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142 Birthday

142 Birthday

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It's Leslie's birthday, and the band is celebrating with Brenda's legendary church cookbook pretzel salad — and every question that comes with it. Who was Brenda? How old is that cookbook? Does God have an opinion on Jell-O? Dolly for Sue is in full form.This week's episode covers the parenting guilt spiral of marching band volunteerism, the surprisingly solid gift idea of a scenic train ride for an 87-year-old Italian-loving jazz photographer, and a deep dive into why Mark Rober just gave $60 million worth of science curriculum away for free. If you've never made elephant toothpaste or watched a squirrel obstacle course teach physics, that changes next week.The conversation turns serious when the band reckons with AI replacing illustrators and musicians — including a Berkeley professor who had money in an AI music company while teaching music students. The group wrestles honestly with whether this swings back, whether we're already desensitized to technological wonder, and what it costs a generation that let AI do their homework.Then: candle scents, temperature preferences, the one sound you'd mute forever, and what you'd put in a time capsule for the year 2226 — which somehow ends with two taxidermied squirrels on a miniature piano. Happy birthday, Leslie.2. "The Setlist"0:00 Track 1: Happy Birthday, Band Mom — Pretzel Salad, Brenda's Church Cookbook Legacy & Birthday Rituals 3:45 Track 2: The Marching Band Trap — Why Every Band Parent Gets Voluntold (And How to Escape) 7:10 Track 3: Church Cookbook Science — The Secret Ingredients Behind Jello Salad Culture 10:20 Track 4: Hey Hi Hello — The Ohio Song That Actually Gets Kids to Put Down Their Phones 14:00 Track 5: Korean BBQ, Pokémon Monopoly & the Perfect Low-Key Birthday 16:30 Track 6: The Dad Who Would Get Kicked Out — Why Honest Men Can't Run Band Boosters 18:45 Track 7: Pineapple Roots & Wild Strawberries — When Your Garden Raises Itself 22:00 Track 8: The Train Ride Idea — Gift Planning for an 87-Year-Old Who's Seen Everything 24:30 Track 9: Mark Rober, Crunch Labs & the $60 Million Bet on Free Science Education 28:15 Track 10: Glitter Bombs, Porch Pirates & the Cartel That Ended the Series 30:00 Track 11: Elephant Toothpaste Live — Why We're Doing Science Experiments Next Episode 32:10 Track 12: AI Music at Berkeley — Why an Entire Student Body Petitioned Against Their Own Professor 34:00 Track 13: Will AI Kill Creative Careers? The Illustrator Who Can't Get Hired Anymore 36:30 Track 14: From iPhone Wonder to AI Fatigue — How Fast We Stopped Being Amazed 39:30 Track 15: Candle Scent Philosophy — What Your Signature Smell Says About Your Personality 42:50 Track 16: Too Hot or Too Cold? The Great Temperature Debate That Split the Band 45:10 Track 17: If You Muted One Sound Forever — The Dog Lick, the Alarm & the Worry in Your Head 49:00 Track 18: Last Person on Earth — You've Got Two Weeks Before the Power Grid Dies 52:30 Track 19: The Legacy Box — One Physical Object, One Digital File, 200 Years From Now 56:45 Track 20: Two Squirrels on a Tiny Piano Playing "Heart and Soul" — Closing Time Counterintuitive InsightsVolunteering guilt is a feature, not a bug. Band programs and school organizations are specifically designed to recruit people who make eye contact. Awareness doesn't protect you — it just makes you feel worse when it works anyway.Desensitization to AI may be the beginning of its correction. The band argues that the societal craving for human creative work will return — not because AI gets worse, but because once everything feels generated, handmade becomes rare enough to be valuable again.Dogs and cats may have adapted their voices specifically to talk to us. Barking and meowing aren't natural inter-animal communication — they're behaviors shaped by thousands of years of living with humans. Which means Albert the dog's silence felt like losing a conversation partner, not background noise.Additional Information & ReferencesPeople & Artists MentionedMark Rober — former NASA engineer, YouTube science creator, founder of Crunch Labs; recent TED Talk on science education reform; creator of the Porch Pirate Glitter Bomb seriesRafi (Raffi Cavoukian) — Canadian children's musicianLaurie Berkner — children's music artist; mentioned as a live concert experienceSandra Boynton — author/illustrator of children's books; produces music CDs featuring artists including the Bacon Brothers and Alison KraussThey Might Be Giants — indie rock band with a substantial catalog of children's musicJim Gill — children's musician; "Hey Hi Hello" referenced as a library program songJacob Collier — Grammy-winning musician; referenced as the 2025 UC Berkeley commencement speakerBilly Joel — "Honesty" referenced (1979, 52nd Street)Sheryl Crow — "The First Cut Is the Deepest" referenced (though originally Rod Stewart/Cat Stevens)Allison Krauss — bluegrass/country artist; appeared on a Sandra Boynton ...
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