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Please Don't Die

1 h 10 min · I går
episode Please Don't Die cover

Beskrivelse

You can’t forget a slogan that’s been burned into your brain since elementary school, and that’s exactly what makes America’s safety mascots so fascinating. We’re Gen X, so our childhood came with a rotating cast of animated guardians, trench coat enforcers, and neon warning faces that somehow taught us real world habits before we even understood what “public health messaging” meant.  We talk through the biggest icons and what they were designed to do: Smokey Bear and wildfire prevention, Woodsy Owl and anti pollution messaging, McGruff the Crime Dog and stranger danger era anxiety, Mr. Yuck and poison control stickers, plus Vince and Larry the Crash Test Dummies turning seatbelt safety into slapstick you still remember. We also get into the complicated side of PSA history, including how some campaigns oversimplified the problem or leaned too hard on fear, and why they still changed behavior anyway.  Along the way, we keep it very us: a quick question of the week about favorite animals, an update on feeding the crows and earning our “crow army” trust, and a few real life moments from the mail route that remind us how much people rely on small kindness. Then we zoom out to the internet era where nostalgia, memes, and social media give these old characters a second life, even as modern dangers shift toward cybercrime, mental health, and climate change.  If you grew up on classic PSAs, you’re going to have opinions. Listen, then subscribe, share the episode with a fellow Gen Xer, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

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86 episoder

episode Please Don't Die cover

Please Don't Die

You can’t forget a slogan that’s been burned into your brain since elementary school, and that’s exactly what makes America’s safety mascots so fascinating. We’re Gen X, so our childhood came with a rotating cast of animated guardians, trench coat enforcers, and neon warning faces that somehow taught us real world habits before we even understood what “public health messaging” meant.  We talk through the biggest icons and what they were designed to do: Smokey Bear and wildfire prevention, Woodsy Owl and anti pollution messaging, McGruff the Crime Dog and stranger danger era anxiety, Mr. Yuck and poison control stickers, plus Vince and Larry the Crash Test Dummies turning seatbelt safety into slapstick you still remember. We also get into the complicated side of PSA history, including how some campaigns oversimplified the problem or leaned too hard on fear, and why they still changed behavior anyway.  Along the way, we keep it very us: a quick question of the week about favorite animals, an update on feeding the crows and earning our “crow army” trust, and a few real life moments from the mail route that remind us how much people rely on small kindness. Then we zoom out to the internet era where nostalgia, memes, and social media give these old characters a second life, even as modern dangers shift toward cybercrime, mental health, and climate change.  If you grew up on classic PSAs, you’re going to have opinions. Listen, then subscribe, share the episode with a fellow Gen Xer, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

I går1 h 10 min
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Do Effing Better

Lorena Bobbitt’s name got frozen in time as a late-night punchline, but the real story is about domestic violence, marital rape, and what happens when the public treats a survivor’s trauma like entertainment. We sit with how the 90s media machine framed the case, why so many of us absorbed the wrong takeaway, and why that kind of coverage still shapes how survivors are treated today. We also dig into the systems that fail people long before a headline happens: the ugly reality of trying to get a protective order, the legal barriers that once made marital rape nearly impossible to prosecute, and the way abusers use control, money, fear, and immigration threats to keep someone trapped. Along the way, we share concrete domestic violence resources, including hotline and shelter options, because awareness is not enough if people cannot find help quickly and safely. From there, the conversation widens into what “believe women” actually demands, how victim blaming shows up in everyday language, and why accountability can’t depend on whether a story is convenient. If you’ve ever caught yourself rethinking a joke you heard or a headline you remember, this is a chance to revisit it with clearer eyes. Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs it, and please leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

22. maj 202651 min
episode The Parent Trap cover

The Parent Trap

Your phone rings and you instantly know something is wrong. A parent is in the hospital, nobody is giving straight answers, and you are suddenly managing medications, paperwork, and family emotions like it’s your second job. We’re Nicole and Heather, two Gen X friends trying to make sense of what it means to “raise our parents” while we’re still working, paying bills, and barely feeling like adults ourselves. We talk through the caregiving reality hitting baby boomers and their Gen X kids: longer lifespans, chronic illness, dementia fears, rehab stays, and the shocking price of assisted living and home care. We get personal about a small stroke, the frustration of stubborn parents who refuse to slow down, and the quiet roles families assign when a crisis hits. We also dig into the modern twist nobody warned us about: elder care is now tied to apps, patient portals, pharmacy kiosks, and digital systems that can leave older adults stranded unless we step in. Then we go to the hardest part: end-of-life decisions. We share what we learned about DNRs, why “pulling the plug” can still land on the family, and how guilt can stick even when you’re doing your best. We also wrestle with quality of life, dignity, and why so many of us are rethinking what we’d want for ourselves. If you’re navigating aging parents, caregiving stress, medical power of attorney, or long-distance elder care, you’ll feel seen here. Subscribe, share this with a Gen X friend, and leave a review so more caregivers can find us. Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

15. maj 20261 h 24 min
episode In Da AARP Club We Gonna Party Like It's Your Birthday cover

In Da AARP Club We Gonna Party Like It's Your Birthday

The red AARP envelope is one of the strangest American milestones: it’s mailed like a harmless membership perk, but it lands like a quiet announcement that time is moving faster than you want to admit. We follow that feeling straight into the real story behind AARP, and it gets way bigger than hotel discounts and a magazine in your mailbox.  We start where we always do, as Nicole and Heather catching up on the here and now, then we pivot hard into the main question: what is AARP, who built it, and why does it have so much power over aging in America? You’ll hear how Ethel Percy Andrus, an educator and advocate, was galvanized after discovering a retired teacher living in a chicken coop because retirement security and affordable health insurance didn’t exist. From there, the organization grows into a national force pushing early group health coverage for older Americans, pioneering services that predate Medicare, and shaping how the country thinks about independence and dignity after 50.  Then we trace the uncomfortable part: the money. We talk insurance partnerships, public scandals, policy fights, and the modern licensing model that brings in billions through Medicare supplement branding with UnitedHealthcare. That financial engine funds real programs and serious advocacy, but it also creates a conflict-of-interest question that won’t go away: can a group be the most trusted champion for seniors while earning massive royalties from the products seniors buy?  If you’ve ever wondered whether AARP is a lifeline, a lobbying juggernaut, a marketing machine, or all three at once, this one will stick with you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who just turned 50, and leave a review with your own red-envelope story. Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

1. maj 20261 h 23 min
episode Flannel, Cigarettes, and Highway‑Volume Therapy cover

Flannel, Cigarettes, and Highway‑Volume Therapy

Your brain wants nostalgia and your body wants a grilled cheese, so we follow both threads until they collide with a wall of fuzzy guitars. We start with the very specific Gen X comfort-food universe: cheese toast, PB&J, bologna with mayo, and the elite move of stuffing salty chips into a sandwich. It’s funny, but it’s also a real look at how “fend for yourself” childhood dinners shaped our cravings, our independence, and the way we treat food as a shortcut to safety. Then we launch a new hypotheticals segment with one big question: if reincarnation is real, what do you come back as? The answers get wildly specific, deeply lazy in the best way, and surprisingly revealing about burnout, boundaries, and the fantasy of finally being off the clock. After that, we dig into grunge and 90s alternative rock with a listener-friendly breakdown of what makes grunge sound like grunge, plus the meaning and backstory behind songs like Nirvana’s “In Bloom,” Dinosaur Jr’s “Feel The Pain,” Screaming Trees’ “Nearly Lost You,” Hole’s “Doll Parts,” Jane’s Addiction’s “Been Caught Stealin’,” and Pixies’ “Where Is My Mind.” Along the way, Nicole reads a real 1984 diary entry that proves middle-school drama and ruined eclipse days are forever. Hit play, then subscribe, share the show with a fellow Gen Xer, and leave a review. What would you choose to be in your next life? Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2400972/support] #genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

24. apr. 20261 h 19 min