Episodios

  • Small Town America Lives
    Apr 15 2026

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    The bridge is green, people are mad, and somehow that turns into one of the clearest conversations we’ve had about how small-town America actually runs. We’re joined by Matamoras Mayor Corey for a hangout that starts with laughs and ends with real takeaways about infrastructure, road safety, and why a town can’t deliver “instant gratification” without somebody paying for it. If you’ve ever argued about potholes, snow plows, taxes, or “why doesn’t the borough just fix it,” you’re going to feel seen.

    We talk about what makes Matamoras, PA special, from the Delaware River and the Pocono Mountains scenery to the simple stuff that builds community: tunes in the park, flea markets, food trucks, breakfast with Santa, big Halloween nights, and even an adult prom theme night. Corby also breaks down a model we love: if you want something to exist, step up, make a plan, and let the town support you. The Tree of Heroes veteran tribute is a perfect example of civic engagement that actually works.

    Then we go sideways in the best way, into generational habits, psychology, and why herd mentality takes over when fear hits. COVID stories come out, from panic buying to workplace chaos, plus Corby’s “I need to stay busy” moment that ends with a koi pond. We also get into his day job as president of Sussex County Community College and how statistics, psychology, and leadership show up in real decisions.

    If you care about small town life, local government, community building, or just want a smart funny conversation with a mayor who keeps it real, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a neighbor, and leave us a review, what’s one thing you’d change or start in your town?

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    45 m
  • Why Empire Still Hits
    Apr 8 2026

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    Empire Strikes Back isn’t just a classic Star Wars movie, it’s the pivot point where the saga learns how to hurt. We jump into a full rewatch with our friend Steve, the guy who helped pull us back into Star Wars during the Mandalorian era, and we break down why Hoth still feels like pure survival horror for the Rebels and why the Empire’s pressure never lets up.

    From there we go straight into the joy side of fandom. We talk Disney’s Galaxy’s Edge, building a lightsaber, choosing a kyber crystal, and the unexpectedly hilarious logistics of flying home with something that looks way too much like a weapon case. We also get into the stuff that keeps Star Wars alive between movies: animated series, video game story cutscenes, new canon, and the way fans argue now and come around later. That leads to bigger lore questions like Sith crystal bleeding, whether a Darth Vader series could work, and why some stories land differently once you rewatch the whole timeline.

    We wrap on the moments that make Empire legendary: Cloud City as a massive world expansion, Yoda’s training as comedy and philosophy at once, Boba Fett’s quiet competence, and the reveal that changed movie history forever. If you’re a lifelong fan or you’re trying to convert someone who “doesn’t like sci fi,” there’s a lot here to steal and share. Subscribe, share this with your favorite nerd, and leave a review with your all time #1 Star Wars moment.

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    52 m
  • Women Who Built The World
    Apr 1 2026

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    Windshield wipers didn’t always exist, Monopoly didn’t come from the person most people think, and a Hollywood star helped inspire tech that echoes through modern communications. We jump off from Women’s History Month and start naming names, because “history” gets a lot more real when you connect it to the stuff you touch every day and the rights you assume were inevitable.

    We talk through women who moved civil rights and public life forward, then pivot into women in science, medicine, and space: Marie Curie’s Nobel-winning research, Rosalind Franklin’s role in understanding DNA, Jane Goodall’s groundbreaking fieldwork, and Katherine Johnson’s calculations that helped make missions possible. Along the way, we keep coming back to recognition, because credit is not just ego, it shapes money, jobs, textbooks, and who gets remembered.

    Then we get into the inventions and innovations hiding in plain sight: Kevlar, windshield wipers, flat-bottom paper bags, early computing languages, and the ideas that made big systems work. We also hit the uncomfortable parts, like medical ethics and the ways women’s breakthroughs have been taken, minimized, or credited to someone else. We close out with culture and comedy, because influence shows up in songs, TV, and the way a joke can change what people say out loud.

    If you like smart history with real-world connections and a little chaos, queue this one up, share it with a friend, and leave a review. Who’s the most overlooked woman innovator on your list?

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    44 m
  • Why Star Wars Still Works
    Mar 27 2026

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    Star Wars was once just Star Wars, and watching it that way changes everything. We go live from Crawford Studios DC to start a full rewatch in release order, beginning with the 1977 film later labeled A New Hope, and we try to remember what it felt like when there were no prequels, no Disney era lore, and no built in explanations.

    We talk through the movie’s lightning fast worldbuilding: the opening crawl, the Star Destroyer overhead, Vader’s first terrifying steps, and Leia’s stubborn courage under pressure. From there we follow Luke Skywalker as a frustrated farm kid who stumbles into a classic hero’s journey, meets Obi Wan Kenobi, and gets his first taste of the Force through those early “Jedi mind trick” moments that instantly became pop culture. We also stop at Mos Eisley to explain why the cantina scene makes the galaxy feel huge, dangerous, and weird in the best way, and we revisit Han Solo’s introduction plus the never ending “who shot first” argument.

    Then we get into the real nightmares: Tarkin’s cold command, the Death Star as a moon sized villain, and the gut punch of Alderaan’s destruction. We break down Obi Wan versus Vader as a small fight loaded with history and respect, and we close with the trench run, Luke’s choice to trust the Force, and Han’s last second return that flips his character. If you love Star Wars analysis, original trilogy talk, and film history around practical effects and blockbuster pacing, you’re in the right place. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a rewatch, and leave a review telling us which moment made you fall in love with Star Wars.

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    44 m
  • Black Inventors Who Quietly Shaped Modern America
    Mar 18 2026

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    You ever look at a traffic light, a dry cleaned suit, a blood bank, or even your microphone and wonder who actually made modern life work? We do and the answers are a lot more surprising than most of us were taught. From Crawford Studios, we mix laughs with real history and spotlight Black inventors and African American inventors whose ideas became everyday infrastructure, medicine, and technology.

    We run through names that deserve to be common knowledge: Louis Latimer’s improvements that helped make electric lighting practical, Thomas Jennings and the dry cleaning process, Granville T. Woods upgrading railway communication, and Garrett Morgan creating a three-position traffic light plus an early gas mask. We also talk about Sarah E. Goode’s folding cabinet bed and how small-space design is real engineering, not just “home stuff.”

    Then we zoom out to the bigger system: who gets credit, how school materials leave people out, and how patents, copyright, and fair use can either protect inventors or slow innovation. That thread connects straight into medicine and tech, from Dr Charles Drew’s blood plasma storage for blood banks to Dr Patricia Bath’s laser tool for cataract surgery, plus Mark Dean’s work on personal computers and the path to having a computer in your pocket.

    We wrap with more game changers like refrigerated trucks, CCTV security, and the electric microphone, then end on the most fun inventor shoutout of all: Lonnie Johnson’s Super Soaker. If you like smart conversation, real US history, and practical “how did we get here” curiosity, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What invention on this list hit you the hardest?

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    44 m
  • Ghosts, Groves, And Red Doors
    Mar 4 2026

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    A bell rings on command, a smart speaker blasts country music without a wake word, and a 19-year-old nearly walks through a red door behind an elite clubhouse. Tonight we follow the threads—from classic haunt spots like the Biltmore and Suicide Bridge to an alleged Bohemian Club recruitment call with unnerving instructions and too-good pay. We share what it felt like in real time, the second thoughts that saved a life, and how leaked ritual footage and ancient lore around Moloch shape the way people interpret secrecy, power, and spectacle.

    We don’t stop at the legends. We pull apart claims, compare notes on how myths migrate across eras, and ask what makes closed-door societies so compelling in film and culture. Eyes Wide Shut, Pinocchio’s dark island, and quiet signals inside pop stories all surface—not as proof, but as mirrors we hold to our own anxieties about status and control. Alongside the ideas, the activity escalates: an Estes Method anecdote with spot-on replies, sudden battery drains, and that eerie, in-room music cue. Whether you land on glitch or ghost, the timing is hard to ignore.

    Amid the chill, we get practical. We trade simple, field-ready safety habits—ditch unattended drinks, scan cars for tags like zip ties or tape, keep lights and exits in mind, and tell someone where you are. We also lay out what’s next: a quick-hop to Vancouver haunts, a careful pause on cartel-controlled sites, a wish list featuring Centralia and Pine Bush, and a 420 collaboration that blends stand-up, cannabis culture, and a full investigation. Horror and paranormal communities cross over here, proving that curiosity, consent, and community can coexist with sharp skepticism and open wonder.

    If you’re into paranormal investigations, secret societies, true crime adjacency, urban legends, and live-caught anomalies, this one delivers. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves strange stories, and drop your biggest question or theory in the comments—what part of tonight’s ride hit you the hardest?

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    50 m
  • Glitches In The Matrix
    Feb 25 2026

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    Ever had a day stretch like taffy while everyone else swears it dragged too? Or swear the Monopoly man wore a monocle and “Luke, I am your father” was the line? We unpack the strange comfort of the Mandela effect, the goosebumps of deja vu, and the seductive idea that glitches aren’t just brain bugs—they’re debug logs from a world running on code.

    We start with the classics: Berenstain vs. Berenstein, Jif vs. Jiffy, Looney Tunes spelling, Curious George’s missing tail. Then we push beyond trivia. What makes a crowd share the same wrong memory? Is it cultural telephone, film quotes, or the frequency illusion wiring our attention? From there, we examine NPC theory as a metaphor for everyday life—those uncanny moments when people seem to repeat lines, cities repopulate with look‑alikes, and traffic appears right when you try to leave the script. The Matrix and The Truman Show become our cultural tools to think with, not answers but maps.

    We question sky oddities and “frozen birds,” balancing camera artifacts and AI fakery with the experiences that refuse to tidy up. Comics, The Simpsons, and sci‑fi get their due as early rehearsals for tech that now feels routine—autonomous vehicles, low‑altitude “fliers,” and immersive worlds that make simulation theory feel uncomfortably plausible. Along the way we ask whether simulation frames can also hold spiritual ideas: avatars, afterlives, and life beyond the host body.

    By the end, we don’t demand belief; we invite better noticing. Learn the biases, log the anomalies, and keep your sense of wonder switched on. Hit play, then tell us the one “this can’t be real” moment you still can’t shake. If you enjoy deep dives into memory, perception, and the edges of reality, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a quick review to help more curious minds find the show.

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    44 m
  • Laughing At Power: The Enduring Genius Of Mel Brooks
    Feb 18 2026

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    Mel Brooks didn’t just make people laugh—he taught us how to look straight at the things that scare us and still find air. We dive into his arc from a Brooklyn childhood and Catskills hustle to a war-time mine-sweeper, a writers’ room whip at Your Show of Shows, and the fearless architect behind The Producers, Blazing Saddles, and Young Frankenstein. The new HBO two-part biography sparks a bigger journey: how satire can punch up without cheapening the target, why the strongest jokes are sometimes the ones you cut, and how collaboration turns a funny idea into a classic.

    We trade favorite scenes and the hidden craft inside them—Gene Wilder’s slow-burn “pressure cooker” meltdowns, the top-hat routine he fought to keep, and the sly Wonka entrance that rewired an audience’s trust. We unpack the Blazing Saddles debate with real context: Richard Pryor’s imprint in the writers’ room, Cleavon Little’s pitch-perfect sheriff, and how casting itself was a statement. Beyond parody, we spotlight Brooksfilms backing The Elephant Man and Mel’s unlikely bet on David Lynch, proof that a comedy legend also expanded the edges of prestige cinema.

    There’s a human core to all this: Anne Bancroft’s steady, loving push that kept the pages moving, a Jewish identity celebrated with warmth and self-satire, and a mentoring spirit that welcomed new talent. Dave Chappelle’s memories from Men in Tights sit alongside Spaceballs lore, where John Candy and a new generation blended improv with old-school timing. The through line is simple and brave—use laughter to name the absurd, relieve the pressure, and bring people back into the same room.

    If Mel Brooks shaped your humor—or if you’re meeting his work for the first time—press play, laugh with us, and tell us your top three Brooks films. If this conversation made you smile, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a quick review so more people find the show.

    Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
    Contact us: CCandNJGuy@gmail.com
    Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

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    47 m