DISGRACELAND - Bonus Episode: Disgraceland Origins, Elvis's Dressing Room, and Jake's Top 5 Movies Ever
Episode Date: March 16, 2023Rocka Rolla Disgos. It's been a wild week. Jake is riding high off a win for the show at the Ambies in Vegas, a trip to Maine, and yes, your listener messages. Not to mention Mick Jagger assassination... attempts, All Quiet's Oscar wins, and the greatness of 90s movies. Hit up 617-906-6638 to join the after party and hear from Jake yourself. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is exactly right.
Double Elvis.
Hey, Discos, need a little more disgrace land in your life?
Just a touch to get you through?
Yeah, me too.
This is the podcast that comes after the podcast.
Welcome to Disgraceland, the After Party.
Welcome to the Disgraceland bonus episode.
A little thing we like to call The After Party.
This is the show, after the show, the party, after the party, the bridge to get you from one full episode of Disgraceland to the other, the backyard to dig into the
On this episode, we are talking about a contract on Mick Jagger's Life, the big award show that just happened.
The Amby's, not the Oscars, Leonard Skinner, Peter Tosh, and of course, your voicemails, texts, DMs, and more.
And as always, a whole lot of rosy.
All right, discos, let's get into it.
Ooi, oy, oy, second full week of March, and we are back.
Beware the aides of March, A2, Butte.
Sure, why not?
I'm back here in disgrace lane with another after-party episode.
here in my Boston area studio back from Las Vegas, back from Maine, back from an action-packed
week. I was out in Las Vegas, the city of sin that'll swallow you in, picking up an award for
disgrace land. An award I was honored to receive. I've talked about why before when we were nominated.
The award was for Best Original Score in Music Supervision, nominated by and awarded by the prestigious
podcast Academy. The award is called an ambi. And like I said, I was,
I was stoked to be nominated alongside my brothers, Ryan Spraker, Matt Bowden, and Bryce
Kansas to bring this trophy home for the double Elvis trophy case, which is filling out
quite nicely, I might add.
And the reason I gave a shit about this award was because of the category.
Like I said, I've mentioned this before, and it was part of my acceptance speech out in
Vegas.
But the reality is that a lot of people that I spoke with before launching disgrace land
warned me off of doing so because the nature of the show and the challenges it would
present, it's a music show, as you know, no duh. Licensing music is very difficult to do,
never mind in a new medium like podcasting. It won't work because of this, blah, blah, blah, blah,
that's what they said. We didn't let that stop us. Obviously, I am, like I've said in the past,
from the hardcore scene, and we were taught to use our limitations as strengths. Can't get anyone
to book your band, that's okay, book the VFW hall down the street, put the show on yourself.
Can't get anyone to put out your record? That's fine, too. Find a way to record. Go press up some
copies on cassette and voila.
Now you get your own record label.
Can't afford to license the music from the artist you're discussing in your podcast.
Make your own music and build it into the show's DNA.
And that's essentially what we did because that was the number one solution I had in the
spring of 2018 when Disgraceland was born.
And that was the only way the show was going to work.
And thank God it did.
And boy, howdy am I grateful.
I was the only one up there at that podium.
And with a tight 30 seconds to accept the award, it's important to point out.
Now, there are many people who work on this show,
despite the four of us who were nominated.
Double Elvis is a team, a team that lives and dies
with the support of you guys, the listeners.
So I just want to say thank you to all of you
and to everybody at Double Elvis,
as this award is as much yours as it is mine.
Cool thing about the hotel, side note,
that the AMDs were held in.
It's the same hotel in Vegas that Elvis did
his legendary Las Vegas residency in,
and after I won the award,
they kind of whiskey downstairs to do,
interviews and get your picture taken, and then they very quickly hustle you back up into your
seat so your seat isn't empty for too long for the simulcast. And in that process, the dude who was
bringing me around was like, hey, man, you'll appreciate this. Check this out. And he took me into
this little hidden room in the bowels of the theater. And it was Elvis's actual dressing room.
They still use it as a green room of sorts. Barry Manilow is about to start a residency there in a
couple days if he hasn't already. Anyways, this dude brought me back into Elvis's dressing room.
And behind Elvis's dressing room connected, there's this door and it connects into this super tiny room.
And back there all there was was like a mirror, a desk, and a bed.
This is the bed where Elvis used to take his naps.
So damn awesome.
The spirit of Elvis was definitely in the building Fortis Graceland last week at the Ambe's.
Thanks to everyone at the Podcast Academy who voted.
Really appreciated the support from the greater podcast, just industry or whatever,
or just my friends and colleagues who were milling about the casino.
It was awesome to just run into everybody that I knew, run into new people,
just be walking around and people coming up to me.
Hey, you're in disgrace land.
Way to go, blah, blah, blah, that stuff.
It was this awesome.
Haven't had a lot of that in the last couple months, years, et cetera.
So it was a very cool experience.
I was happy to get back to New England.
I flew from Vegas, flew back home, crashed for a couple hours,
grabbed my family and headed north to Maine for the weekend,
which was awesome.
I love that state, got some good, much-needed, replenishing, soul-filling time with my family.
And a cool thing happened.
We're wandering through a random food market, picking up snacks to bring back to the hotel.
And I was cruising for some non-alcoholic beer as I'm off the sauce for Lent.
And I randomly came across the disgraceland beer called Rockarola in the cooler of this random market in Ogunquant.
And Orno Brewing, who we collaborated with on the beers from Maine.
so it shouldn't have been a surprise to me to come across Rockarola.
But then again, it totally was.
My boys saw it.
They knew it immediately.
They freaked out.
One of the customers was like, what the hell's going on?
And my wife, of course, is all bragging at the top of her lungs.
So we told her about the beer.
She bought a four-pack.
That was cool.
You can buy your own four-pack of Rockarola in New England.
It's a gluten-reduced, basically gluten-free beer.
You can get this wherever awesome beer is sold.
I'll have more info on this with specific stores up on.
our social shortly stores where you can buy rocka roll all right enough i mean mine back with some
you you you after the break so some of you might remember when i staged disgrace land did some live
shows here in boston cambridge actually and then out in denver and in san francisco and the story i told
live was the story of the rolling stones at altamont which i eventually reproduced into a full
disgraceland episode one anecdote from that story that i touched on in the live episode or live
staging and on stage and then in the other episode like I mentioned one of the anecdotes was how after
the melee of the disastrous rolling stones concert where the hell's angels stabbed and killed
meredith hunter after that mc jagger was staying in new york city out on long island at andy warhol's
place and some enterprising new york chapter hell's angels decided they were going to kill mc jagger
as payback for altamont there's a contract on his head and this story again anecdotal to the larger
Altaamont story that I told on stage
in the pot and in the podcast.
And I've always wanted to dig in deeper
to this anecdote. So
that's exactly what I did last week
over on the disgrace land YouTube channel.
We go deep into the contract that the angels
put on Mc Jagger's head and the attempt on his life
by the motorcycle club. And I encourage you
all to go watch it. That's at youtube.com
slash at disgrace land pod. Watch
the video, subscribe to our channel.
Turn on all notifications so you never
miss any of our daily shorts or our weekly
deep dives. All right.
That's YouTube. How about we get to you? Just you. No, Tube. All right. How about some of your voicemails and your text?
You can call me. You guys know this. You know it. It's 6179066638. You can leave me a voicemail. You can text me at that number as well.
617906638. And I'll respond to some of you right here in the after party. Let's hear what Sherry from the 215 has to say.
Jake, I love all your stuff. Sherry here in Philly.
Listen, don't bunny beat me because I'm on the Spotify side.
So everything you're releasing on the Spotify side, I am gobbling this shit up because your shit is good.
I've turned four to five people already onto your shit.
It's so good.
It's great.
Badlands, the disgrace land, loving both of them.
Got a question, though.
If you've done it already, then I'll hear it on the next, you know, when you have the next screening.
but if not can we have Whitney Houston, Bobby Brown,
and is it too soon for us to go after like David Caradine and Robin Williams?
I'm saying it with hesitation because Robin Williams with my heart.
But anyway, love you, Jake. Thank you.
Sherry and Philly, I love you back.
Listen, I'm good with the Spotify listeners.
Never going to hate.
Appreciate you guys, no matter what platform you're listening on.
As for Whitney, there's a disgrace land episode on Whitney Houston.
It's part of season four, which means it's a previously exclusive episode,
and that this one in particular is going to be re-released into your feed, Sherry, on March 24th.
That's coming up.
You get that to look forward to.
As you guys know, we are releasing previously exclusive content every day.
this month in March.
We're doing our best
to get the entire archive
back out into your feed
for your listening pleasure.
And Sherry also,
Sherry, you brought up
the Badlands series.
You're talking about Robin Williams.
There's a Robin Williams episode.
It's out there.
It's out there.
It's in your feet on Spotify.
It's everywhere.
Go, listen.
It's there.
Get in there, Sherry.
Come on.
All right.
Let's check out
this voicemail from the 224.
I really dig your show.
I just listened to the one
about the club kids.
I have one thing
to say there's no such thing as assless chaps if they had an ass in him they'd beat pants ha okay i stand corrected
maybe i think i don't know i said assless chaps not assless pants so i don't know what i'm missing here
dude uh this guy's referring to our episode though from season one on michael aleg which i highly
recommend that you guys go listen to if you've not already it's an easy one to pass over because you
see his name and you're like who the hell is this guy he's not a musician but he was
a famous club promoter,
tangentially attached to the music scene
in New York, in the 90s.
And this story,
Michael Alec and the Club Kids,
is one of the wilder stories we've ever done.
And that's saying something, as you know.
So I highly recommend you check out that episode.
Guys, 617-906-66-38.
You can call and yell at me about assless chaps
or whatever you want to yell at me about.
You can also text me like the 305.
All right, so from the 305, this is a long message here.
I'm going to read part of it because it's very connected to the conversation we've been having here in the after party.
The 305 says, now I wouldn't recommend this, but when I was going through a really low point in my mid-20s,
I spent a few months listening to predominantly Nick Cave in the Bad Seeds, Elliot Smith and Tom Waits.
Yikes.
That yikes is my part because that's some dark shit there.
I had a bunch of their CDs on constant rotation.
That's where Nick Cave comes in.
And in hindsight, that was a bit too much wallowing in the sadness.
But damn, the music was still amazing.
Yeah, that music is amazing, but that's a lot of darkness, man.
A lot of sadness, like you're saying.
And this is because getting this text from the 305
because in our last episode,
someone had asked me what I like to listen to when I'm sad
and to cheer me up.
And I answered, I don't really listen to music to cheer me up.
Not anymore.
I don't know if I really ever did.
I do other things, but I'm not going to go backwards and repeat what I said last week.
But that's why I got this text.
We also talked in the last episode about what I'm reading, and I mentioned Flannery O'Connor, and the 305 goes,
oh, and Flannery O'Connor isn't my favorite writer, but I do think Good Country People is one of the best short stories ever written.
I don't remember where she originally published it, but it's been widely anthologized and for good reason.
Thank you, 305.
I have not read that short story, Good Country People by Flannery O'Connor, but I'm going to go check it out on
pretty sure I have it in an anthology in my library.
And then the 305 sent this awesome picture of Billy Holiday with her dog, Mr.
Which, you know, if you have not heard the Billy Holiday episode of disgrace land,
Mr. Her dog features prominently in it.
It's a drug-dealing dog.
You're like, what?
What the fuck are you talking about?
Just trust me, go listen to the Billy Holiday episode.
All right, let's do some more texts.
From the 314, MacMiller episode.
I think the ending of that episode was one of the best.
endings of a podcast episode I have ever heard. Thank you. Well, thank you, 314. Go check out that
Mac Miller episode if you have not heard it. From the 202. My wife says, this looks like fingers.
Again, not a food stylist. I don't know what the fuck I'm looking at here, man. It's a picture of
geez, dude. Oh, wait, there's another text. Again, Jake, amazing episode on Ike and Tina Turner.
I know you like to know how we listen. The 62-year-old retired. I'm not going to say what she calls herself,
but lesbian is the polite word.
Lisons while she's making bangers and mash.
Total whim for late Friday night dinner.
Loved the episode.
Nutbush City Limits is one of my favorite songs.
Had no idea of the origin.
I'm a constant podcast listener.
You are the best.
Thank you from the 202.
And there's some bangers and mash in a photo there.
All right.
Digging it.
Send me the food picks.
I'm here for the food porn.
All right.
What else we got here?
What up Jake from the 971?
I'm laying here in bed next to my sleeping sick 10,
month old passing the time with Kurt and Courtney part one. I'm sorry you're 10 month old is sick that
sucks and that's stressful shit man I've been there. Textor goes on to say thanks for all the amazing
content brother. I do have a suggestion though. Have you ever thought of doing some more early
American delta blues players like Sun House? I have and I will. We did the Robert Johnson
episode that's currently in the archive. It's not it has not yet been re-released live but it will soon.
House is a prominent player in that episode.
And we've got a Skip James episode that I did
at the Newport Folk Festival last summer.
We are doing the fully recorded version of that.
And that's coming out when, like a month or so.
That's a new one.
All right, what else we get?
Oh, look at this.
How's this for timing?
The 724 sends in a text,
and it's a photo of Lee Field's album, Sentimental Fool.
the aforementioned Robert Johnson episode
that I just talked about in Sun House,
Lee Fields, the great soul singer, modern R&B soul singer,
he voices Sun, he voiced Sunhouse for me.
We hit up his manager, we're like, hey man, let's get Lee Fields in on this action.
And he did a tremendous job playing the role of Sunhouse's decapitated head.
Have I hooked you yet?
Are you like, what the hell are you talking about?
I'm going to check this Robert Johnson.
episode out. You've mentioned Lee Field's
Sun House's head and Robert
fucking Johnson. I hope so. Get
in there and check that out.
724 also says,
Jake, thanks so much for everything you do on your podcast.
I took your advice about listening to Lee Fields.
Man, I'm absolutely a huge
fan of his now. Sentimental Fool.
An incredible album. I spend it at least twice
a week. Thanks, man, rock or rolla. All right, you got it.
Yeah, Lee Fields is no fucking joke.
Check that out. A lot of text.
Let's keep going through here. What do we got? What do we
got what do we got what do we got what do we got what do we got uh hi my name is jared and i'm a huge
fan of disgrace land bad lands i was wondering if you have any merch for sale jeez oh jared come on
merch is a touchy subject around here uh we are all out of merch we've got new stuff coming for
you i need to get on it that's my answer i apologize um what else do we got hey jake big fan
from canada here was curious if you've ever read al jorgensen's book and if you've ever considered
doing a podcast or YouTube video on his crazy story.
Al Jorgensen is, of course, the mastermind behind the industrial band Ministry.
And no, I haven't read the book.
I've seen Ministry Live before a couple times.
I love him.
And, you know, thanks for reminding me.
He goes on, this textor goes on from the 519 to say,
I would also be curious to your opinion on the validity of his claims.
I don't know what old Al is spewing, but now I'm intrigued.
So maybe I'll check that out.
What else we got here?
from the text.
All right, last text here from the 4-24.
I love you show.
I listened to every single episode
and listened to the re-releases
and the new releases.
I work as a programmer
and your show really helps me
to get through the day.
Your show is very informative,
but not like a boring classroom setup.
It really helped me communicate
to my coworkers
whose kind of music is rock and rollish.
Thank you for helping me sound cool.
Thank you for helping me sound cool.
Keep it up.
Looking forward to the future.
Jamie, J-A-I-M-I-E from the 4-R-N-R-E from the 4-R-E.
two four well jamie i like this text because you know disgrace land goes deep um goes real deep
and that's by design that's what the podcast is that's baked into the cake so to speak
but it was brought to my attention a about a year ago that there's this this entirely not jamie
i don't know who you are and i don't know how old you are but i'm guessing you're a little bit younger
than me. And it was brought to my attention that there's this entire new generation of young
20-somethings who are obsessed with classic rock but are perhaps not as knowledgeable because they didn't
grow up anywhere near it or around it. It's music that their parents listened to or listened to.
It's great music. There's all these amazing biopics being made, Queen, Elton John, great movies
about classic rock, almost famous, you know,
Fast Times at Ridgemont High, not classic rock, but great soundtrack, et cetera.
All these real iconic touchstones in our culture that rub up against classic rock,
but it can be intimidating for younger people,
which is an idea and a notion that I never really thought about before
because I just grew up surrounded by it.
I've gone through so many stages of classic rock, you know,
like I hated it for a long time.
I denied it, even though I loved it.
It's just what you do if you're my age.
And you've grown up in punk and hardcore and classic rock.
You know, it comes to you first, and then it bores the shit out of you, and then it's overplayed,
and then you come back to it, and you love it.
And you start a podcast that utilizes the history of classic rock most of the time,
along with some modern stuff.
But I just really got into this idea that there was this whole generation of coming,
listeners who are intrigued by classic rock yet kind of intimidated by it perhaps or at the very
least want to hear more about it and don't have a place to do it besides classic rock radio and
classic rock radio is you know no offense to classic rock radio guys but it's it's not my thing
you know it is a thing it's not my thing i think classic rock is one of the most misunderstood
genres of music or mis that's not right it's one of the most mispresented genres of music it might be
the coolest genre of music but it is presented in an incredibly uncool way and has been presented
that way for decades and you know i'm not saying i'm making a make a make a classic rock
great again hat but i am kind of in the front of my mind thinking about how do we make classic rock
all of us, you know, like, I don't want to be exclusionary.
And I'm certainly not trying to come off like a snotty record store geek with disgrace land.
I'm very happy to receive this text from Jamie.
So one of the things I'm doing about it, that's the YouTube channel that I've been talking about constantly.
But you'll find when you go to the YouTube channel that not only are you getting stories on our disgrace land YouTube channel that aren't part of our disgrace land podcast feed,
the stories are a little bit broader.
They're not as deep.
The format's different and the medium's different.
YouTube is a different place.
It's a wider, bigger space.
So I feel like it allows us the opportunity
to not go as deep, play a little bit up closer to the surface,
and perhaps reach some other folks
who might be,
put off, put off is too strong, but just, you know, not as into the, the deep, deep, deep dives we do on disgrace land. And, you know, not that, not that we're being like, not that we're in the shallow under the pool over on YouTube, we're offering you stories that, that you, even if you're a huge music fan, you might not have heard before. But I'm not doing it in a way where I'm comprehensively, you know, drilling down as deep as we do in disgraceland. And that's on purpose. And, um,
I'm hoping to bring some folks in to the disgrace land universe who might be sitting there at the edge of the pool,
dipping their toe in and are ready to jump.
So come on in.
It's a big pool.
We got room for all of you.
I've been ranting.
You know, those are texts.
There are voicemails before that.
617-9066638.
Some of your texts, your voicemails.
You can DM me as well at Discraceland Pod on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and Twitter.
And I'll respond either there in app or.
here in the after party like I am to, oh hey, it's Caitlin on Instagram who sent in a picture of
her and her dad at the Leonard Skinnerd crash site after hearing our recent episode on Skinner.
Thanks, Caitlin.
Got another airplane crash story from Rock History coming into your feed this week with our story
on Otis Redding.
I hope you guys have heard that and I look forward to talking about it with you all on next
week's after party.
Hit me up at Disgraceland Pod on Instagram, Twitter, TikTok.
and Facebook on your Otis writing episode thoughts
or just your Otis
writing thoughts in general. I love Otis, you love Otis,
how do you not love Otis? Everyone loves Otis.
All right, another story we have for you guys
in the media future is the story on Peter Tosh,
which is not a podcast. It's a video
and like I said before, it's going to only be
available on the YouTube channel. That's
coming this weekend, Sunday, March 19th,
go to the YouTube.com slash
at Disgraceland Pod to subscribe
to the disgrace land video channel
so you do not miss these extra stories.
Peter Tosh, Wayland Jennings, Debbie Harry,
and more. Get in there, and I'll get right back after this with some recommendations.
All right, another week in the disgrace and then after party and another week without a theme song
for the recommendations part. You guys are letting me down, letting me down, letting me down.
Actually, my guys at Double Ovis are letting me down more than you guys are. They're professional musicians.
They get paid to make this shit up for a living. Where the hell are they with the theme song?
I want my tossed salad and my scrambled eggs. The fuck is happening. Kelsey Grammer never had to stand for this affrontary, so I'm not sure why I have to.
I'm an award-winning podcaster for fuck sakes.
So for original music score, music supervision, no less.
And I can't get a goddamn cheesy segment theme song.
What is happening?
The shit is cold.
All right, I digress.
My recommendations.
So many recommendations.
As like I said, I was traveling this past week.
So I had the opportunity to take in a lot of content.
Someone recommended Chuck Klosterman's book, The 90s to me a while back.
I'm not sure who, but thank you.
And then someone bought me the book.
I'm also not sure who.
So thank you.
Anyway, I re-bought the book while I was in Las Vegas.
I was in the airport and I didn't want to decide it.
I didn't want to stare into my phone for five hours on the plane.
I had nothing else to read.
So saw the book in the bookstore, bought it again.
Read it, read a lot of it on the plane.
I'm still reading it this week.
This book is incredible and it's not just a testament to the second greatest generation
of my lifetime, Generation X, second of the World War II generation, the greatest generation.
But again, I digress.
The 90s by Klosterman, it's an incredible.
incredibly smart take on not only the decade of the 1990s, but on our perception of the 1990s,
often our misinformed perception of the 1990s. And Klosterman backs up this disruption of the popular
narrative of what the 90s was with wait for it, data. Yes, actual data, polls,
television ratings, record sales, all that data. And this is not a dry read by any
mean, I'm not trying to sell it like that. It's not. Everything's contextualized in his great style of
writing, which is humorous and also very much of the 90s. The results of what the 90s were are not
what you think. What actually happened, even though I lived through it. My view of that decade is
colored by the popular narrative that has sprung up in the decades since. And this is fascinating,
but it's not surprising.
It's too much to go into right here,
but if you're all interested in the 10 years
and informed this show,
probably more than any other decade in history,
or if you just want to get your fill of,
oh, well, whatever, never mind,
then read the 90s by Chuck Klosterman.
You'll dig it.
That's what I'm reading.
All right, I'm watching, or I watched.
I watched half the Oscars.
Who watched the whole show?
It's a long show, man.
And very serious.
It's very serious this year.
The Oscars are getting very serious.
I guess that's what happens when your best leading man Oscar winner gets up and smacks one of the presenters.
Next year, you're going to come back very serious.
Anyways, I was happy that all quiet on the Western Front won for best score, very much deserved in my opinion.
I did not see everything everywhere all at once, so I can't therefore comment on the rest of the Oscars
because that movie kind of won everything, Oscar everywhere all at once.
I won seven awards, I think.
So people loved it.
I believe them.
I'm going to watch it.
I'm probably going to watch it tonight.
If you saw it, let me know what you think.
Let me know what you thought of the show.
I like critiquing awards shows.
It's fun for me.
Like I said, I thought this one is very serious
and not particularly exciting.
As I mentioned on previous after parties,
I'm watching.
I'm also watching Party Down.
I finished the first two seasons, like I said I would,
and I started the reboot season three.
I love the first episode.
I'm going to watch the second episode tonight.
I'm excited to see it.
see where the rest of the season goes.
And if I'm going to miss Lizzie Kaplan, I can't tell yet.
I probably in.
I think she's great.
I don't know.
Maybe the show can exist without her.
I hope so.
I also rewatched heat, all right?
After reading some of Klosterman's book, I was in the mood for something 90s.
And I saw heat in the theaters when it came out.
I've watched bits and pieces of it passively over the years as it appeared on cable or whatever.
But I've never sat down and watched.
heat from start to finish again.
And I don't know, man.
I think it might be one of my favorite movies ever.
I'm not sure.
It's so fucking good.
I'm not telling anyone who's seen this movie,
anything they don't know.
This movie's a masterpiece.
I just can't believe I haven't given it the time it deserves.
It wasn't on purpose.
It wasn't like fuck heat.
It wasn't like I don't like heat.
I loved it when I saw it.
The writing, the acting, the pacing, the ending,
the cast, fucking cast is incredible.
Tonloque, Al Pacino.
God, De Niro, John Voie.
Henry Rollins
God, who else?
That weird Ted guy from Silence of the Lamb.
So many great actors.
Oh, fucking homeboy who just died.
Oh, God, what is his name?
He was snubbed at the Oscars.
Hold on, I've got to find this guy.
He's great.
Tom Seismore.
How did I forget that?
I'm really upset of myself for not having that
at the tip of my tongue.
Tom Seismore's in it.
And of course, our friend, Val Kilmer, not our friend, but my wannabe friend.
And he's great.
They're all great.
Ashley Judd, like I said, the cast, it's incredible, it goes on.
But, you know, I'm wondering, is this one of my top five movies of all time?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Quick, without thinking my top five movies of all time, without thinking,
Jaws, Goodfellas, Godfather, Pulp Fiction, Boogie Nights.
Is he better than any of those five?
I don't know.
Again, Jaws, Goodfellas, Godfather, Pulp Fiction, Boogie Nights.
again is heat better than any of those five uh maybe it's better than the boogie nights i don't know
maybe that top five list sucks i also don't know it could top five movies of all time that's a
hard fucking list to come up with what are your top five movies 617906 666 63638
send me a text 617906 666 636 638 top five movies of all time five don't send me six don't send me 10
don't send me four or three two or one if you can get down there i'm going to be impressed but five is
wicked hard uh so is he to top five movie is it worthy of my list does my list suck how flawed is my
list what does it say about me that three movies in my top five are from the 90s and the other two
or from the 70s what does that say about the decade i came of aging or the decade that i was born in
i don't have answers to these questions all i know is that heat is the shit all right what i'm
listening to i'm listening to the washed up
Emo podcast with Tom Mullen because I'm a fucking narcissistic ego mate.
No, I just sat for an interview with Tom.
So yeah, I am a narcissistic egomaniac.
And in preparation, I went back and crushed a couple of TOB's episodes from Washed Up Emo.
Great podcast.
I listened to the Ghee one from Fugazi as an episode, Ted Leo from Chisel, from Walter, from Quixin.
There's so many.
Tom makes a great show.
If you're at all interested in emo or hardcore or post hardcore or whatever the hell you want to call it,
you probably already know about washed up email.
But if you don't, I highly recommend you check it out.
That's washed up emo wherever you get podcasts.
I will be back in a flash.
All right, stage fright.
Let's recap number one, previously exclusive episodes of disgrace land coming every weekday in March.
Number two, new Peter Tosh episode coming to YouTube this weekend.
Number three, new Otis Redding episode in your.
feed right now. Number four,
Heat is the shit, but is it
top five? And now,
my moment of bliss, me
reading the phone book, from
Las Vegas, Nevada,
1930.
Patterson, Webster
Ranch, 10-F1,
4. Pleasant Valley Ranch
Co. Holland Ranch, 7-F5.
Strange Frank,
Ranch,
7-F1-1-3.
Bureau of Reclamation, 98.
Burgess, William, Chiropractor,
119 South 2nd, 344.
Business Service Berkeley Building, 500.
Bucic, H. Southern Nevada Bank 5, Fremont, 152.
Callan, A.E. 600, South 6th, 280.
Kerner, H.A.
215 south 6th, 421.
Cashman's Paint Shop, 11th in Fremont, 228, Cemetery, north of town, 92.
Central Labor Union Boulder Club Building, 391, Chamber of Commerce, Delken Building,
204, Christian, H.C. Richfield Board Company, 310 South Main.
Quit talking and start mixing.
