PILTDOWN MAN AND THE CARDIFF GIANT

(49) "What If The Best Trips Happen At Home?" Plus A Peanut Butter Baked Potato Plot Twist"

33 min · 25. Juni 2026
Episode (49) "What If The Best Trips Happen At Home?" Plus A Peanut Butter Baked Potato Plot Twist" Cover

Beschreibung

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] You can cross into another country without a passport, touch a sign, and still come home with a story you’ll tell for years. That’s the tone we’re in here, trading the kind of “unexpected moment” memories that don’t look huge on paper but land like a gut punch when you’re living them. Jim Wade sits in with us and we start with his one brush with Canada on a Boundary Waters fishing trip, then widen out into why travel stories aren’t really about distance, they’re about surprise. From there we dive into sports entertainment history, starting with the legendary Eddie Feigner and King and His Court, a four-man softball team built around jaw-dropping pitching and pure showmanship. We connect that same idea to the Harlem Globetrotters: their real basketball skill, their roots, their place in integration-era pro sports, and why the comedy only works because the precision is so high. If you love nostalgia, classic performers, and the craft behind the laughs, this section is a treat. We also get personal: engineering as a life of planning and organizing, the way marriage expectations change over time, and the moment parenting makes you realize you’re not in control of anything. And yes, we end with a snack recommendation that sounds unhinged but might be genius: a room-temperature baked potato with crunchy peanut butter. Subscribe for more real conversations, share this with a friend who loves a good story, and leave a review. What’s a small moment that turned into one of your biggest memories? Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

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Episode (49) "What If The Best Trips Happen At Home?" Plus A Peanut Butter Baked Potato Plot Twist" Cover

(49) "What If The Best Trips Happen At Home?" Plus A Peanut Butter Baked Potato Plot Twist"

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] You can cross into another country without a passport, touch a sign, and still come home with a story you’ll tell for years. That’s the tone we’re in here, trading the kind of “unexpected moment” memories that don’t look huge on paper but land like a gut punch when you’re living them. Jim Wade sits in with us and we start with his one brush with Canada on a Boundary Waters fishing trip, then widen out into why travel stories aren’t really about distance, they’re about surprise. From there we dive into sports entertainment history, starting with the legendary Eddie Feigner and King and His Court, a four-man softball team built around jaw-dropping pitching and pure showmanship. We connect that same idea to the Harlem Globetrotters: their real basketball skill, their roots, their place in integration-era pro sports, and why the comedy only works because the precision is so high. If you love nostalgia, classic performers, and the craft behind the laughs, this section is a treat. We also get personal: engineering as a life of planning and organizing, the way marriage expectations change over time, and the moment parenting makes you realize you’re not in control of anything. And yes, we end with a snack recommendation that sounds unhinged but might be genius: a room-temperature baked potato with crunchy peanut butter. Subscribe for more real conversations, share this with a friend who loves a good story, and leave a review. What’s a small moment that turned into one of your biggest memories? Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

25. Juni 202633 min
Episode (48) "Special Father's Day Episode: How Joe's Dad and Dr. Holly"s grandfather, Grant Hall, Outsurvived Bad Odds And Always Taught Himself To Find A Way To Move Forward" Cover

(48) "Special Father's Day Episode: How Joe's Dad and Dr. Holly"s grandfather, Grant Hall, Outsurvived Bad Odds And Always Taught Himself To Find A Way To Move Forward"

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] Father’s Day isn’t simple for a lot of us, so we wanted to do something that feels honest. We start with some light banter, then we bring back Dr. Holly Holman to help us tell the story of Grant Hall, a dad and grandpa who somehow managed to be reckless, hilarious, loving, and relentless all at once. We talk about what it looks like when a person comes from extreme poverty in rural Kentucky and still finds ways to move forward. Grant works the farm as a kid, ends up digging graves at the Lexington Cemetery, and later wills himself into better work with a kind of self-taught determination you don’t forget. That includes the wild part: teaching himself crane operation after hours, and even learning to read through sports magazines because formal school never really happened. Then the story turns into a catalog of survival and attitude: brutal accidents, chemical exposure, strokes, dialysis, and even surviving a ruptured aortic aneurysm. Somehow, the takeaways aren’t just about toughness. They’re also about how humor shows up in dark places, how a parent can change, and how a single moment of laughter at the end can matter more than a hundred perfect speeches. If you care about fatherhood, family legacy, resilience, grief, and real-life storytelling, this conversation will stick with you. If it hits home, subscribe, share it with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your own Father’s Day story. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

21. Juni 202644 min
Episode (47) "Small Town Meets Bay Area. Jody (Joe) And His Wife 'Trinka (MK) Dissect How Two Very Different Childhoods Shaped A Partnership." Cover

(47) "Small Town Meets Bay Area. Jody (Joe) And His Wife 'Trinka (MK) Dissect How Two Very Different Childhoods Shaped A Partnership."

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] Two people can love each other deeply and still sound like they grew up on different planets. That’s what makes this conversation so fun and so honest: I’m Joe Flush, and while Ed is on assignment, my life partner Mary Kay steps in and we compare the worlds that made us. One of us comes from a tiny Kentucky town where everybody knows your business. The other grows up in the San Francisco Bay Area with teacher parents, piano lessons, and a whole different set of rules. We get into the details that actually shape a life: who raised you day to day, what your parents expected, whether you were pushed toward achievement or left to figure things out, and how nicknames can follow you for decades. We talk siblings, neighborhood freedom, and why “opportunity” can mean structured experiences for one kid and wide open fields for another. We also chase the nostalgia thread through 1960s and 1970s culture, from Saturday morning cartoons and Looney Tunes to church schedules, banned TV language, and the shows your family treated like required viewing. The story keeps moving into the awkward parts of growing up: strict school environments, dating rules, first jobs, sports you avoided, and the jolt of arriving at college without a roadmap. We connect those early experiences to adult life, including how we ended up together, why chemistry matters, and how you keep pivoting as you age, care for pets, and laugh at yourself when the turn signal is left on a little too long. If you like relationship stories, childhood memories, family dynamics, and real talk about becoming yourself, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves nostalgia, and leave us a review with your own “I grew up so different” story. Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

17. Juni 202643 min
Episode (46) "Chasing Goosebumps - Travel Moments That Stop You Cold" Cover

(46) "Chasing Goosebumps - Travel Moments That Stop You Cold"

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] A backyard bird feeder camera should be harmless, right? Then it shows you a version of yourself you weren’t prepared to meet, and suddenly you’re thinking about age, perspective, and the strange distance between how we feel and how we look. That little jolt kicks off a bigger theme: the “good kind” of hair-standing-up moments, when surprise turns into awe instead of fear. We swap bucket list travel stories that still feel electric years later. Rome isn’t just the Colosseum, it’s the instant you turn a corner and the Trevi Fountain hits you with brightness and scale that your brain couldn’t properly pre-load. We talk Spanish Steps street life, a once-in-a-lifetime peek beneath Vatican City, and why expectations can dull a place until the real thing resets your senses. Then we jump to Europe at sunrise, stepping out of the subway to see Notre Dame for the first time and later reflecting on the cathedral before and after the fire. From there it’s a hard pivot to Pamplona’s Running of the Bulls atmosphere, nonstop music, white-and-red crowds, and the kind of festival energy that makes you feel pulled into the story even if you didn’t plan to run. We also hit moments that aren’t tourist postcards: arriving at Lackland Air Force Base at nineteen, the Galapagos Islands where animals don’t fear humans, and Machu Picchu at dawn with altitude and oxygen in the mix. The thread through it all is practical: travel while you’re young enough to enjoy it, because “someday” can show up with less time and less stamina. If these stories sparked a memory, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what place gave you goosebumps? Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

14. Juni 202635 min
Episode (45) "Sunny And Shade, Relationship Phases, A Brutal Strikeout, An Alligator Named Oscar, And More" Cover

(45) "Sunny And Shade, Relationship Phases, A Brutal Strikeout, An Alligator Named Oscar, And More"

We love your feedback and suggestions. Please tell us your name too. AI tries to trick us and scam us sometimes. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2558645/fan_mail/new] A single sentence can reframe a whole marriage: “She does the sunny parts, I do the shade.” We start with small talk about rain, yard work, and the kind of weekend chores that leave you sore, then we stumble into that line and realize it explains more about relationships than most advice ever does. Who gets the spotlight, who carries the quiet load, and how do those roles shift when life changes? Along the way, we revive our ongoing comfort food argument about the perfect easy baked potato. Listener feedback puts bacon bits on trial, and we defend the idea that dinner can be satisfying without becoming a project. It’s funny, but it also gets at something real: the way we judge effort, taste, and “doing it right,” even when we’re just talking about toppings. From there, we trade stories we’ve somehow never fully unpacked, even after decades of friendship: a childhood pet alligator, a brutal little-league strikeout that still stings, the humbling math of aging when you can’t jump like you used to, and the strange pride of running races alongside big names. We wrap with memories of sleeping outside, camping misery, fear of water, and that kid impulse to jump off anything tall just to see what happens. If you like conversations about friendship, marriage, nostalgia, personal growth, and the everyday moments that shape us, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who would argue about bacon bits, and leave us a review with your answer: are you the sunny part or the shade? Please leave us your comments, text me, DM me, give me your thoughts.  what works and what doesn't land?  We want to improve. thanks for listening Joe

10. Juni 202641 min