Charles W. Chook Bryant
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And now let's talk about the Fairness Doctrine.
But, you know, since podcasts don't fall under the FCC, then I doubt if it would have mattered.
Yeah, we could, if we wanted to right now, we could say every curse word, every awful thing in the world under the sun.
We elect not to do that, everyone.
I do too.
And if you want to hear me curse, just A, you can come to a live show.
True, yeah.
Because that happens a little bit.
Or B, you can just join me over at Movie Crush.
I cussed a lot over there.
Well, for roughly two and a half hours a week, this is the real me.
No, I mean, I'm fully used to it by now.
But I definitely am not as fully freewheeling as I normally am.
You should start another podcast just called Filth, Florn, Filth with Josh Clark.
But none of this has to do with the 1920s, except for the fact that people did not curse on the radio back then either, because there weren't a lot of people on the radio in the 1920s.
No, actually, pre... Or early, early, early 1920s, that is.
Yeah, I think that's a great trivia question.
If someone were to say what city hosted or whatever was part of the first radio, commercial radio broadcast, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
And the follow-up would be, and what did they broadcast?
A presidential election outcome, which was a big deal because it's weird to think about in 1920 that people all over the country were waiting for that morning paper to come out except in Pittsburgh.