Speaker:

Matt: I might also point out that that's a bit of a fault of mine.

Speaker:

Matt: And that's sometimes you wait too long.

Speaker:

Matt: If only I had known, if only if I had acted sooner.

Speaker:

Matt: I can't tell you how many times in business people said, if only I had acted

Speaker:

Matt: sooner, I would have, it would have been different. It would have worked out better.

Speaker:

Matt: It could have worked out worse. But often when we talk about if only I had acted

Speaker:

Matt: sooner, we're talking about something that could have been better.

Speaker:

Danny: Hi, and welcome to 5 Random Questions, the show with unexpected questions

Speaker:

Danny: and unfiltered answers.

Speaker:

Danny: I'm your host, Danny Brown, and each week I'll be asking my guests five questions

Speaker:

Danny: created by a random question generator.

Speaker:

Danny: The guest has no idea what the questions are, and neither do I,

Speaker:

Danny: which means this could go either way.

Speaker:

Danny: So sit back, relax, and let's dive into this week's episode.

Speaker:

Danny: Today's guest is Matt Cundill. Matt is a recovering broadcaster turned podcast producer and host.

Speaker:

Danny: He's the founder of the SoundOff Media Company, where he develops and produces

Speaker:

Danny: a diverse portfolio of original and branded shows spanning industry commentary,

Speaker:

Danny: culture, tourism, lifestyle, and music storytelling.

Speaker:

Danny: His flagship program, The Sound Off Podcast, is now in its 10th year,

Speaker:

Danny: approaching 500 episodes, and remains a leading voice in North American podcast

Speaker:

Danny: and broadcast industry conversations.

Speaker:

Danny: He also publishes The Sounding Off newsletter, widely followed by media professionals

Speaker:

Danny: across Canada and the United States.

Speaker:

Danny: So Matt, welcome to 5 Random Questions.

Speaker:

Matt: Thanks for having me. I've actually always wanted to be on this show

Speaker:

Danny: Ah you're you don't have to say that mate i got you on anyway so thank you i appreciate that,

Speaker:

Danny: And we've known each other a little bit. We've met actually in person.

Speaker:

Danny: I think we met online first, obviously, but then we've met in person at podcasting events.

Speaker:

Danny: And as I mentioned in the intro there, your leading podcast,

Speaker:

Danny: your main podcast, 500 episodes or almost 500 over 10 years,

Speaker:

Danny: which is almost, I think, if my math is correct, about an episode a week.

Speaker:

Danny: So what's the secret to consistency and just essentially longevity keeping going?

Speaker:

Matt: I think I got, it's jealousy is the answer. And I was really jealous of people

Speaker:

Matt: who are really good at this.

Speaker:

Matt: And one of the things I said, well, how do you keep doing? And they said,

Speaker:

Matt: well, I keep creating every week and I'm always trying to reinvent what I'm doing.

Speaker:

Matt: And I'm always adding to it. I said, well, if I can just be consistent with

Speaker:

Matt: the, with the whole thing, then good things will happen.

Speaker:

Matt: And consistency is really, you know, one of the keys to building audience

Speaker:

Matt: I had Aaron Monkey from Lore sort of say, well, why do you release sometimes

Speaker:

Matt: on Thursdays and sometimes on Tuesdays?

Speaker:

Matt: And he said, if you can be consistent with it, you can build a great audience from it.

Speaker:

Matt: And, of course, I should have known that being a radio broadcaster because you

Speaker:

Matt: should see the number of people who go to the Radio Hall of Fame just by showing

Speaker:

Matt: up every day at the same time and putting in a mediocre job,

Speaker:

Danny: Right? Just shipping it. And it's funny you mentioned Hall of Fame there,

Speaker:

Danny: because obviously your background is in media production, podcasting, etc.

Speaker:

Danny: And the creative front. But obviously you've got many interests outside of that.

Speaker:

Danny: And being Scottish, from Scotland originally, I've been in Canada for the last 20 years now.

Speaker:

Danny: But I don't know a lot about American football.

Speaker:

Danny: And yes, I'm calling it American football because my football is a proper one.

Speaker:

Danny: But I don't know a lot about American football. And I noticed on a recent social

Speaker:

Danny: media post that you said there are a lot of truly petty people in the world.

Speaker:

Danny: And those people are the ones who did not vote Bill Belichick to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Speaker:

Danny: So what's all that about? Why are they all petty?

Speaker:

Matt: Well, it's sports writers who vote on this stuff. And it's very odd.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, we're punishing Pete Rose all the time for, you know,

Speaker:

Matt: he can't go to the Hall of Fame because of something that he did.

Speaker:

Matt: Bill Belichick got caught up in something called deflate gate,

Speaker:

Matt: where there was a little cheating involved, where the footballs were not quite

Speaker:

Matt: as inflated as they should be, which led to, of course, less fumbles.

Speaker:

Matt: But media has it in for some of these sports professionals, and it's just petty.

Speaker:

Matt: Listen, this is the winningest head coach of all time.

Speaker:

Matt: This is a simple, simple thing to do. You put him in the Hall of Fame,

Speaker:

Matt: but on the first ballot and in his first year of eligibility,

Speaker:

Matt: they didn't do it. And it's, I guess, some people have got an axe to grind with the sports media.

Speaker:

Matt: And if you go back and look at a number of his media conferences,

Speaker:

Matt: he would often hold them at seven in the morning.

Speaker:

Matt: He would force the media to get out of bed. There were a lot of curt answers.

Speaker:

Matt: There's a lot of great sound bites.

Speaker:

Matt: He would answer the same way every time. He had tremendous disdain for the media.

Speaker:

Matt: And this was their way of getting back in a minute. It's petty.

Speaker:

Danny: So I guess it's the media, like I said, I don't really understand or don't know.

Speaker:

Danny: I understand. I know American football. I understand that. I've played it on

Speaker:

Danny: the Sega Genesis way back in the day.

Speaker:

Danny: So I'm guessing the Hall of Fame, it's all primarily media-led for nominations,

Speaker:

Danny: recognition awards, et cetera, then?

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, there's people inside football who get to vote on this too,

Speaker:

Matt: but it's perpetuated in a strange way. Listen, he's not a likable guy. That's fine.

Speaker:

Matt: Is this the way we should be sort of getting back at him and judging him?

Speaker:

Matt: It seems like a petty way to do it.

Speaker:

Danny: Okay well what we will try and thanks for explaining that

Speaker:

Danny: and we will try not to be we will try not to be petty with our questions and

Speaker:

Danny: answers here but and continuing the hall of fame like theme i'm going to invite

Speaker:

Danny: you now to the hall of fame collection that have been on the random question

Speaker:

Danny: hot seat are we ready for this i'm ready awesome let's bring up the random question generator,

Speaker:

Danny: OK, yeah, I think this may have been up before, but it's been a while since

Speaker:

Danny: it came up. And I'm always curious for questions like this.

Speaker:

Danny: So, Matt, question number one, if you had $10 million, would you still be working

Speaker:

Danny: or going to school if that was an option too?

Speaker:

Matt: Absolutely. I absolutely would still be working.

Speaker:

Matt: I don't know what I would do if I didn't have work. And I know these are kind

Speaker:

Matt: of like the words of somebody who may be a workaholic,

Speaker:

Matt: but I've been getting out of bed and working and excited

Speaker:

Matt: to go to work too every day for like a very long

Speaker:

Matt: time now if i didn't like my job and it didn't involve microphones

Speaker:

Matt: and recording audio dealing with audiences making people happy that sort of

Speaker:

Matt: thing you know what i might i might quit but i have made it a part of my life

Speaker:

Matt: to do something that i really really enjoy and be sure to wake up every morning

Speaker:

Matt: to something i want i like to wake up to the future every day i think podcasting's

Speaker:

Matt: got a great future in front of it and i'm excited so absolutely 100 if i had

Speaker:

Matt: 10 million dollars i would still be doing exactly what i'm doing so

Speaker:

Danny: What would you and i kind of figured you might know you as a person um what

Speaker:

Danny: would some of the changes be that we'd make with that extra money so events

Speaker:

Danny: you go to more events more podcast events would you create bursaries would you

Speaker:

Danny: create x y studios what would you do with the 10 million.

Speaker:

Matt: I'd probably work in a little bit more travel, uh, into, into it.

Speaker:

Matt: So let's say there's podcasting events I couldn't afford to go to.

Speaker:

Matt: I would definitely find a way to afford to go in and explore the world and as

Speaker:

Matt: well, you know, see what podcasting is like in, in other parts of the world.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm sure that I could probably have just one too many drinks that I would part

Speaker:

Matt: with some of that money and into some company or something.

Speaker:

Matt: In fact, actually just before, you know, we started recording this,

Speaker:

Matt: I had a phone call from somebody who was looking for a little bit of money for their app.

Speaker:

Matt: And I thought, well, if I had that, I would probably do it.

Speaker:

Matt: And if I had $10 million, I definitely would have given this person the $1,500

Speaker:

Matt: they wanted as a contribution towards the development of their app.

Speaker:

Matt: So I would definitely be a little bit more.

Speaker:

Matt: I would be spending a little bit more if I had the $10 million.

Speaker:

Matt: I got a soft spot, you know?

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, no, 100%. And it's funny you mentioned what you would do to help app developers,

Speaker:

Danny: for example in podcasting you know pros and people new to industry i'm curious

Speaker:

Danny: is there anything you would use the money to kick out with the podcasting space

Speaker:

Danny: or the production or media space that's kind of bad and holds people back if you like yeah.

Speaker:

Matt: So i've often thought about this and the question that comes up quite often

Speaker:

Matt: is what would you do if you had a hundred thousand dollars to to market your podcast.

Speaker:

Matt: I think I would probably be looking for ways to make shows more popular.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm not sure that there's a direct spend with any of that money,

Speaker:

Matt: but it would be something that I would look to, to try to increase voices.

Speaker:

Matt: I just don't know how to spend that money. You see, I'm very cautious with money.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm like, well, I have it. I'm not really sure if I should be jumping into that.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm going to take a year to think about this idea.

Speaker:

Matt: And if I wake up in about a year and I still love the idea, then I would probably jump at it.

Speaker:

Matt: And I might also point out that that's a bit of a fault of mine.

Speaker:

Matt: And that's sometimes you wait too long.

Speaker:

Matt: If only I had known, if only if I had acted sooner, I can't tell you how many

Speaker:

Matt: times in business people said, if only I had acted sooner, I would have,

Speaker:

Matt: it would have been different. It would have worked out better.

Speaker:

Matt: It could have worked out worse. But often when we talk about if only I had acted

Speaker:

Matt: sooner, we're talking about something that could have been better.

Speaker:

Matt: That's my characteristics.

Speaker:

Matt: That's what would happen with $10 million. In the end, I would still have $10

Speaker:

Matt: million plus interest and I wouldn't have acted. I'd still be thinking about it, though.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah. I mean, interest would rack up pretty quickly, I feel, on 10 million.

Speaker:

Danny: So then you've got like an added problem of, well, now I can't spend it.

Speaker:

Danny: Now it's 10 and a half. Now it's 11. Now it's a loan and a half.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, there's a B part to that because of the question that says,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, going to school, would you still go to school?

Speaker:

Matt: I think I love working in this space because I'm a student of podcasting.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, even though I've got, you know, 10, 15, 20 years of experience having,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, very simply even uploading to what was iTunes, you know,

Speaker:

Matt: at the time, I still want to be a student of, you know, audio and learn every

Speaker:

Matt: day. I think that's part of it.

Speaker:

Danny: No, I like that. And like I say, yeah, I mean, I think once we feel we've learned

Speaker:

Danny: all we can about podcasts in this space that we both love, clearly,

Speaker:

Danny: that's time to hang up the mic, personally.

Speaker:

Matt: Hey, I just got $10 million. I don't even know how to grow the space yet.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I can help you with that for a mere $3 million. So I'm not even taking

Speaker:

Danny: a big chunk yet. So you're all good there, Matt.

Speaker:

Danny: But okay, I like that. And that's a nice, informal, easy one, I feel.

Speaker:

Danny: A gentle one to kick off proceedings. So let's have a look and see what comes

Speaker:

Danny: up with question number two.

Speaker:

Danny: Okay. Question number two. And I'm wondering, we were speaking,

Speaker:

Danny: you mentioned Green Room earlier prior to recording there, Matt.

Speaker:

Danny: We were speaking about Netflix and stuff like that.

Speaker:

Danny: So question two, what is the worst movie that you've seen?

Speaker:

Matt: Well so there are a lot of them um i

Speaker:

Matt: thought zapped with scott baio back in

Speaker:

Matt: 1980 something that that was terrible uh i

Speaker:

Matt: thought gone girl more recently i think it was like 2015 maybe 2014 that was

Speaker:

Matt: terror i didn't like that movie i didn't like the movie with matt damon going

Speaker:

Matt: to space and i'll tell you in terms of quality of movies i don't find movies

Speaker:

Matt: to be i've never thought it was time well spent.

Speaker:

Matt: And, you know, if you only go to see one movie a year, you'd hear that in the

Speaker:

Matt: trailer. If you only see one movie a year,

Speaker:

Matt: Uh, well, I'm the person who actually only sees one movie a year.

Speaker:

Matt: And I made it a point for many, many years to just see one movie a year that,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, was word of mouth that people said I had to go see,

Speaker:

Matt: then I would be excited to go see the movie. But there are so many movies out there.

Speaker:

Matt: And I thought there was a turning point with, with gone girl.

Speaker:

Matt: I met my, my now wife and she said, I love going to movies. Let's go.

Speaker:

Matt: And what are we going to see? We're going to see gone girl. Okay.

Speaker:

Matt: And I went to watch it. I was impatient. I didn't like it.

Speaker:

Matt: I don't remember much. I don't, it didn't identify with what was going on.

Speaker:

Matt: Some people found it clever.

Speaker:

Matt: I, I thought I'm never getting, you know, two hours of my life back after that investment.

Speaker:

Matt: So I'm quite, I'm quite careful with it. What I look for in a movie is I like good writing.

Speaker:

Matt: I'll have a great story and I love characters that, that make me laugh at,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, make me love them, make me hate them, something like that.

Speaker:

Matt: But if your movie doesn't have that, don't bring it around here.

Speaker:

Matt: Don't bring your two star movie here and do not bring your three or three and

Speaker:

Matt: a half star movie here either. I want fours and fives.

Speaker:

Danny: And you mentioned that you make it, or made, I'm not sure if it's still the

Speaker:

Danny: case now, but you made it a point of just seeing one movie a year.

Speaker:

Danny: So do you prefer just staying at home and wait until it comes on the streaming

Speaker:

Danny: then or buy it on digital to watch?

Speaker:

Danny: Or is it, you mentioned obviously that's how you met your wife.

Speaker:

Danny: Was that a movie? Or going to the movie, not that movie. Didn't go in there

Speaker:

Danny: and met her in the dark or whatever. But going to a movie theatre.

Speaker:

Danny: Is it still something that you still go, even knowing that you probably won't

Speaker:

Danny: enjoy the movie you're going to see, or are you just like, you're fair to stay at home now?

Speaker:

Matt: If I sense I'm not going to enjoy the movie, I'm not going to the movie.

Speaker:

Matt: Often, and this is where my wife has a great job, she will, she knows I love documentaries.

Speaker:

Matt: So we will watch, like, for instance, the Bruce Springsteen movie,

Speaker:

Matt: which not everybody loved.

Speaker:

Matt: I enjoyed it. I did like that one when it came out, which talks about Bruce

Speaker:

Matt: Springsteen's time between recording Born in the USA and Nebraska in that 1982,

Speaker:

Matt: 83, 84 period. I really enjoyed that one.

Speaker:

Matt: But yeah, she'll bend over for that. But, you know, to help me,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, to make it so that we can watch the movie together.

Speaker:

Matt: It's just not often we can do that

Speaker:

Matt: because there's only so many history documentaries she's going to enjoy.

Speaker:

Danny: And that's your jam then, History Docs?

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, I love nonfiction. I love history. I'm a history major.

Speaker:

Matt: Just love studying history. When I went to Acadia University,

Speaker:

Matt: the professor, he was giving me C's and C minuses, but that didn't matter.

Speaker:

Matt: I fell in love with the whole thing.

Speaker:

Matt: And he taught me how to study it and how to appreciate history.

Speaker:

Matt: And I've kind of been in that space ever since.

Speaker:

Danny: It's also expensive to go to the movie theatre now. We've got two teen kids,

Speaker:

Danny: so if we were to go as a family of four and buy the tickets,

Speaker:

Danny: then the popcorn, drinks, whatever.

Speaker:

Danny: And then let's say we're hungry either before the movie or after it.

Speaker:

Danny: You're talking probably, I don't know, $300 for an evening out maybe?

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, I'm sad actually because we don't go to movie theatres as much and inside

Speaker:

Matt: the theatres there's only movies that we are familiar with. You know,

Speaker:

Matt: they're generally a bunch of reboots. There's a bunch of remakes.

Speaker:

Matt: I did go see, for instance, you know, the Barbie movie.

Speaker:

Matt: That was my one movie for that year, actually, that I did go out to go see.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, I enjoyed it. But I feel that we've lost a little bit with streaming into the house.

Speaker:

Matt: It's nice to have the convenience, but I just moved to a very small town.

Speaker:

Matt: There's only a few thousand people in Saint-Henri-Dal-Quebec,

Speaker:

Matt: where I live now. But we have a movie theater.

Speaker:

Matt: And the movie shows movies in French and in English. And this is a predominantly

Speaker:

Matt: Francophone town, too. So I am happy to be in a town where there's a nice movie theater.

Speaker:

Danny: That's awesome. We're actually in a small village, too. Probably about the same kind of numbers.

Speaker:

Danny: There's 800 families, so let's say that's about 3,000 people, probably.

Speaker:

Danny: We don't have a movie theater, but if we drive 15 minutes away,

Speaker:

Danny: there's an old-fashioned one.

Speaker:

Danny: It's got just two rows, leather chairs, a little dinky screen,

Speaker:

Danny: no huge Dolby Atmos or whatever.

Speaker:

Danny: And I do enjoy that because that takes me back to when I was a teen going to see a movie, right?

Speaker:

Danny: Perfect perfect so we know that maybe with your 10 million you could like make

Speaker:

Danny: a little indie movie that could go to these little theaters.

Speaker:

Matt: You know i i probably would um do that and in fact in my top desk drawer there's

Speaker:

Matt: about three or four podcast ideas that are sitting there that would probably

Speaker:

Matt: go straight from we'll skip the podcast and we'll take it right to to make a documentary with it i

Speaker:

Danny: Showed i was going to say i'll take you up and up but i won't because i want

Speaker:

Danny: my three million for the idea so i'll leave you with a seven to make the movie then but.

Speaker:

Matt: Listen this is what we make you executive producer for i

Speaker:

Danny: Like it i'm going to put that on my side of my desk my little i'm going to get

Speaker:

Danny: a background sign for that matt's executive producer sounds good all right i

Speaker:

Danny: like that then let's have a look then at question number three what is the last

Speaker:

Danny: thing you do before you go to sleep.

Speaker:

Matt: I put on a podcast i

Speaker:

Danny: Can't i wasn't sure if you're going to say that or not but it's kind of feel

Speaker:

Danny: that you might have but okay cool.

Speaker:

Matt: And that's because of the way i grew up i grew up in montreal

Speaker:

Matt: i grew up with an am radio beside my am fm

Speaker:

Matt: clock radio actually beside my bed but predominantly i would listen

Speaker:

Matt: to am 10 o'clock at night i would listen

Speaker:

Matt: to sports with ted tevin who is a detroit broadcaster also montreal broadcaster

Speaker:

Matt: but you know montreal canadians hockey game or the montreal expos game would

Speaker:

Matt: end and i would listen to the phone calls And I learned to fall in love with

Speaker:

Matt: the radio and that got a little bit boring.

Speaker:

Matt: I would turn the dial and I could move it from 600 down to six 60, which is WNBC.

Speaker:

Matt: Oh, wow. I'm getting a New York radio station piping right into my bedroom.

Speaker:

Matt: You could turn it a little further. You get to, uh, get to eight,

Speaker:

Matt: 10, get to Detroit. You pick up, you know, WLS.

Speaker:

Matt: It was 800 actually was Detroit. Eight, 10 was WLS.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm, I'm going off memory. These are all call letters and frequencies that are,

Speaker:

Matt: that are, you know, that nobody talks about as much anymore.

Speaker:

Matt: But I fell in love falling asleep.

Speaker:

Matt: Listening to the radio. And that really hasn't changed today.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm not much for a TV in the bedroom.

Speaker:

Matt: This has been a bit of a sticking point with my wife and I, she loves the TV

Speaker:

Matt: in the bedroom. I do not like the blue light.

Speaker:

Matt: That doesn't stop me from picking up an iPad every once in a while.

Speaker:

Matt: And I do know that if I wake up in the middle of the night, I do not want to

Speaker:

Matt: check the phone. I do not want to look at an iPad or anything because that's blue light.

Speaker:

Matt: Blue light will keep you awake. And I like to get my sleep. I think that's important to get your sleep.

Speaker:

Matt: So I find it wonderful to drift off with uh with the sound of of a voice and

Speaker:

Danny: Do you have like um set podcasts you listen to because i'd imagine maybe there's

Speaker:

Danny: some genres like true crime which maybe maybe not but if you got like a really

Speaker:

Danny: gory scary true crime story that might keep you or keep some people awake is

Speaker:

Danny: there any genre or certain podcast you you drift off to.

Speaker:

Matt: Oh i have a story because this happened the

Speaker:

Matt: other night i went to sleep listening to christy lee

Speaker:

Matt: canadian true crime and the story

Speaker:

Matt: involved you know bad things of course and my

Speaker:

Matt: wife woke up in the morning she said i dreamt of this bad thing and

Speaker:

Matt: this bad thing and i said well i take responsibility because i was the podcast

Speaker:

Matt: was on and it probably put that in your mind and that's how

Speaker:

Matt: you got to dreaming about that sort of thing so when i do fall asleep it will

Speaker:

Matt: be sports it could be politics i love falling asleep to politics is so dull

Speaker:

Matt: that you just sort of lose yourself and and then you fall asleep to it um if

Speaker:

Matt: it's something instructional if it's something that's going to be good for me it's You know,

Speaker:

Matt: I used to do this at university. I would read a textbook before going to bed.

Speaker:

Matt: I was done after a page and a half of political science. I'm done. I'm asleep.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, it's, it's, it's good stuff to, uh, to fall asleep to.

Speaker:

Matt: I like to listen to some sports, but I, sometimes if I'm emotionally invested,

Speaker:

Matt: it will get my heart racing. It will have the reverse effect.

Speaker:

Matt: So I don't need to hear anything else about the Buffalo Bills and their tragedies.

Speaker:

Matt: Because that just makes me sad and it keeps me up at night. They literally keep me up at night.

Speaker:

Matt: So I can't listen to any sports that talks about something sad like that.

Speaker:

Danny: No, I hear you. So obviously you mentioned that your wife woke up and she couldn't

Speaker:

Danny: sleep while she was having nightmares and dreams about the topic of the true crime.

Speaker:

Danny: Do you feel, not buy into, that's the wrong word, do you feel that subconsciously

Speaker:

Danny: what we listen to prior to going to sleep can help, or even while sleeping.

Speaker:

Danny: So if you want to learn a new language, for example, like people say,

Speaker:

Danny: well, go to sleep, listen to learning Spanish or learning French or whatever.

Speaker:

Danny: Or if you want to learn history, you know, and be better prepared for your exams,

Speaker:

Danny: go to sleep, listen about the topic.

Speaker:

Danny: You're going to be examined, examined on, examined, I think that's a verb.

Speaker:

Matt: Tested.

Speaker:

Danny: Tested, there you go, thank you. Do you believe that? Is that something you have seen?

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, it actually happened just last night. And

Speaker:

Matt: And she said, well, she woke up this morning and said, well,

Speaker:

Matt: I was dreaming of being in a hotel. And I said, well, maybe you wouldn't be

Speaker:

Matt: dreaming of being in a hotel if you weren't booking hotels as the last thing

Speaker:

Matt: you were doing before you went to sleep last night.

Speaker:

Matt: We often, and this goes back to the television too.

Speaker:

Matt: I don't like the television in the room, you know, especially if the show is

Speaker:

Matt: going to be of a nature where there's like murder or crime or something sad happening.

Speaker:

Matt: I'll bring that feeling to bed with me and I won't feel good about it.

Speaker:

Matt: So, I mean, I like to go to sleep with butterflies and unicorns and,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, my wonderful chicken farm and other things that I'm imagining and in faraway places.

Speaker:

Matt: But yeah, if you, if you bring, you know, for instance, the Sopranos is a tough

Speaker:

Matt: one before bed because it's heavy storylines, heavy conversation.

Speaker:

Matt: There's murder, there's blood, you know, it gets the heart going and,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, you can sleep a little bit of discomfort.

Speaker:

Matt: So that's why I'm not a fan of, of the TV in the bedroom. I've managed to keep

Speaker:

Matt: the television out of the bedroom to this point since we moved about a year ago.

Speaker:

Matt: And I think as a couple, we're better for it.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah. I know my wife used to watch Dexter a lot. She'd binge watch Dexter before bed.

Speaker:

Danny: And then she'd wonder why she wasn't getting good night's sleep and having nightmares and stuff.

Speaker:

Danny: And I said to her, well, what are you watching before you go to sleep? Well, Dexter.

Speaker:

Matt: It's a heavy watch.

Speaker:

Danny: Exactly. And I couldn't. And I enjoy scary movies, but I wouldn't watch them

Speaker:

Danny: late at night before going to sleep.

Speaker:

Danny: I'd watch them middle of the afternoon or early evening when they're still, you know, light, etc.

Speaker:

Matt: Okay, so scary movies. I know we did movies earlier in this conversation.

Speaker:

Matt: That is, we are not doing scary movies ever. That is out.

Speaker:

Matt: I like lighthearted comedies, things that make you smile, things that make you laugh.

Speaker:

Matt: That's where I am. But I've got a wife who loves true crime shows,

Speaker:

Matt: listening to it. And she also watches trials.

Speaker:

Matt: She loves like the lawyer, you know, the YouTube channels with the lawyers,

Speaker:

Matt: the lawyer, you know, and stuff like that. So very invested.

Speaker:

Matt: She has a law background.

Speaker:

Matt: She loves watching that stuff, but not for me.

Speaker:

Danny: Not for you. But I'd imagine that's good because like often couples,

Speaker:

Danny: many couples I know, and watch the same stuff, enjoy the same stuff.

Speaker:

Danny: But it sounds like you've got two very different, you know, things that you

Speaker:

Danny: enjoy, which I'd imagine offers some great conversation as well when you're

Speaker:

Danny: talking about and trying to maybe explain why you enjoyed X,

Speaker:

Danny: Y, Z, and she's the same, you know, with her stuff.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, so, you know, we meet in the middle. At some point we have to settle on

Speaker:

Matt: something on Netflix or, you know, Amazon Prime or, you know,

Speaker:

Matt: one of those streaming services. We do have to land on something.

Speaker:

Matt: So we do, we do find stuff. So the studio with Seth Rogen is something I watched. We loved it.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, we watched it together, loved it. Hopefully there's going to be more in the near future.

Speaker:

Matt: So we have our shows and we meet in the middle and, you know,

Speaker:

Matt: she, I live, I live in American football lifestyle for, for a number of months

Speaker:

Matt: of the year where we travel, we'll go to see the team maybe even twice.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, I watch my team and, you know, she watches alongside.

Speaker:

Matt: Side so she's gotten into it you know just just watching me go through my my

Speaker:

Matt: sad emotions on Sundays well

Speaker:

Danny: I won't keep you uh with the sad emotion mindset

Speaker:

Danny: there but I like that and I like the um like you say it's just like um I am

Speaker:

Danny: with you 100% in the blue light I need my sleep I'm an agent now I've if I don't

Speaker:

Danny: get my sleep I'm grump I'm Scottish I'm a gen X Scotsman so I'm grumpy anyway

Speaker:

Danny: by default if I don't get my my night's sleep no I'm just don't come near me that.

Speaker:

Matt: But also Danny we work in front of screens all day so

Speaker:

Matt: yeah you know we have our fill of screens I don't need any more screens as well

Speaker:

Matt: I'm making content all day and listening to other people's stories and making

Speaker:

Matt: stories I don't need some to watch somebody else's story because I'm going to

Speaker:

Matt: watch go well they missed the writing there well I can see that coming I go

Speaker:

Matt: watch it from such a different perspective it's almost like not fun to be with me almost I said I

Speaker:

Danny: Know well I've met you And I know what you mean. So we'll leave that there. I jest, I jest.

Speaker:

Danny: So on that note, before Matt reaches through the screen and rearranges my face,

Speaker:

Danny: let's have a look at what comes up on question number four. And I like this one.

Speaker:

Danny: It's come up before, but I do like this. So Matt, question four.

Speaker:

Danny: What is one of the top things on your bucket list?

Speaker:

Matt: Wow. Okay, so I haven't really thought about my bucket list for a long, long time.

Speaker:

Matt: Because I thought as I was going through life, I was checking them off when

Speaker:

Matt: I didn't even really need to check them off.

Speaker:

Matt: I want to see Metallica. Well, I've seen Metallica now 10 times.

Speaker:

Matt: I had the luxury of working in radio and even got to see Metallica play at the

Speaker:

Matt: North Pole at one point in my life where I met Adam Curry, who if you know anything about podcasting,

Speaker:

Matt: was one of the very first to create a podcast.

Speaker:

Matt: And there was Adam Curry who was, And I don't know why I'm telling the story

Speaker:

Matt: because I haven't answered the question yet, but there he was doing some live streaming.

Speaker:

Matt: And I said, well, what's his live stream? He said, well, I'm live streaming

Speaker:

Matt: the concert from the North Pole. And I thought, wow.

Speaker:

Matt: Anyway, that was, that turned out, I mean, at one point just seeing Metallica

Speaker:

Matt: was, was, was on my bucket list.

Speaker:

Matt: Today, it's just simply, you know, travel to Asia.

Speaker:

Matt: I've never been. um i also have never been to africa so i've got two things

Speaker:

Matt: and they both involve travel

Speaker:

Matt: in places to go and i'm beginning to really think about

Speaker:

Matt: it now that i've you know i'm well into my 50s and

Speaker:

Matt: you know is it japan or is it thailand you know and where do i go in africa

Speaker:

Matt: and i've got a lot of podcast listeners in nigeria and i've made connections

Speaker:

Matt: with people there and i thought that might be an interesting place to go but

Speaker:

Matt: people tell me kenya is is remarkable. So the bucket list

Speaker:

Matt: is it definitely involves travel and those two parts of the planet are just

Speaker:

Matt: under traveled in my on my passport

Speaker:

Danny: It's interesting it's like um i think

Speaker:

Danny: travel is such a key thing as well like um a few of the past episodes on this

Speaker:

Danny: season funnily enough uh we've been talking about why people should travel if

Speaker:

Danny: they get the opportunity and for so many reasons and like africa and asia it

Speaker:

Danny: just it seems like because they're so far away from where we are as well,

Speaker:

Danny: it makes it such an interesting and desirable place to go.

Speaker:

Danny: And I know we probably know some of the, we probably have some fellow creators

Speaker:

Danny: from Africa that we both know.

Speaker:

Danny: Is there like, what's the main reason for choosing there as opposed to,

Speaker:

Danny: let's say, Europe, I guess that's easier to get to maybe, or Australia or,

Speaker:

Danny: you know, Or is it just a completely different culture from what we might get in North America?

Speaker:

Matt: So I picked out two continents, and they're just two places I have not been.

Speaker:

Matt: I think they'd be challenging places to go. I wouldn't find Australia very challenging to go to.

Speaker:

Matt: I feel like I know Australia just from getting on the lift at Whistler.

Speaker:

Matt: I've met enough of the lifties there who can help me.

Speaker:

Matt: I feel like those places would be the challenging ones.

Speaker:

Matt: But Europe, I've been to quite a lot. And, uh, I've spent a lot of time in Spain.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, I love it. It's an easy place to work from. I can spend one month of my life there.

Speaker:

Matt: It's, you know, in the South of Spain is, is Malaga.

Speaker:

Matt: The weather's nice. I can get out of the Canadian winter for a little bit.

Speaker:

Matt: It's, it's kind of an easy place to do it, but it's not travel.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm actually living there for, you know, anywhere between four and six weeks.

Speaker:

Matt: And, you know, I enjoy it and I enjoy the food.

Speaker:

Matt: I know a little bit of the language. I like to practice the language,

Speaker:

Matt: but it's time to probably leave the box and, and, you You know,

Speaker:

Matt: try, you know, try Thailand, try Japan.

Speaker:

Matt: Something in asia just you know sort of travel a little bit further than normally

Speaker:

Matt: than what i would be used to again this takes a little bit of research it takes a little bit of

Speaker:

Matt: definitely some preparation to go to places to it definitely takes preparation

Speaker:

Matt: to go to a new place because you want to get the most out of it in the amount

Speaker:

Matt: of time that you're going to spend there

Speaker:

Danny: Well that's the thing it's like that's what i was going to ask you actually so

Speaker:

Danny: i'm glad you brought that little segue perfect there it's

Speaker:

Danny: like it's like you're a pro mate it's like you're a pro but um would you i guess

Speaker:

Danny: how long would you want to go there for and would you do a mix of the larger

Speaker:

Danny: metropolitan metropolitan areas getting my words out properly um and then go

Speaker:

Danny: deeper into the country to discover off the beaten track or how would you mix that up.

Speaker:

Matt: Probably with research and a lot of word of mouth so i would probably ask other

Speaker:

Matt: people who have been there you know and this is another thing and that's youtube

Speaker:

Matt: youtube has really opened up the

Speaker:

Matt: world to travel to say Oh, here's an experience. I'd like to do this too.

Speaker:

Matt: Instagram as well has told us some of the great places we can go try and what we can eat.

Speaker:

Matt: It, it's, it's changed the game and it's changed the game in another way.

Speaker:

Matt: And by the way, Anthony Bourdain did this as well.

Speaker:

Matt: He would go to places and he would sort of show the experiences and then people began to mimic it.

Speaker:

Matt: And he realized, and a lot of successful YouTubers are really realizing if I

Speaker:

Matt: go and promote this restaurant, if I go to promote this tourist attraction,

Speaker:

Matt: this place is going to get slammed if I do it right and I make it look good.

Speaker:

Matt: And it happens. There are, there are specific restaurants I know in,

Speaker:

Matt: in, in Barcelona that are largely tourists.

Speaker:

Matt: Tourists go there. There's still some locals, but by and large,

Speaker:

Matt: it's a lot of tourists who go and they've been sold by other Instagrammers or

Speaker:

Matt: by other YouTubers, uh, to go in. So yes, I would fall down that trap.

Speaker:

Matt: I would definitely use YouTube to help me sort of, sort of frame my experience.

Speaker:

Matt: Uh, cause if you see one person do it, then we can mimic it and then we can go copy it.

Speaker:

Matt: We used to use the voters book to find out where to go those are very good too

Speaker:

Matt: but now we've got YouTube and we can see for ourselves what the experience is

Speaker:

Matt: like and I preface that by saying for better or worse

Speaker:

Danny: No, I agree. I wish I had usual.

Speaker:

Danny: I did a backpacking trip to Australia in my early to mid 30s or 20 plus years ago.

Speaker:

Danny: And it was all about, I knew one person from Australia and he was like a waiter

Speaker:

Danny: at one of the diners I went to.

Speaker:

Danny: So you'd say, okay, well, if you're going to New South Wales,

Speaker:

Danny: you have to do this and this, but then you have to do that. But if you never

Speaker:

Danny: knew that guy, I'd have no idea what to do with us now.

Speaker:

Danny: I know we give a lot of sticks sometimes to YouTube and some of the creators

Speaker:

Danny: on there and TikTok, et cetera.

Speaker:

Danny: But it's such a great platform, or these are great platforms as well,

Speaker:

Danny: to help you, you know, when it comes to decisions like that, I think.

Speaker:

Matt: One of the things that really comes up when I'm thinking, okay,

Speaker:

Matt: Metropolis is easy. You know, I want to learn how to use public transportation.

Speaker:

Matt: That's the first thing I want to learn. To leave, though, and go to the countryside,

Speaker:

Matt: how am I going to do it? Can I take a train?

Speaker:

Matt: Fine, I will take a train. Is there a bus? Okay. I'll take a bus.

Speaker:

Matt: Do I have to rent a car? Is that easy? What side of the road do I drive on?

Speaker:

Matt: You know, is there a stick shift that doesn't bother me? I have a stick shift.

Speaker:

Matt: I know how to work that thing.

Speaker:

Matt: These are some of the questions that get asked when I wanted to leave the metropolis

Speaker:

Matt: and head to the countryside.

Speaker:

Matt: I did some driving in Italy and Spain, and then I realized I wasn't necessarily

Speaker:

Matt: on holiday because I found myself paying so much attention to what was going

Speaker:

Matt: on on the road that I said, well, this doesn't feel as much like a holiday.

Speaker:

Matt: So I learned to use public transportation wherever possible.

Speaker:

Danny: Especially like if you go to Rome, there's like a massive roundabout smacking

Speaker:

Danny: the middle of Rome that's a nightmare.

Speaker:

Matt: I did it. You did that one? I survived it. And it's not far from the train station

Speaker:

Matt: and across the street from the train station is where you can rent the cars.

Speaker:

Matt: And it's like one of the first things you encounter. All I can tell you about

Speaker:

Matt: driving in Italy is it's twice as bad as you've been told in Rome and only half

Speaker:

Matt: as bad when you're in the countryside.

Speaker:

Danny: I can imagine that. I've never been, like I've not been far out in Italy,

Speaker:

Danny: but I just remember that roundabout.

Speaker:

Danny: There's another one in Paris as well, near the Arc de Triomphe,

Speaker:

Danny: where it's just, and my wife, she's Canadian, so she's used to doing little

Speaker:

Danny: dinky roundabouts that have got two lanes tops, but normally one lane.

Speaker:

Danny: And then she looks at that and she has palpitations even thinking about driving there.

Speaker:

Matt: I've got one worse, and I'll throw it at her, and that's called Bermuda,

Speaker:

Matt: where they've got the roundabouts, but they're going around on the left side in the other direction.

Speaker:

Danny: Oh.

Speaker:

Matt: So I'm a regular visitor to Bermuda, and driving on the left on a scooter is, I enjoy that.

Speaker:

Matt: Actually, I really do enjoy that. And then I can deal with the roundabouts.

Speaker:

Matt: You just got to be prepared to give way.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, because Bermuda, so you mentioned the left there. So I'm assuming Bermuda

Speaker:

Danny: does the same side of the road driving as the UK and Australia then.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, it's a British island.

Speaker:

Danny: Oh, it's a British island. I forgot that completely.

Speaker:

Matt: And listen, this is one of the cleanest places on the planet.

Speaker:

Matt: They serve tea at four o'clock and everybody is dressed well.

Speaker:

Danny: High tea.

Speaker:

Matt: High tea is served at four.

Speaker:

Danny: High tea with scones and cream and strawberries and such as.

Speaker:

Danny: Oh, man. Done it again. Last week's episode, I mentioned to my guest we were talking about pizza.

Speaker:

Danny: And I said, I've got to stop talking about food on the show because every time

Speaker:

Danny: I do, I want to have what we're talking about after the episode finishes recording.

Speaker:

Danny: Now I need to make like a scone. Well, I've not got a scone,

Speaker:

Danny: but I've got muffins, English muffins. I have to try to find some cream and jam for that then.

Speaker:

Danny: Thanks for that, Matt. I appreciate you making me think about food again on an episode.

Speaker:

Danny: Alrighty, we're doing well. We've got to the last question. So let's see what

Speaker:

Danny: question number five brings up.

Speaker:

Danny: And yeah, okay. This may tie into your first answer, actually,

Speaker:

Danny: about procrastination, maybe. I'm not sure.

Speaker:

Danny: Anyway, Matt, question number five, mate. What's one thing that you would like

Speaker:

Danny: to change about yourself? Not necessarily would, but would like to?

Speaker:

Matt: Um that's a hard one and i'll tell you why it's because i i think about that a lot

Speaker:

Matt: and and what i would like to be and it's

Speaker:

Matt: something that i work on quite often and that's i would like to learn

Speaker:

Matt: how to let go of control i have control issues and i don't have a fear of flying

Speaker:

Matt: but i'm very very nervous about flying so before the plane takes off i'm saying

Speaker:

Matt: a little mantras i'm calming myself down but what i learned was i don't really

Speaker:

Matt: have a fear of flying i've got a control problem.

Speaker:

Matt: And that's letting somebody else operate the plane to take me to my next destination.

Speaker:

Matt: So which also leads to a little bit of trust issues. So there's control and trust in there.

Speaker:

Matt: I'd like to learn a little bit more about being more comfortable with not being in control.

Speaker:

Danny: Interesting.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah. So this goes to producing a radio show. I had to have my finger on the

Speaker:

Matt: buttons. I like to be in control of what's going on.

Speaker:

Matt: I like to be in control of the sound and the production. And,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, it's to my detriment.

Speaker:

Matt: If I could let go of a little bit more, I'd probably get more done in the day.

Speaker:

Matt: If I could let go of a little bit more, things might flourish a little bit better.

Speaker:

Matt: I'm kind of like the person who overwaters their plants, probably spends too

Speaker:

Matt: much time hovering over a situation.

Speaker:

Matt: Spends too much time over focused on

Speaker:

Matt: something that just doesn't need to be doesn't need

Speaker:

Matt: any attention we've written the program the program works what are we doing

Speaker:

Matt: well me i like to fiddle with it a little bit more right because it because

Speaker:

Matt: i'm comfortable being in control it gives me a good feeling uh i'd like to be

Speaker:

Matt: told i'd like to know when to knock it off and to not worry about having a controlling moment.

Speaker:

Danny: Do you think this might have, like, I'm not sure if it was like before or after?

Speaker:

Danny: Obviously, you've spent many, many years in production, you know, in the media space.

Speaker:

Danny: Was that a trait that you had prior to going into that?

Speaker:

Danny: Or do you think you picked that up as you learned more and you started to control

Speaker:

Danny: more of productions, you know, studios, et cetera?

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, that's a good question. So I would probably...

Speaker:

Matt: I think I've been to enough therapy to know that I got into radio in this particular

Speaker:

Matt: space because there were things that I could control.

Speaker:

Matt: And because I could control what was going on the radio or what the content

Speaker:

Matt: was or the direction we'd be headed,

Speaker:

Matt: that led me to being a manager, which led me to running radio stations and then

Speaker:

Matt: starting my own company and having degrees of control over it.

Speaker:

Matt: And, yeah, I mean, it's something that was ingrained at me at a younger age

Speaker:

Matt: where I wanted to sort of have or exert a little bit of control.

Speaker:

Matt: So I'm not controlling in a sense of I'm going to control this relationship

Speaker:

Matt: or I'm going to control the outcome of something. I just like to have my hands on the wheel.

Speaker:

Danny: Now, that makes me wonder. So obviously you've got various podcasts,

Speaker:

Danny: you produce various podcasts.

Speaker:

Danny: And one of the ones you do is podcast Super Friends with you and for co-hosts normally.

Speaker:

Danny: And you, not control, you produce that.

Speaker:

Danny: Would you be willing to hand the reins over to one of the other co-hosts to

Speaker:

Danny: produce that or would that have to be you?

Speaker:

Matt: So we actually had a guest on from Riverside, Kendall, who is the community manager there.

Speaker:

Matt: So it only makes sense that we would use Riverside in order to record this episode.

Speaker:

Matt: So happy to let that go. Yeah, I would totally let that go and let somebody else do it.

Speaker:

Matt: I would probably find a little bit of joy for a day. But there's a little bit

Speaker:

Matt: of that rush that when I'm sort of driving, I'm like, oh, yeah,

Speaker:

Matt: there's a little bit of a rush there to how we're going to be producing with

Speaker:

Matt: five or six people on the screen.

Speaker:

Matt: And is it all going to work? And what are we going to bring in at what point?

Speaker:

Matt: But yeah, I'd be more than happy to pass it off now because I'm running the recording system.

Speaker:

Matt: We do share hosting duties. And I think that's, that's part of it is just,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, maybe today I should let go.

Speaker:

Matt: What can I let go of today that will serve the greater good of our group?

Speaker:

Matt: And by the way, that's something that I've had to learn in my thirties,

Speaker:

Matt: late twenties, into my third, especially in my younger thirties was just,

Speaker:

Matt: just to let go a little bit.

Speaker:

Matt: But eventually I found my way to a yoga mat and they really,

Speaker:

Matt: really taught me how to let go just to this, let that go into the universe and

Speaker:

Matt: it's going to be okay. And they didn't lie.

Speaker:

Matt: Everything's fine. It's going to be okay. And it, you know, it's also my,

Speaker:

Matt: my dad, my late father, he, he, he would say to me, um, after I would come back

Speaker:

Matt: from a day's work of blah, blah, blah, this, this, this, this,

Speaker:

Matt: and this, all this is wrong in my life.

Speaker:

Matt: And he would say, you know what, it's going to be okay. Why don't you just let

Speaker:

Matt: that go? It doesn't matter.

Speaker:

Matt: You'd be surprised by the number of things that we worry about that just don't matter.

Speaker:

Matt: And I'm still learning that I'm still to say, and now often I find myself just

Speaker:

Matt: saying to Pete, to my kids too,

Speaker:

Matt: you know, that doesn't matter you know when i see somebody riled up or and especially

Speaker:

Matt: in this day and age post pandemic seeing people on the street or they go off

Speaker:

Matt: and there's a tweet or this or that

Speaker:

Matt: you'd be surprised how that doesn't matter and i find myself telling other people

Speaker:

Matt: this stuff and sometimes i also have to tell myself that too no

Speaker:

Danny: It's funny you mentioned that like um like i say we live in a little village

Speaker:

Danny: um but we moved here from just north just west of toronto a few years back.

Speaker:

Danny: So we went from a big place to a really small place.

Speaker:

Danny: So it took a bit of a mindset change to adapt to that. And one of the things

Speaker:

Danny: that we have up here is like because we've got a lot of snow in the winter,

Speaker:

Danny: we have a lot of trails, etc.

Speaker:

Danny: So there's a lot of snowmobilers, I guess. And it took me, and even now sometimes

Speaker:

Danny: if someone goes by and the snowmobile is just a little bit loud,

Speaker:

Danny: I think, oh, turn that down. You don't need that loud. But I'm thinking, but who cares?

Speaker:

Danny: You know, you're not hurting anyone. You're not, or my wife says that to me, I should say.

Speaker:

Danny: But who are they hurting? They're not doing drugs. and not terrorizing pensioners

Speaker:

Danny: or out on their snowmobiles enjoying the outdoors. What's bad about that?

Speaker:

Danny: So I get you. And it's like you say, it's hard to, when you've been so long

Speaker:

Danny: of one mindset, it's hard to try to forget it at times that,

Speaker:

Danny: you know, don't let that upset you.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, we used to have these discussions in radio where we get together and we

Speaker:

Matt: say, well, this is the way it's done and this is the way it should be.

Speaker:

Matt: And we get hung up on it and then the results wouldn't be there.

Speaker:

Matt: And one of the things I learned was just, let's try somebody else's idea.

Speaker:

Matt: Even if it's bad, Let's try the idea. One of two things is going to happen.

Speaker:

Matt: It's going to be bad and we will then know it is bad or it's going to work out and be good.

Speaker:

Matt: But both the results are great because you get feedback.

Speaker:

Danny: And you might get a really awesome outcome for that change.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah. So as controlling as I am, as much as I know that I like to be in control

Speaker:

Matt: of things, I like trying other ideas as well because you never know.

Speaker:

Matt: And if I knew, then I would know. But I just have to admit, sometimes I just don't know.

Speaker:

Danny: No, I like that. And I feel that's a nice one to finish off your time in the hot seat, mate.

Speaker:

Danny: But speaking of handing over control and, you know, driving the train or driving

Speaker:

Danny: the car, whatever, I've had you in the hot seat for around about 40 minutes or so there, mate.

Speaker:

Danny: So it's only fair to take that pressure off and hand over the question asking baton to you.

Speaker:

Matt: So I gave some thought to this one. And then about just between question three

Speaker:

Matt: and question four, I thought, oh, I see.

Speaker:

Matt: This is, yeah, Danny gets on about food and I've got a food question.

Speaker:

Danny: He's swine. I'm going to edit this as no be no guest question this week.

Speaker:

Matt: Well, I brought it back up. So I may let you pass on this one,

Speaker:

Matt: but I know that you're in Huntsville, Ontario, and I know the region well.

Speaker:

Matt: It can be cold, especially over the last number of weeks, some long nights,

Speaker:

Matt: cold ones. And I'm wondering what your favorite comfort food dish is on a cold

Speaker:

Matt: night in Huntsville, Ontario.

Speaker:

Matt: And how do you make it if you do make it yourself?

Speaker:

Danny: Ooh. So generally, if I'm looking for comfort food, I might just get something from a drive-thru.

Speaker:

Danny: But it's too much effort to get out there, especially in the winter, to do that.

Speaker:

Danny: So I guess my comfort food, the one I like, which is fairly easy to make as well.

Speaker:

Danny: I will do, and this is going to sound disgusting, it's like a Scottish thing,

Speaker:

Danny: so it probably is disgusting.

Speaker:

Danny: So I like warm food, if comfort is going to be warm, for one.

Speaker:

Danny: So I'll make some toast, so that's pretty easy.

Speaker:

Danny: And then I'll get some cold meat, so it can be ham, it can be turkey slices, whatever it is.

Speaker:

Danny: And I'll bang that in and warm that up. And then I'll throw on some hot sauce

Speaker:

Danny: and mush that in with that.

Speaker:

Danny: Throw on a lot of mayonnaise, but that's got to be hot and warm as well.

Speaker:

Danny: And so you, depending on what you want to do you can slice the meat up and throw

Speaker:

Danny: it in the mail and like put that in the microwave and heat that up,

Speaker:

Danny: and then get some little, so once you get the toast and you've got all this

Speaker:

Danny: meat that's on there and if you want to put more hot sauce on,

Speaker:

Danny: you'll do that, throw it on there as well so it's nice and hot and spicy,

Speaker:

Danny: but then, and this is the disgusting part,

Speaker:

Danny: I'll get chips or crisps as I call them, but chips so it can be any flavour

Speaker:

Danny: but I tend to like just a plain one because you've already got the flavour on

Speaker:

Danny: there and dip the the chip into the bread and the sandwich or the toast or what

Speaker:

Danny: you've got made there and scoop that up and just eat that.

Speaker:

Danny: And sometimes just if I'm feeling really lazy, I won't even bother making toast.

Speaker:

Danny: It'll just be like the bread with all that stuff on it and then crinkle up a

Speaker:

Danny: bunch of chips, sprinkle that on top and then fold the bread over it and then

Speaker:

Danny: eat it that way. And that would be my comfort food.

Speaker:

Danny: There's no name for it, just a hot shot mess.

Speaker:

Matt: Okay, excellent. I like that. And I love how you walked us through each step to do this.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I'm sure you want to make this now. You know, you're going to come off

Speaker:

Danny: this recording, mate. You might have some work to do this afternoon,

Speaker:

Danny: but you're going to come off this recording.

Speaker:

Danny: And I know you're going to make that. And you're going to tell me exactly how

Speaker:

Danny: much awesomeness it was.

Speaker:

Matt: So I'm finding that a lot of my comfort food does revolve around bread.

Speaker:

Matt: And there's something in bread. It must be the sugars or something that has

Speaker:

Matt: me coming back all the time.

Speaker:

Matt: And of course, every once in a while, I need to, you know, slow down and

Speaker:

Matt: maybe eat something that doesn't involve bread. And that's kind of the week that I'm in this week.

Speaker:

Matt: We're just having a no carbs kind of week. But I find when I get hungry and

Speaker:

Matt: I get a craving, it generally involves something, you know, bread.

Speaker:

Matt: And what's better than a sandwich? Who doesn't have a favorite sandwich of some

Speaker:

Matt: sort that they can rely on? And who wouldn't eat a sandwich every day for lunch if they could?

Speaker:

Danny: Oh, that's it. My favorite, and I used to hear it as well. My mom would make

Speaker:

Danny: cheese and onion sandwiches for my dad.

Speaker:

Danny: So slices of cheese, sliced onion, and then just throw it on top of the cheese,

Speaker:

Danny: butter, big, thick Scottish bread, and then serve that up.

Speaker:

Danny: And I got to like onion because of my mom making these sandwiches years and years ago.

Speaker:

Matt: You know, Scotland has some of the most unique stuff in the world.

Speaker:

Matt: I was waiting for something involving haggis. I was wondering if haggis would show up.

Speaker:

Matt: There's also the deep fried and the battered Mars bar.

Speaker:

Matt: Battering a whole bunch of stuff and seeing whatever comes out of it.

Speaker:

Matt: So that's why I sort of reserved this question for you and put it off to the

Speaker:

Matt: side because I knew I would get something unique.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, I would make. I guess it's really hard to get here and battering stuff.

Speaker:

Danny: It's just, it takes too much time. For me, I'm lazy. If I want something really

Speaker:

Danny: fast and comfort, I just want it quick.

Speaker:

Danny: So that's why microwave, bread, toast, whatever, meat, mayo, you're good to go.

Speaker:

Danny: But I don't know, I appreciate the fact that now I will probably have to go

Speaker:

Danny: make myself some food again.

Speaker:

Matt: Well, of course, we're going to conclude this show and then we're going to go make food.

Speaker:

Danny: Exactly. Maybe even some of that comfort food. So I appreciate that,

Speaker:

Danny: Matt, and I appreciate you being on the Random Question hot seat today.

Speaker:

Danny: For anybody that wants to check out your production stuff and your media stuff,

Speaker:

Danny: listen to your podcast, watch the videos that you do, or maybe even get in touch

Speaker:

Danny: with you to work with you, where's the best place to connect,

Speaker:

Danny: reach out, all that good stuff?

Speaker:

Matt: All the podcasts we make are at soundoff.network and my podcast is a Sound Off

Speaker:

Matt: podcast, which you can find at soundoffpodcast.com.

Speaker:

Danny: That sounded super professional. You've done this before, Matt.

Speaker:

Matt: Yeah, I didn't even mention that I do voiceover.

Speaker:

Danny: I was going to say you do voiceover work as well. And I will leave links to

Speaker:

Danny: Matt's voiceover page, if that's okay.

Speaker:

Matt: That's great. You can find that at mattcundlevoice.com.

Speaker:

Danny: And there you go. And you've got a sample, so you know exactly what you're going to get.

Speaker:

Danny: As always, I will leave links to that in the episode show notes.

Speaker:

Danny: So whatever app you're listening on, or even you're listening on the website,

Speaker:

Danny: check out the episode show notes. All the good stuff will be there.

Speaker:

Danny: So again, Matt, thanks for appearing on today's 5 Random Questions.

Speaker:

Matt: Thanks for having me.

Speaker:

Danny: Thanks for listening to 5 Random Questions. And if this was your first time

Speaker:

Danny: here, feel free to hit follow and check out past episodes.

Speaker:

Danny: If you enjoyed this week's episode, I'd love for you to leave a review on the

Speaker:

Danny: app you're currently listening on.

Speaker:

Danny: And if you know someone else that would enjoy the show, be sure to send them

Speaker:

Danny: this way. It's very much appreciated.

Speaker:

Danny: Until the next time, keep asking those questions.