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Tag: dive

  • ‘Agatha All Along’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

    ‘Agatha All Along’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

    The witch’s road is ever-winding! Jo and Mal are here to take you down the deep dive of the sixth episode of Agatha All Along. They begin with their opening snapshot and dive through a massive theory corner about Teen’s big reveal and what it means about his journey through the road!

    Opening Snapshot (04:17)

    Deep Dive (14:00)

    Three Years Later (01:15:26)

    When Craftcrazy17 Met Bohnerrific69 (01:22:49)

    Billy Come on House of R (01:34:27)

    Back to Westview (01:41:36)

    Agatha Drags Herself out of the Swamps Of Sadness

    The Witches’ Road Goop (01:48:20)

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Video Editor: Stefano Sanchez
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal, T Cruz, and John Richter
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / YouTube

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Agatha All Along’ Episode 5 Deep Dive

    ‘Agatha All Along’ Episode 5 Deep Dive

    We fly together or not at all, and you know Mal and Jo love a broom! Our favorite witches are back to dive deep into the latest episode of Agatha All Along. They start their spell-binding dive by talking about brooms, of course (17:30), before getting into everything from the latest trial (50:16). Then, they finish off with plenty of discussion around Teen, his true identity, and the ending of the episode (02:08:20).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Mike Wargon
    Video Editor: Stefano Sanchez
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal, John Richter, and T Cruz
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / YouTube

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Agatha All Along’ Episodes 1 and 2 Deep Dive

    ‘Agatha All Along’ Episodes 1 and 2 Deep Dive

    It’s time to go down the witches’ road! Mal and Jo conjure up a pod that dives deep into the season premiere of Agatha All Along! The two give their overall impressions of the show and what they think about the follow-up to the hit WandaVision (08:17). They then get into the first two episodes and later stop by Theory Corner to see what could be in store for our witchy crew!

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Video Editor: Stefano Sanchez
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal and John Richter
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / YouTube

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Rings of Power’ Season 2, Episode 6 Deep Dive

    ‘Rings of Power’ Season 2, Episode 6 Deep Dive

    WHERE IS HE? It’s time to join Jo and Mal as they best Fëanor and dive deep into the latest episode of Rings of Power! They begin with their opening snapshot (3:44), before the patented House of R deep dive into each scene and explore what’s in store for our heroes and villains in Eregion, Númenor, Rhûn, and more (16:35)! Also, later wig watch check-in and a special spoiler speculation section (02:18:45).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Video Editor: Stefano Sanchez
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal and John Richter
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / YouTube

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Rings of Power’ Season 2, Episode 5 Deep Dive

    ‘Rings of Power’ Season 2, Episode 5 Deep Dive

    ‌It is time to step out into the sun to join Jo and Mal as they dive into the latest episode of Rings of Power! They begin with their opening snapshot and establish their thoughts on what might be one of the best episodes of the season (05:18). Then, they dive deep into each scene and explore the themes and characters in a world unseen (16:18). They also have wig watch and their special spoiler speculation section (02:11:15).

    ‌Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Video Editor: Cameron Dinwiddie
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal and John Richter
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 8 Deep Dive

    ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 8 Deep Dive

    It’s time to bleed the crystal, as Jo and Mal are here to dive deep into the season finale of The Acolyte. They begin with their opening snapshot on this episode and their thoughts on the season in general (06:54). Then they get into the nitty gritty of revelations and surprise cameos that make up this divisive season of TV (17:02).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Below Deck’ Deep Dive With Jodi Walker

    ‘Below Deck’ Deep Dive With Jodi Walker

    Juliet is back this week with friend and Ringer colleague Jodi Walker to talk about one of the most underrated Bravo shows, Below Deck. The ladies discuss the franchise, their favorite characters, the current season (Below Deck Mediterranean Season 9), the drama, their favorite captains, their favorite chefs, and more!

    Host: Juliet Litman
    Guest: Jodi Walker
    Producer: Jade Whaley
    Theme Song: Devon Renaldo

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Juliet Litman

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  • ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

    ‘The Acolyte’ Episode 6 Deep Dive

    Hold on to your hakama pants and get ready for a steamy deep dive into The Acolyte Episode 6. After Opening Snapshot (06:32), Mal and Jo rank Qimir’s horniest lines in an endowed installment of Thirst Trap Corner (18:01). Later, they check in with Detective Bazil (01:22:10) and discuss the potential shadiness of Vernestra. All that and so much more on the latest House of R!

    Also, be sure to get tickets for The Ringer-Verse live as part of the Ringer Residency this coming July 17 at the El Rey Theatre!

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Guest: Ben Lindbergh
    Producers: Steve Ahlman and John Richter
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘X-Men ’97’ Episodes 4-6 Deep Dive

    ‘X-Men ’97’ Episodes 4-6 Deep Dive

    “The name’s Gambit, mon ami … remember it!” Mal and Jo are back to continue their X-Men ’97 deep dive by breaking down episodes 4-6. They discuss the stakes of the show (18:30) and explain why shame plays such a key role (56:40). Plus, they cover every romance and go over all that happened in the middle three episodes (78:37).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Mike Wargon
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • At This Chicago Dive Bar, Matzo Ball Soup Is the Malort Chaser of Choice

    At This Chicago Dive Bar, Matzo Ball Soup Is the Malort Chaser of Choice

    Chris and Calvin Marty, the owners behind Best Intentions, say they “don’t make a big deal” that they’re Jewish. The brothers, who opened their Logan Square bar in 2015, grew up in Cambridge, Wisconsin, a village about 60 miles west of Milwaukee and with a population of about 1,600. Less than 1 percent of Wisconsin’s population is Jewish, per a 2020 study from Brandeis University.

    ”We probably experience a little private guilt that maybe we’re not the best Jews — we never went to temple, we never had bar mitzvahs,” says Chris Marty.

    The bar’s menu definitely contains some decidedly unkosher items like the Cuppa Shrimp with mild sauce, a gnarly cheeseburger, and red wine-braised short rib. The harissa chicken provides another nod to the Middle East. But tucked within the menu lies a surprise — matzo ball soup — and a great version at that, with a rich broth darkened by duck fat yet brightened by heavenly wafts of ginger and lemongrass.

    Yes — a place like this uses duck fat for its matzo ball soup.

    In Chicago, it’s not especially hard to find a bowl of matzo ball soup, as a basic version appears on the menu of every self-respecting Jewish deli in town. But in recent years, the dish has begun to spring up in some unexpected places, too, including while perched on a bar stool on a rainy Friday in Logan Square and double-fisting a dirty martini. Best Intentions manages to channel the best of Wisconsin dives and serve fun, well-executed bar food. It was immediately clear that whoever created Best Intentions had spent some time in Wisconsin’s many unironic watering holes like River’s End in rural Ontario.

    “In Jewish American food, the two big things are matzo ball soup and bagels – what’s more ubiquitous than the two of those?” posits Zach Engel, chef and owner of Michelin-starred Israeli and Middle Eastern restaurant Galit in Lincoln Park. Even his mother, an unenthusiastic home cook, makes a “pretty killer” version for family holiday meals: “As far as representations of Jewish culture, [matzo ball soup] makes us look pretty good.”

    Best Intentions reopened in 2023 after a three-year hiatus.

    A group of three women smile and talk at the bar.

    A dollop of burrata and beans.

    This burrata with white bean anchoïade shows the ambition at this dive bar.

    A griddled cheeseburger in a paper bag with fries and a can of pickle beer.

    Cheeseburger (Land O’ Lakes white American cheese, dill pickles, joppiesaus).

    Matzo ball soup was once on the menu at Galit, but Engel hasn’t served it since the pandemic began as the restaurant has shifted to a four-course menu of shared dishes; soup is difficult to share. Nevertheless, Engel says he’s watched with interest as more restaurants work to attract diners with unexpected food while simultaneously tapping into a feeling of cozy familiarity. “Matzo ball soup is a super straightforward way to get people to feel a level of comfort in their heart, but it’s still interesting,” he says.

    Though their exact origin is hazy, the proliferation of matzo balls — a simple mixture of matzo meal, beaten eggs, water, and schmaltz, or chicken fat — is generally attributed to German, Austrian, and Alsatian Jews who adapted regional Eastern European soup dumplings to suit Jewish dietary laws. No matter its history, the matzo ball’s simplicity also means that even unenthusiastic home cooks can deliver a version that will please a crowd.

    The mixture is formed into balls (as usual, there’s debate over the supremacy of fluffy “floaters” or toothsome “sinkers”) and simmered in boiling water or even better, soup stock, until they swell into spongy spheres. Given the relatively small number of American Jews — about 7.6 million, or 2.4 percent of the total U.S. population, and a mere 319,600 in the Chicago area, according to the same Brandeis study — Ashkenazi-style Jewish deli cuisine has made an outsized impact on mainstream American culture in general, from corned beef on St. Patrick’s Day to Meg Ryan’s infamous faux-gasm in rom-com icon When Harry Met Sally.

    A bowl of matzo ball soup.

    Best Intentions chef Bryan McClaran had never tried matzo ball soup before making it.

    As a child, Chris Marty was close to his great-grandmother, Hannah Westler, who fled antisemitism in Europe around the turn of the century and immigrated to Milwaukee, where she worked “14,000 jobs” to put her sons through law school. The brothers grew up eating her matzo ball soup, which she made from a recipe featuring a special twist: vodka. Years later, her boozy invention would inspire them to create a matzo ball cocktail for a local bartending challenge, an exercise that rekindled their connection to their family’s past.

    Though he’d heard of it before, Best Intentions chef Bryan McClaran, who’s worked at the Cambodian restaurant Hermosa and the Asian-influenced Bixi Beer, hadn’t actually tried matzo ball soup when his bosses pitched the idea. Research involved YouTube videos, cookbooks, and some New York Times articles from the ’80s, and in the end, the first version he wound up tasting was his own. Together, the brothers and McClaran worked to hone a recipe that would be worthy of the history it represented.

    “The big thing for us, other than nailing the consistency of the matzo ball, was not to goy it up with dill,” Chris Marty chuckles. “Anywhere we go with my mom, if there’s matzo ball soup, we’ll order it. She’s always like, ‘Why do the goys have to load it up with so much fucking dill?’”

    “Matzo balls aren’t going anywhere”

    It’s a Saturday in March at nearly 18-year-old deli Eleven City Diner, and owner Brad Rubin is holding court from a roomy booth inside his South Loop deli-diner hybrid. Founded in 2006 as an ode to casual midcentury hospitality, the restaurant, which at one point had a Lincoln Park location, has endured long enough to become a pillar of Chicago’s Jewish culinary scene while attracting non-Jews with a retro aesthetic and plentiful plates of food.

    Rubin bursts with pride as he recounts his family’s Ashkenazi immigrant history and explains the meaning behind each photograph, vinyl record, and painting on its walls. His clear, resonant voice rings out as he bids farewell to customers (he learns all of their names) and jokes with employees.

    It’s also impossible to ignore that at least a cup, if not a bowl, of matzo ball soup can be found on half the tables. The broth is light but not additive-yellow, with fluffy-yet-firm matzo balls noteworthy for both their ample size and distinctive green flecks of parsley, mostly for color. However one feels about parsley, the diner’s version serves well as a baseline matzo ball soup — uncomplicated, nostalgic, and reminiscent of a bubbe’s concoction with slightly more polish. There are no surprises in Eleven City’s bowl, and in this way, it’s a stark contrast to McClaran’s melange of elegant aromatics and ducky character at Best Intentions.

    People sit on stools beside a long, low-lit bar with checkerboard flooring.

    Rubin’s resonant tone, however, drops to a hush as he admits Eleven City hasn’t had kreplach since COVID began. The diners who used to order it have since moved out to the suburbs, he says. Kreplach are small and plump dumplings stuffed with fillings like meat and mashed potatoes — cousins to Polish pierogi, Russian pelmeni, Italian stuffed pasta, and Chinese jiaozi. The difference between matzo balls and kreplach is mostly negligible, but, according to Rubin’s numbers, the gap in sales was significant. “Matzo balls aren’t going anywhere,” Rubin affirms.

    Indeed, in recent years they’ve also cropped up on the menu at seemingly random spots like Armitage Ale House, Lincoln Park’s British pub from Au Cheval owner Hogsalt Hospitality. In West Town, chef Zoe Schor also served a pepper-laden matzo ball soup at Split-Rail, which she closed in late 2023. Schor isn’t shy about her Jewish American identity but the restaurant, a neighborhood hit known for fried chicken, was never positioned as a particularly Jewish spot. But for Schor, the soup was about something bigger than Split-Rail – its presence marked a broader movement among chefs seeking to connect with their own background.

    “I feel like in terms of the zeitgeist of becoming classically trained and cooking the food you grew up eating, Ashkenazi Jewish culinary traditions were a little later to hit the trends,” she says. She’s been happy to see the ripple effects manifest in spots like Russ & Daughters, the 110-year-old New York appetizing store that launched a wildly successful cafe in 2014. “I think it’s very cool and important that we continue these traditions and the conversation.”

    The early 2010s saw a matzo ball revolution of sorts, arguably ushered in by the 2013 debut of Shalom Japan, a Brooklyn restaurant where chefs Aaron Israel and Sawako Okochi have made a major splash with their matzo ball ramen. In Chicago, some had the audacity to suggest adding jalapeno, and in 2020, the short-lived restaurant Rye in West Loop made matzo balls with blue corn masa. The dish has come a long way in, at least in the canon of Jewish culinary history, a very short time. But by its very nature, matzo ball soup is relevant not due to its ingredients, but rather, the sensory and emotional experiences it evokes.

    A ladle pours broth from a bot into a bowl.

    A bowl of matzo ball soup with carrots, parsley, and celery.

    It’s difficult to pin down why exactly matzo ball soup has risen to such a cross-cultural level of notoriety. But a look back at the soup’s lore in the U.S. may shed some light. Take Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller — please. It’s hard to imagine a worse pairing than the legendary Hollywood sex symbol and the Jewish Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright who devoted much of his career to shedding light on the American everyman.

    As the story goes, the couple frequently dined at the home of Miller’s mother, Isadore, who served a lot of matzo ball soup. They ate it so much that at one point, Monroe reportedly quipped, “Isn’t there any other part of the matzo you can eat?”

    With that, a star was born and the humble, homely matzo ball was catapulted into American pop-culture history.

    In the wake of the Holocaust, the mid-1950s (the couple married in 1956) was an unusually optimistic era for American Jews, who began to enter the middle class and seek higher education. For the first time, the American public was exposed to stories like Oscar-winning 1947 film Gentleman’s Agreement, which starred cinematic icon Gregory Peck as a non-Jewish reporter who poses as a Jew to research an exposé on antisemitism.

    Despite ongoing institutionalized discrimination at universities and social hubs like country clubs, American Jews at the time saw broader social acceptance than perhaps in any other millennia of Jewish history. And suddenly, that cultural validation reached new heights. Monroe, the blonde bombshell herself, was eating matzo balls too, lending mainstream credibility to a tradition that’s endured in Chicago and across the country well beyond Miller and Monroe’s marriage, which lasted less than five years.

    Though reluctant to get “too high-minded” about what it means to serve Jewish food in a non-Jewish context, for Chris Marty, it points to a desire to push back on a national political shift toward exclusion. “I think society is pretty shitty right now,” he says. “People are highly intolerant and very insular… The beauty of the bar and restaurant industry — especially in Chicago — is that you have that willingness to just love it if it’s good.”

    A crowd clusters around a bar corner in a low-lit space.

    Naomi Waxman

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  • The Field House, the 33-Year-Old Lincoln Park Dive, Has Been Sold

    The Field House, the 33-Year-Old Lincoln Park Dive, Has Been Sold

    While the ownership of the Field House — a home away from home for Cleveland Browns fans for more than three decades — announced the sports bar would be closing on Wednesday, February 28, the Lincoln Park dive won’t be shutting down.

    The co-owner of HVAC Pub in Wrigleyville, Nick Ivey, has bought the bar at 2455 N. Clark Street from Field House’s longtime owner Patrick Maykut. Ivey — who took over as co-owner and operator of HVAC in April 2022, partnering with 8 Hospitality Group (Hubbard Inn, Joy District) — says he won’t mess with the sports bar’s “essence” when he remodels the bar; it will stay closed for a bit while crews work. Ivey says he was looking to buy a new bar to give his employees at HVAC new opportunities.

    One of his bartenders at HVAC, Savanna Haugse, will be a partner in Field House, as will 8 Hospitality founder Carmen Rossi. Ivey calls Rossi a mentor — they met while Ivey was a bartender at Hubbard Inn. Ivey says he was looking for more of a management and ownership track.

    Ivey plans on keeping the bar closed until St. Patrick’s Day when they’ll open just for the holiday. Workers will then swap out the front door for a garage door and spruce up the space. They’ll also serve new cocktails. Ivey isn’t sure how long he’ll close the bar, but he’s not going to rush anything.

    “It’s a dive bar — we’re not going to turn it into a nightclub or anything like that,” Ivey says.

    The Field House had its quirks, as it would serve shelled peanuts, encouraging customers to drop shells on the floor. This was before society had a clearer understanding of peanut allergies. The bar adopted the slogan “cold beers and crunchy floors.” As Lincoln Park and neighboring Lakeview draw many recent college grads from Michigan and Ohio dying to meet people from the same state after moving to the big city, the Field House seemed inoculated from that scene while carving out a niche as a divey sports bar.

    The bar’s workers reportedly tried to buy the bar from Maykut. Maykut rebuffed their efforts, they say. These workers were blindsided by the news that the bar was sold. Staff was reportedly told of the sale over the weekend. An Instagram post called the news “a mix of sadness and surprise.”

    Meanwhile, Ivey calls the Field House a community meeting place and he wants to keep the momentum going. Taking over a dive is a complicated matter, and it’s easy to alienate regular customers. SmallBar in Logan Square was recently sold to Footman Hospitality, and Skylark in Pilsen was purchased by a group of the bar’s workers. So far, Ivey has been pleased by the response.

    “HVAC Pub is a late-night music venue,” Ivey says. “What we’re looking to do is totally the opposite.”

    Look for more news about Ivey’s plans for the Field House in the coming weeks.

    Ashok Selvam

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  • ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Season Finale Deep Dive

    ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Season Finale Deep Dive


    The Gods are among us as Joanna and Mal return to dive deep into the season finale of Percy Jackson and the Olympians (08:10). They take an extended look at the season’s final episode and break down all of the significant story elements of the show (15:41). Later, they talk about book spoilers to see what may happen next in a potential Season 2 (02:03:42).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts



    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘True Detective: Night Country’ Episode 3 Deep Dive

    ‘True Detective: Night Country’ Episode 3 Deep Dive


    Jo and Rob return to break down the third episode of True Detective: Night Country. They discuss the vast use of teal and what it might symbolize, why the flashback sequences are so effective, and Danvers’s (at times misguided) maternal instincts. Along the way, they talk about Hank’s ongoing suspiciousness and Navarro opening up for the first time. Later, they highlight some of the show’s most significant unanswered questions.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producer: Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify



    Joanna Robinson

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  • ‘Echo’ Deep Dive

    ‘Echo’ Deep Dive

    It’s time to join Mal and Jo for the first Marvel endeavor of 2024 in the form of Echo (10:13). They take on the entire season drop and get into what made the show work and not work for them (28:32). Later, they break down easter eggs and much more.

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adenira

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Episodes 3 and 4 Deep Dive

    ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Episodes 3 and 4 Deep Dive

    Mal and Jo are here to dive into Episodes 3 and 4 of Percy Jackson and the Olympians. They begin with their initial thoughts on these two episodes and the general reviews the show has gotten (8:20). Then they dive into each episode, discussing the journey we’re on with each character, new characters that appear, and much more (20:09). Later on they talk about some Easter eggs and some book spoilers that could potentially show up in future episodes (2:12:53).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Producer: Isaiah Blakely
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Episodes 1 & 2 Deep Dive

    ‘Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ Episodes 1 & 2 Deep Dive

    We just need some more wine. Mal and Jo are here to dive into the first two episodes of Percy Jackson and the Olympians (07:20). After their initial impressions, they delve into their thoughts on Percy and the many characters and lore that stem from this beloved book series (16:22). Later, they also dive into book spoilers to see what may come ahead (1:54:22).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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  • ‘Loki’ Season 2, Episode 3 Deep Dive

    ‘Loki’ Season 2, Episode 3 Deep Dive

    It’s time for another deep dive into Loki Season 2! Mal and Jo are back to discuss Episode 3, “1893” (13:08). They talk about some questionable decisions being made by Loki and Mobius, discuss the horny motivations of Miss Minutes, and even sprinkle in a little Midwest geography talk (33:47).

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Associate Producer: Carlos Chiriboga
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Pandora | Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

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