Stuff You Should Know - The Village People Episode
Episode Date: April 30, 2024The Village People were a smash hit singing group that came and went in under two years. Then other people performed under that name for several decades. This is their story. See omnystudio.com/liste...ner for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Buenas, buenas, mis amores.
This is Vico Ortiz, host of Dave, My Abuelita First, each week.
Myself, alongside our resident abuelita, Liliana Montenegro,
esa soy yo!
play matchmaker for a group of hopeful romantics
in this fun, flirty, and hilarious game show.
Let's see if cheese bus will fly,
or if these singles will be sent back to the dating apps.
Listen to Dave, My Abuelita First on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Dioza.
And I'm Mala.
We're the creators of Locatora Radio,
a radiophonic novella, which is a fancy way of saying.
A podcast.
Welcome to Locatora Radio season nine.
Love at first listen.
This season, we're falling in love with podcasting all over again.
With new segments, correspondence, and a new sound.
Listen to Locatora Radio as part of the MyCultura podcast network, available on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everyone.
Do you live in Washington DC?
Are you sitting around fretting about this upcoming election?
Maybe you're even working on one of these campaigns.
Well, we've got a great stress reliever for you
and that's coming out to see us on May 30th
at the Warner Theater for Stuff You Should Know Live.
Yeah, we guarantee zero political jokes.
100% zero political jokes if you come out and see us.
We're gonna be in Medford, Mass on May 29th.
The next night we'll be in D.C. on May 30th.
And the night after that we'll be at our old friend,
the town hall in Manhattan Town, NYC.
That's right, so check out tickets.
You can go to stuffyoushouldknow.com.
You can go to the theater websites themselves.
Avoid those secondary ticket brokers.
Or check out our Linktree, right Josh? You can go to the theater websites themselves, avoid those secondary ticket brokers, or check
out our Linktree, right Josh?
Yeah, Linktree slash SYSK live.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And when you put us all together, well, things get pretty great.
How's it going, man?
It's going great.
I've been listening to the village people off and on all day.
Yeah, same here. Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da,
da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da,
well we were supposed to both come in for the last part.
Oh, sorry.
Chuck, did you pick this because I cannot imagine
that you weren't a cute little seven-year-old
Village People fan?
True.
So which one did you identify with the most?
Well, I've told this story before
because I posted it on Instagram
way back when I talked about it.
But I still have a crayon drawing of the Village People
because I would sit around and play Cruisin, the record Cruisin. Okay, their third album. Their third album, but the one with YMCA
and I believe in the Navy and like most of their big hits outside of my favorite
Village People song, which is of course Macho Man. Sure. Such a good song.
I would just sit around and listen to
Cruisin and stare at that record cover of those guys,
on the horse and the motorcycle and the bulldozer.
I would see them on American Bandstand and
Solid Gold and the early music videos.
And I would just, I thought they were the coolest,
most awesome dudes ever in the world.
And I would sit around and draw crayon pictures of them,
and I still have one of them.
Maybe I'll pin it on Instagram.
I sort of always laughed years later that,
like, who knows what my parents were thinking.
And we'll get into the you know
whether or not village people count or were in fact a gay band but I imagine at the time in the
early to mid 70s with southern baptist parents they either weren't aware of that or were probably
pretty like worried about their son when they
needn't be because either way it would have been fine.
Yeah well put man. You know what I'm saying but back in the 70s in the in the
rural not rural but in the suburban conservative South I'm I'm sure if they
didn't if they did know what was going on they're probably like have you seen
these crayon pictures? Like he drew literally counselor got in touch.
I drew literal like pancake boobies on the biker guy.
Cause I didn't know how to draw like a bear chest correctly.
Right.
Yeah.
Hey, that works.
Yeah.
So anyway, I'll either scroll through my Insta or maybe I'll figure out how to pin
stuff, but we're talking We were talking about village people,
technically not the village people.
Yeah.
It's just sort of one of those things like
Eagles or Hall and Oates where you just,
you come to be known by that name,
even though that's not your real name.
Yes.
Like Edith Burkell in New Bohemians.
Oh, is that what it is?
It's not The New Bohemians?
Yeah, for some reason I've always had this memory
of her correcting David Letterman on,
on Letterman in like 1990 or something like that.
I don't know why it stuck with me, but I always, she got the point across for sure.
Indigo girls is the other one.
They're not the indigo girls.
Yeah.
Don't even say that to their face.
They will, they will beat you up.
Well, if you say a Hall of Notes to, uh, Darrell Hall, he gets pretty salty.
He's like, we were not Hall and Oates.
We never were.
Oh, really?
What were they?
Look at the Hall and Oates.
No, every single album, it's Darryl Hall and John Oates.
They were never Hall and Oates.
And it just.
Does he really get salty about that?
Cause there are much, much greater things to be upset about.
I've seen them get a little salty, but I think it's largely because
they don't like each other
Man, why are you telling me all this?
Sorry, I want Darryl Hall and and John notes to be like just the best guys ever you want to be like Hall and Oates
It's like yeah, exactly
Wow, or dare I say Josh and Chuck? I'm not participating for the rest of this episode. I have to chew on some stuff.
All right.
Let's talk village people.
Yeah, actually, uh, one of the things that stood out to me is this is like the improved
version of our Milli Vanilli episode.
Cause one thing I didn't realize is that the village people were like a manufactured band.
Yeah.
And they were the brain child, I guess,, of Jacques Morali and Henri Bellolo, who were
both Moroccan-born Frenchmen, who I guess separately kind of got into the music industry
by their own grit and determination and didn't really know each other at first.
They had their own, I think starting in the 50s and 60s, had their own careers that they
were trying to build.
And eventually in the 70s, they came together.
Henri Bellolo was kind of like the brains, the producer, that kind of type.
Jacques Morali was more, he was a producer as well, but more the hands-on creative type
of producer.
And when they came together, some sparks flew
even before the village people were ever around.
Yeah, there's no way to say this
without sounding completely like kind of stuck up,
but I've been listening to a lot of French music lately.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, there's, I mean, if you're in the right mood,
if you look up like 80s sort of new wave
But French music their their version. It is really really awesome stuff. Nice. I will check that out highly recommended
So yeah, they were like you said they were had made a name for themselves independently. I believe in 1973
Belolo set up Can't Stop Productions
a couple of years later.
That's a great name by the way.
Oh yeah.
It's just stuck out to me all day.
Oh yeah, and I remember seeing that little logo,
like Can't Stop the Music,
I think that was the name of the movie, right?
Yeah, I didn't put those two together actually
until just now.
But they eventually met up in the United States and their first project in release was a real banger.
You know the song Brazil from the 1930s, the one from the movie Brazil.
They took that and updated it with a female trio called the Richie Family as a disco song.
And it is, like I said, it's a real banger kind of a classic disco song
Yes, but it was disco before disco actually existed
So a lot of people kind of credit these two is really helping lay the found foundation for disco
It was that that period right before disco became a thing. So it was a weird transition between like
What's the guy's name Percy
Fledge is it Percy Faith in his orchestra? Okay, the transition between Percy Faith and
In John Travolta, this is like that that of music. Lots of strings, kind of salsa based,
lots of like chorus and vocals.
It actually was up for the 1976 Grammy
for best pop instrumental performance
and lost to the Hustle if that gets it across.
So like the Hustle is like proto disco.
So is this version of Brazil.
And it's right before disco became a thing.
Yeah, like on the matter of months though, probably, right?
Yeah, I would say that, yeah.
Okay, I mean losing to the hustle,
there's no shame there.
No, not at all.
So they had this pretty good hit with Brazil.
Again, I recommend you check it out
and listen to all these songs, they're all great.
Can't Stop Productions was like, all right, listen,
we need, we got, we, you know, back then they would just go from thing to thing
because it's not like you can write out something
like The Richie Family forever.
So they're always looking for the next new thing.
In 77, they were hanging out in Greenwich Village, New York,
which then as it is now is a very friendly community
for especially gay men.
Morale was gay, but Belolo was not.
But they were hanging out there,
they were going to discos,
they were going to bars and stuff.
And they started to see these guys in
these clubs that were dressed up as
these macho American stereotypes that they grew up
watching on American TV and American movies.
And this is a direct quote from Bellolo.
Dave is encouraging me to read it with a French accent.
I'm not sure about that.
But I'll try. This is from Billboard magazine.
We saw different types of characters in bars.
That's how we decided to create a group that will
represent different characters of the American male.
As we had the idea in the village, we decided to call the group the Village People. Simple.
That was a great pep-y-lo-pew.
Yeah, that was it. Like, they saw these guys in bars,
fitting these sort of archetypes or stereotypes of what they thought like a macho
American man was.
And they're like, hey, this is like a concept right here, right in front of us.
Yeah.
And actually, it's possible that it was one specific guy they saw, Philippe Rose, who
was known as the Indian, who dressed up as a Native American Indian around Greenwich village.
That was his jam.
Very flamboyantly because he was a Native American.
His father, on his father's side, he was Mescalero
Apache, Lakota, and Cherokee, which is like,
that's the trifecta.
And he was very proud of it.
So he dressed up in like moccasins and, and fringed
leather vests and all that kind of thing.
And they saw him.
And that in addition to going to bars like the Mine Shaft,
which was a BDSM gay club,
and then seeing other people kind of dress up,
that's where they put the whole thing together.
And Dave made a really good point here
that that whole concept of dressing people up
as like stereotypical American male macho,
like image, images essentially,
that an American producer probably would have been like,
that's not a great idea, it's kind of lame.
But these guys were like looking at America
from the outside in,
and I think like you kind of alluded to,
they were exposed to this, like their whole lives.
This is like what they were fed
through American movies and TV.
So to them, they were like, this is amazing.
What a great idea.
Like we wanna celebrate this American macho male.
And that's where the village people came from.
Yeah, I'm not so sure about that part,
but I respect Dave's opinion.
And if you agree with him.
I do agree with him on that one.
I respect you both.
I'm going with Dave on this one.
I bet there are American producers that were like,
oh God, it's right there in front of my face.
Can't believe I didn't think of that.
Yeah, yeah, in hindsight.
So, Moroli started writing songs.
Like you said, they were inspired by Felipe Rose.
I don't think you said he was basically kicked out
of his house because he came out as gay.
So he was hanging out in the village,
working in bars and stuff.
The Richie family was, you know,
they were trying to eat a little,
trying to wring that thing dry from the Richie family.
They were getting a new album together.
They needed some backup singers.
And someone said, hey, there's this guy.
He's on Broadway right now in The Wiz.
His name is Victor Willis. The guy can really sing. He's got a lot of personality. someone said, hey, there's this guy, he's on Broadway right now in The Wiz, his name
is Victor Willis.
The guy can really sing, he's got a lot of personality, can dance a little bit.
You should bring him in here as a backup singer.
Moroli brought him into the studio and was like, dude, you are a star, so we need to
get you to record these other songs we've written.
There were no village people yet, but in 1977, he cut their very first
disco hit, and you'll see a lot of parentheticals because that was the time, but this is called
San Francisco, parentheses, you got me. Another good song.
Pete Slauson So, yeah, Victor Willis was the first, this is long before Felipe Rose came along,
but after they had seen Felipe Rose,
right? So they were inspired to create the Village People, but Victor Willis was really the only
Village Person at the time. Everybody else was just studio session musicians and singers and stuff
like that, right? So that worked fine when they cut that first album, which I think was like four
songs or something like that. And they had that hit with San Francisco.
You really got me.
And with that hit, they're like, okay, you got me San Francisco.
Yeah.
Um, which is funny because as we'll see later on, uh, uh, Victor
Willis would become a fugitive from the law and he would finally
be arrested in San Francisco.
So, um, he was, he, so he, but he was the village people.
And now that San Francisco, you got me was a hit, like apparently an international club hit, um, they needed more people.
Uh, and so they started looking for other village people and the first one they recruited was Felipe Rose appropriately enough, because apparently he was unknowingly the inspiration for the whole thing.
Right.
Funny enough, they were, San Francisco, You Got Me,
was big in Australia.
As you'll see, this has become a recurring thing.
Seems like Australians love the village people.
Yeah.
So I'm curious to hear from them.
If you look at that first album cover,
it is not the village people.
And I don't even think Victor Willis is on the cover.
It's just, it's a bunch of guys.
Um, there is a guy, uh, wearing a native American
headdress, but I don't think it's Felipe Rose.
No, none of them.
Um, there's a flannel shirt, hard hat guy, and there
is a biker, but that's it.
Just those three sort of village people that we went
on to know and love.
Everyone else is just a bunch of guys standing around
in T-shirts looking tough with a motorcycle in frame.
Yeah, I mean, so they had the concept,
they just didn't have the people yet.
So they're slowly starting to assemble this.
Now they have Victor Willis and Felipe Rose,
they've got the first two.
And they actually put anis and Felipe Rose, they've got the first two.
And they actually put an ad in the paper,
I would guess the Village Voice,
looking for gay men, singers and dancers,
with mustaches to basically audition
for the roles in this band.
Not like, can you play the bass,
can you play the drums,
but do you have a mustache and are you good looking
and a singer and dancer?
And they got from what I saw like thousands of replies.
Yeah, they were never a band.
It was always just supposed to be a singing group.
And they did.
I believe Felipe, or I'm sorry, Glenn Hughes,
who was the biker, he worked at the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel
collecting tolls, saw the ad.
By his memory, the ad said,
Seeking gay singers and dancers, very good looking
and with mustaches.
That probably wasn't hard to find at that time.
Well, all his friends were like,
Glenn, that's you, buddy.
Like, you need to get in there.
Yeah so Glenn Hughes became the village people's leather man, which apparently was not a stretch for him. I think he was already into leather at the time, so he became the leather man slash biker,
right? That's right. He was the third, I think the second one to join up was Alex Breyley,
who came at Victor Willis' recommendation.
He was the original sort of stereotype for him was
he was the athlete, but then they changed that pretty quickly
to the army guy, he was the GI and also the Navy sailor.
So he kind of crossed over the different
armed services, I guess.
Yes.
And then another guy who responded to the ad
was David Hodo.
He had just gotten done with a musical
about the Grand Ole Opry
and basically went out for the cowboy.
They're like, nope, you're a construction worker
through and through.
A guy named Randy Jones became the cowboy.
And so you have Victor Willis, Felipe Rose,
Alex Brieley, Randy Jones, David Hodo, and Glenn Hughes,
which by the way, I realized earlier today
that I could rattle off the names
of the original village people now.
But that's who the village people were at first.
And I say we take a break because now we've got
this murderer's row of mustachioed, generally gay guys
ready to hit the disco scene, and they're about to blow up.
Who hasn't heard names like Achilles or Odysseus, Cassandra, Medusa, but how much
do you know about them from the ancient world?
Let's Talk About Myths, Baby is the podcast bringing the ancient sources to life.
Greek myth and history is timeless and unless you've been living under a rock, you have
seen just how true that is today.
But there is so much more to these characters and stories than what pop culture can do justice.
I'm Liv Albert, the host of Let's Talk About Myths, baby, and every week I bring
you stories from the ancient world, both mythological and historical, to breathe new life into these
thousands of years old stories.
I'm also regularly joined by some of the most brilliant names in the field of archaeology
and ancient history, authors of your favorite retellings from today,
and everyone in between.
Join me as I dive into the wild world of the ancient Greeks and their stories.
Listen to Let's Talk About Myths, Baby on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Do you think Abuelita knows best?
We know about the drama here.
Executive producer of the podcast, Day My Abuelita First.
And we definitely do.
Join us while our host Pico Ortiz and our Abuelita Liliana Montenegro play matchmaker for you loving hopefuls out there.
Pico?
Yes, yes Wilmer. We are ready for another wild ride.
Listen, every Thursday as Abuelita Liliana and I
meet three single cuties who will vie for a date
with one lucky dater.
Except, to get their heart, they have
to win over Abuelita first.
How PG is this?
Not at all.
Totally are.
Abuelita's here, so bring it.
Through speed dating rounds, hilarious games, and AI,
Abuelita's intuition, one contestant
might be lucky enough to become the perfect match.
Let's see if chistas will fly or if these singles will be sent back to the dating apps.
Listen today, my Abuelita, first as part of the My Cultura podcast network available on
the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tamika D. Mallory.
And it's your boy, Mike Saunders, General.
And we are your host of TMI, New Year, New Name, New Energy, but...
Same old us.
Oh, yeah.
And catch us every Wednesday on the Black Effect Network, breaking down social and civil rights issues, pop culture and politics in hopes of pushing
our culture forward to make the world a better place for generations to come.
But that's not all.
We will also have special guests to add their thoughts on the topics, as well as break down
different political issues with local activists in their community. If you like to be informed and to expand your thoughts,
listen to TMI on the Black Effect podcast network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcast.
That's right.
["Stuff It Should Know"]
All right, so we're back. We have our village people assembled.
I think we failed to mention earlier that Dick Clark in American Bandstand, the TV show
had already sort of reached out after they had San Francisco You Got Me as a hit, but they were like,
there is no Village People yet, we can't just, you know,
send one guy out there.
So they got these other guys together in December of 1977.
They appeared for the first time on American Bandstand.
I could not, for the life of me, find this exact performance.
No, I couldn't find it anywhere.
I mean, they were on quite a few times,
but I never saw the one from 77 somehow.
But that was their American TV debut
and debut to the world when they sang
San Francisco, or I guess lip synched,
and the song In Hollywood, parentheses,
Everybody is a Star.
Yep, and you're right, parentheses were a thing back then.
I just died in your arms tonight.
Is that a real one?
Yeah.
Remember we talked about it a few weeks ago, that cutting crew song.
I just didn't know if you fooled me then or not.
No, no, no.
It's, it's, it's legit.
Have you been walking around wondering that?
Yeah, for three weeks.
So we're onto your favorite song, Chuck, which I agree, I think it's the best Village People song.
Macho Man. And that was in their second album. So their first album, like you said, was called Village People.
It came out in 1977. Their second album came out in 1978.
And that was the one, the album was called Macho and the the big single from it was called macho man
As well, is it okay if we read some of the lyrics to some of these songs? Yes. I saved them too. Oh you did. Okay
I think you should sing them not gonna sing them
Okay, although it might be hard not to and I'm not gonna read them all because there's that intro
That great intro to macho man when they're going, you know,
body, body, and he's going, want to feel my body, such a thrill, my body, want to touch my body.
Sure.
That's all that long intro. And then here are some of the words to the verse. Every man wants to be
a macho macho man to have the kind of body always in demand, Jogging in the mornings, go man go. Workouts in the health spa, muscles grow.
You can tell a macho man he has a funky walk.
His Western shirts and leather always look so boss.
Funky with his body, he's a king.
Call him Mr. Ego, dig his chains.
Every man ought to be a macho macho man
to live a life of freedom. Machos make a stand,
have your own lifestyle and ideals possess the strength of confidence. That's the skill.
But it's so so if you dig into that last bit, this song goes from essentially just total body
worship and like working out at the spa and all that stuff and how everybody wants to be a macho
man to essentially like that last, the last verse is
about gay liberation and basically coming out of the
closet, it sounds.
Have your own lifestyles and ideals possess the
strength of competence?
Yeah.
I would say so.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So it really takes like a sudden turn there because
it's like the most superficial, vain song of all time.
And then it suddenly like kind of is a shout out
for Gay Liberation.
Yeah, like owning it.
This was like, it's kind of tough to wrap your head
around here in 2024.
Sadly, it's not as tough as it should be,
but it's still tough to wrap your head around
just how big of a deal it was for men to be like on stage, singing
songs, gay.
Like I'm gay, everybody.
Like there's no question about it.
I'm a gay person.
Yeah.
Um, that was a big, big deal at the time.
And then to sing about it and to sing about how
that was a good thing, that was really daring.
And it was really, it's neat that they did that.
Like, it just should not go unnoticed or unmentioned.
And it's hard to overstate what a big deal it was.
And then it's even harder to overstate how huge of a hit Macho Man was for the village people. Yeah. I mean, little seven-year-old Chuck in Stone Mountain,
Georgia, dancing around in the shower to that song.
Yeah.
Like, it truly reached every corner if that was what was going on.
They went out on the road,
which is not something that a lot of Disco X did,
that Disco wasn't known as a great,
like, sort of live touring thing.
Well, it was like, we talked about in our disco episode,
it was a really anonymous type of music.
Like, you never see a picture of the person who sang your favorite song at the time.
Yeah, so there were some packaged things here and there,
but generally going on the road as a disco act wasn't a very big thing to do.
But the Village People did it from the start,
and Dave dug up this thing from the Washington Post in 79
that said that their first tour had, you know,
usual stage and equipment problems,
but also the group was forced to endure all manner of verbal
and physical abuse from the audience,
which means that people were either dragged there
or whipped there to,
uh, you know, to, to boo, to boo, like, like a hate watch.
Yeah.
Which is crazy.
It is crazy, but I mean, we're talking 1979, you know?
I guess so, but like to spend your six bucks or whatever to like, Hey, we're
going to go down to Madison square garden and boo the village people.
I don't know. I guess that was a thing.
Yeah.
I'm sure that was a thing, but I think more often than not, they were just loved.
I read a quote from, um, Glenn Hughes, the leather man who, who said he basically had
to beat back women who wanted to sleep with them.
And he's like, uh, he's like, I got a headache.
Yeah.
He said, I have a headache tonight.
So apparently some people just didn't get it.
Some people didn't care.
Other people did get it and cared one way or another.
But they were, they were huge.
I think for the most part, people were either not reading into it
or just look like purposefully being obtuse and looking past it.
I'm not sure.
But they were enormous.
You mentioned Madison Square Garden.
They definitely played Madison Square Garden.
They were in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1978.
They were huge.
But if you look back on when they were huge,
it apparently lasted 22 months, less than two years.
But they were at the top of the heap during that time.
Yeah, because you know, disco,
and again, like Josh mentioned, we had one of our favorite episodes
was on disco many years ago.
Yeah, it was great.
It was, you know, not a flash in the pan,
but it was a pretty brief stay.
And you know, I guess we should get into this whole notion
of whether or not village people were, you know,
a quote, gay group, end quote.
Because that's always been a question,
like, you know, when I was a kid, I believe I've, you know,
people finally started telling me, like, you know,
those guys are all gay.
And I don't know if it was,
I'm not sure how common knowledge,
because pre-internet, any of the real truth was back then.
Randy Jones, who was the cowboy, said,
"'We didn't start as a gay group
and not everyone in the group was gay.
That's an incorrect notion.
So much of our music was played in black, Latin,
and gay underground clubs though.
That's where the first Village People album
found its initial audience.
Victor Willis, who, you know, to a lot of people
kind of was and is the Village People
because he was the super, super talented Broadway guy.
He was the guy that co-wrote a lot of their big songs,
was not just sort of a backup singer.
He was the cop.
He was the cop as the front man and he was not gay.
He was in fact for four years married to Felicia.
At the time, Felicia Ayers Allen,
who would later become Felicia Rashad,
the wife on the Cosby show is what she's most well known for.
But they were in The Wiz together on Broadway,
and then eventually got together to make music
with Morale.
I think they got together to write a concept album
for her called Josephine Superstar
about the life of Josephine Baker, which I haven't heard,
but I'm gonna try and find that
If it's in French, it's really gonna knock your socks
Yeah, but so Victor Willis was not gay
He was the frontman and lyricist but like they had songs about Fire Island and San Francisco
and Key West Greenwich Village and Key West and if you look at the lyrics like it's pretty clear that like
the stuff was either coded for gay
or just basically, if you don't know what we're talking about,
then you're pretty dense.
But if you were even remotely hip
and you read some of the contemporary
or contemporaneous articles on them,
all the journalists wanted to know, are you gay?
I read a New Music Express article from, like, I think,
1978, and the guy's asking Randy Jones the Cowboy,
he's like, are you a gay group?
And apparently, Randy Jones was sick of hearing this
at the time.
It was barely containing his anger.
And he's like, why does it matter?
He's like, we're not a gay group, we're a disco group.
But over time, they definitely evolved into a gay group.
I think it kind of occurred to them,
like what a huge impact they were having,
just by basically being ambassadors of gayness
to the rest of the world and showing everybody,
like, you like our music, you know?
Like us too.
Maybe like the gay dude that you work with.
Exactly, and that's what I think Victor Willis
as the straight lead singer,
and this is touching on YMCA, which we'll get into,
but he said, you know, I wrote those lyrics,
so technically it's not a gay song
because I'm not gay and I wrote it,
but I never had any qualms
that it was embraced by the gay community.
Yeah, he's like,
now there's anything wrong with community. Yeah, he's like, nothing is anything wrong with that.
Yeah, basically.
So on the other hand, the Hodo, the construction worker says,
I mean, look at us.
We were a gay group.
The song was written to celebrate gay men at the YMCA, was it?
Yes, absolutely.
And gay people loved it.
YMCA was, you know, it's the song.
I think Macho Man is a much better song, but YMCA was, you know, it's the song, I think Macho Man is a much better song, but YMCA
is, became part of the cultural zeitgeist like forever.
Yeah.
I saw somewhere, I couldn't find it, but that it's in a time capsule in orbit around Earth
right now.
It was included in like a bunch of songs that was sent out into space.
Oh yeah, for sure.
It was, yeah, it was a huge hit. That's just, yeah, it's part of American culture,
I guess international culture really. But the idea behind it is that Randy Jones, the cowboy,
when he moved to New York in 1975, one of the first things he did was join
the YMCA on West 23rd Street in Manhattan, which became the inspiration for the song YMCA
because he took Jacques Morali to the YMCA with him
to work out with some of his buddies
who apparently were gay adult film stars.
And Jacques Morali was just blown away
that there was this place.
It's amazing.
Yeah, it's like this secret hidden gay oasis
on the cheap, right?
Like it costs almost no money to not only like work out there, but get a room there too.
Yeah, you could stay there at the time.
So apparently he was just starstruck at the whole idea
and loved going to the YMCA and decided to write a song
about it.
So he wrote the bones of YMCA and then Victor Willis
came in and wrote kind of the rest of it.
But the whole idea behind YMCA is that it was an ode to just the gay experience at YMCA.
And Victor Willis though, he wrote a lyric that I hadn't noticed until
I was listening to it yesterday where he's talking about how
just he arrived in this new city and he was very unhappy about being there.
He said, I thought the whole world was so jive.
I never noticed so jive.
Like he just didn't like anything.
He thought the whole world was jive until he discovered the YMCA and realized that this place is awesome and amazing.
And the world in turn was pretty amazing too. I had never heard that lyric before, noticed it, and
when I did I was just, I just thought that was so great.
That's a great lyric. If you look at the original music video, it has a close-up shot of the
McBurney YMCA at the very beginning there on West 23rd and it's basically
just a video of them dancing in the street outside of it. As far as the the YMCA hand gestures,
they did not create that. They, if you if you look at that video and basically any
performance of them doing it on the Y, like you know it builds up, and they go
they throw their arms up on Y and what they're doing is they were just kind of Like, you know, it builds up, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, it's fun to play, and they go,
they throw their arms up on Y.
And what they're doing is they were just kind of
throwing their arms up in unison as like a dance move,
but it sort of looked like a Y,
and as Randy Jones tells it, that it was a live performance
where some of the audience like just started doing the,
you know, the Y and then the MCA,
and the audience sort of started it. Yeah, so when they the, you know, the Y and then the MCA and they, the audience sort of started it.
Yeah, they, so they, when they threw their arms up, the audience mistook that as like the beginning of them spelling out Y with their arms, and they took it from there.
And so some kids on American Bandstand are the ones who actually came up with the YMCA dance.
Yeah, and Hodo said, here's the quote, when I saw the movements, I thought, wow, this is so stupid.
Then everyone in America started doing it,
and I thought, wow, this is so brilliant.
Yeah, it was pretty awesome.
And the YMCA itself, apparently,
remember, this is not a time where everybody's like,
hey, gay is great.
The YMCA was like, you can't use our name like that.
Right.
It's trademarked.
And I guess got in touch with Casablanca Records,
which was producing
the village people at the time.
And, um, it just petered out.
It just went nowhere.
They, they, they ultimately decided not to, I think they kind of concluded.
It was actually way better press to just leave it as is, and that they risk
getting terrible press for suing the village people for, for singing how great
YMCA is.
So they just left it.
I think in the movie version, it would be like the head of the YMCA is on the phone
to the record company. And right before he goes to tell them that he wants a cease and
desist letter drawn up, some kid, you know, some low-level worker busts in the room and goes,
boss. And he comes up with the phone, memberships are through the roof!
That's right.
And then it just, you know, never mind, this is all good.
Yeah, he's like, wrong number.
So before we break, we'll talk quickly about the fact that you cannot go to a
baseball game anymore without hearing YMCA, like a Major League Baseball game.
Especially the Yankees. Especially the Yankees.
Especially the Yankees.
That all started at spring training in Tampa.
I'm not sure if the Yankees are still there,
but that was their home at least at the time.
And in 1996, this did not happen in the 70s,
it was in the mid 90s, top of the fifth inning,
the grounds crew came out to take care of the infield
like they always do midway through the game.
And they broke into the YMCA, you know, spelling out those letters as the song played.
And everybody thought it was the best thing ever.
And that's how it was born.
It was transferred to the new Yankee Stadium.
And then it just became a thing.
Yeah, you can hear Larry David as Steinbrenner
ordering them to get the YMCA dancers in the grounds crew.
But yeah, I saw a video of it from a Yankees game
and they're just out there doing the raking like normal
and then YMCA's playing, like it's just playing
as a song for the crowd and then all of a sudden
when it gets to the YMCA, they just drop their rakes
and start dancing and then when that's done, they just drop their rakes and start dancing.
And then when that's done, they pick up their rakes and go back to work.
It's pretty great.
Did it.
You want to take that break you promised?
Let's do it.
Okay.
Well, we'll be right back. Who hasn't heard names like Achilles or Odysseus, Cassandra, Medusa?
But how much do you know about them from the ancient world?
Let's talk about Myths, Baby is the podcast bringing the ancient sources to life.
Greek myth and history is timeless and unless you've been living under a rock, you have
seen just how true that is today.
But there is so much more to these characters and stories than what pop culture can do justice.
I'm Liv Albert, the host of Let's Talk About Myths, baby, and every week I bring
you stories from the ancient world, both mythological and historical, to breathe new life into these
thousands of years old stories.
I'm also regularly joined by some of the most brilliant names in the field of archaeology
and ancient history, authors of your favorite retellings from today, and everyone in between.
Join me as I dive into the wild world of the ancient Greeks and their stories.
Listen to Let's Talk About Myths, Baby on the iHeHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Oh, hi, I'm Rachel Zoe, and I'm back for another season of my podcast, Climbing in
Heels. You might know me from the Rachel Zoe Project, or perhaps from my work as a celebrity
stylist. And guess what? I'm still just as fully obsessed with all things fashion, beauty,
and business. My podcast, Climbing in Heels,
is all about celebrating the stories of extraordinary women and this season we're taking things up a notch.
I'll be talking to some incredible women across so many industries, from models and beauty industry
stars to doctors, entrepreneurs, and tv personalities. Climbing in Heels is here to bring you a weekly dose
of glamour, inspiration, and fun. Every week, listeners will
be able to ask me any questions. I'm answering it all. My life is absolutely crazy with so much
going on and I'm so beyond excited to bring you along for the ride. Whether we're talking red
carpet looks, current trends, or products I'm obsessed with, I'm here to be your fashion fairy
godmother. Listen to Climbing in Heels every Friday on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Do you think Abuelita knows best? We know about
the Rama here, executive producer of the podcast, Day My Abuelita First. And we definitely do.
Join us while our host Pico Ortiz and our Abuelita Liliana Montenegro play matchmaker for you loving hopefuls out there.
Biko?
Yes, yes Wilmer.
We are ready for another wild ride.
Listen, every Thursday as Abuelita Liliana and I
meet three single cuties who will vibe for a date
with one lucky dater.
Except, to get their heart,
they have to win over Abuelita first.
How PG is this?
Not at all. Totally are. Abuelita first. How PG is this? Not at all.
Totally R. Abuelita's here so bring it.
Through speed dating rounds, hilarious games and AI,
Abuelita's intuition, one contestant might be lucky enough to become the perfect match.
Let's see if Chistas will fly or if these singles will be sent back to the dating apps.
Listen today my Abuelita first as part of the My Cultura podcast network available on
the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, Chuck.
So, we've hit Macho Man, YMCA.
I think it's time for In the Navy, which was their last big hit, their last big single.
It came out in 1979.
That was on the album Cruisin', which I guess YMCA was as well, right?
Yeah, that was the one that I had.
So that was their third album, second album in 1978.
These guys released two albums in one year.
I thought it was all three, was it just two?
Two.
No, the first one was 1977.
Macho Man and Cruisin came out in 1978.
And then there was a whatever the third of,
no, I guess it was three.
There was, no, there's three singles, four albums.
So I'm missing an album.
Um, but that, that album came out in 1979, the fourth one.
Yeah. That last album was, uh, Go West.
Yes. Which by the way, I always thought that was a Pet Shop Boys song,
cause it was on their album, Vary, from the nineties.
And, um, I was listening to Village People and came across that and was like,
oh, I never realized it was a Village People song.
Okay.
I actually had this album too now that I'm seeing the cover,
because it's basically them on a, well, clearly a green screen, but like a tropical island
setting.
And that had In the Navy on it.
So I think I'm just getting those confused because I had both records.
Sure.
But can we read a little bit of In the Navy?
Yes.
All right, here we go everybody,
In the Navy by Village People.
Where you can find pleasure, search the world for treasure.
Learn science technology,
where you can begin to make your dreams all come true
on the land or on the sea, where you can learn to fly,
play in sports and skin dive, study oceanography,
sign up for the big band or sit in the grandstand
where your team and others meet in the Navy.
And that's when it starts that great chorus.
And then weirdly at the end of the song,
they're singing like the in the Navy part
over and over again.
And Victor Willis is, I guess, singing about how he doesn't want to join the Navy. And at one point,
he goes, but I'm afraid of the water. Yeah. And it just, it's hilarious. It's like purposely
funny. And that really kind of to me captures like what the village people were doing. Like
they were balancing like really good disco music with high camp, right? I mean,
these guys were dressed up as just macho stereotypes with like genuinely funny lyrics sometimes.
And I think that really kind of captured it for me. I saw it in that New Music Express article,
the author said that they were experts at balancing what is deft and what is daft. Can I read verse two?
Yeah, oh yeah, sorry, I didn't know you were.
Oh no, that's right.
I think it works better to split it up so people can just fully absorb.
If you like adventure, don't you wait to enter the recruiting office fast.
Don't you hesitate, there is no need to wait.
They're signing up new seamen fast.
Maybe you're too young to join up
today, but don't you worry about a thing, for I'm
sure there will be always a good Navy protecting
the land and sea." And there's another line in
the chorus about, you know, you can protect the
motherland. Like, it is a legit Navy recruitment
song. So much so that the Navy said, you know what, we'd like
to actually use this for recruitment and in exchange we will let you film your
music video aboard, like we'll completely help you out and not charge you money.
We'll give you all the Navy seamen that you want as background actors
and stuff and you can shoot it aboard our active ship,
the USS Reasoner, and that's what they did.
They said, all right, great,
we got a lot of production value here.
You can use it as an official recruitment song.
Yeah, I mean, that's just amazing.
Like, that's just crazy, but that's what happened.
Apparently, the Navy, any ship that had
a closed-circuit TV system got got that video and I guess would play it
over and over again, which, I mean, luckily it's a good
song and it's an interesting video.
I was at a Dunkin' Donuts the other day and they had
the Super Bowl Ben Affleck Jennifer Lopez commercial
on loop and everyone inside was completely out of their minds.
It was an awful, awful scene.
Terrible place to be.
Yeah.
Oh man.
So what I'm saying is I don't think that would have happened on board those Navy
ships because it was a pretty good song.
Yeah.
And I think their, their actual recruitment did like increase supposedly, uh, while
this song was out and being used.
I think the American military was maybe like my parents.
They weren't like, wait a minute,
what song are we using and by what band
as active recruitment for our US military?
Right.
But I'm glad they were daft enough to not recognize that, I guess.
Right. Well, the other thing about it is I didn't see a single kind of gay innuendo
lyric in that song. It was more just a gay group singing about being in the Navy,
which, you know, coded for there are plenty of like gay dudes in the Navy
secretly at the time, and I'm sure still are, but I'm sure it's much less secret.
So I think that's more what it was than it being like a gay song.
It was like you said, a straight up like, like promotional song for the Navy.
Yeah.
It's, it doesn't say in the Navy, you can maybe meet your next husband.
Right.
Exactly.
That got cut.
Yeah.
That got cut.
So that was like, we said the last big hit, um, it was in 1979 and I alluded earlier,
I think I just said outright, didn't even allude to it.
They had a 22 month run, just burned white phosphorus hot during those 22 months.
I saw that both Madonna and Michael Jackson opened for them while
they were on tour during this time.
My guess would be 1978.
Wow.
Michael Jackson surprises me.
Yeah.
Cause he was already like famous from the Jackson five.
But I mean, that goes to show you just how crazy, huge the village people were for
a time.
Yeah.
And this is before Michael Jackson himself was like just the world's biggest star.
Yeah.
Um, but yeah, it still says quite a bit.
Um, and they, yeah, it still says quite a bit.
And they kept it going.
They kept trying to go with it,
and they released a movie, as you do.
Like you said earlier, it's called Can't Stop the Music.
I can't even make it through the trailer.
No, it's bad.
It's well known as one of the worst movies of all time.
Just a disco fluff ball that keeps hitting you in the head over and over again.
Steve Gutenberg is the star.
Yeah, good.
The whole thing is kind of like a fictitious or fictionalized version of the story
of how the village people came to be.
So he plays an Americanized fictionalized version of Jacques Morelli.
His name is Jack Morell in it.
And again, he roller skates everywhere and finally puts together this group that became the village people.
And it was so bad that apparentlyazzies and was the inaugural worst picture
and worst screenplay winner in 1980.
You know where it was a modest hit though?
I do.
Australia.
I think that's where they made just the tiny amount
of money that they made back.
That's where they made it back.
I guess so.
I would love to hear from some Aussies of a certain age that could testify
as to whether or not this is true.
I would love to hear that as well.
Yeah, so we'll find out.
Yeah, I think the guy, one of the guys who created the Razzie's, the Golden Raspberry Awards,
which for those of you who don't know, it's like for the worst movies of the year, they hand these out.
He went and saw a 99 cent double feature
of Can't Stop the Music and Xanadu
and wanted his money back.
That's how bad he thought that movie was.
Xanadu was great.
He clearly was not talking about Xanadu.
He must've just completely been focused
on Can't Stop the Music.
When was the last time you saw Xanadu?
Not that long ago.
Okay.
I love it. It's also got a great soundtrack too.
It does, I mean this was the time
when they were making these big sort of movie musical
like pop movie, pop music movies.
Yeah.
It was a strange time.
And everyone was on roller skates.
Yeah, you know, none of them had like,
were the best like plotted, you know,
and they were just what they were, which was can we get, were the best like plotted, you know, and they were just worth what they were,
which was can we get someone into the movie theater
that likes this music?
Yeah, and roller skates.
After disco, Village People did try their hand at New Wave
because that's what came next.
So bad.
It did not work out.
Victor Willis left the band in 1979.
This is where the story gets.
Sad.
I guess sad in one way or just a little confusing
because Victor Willis who a lot of people say like Victor Willis
was village people as the leader,
as the original singer and songwriter.
But he left, had many,
many run-ins with the law,
awful, awful drug problems, many warrants out
and for illegal firearms and cocaine possession
and stuff like this, kind of over and over and over.
Kept getting second chances from sympathetic judges
who were like, hey, listen, you got a lot to offer
the world, can you get yourself clean?
In the meantime, Ray Simpson, Sugar Ray Simpson took over as lead singer.
And like for 30 years and all new village people, uh, save Felipe Rose and Alex
Briley as the Indian and GI toured and played, sold out cruise ships and county
fairs, like all over the country and world for like 30 years without Victor Willis.
They would do 280 shows a year.
Yeah, I mean very successful touring, like nostalgia touring group, but without Victor Willis.
Yeah, and Victor Willis was not very happy about that. So he'd been,
again, you said he had huge, huge self-inflicted problems and run-ins with the law.
He was on an episode of America's Most Wanted once
because he kept skipping bail.
I know.
At the same time, he definitely had been taking advantage
of I Can't Stop the Music productions early on.
He'd only gotten less than two grand an album.
Even back in 1978, that wasn't that much money.
For something that was just super mega hits.
He got one and a half percent of Village People royalties
for the songs that he co-wrote.
Co-wrote, like he wrote significant portions of these songs.
And like you said, to a lot of people,
he was the Village People.
So there was a point in time where the Village People
were playing the San Mateo County Fair,
and a mile away, Victor Willis was in the San Mateo County Fair, and a mile away,
Victor Willis was in the San Mateo County jail. Probably could hear at least a
little bit of it from his jail cell, right? So it was pretty bad, and apparently the
lowest point came in 2008 when they got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Yeah, I looked this up and apparently they've edited out
anything, because I watched sort of the whole ceremony,
but apparently Willis was in the crowd in that cop uniform
like yelling and screaming and talking about how it was fake
and caused a disruption.
So I don't know if they just got him out of there
and did the ceremony or if they edited the thing out,
but it is not in the YouTube video.
But what is evident when you're watching that YouTube video,
no disrespect to these guys,
but those aren't the village people.
No.
When you watch those guys, you're like,
those aren't the guys.
They're not the guys I drew in Crayon.
It's kind of like if you see a guy dressed
like the Incredible Hulk, you're like,
that's not the Hulk, he represents the spirit of the Hulk.
And in the same way, these people represented the spirit of the village people.
They were there to accept the award in honor of the village people.
I hope they realized that that's what they were doing.
They didn't even mention Willis though.
Like they were listing off names and no one said Victor Willis' name.
Yeah, there were a lot of sour grapes, I think.
And so Willis actually took Can't Stop Productions to court.
And in a really rare and unusual turn, he won big time as a matter of fact.
They went from giving him 1.5% of royalties to 50%.
Totally.
I didn't see, did he get back royalties?
I don't know.
That I was really curious about that.
Cause he just became probably something close to a billionaire
overnight if they did.
And then he, this was, this to me where I was like,
I wish this hadn't happened.
They also gave him full control over the village people
like name and likeness, the name of the band,
the whole intellectual property that was the village people you feel bad for the other guys
Yes, yeah, that's so wrong. They kept the thing going for decades. Yeah, and what did he do?
Well, I mean he started playing shows his village people with you know
Entirely set of new guys behind him. He fired them. He fired some of the original village people.
Like you said, I think it was, um, uh, Alex
Briley, Felipe Rose and Ray.
He was not the original, but he came in so
closely after, um, Victor Williston.
He was, uh, for all intents and purposes
in original, but he was the cop.
What are you going to just say, all right, now
put on the, some, like the GI uniform.
Sure.
And Alex Briley would be like, I'm the GI.
So, it probably would have gone back and forth
for a little while.
He could have accommodated them.
Instead, he was like, you guys are out.
And I don't know that they had anything to do
with the decision to, you know, mess over Victor Willis.
And yet he took his angst and anger out on them.
And I thought that that was wrong.
Yeah, I don't know enough of the story to judge it,
because I don't know how they treated him
when he was down and out, so.
Well, that's the best way to judge a story.
I'm gonna just reserve my judgment on this one.
I do think it's a shame that they couldn't get
the original group back together for at least the show,
because when I saw what I considered
the not real village people performing online, I was like, this isn't right.
And then when I saw Victor Willis and those guys,
he got together, I was like, well, this isn't right either.
Right.
You know?
Yes.
I wanted the gang back together.
I wanted all my gay friends that I gazed upon
and drew and crayon.
I wanted them to reunite.
I'm with you. You wanted them to reunite.
I'm with you.
You wouldn't be able to.
Unfortunately, Glenn Hughes died of lung cancer
in I think 2000 or something like that.
Yeah, I believe he's the only one that passed, right?
I believe so, but both I think Henri Bellolo
and Jacques Morelli are both dead. I think Jacques died of AIDS, sadly.
And Henri Bollolo died in like the late 2010s, I think.
I'm not sure of what.
But yeah, so there are some village people out there still.
You can go see them touring.
You can see the Victor Willis version at the San Diego County Fair on July 4th.
And if you happen to be in Santiago, Chile or Bogota, Columbia, you can see them in May.
All right.
Okay.
So that's your assignment stuff.
You should know army go out and see the village people and let us know what you think.
I, in the meantime, you can sit there and listen to listener mail.
Oh, interesting.
I was trying to verify really quickly if they were all alive,
because that's important.
Yeah, sure.
And I just saw here that, and this is real-time fact, everybody,
Alex Bryley supposedly, his brother was thought to be the falling man
from the 9-Eleven building.
No way.
Wow. Who knows?
Man, that took a very strange turn here.
It did take, and I believe that you're right.
I believe that Glenn Hughes is the only one
who has passed away.
But the rest of the guys are still trying to do stuff.
Is it Randy Jones?
He released a song in 2017 that reached number 42
on the Billboard Dance Club song charts,
so that's not too bad.
Randy Jones was the cowboy.
Yeah, cowboy.
So you never answered, which one did you identify
with the most or did you identify with them as a group?
I don't know, like identify is a weird word
because I didn't like
Identifies and like I wanted I think I'm one of those guys
But sure like I think I thought that the biker was the coolest
Uh-huh because like that leather man that mustache and that chopper like I thought that was just the coolest thing ever
Dig those chains. Yeah, so probably I think definitely the biker, you know, I mean that's the one who drew with
the little round boobies.
I always saw them pretty much collectively, but if any of them stood out to me, it was
probably the construction worker.
Yeah, you're always a blue collar kind of guy.
I think it was this Sherpa line jean jacket that always stood out to me and then the mirror
aviators.
It's those Toledo roots.
Oh yeah, the aviators. It's those Toledo roots. Oh yeah, the aviators.
That's right.
OK, now everybody, it's time for listener mail, I think.
Well, I don't have a listener mail
because I thought we could just talk a little bit about
our upcoming live shows.
Oh yeah, let's do that.
As just sort of an in-show announcement.
Because we are hitting the road.
This is a very fun show that you put together
and we've been getting emails from parents
like hey can my kids come?
Kids are always welcome at our shows.
Sure.
It's kind of a, well it's a kid friendly topic
in that it's not, you know, not kid friendly
but it's not about Barney the dinosaur, you know what I'm saying?
It's not terrifying though, it's pretty funny.
If you're cool with your kids hearing the S word occasionally, you're fine.
Yeah, we have a CUS word or two here and there, but it's not too bad.
But we were going to be in Medford, Mass on May 29th, then DC on the 30th, and New York
on the 31st.
Then this summer, we're going to hit the road in August on the 7th, 8th, and 9th to Chicago,
Minneapolis, and Indianapolis for the first time.
Very nice.
And then we're going to wind it out in September on the 5th and 7th in Durham, North Carolina.
And here in Atlanta, tickets are moving pretty good in most cities, but we really want to
make sure this first leg gets close to sold out.
Yeah, for sure.
We would love that. If you would like to come see us we would love that too and you can get all
the info you need you can get links to ticket sites and all that kind of stuff
by going to our website stuffyoushouldknow.com clicking on the tour
button or you can also go to our link tree linktree.sysklive and it'll
give you all the stuff you need to come see
us.
Because again, we would love that.
Right, Chuck?
It's a good time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in the meantime, if you want to get in touch with us via email, you can send it off
to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, myHeartRadio, visit the
iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
I'm Dioza. And I'm Mala. We are the creators of Loca Torra Radio, a radiophonic novella,
which is a fancy way of saying, a podcast.
Welcome to Locatora Radio, season nine.
Love at first listen.
We're older, we're wiser, and we're podcasting
through a new decade of our lives.
This season, we're falling in love with podcasting
all over again.
And getting to the heart of our stories.
We're going places we've never gone before,
and we're bringing you along with us.
With new segments, correspondence,
and a brand new sound.
Season 9 is kicking off with an intimate interview with Grammy award-winning singer-songwriter
Natalia Laforcade.
What's giving you hope right now?
Well, when I see what music does to people, it gives me a lot of hope.
If you liked Loca Tora before, you're gonna love Season 9.
Subscribe to our show and you'll see why Locatora is your prima's favorite podcast.
Listen to Locatora Radio as part of the MyCultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry. We're going to be talking with some of my best friends.
I didn't know we were going to go there on this.
People that I admire.
When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on.
Authors of books that have changed my life.
Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right?
Never forget, it's OK to cry as long as you make it a really good one.
Listen to A Really Good Cry with Radhida V Devlukia on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Buenas, buenas, mis amores.
This is Vico Ortiz, host of Date My Abuelita First each week.
Myself, alongside our resident abuelita Liliana Montenegro, esa soy yo!
Play matchmaker for a group of hopeful romantics
in this fun, flirty, and hilarious game show.
Let's see if cheese buzz will fly
or if these singles will be sent back to the dating apps.
Listen to Dave, my Abuelita first
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.