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Interview by Angela CroudacePhoto Credit: Erik Ohlsson, Magnus LarnhedTwo of the all-time punk greats will be returning to Australia with pioneering California dynamos PENNYWISE and beloved Swedish trailblazers MILLENCOLIN set to co-headline a huge run down under.For over 30 years, Swedish icons MILLENCOLIN have vividly put punk on the map. With their original line up still intact since forming back in 1992, MILLENCOLIN's debut album, 1994's Tiny Tunes, opened the floodgates that would shape the quartet's staggering career to come. Skyrocketing their popularity courtesy of the 2000 full-length Pennybridge Pioneers, the rock-infused dive beyond the band's earlier skate punk and ska leanings would ultimately spawn iconic tracks like No Cigar and Penguins & Polarbears, achieving infamy with No Cigar's addition to the soundtrack for Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2, and ultimately finding the overall album scoring an ARIA Platinum certification.One of punk rock's most famed and favourite acts to emerge out of Europe, MILLENCOLIN have played thousands of shows around the world, including as part of Warped Tour, Soundwave Festival and Big Day Out, multiple sold-out headline performances, tours with the likes of Bad Religion and The Offspring, and, most recently for Australians, at Good Things Festival in 2022. And never ones to rest on their laurels, MILLENCOLIN also continue to finesse their sonic creations, seen vividly via their 2019 album SOS, exploring political and darker themes without sacrificing their explosive energy and gripping melodic.HEAVY caught up with Millencolin guitarist Mathias Färm to find out more.MILLENCOLIN & PENNYWISE tix from destroyalllines.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
Lou writes a tune about touring (Another Day) just before the podcasting begins. Unusually energetic, Adelle asks him what he's on. The continuing DInosaur Jr tour with Weezer and Flaming Lips is recapped by a loosened Lou. Adelle keeps it together. join our Substack 'cause we are gonna kick it up a notch real soon, look out!https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.comWATCH IThttps://youtu.be/aoRkXSjm4aE Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Home for a day, Lou plays Adelle his song Imagination Blind from Dinosaur Jr's FARM L.P. (15 years old!). The continuing tour with Weezer, Tom Petty playlists, and Adelle and Lou's 'datey-poo' at Boston's TD Garden are discussed. like the podcast?.. join our substack! https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.comWATCH IT!https://youtu.be/KP5fT-O9VrE Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Millencolin is a Swedish punk rock band that was formed in October 1992. The name Millencolin is derived from the skateboard trick "melancholy". You might have a few of their albums in your collection including Tiny Tunes (1994) Life on a Plate (1995) For Monkeys (1997) Pennybridge Pioneers (2000) Home from Home (2002) Kingwood (2005) Machine 15 (2008) True Brew (2015) SOS (2019). Thank you to Double J for the intro to Erik and Chris Mahon for reaching out to the band to make this happen. So I got Erik on the Skype and this is what we chat about: Touring with Blink back in 97 Calling Fat Mike to get signed Getting sued by Warner Bros The Hives Their studio getting flooded Killercrush Recording with Mr. Brett How No Cigar got on Tony hawk 2 The hot sauce on their website And a ton more Feel free to support the podcast for as little as $1 a month through Patreon
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#18 ECHO This: Tiny Tunes, Big Lessons: The Power of Kids Songs Children's songs
THE EMBC NETWORK featuring: ihealthradio and worldwide podcasts
#18 ECHO This: Tiny Tunes, Big Lessons: The Power of Kids Songs Children's songs
Lou is in Amsterdam and Adelle is home in Massachusetts, glitches abound. Lou also shares a cover of “Dick About It” by the band MOTO. Yes, that's right, the song already exists! Oops!Join our Substack!https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Adelle and Lou receive 2 pieces of actual, in the mailbox, fan mail! Lou plays a written request, HOME (from his 2005 LP EMOH) and he and Adelle discuss coffee beans and T.V. guides. Thanks Thomas and Morgan! join our Substack for extra cozy stuff https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this Tiny Tunes Tuesday Lou fulfills another listener request: Too Much Freedom from his 2009 LP, Goodnight Unknown. It's also Eclipse Day and Adelle can't help but fear the Path Of Totality. join our Substack, seriously, Join Our Substack...a paid subscription costs a cup of coffee a month, a free subscription is.. free! https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lou plays two tunes too many times on this Tiny Tunes Tuesday. I'm A Hog For You by The Coasters and Whole Hog by The Folk Implosion/ Deluxx Folk Implosion. join our Substack for extra stuff https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lou follows through on covering Ready For The World's 1985 hit, Oh Sheila. More behind-the-scenes tidbits from the Dinosaur Jr Where You Been shows are revealed. Stream and download the song (and so much more) as a paid subscriber to the Barlow Family General Substack https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Adelle reflects on her successful holiday pop-up shop, Lou listens to 'The Woman in Me', Britney Spears' autobiography, and covers Baby One More Time.https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com for audio extras and domestic stuff Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lou reacquires a compilation cassette he made for his late friend Mark in 1983. He and Adelle listen to one of his song/noise collages from the tape and talk about it.https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com for all all kinds of new and archival sounds + Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On the day after their very-first-live-show, Adelle and Lou provide listeners a recreation of the performance with added local references! No tunes were harmed in this episode. Handwritten lyrics!: https://barlowfamilygeneralstore.comOur ever expanding Substack of words, songs and domestic tips! https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
El que desde los 16 años ya andaba en Mercedes fue apadrinado en un inicio por productores legendarios del género como Nely “El Arma Secreta” y el dúo Luny Tunes. Estos últimos le apodaron “Tiny Tunes” porque era la versión infantil de la caricatura. Tan sólo al principio de su carrera fue creador de éxitos como “Abusadora”, “El Teléfono” o “Pam Pam” de Wisin & Yandel, dos de los referentes clave para entender la evolución del reggaetón incorporando otros sonidos. Es el arquitecto del estilo moderno del movimiento gracias a su labor de producción en temas como “Adicto” de Ozuna y Anuel AA: “I Like It” de Cardi B, J Balvin y Bad Bunny; “Reggaetón” de Balvin o “Dákiti” de Jhayco; y es mano derecha del artista boricua que ha roto todos los récords de popularidad: Bad Bunny, realizando la música para todos sus álbumes incluyendo sencillos como “Callaita” o “Yonaguni”. Este personaje ha trascendido las barreras del reggaetón y ha producido no sólo hits, sino también ha trabajado con artistas que han logrado que la música en español se posicione en todo el mundo: desde Héctor “El Father”, Daddy Yankee y Arcangel, hasta Rauw Alejandro o Rosalía. Pero más allá de sus logros en los charts y hacer canciones con artistas anglo como Justin Bieber o Selena Gomez, él ha consolidado un sonido propio y ha demostrado que es el productor más vanguardista del reggaetón en su álbumdebut.En este episodio, Tainy platica conmigo sobre su estilo de producción, sus momentos clave en la historia del reggaetón, y 'DATA', un proyecto que trabajó en un lapso de alrededor de tres años donde logra conciliar el sonido más callejero del reggaetón y el trap con el synth-pop, el synth-wave, la psicodelia, la música electrónica y el pop alternativo.
Today on the show, B-sox was joined by Mike Reyes from Cinemablend for reviews of The Northman, The Bad Guys and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent. They also talked movie news including Spider-Man news, Jurassic World and more! https://www.kggo.com/ Mike Reyes: https://twitter.com/MrControversy83 https://www.instagram.com/mrcontroversy83/ https://www.facebook.com/MrControversy83 CinemaBlend: https://www.instagram.com/cinemablend/ https://twitter.com/cinemablend https://www.facebook.com/cinemablendcom/ Overdue Rentals Podcast: https://anchor.fm/overduerentals?fbclid=IwAR3Kal5iIvL1NeioldZtrzlGMY7Yzbr04KYEQ4U_uytLw5t2p_P0pIHHC0A https://twitter.com/RentalsOverdue https://www.facebook.com/OverdueRentals See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ray and Lee check in on election night to give you all the geeks-sports happenings from the past seven days! Tune in now to hear their thoughts on everything from the Mandalorian Season 2, to a new anime series based on a great live action property, to the latest Dallas Stars alternate jerseys! The Mandalorian Chapter 9-The Marshal - 2:05 Cyberpunk 2077 Delayed - 20:42 Halo Infinite Dev Issues - 23:20 Netflix Developing Live Action Assassin's Creed Series Officially - 28:50 Netflix Pacific Rim Anime Series - 37:37 Tiny Toons Announced For HBOMax - 39:44 Rest In Peace Sean Connery - 43:05 Travis Roy Passes - 46:21 Raiders’ Trent Brown Medical Error- 47:49 NFL Week Eight - 50:49 Ray’s Rant - 54:49 The Patriots - 1:05:42 Dallas Stars Alternative Jerseys - 1:06:52 OHL Rules No Body Checking - 1:11:09 Could All Of NHL Play In Canada Next Year? - 1:15:13 Mitchell Miller Renounced By The Coyotes - 1:19:27 White Sox Hire Tony LaRussa - 1:27:57 Detroit Tigers Hire AJ Hinch - 1:34:28 Jon Lester Buys Chicago A Beer, $47k On 4838 Beers - 1:34:35 What Live Action Property Should Have An Anime? - 1:37:49
Episode 10: They Might Be Giants Part I; What Makes Them A Nerdy Band??? We have our first Guest Host, and what an amazing host!!! Ritchie, who is a Professor of Music History at UMass Amherst, breaks down why TMBG is her favorite band, and why they are so weirdly strange and silly. ***Editors Note: Every time we mention "The Animaniacs," what we meant to say was the show "Tiny Tunes." (My Bad - Jon)*** --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mike-barrett9/support
This week, Bobby trashes white trash Kid Rock for being a spoiled brat, we've got a hard obsession with some Guardians of the Galaxy characters, Horse the Band makes their appearance in conversation, Bobby hates everything family friendly, we ponder childhood stuff, and we discuss the best 90's cartoons.If you have your own top 5 list that you'd like us to read on the show, message us through any of our platforms below!Check out our website here, like us on Facebook here, follow us on Twitter @njalpodcast, and subscribe/review on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Play Music. You can follow Tim on Twitter @KidInsanity and you can follow Bobby on Twitter @bobbywws.
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Religion and IT share a common ground when it comes to humor. In both cases, if someone doesn’t “get it”, it could take HOURS to explain enough for them to understand. in this episode, Leon, Josh, and special guest Doug Johnson talk about whether that is unique to IT/religious people, our own experiences with tech- and religious-based humor, and whether (as Josh asserts), Mormons just aren't that funny. Listen or read the transcript below. Leon: 00:00 Hey everyone, it's Leon. Before we start this episode, I wanted to let you know about a book I wrote. It's called "The Four Questions Every Monitoring Engineer is Asked," and if you like this podcast, you're going to love this book. It combines 30 years of insight into the world of IT with wisdom gleaned from Torah, Talmud, and Passover. You can read more about it, including where you can get a digital or print copy over on adatosystems.com. Thanks! Doug: 00:24 Welcome to our podcast where we talk about the interesting, frustrating and inspiring experiences we have as people with strongly held religious views working in corporate IT. We're not here to preach or teach you our religion. We're here to explore the ways we make our career as IT professionals mesh, or at least not conflict, with our religious life. This is Technically Religious, Josh: 00:49 So we just missed a very special holiday. Leon and Doug: 00:52 Wait, what? I... Leon: 00:54 International women's Day? Doug: 00:56 Ash Wednesday? Leon: 00:57 Mardi gras? Doug: 00:58 Pi Day! Leon: 00:59 The opening of Captain Marvel!! Josh: 01:00 Uh, no, no. It's that special day when we as it pros, we do important work, like changing everyone's password to "butthead" or setting everyone's email quota does zero, or setting off 500 alerts, you know, for no reason. Leon: 01:15 Oh April Fool's day. Josh: 01:18 Exactly. And in honor of that blessed day we're going to talk about jokes Doug: 01:24 Religious jokes? Leon: 01:25 Well, kind of. I think that religion and IT share a common ground when it comes to humor. In both cases if someone doesn't get it, it could take hours to explain enough for them to understand it. And by that point it's not funny anymore. So today I think we should focus on "jokes I wish I could tell." Josh: 01:39 So like religious jokes, you can't tell at work, not because they're bad but because it requires too much background knowledge? Doug: 01:48 Sure. But maybe also tech jokes that you can only tell the other it people. Josh: 01:53 Or even tech jokes you can only tell other folks who understand YOUR sub specialty? Like enterprise monitoring? Leon: 02:01 That would be like the story of my life as a monitoring engineer. Exactly. So before we dive into the topic, I do want to do some introductions. With us today is Doug Johnson. Say, Hi Doug. Doug: 02:11 Hey, hi.. uhey, Leon: 02:14 You missed it. Doug: 02:15 I know! All of a sudden I realized.. and oh no. I hate those jokes. Leon: 02:22 "Good night Gracie" Okay. Well, and today especially, we can talk about the jokes that we don't appreciate. So that's, that's fine. That's fair. I didn't mean to set you up for a joke you didn't want to hear. Um, so like I said, I think the tech and religion have like similarities to them that they're in the, you know, if you're not in the "in" crowd, you don't get it. But the other part of is that I think as IT people and also as people with a religious background, whatever, we keep TRYING to tell these jokes to people like, "No, really, you're going to love it once you understand it." Like, we keep doing that. Um, and, and that expands, I think to nerd or geek culture overall. The number of times I've tried to explain, you know, Harry Potter or Star Wars or whatever to people who just did not want to, did not want to hear it. Right? Doug: 03:08 Oh, I know. One of the problems that you run into is, you know, here we are, we, we've got all of these jokes that we really think are great and maybe they're jokes in our religious area or they're jokes in our technical area and there's a whole bunch of people we can't tell them to, but there are jokes. Right? Leon: 03:23 Right. And they're our people. You know, just because I can't tell, you know, something that really funny that happened at synagogue or a, a funny Jewish joke to people at work... But they're still my friends. Right? So I want to share those aspects of my life and vice versa. I want to, you know, share a RAID array, joke with, you know, people you know, at shul and they're just, they're not going to care. Josh: 03:46 It's funny, as you were talking Leon, I was thinking first you've just described my entire teenage life, sitting in the corner, you know, laughing about jokes that nobody else gets. And the harder you laugh because you know, you're making fun of that football player who looks like the ogre from your campaign last night and then suddenly you know you're running because you're, and you're trying to run and laugh and you know, you're dropping your "Magic, the Gathering" cards and like it's just, it's a, it's a nightmare. Um, yeah, sometimes you're, you laugh and sometimes you're laughed at. Doug: 04:21 But then the other thing that comes out of that though is if you think, I mean, we want to share the jokes, but sometimes as you note, you're just laughing so hard. Everybody says, "No, no, no. Tell me what the joke is." I mean, they actually, they try and get it out of you and you're going, it would just take too long. Leon: 04:35 Right. Okay. So that, that leads me to, I think the first big question that we should address, which is: is it really that specialized, you know, is religious based. You know, humor and/or geek tech humor so much different from say, sports humor or city location humor or humor that you would only understand if you were of a certain age or whatever. Josh: 05:00 Uh, yeah, Canada jokes, ya hoser! Leon: 05:04 Okay. But again, you know, we're not talking about jokes that make fun OF somebody. We're talking about humor that you'd only understand if you were Canadian. Right? Josh: 05:13 I have a perfect example for you. Okay. So, uh, and this is a great extent. This is a great example of how I have to give you the backstory. So, uh, one of the former prime ministers of Canada, his name was Brian Mulroney, and he was recently in the, in the news for making a very derogatory comment horde, a young politician. He called her" little lady" a way to go. Brian. Brian is famous for bringing in something called the "goods and services tax". It's, it's one of those taxes that was supposed to be temporary and it never was. And so, um, to the tune of the Tiny Tunes theme song, we used to sing a, "...we're tiny, we're twoney, we're all a little loony, since Brian Mulrooney invented GST." Leon: 05:58 Okay... Josh: 05:58 And we think it's Hilarious, right? Where it, and it takes not only an understanding of Canadian politics, but you have to be someone who appreciates children's... uh.. not-children's cartoons... NOT children's cartoons. Yes. Leon: 06:12 Right. Okay. So to my point is, is the premise of this episode not to, you know, pop poke holes in the premise the episode, but is is the stuff that we're talking about tech jokes and and religious jokes. I they is it really so specialized? Doug: 06:27 The thing that makes things funny is the element of surprise that comes, I mean, so that's why the one, two, three for jokes worksheet thing number one, thing number two, and then thing number three comes out of left field, New Speaker: 06:39 ba-dum-bum Doug: 06:40 Ba-da-boom. Right? That's, that's sort of the nature of all at least verbal humor. The problem is in the case of religion or IT or Canada or sports or whatever, you have to have enough knowledge to know what is normal so the setup works, if you don't understand the normal, then there's no surprise cause it doesn't seem any different from the first two parts that were there in the first place. I mean it's, I don't know that it's necessarily that different from other very specialized areas, but the fact is it's a specialized area that requires a knowledge for there to be a normal for there to be a surprise. Leon: 07:22 Right. And, and I would also argue that the populations that we're talking about are significantly smaller. It, it's a lot easier to find a group of people who would probably understand a, let's say a Cleveland joke or again, not to joke about Cleveland, but a joke that only Clevelanders would understand. Josh: 07:42 Did you just insinuate that Cleveland has more people in it than Canada. Leon: 07:45 Uh, no, I was not that at all. I was actually supporting it or it can, you know, Canadians, Doug: 07:51 They do have more people who are willing to go ahead and laugh at themselves though. Leon: 07:56 Canada does. Canada is very, yeah. Um, yeah. Clevelanders are just tired of it all. So, uh, anyway, um, Josh: 08:05 So Doug, when you were counting, I feel like I was, I was, uh, almost having to hold myself back, um, about making a number two joke, you know, you're like number one and number two, I feel like there's a, there's a universal joke that every everyone gets and I feel like, you know, boys get it around the age of three or so, like as soon as those sentences start being stitched together. Leon: 08:30 And they never lose it, Josh: 08:32 They never lose it. Leon: 08:33 Or as somebody said that, you know, all babies when they're first born have to be burped. Um, boys just do it on their own from that point forward. Um, and you're right, there was a study that was done and they found it two specific... Specifically two types of humor work regardless of culture, regardless of where you're from or how old you are or anything like that. And that is scatological or a fart and poop jokes and mother-in-law jokes. Uh, those are appreciated everywhere. Right? Doug: 09:02 Makes Sense. But, and the one that the, I've also heard that it's like universal and frankly it doesn't appeal to me at all, Is physical humor, slapstick stuff. I mean, if you look at even the comedy that we got in the beginning of the, uh, the film era, that was all slapstick stuff, right? And everybody loves it. I just don't, I don't know. It's not me. Leon: 09:25 Exactly. And I think that's another important point, right, is that whether you understand the joke is different than whether you like the joker. Appreciate the joke. Um, you know, to give an a, an a tech example, a lot of people who know even the littlest bit about networking say, you know, there's no place like one 127.0.0.1 right? Okay. There's no place like home, there's nobody, you know, or I could tell you a UDP joke but you probably wouldn't get it right. Ha Ha. Okay. That's all right. I, you know, but there's, even though that is, uh, that is a joke and, and some people will laugh at it. There's a lot of networking people who are like, really? I just, that is the 1024th time I've heard it. Right. Doug: 10:09 Oh Man. Leon: 10:18 So, uh, yeah. And, and it, there's a group of people right now her listening to this podcast who are like, "I don't, I don't get it" so, so Doug: 10:26 You just need to wait a bit Leon: 10:27 So "getting it" and "liking it". Right. Uh, oooooh. So, um, so you're liking it and getting it to, okay, this is where things get interesting. Um, I, I was playing around with the idea of like worlds colliding. Like are there jokes that you have to be both? Do you have to be like you have to be a Mormon and also a network engineer, you know, FULL INNER JOIN to get, you know, certain humor, stuff like that. I didn't know if you've run across any of those. Speaker 3: 11:01 Well, having been Mormon for 41 years, I, and as we talked about an episode two now post Mormon, I can tell you that the majority of Mormons, so that I know have, uh, no sense of humor. And it's not that they're not funny, it's just the things that they laugh at our really contextualized for Mormonism, um, like, um, pickup lines at a BYU, right? Um, you know, hey, well things like, um, uh, "Baby, I came here to feel the spirit, but I didn't know that I would see an angel." I, you know, Doug: 11:38 Oh yeah...f Josh: 11:40 So as I was looking for, for Mormon humor, I realized that most of it is around getting married. Uh, which I think is, that ties with the youthfulness. And you know, LDS people tend to get married younger than others. And generally, if it's not about Green Jello with carrot in it, if it's not about a, the relief society, which is the women's organization, uh, making ice sculptures, there's a whole, there's a whole trope of Mormon movies like "The R.M." Um, well "The R.M." is the one that we laugh at the most and it's, it's takes all of the sticks about Mormonism and cram them into, you know, 90 minutes of, of stories about people's lives. Um, all of those things, although we laugh at them, they're not really that funny. It's just, it's more self deprecating humor. So maybe we're really good at picking on ourselves. I don't know. Leon: 12:35 Huh. And then again, trying to get the technology in there is probably a little tricky. Doug: 12:39 It just doesn't happen. That's what I mean. We're just not that funny. Leon: 12:42 Huh. So I did here. So a friend of mine, Phil Setnik, posted on Twitter a little bit ago. So just for context for those listening, even though this is the April podcast, we did record it. Uh, not yesterday. We recorded it a couple of weeks ago and Purim the Jewish holiday of Purim is coming up in, one of the things about Purim is that you are commanded to drink. This is where everyone starts like, "Wait, wait, I want to convert!" Um, you know, you're commanded to drink until you don't know the difference between the sentence that the phrase, uh, "wicked is Haman" and "blessed is Mordecai". And so Phil posted that on May 4th, we're commanded to drink until we can not tell. The difference between "blessed is Obi-Wan" and "Cursed be Vader". This is the, this is none of the Mitzvah. The commandment known as "Ahd Lo Yoda". Doug: 13:31 Yeah. Leon: 13:33 Right, right. Okay. So requires deep knowledge of both Geek, you know, culture and also whatever. So I just wanted to get props out that, that this is a difficult brand of humor to, um, to perhaps a trade in and yet Phil managed to do it. So hat's off. Josh: 13:52 Does this mean that we had to have watched Star Trek? Leon: 13:54 Uh, no, no, it doesn't. Doug: 13:59 If you come down to it though, it just comes down to audience size really. I mean, we would go back to mother-in-laws and fart and poop is relatively universal, whereas people who both have seen Star Wars and know the stuff+ behind Purim are relatively few. Leon: 14:18 Right, right. Doug: 14:19 So you're, I mean you'll, I'm sure you, you'll kill it, your audience, but it's not the two people. Leon: 14:28 Exactly. It's Phil and me and maybe one other person. Yeah, exactly. Um, there's a few of us, but you know, it's, it's definitely a small group. So, so talking about that, like what are some occasions when, because it's so hard to find these populations. I want to hear about some times that you've tried to tell a joke to the group and they just, they didn't get it. Like what are those? Doug: 14:55 I live those every day. I work out at my home, so, uh, you know, I do all of my social network stuff while I'm sitting down in the living room next to my wife and I tend to laugh out loud when I read things that I find funny and my wife will be sitting there, she'll go, "what?" And you just do a take where you sit there going, how long would it, how much do I have to explain for her to get it to make it worthwhile? And then it always comes down to, and all the, all the answer is, is "Geek joke" and we're done. It's just she, she now has, cause we tried in the, you know, years ago, she would say, "No, no, really, I'll get it." And we'd go through it and she'd just eventually realized that it's not worth it to her for me to explain it to her. Leon: 15:50 So I had that the other day. And, and uh, again, for background context, uh, I, I work from home, so I had the same situation, you know, my wife and her sitting at the table for breakfast and we're doing, you know, reading stuff. But on top of it, my, my daughter and her children, my grandkids are living in the house with us also. So I have a three year old and a two year old and all of the things that they, they do and they listen to and their very sophisticated music that they listen to. So all of a sudden I'm laughing hysterically and my wife says, "what?" And I said "wireshark, do, do, do, do, do wireshark, do do do do", because you have to understand that that "Baby shark" is sung probably 52,000 times a day in my house. So it was just one of those things and she's like, "I don't get it." You were so close, you had everything except that one little piece. So, yeah. So Josh, how about you Josh: 16:52 Not to feel left out, I also work from home and I'm super grateful for it. One of, uh, one of the engineers on my team who lives in Boston. So if he's listening to the podcast, you know who you are. Um, he always drops these great, uh, pop culture references. Um, he is a veritable catalog of pop culture, uh, both current and historical. And the problem is that, I mean, I have no idea the other engineers, you know, they're like doing the ROFL and the LOL and you know, emojis are flying and I'm googling like a madman trying to figure out like what is so funny about that. And then I'm like, oh yeah, right. Ha Ha, lol, lowercase. That is my life. I get it. It's hard. But you know, fortunately worked from home and Google have made me seem kind of hip, you know, like, Leon: 17:44 right, exactly. And that's not just like IT people to non-IT people. I think it works for people who work in one area of IT and you know, versus another one. I think there are jokes that, you know, you have to be a storage engineer. You have to be like to "get it" right? Josh: 18:02 Yeah. We actually have a, we have a saying that it's kind of an inside joke. And I think that a lot of these jokes that we tell are really inside a humor as opposed to the traditional, you know, uh, a "Jew, a Mormon, and an atheist walk into the bar." They don't start like that. But we have, um, so our, our cloud team, uh, whenever they do something that were, uh, upset about, we'll say "what the cloud?" because that's our thing, right? It's, it's almost like, you know "what the fork?" or "holy shirt!", uh, from "The Good Place." If you haven't watched that on Netflix, you should. It's hilarious. Teaches you how to swear without swearing. It's great. Uh, but I think we all have those little sh...ticks that we throw out and uh, that is the ultimate insider jokes are the ultimate exclusivity of humor, right? You have to literally have been there and done that in order to get in on it. Um, and we've got them for technology. We've got them for a situational humor. We've got them for, uh, our religious things. Like I said, you know, the, the Green Jello joke, it just goes over roaringly, uh, and, and Mormon theology, uh, discussions and everyone else is like, "What Elliot? I like Green Jello. You guys put carrot in it? That's weird man. I don't understand you Mormons" Doug: 19:20 Thing that it does is the exact opposite? We talked about, you know, how you trying to go ahead and reach out to other groups and it's really hard. But what Josh is basically saying is we can actually use our humor to go ahead and cement the solidity of our very tight group. Oh Wow. That's so many of the jokes that are coming out of this pop culture type stuff. And you know, you are willing to go ahead and Google pop culture. And I appreciate that, uh, Josh I just, I admire your willingness to do that. I've just, uh, I've reached the point where I just don't care anymore. I was a disc jockey for like, you know, 12, 14 years. I was in pop culture. I would say celebrity, blah, blah, blah. I don't care. I haven't listened to I, it's not, we were just talking about that today. My wife and I said, I, I don't know if I've ever heard a Taylor Swift song I may have. The fact that I know that she exists is pretty much it. And so I not only am not current on pop culture, but I've also now reached the point where I don't care. I just don't care anymore. Leon: 20:23 And I think that that's sort of like you've reached your final form, you know, not only, you know, not only do you not get the joke, you don't care to get the joke. It's not, you're not curious about the joke. You just like, you know what, you know what you think is funny and everything else is like you do you, but I'm going to stay over here Doug: 20:43 Pretty much it, and they're perfectly willing to not explain it to me. That's one of the nice things about reaching a certain age is youngsters no longer care to even bother explaining it to you anymore. Leon: 20:55 Right. They just assume that you don't know. Doug: 20:57 Yeah, yeah. Josh: 21:00 You can always get back at them Doug. I found that as my teenagers drop jokes and they will sit with their friends and banter back and forth and they're just dying laughing. So the way that I get them back is that I, I drop their vernacular. I'm like at the dinner table, you know? Um, so I'll be talking to my wife and I, and I'll be telling her a story about work and I'll say, "Yeah, today I was a real baller at work. I was, you know, totally..." And my kids, let's just look at me and say, "What are you doing?" Um, so when you get, when you get to our age, I think, isn't it? You can really, the, the joke is on them. We don't actually care and we're just going to pick at you for thinking that you're, you know, so funny and welcome to old age or middle age or I don't know what we are the, we won't talk about that. Leon: 21:55 My kids have banned me from being jiggy with anything anymore. New Speaker: 21:58 (conversation fades) Josh: 22:01 Thanks for making time for us this week to hear more of technically religious visit our website, technicallyreligious.com where you can find our other episodes, leave us ideas for future discussions and connect with us on social media. Doug: 22:15 Hey, thanks for having me on. Until next time, I've got a funny story... Leon: 22:19 You know what? Nevermind, you probably had to be there.
In this mini-episode, Christina and Nicole talk about some of their favorite breakup songs because that's the best kind of love song.
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Swim in the water and jump when you hit ground The post Tiny Tunes: Grenouille appeared first on Phaune Radio.
Hugo attended the local school district's Winter Concert and this reminded him of the only time he considered playing an instrument. On his Birthday, Hugo pontificates about the passions we pursue in life and how they can be stunted or encouraged by those most important to us. Today On the Show: Violonist Itzhak Perlman: http://www.itzhakperlman.com/ Fiddler on the Roof: https://youtu.be/3yhZy0b87Eg Hugo's Insta: www.instagram.com/hugotorres/ Hugo's Writings: https://sangabrielvalley.blogspot.com/ Hugo on State: https://youtu.be/FOSIS3YzeJQ Subscribe to the Podcast or you can find Hugo on Twitter at @hugosposts on Insta at @hugotorres or his blog at sangabrielvalley.blogspot.com
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After an outrageous trip to the land of talk shows featuring pro wrestlers, Three Way Theater continues its trek across the TV landscape with a trip over to Nickelodeon for the pro wrestling episodes of Ren & Stimpy, Rugrats, Tiny Tunes, Looney Tunes, Hey Dude, and Fred 2: Night of the Living Fred! The boys discuss Mikey's seasonal depression, the awesome Nick Studios being replaced with Blue Man Group in Orlando, the logistics of Hey Dude, and how depressing Rugrats could be. Listen and download RIGHT NOW on Podbean, iTunes, TuneIn, Stitcher Radio, and ThreeWayTheater.com! Check out our new Tee Public Store! CHECK OUT OUR EGG ROULETTE CHALLENGE!
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¿Qué hay de nuevo, viejos? Los dibujos animados de Warner Bros son una referencia clave de la cultura pop. Durante décadas han creado un universo muy peculiar que surgió de la mente de talentos como Chuck Jones o Tex Avery. Junto al gran experto en animación Cruz Delgado Sánchez repasamos su origen, características e historia, todos sus personajes emblemáticos de Porky a Taz, pasando por el icónico Bugs Bunny y, por supuesto, repasamos los cartoons que más nos flipan. Además repasamos sus largometrajes con Michael Jordan o Joe Dante y todo tipo de reboots, desde los Tiny Tunes hasta los muy poochies Loonatics Unleashed. No faltará el recuerdo de algún merchandising clásico y su encuentro con los superhéroes de DC. Thats all folks!
¿Qué hay de nuevo, viejos? Los dibujos animados de Warner Bros son una referencia clave de la cultura pop. Durante décadas han creado un universo muy peculiar que surgió de la mente de talentos como Chuck Jones o Tex Avery. Junto al gran experto en animación Cruz Delgado Sánchez repasamos su origen, características e historia, todos sus personajes emblemáticos de Porky a Taz, pasando por el icónico Bugs Bunny y, por supuesto, repasamos los cartoons que más nos flipan. Además repasamos sus largometrajes con Michael Jordan o Joe Dante y todo tipo de reboots, desde los Tiny Tunes hasta los muy poochies Loonatics Unleashed. No faltará el recuerdo de algún merchandising clásico y su encuentro con los superhéroes de DC. Thats all folks!
Robert and Jake sit down with the legendary cartoonist, author, and animator, Guy Gilchrist, as he talks about what it took for him to go from doodling at his mother's cafe as a child to becoming world renown for his work with The Muppets, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Tom & Jerry, Pink Panther, Muppet Babies, Looney Tunes, Tiny Tunes, Fraggle Rock, Tiny Dinos, Nancy, and so many more. Listen as Guy talks about music and how it has always played a key role in his life and career. Listen and subscribe! And don't forget to rate and review: iTunes Podcast Stitcher Radio PodBean Twitter: @TurnedUpPodcast Instagram: @TurnedUpPodcast Facebook: /TurnedUpPodcast
The Boys open the show revealing their new door to door marketing plan. Steve Ausburne reveals tips for how to deal with Jehovah's Witnesses. Joke stealing comes up, BEEEEEF!. The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon seems to be doing okay. We learn all about Canadian Jesus. Candied bacon sounds delicious. Favorite 90's cartoons like Duck Tails, Rescue Rangers, Animaniacs, Tiny Tunes, & Darkwing Duck are remembered fondly. Whiskey Tasting Time! Sonoma County Distilling Company 2nd Chance Wheat is on the menu. Cookie Butter from Trader Joes is amazing but Barrel Proof has plans to go deeper…think Cookie Centipede. Healthy foods like Jack in the Box Tacos and McDonald's Salads are craved. Casey Williams reveals his Costco Sample Strategies. Steve manages to shoehorn in Baltimora and Tarzan Boy. Guns N' Roses and Metallica Easter Eggs are revealed. Thunder Cat is Steve's new favorite band. The career of Meshach Taylor is discussed which dovetails nicely into plans to expand the Weekend at Bernie's Cinematic Universe. WHERE ARE THE LINKS!?!?… iTunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/barrel-proof-comedy-podcast/id1029674204?mt=2 Website = http://www.barrelproofcomedy.com/ Facebook = https://www.facebook.com/barrelproofcomedy Email = barrelproofcomedy@gmail.com Twitter = @barrelproofpod
John Kassir - Heather Height Open up the show with Denise not doing a good opening… Heather Height on Skype… Chris called up and said he is not coming throws us into a tizzy and then the fucker shows up anyway – Thank God coz he knows the most about Tales From The Crypt… Talking about upcoming interview with John Kassir and what questions to ask – Did John just do the intros and outros and not seeing what is in-between? Talked about Different Stroke and then how Chris is obsessed with Big A’s date with Lady Trucker next time she is in Jersey… Talking about getting free cable back in the day… John Kassir called in… HBO’s “1st and 10” and John said Chris watched for the tits...OJ was in it… Moved to NYC and did sketch comedy and talent search from star search and beating Rosie O'Donnell and Sinbad to win the competition and was now a comic.. First job was 1st and 10. 38 year career. Heather’s line is awful and John Kassir was busting heathers chops about her cell phone ..it was on speaker phone and head phones ... Refer Madness opened days after 9-11 and it was so tough to do it .. Doing a pilot with Sid Ceasar and working with a lot of older celebrities Johnnytime ....kid show----confessions of a TV junkie --- Tales From The Crypt was the first voiceover job---creep keeper eyes is the eyes from chucky ---Kevin Yeager did the puppet ....john was talking about his audition and how he got the part...they taped the shows with the actors sometimes and they were directed by some of the best directors in the business – Sid Ceasar and Carol Burnett worked with John and also Robin Williams too ...more voiceover work after Tales From The Crypt. Talking about Lena Dunham in Girls on HBO --why does Lena Dunham get naked 6 feet under and talking about vinyl and HBO has good shows...Olivia Wylde was so good to look at ... moviemistakes.com Ray Romano looks like a Muppet. John did Peter Puma for Tiny Tunes---give a voice reference and he tries to find out how to play the character ---loop group to play different voices for everyone in the background and they make up what is to be said . loop groups work in improv ... lion king was penciled drawn ...talking about despicable me and it was hand drawn... John does voices for Disney and video games ...not getting paid fairly for some of his early voiceover jobs . and John has done motion capture work.... Next voice part is a mythical character in a live action movie .. John was in ‘Hot In Cleveland’ as a pope with Betty White. John loves horror and grew up reading Tales From The Crypt comic books ..will they ever do the crypt keeper again..time will tell ..the original was taken from 500 comic books and Paul got the wrong info ... He did a great bumper and Denise talked at the very end of it ...interview was great .. We got Heather back on Skype .. Satanism is not Devil worship and Heather describes it to us .. Talking about Heather’s fetish name Heidee Nytes where spanks man and woman Paul is licking his cum off of Denise’s back… David, Heather’s husband, likes smelly pussy and armpits ... David always wanted to do porn ...and Heather helped with his dream. Heather loves spanking porn ...weirdest things people have asked her to do ...Denise and Paul’s sex life and what they did ..anal sex. Denise is 54 years old.. Hover craft lawn mower ..flymo’s ...talking about Big A and how he got his money.. and about my workouts and how me and Paul hate sexual pain.. paid or pain --hot wax or spanking -- David is talking about Satanism --worship yourself and your own god...enjoy this world as much as you can.. Media Takeout Ghostbuster trailer is terrible and why did they have to make the new movie ..
In this episode Cullen demonstrates how to upgrade to the latest version of Tiny Tunes using Windows XP.
In this episode Cullen demonstrates how to upgrade to the latest version of Tiny Tunes using Windows XP.
Happy New Year! Have you resolved to listen to MainMenu every week this year? We hope so! MainMenu rings in 2013 with 3 new segments of interest to many who have requested reviews of Tiny Tunes and Text Detective. Cullen Gallagher brings us a review and demonstration of the new Tiny Tunes Talking MP3 Player. He shows us a lot of the great features in this little player, and a few features that need considerable improvement in their accessibility. Steve Zent then brings us a demonstration, review and discussion of the OCR app for iOS devices named Text Detective. The review was done a few weeks back, and a brand new release of this app was released on January 2nd 2013. So, you will want to hear the review and grab the updated version of this very nice app from the app store. Then David Woodbridge from www.visionaustralia.org brings us a demonstration and review of the Notes app on Mountain Lion. SO, DO NOT MISS MainMenu this week for sure!
Researchers at the University of Rochester have made it possible to digitally reproduce music in a file nearly 1,000 times smaller than a regular MP3 file by recreating in a computer both the real world physics of a clarinet and the physics of a clarinet player.