With all the political preening, posturing, and protesting, I can guarantee on thing: I don’t trust any of it.
With all the political preening, posturing, and protesting, I can guarantee on thing: I don’t trust any of it.
I need a break from the morass of politics, so this is a bit of a 2016 year in review that’s about 60% fun, 20% sad, and 20% politics. Oh, and a warning – I get really really loud about 16:20 into the podcast.
Doing things a little different this time. This podcast is a commentary on a TED Talk from Dan Pallotta on rethinking how we look at charity. While I cite his speech regularly, for a thorough understanding of his point of view, I highly recommend clicking the link and giving his ideas a listen in conjunction…
How a very unpleasant recent experience made me take a slightly different look at the 2016 elections. This is one I would like you to listen to and share before Election Day if possible.
Part pop-culture, part politics, this podcast has a spoiler-filled review of Suicide Squad and political musings inspired by the movie.
In the aftermath of the Pulse nightclub tragedy in Orlando, a monologue about LGBT liberties, religious freedom, and gun rights.
Politics, religion, sex, they’ll find any excuse to divide us. How we respond will define us.
I rave about Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and then talk about a couple of themes in the movie and how they relate to the real world.
Special thanks to The Bladtcast for unknowingly giving me the inspiration for this month’s episode. This is an assortment of topics with one thing in common: they all have people that make me want to say “fuck you.”
A small protest, a large protest, and a critique of the first two Hangover movies. Wait… what?!?
How the mind of an ancient Roman dictator is helping destroy the ideals of individual liberty & personal responsibility. Plus, I cleverly sneak in movie recommendations.
I wanted this to be a light-hearted, fun, irreverent podcast about sexuality, but something happened along the way…
What Ariana Grande said, what people reacted to, and what they should have reacted to. (explicit)
Commentary on the Supreme Court ruling on gay marriage and the reactions on both sides.