The Pretty Peculiar People Puzzle

A Father’s Day Reflection_Good Father, Bad Father_ (June Bonus E)

34 min · I går
episode A Father’s Day Reflection_Good Father, Bad Father_ (June Bonus E) cover

Beskrivelse

In this heartfelt Father’s Day episode of THE PRETTY PECULIAR PEOPLE PUZZLE, Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard takes listeners into a real, layered, and mature conversation about fathers, absence, grief, gratitude, and the complicated emotions that come with a holiday that does not feel the same for everybody. The episode opens with a personal and funny behind-the-scenes moment featuring Pudgee’s mother, bringing warmth, family energy, and everyday life into the recording before the conversation shifts into the deeper meaning of Father’s Day. From there, Pudgee reflects on the holiday’s origins, honoring the women who first pushed for fathers to be recognized and reminding listeners that Father’s Day began with grief, gratitude, and the desire to acknowledge fathers who showed up. But this episode does not simply celebrate the holiday — it questions what the day means for people with different experiences. Pudgee speaks to the children who had loving fathers, the adults who still miss fathers who have passed away, the people who grew up with absent dads, and the families who had to make peace with complicated fatherhood stories. He honors the fathers who stayed, the father figures who stepped in, and the bonus dads, coaches, uncles, grandfathers, mentors, and men who gave love where it was needed. At the same time, Pudgee gives space to those who struggle with Father’s Day. He talks honestly about the empty seats at barbecues, the calls not made, the calls not answered, the children who never had a father to give a school-made card to, and the people who feel like the world is celebrating something they never received. He makes it clear that if Father’s Day feels painful, uncomfortable, or unfair, that does not make anyone broken or bitter — it means they are responding to their real life. Throughout the episode, Pudgee reflects on his own father with love, humor, and gratitude, remembering the kind of man who fixed things, built things, loved his children, served in the military, and left behind stories that still bring laughter. He also explores how people often romanticize absent parents, imagining that life would have been better if that person had stayed, when sometimes absence may have protected them from harm, limitation, or emotional damage. The conversation also challenges schools, families, and culture to be more thoughtful about how Father’s Day is handled. Pudgee questions why children are often forced into crafts, celebrations, or emotional performances that may not match their reality. He encourages people not to force children to participate in holidays that reopen wounds, and he reminds listeners that everyone has the right to decide what Father’s Day means for them. The heart of the episode is simple but powerful: presence matters. A title, a holiday, or a gift means very little if the other 364 days are empty. Pudgee reminds fathers that the real gift is not the Father’s Day barbecue, mug, tie, or card — the real gift is showing up, staying present, and giving children memories they can carry long after the day is over. This episode is emotional, honest, funny, reflective, and healing. It is for anyone who had a great dad, anyone who lost a dad, anyone who never had one, and anyone still trying to make peace with what fatherhood did or did not look like in their life. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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Alle episoder

34 Episoder

episode A Father’s Day Reflection_Good Father, Bad Father_ (June Bonus E) cover

A Father’s Day Reflection_Good Father, Bad Father_ (June Bonus E)

In this heartfelt Father’s Day episode of THE PRETTY PECULIAR PEOPLE PUZZLE, Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard takes listeners into a real, layered, and mature conversation about fathers, absence, grief, gratitude, and the complicated emotions that come with a holiday that does not feel the same for everybody. The episode opens with a personal and funny behind-the-scenes moment featuring Pudgee’s mother, bringing warmth, family energy, and everyday life into the recording before the conversation shifts into the deeper meaning of Father’s Day. From there, Pudgee reflects on the holiday’s origins, honoring the women who first pushed for fathers to be recognized and reminding listeners that Father’s Day began with grief, gratitude, and the desire to acknowledge fathers who showed up. But this episode does not simply celebrate the holiday — it questions what the day means for people with different experiences. Pudgee speaks to the children who had loving fathers, the adults who still miss fathers who have passed away, the people who grew up with absent dads, and the families who had to make peace with complicated fatherhood stories. He honors the fathers who stayed, the father figures who stepped in, and the bonus dads, coaches, uncles, grandfathers, mentors, and men who gave love where it was needed. At the same time, Pudgee gives space to those who struggle with Father’s Day. He talks honestly about the empty seats at barbecues, the calls not made, the calls not answered, the children who never had a father to give a school-made card to, and the people who feel like the world is celebrating something they never received. He makes it clear that if Father’s Day feels painful, uncomfortable, or unfair, that does not make anyone broken or bitter — it means they are responding to their real life. Throughout the episode, Pudgee reflects on his own father with love, humor, and gratitude, remembering the kind of man who fixed things, built things, loved his children, served in the military, and left behind stories that still bring laughter. He also explores how people often romanticize absent parents, imagining that life would have been better if that person had stayed, when sometimes absence may have protected them from harm, limitation, or emotional damage. The conversation also challenges schools, families, and culture to be more thoughtful about how Father’s Day is handled. Pudgee questions why children are often forced into crafts, celebrations, or emotional performances that may not match their reality. He encourages people not to force children to participate in holidays that reopen wounds, and he reminds listeners that everyone has the right to decide what Father’s Day means for them. The heart of the episode is simple but powerful: presence matters. A title, a holiday, or a gift means very little if the other 364 days are empty. Pudgee reminds fathers that the real gift is not the Father’s Day barbecue, mug, tie, or card — the real gift is showing up, staying present, and giving children memories they can carry long after the day is over. This episode is emotional, honest, funny, reflective, and healing. It is for anyone who had a great dad, anyone who lost a dad, anyone who never had one, and anyone still trying to make peace with what fatherhood did or did not look like in their life. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

I går34 min
episode Weak Men Make Bad Fathers (June Bonus F) cover

Weak Men Make Bad Fathers (June Bonus F)

In this powerful follow-up to the Father’s Day reflection episode, Ekko Seven and Pudgee return to THE PRETTY PECULIAR PEOPLE PUZZLE for a raw, honest, and deeply necessary conversation about fatherhood, parenting, responsibility, maturity, and the difference between simply being a father and actually being a dad. The episode opens with gratitude for the podcast sponsors and supporters, followed by love and appreciation for Ekko Seven’s safe return after a procedure. Ekko Seven reflects on the importance of cultivating real relationships with your children, explaining that when love, time, and effort are invested, children often show up for you when life gets serious. From there, the conversation connects directly to the previous Father’s Day episode, where the hosts explored good fathers, bad fathers, the origin of Father’s Day, and how consumerism attached itself to a holiday that began as a personal act of love and remembrance. This episode pushes that conversation further by asking a harder question: What makes someone a dad beyond biology? Ekko Seven breaks down the difference between the terms mother, mom, father, and dad, arguing that biology may make someone a mother or father, but time, sacrifice, emotional presence, protection, and investment are what create a mom or dad. She speaks passionately about parents who want recognition without doing the work, especially fathers who expect Father’s Day praise from children they did not consistently nurture, guide, protect, or support. Pudgee adds science and perspective to the conversation, bringing up fetal microchimerism, the biological connection between mothers and children, and research around how fatherhood can affect men emotionally, hormonally, and psychologically. Together, the hosts examine how bonding, presence, cohabitation, willingness, emotional maturity, and early interaction with a child can shape whether a real parental connection forms. The episode also enters more difficult territory, including single-parent homes, absent fathers, toxic parents, domestic violence, unplanned pregnancies, accountability, and the emotional damage caused when adults refuse to take responsibility for the children they helped create. Ekko Seven makes it clear that children should not be forced to perform maturity for adults who have failed them, and that no child should be pressured into celebrating a parent who has not earned that emotional place. Pudgee and Ekko Seven also discuss the different types of fathers — absent fathers, distant fathers, addicted fathers, critical fathers, narcissistic fathers, doting fathers, abandoning fathers, and fathers who are physically present but emotionally unavailable. The conversation challenges listeners to think honestly about what kind of parent they are, what kind of parent they had, and what kind of generational patterns need to stop. At its core, this episode is about accountability. It is about understanding that creating a child is not the same as raising one. It is about recognizing that children are whole human beings, not emotional props, trophies, compliments, or extensions of adult ego. It is also a reminder that if a parent is harmful, toxic, violent, or destructive, their absence may sometimes be safer than their presence. By the end of the episode, Ekko Seven brings the conversation back to growth, maturity, safety, and responsibility. She encourages people to work on themselves before creating families, to be honest about whether they want children, to find like-minded partners, and to understand that children deserve more than unresolved trauma, broken promises, and emotional confusion. This episode is passionate, uncomfortable, emotional, and necessary. It is a conversation for fathers, mothers, single parents, co-parents, adult children, and anyone trying to understand what real parenting requires. Father may be biology — but dad is investment. Father Is Biology, Dad Is Investment Don’t Ask for Father’s Day I Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

I går1 h 4 min
episode (June Bonus) Episode C -- Get AI Before It Gets You cover

(June Bonus) Episode C -- Get AI Before It Gets You

In this bonus catch-up episode of THE PRETTY PECULIAR PEOPLE PUZZLE, Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard returns with a powerful solo conversation about the changing world of work, creativity, artificial intelligence, digital opportunity, ownership, and why artists and entrepreneurs must protect themselves in the new economy. The episode opens with Pudgee reflecting on how unstable and unpredictable career paths have become, especially for young people trying to figure out where they belong in a world being reshaped by AI — artificial intelligence. As companies rush to grab their piece of the AI pie, Pudgee speaks directly to families, young adults, creators, and anyone looking for a way forward, encouraging them to pay attention, learn new tools, and stay informed instead of being left behind. Pudgee highlights opportunities like Claude Corps, a fellowship connected to Anthropic, where young people can potentially gain hands-on experience in the world of AI and help organizations streamline their systems. He frames this as the kind of information people need to share with their families, especially those looking for new career paths, remote work possibilities, and future-facing skills. The episode then shifts into digital products, AI agents, online business, print-on-demand, T-shirt brands, website building, and ways people can create income from home. Pudgee speaks from personal experience, including his success with an Amazon store, while encouraging listeners to look for real-world problems they can solve with digital tools, products, systems, and automation. But this episode is not just about opportunity — it is also about ownership. Pudgee dives into the complicated relationship between AI and the creative world, especially music. After learning that dozens of his songs were allegedly being used to train AI systems, he reflects on the strange feeling of being both honored and violated. He makes it clear that artists, writers, producers, and early hip-hop creators deserve compensation when their voices, flows, lyrics, cadences, and creative work are used to build technology that others profit from. From there, Pudgee speaks passionately about publishing, songwriting, film, and the way the entertainment industry often takes from creatives while acting like they were never in the room. He connects this to larger industry patterns, including artists being ostracized, stories being buried, SEO being used to reshape public memory, and powerful people controlling narratives behind the scenes. The conversation also touches on the importance of real historians, real people, and real truth-tellers in the age of AI. Pudgee makes it clear that AI can be an assistant, but it should never erase human intelligence, lived experience, cultural memory, or the people who actually did the work. Pudgee also gives updates on his creative projects, including Carol’s House, the already-written Carol’s House Part Two, upcoming films, app ideas, and a documentary supported by the MBD organization. He reflects honestly on the challenges of filmmaking, funding, creative roadblocks, and the painful reality that sometimes people show their true colors after you help them. That leads into one of the episode’s biggest lessons: get a contract. Whether working with friends, family, business partners, artists, filmmakers, or collaborators, Pudgee stresses that verbal trust is not enough. He encourages listeners to protect themselves legally, understand the difference between a lawyer and an attorney, and look into resources like the Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts if they need legal support but cannot afford traditional representation. The episode closes with love and celebration, as Pudgee shouts out Candace the Ghetto Girl, her food, her restaurant dreams, and the kind of real support that shows up in everyday ways. After covering AI, music, ownership, lawsuits, contracts, business, film, and community, the episode lands on a message of gratitude, protect Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

22. juni 202630 min
episode (June Bonus) Episode C -- The Catch Up cover

(June Bonus) Episode C -- The Catch Up

In this bonus episode of THE PRETTY PECULIAR PEOPLE PUZZLE, Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard steps to the mic solo for a raw, reflective, and thought-provoking catch-up episode filled with culture, creativity, concern, motivation, and truth. Opening with the podcast theme song “People Are the Problem” featuring Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard** and EKKO SEVEN, produced by **G. Weekes, the episode sets the tone for a powerful conversation about people, purpose, community, and the responsibility we all have to stop being part of the problem and start becoming part of the solution. Pudgee begins by sending love, prayers, and blessings to EKKO SEVEN as she undergoes a procedure, while also honoring the importance of family support during vulnerable moments. He gives a special shoutout to Sasha for being present for her mother, using that moment to reflect on care, family, and the comfort of knowing someone is truly there when life gets serious. From there, the episode moves through a wide range of real-world topics, including congratulations to Melanie from Bar TV for her award-winning documentary **Unbreakable**, the excitement surrounding New York sports, the return of **Rucker Park** basketball in Harlem, and several troubling news stories that raise serious questions about safety, awareness, trust, and the dangers young women can face in today’s world. Pudgee also speaks directly to the importance of having honest conversations with young people about who they trust, where they go, who they travel with, what they drink, and how quickly one wrong decision or one wrong person can change everything. Even when the stories are heavy, the message is rooted in protection, awareness, and love. The episode then shifts into hip-hop, where Pudgee celebrates the culture’s continued evolution and the return of veteran artists who are still fighting to preserve the essence of the music. He reflects on why hip-hop deserves respect, how hard earlier generations had to fight to be taken seriously, and why future music interviews on the podcast will focus on artists with real stories, real purpose, and real perseverance — not clout, gimmicks, or people playing with the craft. Pudgee also gives listeners a deeper look into his own creative world, including his films Carol’s House** and Fault, and the powerful experience of discovering hidden talent in others. He shares how believing in someone before they fully believe in themselves can unlock something life-changing, using his experiences with actors, collaborators, and creative partners as examples of what happens when trust, vision, and encouragement come together. The conversation also touches on upcoming podcast themes, including family, brotherhood, sisterhood, mental health, ADHD, elder care, cultural differences, Nigerian and American perspectives, music interviews, and conversations with people who are “pretty peculiar” in the best way — people with unique skills, unusual journeys, hidden gifts, and stories that can inspire others to keep going. Toward the end of the episode, Pudgee reflects on his upcoming music, including his overseas hip-hop project **Leading the Blind** with French producer **DJ Parental** on **HH Me Records**. He speaks on creating music for the soul, honoring the essence of hip-hop, and thinking deeply about what artists leave behind for future generations. The episode closes with an honest conversation about AI and creativity. Pudgee explains how he uses AI as a creative assistant, especially in music, writing, and idea development. Rather than fearing new technology, he encourages creators to learn it, study it, and use it in ways that make their process sharper, faster, and more intentional — while still keeping the human soul at the center of the work. This catch-up episode is personal, passionate, unpredictable, and full of purpose. It is Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard speaking from the heart about the world. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

17. juni 202636 min
episode (June Bonus) Episode B-- Narcissist VS. Emotionally Immature Adults (EIA) cover

(June Bonus) Episode B-- Narcissist VS. Emotionally Immature Adults (EIA)

The Pretty Peculiar People Puzzle Podcast, hosted by Pudgee Tha Phat Bastard with co-host Qiana The Goddess, dives into the strange, complicated, and deeply human behaviors that shape our relationships, families, friendships, and communities. In this episode, Pudgee and Qiana unpack the difference between emotionally immature adults and narcissistic people, blending real-life stories, sharp humor, personal truth, and thoughtful research. Together, they explore how emotional immaturity can show up as selfishness, defensiveness, lack of accountability, poor communication, and the inability to truly see others as individuals. The conversation also examines how narcissism can take a darker turn, especially when manipulation, exploitation, ego, and control become part of the relationship dynamic. Through Qiana’s honest reflections on childhood, parenting, healing, and boundaries, the episode becomes more than just a discussion — it becomes a powerful look at survival, self-awareness, and choosing healthier connections. This episode reminds listeners that clarity is the beginning of freedom. You may not always need the perfect label for someone’s behavior, but you do need enough understanding to protect your peace, recognize patterns, and decide who deserves access to your energy. Pretty people. Peculiar stories. Powerful conversations that help us solve the puzzle of human behavior. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

15. juni 20261 h 4 min