Archive for November, 2011

Pop Culture Politics Podcast – Talking Turkey (and Racism)

Nov 23rd, 2011 Posted in podcast | Comments Off

As a special Tasty Turkey Treat, we are proud to bring you a 2nd show this week. Listen as we talk turkey, but somehow end up talking racism. The topics on this show include:

Paulie defines “raghead”,
Hilary finds the domesticated turkey,
Hilary goes home for Thanksgiving,
Hilary tries not to have a rhotic accent,
my in-laws eat fast meals,
The friend zone on mtv,
Occupy Wall Street is harming Hilary’s feet,
Paulie is racist

You can listen to the show using the player at the bottom of this article, or you direct download it here or if you have iTunes, subscribe to the podcast here.

Pop Culture Politics Podcast – Jason O’Donnell Interview

Nov 22nd, 2011 Posted in podcast | Comments Off

On Monday it was revealed that a bomber had targeted NYC as well as Bayonne City Hall. On this show I interview Bayonne Public Safety Director and State Representative Jason O’Donnell about the plot, along with a number of other issues close to home that include:

Teacher merit pay & education issues,
Telling the Governor to “go to hell”,
The highest property taxes,
Marriage equality,
Who will win the GOP,
Occupy Wall Street,
Jason champions screening heart defects in newborns because of his son,
Hudson county Autism & Paulies kid

You can listen to the show using the player at the bottom of this article, or you direct download it here or if you have iTunes, subscribe to the podcast here.

The Pop Culture Politics Podcast – “The Worst Show Ever”

Nov 17th, 2011 Posted in podcast | Comments Off

On this show:

- Penn State/Sandusky jokes write themselves
- Whats a David Copperfield? (and other references)
- Whats more popular than congress?
- Are you smarter than an OWS protester?
- “most garbage show ever”
- Cousin Paulie wants to talk about relationships
- Hilary the sorority girl
- Cousin Paulie is non stop drama
- 84 year old woman pepper sprayed
- OWS camps cleared, camping doessn’t=free speech

Listen using the player at the bottom of this article, or direct download it here or subscribe to the podcast here.

Penn State Coach hires attorney connected to the Sandusky pedo case… and joke writes itself

Nov 14th, 2011 Posted in entertainment, humor, sports | Comments Off

Sometimes the jokes just write themselves…

Last week when the Jerry Sandusky story broke, we learned that his autobiography is ACTUALLY named…

Touched: The Jerry Sandusky story

but wait it gets BETTER!!!

Today… and I am literally giggling while I write this, we learn that assistant Penn State football coach Mike McQueary has retained the Harrisburg law firm… wait for it…

Strokoff and Cowden.

I * KID * YOU * NOT

Reviews for the latest podcast…

Nov 11th, 2011 Posted in humor, politics, press | Comments Off

After listening to our latest show, listener Rob Bielan wrote:

Some are calling this site “GENIOUS” and the FUTURE of talk radio/ pod casts- Also voted by 12 of 12 Nerds as the “Howard Stern Show” for the next Generation!

5 Stars by the East Wing of Inmates at the Hudson County Corrections Facility-

I Laughed, I shook my head, I spit water our of my mouth!!! (Rob Bielan)

Check it, and become hooked _Support a Bayonne Nerd & just listen_

The Pop Culture Politics Podcast – “The Jerry Sandusky Interview”

Nov 10th, 2011 Posted in podcast | Comments Off

Listen at the bottom of this article, or direct download it here or subscribe to the podcast here.

On this show, we landed the interview that no one else could get: an interview with Jerry Sandusky, the man at the heart of the Penn State scandal. We ask Mr Sandusky about the accusations of child abuse in this no-holds-barred interview. This is the finest journalism… at its best… distilled to its essence and filtered down to just the purest fine product. Brought directly to you, the consumer, at no additional cost because we care about what we do so… very… much (queue tear down cheek and fade to black).

- Bernie from Planck’s Constant sits in on the show
- Drama from last weeks show (interview with Diane Sare)
- interview with accused molester Jerry Sandusky, former Penn State official
- Hilary thinks this “best of craigslist” is funny

I “virually” want to buy… nothing

Nov 9th, 2011 Posted in games, nerd culture, press, technology | one comment »

Zynga is a company that makes money by selling nothing. Or, to be fair, by selling imaginary things, like tractors that plow farms on Facebook.

A “virtual good” is the term of art for an industry that minted $9 billion last year alone. Zynga is America’s first virtual goods company to file an initial public offering. The IPO is expected to go through before Thanksgiving and will test whether the company’s modern day alchemy — turning virtual goods into real money — is a game-changer for the gaming industry.

Misiek Piskorski is a professor at Harvard Business School. His job: to play and study popular online games like Cityville by Zynga.

“I forgot to come back to my city, so some of my plants have withered away,” Piskorski explains as he plays the game on Facebook. “My friends actually have been kind enough to come back and unwither some of my plants.”

Piskorski harvests his virtual crop and sells to a local grocer. Not for cash — at least, not the green, folding type. His money, like his goods, is virtual.

But for 5 percent of Zynga’s 200 million monthly users, that’s not the case. They buy a special currency to get ahead in the game, without relying on friends for help.

Or, Piskorski explains, they use the virtual money to buy luxury condos, yachts — goods that don’t have a use per se, but are “just really beautiful to look at.”

Zynga raked in $1 billion this last year, in sales of virtual tractors that plow virtual farms, or avatars that embody gamers’ Web personas.

Lady Gaga released her album “Born This Way” on Farmville in May 2011.

Tierra Cates, 19, sells Zynga currency at a CVS in Washington, D.C. She points to a shelf lined with pre-paid cards for Starbucks, Loews theaters and other businesses. One card has a goofy duck waddling up a pasture. It’s for Farmville, Zynga’s original mega-hit.

“I’ve seen kids come in with their parents and cry for these cards,” Cates says. “My dad does it, too. And I think it’s like, ridiculous.”

Traditional video games make you pay up front. Zynga inverted the model: play for free. And, once you’re hooked, pay to get ahead.

Revenue from virtual goods has helped Zynga kick the addiction to ad revenue — the curse of online businesses. The ads it does feature enhance the game. American Express sponsors blue virtual windmills that help grow crops. Lady Gaga sexed up the scene by releasing her album Born This Way on Gagaville.

Zynga officials declined an interview because, they said, they’re in a “quiet period” required by the Securities and Exchange Commission before the IPO.

Eric Ries, author of The New York Times bestseller The Lean Start Up, is a Zynga fan. To be more precise, he’s a defender of virtual goods. For skeptics who think virtual goods aren’t real, he has this retort: “I don’t think that you’re using the word ‘real’ correctly.”

Fashionistas spend $2,000 on a Prada handbag. Gamers spend $20 on an imaginary tractor or avatar or sword. It’s the same, Ries says, except “the virtual objects are all tied to the specific environment in which they were developed.” A sword purchased in the game World of Warcraft can’t be taken into the real world, or into other games.

Sam Hamadeh, CEO of PrivCo, sifts through the financial data of private corporations and isn’t so sure that virtual goods sales are anything more than a fad. Yet he estimates Zynga is worth $5 billion. Others say $20 billion.

Today, Mississippi votes to determine whether or not to outlaw birth control and remove birth rights from all women

Nov 8th, 2011 Posted in politics | Comments Off

You read that right. Mississippi may very well take a giant leap backwards in time today. With such laws being considered, why stop there? Why not christian-talibanize the whole state? Force women to cover up, after all it’s their own fault they get raped.. they WANTED it didn’t they? In fact, put a law on the books that says a raped women needs to pay damages to her attacker… I am sorry I mean her “victim”.

This from Talking Points Memos:

Mississippians will vote on a “personhood” ballot amendment Tuesday that would define life as beginning at the moment of fertilization, which would ban abortions as well as some types of birth control.

Personhood USA is a Colorado-based group that has been running a nationwide campaign to get states to define a fertilized human egg as a person, which would effectively label all abortions as murders. In Mississippi, Personhood Mississippi founder Les Riley drafted a ballot initiative called “Yes On 26” that collected over 130,000 signatures to get the measure on the ballot.

Why College Sports Have Been Proven Dangerous Today

Nov 7th, 2011 Posted in entertainment, politics, sports | one comment »

Today we learned that it’s more important to win a college football game than it is to bring a known child abuser to justice.

Let that sink in for a second.

Today we learned that the Penn State Athletics department covered up for a child abuser. Two men are to be indicted for knowing that one of their own was actively abusing children. Not just any children, but the neediest of children, in a foundation he had set up that was supposed to protect them.

We have reached a point where it is more important to “win” and protect those who help you win, rather than protect children.

For years, I had always been dubious of college athletics and the benefit they have for schools. How could it be possible for an athlete to get a full ride, when perhaps the next great scientist could have gotten that ride instead? The stories we have heard about college professors being under pressure to pass star athletes and look the other way. Stories of students receiving gifts in various and creative hush hush ways to avoid the “oversight” of the NCAA.

Now we can see the true extent of how dangerous college athletics are. Now, all of the naysayers who defend college athletic programs as they drain their schools of money, as they ignore the nerds on campus and reward jocks should hang their heads in shame. Shame on you for being part of the problem.

Maybe now, it should dawn on people that college athletics has to change. But, it will not. Like all scandals in the NCAA, this one will fade out of memory as the fictional myth of a national title become “important again”.

The sad thing is that I am sure there is more than one fan who might actually be thinking to himself right now (without ever saying it out loud)”yeah… if we could the national championship, I’d be okay with that.”

Remember that restaurant that banned kids? Out of business. Just kidding. Business is up 20%

Nov 5th, 2011 Posted in humor, politics | one comment »

From WTAE in Pittsburgh:

MONROEVILLE, Pa. — In July, McDain’s Restaurant started a ban on children younger than 6. The story quickly spread from Monroeville and went viral on the Internet, being featured on CNN and Yahoo!
Four months later, owner Mike Vuick told Channel 4 Action News that he has seen a 20 percent increase in business at his eatery on Broadway Boulevard.