Adventures in Spanglish, Family Dystopias, and More with Neal Veglio
Join your host Danny Brown as he puts this week's 5 random questions to Neal Veglio. Answers include why Modern Family is more fact than fiction, why a great British tradition needs to continue, and why sliced bread isn't the best thing. Let's jump in!
Answering the questions this week: Neal Veglio
Owner of podcast agency Podknows Podcasting, helping deliver real world results to serious podcasters and organizations. He's also the founder of Podmastery, a service and podcast that helps you increase your podcast's success.
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Transcript
The funny thing is that Modern Family, the Spanglish, all those
Neal:stereotyped movies and television shows where you've got the angry Latina in
Neal:the house, that is not fabricated.
Neal:That's not an exaggeration.
Neal:That is exactly what it is like being with, living with, or even
Neal:conversing with an angry Latina woman.
Danny:Hi, and welcome to 5 Random Questions, the show where
Danny:every question is an adventure.
Danny:I'm your host Danny Brown.
Danny:And each week, I'll be asking my guests five questions created
Danny:by a random question generator.
Danny:The guest has no idea what the questions are, and neither do I,
Danny:which means this could go either way.
Danny:So sit back, relax, and let's dive into this week's episode.
Danny:Today's guest is Neal Veglio, who's the owner of podcast
Danny:agency Podknow Podcasting.
Danny:which helps deliver real world results to serious podcasters and organizations.
Danny:He's also the founder of Podmastery, a service and podcast that helps
Danny:you increase your podcast success.
Danny:And as someone who's been in the podcasting space since 2001, he's
Danny:probably older than 98 percent of all podcasters out there.
Danny:So be gentle if you see him down your local supermarket.
Danny:Neal, welcome to the show, mate.
Neal:Thank you, young Danny.
Neal:Appreciate your kindness there about my age.
Danny:That's yeah, I thought I was speaking to Emperor Palpatine there.
Danny:Oh, he's coming in there.
Danny:A little bit of Palpatine, a little bit of Animal from the Muppets,
Danny:and maybe even a tiny piece of Yoda in there for a good measure.
Danny:How
Danny:are
Danny:you doing, Neal?
Neal:I'm fantastic.
Neal:I'm really excited because I get to be on your brand new podcast that's
Neal:only been going for a few weeks now.
Neal:Yeah really good.
Neal:And, fresh, I'm going to do it because you won't, because you're Mr Diplomatic, Fresh
Neal:from your company's amazing live stream where you unveiled a load of new features.
Neal:So I'm loving podcasting today.
Danny:Yeah, thanks, mate.
Danny:And yeah, I'm for listeners that don't know, I'm the head of podcaster
Danny:support and experience at Captivate.
Danny:fm.
Danny:And we had a feature release or a feature update, earlier today.
Danny:goes out tomorrow as we're recording this.
Danny:And so we did a live stream.
Danny:The CEO and co founder Mark Asquith did the live stream for that.
Danny:And it was cool.
Danny:Neal was in the old chat there chucking his comments at us
Danny:and being a nice supporter.
Danny:So that was good.
Danny:So yeah, it's great.
Danny:Excited to see that come out as well, mate.
Danny:So thanks for all the good words that you're putting in there.
Neal:Pleasure.
Neal:Always a pleasure to support you guys.
Danny:Now I have to get the elephant in the room out of the way.
Danny:first before we jump into the five random questions.
Danny:You're a good, proud Englishman.
Danny:We've just finished the Euros.
Danny:Did you watch it?
Danny:Are you an English supporter or what was your take?
Danny:What happened?
Neal:I'm one of those typical armchair supporters where I don't
Neal:watch any club level football.
Neal:And then I suddenly become an expert when we're at a tournament level.
Neal:And yes, I did watch it.
Neal:No, I didn't have any expectations.
Neal:And very proud of the boys, very proud of Gareth.
Neal:Sad to hear he's, he's decided enough's enough.
Neal:But yeah, I come from the footballing capital of the world.
Neal:It's not like I can't watch it, is it really?
Neal:It's against the law.
Danny:That's true.
Danny:Did you go out for any games, like any of the pubs that were holding it or anything,
Danny:or were you just watching at home?
Neal:Armchair supported, Danny.
Neal:I
Neal:don't leave the house for any good reason, unless it's a really good reason.
Danny:When in England, I see.
Danny:I got to be careful here because I'm Scottish, obviously.
Danny:So anytime I speak about the English football team, there's
Danny:a bit of bias comes over, I was.
Danny:I did want Spain to win it, not because we're playing England, I'll
Danny:be honest but primarily because of the way the media always tends to
Danny:build England up pre tournament.
Danny:Then they rip into them and they rip into the players and they ripped into
Danny:Southgate, sometimes valid, oftentimes not valid, and then they start to build them
Danny:up again as they get closer to the final.
Danny:I can't be done with that kind of sports journalism and Spain played the
Danny:better football throughout the whole tournament, so it was nice to see
Danny:that, get them the goal, if you like.
Neal:Absolutely.
Neal:I think the difference this time around, certainly from
Neal:where I was watching things.
Neal:I think that, there was a definite divide between people that were being mean
Neal:about Gareth and the boys and people that were just, they didn't know what they
Neal:were talking about, and it, for me it did feel like most of the country that
Neal:weren't the crazy gatekeeper football fans were definitely getting behind
Neal:them and were proud, it was actually a really nice tournament this time
Neal:round and yeah, you had some trouble, but you're always going to get trouble
Neal:when you get a bunch of Englishmen and some beer together in the same room.
Neal:It's always going to be a nightmare, isn't it?
Danny:Not just football fans.
Danny:You see them podcasting people when they go to the events.
Danny:Get the old three beers at the meetups, etc.
Danny:Ooh, we could tell tales.
Danny:Alrighty, Neal, so it's five random questions.
Danny:So what I'm going to do is I'm going to bring up the random question
Danny:generator and we'll see how this goes.
Danny:You ready for the questions today?
Danny:I'm excited.
Danny:Let's do it.
Danny:Okay, question number one.
Danny:What is something you learned in the last week?
Neal:Oh, that's a good one.
Neal:Off to a strong start.
Neal:I would say, as he pauses for time and uses filler words,
Neal:you're Jordan Pickford in goal.
Neal:I'll tell you what it was.
Neal:Okay, I'm going to be completely honest, actually.
Neal:Talking about Jordan Pickford, this is a football related
Neal:what I've learned this week.
Neal:I'm glad I didn't tweet it because I saw the pure vitriol that came back at this
Neal:person when they did tweet about it.
Neal:I didn't realize that the Spanish National Anthem had no lyrics.
Neal:I learned that the hard way.
Neal:Cause I was sat there with my wife watching game.
Neal:And of course, yeah, Gareth and the boys, they're all like, Oh God, save the king.
Neal:And I was sat there thinking, hang on a minute.
Neal:That's right.
Neal:Why the Spanish not as patriotic?
Neal:Unlike Ian Dale, I didn't actually tweet that and bless him.
Neal:He came in for quite a bit of flack on X.
Neal:Because of that that comment.
Neal:But yeah, I'm in the same camp.
Neal:I did not realize that the Spanish National Anthem has no lyrics.
Danny:That is interesting.
Danny:I saw them.
Danny:Like you mentioned, I saw the team standing there and the anthem was
Danny:playing in the background and nobody was mouthing, even if you're just like
Danny:half hearted about the anthem, because I know there's a whole political thing
Danny:going on in Spain with the Basque region versus some other parts of Spain, etc.
Danny:And some team members come from the Basque region, some don't.
Danny:So there's that, that possible, political side of it, but he never knew it was
Danny:because there's no lyrics at all.
Danny:So do you have any more information on that?
Danny:How that came about or?
Neal:Not a clue.
Neal:I've got no idea.
Neal:All I saw was a bunch of players that were completely stony silent and I
Neal:thought, wow, okay they're obviously either really confident or really don't
Neal:care about their country, which was a terrible assumption to make on my part.
Neal:And I've learned from it.
Neal:Unlike Ian Dale, who probably hasn't.
Neal:So yeah, it was very surprising, but now I feel that I've got one up at
Neal:a pub quiz when when someone tries to catch me out and say, sing the
Neal:national anthem for Spain, Neal.
Danny:Let me clear my throat.
Danny:I'll have to, I'll have to link to Ian's tweet.
Danny:I'll find the tweet and link to that in the show notes, em.
Danny:Cause yeah, I was watching it.
Danny:I was thinking the really, as you say, they've got a really steely gaze.
Danny:I just thought they were so focused on the game at hand and what was coming up.
Danny:Maybe they didn't want to waste their breath singing the anthem.
Danny:They wanted to save it for the battle that was about to come.
Danny:But I wonder if there's any other countries that don't sing.
Danny:The Scots don't care.
Danny:We've got our national one from the Flower of Scotland.
Danny:We'll study.
Danny:Mumble that if I remember it.
Danny:I know Canada is very patriotic about their national anthem.
Danny:The US, obviously, hugely patriotic for their national anthem.
Danny:But I wonder if there's any countries on top of that, that don't have
Danny:words to the national anthem.
Neal:I'm sure you'll get listeners emailing in and telling you, Danny,
Neal:how did you not know about I know.
Neal:Outer Wherever it's called, National Anthem not having lyrics.
Danny:See, now I'm going to research that after this episode.
Danny:I'm going to start researching that and I'm going to drop a whole, but
Danny:I might not drop all the links in.
Danny:I might set up a nice little Easter egg, treasure hunt.
Danny:Okay, I'm going to do a special giveaway for anybody that can tell me
Danny:how many countries do not have words to the National Anthems and what these
Danny:words are, just to confuse people.
Danny:But that's very cool.
Danny:That's an interesting little, tidbit to kick the episode off.
Danny:So yeah, that's further investigation is needed for that, I think.
Danny:So now that we know that Spain was not ignoring their royal family or
Danny:whoever the national anthem would be in honor of, let's have a look
Danny:and see what question number two is.
Danny:All right, Neal, I'm a bit of foodie, so I know what I would do here, I think.
Danny:But question number two, what is the one food that you would never give up?
Neal:Beef.
Neal:Oh, beef.
Neal:And in particular, if you want me to get really niche, roast beef.
Danny:I'm thinking there's a, I'm thinking there's a Sunday roast
Danny:reason for that
Danny:here.
Danny:Are you a traditionalist?
Danny:Every Sunday you've got the roast on?
Neal:I'm not as often as I'd like.
Neal:Unfortunately, I'm married to a a Costa Rican woman by descent and
Neal:they didn't really do roast beef roast family meals in Latin America.
Neal:I get treated whenever I go and visit my mam and of course, like
Neal:everybody's mam, my mam cooks the best roast beef on the planet.
Neal:So it's always a treat to go, it's obviously a treat to go home and
Neal:see the parents anyway but certainly having mum preparing a nice roast
Neal:beef for a little boy is definitely a highlight in the value family.
Neal:Whenever we have a meetup.
Neal:So yeah, that's probably, it probably is a childhood thing.
Neal:I think a lot of these food related comforts tend to come
Neal:from your childhood don't they?
Neal:Whether there's a certain chocolate bar that reminds you of happy
Neal:memories or whether there's you know, a certain type of dessert or a
Neal:meal, but yeah for me roast beef, it definitely reminds me of simpler times.
Neal:When we weren't all sat with our phones out on the table when we were eating, and
Neal:we were actually talking to each other and conversing like normal human beings.
Danny:Why, I also wonder if the, I love a good roast beef.
Danny:I'll make a roast now and again, like I'm married to a Canadian and she loves,
Danny:Sunday roast when I make a Sunday roast, whether it's roast beef or maybe it's
Danny:a pork loin or something like that.
Danny:But I also wonder, you mentioned, it's like simpler times or
Danny:childhoods where it came from.
Danny:I wonder now with the influx of tech and phones and all that kind
Danny:of stuff that maybe roast dinners aren't quite certainly in the UK.
Danny:It's a very UK specific thing.
Danny:I feel a roast beef dinner, a Sunday roast, etcetera.
Danny:I wonder if I'm that sort of going to die down and more
Danny:people just do their own thing.
Danny:And, don't get together as often for that kind of, family get together.
Neal:Oh, that's a very depressing thing that you brought up there, Danny.
Neal:That's made me feel very sad, thinking of this utopia, dystopian
Neal:future where, families are all having their own individual meals
Neal:and all consumed in their own virtual reality worlds on their phones.
Neal:I don't think I want to live in that world, Danny.
Neal:I want to go back to the eighties and just eat prawn cocktails for starters and
Neal:a bit of sweet corn and some roast beef.
Neal:Thanks very much.
Danny:Yeah I can see it now.
Danny:You look at some, our kids are very active.
Danny:They're like competitive athletes.
Danny:My son plays football, soccer in North America and my
Danny:daughter's a competitive cheer.
Danny:So they're very active in the evenings.
Danny:They've got lots of training.
Danny:They've got games and competitions and all that stuff.
Danny:So sometimes it's harder to get together as a family.
Danny:And a lot of the time my wife does the driving, she'll be like, Oh, Be with
Danny:the kids and I'm just at home eating beans on toast for my dinner or my tea,
Danny:whatever you want, whatever you call it.
Danny:But we do try and make an effort.
Danny:Obviously, when everybody's in the same vicinity, we'll make an effort to sit
Danny:down and have that family get together.
Danny:But I can see as well.
Danny:I completely agree.
Danny:It's very much Something I wouldn't want to see become the norm, but
Danny:I can also understand how it could become the norm, depending on, what
Danny:your life's and business, et cetera.
Neal:Yeah.
Neal:We all live very busy lives and you know that the whole.
Neal:This is what I think I've noticed as I've got older is that, it becomes harder and
Neal:harder to make that time for family time just because of the pressures of business.
Neal:If you've got a job, you've got 9 million tasks you've got to
Neal:complete before the end of the day.
Neal:And even with the hybrid remote working now that, it's
Neal:pretty much become the norm.
Neal:It's still seems to be that overzealous, overambitious bosses
Neal:like to pile work on their staff, even if they're based at home doing it.
Neal:Yeah, it is.
Neal:It's a special time and I really hope that we don't lose it.
Neal:I hope it, it definitely stays with us.
Danny:And you mentioned your wife.
Danny:Is it Costa Rican, your wife?
Danny:Costa Rican descent Costa Rican, that's right.
Danny:Cost.
Danny:Has she had, prior to marrying you and moving to the UK, et cetera,
Danny:had she had like a Sunday roast equivalent or not equivalent?
Danny:Has she had us traditional Sunday roast?
Danny:Was that her first introduction to it?
Neal:That was her first introduction to it, meeting me, as if I wasn't enough.
Neal:The fact that I introduced roast beef into a life just may give
Neal:us the icing on the cake, Danny.
Danny:I can imagine.
Danny:And what's her specialty then?
Danny:I can imagine she's maybe got a specialty or two for dinners.
Neal:Name any sort of, underground Latin American dish.
Neal:So you got rosa con pollo.
Neal:You've got, all the stuff that you wouldn't get in a Tex Mex restaurant,
Neal:basically, the proper stuff.
Neal:The pico de gallo and all that kind of stuff.
Neal:She really specializes in that.
Danny:That's awesome.
Danny:I think if I ever get to the Podcast Show in London, which I keep pushing Mark to
Danny:get me over to, but no success yet, I'm gonna have to employ your wife, I think,
Danny:to make a nice dish, because I love that kind of food, and that would be amazing
Danny:to have it be proper, authentic as well, as opposed to, not that I have a shop
Danny:there, but like a Taco Bell or something.
Danny:No, thank you.
Neal:You don't want to go to Taco Bell if you've got the choice of a Taco
Neal:Bell on my wife's cooking, absolutely.
Danny:I never could understand why Taco Bell became so popular.
Danny:Maybe cost cheapness, the cost and food, etc.
Danny:But when you taste the food, I just like when I never had a Taco Bell.
Danny:prior to moving to Canada.
Danny:And I, when I first moved here because I was still going through the process
Danny:and getting my visa or my permanent residence and all that sorted out,
Danny:I had to take certain like odd jobs where you just try to make some money.
Danny:And one of them was a mystery shopper.
Danny:And part of that was going to fast food restaurants and, making notes of the
Danny:ambience, the cleanliness and that.
Danny:But because of that, you had to buy the stuff there to see
Danny:what the whole process was like.
Danny:That was my first taste of Taco Bell, and I was appalled, mate.
Danny:Appalled.
Danny:I thought, oh.
Neal:Thought you were going to say, it was pleasantly surprising.
Neal:Oh
Danny:no, it was awful.
Danny:And I may be better now, I doubt it.
Danny:I pretty much guaranteed the same recipe.
Danny:But yeah, no Taco Bell for me.
Danny:I'm sorry.
Neal:You
Neal:know that probably, when did you move to Canada?
Neal:How long ago was that?
Danny:2006, so almost 20 years now.
Neal:There's probably way more Taco Bells here now in the UK
Neal:than were here when you were here.
Neal:It's becoming a growing brand.
Neal:There's even my local town, they've got a Taco Bell as well.
Neal:Yeah, it's, they're
Neal:coming over
Neal:like locusts.
Danny:That's probably why people were leaving the UK then.
Danny:It has nothing to do with Brexit, it's Taco Bell's fault.
Danny:You heard it here first.
Danny:Alrighty Neal, moving swiftly on from the whole Taco Bell debauchery,
Danny:which I feel could happen if you actually had too much Taco Bell.
Danny:Let's have a look at what question number three would be.
Danny:This, ooh, okay, this is an interesting one.
Danny:Because, yeah, I'm just gonna let you have it, mate.
Danny:What's question number three, Neal?
Danny:What's one difference between us that you love?
Neal:Is this between you and I?
Danny:I'm, see, this is what I'm, this is what I love about the show.
Danny:It's just popped up.
Danny:I have no idea what the context is between the, so let's go two options.
Danny:So let's go the difference between you and I as people, me and you,
Danny:and then maybe let's go as cultural.
Danny:So English versus Scottish or however you want to approach that side of it.
Neal:Okay.
Neal:Interesting.
Neal:Intriguing.
Neal:Okay.
Neal:The difference between you and I, on a personal level, is pretty, I mean
Neal:we have to go to the work thing, in the, you're clearly someone that
Neal:is an indie podcaster, and you love podcasts, you're, borderline need
Neal:an intervention, to be honest with you, the amount of podcasts that you
Neal:launch, I worry about you sometimes.
Neal:Especially knowing that you're a family man and, time is poor as it is.
Neal:Versus me, who is a business owner who does podcasting for a living for
Neal:other people and would love to do more podcasts for myself, but simply
Neal:there aren't enough hours in the day.
Neal:So I think that's like the most obvious difference between you
Neal:and I personally, culturally.
Neal:Interestingly, I think there's a similar maybe difference in the creative aspect
Neal:in that I think you perhaps probably approach your content in a kind of,
Neal:I love getting content out there and I wanna just share knowledge with the
Neal:world and you're really good at what you do with the One Minute Podcast Tips
Neal:that you do, which I'm a big fan of.
Neal:You've had podcasts in the past where you've interviewed people.
Neal:Obviously you've got this now, which is obviously a very different
Neal:approach versus me, who is.
Neal:So beyond tied down in the minutiae and the perfectionism of like barely even
Neal:getting one episode out a month I think I could really learn something from
Neal:someone like you culturally where You just go, do you know what content is great.
Neal:Let's just get this out there and, and we just rush through it and get it all done.
Neal:And honestly, when you listen to what you're producing, you
Neal:listen to what I'm producing.
Neal:You can't tell the difference.
Neal:So there's a learning moment there.
Neal:Neal, stop getting bogged down in the detail, but I think that's what
Neal:makes it brilliant in this industry is that, you've got some people
Neal:that approach things in one way.
Neal:You've got some people that approach things in a different way.
Neal:It makes us all really different and unique and it.
Neal:It's just that, without wishing to sound poetic, it's like that smorgasbord of
Neal:different tasty dishes that people can tuck into and find their own preferences.
Danny:I almost wonder, and A, thank you.
Danny:A, thank you for The kind words about my content approach, but then
Danny:B, what's that a little, sorry, passive aggressive because you
Danny:just throw it out there, Danny.
Danny:You get it done.
Danny:You don't care about it.
Danny:You're it's out there.
Danny:So I see what you did.
Danny:Are you monkey?
Neal:Not
Neal:at
Neal:all.
Danny:I almost wonder so when I was back in the UK years ago, I'd be,
Danny:I'm going to say early, mid twenties.
Danny:My age wise.
Danny:So I was, I'm still a big gamer, but I was a huge video gamer then
Danny:and the Dreamcast was about to come out in the UK, something like that.
Danny:And I knew people that worked at Sega as game testers.
Danny:So they'd, work on games, et cetera, to test them.
Danny:And the last thing they wanted to do When they got home was play video games
Danny:because they've been so focused on trying to identify small little bugs, glitches,
Danny:stuff that should have worked, that should have worked and didn't work, etcetera.
Danny:And I wonder if that's maybe the same with someone in your position that does
Danny:so much for podcasters and, companies and production companies, etcetera.
Danny:The last thing you want to do when you've been podcasting all day long,
Danny:For someone else or working on podcasts all day long for someone else is
Danny:now go back and record and edit and publish and market your own thing.
Danny:I wonder if that's part of it as well mate.
Neal:It's really interesting you bring this up because this actually has surfaced
Neal:for me quite recently actually when I was talking to somebody about my processes
Neal:and it is really interesting that.
Neal:Obviously I come from a radio presenter background that was my gig for you
Neal:know nearly 30 years was going into radio studios in front of the mic
Neal:holding down morning radio shows and writing the comedy bits and performing
Neal:the skits and playing the music and talking to callers and all that stuff.
Neal:And I really loved it.
Neal:Don't get me wrong.
Neal:I really enjoyed it, but it didn't fire me up in the same way that it
Neal:does when I'm actually producing other.
Neal:And I learned this producing others was really exciting to me, like
Neal:the fact that I could take someone.
Neal:Who was slightly unseasoned and didn't have necessarily my
Neal:experience and my skill set.
Neal:And helping them to grow their skill sets to basically emulate
Neal:what I'd been doing before.
Neal:And I really picked up on the fact that I get way more.
Neal:Out of doing that for others than I ever do for myself.
Neal:So I think there's a big aspect, I think you're right.
Neal:I think there is that aspect of, busman's holiday.
Neal:To quote a British term.
Neal:You don't necessarily want to do as a hobby that you do as a job.
Neal:But also I think it's probably that it doesn't turn me on quite as much to
Neal:stick my own content out there in a feed.
Neal:and see the data coming back on me.
Neal:It really turns me on when I see the data coming in for a client or
Neal:for someone I've been consulting with or training or, coaching.
Neal:That is a different ballgame to me.
Neal:And I think That is the interesting part is that maybe I need to look
Neal:at gamifying this slightly more for myself to make it much more of a much
Neal:more of a dopamine hit to actually get that content out there for myself.
Danny:Good point.
Danny:And that's it as well.
Danny:It comes back to the whole, like a lot of podcasters start
Danny:it as a passion project, right?
Danny:It's a hobby project in the might and meander.
Danny:Along as a hobby and meander is a horrible word.
Danny:I apologize.
Danny:I don't mean you meander because you don't want to take your podcast to
Danny:monetization or growth or anything like that, but they're completely happy
Danny:about keeping it as a hobby because that's what they're passionate about.
Danny:They're passionate about talking about their Star Wars love or their love of
Danny:Jason and the Argonauts, and the effects that Ray Harryhausen did back in the day.
Danny:But then, to your point, if you're not passionate about creating the
Danny:content, then the content itself might suffer anyway, because you're just
Danny:going to start mailing it in, just to make sure that you've met your quota
Danny:of one episode per month, and it's out there, here's my marketing, and
Danny:you're done, ready for the next one, and then you go back to obviously,
Danny:Being super passionate about creating great, podcasts and great experiences
Danny:for your clients who then can see the results and the effects of that work.
Danny:So I feel that the your passion side is more geared towards the behind the scenes
Danny:as opposed to front end stuff, right?
Neal:I think I'd agree with that.
Neal:I think, yeah, it's a different, it's a different approach,
Neal:obviously, and there's a different output, but I think, yeah, for me.
Neal:Sitting down and recording something into a microphone.
Neal:It's usually done because I'm, it's a means to an end.
Neal:It's either it's a marketing thing, be it with the PodMastery, which
Neal:is very much, I enjoy doing it.
Neal:Don't get me wrong.
Neal:I love to do the PodMastery podcast, but it doesn't hold that same passion for me.
Neal:I try and put a bit of as much of me into it as I can.
Neal:But it's never going to fill me with as much joy as getting someone
Neal:else and putting their brand out there and getting them the results.
Neal:It's just a weird block that I've got mentally around it where, of
Neal:course I love doing it, but I prefer doing other things for other people.
Danny:It's like they say you've got great voices for, what
Danny:is it, great voices for TV?
Danny:Great face for radio.
Danny:Great face for podcasting.
Neal:I've heard that one before.
Neal:That's why I never went into TV, mate.
Danny:You know what?
Danny:I was like doing a show, I think I was a guest on a show a while back
Danny:and someone said that, and I don't think they meant it to be mean.
Danny:But as the way it came across, I think it was more because of my accent and this
Danny:was a North American podcaster, so it sounded a bit more exotic, if you like.
Danny:But they said, oh, you've got a great voice for, do you do video?
Danny:Something like this.
Danny:Do you do video?
Danny:I don't.
Danny:I only do audio.
Danny:Yeah, I can see why.
Neal:Wow.
Neal:How rude.
Danny:I do feel they were on about the vocal, but I didn't
Danny:really want to push them.
Danny:I'm not George Clooney.
Danny:So I can understand that, but I thought that was an interesting choice of a
Danny:phrase to come and introduce me with.
Danny:We'll see.
Danny:Anyway, so there you go.
Danny:Listeners, if you want Neal to get super passionate and yak along for
Danny:ages, speak about podcast production and not about podcast making.
Danny:Hey there, Danny here.
Danny:This podcast will forever be free to listen to, but if you enjoy Five
Danny:Random Questions and get value from the show and want to support it.
Danny:You can either do that with a donation of your choosing, or as a monthly supporter
Danny:with a 5 Random Questions membership.
Danny:Choose your preference over at 5randomquestions.
Danny:com forward slash support.
Danny:And now, back to this week's episode.
Danny:Alrighty, so we're about three, we are at, there's no about it.
Danny:We're three fifths of the way through, so let's go and see what
Danny:question number four holds for us.
Danny:Okay, I have a little guess.
Danny:Or maybe I've got a guess on what this might be, but you might
Danny:already be fluent, so we shall see.
Danny:Question number four.
Danny:If you could learn any language fluently, what would it be?
Neal:Your guess would be correct.
Neal:You obviously picked up on the Costa Rican wife thing.
Neal:Yeah, Spanish.
Neal:I did try.
Neal:When we first met, I did try and learn it.
Neal:I'll be completely honest.
Neal:I picked up maybe, I don't know.
Neal:10 percent of conversational Spanish.
Neal:I actually had, this was in the days when, you had to literally download stuff to
Neal:your MP3 devices because we didn't have iPhones that were connected directly to
Neal:Spotify and Apple podcasts back then.
Neal:I had this audio book and the name of the chap that read the audio book escapes me
Neal:now, but he was a Portuguese fella and he taught pretty much every single language.
Neal:And one of those languages was Spanish.
Neal:And I loved the way that he did it because rather than saying,
Neal:saying and is E and saying you is do and all this sort of stuff.
Neal:And the way that we tend to learn basic, languages, he would literally
Neal:go straight in with an immersion.
Neal:So it was like you're in a shop and you want to buy a loaf of bread and some milk.
Neal:How are you going to do this?
Neal:And then he'd do role playing and things like that.
Neal:And I found that really helpful for my then younger brain to absorb it.
Neal:But it's like anything.
Neal:You get to a certain age.
Neal:I started this when I was about 31, I'm 48 now.
Neal:And by the time I got to about 33, I was just like, I'm too old to learn language.
Neal:And I just got lazy, honestly.
Neal:And what I found was that talking to my in laws, I was getting by enough.
Neal:I thought now I think I can just chill out on this.
Neal:But of course, like anything, you don't use it, you lose it.
Neal:And so I've.
Neal:Definitely, I frustrate my mother in law because she's trying to talk to me and
Neal:she's asking me for more wine and I'm not hearing her because I'm not understanding
Neal:so she goes with an empty glass for about ten minutes too long and so I get told
Neal:off yeah, it would be really nice to be able to just click a button in the head
Neal:and then suddenly be fluent in Spanish so I can talk to my family and please
Neal:my wife and get her off my back and talk to some of their friends whenever we go
Neal:on holiday, which we do quite often go back to the States and visit with them.
Neal:So yeah, that would be definitely my number one now, I think, to learn
Neal:rather than French, which to be honest, Academically, I probably could do it.
Danny:I think that's it.
Danny:I don't know what the UK is like now.
Danny:I know when I was at like primary school into high school in the UK, French was
Danny:I think it was an option, actually.
Danny:French and German.
Danny:That was the two languages you could learn.
Danny:And I took both.
Danny:But after I left high school, I didn't use them.
Danny:So they just went by the wayside.
Danny:But I'm wondering, I'm thinking of the Modern Family here as well, actually.
Danny:When your wife gets angry at you, does she rattle off in Spanish and you're thinking,
Danny:I really wish I knew what Spanish was now?
Neal:The problem is I know exactly what she's saying when she's riffing
Neal:off in Spanish with the swear words.
Neal:Absolutely.
Neal:And it makes it more painful because I know exactly what she's saying.
Neal:But yeah, that is, the funny thing is that Modern Family, the
Neal:Spanglish, all those stereotyped.
Neal:Movies and television shows where you've got the angry Latina in the house.
Neal:That is not fabricated.
Neal:That's not an exaggeration.
Neal:That is exactly what it is like being with, living with, or even
Neal:conversing with an angry Latina woman.
Danny:You got that passion, right?
Danny:They've always, I always find that culture very passionate
Danny:about most things that they do.
Danny:So I can see that.
Danny:And it's funny you mentioned like the stereotypical approaches
Danny:of movies, TV shows, et cetera.
Danny:I used to watch a show back in the UK.
Danny:You could probably remember as well, I would imagine Mind Your Language.
Neal:Ah, yes.
Danny:Yeah.
Danny:And I keep seeing little clips of that on YouTube now and again, and
Danny:I am not sure if some of that could be, presented today or go out as a
Danny:TV show today, because I feel some of that was very near the knuckle.
Danny:Not that it was, not that it'd get cancelled to use a term that gets
Danny:bandied about rightly and wrongly today, but I feel that was really
Danny:funny, but I can also see that, struggling to get maybe produced today.
Neal:Oh, 100%.
Neal:It would be pulled off the air as soon as it was aired.
Neal:It's yeah, sad, but there we are.
Neal:That's the world we live in now.
Danny:Top tips then.
Danny:If you want to, not upset Neal, but if you want to confuse Neal, speak Spanish.
Danny:Just learn the basics of Spanish and speak Spanish in front of him.
Danny:Alright, we've reached the end almost.
Danny:We're in the home straight now.
Danny:Coming in to question number five.
Danny:Let's see what we've got for this one.
Danny:Haha, okay.
Danny:I'm curious about this because I feel this is, this the terminology
Danny:is very British, I feel.
Danny:Could be wrong.
Danny:Could be a more global thing.
Danny:But Neal.
Danny:Question number five.
Danny:What was the best thing before sliced bread?
Neal:The knife.
Neal:Isn't it obvious?
Danny:Ah, my grief, that's the shortest answer ever.
Danny:And now we're roll out of time.
Neal:Really, it's what do they call it?
Neal:It's not Schrodinger's cat, is it?
Neal:It's some somebody's dog.
Neal:It's like the, Most obvious answer is normally the right one.
Neal:I think that really You can't slice bread without a knife.
Neal:How can sliced bread be the best thing?
Danny:You could use a spoon, maybe.
Danny:It'd be uneven.
Neal:It wouldn't look very well sliced!
Danny:Yeah, but maybe that's what Oh, you know what?
Danny:Maybe There weren't knives before sliced bread.
Danny:Maybe people used spoons.
Danny:Oh, that doesn't look good, doesn't it?
Danny:They look better than that, doesn't it?
Danny:My presentation's awful.
Danny:I can't show that to Queen Mary or Aunt Nancy.
Danny:So then they thought we need something sharper.
Danny:What's sharp?
Danny:I don't know.
Danny:We'll create something.
Neal:If ever the podcasting thing dries up, Danny, I think you've
Neal:got a great future as a politician.
Neal:You're able to take something that is clearly undebatable and debate it
Danny:still.
Danny:There's a joke in there about mass debates and we can't,
Danny:it's too, it's a too easy one.
Danny:We won't go there.
Danny:That's, I could never be a politician in all honesty.
Danny:I like the abuse and stuff that they get thrown at them.
Danny:I, and I feel, I can't remember who said it.
Danny:There was a comedian.
Danny:And I, I think it might have been George Carlin actually that said the
Danny:very fact that someone wants to be a politician and the power that comes
Danny:with that is the very reason they shouldn't be a politician, which I
Danny:always thought was a really good thing.
Danny:Obviously there's great politicians out there, but then you look at
Danny:some and obviously in the UK, you've just had an election.
Danny:There's been all sorts of craziness leading up to that, point in time.
Danny:So yeah, I.
Danny:Politicians, I will give that a pass, I feel, mate.
Neal:Probably sensible, to be honest.
Neal:Although I hear the parties are great.
Neal:Yeah, exactly.
Danny:I heard of them.
Danny:They're really good.
Danny:I'm going to, I'm going to take the knife out of the equation, okay?
Danny:I'm going to cheat here.
Danny:I know that was your answer and generally I would allow it, but no, I'm going
Danny:to take the knife out of the equation.
Neal:Your
Neal:show your rules, Danny.
Danny:That's fine.
Danny:So before the knife then, prior to the knife, what was the
Danny:best thing before sliced bread?
Neal:Ladies and gentlemen, Danny is obviously one of the linesmen
Neal:from one of the England games in the Euros recently and just
Neal:changing the roles as he goes along.
Neal:That's absolutely fine.
Neal:I would say then, in which case, before Sliced Bread, what was the best thing?
Neal:Surely, it has to be
Neal:Music.
Danny:Any particular genre?
Danny:Just music.
Danny:Just the creative outlet of music.
Neal:I think we have to give props to the OGs, don't we?
Neal:It has to be the old classical guys like Mozart, Beethoven,
Neal:because, let's be honest about it.
Neal:Without them, we wouldn't have, any of the Bebe Rexhas or David Guetta
Neal:or any of the other nonsense that the kids are listening to these days.
Neal:So yeah, I think with music is a, is something which now this is interesting
Neal:actually, because what's interesting for me, it's probably dull as ditch
Neal:water for you and your listeners.
Neal:But for me, it's quite impactful that I can, even though I don't work
Neal:directly in the music industry anymore, I was a, as I mentioned, I was a radio
Neal:broadcast of many years and radio music was a big part of that job.
Neal:And much like we alluded to earlier with busman's holiday, when
Neal:you're Doing something for a job.
Neal:The last thing you want to do really is go home and do more of that.
Neal:So listening to music, focusing on it and listening with the headphones
Neal:on my head when I got home from work wasn't something I did often, but when
Neal:I did, obviously I was listening to the sort of music that I absolutely
Neal:wanted to listen to, not the stuff I was paid to churn out on the speakers.
Neal:And I still now to this day, I will still find myself if I
Neal:really need to get into sort of a place of Zen or calm or whatever.
Neal:I will stick some classical music on and it's really, I never would, I was never
Neal:into classical music when I was younger.
Neal:My dad was a big fan.
Neal:He was into opera and, the Pavarotti's and Domingo's and the classical
Neal:pieces and, orchestral, you name it.
Neal:He was into all that, but I never was.
Neal:And I found myself thinking, Dad, what do you see in all this?
Neal:It's just a bunch of string instruments playing random notes, but As you get
Neal:older, I think you start to appreciate older music, and more recently, I'd say
Neal:about five to ten years ago, I started discovering the Beatles and listening
Neal:to some of their stuff and appreciating it, and Yeah, I think music, it's one
Neal:of those things that it just brings us together, it equalises everything
Neal:and it just brings focus to us.
Danny:And as the Spanish national team showed, you don't need words to
Danny:go with music, you can still enjoy it.
Neal:Nice callback, I love it.
Neal:It's like you've done this before.
Danny:Oh, I don't know.
Danny:But yeah, music, like you say, it's a big connector.
Danny:You don't have to know the language.
Danny:You could, I don't understand, obviously, the language of opera.
Danny:But I can appreciate the emotion that's clearly coming through from the singer.
Danny:And I think that's a great call.
Danny:All right, Neal.
Danny:So we've reached the end.
Danny:We've made it through the five random questions.
Danny:And I appreciate your willingness to share and open up on that.
Danny:As is the want to make it fair on every guest.
Danny:I obviously do allow you, and I'm not going to say allow.
Danny:I've said that before.
Danny:That's wrong.
Danny:I encourage you to share a random question of your own.
Danny:So hit me up with your own random question.
Neal:This one's actually very similar to one of the questions that I had in a sort
Neal:of way and you'll get this in a moment.
Neal:But if you could instantly master any new skill, hobby,
Neal:or talent with zero practice.
Neal:You wake up one morning and it's there.
Neal:What would it be?
Danny:That's a good one.
Danny:See, part of me wants to say pottery.
Danny:I don't know why it's just popped up my head.
Danny:It just seemed like a nice relaxing thing to do.
Danny:I was probably watching a YouTube video the other day that
Danny:mentioned pottery for some reason.
Danny:I feel that it needs to be something that would benefit my wife because she
Danny:does all this stuff around the house.
Neal:You know who's boss.
Danny:She does a lot of the driving and everything, with the
Danny:kids, gets them to sports, etc.
Danny:So I feel that Yeah, I'm gonna actually go with that, actually.
Danny:So my wife does a lot of crafting.
Danny:She owns a Cricut, which makes, she's got like the laser cutter
Danny:and the steel cutter and all that.
Danny:So she'll make a whole bunch of really cool crafts.
Danny:And her goal is to do it for fun.
Danny:And we've talked about maybe, set up a little online store
Danny:or a local store where we live.
Danny:We're in a little village about three hours north of Toronto.
Danny:So it's great in the summer because a lot of cottagers come up and it's a
Danny:nice boom industry for tourists, etc.
Danny:So it'd be cool to make stuff that we could sell, from the house, etc.
Danny:So I'm going to say.
Danny:If I could wake up tomorrow and be as expert as the people that's teaching
Danny:my wife craft courses, et cetera, so I could just do all that while
Danny:she's out with the kids at the sports and all that would be my skill set.
Danny:I think about effort away from her side because she still wants to
Danny:come home, do all the craft and then I'll look for opportunity to market.
Danny:So that would be, I think, mate,
Neal:I love it.
Neal:And now we've understood fully why why Danny's wife.
Neal:Is so committed to him because he's obviously a lovely man.
Neal:It's always wanted to take work off her hands.
Danny:Yeah it's happy wife, happy life.
Danny:Isn't that the phrase?
Neal:Yeah, I keep getting told this.
Neal:I need to learn that one.
Neal:Don't
Neal:I?
Danny:I think I don't know what that would be for husbands because there's
Danny:no rhyming word for husband, is there?
Danny:I don't know that we are just happy.
Danny:We just as long as we've got a Sunday roast and an ice beer
Danny:in front of us, life is good.
Danny:Life is good.
Neal:Yeah.
Danny:So Neal, before I let you go, mate, obviously I do want to encourage listeners
Danny:to check out, your podcast production agency, and all the cool stuff that you
Danny:do for clients and other podcasters.
Danny:So where's the best place to find out more about that and connect with you online.
Neal:I would be delighted if anybody would want to connect on LinkedIn.
Neal:I love LinkedIn.
Neal:I live pretty much on LinkedIn.
Neal:I'm also on Twitter.
Neal:I'm not on there as often these days, it's always good to chat
Neal:to fellow podcast enthusiasts.
Neal:So by all means, look me up on there.
Neal:If you're looking from the sort of like the, the podcasting services and advice
Neal:point of view, then pod knows podcasting.
Neal:co.
Neal:uk is where I get the bills paid.
Danny:And I'll be sure to leave all these links in the show notes.
Danny:So whichever app you're listening to this episode on.
Danny:Make sure to check them out.
Danny:They'll link out directly to Neal and his website.
Danny:So again, Neal, thanks for taking part today in 5 Random Questions.
Neal:No, thanks for having me.
Neal:It's been an absolute pleasure and great fun.
Danny:Thanks for listening to Five Random Questions.
Danny:If you enjoy this week's episode, be sure to follow for free on the
Danny:app you're currently listening on or online at fiverandomquestions.com.
Danny:And if you feel like leaving a review, that would make me happier
Danny:than that time I realized podcasting was primarily an audio platform.
Danny:At least in the early days, and my lack of George Clooney looks and
Danny:charisma would not be a hindrance.
Danny:But seriously, if you did want to leave a review or recommend the show
Danny:to someone else, I'd be super grateful.
Danny:Until the next time, keep asking those questions.