• What My “Useless” Liberal Arts Degree Actually Taught Me: Hint: It Wasn’t Political Indoctrination. It Was Perspective
    2026/03/05

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    For decades we’ve heard the joke.

    Liberal arts majors.
    English. Journalism. Film.

    Four years of college just to ask one question:

    “Would you like fries with that?”

    But what if the real value of a liberal arts education has never been about salary?

    In this episode, George reflects on his time at the University of North Texas in the late 1990s and the classes that unexpectedly reshaped how he understands the world.

    Economics. World geography. Environmental science. Media history.

    Not indoctrination.

    Perspective.

    From realizing Christianity represents only a portion of the global population, to recognizing how media narratives are constructed, to understanding the historical patterns behind the rise and fall of empires.

    Those lessons feel more relevant than ever in a time of political polarization, shifting global alliances, and an information ecosystem built to amplify outrage.

    A liberal arts degree may not guarantee wealth.

    But it might make you harder to fool.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    13 分
  • Clarity Without Agreement: Choosing Peace Over Permission
    2026/03/04

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    In this final chapter of my family arc, I map the progression of events and dynamics that shaped me and explain why peace does not require agreement. This episode marks a turning point rooted in clarity, closure, and a conscious move toward a steadier future.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    14 分
  • The Day Facts Became Negotiable: A Gen X Witness Statement on Media and Fear
    2026/02/21

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    I grew up watching history happen live.

    The Gulf War looked like a video game.
    The siege at Waco unfolded for 51 days and ended in fire.
    The OJ trial turned justice into spectacle.
    September 11 compressed complexity into slogans.
    The Iraq War sold certainty before evidence.

    This episode traces the through line.

    It’s about how narrative began to outrun verification. How fear accelerated decision-making. How identity started to reorganize evidence. And how the collapse of traditional media gatekeepers reshaped what we consider real.

    Long before social media and algorithms, something shifted in how Americans processed truth. The OJ trial didn’t create that shift, but it exposed it. Waco intensified distrust. September 11 mobilized fear. The War on Terror normalized certainty before proof.

    This is not a hot take. It’s a witness statement from someone who grew up inside mass media while learning how journalism works.

    If you’ve ever wondered how we arrived at a moment where facts feel negotiable and outrage travels faster than context, this episode connects the dots.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    13 分
  • Inside a Life in Broadcasting: A Conversation About Radio, Voice, and Longevity
    2022/01/30

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    This episode started as a catch-up.
    It turned into a time capsule.
    And it still holds up.

    In this pilot episode, I sit down with longtime Dallas broadcaster and voice actor Keith Andrews for an unfiltered, nearly two-hour conversation spanning more than three decades in radio and voice work. What began as a twenty-year reunion quickly became a deep dive into the craft, culture, and compromises of broadcast media.

    We talk about Keith’s origins in radio, what it takes to survive as formats change and jobs disappear, and how broadcasters adapt when an industry over a century old collides with the digital age. This isn’t a highlight reel. It’s an honest look at longevity, relevance, and the quiet skills that separate people who last from people who burn out.

    This episode also explores what radio still does better than almost any medium. Connecting with audiences. Telling compelling stories. Building trust through voice. Those fundamentals don’t disappear just because the devices change.

    If you’ve worked in media, broadcasting, voice acting, or any creative field that’s been disrupted by technology, this conversation will feel familiar. And if you’re newer to the show, this episode captures the long arc behind the perspective that shapes everything that followed.

    This was the beginning.
    And in many ways, it still explains the whole project.

    For Dallas–Fort Worth listeners: this conversation will sound especially familiar. We reference stations, formats, and eras that shaped local radio, including Merge 93.3 FM, The Bone 93.3 FM, 99.5 The Wolf, and Sportsradio 1310 The Ticket. If you grew up with these signals in your car or on the job site, you’ll recognize the voices, the culture, and the moments we’re talking about.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    1 時間 54 分
  • Part 2 My Uncle's Mercedes, Creative Accounting, and White Collar Fraud: How Systems Protect the Powerful
    2026/02/19

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    Some stories don’t end with a conviction. They just go quiet. And that’s where this one begins.

    In this follow-up to My Uncle’s Mercedes and the Church of Creative Accounting, I go deeper into one family’s brush with the Savings and Loan scandal. This episode isn’t just about the crimes that sent my uncle to federal prison in the late 1990s. It’s about the unanswered questions that came afterward.

    While cleaning out my grandfather’s house, I found three matchbooks tucked away in an old travel box. One from the Grand Cayman Hyatt. One from the Hilton International in Zurich. One from the Amsterdam Hilton. Not exactly standard destinations for a small-town Texas bookkeeper. But very familiar names if you know anything about offshore finance in the 1980s.

    This episode explores a hypothetical but highly plausible theory about hidden assets, offshore havens, trusts, and what happens when someone becomes a non-person long enough for their past to cool down. It’s not an accusation. It’s an examination of patterns, incentives, and the way white collar crime often fades quietly instead of ending cleanly.

    The story blends investigative storytelling, eighties nostalgia, forensic accounting, and the particular Gen-X humor that comes from growing up on Ferris Bueller, the Beastie Boys, and Gordon Gekko energy. There’s curiosity here, but also discomfort. The kind that comes from realizing how close these systems can get to ordinary families.

    If you’re drawn to true crime, family secrets, financial intrigue, and stories where the most interesting part is what was never fully explained, this chapter is for you.

    Sometimes the question isn’t where the money went.
    It’s who waited long enough for everyone to stop asking.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    6 分
  • Part 3 My Uncle's Mercedes, The Fallout, the Family, and the Phantom Fortune
    2026/02/20

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    In the final installment of My Uncle’s Mercedes and the Church of Creative Accounting, the paper trail leads through trusts, lawsuits, coal deals, and family silence. From post-prison ventures to the overdose that changed everything, this episode explores the long shadow of white-collar crime and what it leaves behind. A story about cousins, collapse, and the cost of never telling the truth out loud.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    12 分
  • Part 1- My Uncle’s Mercedes and the Church of Creative Accounting; The Family Mythology That Shaped My Gen-X Mind
    2026/02/18

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    This episode sits at the foundation of Confessions of a Gen-X Mind. It’s not about diagnosis. It’s about the environment that shaped one. If you’ve come here for the ADHD, ASD, or chosen-family episodes, this is the backstory that makes them make sense.

    I was nine years old.
    Suddenly surrounded by wealth.
    And something felt off.

    In this episode of Confessions of a Gen-X Mind, I tell the true story behind My Uncle’s Mercedes and the Church of Creative Accounting. It begins with a Detroit kid raised on BMX bikes, MTV, and pop-culture rebels, and then drops him into the middle of 1980s Texas wealth during the height of the Savings and Loan era.

    Overnight, I went from watching Silver Spoons and Dallas on TV to standing in driveways with real Mercedes, jet skis, private planes, and adults who talked loud about Jesus while quietly bending the rules. My uncle lived big. He talked smooth. Money seemed to appear out of thin air. Even as a kid, I could tell something didn’t add up.

    As an adult, I came to understand what I was witnessing. Land flips. Inflated appraisals. Shell companies. Trusts and proxies. A textbook case of white-collar crime wrapped in piety and respectability. When the system finally collapsed, the legal consequences came late and incompletely. The damage to the family came fast and lasted for decades.

    This isn’t a story about nostalgia or crime trivia. It’s about growing up rich-adjacent inside moral contradiction. About how greed, charm, and intelligence without ethics leave collateral damage behind. About what it does to kids when adults treat the rules like a game.

    It’s also how those early contradictions shaped my voice, my skepticism, my dark humor, and my instinct to notice the cracks beneath polished surfaces.

    This is a Gen-X story about money, faith, family mythology, and learning early that not everyone who looks blessed is playing fair.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    11 分
  • Entering Moshing Area Is at Your Own Risk: Fifteen Nights with Metallica
    2026/02/15

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    There’s a bright orange wristband sitting on my desk.

    “Entering moshing area is at your own risk.”

    I’ve seen Metallica live fifteen times. From Texas Stadium in 1992 to Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza, two rounds of Summer Sanitarium in the brutal Texas heat, a New Year’s Eve flight to Detroit for Y2K, and eventually into the photo pit at Ozzfest with press credentials.

    This episode isn’t just about a band.

    It’s about friendship.
    It’s about growing up Gen-X in the effort era, when seeing a concert required money, travel, and commitment.
    It’s about the friends you stand next to in the front row — and sometimes run into again in a crowd of 50,000 nearly twenty years later.

    It’s about Jerry.
    It’s about Aaron.
    It’s about becoming the person you were going to be.

    Before streaming. Before social media. Before everything was available instantly.

    Nothing Else Matters.

    …For the fans.

    This podcast reflects personal experience, opinion, and information drawn from publicly available court records and historical reporting. It is not intended to assert new allegations or to characterize any individual beyond matters established in public proceedings

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    12 分