Music Junkies Podcast

Exploring Heavy Metal, Horror Films, and Juggalo Culture with Jeremy Bryant

December 11, 2023 Annette Smith / Jeremy Bryant Season 3 Episode 20
Music Junkies Podcast
Exploring Heavy Metal, Horror Films, and Juggalo Culture with Jeremy Bryant
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Guest of honor, Jeremy Bryant is joining us for an enlightening chat, imparting his expertise on metal music, horror films, and the intriguing lifestyle of Juggalos. Our conversation takes us on a journey through Jeremy's high school years, shedding light on how his love for the band Sticks shaped his musical taste. Tag along as we dive into Jeremy's college days, where we learn about his initiation into the vibrant Juggalo culture.

Prepare to get spooked as we navigate the world of horror and the supernatural. Jeremy shares his favorite gory and straight-to-French horror films, alongside anecdotes from memorable encounters with Scum. Unearth the charm of Hopson's rap music, known for its profound lyrics and the significant influence of life experiences on his songs. Laughter is guaranteed as Jeremy reveals a hilarious family tradition involving B-horror movie downloads and his cousin's reaction to Scum's onstage persona.

Finally, we explore the profound influence of music on personal relationships and society. We dissect various musical genres and their ability to shape our moods and perspectives, with Jeremy offering his insights on mumble rap, experiences with musical instruments, and why he chose lunch over joining the school band. We also get to meet Jeremy's beloved mastiffs, Munchkin and Moose, and learn how they influenced his musical preferences. All this and more await you in our captivating chat with Jeremy Bryant, which you can follow on YouTube, Twitter, and Instagram. Hold onto your headphones, this is going to be a thrilling ride!




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Speaker 1:

Welcome everyone to Music Junkies, a podcast about people sharing extraordinary stories about how music has impacted their lives.

Speaker 2:

Welcome everyone to Music Junkies. I'm your host, annette Smith, and our guest today is a husband, stepfather of two. We love that. You own a Mastiff, so do I right? We love our Mastiffs. You're also a host of the Paranoimal, the new Normal Podcast. Plus, you co-host it looks like 50 million other podcasts, which is awesome. You love pop culture and are you a juggler or a jiggler. I wasn't quite sure about that.

Speaker 1:

Jiggler was a dream profession, but it's a juggler.

Speaker 2:

Okay, we got that right. Metalhead and a hater of country music. Please welcome Jeremy Bryant to the show. The crowd goes wild. It's awesome Welcome. How are you?

Speaker 1:

I'm doing good and, yes, country music.

Speaker 2:

So, before we dive into your crazy metal playlist, I want you just to share a little bit about how you came up with your playlist. You know, was it an easy process? Was it in a hard process? Did you know exactly what to put on there, or did you struggle through the process?

Speaker 1:

Not gonna freaking lie. In the beginning it was easy. I mean the first six, seven I'm like, yeah, I got this. After that it's kind of like all right now I gotta think a little bit and try to figure something out here. And I mean co-hosting a music podcast. I am always looking through music regardless, for some reason or another, so I always have things in mind, but as you spend the thick of ones that have stories involved, it's a whole other thing.

Speaker 2:

I know I know, and then you could go down a rabbit hole. You can pick a song and then that goes down this rabbit hole or brings you to this age that you love this song, love that song, and then now you have, you know, 100 Britney Spears songs, right, and then now, what are you gonna do?

Speaker 1:

I like Britney but yeah, I don't listen to any of her music on a regular. If it's out in the store I'm not gonna complain. But you know I love it.

Speaker 2:

All right, we're gonna get started with your first song. Are you ready?

Speaker 1:

Let's go, all right. Let's meet contestant number one. He's a schizo-vratix serial killer clown who says women love his sexy smile.

Speaker 5:

Let's find out if his charm will work on Sharon. Sharon, what's your question?

Speaker 3:

Contestant number one.

Speaker 1:

I feel like everybody found this song in high school Like you can see my face just dying, laughing, as I'd be here at the beginning of it, because I oh my God, everybody found that fucking song in high school. I swear to God, if you grew up in the 90s or the 2000s, you found that song in high school. You may even find it these days in high school. I kind of doubt it, but it's still possible.

Speaker 2:

So these guys were big influence for you when you were growing up in high school.

Speaker 1:

Not. That's the funny story part is? No, they weren't. I did not get into ICP in St Clown Posse until college. Really. I mean I had one burnt CD of like a mix of their songs I found randomly, including that one. The first song I ever heard of there was, like everybody else Like it. Just I heard that song and I couldn't stop laughing for days Like it's the funniest as the funniest freaking song in the world. But it's just like I didn't get into college. And then, you know, six, seven years ago I decided to go get a tattoo on myself for permanent life. But Juggalo signed everything, and that's probably about the time that the FBI said that Juggalo's are gang. Oh so I mean completely unfounded bullshit, but they take the few rotten apples because they want to hate on the whole group.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, so what kind of gang are they?

Speaker 1:

A street gang, according to the FBI. Oh, they're right there with the crypts and the bloods.

Speaker 2:

Really, I've never even heard of them before.

Speaker 1:

And that right there is why they're really not, because nobody's ever heard of them, I mean if you know music and you go through like every if you know every genre of music to some degree.

Speaker 1:

you've heard of them. Most people I've heard of them, usually not through good things, but most people I've heard of them because the word Juggalo has been around for 30 years at this point. Yeah, you see, clownposs has been around since like 91, 90. So I mean, it's not like it's a new thing, it's just it kind of fallen back into obscurity because they don't. They're not in the headlines anymore since back in 2016 when that happened and they marched on Washington.

Speaker 2:

Oh, interesting See, I wouldn't even really think that that would be a really good gang name.

Speaker 1:

On their first CD, violin J called himself the Juggalo, and that's where Juggalo was born from, because it's a dark carnival. Juggalo is all that shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so you like to juggle?

Speaker 1:

No, I can't juggle for shit. No, I being a Juggalo, just basically me. It's something you can. It's a family. Juggalo is our family. We all like the same type of music. Well, usually they've had some kind of horrible experience in their life. Like it's just usually it's just something that you need to draw together people who are like you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so you just have like this little community you guys can relate to, like upbringing past, trammas, all that kind of crazy stuff that goes on in all of our lives.

Speaker 1:

I mean Dead Hedge are the same thing. Yeah, I mean, all those groups are the same thing. Juggalo's were the late 90s version of it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so you grew up in the 90s and so what was you know? Going back to high school, what were you like in high school?

Speaker 1:

That fat and nerdy white kid that no one would talk to.

Speaker 2:

So that was your biggest challenge in high school.

Speaker 1:

Basically, I was a straight A student. So the only thing I had to work the only thing I didn't have was a social life.

Speaker 2:

But you had music oh yeah, I mean yeah, different.

Speaker 1:

went through different phases of music throughout high school, but always had music.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so take me back to like grade eight, to grade 12. How much did your music change?

Speaker 1:

Oh God, I mean 100%. Basically, I went into high school being the white kid that likes rap and wants to be of a different color because he thinks that it would fit him better. But I went through being that kid to become like the heart in the 11th grade, becoming like the hardcore metalhead Like got my friend giving me my first Iron Maiden Cradle of Phil CDs and it just from there. Just I became that kid that hated rap and was all into metal shaved head, being a white kid like yeah.

Speaker 1:

Trying to grow a beard. That wasn't successful yet, but I think until now that eventually worked out.

Speaker 2:

And now you got the beard and you're still a metalhead. So that's a good thing, right? Oh?

Speaker 1:

yeah, definitely worked out.

Speaker 2:

Right. Next song I'm an.

Speaker 3:

Iceman yeah, I'm an Iceman, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm assuming you like wrestling.

Speaker 1:

I did love wrestling from fifth, sixth grade all the way to ninth, 10th grade, Like I loved the early 2000s wrestling. With the 90s 2000s wrestling was pretty incredible. It was just fucking amazing. To this day I still watch Reels of it on Facebook and just still laugh my ass off at it or remember the amazing matches back then. Or the people like there's just, it was a good time wrestling. I got back into it in college for a while too, from like a week to 13,. But it just it became too big, it became too much. I couldn't keep up with it anymore as an adult, trying to work and watch other things besides wrestling all week.

Speaker 1:

So, who are?

Speaker 2:

your mean wrestlers growing up. Who are your favorites?

Speaker 1:

I mean Undertaker. Obviously, if you didn't like Undertaker, there's something wrong with you. And Stone Cold, of course. Even though he was kind of out most of the time, I watched it until the end. Triple H always a favorite. Any of DX really a favorite. I mean so many others like a name, but I mean just those are the main ones. And that theme song right there is DX related. Because, mr S Billy Gunn, that song got me in so much fucking trouble all through going to high school. Why? Because I would sing it out loud and my parents were like what the fuck is wrong with you? You do not. A white boy should not go around singing that song.

Speaker 2:

There is on prime. I don't know if you've seen it, but they have all old school kind of wrestling documentaries. We've been watching some of them and I'm older than you so my wrestlers were like Roddy, Roddy, Piper and Brutus of our Rebeef Cake and that. So those stories are really cool just to kind of hear what a fucked up lifestyle and the shit that they put their bodies through. I think the Undertaker on there too, and Stone Cold I haven't watched those ones yet just because I was kind of done with wrestling when those guys kind of came into wrestling. But it's insane. Their stories are absolutely insane. So if you haven't seen it, go check it out, because if you're a wrestling fan it will just blow your frickin mind. It was so good.

Speaker 1:

I've been mean to go back and watch wrestling stuff for so long. I watch these reels all the time. I'm like I just watch the frickin old shit that's on Peacock and watch stuff I grew up with. But it's just. I do a lot of I'm starting to do a lot of horror movie brackets on my paranormal show, so I've been watching that the most slasher for the last month.

Speaker 2:

What's a really good slasher that you've watched over the last month.

Speaker 1:

Not many good ones. No, no, I mean it's also the first part. So I mean there's like 25 parts of the slasher brackets. The first part is like a lot of low ranking movies. Yeah. But I think I mean it got me into the Bachelor, the slumber party massacre and the and the and sorority party massacre, okay, and they are just, they're so horrible. That's funny and, of course, as a guy, the new, the, the new D&AD slasher films just always par.

Speaker 2:

That's right. What is your favorite horror movie? Do you have a favorite?

Speaker 1:

Hard to pick a favorite. I mean the new it movies really were awesome. I love those Salms lot. The original sounds a lot that Toby Hooper did Like that's freaking incredible. I love the Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake they did in the 90s not the original crap but the remake in the 90s. But Bonesaw Tomahawk no one's ever heard of it but it's one of the. It's a Western horror movie. It's freaking incredible.

Speaker 2:

But I mean there's there's so many others like a name, but it's just you like the Gory, or do you like okay, I can watch this straight to French. Or do you like the really messed up Gory?

Speaker 1:

The pet. Yeah, it has to have a good storyline, like that's what does it. For me it has to have the good storyline. I don't care if it's shit, the production shit, but it has to have a good storyline At least. Like give me a fucking storyline that makes sense, not something that I can figure out, like in the first five minutes of the movie, like what's going to happen.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And a lot of like slashers, especially you know what's going to happen. You like oh my God, I've watched so many shitty movies in the last month. It's funny.

Speaker 2:

We play a game as a family where we get, you know, we just download B horror movies, and then we all pick our players, and then, obviously, the last person alive is the winner, and we've been doing this forever. So now what we've been doing, though, is we've been adding this to Christmas, because we get a little downtime, like you know, after you wake up, and it's like this big wait until dinner and everybody's kind of hungover from Christmas Eve. So now we make sure we download, like a Christmas really bad B movie, and then we die laughing and have some fun with that. So it's funny.

Speaker 1:

Funny. You say that I just actually made a holiday. Horror bracket up today.

Speaker 2:

You have to send me what you found, because there is some psycho ones out there. I tell you.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I could send you a list. I got. I got a. I'll send you the. I'll send you the webpage I use. It's got 107 movies on it.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, for sure, make sure you do that. I'd love that.

Speaker 1:

If we will tomorrow.

Speaker 2:

All right. Next song. What are you?

Speaker 3:

Oh, there's so many names. Such a good song.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, my God, if you guys should appreciate scum, that I freaking might love you. That is that, might. That is one of the few albums my co-host, my music show, couldn't get through. He was sick at the time but he couldn't get through it Like and the guests the guests was just like. He came on, like what the fuck did you make me listen to? Oh, and I've actually met scum. I was at a concert in Worcester that he was performing at and I'm outside, my cousin just smoking a cigarette and like waiting a while, like the local rappers where I think we're starting to go on. So we're waiting for like the main rappers to go on. And I mean it's for your local rappers, but I have friends with a bunch of them around here, so please support them. But I mean like we're smoking cigarettes and all of a sudden this guy walks out the bar. It's a little small venue.

Speaker 1:

It's like a bar stage in like a floor, that's all it is Like it's nothing to it Like maybe 30 people are at the show. Total by time was done. But this guy walks out and I'm just like you. Look like scum, like not even thinking it could be him, just thinking it. Looks like him. Like I was probably stoned to shit at the time but I'm pretty sure we were drinking already. But I know he's like I am scum.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

And I'm like you're either insulting yourself or you are scum, and I ended up being him and I literally, like I literally talked to this guy for probably an hour and a half Like outside just smoking cigarettes and among other things, and literally like the nicest fucking guy in the world, and then like my cousin like my cousin didn't really listen to his music besides like one or two songs, so he didn't know him and like the whole time he's like it's such a nice guy.

Speaker 1:

Like we walked into McDonald's, set a street, come back to the concert and like, right when all like the maniac started to form. Finally scum comes on because he's a headliner and my cousin sitting there like through like one song and I guess the second song, and as soon as he gets to the freaking line, like you from your pussy to your throat, my cousin's like I'll be the bar.

Speaker 2:

Oh, he was out.

Speaker 1:

Oh, he was he was like this is in. Like I mean scums on stage, like humping a sack of something that's supposed to be a dead body.

Speaker 1:

And my cousin's, just like yeah, I'll be the bar when this is done, and I was like, I'm like I'll be right here in the front rocking as shit Like we did, freaking the acre bombs with scum and everything to, before he went on Like it was just a fun night but and actually I have a picture with him in the lava represent that night as well, but like this year's the funniest thing in the world though, because, like my cousin still tells the story to this day of like how he was in nice as fucking God and the city says on stage is completely opposite of what he's like in real life. That's our core.

Speaker 1:

It's a freaking act, dude. It's a persona Like you don't. They're not all. They're not real. There's only been one person in rap that actually was like a terrible and he's in. He's dead. I think he was in jail for like 20 years.

Speaker 2:

Do you remember the first concert you ever been to?

Speaker 1:

smash mouth.

Speaker 2:

Oh, no way.

Speaker 1:

In sixth grade. They're the my whole sixth grade class was there.

Speaker 2:

No way.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because the town I'm from, kingston, new York, has like this little little feeder called the you pack, like it's for plays and comedy shows mainly but, they get. Sometimes they get pretty big music acts there and I don't understand how, but they do and smash mouth when they're right.

Speaker 1:

In 2000 when all star dropped and it was like when it was when they were freaking huge RIP the singer who just died. But I mean, like we went to. We went to the concert and like my whole six grade class was there as well, looking around seeing everybody with their parents. It's just like this is so lame.

Speaker 2:

We were just in Vegas because we went in May. We went to punk rock bowling show and they were playing when we were down there just on Fremont Street and we were going to go see them. And now I regret not going and seeing them. Like that's so crazy, right, like it was just like here's the thing.

Speaker 1:

We got like halfway through the concert and my parents were we look. My parents were like can we go?

Speaker 2:

Oh really.

Speaker 1:

Like we didn't even get to their fucking hits, like their opening songs were just so horrible. It's just like most of people you can see most of people were freaking, get the same idea and just leaving Like yeah, well, they are one hit wonder kind of bad Three hit wonder I'd say, but yeah.

Speaker 2:

So what has been your best concert you've seen.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that's fucking tough, okay, oh, tell you what I'll say that answer. It's gonna be one of those. One of the songs they play is coming up.

Speaker 2:

Okay, okay. Well, let's. I don't know if it's this one, but let's try this one. All right, I'm not crazy.

Speaker 1:

I mean you can play the first whole line of that song, so I'm playing you. Uh, I mean, no, that's not it. I wish I saw fucking Hopson live. I still want to see Hopson live. He's fucking incredible. Hopson is who I refer. I actually just did a bracket for him back in June, I think. Or, yeah, back in. Yeah, back in June we just did a Hopson bracket and like I brought his three of his albums to shows that month because I was trying to hype it up and like I've turned people who never listen to Hopson and like they listen to like one CD and they freaking love him, like they think he's incredible, like I literally have since I first started listening to him back in like oh no, I, I call them, I call them a black M&M.

Speaker 1:

Cause like I mean just the lyrics and the freaking flow and everything just reminded me of M&M from the beginning. Like I'm not an M&M fan I haven't been for since I was like a teenager but like it's just, hopson is incredible, the depths he goes with his songs. His life has just been fucking like one bullshit after another and each bullshit makes an album out of it and it's freaking incredible. I mean literally. His newest album is about him knocking up a girl that a fan, a girl that a fan that he freaking dated in Australia and like it's literally about like her calling the cops and saying that like he pitter shit. And it's literally about like him getting arrested in Australia and how he's now not allowed back in the country. And I mean it's all about like him trying to deal mentally with all this horrible shit.

Speaker 1:

So his CDs like any of you haven't been in that exact situation or even a situation like that you always relate to what he's saying and you always relate to dark times. So and like his songs are just his ill mind of. Hopson songs are so fucking good, like the number I think it's in my to Hopson, for it's just literally him like rapping, the teenager sitting on the couch, and it's just so accurate with kids today. And it's just so, oh my God, like it's stuff that every adult wants to say to a teenager, like it goes all out on it and doesn't hold back. And it's like, oh my God, you're sitting there like laughing one second Next thing I like, oh, like, it's just like, like it's just a mix of emotions in all his songs. It's just incredible.

Speaker 2:

So what do you think of the today's kids then?

Speaker 1:

Oh God I got. I had two step kids. You give me a fear for what the hell their world's going to be like in 10 years when they're teenagers. I really do. But I could say just the internet destroyed them. It didn't story us because we were around for a good decade before at least, so we knew what life outside of it. They don't know life outside the internet or video games or any of that. So we changed the world's landscape of the world. It's just not a good thing.

Speaker 2:

Do you think we're making stronger kids or weaker kids? Oh, weaker.

Speaker 1:

These kids couldn't survive in the 90s. As a teenager.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's crazy. It's crazy to watch.

Speaker 1:

So you feel helping your parents. I don't know where the hell you are.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I grew up in the late 80s, early 90s. You know, I look back then, right, I couldn't imagine all like we'd be in jail if they videotaped all this shit. We did back then Like you're not getting out, you're in trouble. So you are. You do lots of podcasts. So let's start with the paranormal your first podcast. So walk me through. How did it get started? What's the concept of the podcast? How long have you been doing it?

Speaker 1:

Well, basically it was my first solo podcast. I was already on another podcast before that, but that they did. All people on that podcast were like you need to do your own shit too. Like you know, like you have a voice, you have good opinions, you need to be talking about something you love. And at that time I was really into paranormal podcast for years and I was just like I love the paranormal, let's do that shit. Like let's get on that with every 5,000 people that do it. But I'm like let's get in there. And so in April of 22, I think I started and 150. I feel like 180 episodes later it's still going. Wow.

Speaker 1:

It's just your basic inner. I mean it's an interview show mostly, and I just talked to people who are in the paranormal realm or spiritual realm or supernatural realm. I mean paranormal investigators, mediums, psychics.

Speaker 2:

So how many stories have you heard?

Speaker 1:

It would take me days to tell all the cool stories. I've heard, but I've heard a lot of different and a lot of amazing stories and whether people believe them, that's up to them. But I look in the eyes of everybody in the interview and I yet to see one that I think is not telling me the truth. Yeah, at least they believe it's the truth.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so how do you find your people?

Speaker 1:

Easy. Actually, that's the easiest story I guess we're in the world. I mean, there's Facebook podcast groups are blown up with those people always looking to be on shows. All the podcast guesting sites like there's so many of them on there that want to be on shows like mediums and psychics my God there's. I've interviewed so many and they're all different.

Speaker 1:

They're all different. People said they're all different stories. That's the great thing. I could do six interviews in a row with them and not one of them said tell me the same thing twice, not usually at least. So it's always interesting. It's always a different perspective in the world and that's what the shows about is just trying to make people think the world's not as normal People think it is. Like. Are they trying to put? Or, as they want to play ignorant, say it is. So they got to see the other perspectives.

Speaker 2:

So have you had any of these psychics or mediums like read, like to say hey, there's just something that I have to tell you.

Speaker 1:

It's happened a few times and it's that. Well, it's happened probably a good and times, not least, and Half of them have been recorded and are in the episodes and the other half were after that. So it was over and they just that, they wait. I didn't tell me, but I mean they always they was asked like do you mind? Like no, go ahead, do a lot, I don't care.

Speaker 2:

How do you feel like? Do you feel like what they've said to you personally has been real, or has it came into fruition?

Speaker 1:

I usually don't get anything the future per se they usually do more than anything. It's spirits hanging around me, because my house is haunted.

Speaker 1:

So I mean, it's been some relatives and some people, though that I didn't expect to be around me and that was the kind of cool part, like it was just like what, who like and like the stuff they're telling me there's. You can't Google that and figure that out? I mean, like I Google myself all the time just to make sure stuff and as a broadcaster and I I am way down the page if you just search my name.

Speaker 1:

I'm ready, I am way down the page there's a lot of Jeremy Bryant's. In this damn world, something looks really like me.

Speaker 2:

Okay, and then tell me about your bracket bastards podcast.

Speaker 1:

That was the first podcast I ever got on. That was I literally saw a post in its group on Facebook, a man called Bracketology, where it's a poke, it's like a whole group. Every day there's a port or two poles thing on how many are going to time, and the head of it just put out post saying, hey, I want to start a podcast doing what we do in this page, basically. And I was just like you know what, I always wanted to be on a podcast and I was listening to him a lot at that point. So I was just like fuck it through my hat in the ring and about four or five months later I finally got started and that's been going to November of 21.

Speaker 2:

Nice. So how do you manage all of these podcasts? Are you doing like one every single day?

Speaker 1:

Ah, for a long time that was very much the case but due to Overlucked in wife and kids I kind of had to slow it down. So I try to only do two, three, like one hour, even one of three, like we're going to turn the week and then the weekends I do. I do one every Sunday night at the same time and I do one and bracket bastards every Saturday at Three east now. So we always I'm always on that usually- yeah, and you enjoy them.

Speaker 2:

They're all very different exactly.

Speaker 1:

I mean I, if a yeah when it comes to podcast, if they all, if I do too many similar ones in a row again. So when? We're just like, almost like you dread having to get a microphone again. Yeah so like I have to break it up, and so if I talk about music one night and then talk about ghost the next night, I'm good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, mix it up. I love it. No, it's cool. I think it's awesome that you do that. I think it's great that you are on many different shows, which is really cool. It's like diverse, which is really cool as well. Alright, next song.

Speaker 3:

Oh, mama, I'm in fear for my life from the long, long man is put in into my running and I'm so far from my home.

Speaker 2:

I love the beginning of that song.

Speaker 1:

I that whole song is fucking incredible. That was my, that was one of my dad's favorite bands and he got me into sticks and like. So I mean that and that's a band I always wanted to see live too but never got the chance. And I mean since Dennis the young died, I mean why that? Would you want to see him live anyway, but it's just. I mean sticks is just incredible, one of my favorite bands by far and I love that song. Like Everybody can relate to that song at some point in their life.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, for sure, were your parents fairly strict when you were growing up.

Speaker 1:

Mom, yes, dad, not so much and how about their music?

Speaker 2:

was it completely different? Mom listened to different music than dad mmm, some what?

Speaker 1:

but not I mean they. They went like when they were dating, through college and everything they were going to Kansas and Chicago concerts and all that type of stuff. So I'm pretty sure they saw sticks much twice. So I mean they they love all that stuff in common. But I mean my mom, of course you know, in the 90s fell into the Cheryl Crow and all that stuff like the woman music, yeah, as we call it. I Can appreciate it more nowadays than I could back then. Like she got into the Savage Garden and Ricky Martin's of it all like, and I forget about Savage Garden, but I, yeah, I mean, and my dad always just stayed more in the classic rock zone, like that was always his thing to jazz. He would jazz it up sometimes but it was mainly classic rock zone with him.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's cool. So then you're a collective of lots of different music than when you're growing up. So why? Why the hate for country?

Speaker 1:

Just never liked it Like I. Just I mean I could, I could respect all country. Johnny Cash like that, yeah, but Elvis, to some degree Elvis's country I like to some degree. I like his other stuff better, but I mean it's just. I don't like country. I mean on our podcast we call it sister Fisher music and.

Speaker 1:

I mean we've done country on the show because people the guests can bring around they want. So I mean, if they bring country, we're not gonna say fuck you. But I mean like we had someone brought John Denver like a month or two ago. So I mean if and I, I can't appreciate it because John Denver's good. But yeah, I don't country, I just don't like it's too whiny, it's too all about relationships and everything like Like I I'm friends with a lot of Swifties and it's just like, yeah, swift fans.

Speaker 3:

Oh.

Speaker 1:

But you haven't heard the term Swifties. It's been all over the news since she went on that last tour. People weren't Swifties, weren't diapers at the concerts and shit. So they'll miss a second.

Speaker 2:

Oh really.

Speaker 1:

Oh God, it's a whole thing. It's a whole thing. No, I don't understand I don't understand it, because I literally did a bracket for my prep podcasting friends birthday and, like I had a listen to 30 something Taylor Swift songs should be now, but it was. I mean, she's not horrible, but she's just. I can't listen to her.

Speaker 2:

They're wearing diapers to her concert.

Speaker 1:

Oh, something for biggest fans, worry, yeah, they don't want miss a second of the show.

Speaker 3:

Oh well.

Speaker 1:

I, I don't know. Okay, so on the news, oh, no, I didn't we.

Speaker 2:

We have different news down here in Canada.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, but it's all censored up here.

Speaker 2:

We don't hear any of that stuff. So are you being karaoke fan, could we see you singing at a karaoke bar?

Speaker 1:

Oh, actually one of the songs actually was a story behind that with karaoke, but um, not so much anymore. I mean I, if you want me to karaoke, there's gotta be a lot of.

Speaker 2:

What's your go-to karaoke song? I?

Speaker 1:

Honestly don't do it enough to really have one. I just a few times I done. It was at different points of my life, it was different things came up. If we get to the one song that I did do, I will bring that up.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, sounds good. All right, great song.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you're getting the answer to one of your questions with this one, that's for sure.

Speaker 2:

Right, greatest, greatest show on the earth.

Speaker 1:

It truly, it truly is, and it was the best concert I've ever went to nice it was.

Speaker 1:

Nightwish is. It's not even like they do pyrotechnics or any cool like screen shit, really like, it's just them. Live is just. I mean you think them in our CD can't get any better than them. Live is just the energy they put out when they do their Shows. Just my god, I mean for Jansen when she's stuck around the stage singing is just Illuminates like positive vibes completely out into the audience. I mean there's no much bit at that concert. There's nothing at that concert. It's just people enjoying the music.

Speaker 1:

It's just some pure ass, amazing music like that. Nightwish is literally my favorite band on earth like they, since I discovered them in high school, like, and I really got into them like college, like they just been like one of my favorite bands on earth, like. It's just incredible. And the fact I got to see them live I think it was back in St Patrick's Day after the concert, I think I was on St Patrick's Day, I think 2017, for not mistaken, or, yeah, 2017, I think, and it was just maybe 20, you know but Literally standing in a freezing cold ass, massachusetts March weather, like was snowing the ground, just freezing my ass off in line waiting to go in, this couple behind me in their fifties, like, like I'm talking about smoking weed and I'm like, damn, I wish I had a joint and like, and the wife taps the husband and the Shoulders, is like, oh honey, you have that, don't you?

Speaker 1:

And I'm like I'm cooking up, like where they have now, where they have, and he ends up his jacket, pulls out the freaking air pocket a joint, like and like, literally, just I smoked a joint with a 50 year old couple and the guy that was near side me because I wasn't going to not include somebody else because I felt bad that he all spoke and he wasn't but Literally just smoked with a 50 year old couple I never met for my life. I never expected that to happen. Looking at them, I never expected that moment to happen, like I was talking to them and everything. But I just never expected that to happen, like it was just oh, and it was such a good concert. I wish I could have got on the floor of the venue closer to the stage, but just it was so packed my time I got in there was just no, no, no. What's happening?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So you're married. You have a couple of step kids. How'd you meet your wife On a dating app?

Speaker 1:

called Zeus. Oh, that's that we met. We met in there on there in the winter of 2017 and what winter of that's. Yeah and the winter 17 we met, and then we finally met in person in the spring of 18.

Speaker 2:

Oh, wow, that's a long time.

Speaker 1:

Well, I mean we were both talking to a few different people at the time and it just never seemed like the right time to and it was winter. You know you don't want to travel. We lived an hour and like an hour and 15 minutes away from each other. So in the winter, and Massachusetts, you don't, you don't want to travel out, you got bad winters, just like Canada, or what I mean. I don't think anyone here is best Canada now come on.

Speaker 1:

You're a lot further north than we are, but it just it gets bad enough. I mean where you don't want to drive and you don't have to, yeah, freezing cold. Yeah, yeah, then got bits, knowing even all your tires and freaking help anymore.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so what do you love most about your wife?

Speaker 1:

A question, but she puts up with me. That's the best answer I can give. She puts up with me. I think it's a great answer. It takes, it, takes over special. Do that so yeah.

Speaker 2:

I think it's a great answer. I could be a lot as a. I'm a boggess or a multiple boggess.

Speaker 1:

I have a personality, I have an ego, I'm a lot to put up with. And then your two step kids. What have they taught you the most?

Speaker 2:

patience.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, good answer patience and I mean just the feeling of having a purpose in life besides just saving money, like you're working towards something in life, not just going along, just live in the daily grind, not have a real reason to keep going every day. Yeah, it's a purpose. I love that. I love that.

Speaker 1:

Alright, next song is so weird here in Cradle of Filth and one in one of your headphones. It really is, with their freaking percussion you need two headphones for them. But oh my god. And yeah, they are very close to the top concert I've ever seen too. They are their. Their concerts are the same thing. There's there's a little pyrotechnics, but there's no, not really a lot. It's not like a kiss concert or anything in words and there's no real screen stuff going on. Besides a couple songs. Like it's just. Their music is just so amazing. Like they're so heavy but so melodic at the same time. It's just hard not to love them. And that song right there, when you hear it live, it's just like mmm and I fed him.

Speaker 1:

Mean, it's just one of the best songs I've ever heard in my life. Like it's one of the most popular songs, but it's just one of the best fucking songs ever. It just goes from such a heavy. If you listen to the long version, it goes from such a heavy song until like a such melodic center sweet piece with I forget her name, with the way she sings, sarah or something. The way she sings is freaking magical and then end it with the heavy again. Like they're. They're storytellers, like their albums are already theatrical, usually history based. So it's kind of like you learn. You learn shit listening to them. You actually pay attention to what the lyrics are saying.

Speaker 2:

Does your wife listen to the same music as you do?

Speaker 1:

To some degree. Yes, not completely she. She's not a rap fan at all, really she's like classic. She like Dr Dre or something. And she's not a heavy heavy metal fan for the most part. She's more into like the 2000s, godsmack, drowning Pool I mean Nirvana too, like run yeah like you know, it's like the 92,000s rock basically.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, do you play an instrument?

Speaker 1:

I play drums in middle school and end of elementary school but never really went beyond that with it. My dad was a drummer in bands actually, so I mean that's why I wanted to do it. But I just in high school they told me you either have a lunch or you can be in the band and I was like I'll take my lunch. I'm a fact, I'll take my fucking lunch.

Speaker 2:

So you didn't pursue it. You didn't pursue drumming.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't a freaking natural right of means. I had to really work to even get good at doing the simplest shit.

Speaker 2:

And then what about guitar? Never wanted to pick it up.

Speaker 1:

My cousin actually gave me a guitar when I was in high school and, like he, I don't even know where he got it, who knows with him, but I fooled around on it. But just never bad fingers, never really was a thing I want, like I heard the shit of my fingers trying to play and it just didn't work. So I just, I mean I just I meant to appreciate the music and comment on it. I'm not meant to play it. Yeah. Figure that out. Figure that out for a young.

Speaker 2:

No, it's good. I think I'm a drummer too, like I play drums and it's. I now want to kind of look at getting into guitar a little bit, just kind of playing. My husband plays guitar, so we jam lots and so I just thought, well, maybe I'll play guitar, I'll try guitar right. But every time I see his fingers after that I'm like, nah, I don't know if I really want it, I don't know if that's the commitment I really want to put in.

Speaker 1:

Exactly, exactly. Do you have any?

Speaker 2:

pet peeves, jeremy, things that drive you absolutely insane.

Speaker 1:

Kids that don't listen yeah. Okay, but I mean people who insist that certain types of music are good when they're not. People that insist that's people that insist that's a lot of my current rappers are actually good when they're not. All the fucking mumble shit makes me freaking heat wrap nowadays, unless it's underground.

Speaker 2:

I mean people that Some examples of mumble rap like who would you consider that Like? When you say that, what do you mean by that?

Speaker 1:

I mean meek mill is, when it comes to something I have, for some reason I don't know why I don't listen to him. I don't even know names, because I just don't listen to this shit today. I mean Weegee Mack, who's a juggler rapper. I mean even him with his mumble rap, piss of the fuck off. Like I just can't listen to him and I have. Anything usually I see people do is I'll listen to, but I can't listen to him. He's freaking horrible. Like it's just, like it's all you hear on TV shows nowadays. To like like groanish, like the blackest spin off, like they play it all the fucking time in that show, and just like like it's really. It's like it's really just like someone going like heaven to heaven, heaven to heaven, and then like they'll say one word and that's it and it goes back to the mumbling. And it's like I know I don't understand it.

Speaker 2:

Or it's just like bitch ass slut. It's like okay, like, or do we have, like any other words here that we're going to use?

Speaker 1:

I mean, don't get me wrong, I I'm a sucker for some good trap rap. But yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2:

But there's also other words like it's just like, and then uh, that's what I mean.

Speaker 1:

That's why mainstream rap has never been my thing since, like the early 2000s, like it just never has been my thing Like I have to listen to artists that are lesser known or underground or they don't get big because they're not like these fucking sellouts or just want to say random shit to get paid, like they had messages they want to give. I mean even three, six mafia started to fucking suck after they got mainstream.

Speaker 2:

What's the music scene where you are? Uh?

Speaker 1:

I mean what mass usage has had a lot of successful metal bands come out of it in the last 10, 15 years and yeah hardcore. There's a lot of hardcore rappers around here, too that, like are underground rappers that do their thing. I've had a few of them on the show, like there's a lot of. There's a lot of them around here. You see a lot of ads on Facebook, portland and whatnot and they perform at, like, local venues and open for other rappers.

Speaker 1:

But yeah that's I mean, that's basically it. I mean, as far as other than that, I mean there's, yeah, there's the classic or the 40-something dads that play classic rock bands, and stuff.

Speaker 2:

But I mean mostly just metal and rap.

Speaker 1:

Yeah well, I mean it's master's mostly metal rap. It's like it's a lot of angry, angsty teens.

Speaker 2:

Well, this is not angsty teens, for sure this next song. Jason Franks Trinatra my way.

Speaker 1:

That's your karaoke song. Question.

Speaker 2:

Really, I would love to hear that.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, I always, I always had a Christmas party in Florida, my dad's at my aunt and uncle's friend's house, like they had a bunch of families, they're all, they're all friends and I know we all knew them for years and everything, and we wrote one of their houses for a Christmas party.

Speaker 1:

And I mean it's Florida so it doesn't feel like Christmas because you know, god damn snow and it's warm, but yeah we were at a Christmas party and they had a karaoke machine and I, of course, was pretty kind of that point because I was in my early 20s, so I was drinking all of the party and.

Speaker 1:

I literally had to pay someone to give me cigarettes that store at that point, but good, I didn't have a car with me but and did a couple. I think I did a Nirvana song and karaoke with somebody else and we sound like shit. I know we did, but I, as I'm home at it, steve, you sound like perfect because you're drunk and you don't know any better. And as night progressed, their grandmother, who was in her 80s, was put, they put out, they put on my way for her to sing and drunk Jeremy of course goes up and puts his arm around her and starts singing with her. The other microphone and until and actually I'm pretty sure I'm pretty, actually I think I did that one first and then we did Nirvana second, and then, when we were doing Nirvana, I think my uncle really came over and plugged the karaoke machine in like everybody's left.

Speaker 2:

You're done, jeremy, you're done.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my uncle's on my biggest fan to begin with.

Speaker 2:

Oh my god. So are you a dancer? Do you like to get out on the, on the dance or in dance?

Speaker 1:

Once again, alcohol has to be involved. Okay. So I don't do anything. Socially. I'm less like about you. I mean, I just I haven't danced in fucking God a decade almost like it's just the last wedding. I actually was inside at most for most of the wedding and I was drinking at like the first one I ever went to, really like that one. I was on the dance world like a night just because I was drinking and having a good time and I literally sweat off all the alcohol. I was dancing so much.

Speaker 2:

So you got a lot of tattoos. You want to tell me some meetings to some of your tattoos.

Speaker 1:

That's actually the only tattoo I have. But oh, it is, I'd love to get more, but that's it's also painful. I'm not a pain person and getting that one was bad enough, I mean. But I definitely do want to get more. I'm just gonna buy a fucking couple tubes of numbing cream off Amazon for it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so are you a risk taker? Do you like to eat weird food? Do you like to do extraordinary things?

Speaker 1:

I was gonna say no, but they said weird food and I'm like, okay, I like eating weird shit.

Speaker 2:

What's the weirdest thing you've?

Speaker 1:

ate. I mean they're really the first thing I ate. Oh my god. I mean we used to go to game dinners when I was a kid and like I've had ostrich, I've had antelope, I've had like so many different meats you can't imagine. I mean we, we just see guinea, hand and rabbit and all that. We've got a bunch of stuff from fossil farms and we tried a bunch of different meats that we'd never had before. I mean bison's always good. I mean I love fast and I like I mean the pretty much. It is no meat, the only meat I haven't eaten and I have no urge to eat unless I'm not told what it is. So I try to try it. It's snake. That's the joint here. Don't try it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's got lots of bones in it.

Speaker 1:

It does like, because they have that on the site we got the other stuff from too. But like just a picture of, like, the meat in a pile like a snake. No, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 2:

Have you ever had food poisoning before? Yeah, oh god yeah. Yeah, you got a good story for it.

Speaker 1:

Let's just say oysters and strawberry daiquiris don't go together very well.

Speaker 2:

No, they do not. Those are not two that I would put together at all.

Speaker 1:

Well, for, a twenty something year old they seem like a good idea at the time or even younger maybe, I don't know. My dad used to give me into the bar and I was like 14, 15, so I was a big kid. But so I mean, yeah, oyster, oyster, I should have an oyster too. There's mussels in strawberry daiquiris. They don't go well because there's this bar there, like on Friday's you can get like this big ass bowl of mussels cooked in like olive oil and garlic, like fucking incredible. And you, my dad, used to get like a bowl each and maybe, maybe even a third bowl to split, and like I was there drinking strawberry daiquiris, eating those, and that night I was over the porcelain gods for so fucking long. Ugh, gross. And yeah, they don't eat mussels don't taste good. Come back up, like I'll see you.

Speaker 2:

No, they don't taste good coming up at all, just like every kind of seafood Next up.

Speaker 5:

Meet Eddie, 23 years old. Fed up with life and the way things are going, he decides to rob a liquor store. But on his way in he has a sudden change of heart and suddenly his conscience comes into play All right.

Speaker 3:

Stop now, before you walk in your door, the liquor store and try.

Speaker 1:

All right, eminem, when Eminem was good still.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so you loved. Eminem. And then, when did your Eminem love change?

Speaker 1:

When he got clean.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, how long ago was that?

Speaker 1:

2008.

Speaker 2:

Oh wow, he's been clean for that long.

Speaker 1:

I mean he might have found back and forth, I don't fucking know, but that's when he did the rehab album. That's when he was clean supposedly. But he did, yeah, he did rehab, he did detox, I think. But those were two albums he put out. Reg Reg are clean, but that song is a classic Yield to Conscious. I think it's kind of yeah, Yield to Conscious yeah.

Speaker 1:

That song is a classic. I mean, we were in Florida with my dad on vacation in 2001. And we had my brother playing a burnt CD, a mixed CD, like I already did back then, and that song came on and my dad's just listening to it and I guess the part in the third story where it's like, where he's like should I fuck the girl, and Dr Dre's like I got hair down there, don't she? And my dad's like oh, this is a good song, this is a nice song. Good lessons, kids. It's just like my dad's like seriously, you're just laughing. He was laughing his ass off, but he was just like seriously, guys like. This is where you're listening to.

Speaker 2:

So, with all the podcasts that you kind of have going on, do you want to just kind of run through them? When are they on? Do you do them weekly? Obviously they're on all the social media platforms, I'm assuming, but do you want to kind of name them all when you can be found, when those can be found?

Speaker 1:

Sure, I mean Bracket Bastards goes live every Saturday at 3 East to Central. We are on YouTube, that's where we go live on YouTube and I usually link it up to my Facebook group and to my Twitter as well. Paranormal to the normal there is no really set date for I do it whenever I can get interviews and whenever I feel like doing interviews. So if you join my Facebook group, you'll see whenever I do one. And maniacal music music goes live every Tuesday, normally at 9 o'clock Eastern, 8 o'clock Central, and that's our regular episodes, our specials. You've got to listen to figure out when those are. So listen to figure it out. And Global Strange it goes live every Sunday at 9 o'clock East, 8 o'clock Central.

Speaker 2:

So where can we find you? Are you on Instagram? You're obviously on Facebook, so what's your name on Facebook?

Speaker 1:

Here we go. You can find me on Facebook. Trust me, this is a process. I do it every time. I do this so often. It's just I have an actual pre-record for my shows for this reason. But you can find me on Facebook.

Speaker 1:

I stream everything right now on Facebook under the uncensored, unapologetic and untamed UQ podcast collective Facebook group and that's where everything streams. If you join, it's a private group, you got to join it but once you're in there, you can see everything streams and all the posts of the stuff that's dropped. And you can find me on Twitter and the Gram or sorry, x in the Gram at Juggalo Basterd. You can find me on TikTok, as at Juggalo Basterd podcast, you can see clips from the shows we do and some of our early maniacal music music shoes are on there in full in clips. And you can find me on YouTube as maniacal music music, music parallel to normal. Global Strange, as you know, doesn't get updated as much as you should. And you could also find me on the Blind Knowledge Network. I stream both my main shows there, so you can always find me on there. And you see, you subscribe to them. You'll see when they're coming live. There's always previews of them.

Speaker 2:

And all your co-hosts, people that you work with. You love them all. They're all amazing, Of course.

Speaker 1:

I wouldn't work with someone if I can't stay at work with them. No, no, no. I love it All right, we're on your last song.

Speaker 2:

But before we get to your last song, tell me about your dog. What's your dog's name?

Speaker 1:

I have two mastiffs, munchkin and Moose.

Speaker 2:

Oh Moose, good name, and what kind of mastiffs are they?

Speaker 1:

They're names, they're North American mastiffs.

Speaker 2:

Oh, awesome.

Speaker 1:

I love it. That's them in the background. They wanna go outside again apparently.

Speaker 2:

Well, I have a cane, of course, a mastiff so, and his name is Bane Nice.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I guess they're such amazing dogs. I've never had a mastiff before. I've had a lot of wilders, I've never had a mastiff before and I don't know if I'd ever get a different kind of dog again, like I've had so many different types of dogs. But I just love the mastiff Like. I love their personality, everything about them. They're just big teddy bears.

Speaker 1:

Hey, yeah, I mean, North American mastiffs are very prey driven, so don't give it to chickens. We found out the hard way.

Speaker 3:

I don't think I would get chickens.

Speaker 1:

Oh, moose literally tore one apart the other night, Really, eh? Oh, anything, small rabbits, chickens they'll try to run after it and kill it.

Speaker 2:

Crazy.

Speaker 1:

They don't. Other dogs they're perfectly fine with. But bring them to the dog park and they get along with other dogs for the most part, unless they're getting annoyed. But and then moose starts barking. But I mean, and they get along with humans perfectly fine. They never they're human, ever by, oh, on purpose. They're big dogs. They step on parties by accident. It's not their fault, but I mean they're good with humans. They're good with dogs. There's not good with small animals, I don't know how they do with a calf?

Speaker 1:

I really don't want to find out.

Speaker 2:

No, not at all. That must have been quite a scene to see. Right Go inside and moose is ripping up a chicken.

Speaker 1:

Uh, it's just well. Now it's more. When they get loose, you just know that's where they're going, and they've taken out probably a dozen chickens by now.

Speaker 2:

And they're all your chickens, not other people's chickens.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, they're all my wife's chickens.

Speaker 2:

but you know, ha ha, ha ha ha, all right, last song, and I have seen these guys just recently.

Speaker 3:

Guess who's back. Guess who's back, guess who's back, who it does with the wickedest rhymes, wickedest rhymes, wickedest rhymes. Who it does with the wickedest rhymes, wickedest rhymes, wickedest rhymes. Time to stop get your gun and teeth. Ha, ha, ha, ha.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh, I forgot to put that song on there. Even my God, ha ha, ha ha. I, yeah, I am not even that Bigger Bone Thug's fan, because I can't understand half what they fucking say. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

But that song. When that CD came out, my brother got it, he downloaded it or whatever, and he had a burnt CD of it and I would always sneak into his room and burn CDs of it and, like, every time he found out I burnt a copy of it, though For some reason he would get so pissed off he would snap the CD in half of it or smash the CD. I don't to this day know. I think it's because he thought I was trying to get into his like stuff, like be like him or something, even though he's my younger brother, like it's kind of the opposite normally. But yeah, I mean, I don't know, like, but I must have burned that CD 25 times and he broke every CD up, into the last one and then, I think, that one. Eventually he broke too, but but it was mainly for that song I did it. So by that point I stopped giving a shit Like. It was just like okay, I'm over that song at this point.

Speaker 2:

So I only seen them because we went to go see Snoop Dogg and these guys opened up for them. It was like a whole bunch of bands. It was like these guys Snoop there's I can't remember how many there was, but it was a lot Like I was like this is.

Speaker 1:

I think I saw that show at advertised like around the country and stuff, so yeah, it was like four of them.

Speaker 2:

I can't remember who the other two were, but it was.

Speaker 1:

I think what's that connection with one of them? But it could be wrong.

Speaker 2:

Maybe Wontang Clang too, I think, was in there, I can't remember. Oh, wontang to the children, for the children, that's right.

Speaker 3:

Well, thank you, Jeremy.

Speaker 2:

But for joining us on Music Junkies today. But before I let you go, as you know, I always like to get some words of wisdom from my guests before they leave the show. So what amazing words of wisdom could you leave us today?

Speaker 1:

Don't like the music everybody else likes. Find your own flavor and taste. There's enough genres out there that you can find something that you will love, that nobody else really loves. Find that. That's what's going to make your life better. Now this thing to the shit on the radio.

Speaker 2:

That is great.

Speaker 1:

I love that word.

Speaker 2:

So wisdom, right. I appreciate that because I think so many people follow Right, and I appreciate myself because I've never been a follower in like in pretty much everything I've ever do in my life, but especially music, where I'm always I like love everything, like not listening to jazz when we get off here, but in general I love everything that is just kind of, and I love that and I love that I have that style where I could listen to the fifties, I can listen to thrash metal I can, you know, and it's all has its place and I feel like it all has a time as well.

Speaker 1:

Oh it does. I mean you're angry, throwing some fucking.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Throw some pretty old filth if you're happy, throwing some fucking Dave Matthews band or some fucking cop mouth kings, like there's so much different variety for boy you're moody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I totally agree. Again. Thank you, jeremy for joining us on Music Junkies today. Please like, subscribe, follow this guy. I will put all your social media platforms. Send him Dick pics. He loves everything. You just don't. Well, maybe I don't. Are you okay with a few dick pics? I can you get them, because I never get them. So send Jeremy the dick pics that you want to send a net and then we can have. We'll share them back and forth. Right, we'll share them after.

Speaker 1:

my wife will love that, but I'm down.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's hilarious.

Music's Impact on High School and Juggalos
Favorite Horror Movies and Concert Stories
Podcasts, Hopson, and Today's Kids
Music, Parental Influence, and Personal Relationships
Music, Instruments, and Preferences
Podcast Line-Up and Streaming Platforms
Conversation About Mastiffs and Music
Words of Wisdom and Musical Taste