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  • Ep 8: Thanks, I Needed That
    2026/04/23

    After leaning all the way into the heavier side of music in last week’s episode, Let’s Get Sad, Melissa goes in a completely different direction.

    This time, she set out to build a playlist around something that should have been easy to name but wasn’t; songs that bring us joy.

    What she found instead is that while she’s always been able to track the songs that make her feel something deeply, the ones that make her feel better were more elusive. They’re not always tied to lyrics or memories. More often, it’s the beat, the movement, the way a song can cut through everything else without asking for much in return.

    The result is a mix of familiar and unexpected tracks, many of them discovered later in her life, that reflect how her listening habits have evolved beyond what she grew up with. Along the way, Melissa explores why joy is harder to catalog than other emotions, and why it might be worth paying closer attention to the songs that simply make things feel lighter.

    As the episode unfolds, she also begins to tease what this next version of Gen X Jersey could become, which is not a place to revisit the past, but a place where you don’t have to grow up and just figure things out as you go.”



    Gen X Jersey
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    30 分
  • Ep. 7: Let's Get Sad
    2026/04/16

    “Oh my God… is this what adulthood is?”

    That question, from Melissa’s niece, sets the tone for this episode of Gen X Jersey: The Aftershow. It becomes the starting point for an hour built around something many people avoid, but instinctively understand: grief. Loss and sadness can have a place in daily life without overwhelming it.

    But it’s not a total downer. Hope carries through both the music and the conversation. Melissa shares how she curated the “feel the feels” playlist, along with perspectives from musician friends and, as she understands it, John Lennon.

    As Season 1 of Gen X Jersey begins to wind down, Melissa also explains that while listener calls haven’t dictated many episodes so far, they’ve helped clarify what the show needs to become and invites more input about where it’s headed next.

    The name isn’t changing, but the format is. Season 2 is coming soon.




    Gen X Jersey
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    21 分
  • Ep. 6 Spring Break
    2026/04/09

    Melissa hosts from her Spring break road trip and follows up on last week’s Rock Star: INXS episode by sharing a couple of unexpected calls to the show’s phone line.

    One comes from former contestant Marty Casey, who shares his connection to New Jersey, thanks the show for remembering that moment in time, and previews the upcoming reunion concert in Hollywood. She also teases a second message from a reality TV producer with roots in the early days of Survivor and American Idol as well as RockStar INXS. and hints at a future interview that will go deeper into the making of RSINXS and beyond.

    The response was exciting, but also clarifying. The call-in line isn’t quite being used the way she imagined, so a spring reset is coming. The format may evolve, but the identity won’t. This will always be Gen X Jersey.

    With a shorter show this week and no calls to recap, the music takes the lead.



    Gen X Jersey
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    18 分
  • Ep. 5: Back to 2005: Rock Star INXS Revisited
    2026/04/02

    Melissa goes deeper into her memories of Rock Star: INXS, stopping just short of full fangirl with a few well-placed facts along the way. She also laments the recent miscommunications on the call-in line.

    In this After Show, she revisits what made the series feel different from everything else on TV at the time: it wasn’t about becoming famous. It was about earning a place in an iconic rock band with a legacy to protect. She reflects on what the contestants had to go through and what happened after the show wrapped.

    If you remember it, this will take you right back. If you don’t, the music alone is worth it. Hear the songs that go with the stories on the Amazon Music playlist: Gen X Jersey Show.



    Gen X Jersey
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    24 分
  • Ep. 4: I Should be Fired Immediately
    2026/03/26

    This week’s aftershow goes deeper into the backstories behind a few of the artists featured on the show, whom Melissa knows personally, and the idea that good music never really disappears. It just gets reinvented by the people who pick it up next. The show was full of new voices making old songs new again.

    The conversation also turns to how much harder it feels to discover new music now. Even when you set aside time for it, streaming has a way of steering you back to what you already know, unless you walk in with something specific in mind.

    Along the way, Melissa calls herself out for a few technical missteps from recent episodes and then realizes she may not have caught all of them. So now there’s a challenge: go back, listen closely, and see if you can spot the one she missed. She even offered a free gift from the Radio Garden State merch shop for the first person to call and catch it.

    And yes, she also addresses the lack of phone calls coming in. You're stuck with her until you finally decide to be part of the conversation!

    If you’ve got a song request, a story, or even a correction, now’s your chance to be on the radio. Call 732-455-9155 anytime, 24/7

    To listen to the tunes referenced on the show, go to Amazon Music and search for the Gen X Jersey Show Playlist.



    Gen X Jersey
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    26 分
  • Ep. 3 Who Decides the Future of Rock and Roll?
    2026/03/19

    This week’s aftershow starts with a voicemail about a Bon Jovi wing inside a New Jersey high school, and the realization that the people who grew up on that music are now the ones keeping it alive in younger generations

    That idea opens up a bigger conversation about the future of rock and roll. Not just the sound of it, but how it finds an audience now. Who gets played, who gets heard and how newer artists are building something that still feels familiar to longtime rock fans.

    Melissa also follows up on a correction from a listener about Billy Squier and takes a look at his 2023 release, “Harder on a Woman,” including what led him back into the studio after more than a decade away and what he’s been doing since.

    Along the way, there’s a very Jersey story about what it actually meant to have a hit song on the radio in the 1980s, using Bon Jovi as the backdrop.

    The episode closes with a reflection on the quieter side of modern rock, the kind of stripped-down, lyric-forward songs featured in the Blue Light segment, where your hosts insists that you take a few minutes to "put your phone down close your eyes an listen."

    No music in this one, just the calls and stories behind it.



    Gen X Jersey
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    29 分
  • Ep 2: You paid HOW much for that ticket?
    2026/03/12

    This week’s aftershow picks up where the radio episode left off, with a conversation about the strange and wonderful ways music moves between generations.

    Melissa talks about the voicemail from Bryan Hansen that inspired the episode and the idea that the songs that shape our lives often come from the people around us, whether that’s parents, friends or our own kids.

    Along the way, the conversation takes a few unexpected turns, including the discovery of a Claudine Longet album tucked into Melissa’s mom’s record collection, which leads to a detour into Longet’s famously complicated and somewhat sordid history.

    The episode also includes a comparison of the concert experience in 1989 versus today, from the way we bought tickets to what it felt like to see live music before phones and social media became part of the crowd.

    It’s a mix of music history, personal memories and a few stories that didn’t quite fit into the radio broadcast.



    Gen X Jersey
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    28 分
  • Ep. 1: And so it begins...
    2026/03/05

    In this debut episode of Gen X Jersey: The Aftershow, Melissa explores the cultural threads behind Episode 1, from Elvis Costello’s rebellion against radio gatekeepers to MTV’s 1981 launch and the divide between Top 40 radio and underground cool. She reflects on taste, nostalgia, streaming-era parallels and why stepping away from blue light still matters. This is where Gen X memories get translated, and the hotline is open for your memories too, no matter what your birth years is: 732-439-4423

    Gen X refers to the host, we are programming for all ages!



    Gen X Jersey
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    30 分