Épisodes

  • Two Friends Rewind To 1983 And Connect The Dots Between MTV, Blockbusters, And Sports Legends
    Nov 13 2025

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    Neon lights. Big hair. Bigger hooks. We crank the dial back to 1983 and trace how a single year rewired music, movies, TV, sports, and even what we wore on our wrists. From Michael Jackson’s chart dominance and Madonna’s arrival to Prince’s sleek menace and The Police at full polish, we pull on the threads that MTV stitched into identity. Metal slammed through the door with Quiet Riot and Dio, New Order and The Cure made synths feel human, and Run‑DMC and Grandmaster Flash gave hip hop its next gear. Southern rock kept the amps warm, proving that heartland riffs could coexist with neon beats.

    Screens were just as loud. Return of the Jedi closed a chapter, Scarface redefined swagger and consequence, National Lampoon’s Vacation made family chaos cinematic, and WarGames turned arcade smarts into world‑ending stakes. The MASH finale became a collective goodbye, The A‑Team taught us to love duct‑tape ingenuity, and Fraggle Rock snuck weirdness onto HBO. In arcades, Dragon’s Lair looked like the future while the market crashed around it; at home, Japan’s Famicom quietly set up the NES to rescue gaming later. Even Swatch watches and Chicken McNuggets joined the culture shift, proof that style and snacks can be moments, too.

    Sports brought the mythmaking. Washington rode John Riggins to a title, Philadelphia went almost “fo’, fo’, fo’,” and the Islanders held off Gretzky’s Oilers one last time. College hoops delivered NC State’s miracle finish. And the 1983 NFL draft launched a generation—Elway, Marino, Kelly—while we revisit how the Patriots and Broncos actually fared that season. Along the way we compare then vs now toughness, share porch‑side memories, and connect why 1983 still shapes today’s playlists, highlight reels, and timelines.

    Hit play, take the ride, and then tell us your definitive 1983 pick—song, movie, game, or game-winning moment. If you enjoyed this throwback, follow, share with a friend, and leave a quick review so more listeners can find the show.

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    48 min
  • "1982 Rewind"
    Nov 6 2025

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    A year can change everything, and 1982 proved it. We crack open the moment when MTV turned music into moving pictures, fashion into a stage, and hits into cultural events. From front-porch laughs to deep dives, we map how Thriller rewrote pop’s playbook, why Eddie Van Halen’s Beat It solo made genre walls crumble, and how Toto’s studio sheen, Prince’s swagger, and Survivor’s training montage forever reshaped the soundtrack of daily life.

    The stories don’t stop at the stereo. We revisit a film slate that still defines taste: ET’s wonder and bicycles against the moon, Blade Runner’s neon rain and philosophical ache, Tron’s digital dreamscape, Fast Times at Ridgemont High’s quotable chaos, and Rocky III’s gleaming grit. Each title didn’t just entertain—it minted an aesthetic you can still spot in modern music videos, streaming shows, and the way brands sell nostalgia. Add the compact disc’s debut, arcade highs before the crash, and fashion’s neon surge, and you get a snapshot of culture speeding up and learning to look at itself.

    We even pull a sports thread: the 1982 NFL strike season and how it warped records and memories, from Denver’s struggles to New England’s playoff flicker. It’s all part of the same current—media, tech, and mood shaping what we talk about decades later. If you’ve ever argued about the best MJ track, quoted Spicoli in the wild, or matched a skinny tie to a synth riff, this ride is for you. Hit play, share it with a friend who still knows every lyric to Africa, and drop us a note with your top three moments from 1982. Subscribe, rate, and leave a review—tell us what year we should time-travel to next.

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    46 min
  • Two Guys, One Year, Zero Attention Spans
    Oct 29 2025

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    What if one year could explain why your playlists, movie nights, and game obsessions still look the way they do? We crank back to 1981, where synths collided with stadium guitars, country hit its stride, and MTV turned music into a visual habit. From the Stones’ swagger and Journey’s eternal chorus to Human League’s neon pulse and Ozzy’s riff machine, we trace the tracks that built a generation’s soundtrack—plus the deep cuts that still deserve more love.

    Along the way, we keep it real and personal: porch chairs, road trips, mom’s apple pie, and the kind of small-town detours that deliver leaf-peepers and accidental festivals. We laugh about late-game NFL roller coasters, rookie phenoms, and the inexplicable power of fourth-quarter comebacks. Then we zoom out to the bigger canvas. Raiders of the Lost Ark lit up drive-ins. Stripes taught us irreverence. Arcades stole our quarters with Donkey Kong, Frogger, and Galaga. And in the background, 1981 marked sobering headlines, from the early identification of AIDS to an era-defining assassination attempt—reminders that culture and life are always in dialogue.

    If you’re chasing nostalgia or discovering why 1981 keeps showing up in modern playlists, you’re in the right spot. We map the year’s sounds to the moments that made them stick, from cassette tapes to MTV’s first wave, and we have some laughs when the football chat inevitably hijacks the agenda. Hit play, compare your top three songs of 1981 with ours, and tell us what we missed. If you enjoy the show, follow, share with a friend, and leave a quick review—it helps more listeners find their way to the porch.

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    46 min
  • Porch Talk, 1980
    Oct 10 2025

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    52 min
  • "Living in '79: The Soundtrack of Chaos"
    Sep 25 2025

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    1979 was the year music changed forever. The spectacular death of disco at Chicago's Comiskey Park, where fans rioted and burned records on the field, marked a cultural turning point that Mike and Tom explore with both historical insight and personal memories.

    Against the backdrop of disco's demise, rock music reached remarkable creative heights. Pink Floyd's "The Wall," AC/DC's "Highway to Hell," and Led Zeppelin's final album "In Through the Out Door" all dropped in this pivotal year. The podcast dives into how these monumental releases shaped not just 1979, but set the stage for the explosive musical evolution of the 1980s. From Donna Summer's continuing disco dominance to The Clash's genre-expanding "London Calling," we explore the full spectrum of a year that refused to be defined by a single sound.

    Beyond the turntables, football fever takes center stage as Mike and Tom preview the upcoming NFL season with equal parts analysis and friendly rivalry. Their breakdown of the historic Broncos-Patriots matchups reveals surprising statistics and memorable moments that football fans will appreciate. The conversation takes unexpected turns with a medical emergency story, casino adventures on an Indian reservation, and the return of the hilarious "Little Dudes" segment featuring Pip and Squeaky's completely unhinged retellings of classic fairy tales.

    Whether you're a music historian, sports enthusiast, or just enjoy authentic, unfiltered conversation, this episode delivers nostalgic deep cuts alongside laugh-out-loud moments. Subscribe now and join us next week as we leap into the neon-colored explosion of 1980s music – where mullets were somehow acceptable and MTV changed everything.

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    50 min
  • "Grease, Glitter, and Guitars- Welcome to the music of 1978"
    Sep 10 2025

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    Step into a time machine as Mike and Tom transport you back to 1978 – a year when disco ruled the airwaves, rock was evolving, and both hosts were navigating their youth at ages 11 and 15. This nostalgic deep dive isn't just about the music; it's about how these songs became the soundtrack to their formative years.

    The duo meticulously walks through Billboard's Top 40 hits from 1978, sparking memories and playful debates along the way. From the Bee Gees' disco dominance with "Stayin' Alive" to Queen's "Fat Bottom Girls" (which Mike still enthusiastically sings at work), each song unlocks personal stories that bring the era vividly to life. Their journey spans multiple genres – rock anthems from Van Halen's groundbreaking debut album, disco classics that defined nightlife, outlaw country from Waylon and Willie, and everything in between.

    What makes this episode particularly engaging is how Mike and Tom connect the music to broader cultural touchpoints of the era. Remember Steve Martin's "King Tut" on Saturday Night Live? The debut of the Millennium Falcon toy from Star Wars? Or cruising around in a 1974 Monte Carlo nicknamed after that famous spacecraft? These authentic, lived experiences transform a simple countdown into a rich cultural exploration.

    Between thunderstorm interruptions and a brief but chaotic takeover by recurring characters Pippin and Squeak, the episode captures the hosts' trademark tangential style. They close on a thoughtful note, expressing condolences to those affected by the Camp Mystic tragedy in Texas, showing the heart behind their humor.

    Whether you lived through 1978 or simply appreciate great music and entertaining storytelling, this episode offers both laughs and a deeper appreciation for a pivotal year in popular culture. Listen now on any major podcast platform or at mtaltpod.com.

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    39 min
  • The Warning's Thunder at The Ritz
    Aug 21 2025

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    Take a wild ride through rock history and roadside adventures as Mike and Tom deliver another unpredictable episode filled with concert tales and travel mishaps.

    Mike's musical heart is set ablaze after witnessing The Warning—three sisters from Monterrey, Mexico—deliver a face-melting performance at The Ritz in Raleigh. His VIP experience (which he didn't even realize he had purchased) granted him early access, signed memorabilia, and encounters with possibly the greatest bartender in North Carolina. Mike dives deep into the band's remarkable origin story: how these three sisters began playing instruments before age eight, learned on Rock Band video games, and accidentally went viral with a Metallica cover originally intended just for their grandparents. By the time they formed their band in 2013, they were just 13, 11, and 8 years old—yet their talent was already undeniable.

    Meanwhile, Tom recounts his eventful journey to Cherokee that quickly spiraled into chaos. What started as a simple road trip became a traveling circus complete with two chihuahuas, an extra dog (who promptly got carsick), and mysteriously appearing birds. His colorful description of entering an Indian Reservation dispensary wearing "a cowboy hat and a red cannabis shirt" with camouflage shorts paints the perfect picture of culture clash. The trip home featured the special anxiety only car trouble three hours from home can bring—though somehow the vehicle ran better at highway speeds than when idling.

    Between Mike's musical discovery and Tom's misadventures, the episode captures everything fans love about this podcast: authentic experiences, unexpected twists, and the undeniable chemistry between hosts who find humor in life's chaotic moments. Listen in as they prove once again that the alternative path makes for the best stories.

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    46 min
  • The Prince of Darkness: Remembering Ozzy Osbourne
    Jul 30 2025

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    Mike and Tom pay tribute to the legendary Ozzy Osbourne, reflecting on his extraordinary journey from Black Sabbath pioneer to solo superstar and cultural icon. They explore the musical evolution, personal struggles, and unforgettable legacy of the Prince of Darkness who defied expectations and transformed heavy metal.

    • From working-class Birmingham to pioneering heavy metal with Black Sabbath in the late 1960s
    • The creation of landmark albums like Black Sabbath, Paranoid, and Master of Reality that defined the metal genre
    • Ozzy's remarkable comeback after being fired from Black Sabbath, launching an even more successful solo career
    • The crucial partnership with Randy Rhoads and later guitarists Jake E Lee and Zakk Wylde
    • How Sharon Osbourne's management and support helped transform Ozzy's career and life
    • The infamous bat and dove incidents that contributed to Ozzy's wild reputation
    • Ozzy's humanization through The Osbournes reality show, introducing him to new generations
    • His battle with Parkinson's disease and determination to perform despite health challenges
    • The emotional final performance at the Black Sabbath tribute concert shortly before his death
    • Personal reflections on how Ozzy's music served as the soundtrack to Mike and Tom's lives


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    44 min