Plebchain Radio Podcast Por Avi Burra and QW arte de portada

Plebchain Radio

Plebchain Radio

De: Avi Burra and QW
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Plebchain Radio is the broadcast hub for the sovereign web. Hosted by Avi Burra and QW, the network explores the synthesis of Bitcoin culture and the Nostr protocol. From breaking news to immersive music sessions, we bring you the voices shaping the parallel economy. This is where the signal is distinguished from the noise.

Ciencias Sociales Música
Episodios
  • 157 – Where the Wild Sats Live with Kent Halliburton
    Mar 27 2026

    Episode 157 opens with Avi’s sermon “The Forgotten Forge,” a meditation on what happens when a civilization outsources the making of the things that keep it alive. The frame is applied directly to Bitcoin: early on, acquiring BTC and producing it were effectively the same act, but convenience split buyers from builders, and the network has been living with that fracture ever since.

    Kent Halliburton, CEO of Saz Mining, joins to argue that this split is one of Bitcoin’s under-discussed fault lines. He traces his own path from a decade in the solar industry, through burnout and a Portugal walkabout, into Bitcoin and eventually mining, where he came to see mining as the “hashpunk” counterpart to the ledger’s cypherpunk side. His core mission with Saz Mining is to make sat-based acquisition through mining accessible to normal people rather than leaving production to specialists and institutions.

    A big chunk of the episode is devoted to Kent’s “hidden history” thesis: the 2013 combination of ASIC specialization and Coinbase convenience created a fork in how people acquire Bitcoin. One path led to buyers, the other to producers, and over time those became culturally separate worlds. Kent argues that Bitcoiners failed to think through the downstream consequences of surrendering majority hashrate, while the mining industry failed to earn the trust of Bitcoin-native users with products that felt sovereign, legible, and easy to use.

    From there the conversation gets practical: Saz’s hosted-ownership model, mining pool payout tradeoffs, the meaning of “wild sats” mined straight from the network, and the dangers of pool concentration, especially with Foundry and Antpool commanding an outsized share of global hashpower. Kent’s answer is simple but demanding: more proof of work from actual Bitcoiners, and less passive dependence on fiat-native public mining companies.

    There is also a rich side-thread through the geopolitics of energy and place: solar incentives and greenwashing, hydro-powered mining in Paraguay, Norway, and Ethiopia, plus reflections on Portugal, Peru, and the cultural textures of life on a Bitcoin standard outside the U.S. orbit.

    Executive Producer: Richard Greaser

    Links

    • Sazming
    • Kent on Nostr
    • Avi's New Book – July 18
    • Finding Home Episode 3 – Paraguay [IndeeHub Code: PIONEER21 ]
    • Avi's First Book – 24 (2nd Edition)
    Más Menos
    1 h y 46 m
  • Sunday Brunch 11: Buttercup Roberts
    Mar 22 2026

    Sunday Brunch #11 is a relaxed, music-first decompression chamber with Buttercup Roberts at the table: coffee poured, no sermon, no script, and the Value-for-Value house rule intact, where 90% of sats streamed during songs goes directly to the artist. Buttercup brings a playlist built through deep dives on WaveLake and Nostr, using the episode to reflect on how direct zaps can create a real feeling of connection between listener and musician in a world usually clogged with intermediaries.

    The conversation ranges across Buttercup’s wider creative world. She shares her film background, her love of storytelling’s emotional power, and her growing disenchantment with the modern film industry’s shift from immersive movies toward disposable “content.” That opens naturally into talk about The Bridge, her parallel Nostr project using comics, characters, and visual storytelling to make privacy, censorship, data rights, and digital freedom more legible to everyday people.

    A big middle section focuses on discovery, onboarding, and the UX challenge in open music ecosystems. Avi and Buttercup compare WaveLake and Fountain, discuss how hard it still is for normal people to browse music intuitively, and zoom out to the broader Nostr problem: how do you onboard artists and non-Bitcoiners into a network that is still culturally dominated by Bitcoin-native conversation? Their answer is less about hiding the ethos and more about building compelling creative entry points around art, identity, and sovereignty.

    That leads into Bitcoin for the Arts, where Buttercup discusses the initiative’s mission to fund artists across disciplines, not necessarily for explicitly “Bitcoin” art, but for work that carries the ethos into culture through story, symbolism, and emotional resonance. The episode closes in a playful, ambitious place: imagining grants, murals, scavenger hunts, and global artistic treasure maps as ways to make the parallel culture feel alive, participatory, and worth showing up for.

    Links

    • The Bridge on Nostr
    • Today's Playlist
    Más Menos
    1 h y 56 m
  • 156 – Mayhem by Design with Richard Greaser
    Mar 20 2026

    Plebchain Radio Ep. 156 is part sermon, part game-theory lab, part cultural weather report. Avi opens with “The Price of a Voice,” using Primal’s new zap polls to explore a bigger idea: when voting has a real cost, consensus stops being cheap theater and starts becoming an economy of conviction. In the context of Maxi Madness, that means last-minute snipes, whale zaps, coalition strategy, and a genuinely new social dynamic where intensity beats duplication and every move leaves a receipt.

    Richard Greaser of The Bitcoin Bugle joins to unpack how the tournament has evolved from a fun bracket into a live experiment in Bitcoin-native participation. He talks through why they kept the wide zap range, how unpredictability is part of the magic, and why Nostr’s version feels more wholesome and sportsmanlike than the more politically charged version on Twitter. The bigger theme is that having fun is not a distraction from the mission, it’s part of how movements stay alive.

    Mid-episode, the conversation shifts into music and culture-building. Richard explains how the new “Maxi Madness” song, written by him and performed by Noa Grumman, came together, and why collaborations like that matter as markers of a maturing Bitcoin-native creative scene. That opens into a passionate discussion of Revolution Rocks, the upcoming Belgrade festival, and the need to build music ecosystems where artists are actually paid, not merely offered “exposure.”

    The closing stretch zooms out again to the mood of the moment: podcast boosts are down, people feel psychologically squeezed, and the wider world is radiating bear-market fatigue. Richard’s answer is not pity but purpose. Hard times, he argues, are not proof that the signal failed. They are the proving ground that reveals whether people can turn struggle into meaning instead of despair.

    Links

    • Maxi Madness Video
    • Richard on Nostr
    • Avi's New Book – July 18
    • Finding Home Episode 3 – Paraguay [IndeeHub Code: PIONEER21 ]
    • Avi's First Book – 24 (2nd Edition)
    Más Menos
    1 h y 40 m
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