PODCAST · arts
The Fisch Bowl
by Sam Fisch
Are you a fan of all things Film, Music, Horror, Sci-Fi, Theater, and the Arts, then you are going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea and join Sam Fisch in the Fisch Bowl; where all your favorite aspects of the horror, music, entertainment, and arts industrie are covered.
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Deron McBee: "I'm Malibu Bro, What's Up?"
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl's next interview is with athlete and actor Deron McBee, known for many roles including Malibu from American Gladiators, Motaro from Mortal Kombat Annihilation, and even makes an appearance as a thug in Batman Forever and Batman and Robin! Dive back into the bowl and listen to our conversation with McBee as we discuss his experiences, career, and of course our favorite movies and TV shows along the way!Support the show
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Pittsburgh 2026 Horror Realm Convention: All Interviews
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl Podcast had the pleasure of attending Pittsburgh's 2026 Horror Realm Convention, and interview many actors and filmmakers behind the scenes of your favorite horror and sci-fi films! Now, all interviews from the convention conducted by The Fisch Bowl are here in one episode. Dive in and revisit our conversations with Andrew Divoff, Eduardo Sanchez, Clint Howard, Alan Howarth, and more!Support the show
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Pittsburgh 2026 Horror Realm Part 4: Clint Howard, William Katt, and Jeffrey Kramer
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl Podcast had the pleasure of attending Pittsburgh's 2026 Horror Realm Convention, and interview many actors and filmmakers behind the scenes of your favorite horror and sci-fi films! The fourth and final part is with actors Clint Howard, known for his roles in Ice Cream Man and The Wraith, William Katt, known from House and Carrie, and Jeffrey Kramer, best known as Deputy Hendricks from Jaws.Support the show
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Pittsburgh 2026 Horror Realm Convention Part 3: Tommy Lee Wallace, Don Shanks, and Alan Howarth
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl Podcast had the pleasure of attending Pittsburgh's 2026 Horror Realm Convention, and interview many actors and filmmakers behind the scenes of your favorite horror and sci-fi films! Today's episode is with Tommy Lee Wallace, director and screenwriter for films including Halloween 3: Season of the Witch as well as the It miniseries from 1990, Don Shanks, known for playing Michael Myers from Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, and lastly Alan Howarth, the composer and sound designer behind many of the Halloween films, Escape from New York, and Prince of Darkness.Support the show
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Pittsburgh 2026 Horror Realm Convention Part 2: Christine Elise and Eduardo Sanchez
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl Podcast had the pleasure of attending Pittsburgh's 2026 Horror Realm Convention, and interview many actors and filmmakers behind the scenes of your favorite horror and sci-fi films! Today's episode is with actress Christine Elise, known from Child's Play 2 and Bodysnatchers, and Eduardo Sanchez, co-director and writer of The Blair Witch Project.Support the show
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Pittsburgh 2026 Horror Realm Convention Part 1: Andrew Divoff and Caroline Williams
Send us Fan MailThe Fisch Bowl Podcast had the pleasure of attending Pittsburgh's 2026 Horror Realm Convention, and interview many actors and filmmakers behind the scenes of your favorite horror and sci-fi films! Today's episode is with actor Andrew Divoff from Wishmaster and Another 48 Hours, and actress Caroline Williams known from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2 and Leprechaun 3.Support the show
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Robert Kurtzman and Marcy King on Marshmallow
Send us Fan MailDive into this episode of the Fisch Bowl with Robert Kurtzman and Marcy King, where we discuss their upcoming film, Marshmallow, as well as their use of practical effects, movie adaptations, and experiences on the sets of other projects.Support the show
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122
Dying For Living: The Experiences of Patrick Kilpatrick
Send us Fan MailOn his third interview with the Fisch Bowl, actor Patrick Kilpatrick talks about his experiences in the acting world in films like Last Man Standing, working alongside household names like Christopher Walken and Bruce Willis, and his upcoming film currently in the production stage, Dying For Living.Support the show
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Jack Horner: The Rise of the Underground
Send us Fan MailDive into part two of our casual conversation with Jack Horner from The Dirt, where we discuss the underground music world up against the mainstream, as well notable bands in the scene, film scores, and the effect word of mouth has on art.Support the show
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120
Chaos, Culture, And The Sound Of Dissent
Send us Fan MailEver hear a lyric that flips on the light in a dark room? Jack Horner of the UK psychedelic duo The Dirt joins us to unpack Monkey Punch, a live-wire album tracked in just two days that insists albums should feel like stories, not shuffled singles. We dive into the line that’s still ringing in our heads—“Protons neutrons controlled by morons”—and use it as a compass for a bigger conversation about unity over division, resisting performative outrage, and building spaces where disagreement can breathe without turning toxic.Jack pulls back the curtain on process: recording live without a drummer, trusting first takes, and partnering with producer Jason Shaw to preserve grit, air, and momentum. We talk about why some songs need six and a half minutes, why vinyl’s 42-minute canvas still shapes better narratives, and how algorithmic skimming flattens meaning. If you’ve ever missed the feeling of flipping a record, this one’s for you.Culture threads through every riff. We map the parallels between long-form music and slow cinema—think Blade Runner and the rare sequel that dared to stretch time—arguing that patience isn’t a luxury, it’s a creative weapon. From social media’s shrinking attention spans to the resilience of underground scenes in the UK, US, and Japan, we make the case for art that outlasts the scroll. Monkey Punch is protest you can hum, a reminder that chaos can clarify when it’s channeled with care.Hit play to hear how a minimalist setup carries maximal intent, why the underground still matters, and how storytelling structure can turn an album into a world. If this conversation moves you, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves long songs, and leave a quick review—your words help keep the signal strong.Support the show
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Helicon, Sitar, And The Sound That Stings
Send us Fan MailEver hear a sitar slice through a wall of guitars and think, this belongs in a film? We went deep with Helicon’s John Paul Hughes to map how a Glasgow psych band turns orchestral tension into thunderous finales, why beauty lives inside noise, and how structure makes chaos hit harder on stage. From the Beatles’ psychedelic turn to Brian Jones’s restless curiosity, we explore the instruments, scenes, and accidents that shape Helicon’s sound.John shares an exclusive: the band was invited to help recreate and expand music from Brian Jones’s lost 1967 soundtrack, transforming fragmentary cues into fully realized pieces—one razor-bright sitar theme, one wild harmonica burner, and one dirge-like organ work—planned for release on Jones’s birthday. We also talk shop about curfews, timing, and rehearsing the “improvised” parts until they breathe, so finales land before the lights snap on. The conversation spirals through film culture—love for scores, skepticism toward biopics—and a candid take on authenticity, legacy, and why making music for yourself is still the only compass that lasts.Looking ahead, Helicon is building a new chapter with LA producer Al Lover, blending breakbeats, dub textures, and electronica into their sitar-and-guitar surge—a lineage closer to Primal Scream’s XTRMNTR than purist psych. Along the way we shout out key influences and peers, from Spacemen 3, Mogwai, and the Jesus and Mary Chain to modern torchbearers keeping the drone, dream, and feedback alive.If cinematic psych, lost soundtracks, and the craft behind explosive live sets light you up, press play. Then tap follow, share it with a friend who loves bold guitar music, and leave a review telling us which psych record you’d want scored for the screen.Support the show
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Helicon, Glasgow, And The Fight For Real Rock
Send us Fan MailStep into a smoky Glasgow rehearsal room and meet John Paul Hughes of Helicon, the psychedelic rock band turning influence into something fiercely their own. We go deep on craft, why permanence beats hype, and how to build songs that still feel new decades later. If you’ve ever argued that guitar music is alive and well, this is your proof.We trace the DNA from The Velvet Underground, Pink Floyd, and Led Zeppelin to Ride, My Bloody Valentine, and The Jesus and Mary Chain, then follow the sound into today’s shoegaze, dream pop, doom, and stoner rock. John Paul breaks down what “psychedelic” really means—less pedal worship, more form-breaking and emotion-driven architecture. Along the way, we celebrate a global map of scenes across the UK, Europe, Australia, and even Cambodia, showing how far this music travels and why it keeps finding new ears.The conversation lands squarely on the realities of making art now: streaming platforms that make uploading easy and discovery hard, attention spans stretched thin by short-form feeds, and a film ecosystem locked on IP and remakes. We talk arts funding, practicing until the ideas click, and starting a band later in life with a clear sense of purpose. The core takeaway is simple: make the work for yourself first. Listeners can smell the difference between a song built for a trend and a song built to last.If you care about shoegaze, psychedelic rock, indie craft, and the fight to be heard in a noisy world, you’ll feel at home here. Hit play, share it with a friend who says rock is dead, and leave a review to help more curious listeners find the show.Support the show
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Wearing The Colors Anyway
Send us Fan MailThe shine of a big break doesn’t always light the path ahead. We sit down with character actor Robert LaSardo to explore what success really feels like when the cheers fade and the measuring starts—how to wear your colors after a loss, why loyalty outlasts gossip, and what it takes to keep your spirit intact inside a machine that rewards visibility while testing your soul.Robert brings us into the surreal joy of working on The Mule with Clint Eastwood—from a simple self-tape to notes, a greenlight, and then the quiet shock of meeting a legend who leads without ego. He shares how Eastwood “plays jazz” on set, trusts improvisation, and eats with his crew like family. That humility becomes a masterclass in creative leadership: protect the work, respect people, and let honesty breathe. We also touch on a tender moment with Andy Garcia that affirms how old-school respect still matters and how being seen can reset your day.From there, the conversation tackles film literacy, lowered standards, and the seduction of spectacle. Robert contrasts meaningful storytelling with the numbing effect of relentless visual stimulation and weightless violence. He champions writing what you know, building teams around authenticity, and using craft to entertain without dumbing down. We thread Scorsese’s evolving style, Woody Allen’s neurotic wit, and the enduring power of films like The Poseidon Adventure, American Graffiti, and The Exorcist—stories that last because they carry consequence, atmosphere, and soul.Robert closes with American Trash, his new film in post-production: a raw, compassionate portrait of PTSD, apathy, and environmental care set in Los Angeles. It’s a 1960s spirit reimagined for right now, asking us to look at the ground under our feet and the people beside us, then choose community over indifference. If you care about acting, directing, or simply watching better movies, this conversation is a compass—equal parts grit, gratitude, and guidance.Enjoyed the episode? Subscribe, share it with a film‑lover, and leave a quick review to help more curious listeners find the show.Support the show
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Robert LaSardo: From Navy Discipline To Screen Grit
Send us Fan MailSupport the show
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Mall Memories And Midnight Zombies
Send us Fan MailThe best horror stories aren’t just on screen—they’re the ones told in the glow of dead‑of‑night lights, long after the credits. We sit down with cast and crew from Dawn of the Dead to relive the midnight Monroeville shoots, the improvised zombie gigs, and the wild on‑set mishaps that became legend. From a neck‑bite effect gone hilariously wrong to a crew member who asked George Romero for a shot and walked away as the machete zombie, these are unscripted, human moments that turned a cult classic into a lifelong bond.What makes these memories stick is how ordinary they started. One panelist only came because a friend insisted. Another was just an 11‑year‑old who could stay awake while other kid zombies crashed, perfectly embodying Romero’s idea of “residual memory” as he bumped a toy bike down a fluorescent hallway. A teacher brought a Super 8 camera to show students what a set looked like and accidentally created a DVD extra that now anchors the movie’s archive. The mall itself remains a character—still a place some of them shop, still a trigger for recall—with every corridor doubling as a portal back to 3 a.m.We trace the film’s unlikely afterlife through media history: from three broadcast channels and strict censorship to the arrival of pay TV, Betamax, and VHS that kept the undead alive at home. The panelists talk about walking into their first conventions in Strongsville and beyond, astonished to find passionate fans from Nova Scotia, England, Germany, even Hawaii. Autographs, photos, and t‑shirts came later; the connection came first. Decades on, the reunions feel warmer than high school anniversaries because the memories were forged under pressure, creativity, and the practical magic of Tom Savini’s effects.If Dawn of the Dead lives on, it’s because people keep telling these stories—small, funny, honest—and inviting new fans into the crowd. Join us, subscribe for more behind‑the‑scenes lore, and share your first Dawn of the Dead memory in a review or with a friend who loves horror history.Support the show
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Inside Night Of The Living Dead
Send us Fan MailA crowded floor at Living Dead Weekend, a mic in the “fishbowl,” and one of horror’s key voices reflecting on how a scrappy regional production became a global touchstone. We sit down with Russ Streiner to unpack the 30-day, two-block shoot behind Night of the Living Dead, the trade-offs of keeping commercial clients afloat while chasing a dream project, and the nerve-wracking distributor road trip that collided with national tragedy. The result isn’t a victory lap; it’s a frank study in how timing, casting, and theme can elevate a low-budget horror film into a cultural landmark.We dig into why Duane Jones’s lead performance mattered then and still matters now, and how the film’s stark frames, practical approach, and moral ambiguity gave it staying power far beyond its modest means. Russ shares how spontaneous moments and small line tweaks helped shape the movie’s voice, and we zoom out to compare craft elements—like the chilling role of music in The Shining—against Night’s raw, cut-to-the-bone rhythm. Along the way, we celebrate film geek moments, from Dr. Strangelove trivia to the joy of discovering that a kept stumble or an ad lib can become canon.Through it all, Russ credits the fans for the film’s longevity. Community screenings, classroom debates, and con conversations have kept Night of the Living Dead alive for generations, proving that independent horror thrives when audiences see themselves in the fear, the fallout, and the choices that define the living. If you love horror history, indie filmmaking, or the story behind enduring cult cinema, you’ll find plenty to chew on here. If this conversation hits home, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—what keeps Night of the Living Dead alive for you?Support the show
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Romero’s Legacy, Laughter, And Lasting Community
Send us Fan MailHorror history feels different when you’re standing where it happened. We sit down at Living Dead Weekend 2024 to celebrate George A. Romero, trade stories with longtime friends, and trace how a single location—the Monroeville Mall—became a cultural landmark that still pulls fans from the UK, Germany, and beyond. It’s part reunion, part field study in why certain films never fade: they attach to places, people, and rituals that outlast trends.Our conversation dives into Creepshow and why it remains a high-water mark for anthology horror. We talk about the EC Comics DNA baked into the film’s design, the craft of threading five stories without losing momentum, and the joy of working with icons like Hal Holbrook, Fritz Weaver, and Leslie Nielsen. The set memories are unforgettable, from performance notes to Nielsen’s infamous “fart box,” a perfectly timed prank that says everything about his comic instincts. That story becomes a lens on his career arc—from early heavy in dramatic TV to deadpan genius in Police Squad and The Naked Gun—showing how Creepshow acted as a bridge between two distinct personas.We widen the lens to celebrate genre shapeshifters like George Kennedy and Christopher Walken, exploring how great actors manage tension, timing, and tone whether they’re playing menace or mirth. There’s a loving nod to Walken’s under-the-radar comedic turn in Envy, plus reflections on why malls and movie locations function as living archives for fans. If you care about Romero’s legacy, the evolution of anthology horror, or the alchemy that lets actors cross from drama to comedy, you’ll feel right at home here—surrounded by stories, laughter, and a community that keeps the flame alive.If this conversation made you smile or sparked a new watchlist, follow the show, share it with a horror-loving friend, and leave a quick review to help more fans find us.Support the show
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George Romero’s Legacy Through The Eyes Of His Crew
Send us Fan MailHorror stays scary when the set stays alive, and few directors kept a set more awake than George Romero. We’re at Living Dead Weekend inside the Monroeville Mall with Michael Gornick and Tom Dubinsky, digging into the craft behind Dawn of the Dead, Martin, and Creepshow—where a passing idea could turn into the next unforgettable moment. From the Westinghouse lights shutting down floor by floor to a mall blood pressure machine that inspired a gnarly gag, you’ll hear how real-life details became on-screen legend through quick thinking and a crew ready to pivot.Michael and Tom pull back the curtain on Romero’s process: open scripts, sharp eyes, and a willingness to fold in whatever the world offered that day. We talk timing a helicopter shot to a skyline, inventing non-gun zombie kills like the screwdriver to the ear, and navigating mall hours where the music cut them off at seven. The result is a practical playbook for indie and studio shooters alike—use your environment, embrace constraints, and let spontaneity guide the camera.Creepshow brings a lighter twist with Leslie Nielsen’s notorious pocket whoopee cushion, a running bit that tested patience, then restored it with perfect comedic timing. We connect those pranks to Nielsen’s deadpan legacy in Police Squad and The Naked Gun, showing how performance, rhythm, and tone cross from horror to comedy with the same precision. We close with updates on Tom’s documentary work with Tony Buba and both guests’ memoirs, capturing lessons from decades of fearless filmmaking.If you care about how iconic scenes are born—half planning, half lightning strike—this conversation will arm you with tools and stories you can use on your next shoot. Listen, subscribe, and share your favorite Romero moment with us. Your pick might inspire the next great set story.Support the show
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Living Dead Weekend With Joe Shelby
Send us Fan MailThe floorboards of horror history creak a little louder when Joe Shelby pulls up a chair. We’re recording from Living Dead Weekend 2024, surrounded by friends, fans, and the kind of stories that only happen when a cult classic like Dawn of the Dead becomes a lifelong passport. Joe opens up about working within George Romero’s orbit and why that spirit of resourceful, human filmmaking still guides the way we write, cast, and shoot today.We trade neighborhood hellos for set secrets, then dig into the art of homage without the handcuffs. You’ll hear how a battered writing desk once owned by Romero turned into a ritual for screenplays, contest wins, and a published zombie rom-com that winks at horror canon while building its own world. Joe walks us through Green Man, a scrappy indie that flips an urban legend from threat to guardian, repurposes road closures into story stakes, and fills the frame with living dead alumni playing against type. It’s a masterclass in practical effects, quick pivots, and the magic that happens when your poster star is you, sprinting to the tunnel for the perfect shot.Then we turn the screws on fear itself. Inspired by Creepshow’s final segment, we dive into why cockroaches haunt the collective gut more than spiders ever could, and how sound, scale, and suggestion make small creatures feel apocalyptic. Along the way, we swap con-floor lore, celebrate generous fans who bring rare discs and red coats, and underline a simple rule: horror thrives when the community does. If you love Romero, indie filmmaking, practical effects, or the strange warmth of a genre family that remembers your name, this conversation hits home.If this sparked an idea—or a shiver—follow the show, share it with a horror friend, and leave a quick review. Your notes help us keep the lights low and the stories sharp.Support the show
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Mall Zombie to Cult Icon
Send us Fan MailA late-night ask changed horror history. We’re at Living Dead Weekend 2024 with Lenny Lee—yes, the machete zombie from George Romero’s Dawn of the Dead—unpacking how a crew guy became a cult icon, how a practical head gag sold one of the film’s most unforgettable moments, and why a 19-second shot still pulls cheers decades later. This is a ground-level look at Romero’s set culture: collaborative, curious, and open to anyone willing to get their hands dirty.Lenny walks us through the pivot from lights and camera to on-screen monster, the careful blocking behind the biker melee with Tom Savini, and the practical effects that made the “one-take” illusion feel raw and dangerous. We relive the Pittsburgh premiere when the theater roared for every familiar face, and follow the clip’s afterlife as it carried Lenny to conventions around the world. Along the way, we trade stories of 16mm projection, near-misses with hungry projectors, and backyard screenings where the thrum of the machine and fog in the beam turned film into community.We don’t stop at nostalgia. You’ll hear mall-tour trivia that digs deeper than photo ops, the reveal that David Emge (Flyboy) was a Vietnam veteran who actually knew his way around a rifle, and the wild fact that the bank scene tossed real money that had to be accounted for down to the last bill. It’s a vivid time capsule and a craft masterclass rolled into one: practical effects, analog cinema, and the fan energy that keeps Dawn of the Dead undead. If you love Romero, Savini, horror history, or the grit of filmmaking before pixels, this one’s for you. Hit follow, share with your horror crew, and leave a review with the moment that made you a Dawn believer.Support the show
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Fluffy, Fear, And The Crate
Send us Fan MailThe scare that hooked so many of us wasn’t just teeth and shadows. It was wood splintering underwater, a breath that didn’t come when it should, and the stubborn belief that a crate at the bottom of a quarry still holds something hungry. We open the vault on Creep Show’s The Crate, the creature fans call Fluffy, and the handmade practical effects that make this segment feel alive decades later.We talk about why The Crate sits at the top of our Romero list and how that cliffside ending reads like a neon sign for a sequel that never arrived. The conversation moves from fandom to the shop floor: the oversized creature head, a routed breakaway crate front, and a studio tank likely shared across segments. On take one, panic hits—proof that even seasoned crews can miss the rehearsal that matters most. That moment becomes a lesson in preparation, safety, and the strange alchemy of fear and craft that gives horror its bite.From there, we chase the artifacts that got away—those broken crate fronts and odd treasures that slip into the “murky past.” The nostalgia turns forward as we trade ideas for modern Creep Show, including a cockroach-inspired script concept itching to be written. It’s a love letter to practical effects, the Romero lineage, and the creative loop where one iconic monster sparks a new one. If you’ve ever wondered why some segments live rent-free in your head, or how a single prop can shape a generation of nightmares, you’ll feel right at home here.Join us for a candid, lively look at creature building, underwater gags, and the sequels we still dream about. If this conversation stirs your own pitch or memory, share it with us, subscribe for more deep dives, and leave a review so fellow horror fans can find the show.Support the show
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First Time Awe In Pittsburgh
Send us Fan MailThe door of the tunnel opened and Pittsburgh exploded into view—bridges, rivers, stadium lights—and we knew we were in for something special. Sitting with Alan Kaiser at Living Dead Weekend 2024, we traced a candid arc from a first-time love letter to the city to the craft and community that made Knight of the Creeps a cult classic with real staying power.Alan walks us through what made that set different: a sharp script, a director with focus, and scene partners who made every take count. He talks about the moment you know you’ve done good work—the kind of internal click artists rarely admit—and how that confidence fueled a run that led straight into Mama’s Family and a four-year series job. No shortcuts, just hundreds of auditions, relentless reps, and a reminder that momentum is a byproduct of consistency. Along the way, we touch on friendships that formed long after the cameras stopped, and why some stories keep finding new fans decades later.The conversation bends toward music, where Alan’s fandom lights up: vintage Van Halen, Blackfoot, Tesla, Godsmack, and especially Metallica. We dig into what longevity really looks like—touring hard, giving back to local communities, and staying generous with fans. There’s even a tease of future guests from Anthrax and a few backstage stories about meeting Frank Bello and Scott Ian, proof that the metal family tree keeps growing. We close with gratitude for the people who show up at conventions, the organizers who make them happen, and the city that welcomed us with open arms.Hit play for a grounded, funny, and inspiring hang that blends cult horror, 80s nostalgia, and the practical blueprint of a working artist. If you enjoyed this one, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves classic horror or metal, and leave a quick review to help more fans find the fishbowl.Support the show
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Inside Buffalo Bill’s House
Send us Fan MailEver wished you could walk through a legendary scene and feel the tension in the walls? We sit down with the mind behind Buffalo Bill’s House—the real Silence of the Lambs filming location—to share how a cinematic landmark became a stayable, tourable, and filmable experience for horror fans and creators alike.We dig into what the property offers: overnight stays for groups up to eight, guided tours from May through October, and on-location filming support for shorts, features, and pro content. You’ll hear stories from the community that sustains it, including visits from Brooke Smith, Ari Lehman, Kane Hodder, and Doug Bradley, plus a behind-the-scenes look at the interactive basement set. The famous well was built with Tom Savini’s special effects makeup program, giving guests a safe, screen-ready space to recreate moments and capture unforgettable photos.Along the way, we talk about the enduring pull of 80s slashers and action heavyweights—Jason, Freddy, Michael, Schwarzenegger, and Stallone—and how that era’s practical grit shaped this project’s ethos. This isn’t a gimmick house; it’s a carefully preserved film location that respects the craft while welcoming fans from around the world. Whether you want to book a night, hop on a tour, or roll cameras in an Oscar-winning environment, you’ll get a clear picture of how Buffalo Bill’s House became a living archive and a creative playground.Ready to plan your own visit or shoot? Subscribe for more conversations like this, share with a horror-loving friend, and leave a review to help others discover the show.Support the show
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From Creeps To Griswolds
Send us Fan MailA cult classic, a swapped ending, and a passport full of memories—this conversation with Jason Lively travels from campus-set horror mayhem to European misadventures with the Griswolds. We open on Night of the Creeps, where Jason recalls a set that felt like summer camp at USC’s frat row: late laughs, a tight crew, and Tom Atkins as the legend everyone rallied around. That on-set joy helps explain how a mid-80s gamble became a horror-comedy touchstone as audiences grew more fluent in genre mashups and meta humor.Then the twist: an unfinished effects reel screened to test audiences pushed the studio toward an alternate ending. Jason shares how director Fred Dekker wanted to finish what he started, and why the director’s cut—restored by Blu-ray champions like Scream Factory and Arrow Video—finally delivered the intended finale fans now consider definitive. It’s a snapshot of 80s filmmaking where practical effects, studio notes, and future home-video restorations collide. Along the way, we wink at Slither comparisons and talk about how horror ideas echo across decades without losing their charm.From there we hop continents to European Vacation. Jason steps into Rusty with a mix of nerves and excitement, only to find Chevy Chase turning the set into a playground that loosened everyone up. We unpack what it’s like to work a big studio comedy at a time when Chevy was in full stride, why different generations attach to different Vacation entries, and how the so-called “underrated” sequel still delivers big laughs. The story wraps at conventions, where Jason meets another Rusty, Ethan Embry, and the family tree of Griswolds becomes real—proof that characters can outgrow single films and live on through fans, reunions, and shared memories.If you love 80s horror, the Vacation franchise, or the behind-the-scenes choices that change movie history, this one’s for you. Follow the show, share it with a friend who quotes Tom Atkins, and leave a quick review—what’s your favorite Vacation entry and which Creeps ending do you back?Support the show
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Ink And Horror: Building Magazines In A Digital Age
Send us Fan MailHorror deserves ink you can hold. We sit down with art director and publisher Brian Stewart to chart a wild journey from the first death of Fangoria to launching Phantasm Media and steering Delirium with a fresh design voice. Brian shares how a single-subject magazine strategy—think George Romero, Sid Haig, Italian cinema, Linnea Quigley—creates depth you can’t get from quick-hit feeds, and why making paper in a digital world is more rebellion than nostalgia.The conversation rocks into music, where KISS served as Brian’s early compass and later creative canvas. From official poster books to tour guitar picks, he shows how rock theatrics and horror imagery fuel each other. We trade Detroit Rock City memories, swap favorite shots, and celebrate that charged moment when a bootleg screening turns a kid into a lifer. Then we map the roots of heavy metal—crowning Black Sabbath, tracing Alice Cooper’s reinventions, and tipping a hat to Rob Zombie’s showmanship—revealing the shared DNA that binds riffs, latex, and late-night double features.Center stage is a love letter to 1985. We connect the dots across Day of the Dead, Return of the Living Dead, Lifeforce, Back to the Future, Rocky IV, and Weird Science; then jump to comics with Crisis on Infinite Earths and toys with the second wave of G.I. Joe; and round it out with music sparks from S.O.D. to Dead Milkmen and Samhain’s shift toward Danzig. It’s a curated atlas of a year that rewired genre culture, the kind of deep dive only print can stitch together without losing the thread. We close with Phantasm trivia, Angus Scrimm’s towering illusion, and where to find Delirium and Phantasm’s latest work.If you love horror, metal, and the smell of fresh ink, hit play, subscribe, and share this with a friend who still files their favorites on a shelf. Leave a review to help more fans find the show and keep print’s pulse strong.Support the show
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From De Palma To Die Hard
Send us Fan MailWhat does it feel like to walk onto your first film set and see Robert De Niro, Sean Connery, and a young Kevin Costner across the room? We sit down with character actor Don Harvey for a candid tour through a career that bridges classics, cult favorites, and the small on-set details that make them stick. From The Untouchables and Creepshow 2 to Casualties of War, Don shares how early shock turned into craft, how Brian De Palma shaped his sense of cinematic tension, and why some “horror” films like Carrie live comfortably in the mainstream canon.The conversation turns kinetic when Bruce Willis enters the frame: Die Hard 2 and Hudson Hawk become a window into how action movies are built, with a hat tip to screenwriter Stephen E. de Souza. Don’s stories land where craft meets personality—like Thomas Jane shooting Vice barefoot in a three-piece suit and getting away with it because the camera rarely shows the floor. We zoom out to the power of scene partners, with vivid portraits of Liam Neeson’s generosity and Forrest Whitaker’s method intensity, and we spotlight Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai as a lean, inventive gem powered by RZA’s score.We also swap origin stories. Our host traces a lifelong movie habit back to Back to the Future Part III and the electric memory of a theater’s glow, then shares a writer’s path forged in Pittsburgh—typing every script at George Romero’s own desk. Don contrasts Michael J. Fox’s effortless charm with Sean Penn’s deep immersion on Casualties of War, revealing how set dynamics shape performances and friendships alike. We close with a friendly canon skirmish—The Godfather or Goodfellas—and an open door to keep the conversation rolling.If you love behind-the-scenes truth, actor craft, and film history that breathes, hit play, subscribe for more conversations like this, and tell us where you land: Godfather or Goodfellas? Share the show, leave a quick review, and join the debate.Support the show
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Terror On The Raft
Send us Fan MailWhat makes an ordinary lake feel more dangerous than the ocean? We sit down with actor Daniel Beer to unpack the cold, creeping terror of Creepshow 2’s “The Raft” and why that simple setup—four friends, one raft, and an intelligent slick on the water—still gets under the skin decades later. Daniel shares how he played calm against panic, approaching survival like a puzzle while the monster and the clock closed in. We dig into practical effects, shared memories of swimming out to rafts, and the way relatable settings intensify fear.The conversation tackles the controversial mid-segment moment with clear eyes, looking at how 80s teen-comedy norms collided with horror and how shifting standards change the way we read characters today. Daniel argues the ending hits harder because morality is muddy—classic Creepshow justice that feels earned and unsettling at the same time. That theme opens a bigger window into the anthology’s world: no one is spotless, and consequences have teeth.Then we turn the dial to Point Break and ride a different kind of adrenaline. Daniel recalls FBI prep, on-set dynamics with Keanu Reeves, and why Kathryn Bigelow’s craft turned high-concept action into a timeless classic. From grounded procedure to kinetic stunts, we connect the film’s staying power to tangible filmmaking—practical effects, real motion, and character stakes you can feel. You’ll also hear the backstory of a now-famous finger gag that slipped from a stakeout scene into pop culture folklore.If Creepshow, practical effects, and action-thriller storytelling are your jam, this one’s for you. Hit play, rank your favorite Creepshow 2 segment in the comments, and if you enjoy the show, follow, share with a friend, and leave a quick review—it helps more horror and action fans find us.Support the show
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102
From Blood To Blockbusters
Send us Fan MailYou can feel it the moment Howard Berger starts talking: the best practical effects don’t just decorate a story, they drive it. We sit down with the KNB EFX cofounder to unpack how scrappy bets, obsessive planning, and a fierce love for monsters shaped modern genre cinema. From the unlikely $1,500 script that launched Quentin Tarantino to a fully storyboarded From Dusk Till Dawn handoff that let Robert Rodriguez focus on energy rather than logistics, Howard maps the decisions that turned cult ideas into enduring franchises.We dive into the KNB partnership model that keeps the work fresh: Greg Nicotero helms the gore and undead empire while Howard steers character-first makeup shows. That yin and yang unlocks range—from Grindhouse and Planet Terror to intricate prosthetics that demand patience and precision. Along the way, Howard reflects on why some films surprise even the crew, how nonlinear storytelling redefined what a “genre” movie can be, and what it takes to keep a team “frosty” through long days and high stakes. The stories stretch from Lovecraft and Bride of Re-Animator’s brutal build to the relationship-first choice to do Cabin Fever at cost, which opened doors to Hostel and beyond.What emerges is a blueprint for sustainable creative careers: respect every project, plan like your life depends on it, and choose collaborators who sharpen your voice. If you love 80s–90s horror, practical effects, or the crossroads where indie grit meets blockbuster scale, this conversation is a masterclass in turning latex, blood rigs, and storyboards into cinema that sticks. Hit play, share with a horror-loving friend, and leave a review with your favorite KNB effect moment—we’ll read the best ones on a future show.Support the show
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101
Voices Behind Your Favorite Nightmares
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100
Sasquatch, Slashers, And A Signed Skull
Send us Fan MailThe best horror conversations start with a prop on the table. Ours begins with a skull covered in signatures and spirals into a fast, funny, and surprisingly heartfelt ride through Abominable, Victor Crowley, and the moments that turn midnight movies into lifelong obsessions. With Tiffany Shepis at Round Con 2025, we unpack the creature‑feature charm of Abominable, why its stacked cameos keep blindsiding us, and how a “Friday night sci‑fi” label hid a sharp, crowd‑pleasing thriller in plain sight.From there, we head straight into the Hatchet universe. Tiffany shares what it felt like to get the secret Victor Crowley script and discover her scenes would carry real dramatic heft inside a franchise famous for gleeful gore. We revisit a Halloween pre‑screening that welded shock and nostalgia into a perfect theater memory, then step back to ask a bigger question: why does horror still default to female nudity while dodging male bodies? The answers aren’t tidy, but the conversation is honest, and it points to how the genre keeps evolving when filmmakers challenge the gaze and let character guide the heat.Because no horror chat is complete without mythbusting, we get nerdy about scene logic—specifically, how water displacement might have saved a character from drowning—and spin that fix into a fearless sequel pitch. Imagine Victor Crowley as an accidental caretaker, raising a child born of tragedy, turning a slasher into a twisted study of grief, legacy, and survival. It’s part love letter, part thought experiment, and a reminder that cult films live on when fans and creators dream out loud together.If creature features, practical effects, and franchise lore make your heart race, you’ll feel right at home. Hit play, trade us your favorite Abominable cameo, and tell us where you’d take the Hatchet saga next. Subscribe, share with a horror‑loving friend, and leave a review so we can keep digging up the cult gems you care about.Support the show
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99
Horror Fandom At Warp Speed
Send us Fan MailThe floor is loud, the badges are bent, and we’re already arguing. From the first hello, we jump straight into the hot coals of horror fandom: which sequels actually move the story forward, and which ones only replay the trailer in longer form. The Scream series takes center stage as we unpack the leaked script saga, rewrites that changed character arcs, and the emotional whiplash of loving a franchise that sometimes loses the thread. One of us left Scream 3 devastated—not by fear, but by a sense of promise broken—and that wound becomes the lens for why sequels must do more than echo their origins.We pivot to Nightmare on Elm Street to map how a franchise can reinvent itself without burning its roots. Dream Warriors stands tall for its ensemble spirit and operatic imagination; New Nightmare earns equal praise for bringing terror into the “real” world and reshaping meta-horror into something unnervingly sincere. Those contrasts let us define what makes a sequel essential: new stakes, new questions, and a tone that deepens the original myth instead of flattening it. Along the way, we celebrate Barbara Crampton’s range and the tactile wonder of practical effects that give From Beyond and Re-Animator their lasting bite.Then we dig for treasure in the VHS dark: Lovecraft adaptations that never got the restorations they deserve, footage rumored lost, and the heartbreak of films trapped in rights limbo. That sparks our dream slate—The Cats of Ulthar, The Terrible Old Man, and The Hound—reimagined with veteran horror icons, a moody modern score, and a director who respects shadow and silence as much as spectacle. It’s part wishlist, part manifesto for preserving cult cinema so new fans can discover it beyond grainy bootlegs.If you’ve ever defended a maligned sequel, hunted for a lost cut, or whispered praise for an underseen classic, you’re among friends here. Hit play, then tell us your top Scream ranking and the one Lovecraft story that deserves the big-screen treatment. Subscribe, share with your horror crew, and drop a review so more fans can find the conversation.Support the show
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98
Behind The Mask: Making Killer Klowns From Outer Space
Send us Fan MailEver wonder what it’s like to act when your costume is literally glued shut? We take you straight onto a cult-horror set, where latex suits creak, tiny motors hum inside masks, and the blood gag has to hit its mark on the first try. It’s sweaty, surreal, and oddly joyful—exactly the messy alchemy that turns a low-budget oddity into a lifelong favorite.We break down how performers adapt when they can’t hear live direction, why body language becomes the lead actor, and how practical effects teams choreograph with camera operators to sell impossible moments. The “blood cocoon” sequence gets a full deconstruction, from rig setup to the shock of watching that red surge on playback. Along the way, we map the film’s DNA: TV creature-features, B-movie tradition, and the VHS era that made sleepovers and cult classics inseparable. Camp and dread mingle on purpose—clown faces, carnival colors, and suburban backdrops twist into something both funny and unsettling, which is exactly why the imagery refuses to leave our heads.We also open the vault on sequel chatter. Scripts exist, energy is high, but rights tangles and studio timelines keep the brakes on. We talk about protecting the original’s texture if a new chapter lands: practical effects over polish, tactile gags over clean CGI, and performances that read through foam, paint, and silence. Fans keep the flame alive, and we’re right there with you, cheering for the greenlight and promising to keep the story honest if it comes.If cult horror, practical effects, and the secret life of monster suits are your thing, you’ll feel right at home. Hit play, share with a friend who rewound VHS tapes to rewatch the kills, and drop a review to tell us your favorite practical gag—and whether you’d brave a glued-shut suit for movie magic.Support the show
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97
Killer Klowns, Cult Staying Power
Send us Fan MailA seemingly “too weird to work” movie becomes a touchstone for generations—that’s the magic we tap into as we sit down with voices from Killer Klowns From Outer Space at Four Realms 2025. From the very first fangirl moment to a cascade of memories about rubbery practical effects, late‑night shoots, and a cotton‑candy sense of menace, we explore how a film that defied every box ended up building a box of its own: a beloved cult home where fans keep coming back.We revisit the origins of the roles, laugh through a gracious name correction, and dig into the tactile craft that made the Klowns feel real enough to haunt dreams. You’ll hear why practical effects still matter, how tone can be both playful and unsettling, and what turns a one‑off oddity into a tradition parents share with their kids. Along the way, we map the modern ecosystem—action figures, special editions featuring Mike and Debbie, and a video game that reintroduces the world to new players—showing how physical collectibles and interactive media keep the universe alive.Of course, the big question hangs in the air: will a sequel finally happen? We unpack the rights maze, the misreadings from risk‑averse studios, and the irony of a script once labeled “the worst” becoming the seed of a fan movement. The takeaway is both simple and rare in Hollywood: originality endures when the audience claims it. Until the paperwork clears, the community keeps the tent lit. If you love cult horror, practical effects, or stories of creative persistence, you’ll feel right at home here.Enjoy the conversation? Follow the show, share it with a fellow Klowns fan, and leave a quick review—what scene still lives in your head?Support the show
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96
Women Of Evil Dead II Revisited
Send us Fan MailBlood sprays, walls laugh, and somehow it’s beautiful—Evil Dead II still feels brand-new because the craft behind the chaos never ages. We sit down with Cassie DePaiva and Sarah Barry to pull back the cabin door and share how a tight script, fearless performances, and razor-sharp timing turned a low-budget experiment into a horror-comedy landmark.We dig into the set culture that made it work: Sam Raimi’s precise plan behind the camera, Rob Tapert’s ruthless schedule, and Bruce Campbell’s physical timing that carried wild gags without losing heart. You’ll hear the real cost of practical effects, from Ted Raimi’s infamously brutal latex suit sequence to the day-by-day discipline that kept the shoot safe and inventive. Dan Hicks’ quick wit, on-set camaraderie, and the crew’s shared rhythm reveal why the film’s tone holds together—loose in spirit, exact in execution.Along the way, we trace the franchise’s arc through fan memories, book signings, and the Ash vs Evil Dead series, asking what later entries miss and where they strike gold. The answer keeps circling back to Evil Dead II: fresh, handmade energy that blends horror, black comedy, and a strange kind of beauty. If you’ve ever wondered how terror and slapstick can live in the same heartbeat, this conversation delivers the playbook and the war stories that built it.If you enjoyed this deep dive, follow the show, share it with a fellow Deadite, and leave a quick review—what’s the one Evil Dead II scene you’ll never forget?Support the show
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95
Behind The Mask Of Thanksgiving
Send us Fan MailA fake trailer doesn’t usually earn a second life, let alone a cult following—but Thanksgiving cut a clean path from Grindhouse gag to modern slasher icon. We pull back the curtain with the team who wore the mask and took the hits, tracing how a simple holiday hook became a full-feature blueprint: clear geography, practical gore, and a killer whose movement tells the story before any line does. From first day in costume to the moment the prosthetics clicked, you’ll hear how on-set improvisation and smart use of the environment shaped kills that feel inventive, readable, and brutal in all the right ways.Working with Eli Roth meant moving fast without losing detail. We talk about his TV-honed pace, the enthusiasm that powers a long day of blood and latex, and the little choices that keep a slasher grounded instead of campy. The conversation dives into tone—how to keep the old-school spirit without getting stuck in homage—and why practical effects and tight blocking make even the wildest set pieces feel “real.” You’ll also get a candid look at the surreal milestone of seeing your own villain turned into an action figure, and why collectibles matter for building a lasting horror myth.Beyond the gore and gags, we explore why this story reached beyond hardcore horror fans. The concept is immediate, the silhouette is memorable, and the craft rewards repeat viewing. If you’re curious about stunt performance, creature acting, or the anatomy of a great kill, this is your front-row seat to the process that turns ideas into nightmares. Hit play, then tell us your boldest sequel prediction. If you enjoyed this conversation, follow the show, share it with a horror-loving friend, and leave a review to help others find us.Support the show
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94
Sharks, Slashers, And Sequels
Send us Fan MailSalt spray, shark lore, and the thin line between fear and fandom—this conversation dives straight into the craft that gives horror its bite. We open with Tom Morton’s vivid memories from Jaws second-unit work on Catalina: underwater setups, safety puzzles, and the gritty logistics that made the original feel so real you can taste the brine. Those details set the stage for a bigger question we keep returning to: why do some sequels become legends while others wash out?We explore the rare alchemy of a sequel like Aliens, which flips from slow-burn terror to high-stakes survival without breaking the emotional spine of the story. From there, we test the limits of escalation across Pirates and Blade, where charm can buckle under lore and noise when “bigger” crowds out character. Slashers add a different tension: brand identity. Fans who want the “real” Jason or Michael often bristle at detours, yet time can turn a maligned entry into a cult favorite once the shock of difference fades. Tom shares how a copycat twist was slammed on release but later found defenders who appreciated its sly humor and craft.Nostalgia frames the second half. We remember the electricity of 80s hype—the Thriller premiere, Tyson fights, midnight lines—and how that communal build-up amplified every scare. That lens helps explain why remakes stumble: a shot-for-shot Psycho can mimic the frame but not the era’s pulse. We talk Nosferatu echoes and why reinterpretation beats replication, especially when a story returns with a fresh thematic heartbeat rather than brand gravity alone. Through it all runs one thread: practical realism and purposeful reinvention outlast spectacle. When a film preserves texture, honors character, and evolves its idea, it earns its place in the canon.If the craft behind your favorite scares fascinates you—and if you’ve ever argued about which sequel is secretly the best—press play, then tell us where a franchise won you back or finally lost you. Subscribe, share with a fellow horror fan, and leave a review with your most controversial sequel take.Support the show
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93
From Cuckoo’s Nest To Cult Horror
Send us Fan MailA cinematography book changed the way Michael Berryman acts—and it might change the way you watch movies. We sit down with the cult horror icon to unpack how learning the camera’s language during One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest helped him craft the precise, unsettling presence that made The Hills Have Eyes a classic.Wes Craven saw potential and built space for it, and Michael takes us behind the dust and danger of guerrilla filmmaking: tiny budgets, big tension, and choices that turn limitations into atmosphere. We compare the raw force of the original Hills with the visual polish of the remakes, exploring where modern craft shines and where it slips, all through the lens of intent, pacing, and composition. Along the way, we trade stories about Rob Zombie’s eye for framing, his reverence for genre history, and the art of homage done right, from Peckinpah echoes to the details that make frames feel dangerous.The conversation widens into favorite films—Soylent Green, Blade Runner—and why dystopia and horror share more than mood. It’s about worldbuilding that shapes performance, production design that pressures characters, and those quiet seconds where the frame does the scaring. Whether you’re here for filmmaking craft, cult horror history, or practical acting insights, you’ll hear a rare blend of experience and humility from someone who’s lived inside the genre’s most enduring images.If this conversation sparks something, follow the show, leave a quick review, and share it with a friend who loves horror. Your support helps more curious listeners find the craft, the stories, and the legends behind the monsters.Support the show
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92
Rock Returns With Gyasi
Send us Fan MailGuitars that bite, hooks that stick, and a frontperson who treats the stage like a high-voltage ritual—this conversation with Jossie pulls back the curtain on how modern rock gets made and why it still matters. We start where the obsession began: Beatles on repeat, pots-and-pans drum kits, blues records on the family stereo. That early gravity toward rhythm and melody grew into a craft sharpened at Berklee, where songwriting, arranging, and gypsy jazz chops turned raw instincts into reliable tools.From there, Jossie walks us through the leap from DIY everything—writing, producing, mixing—to teaming with Nashville producer and engineer Bobby Holland for Here Comes The Good Part. The difference isn’t about polish for its own sake; it’s about choices that make the songs hit harder. We get real about the push-pull between total control and a producer’s perspective, the kinds of decisions that change a record’s color without losing its edge, and the joyful chaos of building a live band that can deliver theater and thunder in equal measure.Tour talk gets honest fast. Europe grew first, with three runs leveling up into sellouts and a September–October swing already in motion. The U.S. remains a maze—big distances, siloed markets, and budgets that balloon on off-nights—so the plan is precision: festivals, strategic cities, and rooms that fit the moment. Pittsburgh’s Mr. Smalls earns a nod as a perfect match. We also dive into visual identity (why the covers center Jossie), stagewear with purpose, and the rising wave of female-led rock that’s pushing the genre forward.If you’re curious about how great records really come together, how touring decisions get made, and how a single well-placed sync can change the trajectory of an indie project, this one’s for you. Press play, meet the mind behind the music, and hear why the next chapter is already being written between meetings and midnight writing sessions. Subscribe, share with a friend who misses loud guitars, and leave a review with the city you want on the tour map.Support the show
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91
Psychedelic Currents, Modern Fires
Send us Fan MailThe storm outside was real, but the conversation turned into shelter. We sat down with John Treanor of Tombstones in Their Eyes to trace the long arc from childhood piano lessons and punk’s fearless ethic to the fully realized pulse of Asylum Harbor. What emerged is a candid look at how modern psychedelic rock, shoegaze, and dream pop can still feel dangerous, beautiful, and cohesive—an album you play all the way through, not a playlist fragment.John walks us through the band’s origin story, from Dropbox demos with James Cooper to the steady climb through EPs and albums that shaped their sound. We unpack the contrast between Sea of Sorrow’s heaviness and Asylum Harbor’s unified mood, why he writes fast instead of chasing perfection, and how that urgency translated into organic college radio momentum well beyond the typical promo cycle. Along the way, we swap scene notes on Spacemen 3, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, The Dandy Warhols, The Black Angels, and other psych staples, plus overlooked gems like Guitaro and Jesus On Heroin that deserve fresh ears.Visual identity matters here too: the recurring ship‑in‑a‑storm artwork, a metaphor for getting through life, created by different artists each release, with Asylum Harbor’s striking cover from South Africa’s One Horse Town. We also talk discovery in 2020s rock—how Europe, Australia, and New Zealand are feeding a healthy underground—and why album flow, deep harmonies, and longer tracks still build a deeper bond than instant singles ever could. John closes with news of a bigger live lineup featuring dual female vocalists, a focus on becoming a powerful stage act, and smart, targeted touring on the West Coast with an eye toward the East.If you care about psychedelic rock, shoegaze, and the art of making records that hold together like a film, this one’s for you. Hit play, share it with a friend who lives for deep cuts, and if it moved you, subscribe and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.Support the show
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90
Weed, Wait Times, and Why the Chicken Sandwich Is Always “Two Minutes Out”
Send us Fan MailThe funniest part of chasing a dream isn’t the victory lap—it’s the miles you put in when nobody’s watching. We sit down with comedian Nathan Lund to talk about building a career that lasts, why “making it” doesn’t always mean going viral, and how to earn laughs fast without losing your voice. Nathan breaks down why open mics are still the best classroom, how one-minute sets can teach brutal lessons about pacing, and why patience beats panic when you’re new and hungry.We wander into movie-geek heaven—character actors who steal scenes, the tonal whiplash of Judgment Night, and sleeper gems like Things to Do in Denver When You’re Dead and Hard Rain. If you love the faces you always recognize but can’t always name, this part’s for you. Nathan connects the dots between those unsung film heroes and the role of a working comic: consistent, essential, quietly elevating everything around them.There’s a candid detour into weed policy, vaping hazards, and what smart psychedelic use actually looks like. Think set and setting, not stunts. We talk microdosing, avoiding panic spirals, and why access to cannabis still gets tangled in outdated rules. It’s harm reduction without the lecture—and a few very funny stories about trips that landed well.We close with updates on Chubby Behemoth (weekly free and Patreon episodes), the travel series Wide World (Tokyo, Paris, Colorado plains, and Rome), and where to catch Nathan on the road. If you’re curious about starting stand-up, obsessed with deep-cut movies, or just here for smart, unpretentious comedy talk, you’ll feel right at home.If this hit the spot, follow, share with a friend who loves stand-up and cult films, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show.Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show
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89
Michael Ciravolo: The Man Behind Beauty In Chaos
Send us Fan MailMichael Ciravolo, President of Schecter Guitars and the creative force behind Beauty and Chaos, pulls back the curtain on his musical journey in this candid, free-flowing conversation about artistic integrity in the digital age.Beginning with his formative musical awakening—watching Mark Bolan of T-Rex perform on late-night television—Ciravolo reveals how his approach to guitar playing has always prioritized emotion and expression over technical showmanship. This philosophy carries through to his work with Beauty and Chaos, a revolutionary musical collective that has featured over 25 singers and 60+ musicians across four studio albums. Rather than functioning as a traditional band, the project allows Ciravolo to collaborate with artists from legendary groups like The Cure, Ministry, and Body Count while maintaining complete creative freedom.Throughout our discussion, Ciravolo delivers passionate insights on the diminishing value placed on music in the streaming era. "I always say if you like an artist or a band and you want them to make another record, buy their stuff," he urges, highlighting how physical media creates a deeper connection between listeners and music. His commitment to creating complete albums rather than singles stands as a deliberate rebellion against disposable consumption habits. "I try to always look at it going: we're coming in to make an album... from the title, the cover, it makes it a package, something complete and not just one song."The conversation weaves through discussions of influential guitarists, the evolution of rock through the decades, and memorable collaborations, including working with Ice-T on the Beauty and Chaos track "A Natural Disaster." Ciravolo also shares exciting news about upcoming projects, including a stripped-down, almost acoustic version of "Made of Rain" featuring a duet between vocalists Ashton Knight and Whitney Tai.Discover why Michael Ciravolo continues to push creative boundaries while honoring musical traditions in this revealing glimpse into the mind of a true artist. Check out Beauty and Chaos on vinyl, digital platforms, and look for their newest video coming June 18th.
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The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Michael Myers Icon Tony Moran Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!! Are you fans of John Carpenter's Halloween? If the answer's yes than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with Michael Myers character actor Tony Moran live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!Support the show
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87
The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Night Of The Demons Icon Amelia Kinkade Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!!! Are you fans of the 80's horror franchise Night Of The Demons? If the answer's yes than you're going to want to swim down to deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with scream queen star Amelia Kinkade live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!Support the show
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86
The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Scream Queen Icon Jennifer Banko Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!! Are you fans of both the Friday The 13th and Texas Chainsaw Massacre Franchises? If the answer's yes than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's podcast interview with scream queen Jennifer Banko live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!!Support the show
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85
The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Wrestling Icon Gail Kim Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAre you a fan of wrestling and horror? If the answer's yes than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's podcast interview with wrestling icon Gail Kim.Support the show
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84
The Fisch Bowl Talks: With The Purge Election Year Icon Brittany Mirabile Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!!! Are you fans of The Purge Franchise? If the answer's yes than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with The Purge Election Year's co-star Brittany Mirabile live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!!Support the show
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The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Iconic Academy Award Winning Special Makeup Effects Artist Ve Neill Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!! Are you a fan of Tim Burton movies and Johnny Depp? What about movie monsters and special makeup effects? If the answer's yes to both of these questions than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with Academy Award Winning special makeup effects artist Ve Neill live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!!Support the show
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The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Friday The 13th Franchise Icons Darcy DeMoss & Tom Fridley Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!!! Are You fans of the Friday The 13th Franchise? Is your favorite sequel in the franchise Part 6: Jason Lives? If the answer's yes to both these questions than you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sean, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with Darcy DeMoss & Tom Fridley live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!Support the show
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The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Iconic Horror Actor C.J. Graham Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!! Are you a fan of the Friday The 13th franchise or Highway To Hell? If the answer's yes, then you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with C.J. Graham aka Jason Voorhees aka Hellcop live from Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023!!!Support the show
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The Fisch Bowl Talks: With Iconic Horror Actor Thom Matthews Live From Pittsburgh's Horror Realm Con 2023
Send us Fan MailAttention all you Fisch's in the sea!!!! Are you a fan of the Friday The 13th franchise or Return Of The Living Dead? If the answer's yes, then you're going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea, and check out The Fisch Bowl's exclusive podcast interview with horror icon Thom Matthews live from from Pittsburgh's Horror realm Con 2023.Support the show
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Are you a fan of all things Film, Music, Horror, Sci-Fi, Theater, and the Arts, then you are going to want to swim down to the deepest depths of the sea and join Sam Fisch in the Fisch Bowl; where all your favorite aspects of the horror, music, entertainment, and arts industrie are covered.
HOSTED BY
Sam Fisch
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