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PODCAST EPISODE NO. 4

Zolecki Part of the reason why we started The Podcast of Awesomeness was because we like to talk about people who do things. No, I’m not talking about driving to the store for a six-pack and a carton of Viceroys,though that can be a full day for most. Instead, we’re talking about people who contribute to our culture.

Artists, sculptors, inventers, authors. Those are our people.

Call us professional appreciators, to steal a phrase from John Cusack’s character in High Fidelity. In a media age where it’s cooler to be all snarky and critically, we decided it would be more fun to just like things.

Truth be told, we didn’t actually sit down and have a conversation about this, because God knows we all have things to do. But if I could speak for the rest of the gang — Sarah, Boonie, Dennis, Radano our MVP, Tom — I’m gonna put it out there that it’s nice to be nice.

So in three of our first four shows we’ve been lucky enough to have on people we like and want to celebrate. In our Episode No. 4, Todd Zolecki (pictured, right), the scribe from MLB.com who writes about the Phillies came on via the telephone to chat about a whole bunch of stuff. Better yet, we were able to figure out a way to hook up a telephone to our recording system. Being all nerdy and Internet-y and stuff, we wanted to have Todd on via Skype, but it didn’t work out. Give Todd credit for not being as dorky about that stuff as us.

But the point is Todd wrote a book. It’s called The Good, The Bad, & The Ugly and it’s all about the different parts of the Phillies’ history. We even talked about it on the show. Here, take a listen:

PODCAST EPISODE NO. 4

Meanwhile, in Episode 3 we had on Mike Sielski whose book Fading Echoes is the tale of two rival high school football players from Bucks County who went to Iraq together. Like I wrote before, it’s a real book.

Of course in Episode 2 we had on Chris Wilson, the great drummer from Ted Leo & The Pharmacists. It just so happens that Chris and the band will be on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon tonight, which means you have to tune in to watch. Better yet, the group’s latest record hits stores (of all kind) on Tuesday, so get it. It just might be the finest collection of songs released by the band yet, which is saying something. No, it doesn’t capture the energy and ferocity of their live shows, but that would be pretty much impossible. It also means you should get the record and then go see the band play when they come to a town near you.

Here's the song the band will perform tonight:

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Yes, we like our guests and you should, too.

Otherwise, Deitch didn’t make it to Episode 4 because he was on his way to Las Vegas so he could play cards. Episode 5 will not hit the streets until March 18 because of travel plans, etc. for the working scribes of the Podcast of Awesomeness.

Sorry, this one will have to do for about 10 days.

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Jawbox and Cal

Jawboxrehearsal INDIANAPOLIS—For the old punks like me, it was quite a little surprise to see old, Washington, D.C. stalwarts, Jawbox, reunite for a gig on Jimmy Fallon’s show last night. Better yet, the song they performed in this reunion was one from “Your Own Special Sweetheart,” which had it been a piece of old technology back in the summer of ’94, it would have broken because of overuse.

See, I used to have a portable CD player called a “discman” that I carried around in very much the same manner that I use my MP3 player and laptop these days. But back then the discman wasn’t as ubiquitous as an iPod, Blackberry or whatever else folks use. Plus, when someone used one – say, to walk to work or while riding the train – it took planning. Which CDs made the trip and how many?

Back in the summer of 1994, Jawbox’s CD “For Your Own Special Sweetheart” was with me on a lot of trips. Actually, it was better classified as a staple and landed a spot in my portable CD travelling case that held approximately 20 to 30 discs. There, Jawbox sat alongside heroes like John Coltrane, Bob Dylan, Fugazi and The White Album. They went everywhere I went.

That’s not bad company.

Nevertheless, last night’s reunion was Jawbox’s so-called “major” label release back when such things existed (or mattered) after putting out its previous records on Ian MacKaye’s Dischord Records. The band, it seemed, got caught up in that post-Nirvana alterna-revolution that also claimed D.C.’s unique Shudder to Think, yet also gave us things like Nicklecrap or Three Doors Down or whatever those contrived bands called themselves back then.

Needless to say, the major label bit ended badly for Jawbox. But that’s OK – we got good songs from them. Better yet, they also never graduated to the monstrous venues when they played live, which meant I once saw them while lounging on the grass on the quad at Franklin & Marshall on a sunny April day about a dozen years ago.

Good times.

These days, former Jawbox lead man J. Robbins fronts a band called The Channels and works as producer. Perhaps he will lead a Jawbox reunion?

Sadly, though, Robbins' son Cal, now 3-year-old, was diagnosed with Type 1 spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), an incurable nerve disorder which affects the brain's ability to communicate with the voluntary muscles that are used for activities such as crawling, walking, head and neck control, breathing, and swallowing.

According to information, Type 1 SMA is usually fatal and most Type 1 babies will die before they turn 2. For the kids who make it to childhood, life is filled with lots of therapy and the need for tons of medical assistance because little Cal will never be able to walk.

But as a non-corporate musician who is self-employed, Robbins doesn’t have medical insurance that covers something like SMA. As a result, the indie music community has taken to soliciting donations and staging benefits where all the money goes directly to support Cal.

Check out the web site J. set up for Cal to learn more about the disease. Or check out the shirt he wore on TV last night along with some extra songs taped during the pre-show rehearsal.

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