DISGRACELAND - Bonus Episode – The Verdict is in
Episode Date: July 3, 2025This week in the after party, Jake hears from you about your favorite singer/songwriters and which artists are the most gangster. Plus, Jake gets into what he's reading. Oh, and also the Diddy verdict... came in - so there's that. On Tuesday, we're bringing you our previously exclusive episode on the Replacements. Jake wants to know: Which band or artist never made it big, but should have? Share your thoughts at 617-906-6638, disgracelandpod@gmail.com, or on socials @disgracelandpod. For more great Disgraceland episodes, dive into our extensive archive, including such episodes as: Episode 68 - Gram Parsons Episode 155 - Sean "Diddy" Combs, pt 1 Episode 215 - Sean "Diddy Combs, pt 2. Episode 25 and 26 - Curt Cobain and Courtney Love, pts. 1 and 2 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.
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 disgrace land 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 full episode subject on Frank Sinatra,
a part two episode on Frank Sinatra, actually.
We're rewinding back to Studio 54, previewing our upcoming episode on the replacements.
Get into your voicemails, text, DMs, thoughts on the books,
we're reading, the music we're listening to, the film and television, we're watching,
and, and, we dig into the Diddy Verdict Fallout.
And as always, a whole lot of Rosie.
All right, discos, let's get into it.
It's not often that a jury in a federal trial for racketeering answers our disgrace land
question of the week for us.
But guys, that's what happened.
By now you know that Sean Diddy Combs was deemed not guilty of racketeering conspiracy
and not guilty of sex trafficking.
by force, fraud, or coercion.
He was found guilty of two lesser counts of transportation
to engage in prostitution.
So, in light of our recent Part 2 episode on Frank Sinatra,
we asked, was Frank Sinatra the most gangster musician of all time?
And according to the jury in the Sean Combs trial,
Sean Combs, at least, is not the most gangster musician of all time,
at least if we're going by the book.
Now, I don't know, just because he got off on the more serious charges
I cannot unsee Sean Diddy Combs viciously beating on Cassie Ventura.
And yeah, impossible to accept.
But does that make him guilty of racketeering?
No, it does not.
And as our recent Sinatra episode points out,
Frank got violent with the opposite sex too,
at least if we're to believe Peter Lofford's story
about Frank putting that woman to the plate glass window.
Now, like most of you guys,
I read a ton of books.
I read more than I spend
more time reading. I should say
more than I spend my time on TikTok.
And I got to say, I'm pretty
annoyed by the Sean Diddy Combs'
corner of TikTok. The Jaguar writes,
the wild claims about
A-list celebrities involved
in Diddy's worst crimes.
Now, of course, none of that came out
in trial. And
I'll admit, there was a moment
there where I thought it might,
but I was never convinced, which is why,
is why in the recent diddy episode that we released, I based it entirely on the indictments
and the publicly available legal documents at the time. And most everything in that episode,
that came out in the trial, as I expected it would. Everything in our disgrace and part two
Sean Combs episode. Most of that was touched upon in the recent Sean Combs trial. And of course,
the trial gave us more details, stuff that I didn't have proofs, stuff that none of us had
beforehand. But the trial did not give us anything that the TikTok gossip merchants
were peddling like gospel.
Okay?
The new Sinatra episode,
it's based on real information,
information that I found in a recent book
called Frank Sinatra and the Mafia murders
that was released just two years ago.
And it's based on sourcing
from recently released Los Angeles
police intelligence files
and a whole cache of new FBI documents
that the authors got their hands on.
Now, none of it was taken from X, Wise, guys,
with YouTube channels or TikTok accounts,
And as you've likely heard by now, Sinatra's involvement with the mafia is pretty damn disgraceful.
And more gangster than what Sean Combs was officially found guilty of, at least as far as the official record is concerned.
Now, speaking of records, switching gears here a little bit, Nirvana's unplugged.
It's getting its 30th anniversary remaster and re-release.
And that reminded me that I bought this album on vinyl when it came out.
I still have it.
And I still listen to it.
And I kind of want to get this remaster and A, B, the quality to see if there's actually
any difference between the original that I have and the new remaster.
How's your record collection doing?
Okay, let me know.
Let me know if you got anything you're excited about recently.
I'm super excited on the reading front.
I talked about this, I believe, in the all-access portion of last week's after-party episode.
But I'm super excited about the Chris Whitaker book that I'm reading called We Be
at the end. It reads, you know, I've got Nebraska from Bruce Springsteen on my mind. It's been a theme
the last couple of weeks here, but it reads like Nebraska sounds. The book is sparse. It's poetic.
It's thrilling. It's filled with characters that are barely hanging onto a world that's
trying to shake them loose. Chris Whitaker has a new book out right now that a ton of people
are freaking out over. It's number three on the New York Times bestseller list at the moment, I believe.
I haven't read that yet, but I'm psyched to you. That one's called All the Colors of the Dark.
you're probably going to hear about that, but when you do know that the book, his first book,
called We Begin at the End, is tremendous.
This guy's a serious, serious author, and I can't wait to read all this stuff, but especially
this new one, all the colors of the dark.
Also just finished reading Brian Wilson's autobiography called I Am Brian Wilson, and I'm here
to say that I am Jake Brennan, and this book broke my heart.
I'm having a hard time writing this Brian Wilson episode.
this week. It's hard to find something original to say about a guy who so much has already been
said about. But I think I found a unique way into Brian's incredible story. And I'll have this
episode ready for you guys shortly. I can't wait to bring it to you. But before that,
coming up next in your feed, we've got our rewind into our Studio 54 episode. Of course,
lots of sex, lots of drugs, dead dude trapped in the walls, federal agents crashing the whole
party. It's a whole thing, man. That's coming up next to your feed right after the bonus episode.
Then after that, next Tuesday, we're bringing you our episode on the Replacements, a punk rock,
rock and roll, cautionary tale of self-destruction if there ever was one. Okay? When you're listening
to this replacements episode, guys, I want you to be thinking about which band or artist never made
it big, but should have. Not that the replacements weren't big. They're legends in their own right.
But you got to understand.
People who were around then expected the replacements to be Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers,
okay, to be the 1980s version of the Rolling Stones.
Okay?
That didn't happen.
They weren't as big as most believe they should have been.
And we all know bands like this.
We all have even friends who are in bands who were great bands, great musicians,
that never got to do that they deserve.
So let me know, are the replacements the best example of that, or are there other bands,
perhaps, other artists that we should know about that you might want to turn on other disgrace land
listeners, the other discos, onto these artists, onto these bands that are more unknown,
that never really broke through that should have.
Okay, call us 617-90666338, DM us at Disgracelam pod, and your answers might land in next week's
after party.
That's it from my world this week.
Okay, I could have spent, of course, an hour at least talking about Sean.
I've been on, I've been doing radio interviews all day across the country. Maybe you're driving around,
Wichita, Kansas, Chicago, Detroit. Those are the ones I've done so far today. And you might hear me.
I don't know. We'll see. Got more lined up for tomorrow. But right now I got your voicemails,
your texts, and your DMs lined up right on the other side of this break.
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 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 religious.
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?
Gaten Matarazzo from Stranger Things.
Tena, Monjou, Camilla Morone, Carrie Kenny Silver, and more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Child
on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, we are back.
Apple Podcast listeners, you know the drill.
Turn on auto downloads and your Apple Podcasts.
That way you don't miss any of her disgrace land episodes.
Okay?
617-90666-38.
You know where I'm at.
I'm in the phone booth.
This is the one across the hall.
I'm hanging on the telephone.
You want to send me a voicemail?
You want to send me a text?
Hit me up, voicemail and text.
This week's question of the week in relation to Frank Sinatra,
who's the most gangster musician of all the time?
Karen Reid, Karen Reid writes in, hey Jake, Karen Reid from the 281, Sugar Land, Texas.
Not a Karen, and not that, Karen Reid.
I'm responding to your question of the week.
Frank Sinatra is definitely the most gangster actor, celebrity musician.
I'm re-listening to the Frank Sinatra episodes right now.
When you listen, I mean, really listen.
You need a string board to connect all the characters, historical places, events.
times and romantic liaisons. You got me started down so many rabbit holes with the new episode two,
Judas Campbell, Exner, Alora Gooding, aka Dorothy Lima, the Calneva Casino, CIA conspiracies.
And I need to know more. She goes on to say, not having your podcast on my commute or any time
would be a disgrace. P.S. Did he is gangsta, less class, unfortunately charismatic for those
he befriended and brought into his web of perversion, ruthless and sexual depravity.
I hope he gets what's coming.
If he doesn't, that's a disgrace.
Happy fourth to you and the team of double all of us.
Happy, happy,
to 4th of July to you as well, Karen Reed.
Happy to hear you beat the rap.
I'm just kidding.
I know nothing about the Karen Reed case, and I know you're not the real Karen
Reid.
We had a pretty extensive conversation last week about great singer-songwriters,
greatest singer-songwriters of all time.
If you remember, we went through that list.
And I heard from a lot of you, and there were some sense.
there were some serious singer songwriters who were left off of that list.
You guys have reminded me of a ton.
727 writes in,
Hey, Jake, two singer songwriter albums that would definitely be on my list are
Graham Parsons, Grievous Angel, and Tom Waits is Frank's Wild Years.
Love the show, so keep doing what you do.
Erica, it's interesting to hear you put Grievous Angel ahead of GP.
They're both fantastic.
I think GP is a smidge better, and really hard for me to pick a favorite,
Tom Waits album.
I don't know.
If I did, though, I don't know that it.
I love Franks Wildeers.
I don't know if that would be it.
Maybe swordfish trombone.
I love Bone Machine, too, even though it's later.
Kind of messed up that both those artists weren't on the list.
Leonard Cohen was also left off the list.
Someone else pointed out Billy Joel, Elton John.
302 writes in, Warren Zevon and John Prine are for sure among the best singer-songwriters of all
time.
but the wind is a far better album than Zevon's self-titled second album.
He does a haunting cover of knocking on Heaven's Door as he is in fact dying.
Oh, I need to hear that.
That's going to make me sad, though.
415 writes in, hey, Joni Mitchell, how could she be left off the list?
It's a really good, really good point.
That's Glenn in the 415.
617 writes in, favorite singer-songwriter album is Living with Ghost by Patty Griffin.
That's a bold statement, 617.
I would expect nothing less from somebody back in my hometown.
724.
Hey, Jake, just listen to your after-party episode
and you asked about great singer-songwriters.
I got to say, my favorites that you didn't mention
were Gordon Lightfoot and Marty Robbins.
And both can be seen as some of the most successful,
especially for the genre.
Marty Robbins, I get.
Oh, devil, woman.
Gordon Lightfoot, on the other hand.
I mean, I get it.
I get the love for Gordon Lightfoot.
Not one of my faves.
Maybe it should be.
I love Beck's Sea Change,
and people often say that Sea Change by Beck
is a Gordon Lightfoot.
ripoff. I think it's more of a Serge Gainsborough ripoff, but I don't know. Get back at me 724. Let me know
where to start with Gordon Lightfoot. God, these messages on the singer-songwriter stuff are quite,
they're pretty endless here. 5-40 writes in. Uh, brings up Steve Earle 5-4-0, Stephen in the 540.
Steve Earl, what are the all-time greats. I have a couple funny stories about Steve Roll.
I've probably shared them with you guys before. I won't, I won't belabor it.
All right, let's check out this voicemail here again on the same subject.
is the 414.
Rain.
I am calling to respond to your after show the other night, or actually last night,
and you were talking about singer-songwriters.
And I do not understand why no one mentions Tom Waits as an incredible singer-songwriter.
He is beyond amazing.
And also Nick Cave, I know that he sometimes writes with his band,
but I believe that he writes a lot of stuff himself.
So I was hoping that maybe you guys could think about doing episodes on them.
That would be amazing.
Yeah.
And oh, hell damn.
There was another thing I thought of, but I'm going to have to call you back.
All right.
You take care.
All right, Rayne, call us back when you remember what you wanted to say.
I just talked about Tom Waitson.
You know, I can add a little bit here.
When I was just starting out as an adult and making music,
If you asked me which artist's career, what I want to replicate,
the answer would have been Tom Waits for sure.
Of course, I wasn't doing anything even close to approaching the greatness that Tom Waits was doing,
nor was I really trying that hard.
Nick Cave, tremendous as well.
This is really hard.
There's no way you can come up with 10, a list of 10 of the greatest singer-songwriters.
There's just too many you have to leave off.
You're going to leave Nick Cave off that list.
PJ Harvey?
P.J. Harvey?
Leonard Cohen?
No.
You can't.
Hey, Jake, this is Clint from the 724 triad.
Jim Carroll Catholic Boy for a singer-songwriter album.
I think he wrote most of the songs on that album and the production and everything on
it's killer.
It's just a good one from like the late 70s, bro.
Keep it up.
You do a good job.
Thanks, man.
Bye.
Clint and the 724.
I actually don't know that.
record that well. I mean, I've heard, I think that's the one that has people who died and whatever
the other song single was that got some traction. I know those tunes, of course, even though I can't
think of the other one's name right now, but I don't know that as an album. So, great recommendation.
And I'm pumped to be reminded to check out Jim Carroll. Jim Carroll should be an episode of Disgraceland.
I've never seen the basketball diaries, by the way. Have you guys? I have not.
617-906-66-6-6-3-8 you want to hit me up leave a voicemail or text at disgracelam pod on
Instagram TikTok X and Facebook if you want to get in touch with me over there
Kelly van Violet sibling I believe I'm pronouncing that correctly but I'm probably not
right saying hey I just happen to listen to the podcast your podcast for the Beach Boys
and in the last two days on disgrace land I finished it up this morning on way to work and I
can tell you what the Beach Boys meant to me growing up as
somebody whose mother grew up in the 60s, somebody who was heavily influenced on this music,
I am deeply saddened to hear the news about Brian Wilson.
Thank you for sharing your stuff.
You know, I got to say here, Kelly and everybody else, when the news about Brian Wilson's
death hit, you know, it didn't really affect me one way or another.
Old rock stars die all the time.
Oftentimes rock stars die, and you can immediately feel the hole.
And we felt that.
I felt that with other people.
I didn't feel it myself.
But now that I've been in this research and writing for the last week and a half on Brian Wilson,
I do feel a tremendous amount of sadness.
This guy, and I knew all this before, but when you get into his head, especially in the autobiography,
he was not only a genius, not only a hugely important cultural figure in our culture,
he was also a man who was largely a child.
And I don't mean that in a negative way.
I mean that in kind of the best way.
in his mental illness certainly had something to do with that he was taking advantage of he
oh god it's it's it's really rough because there's so much innocence in his songs innocence and
beauty and i've listened to that uh sort of 90s late or early 90s i believe it's 1991 the love
and mercy track that album but that so the song love and mercy i should say i don't think that that's any of the
album with a song love and mercy. It's just been on repeat the last few days. And it's,
it's wrecked me. It's so simple. It's so beautiful. It's such a fantastic representation,
I think, of who Brian Wilson was as a person, as a character. And I'm a bit wrecked by it.
And I'm looking forward for all of you, you especially Kelly, hearing this Brian Wilson episode.
So thanks for writing. You guys want to hit me up at Disgracedland Pod on the socials. Go for it.
Wicked Wanda writes in in relation to Sean Diddy Combs, he is guilty like OJ.
Wicked Wanda and everybody else, I feel your pain.
You know, I just circling back to the Diddy thing here.
I have this one thought and I've been talking about this all day.
We can't unsee what Sean Combs did to Cassie Ventura, but he wasn't on trial for that.
And I do think he's guilty of things if they weren't proven.
Two things can be true at once.
Um, I can't exactly say what those things are. I don't know. I don't think really anyone truly knows who's on the outside like we are.
But I think it's also possible that the government overreached here. And that's why we ended up where we ended up.
Shocking. I don't think the guy's going to do any time. Um, I mean, he'll do some time, but not real time.
So yeah, your OJ comp, it might be, uh, entirely accurate. Wicked Wanda. Thanks for checking in.
All right. Let's switch gears here. Let's get into our.
a little sports section to the zone.
This is a 60 second sports rant in under 30 seconds or whatever we're calling this segment
for the discos who are also sports geeks like me.
All right, Matt, give me the buzzer.
Give me the little buzzer beater thingy.
All right.
All right.
All right.
All right.
Not a lot going on.
I don't care about tennis or the WMBA beating the piss out of Caitlin Clark.
What the hell is that all about, by the way?
Like I said, not a lot going on.
So I did a quick Google of the five greatest sports movies of all time.
and Vulture gave me the following.
Number five, Foxcatcher.
Never seen it.
Number four, Bull Durham.
Great.
Might be too high on this list.
Number three.
Rocky, wrong answer.
This should be number two.
Two, they have here in Vulture
on the list.
Number two, Raging Bull.
That's also the wrong answer.
That should be number three.
Number one, hoop dreams.
Great, great, great movie, but wrong.
The correct answer is to the question
of what is the greatest sports movie of all time?
Well, that is, of course, slap shot.
from 1977,
featuring Paul Newman,
The Hanson Brothers,
and Eddie Shore's old-time hockey.
Tell me I'm wrong.
617-906-66-6-3-8.
I'll be back in a flash.
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 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?
You'd 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.
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
at sleepwalking.
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 Monsu.
Camilla Morone,
Carrie Kenny Silver, and more.
Listen to these episodes of Dear Chelsea
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, guys, welcome back to the show.
We are back, back, back this week.
The Hollywood Land Minute is brought to.
you by Roman Polansky, sort of. That doesn't really make sense, but you know what I'm talking
about. The Hollywoodland episode that we're featuring this week is on Roman Polansky, okay,
from Chinatown to exile, Oscar acclaim, to extradition battles, and all kinds of other
disgraceful things that I'm not going to get into here. You need to subscribe to Hollywoodland
to hear this episode, okay? And of course, in addition to this episode this week, Zeth and I,
my guy Zeth, guy who writes most of the Hollywoodland episodes, he and I every week, we're doing
a whole other bonus thing over there.
called the rap party right in the Hollywood land feed.
All right?
Complete with our recommendations, our movies, music even.
All right, Matt, give him a little taste.
Give him a little bit of the rap party.
Jake, what's going on, brother?
It's Tony from the 206.
Just listen to the Romney-Plankey episode.
And I thought about the question you ask about,
are you able to, you know, separate the artists from their art,
the creator from their art?
And honestly, it's more easier for me to do in movies
than it is, say, music, for example.
Like, I know a lot of people that will still watch a John Wayne film and can totally separate that from who John Wayne was the person, you know, Google the 1971 Playboy article versus music.
Like, for me, I can't listen to any of R. Kelly's music anymore because a lot of his music is him telling on himself.
You know, and I guess with Roman Polanski, it's kind of like with some of his work telling on himself in a way, I don't know.
But that's just my take on it, man.
Much love to you.
Much love from the 206.
Hope you having a good summer.
Stay hydrated, brother.
Tony and the 206, great to hear from you.
Great way to frame this question
when you're comparing the transgressions
of film directors and musicians.
I think maybe, put the telling on yourself
a piece aside for a second.
But the, I don't know, is music just more personal?
Is that what it is, Zeth?
Is that what makes it harder?
I think it could be.
I think there's a big part of the music that you listen to being such a part of your identity
in a way that the movies that you watch aren't part of your identity.
I don't have a fast, clear answer for why that is the case.
But music has always been such a part of who you are.
Yeah, certainly for me, but movies, too, to some degree, I don't know.
I mean, Woody Allen is certainly in Manhattan telling on himself.
to use, to use Tony's phrase.
But I still love that movie.
And I guess, I don't know.
I don't know if it's different between musicians and directors for me.
All right, guys, that's Hollywoodland.
That is available wherever you get your podcast.
That's our little, you know, our corner of the movies and true crime annex from history.
All right?
You got to subscribe and follow on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get a podcast,
search for Hollywoodland.
You're going to get one of those archive episodes.
per week, plus you're going to get the wrap party bonus episode.
Lots of new listeners.
Appreciate you guys real quick.
If you're new, this is how we do it.
Tuesdays, new full episode of disgrace land.
Thursday, this after party bonus episode of disgrace land.
Fridays, we rewind an episode from our massive archive.
I always say with over 230 full episodes,
but that's going to be pushing 250 at this point.
Any of you new listeners have questions about previous artists that we've covered,
and we've covered so many of them.
Get in touch.
617-90666-6638 voicemail and text.
Hit me up on the DMs at Disgraceland Pod.
I can answer most questions for you.
One of the questions I get often is Jake,
how can I support the show?
How can I help out?
How can I pitch in?
How can I do my part?
I really like what you're doing over there.
I want you to do more of it.
And I always answer, well, hey,
there's a couple ways you can leave a review
all right, on Apple Podcast or Spotify,
or you can support the show on Patreon
or an Apple Podcast.
Just go to disgracelampod.com slash membership.
And when you're there, it's basically going to tell you what I'm going to tell you right now.
Five bucks a month, you're going to get ad-free listening.
You're going to get an extra portion of this bonus episode where I talk to you and you alone.
Well, you and you alone in the sort of universal members sense.
And you're also going to get one additional full episode per month, just for five bucks.
I say just for five bucks.
Like five bucks doesn't mean anything.
It does.
I get it.
It's hard to buy anything with five bucks these days.
Because shit is expensive, okay?
But I like to think what we're providing for five bucks is worth it.
So again, disgracelandpod.com slash membership to become a member.
And if you do so right now, in the bonus part of this here bonus episode, you're going to hear me give my full take on the Sean Diddy Combs case.
All right, we are back.
Thanks for hanging on me for another after party here, guys.
We talked about a bunch of artists in this episode that we've covered in our previous episodes of disgrace.
Of course, Sean Dittie Combs, two episodes on Sean Combs.
You want to hear those.
The second one gets explicitly into the Cassie Ventura indictment.
Check that out.
We also mentioned Nirvana.
I'm not sure who else.
Matt, Matt will figure it out and he'll put it all in the show notes for you.
He'll make it easy for you.
All right.
It'll be right in there.
You can find where these episodes are in our archive.
But for now, let's recap.
All right.
Number one, this week's full episode of disgrace land on Frank Sinatra, part two on Frank Sinatra.
That's available for you right now, top of your feed.
Number two, coming up next in your feed is our rewind episode, our studio 54 episode, number three,
coming next week, new episode on the replacements, number four.
Over in the Hollywood land feed, Roman Polanski, plus our rap party bonus episode where Zeth
and I are unpacking the story and giving you our recommendations.
Number five, 617-906-6638 voicemail and text.
DM me at Disgracelampot on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and X disgracelam pod at gmail.com
to email number six, don't forget.
No one cares about music, books, records, and the crime and grime that ties it all together like you do.
And well, that is a disgrace on December 8th, however.
1963, Frank Sinatra's son was kidnapped and a mafia enforces phone calls set off a chain of really, really bad things.
Here is what America was listening to at that time.
Number one, on the Billboard charts, Dominique, the singing nun.
Last week, two, peak position, one, weeks on chart, five.
Number two, I'm leaving it up to you, Dale and Grace.
Last week, one, peak position, one, weeks on chur, ten.
Number three, everybody, Tommy Rowe, last week, seven, peak position, three, weeks on chur, nine.
Number four, Louisville.
Louis, the Kingsman.
Last week, 23.
Peak position.
Four.
Weeks on church.
Five.
Number five, she's a fool.
Leslie Gore.
Last week, six.
Peak position.
Talking and start mixing.
Cut!
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, Tena Mongeu, 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.
Sometimes a suspect is found guilty before a verdict is ever read in court.
On the Wicked Words podcast, I talk with the writers who dig deep into the cases that changed history,
including Marsha Clark, who went from prosecuting one of the most famous murder cases to writing
crime fiction.
It doesn't matter that you didn't take part in the murder.
If you were at the scene at all, you're guilty of murder.
Every week, the real story is revealed.
Join us every Monday for new episodes of Wicked Words.
Listen to Wicked Words on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
