PILTDOWN MAN AND THE CARDIFF GIANT

(56) "Special Guest Bret Sohl Tells Us How To Become A Dainty Sport Athlete At 45 Or Older."

34 min · I går
episode (56) "Special Guest Bret Sohl Tells Us How To Become A Dainty Sport Athlete At 45 Or Older." cover

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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 mystery bruise turns into a surprisingly perfect doorway into how time changes your body, your hobbies, and what you choose to do for fun. Then we bring on our guest, Brett Sohl, a longtime Louisville entertainment lifer who spent years behind the scenes at comedy clubs, making shows run, guiding openers, and capturing recordings that actually sounded great. If you’ve ever been curious about the hidden jobs that hold up the comedy world, Brett gives the kind of details you only hear from someone who lived it. Things get even better when Brett explains how that club path connects to late night TV. He wrote for Jay Leno for 22 years, and he breaks down the real craft of topical joke writing: spotting patterns in the news, combining stories, and landing a punch line that survives the edit. He even shares the last joke Leno told on the show, and how that kind of timing and structure gets built. From there, we follow the thread into comedy magic and live variety acts, with shout-outs to Mac King’s Las Vegas show at Excalibur, plus other favorites like Penn and Teller and Piff the Magic Dragon. And then we go full Louisville with the World Championship Dainty Contest, a German street game turned neighborhood festival in Germantown and Schnitzelburg, complete with rules, technique tips, and a prize for the shortest hit. If you love Louisville events, Kentucky festivals, comedy history, or the overlap between magic and stand-up, this one has all of it. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves weird local traditions, and leave us a review, what’s the most unusual contest you’d actually try? 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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57 episodes

episode (56) "Special Guest Bret Sohl Tells Us How To Become A Dainty Sport Athlete At 45 Or Older." artwork

(56) "Special Guest Bret Sohl Tells Us How To Become A Dainty Sport Athlete At 45 Or Older."

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 mystery bruise turns into a surprisingly perfect doorway into how time changes your body, your hobbies, and what you choose to do for fun. Then we bring on our guest, Brett Sohl, a longtime Louisville entertainment lifer who spent years behind the scenes at comedy clubs, making shows run, guiding openers, and capturing recordings that actually sounded great. If you’ve ever been curious about the hidden jobs that hold up the comedy world, Brett gives the kind of details you only hear from someone who lived it. Things get even better when Brett explains how that club path connects to late night TV. He wrote for Jay Leno for 22 years, and he breaks down the real craft of topical joke writing: spotting patterns in the news, combining stories, and landing a punch line that survives the edit. He even shares the last joke Leno told on the show, and how that kind of timing and structure gets built. From there, we follow the thread into comedy magic and live variety acts, with shout-outs to Mac King’s Las Vegas show at Excalibur, plus other favorites like Penn and Teller and Piff the Magic Dragon. And then we go full Louisville with the World Championship Dainty Contest, a German street game turned neighborhood festival in Germantown and Schnitzelburg, complete with rules, technique tips, and a prize for the shortest hit. If you love Louisville events, Kentucky festivals, comedy history, or the overlap between magic and stand-up, this one has all of it. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves weird local traditions, and leave us a review, what’s the most unusual contest you’d actually try? 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

Yesterday34 min
episode (55) "Birthday Wistfulness" artwork

(55) "Birthday Wistfulness"

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] Blood on the grass, a missing cone, and a dog so locked in he won’t listen. We start with a true pet story that’s funny until it isn’t: Felix gets stitched up at the vet, then tangles with a groundhog in the yard, and suddenly we’re doing the mental math of scratches, saliva, bacteria, and what “low risk” really means when your hands aren’t spotless. If you’ve ever broken up an animal fight or worried about infection after a bite, you’ll recognize the mix of adrenaline and second guessing.  From there, the talk turns personal and surprisingly tender. A 75th birthday is coming up, and we don’t treat it like a party planning session. We talk about aging, how birthdays can feel like nothing more than timekeeping, and why that can still leave you lonely when everyone else is celebrating. Along the way we trade childhood birthday memories from country life: the rare party, the homemade pinata, the awkwardness of being ten and not knowing how to talk to girls, and the one birthday where a bicycle becomes the whole storyline.  We also get into the small objects that carry big meaning: a bike speedometer for chasing downhill “breakneck” speed, a siren used for drive-by bravery, and the moment you realize high handlebars and a banana seat were a bridge too far. It all builds to a simple question about celebration and connection: if milestones don’t matter to you, what does matter, and how do you make sure the people you love still feel seen? Subscribe, share this with a friend who’s complicated about birthdays, and leave a review with your own birthday rule or memory. 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

15. juli 202632 min
episode (54) "Meet Café The Dog Who Hates Everyone. You Can Never Go Home Again. Should You?" artwork

(54) "Meet Café The Dog Who Hates Everyone. You Can Never Go Home Again. Should You?"

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] Going back sounds simple until you actually do it and the place feels smaller, stranger, and somehow not yours anymore. We start with a story that’s pure chaos: Joe takes Felix to the veterinarian to get stitches removed, only to run into a dog that “doesn’t like people or dogs” and a owner who parks herself right by the door like she’s daring the universe to start a fight. Even the dog’s name, Café, turns into a running joke and a perfect snapshot of how weird public spaces can get. Then we take a sharp turn into something deeper and honestly more personal: Thomas Wolfe’s line “You can’t go home again.” We talk about where the phrase comes from, what it means beyond the literal, and why nostalgia can hit like comfort one minute and grief the next. The real punch is that “home” isn’t just a location. It’s time, memory, relationships, and a version of you that no longer exists. From there, we get into high school reunions, the shock of being seen differently than you remember, and the quiet sadness that shows up as people age, disappear, or struggle. Joe shares why he stopped going, how performing comedy changed the way old classmates treated him, and why the smartest move might be choosing new friends and new rituals instead of chasing a perfect past. If you’ve been thinking about returning home, aging, mental health, or the strange ache of places that vanish, this one will stick with you. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show. 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

12. juli 202629 min
episode (53 "Neighborhood Board Drama And Why Soccer Needs A Vuvuzela Rule" artwork

(53 "Neighborhood Board Drama And Why Soccer Needs A Vuvuzela Rule"

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] Getting drafted into neighborhood leadership when you’re just trying to live your life is a special kind of comedy. We talk about being “wrangled” onto a neighborhood association board, the strange politics of minimal dues, and how planning a simple Fourth of July parade can turn into a tangled thread of emails, opinions, and unintended drama. It’s the kind of community involvement that sounds wholesome until you realize it might quietly eat three years of your time. The heat pushes us indoors, and the World Cup becomes our jumping-off point for a very honest conversation about soccer. We dig into why the sport can be tough for casual viewers: stoppage time that makes the ending feel mysterious, the offside rule that never quite sticks, and the reality that low-scoring games demand patience. We also compare soccer to hockey and other sports, and we make the case that rules knowledge is the difference between “nothing is happening” and “everything is happening.” Then we switch to games we grew up with and actually love playing. We talk Rook, poker, why bridge feels intense and a little snooty, and how family history can shape what you enjoy at the table. We finish with favorites like Hearts and cribbage, including the fine line between luck and skill and why competition gets fun when everyone knows what they’re doing. If you’ve ever argued about rules, hated being the newbie, or found your “one game” that brings out your best trash talk, you’ll feel seen. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves game night, and leave a review with the one rule you’d change in any sport or card game. 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

8. juli 202637 min
episode (52) "Fulcrum Friday At The Imaginary Store" artwork

(52) "Fulcrum Friday At The Imaginary Store"

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 teeter-totter accident statistic hits the “news,” and we cannot let it go. If injuries are supposedly down, is it because kids got safer or because the teeter-totter basically disappeared? From there we tumble straight into the best kind of conversation: the kind where childhood nostalgia, real-world common sense, and a little bit of mock-serious “research” all fight for the mic. We trade stories from late 1950s and early 1960s playgrounds, when metal slides got hot enough to hurt and a missing slide somehow turned the whole structure into a fort. We talk through why slides cause so many playground injuries, why patience at the bottom matters, and why a seesaw is more than a board on a rock once you understand the fulcrum and the lever. Yes, we also invent a “fulcrum store,” because that is how our brains work. Then we veer into myths people swear are true: are left-handers smarter, do they multitask better, and why do certain athletes look smoother from the left side? That thread opens into bigger questions about individuality, DNA odds, and why it can feel like nobody is quite like you. Naturally, that leads to Elon Musk, trillionaire talk, and a surprisingly sincere detour into what scientists think about intelligent alien life and the math behind it. We wrap with more swing-set chaos, a childhood story we only half want to tell out loud, a reality check on blonde stereotypes, and a heartfelt dedication. If you like funny conversations with real takeaways hiding inside them, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a review. What piece of playground equipment do you still remember most clearly? 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

5. juli 202632 min