エピソード

  • DDH - The Perfect Villian
    2026/03/24
    There he sits, George the Third, crowned, certain, and simmering. Not a cartoon villain twirling his mustache, but a king who believed, quite firmly, that he was right. That is where this story begins, not in rebellion, but in conviction. Because the truth is a little uncomfortable. The American colonists did not see themselves as rebellious children. They saw themselves as Englishmen, defending rights older than the crown itself. Trial by jury, representation, the ancient guarantees that stretched back through Magna Carta and the long memory of English law. And George? He saw something else entirely. Disorder. Ingratitude. A distant people who refused the responsibilities that came with protection and empire. To him, this was not tyranny. It was governance. Necessary. Justified. Even moral. That tension, that gap between belief and accusation, is where the Revolution lives. Not in muskets and marches alone, but in the quiet certainty on both sides that they were defending what was right. Today, we step into that divide. We look at the man behind the crown, the charges against him, and the uncomfortable possibility that every villain, especially the convincing ones, thinks he is the hero of the story.
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    38 分
  • FLASHBACK - Icebergs Are No Danger
    2026/03/24
    Afternoons Live with Dave & John — December 27, 2011 (Hour 2) Holiday Hangover, Tonka Trucks, and a Titanic-Sized Dose of Skepticism There’s a peculiar magic in the week between Christmas and New Year’s, a stretch of time where clocks tick, but nobody quite believes them. That spirit hangs thick over this December 27, 2011 episode of Afternoons Live, where Dave Bowman and John Considine return from the holiday break not with urgency, but with something rarer in radio, looseness. This hour doesn’t rush. It wanders. It jokes. It pokes at the absurdities of modern life and occasionally at each other. ________________________________________ A Show Finding Its Feet (and Its Audio Feed) The hour opens in a fashion familiar to anyone who’s ever worked live radio, mild chaos. Traffic updates, chat room glitches, audio issues. John may or may not be audible, and nobody seems entirely sure why. Dave shrugs through it with the weary confidence of a man who has seen worse. There’s something charmingly analog about it all. No polished veneer, no illusion of perfection, just two voices trying to get the machine humming again. And that’s the point. This is radio as it was meant to be, alive, imperfect, and immediate. ________________________________________ Christmas, As It Actually Happens Holiday recaps dominate the early stretch, and they land somewhere between heartfelt and hilariously anticlimactic. John’s Christmas sounds like the kind you’d bottle if you could, family games, laughter, warmth. Dave’s is a bit more experimental. There are menorahs running out of candles, a toddler unimpressed by carefully staged Tonka trucks, and the quiet realization that the perfect Christmas morning exists mostly in theory. Dave’s son, instead of marveling at his gifts, takes one look and retreats, an act both baffling and deeply human. It’s the kind of moment that cuts through the Hallmark gloss. Kids don’t follow scripts. Neither do holidays. And Dave, equal parts amused and perplexed, tells it like it is. ________________________________________ The Modern Christmas, Everyone’s a Cameraman One of the more reflective threads comes when Dave contrasts Christmas past with present. Gone are the days of Super 8 film and waiting weeks to see blurry footage. Now, every moment is captured instantly, five phones pointed at every gift opening. It’s not nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. It’s a quiet question. Does documenting everything mean we’re experiencing less? No answer is given. Just the observation, hanging there like tinsel after the party’s over. ________________________________________ Sports, Skepticism, and the Death of the Team Game Dave takes a swing at the NBA, arguing without apology that the sport lost its soul somewhere along the way. In his view, the rise of superstar culture turned a team game into a one man spectacle. He lays a good portion of that at the feet of Michael Jordan. It’s a bold claim, and not entirely fair, but that’s talk radio. It thrives on conviction, not consensus. John pushes back just enough to keep it lively, but the segment isn’t really about basketball. It’s about something older, the tension between individual brilliance and collective effort. A debate as old as sport itself. ________________________________________ The Titanic, Revisited, Because What Could Go Wrong? And then comes the centerpiece, a story so strange it feels like satire. A company plans to recreate the Titanic voyage for its 100th anniversary, complete with matching menus, the same route, and a solemn memorial at the exact moment of the original sinking. Dave’s reaction is immediate and merciless. This, he declares, belongs in the file labeled “What could possibly go wrong?” The real kicker is that organizers claim modern ships are no longer threatened by icebergs. That’s the kind of sentence that makes history sit up straight. Dave leans into the irony with gusto, imagining the headlines that might follow. It’s dark humor, yes, but it’s rooted in something deeper, a suspicion of hubris. The same hubris that once called the Titanic unsinkable. History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does enjoy a good echo. ________________________________________ Concerts, Crowds, and the Trouble with Other People The hour closes with a wandering conversation about live music, where Dave reveals a surprising truth. He prefers concert albums to actual concerts. Why? The crowd. In his telling, live shows are less about music and more about enduring everyone else in the room. It’s a curmudgeonly take, but not without merit. Anyone who has stood shoulder to shoulder in a packed venue might nod along. John, more forgiving, offers balance, but Dave’s stance is clear. The music is best when stripped of excess. No noise, no distractions. Just the song. A traditionalist’s view, if ever there was one. ________________________________________ Final Thoughts, A Broadcast Between Moments...
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    43 分
  • WTF - Lemon Pound Cake and Hot Dogs
    2026/03/22
    There are stories that feel like they were carefully planned, neatly written, and politely delivered. And then there are stories like this one… which show up wearing sunglasses, kicking in the front door, and humming a tune about dessert. In this episode of What the Frock, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod take you through the truly bizarre saga of Afroman, a police raid that found absolutely nothing, and the artistic revenge that followed. What begins as a questionable warrant quickly turns into a masterclass in unintended consequences. Cameras were rolling. Doors were broken. Cash went missing. And somewhere in the middle of it all, a lemon pound cake became the most suspicious object in the room. Rather than quietly accepting the situation, Afroman did what any reasonable modern philosopher might do. He turned it into music. Videos. Merchandise. And, ultimately, a courtroom showdown that asks a simple question. Can satire hurt your feelings… and still be completely protected? Along the way, the guys unpack free speech, the Streisand Effect, and why sometimes the worst thing you can do is try to stop people from laughing. It is ridiculous. It is real. And yes… the cake matters.
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    1 時間 9 分
  • DDH - Evacuation Day
    2026/03/17
    March 17, 1776. Nearly a year into open rebellion, the British still hold Boston, and the American cause hangs in that uneasy space between bold talk and hard reality. In this episode of Dave Does History, we step into a siege that should have failed, led by an army that, on paper, had no business winning. Surrounding the city, Washington’s forces are outnumbered, under-supplied, and still learning how to become an army. Inside Boston, the British wait, confident that time and discipline will break the rebellion. And yet, both sides overlook the same critical piece of ground, Dorchester Heights, as if history itself were daring someone to act. What follows is not a clash of grand armies, but a lesson in leadership, ingenuity, and timing. With Henry Knox’s artillery finally in hand, Washington makes a gamble that will redefine the war. In a single night, under cover of darkness and deception, the Americans transform the battlefield. By morning, the balance of power has shifted, and the might of the British Empire faces a truth it cannot ignore. Sometimes victory is not taken. Sometimes it is forced upon your enemy.
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    38 分
  • WTF - Sorry, That's Not Your Money...
    2026/03/15
    On this week’s episode of What the Frock?, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod gather on the Ides of March to wrestle with one of the great mysteries of modern life. No, not the meaning of existence. Something far more perplexing. Why does everything suddenly feel just a little bit insane? The show kicks off with the latest political earthquake in Washington State, where a newly passed “millionaire’s tax” has inspired several very wealthy residents to pack their bags and relocate to places where the sunshine is warm and the tax codes are friendlier. Rabbi Dave has a simple warning for the rest of the country. If you think those billionaires are arriving with a sudden change of heart, you may want to check your assumptions and possibly lock the doors. From there the conversation wanders, as it often does, into the strange territory of social media outrage, questionable political logic, and the growing suspicion that something odd is happening to public discourse. Are people actually getting dumber? Or are the loudest voices simply drowning out the rest of civilization? Along the way there are stories from Navy chow halls, suspicious steak and lobster dinners before bad news, and a Wyoming strip club dispute that proves reality still writes the strangest scripts. All that, plus coffee. Or at least the tragic lack of it.
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    1 時間 3 分
  • WTF - 4-D Chess
    2026/03/08
    Welcome to another episode of What the Frock?, where Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod once again attempt the impossible task of making sense of a world that seems determined not to make sense. This week’s conversation begins with a torpedo. Not metaphorically. An actual one. A Mark 48, fired in combat, setting off debate across the submarine world and raising a few questions about what really happened beneath the waves. From there, the discussion drifts through intelligence operations, geopolitics, and the strange way modern media manages to blame nearly everything, including gas prices and housing markets, on whichever crisis happens to be trending that week. But that is only the beginning. Along the way, Dave and Rod wrestle with theology, including the curious use of the so called Gospel of Thomas in modern political rhetoric. They talk about what happens when religious authority is used to sell ideas that may not actually belong to the faith being invoked. And then the conversation takes a more personal turn, reflecting on fear, anxiety, and how people, especially young people, process a world full of headlines about war and uncertainty. It is part history, part theology, part commentary, and occasionally part comedy. In other words, it is exactly what you would expect from What the Frock?
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    58 分
  • DDH - Standing Armies
    2026/03/03
    On this week’s segment of Dave Does History on Bill Mick Live, we take up one of the most overlooked, and most explosive, phrases in the Declaration of Independence: “He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.” It is easy to skim past those words. It is much harder to understand why they burned. Why were the American colonists so deeply unsettled by the presence of British troops? Why did red coats in Boston streets feel less like protection and more like occupation? And why did Jefferson and the other founders see a standing army not simply as a policy disagreement, but as a direct threat to liberty itself? In this episode, we trace the fear of standing armies back through English history, from Charles I to James II, and show how those lessons shaped colonial resistance. We explore the debt of the Seven Years War, the Quartering Act, the Boston Massacre, and the constitutional compromises that followed independence. This is not just a story about muskets and marches. It is a story about power, memory, and the uneasy balance between security and freedom.
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    37 分
  • It's Never "What." It's ALWAYS "Who."
    2026/03/01
    Welcome to What the Frock?, the podcast where current events meet common sense, and occasionally get audited by artificial intelligence. This week we cover a little light material, including presidential war powers, selective political outrage, international air defenses, and whether your emergency room visit secretly financed new hospital drapes. You know, the usual Sunday conversation. We begin with the War Powers Act of 1973 and the timeless American tradition of loving executive authority when your team holds it and denouncing it when the other team does. Somehow, every president questions the constitutionality of the law while also using it. It is a bipartisan magic trick. Then we shift to something even more unsettling: Dave’s ER bill. After a two-minute consultation and one warm blanket, the invoice arrived with the enthusiasm of a small mortgage. Enter ChatGPT, which calmly suggested strategy over outrage. The machines are not taking over the world yet, but they may be coming for hospital billing departments. We also touch on budget chaos in Washington State, a legislator who may have personally tested the DUI threshold debate, and why “it was bots” is the new political defense strategy. All that, plus music, sarcasm, and just enough skepticism to keep things interesting.
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    1 時間 5 分