Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What would you talk about on your on your podcast?
Firm Elvis Presents Show. All right, I got something for
us to talk about on our podcast. I hate that intro.
What would you talk about your podcast? I'll talk about
(00:23):
your podcast, the Brooklyn Boys? What about us? Oh did
you enjoy the last episode? Yeah? I mean you know
very much. So you know I I don't hear all
of them, but everyone I'll turn them on like every
other week, you know, on average. I love it. I
love the energy. I love the fact that you guys
go on there and you are yourselves and you have
time to say this stuff. You know that I won't
(00:43):
let you say on the Show's correct, I'd rather you
save it for your podcast. It's all for you, it's
for your veteran. Elvis said that for three years before
we haven't had a podcast, said, you get your own show,
and now you do. Okay with that? You have your
own show, and you know you're talking about Gandhi and
how you used her name to get her a seat
at a table. That but but I started fact checking
(01:07):
Scary for instance, Now Gandhi, are you Gandhi's great granddaughter
or great great grand Okay, Scary insisted you were great,
right though, he was your great great And there was
another thing you said on the podcast which was not
correct me. Yeah, what did I say? I can't remember.
I love that you're fact checking. I was. I was
(01:27):
on the treadmill listening to the Brooklyn Boys podcast and
by the way it made, it made the run go
by really fast. I enjoyed it. You trying to run
away from the podcast. Imagine you like behind me and
I just want to get the hell out of there.
I love the podcast. I thought it was It's great.
It's awesome, It's perfect the way it is. Well. There
(01:48):
was an interesting thing that came up on the podcast
about him helping Gandhi. I asked him, would he have
been more upset if he couldn't get the table because
he would have felt bad for Gandhi or because it
would have hurt his image as being able to get
a table the Maestro, and he said he'd be more
upset if he couldn't get the table because it would
make him look bad. Yeah, I understand. It was kind
of like, oh my god, this is embarrassing. I better
(02:10):
give it the gusto and make sure that this table
gets booked. It so I went all in, thank you,
So I'm trying to say else there was something else
I was fact checking you, and there was another factor
you got totally wrong. But by the way, I just
learned now that he was your great great granddad and
not your great grandfather. So that's my bad. That's okay. Honestly,
when people ask me, I just said he's my great grandfather,
because it's it's yeah, before after a great it's like,
(02:33):
there's the other thing. Okay, you talked about sports, you
talked about I don't know, Okay, I just want to
let you know that I'm listening and taking notes, and
I think you'd be proud of us. I'm very proud
of you. I think it's I think it's a great podcast,
and it's growing. I've seen the numbers. It's growing every week.
It's doing really well. How bench ham doing is there
(02:53):
at You're on Fetching it happens to Garrett? How How
are how's your your podcast going? It's great. I have
Celebrity Yeah with Rob Shooter, and then I created something
new called the Audio Laboratory because just like the Brooklyn Boys,
where they have all this stuff they want to say
on the show, they have no time. I have all
(03:14):
this audio that I don't get to use, so I
put it all together and that's how I got the
audio laboratory. I want to hear that because I love
your audio stuff. I had no idea how long you've
been doing this? About a month? Oh okay, I remember
the fact checking the Brooklyn Boys podcast. The other fact
I think you I think you got wrong was how
ZA got whatever, how they get their reviews. You said
(03:37):
that people are hired and paid to do it, when
I when I took part of that, I never got
paid for doing that in reviews. They recruit everyday people
to do it. I don't think that they get a
form of payment that. I thought you said that on
your podcast. I don't know. I would check that out.
He did, and I and I said, I don't think
that's correct. We did say it's the gat right. By
the way, we're talking about Garrett's podcast, we should talk
about Froggies podcast, the Playing Through podcast. It's about golf.
(04:00):
Last week he interviewed Bruce Kepka, number two golfer in
the world. That's right, and he uh, he had a
quote that went viral all the Golf Digest, Golf World
all the golf sites got picked up, and his listenership
for this past episode went up three D. And all right,
you gotta come up with an idea, we said, we heard.
(04:20):
We sat with one of the podcast gurus of our company,
Maddie Maddie and they and he said that the more
specific and more honed in on a specific topic you
can be, you can make an entire podcast out of
that deep and narrow find that niche audience, niche or
niche whatever like. For instance, Prodi's Walkers and Talkers podcast
specifically aimed at that show exactly, and I have no
(04:43):
interest in it because I have no freaking clue, right,
but what do you have in your life that you
want to expose that you have a lot of exactly,
But you knew how to hit a nerve with your
Walkers and Talkers because you know there are a lot
of people who love walking dead. Ye. This trusses me
out because they were talking about this podcaster Maddie too,
and he was saying, you know, if there's just something
that you're passionate about and you think you know more
about this information, more about this topic than anybody else,
(05:06):
that's what you should do. And it made me think,
I think I have anything that I think I know
more about than everybody else. Nothing, But I bet you do.
That's the thing. It's something you blanche. It's something that's
so obvious you overlook it. Like mine would be crunchy Lasagna. See,
that would be a good one. That would be about
crunchy lasagna every week. By the way, no matter what
(05:28):
you talk about, crunchy lasagna is a great name for
a podcast. I was thinking about that. Who like, now
someone just took it. I want to do a shipping
back a shoe podcast, but I can't. What would you
talk about? That's a starter, But what would you What
would I talk about? You should call it walkers and
talkers finally, an interesting walks and podcast. I just don't
(05:52):
know what I would talk about, Like what you like
the hits and misses of the week, new shoes that
came out. Yeah, I could have shoes. Shoes or signers
on shoes are so visual, it really are so I
don't know if you can do it, you have to
be very descriptive. By the way, speaking of podcast, this
is a boring, boring podcast. Let's all talk about sex
baby alright's turn out there went sex this weekend. This weekend,
(06:16):
I had yeah, at the end of last week. That
doesn't count, right, Friday Friday is the weekend. Yeah, I can't.
I would never talk about my sex life with you. Okay, no,
just you, but anyone? Can we talk about the Grammys?
(06:37):
Have I have a concerned about the summies? What didn't have?
You didn't have sex? Talented? Love her by the way,
but she one Album of the Year. Yes, now here's
my problem. The cmt s, the CMAS. Country artists have
their own award shows. Give us this. He let pop
music win the Grammy for Best Album. You have your
(06:58):
own thing going to see mt put the Ammy's is
his full spectrum it it's every genre. Was full on shocked.
She sat there with her mouth open. But it does.
But her album doesn't cross genres. It's just one genre.
I like an album that crosses multiple genres. To me,
that's a great album. I think a lot of people
like her album. Also, like Scott, he's got a point
(07:19):
because we don't have the top forty awards, and then
we should. That's what I'm saying. Like post Malone crossed
multiple genres of music. That's a great album. If the
point is to attract a lot of people and get
a lot of people listen to the album. I feel
like post Malone might have one best album. Nothing against
the country artists. I don't know. I agree with I
(07:40):
see we need in addition to not that the Grammys
cannot be just a pop right, but let's let her
win Best Country Album, but that should be also a
best pop album. I don't think you can compare all
those genres. But like at the Oscars, you don't put
best Drama against best Comedy. It's best picture, but it's
never a comed What are you saying? What are you saying?
(08:01):
I think there's the best pop album there is that
because Ariana grande A one it it was like best
pop vocal, Best Beny one for Ariana one for Sweetener
that was best pop album. She's right, Gandhi's right. Here's
my favorite name of Gandhi. About Gandhi, she has her
laptop in front of her, and if ever you say
one thing that she may have a question about, you
can hear her. You can hear her fingernails on her keys.
(08:25):
Like looking at the best pop vocals. Well, I just
want to make sure that I'm putting out the correct
information on the Working Boys podcast Best Rap Album and
Cardi b one then the album now best album, right,
and they decided it was a country thing because some
people could argue that the hip hop should be kicked
out too, because the b ET awards exist and they
have their own kind, right, So Ariana one Best Pop
(08:47):
Vocal Album even though she wasn't there. You know who
else had a great weekend was Halsey and she wasn't
even at the Grammars, right, she was a Saturday night
We are much better than the material they made her do.
What's the difference between a Grammy than am an American
Music Award? Ones? One company ones the other. That's the
only thing. One was created by Dick Clark, the other
was created by the Grammy. So which one is more prestigious? Arguably?
(09:12):
But first, the most prestigious is the I Heart Radio Music.
But don't the Grammys and the a m A's have
this thing still where if one performs that one, they
can't perform at the other. They used to remember, I
think those are the production companies. They get hard on,
hard on for people who aren't you know, yeah yeah,
are doing There's exclusively the big enough artist wants to
do both, they'll do both. Hey, by the way, the
(09:33):
I heart Radio Music Awards. We just love all serv
We don't care where you perform. Show up. I'm super
excited to go this year. Can't You've never been, never been.
It's fun. I can't wait. You guys are a fun team.
It's easier and easier than the music festival. We don't
work as much. And the categories you do, we don't categories.
(09:55):
The categories are more most instagrammable animal right, you know,
like the dog that won the Palm Dog. Do you
know what I want to do tomorrow? I want to
try to explain on this podcast the difference between music
back then and music now. I sent this article too scary,
didn't I send it to you? Dandie. I'm just scary.
It's about the sound of music back in the seventies
(10:17):
and eighties, especially the seventies versus now. And it's it's
a scientific approach to how music is different. It's recorded different,
it's it's process different, and uh, it's it's it's changed.
There were sound engineers that would would concentrate on the
highs and the lows of of a track and an
album and now it's so loud and noisy that we're
(10:41):
all competing for the most compression, which means too much highs.
So they took like a bar graph and they track
all the dots on it and like today's music, like
four of the five. So maybe I should explain this,
Like I said, we need to get we need to
get audio this, you know what saying that we're not
(11:01):
going to talk about this. You have to have audio
back up to examples because they're anyway they're saying the
way music is recorded now is fatiguing as opposed to
the way it was recorded back when we played vinyl
and it was a whole different world. But it's better
explain music. This is the article about the Golden Age
of pop. So it came out. Study just came out
(11:23):
say they have the official Golden age of pop the years.
Do you want to try to guess seventies, closed sixties
through the nineties. Anything after that is not the golden
ag pop? What about Macina that's in the nineties, let's
catch I'm serious. This is probably the most boring podcast
(11:44):
we've ever had. Isn't Monday podcast. It's kind of like
podcast tired. My podcast doesn't exist. But when it does,
you'll see you will rue the day, Brodie, I will.
I will definitely ruine the day. Fact check that thing
up and down Rue the day scary is rue the
day correct. You know what, I'm not going to argue
(12:04):
with him. I'm not because I'm gonna be proven wrong.
I could tell you were so, Charlie Brown, Well all right,
it's over. Thank god. The fifteen Minute Morning Show