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January 8, 2024 50 mins

Let’s play ball, broseff! Patrick Renna might be internationally known as The Great Hambino, but to us he’ll always be a leather jacket bad boy in BMW Season 3’s “Life Lessons.” 

So now the TikTok star sits down with Danielle, Rider & Will to examine the unexplainable Sandlot / Boy Meets World connection and what it felt like to want Mr. Feeny dead, but also be completely terrified of him.
 
Patrick also reveals which Sandlot cast member punched him in the face during filming and, more importantly, what he remembers from making “Summertime Switch.”
 
This week’s guest knocks it out of the park with stories that are sweeter than a perfectly assembled S’more, right here on Pod Meets World!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
If you're raising the kid in California, you have to
constantly guard against California Valley surfer talk. Oh yeah, yeah
yeah constant and uh yeah, Indie, Indy and his friends
are like, that's so sick, that's so sick, bro. And

(00:43):
so I just started making fun of it with Indy
and just calling him bro. Then very soon became bro Seth,
and so I would just be like and so then
he started doing it back to me, and and it's
kind of a joke, but it's also become kind of
an addiction where we're like, let's go Brosinski, all right,
bro Seth. And then we just started throwing bro into

(01:06):
as many different words as possible. So like, you know
mom used to work as a bro tender. Yeah, she
would make broteinis. That's grotastic. And then it's like and
Heath just thinks it's the funniest thing ever. So, like
we talked about Star Wars, it'll become Han Brolo and
you know, there's broda. Andy didn't want to play the

(01:29):
sacks of bron anymore. He wanted to play the trombrone.
But the best, the best was one day. So we're
batting these words back and forth, and the best he says,
he says, oh yeah, Mom, Mom made that movie. She's
a producer. And I was like, oh, I have definitely
worked with some producers like that. One's really good. There's

(01:51):
a there's a classic dude bro producer. And I think
that this is the best we've come up with so far. Producer.
And so I want this word enter our nomenclature. Now
you talk about certain producers in Hollywood, you just call
him a producer. We all know that guy.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
Listen.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
You know what's crazy is that you saying that and
you and Indy going back and forth. I know that
India is not on social media, but we are about
to have Patrick Renna on the show and one of
the things I want to talk to him about is
how genius he is on TikTok. You doing if you
ever joined TikTok, you doing bro conversations And if you
didn't want to use Indy, you just make it you.

(02:27):
You have you and one surfer bro outfit and you
in a different one, and you shoot it like a
movie and just shoot the different angles of this of
a whole conversation of you fitting bro into different words
is a very funny forty five second TikTok, and it
would go very viral.

Speaker 4 (02:44):
It would be very funny.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Sure, I always said producer.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
Ah, that's great.

Speaker 5 (02:50):
So that's the one I always use when you met
those like that guy's a produce, he's producer.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
Oh my god. Yeah, you could just come on and
Bro Doucher.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
There's lots of There are lots, unfortunately lots.

Speaker 5 (03:06):
So going back very quickly to what you said, though, Rider,
because it was something that made me instantly know the
difference between where we were raised. When I first met
you is I would always say something like, oh, that's
so sick, and you'd always go up and go that's
so sick.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
You've talked about this on the podcasts.

Speaker 5 (03:23):
Always it was totally so you'd always go up, that's
so sick.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Yeah, yeah, So I remember the moment when that happened,
when it was like instead of saying some if you
agree with somebody, you do it almost you're going up,
almost as if you're challenging them. Like it's something my
brother started doing when he was thirteen, and then I
was like making fun of him for it, and then
I started doing it. So if you say like, oh,
I'm like I like that flavor of ice cream. Like
the normal or the non bro speak would be like

(03:52):
yeah you do, but instead yeah you do, Yeah you do.

Speaker 6 (03:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
It's like that, ending it with like a little like yeah, man,
It's like that's right, and that's like the most And
then I started doing it, and I still do it
to this day. It's like yeah, yeah, so funny.

Speaker 6 (04:06):
They're weird.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
Welcome to Pod Meets World. I'm Daniel Fishl, I'm right
or Strong, and I'm Wilfrid Dell.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
Yeah you are, Yeah you are. Yeah you are sick.

Speaker 6 (04:19):
Bro.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
Are you listening to our podcast right now and you
live in Dallas or Austin, Texas, then do we have
news for you.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
We are bringing Pod meets World live to you to
ring in the new year with many, many layers.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
We'll be at the Majestic Theater in Dallas on January eleventh,
and then the Story Paramount Theater in Austin on January twelfth,
and tickets are still available.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
We'll be telling new stories, interacting with fans.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Even meeting and greeting some of you, and judging a
costume contest where the winner gets a legit Nineties Boy
meets World shooting script signed by us, So come dressed up.

Speaker 4 (04:52):
We're winding down the tour and we want.

Speaker 7 (04:54):
To see you again.

Speaker 5 (04:56):
January eleventh at the Majestic in Dallas and January twelfth
at the Paramount in Austin. Tickets are available now at
Podmeets worldshow dot com.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
When it comes to iconic kid actor roles of the nineties,
our guest this week ranks right up there with anyone
left home alone during the holidays or a young boy
who saw dead people. Best known as Hamilton ham Porter
from the classic nineteen ninety three baseball comedy The Sandlot.
Patrick Runna's face will make anyone from our generation smile

(05:36):
from nostalgia, and for good reason. He's a sunshine of joy,
not only in The Sandlot, but in movies like Son
in Law, The Big Green, and one TV movie that
we know here on Pod Meets.

Speaker 4 (05:47):
World Summertime Switch Woo Yes.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
More recently, he appeared in Netflix's hit show Glow and
the movie Boys of Summer. But most importantly, he is
a genuine TikTok superstar with three point two million followers
on the app, which, if you're over forty, is like
having thirty two million, but Today, we're ignoring his international
fame and focusing on just one small role he had

(06:14):
in nineteen ninety six on the TV show Boy Meets World,
playing leather jacket gang bad boy Kyle in season three's
Life Lessons, where he may or may not have written
die feene on a school building. So please welcome to
Pod meets World. Our friend, Patrick Renna, how.

Speaker 6 (06:39):
Are you always start video off? Sorry about that, just
in case I'm doing something that you.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
Never know, never know, you never know you could be
filming an incredible TikTok while you know, Yeah, exactly. You
are one of the funniest people on TikTok. I've just
i'vet You're literally a genius.

Speaker 6 (06:58):
Wow, it's because I'm I'm a boomer and everyone's really
coming to understand what's so great about us boomers?

Speaker 4 (07:05):
You know, Yeah, they're they're wonderful.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I'm so old. I have never been on TikTok in
my life.

Speaker 6 (07:10):
Mum on in. Oh god, I don't know a two
We could do good choreograph, it'd be great.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
Here's the thing.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Here's the thing that I that I love about your
TikTok is that I also have two best friends that
I could do very funny dances with and they literally
like you here, they won't they I've never been on
the app. I've never seen it. I show them things
all the time. I'm like, look, how funny this is?
Could could the three of us please do this?

Speaker 8 (07:39):
And writers like, oh yeah, I'm terrified.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
I already have no time, like and I feel like
every time I invest in in one of these things,
it's just more time gone. It's like this, yeah.

Speaker 6 (07:50):
Yeah, my friends are so into it that I have
to keep them in their lane to not upstage me.

Speaker 4 (07:55):
Like I say, guys, get back, worry about you.

Speaker 6 (08:01):
I know who choreographs them all. Danielle Lindsay bartleson no Way, Yeah,
one of them is her husband.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
I was going to say, you you put them so
in the back. You don't tag them. I don't know
who they are. You make they could never get any fame.

Speaker 6 (08:17):
That's not true. You can't say that I tag them.
They're not on TikTok.

Speaker 5 (08:22):
No.

Speaker 6 (08:23):
I tagged them on Instagram.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
Got it okay? Well, because I was looking only I
was on.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
The TikTok app and I was like, these guys are
he literally keeps them anonymous.

Speaker 6 (08:31):
They don't people will go nuts on me for that
one them.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
Yes, yes, yes, okay.

Speaker 3 (08:40):
So while researching your your career before we brought you
onto this podcast, I realized that correct me if I'm wrong.
The Sandlot was basically your first role, unless you count
Salute your Shorts Where Hold Time? I love this, Okay,
you played Listen to this. This is how you were credited.
I know how it's you are credited as kid. That's

(09:00):
says Denucci peede his pants and later was in a headlock.
That's right, that's the day of the That was the.

Speaker 6 (09:08):
Whole line, and it was wo din' and it looks
like you at your pants and then he puts me
in headlock and that was it. I'll never forget. When
I booked the job too, I was in my kitchen
at my parents' house and the producer called my home
line and I answered and he said, is your mother there?
It's blah blah blah from Sluter Shorts, and I said,
did I get it? And he started laughing. He said,
let me talk to your mother, and I was like,

(09:28):
I don't. I mean, yes, that technically was my first,
but Sam one of the.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Most classic shows of all time.

Speaker 6 (09:34):
Those shorts that's true.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
Like, yeah, he truly lasts that long though. That's what
I was. I was ranted to somebody wash was in
that show, and he was telling me they were only
did like one and a half seasons or two seasons,
and yet it's it looms large.

Speaker 7 (09:48):
It does, it absolutely does. It's one of those shows.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
And then you book Sandlot. What what was shooting that
like for you?

Speaker 5 (09:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (09:58):
I mean it was it. It was a wild experience,
you know. The the casting process was crazy.

Speaker 4 (10:05):
Walk us through it.

Speaker 6 (10:07):
Well, originally they had it cast for six and seven
year olds, so they had a whole group of kids cast,
and they realized that they're a little young to be saying, you.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
Know, some of the things, some of the things.

Speaker 6 (10:26):
I don't know, you know, can we save them here?
I'm sure we can't.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
Yeah we can.

Speaker 6 (10:29):
Yeah, okay, great. So then they recast everyone and I
was the last person cast, so they had all eight
guys cast, and for one reason or another, there was
a kid that the roles were jumping around. I think
you had Marty on, so he probably told you he
was he was cast to some other role for a second,

(10:52):
and they were switching roles. They were never really switching mine,
but the kid that was going to do my role
ended up not being able to do it for for
some reason. And then I had one audition for the
director because it was so last minute. The next day
or the day after, they brought me to meet the guys,
and that was like my callback, and they were very clear,

(11:12):
they said, you don't have this job. You need to
get along with everyone. I was bigger than all and
then so I forced them to get along with bigger
than me. But it doesn't work that way anymore. So then,
I mean, obviously we got along like brothers. And then

(11:35):
we had two weeks of baseball camp in LA. They
shipped us off to uh Salt Lake City and we
had about a week. We filmed one scene and then
we had a week or two off then. So it
was cool because we had this whole month of just
hanging out before the movie started. And I don't know
if they designed it that way, but David Mickey Evans

(11:55):
was pretty brilliant, so we probably did. And we just
got to know each other before we even started filming.

Speaker 3 (12:02):
So that's a little risky though, because you put that
many kids together for that long well not just broken bones,
but also the odds that that many kids are all
going to like each other and that there isn't going
to be some stuff where like some jealousy develops or
some rivalries developed, and some you can really it could
really backfire where people now don't like each other and

(12:23):
it could have gone the wrong way.

Speaker 5 (12:25):
Yes, it's it's different a lot of times with boys,
groups of boys will find a way to usually just
kind of get along for a one. Yeah, I think
you found that to be. It's like jealousies and stuff
like that.

Speaker 6 (12:36):
Yeah, exact, we just get along.

Speaker 7 (12:41):
Exactly, throw us a ball and find a way to
just get along.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
Its Yeah, But I also think that that's part of
the dynamic of the movie, is that not everybody's super
nice to each other all the time, like enjoys constantly.
And that's like chemistry is chemistry, even if it's negative chemistry,
you know what I mean. Like, even it's like that,
I think whatever whatever like soup you get by pushing
all these kids together is probably going to be helpful
to the movie and make it more realistic in some way,

(13:05):
you know.

Speaker 6 (13:05):
Yeah, Yeah, that's a good point. And we definitely fought
like thought like brothers on the movie. I mean, SHANEO.
Bazinski punched me in the face right on the sandlot
one day. But I was one of the oldest. He
was one of the youngest, so it was like my
little brother punching me, and I kind of laughed at
him and then, you know, but like there was like
a love punch, right. Yeah. I have two boys six

(13:28):
and three, and believe me, there's some love punches going around.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
I have two boys four and a half and two
and a half, and gosh wow, So I know I
can't wait for some I can't wait for for what's to.

Speaker 4 (13:39):
Come with that.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
Just on that exactly. You and I could have a whole,
a whole We could do our own podcast, just.

Speaker 6 (13:46):
About to give each other moral support.

Speaker 3 (13:49):
And please I have a boy cat, a boy dog,
a male husband, and two sons.

Speaker 6 (13:55):
Oh my god, yeah, we'll send you to oh do,
please do. We'll all be alive when you come back.
But other than that, I can't promise.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
Listen, every time I come back, there are new cuts,
new scrapes, and I'm just as long as everyone's alive.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
I don't even care what happened.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
I'm like, listen, bruised, bruised, so did the did the
on set while you were doing the movie?

Speaker 4 (14:21):
Did it feel like, oh, this is going to be
a hit.

Speaker 5 (14:25):
No.

Speaker 6 (14:26):
I think it's hard to know, you know, because I
always say, like, you know, the daily is when the
crew watches the day before that night in the trailer.
I don't think I've ever been on a movie where
they come back the next day. Those are terrible. So
everyone thinks their movie is going to be great, right right,
and they're not all great. Believe me, I've done some
not great movies.

Speaker 4 (14:46):
We've done them together.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
Patrick, Yeah, movie out there.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
That's what I was gonna say. Yeah, sorry, we already
mentioned it. We recapped it.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
It was great.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Did a recap of it? Yes, we could all the episode.

Speaker 7 (15:01):
Yeah, it's so good.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
And we had Jason come on to uh oh did
we write a masterpiece?

Speaker 6 (15:06):
Yeah, and he was the voice of lions.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
Oh yeah, we are going to get into summertime switch guys.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
I've got it.

Speaker 4 (15:13):
I've got it coming up. We've we're getting into it
for sure.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
I Yeah. So I don't think we knew it was
gonna be good, but you definitely had a sense that
there was something cool happening. And then it's pretty soon
after too, you got the idea that people were into it,
you know, because I remember sneaking into movies and sitting
in the back and watching the crowd reaction, and it
was it was pretty solid for what, you know, for

(15:38):
what I've I've sat in the back now since a
lot of times and remember having the Sandlot reaction, you know.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Right, exactly, everything's now compared to let's see if it
was as good as the Sandlot reaction, right.

Speaker 6 (15:50):
Yeah, we're trying to sneak out. Yeah, oh yeah. I
had the same thing for Home Alone, not that I
wasn't in and obviously, but I remember sitting in the
back seeing the Home Alone reaction, which was the greatest
I've ever seen, Like the most fun I've ever seen
an audience have was that movie.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
Oh phenomenal.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
Well, just like Boy Me's World, The Sandlot celebrated its
thirtieth anniversary this past year. Were you able to do
anything special for the milestone.

Speaker 6 (16:18):
Except one of us? There's two of us that don't
get out and I'm just kidding, Okay, No, we're all
we're all great friends. It is cool. When we get together,
we're like it's like we're back thirty years ago. We're
kind of like brothers will always have that together, like
you three have what you went through together, you know,

(16:39):
So we get to see each other. Yeah, we and
we've seen a lot more of each other since the
twentieth anniversary. Every five years.

Speaker 4 (16:47):
You see each other.

Speaker 6 (16:48):
Yeah, but there's also been stuff in between. So I've
seen them a lot more over the past fifteen years,
I would say when the movie. After the movie filmed,
and then for the next ten to teen years, I didn't
see a lot of them, right, yep. But then as
the movie kind of became a classic because it sort
of ramped up, like twenty years where it really.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Started pile, the nostalgia was at its peak for Yeah.

Speaker 6 (17:13):
So I've seen them a lot since then.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
It's been good, that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
So we kind of went through the same thing.

Speaker 5 (17:17):
After Boy, you do your thing, and then you you know,
five six, seven years, you kind of go your own way,
you find yourself, you get away from whatever you did,
and then you find yourself back again.

Speaker 7 (17:26):
So yeah, it was kind of very similar.

Speaker 6 (17:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Well, especially when when it stands a test of time,
you know what I mean, Like, that's that's what we've
been surprised by. How Boy Meet's World compared to a
lot of other shows, is still being talked about, and
I think sam Lot's the same thing. It's just one
of those like and of course when you're a kid,
you're like just one of the jobs you know, and
you keep going, you keep hoping you get another job
that also does as well. But the reality is like

(17:49):
they're once in a lifetime, those kinds of like cult
things that keep coming back.

Speaker 6 (17:53):
Yeah, they really are.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
Yeah, Patrick, you and I did a Laker charity event,
not that long ago, is within the last maybe three
or four years.

Speaker 6 (18:13):
And yes, that's why I was like, I have you Where.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
Have I seen her?

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (18:18):
I knew that we obviously when we were younger, we've
of course hung out in Hollywood constantly, but I knew
I've seen you since.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
Yeah, we recently did.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
You had your son with you, so you know it
must have been within the I think your oldest son,
but he was yeah, okay, Yeah, So we did a
Laker charity event together. And I love how much athletes
freak out about you because they love sports movies and
yours is right up at the top and it's on
many of their lists. What are some of the craziest

(18:48):
and most fun interactions you've had with sports stars.

Speaker 6 (18:53):
God, I mean they're they're also it's it's funny to
me because they're all younger than me, but they feel
like men right, like a boy still when you know
what I mean, when you're around these six I mean
Aaron Judges six ' eight. So when I went to
a Yankee Stadium and I met him, I met one
Carlo Stanton, and I met uh C C C. Sabbathia

(19:20):
and then Aaron Boone the manager. And I'm from Boston,
so yeah, but going Yankee Stadium is there's something special
about it, yess man, because it's what you hate but
you love to. So that was a pretty fun one.
And those guys are all six eight six six sixty
six and I'm like five eight on a really good day.

(19:43):
So I remember having my arm around one Carlo Stanton
and it was just right above his took us off,
and I was like feeling these muscles that I didn't
know human beings had.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Six steel.

Speaker 4 (19:57):
Yeah, there's a muscle.

Speaker 6 (20:00):
Get your hand off me. But I was like, whatever, dude,
this is unbelievable. This is I love in your work.

Speaker 7 (20:10):
Man.

Speaker 6 (20:10):
And then I met Big Poppy and uh, Dustin did. OK. Yeah,
I met them in Minnesota. So that was cool for
me as a as a Bostonian.

Speaker 5 (20:21):
As a Bostonian, did your life officially start in two
thousand and four?

Speaker 6 (20:26):
Uh? Yes, and it totally passed up. Thing is in
two thousand and three, I was in Boston. I was
at my grandfather's service. You know, this is twenty years ago.
He passed twenty years ago. I'm with my whole family,
all the aunts, We've finished the whole day, We're all
worn out. All the aunts go go watch the game.

(20:47):
So all the cousins go.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
No game.

Speaker 6 (20:53):
I mean, I'm I'm in a bar in Wistern, Massachusetts.
Watch them not pull or whatever. Drama happened and they lost.
Oh yeah, and that the next year, that truly was
when everything started. That was believable. I mean, my cousin

(21:14):
got me the newspaper and sent it to me, said keep.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
That, like, you know, are you from the Worcester area originally?

Speaker 6 (21:21):
No, my mom is I lived in the city, kind
of grew up in the North End and suburbs and
areas like, oh.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Did you come to LA because of your acting?

Speaker 6 (21:32):
Yeah? I came, I guess so my mom had a
job opportunity out here, so she took it knowing I'd
done school plays and things, knowing that I wanted to
be in the business. And I don't think we expected
it to hit that fast. I mean, I came out
here in My first agent was Judy Savage. I know,

(21:55):
I know, and I think there's this photo that you're
in writer that I have. We did this like luncheon
with Judy one day, like in nineteen ninety four or something.
It's just funny to see all the all the actors
in it. She was the queen like and she even said,
don't be surprised if you don't work for two years,
like that was her line to prep, which was the

(22:16):
best thing she ever said to me, because I went
into sand Lot thinking I wasn't going to get it
and I didn't stress out about it, and you know,
I booked it and it was great. So yeah, so
I guess we did move out here for that. I
don't think we expected to really hit it like that.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
And so your parents were obviously very supportive.

Speaker 6 (22:38):
Yeah, they absolutely, I mean they had split so they
you know, my dad supported us moving too though, right
owing I was going to be three thousand miles away,
so and they were still really really close. You know,
they'll stay at each other's houses when we visit.

Speaker 4 (22:55):
That's great.

Speaker 6 (22:56):
But yes, for me to move three thousand miles away,
it was a big one for sure.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
I want to ask you also about Son in Law.
Polly Shore was really on top there for a few years.
Looking back with in Sino Man, Son in Law, Jury Duty,
I mean, those three movies are all better than they
should be.

Speaker 4 (23:15):
Was that a fun experience to shoot?

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (23:18):
Yeah? And Sino Man was one of my favorites, so
I knew exactly who he was and that was great
that you know, it's funny. I auditioned for that right
in the same building that auditioned for Sandlot. Ohow, and
it was right across the well. They were like next
to each other. But I have so many memories in
that it's right across from CBS Radford and there's just

(23:41):
a row of buildings or everyone auditions. But so I
had just come back from Sandlot, and I honestly think
that that was my third audition. So I booked my
first three auditions and I didn't even like know what
I I didn't experience and believe me, I experienced heartache
in the industry later later, I didn't even know any

(24:05):
better than that thing. So I walked in and I
think I didn't even again I had. I just went
to the director because it was so last minute. I
think I had just gotten back from Sandlot, and so
they rushed me into the audition. It was for the director,
and Paulie was there and my mom was in the

(24:26):
waiting room. We do this whole scene and Paulie gets
up close to me and gets like intimidating. There's this
scene in the movie where he like says, look you
little or something like that, and he comes up close
and so he says his line and then like I
looked to the right and I think I opened the
door and I just screamed mom, and everyone started laughing

(24:47):
and loved it, and I think that, you know, and
then I just booked it. I just threw a little
zinger in there, and he loved it, and yeah. So
then I was off to Northern California to film with
Paully for three months, and Tiffany Anderthiesen was in it,
Lane Smith, Cindy Pickett like vets. So it was that

(25:10):
was the polar opposite to Sandlot too though, because Sandlot
I was with my buddies playing baseball. This I'm the
only kid with a bunch of adults, right, And I
think save By the Bell had been out then, so
I knew who Tiffany and Withertheson was and it was
probably madly in love with her.

Speaker 2 (25:26):
Of course everybody was, Yeah.

Speaker 6 (25:29):
There was this one scene where she there was like
the affair where her and another guy in the move
beer in the hay. Yeah, And so I got called
to set early because I was supposed to be my
milking scene with Poli Shore. And I get there and
she's laying in the hay about to do her scene
with the guy, and I was like, oh, I don't

(25:49):
think I'm supposed to be here, and she looked at
me and she patted the hay and said, come here,
Pat and I literally just ran to my trailer. I couldn't.
There was too much and I just was like that
was my experience. Was like I was like the little
kid and everyone loved but I.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Was, yeah, too young to be there.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
Well, before we get into Boy Meets World, do you
know at all about the Sandlot slash Boy Meets World connection.
All of these people were on Boy Meets World and Sandlot, Chauncey,
Lea Pardi, Marty York, Brandon Adams, Grant Gelt, and yourself.
We're all on Boy Meets World. That has to be
some kind of record for.

Speaker 8 (26:33):
Like, sure, Yeah, it's just was in the pilot.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
So I think we worked with Chauncey before you guys
shot Sandlot. That was I think it was the right
before you guys shot Sandlot. And I remember like he
was supposed to be a regular. He was supposed to
be Cory's other best friend. So he's in the pilot.
It's me and Chauncey and anybody on the on the pilot.
Chauncey's the one I hung out with the most. And
he was already like a little gangster. He already like
he was wearing like the baggy pants and I was

(26:58):
like he acted like a fifteen year old when he
was like twelve.

Speaker 6 (27:02):
And I remember just.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Thinking he was the coolest, like most urban kid, and
I was like such a hic. It was so funny. Yeah,
he was a huge And then I don't think I
ever I don't think I ever saw him again, like
maybe once or twice. But did he come back to
do another episode?

Speaker 5 (27:17):
No, he must have come back because I worked with
him and I wasn't in the pilot, so he Chauncey
must have been back because I'm on world.

Speaker 6 (27:25):
Was what year did I do it?

Speaker 3 (27:27):
It would have been ninety five, ninety four, ninety five
because it was season two.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
And what year we just covered it?

Speaker 7 (27:33):
Eason?

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Was season three?

Speaker 4 (27:34):
It was season it was.

Speaker 6 (27:37):
Six? Yeah, And when did we do summertime switch?

Speaker 1 (27:41):
That late ninety ninety four?

Speaker 5 (27:42):
No?

Speaker 1 (27:42):
Before that?

Speaker 6 (27:43):
Oh? Really? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Yeah, we did summertime switch after the first season of
Boy So Sandlot probably so Sandlop came out in ninety three, right, yeah, yeah, yeah,
in the fall of ninety three, and that's when War
Show premiered, and so it would have been the summer
of ninety four that you and I went and did
summertime switching in Jacksonville.

Speaker 6 (28:02):
Yeah, that was that was the bad.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
Yeah, yes, you were.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
You were psychoically.

Speaker 6 (28:10):
Maybe a little juice like read the room buddy like
you No, you.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Clearly make the boldest choice. You're like, I'm not going
to try and be funny. I'm going to play this
as like I'm going to be I'm going to be
a complete sociopath. It is hysterical funny.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
That was great.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
We talked about what great risks you took in that movie,
and uh, you and Jason Weaver are no offense to
dear writer, my one of my bestest friends. But you
two were on a different level in that movie than
everyone else.

Speaker 4 (28:43):
Just so great.

Speaker 5 (28:46):
Was still trying to figure out why they threw him
a basketball, so uncomfortable.

Speaker 6 (28:51):
Yeah, Jason was pretty great in that. I I love
that filming that. And wasn't Dave Tom in that too?

Speaker 4 (28:58):
Yes, that's right, and.

Speaker 6 (29:01):
Oh yeah that's right.

Speaker 1 (29:03):
Yeah, a bunch.

Speaker 6 (29:06):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
And I remember teaching you how to play magic the Gathering, Yes,
And we're trying.

Speaker 6 (29:10):
To play for a few years after too. He taught
me to a few years too long. I remember being
eighteen and going and gathering and was like, I'm too
old for this now. No, No, I mean look, don't
get me wrong. I'd play now and have a great time.
It's just, you know, I'm not comfortable enough to, you know,

(29:30):
admit it.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
Yeah, do you like playing a bad boy?

Speaker 6 (29:36):
I've played it a few times. Yeah, I do, I do.
I think i'd it's fun. It's It's hard to do though,
because you don't want to, like you always like when
you look at the real bad guys that have like
one oscars, like Anthony Hopkins, and how how they're almost

(30:00):
so charming and not bad, which makes them so terrifying
that that's the thing I try and remember, but it's
so easy to forget because you just want to.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
Be like like Mustache.

Speaker 6 (30:15):
Yeah, Like I almost would like to play a bad
guy in a movie and have an acting coach the
entire time going rein it back Buddy Rain it be charming,
be charming. So honestly, that's the biggest struggle in it
where I haven't been fully satisfied doing it all the
time because it's it's hard to be annimal elector you know,
how are you the most psychotic man of the planet

(30:38):
but everyone loves you? It's weird, right?

Speaker 3 (30:41):
Do you remember your audition for Boy Meets World? And
what can you tell us about it?

Speaker 6 (30:45):
No? I think I think Boy. I mean so I
hated guest starring on TV shows me too, sure, because
you're coming in to a group of people that have
been together forever and you're you know, yeah, you're just
like the odd man out I think with Boyman's World.

(31:08):
That's why I asked that question, because I remember enjoying
that process more. But I think it's because I knew
writer Yea, so I had an inn, and when you
have an in, it's cool. Like I did a couple
episodes A Glow and I was friends with Jackie Tone,
so I kind of had an inn, and then all
the girls were so welcoming that it was my favorite experience,

(31:32):
I think after Boyman Troub Thank You. So I also
think I was only there a day. I think I
had a pretty small part in that I was. Wasn't
I like a bad kid? And you were?

Speaker 5 (31:47):
You were part of the Leather Jacket gang, Yes, and
I wasn't even the lead Leather Jacket.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
Nocket number two.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
You don't speak in the episode until, like out of
a twenty two minute episode, like minute sixteen, you say
your first thing, so all refresher memory. So the episode
you appeared in is called Life Lessons, and it's about
finals week approaching and when mister Feeney refuses to adjust
the student schedule, a group of thugs basically threatened to
kill killing.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Him, literally threatened to kill him.

Speaker 4 (32:18):
You are one of those thugs.

Speaker 3 (32:19):
And do you remember working with Bill Daniels for that
final kind of big scene in the show.

Speaker 6 (32:26):
Yeah, I do, I do. But I think that was
the problem too, because he was intimidating as someone who yes,
because the show is successful already, right, Oh, and he's
mister Feenie and he's the adult on the set, and
so you're like, ah, and there was there was had
jacket number one guy Ian Bowen.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
Yeah, who was it, Ian Bowen. He's on He's on Yellowstone.

Speaker 6 (32:55):
Now, Ian Bowen. Okay. So I was like, I was
like second fiddle, second fiddle, like the whole time. Like, so,
I think it was a stressful experience for me.

Speaker 3 (33:08):
Sure, And just so you know, Bill Daniels was also
very intimidating to all of us, even though we worked
with him all the time.

Speaker 6 (33:15):
Sure, well, he's also so talented.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
So talented, and such a professional, like just the consummate professional.
And you know, we were a bunch of kind of giggling,
goofing having fun kids, and he was taking it very seriously.
So then there's a scene too at the end where
it actually says die Feenie in like spray paint on
the wall, threaten to kill the Man?

Speaker 6 (33:39):
Remember that? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Okay, but in general, Patrick, you are completely wasted. It
is the weirdest thing. Yeah, it was like watching it,
I was like, I didn't remember him being on our show.
And then I was like, and this is why, because
you were so wasted, and I feel like you actually
came and hung out on the set other times.

Speaker 6 (33:59):
Like maybe because I knew Ben a.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
Little bit, Yes, I remember, didn't did you? Do you
have a memory of going to see the movie Quiz
Show together, like in a big group of kids. I
don't know, like I feel like.

Speaker 8 (34:10):
Right universal probably probably you would have gone to the
Burbank amc or gas. Anyway, I have a memory of
going to see the movie Quiz Show with Ben and
you and a couple other friends and that, you know,
so yeah, we would like hang out and I feel like, but.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
So that's why I didn't remember you were actually on
the show. And then we watched it, I was like,
has he has he said anything? Do you just like
put him in a scene as an extra because he
was there?

Speaker 6 (34:33):
Like what's going on? But that's what I mean. It
was very you know, when I would you would come
home and then there would be like auditions for things,
and you'd do it and then you book it. You
don't know what you're gonna get. So I know I
do remember shooting it, though where there are some I
just saw an episode of R List I did, and

(34:55):
I watched it and was like, I have no memory
of being Its.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Weird, doesn't it, I don't you know? Yeah, we do
that with certain episodes.

Speaker 7 (35:05):
Yeah, we don't. We just don't.

Speaker 5 (35:06):
We were looking at going I know I'm watching myself,
but I don't remember.

Speaker 4 (35:09):
I don't remember being there.

Speaker 6 (35:11):
No, Yeah, so I at least remember filming Boy Meets World.
But I think it's because I probably watched the show
and was a fan and there was like that excitement
to be there.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
And new writer from Yeah, so that that obviously makes sense.
Now feel free to be honest and say absolutely no
to this.

Speaker 4 (35:28):
But in a world.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
Where sand Lot exists, do people ever recognize you from
Boy Meets World?

Speaker 6 (35:36):
Yeah? Yes, that there are the Boy Means World fans
that have seen everything. It's like I did a very
memorable episode in X Files, so the X file about
this stuff, and like I'll tell you, I don't get
recognized from our lists. People will be like a Boy

(35:59):
Means world, you know, but that's because the show is
so big, so.

Speaker 1 (36:03):
In general, you must get recognized so much. I can't
even I feel like you have such a unique particular
look that everyone knows you. You're so indelible for people
because of basically because of Sandlot. But right, you get
recognized like every day of your life constantly I do.

Speaker 6 (36:18):
I can't grow a beard, so it's, uh, you know,
I'm just stuck with the baby face. It definitely happens
a lot, and social media hasn't helped. And the rise
of Sandlot, I like it. That's like a new Star
Wars Sandlot from you know, the twentieth on. It's definitely

(36:41):
gotten more and more. But that that's kind of why
I started doing social media because I can. I love
it because I can do whatever I.

Speaker 4 (36:48):
Want, and yeah, it's yours.

Speaker 6 (36:50):
I'm leaning into it because that is my life, so
I might as well, you know, enjoy it. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Did you ever go through a period where you were
sort of sick and tired of getting recognized and not
wanting to deal with being not being able to walk
down the street.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
It's funny because I'm so used to it that when
it doesn't happen. I'm like, what's happening a little bit,
and I like to think that I have a decent
attitude about it, so I try and be nice. Sometimes
you're just like in a bad mood, and that's rough
because no matter what, if I know, it's their first experience,

(37:29):
and when I see someone that I love, it's my
heart jumps and all I want to do is talk.
So I have to remember that, you know, because it
does happen so frequently. But I am just a guy
living life getting screamed at my three year old, so
sometimes that you know what I mean, like totally interesting times.

Speaker 3 (37:49):
It also depends a lot on who you're with, because
I when I'm alone, I'm a lot more willing to
just stop what I'm doing. When I'm with my kids,
or when i'm with somebody else for their birthday, I
become very aware of like I'm stealing focus from what
I'm really here for, or it's infringing on time with

(38:10):
my children. So yes, it's it's depends on the circumstances
for sure.

Speaker 6 (38:16):
Yeah, But generally speaking, I mean I always say, ninety
nine percent of people are coming up to you talking
about how much of a difference you've made as Yeah,
so sometimes hard to just not even like get choked up.
You're like, really, oh my god, you know, so that's cool.
So you know, I am fairly used to it now,

(38:36):
and you know, just you know, I don't go out
unless I've showered, you know what I mean, and had
a nice cup of coffee. Like these are the things.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
We do face the world.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Yeah, I talking about you saying embracing social media. It's
one of the things that I loved so much when
I found your TikTok and I was and I loved
it so much. It's so nice for somebody like yourself
who gets recognized all the time and people in their
mind have just an idea of who you are, but

(39:06):
they obviously don't know you at all. And now you
really get to show your personality, your interests, your sense
of humor, and all of those people now who loved
you because of work that they've done, now get to
actually love you for you. And it helps with the
conversations you get to have when people stop or hate you.

Speaker 4 (39:26):
Sure, but you know what goes for you.

Speaker 6 (39:33):
No, it's a really good point. I love that's cool.

Speaker 3 (39:36):
It also expands the conversations you can have because people
now can come up to you and instead of talking
to you, which they still will, they'll talk to you
about your work and what your work meant to them,
but now they can come up to you and be like,
we have a common interest and I learned about it
through this way, And now you really are connecting with
people on a on a real person to person level
instead of that weird parasocial relationship where your and an

(40:00):
object up here and they're a person who's engaged with
your material.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
They really kind of do know you.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
And that's what made whenever I see a famous person
be able to do that and their personality is good,
I'm always so thrilled.

Speaker 4 (40:14):
Like I'm thrilled.

Speaker 3 (40:16):
It's such an enjoy If you don't follow him, please
go follow him. He's such an enjoyable person to follow.
I love it. And you collaborated with Lizzo and Jax.

Speaker 4 (40:25):
How do you know Jack's wow though?

Speaker 6 (40:27):
I mean, okay, So Jacks had a one of her
first songs had You're killing Me smalls in it right right?
Her her reps reached out to my agent and asked
if I would be in her music video, and I didn't.

(40:48):
I didn't know her yet, she hadn't hit where she
is now, right, And so I started looking at her
and I was like, oh my god, this girls amazing.
So I said, yes, I'll do it, but Jax has
to teach me about TikTok. I kid you not. I said, yes,
you're smart, Like, if she helps me on TikTok, I'll
do it. And literally Jack's was like absolutely yes. So

(41:10):
she is the reason I'm on social media like this
unbelievable because that was my pay. I was like, you
just have to teach me. So we met for coffee.
She would, you know, and she loves it. There's something
about her. She loves mentoring boomers. It's like her her
side project. And she just helped me, you know, figure
it all out and we just had a blast together.

(41:30):
So and now we've just been friends since. Like I
just went to her concert in the Forum and she
just got married and I missed her wedding. I was
so bummed.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
So, looking back your time on the Sandlot and maybe
even your small amount of time on our set, what
are your thoughts on your career overall as a child
actor thirty years later?

Speaker 6 (41:55):
Well, I think you know I think the funny thing
was the first job I did. As we know kid
who says, denutci, it looks like you wte your pants.
I was thirteen years old, so luckily I really wasn't
actually a child actor. I was a teen actor, right,

(42:17):
you know, definitely the youngest possible teen, So I was young.
But I think, you know, making that transition or experiencing
things so young, I think is probably more difficult than
the experience that I had, because you know, fifteen years old,
you know you're about to drive a car, you know

(42:38):
what you're doing. Some kids move out on their own,
they're living life. So I just look back on it
all very fondly. I got to travel the world, you know.
I did a movie in Romania when I was seventeen,
and I brought my best friend at the time's older
brother as my guardian because my mom refused to go

(43:00):
on sets with me. She did not want to be
that stage mom thing. So my mom never was on
any sets. I would, you know, my stepdad went with
me the sandlot. We would hire friends to go with
me on son in law, uh, you know, or when
I when I started getting older, I would go alone,
or you know, so I traveled to Canada and filmed

(43:24):
a lot there. So I don't know, it just it
was a It was a cool up, a cool way
to grow up, and was sort of my extended college
film sets. You know, yeah, we have.

Speaker 5 (43:35):
We had very similar, very similar experiences that same way,
whereas you know, both from the East Coast and you
know that kind of and on your own out here later,
moving out later. Yeah, my mom parents didn't want to
come on the set either. I mean, it was all
that same kind of stuff.

Speaker 7 (43:49):
Yeah, you're right, it.

Speaker 5 (43:50):
Does you look back at it in a kind of
a much more positive way when it's like that it's yours.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
I will say though, that you guys, for lack of
a better word, your parents did get kind of lucky
that both of you were had your head screwed on straight,
like it could it could have gone a different Yeah,
it could have gone a different direction.

Speaker 6 (44:11):
Were they lucky or did they raise us?

Speaker 3 (44:14):
And that's exactly that's why I said, for lack of
a better word, because it's not just luck, it is
they raised you to keep your head on straight, and
you did do it. I also give credit to you
guys for having your own moral compass of like this,
doesn't you know, friends that don't sit right with you,
you you know, keep them at arm's length, and you know,
it's just it says a lot about you, so very exactly.

Speaker 6 (44:38):
That is a big part of it. But it's it's true.
I mean, I think because you know our parents didn't
want to be there as on those sets, shows to
their mentality because that's a rough I don't know, that's
rough for parents. And sure it's rough for the crew
sometimes and it's rough for the parents. It's just it's

(44:59):
not meant to be like that.

Speaker 3 (45:01):
You know, you're right, absolutely well, Patrick, thank you so
much for being here with us.

Speaker 4 (45:07):
It was so great to see you.

Speaker 6 (45:08):
Thanks for having me. This was great.

Speaker 4 (45:10):
I'm so glad you came on.

Speaker 6 (45:11):
You guys do like a Boy Meets World new season
or something. Maybe I am not a co star this time,
maybe occurring.

Speaker 4 (45:20):
I love that.

Speaker 6 (45:20):
Maybe three lines, three or four lines.

Speaker 4 (45:22):
We'll give you a way bigger part.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
No, I don't. I don't think so at all. I
think we go back the other direction.

Speaker 5 (45:27):
I think you're credited as guy who yells die feene die.

Speaker 6 (45:34):
I like it.

Speaker 3 (45:35):
We'll still give you a guaranteed thirteen out of twenty two.

Speaker 6 (45:38):
Which is great, good, thank you great. I'm not even
a guy who yells dive Feenie die im guy who
spray painted dive.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
For a artist die feene died.

Speaker 7 (45:49):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (45:50):
Well, thank you so much for being here with us.
We hope to see you again soon.

Speaker 6 (45:53):
I'm in, I'm in. Thank you guys. Bye bye, man.

Speaker 3 (45:59):
You guys are really missing out not following him on TikTok. Honestly,
it's worth opening a TikTok account just to follow him.

Speaker 6 (46:04):
I know.

Speaker 1 (46:04):
Well, just listening to you talk about it kind of
inspired me. I was like, oh, maybe I could do
you know, maybe there's a TikTok where it's just me reading.
They're literally snow and maybe just me crying. Like I
could just like embrace the like.

Speaker 4 (46:18):
The depressed, and it will like keep audience love it.
But not only that.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
The thing that's hard for me with TikTok is that
TikTok really has so many tons of tools transitions, backgrounds, transition.
Did I say transitions, I mean tons of things, effects,
things you can do where you really can make your
own minute long movie.

Speaker 4 (46:41):
You would truly love it. Writer.

Speaker 3 (46:43):
And if you just sat there and cried for a
minute while reading something Beautiful people would love it.

Speaker 4 (46:49):
It's it's really great.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
I actually, I know it's destroying the world and we're
all we're all gonna die from TikTok and whatever else,
but it is great. Nikes, anything else you guys want
to say about Patrick instead of justice.

Speaker 7 (47:06):
To see him super funny and it's great to see
him again.

Speaker 5 (47:08):
Yeah, I mean, I you know, obviously didn't didn't know
him as well as you guys did, but was always
just such.

Speaker 7 (47:12):
A fan of I mean, it's uber talented, so I mean, yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:17):
That's it's so. It's so interesting too the way he
like basically was a fully formed actor, like the second
he decided to do it. It doesn't seem like he's
changed he personally, he hasn't changed that much physically, which
is amazing. Like he like he said, he still has
the baby face, but it's true, he still he still
looks so much like him. But then also just as
an actor, he was always just making interesting choices and
doing his own thing and being able to be a villain.

(47:39):
And he's just great.

Speaker 3 (47:41):
Yeah, he's really great. I love seeing him and yeah,
he's wonderful. I hope I hope we get to do
something with him again in the future, as.

Speaker 7 (47:48):
Long as it doesn't involve us dancing behind him on TikTok.

Speaker 3 (47:51):
I'm in I want you to dance behind me on TikTok.
If you dance behind Patrick Grenna and not me, what
do I get?

Speaker 5 (47:56):
What do I get if I go on TikTok and
dance with you? What's in it for me?

Speaker 6 (48:00):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (48:01):
The fun of doing it? We can do it on
your account, open your own account. We'll do it on
your account. I know I said, open it.

Speaker 4 (48:07):
What do you mean? What's in it for you? It's fun.

Speaker 3 (48:08):
We would also get people to to get know about
pod meats World.

Speaker 4 (48:11):
We'd be posting it to promote pod meats World.

Speaker 3 (48:13):
It's and what Tara just said, it'll bring everyone so
much joy.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
That's what you get to bring people too.

Speaker 5 (48:19):
One comment telling me something negative and I'll be curled
up in a ball for a month.

Speaker 4 (48:24):
I showed you.

Speaker 3 (48:24):
Writer the one I want to do of the three
of the people that were like dances to bring out
at the holiday party, and it was like.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
So great I do.

Speaker 4 (48:30):
I'm never gonna be that guy.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
I know, right Hey, you are encouraging say that The
whole point of TikTok is that whisk you be yourselves.
And so I only want to go If I'm ever
going to do TikTok videos, they're going to be very
much my videos.

Speaker 3 (48:44):
Right, You're going to be drunk on whiskey with a
box and a fancy pos snow.

Speaker 1 (48:49):
Glow, tears streaming down my face, just turning around, going
it was the best of times.

Speaker 8 (48:54):
It was the time.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
And there are people who will love that.

Speaker 3 (48:58):
Yeah, there are there are there are people who will
that and who loves to make people laugh.

Speaker 4 (49:02):
It's perfect for you.

Speaker 5 (49:03):
Yes, I want to make a suggestion, and so here
here will be the trade off. Okay, I will come
dance on TikTok with you if we all get together,
including Patrick, and you play magic the gathering with us.

Speaker 3 (49:17):
Oh god, I'm out, sorry, like a card game. I
don't have to dress up, do I? You don't I
love cards.

Speaker 4 (49:28):
I love cards. I'll play a card game.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
Okay, I'll do it.

Speaker 6 (49:31):
I'll that's it.

Speaker 7 (49:32):
That's a fair trade.

Speaker 1 (49:33):
I will do something on TikTok with This is your trade,
will not mine.

Speaker 2 (49:36):
No, No, I said I will do I said I'll do
it with.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
You can cry with you while you read me a poem.

Speaker 7 (49:42):
Okay there you okay, perfect, all right, all.

Speaker 4 (49:44):
Right, okay, that's it. Well we just put together a
great night. I can't wait. We're gonna play cards, cry
a little, and do a dance.

Speaker 2 (49:51):
Perfect. It's a Tuesday in my house.

Speaker 7 (49:53):
Come on.

Speaker 3 (49:56):
Thank you all for listening to this episode of bod
Meets World. As always, you can follow us on Instagram
Podmeets World Show. You can send us your emails podmeets
Worldshow at gmail dot com.

Speaker 4 (50:05):
And we have merch.

Speaker 2 (50:06):
You're killing me March.

Speaker 3 (50:08):
Podmeetsworldshow dot com writer send us out.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
We love you all, pod dismissed. Podmeets World is an
iHeart podcast producer hosted by Danielle Fischel, Wilfridell and Ryder
Strong Executive producers Jensen Karp and Amy Sugarman. Executive in
charge of production, Danielle Romo, producer and editor, Tarasubasch producer,
Maddie Moore engineer and boy meets World Superman Easton Out.
Our theme song is by Kyle Morton of Typhoon. Follow

(50:34):
us on Instagram at podmets World Show or email us
at Podmeets Worldshow at gmail dot com
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Hosts And Creators

Will Friedle

Will Friedle

Danielle Fishel

Danielle Fishel

Rider Strong

Rider Strong

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