エピソード

  • Tony Perkins on Comedy, Craft & the Carson Standard
    2026/06/03

    He grabbed a hairbrush as a kid and pretended it was a microphone. Decades later, Tony Perkins has anchored major newscasts, co-hosted Good Morning America alongside Diane Sawyer and Robin Roberts, and made audiences laugh from comedy club stages to the NBC4 anchor desk. In Part 1, Tony talks with Rob and Jess about what stand-up comedy taught him about reading a room, the phone call that changed everything, and why it took him two full months at a network show to remember: they hired me because of me. Plus — the moment he stood in a corner trying to collect himself after hugging a Beatle.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    27 分
  • Andrew Marotta on Burnout, Balance & the Formula for Leading Well
    2026/05/27

    Airtight compartments, Belgian beer in Brussels, and a 9 p.m. bedtime — Andrew Marotta's approach to avoiding burnout is as practical as it is intentional. In Part 2, Andrew breaks down the leadership formulas from his latest book, including the five SWs and E+R=O, shares how he handled a rash of knives in school without a single parent complaint, and drops the one piece of advice he wishes he'd had early in his career: enjoy the journey. Plus, the Port Jervis Alumni Association is launching — and they want to hear from you.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    30 分
  • Small Actions, Big Impact: Andrew Marotta on Leading with Positivity
    2026/05/20

    What happens when a Staten Island kid chasing small-town living lands in Port Jervis on the day of the flood — and never leaves? Andrew Marotta, educator, author, and the driving force behind Port Jervis City School District's communications renaissance, joins Rob and Jess for a conversation about what drew him to teaching, what's kept him there for nearly three decades, and why looking for the positive isn't naive — it's a leadership strategy. Plus: the veteran teacher who stormed into his office angry and left with the wind back in her sails.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    26 分
  • Steve Overmyer: The Stories Behind the Scoreboard
    2026/05/13

    What does it feel like to be standing on the field when Dan Marino hits a touchdown pass in front of 80,000 screaming fans — and think the whole stadium is cheering for you? That's the kind of moment that turns a young broadcaster into a lifer.

    Steve Overmyer has spent decades telling sports stories at the highest levels — from CNN to CBS News New York — and in Part 2 of our conversation, he breaks down what makes sports the last great unifier in a divided culture, why the best broadcasters learn to get out of the story's way, and what a dancing crossing guard has to do with the most important lesson in journalism.

    Plus: Patriots fans in New Jersey, Buffalo Bills loyalists who don't think the Jets count as New York, and the moment Steve accidentally became part of a college football game.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    26 分
  • Steve Overmyer: Reading the Room
    2026/05/06

    A rejection letter that said your tape was so bad they didn't want it "infecting their other tape stock." A joke that landed wrong in front of a six-foot-ten Randy Johnson. A tip from David Wright to stop treating every loss like a funeral.

    Steve Overmyer gets real about the mistakes that shaped him — and the lessons that stuck. From his first job in Fort Myers to the Jets post-game show to the locker rooms of New York, he breaks down the art of asking the hard question without torching the relationship, why you stop watching yourself in the mirror at a certain point, and what Satchel Paige pitching at 63 years old tells us about heart over measurables.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分
  • Taylor Mackenzie Mieszkuc on Anxiety, Authenticity, and Trusting Your Own Voice
    2026/04/29

    In Part 2 of our conversation with 19-year-old singer-songwriter Taylor Mackenzie Mieszkuc, Jessica Curtis and Rob Sermerano go deeper into the story behind the songs — and the lessons Taylor has learned along the way.

    Taylor opens up about the hardest chapter of her musical journey so far: a senior year of high school marked by a friendship that unraveled, targeted mind games, and the panic attacks that came with it. She shares how that experience triggered her anxiety disorder, how she worked through it with the help of family, and how it ultimately led her to the best friend she still talks to almost every day — plus the song "Glimmering Gold," which she recorded as part of her current release.

    Rob offers a ballplayer's take on being targeted ("the louder you get booed on the road, the more of a threat you are"), Jessica reflects on her own journey of shedding other people's perceptions, and Taylor talks about finally finding her people in college — five roommates who show up to every open mic, know the words to songs that haven't even come out yet, and post her music on TikTok.

    For anyone sitting on a creative project they're afraid isn't "perfect" enough to share, Taylor has simple advice: just do it. (Yes, even if the cover art came from ChatGPT in the car with your mom.) She also gives us a peek at what's next, including a song called "Calendar Years" built around her college friends' birthdays.

    Whether you're a young artist hesitant to hit publish, someone working through anxiety, or anyone who's ever felt targeted for simply being on your own path — this one's for you.

    🎵 Find Taylor on Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music as Taylor Mackenzie Mieszkuc (M-I-E-S-Z-K-U-C) 📱 Instagram: @taymackenziemieszkuc | TikTok: @taylormackenziemieszkuc

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    21 分
  • Striking Matches: Taylor Mackenzie Mieszkuc on Writing Her First Song at 12
    2026/04/22

    At 19, Taylor Mackenzie Mieszkuc is already a decade into her musical journey — and in Part 1 of this conversation, Jessica Curtis and Rob Sermerano dig into how it all began.

    Taylor takes us back to a third-grade production of Peter Pan that lit the spark, the sixth-grade ukulele that turned her into a songwriter, and the Teen Beach Movie moment that led to her very first song, "Miss Invisible" — written from the perspective of a quiet friend overshadowed by outgoing siblings. Pretty introspective stuff for a 12-year-old.

    We also hear the story behind her newly released single "Matches," written at 14 during the height of COVID lockdown and inspired by the cinematic music video for Aria's "Mulholland Drive." Taylor shares what it was like walking into Black Sheep Studios and hearing a full band play her song "Boy at the Beach" back to her for the first time (spoiler: she may or may not have had a minor meltdown on camera), plus a preview of her upcoming song "Glimmering Gold," a deeply personal track about the search for lasting friendship.

    Along the way, Taylor opens up about her influences — from Taylor Swift (the "blueprint") to Conan Gray, Sabrina Carpenter, Mimi Webb, and country artists like Megan Moroney and Lainey Wilson — and who she hopes to inspire with her own music: the girls, guys, theys, and everyone in between who just need a safe space to feel seen.

    Currently studying music education at Bloomsburg University, Taylor is learning everything from piano to percussion to violin, and it's clear this is only the beginning. Stick around for Part 2, where we go even deeper into her story.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    28 分
  • The Guy With Stage Four Breast Cancer: What Men Need to Know Right Now
    2026/04/15

    In part two of their conversation with male breast cancer advocate Jake Messier, Rob and Jessica dig into the naming debate — should breast cancer even be called breast cancer if the word itself keeps men from getting checked? Jake pushes back on the idea of rebranding, arguing that softening the language only deepens the stigma, while making the case that a simple line in sixth grade health class could eventually save thousands of lives. From self-exam reality checks to the story of a doctor who refused to screen a man for breast cancer in 2024, this episode is a candid look at how far awareness still has to go.

    Support the show

    続きを読む 一部表示
    17 分