Entertainment

Kate Nyx – Musician & Wrestling Costume Maker

Kate Nyx is a folk-rock musician in Philly as well as a nationally recognized costume and luchador mask creator. She is our guest for BLUNTCAST #14. These Bluntcasts air live on Friday nights on our Facebook page

Kate creates honest, grass-roots folks rock that has been garnering local and national attention. From originals to covers, her music is raw and honest.

Kate is also a wrestling costume creator. She works with independent wrestlers as well as creating designs for the WWE. She may be best known for her luchador mask creations, which you can purchase from her website.

LINKS:
KATE NYX: www/facebook/twitter/bandcamp

SLUTCHURCH Performers Honeytree EvilEye & Kitana Kedavra

For BLUNTCAST 11 we are joined by burlesque dancers Honeytree EvilEye and Kitana Kedavra to celebrate the 4th Anniversary of Slutchurch, Philly’s very own heavy metal/BDSM monthly burlesque event.

Slutchurch is normally held on the last Tuesday of every month at Raven Lounge at 17th and Sansom. As Honeytree professes, it is an actual church and these two dancers are the clergy for this denomination.

As they ladies as: Do you like butts? Do you like metal? Do you like BDSM? If any or all of them apply to you, then Slutchurch is your people.

We discussed the origins of the Slutchurch event and how both of these ladies found themselves in the middle of all of us. Johnny, who has never been to a Slutchurch, has the ladies describe, in detail, a typical Slutchurch happening.

The ladies, not to be deterred by COVID-19 precautions, recently celebrated their 4th Anniversary remotely by having the featured dancers perform via Instagram Live from their domiciles. We talk about how that all works and what they do if two dancers want to dance to the same track on the same evening.

If you’ve been to Slutchurch, you should enjoy this. If you have no idea what Slutchurch is, you’ll definitely enjoy this.

Don’t forget, if you have Facebook, you can watch these Friday night BLUNTCASTS LIVE and you comment real-time. If you don’t have Facebook, you can check out the videos of the interviews on our YouTube page, just search for “The Philly Blunt Podcast”.

LINKS:

Slutchurch: Facebook/Instagram
Honeytree EvilEye
Kitana Kedavra
The Raven Lounge

The Philly Blunt YouTube Channel

Sandwich King TONY LUKE, JR

Philly restaurateur and sandwich icon, Tony Luke, Jr joins us for our LIVE QUARANTINE BLUNTCAST #9. We all know Tony Luke sandwiches. It’s a brand that is known nationwide as Tony has been on numerous food shows. We guarantee there is a whole other world of Tony Luke, Jr’s life that you may have had no idea about.

Tony discusses his entry into the sandwich world, but also about the creative passions that have burned within since he was in high school and a student at Philadelphia’s High School for Creative & Performing Arts (CAPA).

He’s an actor, a writer, and singer, and a songwriter. Tony shares insight into all his endeavors, as well as some new songs he’s been working on. Tony is doing some songwriting for new artists. He’s really excited about working with one in particular, Gabrielle Delisi.

Tony talks about addiction and how COVID-19 personally struck his family as his son was diagnosed with the virus. Tony walks us through that harrowing experience as his son had a tough time getting through it, but is good now.

Tony talks about addiction and the long, arduous process in finding a high quality frozen version of his sandwiches, down to the bread. Now, great tasting Tony Luke sandwiches can be enjoyed nationwide.

These LIVE BLUNTCASTS will go on as long as getting into a bar together proves challenging. We do them on our Facebook page via ZOOM/Facebook Live every Friday night. You can also catch the videos of most of them on our Youtube Page. You can find them by searching “The Philly Blunt” podcast.

LINKS:

Tony Luke, Jr: Instagram/Facebook

Video of Interview:The Philly Blunt Podcast YouTube

Timaree Leigh – Philly’s Burlesque & Sexuality Queen

We talk to Timaree Leigh for BLUNTCAST #5. Timaree is Philly’s Queen of burlesque and sexuality, as well as the host of the popular podcast Sex with Timaree.

She talks about how the porn industry is affected by COVID and how the history of burlesque has prepared it for this moment. We cover how gig-economy workers, fitness instructors, and creative folks are adapting the current economic and stay-at-home conditions. 

We also ask her about the strangest DMs she receives. It’s a fun and informative interview.

Follow Timaree: Twitter/Facebook

Victor Fiorillo – Philly’s Most Controversial Writer Returns

For the second BLUNTCAST, Victor Fiorillo of Philly Mag sat with us, drank a cocktail, and provided fascinating insight into how the city is dealing with the current COVID19 conditions from bars staying open to gun sales in Northeast Philly.

Don’t forget to keep an eye out for the live shows via Facebook Live on Monday, Wednesdays, and Fridays while the social-distancing and stay home orders are in effect.

If you do have Facebook, you can join the show in real time with questions and maybe becoming an actual guest for a segment.

Follow us HERE for Facebook and HERE for Youtube, where we’ll also put the video up after the live broadcast.

You can and should follow Victor on Twitter.

Kenn Kweder – Philly’s Local Rock Star

COVID-19 and social-distancing has changed our collective worlds for the near future. To help us all get by, we’ve decided to do some live Philly Blunt “podcasts” via Zoom, which we are calling BLUNTCASTS. It’s pretty much Philly’s only live, prime-time late-night television show during these unique times as we have decided to go live on Facebook Live.

We are trying to go live on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday nights.

This episode featured Philly legend Kenn Kweder.

The sound isn’t normal quality, but nothing is normal these days. If you have Facebook, make sure you follow us on Facebook so you get updates and notifications when we go live. You’re able to comment and partake in these real-time podcasts. You can also watch these Bluntcasts on YouTube. Just do a search for “thephillyblunt” or click HERE.

We hope that these help you pass the time while quarantined or social-distancing. Remember to wash your hands. 

Follow Kenn Kweder on Facebook.

 

Joan Myers Brown: The Mother of Philadelphia Dance

Joan Myers Brown is a Philadelphia icon. She has done more for the world of dance in Philadelphia than anyone and she’s our guest on this episode.

Ms. Brown was born in Southwest Philly during the 1930’s. She’s a self-proclaimed “Woodland Avenue Girl.” A high school gym teacher saw her natural talent for dance and encouraged her to take dance lessons. She wanted to be a ballet dancer, but none of the ballet schools at the time took Black students.

Ms. Brown ended up working as a touring nightclub dancer performing with the likes of Pearl Bailey, Duke Ellington, Nat King Cole, and Sammy Davis, Jr. and talks about how segregation impacted her life back then in the 1950’s.  

In 1960, Ms. Brown decided to open her own dance school to provide black students the opportunity still not available to them at traditional ballet schools.  Ten years later, in 1970, when Ms. Brown noticed her students weren’t getting positions in dance companies or productions, she started her own dance company, which is now known as Philadanco!

60 years later, Ms. Brown is still teaching children the fundamentals of dance and her dance company,   Philadanco!, is revered around the world having toured dozens of countries, performing in front of sold out crowds.

Ms. Brown has won countless awards, including three honorary doctorates, a Master of African American Choreography medal from the Kennedy Center, a 2019 Bessie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Dance, and the 2012 National Medal of Arts presented to her by President Barack Obama.

President Barack Obama has said of Ms. Brown: Joan Myers Brown has made] an artistic haven for African-American dancers and choreographers to innovate, create and share their unique visions with the national and global dance communities.”

LINKS:

PHILADANCO!: www/Facebook/Instagram/Twitter

Anthony Moore: West Philly Comedian Making it in NYC

Anthony Moore has been doing comedy for less than a decade, but his resume is better than plenty of veterans on the Philly comedy scene. The St Joe’s graduate has appeared on Kevin Hart’s show Hart of the City, become a regular at the Comedy Cellar, and traveled throughout Europe entertaining the armed forces. 

The interview was interesting and wide ranging. Anthony is from West Philly but moved to New York in 2015. He talked a bit about how different the comedy crowds are in the two cities: “New York taught me to be more universal. The crowds here (Philly) might be a little more tougher, but I know how to relate so well because I know the crowd is either gonna be from Philly, Jersey, or Delaware. Where in New York, I don’t know where they gonna be from…when I’m in the City I might be performing for a family from Texas that’s sitting next to a family from South Africa. So that just made me step it up a lot, just figuring out how to relate to all of these different cultures.”  
 
Anthony has performed with some of the biggest names in comedy, guys such as Kevin Hart, Louis CK, and Aziz Ansari. He talked about the experience of having to come on after a major star. “I remember the first time I had to follow Kev, and I was like terrified. But then, going up, that was like one of the best sets I’ve ever had. Because the crowd energy was just so high.” 
 
He talked about what he misses in Philly, how Instagram stars have changed the comedy game, and how he bombed at Fergie’s the night before his taping of a Kevin Hart special. 
 
We had a lot of fun with this one. Anthony is a laid back and fun dude to hang out with, and I think anyone listening to this will quickly jump on the Anthony Moore bandwagon. Shout out to New Wave for being such a great place to record the show. Thank you for listening. We’ve got some great guests lined up for 2020, and we’d love to hear more from you guys: who do you want us to sit down with? What do you want more or less of on the show? And what Philly Blunt questions do you want us to ask? We’ll be sure to give you a shout out if we use any of your questions. And be sure to review and rate us on itunes. It’s a big help for our ratings and rankings. Cheers!  
 
LINKS:
ANTHONY MOORE: www/Instagram/Facebook/Twitter
 
NEW WAVE CAFE: www/Facebook/Twitter

Jerry Blavat: Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, Geator with the Heater, Boss with the Hot Sauce

Philadelphia is not a city of celebrities. It’s a city of legends. And we were lucky enough to sit down with one of the biggest legends of all. Jerry Blavat grew up in South Philly, and by age 13 he was a star dancer on the original (pre Dick Clark) American Bandstand. A few years later, while still in high school, he was valeting for Don Rickles. His story only gets wilder from there, and features appearances from Sammy Davis Jr., Chuck Berry, and Angelo Bruno. 

In 1960, he started working in radio. With a show still on WXPN, he’ll be starting his 60th year on radio in 2020. While on radio in the 60s, he gave himself the nickname “The Geator with the Heater, the Boss With the Hot Sauce”. The nickname Geator has stuck, and it rings out all over Philadelphia. Older Philadelphians know him from his legendary dance parties, where kids from all over Philadelphia came together to get down. Millenials know him from the parties he puts on at Memories at Margate, where he still keeps the crowd dancing every Friday and Saturday night. 
 
At age 79, the tireless Geator is working as hard as ever. As we were setting up for the interview, he was on the phone, discussing with his business partner what songs Peaches and Herb were going to be singing at his big Disco, Rock n Roll, and Soul show at the Kimmel Center on January 25th. He’s got the weekly show on WXPN. He’s got the summer gig at Memories. He makes appearances at the Thanksgiving Parade each year, as well as at the Mummers Parade. He’s part of an annual Malt Shop Cruise. I asked him if he ever thought about retiring, and he told me that his followers would get too mad at him, so he can’t. Think about that for a second: at age 79, Blavat still has enough diehard fans that he simply can’t retire. 
 
This is a highly entertaining and far ranging interview. He discussed his friendship with Sammy Davis, an INSANE story about Chuck Berry, and how he and Dick Clark started as adversaries but became good friends. What an honor it was for us to sit down with a true Philly legend, and to hear some of the best stories we’ve ever heard on the show. Whether you’re a fan of the Geator, or just a fan of great music, or just like to hear great stories, you’re going to enjoy this one, guaranteed. 
 
LINKS:
Jerry Blavat: www/Facebook/Book
O’neal’s Pub: www/Facebook/Twitter

Rich Medina: Philly’s World Renown DJ & Producer

Working a lucrative but soul-sucking corporate job in Philadelphia in the mid-90s, Rich Medina knew he wanted more from his life. He had been moonlighting as a DJ, and decided to go all in. It was a risky proposition. But it was one that ultimately paid off, as 25 years later is one of the most beloved DJs on the planet, playing everywhere from Miami to Melbourne. 
 
In the late 1990s, Medina and Cosmo Baker started a regular party called The Remedy. In the early 2000s, Rich began hosting The Open in NYC with Q-Tip. He also began introducing audiences to Fela Kuti, the father of Afrobeat music. His Jump n Funk parties, starting in 2001, soon took him to Atlanta, LA, and San Francisco. Word of his skill and just as importantly the fun he brought to the dance floor spread, and he is now a true globetrotter, playing shows in cities like Tokyo, Amsterdam, and London. 
 
But he’s not limited to DJing. He also has begun work as a professor at Lincoln University, he’s on the advisory board to Cornell’s renowned hip-hop collection, and he’ll be teaching a class at the Barnes Foundation next spring. He’s also well respected as a spoken word artist and as a writer, having contributed articles to magazines such as the Fader and Complex Magazine.
 
He talked to us about his early days in Philly in the corporate world (“A job with a Fortune 500 company was like handcuffs”), the motto for life he learned by playing basketball (“Put the rock in the hole or sit the fuck down. That’s everything.”) and his family heritage (“I’m mixed up with slave blood and native blood. I’m a real American.”) 
 
Not surprising when speaking to such a Renaissance Man, this is a varied and far reaching interview, from hoops to religion to race to politics. You’ll learn about Afrobeat, what it’s like to travel in Europe as an American in the Trump era, and whether he has to play different songs to get the crowd moving in Philly than he plays in Miami. 
 
Hope you enjoy the latest interview. Thanks as always for listening, and if you could do us a solid and rate us on itunes, we would be much obliged. Enjoy!
 
LINKS:
Rich Medina: Instagram/Twitter