Bob Barry's Unearthed Interviews
One of the funniest episodes on the “Love Boat” TV sitcom was when the captain’s wife had a waterbed brought into their cabin on the ship. If you’ve been on a cruise, you know how the bed rocks and rolls during a storm at sea. Can you imagine what it would be like in a waterbed? How many of you have owned waterbeds? How many still have a waterbed? Remember when we had the groundwater waterbed commercials on the radio? Today we meet the man who looked at an ordinary mattress and thought, “You know what this needs? A few hundred gallons of water.” Before memory foam, and before sleep...
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You need to be a country music fan for this podcast. We’re going back to one of country music’s most graceful and underrated voices. Helen Cornelius arrived in Nashville with determination, powerhouse vocals, and enough talent to stand toe to toe with the biggest names in country music. Then came the hits, the awards, and the unforgettable duets with Jim Ed Brown that helped define country radio in the late 1970s and early 80’s. Together they gave fans classics like “I Don’t Want to Have to Marry You,” blending humor, chemistry, and pure country charm. Time to turn the dial to...
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From the golden age of truck-stop coffee, CB radios, and jokes your uncle definitely shouldn’t have told at church, comes the comedy duo that turned southern storytelling into an American art form – Hudson & Landry. One was smooth, one was loud. Together they sounded like two guys holding court at a roadside diner somewhere between Nashville and trouble. They gave us a collection of timeless routines. Their records spun on jukeboxes and radio stations across the country with punchlines around every corner. Their biggest hit “Ajax Liquor Store,” was nominated for a Grammy Award. One...
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On this podcast we rewind the late-night clock to the era of cigarette smoke, sideburns, and the king of double entendre, Carol Wayne. She was the platinum blonde with the breathy voice, and the unforgettable “Matinee Lady” beside Johnny Carson on the Tonight Show. More than a hundred appearances turned her into a pop culture icon of the 70s. But behind the laughter and punchlines was a life far more complicated than Hollywood ever admitted – from Vegas chorus lines to network TV, from cult comedy fame to a mysterious death in Mexico that still sparks questions decades later. This could...
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Today’s podcast goes behind the scenes of an actor, producer, and former undercover operative Steve Collura. Before stepping in front of the camera, Steve spent years working deep undercover in organized crime investigations, living another identity, gaining trust in dangerous circles, and helping law enforcement bring criminals to justice. Steve took those real-life experiences and brought them to the screen. He has seen both sides of the action and has stories to prove it. We have seen that in “Night Heat,” “Serpico,” “Riptide,” “Police Woman,” and others. His story was...
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Time for some smooth harmonies, warm Tennessee charm, and the unmistakable voice of Jim Ed Brown. Long before country music became stadium lights and arena tours, Jim was bringing elegance and heart to the airwaves, first with his sisters as The Browns, delivering the timeless hit “The Three Bells” and later as a solo star with classics like “Pop a Top” and “Morning.” He made performing on television, at the Grand Ole Opry and on the road, look easy with a velvet voice and a friendly smile.
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On today’s podcast, a guy who turned anxiety into an art form, arguments into punchlines, and imaginary phone calls into comedy gold. Long before stand-up had edge, Shelley Berman had nerves and always sold-out night clubs. He didn’t just tell jokes, he unraveled in real time…and audiences loved every minute of it. He was a pioneer and a storyteller. Shelley was brilliantly frazzled, the original overthinker.
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Seventy years ago this month, Elvis Presley topped the Billboard Music charts and redefined popular music in America with “Heartbreak Hotel,” his first single for the RCA label. Mae Boren Axton co-wrote the song and introduced Elvis to Colonel Parker. She was a 41-year-old English teacher, and singer, songwriter, who knew Presley when he was a teenager. Mae was one of the first people to interview Elvis.
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Today’s podcast takes us into the golden age of show biz gossip, when the movie studios were powerful, the stars were glamorous, and the columns were read before the morning coffee was finished. Our guest was one of the sharpest observers of that world: A journalist who knew where the stories were and who the players were. She chronicled the triumphs, scandals, romances, and rivalries of Tinseltown with wit and truth. If there was buzz on Sunset Boulevard or whispers on a studio lot, chances are she heard it first. Gossip columnist Joyce Haber gives us a history lesson of movie stars, power...
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Today’s podcast features comedy royalty. He was there at the very beginning, when Saturday Night Live was live, dangerous, and nobody knew if it would make it to a second season. He’s an original cast member, a trailblazer, and the man who could steal a sketch with one look, one line, or one perfectly timed glare. You know him from “SNL,” the “Jeffersons,” “Two Broke Girls,” and the sci-fi movie “The Stuff,” which is available to watch for free on the Tubi app. Garrett is a singer, a survivor, a storyteller, and one of the great unsung nice guys of American TV comedy....
info_outlineTime for some smooth harmonies, warm Tennessee charm, and the unmistakable voice of Jim Ed Brown. Long before country music became stadium lights and arena tours, Jim was bringing elegance and heart to the airwaves, first with his sisters as The Browns, delivering the timeless hit “The Three Bells” and later as a solo star with classics like “Pop a Top” and “Morning.” He made performing on television, at the Grand Ole Opry and on the road, look easy with a velvet voice and a friendly smile.