Hey, everybody. Welcome to Poduty and the News for November
15, 2025. We've got six great stories coming your
way. I've got Asha Woodward, writer, teacher, host of
the Spooky Scholars podcast. Let's hear that theme
song. What time is it?
What time is it?
Poduty and the
News. The only live
news podcast about podcasting from the
stage.
Poduty and the News. The only live
news podcast about podcasting from the
stage.
Well, the only live news podcast about podcasting from
the stage. Ashe, welcome to the show. Oh, thank you so much
for having me. Again, that intro is so catchy. I
don't know how we get through the day without that in our heads all day
long. It does play in my head all day long. I found myself putting the
dishes away. And the way that the forks land in the silverware
tray, it kicks off that beat in my head. It's like, perfect.
Well, tell us a little bit about the Spooky Scholars podcast because as most people
know, this is a show about podcasting. It's very meta. We record it live
about live podcasting, and the Spooky Scholars has
been around. Tell us a little bit about the show and, you know, your love
of podcasting or your how much you enjoy podcasting. Oh, well, I
do. I mean, this is now. I now have three shows
that I've done on podcasts and on public radio.
So I definitely love the format. The Spooky Scholars
is a horror podcast where we don't just review movies. We kind of
do deep dives into the whole horror world, into like the future of
horror, indie film making and that kind of thing. And
most of my guests are either filmmakers, authors, or
essayists and big horror nerds like me.
Awesome. And if you want to hear more about that, we do a nice in
depth conversation on our sister podcast called My Guest Tonight.
Comes out in two weeks from now. Look for the the My Guest
Tonight, dot com. Ashe Woodward. We'll have all those stories.
We get into all the history of the writing and the teaching and.
And the podcasting. You'll hear it all in just two weeks. But
we've got six great stories on this show coming your way. We got
Gilmore Girls, Lighthouse, Lineman, Rodeo, Little
House of the Prairie. Are you ready to get into it? Oh,
I'm so ready to get into this. All these stories are really speaking to me,
so I can't wait to get into it. Awesome. Well, our first story,
we're going to Stars Hollow. Luke
Danes in real life, Coffee, comfort, and clever fan
strategy. This holiday season, Warner Brothers Studio
tour. Hollywood is turning Stars Hollow into a real life snow
globe for the 25th anniversary of Gilmore Girls.
And yes, you can actually meet Luke Danes himself.
Actor Scott Patterson will be behind the counter every day
from December 18th through January 4th,
serving up that signature grumpy charm fan or the grumpy
grumpy charm energy fans love. Opening day even includes a live
podcast hosted by James Parker Pettit, diving into
behind the scenes holiday magic with a mystery guest on the
way. Between immersive sets, cozy vibes and
virtual options for fans who can't be there in person, this
is a masterclass in turning nostalgia into, into an event
driven content machine. And this really speaks my
language for sure. We have this theater space to do these types of
events and here's Universal Studios doing it on a
whole nother level. What were some of your takeaways from this one, Asha?
Oh my gosh, so many. So first of all, being growing up in the
90s, Gilmore Girls was the show. This was
everything from all of the fast talking,
weird David lynch references. Like this was wb,
like cozy nights at home watching Gilmore Girls, like Dawson's Creek and all of
that. My question is though, like, is he gonna
be completely method for like the whole month of like putting on
his Luke Persona? That's pretty in depth. That's like gonna
be a lot of focused work there. He's got great
experience, don't it? But hopefully it's not a full, a
full day of work at the office. Maybe it's a couple tours here and there.
But one of the things that we took away from this was the
podcasting element, a way that they're taking this show that has
so much nostalgia. My daughters, they're, they're 15 and 19
and they, they love Gilmore Girls and they weren't even born
when it, when it first aired. They're in the reboot section,
right? Yeah, there's a whole, whole world around this
show. That's. It had such a following to it and
to be able to get a little glimpse of this and for the, for Universal
Studios to tie this into an experience and include
podcasting as a part of the event, that's a, that's a pretty
big deal. And even Hollywood studios are realizing the power
of these immersive events and bringing like minded fans together,
it's really interesting too. They had the, the Warner Brothers
executive you mentioned, James Parker Pettit, and he's going to be directing all of
this on the podc. But I also found that
Scott Patterson himself actually has his Own podcast about Gilmore
Girl. So I think that's such an interesting connection there.
Yeah, I didn't. I did not know that in my research. That's. That is
very interesting. Yeah, he. He talks about Gilmore Girls, talks
about the show. I mean, there's actually a lot of Gilmore Girls
podcasts. I. I just, I pulled a few of them and some of them are
really cute. I'm just going to say the. Where are they?
The. The Gilmore gals. Buffy, the Gilmore Slayer.
I like that one. Like 90s culture, I guess. Right. Gilmour
and talking fast. A Gilmore Girls podcast. So all
of those. And then Scott Patterson's himself is
called. This isn't. No, what is it called?
I'm all in is his podcast. And then he does a spin
off as well on Gilmore Girls music. So that's another podcast he has
on Gilmore Girls music. So I might wonder, like, I'm wondering if
maybe pitched this to them. Right. And went, oh, yeah, well, we've
got this studio space. We could totally do this. And can you be in character
for a month? Sure, no problem. No problem. And
this is one of those things that we talk about, you know, if you're producing
something, if you're a fan of something, or you're immersed,
maybe your podcast is about accounting or real estate, or
there's something about what you do that other people
relate to. And in this case, a major hit television
show has massive fan appeal. And they're doing these
types of events to. To kind of solidify their place in history, to
really reward the people who have been there since the beginning. And
these are the types of things that people are thinking about now for their own
business, for their own podcast. How can you bring your community together
around something everybody loves and just have a great
Christmas time, You know, in this case, you know, everybody loves.
What's the name of it? Stars Hollow. Stars Hollow in the wintertime
Is this magical place for the fans? Yeah, just
like a snow globe. And they're bringing their fans
together. So what can you do? How can you bring your community
together to create experiences like this? Yeah.
And I think also all of this, plus the fact that they still
have a mystery guest to be announced or to just show
up. I mean, can you imagine, like, is this going to be Jared Padlecki or
like Melissa McCarthy? I would die. I. My guess, though, I'm
putting my bet on Kirk. I think it's going to be Sean Gunn
that played Kirk because he was like, he had such a contentious relationship with
Luke on the show. I think that would Be really funny. Well, place your bets.
We'll find out December 18th. Get your tickets. You can watch the live stream
as well. Let's go over to story
number two. We're going to the Brooklyn the Lighthouse, where
creators go to shine and record everything.
Brooklyn just scored a massive win for creators with the opening of the
Lighthouse, a stunning, fully loaded creator campus inside
the historical 1872 pencil factory.
Now redesigned as a creative playground. With podcast
studios, live event spaces, test kitchens, screening rooms, edit
bays, and even a rooftop terrace overlooking the east river, this place is built
to power every stage of modern content creation.
Led by Wailer Group and curated through a membership model co chaired by
Colin and Samir, the Lighthouse is pitched as the studio
system for creators, offering a space where artists,
podcasters, filmmakers and digital storytellers can collaborate,
perform live shows and produce broadcast ready content.
Their opening festival hosted everyone from Anna Gasteyer
to Danny Brown, signaling this is more than a workspace,
it's a cultural engine built for the next wave of creator led
IP. Now the big thing on here,
Collins, Amir, huge YouTubers, very talented
interviewers. If you ever watch interviews, they're long form, in depth,
massive following, just immersed in YouTube, the
algorithm, building a YouTube business. And this place
isn't just for little podcast, not podcast studios in the corner.
It isn't meeting rooms, they have social spaces, there's event
spaces. So these creators also have this
opportunity to have this common area to not only
collaborate, but maybe even put on their own shows or their own
events in one little space. Not little space. This is a huge
space. What were some of your takeaways? Oh yeah, I mean
all of that as I'm reading and saying, okay, they've got the studio, the editing
bay, all of this, it just keeps going. So when I was getting
started, I was with Talkshoe and Talkshoe had their own studios
in, in Toronto in a place called Stacked Market. It was this pop
up studio and that's what we used when I got started with. That's so
morbid. And it was everything like to not have a space to go
and record. Everything was together. So we had our platform
that we had the, the place to record. No editing though, but
that was still something you could do with them on the, the
desktop. But having also, like you said, the community space
additionally and all of these other services, it just makes it so
much easier for creators. And like you said, this isn't, this is kind of like
an elevated place. But I think that just means that more people are going to
take their podcasts or Be able to take their podcast to the next level.
And especially for those who maybe just don't have the
resources to do that, like a full
podcast studio or, you know, renting out the space is always a
hassle. But this is, this is really like one and done. This is like
a whole business model all in one. And I'm really jealous of everyone
in Brooklyn. I. When I heard of the rooftop
terrace, I first saw like, oh, a summer evening, maybe
a one year anniversary party of your podcast. You could have a
live show, you know, maybe 20, 30 people up with you,
pass around cocktails, you know, open bar, record a podcast
and have this great view, you know, overlooking lower
Manhattan. What a, what a great space and just a
tremendous asset for the creators of Brooklyn. Yeah, such and such
a good idea. I mean, we all know that we're on the verge of something.
Even though podcasting is, you know,
established, this is, like I said, I think this is taking things to the next
level. I think we might see more of this happening hopefully around the
States, in Canada. Yeah. One of the things we preach here is you may not
have a theater like we have here in Pittsburgh, or you may not have this,
the Lighthouse, like they do in Brooklyn, but you have coffee shops,
bars, restaurants, libraries that are looking for
people to come in. They need, they like customers to come into their coffee shop
at even two or three in the afternoon on a Sunday during a slower
time. That might be a time for you to test the waters to do a
live show somewhere, you know, make some new connections, help
a local business and just have a little fun, little festivity on a Saturday
afternoon. No, definitely. Taking it live makes
a complete difference. So having those places, keeping those places in mind, but
then also having this one stop shop, I think is everything. Yeah, mix and
match, you know, a little bit here, a little bit there. If you don't have
it, you know, start thinking about how do we do this in our own community.
Definitely. Here we go. We're going to story number three. One of my
favorites. I love stories that surprise me. And here's an
industry I never thought would have podcasting, but this
one comes to us from TD World. High Voltage Higher Entertainment. The
Lineman Rodeo goes live. The Line Life
podcast proved that any industry, yes, even power
lineman, can turn their biggest annual event into a live podcast
moment. Broadcasting straight from the 2025 International
Lineman's Rodeo, the show captured competition, highlights,
opening ceremony, energy and real time interviews from the
field. With the event marking its largest Turnout in over 40
years, the podcast doubled as both A celebration
and a living time capsule of an industry gathering that rarely
gets this kind of media spotlight. It's the perfect example
of how niche communities can amplify their culture, honor their people,
and reach new audiences simply by hitting record at
their biggest event of the year.
Now, this one, we had Maria Daniels on the, on the show before. She's from
Ohio. Her husband is a lineman. So I, I, I sent this show to her
or the story to her, and she said, we've been there. We've been to the
lineman rodeo. Oh, my gosh, it's such a small world.
And this is one of those industries where I didn't expect them to have a
podcast, and I didn't expect them to choose podcasting as a form of
entertainment at their annual convention. And also, what is a
lineman rodeo? Like, what happens there? I have so many
questions, but I think this is great, like having that event
and then bringing in a podcast kind of on the sidelines. I think
for me, what that says is they're gaining some
curiosity, because when you have the podcast set up, you see
people talking. That looks like an interview. People start to wonder, like, oh, look at
the equipment. Maybe that person's famous. You know, what's going on over there. It
definitely brings in some energy to the event, but then also creates that
curiosity. People are going to come over and find out what's going on with this,
this podcast, what's happening here. Yeah. And it's your opportunity.
I don't want to use the word micro celebrity, but if you're in a
niche industry, like, you know, lineman, there's
a couple people who are doing a podcast just for linemen. And I
bet within that industry, they're starting to get recognition, they're starting to get
known, they're starting to be the experts in that industry by doing this
live show, by sharing information, maybe talking about success
stories or struggles after a storm, or, you know, just sharing
some insight how they, they brought electricity to a family that was without it
for weeks. And you get to hear these stories and they get to position
themselves as the expert in their industry. Definitely. I think it's also
a message for podcasts that are in those kind of niche
areas to look out for those opportunities at bigger events. Right.
So, you know, recording, you'll get your stuff together.
I know kind of my what my first impression was like, okay, I'm going to
be at a big event, there's going to be crowd noise, that kind of stuff.
But that can add a little bit of ambiance to an episode. Right. That you're,
you've got that live energy. So. So it's just something to think about what other
live events would really appreciate your, like, be in
that niche and appreciate that there's a podcast that's actually getting the word out about
what they are. I think that's great. Yeah. We're seeing this more and more when,
if you went to conventions five, six years ago, there was a band
or a comedian, a magician. But now we're starting to
see podcasters as part of the entertainment of conventions.
And one of the things I'm starting to realize here is these
conventions are inviting podcasters, they're promoting, hey,
I'm going to be on the main stage during the convention. So they're talking about
it leading up to the convention. Then they record the episode
at the convention and then they release the episode at the convention.
So if you're hosting events, thinking about adding podcasting
as part of the entertainment is a win win for both you
because you're going to get promoted before, during and after the show.
And for the podcaster, they're getting a couple days, maybe even a month worth of
content because they're able to interview everybody in one central place.
And it's just a great way to come together in your industry
and lock up a bunch of content for a month or 2. Oh,
100%. And I think there's some really big opportunities for being creative
with that content as well. Like we're going to talk about it in some upcoming
stories, but just ways to get people grabbing
the live podcast and having access to it for a certain amount of time, I
think that can really go a long way with again, bringing that curiosity
and getting people interested in listening to your show. Yeah.
And one of the benefits, we always say if you get to see these people
that you listen to all the time. And it's. Podcasting is mostly
a fairly passive medium. Maybe you listen in your morning commute.
Do you have it on the background while you're working? But when you see them
on the stage and all these things that you've been envisioning in your mind
and you get to see them in, in real life and see them think
in the moment, how they respond to questions, how they treat people
that ask them, how they treat one another, you get to see all that out
in the open and it makes for so much, a much more
immersive experience than imagining it. You know, how it goes down
in. Your earbuds for sure. Coming out from
behind the microphone. Let's go. We'll Keep
it moving along. We're going to the 50th anniversary of
little House on the Prairie. This comes to us from Broadway World
Prairie Power, turning 50 years of nostalgia into
a live New York City podcast spectacle.
The Little House on the Prairie fans are hitching their wagons to
Manhattan as The Little House 50th anniversary podcast
goes live at the Green Room 42 on November
22, 2025. Led by Alison
Arngrum, the iconic Nellie Olsen herself,
along with Dean Butler and host Pamela Bob,
the show promises backstage stories, music, comedy, and a
whole lot of prairie mischief. It's a nostalgic
fjord celebration, mixing legacy talent with modern live
podcasting, proving once again that longtime fandoms
crave experiences that bring their favorite worlds back to life.
And for fans who can't make the trip, the live stream lets them keep the
magic for 30 days. This is what happens when a beloved TV
classic evolves into an event driven interactive podcast experience.
The past becomes present again and the fans get to be
part of the story. Being part
of Little House on the Prairie, I will take it. What a legacy.
I'll admit too, for a minute when I saw 50 years, I was like, wow,
1955. No, 1975, come on.
I had to do it. I was like, wow, 50 years. That's a long time
to still again have that legacy. And it's really interesting. So that's
the part that we were saying, is that they're taking this and giving fans
access, special access, like treating the real, true,
true fans to something unique here, I think as
well. Yeah. If you've watched the reruns, if you grew up
watching Little House on a Prayer, it was such an iconic part of the. At
least for me, for the 80s. Oh, totally. And people that was
like such a part of culture was Little House on the Prairie, whether
it was even before there were Internet memes, there were, there were like,
jokes that went through society and there were things about Little House on the Prairie
that were just ingrained in us that we loved. And we always
appreciated those moments and sometimes we goofed about it and we laughed about it.
But there was no escaping Little House on the Prairie in the 80s.
It was part of almost everything. Oh, absolutely. And it's so
funny you bring up jokes because I was going to ask too. So Allison Ungram,
she's Nellie, you mentioned. And there. I just wonder if they
chose her or if she signed up for this kind of event or something because
she's having a resurgence. There's a really popular video
that, that circulates on TikTok of Little House on the Prairie and
her pushing one of the other characters down the hill. And it was
made famous by a couple of drag queens, by Trixie and Katya and that
they've got a big following on their podcast. So I think it's so funny that
they, they've got her on this because it's gonna be, I think it
attracts like another fan base of the people that know her from that video
on TikTok as well. Yeah, it's just such a part of
culture. And just like our other story with Gilmore Girls, there is such an
appreciation of the show, there is such a love of this show. And
again, bringing fans together, not a big secret. Like, this is a great
strategy to really connect people together. But what's a little
different from this one is even if you can't make it that day, they're
offering the replay for 30 days. So think of this
is a whole nother level of broadcast entertainment. It's, it's
a private stream, but if you can't make the stream, it's still available to you.
You won't miss out even if you can't make it. So you get 30 extra
days to make sure that you don't miss anything about it. Yeah,
I think that's so special and really smart on their part.
Awesome. New York's coming in strong. We had two stars from New York already.
Let's go to story number five. This is a big one. We got Microsoft involved.
We're going to techcellence and truth. Rich Little Broke Girls goes live at
Microsoft's House of Black Brilliance. This comes to us from essence
at Afro Tech 2025, Microsoft's House of Black Tech
Cellence close its week long celebration of culture and
innovation with a powerful live taping of Rich Little
Broke Girls. Podcast host Kimberly Bazzu and
creator strategist Jody Taylor delivered a vulnerable insight
packed conversation on breaking into tech, surviving
corporate spaces, balancing creator life and designing
careers that reflect your authentic self. Intentionally, not
blindly. The live event embodied the house's mission to create a
place of community replenishment and radical excellence for black
creatives. With conversations about authenticity as
currency, finding your zone of genius, proof of concept
thinking, and transforming personal hardships into creative
fuel. This episode wasn't just a podcast. It was
a masterclass in building identity, wealth and purpose in the
creator economy. There's so much here there. This
event is brilliant, absolutely brilliant from
the way that the two women are actually friends. So when they're
saying, you know a lot of the topic was authenticity. And they did these deep
dives into their experiences with corporate culture and their
struggles and like building their careers. Having them be friends to
begin with, I think opened up everything for being authentic,
for that vulnerability and gave the listener something
unique. There was a unique focus to this event. It wasn't just a one off
episode. They definitely had a specific direction in mind.
Yeah, this was top tier all around. One of the things that we do at
our theater is look at some of the events that we're doing, the community that
we're bringing together, like minded people, people in the business
community, people who are lifting each other. You often hear on many of the shows
on my stage, you know, the rising tide lifts all ship and this was
a masterclass in coming together, elevating.
You're getting a giant sponsor like Microsoft supporting
all of this. This is a win, win all around. I love
this story from the moment I first saw it. Yeah, no, this is a big
one and it's a big thing for all podcasting, I think. You know, getting those
big sponsors and it's also just setting the stage of having focused
events. And you know, in the, the deeper article here, they're just
going into talking about how tech and
in the black community, tech for
the black entrepreneurs and setting a tone for culture going
forward I think is huge and just really exciting. Yeah,
yeah, keep this coming up, Microsoft, tremendous sponsor,
huge event. This was a crazy. Check all the links in the show
notes. There's this article that we're citing here, has top five gems. So
there's, there's a whole great list of things to take from
an event like this. And how can you apply these types of things? How can
you bring creators in your area together? You don't have to have the
Microsoft sponsors. You don't have to have a giant podcast. You
can start with small meetups, small communities around
what you love, around, you know, your interest. You can
start building these types of events in your own community.
Yeah, the sponsorship thing is key. That's interesting. Yeah,
that's huge pull at Microsoft. Yeah.
And this one was fun. I thought Ashe and I have talked before. Some of
our background and the music we shared, the movies we like growing up. And
this one, this is one of those things I file under this blew my mind
that this happens in podcasting. And this, Wait till you hear this
story. I just loved it so much. And this is about secret social
networks, how kids turn podcast comments into digital tree
houses. And again, this isn't a live podcast story, but this
is One of those outliers of podcasting that's happening.
So in a plot twist only the Internet could deliver, kids have started
transforming the content comment sections of random years
old podcast episodes into covert chat rooms,
a workaround born from schools and politicians banning them from
traditional social platforms. NPR's TED Radio
Hour team noticed bursts of comments like you're so pretty and
inside jokes on three year old episodes, revealing that
students are using podcast comments as hidden third spaces
where adults won't look. This mirrors a 2019
phenomenon of teens turning Google Docs into social
networks by chatting in a document and resolving
threads when teachers approached as grown ups keep looking
down the digital spaces, spaces kids use to communicate,
kids keep inventing new ones, proving both the
creativity of young people and the futility of trying to ban their
social lives out of existence. If anything,
this shows how communication will always find a way to, even if
it means hiding inside an old NPR podcast.
This is what just cracked me up. I do remember the Google Docs
and, and that was a big thing where they would just start typing,
typing, typing, and then if something, if something got compromised, control,
alt, delete, the chat room is gone. And now they're doing this
anonymously. They're finding old episodes on the Internet
and just starting a little chat room, leaving comments.
Well, as a former teacher, I love this, but
in the classroom, I mean, we knew it was happening, but
I, I think this is genius. This is exactly what you said.
Communication nature will find a way, prevent these kids from
communicating with each other and they're going to be creative. And I kind of love
that. I kind of love that they figured this out. You know what, it
also just to be clear, so would we, for example, in a
classroom, take away their phones still, there are classrooms that do have like
a laptop centric kind of classroom. Right. So even without
phones now they go to those, the
desktop platforms. And what have you got? You've got podcasts, you've got
like Spotify comments section and you know, it's just
so funny that they, they found it in three year old episodes. I mean, it's
kind of great. It gives me like engagement on my podcast. I mean, come
on kids, come on over. I think it's wonderful. Yeah. If
all of a sudden you see one of your episodes just pop, you're like, wow,
that one's really hitting. It must resonate with people. Well, it also might
be that, you know, kids have found your show and they're using it as a
chat room. I love it. It's just so creative. It's so
rebellious. And, you know, I think we should be grateful that,
you know, the kids are all right. They're finding a way to, to still communicate.
Yeah. You can't get upset about creativity. And if you lay
the rules down and they find a way around it, you got to kind of
tip the hat and say, nice. Nice. Well played. Well played.
Well played. Well played. Exactly. Exactly. That story came to us
from Tech Dirt and all the stories and all of our sources are in the
show notes. So make sure if you liked anything that you heard today, go back,
read the articles that we're citing. Give them a little support as well.
This has been piduti in the News for Saturday,
November 15th. I've my special guest,
Ashe Woodward. We didn't really say how can people find you,
connect with you and reach out here, learn more about you. Oh,
easy one Ashewoodward.com A S H E
Woodward how it sounds dot com. It's all there.
That was super easy. The super quickest
way to hear my plugs. Here we go. We got Poduty shirts
at the theater. $10, four sizes or four
colors? Five sizes. Check them out while they last. We have hats coming
in next week, too, so pduti hats and shirts. We've got some
upcoming shows. The Pittsburgh podcast meetup Saturday, December 6th.
Join me in the theater at 6pm I feed you pizza drinks,
I think even give ice. You get cold drinks as well. Then at 7, we
live stream the show. We do one hour live where we're answering
your most pressing podcast questions. We do that for
the 60 minutes and then we cut the feed and we go back to
everybody in the theater for the final hour where we network, pass out
business cards. We've even booked shows because of a guests.
Have guests made appearances on other shows while they're there.
Improv class coming up Tuesday. Paul Mattingly. He's back again.
Learn to podcast. I'm moving this to December. This will be the Learn to
Podcast class with your buddy here, old Jeffers. He'll be in in
December. Look for the change of the date. But I'm going back to
the basics. So this is anything you've ever wanted to know about podcasting, but you
didn't even know what to ask. So I'll be answering those types of questions.
What is an MP3 file? How do I host a podcast? How do I distribute
a podcast? We're going back to square one.
We've got anime on the Allegheny. They're back next week for
episode number two. I don't have the topic that they're talking about. But check it
out. Episode one is on the event page. You can watch that for
free now if you want to. It's 10 bucks. There's a BYOB
ticket. Come down, watch anime on the Allegheny. Second
episode. We have the Black Friday Comedy Showcase with
Davin Magwood. We're going live the day after
Thanksgiving. It's next two Fridays from now. No next
Friday. Once two Fridays from now. Check it out
at poduty.com the audio fiction primer hosted by
Jessica Sutton. If you like audio dramas and want to learn how
to create one yourself, Jessica's doing a three hour
immersive class on how to do audio drama
podcast. We have the toretum holiday spectacular December
3rd and 4th, two nights. I'm hosting an event every 10
minutes. We're going to bring a to rent them business up to the stage. We're
going to showcase their business, tell you their website, how to order, how to support
them. We're going to do 12 businesses per night, December 3rd and
4th. It's a completely free live stream. There's no cost to the
businesses. We're looking for corporate sponsors
and the humorous podcast. They're one of two shows we have booked
into 2026 already. Check them out. P
O-D-U-T-Y.com this has been
Poduty and the News. Just one question for you.
What time is it?
The only live news podcast about
podcasting from the stage.
The only live news podcast about
podcasting from the stage.