Podcast Roundup January 2022

What’s new in Missoula and Montana related podcasts? Here’s the latest Podcast Roundup for January, wrangled together by The Missoula Underground.
Whether you’re driving to or from work or a great outdoor adventure, or could use some stimulating content to jump-start your brain while doing your morning routine…podcasts are a great way to learn something new and cool.
For a complete listing & description of local podcasts & ways to listen to them, check out The MUG’s Podcast Guide.

A New Angle
Elliott Woods – Veteran, Journalist and Creator of Third Squad
Elliott Woods is a multimedia journalist based in Livingston, Montana. Elliott is a veteran and his work has been published in Outside Magazine, the New Republic, and the Wall Street Journal among other prominent outlets. In our conversation, we discuss Elliott’s recently released podcast, Third Squad: a powerful and sobering account of the war in Afghanistan and its enduring effects. The series chronicles his journey to reconnect with a group of Marines Elliott embedded with in 2011.
Listen on Stitcher / 29 minutes
Bonus: Justin Angle speaks with the Confluence Podcast
Justin recently did an interview with Ashby Kinch, Associate Dean of the University of Montana Graduate School, for the Confluence Podcast. Check it out…and check out Confluence for more interviews with interesting folks at UM.
Listen on Stitcher / 51 minutes
Doug Chabot on Mountain and Snow Safety
Doug Chabot is Director of the Gallatin National Forest Avalanche Center. Doug is a prototypical man of the mountains – he’s put up new climbing routes all over the world, been arrested by border guards in Tajikistan, rescued countless stranded mountain travelers, and built an incredible team and invaluable community resource at the Avalanche Center. With winter fast approaching, we talk with Doug about his approach to decision making in mountains and how anyone interested in traveling on the snow can do so more responsibly.
Listen on Stitcher / 29 minutes
Culture Wars with Bryce Ward and Sara Rinfret
Incentives & Instincts is a monthly series on A New Angle in which host Justin Angle speaks with economist Bryce Ward about some of the broader challenges facing our society. For the month of December, Bryce and Justin are joined by our dear friend Dr. Sara Rinfret, professor of Public Policy and Administration, and Acting Dean of University of the Montana’s Blewett School of Law. Together, we break down the culture wars: what are they, how they affect our institutions, and ideas about what we could broker to move forward together.
Listen on Stitcher / 29 minutes
Rick Ridgeway’s Life Lived Wild
Rick Ridgeway is a legendary alpinist, adventurer, activist and writer. Rick’s new book Life Lived Wild is a fantastic collection of adventure essays that trek through the deep relationships he forged with the outdoors and friends across shared objectives and profound experiences. In our conversation, we follow the cairns of Rick’s journey from the hills of the Los Angeles basin, to the remote peaks of eastern Tibet, to his current work as Vice President of Environmental Initiatives at Patagonia.
Listen on Stitcher / 28 minutes
Katie Deuel is building something special at Home Resource
Katie Deuel is Executive Director of Home ReSource, a non-profit community sustainability center in Missoula, Montana. Home Resource offers reused building materials, job training, education and zero waste programs. In this conversation, we frame up some ideas around closed loop systems, material supply chain disruption, and the links between community support and climate; all of which Home Resource aims to address and affect many across Montana.
Listen on Stitcher / 28 minutes
For Actor J.K. Simmons, Montana is Home
The one and only J.K. Simmons is an Academy Award winning actor and 1978 graduate of the University Montana. J.K. was recently in Missoula to film The Woods, a thriller he stars in, co-written and produced by his wife, Michelle Schumacher. J.K.’s reel of film and television credits is long and distinguished and he currently has two films in theaters: Being the Ricardos and National Champions. In our conversation, we dig into his experiences with Montana by way of family, education, and vocation that continue to root him in the Treasure State.
Listen on Stitcher / 28 minutes
Tailyr Irvine – Photojournalist and Co-Founder of Indigenous Photograph
Tailyr Irvine is a Salish and Kootenai photo journalist from the Flathead Indian Reservation. She is a National Geographic Explorer and her work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, ESPN, CNN and the Smithsonian, among other prominent outlets. Tailyr is especially interested in representing the diversity within Native America and complex issues facing tribal communities. In our conversation, we frame up just a few of the many incredible projects and series in her portfolio. From co-founding Indigenous Photograph, to her Blood Quantum project and participation in We, Women, Tailyr documents essential stories that help us all better understand Montana and our country at large.
Listen on Stitcher / 29 minutes
Gunfight Author Ryan Buss on Responsible Gun Ownership
Ryan Busse is a former senior executive in the firearms industry. Ryan’s new book, Gunfight, is an intimate and revealing account of his experience in that industry, his growing disillusionment with it and his ultimate exit. In this conversation, we talk about rural household gun culture, the symbolism assault rifles take on in political division, and the rights and responsibilities of gun ownership in our country.
Listen on Stitcher / 29 minutes

that seeks to showcase artists from Montana.
A Rhythm Runs Through It
Gary Morris
This is a personal collaborative episode featuring a conversation around music and grief with Sarah Bolstad of the “I Speak Dead People” podcast, and Larkin Matoon of the “Death Is Coming” podcast. Both podcasts are based out of Missoula, Montana. Additionally, this episode features the music of Fish Bwoi (a Missoula-based musician), Larkin and myself and the music of Gary Morris, host Callie Morris’ dad.
Listen on Spotify / 28 minutes
The Adventure Audio Podcast with Tyler Hamilton
Tyler Munroe – Cyclist and Racer
Tyler Munroe has been racing bikes for over 40 years, competing in multiple disciplines. Tyler share some stories and wisdom with us from 4 decades of cycling.
Listen on Spotify / 44 minutes
Peter Coombe – Wheel Science
Peter Coombe is the founder of Wheel Science, who specialize in high performance carbon fibre wheels for road, triathlon, cyclocross, gravel and now mountain bikes. Peter has a massive knowledge of all things wheels, and we’d love to hear your wheel or performance questions!
Listen on Spotify / 29 minutes
Jim Capra – Cycling and Endurance Coach
Jim Capra joins us to discuss different approaches to off season training, getting set up for indoor cycling and goal setting.
Listen on Spotify / 36 minutes
Guy Townsend – Mauna Kea, Cycling the Hardest Climb in the World
Guy Townsend (better know in the cycling community as Sir Guy Litespeed) is an ultra endurance cyclist from the UK. Guy has an incredible list of accomplishments in cycling, and he joins us on the podcast to tell us about his journey up the ‘World’s Hardest Climb’, Mauna Kea, on the Big Island of Hawaii.
Listen on Spotify / 52 minutes
Jess Cerra – Pro Cyclist, Entrepreneur and Race Director
Jess Cerra is a pro cyclist, a sports nutrition entrepreneur and founder/race director of the Last Best Ride in Whitefish, Montana (https://www.thelastbestridemt.com). We got to speak with Jess about her background in cycling, gravel and much more.
Listen on Spotify / 45 minutes
2021 Highlights – Part One
In several parts, we’re bringing you the best and most inspirational parts of our conversations from 2021. Part one includes highlights from Ryan Atkins, Fergus Liam, Steve Pucci, Larissa Connors, TJ Eisenhart, Selene Yeager, Brendan Leonard, Mark Synnott and Ronan Mc Laughlin.
Listen on Spotify / 58 minutes
2021 Highlights – Part Two
The best of our 2021 conversations with Dirk Friel, Jeremiah Bishop and Tyler Pearce (The Vegan Cyclist), Alex Howes, Andy van Bergen, Laval St. Germain, Leah Goldstein, John Croom and Reese Ruland.
Listen on Spotify / 57 minutes

Can Do! Lessons from Savvy Montana Entrepreneurs
Social Policy Past & Present with John Roy Price
John Roy Price, author and former senior domestic policy advisor to Nixon.
Listen on TuneIn / 32 minutes
Attracting and Keeping Employees During the Great Resignation with Kendall Clifton-Short
Kendall Clifton-Short of the global firm Within People talks about shifting workplace culture.
Listen on TuneIn / 43 minutes
The Origins of Salish Kootenai College with Joe McDonald
Educator and visionary Joe McDonald talks about how he built Salish Kootenai College from the ground up.
Listen on TuneIn / 36 minutes
Understanding the 2021 Economy with Robert Sonora and Jason McMackin
Research economist Robert “Tino” Sonora and Montana restaurateur Jason McMackin reflect on 2021’s economy, and discuss the uncertainty that comes with 2022.
Listen on TuneIn / 43 minutes
Inside the Den / Griz Sports Podcast with Riley Corcoran (Bobby Hauck and Eric Corcoran)
Instant Classic – Montana vs Montana State
11/20/21
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 3 hours, 2 minutes
Season 3 / Episode 13
Bobby Hauck / Kent Haslam
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 40 minutes
Season 3 / Episode 14
Bobby Hauck / Greg Sundberg / Brian Holsinger / Cam Parker
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 50 minutes
Grizzly Coaches Show
1/4/22
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 58 minutes
I Speak Dead People – Podcast
Kade Anderson
Gear up for some gender, identity, and grief convos with Kade. Kade shares the trials and triumphs of growing up trans in rural Montana. It’s a special episode without rules and politics, just space for learning and respecting his human experience.
Listen on Spotify / 2 hours, 4 minutes
Live from the Divide
Kevin Galloway on Songwriting
Host Jason Wickens sits down with Texas based singer/songwriter Kevin Galloway. They discuss his early musical influences as a child growing up on the Texas Gulf Coast, and his journey from frontman of Uncle Lucius to his much anticipated solo debut.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 43 minutes
Elizabeth Cook on Songwriting
Host Jason Wickens sits down with Elizabeth Cook to discuss the craft of songwriting. They discuss her early childhood influences and her incredible journey as a major label artist, published songwriter and current voice beloved voice of XM’s Outlaw Country.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 43 minutes

No politics, just truth. Podcast everywhere.
Montana Voice Podcast
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 1 – Kaori
Told by Enzi, a runaway and laborer who becomes an entrepreneur and a criminal, “The Aether and the Lie” tells the tale of Kaori, an artist from Tokyo who stalks and kills her ‘one love,’ and then confesses through her art. It is also Enzi’s story, tracing his drifting past and comparing his own failed ‘one love’ to his strange relationship with the artist from Tokyo. It is a story of murders, money buried in the mountains of Montana, a wise bail-bondsman who lives in the back of his truck, revenge, and a thin detective who studied to be an architect but now only draws lines between incorrect assumptions. However, it is not just crime, as the story is infused with nature and solitude, and unwraps the motivations for doing bad things.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 57 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 2 – Oil Field Winter
The Aether and the Lie is a story about heartbreak, art, murder, a billion-dollar heist, and the motivations behind the crimes. Enzi’s past experience of a robbery in the winter oil fields starts to shape his life.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 26 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 3 – The Top of Buildings
The Aether and the The Lie is a story inspired by the collapse of WorldCom. A story about heartbreak, art, murder, a billion-dollar heist, and the motivations behind the crimes. Enzi and Kaori are in New York City and find high places.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 51 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 4 – Helen
The Aether and the Lie is a story about heartbreak, art, murder, and what can motivate crimes. Enzi saves a life.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 26 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 5 – Money
The Aether and the Lie is a story about heartbreak, art, murder, and motivations. Inspired by the true story of the multi-billion-dollar fraud and collapse of WorldCom. A lot of money is involved.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 37 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 6 – Bearings
Instructions on how to make a treasure map. Enzi buries half a million dollars in the Rattlesnake mountains.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 27 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 7 – The Meeting
How to manipulate and control a meeting of techies. Enzi and Kaori travel to Seattle, where Enzi meets with SLAM programmers who have noticed ‘something odd’ in Enzi’s code. The Aether and the Lie is a story of greed, art, murder, and failed love.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 28 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 8 – A Green Place
In Seattle, Kaori shows that she too is hiding something. Kaori confesses through her art and Enzi bleeds. The Aether and the Lie is a story of art and science gone wrong.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 60 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 9 – Pascal
Kaori’s art did not lie: Pascal, the bondsman, does not believe Enzi, but then he makes a grim discovery. The Aether and the Lie is a story of greed, failure, and the past.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 59 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 10 – The Weight of Snow
Enzi’s hack of the SLAM network is discovered, and he wants to give the money back. The Aether and the Lie is a story of greed, loneliness, murders, and the motivations behind the crimes.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 29 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 11 – Luke’s
Pascal tells a story about a drunk ballerina and an arsonist, and Luke’s bar in Missoula. Enzi realizes that he is also going down a bad road. Then Enzi visits Kaori in jail.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 34 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 12 – Seattle, Again
Another murder, another bag of money, a change of plans. The Aether and the Lie: A billion-dollar data heist, a jilted artist, a double murder, and a drifting math genius.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 33 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 13 – Empty Graves
The thin detective looks for connections, while Enzi finds one between Tsai and his Chinese ancestors who died in Butte. The Aether and the Lie is a story of murder, greed, and math.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 47 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 14 – Iteration
The Aether and the Lie is a story of greed, art, and murder. How many deaths does it take to re-open a back door? Enzi asks Pascal for help. Iteration means to repeat and repeat and…
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 33 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 15 – A Brick
Enzi makes a decision and buys a brick from Pascal. The Aether and the Lie is a story of greed, art, and murder. 1911 is a name for a handgun.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 30 minutes
The Aether and the Lie, Chapter 16 – Into the Aether
Enzi waits for Mr. ‘XX’ with a loaded .45 and a bag of potato chips. The conclusion of The Aether and the Lie, a story of greed, art, and murder.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 26 minutes

Check out the newest hiking adventures with Mtn Misfits!
Mtn Misfits
Hiking the Dragon’s Tail – Glacier National Park
The screaming wind roared in our ears and shook our steps as we rounded Reynolds Mountain. There rose the narrow spine of the Dragon’s Tail from the pass we clung to. This would be our turnaround point as discretion is the better part of valor. We turned our backs on the Dragon’s Tail knowing we would be back…soon.
Full Report at https://www.mtnmisfits.com/our-advent…
One of the lesser-known gems in Glacier National Park, the hike to the Dragon’s Tail began from the Logan Pass parking lot (that’s right, the most crowded area in the park). We started out on Hidden Lake Nature Trail, which is initially paved, then a boardwalk, and, eventually, an actual trail.
A bit over a mile from the trailhead, we reached a small tarn, and an unmarked trail will branch off to the left. Someone had attempted to block the trail with old limbs as they mistakenly took this trail as a user trail. However, this side trail, called the Reynolds Route on some maps, was lined with rocks on both sides for the first little bit.
Even on this October day, there was a fair amount of people on the Hidden Lake trail, but quickly they receded into memory. Soon, we were crossing a pleasant alpine meadow that give way to talus slopes of so many hues and shades of Belt Formation rock. Ascending along this slope, we paused often to enjoy absolutely spectacular views of the Hanging Gardens in the valley below and the surrounding peaks of Logan Pass.
Two miles in and we reached the first pass on the route. And it was here that first encountered “real” wind, the type that is angry and violent. The gusts were definitely passing 50 miles per mile, but the views supplanted any notions of turning around and getting out of the gale. This saddle sits on a ridge of the loaming Reynolds Mountain, and from here we stood atop the Continental Divide overlooking Hidden Lake and Bearhat Mountain to the west. And to the east, Heavy Runner Mountain dominated the east-facing scene.
From the pass, the trail continued along the ridge for a way, and then began to sidehill along the flanks of Reynolds Mountain. This portion of the narrow trail crossed talus fields that told a geologic story 1.4 billion years in the making.
Just shy of 3 miles in, we reached the second pass, which was the endpoint for this hike. This pass lies between Reynolds Mountain and the Dragon’s Trail. The panoramic views of Hidden Lake and the surrounding mountains held us dumbfounded as we both exclaimed our love of these mountains (really, we are both in love with these mountains).
Returning back to the Logan Pass parking lot, we drove back down the mountain towards Apgar and the campground (our humble home from the evening in the rooftop tent). The autumn colors were simply mind-numbing with the intensity of the yellows and oranges in the leaves of alder, birch, and cottonwood.
Watch on YouTube / 7 minutes
Aiming for Gunsight Lake – Glacier National Park
It all started with a downhill…actually one and quarter miles of downhill to the St. Mary River. What’s the old saying about the trail that goes down must come up…or something like that.
For more images and details of this hike – https://www.mtnmisfits.com/our-advent…
We started our planned 13-mile hike to Gunsight Lake from the Jackson Glacier Overlook, located along the St. Mary side of the Going-To-The-Sun Road. The initial section trail is a 650-foot downhill to Deadwood Falls and spans a shade over a mile unless you take the wrong turn, which we did (one misdirection down, another to go). The warmth from the early autumn sun had us stripping off layers in short order. Very little water cascaded down the chasm of Deadwood Falls, but this lack of flow revealed the smooth curves of Seussian architecture that Reynolds Creek had carved into the stone over millennia.
In a snap, we arrived at the Gunsight Pass Trail junction, turned right (remember this because we would later miss this junction on our return hike), and crossed the fairly new suspension footbridge that spans Reynolds Creek. The trail between Reynolds Creek and the St. Mary River is a pleasant rolly polly affair. Dusty Star and Citadel Mountain dominated the skyline to our left. The habitat seemed moose-y and it proved to be that soon enough.
Watch on YouTube / 6 minutes
Hiking on the Golden Needle Trail to Lupine Lake, Flathead National Forest
What a beautiful day for a beautiful hike up to Lupine Lake, a place neither of us has ever been. Looking at the whole handy-dandy AllTrails, the hike is a quick and easy 5.7 mile out and back with about 1100 foot elevation gain.
And just like the Gunsight Lake hike in Glacier National Park, the trail starts with an immediate drop in elevation to the bottom of a picturesque small gorge. After this point, the rest of the hike a gently uphill. And this is where we walked on the Golden Needle trail as uncountable millions of western larch needles laid across the forest floor and trail.
We had enough heartbeats to feel rewarded once we got to the lake. Lupine Lake is a pretty little forested lake, a quiet place to catch our breath and take some pics and video (gotta save those memories, ya know). The margins of the lake were wearing a new sheet of thin ice, a sure sign that winter was on the way.
Embracing our inner Mediocre Amateur, we opted to run the trail out as we had a dinner with friends to get to. The trail was a perfect pitch for maintaining a comfortable pace until…we reached that little gorge and the uphill to the jeep. We had a heart-pumping half-mile (short, I know, but enough after a long day), and making it to the rig was a welcome sight. Next stop, the gas station in Marion for junk food and beer!
Watch on YouTube / 7 minutes
Autumn Hiking in Glacier National Park
Let’s talk about autumn hiking in Glacier National Park over two of the most glorious autumn days ever. Really, ever. Every single twist and turn on these hikes was amazing, and this trip will not soon be forgotten. We experienced dazzling fall colors, screaming winds in high passes, and, even an encounter with bull moose.
Watch on YouTube / 39 minutes
How the Bitterroot Mountains Grew / Naturalist Minutes
Dominating the western skyline of the Bitterroot Valley, the Bitterroot Mountains stand like a phalanx of granite, metamorphic rock, and a smattering of ancient Belt supergroup stone. Running north to south, the Bitterroot Mountains form the border of Montana and Idaho. They stand seemingly timeless, at least to the finite human perspective, but the geologic truth is that these mountains have been and are in a constant state of flux.
The Bitterroot Mountains were formed through a combination of geologic forces with the first big event starting with plate tectonics. 100 million years ago, the west coast of North America was located in current western Idaho, but this was to soon change. The North American continental plate traveled west and collided with the massive oceanic Pacific plate. Being heavier, the Pacific plate pushed under the lighter North American plate. With unimaginable compression, the surface of the North American plate crinkled (like a napkin) and thickened. These “crinkles” were the proto Rocky Mountains.
As the Pacific plate dove down, it entered into the hot mantle, where the granite melted and created a large mass of magma, which rose into the rocks of the North American plate near the surface (ten miles below the surface). This process created what is known as the Idaho batholith between about 80 and 53 million years ago. Imagine giant bubble magma expanding upwards and cooling to solid rock that covers nearly10,000 square miles in central Idaho and the southern half of the Bitterroot Mountains.
With all these forces, the Earth’s surface heaved, cracked, and slid around in a chaos of geology. The sedimentary Belt layer was on top of the heap, but not for long. Giant slabs of the formation slid off the east face of Bitterroot Range as a hunk of Idaho batholith moved towards the east, and thus the Sapphire Mountains of the eastern side of the Bitterroot Valley were formed in a rapid seven million years.
Now let’s add another process to mountain building or progeny of the Bitterroots – glaciers. During the great glacial period of the Pleistocene, massive glaciers sculpted the distinctive shapes of the Bitterroot Mountains and their valleys. Ice sheets flattened the valleys and mountains glaciers flowed down from the peaks and carved dramatic U-shaped profiles into side drainages that flow eastward into the Bitterroot Valley.
Watch on YouTube / 5 minutes
Outside by Design
Troy Lee Designs’ Digital Marketing Manager Tanya Velazquez on Telling Your Brand Story
Tanya Velazquez is Digital Marketing Manager at Troy Lee Designs. Tanya talks about building customer relationships, forward thinking as part of your marketing calendar, streamlining processes, and telling your brand’s story through a blend of creativity and logistics.
Listen on Spotify / 30 minutes
Town Hall CEO Robin Hall on Creating Your Outdoor Biz Community
“Community is everything to us.”
Robin Hall joins us on the podcast – she’s the Founder and CEO of Town Hall Outdoor Co. Robin and Lisa chat about Robin’s transition from working at Smartwool to starting a sustainable kids’ outdoor apparel brand. They also cover the nuances of marketing to kids and their parents, interesting consumer trends, approaching gender as a kids’ apparel company, and building an outdoor business community in Steamboat Springs.
Listen on Spotify / 39 minutes
Former Chaco Marketing Director Jamie Kirby on Making Your Vision a Reality
Jamie Kirby is formerly the Creative Director and then Director of Marketing for Chaco Footwear, currently the VP of Marketing for Fernhaus Studio. Jamie shares about being a female creative director, breaking free from corporate life, staying engaged with side creative projects, and being the kind of boss that rolls up their sleeves and gets stuff done.
Listen on Spotify / 46 minutes
Trew Gear Director of Operations Katherine Donnelly on Making Things Better
Katherine Donnelly, Director of Operations at Trew Gear. Katherine shares about her engineering background and her path to the outdoor industry, what it means to be creative as a “left-brained” person, communicating with creative team members, gracefully rolling with supply chain issues and more.
Listen on Spotify / 43 minutes
Tell Us Something Podcast
Forward to Better – Part 1
Stories of the difficulty of being gluten intolerant while traveling in China, being reminded of the magic in life, the complex feelings of a new mother, learning to ride the bus in a new country, and the journey to fix a botched tattoo.
Note that the quality of the sound is not as perfect as we would like it to be. These stories are really worthwhile and we want you to hear them. Thank you.
Listen on Apple Podcasts / 56 minutes
The Trail Less Traveled, hosted by Mandela
Rafting Around the World with Orea Roussis
Orea Roussis is originally from Connecticut and has been running rivers all over the world for over 35 years. She is one of the most experienced yet humble guides who will ever meet and loves sharing the wilderness experience with her guests. Orea often lives a nomadic life for half the year driving around rivers in California, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and the Grand Canyon. When she is not in the U.S. you could potentially find her kayaking in Chile, Nepal or New Zealand.
Listen on Spotify / 45 minutes

Words Out West Podcast
Who is My Dad?
In part one of his radio play trilogy, My Dad and Pre-Socratic Thought, Jay recalls the crazy stories his father told him in an attempt to find meaning.
Listen on Stitcher / 31 minutes
Love and Gunpowder
Words Out West’s own Jay Kettering writes about a kid who’s willing to blow up his world for love.
Listen on Stitcher / 57 minutes
For a complete listing & description of local podcasts & ways to listen to them, check out The MUG’s Podcast Guide.
