like, I wanted to write the book for queer kids to enjoy, to see themselves and know that, you know, youโ€™re not some other subcategory, youโ€™re just a normal person. Itโ€™s just thatโ€ฆthis is just a part of you, it doesnโ€™t define you. And to win an award, I broke down crying. It wasnโ€™t something I was expecting going into this because my journey has always been about the reader but to have something for myself was amazing. It still is amazing. Iโ€™m not over it. I guess I wonโ€™t be over it until I actually hold the award in my hands and say, โ€œThis happened.โ€ Jeff: This actually happened. And the cover too, which was a stunning cover, also won. Julian: Yes, the cover won for best cover. And that was so great for me in the sense that I love our cover designer, C.B. Messer. Sheโ€™s amazing. She reads all the books cover to cover. And so, she knows these characters, she knows their stories, and what she did with that cover just blew me away. What she did with the โ€œRemyโ€ cover, Iโ€™m still in complete awe of just how well she knows these characters. Jeff: When we talked back last year, the book had hardly been out. Julian: Yeah. Jeff: Howโ€™s the reader response been to it? Julian: Itโ€™s been amazing. Today just alone, just so many people will walk by and say, โ€œOh my gosh, โ€˜Running with Lions,โ€™ Iโ€™ve heard of that book.โ€ And Iโ€™m just like, โ€œWhat? Of all the books that came out in 2018, you heard of that book?โ€ The response has been amazing. Going to the events and having people walk up to me and say, โ€œThank you for writing this book because I played soccer all my life, but there was never a queer soccer book.โ€ Or, โ€œThank you for writing this because there werenโ€™t a lot of books with bisexual main characters, or characters that were gay and Muslim, or black characters, or whatever.โ€ Itโ€™s been amazing, the response I get. I get teary-eyed every time. Iโ€™m like, โ€œIโ€™m not strong enough for this, we canโ€™t talk about this.โ€ But itโ€™s also been so cool to know that Iโ€™m helping someone see themselves because I didnโ€™t always get that opportunity growing up. So, to know Iโ€™m getting to be a part of their journey, itโ€™s just been amazing. Jeff: Fantastic. And what have you thought of the fair, of the festival? Because itโ€™s your first time up here. Julian: Yes, this is my first time here for the festival. And I was talking to another friend about it because I went to YALLWEST last year. YALLWEST is thisโ€ฆitโ€™s nice little corner and then this is like a whole city. Like, I get lost every time I go either to the bathroom or get something to drink. But itโ€™s amazing because it brings so many different publishers, so many different books together, so many different genres, so many different kinds of authors are here. And thatโ€™s the amazing part to me, just to know how influential books are because there are people everywhere all the time, stacks of books in their arms. And you donโ€™t really get to see that in, like, media, like how impactful books are, how much people really enjoy the art that we put out there. So, this has just been amazing to watch how excited people get when they see the books. Jeff: Yeah, itโ€™s been very cool here. So, thank you so much for hanging out with us. Julian: Thank you. You know, I love you guys. Jeff: Best of luck on โ€œHow To Be Remy Cameron,โ€ coming out September 10th. Interview withย Kim Fielding and Venona Keyes Jeff: We are at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books with Kim Fielding and Venona Keyes. Thanks for being here. Kim: Thanks so much. Venona: Thanks for asking. Jeff: Weโ€™re excited to have you both here. And now, Kim, of course, within the past couple of weeks, weโ€™ve raved about the โ€œThe Spyโ€™s Love Songโ€ and the new โ€œDreamspun Desires.โ€ Where did the inspiration for this book come from? Because it was so good. Kim: I think a big part of the inspiration came from my travels in Eastern Europe. So, you know, thinking about the way things used to be in Eastern Europe and how things are changing, plus politics as theyโ€™re happening right now. And so, yeah, I think that was the main thing. Jeff: What kind of research did you have to do to develop your spy and your rock star who becomes kind ofโ€ฆalong on this mission without even knowing heโ€™s on it? Kim: I didnโ€™t have to do too much research on the spy part or on the travel part, but rock stars and music is not something I know anything or have any talent or anything else about, so that was where I had to do most of my research because I donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like. I donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like to be a rock star. I canโ€™t even sing. Jeff: Does that mean you what itโ€™s like to be a spy? Kim: Hmm, Iโ€™m notโ€ฆI canโ€™t divulge. Venona: You have kids. Kim: Yeah, I have kids. Jeff: And you wrote song lyrics too? Kim: I did. Yeah, I know. And it was really fun. And then in the audio version, my narrator Drew Bacca sang them, which was so cool. And itโ€™s like, this is the closest Iโ€™m ever gonna get to being a songwriter. And itโ€™s so much fun to listen to. And I can pretend, you know, like, Iโ€™m the next thing. Jeff: Which actually raises the question, did you give him an idea of what the melody for it was or did he just kind of make that up? Kim: I had no melody in mind. I didnโ€™t know he was gonna sing. When I write a book, Iโ€™m sorry narrators, I donโ€™t think about what Iโ€™m doing to my narrators. And so, sometimes I torture them, and I wasnโ€™t even thinking about a narrator singing it. So, that was his idea and I was so pleased. Jeff: And this is a little different in โ€œDreamspunsโ€ as well and I noted it in my review that you are a single point of view here. Did you go into it deliberately that way or just kind of organically discovered it was the way to go? Kim: It made more sense for this book because thereโ€™s some surprises about our spy character and I think itโ€™s a lot more fun if we kinda discover the surprises along with the other character rather than knowing right from the start. So, you know, for some books, the dual point of view works really well, but for this one, I think this works well. Jeff: Yeah, I totally agree on that. Now, this is part of a bigger series thatโ€™s happening within the โ€œDreamspuns.โ€ Kim: It is. Jeff: Tell us a little bit about the series overall. Kim: Sure. So, this series is called โ€œStars from Perilโ€ and this is the first book in it. The second book comes out next month, and thatโ€™s โ€œRedesigning Landry Bishop.โ€ And the third book, I just finished the first round of edits on. Itโ€™ll be out in October and that one is โ€œDrawing the Prince.โ€ We went over several titles on that one. And so, what all three of them have in common is the main characters are from the same small town in Nebraska called Peril, Nebraska. And all three main characters have made it big in some way. So, our first guy is a rock star, our second guy is kind of a Martha Stewart type, and the third guy is an artist. And so, theyโ€™ve made it big in the world and they meet someone. And so, you can read each of them as a standalone and in any order you want to, but youโ€™ll kind of see the characters appearing a little bit in one anotherโ€™s story. Jeff: It didnโ€™t even click for me that it was the name of the town too because peril plays into their own peril. Kim: Exactly. And I honestly cheated a little bit on that. There is a real town, a tiny little town, I think thereโ€™s like 60 people in it, in Nebraska called Hazard, Nebraska. So, Peril. Jeff: Peril, Hazard, it works. Kim: And itโ€™s a great name. Jeff: Now, people may be wondering, why do we have both of them here together? Well, Venona and Kim also co-write. Tell us about that book. Venona: โ€œRunning Blind.โ€ I will tell you this came about some years ago in Portland at our Dreamspinner meetup and she pulls me aside. Now, you have to understand that I was such a fan of Kim. I love โ€œBruteโ€, I loved all of her stuff. And then sheโ€™s talking to me and Iโ€™m like, โ€œYou sure youโ€™re talking to me because, you know, I donโ€™t, like, co-write. Iโ€™m really bad at, you know, doing it by myself.โ€ And she goes, โ€œOh, yeah, I heard on NPRโ€ฆโ€ And thatโ€™s how it started. Because Peter Sagal whoโ€™s out of Chicago hosts, โ€œWait, wait, Donโ€™t Tell Me.โ€ He is a running guide for blind people for marathons.โ€ So, she had the idea and we came up with โ€œRunning Blind.โ€ Kim: And the reason why Venona was such a perfect choice is because, unlike me, she does triathlons. So, I didnโ€™t have to do the research on marathon running. Venona: No, or running guides either. Stuff like, โ€œYeah. Thatโ€™s your department,โ€ Iโ€™m like, โ€œAll right, we can do this.โ€ And itโ€™s a wonderful book and we decided that we wanted to have a second story because in the beginning, and itโ€™s not giving a spoiler away, is Kyle and Matt who have been friends, who went to college together, were friends, became lovers, and now theyโ€™re in a comfortable pattern, and they really love each other but as brothers rather than lovers. So, when something happens to Kyle, Kyle breaks it off and he goes, โ€œYou gotta go do stuff.โ€ And Mattโ€™s reluctant, but this story is about Kyle and how he deals with the things that have happened in his life. So, the next book that weโ€™re writing, the working title is โ€œPlaying,โ€ is Mattโ€™s story about how he finds romance after the breakup. Jeff: And when do we get to see that one come out? TBD. Venona: TBD. Kim: Well, that one is still in progress. Venona: Itโ€™s still in progress. Itโ€™s now in my hands. And so, we switch back and forth when we write, and I need to get it back to Kim. So, hopefully soon. Jeff: And youโ€™ve got some other co-writing coming too? Youโ€™re working with Shira Anthony as well. Venona: Shira Anthony, it is another story. Itโ€™s actually about a farmer and a city boy. So, that one is coming up soon and thatโ€™s an honor of a friend of ours from GRL. So, weโ€™re writing a story about a farmer which he is and whoโ€™s not out and a city boy who is. So, itโ€™s a lot of fun. We already have the outline and weโ€™re just getting started on writing that as well too. Jeff: Very cool. Anything else coming up we should know about? Venona: Yes. โ€œHow to Become a K-pop Idol,โ€ I am writing that one by myself. We might get a co-writer on that one, you never know. But that one is, if people arenโ€™t familiar with this, I love Korean culture, a lot of Asian culture, Japanese, Korean. Iโ€™m learning Korean. Iโ€™ve been a K-pop fan since 2009 proudly with the Big Bang. Jeff: Before it was cool. Venona: Before it was cool. And my bias is right now, because Big Bang, if you donโ€™t know in Korea, you have to go in for military service mandatory by the time youโ€™re 30. So, a lot of the K-pop idols are going in. So, new ones are coming up. So, the third gens right now is BTS, if youโ€™ve not heard of Bangtan Sonyeondan, BTS, theyโ€™re really big. Theyโ€™re the band that Iโ€™m following right now. Jeff: Very cool. Anything coming up for you, Kim, a part from the Peril series? Kim: Yes, start of the Peril series at the end of this month, so April 30th. Iโ€™ve got a new novella coming out. So, if people who are following my โ€œBureauโ€ series, thereโ€™ll be a new novella in that. And I wanna push that because I give all my royalties for that to Doctors Without Borders. So, this is the fourth story in that series, but you can read them as standalones too. Venona: And theyโ€™re awesome stories too, I love those. Kim: Thanks. Jeff: And what have you guys thought of the festival? Venona: You know, this is the first time Iโ€™ve been here, and it is awesome. Thereโ€™s just so many people here, thereโ€™s so many different books, and you get to browse them all at the same time instead of in a little bookstore somewhere. So, yeah. Kim: And itโ€™s been a lot of fun just kinda hanging out with everybody, LA is fun. So, itโ€™s been a lot of fun. Jeff: Very cool. Well, thanks for hanging out with us for a few minutes. Kim: Thanks so much. Venona: Thanks for asking us. Interview withย S.A. Stovall Jeff: And weโ€™re at the LA Times Festival of Books with S.A. Stovall. Thanks so much for being here with us. S.A.: Well, thank you for having me. Itโ€™s super exciting. Jeff: Now, youโ€™re the author of โ€œVice City,โ€ itโ€™s currently two books in the series. Tell us a little bit about what the series is? S.A.: Itโ€™s a crime thriller like a noir style. Ironically, if youโ€™ve ever read โ€œSin City,โ€ which is a graphic novel, itโ€™s kind of similar to that. I used to work at a courthouse and I got a lot of green, was an attorney and all that. I donโ€™t do that anymore because itโ€™s a little depressing, but I used some of my experience in that to write the series. And I really like redemption stories and like criminals turning it around. Thatโ€™s what I did in the courts is I helped a lot of drug addicts get to rehab and turn their life around. And so, Iโ€™m really into that kind of story. So, the series follows an ex-mobster who like, you know, leaves the mob and then becomes a private detective, and then, you know, shenanigans ensue. Jeff: Shenanigans ensue? S.A.: Yeah. Jeff: And heโ€™s consistent through the series? S.A.: Heโ€™s the main viewpoint. Thereโ€™s a romance a subplot in which he falls in love with like a police academy cadet, and obviously, thatโ€™s his in to the police and you know, again, more shenanigans ensue that way. In the sequel book that just came out, one of the subplots is that a police officer suspects the main characterโ€™s actual identity, that he had connections to the mob and used to be a mob enforcer. And so, heโ€™s out to prove that itโ€™s him. And so, you know, itโ€™s a thriller story so itโ€™s got lots of thrills. Jeff: Mystery, suspense, thrills, itโ€™s all there. S.A.: Yes, exactly. Jeff: What got you into starting to write these books? S.A.: So, I had a friend who really likes Dreamspinner Press and I used to write just books like short stories for my D&D group, because they really liked, you know, fantasy, all that kind of stuff. So, I wrote short story fantasies and she was like, โ€œMy God, you should write me a Dreamspinner-style novel, like, thatโ€™s what you should write for me.โ€ And I was like, โ€œOkay, I donโ€™t know if I can do it as good as all these other people, but Iโ€™ll try.โ€ And I wrote โ€œVice Cityโ€ for her specifically. I even put that in the dedication. Iโ€™m like, โ€œItโ€™s just for you.โ€ I didnโ€™t think that it would go anywhere because, you know, I was just like, โ€œOkay.โ€ But I got an agent after I wrote this and then the agent sold it to Dreamspinner and then they published it for the DSP line because thatโ€™s where they do genre stuff. Jeff: It doesnโ€™t necessarily have the romance in it, right? S.A.: Yeah. Well, mine does but itโ€™s not the focal point. The focal point is the, you know, mystery and the mobster story. So, I was very surprised. I didnโ€™t think it would go anywhere but it totally went somewhere. So, every time somebody is like, โ€œOh, I donโ€™t know if I should write a novel,โ€ thereโ€™s a piece of me thatโ€™s like, โ€œMan, I just wrote that novel willy-nilly. So, you should try, you should do it. You should try.โ€ Now admittedly, you know, I was writing before I wrote this because I wrote other stories and short stories, but still, if youโ€™re thinking about it, you should just do it, you know. Donโ€™t even think to yourself, โ€œOh, nobody will read this,โ€ because I kinda thought, โ€œNobodyโ€™s gonna read a crime noir.โ€ You know what Iโ€™m saying? Like, I was like, โ€œThatโ€™s old school, nobody reads that kind of stuff anymore.โ€ But no, people do, and people like it. So, I was really happy. Jeff: And you noted that the second book just came out. Do you have plans for third? S.A.: Yeah. Jeff: What is yet to come? S.A.: Iโ€™m about halfway through the third book and itโ€™s a true series in the sense that it could go for as long as I want it or, you know, that kind of thing. Itโ€™s not like a trilogy or a set thing like, โ€œOh, something needs to happen.โ€ But, you know, as a private investigator, anything can happen, you know, all sorts of shenanigans can ensue. Jeff: Very true, very true. S.A.: But there is a connecting theme. The whole reason that itโ€™s the vice enforcer is that the mob that he used to work for was the vice family, and theyโ€™re still around by book three so you can kinda see the, like, heโ€™s trying to take them down one by one. And so, I guess I could be limited to and then it got the whole vice family and then the series is over. But, you know, thereโ€™s that connecting thread too. Jeff: Now, that youโ€™ve been writing in this genre, do you wanna expand out to other genres or is noir thriller kind of your sweet spot? S.A.: Well, itโ€™s just a thing that I like a lot, that I thought, you know, nobody likes this anymore, but I like it. I wrote โ€œModern Gladiatorโ€ which is just a pure romance for Dreamspinner. It was a sports romance with UFC fighter. Jeff: Oh, cool. S.A.: I, a few years back, was dating a guy who was in the UFC. And so, I just used all of that experience to write a sports romance. And I know a lot about, you know, wrestling and all that kind of stuff just from him. And I put a lot of that kind of information in the book and it literally just came out about two weeks ago. Yeah, โ€œModern Gladiatorโ€ came out. And then I do a lot of fantasy and science fiction on the side as well. So, I mean, all sorts of things, all crazy things. Jeff: Very cool. Now youโ€™re also an artist? S.A.: Yes, thatโ€™s true. Jeff: While sheโ€™s been here doing her signings and such, sheโ€™s also been doing caricatures of people who get their book signed. And so, we had this one done of us. It is so freaking adorable. How did this get started for you? S.A.: Iโ€™ve just always drawn things. I like doodling. I was really into comic books at a point in my life. I mean, so many comic books and manga. I mean, anything that was drawn and kind of that like storybook style with the panel, super loved. But I didnโ€™t really intend for it to go anywhere. I went and got my history degree, I got a law degree. I wasnโ€™t like, โ€œMan, I need to study art.โ€ But I did at least doodle enough that I was like, โ€œIโ€™m mildly good, you know.โ€ And when I went to my first ever book fair, I thought, โ€œI canโ€™t just be the schmoe whoโ€™s standing in a booth trying to peddle their book, because Iโ€™m gonna be like 50 other people in the road doing the exact same thing. I should try and do something thatโ€™s at least enticing or to get people to read my stuff.โ€ And I figured, โ€œHey, I could try a little caricature, and while Iโ€™m drawing them, they can read my book. And if itโ€™s enticing enough, you know, theyโ€™ll buy the book, or theyโ€™ll feel guilty enough to buy the book, you know, I donโ€™t know, whatever gets them to buy the book.โ€ And a lot of people usually give me comments right away. Like, the first line in โ€œVice City,โ€ everybody always comments, well, not everybody but like 80% of people. The first line is, โ€œGetting hit with a wrench hurts.โ€ And, so many people either laugh or comment like, โ€œOh my God, what a good line,โ€ and Iโ€™m like, โ€œYeah.โ€ And the first chapter in โ€œVice Cityโ€ is an interrogation of that police cadet. So, Pierce, the mobster, is interrogating this guy who he thinks is a police mole. So, itโ€™s really intense, you know, high stakes going on. I really like that first chapter and it usually hooks people. So, they read that first chapter while Iโ€™m drawing them and, bam, thatโ€™s my sales strategy. Donโ€™t steal it. Iโ€™m joking, everybody can use it. Jeff: Itโ€™s all herโ€™s. S.A.: Anybody can do it. Jeff: But the key is, like, I could never draw. Thereโ€™s no way Iโ€™d do this, Iโ€™d have to find another hook. S.A.: Iโ€™ve been successful with it. People typically like that. And the caricatures are free. I just give them to people. So, even if they donโ€™t buy the book, you know, itโ€™s fine. Jeff: And itโ€™s awesome watching her do them. We watched as she did ours. Itโ€™s like, โ€œOh my God, there we are just manifesting on the page.โ€ It was very cool. Well, thank you so much for hanging out with us a little bit. One last question, what have you thought of the fair? S.A.: Itโ€™s good. There are a lot of people here though. I mean, just thousands of people all over the place. Going to the food trucks was fun, although not during lunchtime. Thereโ€™s like a mile-long line from here to the sun and back. Nobody wants to do that. But the food trucks are good, the people seem to be really nice, and I donโ€™t know, itโ€™s just a good time. Jeff: Excellent. Well, thank you so much for spending a little bit of time with us. S.A.: Thank you for having me again, like, super awesome.

BGM: Bad Gay Movies = Bitchy Gay Men ยป Episodes
Episode 101: Something Like Summer (with Kyle Brownrigg)

BGM: Bad Gay Movies = Bitchy Gay Men ยป Episodes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2019


BGM 101 and itโ€™s back to schoolโ€ฆhigh school! Graphic novel adaptations are always so great, think ofย Ghost World,ย and gay YA fiction can be so charming, likeย Love Simon!ย ย So of course this adaptation of Jay Bellโ€™s book has to be great, right?ย  Well, youโ€™ll find out when Dan and Bil and our super exciting special guest Kyle [โ€ฆ]

graphic bgm bil jay bell something like summer
La Mezcla
E11 - Connor Johnston's Dad is a Lumberjack

La Mezcla

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 47:06


Originally from Portland, Oregon, Connor Johnston is a graduate of NYU Tisch. Connor's theater credits include: Snow Falling on Cedars (Portland Center Stage), Neighborhood 3: Requisition of Doom (The Flea Theater), Rabbit Hole (Theatre with a View). Film/TV credits include NBC's "Grimm" and CBS's "Elementary" & "Madam Secretary" and supporting roles in the independent films, "All These Small Moments" and "Something Like Summer.โ€ Connor is also funny and performs with his improv team, Microdose, around the city - @MicrodoseImprov. www.connorjohnston.com @conjohn18 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Sewers of Paris
Like Getting Struck by Lightning (Ep. 158 - The Twist Queer Film Festival)

The Sewers of Paris

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2018 51:27


Welcome to a special bonus episode of The Sewers of Paris! On most episodes, I talk to a guest about the entertainment that changed their life. But tonight I'm speaking to five guests who create entertainment that they hope will change the lives of others.I recorded these interviews at Twist, Seattle's LGBT film festival. You'll hear from folks involved in two projects that screened at the festival: the first is Something Like Summer, a romance based on the novel by Jay Bell; and the second is Queer Ghost Hunters, a docu-series about a group of investigators who believe in life and love after death. We talk about the books, movies, shows, and songs that touched their lives and inspired them to become creators. A huge thanks to the folks at Twist for helping to arrange these conversations. And thanks to everyone who backs The Sewers of Paris on Patreon, making it possible for me to produce bonus episodes of the show. If you're enjoying The Sewers of Paris, you help keep it going by clicking "support the show on Patreon" to pledge as little as a dollar a month. Or more, more is good too.And! If you enjoyed my bonus episodes where I have guests playing Dungeons and Dragons, check out our live show where drag queens play D&D onstage for a live audience. The show's coming to Oasis in San Francisco on March 20th, featuring Erika Klash from Dragula; Kitty Powers, of the games Matchmaker and Lovelife; and San Francisco stars Pollo Del Mar and KaiKai Bee Michaels. Tickets are now on sale! And if you're not in San Francisco, I hope you'll pass the word along to anyone who you think might enjoy the show.Also: I'm about to launch a brand new podcast featuring drag queens playing D&D! It's called Queens of Adventure, and we're crowdfunding throughout the month of March to pay for performers, music, art, and equipment. We just hit our first funding goal, and now we're heading towards a stretch goal of doing livestreams with the queens -- Visit QueensOfAdventure.com to join us in bringing this new podcast to life.

Scream 101
Slasher Month #2: SLEEPAWAY CAMP III: TEENAGE WASTELAND (1989)

Scream 101

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2017 30:09


Slasher month continues on its merry way through the woods with the third entry in a campsite slasher stalwart: SLEEPAWAY CAMP III: TEENAGE WASTELAND Join us as we review the film, discuss how much itโ€™s weirdly different from Part II which was filmed at the same time, Brennan gets interrupted by dogs a whole bunch, and Sergio takes the lead in reading the plot! Stick around for the credits to hear our rendition of the Pamela Springsteen classic โ€œIโ€™m a Happy Camperโ€! Ten Word Reviews: It (2017), Something Like Summer, Sister Act Our theme music is โ€œA Beat for Youโ€ by Pseudo Echo. You can find more episodes of this show and others at podpeople.me

ๅฑฑไธ˜็”ตๅฐ
็ฌฌ่ฒณๆ‹พๆŸ’็ซ  Something Like Summer

ๅฑฑไธ˜็”ตๅฐ

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2016 63:32


ๅฑฑไธ˜้›ปๅฐ๏ผŒ็ฌฌ่ฒณๆ‹พๆŸ’็ซ ใ€‚Something like summer.

something like summer
ๅฑฑไธ˜็”ตๅฐ
็ฌฌ่ฒณๆ‹พๆŸ’็ซ  Something Like Summer

ๅฑฑไธ˜็”ตๅฐ

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2016 63:32


ๅฑฑไธ˜้›ปๅฐ๏ผŒ็ฌฌ่ฒณๆ‹พๆŸ’็ซ ใ€‚Something like summer.

something like summer
Between The Scripts
Boyz Talk about the Oscars and Visit with Ben Baur

Between The Scripts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2016 99:39


OUTSpoken welcomes guest Ben Baurโ€‹, joining us to discuss hiscareer as an actor and writer. Ben Baur has previously appeared ontelevision shows such as The Following (CBS), Happily Divorced (TVLand), and Difficult People (Hulu). Ben just wrapped and can beseen soon in the upcoming feature film, Something Like Summer.Ben also starred in the massively popular web series HuntingSeason (hunting season.tv), These People (ThesePeople.tv) and hasstarted on his own series #Adulting, which will be releasedsometime this year. His writing credits include the series #Adultingand an episode of These People.OUTSpoken is excited to discuss Ben Baurโ€™s career as well as hiscoming out process. His story has been told on Huffington Post andOUT100. โ€œI am an out gay actor now, but I worry that I might onlyplay gay characters for the rest of my career, or that I will beforever marked by something I canโ€™t control.

Rated LGBT Radio
Winter Solstice Event / Something Like Summer Movie!

Rated LGBT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2014 64:00


Join Garrett in welcoming Trina Butler to the show on Monday! Trina will be sharing information on the upcoming WINTER SOLSTICE EVENT in Salem, Oregon on Saturday, December 20th from 10a-5p! 2111 Front Street, Building 3, Salem, OR ย (NE Corner of Pine & Front streets) Showcasing unique gift buying for the holidays! ย Vendors with crafts, jewelry and more! ย You'll also find tarot readers, psychics, angel readings, reiki, massage and ways to contact your spirit guides. This is a BODY, MIND and SOUL event! Head to Facebook for their Event Page for the latest updates by clicking here! In the second half of the show, you'll hear from Screenwriter/Producerย Carlos Pedraza and actor Ben Baur who are raising money to complete a feature film, "Something Like Summer!" Check out their Indygogo page to donate to Something Like Summer by clicking here! Check out the Something Like Summer Facebook Fan Page by clicking here! ย 

Rated LGBT Radio
Winter Solstice Event / Something Like Summer Movie!

Rated LGBT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2014 64:00


Join Garrett in welcoming Trina Butler to the show on Monday! Trina will be sharing information on the upcoming WINTER SOLSTICE EVENT in Salem, Oregon on Saturday, December 20th from 10a-5p! 2111 Front Street, Building 3, Salem, OR ย (NE Corner of Pine & Front streets) Showcasing unique gift buying for the holidays! ย Vendors with crafts, jewelry and more! ย You'll also find tarot readers, psychics, angel readings, reiki, massage and ways to contact your spirit guides. This is a BODY, MIND and SOUL event! Head to Facebook for their Event Page for the latest updates by clicking here! In the second half of the show, you'll hear from Screenwriter/Producerย Carlos Pedraza and actor Ben Baur who are raising money to complete a feature film, "Something Like Summer!" Check out their Indygogo page to donate to Something Like Summer by clicking here! Check out the Something Like Summer Facebook Fan Page by clicking here! ย 

On Air with Douglas
Author, Jay Bell

On Air with Douglas

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2013 61:00


Jay Bell in Merriam, Kansas. He supposes his childhood could be summed up in two words: rebellious nerd. Come to think of it, that pretty much covers his teen and adult years as well, says Jay. "Iโ€™ve always loved books, delving into fantastic worlds and letting myself get lost there. I grew up marvelling at the creative genius of C.S. Lewis, Piers Anthony, Robert Asprin, Terry Brooks, even that guy that wrote the Mr. Men books. The list could go on and on. Itโ€™s a daunting task to try and add my own stories to the countless volumes already out there, but Iโ€™m giving it my best. Anything else youโ€™d like to know, feel free to ask. Reading my blog will reveal most of my hobbies and interests as well. Or you can check out the interviews below. And hey, just so this isnโ€™t all about me, feel free to tell me about yourself below. We can start our own biography party!" http://www.jaybellbooks.com/

On Air with Douglas
Author, Jay Bell

On Air with Douglas

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2013 61:00


Jay Bell in Merriam, Kansas. He supposes his childhood could be summed up in two words: rebellious nerd. Come to think of it, that pretty much covers his teen and adult years as well, says Jay. "Iโ€™ve always loved books, delving into fantastic worlds and letting myself get lost there. I grew up marvelling at the creative genius of C.S. Lewis, Piers Anthony, Robert Asprin, Terry Brooks, even that guy that wrote the Mr. Men books. The list could go on and on. Itโ€™s a daunting task to try and add my own stories to the countless volumes already out there, but Iโ€™m giving it my best. Anything else youโ€™d like to know, feel free to ask. Reading my blog will reveal most of my hobbies and interests as well. Or you can check out the interviews below. And hey, just so this isnโ€™t all about me, feel free to tell me about yourself below. We can start our own biography party!" http://www.jaybellbooks.com/