Episode 244

The Paunch Stevenson Show episode 244

In this episode:

  • Rodriguez Live in Concert!,
  • Jose Delbo,
  • did we meet Stan Lee 20 years ago?,
  • selfies over autographs,
  • death of the Sugerman director Malik Bendjelloul,
  • celebrity deaths (Jerry Vale, Bob Hoskins, Maya Angelou),
  • Mrs. Ellis,
  • Canterbury Tales,
  • Barnes and Noble,
  • Advanced Placement Exams,
  • junior high school antics,
  • reading adult-oriented novels during high school,
  • Sean Patrick Flanery tweet,
  • and Road to Hell sequel to Streets of Fire, starring Michael Pare.

Pictures from the Rodriguez Concert May 8, 2014 in Newark, NJ:
Rodriguez Concert, NJPAC, Newark, NJ, 5/8/14
Rodriguez in Concert
Rodriguez in Concert
Rodriguez in Concert

Download this episode:
77 minute MP3 file – 35.5 MB (right-click to save)

Listen to this episode:

5 Replies to “Episode 244”

  1. I don’t believe he did no. Yeah that’s a good one, but may too much of a rocker for the band he played with. There were 4-5 I would loved to hear, but for whatever the reason he covers other bygone songs.

  2. Here’s the actual setlist….
    http://www.setlist.fm/setlist/rodriguez/2014/new-jersey-performing-arts-center-newark-nj-2bc36c06.html

    1. Climb Up on My Music
    2. Can’t Get Away
    3. This Is Not a Song, It’s an Outburst: Or, The Establishment Blues
    4. I Wonder
    5. Love Me or Leave Me (Nina Simone cover)
    6. Inner City Blues
    7. Only Good for Conversation
    8. Sugar Man
    9. Lucille (Little Richard cover)
    10. Crucify Your Mind
    11. Rich Folks Hoax
    12. Like Janis
    13. I Only Have Eyes for You (The Flamingos cover)
    14. Blue Suede Shoes (Carl Perkins cover)
    15. I Think of You
    16. Forget It
    Encore:
    17. You’d Like To Admit It
    18. Learnin’ the Blues (Frank Sinatra cover)
    19. To Whom It May Concern

  3. bob hoskins’ death is still very strange; he was young and always working and relevant. he is probably best known for ‘the long good friday’, even though it’s a relatively old film, but ‘mona lisa’ is also notable. harper lee’s ‘to kill a mockingbird’ was the book i read at school that even though it contained weighty social commentary, it never registered with me as a fourteen-year-old. which i am embarrassed to admit. i preferred fighting fantasy books at that age. which i am slightly less embarrassed to admit.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.