PILTDOWN MAN AND THE CARDIFF GIANT

PODCAST · comedy

PILTDOWN MAN AND THE CARDIFF GIANT

Two longtime friends, one a former comedian and the other a world traveler, riff on life, the arts, music, sports, travel and Horehound candy, and follow rabbit holes on just about anything.  Much of it tongue in cheek while entertaining themselves and hopefully you. Future plans are interviews and at least one listener.

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    (34) "The Night A Nude Stranger Attacked My Door... And Other True Dating Misfires"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Some bad dates are just awkward. Others turn into lifelong stories you tell when you need a reminder that you survived.We’re Joe Flush and Eddie Penn, and we’re digging into the dating disasters that shaped us, from painfully quiet prom nights and getting stood up at a church hayride to the kind of confidence swings that make you kiss a screen door and still keep trying. We talk about how early rejection can harden into self-doubt, how that mindset can push people into the wrong relationships, and why learning to laugh at yourself is sometimes the first real step toward growth.Then the stories get bigger: a dinner date derailed by nonstop sneezing, an attempted romantic parking spot interrupted by a cop, and online dating chaos before apps made it “easy.” There’s a declined credit card moment, a meal that suddenly costs more than planned, and a reminder that money stress and pride can wreck connection fast. We also touch marriage and divorce, the danger of living by a relationship script, and what it means to rebuild boundaries after everything falls apart.By the end, we land somewhere surprisingly hopeful: being single can be fun, and the best dating lesson might be realizing you can make yourself whole again. If you’ve ever searched for bad date stories, online dating disasters, or honest relationship advice, you’ll feel seen here.Listen now, subscribe, and if you laughed or winced, share it and leave a review. What’s the worst date you’ve ever had, and what did it teach you?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (33) “The Derby Betting Mindset With Renowned Comedian, Handicapper And Horse Owner Mark Klein As Our Special Guest. Horse Racing Is Not About Money, It Is About The Story."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A Kentucky Derby saddle hits the auction block, the bids stay quiet, and for a moment it looks like a once-in-a-lifetime piece of racing history might land in the right hands. Then the price explodes at the last second and the dream disappears. That’s where the larger conversation really starts: why horse racing gets under your skin, why we chase it year after year, and why the best part often isn’t the money, it’s the story you get to tell afterward. We’re joined by Mark Klein, a Louisville comedian and racehorse owner who has lived both the comedy-road grind and the track life. We talk Churchill Downs lore, family gambling legends, and the weird way Derby trivia becomes permanent brain furniture. Mark explains why you can’t handicap the Kentucky Derby intelligently without post positions, why you often have to toss half the field, and why wide-open years create both opportunity and chaos in pari-mutuel betting. Then we get into the modern reality: you’re not just betting against the guy next to you anymore. Computer-assisted wagering can crush odds in a blink, so we focus on what’s still real for a small player, like paddock handicapping, horse body language, and noticing what a horse looks like five minutes before they load. Finally, Mark lays out a clear Derby strategy, including his top horses and a “life-changing” $1 superfecta box. If you love Kentucky Derby picks, horse racing handicapping, or just great road stories from a working comic, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a racing friend, and leave a review with your Derby exacta so we can compare tickets.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (32) "Trying To Buy Calvin Borel's Saddle , Walking To The Moon, Wooing Marilyn McCoo, And Other Things That Will Never Happen While Ed Dances with An Angel."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A beat-up road tiller, some yard work, and a little golf sound harmless, but our chat takes a wild turn fast. We start trading small-life updates, then we land on a real piece of Kentucky Derby history: the online auction of jockey Calvin Borel’s saddle. That opens the door to what makes horse racing unique, why “riding the rail” can be brilliant or brutal, and why winning gear can carry scars that tell the whole story of how a rider threads impossible gaps.From there, we wrestle with something every sports fan eventually faces. What does it mean when champions sell the things we assume they would keep forever, like trophies, rings, or a career-defining saddle? We talk about the uncomfortable mix of pride, heartbreak, and practicality behind sports memorabilia auctions, plus how money changes the way we assign “value” to memories.Then we swing into lunar science and pop curiosity: the moon drifting away from Earth, why the “dark side” is a misleading phrase, how poorly the moon reflects sunlight, and even what astronauts said moon dust smelled like. A fun thought experiment follows, walking to the moon in roughly nine years, before we get philosophical about relativity and the idea that there may be no present at all, only past. Finally, nostalgia hits as we swap stories about early crushes and cultural icons, including Marilyn McCoo and Farrah Fawcett, and we tease a Kentucky Derby related special guest coming up next.If you like conversations that connect horse racing, space facts, time theory, and laughter, hit subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a review. What topic should we accidentally spiral into next?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (31) "Joe’s Eleven Ramps To Recovery...A Comedian's Practical Rules For Rebuilding A Life After Hard Times."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A spacecraft loops around the moon and comes home safely, and we’re grateful, but we also ask the uncomfortable question: why doesn’t it feel as electric as it once did? That little moment turns into something bigger, because the same thing happens in our personal lives too. Big events fade, losses stack up, and eventually we have to figure out how to rebuild when the old version of “normal” is gone.We pivot into Joe’s “11 Ramps to Recovery,” a practical, funny, and surprisingly tender set of rules for personal growth, resilience, and mental health. We talk about kindness that shows up in real life like tipping well, softening the habit of saying you “hate” everything, and making new friends before loneliness makes the choice for you. We get honest about time management as a reflection of priorities, and we push into self-reflection and critical thinking that questions our own beliefs instead of only judging other people.It also gets personal: humiliation, depression, and those rare people who stand by you when you’re not at your best. From there we hit compassion for animals, the freedom that comes with being okay with being disliked, and why exercise for the body and mind matters more as you age. We wrap with two simple joy engines: adopting a rescue dog and making somebody laugh, even if it’s just you. If you like thoughtful comedy, self-improvement without the fluff, and real-life recovery tools, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (30) "The Vietnam Draft Years. What Do You Owe A War You Never Fought?"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. The Vietnam draft turned everyday life into a waiting room, and we still remember the feeling. One minute we are laughing about imaginary “Spotify peace prizes” and our weird little podcast rankings, and the next we are back at Selective Service registration, staring down the possibility of Vietnam and realizing how random the whole system could be. If you have ever wondered why that era left such a long shadow, this conversation lays it out in plain language and lived detail.We talk through how the draft lottery worked, what it meant to pull a low number, and why people tried anything to avoid going. Flat feet, blood pressure tricks, joining a different branch, ROTC, Canada, even self-inflicted injuries get mentioned, not for shock value but to show the real desperation behind “draft dodging.” We also share what ROTC and basic training felt like on the ground: marching, map reading, inspections, medals, and the ridiculous shoe polish schemes that seemed smart until they blew up in your face.The hardest part is what comes after the facts: the shame some of us carried for not serving, and the relief of hearing from a Vietnam veteran that people are built for different kinds of service. We touch on guns and the M16, the strange satisfaction of learning the mechanics, and the complicated mix of pride, fear, and doubt that still shows up decades later. If this brings up memories for you or your family, listen, then subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find these stories. What is one detail from the draft era you think people today misunderstand?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (29) "Growing Up Before Safety, Stop Saying VIN Number And SEC Conference Or Ed Will Stroke Out, And With Whom Would You Like To Share One Last Meal."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. The Stone Age lasted so long it almost swallows the calendar, and that idea kicks off a wide ranging conversation about how slowly humans changed until everything sped up. We start by noticing how our little show travels further than we ever expected, then we zoom out to the “ages of man” and the mind bending scale of time between early tools and modern tech.From there we get concrete and personal: growing up when cars had no seat belts, kids bounced around the back seat, and safety was mostly a shrug and a warning like “don’t touch that.” We talk about how the Tylenol tampering crisis pushed medicine into the era of tamper evident seals and childproof caps, and how that legacy shows up today in the plastic wrapped world of product packaging and liability fear. If you care about consumer safety history, everyday risk, or how regulations get written after tragedy, you will feel the tension we wrestle with.Then we take a turn into language and communication, because social media makes bad grammar impossible to ignore. We debate apostrophes in plurals, TO vs TOO vs TWO and the difference between an acronym and an initialism, plus why phrases like VIN number and ATM machine drive some people up a wall. Finally, we end with a question that gets real fast: if you could have dinner with one person living or dead, who would you pick, and what would you ask them now?Subscribe for more stories and arguments, share this with a friend who loves nostalgia and language debates, and leave a review. Who would you choose for that dinner and why?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (28) "Leave It All On The Court While Jimmy Buffett Shows Why Time Feels Faster Now"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A harmless sports phrase can hide a whole worldview. We start by pulling apart the lines you hear in every postgame interview, then ask what those clichés do to fans, players, and anyone who believes the moment on the court is the only moment that matters. Along the way, we share a candid on-mic scare about aging and anxiety, and why we choose to leave the imperfect parts in instead of sanding them down for comfort.From there we move into sports media and sports commentary, including a throwback to the NFL experiment that aired a game with no commentators at all. We talk about what you gain when you only hear the field, and what you lose when color commentary turns every missed call into a scandal. That leads straight into referee hate, internet outrage, and why it feels like everyone is one bad whistle away from becoming a target.Then we hit the real accelerant: sports betting. FanDuel-style gambling doesn’t just make you care who wins, it makes you care about every borderline call, every replay review, and every last-second decision that shifts a line. We also touch on how college sports keeps looking more professional, with eligibility and incentives pushing players to stay longer and chase the best financial outcome.To close, we change gears into Jimmy Buffett, A Pirate Looks at Fifty, and the kind of nostalgia that doesn’t sugarcoat time. We talk art over money, the pull to return to remote places, and how small wins can matter more as the clock moves faster. If this one hits home, subscribe, share it with a friend who loves sports and stories, and leave us a review. What’s one cliché or habit you’re ready to drop?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (27) "The Quest For Sue. A Wild Tour Of Space Travel, And Dinosaur Deep Time With Cohost MK Hall"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Voyager is so far out that even talking about it makes your brain stretch. We sit with that feeling, then let it pull us into a wide-ranging, funny, and oddly grounding conversation about space exploration, the Artemis program, and why “going back to the Moon” still raises tough questions. I’m joined by MK as we restart Episode 27 after a lost recording, and the do-over turns into the kind of unscripted hang that makes big topics feel human. From interstellar distance to Mars skepticism, we kick around what progress actually looks like when timelines are measured in decades and budgets. We also detour through the pop culture that shaped how we picture space, because those old shows and movies still sneak into how we talk about real NASA plans. If you’ve ever wondered whether a Mars mission is inevitable or mostly storytelling, you’ll feel right at home with our mix of curiosity and doubt. Then we make a hard turn into paleontology and dinosaur history, sparked by a documentary that reignites awe. We get into deep time, why some “facts” like Brontosaurus got messy, and why Jurassic Park is a great title even when the dinosaurs people think of are tied to the Cretaceous. The highlight is Sue, the famous T Rex at the Field Museum in Chicago: the discovery, the lawsuit over ownership, and the practical museum detail that her massive skull can’t just sit on the neck. If you love dinosaurs, natural history museums, or science facts that bend your sense of time, this one’s for you. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves space or dinosaurs, and leave a review if you want us to keep chasing weird questions. What’s the last science fact that genuinely stopped you in your tracks?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (26) "From Three TV News Networks To Infinite Feeds-Now Spackle Your Basement And Eat Oreos."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. The world felt different when the whole country got its headlines from a handful of familiar voices. We start with a little everyday comedy, then jump into a nostalgic but clear-eyed look at broadcast TV news when ABC, CBS, and NBC shaped how people understood history in real time. We talk Walter Cronkite, Huntley and Brinkley, Peter Jennings, and what it meant to grow up with news that was limited, shared, and oddly grounding.From there, the memories get bigger and heavier: hearing about JFK’s assassination at school, living through Cold War fear during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and watching families make plans that ranged from practical to almost symbolic. We also wrestle with the political arc that followed, including Lyndon B. Johnson’s complicated legacy, the Vietnam War, civil rights legislation, and the way power worked behind the scenes. Along the way, we remember another unifying media moment: the moon landing, when technology, awe, and national attention lined up on one screen.Then we bring it straight into the present. Today’s media ecosystem runs on endless choice, confirmation bias, and “news” that can be custom-built to match whatever you already believe. We share a firsthand story about flat earth misinformation and connect it to a bigger problem: how to tell what is true when the internet rewards certainty over evidence. Finally, we look at AI deepfakes and synthetic audio, and we offer grounded, practical ways to evaluate sources without giving up or giving in. If you like thoughtful conversations about trust in the news, media literacy, and modern misinformation, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (25) "Pass The Potatoes And Let Them. Why Being Disliked Is None Of Your Business."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A packed hospital parking lot shouldn’t turn into a philosophy talk, but that’s exactly where we go. We start with a real day of juggling mobility issues, doctor visits, and the maddening hunt for a spot while rows of accessible spaces sit empty. From there we zoom out to what disability access is supposed to solve, why ADA ramps and wider spaces were a huge win, and why the system breaks down when people treat accommodations like perks instead of necessities.Then we get uncomfortably honest about the little ways we all bend the rules. The “stink eye” for parking where you shouldn’t, the temptation to grab the roomy handicapped bathroom stall because it’s open, and the mental gymnastics we use to justify it. Accessibility is law, but it’s also character, empathy, and the decision you make when nobody is watching.The second half turns inward. We talk about growing up caring what people think, feeling like the black sheep, and the exhausting urge to fix every broken relationship just so we can feel liked again. Therapy helps us land on a line that sounds simple and hits hard: if people don’t like me, that’s none of my business. We tie it to perfectionism, learning Spanish through immersion in Cuernavaca, and the freedom of showing up imperfectly. If you’ve ever wanted to be “beloved” by everyone, this one will feel familiar.Subscribe for more conversations like this, share the episode with someone who overthinks everything, and leave a review so more listeners can find us. What’s one situation where you need to “let them” and move on?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (24) "From Goldilocks In The Vo-Vo, To Cornhole Champion Murderer, to Birthday Twins, to What You Do When Life Says Enough.""

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A couch that’s too low, a bed that’s too high, an air conditioner that’s never “just right” and suddenly you’re living inside a Goldilocks story while trying to keep real life moving. We kick things off with Joe Flush and Edward Penn swapping the kind of caregiving tales that are only funny because they’re true, including a Volvo that’s taken so many hits it’s missing a letter and a household routine that now depends on patience, timing, and a sense of humor.Then we pivot to pure pop culture joy: Clint Howard is “back in the studio” via a signed Star Trek photo, which turns into a surprisingly sincere appreciation of character actors, aging in public, and what it means to lean into what makes you distinctive. From there, a single headline derails everything: a multiple amputee champion cornhole player arrested for murder. We can’t stop breaking it down, questioning how it even works, and admitting why weird news grabs us harder than it should.The back half gets personal in a different way with celebrity birthday twins, including Margot Martindale, plus a detour through Ed’s own match and a brand-new birthday bar joke. We close on a tougher, honest note with YA Tittle’s iconic “The End Of The Road” photo, the temptation to chase “one more minute,” and the reality that you eventually have to find a new lane, even if you still want the old one. If you laughed, share it with a friend, leave a review, and subscribe so we can keep building toward the next milestone.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (23) "Horton Heard A Who, Jump Jip Jump, And Other Bad Ideas. Special Guest MK Hall Joins Joe And Ed, On Reading From Golden Books To Orwell."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Your reading history is basically a biography you didn’t mean to write. We start with a silly detour through “23” and end up somewhere surprisingly personal: the earliest books we can still name, the family routines around reading, and the exact moments a story latched onto our brains and never let go. Mary Kay joins us as a special guest and longtime co-reader, and the three of us compare notes from Little Golden Books and early school primers to the titles that made us feel smart, scared, rebellious, or wide awake.We talk about growing up with libraries, bookmobiles, and those old-school library cards, plus the weird power of bedtime stories like Grimm’s fairy tales. From there, we jump to school reading culture: honors English requirements, the temptation of Cliff Notes, and why some “short” classics still hit hard. Animal Farm, Hemingway, Orwell, and the way political ideas sneak into narrative come up as we remember what we understood then versus what we understand now.The conversation turns toward adult reading and the books that change your internal compass. Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl becomes a major touchstone, and we also dig into modern reading habits, book clubs, nonfiction, science writing, and why Stephen King might be more underrated than people admit. We even get into the impulse to chase a canon by reading a full list of the top American novels, and what it means that time makes us forget the details but not the imprint.If you love books, reading, libraries, classics, or the simple question “what should I read next,” you’ll feel at home here. Subscribe for more, share this with a reader friend, and leave a review. What’s the one book you’d put on your personal must-read list?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (22). "Thoughtless Nuttall And The Catfish Nobody Kept with Special Guest and Amateur Genealogist Jim Wade."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A numb mouth, a big bill from the dentist, and a birthday that lands on the same age a father died somehow turn into something unexpectedly meaningful: a deep dive into family history that’s funny, tender, and a little haunted in the best way. We start with the uneasy way milestones can stir up grief, then follow the thread that always pulls us back together, stories.From there, we get into naming traditions, Kentucky roots, and the chaos of family trees where “Grant” and “Bob” keep showing up in new forms. Cousin Jim Wade joins us and suddenly we’re back at Thanksgiving, replaying childhood nights of Strat-O-Matic, Sports Illustrated games, and homemade board games built from whatever was on hand. Those memories aren’t just nostalgia, they’re proof of what stuck when everything else changed.Then the genealogy really kicks in: Ancestry.com research, scrapbooks, and old letters that still sound like real people talking. Jim tells the wild origin of the name Thoughtless Nuttall traced back to an 1850s argument about innocence and sin, then we wander through Civil War era details, family “dirt,” and the way documents and nicknames can blur together over time. We end with farm stories, Depression-era survival, and a legendary pond catfish that might deserve its own headstone.If you love genealogy, family storytelling, oral history, or just hearing people make sense of where they came from, hit subscribe, share this with someone who knows the old stories, and leave a review. What’s the strangest name or legend in your family tree?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (21) "From Little League and Stand Up To Late Nights: Special Guest Tim Hockensmith On Fears, Mentors, Mistakes, And Finding Your Voice."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. What if your worst night on stage became your best story about courage? We bring Tim Hockensmith into the studio and trace the messy, funny, and strangely tender line between fear and growth—from a Little League dugout to a Lexington comedy club where the house lights came on and the jokes looped like a broken record. Along the way, a road comic offers surprising encouragement, a club owner delivers a lesson on originality, and we discover why being “likable” isn’t enough if you’re not being yourself.We rewind to 1975 and a Goodyear team that rarely won but somehow still mattered, because a coach promised equal playing time and kept the receipts. That same spirit shows up when Tim tackles public speaking and later picks up the guitar at 61, not for applause, but to play one song for his granddaughter. We talk about how repetition builds confidence, why teaching traffic school turned into the best exposure therapy, and how humor—used with care—can transform a room full of reluctant learners.The conversation gets real about fear: claustrophobia in a packed elevator after a Braves game, the rattling clamor of an MRI, and the heavier weight of watching parents face Parkinson’s and cancer. We balance the hard with the soft—Johnny Carson’s raised eyebrow, Rodney Dangerfield’s rapid-fire rhythm, and the kind of nostalgia that lets you exhale. If you’ve ever wondered how to push past nerves, start a creative habit later in life, or turn a public failure into a private win, this one’s for you.Hit play to laugh, nod, and maybe plan your own small dare—a three-minute mic, a new chord progression, or a kinder rule for the team you lead. If the episode resonates, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs a nudge, and leave a review to help others find the show. What fear will you nibble at next?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (20) "Where's Waldo?-Two Friends Trace A Crooked Path From Oily Bolts To Tax Forms"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Ever felt like your whole career was a series of side quests that somehow turned into a life? We trace that crooked line with stories that swing from a deep construction hole to a sprawling warehouse full of oily bolts and impossible quotas, then pivot to the quiet logic of choosing a stable state job over flashier sales money. Along the way, we use humor to admit what work really takes: endurance, small schemes that help you survive the day, and the humility to pick trade-offs you can live with.We dig into the grind behind “simple” jobs—how 52 orders an hour isn’t motivation, it’s a maze you learn to navigate while your fingernails ache from metal shavings. Stacking window fans to the ceiling doubles as a puzzle and a lunch-time hideaway. The crew politics, the nicknames, the way one overperformer can raise the bar for everyone—these are the unglamorous truths that build character even when they don’t fill a resume. And then there’s the money wisdom most people learn too late: refunds don’t mean you “won” taxes, withholding is a lever not a score, and stability can be worth more than a bigger paycheck when the benefits and sanity add up.We also rewind to school and the odd paths that led us here—guidance counselors guessing “dress designer,” bunny courses that taught us more about systems than subjects, and the strange fact that testing well can open doors a major never will. There’s a throughline from craft jobs and bureaucracy to writing and comedy: fitting pieces together, finding the premise, landing the punch. By the end, we’re teeing up a deeper dive into state tax work and a long stretch on improv and stand-up—the places where hard days become good stories.If you’ve ever had a job that felt like a dare, or traded prestige for peace, this one’s for you. Listen, share it with a friend who’s stuck between pay and purpose, and leave a review with the toughest job you ever had and the lesson it left behind.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (19) "I Brought A Phillips 66 Screwdriver To A Phillips Problem-Early Jobs Before We Knew Why."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Ever have a job that smelled like hogs, paid in blisters, and still left you oddly proud? We go back to the work that raised us: gas station sprints to the pumps, oil can pyramids, crawling under a house to dig for an HVAC install, and long days stacking hay so tight a truck could lean and never spill. Along the way, there’s a one-armed coworker who solves a wheelbarrow problem with a rope and a nod, a widow who pays in Kool-Aid and a single piano hymn, and fathers who taught more by yelling than by guiding.The thread tying these stories together isn’t nostalgia—it’s the ledger of effort and identity. One of us dodged chores and still got handed responsibility with the shop keys; the other paid rent as a teenager and bought his own clothes with farm wages. We weigh what money meant before we had any, and how praise from peers sometimes fills the silence where a parent’s approval should have been. The craft of work shows up in small, exact moments: knowing how to load a hay wagon that will not budge, spotting the right tool without a label, and finding out that repetition builds both strength and a strange kind of calm.Then there’s the hard edge. We hauled heavy cans of grade C milk for cheese plants, lifted a hundred pounds to the truck bed over and over, and drove roads that made the load sway. The warning about a beam giving way seemed like tall talk until a driver on the other route died exactly that way. We don’t polish that memory, but we don’t let it erase what we gained either: a sense of grit, empathy for people who keep going, and a clearer view of how early jobs shape who we become.If you’ve ever wondered why a compliment from decades ago still echoes or why certain tools feel like old friends, this one will hit home. Press play, share it with someone who’s hustled through a rough summer job, and tell us: what was your first real job and what did it leave you with? Subscribe, leave a review, and drop your story—we’ll read our favorites on a future show.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (18) "Altitude Sickness, Pickpockets, And Boobies: Travel Tales With Heart."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Breathless in Quito, dazzled in the Galapagos, and lighter one wallet in Barcelona—we trace a messy, meaningful arc through the kind of travel that leaves a mark and a moral. We swap stories from Machu Picchu’s terraces to Ireland’s chalk-dusted betting rings, pairing wonder with the unglamorous truths of altitude, street smarts, and plans that fall apart.We start with Peru: Cusco as a launchpad, the Urubamba River roaring beyond its banks, and Machu Picchu framed by cloud and stone. That beauty carries a cost—distance from care and the thin line between ambition and prudence—so we talk plainly about aging, risk, and why returning sometimes means staying home. Quito follows as a paradox: a city rich with culture and thinner-than-thin air. One of us faints, twice, learns a hospital from the inside, and still calls it worth it because the Galapagos awaits with warm-water penguins, blue-footed and red-footed boobies, and islands so different you can see evolution with your own eyes.Then Spain turns from postcard to plot twist. Barcelona sweeps us up—tapas, guitar, the thrill of just being there—before a pickpocket at the bus station resets the day. A police report becomes comedy gold, safety pins become fashion with a purpose, and we outline simple, proven tactics for keeping your money and your nerve: front pockets, split cards, low-profile habits, and a plan for when things go sideways. We round out the journey with the Irish Derby, where old-school bookies and a modest bet become a $3,800 lesson in restraint and luck, plus a white-knuckle lap around Ireland’s narrow roads and the humility that follows a fender-bending mistake.Across these miles, a theme holds: travel is a dialogue between intention and surprise. The best souvenirs are skills—how to breathe at 9,000 feet, how to read a crowd, how to savor a city without turning your pockets inside out. If these tales stirred a memory or sharpened a plan, tap follow, share with a friend who loves imperfect adventures, and leave a review to tell us where we should head next.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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    (17) “Mud Pies, Mumbly Peg, Jarts, and Bikes, Plus The National Sign Museum and Why Nostalgia Still Pulls Us Back."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A comedy weekend turns into a time machine. We head to Cincinnati to catch John Mulaney, then stumble into the American Sign Museum and watch a whole century of light flicker back on—hand-painted walls, incandescent bulbs, and neon glass bent by steady hands. Along the way we crack up over Mulaney’s pitch-perfect RFK bit, note how his voice has shifted since his last special, and trade the kind of travel mishaps that leave you sore and oddly grateful.That detour into signs becomes a story about memory you can touch. Big Boy grins, Mail Pouch barns, Rock City arrows—icons that once anchored road trips and small-town pride—now restored by artists who still know how to coax gas into a steady glow. We talk about how neon got labeled “urban blight,” why it vanished from streets, and what it means to see young craftspeople learning the old ways. Preservation stops being a museum word and starts feeling like a living studio, loud with tools and patient with process.From there the conversation slides straight into the high-risk playgrounds of our childhoods: outlawed yard darts, mumbly peg, and the knife game “stretch” that should have come with a waiver. We laugh at our luck, wince at the physics, and admit what drew us in wasn’t pain—it was agency. Then it’s bikes with one speed and coaster brakes, scabbed knees that lasted all summer, and a siren installed solely to impress a pair of twins who—plot twist—didn’t live there. Winter adds slapstick of its own: sleds sharpened for speed, snow pans dented beyond mercy, and a failed “snowboard” flight that writes its lesson in bruises.Under the jokes sits a clear theme: risk and craft give life its edge. We can embrace safer gear and smarter choices without sanding off curiosity. Whether it’s a comic reshaping his story, a glass bender restoring a glow, or two old friends retracing the maps of their youth, paying attention turns moments into markers. If that blend of humor, nostalgia, and hands-on craft hits home, follow the show, share this episode with a friend who needs a laugh, and leave a review to tell us your most dangerous childhood game and the landmark you still miss.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  19. 21

    (16) "We Came For John Mulaney And Stayed For Felix The Humping Dog, The Beatles, The Stones, and The Brain That Never Stops Playing Music."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Ever plan a simple weekend and realize it comes with a logistics spreadsheet? We kick off with a light roast of our “tongue in cheek” ranking, celebrate a small milestone, and map a quick Cincinnati run to see John Mulaney—detouring for the American Sign Museum and a few baseball statues. Then life intervenes: two dogs, two personalities, and one earnest lecture from the boarding staff. It’s funny because it’s true, and it sets the stage for the real theme—how music, memory, and age pull at each other.The heart of the conversation lands on the Beatles and why their songs still hit. We unpack the band’s name origins, trade favorite tracks—Yesterday, Let It Be, Blackbird, In My Life—and weigh that kaleidoscopic range against the Rolling Stones’ ironclad longevity. We talk creative pressure and why repeating hits dulls the spark, using the leap from Rubber Soul to Sgt. Pepper as proof that reinvention can be a plan, not an accident. From there we time-jump to the discovery engines of a three-channel world: Shindig, Hullabaloo, and Where the Action Is, where you could stumble on Otis Redding after homework.The road leads to the blues and its best myths—Robert Johnson at the crossroads, John Lee Hooker holding a room from the edge of the stage—and the way feel beats technique when a guitar line reaches your ribs. Jazz slips in as thinking music—Chick Corea, Dave Brubeck, Maynard Ferguson, Ramsey Lewis—steady as a backdrop. We admit our pop blind spots, defend the right to like what moves you, and salute unique voices like Nina Simone and Janis Joplin that no cover quite touches. One of us confesses to hearing music all waking hours, a private station scored by memory, and we test the idea against our own tiny “poll.” The answer says a lot about how differently art lives in each of us.If music has ever shaped your plans, saved a day, or lived rent-free in your head, you’ll hear yourself in this one. Hit follow, share with a friend who argues Beatles vs. Stones, and leave a review telling us the song that never lets go.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  20. 20

    (15) "Third-Fastest Monobob By A Bisexual Over 40 On A Wednesday and other Sport's Records"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. What makes a record feel legendary instead of disposable? We chase that question from a tongue-in-cheek debate about what “best friend” even means to the big, beating heart of sports: the stories we attach to numbers. From Pete Rose passing Ty Cobb to the tangled legacy of the 1919 White Sox, we relive the moments that turned stats into myths—and wonder whether the modern flood of micro-stats and betting angles has drained some of the magic or just changed the way we watch.Baseball gives us the blueprint. We revisit the 1961 Yankees’ home run race, where Roger Maris—quiet and not built as a classic slugger—outpaced Babe Ruth’s ghost while Mickey Mantle carried the city’s affections and an aching body. Then we pivot to Cincinnati, mapping Bengals milestones that still thump: Corey Dillon rumbling into the record book, an early playoff surge that defied expansion-team odds, and a quarterback lineage filled with both brilliance and heartbreak. Ken Anderson’s Hall of Fame case, Carson Palmer’s derailed trajectory, and the what-if legend of Greg Cook remind us how fragile greatness can be.And then there’s speed you have to feel to believe. Standing 15 feet from Michael Johnson as he scorched the 400 in Atlanta, we learned how thin numbers are without the sound of spikes and the whip of air. That’s the thread running through it all: records land when the human story is loud enough to carry them. We wrap with a candid look at comedy contests, the strange currency of trophies, and how “winning” only matters if it opens a door you actually want to walk through.If you love sports history, Bengals and baseball lore, or just want to argue about what counts as the “best,” you’ll find plenty to push back on—and maybe a memory or two to carry with you. Hit follow, share with a friend who still cares about box scores, and leave a review telling us the record that still gives you chills.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  21. 19

    (14) "Banana Fana Identity Crisis: Judy, Flush, Lalo, and ELP Walk Into A Podcast"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Ever had a name cling to you that didn’t feel like yours? We dive headfirst into the messy, funny, and surprisingly tender business of what people call us—and what we choose to call ourselves. Joe traces a path through a family of Josephs to Jody, a teacher’s accidental Judy, and a protective teenage pivot to “Joe Flush.” Ed unpacks moving from Eddie to Ed and the shock of becoming Lalo in Mexico, where local culture hands out new nicknames like invitations. The result is part comedy, part identity study, and part survival guide for anyone who’s been renamed by life.We explore why pen names matter, from Stephen King’s Richard Bachman to the quieter reasons people separate creative work from their public persona. Then we blow up common filler phrases—I ain’t gonna lie, can I be honest with you, and the customer-service standby no problem—to show how language nudges expectations. When thanks meets no problem at a counter, we accidentally frame paid service as a favor. That tiny swap reveals how the words we choose can either clarify a social contract or fog it up.Along the way we test the pop wisdom that you can do anything you dream. A long-jump legend helps us admit that bodies, physics, and time set boundaries—and that embracing real limits makes room for better goals. We close by savoring the beauty of language itself—archipelago, antediluvian—and how favorite words become a small self-portrait. If you’ve ever tried to outgrow a nickname, wrestled with a label that didn’t fit, or noticed the script in your own speech, this one’s for you. Listen, share your best or worst nickname story, and if you enjoy the ride, subscribe, rate, and leave a quick review so others can find us.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  22. 18

    (13) "Small Bus Measurements, The Metric System, and Facebook Fakes... Plus, What A Teacher With Grit, and a Stranger With Scooby Doo Underwear, Taught Us About Giving and Receiving Help"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A figure skating toss “the length of a small bus” sparks a sprawling, funny, and honest journey through the ways we measure more than distance. We start with playful wordplay, then dig into why the United States still resists the metric system—touching on history, identity, and the myths we tell ourselves about doing things “our way.” The point is not to win a units debate; it is to notice how habits harden into pride, and how pride can keep us from simpler solutions that the rest of the world uses without a second thought.From there, we zoom out to how other countries carry their patriotism. After years of travel, one truth stands out: most people don’t chase a global scoreboard; they want a country that works. That contrast reframes the metric stalemate and opens a candid look at media literacy. We break down viral fakes—icy crashes with frozen bystanders, a deer “coughing up” a jug—and share field-tested cues for spotting what does not add up. If pixels can lie, our first defense is a slower eye and sharper questions.The heart of this conversation beats through two stories about dignity and kindness. An algebra teacher with serious physical challenges refuses help to avoid the trap of victimhood and models grit that lasts a lifetime. Then a rainy flat tire becomes a mirror: a rough stranger with real tools steps in, expectations crumble, and a quiet lesson forms—sometimes the braver act is letting others help. We wrestle with why accepting support can feel harder than giving it, how aging shifts that balance, and why receiving help can be a gift to the giver.If you’ve ever argued miles versus kilometers, rolled your eyes at viral clips, or hesitated when someone reached for your elbow, this one will feel close to home. Hit play, subscribe for more candid takes with humor and heart, and share this with a friend who loves a good story. Tell us: when was the last time you let someone help you?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  23. 17

    (12) “Bottles Tossed at Comics, TV Obsessions And The Shows That Shaped Joe and Ed

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Bottles thrown at comics. Rabbit ears wrapped in foil. Prestige dramas that made us cancel plans. We start with the wild rooms that forged our instincts for story and timing, then dive headfirst into the shows that keep us up too late and talking too loud.We trade reverence and side-eye for the heavyweights. Breaking Bad still feels airtight, every choice paid in full. The Wire demands patience in season one, then opens up a systemic x-ray of power, labor, and the streets in season two. We wrestle over Shrinking—one of us thinks the profanity is earned texture, the other calls it extra—yet both of us agree the ensemble pulls you into honest conversations about grief, boundaries, and messy healing. Landman gets our attention for its oil patch stakes, flawed operators, and the uneasy crossroads where money, land, and danger intersect.Nostalgia has receipts. We split the DNA of MASH—the film’s sharp anti-war current versus the series’ bittersweet humor—and remember the era when three channels and a good antenna defined community. Taxi becomes our clinic in ensemble magic: Judd Hirsch’s quiet gravity, Danny DeVito’s bite, Andy Kaufman’s fragile oddity, and Christopher Lloyd’s scene-stealing chaos. Then we jump forward to the modern carousel: The Walking Dead’s moral calculus, Squid Game’s social dagger wrapped in spectacle, Doc Martin’s droll genius against postcard cliffs, and Resident Alien’s joyous fish-out-of-water medicine.What ties it all together isn’t genre—it’s empathy and craft. We show up for characters who earn their turns, writing that respects attention, and worlds that let humor and hurt sit in the same room. Hit play for lively debate, deep cuts, and a watchlist that spans PBS comfort to streaming thrills. If you’ve got a 10 out of 10 series we missed, we want it on our list. Subscribe, rate, and drop your pick—what are we queuing up next?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  24. 16

    (11) "Joe and Ed Trace Piltdown Man and Cardiff Giant Hoaxes, Seabiscuit vs War Admiral, And The Winter Olympics"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Two legendary hoaxes, a bruising dentist visit, and a sprint through Winter Olympic highs shouldn’t fit in one conversation—but that’s exactly why this one hooks you. We start with the Piltdown Man and the Cardiff Giant, not as trivia, but as a lens on belief: why grand stories seduce experts and fans alike, and how institutions cling to comforting myths. That same urge to crown legends takes us straight to Seabiscuit vs. War Admiral. We unpack bloodlines, the Triple Crown context, and why a single race comes to define memory, then challenge the habit of projecting human regret and legacy onto animals who only know speed, hay, and the next bell.From there the mountain calls. We wrestle with the thrill and danger of downhill skiing, the hard question of whether injured stars should compete if it costs a rising athlete their first shot, and the quiet strategy of curling—golf and chess on ice—where a few feet of sweeping change the whole endgame. Cross-country earns our respect as a test of mind over oxygen debt, while personal wipeout stories deliver the humility check: ski lifts can be final bosses, and a German ski-jump catwalk is no place for a photographer with cold hands. Eddie the Eagle pops up as the eternal lesson that heart can steal the show even when physics says no.Figure skating rounds the arc from elegance to acrobatics as quads rewrite what audiences expect, echoing a culture that chases difficulty points and fast metrics over slow grace. We close with the 1980 Miracle on Ice, setting the record straight that beating the Soviets wasn’t the gold-medal game—proof that real life rarely ends at the perfect headline. Through every turn, we keep circling the same question: how do ego, risk, and resilience shape the stories we tell ourselves about truth and triumph?If this mix of history, hot takes, and hard-earned laughs hits your lane, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help more curious listeners find us. What moment stuck with you most?Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  25. 15

    (10) "Wolverines Don’t Do Scruffs" Zoo Vet Stories In Real Life With Joe's Daughter Dr. Holly Holman

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. A coffee-cup toast sets the tone, but the conversation quickly turns fierce, funny, and deeply human as we welcome Dr. Holly Holman—zoo veterinarian turned small-animal chief of staff—who has stood at the edge of lion enclosures and in the eye of national controversy. From a childhood love of exotics and space camp dreams to a residency at the Columbus Zoo and a decade at Zoo Boise, Holly traces the hard-earned craft of caring for every species in the room when there is no “giraffe-only” doctor to call.We dive into the practical realities of zoo medicine: how animals remember dart events and people, why redundancy at the door can save lives, and what happens when a wolverine wakes mid-move. Holly unpacks the chaos and purpose behind sloth bear introductions—those cartoon-dust clouds of fur that can lead, with careful oversight, to successful breeding—and the discipline it takes to step back or step in. She shares the heartbreaking night a trespasser tried to steal a patas monkey, and the impossible calculus of the Zanesville mass release, when public safety collided with animal welfare and responders faced decisions that would define headlines.Holly brings it home with a candid look at her current chapter: leading a small clinic, mentoring teams, seeing dogs, cats, and exotics, and balancing work with family and a lively household pack. Along the way, we explore ethics, training, hybrid big cats, and why competency in this field looks like humility, checklists, and a quick phone call to the person who’s done the hard thing before. If you’ve ever wondered what zoo veterinarians really face—or how animal behavior, safety, and policy meet in the real world—this is your front-row seat.Enjoyed the stories and insights? Follow, subscribe, and leave a review to help others find the show—then tell us which moment surprised you most.Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  26. 14

    (9)b" Wacky Us Wacky Wisconsin part 2" " (Dr. Evermor's Forevertron, House on the Rock, Frank Lloyd Wright House, and Pinky the Elephant)

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  27. 13

    (9)a "Wacky Us Wacky Wisconsin" (part 1 before Eddie lost his signal) Boom Shakka Lakka Waitress, The International Mustard Museum...

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  28. 12

    (8) "Squeaky Chair, Our Music Talents, and The Beatles."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  29. 11

    (7) "Dogs, and People Who Inspire, Including Joe’s Favorite Teacher. Oh My"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  30. 10

    (6) "You Ain’t All That" (Rating Our Looks from One to Ten)

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  31. 9

    (5) "Games, Sports, Kentucky Wildcat Basketball, Cincinnati Reds Baseball and Brian"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  32. 8

    (4) "Free Fallin' For Seniors sans Tom Petty...Joe and Ed Discuss Their New Reality After Serious Falls"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  33. 7

    (3) "Ed Will Never Kiss Me Like That-Joe's Wife MK Cohosts in Place of a Battered Ed"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  34. 6

    (2) "Brushes With Celebrities-Jesse Owens, Strother Martin, and Don McClain and others"

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

  35. 5

    (1) "If You Spill A Cup Of Urine On The Floor, Tell Someone..."

    We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes.  Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve.thanks for listeningJoe

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Two longtime friends, one a former comedian and the other a world traveler, riff on life, the arts, music, sports, travel and Horehound candy, and follow rabbit holes on just about anything.  Much of it tongue in cheek while entertaining themselves and hopefully you. Future plans are interviews and at least one listener.

HOSTED BY

Joe Flush

CATEGORIES

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