DISGRACELAND - Bonus Episode - Preserving Rock n' Roll, Solo Beatles, and Remembering John Lennon
Episode Date: December 5, 2024This week in the After Party, Jake looks back at John Lennon and gets your take on which Beatle had the best solo career.Next week, we're bringing you the story of a true rock n' roll original, Shane ...MacGowan, and in honor of his classic song "Fairytale of New York," we want to know: what are your favorite holiday songs? Tell Jake your favorites and why at 617-906-6638, disgracelandpod@gmail.com, or on socials @disgracelandpod, and he'll curate a killer Disgraceland holiday playlist based on your recommendations!Join us on Patreon for the premiere of "We Are Not Alone: Music Won't Save Us, But Tom Delonge Might," our first documentary-style video episode of Disgraceland! This premiere event will be available to all Patreon members (free and All-Access) on Thursday, December 12, at 8 PM EST, and Jake will be there in the chat to chop it up with you! Visit the Disgraceland Patreon page for more information.For more great Disgraceland episodes, dive into our extensive archive, including such episodes as:Episode 41 - Iggy PopEpisode 97 & 98 - EaglesEpisode 117 - 50 CentTo hear an extended version of the After Party and to hear more from the DISGRACELAND community, become a Disgraceland All Access member at disgracelandpod.com/membership.Visit www.disgracelandpod.com/merch to see the latest Disgraceland merch!Sign up for our newsletter and get the inside dirt on events, merch and other awesomeness - GET THE NEWSLETTERFollow Jake and DISGRACELAND:InstagramYouTubeX (formerly Twitter) Facebook Fan Group 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.
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This is exactly right.
Double Elvis.
When a group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist, they take matters into their own hands.
I vowed. I will be his last target.
He is not going to get away with this.
He's going to get what he deserves.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This season on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
we have some fantastic guests like Amelia Clark.
When like young people come up to me and they want to be an actor or whatever.
My first thing is always, can you think of anything else that you can do?
Rather be disappointed in.
Do that.
David O'Yellowo.
I love this podcast, whether it's therapy or relationships or religion or sex or addiction
or you just go straight for the guts.
Dennis Leary, Gaten Matarazzo from Stranger Things,
Tana Monsu, Camilla Morone,
Carrie Kenny Silver, and more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Movies can make you feel, make you dream.
Sometimes they even make you appreciate architecture.
Is there anybody who's been hotter in a doorway
than Elizabeth Taylor?
That's the kind of analysis you'll find every week on Dear Movies I Love You, the new podcast from the Exactly Right Network.
Every Tuesday, we break down the films we're crushing on, from blockbusters to deep cuts.
Listen to Dear Movies I Love You on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 disgrace land to the other, the backyard to dig into the dirt.
On this bonus episode, we are talking about this week's subject of the disgrace land full episode, John Lennon in his early 70s politics.
We are also talking about rock and roll animalism in the true spirit, not of Christmas, but of rock and roll.
And of course, we are diving into your voicemails.
texts and more. And as always, a whole lot of rosy. All right, Discos, let's get into it.
All right, what's up, Discos? I hope you had a beautiful Thanksgiving with your families.
I did. I got to chill. I got to do a little work as well. I had some time to start this
poster project that I've been noodling on. I've been talking to different designers about designing a new
disgrace land poster. It's not fully thought out in my head, but it's basically the literal
manifestation of disgrace land, you know, as a place. It's an image that is filled with vice,
grime, crime, and of course, rock and roll. And in my head, as I'm trying to picture this,
so that I can articulate it to these designers that I'm talking to, who will ultimately create it,
who have the real talent. As I'm picturing it, you know, through all this death and destruction,
there's a path almost like like shoots and ladders,
like a shoots and ladders type of path or like some sort of board game.
There's like a winding path.
And the path has a beginning and an end.
And in my head,
I was having a hard time figuring out what the path was for at first.
Why I kept going back to it.
In my mind, I was like, there has to be this path.
You know, I don't know why.
It's just something I'm thinking about.
And then it hit me because it's obvious.
The path is the hero's journey.
the hero from our stories.
And what's at the end of the path, that also became obvious to me.
Because in most cases, in our stories, what's at the end of the path is redemption.
That's what happens to most of the subjects that we discuss in disgrace land.
In most cases, despite the awful, horrible things that these musicians and entertainers do,
and despite the awful and horrible things that happen to them, at the end of the line,
even if there's death, there's usually redemption.
And that's a powerful thing.
It's a powerful thing in storytelling.
It's a powerful thing in life itself.
It's what makes these human stories that we tell so dramatic, I think, and so resonant.
And I bring this all up because in this week's John Lennon episode, or I should say in this week's John Lennon episodes,
because we've got a couple rewinds coming your way as well, this theme of redemption is certainly the case.
the episode on John's political efforts from the early 70s.
In the end, John's a shell of himself, but he's closer to redemption.
And spoiler alert, even though John Lennon dies by the end of the 1970s,
by the end of 1980, December 8th, in fact, by that date,
John Lennon is most certainly redeemed.
He becomes what he was supposed to become all along,
which is a family man, a family man who is expressing his love for his family in his art.
Personally and creatively, he's at peace with himself finally.
of course, John Lennon has always been completely authentic, almost to a fault.
He always expressed his love of family, his love of Yoko.
In some ways, you know, before the end of the 70s, his love of Sean and Julian and his mother.
But by the end of the 1970s, he's really got it all clicking creatively.
Double fantasy is an incredible record.
and it's the realization of John Lennon, I think,
redeeming himself personally and creatively.
He's finally at peace with himself, finally.
These stories, as dramatic and entertaining as they are,
they're also cautionary tales.
For me, they are anyways.
They're big, glaring, blinking lights
warning us of what can happen
if we let the things in our lives that are important,
if we let our priorities slip,
if we give into our base nature, to the darkness,
and ignore the light inside of all of us
that is propelling us, propelling us forward,
propelling us on our path.
That's what I get out of these stories
when I'm researching them and I'm writing them anyways.
And I know you guys do as well
because I hear it from you.
But these stories, they're fading.
We've established here, pretty much anyway,
I think we've established that rock and roll is dead.
Where are the modern day John Lennon's?
Where are the modern day Martin Scorsese's for that matter,
the subject of last week's episode, the last waltz?
Scorsese, he literally tried pushing himself toward death in service of his art.
That's what that whole episode was about.
John Lennon risked deportation to support the political causes that he believed in.
And relevant to today, anyways, John Lennon spent a lot of money on the political causes that he supported,
which is a lot different than what we see celebrities doing now.
I don't want to retread in that water.
But anyways, both these guys, my point, both these guys, when they were doing this,
were at the vanguard of popular culture at the time.
They weren't fringe artists, Martin Scorsese and John Lennon in the 1970s.
They were making chart-topping music and films
and living like the rock stars that they were born to be.
And where are the rock stars and the rock star artists and entertainers
who live in the wildest and freest ways imaginable?
Where are they today?
Where are the wild, feral, true rock and roll animals
struggling to fit themselves into functioning society
while they create, who are always striving, always pushing themselves to make the best art
possible and ultimately be the best versions of themselves possible. Where are they now? Taylor Swift,
Post Malone, Shaboozy, Kendrick Lamar, no offense to any of these artists. But by comparison
to the musicians and entertainers that we cover here in disgrace land, most modern artists
live safe, normal lives by comparison. I suppose we can look at the insanity.
of hip hop, of modern hip hop, I should say.
We can look at the modern hip hop's connection to crime.
But that behavior is so unoriginal and predictable by now
that it seems to me to almost be like an act,
like a right of passage.
The real ones do what they have to do on the street,
level up and leave the street bullshit behind.
And that at least is interesting to me.
C. 50 cent, for example.
And Fiddy isn't exactly modern hip hop.
And Sean Combs' behavior notwithstanding,
this guy did he, he's an outlier.
and I'm not sure there's going to be any redemption for Diddy.
If there is, it's going to be a hell of a story.
Anyways, I think what I'm saying is this.
In some weird way, these John Lennon episodes
and this poster that I'm designing
have caused me to realize something about disgrace land
that I guess I always knew,
but that I never articulated.
With disgrace land, we're preserving rock and roll.
Not in an academic way.
We're preserving rock and roll lore.
Okay, rock and roll is dead.
It's dead on the tree.
charts, it's dead on the airwaves, it's dead as a cultural force. Today's pop, today's country,
by the way, what's the difference? Today's hip hop. The genre doesn't really matter.
It's all really just safe, corporatized music for the masses. I'm not trying to be cynical. I'm not,
but that's what it is. It doesn't move me in any way, hardly at all. It's corporatized music for the
masses. It's sad, but corporate America is what's propelling us culturally. I can't believe I'm saying that,
but it's the truth. There's nothing subversive about any of it. There's nothing compelling about any of it.
And that's what's sad. We don't need subversion for the sake of subversion, but the beauty of subversive
art is that it's compelling and it forces us to think and it forces us to create as a culture.
I don't see any of that right now. The rock and roll animal does not exist in popular culture as it once did.
think it ever will again. Where did you go, Jim Morrison? Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you,
into Jimmy Page, into David Bowie, into John Lennon, and Iggy Pop, and Kirk Cobain. And the list
goes on and on and on, but it stops somewhere around the mid-2000s. So as I look at the beginning of
2025, and as I look at the 209 disgrace land stories and counting that we have in our archive,
stories of real rock and roll spirit, of real rock and roll animalism and redemption from both
literal rock stars and artists and actors and athletes who behaved in rock and roll ways.
What I'm realizing is that we are quite literally creating a space where rock and roll doesn't have to be dead,
where rock and roll lives, at least through storytelling.
And yeah, I mean, come on, country, hip hop, classic country, classic hip hop, classic jazz.
You know what I'm saying. Rock and roll spirit.
Okay, I'm not talking strictly about, you know, five guys in a band with guitars.
Again, what I'm realizing is that we are quite literally creating a space where rock and roll doesn't have to be dead.
And I'm using the word we instead of I intentionally.
Discos, listen, we are preserving rock and roll.
It's not just me.
It's you guys as well.
Some of my favorite emails that I get from you guys are the ones where you tell me about listening to disgrace land with your family
and friends or the ones that tell me that you listen to the episode so that you can tell your
brother or your sister or boyfriend or girlfriend or husband or wife about the story that I just
told you. This is exactly what I did as a kid. I would read Rolling Stone or some nectose
book or some fanzine that I sent away for or annoy the shit out of my dad and his bandmates until
they told me the stories that I was looking to hear and then I would hang out with my friends
and tell them these wild stories myself.
Starting disgrace land was just formalizing that process, adding some bells and whistles with sound and story structure and spreading the word widely to you guys beyond my friend group. And you guys are spreading these stories beyond my reach through the listening with your family and friends, like I said, through the sharing of these stories on social, through the reviews. So we quite literally are preserving rock and roll here in disgrace land. That's what is occurring to me here six years into this podcast. It's pretty incredible. I talked about the word we.
because like I said, we're in this together.
I should also talk about the word preserve, preserve.
When thinking about this in my head,
I went to that song,
God Save Rock and Roll by Kid Rock.
And no shade it on Rob,
but saving rock and roll,
saving rock and roll isn't what this is about.
There is no saving rock and roll.
It's gone,
but we can preserve it.
We can pass on these incredible stories
of what once was
and what likely will never be
again, it's not a secret, but it kind of is. When we tell these stories, people look at us in
disbelief. Did you know John Lennon signed over the royalties from one of his songs to the IRA?
No shit. Seriously, it happened. I heard it on disgrace land. These unbelievable stories of rock and roll
animalism and redemption are worth preserving for that alone. But also because, like I said at the top,
they're not just entertaining. They're cautionary tales and there's stories that bind us, stories that
have formed us because we're all rock and roll in our hearts.
These are stories that are preserving a little bit of who we are.
That's how I'm seeing it anyways.
I don't know.
It's that time of year or I don't know what's going on.
Christmas, as you can see, has got me in a reflective mood.
Maybe it's because we're coming up on the end of the year and that's just my nature.
I'm grateful to be here with you guys in this space.
I'm grateful you're here with me and I'm stoked about the holidays.
We've got an incredible episode coming up next week on Shane McGowan from the Pogues.
Talk about a rock and roll animal.
Talk about a rock and roll spirit.
Shane McGowan embodies it as much as anyone before or since.
This is a Christmas episode.
It's one of a few that we have coming your way in December.
And, you know, Shane co-wrote one of my favorite Christmas songs,
Fairy Tale of New York.
So when you're listening to this Shane McGowan episode,
be thinking of your favorite Christmas song.
And be sure to hit me up and let me know what it is
because I'm going to want to know so that I can put it on my disco holiday mix
and then I can share it with you.
get your favorite Christmas songs to me, all right?
Try to keep it to one.
And I want to know why, because then I can talk about it here.
We can come back next week in the after party.
We can talk about it.
And it'll be fun, okay?
That's what the holidays are all about.
So what is it about the holiday song that makes you love it?
Let me know.
Let me know what the song is.
Get in touch.
I'll play your voicemails.
I'll read your text and your DMs right here in this space.
And like I said, I'll get a mix together that we can share and vibe on for the holidays,
knowing that we put it together.
You know, we all contributed to it.
I think that's pretty cool.
617-906-66-6-6-3-8 voicemail and text at Disgracelamp Pod on the socials.
Okay, though, before Shane McGowan for the Rewind episodes this weekend,
this Friday and Saturday,
we're rewinding the first two John Lennon episodes we ever released,
which chronologically take place after this Lennon episode
that we just released yesterday.
So you're getting a full picture of John Lennon in the 70s,
and you're getting it chronologically.
These are being released because, of course,
this weekend is the anniversary of John's death, December 8th.
And both these episodes deal with the assassination of Lennon
at the deranged hand of Mark David Chapman, okay?
So be sure to check those out.
Even if you've already heard them,
I guarantee you'll hear them with fresh years this time.
They're so packed with information,
you're going to get more out of it on repeat listening.
And I don't know, John Lennon just forever reminds me of Christmas,
probably because he died during this time when I was a little kid and it's just singed in my brain.
Fun fact about these next two of Lenin episodes though. When I wrote them, I was totally in a flow
state. Head down, just blast furnishing words out of the old brain hole. And when I finished and I looked
up, I did a word count and I was like, holy fuck, what have I done? It was so long what I had written.
and it occurred to me, hey dummy, just make it a two-part episode.
So that's what I did in the first two-part disgrace land episode was born.
Anyway, that's coming your way next in the feed.
And as a reminder, if you happen to be listening to this bonus episode way off in the future,
not during its original time of release.
And there's a good chance that those Lennon rewind episodes that I was just talking about
have shifted back into the feed to the time of their original release.
So if you're having trouble finding them, we have preserved all of our episodes.
episodes by their original release dates and by season on our website,
disgrace landpod.com.
See what I did there. We have preserved.
Okay, back in the flash with your voicemails, your texts,
your DMs on which Beatle had the greatest solo careers.
Was it John? Was it George? Was it Paul?
Come on, it was Ringo.
Anyways, we're going to find out. Talk to you in a few.
There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And Rule 2, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that, trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of The Girlfriends...
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truck.
I thought, how could this happen to me?
The cops didn't seem to care.
So they take matters into their own hands.
I said, oh, hell no.
I vowed I will be his last target.
He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This season on Dear Chelsea, with me, Chelsea Handler,
we have some fantastic guests like Amelia Clark.
When, like, young people come up to me
and they want to be an actor or whatever,
my first thing is always,
can you think of anything else that you can do?
Rather be.
Because.
disappointed in.
Do that.
Dennis Leary.
I wake up and I'm hitting him in the head with a water bomb.
And Bruce Jenner is on the aisle in a karate stance.
Like he's about to attack me.
Like, making karate noises.
And his entire, the Kardashian family over there, everybody's going.
And the air marshal is trying to grab my arms and screaming.
I immediately know that I've been asleep walking.
David O'Yellowo.
I love this podcast, whether it's therapy.
or relationships or religion or sex or addiction or you just go straight for the guts.
Guy Branham.
So anyway, Nicole Kimman broke up with Keith Thurban.
Being half of a country couple was always a hat she was going to wear, not like a life she was going to lead.
Oh, interesting.
I like that.
Did you practice that on your way over?
Gayton Matarazzo from Stranger Things.
Santa Monsu.
Camilla Morone, Carrie Kenny Silver.
And more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Kate Winkler Dawson, a host of the Wicked Words podcast.
Each week I sit down with the true crime writers behind some of the most compelling true crime stories
and discuss their years spent investigating and why it still matters.
He sees his father coming out of the woods with his hands over his face, and he knows something happened.
his father just grabs him and says she's gone. She's gone.
These are the cases that leave survivors, families, and the journalists who cover them changed forever.
Working in national television, it'll push you to your limits, and you'll end up doing things you never thought you'd do.
You know, you look back at it and you're like, I can't believe that really happened.
Join me and step inside the investigation. New episodes drop every Monday on the Exactly Right Network.
Listen to Wicked Words on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, guys, we are back.
Thanks for being here with me.
I want to hit you to something we have going on in December here.
December 12th, that's next week.
We've got a special, what's called a drop happening on our Patreon, in our Patreon, I should say.
If you remember, we were going to do this digital live event a couple weeks ago, but the
hurricane happened. This is actually last month, two months ago. The hurricane happened and we weren't
able to pull it off. So what we're doing is we created this documentary as part of that event that
we were going to host live digitally. We don't have a home for it now. So rather than reschedule the
whole event, it's the holidays, it's a weird time. It's, you know, everybody's busy right now.
We're just going to put the doc in the Patreon. And if you're a Patreon member, this is going to
going to drop on December 12th at 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. I will be in there when this drops.
I'll be in the chat. We can talk about it. We can talk about the movie as we're watching it.
It's short. And believe me, I'm putting air quotes around documentary. I'm not a documentary filmmaker.
But it's basically a visual version of a disgrace land podcast on Tom DeLong from Blink 182 and UFO UAP disclosure.
It's just imagine a visual version of the disgrace land podcast and we're going to watch it at the same time together and we can geek out on it.
We can bevis and butthead it.
We can, I'll be in the chat.
This is happening December 12th at 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
The doc is called We're Not Alone.
Music won't save us, but Tom DeLong might.
And I'm excited for you guys to check this out.
Like I said, I will be in there with my popcorn and my bourbon watching this take place.
I hope you join me again.
that's December 12th, 8 p.m. Eastern time. You got to be a Patreon member, but you can be a free member.
It will be available for free members and for paid members as well. So if you have not yet signed up for
our Patreon, this is a great reason to go to disgracelandpod.com slash membership. You can sign up
there. And once it's over, it will remain there for paid Patreon members. But free members,
you only get this one chance to watch it.
And that's when it drops live on live-ish on December 12 at 8 p.m.
So join me.
Okay, there'll be future reminders,
but mark your calendar now, December 12, 8 p.m.
in the Patreon chat.
I'll see you there.
All right, listen, you guys don't want to stop talking about JFK.
And that's awesome.
The rabbit hole is getting deeper and deeper and deeper.
every voicemail that I've received in the last week has been about JFK.
Not everyone, but most of them.
And we received not a one voicemail on who your favorite beetle is.
But we did receive a ton of incoming DMs on the beetle topic.
And I'm going to read some of those now.
I'm also going to remind you guys to go to our Instagram at DisgraceMapot and check out the recent,
the conversation that's developed around the recent John Lennon real that we dropped this past Tuesday to coincide with the episode release.
It is wild.
I'm not going to read those comments, but you can dive in there.
People are pretty worked up over it.
We've got more Lennon content coming by the end of the week.
But let's get to the question of which Beatle had the greatest solo career.
All right, dumb Rolling Stone on Instagram.
If you're not following Dumb Rolling Stone, you should be.
I think it's at F& Good Music.
He posts good content on there.
I like this kid a lot.
He's always got something thoughtful to say.
He says here, on the question of which beetle, he writes,
John's inner life and emotional art can be summarized in three songs,
Run for Your Life, Jealous Guy, and Woman.
And I think that's, I bring this up, not because Dumb Rolling Stone is sitting here going like,
yo, John's my favorite solo Beatle artist,
but because I really like the framing,
and I like what it says about my choice here.
Okay, so run for your life.
You've got Lenin in his Beatles days,
talking about abusing a woman, really.
I mean, really, that's what it is.
Jealous guy, which is the sort of emotional turmoil
of the lost weekend era, Lenin,
in the early to mid-70s.
and then woman, which is his love for Yoko, which is an imperfect love, of course,
which is in part what makes it so damn compelling and keeps us glued to it now some
almost 50 years later. And I say this because if you asked me the question of which
beetle had created my favorite body of solo work, if you asked me this question last year,
I probably would have said George.
In fact, I think we did talk about this in the after party last year.
I probably would have said George.
If you asked me five years prior to that, I definitely would have said Paul.
For my wife's 30th birthday, I hired a band, my friend Corin's band,
and I paid them to learn and play Paul McCartney's RAM album from start to finish at my wife's 30th birthday party.
And it was pretty damn awesome.
But that speaks to the level of my Paul McCartney's solo love and hers, I should say, more than mine.
But yeah, love Paul's solo and was obsessed with Paul Solo and wings about five, 10 years ago.
And prior to that, I'm not embarrassed to say.
I had a solo Ringo phase.
And prior to that, of course, it was John.
And now I'm right back with John.
Okay.
I don't know how it happened, but it happened.
And I think I vibe on John's solo work more than I vibe on any of the other Beatles.
and, you know, dumb Rolling Stone here.
Help me figure that out.
Okay, add-a-boy James underscore on Instagram writes,
George, George, George.
The only answer is George.
Guys, a lot of George love.
Almost, not almost.
Definitely more George Harrison choices here than anyone else,
except on X.
I did a poll on X, and Paul came out in the number one spot
with George in second, I believe.
I'll check that, let you know.
Eddie James on Instagram writes in,
a good couple members of my family are avid beetle haters,
which is sacriwage, I know.
I don't hate them,
but I do like to say I do just for a little light ribbing.
On that note, I will say,
Yellow Submarine is the best song ever written,
which you would not believe the look on people's faces
when I say that.
And then Eddie goes on,
Eddie's not a Beatles fan, really.
Begrudgingly enjoys a couple songs,
but that's it and likes to troll his family members.
members who I guess do hate the Beatles. How do you hate the Beatles? Come on, man. Come on, Eddie.
You're going to educate your family. Shitter's full, said Eddie.
Cynthia Menatola on Instagram, Manitolo. Menatol. Am I saying that, right? Cynthia?
writes in, hey, beautiful. We love John Lennon. Love for the Beatles and Paul McCartney.
And then there's this nice little note here from Cynthia. You know, I live nearby a theater in
Brooklyn called The Roulette. And Sean Lennon plays here constantly with his friend.
I saw him twice this past year. I've seen him live playing. Seeing him live playing is like looking at
John Lennon alive. He looks like John so much. It's incredible. I felt I was seeing a ghost, very talented
and disturbed man at times. You can see Yoko played a number on him. He definitely grew up hearing
that sound at home. He's weirded out by his mother. Okay. Cynthia, I like, I like the idea that
you can just roll down to your local theater and check out a Sean Lennon set. I got to say I'm kind of
I'm kind of jealous of that. J.T. Mangu, always good for a good DM on Instagram, writes in.
John was always my favorite beetle. There you go. And J.T. has hit me to this book about
Elliot Mintz, sorry, book by Elliot Mintz, John and Yoko's longtime publicist, I believe.
This just came out like this week. And if any of you have read it, let me know. I'm excited to read it and check it out.
Jamie Smith on X writes in, George. George is my fave, especially if you can chuck in the
traveling Wilburys, that would be a bonus. I think we're definitely including traveling
Wilburys just as we're including wings. And that pushes George pretty high up on the list.
But again, I go John number one. And just so you know, the ex-pole came in. Paul number one at 39%.
Like I said, George at 32%. John at 25. And Ringo down at 4. Ringo has a new album coming out, guys,
produced by T-Bone Burnett. Again, just lots of George stuff here at Disgracelam Pod.
fun subject. Who's your favorite Beatles solo career?
But let's move on, okay?
Let's move on to next week's subject of the week.
Let's move past JFK, past that wormhole.
You guys have gone further than JFK, okay?
I'm getting flat earth stuff from you guys.
I'm getting from the 5-4-0.
I mention that because it's right up in front of me here.
I'm getting the lizard under the Denver airport
or the ice ring at the North Pole
that hides all the rest of the world that we don't get to see.
Um, yeah, I, listen, I'm into the concept that yesterday's conspiracy is today's fact.
I think there's truth in that, but I don't think there's truth in a lot of these conspiracies.
And, uh, I do think there's a line we can draw to talk about this stuff, but I don't want to go too
far with it. Okay. I don't want the tinfoil hat is what I'm saying. All right. Disgraceland
Pod 617-90666-3638 for next week's question of the week, guys, which is
A very simple one.
What's your favorite Christmas song and why?
Let me know.
Get your answer in.
Quick text, 617-906-6-3-8, or you can leave me a voicemail.
I'll play it here on the show.
And more importantly, I want this because I want to put together a disco playlist.
Okay, a disgrace land playlist.
Why?
Because we are preserving the spirit of rock and roll.
Even during the holidays, we aren't taking any time off.
Get it at me.
617-9066638.
I'm going to take a quick break.
I'll be back in the flash with your emails and more.
There's two golden rules that any man should live by.
Rule one, never mess with a country girl.
You play stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And rule two, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of the girlfriends...
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truce.
truck. I thought how could this happen to me? The cops didn't seem to care. So they take matters into
their own hands. I said, oh hell no. I vowed. I will be his last target. He's going to get what he
deserves. Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcast. This season on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, we have some fantastic guests
like Amelia Clark.
When like young people come up to me
and they want to be an act or whatever,
my first thing is always,
can you think of anything else
that you can do?
Rather be disappointed in.
Do that.
Dennis Leary.
I wake up and I'm hitting him in the head
with a water bomb.
And Bruce Jenner is on the aisle
in a karate stance.
Like he's about to attack me.
Like making karate noises.
And his entire
the Kardashians family over there,
everybody's going,
and the air marshal is trying to grab my arms and screaming.
I immediately know that I've been asleep walking.
David O'Yellowo.
I love this podcast, whether it's therapy or relationships or religion or sex or addiction or you just go straight for the guts.
Guy Branham. So anyway, Nicole Kidman broke up with Keith Thurban.
Being half of a country couple was always a hat she was going to wear, not like a life she was going to lead.
Oh, interesting.
I like that. Did you practice that on your way over?
Gaten Matarazzo from Stranger Things.
Tena Monjou. Camilla Morone, Carrie Kenny Silver, and more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Kate Winkler Dawson, a host of the Wicked Words podcast.
Each week I sit down with the true crime writers behind some of the most compelling true crime stories
and discuss their years spent investigating and why it still matters.
He sees his father coming out of the woods with his hands over his face,
and he knows something happened.
His father just grabs him and says she's gone.
She's gone.
These are the cases that leave survivors, families,
and the journalists who cover them changed forever.
Working in national television, it'll push you to your limits,
and you'll end up doing things you never thought you'd do.
you know, you look back at it and you're like, I can't believe that really happened.
Join me and step inside the investigation.
New episodes drop every Monday on the exactly right network.
Listen to wicked words on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, guys, we are back.
This Gracelandpod at gmail.
Hit me up on email.
Got this one here from Gemma Layton or Leighton.
Hi, Jake.
I always try to be objective when answering this question of best solo, beetle.
And it's something I can debate for hours, but as I've got limited time, I'm just going to say this in the simplest way I know how.
John Lennon's songs just mean more. At least that's what I think. There's more emotion, a message, substance, and purpose. They're not just silly love songs. I think it's a lot easier to write a love song than a protest one. And there's an argument there for George, Dark Horse indeed, but Lenin gets my vote. I wish I had the time to go deeper, but it'd be like reading an essay. Love the show. Keep on, keep in on.
on from Gemma. Gemma, love the email. I like the structure of it. Pretty sound. I like, I like,
the thesis. I even like the way you laid it out. A lot of great spacing in this email.
You guys can't see it, but I'm telling you, Gemma's email. Mesh kiss. You can get a lot of shit here
from George listeners, I think. But, yeah, I'm with you. I am. I agree. I agree. I love the
McCartney stuff. I really do. But, you know, the McCartney stuff, the reason I love the McCartney stuff is
the weirdness of it. McCartney's a weird motherfucker. Even back in the Beatles, I said this before.
Why don't we do it in the road? That song came on the other day. We were driving with our kids.
My wife changed the channel. I changed the song. Skip the song, I should say. And I looked at her.
Like, what are you doing? And she just gave me a look like, you know. And she's right. I knew.
We didn't have to say it. I didn't want to explain to my 10-year-old, what,
McCartney was talking about what it was that he was trying to do in the road.
He's a fucking weirdo.
Can I say?
Ram is weird.
It's really weird.
The wing shit is weird.
Anyhow, but to Gemma's point, do those songs mean as much as John's?
I go for the Lenin authenticity more than anything.
I heard the songs I heard, first time I heard jealous guy as a kid, I think I started crying.
I'm not trying to be a wuss about it, but that's the truth.
Just fucking hit me, man.
All right, guys, disgrace landpot at gmail.com.
You want to hit me up with anything, any conversation at all, any topic at all.
We can continue to talk Beatles.
But like I said, I want to get into Christmas songs next week with Shane McGowan.
So hit me up with your favorite Christmas songs, Disgracelandpod at gmail.com at Disgracelandpod on Instagram, X, and Facebook.
And I want to read this Facebook message that I got.
This is from Hannah Victoria.
And it's more like an email, which is why I saved it for this section.
It's a little long.
but it's uh it has to do a little bit about what we were talking about in the b block here all right unless
it's not about the beetles it's uh it's less about that so uh hannah goes on to say here listen
long time listener here and first i have to say thank you for being a steady calming voice
through these chaotic years you get this rare knack for delivering even the most bizarre stories
with a tone that soothes no matter how dark the content uh i just finished listening to the
86 met's episode friday november 8th and i was struck by words that were haunting
yet inspiring.
Quote, the bestest country has always had to offer is it's people who, unquote.
Today those words resonated more than ever as I, along with my country and the world,
try to process everything that's unfolded in recent days, wondering what lies ahead.
I shared those lines from the episode with family and friends, even social media,
an uncommon move for someone who's typically a quiet voice online.
I'm clearly moved by your words, and I wanted to take a moment to express my appreciation.
Thank you, not just to you, but to the entire production.
team and your families who support this work. The effort you put into creating such an engaging
and thoughtful show means a lot. Thank you for being real and relatable. Thank you for giving my family
something we can bond over as we all live and breathe for sports, history, and music. That's from
Hannah Victoria. And that speaks directly to the point I was trying to make earlier, the whole sharing
these stories, preserving these stories as we go, sharing them with our family and our friends.
I've received a couple of these emails. I received a lot of them throughout the year. I've received a lot of them
throughout the year, but a couple of them around this Mets episode in particular.
And, and, and, and, but Hannah really laid it out there in a way that, that hit me and made me
very grateful, uh, for this whole space, like I said, that we've created here.
So guys, uh, you can get at me any way you want, disgrace land pod on the socials, like I said,
disgrace Sgraceptod at gmail.com. That's the email. You know about the reviews. You leave a review.
I read it here on the air. You get in touch with me and I get you some merch out in the mail.
All right. So this one.
comes from Sharon Stavoy. This is on Apple Podcasts titled Jake Knows Things, Five Stars. Like many others,
I can't remember exactly who told me about disgrace land. I think it might have been the ladies
of my favorite murder, but if you aren't listening to him, you should be. My father used to
warn me that the people I idolized in entertainment were not what I thought they were. I scoffed
him in the worst teenage way. Turns out he was right. And Jake delivers it all in the most
captivating way. Always a conversation starter. I have told so many about this incredible show.
If I could leave 10 stars, I would.
Sharon, you're the best.
I appreciate you.
Get in touch.
Disgracelandpot at Gmail.com or hit me up on the socials at Disgraceland Pot.
I appreciate the review.
We'll get you some merch.
You can also hit us up on Spotify.
You can leave a comment there.
Spotify Rapt is out now.
I see you guys are sharing your Spotify wrapped on Instagram with Disgraceland on your list of
top listen to podcasts.
I really appreciate that.
That's fucking cool of you.
Thank you so much.
Ob Hesh on Spotify, writes
in response to last week's
Rewind episode on David Bowie.
Obhesh writes in,
I once owned the following by Alistair Crowley,
Book 4-777 and Liber Vial Legase.
I think I'm saying that, right?
I actually also had a CD version
of the book of the law.
Call me curious and a bit of a seeker, I suppose.
All of the above items wound up
in a donation pile in the alley behind my house.
Was it because I got freaked out
by some dark and powerful force?
Nope, it was due to boy.
I found Crowley to be the most self-involved boring pseudo-intellectual that I ever encountered.
What a waste of money and time.
Ob Hesh, I have to agree with you there.
For those of you are wondering why we're talking about Alistair Crowley in relation to David Bowie.
It's because David Bowie believed in this occult.
I'm blanking on the name of it right now.
It's right on the tip of my tongue.
I think it was called the Order, something like that.
And Crowley was part of this sort of early 20th century.
The guy who wrote Sherlock Holmes was part of this.
A couple other notable folks, mainly over in England.
They believed in dark power in the occult.
They had a bunch of meetings.
They wrote a bunch of books.
They did a bunch of cocaine way before people did cocaine,
or a lot of people did cocaine, I should say.
And I have been exposed to these occultists through rock and roll,
through David Bowie, like I said,
through, we get into this in the Led Zeppelin episode as well,
because Jimmy Page was deeply into this through Jim Morrison as well.
And to O'Hephesch's point here, they're pseudo-intellectuals.
It's a bunch of bullshit.
Mainly, I think what they were doing was actually creating a permissive structure for themselves to behave like complete fucking animals and just do whatever the hell they wanted.
That's what I get out of it.
So O'Hash, you're right on point.
I appreciate the comment.
All right, this episode, guys, it is nearing its end.
the after party is going to continue for our All Access members sign up today. You're going to hear
an extended version of the After Party. I'm going to get into John Lennon in a little bit more detail here.
I'm going to give you some behind the scenes. I'm going to give you some information on some folks
I heard from who were connected to John Lennon after I released these episodes originally.
I'm going to share a little bit about the controversial sources that I used for these episodes
and how they were validated firsthand for me. Okay? That's coming up in the All Access
portion of this here bonus episode, which if you're an all-access member, you're going to get to
hear it. If you're not an all-access member, you're not going to be able to hear it unfortunately,
but you can go to disgracelandpod.com slash membership and sign up today. You're also going to get
ad-free listening and the extra exclusive full episode of disgrace land every month. All right, guys,
back in the flash. There's two golden rules that any man should live by. Rule one, never
mess with a country girl.
stupid games, you get stupid prizes.
And Rule 2, never mess with her friends either.
We always say that, trust your girlfriends.
I'm Anna Sinfield, and in this new season of the girlfriends...
Oh my God, this is the same man.
A group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist.
I felt like I got hit by a truck.
I thought, how could this happen to me?
The cops didn't seem to care, so they take matters into their own hands.
I said, oh, hell no.
I vowed I will be his last target.
He's going to get what he deserves.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This season on Dear Chelsea, with me, Chelsea Handler,
we have some fantastic guests like Amelia Clark.
When, like, young people come up to me
and they want to be an actor or whatever,
my first thing is always,
can you think of anything else that you can do?
Rather be.
Because...
Pointed in.
Do that.
Dennis Leary.
I wake up and I'm hitting him in the head with a water bomb.
And Bruce Jenner is on the aisle in a karate stance.
Like he's about to attack me.
Like, making karate noises.
And his entire...
The Kardashians family over there, everybody's going...
And the air marshal is trying to grab my arms and screaming.
I immediately know that I've been asleep walking.
David O'Yellowo.
I love this podcast.
Whether it's therapy.
or relationships or religion or sex or addiction or you just go straight for the guts.
Guy Branham.
So anyway, Nicole Kidman broke up with Keith Durbin.
Being half of a country couple was always a hat she was going to wear,
not like a life she was going to lead.
Oh, interesting.
I like that.
Did you practice that on your way over?
Gayton Matarazzo from Stranger Things.
Santa Monsu.
Camilla Morone, Carrie Kenny Silver.
And more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Kate Winkler Dawson, a host of The Wicked Words podcast.
Each week I sit down with the true crime writers behind some of the most compelling true crime stories
and discuss their years spent investigating and why it still matters.
He sees his father coming out of the woods with his hands over his face, and he knows something happened.
his father just grabs him and says she's gone. She's gone.
These are the cases that leave survivors, families, and the journalists who cover them changed forever.
Working in national television, it'll push you to your limits, and you'll end up doing things you never thought you'd do.
You know, you look back at it and you're like, I can't believe that really happened.
Join me and step inside the investigation. New episodes drop every Monday on the Exactly Right Network.
Listen to Wicked Words on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, we are back and I want to thank you guys for checking this episode out.
Remember, December 12th, 8 p.m. Eastern Standard Time in the Disgraceland chat on Patreon.
You, me, and the Disgraceland documentary, we are not alone.
Music won't save us, but Tom DeLong.
Might mark your calendars. We'll get into it.
I cannot wait.
Listen, if you're not a Patreon member, you can become one right now.
just go to disgracelampod.com slash membership and sign up.
All right, this episode, we mentioned Iggy Pop.
Iggy Pop in the archive, for those who are interested,
who have not heard that episode yet,
that's episode 41 from October 15th, 2019.
We also mentioned the Eagles in the bonus section of this episode.
That's a two-parter.
Episodes 97 and 98 released March 8th and March 29th, 2022.
50 Cent came up in this episode as well.
He's episode 117 from February 14.
2023, all in the archive. All ready for you to re-listen to and play and share with your friends.
Rock and Roll, Preservation, baby. That's what we're talking about. That's it. All right, I got to get
out of here. So let's recap, shall we? Number one, right now on your feed, our episode on John
Lennon in the 70s. Number two, coming tomorrow, our rewind episode on the John Lennon
Assassination. That's two episodes, actually. Number three, merch winners, get in touch. You know who
you are. Number four. Remember, no one cares about preserving the spirit of rock and roll more than you do.
and well, that's a disgrace.
All right, in honor of this week's episode subject on John Lennon,
me reading you the billboard charts from the day
Beatle John died December 8th, 1980.
Number one, lady, Kenny Rogers.
Last week, one, peak position, one, weeks on chart, 10.
Number two, more than I can say, Leo Serre.
Last week, six, peak position, two, week.
Weeks on chart, 11.
Number three, another one bites the dust.
Queen.
Last week, four.
Peak position, one.
Weeks on chart, 17.
Number five, Master Blaster, Jammin, Stevie Wonder.
Last week, seven.
Peak position, five.
Weeks on chart, number 12.
Number six.
Talking and start mixing.
Hold on, Matt.
My wife's making a smoothie.
When a group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist,
they take matters into their own hands.
I vowed I will be his last target.
He is not going to get away with this.
He's going to get what he deserves.
We always say that trust your girlfriends.
Listen to the girlfriends.
Trust me, babe.
On the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This season on Dear Chelsea, with me, Chelsea Handler, we have some fantastic guests like Amelia Clark.
When like young people come up to me and they want to be an actor or whatever.
My first thing is always, can you think of anything else that you can do?
Rather be disappointed in.
Do that.
David O'Yello.
I love this podcast, whether it's therapy or relationships or religion or sex or addiction or you just go straight for the guts.
Dennis Leary, Gaten Matarazzo from Stranger Things,
Tana Monsu, Camilla Morone,
Carrie Kenny Silver, and more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Movies can make you feel, make you dream.
Sometimes they even make you appreciate architecture.
Is there anybody who's been hotter in a doorway
than Elizabeth Taylor?
That's the kind of analysis you'll find every week on Dear Movies I Love You, the new podcast from the Exactly Right Network.
Every Tuesday, we break down the films we're crushing on, from blockbusters to deep cuts.
Listen to Dear Movies I Love You on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
