Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hi, and welcome back to another great edition of Access
podcast the podcast About Podcast. I'm your host Maddie Stout
and with me in studio is producer z Z. Last
week we were off, I was very sick and now
you have the plague. It is going around, but at
(00:25):
least you came in. So this week we didn't want
to bring any guests into the plague written studios of
My Heart Radio, so we thought we would do a
special edition of Access Podcasts. You know, in the business,
we always do special editions when something's going on and
we can't do a normal show, so then it becomes
a special edition. But I guess this one is special
(00:46):
break from an interview, it isn't, I guess. Well, but
not really, because what we're gonna do for this special
edition is play you back some of our favorite answers
from the segment called three Killer Questions. I love it's
my favorite. Now, if you don't know three Killer Questions,
that means you probably only listen to the first few
minutes of the show, or you only listen to the
interview and you don't stick around maybe towards the end
(01:08):
of the interview. So rude, So rude. It is rude,
shame on you. Thanks for listening. Just keep listening. Share Subscribe, Yeah, share,
subscribe to all that Luke comments. Tell your friends listen.
So three killer questions Every week I ask three questions.
They're usually the same questions, but I will vary them
from time to time based on the guest. And I
(01:30):
thought maybe in case people don't know what it is,
I would do three killer questions with u Z. I'm
so nervous. Why are you nervous? My hands? I don't
think I can think of something off the top of
my head. I'm not that clever, but I'm gonna try. Okay,
my hands are sweating. First question. First question. When I
ask everybody if you could listen to a podcast featuring
anybody alive or dead, look at you. I'm like really exciting.
(01:58):
So if you could listen to a podcast with any buddy,
living or dead, who would be on the show. I'm
going to say, Oh my gosh, you were stretching time
out with the Peyton Manning. What Yeah, Peyton Manning, he's
kind of a quiet, reserved guy. I want to know
more about his I really want to know what goes
on his head while because I think he's the smartest
(02:20):
quarterback that we've ever had, that the NFL has ever had,
maybe Anthony Bourdain. See this is nerve wracking. I'm so
feel my hands. They're actually sweaty. They are gross. I
interviewed Anthony Bourdain and I did, and I was a
complete dufus I was such a fan girl. It's hard
not to be around him. I feel like I was
(02:41):
terrible with him. I I it was. I thought when
I listened back, maybe it wouldn't have been as bad
as I thought. It was worse. Oh you know who?
Maybe I would want dead? Who's dead? Sorry? R I
P Prince a Prince podcast. Yeah, that would be pretty
interesting because he's got a lot of stories. Yeah, and
he's already he was already like a pretty quiet guy. Yeah,
(03:01):
there we go. I'm just really, I'm so flummix that
you would pick out of everybody in the world, maybe
you're dead, Like the last podcast, I would want to
listen to people. Probably that might be. It might be
a good killer. It's actually really funny. Have you seen
him on SNL when he hosted Top ten? Is he
(03:22):
funny or is he just did they have somebody right
funny stuff for him? Papa John his print commercials. ESPN
now wants him as an analyst. Come on, did not listen? Point?
Did I like it at all? So? Killer question number two.
I don't know which one to ask you. Um, okay,
here's the one. I'll ask you if if you were
(03:45):
in your life life, what is the one piece of
technology that changed it the most that you remember getting
as a new piece of technology that made you go,
this is going to change my life. Oh, I don't know.
I feel like I've always going on technology, right, So
it's not it was not everything felt like amazing because
(04:05):
it's just like, okay, yeah. Another thing when I moved
to America, because you're not from America. From America, yeah,
from Sri Lanka when we moved because in Sri Lanka
we had a computer with the floppies or whatever. The
floppy I think it's great that you even know that
a year olds don't know what a floppy is. Um.
(04:27):
We got a Sega Genesis and that was like life
changing to me. Video games was life changing to me
and my brother. We were like what is this because
I mean we never I mean we had computer games
like that mind Sweep thing on the desktop, but what's
the first TV show you saw from America? Oh, Frasier
(04:48):
And I still watched Frasier to this day, every day.
That was your introduction to American Fraser Seinfeld and um, cheers,
I what what? You know? What? That's great? Yeah? Well
my mom went to school here too, so she was
like American TV watch. It was like it's dope. Yeah
(05:08):
you sound yeah, Okay, the last question, I think we'll
go ahead and give you this one. If you're a
sandwich personified, if you're any sandwich person not not not
your favorite sandwich, but if you were a sandwich personified,
what sandwich would you be? So in Sri Lanka, we
make this sandwich. It's bread, butter, some sugar, and this
(05:30):
like spicy spread that we put on top. I think
that would be me. I don't know what it's called,
but I think that's me. I'm a little sweet, I'm
a little spicy. I love bread, you know, I'm a
little you know. Yeah, it's nice and comforting. That's what
I am. I'm comforting. So I would say you're sweet
and spicy. Yeah yeah, I got the devilok at the
angel on my shoulders, you know, I see both sides. Yeah,
(05:53):
you do. Uh, you get both sides of me too. U.
One of the few people that I would say, probably
when you talk to former students, are they surprised that
I'm I'm as hard a boss as as I am
because I know I'm not easy all the time, right,
I don't think so. Yeah, I don't think they're surprised.
I think they don't think. I think they don't think
(06:14):
that you're a hard boss. They just know that you
want a lot of out of us because you like
know that we have the ability to do it, that
you don't want us to be lazy. That makes me
feel good. I feel good by the way he as
a former student. I'm still kissing up. I know I
forgot we made this four questions because I always asked,
what what's the one podcast that you would binge? But
(06:34):
the last one you've benched? Oh, it's called Up and Vanished. Yeah,
I just found it. One of my best friends was
listening to it, and it's this filmmaker. He's a documentarian
and he wanted to make a podcast documentary and he
picked a story of a cold case and a Georgia
of this woman named Tara who they still haven't solved
this case. So he went back and he's trying to
(06:56):
figure it out because he was like and he prefaces
it with like, you know, I loved Cereal. I love
all these things. So not I'm not a podcaster, but
it's actually really really good. Well, we talked to a
lot of great people since we've started this podcast, and
we're going to hear from them. I think some of
the folks that I remember that I'm really looking forward
to hearing from, what Well, Phoebe Judge because I'm just
(07:19):
awesome that we had her on. Best voice ever, Yeah,
the best voice ever. Who are some of the other
folks that you're looking forward to? Al Madrigal definitely a
magical and you know that whole interview if you want
to go back and listen to it. Folks, it started
off a little rocky, yeah, and then it got really good. Yeah. Yeah,
a little a little combative at first, maybe I I
then it meshed and then it went really well. Yeah. Yeah,
(07:41):
that's fair. I think I think it's always hard when
it's over a phone or something like that make a connection,
you know. Yeah. Initially, Um, also Carla Marie and Anthony
I thought they were they were like my age, So
I was like, yeah, you guys are cool. No, no,
they're great too. Yeah. Um, Seth Lynn Mujan's Alfagari our
first episode, I think we'll probably start with that one.
(08:02):
And also Bobby Bones. I hope we hear from Bobby
Bones during this episode as well. But our very first
show that we ever did was featuring Seth and Muson
from Mission to zix uh and still one of my
favorite shows. They're great and Muson I I do have
a giant crush on her. I see her now she's done,
like she's she shows up in bit parts. I finally
saw her her bit part on Kimmy Schmidt. Yeah, she's
(08:25):
so I just love her. So they were the first
ones to do three killer questions, and that's what we're
gonna focus on today. I hope you enjoy it. We've
got Seth Land you might know him from This American Life,
and Muson Zolfagari actress, comedian and just overall awesome lady.
And the first one is a question I ask everybody
(08:47):
if you were a sandwich personified, not your favorite sandwich,
but like, if you were sandwich, which sandwich would you be? Sethland,
let's start with you. Mm hmm, I think not my favorite.
But what did I be? I think I would be
like a slider, like a small hamburger to the I
(09:08):
know I'm going, I'm no, I'm entering very dangerous territory
by calling a hamburger a sandwich. I know that I
just alienated a lot of people, a lot of a
lot of a lot of sandwich definition boundary enthusiasts now
hate the podcast. But yeah, I think a slider just
because it's like, it's kind of it's like small, like
I'm a pretty small person, and uh and it's um,
(09:30):
I don't know, like I guess it's a little bit. Yeah,
that's what came to mind, like a slider nice. Uh Yeah.
I think I would be a sandwich that my mom
used to make me in high school, which is, take
the Persian stew that she made for dinner and put
it in between two slices of bread. That's just how
I feel sometimes I'm just Persian stew out of place
(09:52):
between these breads, trying to pretend to be a sandwich.
But I'm not a sandwich. I'm just stew. I think
that's my favorite answer to that. Cad you she's your
favorite character your favorite answer. It's like, you know, and
she was on my favorite show, Kimmy Schmidt. You're just
You're just the best. Thank you. What a great podcast. Yeah,
I know what I'm gonna tweet about. I'm starting my
(10:15):
Twitter today. Second question. First piece of technology that you
said this changed my life. For example, mine was a
Sony Walkman. I remember getting it from my brother and
being like, oh, my gosh, tapes, this is great. I
can listen to, uh, you know, my Asia tape now
all over the place. I would think it's because I
come from a huge techy family, Like my brothers are techy's,
(10:39):
my dad did all. They are all in Silicon Valley.
I just remember my brother, the middle brother, getting like
an early Apple like computer and like early nineties and
just for me, just my relationship with my brother was
just sitting down and watching him play things, and then
for the rest of my life sitting down and watching
(10:59):
him play video games. And so I was never the player.
I was always the observer. So perhaps that's that's why
I got into storytelling. Nope, that's not a link. Okay,
I tried so hard. Also, an iPhone. iPhones are pretty
pretty changed my life. Um, this is not first, but
I do I feel like I for Um, I'm thirty
(11:21):
eight years old and I just got my first car
last year. Um, and I've never owned a car before,
and it's amazing, especially living in Brooklyn, to be able
to leave and go to a place where you can
hike or just go to the grocery store that's not
near the subway. That is yeah, like cheaper and better.
(11:44):
So having a car, big big thumbs up to all
you people entering middle age. You haven't given it a shot. Lastly,
what was the last podcast that you you binged? Probably Homecoming?
I think I listened to all of season when I
haven't listened to season two. And oh, although this is
I guess it's more of like a news binge, but
one of my favorite podcasts in the morning is The
(12:05):
Daily with Michael Barbarrow from New York Times. And I
think I was gone, I want to like vacation for
like two weeks and I came back and I listened
to all the news. That's not a good binge. That's
more like, oh God, what happened? Oh got all the
worst things? I missed all these things? Uh yeah, what
about Um, I've been getting really into song exploder Um,
(12:28):
which is, uh, it's a it's a short podcast that
just deconstructs songs. It's like a it's an interview that's
not narrated, so it's just the answers from the musician
and then the different instrumental parts and vocal parts of
the song all separated out, and them talking about the
history of the song, and then you just at the
end here the complete song, and it's just this like
perfect structure and they're like fifteen minutes, so they're really
(12:49):
good for like I can listen to the two of
them on the way and and even and and even
like artists with things like the Mark Marin Show, like
I typically don't I'm not that interested if I'm not
interested in the person. But with this, like it's made
me appreciate songs I don't think I would like at
all if I hadn't just heard the musician tell the
story of it. Am here like the bits all separate.
(13:13):
One of my favorite podcasts of all time is the
show Criminal. I like it for many reasons, but probably
number one is the voice behind the show, Phoebe Judge
Number one. What kind of criminal would you be if
you were going to be a criminal, I think i'd
be I know that i'd be a nonviolent criminal. I
think I might be a bank robber because you're not
(13:33):
hurting that many people. And I just think the whole
idea of escape is so interesting and the planning. I
once was able to follow around a bank robber for
an episode we did, and I was just so fascinated
by the whole thing. And so and I think about
that all the time. How would I get away with something?
So I think bank robbery. I have planned so many
bank robberies in my head. It's it's disgusting, alright. Question
(13:57):
number two, if any criminal alive did did a podcast,
who would you want to listen to? I think John
Dillinger interesting? Why is that? I don't know. Well, I'm
from Chicago, and so I'm pretty intrigued by Chicago crime
because I love I Maybe this is the wrong to say.
I love the glamor of his of his crimes. And
(14:20):
he would escape up to a little you know, retreats
in Wisconsin in the woods, and I just think, you know,
I just think John Dillinger, I think I would love
to just he burned off his fingerprints. I mean there's
wonderful stuff about him. Um, I think him. I would
listen to that. And finally, what was the last podcast
that you binged? I listened to Stown, which is another
(14:41):
podcast kind of about crime. Um. I listened to Stown
and I thought it was wonderful. Today's guest, how magical.
So happy to have him on. He's funny, he's on TV,
he's in movies. I'm gonna give you the first one.
This is a dumb question. I hope you don't find
it too dumb. If you're a sandwich personified, what what
(15:04):
would it be? Not not your favorite? Like if you
were one? What says? Oh yeah, that's a really stupid question,
thank you, but uh yeah, I'll play along with it.
Uh probably club. I could see a lot of people
saying club A club say I want to simple yet
complex and you know, not necessarily the healthiest thing you've
(15:31):
ever had, but you know with the bacon turkey. Um yeah,
I think it's a club sandwich. I think, uh, did
you get that a lot? Though? I feel that I
get PP get P b J a lot. See what
else do we get grilled cheese? Yeah, I've never I
don't think it makes that club before no, no club. No,
you're the first. If you could listen to a podcast
(15:53):
featuring any comedians living or dead, who would you want
to listen to? Oh? Well, I just I such a
big Chappelle fan, So I love Dave Chappelle. I would
love to listen to him jiggle podcast and interview people
because in terms of his take sort of like Bill Burr,
you know, I feel like you're going to get a
(16:14):
great take out of Dave. Um. I would just go
to my favorite comics and Dana Gould. Dana Gould is
a podcast you can listen to. So yeah, I just
I'd love to hear Patrese doing a podcast, Greg Giraldo
do a podcast, So probably Patrese and Greg and some
(16:36):
sort of back table thing if I could pick anyone,
that would be my top one. Patrese and great Geralda.
And what was the last podcast that that you binged?
Podcast that I binged? Um got so many of my
own that I need to listen to that I don't
really know. My wife, yeah exactly, I don't. I listen
(16:57):
to all all things comedy podcasts all the time. We
um me and my wife listen to show podcasts, so
we're very into television, so recently, you know this is
through her. We were listening to some thor podcasts, um,
and then it's all TV related stuff. So we'll listen
(17:20):
to a Stranger Things podcast, West World podcast, Game of
Thrones podcasts, so it's all sort of TV companion podcasts
what we listened to. And one quickly than that, magical
home one quick bonus is there speaking of bad TV?
Is there something that makes you laugh at home that
maybe you wouldn't want people to know about, that you'd
be shamed of, ashamed of. Oh, we have a sort
(17:44):
of running joke in our family where it's like guilty
pleasure of music, but I would be ashamed of. People don't.
But it is something that totally makes us laugh here
because I have two kids, my wife, I play Counting Crows.
Mr Joe owns uh randomly and then we have a
well this is not so embarrassing, but my kids when
(18:08):
we have to relate somewhere and start playing driving music
for me, like sort of baby driver type of thing.
So immediately the bluetooth and I drive to Ie the
Tiger with my family in the car. On a regular basis,
it's a good image to go out on he's naturally
syndicated radio host, author, comedian, and host of the Bobby
(18:30):
Cast Bobby Bones. The first one Bobby Bones is if
there's anyone in history, living dead that you can hear
do a podcast? Who would you like to hear anyone
in history do a podcast? And I get to pick
the subject. Yeah, this is all you. You're the producer.
(18:51):
Whatever you want, more more difficult than than it probably
should be. I could just give an answer. I guess
you know what, Man, when I look at I would
love to hear Andy Kaufman really talk as a human
being and not as one of the characters that he
may or may not have been playing like. I would
(19:12):
love to hear a Andy Kaufman talks as Andy Kaufman podcast,
and he tells me about all of the everything behind
all of the bits that he did, all of these
ideas and the stunts, and that's what I was. Andy
Kaufman to me is one of the more revolutionary comedic figures,
(19:33):
because man, he would take a joke and just beat
it to death where it wasn't funny, and then keep
beating it till it became funny again. And they'll be
able to sit in that spot right where it's like, oh,
people don't like it and just sit and know that
they're gonna come back around or they're not. That to
me is vulnerable and brilliant, and that's what I would want.
Did you watch the Jim Carey documentaries on Netflix right
(19:55):
now about the win Man on the Moon. Yes, I
watched it. Love that. I mean, I I just feel
like those are kindred spirits man for me, like I'm
nuts too. I just watched it Saturday, and I meant
to watch like I was gonna watch a little bit
of it and then go to bed, and I stayed
up till one in the morning. It was so fascinating,
such a such a good watch. It's called Jim and
(20:16):
Andy and I'm gonna tell you if I worked in
that Man on the Moon set with Jim says all
that crap. I don't want nuts too, Like I've been
so pissed at him, but I mean, like I get
I I don't understand why he's like he is, but
I get feeling different than everybody, and that's funn I
watched that The documents fascinating anyway, because I love any coughman.
(20:36):
I love man on the mood and I like Jim
Carrey because of he just lowers his head and goes
into things, and so I admire anyone that can do that.
But the documentary is fantastic. And I watched another one
on Hulu. It was called Too Funny to Fail with
Danna Carvey and uh where it was. It's about that
show and how Steve Carrell was on it and Stephen
(20:57):
Colbert was on it, and you know, the show had
everybody that ended up being fantastic but it bombed. And
it's a that's a really great documentary too if you
love comedy. Man, We're we are in the glory days
of of of network content as far as with Netflix
and Hulu. But I just real quick on the sign
up with that Jim Carey you know he did that,
you know, working radio. We all got that clip when
(21:17):
he was being uh at fashion Week and he was saying, oh,
none of this is real and and people were like, oh,
Jim Carrey has gone crazy. Well, I haven't watched that documentary.
I'm like, no, now, he's right, none of this is real.
And I really I feel like I understand Jim Carrey
a lot more from watching that documentary. Yeah, is he's
so right that he's crazy, that's the question. Like, it's
because we found that the craziest people throughout history were
(21:40):
the ones that were we're right a lot of times.
I mean, just think about I mean Galileo. I mean
we can go to someone who's just we go oh, yes,
of course, a great astronomer who the dude was told
he was absolutely nuts. And so throughout times it's taken
to people with the really crazy. Idea is two, what
(22:02):
was the Bill Gates do with Steve Jobs. Let's say
it takes someone just crazy and that's so crazy to
think they can change the world to actually change the world,
and so Jeff care is nuts. But those are the
people that actually end at making things happen, and people
who are so nuts that they believe in themselves. So yeah,
now we're on a whole different thing where we could
spend an hour on. But yes, question number two, what
(22:24):
was the one piece of technology you know in your
life that you you got and realized this is going
to change my life? I mean the easy answers radio.
But I'm gonna not say radio. I'm gonna say, ah,
probably whenever my whenever I could take my radio show
(22:44):
and put it over the internet. And so I guess
it would be whenever because we started streaming our show
and making it a priority before it was fashionable only
because not because I was some suits there, but only
because I was young and in radio, and they gave
me a huge advantage because I was actually living the
live life of other twenty three year olds and I
wasn't fifty having to adapt, which I always hope that
(23:05):
i'm not, because I mean now in my thirties and
I'm hoping I'm not having to adapt to something and
it's not quite fitting, and you know, you don't want
to lose your your feet into the ground. But I
would say the media Player was a huge deal to
me because people could hear my show on the internet
and we made it a huge priority, and like two
(23:25):
thousand and four, whenever, in two thousand and five, whenever,
it really wasn't. Shows weren't doing that. So I'm gonna say,
the media player, what was the last podcast you binged?
Um that? I so I don't. I won't beinge a podcast.
I will listen to them episode only that's even a word,
because I have something I like. Um, I like the
(23:48):
the the NPR where they tell you how things came about.
I just listened to the one on South with Southwest Carolines,
or they tell you how how things are created. I
listen to the one UM where they talked about al
Alvin and the chipmunks. But that's a good I know
NPR is like a big rival of ours, I guess,
but whatever, um, but yeah, so that's probably the one
that when people will go, hey, what podcast should I
(24:09):
listen to? That's why I send them too, because you
don't have to listen to all of them. You can
scroll them and you don't have to feel like you
have to binge. You can find something to interest you,
just like my Bobby cast like, you can find a
writer and artist and interests you and listen to it
and you don't have to listen to the next episode
or one seven away. You can find someone else that
interests you. And so, um, how that that's probably the
(24:29):
one that I listened to latest, um I listened. I
listened to Ricky Gervais. His um, Ricky gervaisis uh deadly serious?
What everyone on serious? Because I love Ricky Gervais, like
Ricky Gerbay's, Adam Krola and Chris rock Can were the
funniest living individuals, and so I listened to that one
(24:50):
and again I have all the technology, and sometimes the
company gets mad at mean if you're talking about other things,
but then I'm just ignorant if I'm not talking about
other things like I those are the probably tool some
to last. And this is a bonus question that I asked.
That is a stupid question. But if you were a
sandwich personified, not not your favorite sandwich, but if there
was a Bobby Bones sandwich that encompassed you, what would
(25:11):
it be? They would probably a freaking white, red Bologney
sandwich with just mustard, because there's not a lot to it,
but they are very effective. And I think that there's
not a lot to me. I'm not the smartest, I'm
not the funniest, I'm not to anything nest, but just
give me a bed of time and I'll make it work.
(25:33):
And so I'm a freaking Bologna sandwich, hard working, I'll
fail you, not a lot of fantishiness to it, and
I'm gonna show up every day. So probably a blondie sandwich.
We are about to hear a radio fairy tale. Carla
Marine and Anthony first question for you guys, if you
(25:56):
could listen to anybody do a podcast living You're dead,
Who's podcast would you want to listen to? God? God,
that would be a good podcast. It would be like, Hey, everybody,
I know everything. Actually, I know I want to say
this one, but it's such a cliche girl things to say.
(26:18):
Let's say Marilyn Monroe, that girl's got stories. That's not
I've never had anybody give that answer before, because you know,
I mean, I like, but she better keep it real
because I want to know all about JFK and Joe
DiMaggio and all those guys. My producer and see a
shaking head. She would listen to that podcast. Good to know.
I think I just watched the Ric Flair documentary. The third,
(26:41):
I'm sorry, I can't not do that, um you. I
feel like an old school wrestler would be cool because
they were always on the road, They're always doing crazy things.
I feel like that'd be a cool podcast to listen to,
especially if it was done like in the eighties, like
with those guys or The Rock, because I can listen
to anything The Rock does. The second question is I'm
gonna ask the I'm gonna ask that them. Ready, I'm
(27:02):
gonna ask this question. I get yelled at for this question,
but I like this question. If you are a sandwich personified,
what kind of sandwich would you be Tailor him and
cheese because we don't have that here and I really
want Tiller him and cheese. But how does that exemplify
your personality? Because you know what, Tiller him is very rare.
There's not much Teller him in the world. Not many
(27:22):
people know about Tiller him, but when they meet Taylor Him,
they really like Taylor Him. That's me with cheese. Yeah,
but you don't do it with egg. No, I don't
need egg. I'm great without egg. Raging psychopaths, are you? Yeah? Exactly,
I'm thinking the same thing. Actually, no, I don't need
I don't know eggs coming in here blowing up my spot.
I'm just Taylor Ham with cheese. How about you, Anthony, Um,
(27:45):
I would be you're a meat bassmer. I honestly, dude,
just from our conversation and seeing and checking out, I
would I would probably say that's something very Jersey like that.
But you go with the blt Why because I think
it's it's got your bacon, so it has its little
bit of like manliness in there, but it's also gotta
listen tomato and I have some very feminine traits as well. Okay,
(28:07):
can I just say my my producers? Her face is
in her hands, looking down right now, laughing. I've never
heard and describe himself any better. Actually write a little
bit of bacon, a lot of tomato, I don't know
a lot of lettuce. Uh. And finally, guys, what's the
last podcast that you binged? Um? I do a lot.
(28:27):
I do listen to a lot of morning shows on demand. Um,
but I think the last one I binged actual podcast
probably ump last actual pods? Crap? What was it? Was
a history one? Oh? Is it micro? I'll look it
up as she's so, the last podcast I actual actually
(28:47):
binge from beginning to end was s Town And that
is just that's a whole another world Thursdays where I'm
just like the amount of research and effort he puts
into that is just mind blowing to me. That's a
whole another world of podcasting, which is the whole cool
part about podcasting is there's so many. But day to
day I just listened to other I heart morning shows.
(29:08):
I've listened to Anthony's podcast, and I think it was
the micro one. I really like that. We just talked
about that podcast last week, because well, Mike's I've known
Mike a long time. He used to be in San Francisco,
and he's so good. He's and he's that guy all
the time. Yeah, and I love I love his boys,
and I love listening to talk and the way he
takes you through the podcast and tells you a story
(29:30):
about something you already know but you don't realize that
that's what that story is about. It's incredible. The stuff
you missed in history class is one of them. And
then Radio Labs has some good stuff too. Love Radio Lab.
Love Radio Lab. So good with headphones on a long
car trip, exactly. All right, that was great. Another killer
(29:54):
episode O boo. Yeah, we should put that so that
maybe all the folks like True Crime was are listening
to the show like, oh, killer killer stuff. It must
be a true chrome better under crime, pud. I'm excited
about how many people love as Town. We hear that
a lot when we asked that question, Are you really surprised,
I'm not, no, no, no, I'm very happy to um
(30:15):
so if you haven't like it's like one of those
shows like, yeah, go listen to that, Yeah, go listen
to that. Um but a lot of stuff. I think
that you you connected the most with the last interview
we heard Anthony. They're the coolest, And I liked her
answer for who she would want living or dead to
hear a podcast, which was Marilyn Monroe. That's a great one,
so juicy. Yeah, it would be. Yes. You can always
(30:40):
tell that nobody listens to this podcast before they come
on because nobody has answers ready. But yeah, but isn't
that kind of fun maybe one day. Yeah, I guess
it wouldn't be as fun if if if they didn't. Anyway,
thanks for listening. We promised next week we'll be back
on track with the new guest. We've got like six
people lined up. It's just a matter of coordinating all
the times and all that fun stuff and that ze
job she has, so really it's all diss fault if
(31:01):
it doesn't work out. Thanks for listening. I want to
thank everybody involved with the show. Of course, we have
Don Parker at Katie Bollcox here in San Francisco, and
Chris Peterson, who was our our podcast overlord at I
Heeart Radio, and special thanks to Casey Franco who did
the music, Don Rumbrook who did the artwork for our podcast,
(31:23):
our engineers, Horace and Red and David, and I think
that's everybody. Oh, I forgot to thank you. See you
are the producer of the show. Follow us at access
podcast one on Twitter because some d a got at
Access podcast in two thousand fifteen and we can't get
it because he's only used it once. Way to sit
on it, buddy, anyway at Access podcast I'm still super bitter, uh.
(31:48):
And you can also follow us on Facebook Access podcast
and listen to us on any If you're listening to
us anyway, you listen to us on podcasts. You can
find us on iTunes. You can find us on of course,
on I Heart radio. You can also find us Stitcher
and Google Play. So go listen to the podcast. Go
find some podcast, listen to them, and tell your friends
about it. See you later. M