Whether it's your first Bonnaroo or you’re a music festival veteran, we welcome you to Inforoo.
Here you'll find info about artists, rumors, camping tips, and the infamous Roo Clues. Have a look around then create an account and join in the fun. See you at Bonnaroo!!
Yeah I have my suspicions that it was pre-planned or at least not as quick as they portrayed. They didn't put an episode out last week, so maybe when they "took a break" they really took a day or two to do whatever research they typically do.
And instead of saying all of your goodbyes - let them know you realize that life goes fast - It's hard to make the good things last-you realize the sun doesn't go down - It's just an illusion caused by the world spinning round
I don't listen to much of their stuff, so maybe that would make me more reticent, but you can't tell this is from the Ringer. It's just two people - Jemele and Van Lathan - talking about The Wire.
I don't listen to any of their stuff anymore, really. I don't listen to Simmons as much because he has Rusillo on all the time and I think Rusillo is a doucher.
Well, I sure turned out to be fuckin right on about Rusillo, huh lol.
Was looking for SFA's post on Blowback, the pod on Hussein and the Iraq War(s). Maybe that was in the politics thread. Anyway, it's great. Taking my time with it, because it's pretty heavy! The part where
Post by 10goldbees on Jul 28, 2020 14:02:21 GMT -5
Anyone listen to Double Threat with Julie Klausner & Tom Scharpling? I feel like it'd be pretty popular around these parts.
It is possibly the dumbest, most formless podcast around and I love it so, so much. Those two are so good at entertaining one another that it brings to tears (of laughter). The bit this week about Trent Reznor almost actually killed me.
So the Whitest Kids U Know have a podcast now. I watched a clip on YouTube where they discuss their favorite comedy films of the nineties. In that clip, *most* of the guys reveal that they do not consider Fight Club or Fargo to be comedies. After that, I was fully out on that shit.
Fight Club I almost get not realizing is comedic, but Fargo is so obviously a comedy. Really, both are satirical, and they literally do/did comedy as a job. I was never a massive fan of WKUK, but that was shameful.
Post by heyyitskait on Jul 31, 2020 17:40:23 GMT -5
I feel like I’ve probably talked about this before but whatever! Andrea Savage has a podcast and it’s wonderful. It’s called Andrea Savage: Grown-Up Woman #buttholes.
She has her friends/guests on to talk about when they felt like a real adult human and they play games (Would you rather and make love, marry, kill) and it’s generally been really really delightful. I don’t know if she’s doing a second season but I sure hope so. Examples of guests: Mila Kunis, Kaitlin Olson, Paul Rudd, Rich Eisen, and June Squibb.
Post by itrainmonkeys on Aug 4, 2020 22:59:19 GMT -5
Okay so I came to post here about Hollywood Handbook cracking my shit up but first I need to comment on how much airtime is being given to discussing Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles on earwolf lately.
Scott Aukerman has basically turned Comedy Bang bang into a TMNT podcast (though only for a few minutes at a time as he doesn't know anything about it and his guests fill him in and he can't tell if they'r telling the truth). Shaun Diston has played a part in this and now I believe there's going to be a short podcast series on Shaun Diston's patreon where he & Scott watch all the TMNT movies and talk about them lol.
On Hollywood Handbook I was reminded of it when they got into the whole "Jesus is Krang" bit. I loved Sean calling out Rahzel and also the Warren G song Regulate during the ad. So ridiculous but this show hits all my sweet spots.
I started listening to the Birthday Boys and Samberg episode but then realized episode 666 had Wiger and started that lol Edi Patterson from Righteous Gemstones is awesome
I started listening to the Birthday Boys and Samberg episode but then realized episode 666 had Wiger and started that lol Edi Patterson from Righteous Gemstones is awesome
so i'm just a little bit into today's Remain In Light episode of u talking talking heads 2 my talking head and it's fantastic. tawny newsome is PERFECT for this podcast, she clearly gets it. it's also genuinely cool hearing about the talking heads cover band she was in.
scott and scott are particularly frenetic this episode, and when tawny joins and locks in immediately it gets even more frenetic. "dream katies/k.d.'s" might be my favorite new podcast of the season.
maybe this is a joke i've missed before, but i noticed they used "spoonman" as the music for two different pods, i laughed really hard when i heard it the second time.
Hey yall I got a new podcast episode out on Kanye at Roo 2014, so I went and got an RSS feed like a real podcast!
Check it out:
feeds.feedburner.com/fiestaville
Should be on iTunes, etc before long. Part 2 a week from today. All parts featuring powerhouse guests Jake Jortles and @radiatebased.
I’d be down to guest on Aphex Twin DFN
I'll definitely have to do a DFN one before long.
Don't want to give anything away, but I have strong ideas for episodes two and three already.
Didn't want to get too far into Kanye at Roo 08 in this one because none of us were there and it deserves its own episode, but it couldn't be avoided.
If anyone has a headlining set they'd like to do down the road, shoot me a PM and we'll talk about it! Especially if you've been to certain legendary Coachella sets..
maybe this is a joke i've missed before, but i noticed they used "spoonman" as the music for two different pods, i laughed really hard when i heard it the second time.
they played it for the podcasts about sound and gardens. agree on tawny, i get excited any time she pops up on podcasts (she was on cbb last week if you didn't listen!).
Hey yall I got a new podcast episode out on Kanye at Roo 2014, so I went and got an RSS feed like a real podcast!
Check it out:
feeds.feedburner.com/fiestaville
Should be on iTunes, etc before long. Part 2 a week from today. All parts featuring powerhouse guests Jake Jortles and @radiatebased.
i'm about an hour in and have really enjoyed it. it's a cool idea to do a brief history of the artist leading up to the headlining set under discussion. especially with kanye where you really need to discuss the 2008 set to understand the 2014 set.
fwiw i think i generally agree with the conclusion that while there is plenty of blame to go around for the 2008 debacle, i still primarily put it on kanye's shoulders. my primary basis for that conclusion is that in the almost decades long history of bonnaroo, a shitshow of this level hasn't happened with any other artist. i mean yeah it was dumb to put kanye on the which stage, but bonnaroo has a history (and probably a future) of making dumb scheduling decisions crowd-wise, most recently Cardi B on the which, and those artists just go out there and put on a good show for their fans. live music will always have limitations, and those limitations are magnified at a festival. it's up to the artist and their team to make it work for the fans waiting in the sun to see you.
but i don't have zero sympathy for kanye, i do believe he just wanted to put on a great show and he wasn't just being a dick. but he should've been a mature enough artist at that point to just make it work.
also the pod made me think about how i got into kanye. i first heard kanye's name when Jay-Z shouted him out on "Lucifer". and kanye's beats are the first hip-hop beats that made me ask myself "woah who made these beats?" like it was the first time i cared about a hip-hop producer i think. so i started searching for his name and downloaded a bunch of College Dropout tracks from limewire.
Yeah, I think Jortles made that point on the show, that we haven't seen that issue with other artists who've played Bonnaroo, at least not so publicly.
Sorta tricky striking a balance between the scripted backstory parts and a more conversational style. Part 2 is much more conversational because it's mostly just talking about the show itself and our personal experiences.
Thanks so much for listening. I know I'm making it a pain by posting the feed link and not a soundcloud but I needed to figure out the whole RSS/iTunes thing.
Yeah, I think Jortles made that point on the show, that we haven't seen that issue with other artists who've played Bonnaroo, at least not so publicly.
Sorta tricky striking a balance between the scripted backstory parts and a more conversational style. Part 2 is much more conversational because it's mostly just talking about the show itself and our personal experiences.
Thanks so much for listening. I know I'm making it a pain by posting the feed link and not a soundcloud but I needed to figure out the whole RSS/iTunes thing.
I liked the first episode. Definitely reminded me of a music-focused Behind the Bastards or Lions Led by Donkeys
What happened? I'm still catching up on old episodes of this show cuz I kept forgetting about it. Its sad cuz they're so excited for the upcoming season at the point in up to and no whisper of the upcoming pandemic
What happened? I'm still catching up on old episodes of this show cuz I kept forgetting about it. Its sad cuz they're so excited for the upcoming season at the point in up to and no whisper of the upcoming pandemic
Post by snowmanomura on Sept 6, 2020 11:28:59 GMT -5
Most podcasts I listen to are "depressing and make me feel awful" says my wife. Conan and song exploder are the only non political, history, or science pods I listen to.
But two of my favorite news radio/podcast people got together to make one. Amy westervelt, who does the awesome climate podcasts drilled and hot take (very good, definitely depressing and make you feel awful), got together with Elise Hu (NPR do it all, science reporter, VICE news) to make a podcast called Labor - about both pandemic parenting but also the concept of the 'nuclear family' in today's America. Really interesting so far to hear about how pandemic is transforming the family interactions (work from home, school from home, etc) and how structural issues in america influence family dynamics such as societal expectations have stayed the same for decades while support structures have transformed/eroded (e.g. the power of labor unions to make it possible for middle class Americans dad's to work and moms to stay home). Addresses the racial and socioeconomic issues that play into family life, what families actually look like and how they function in america, and how covid is straining (and exposing) these systems.
Also SupeЯfuЯЯyanimal turned me into blowback, about the history of the Iraq war, and it's absolutely fascinating. Again depressing and makes you feel awful, but fascinatingly eye opening and makes me realize how much I missed the first time through but also so much middle eastern and Iraqi history I never knew/learned.