Episodios

  • EP 21 DO NOT LISTEN!
    Oct 4 2025

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    A school that started behind an ink shop is bound to collect legends. We open the yearbook of memory and flip through the pages that actually stuck: a choir rehearsal that turned into a comedy sketch, a student who staged a whole-school farewell photo, and teachers whose theatrical quirks now look different in the rearview. The tone swings from goofy nostalgia to hard questions—how do you tell eccentric from unsafe, and what happens when a campus normalizes “that’s just how they are” long past the point of comfort?

    We also trace a bigger shift: the building that once echoed with band warmups and choral harmonies now hums with esports rigs. We’re not here to dunk on gaming; strategy, teamwork, and reflex are real skills. But we push on the trade-offs. What do students lose when ensemble rooms go silent? Can a modern school champion both stage lights and LED screens? We talk about pathways where arts and gaming feed each other—music tech meeting game audio, theater performance meeting motion capture, visual art meeting environment design—without abandoning the core joy of making something together in real space.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether your alma mater shaped you more than you admitted—or if a campus can honor its creative roots while chasing the future—this one will hit home. Come for the stories, stay for the questions about community, boundaries, and what a school owes its kids when the vibe gets weird. If this episode sparks a memory, share it with a friend, subscribe for more candid debriefs, and leave a quick review to tell us what your school got right—and what you wish it had kept.

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    16 m
  • EP 20 WHAT IF NOTHING REALLY CHANGED AND WE JUST STOPPED PRETENDING IT DID?
    Oct 1 2025

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    Headlines shout change while life keeps looping the same chorus. That’s where we start—questioning whether power actually rotates or just changes outfits—and then we tumble into money myths, climate theater, and what it means to keep making art when everyone wants you polished, quiet, and on-brand. I admit the libertarian spiel, then pull it apart, not to be edgy but to be honest: if fiat is story, why does the story hold, and what does that say about the incentives beneath our outrage?

    From there, I swing hard into a choice I know will split the room: releasing a new album built from old demos—mistakes, warts, timing drifts and all. I’m done waiting for perfect. I’d rather ship the truth and let you decide what’s worth saving. Think of it as an open archive on Spotify, not a museum. While we’re at it, we talk about the AI music flood and what those mass takedowns might actually signal. If algorithms remove algorithmic songs, is that enforcement or just machines arguing with each other? I don’t fear synthetic tracks as much as I fear forgetting why a human voice matters: a fingerprint of intent, a pattern of risk that software can imitate but not own.

    And yes, I address the Instagram haters. Maybe they’re bots. Maybe they’re bored. Either way, I’m not handing them the steering wheel. If I get criticized, I’ll turn it into a bit, a riff, a song—something I control. That’s the real theme tying this all together: agency. Don’t wait for permission from a platform, a pundit, or a purity test. Make the thing only you can make. Publish it before your nerve fades. Then come back here and argue with me about whether anything is truly changing or if we’re just repainting the same walls.

    Tap play, subscribe for the Halloween album drop, and leave a review with your spiciest take: should artists release everything, or curate like guardians of taste? Your call—and your comments—will shape where we take this next.

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    30 m
  • EP 19 WHAT HAPPENS WHEN WE STOP SEEING EACH OTHER AS HUMAN?
    Sep 24 2025

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    Some episodes are born from necessity rather than choice. Returning from hiatus, I find myself confronting the devastating death of Charlie Kirk and the shocking responses it provoked across social media. What chills me to the bone isn't just witnessing such callousness, but recognizing it as symptomatic of a deeper national crisis – our collective failure to see humanity in those with whom we disagree.

    The reactions to Kirk's death reveal how entrenched we've become in our worldviews, seeing everything through binary lenses where people are categorized as good or bad based solely on political alignment. This tragedy has become a cultural stain, amplified by social media into a spectacle that forces us to question: what does it mean to be "united" in the United States of America? Unity doesn't require abandoning personal beliefs or even liking everyone – it simply asks that we recognize our shared humanity. As I put it, "We don't have to mow our neighbor's lawn, but we can look out for them."

    Amid these reflections, life continues its relentless forward motion. I'm moving to a new apartment, which will allow me to fully actualize what this show is meant to be. Simultaneously, I'm processing the loss of my uncle – the person who inspired my musical journey years ago. This juxtaposition of national trauma and personal grief highlights a universal truth: we reach a point in life where childhood fades, loved ones pass away, and everything familiar gradually changes. Dwelling in the past becomes "a disease that you're feeding," while our only healthy option is seeking "broader, brighter horizons." Perhaps this wisdom applies not just to personal grief but to our national condition as well.

    Listen now and join me in contemplating how we might rebuild our capacity for empathy in increasingly divided times. Share your thoughts on finding common ground without compromising your values – I'd love to hear your perspective.

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    14 m
  • EP 18 SNUGGIES, SKULLS, AND STELLAR NONSENSE
    Aug 27 2025

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    Welcome to a milestone moment in the Blake Cunningham Delirium universe—our very first video episode! Filmed outdoors during that perfect sweet spot between summer and fall, this visual journey introduces a whole new dimension to the stream-of-consciousness experience you've come to expect, complete with a decorative skull backdrop and what Blake self-deprecatingly calls "an extremely flattering camera angle."

    The birthday episode kicks off with Blake unwrapping his thoughts about Metroid Dread, a gift from his girlfriend that has been giving him the "heebie-jeebies" when played after dark. His musings on video game difficulty balance between Metroid's rewarding challenge and Demon's Souls' potential frustration offers gamers a relatable touchpoint. As fall approaches—Blake's favorite season for its "spookiness"—he connects these gaming experiences to the changing atmosphere around us.

    Things take an existential turn when Blake contemplates an incoming asteroid, questioning the very nature of preparation when facing cosmic inevitability. "What are you preparing for exactly?" becomes a philosophical thread that weaves through discussions of Canadian wildfires, Instagram critics, and music recommendations. His passionate endorsement of Primus and The Claypool Lennon Delirium reveals the show's musical heart, while his improvised explanation of Schrödinger's cat as it relates to gambling decisions showcases the unique mental connections that make this podcast unlike any other.

    Ready to experience the Blake Cunningham Delirium in all its visual glory? Subscribe to our YouTube channel to see the skull decoration, the snuggie, and yes, those "grody fingernails" Blake mentions. And don't forget to check out Blake's music on all streaming platforms—as he puts it, it's "charged up to the max with all kinds of melodies, riffs, solos, and vocal harmonies."

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    31 m
  • EP 17 BREAD WARS AT PANERA
    Aug 18 2025

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    I announce my new single "Wandering Hope" coming out on August 22nd on Spotify. We've reached 250 downloads on the podcast, which is exciting but highlights the financial challenges of creating content without Patreon support.

    • The podcast has been "sold to Russia" (satirical segment about media ownership)
    • Discussion of problematic aspects of Roblox and parental responsibility in digital spaces
    • Disappointment with the upcoming Nintendo Switch 2's technical limitations
    • Analysis of Panera Bread's business decision to shift from fresh-baked to partially baked goods
    • Debate about corporate efficiency versus tradition and impacts on employees

    Check out my music on Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, and YouTube: Blake Cunningham (B-L-A-K-E-C-U-N-N-I-N-G-H-A-M). New single "Wandering Hope" dropping August 22nd!


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    33 m
  • EP 16 NEW REPUBLIC
    Aug 11 2025

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    Welcome to the new republic... we have great jeans!

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    36 m
  • EP 15 TBCD
    Jul 3 2025

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    Formally known as The Rainy Dayzz Podcast The Blake Cunningham Delirium is a breath of fresh air

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    32 m
  • EP 14 SWITCH TOO
    Jun 10 2025

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    Just basically bragging ab9out my new songs

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    29 m