Takin’ A Walk Nashville
Takin’ A Walk Nashville

Exploring Nashville’s Music Legacy: Sean Martin of The Quarantined on Mental Health, Gratitude, and Creative Resilience

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What if music could be your lifeline in the darkest of times? Join us on this enlightening episode of Takin’ A Walk Nashville as host Sarah Harralson sits down with Sean Martin, the dynamic lead...

Transcript

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Taking a walk Nashville Hi everyone this is your host Sarah Herelson of Takin...

I hope everyone has been enjoying their new year and I want to give a quick shout out to Sennheiser today on this episode I'm using their podcast profile mic and I have been loving it But today here with me on Taking a Walk Nashville is Sean Martin the lead singer of the Grunge punk metal band the quarantine and this band sound grew through college and internet radio play in the early 2010s and All of the members of this band are former students of the musicians institute in Hollywood, California

They recently released their new album a Version two normal C in November with the record being a cathartic

confrontation with trauma and resilience this band has currently amassed over 10 million views across TikTok

With one viral clip earning over one million views. We'll be right back with more of the taken a walk Nashville podcast This isn't I Heart Podcast Guaranteed human

I'm Clayton Eckard in 2022. I was the lead of ABC's the Bachelors, but here's the thing

Bachelors fans hated him if I could press a button and rewind it all I would that's when his life took a disturbing turn a one night stand would end in a courtroom The media is here. This case has gone viral the dating contract agreed to date me

But I'm also suing you this is unlike anything I've ever seen before

I'm Stephanie Young listen to love trapped on the i-heart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts Next Monday our 2026 i-heart podcast awards are happening live in South by South West We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry and the winner Creativity knowledge and passion will all be unfold display. Thank you so much I heart radio. Thank you to all the other nominees. You guys are awesome watch live next Monday at

AP and Eastern 5 p.m. Pacific free it feeps calm or the beach app. I'm Amanda Knox and in the new podcast doubt the case of Lucy Let me we unpack the story of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the UK in 2023

But what if we didn't get the whole story?

What if the truth was disguised by a story we chose to believe? Oh my god, I think she might be innocent

Listen to doubt the case of Lucy let me on the i-heart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts Ego, Oda is your host for the 2026 i-heart podcast awards live at South by South West Hello, is anybody there raised by a single mom a go may have a few father related issues Her podcast thanks dad is full of funny heartfelt conversations with actors including fellow SNL alums, comedians, musicians and more about life and they're wonderfully complicated relationships with their father

I think and hope that's a good thing get to know Ego follow thanks dad with Ego Oda and start listening on the free i-heart radio app today Hey, I'm Jay Shetty host of the on purpose podcast my latest episode is with Hilary Duff singer actress and multi-plattener artists You desire in family like this picture and That's not reality my sister and I don't speak it's definitely a very

Painful part of my life and I hope it's not forever, but it's for right now Listen to on purpose with Jay Shetty on the i-heart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts Welcome to taking a walk Nashville with your host singer songwriter Sarah Harrelson

Sean Martin, thank you so much for being here with me today. How are you?

Good good thanks for having me is this great to be here of course Yeah, so the quarantine your band has been active for over 20 years now Can you tell us how you formed this band and came up with a name for it? Yeah, but it it started with really a need to You know have something of my own you know to as as far as because it's going to music school

You usually go there because you're like I hope to get as much work as possible. I want to work this as many different people as I could and For me, I was doing that, but everything would would fall apart at some point or another like everybody would It would eventually Me, you know, it was some impossible problem and then just eventually give it up and

Sometimes it problems weren't so much impossible as they were self-inflicted,...

You know, that's also part of the music industry, but I knew that I had a

a bunch of songs and a lot of things to say and I wanted to give it a vehicle and

Give it some you know somewhere to to go with the Everything that I knew had happened in in my life that I Didn't know how to talk about feelings that I didn't know how to express the

kind of person who I Wanted to be and who I was didn't seem to be conducive to

Existing in the rest of the world

Sometimes it's hard to

Be the only one who's doing the right thing you have to make the choice between

Cutting yourself off for your own mental health and death-writly needing to be involved because it's an existential problem that you have to face and That kind of feel like that's where my light has existed for a long time So it like probably before the military, but the military was definitely a Prime example of this and through a lot of the therapy that I've done over the over the last 20 years

since I started hiding that that first songs for this for this band I know that I've grown a lot and Learned a hell of a lot of different perspectives and ways to get to gratitude

And that's one of the most important aspects this music is brought to me is because

Whenever we're in a really really bad situation the thing that we need that we don't actually note Not usually know how to vocalize when we're in the lowest lowest point What we really need is gratitude and perspective and if we can get gratitude get to some place where we can see Gratitude and perspective for ourselves with the people around us Then we have a much higher chance of getting through that suicidal feeling that that existential crisis that

Between a rock and a hard place kind of situation when we get there and That's where we can find solutions and that's really what the quarantine is about. It's about being Throwing apart from society throwing a away from society. You don't have any access to anything What are you gonna do on your opportunity? And are you gonna come to the right answer and that's That's really what the quarantine is is really about what it means

Yeah and as you mentioned before starting the quarantine you did serve in the U.S. Army airborne infantry from 2004 to 2007 and Afterwards you dealt with PTSD Following your deployment to Iraq, so did writing this music help you navigate

What you were dealing with post-serving in the army?

Yeah, absolutely You know the quarantine is is a a political Vehicle as much as as it is in a motion view For me, they're they're both intertwined. I knew that I had to find a way to express the things that we're going on in my head And there wasn't there wasn't people who I could just top to about it

But connecting with people through news day through covers has also been a very important aspect because you know If you put a As we've now seen over the last so oh, I don't know maybe 10 15 years or so and explosion and covers of Different kinds like my my favorite is the slow piano march for whatever song, you know like you'll take They'll take last resort and do it as a slow piano like a dirge, you know

Or something like that or I don't know something pops on like take me on you like that, but they did take take take on me For a Deadpool like that's the most classic Example that I that I have with this like they I Would do that a lot of so I would I would start doing covers of the sound of silettes and I would start doing covers of Frank Sinatra and you know to bring them into a grunge context and that's that's something that a lot of audience is across the US

Have really responded well to what I've gotten before them there. So it's there's a lot of different avenues I've found to reach people through music. It doesn't just have to be in one particular genre and the kind of musician that Will take from Amy genre if it has good emotional context and content Yeah, well, and you can connect to other veterans through your music

Your known to be a veteran's mental health advocate and with your new album that's out now

You channel a lot of your own experiences as a war veteran and two reflection...

trauma and healing and just finding purpose and chaos

So is that kind of your hope releasing this album that maybe other veterans can relate to this music themselves and maybe they can Find some joy from it or ways to you know get through whatever they're going through Yeah, yeah, I although I will say It's not like that TV It's not so obvious that it's made for veterans. I feel like the message is more universal than just

Helping veterans Navigate some that's more of like a direct personal conversation, you know the thing that I found in and we're talking with with veterans

From all different eras is you have to be able to meet them on their love

The music is there to make a point every song that I write has a message. It has a lesson. It has an

call to action for yourself You know something that's meant to be self-reflective that's meant to instigate conversation if only with yourself But I found that other people when you start talking Other people will respond to be able to to open up more about it and these songs instigate those kind of conversations so the

Responseted that I've seen now internationally What's with really really cool about is see that happened over Country's borders, you know for it for example Brazil most people the United States don't know the shit about Brazil except for

Visionaries is pretty nice, you know, in summer like that's all that they really know and even that's kind of wrong

There's them there's a lot to that culture that is very much about fighting the Existing powers because they are unjust because they are unfair and there is a big push for self-governance autonomy Community coming together and spending tax dollars for the people who who pay the taxes and

Creating programs for them that benefit them that's something that's big that that's going on in Brazil right now because they just threw off a dictator They just got their Bolsonaro out of power and they prosecuted him and That's a big big deal. So especially a version to normal see

There's a definitely an asset of that in the music and I wanted to create Especially with with Nemesis Nemesis is about confrontation It's about confronting yourself. It's about confronting yourself and what your intentions are and what your actual follow-through is What are the actions that That create the end result regardless of your intention that is an asset of the songwriting that I wanted to to bake into it that it is a existential

Problem that you have to deal with when you're

When you're fighting a problem Yeah, and in this album not only has important messages, but you recorded it at the legendary Blackbird Studios here in Nashville It's been known to produce some of rocks most iconic records the album You worked with a lot of great people on it. It was engineered and produced by Nathan Yarbro who is worked with the likes of Alice and Chains and corn and an also featured

Zach Rapp from Dream Theater on lead guitar and violin so cool. What was it like working with these legends on this album? It was It was okay, so this this might sound weird, but it was extremely efficient and efficiency in the music creation process is one of the most and most invaluable

subtle things so I would ask for something and I would get exactly what I asked for that's

Amazing, you know, and the fan to these guys have can have the ability to hear something and go

Oh, you're looking for a more blue greenish kind of little red on this side I know exactly what you're talking about like the had that is fucking insane that I don't know exactly how that works, but the fact that we were able to communicate so well and to get to the result that we all wanted Extremely quickly was something that You know, I'd have tried to record this this album three times myself

Three times and I spent a solid

Like an overly entire period of of trying to record it and re-record it and mix it was about five years So eventually once I realized hey, I could take this to the best studio that I could find maybe maybe if it changed my my plan and idea then I just started focusing on

the best way to play every single aspect and get it down to if I have to re-record

Five seconds how good am I going to be at recording just that five seconds and I mean I really when is deep as I possibly could to make it so that when I showed up at that studio I could be one take chink the whole entire time and eventually That's what we were doing with the guitars put the vocals. I still had to go through and work them out

but I know that I got compliments from Nathan and the CEO manager at Blackbird and I know that I can definitely give the compliments the same compliments to Zach and to Louis and Jerry for because they

heard it were like, oh, I know exactly what you're looking for this is going to be great This is going to be fun and then they would sit there and joke for 20 minutes and then be like I read and then hit the studio and it knocked it out and like one or two takes it was a fucking fantastic Like that's the great thing. I mean working with this level of professionals they're used to being in the studio and

It's so important to save time and a studio obviously when recording but I think a lot of people don't realize

A lot of people solo artist and bands they don't bring they don't always bring their band into the studio to record their album

They'll play with them live but sometimes there's just a different dynamic where there's you know studio musicians who are better in the studio than live they're great at coming up with the part saving time Whereas that's not always the case with the live band so I think that's a good point to mention because it's not always like the same band that plays in the studio. Right and and other purposes people go it is they try to write in the studio The everything was already pre-plan and so we had a very much an agenda

So there wasn't much time for fucking around you know there wasn't much time for it was you're going to do this part It very much felt like a construction project you know like you're going to you're going to lay the foundation at this point. Okay, so you're going to then lay the walls on the inside but then you're going to do this you know all those it was very much laid out to be a

house at the end and

It wasn't like we're trying to search for finding anything so especially because that was

the purpose that was the intention that efficiency makes it just a wonderful experience just a I'm probably going to be chasing that high for a long time like just to make an album in a matter of a week when you've been doing it trying to make it happen

if for three years is and really truly an amazing experience

Yeah it definitely makes it so fun to be able to do it in that sort of efficient process and you can definitely tell by the quality so you recorded this album in Nashville as mentioned tell us about your transition to Nashville and how you ended up relocating here so in in 2021 I was living in Florida and I really didn't like living in Florida eventually it came opportunities came around to where I was like well I can either try to find a place

to live or just go on the road and I decided I'll just go on the road and I had this crowdfunding campaign that I was doing for Instagram hell and or what would eventually become Instagram hell and one last chance to songs that our Instagram hell is going to be release later this month a new version that we did at Blackbird's studio but at this time we were I was getting ready to record it in Boston with this studio called plaid doll

records and I had four or five months or so where I had to prepare to go and record it Boston everything was set the crowdfunding campaign was already done it was just ready to go and record it

now and I had four months where basically all I had to do was not die so I decided to go on an open

mic to her I went and played open mics and everywhere that I could find to play

From the east coast to the west coast and then back again then I went to the ...

record it and went back to Denver and then from Denver I went to deadwood or deadwood South

Dakota I loved there for a little bit then I went to Pennsylvania then I decided to come here to finally

do the the the real thing of recording the album that I knew was I was finally ready to do it

and you know try to go after the the industry that's that's a national because I had already been in Los Angeles and I'd already known that there's a lot of things that I liked about Los Angeles but it wasn't really the place for me Nashville seemed like a good a good a good place to start for from my kind of music I found that there's a there's a real gratitude now for people not doing you know just country music in Nashville. I don't know correctly if I'm wrong.

Well I mean if you were thinking about Nashville in early 2000s you would probably say forget it

because it's just a country music scene but now it's opened its doors for rock and pop and all sorts

of genres. Yeah yeah I've in the short of my time that I've that I've been around here it seems like it's very much a musicians city not just a country city yeah everybody loves their cow boots and if you know somebody starts singing tonight playing people are gonna fucking dance. However however there is also a real you know it's sensitive of community that people want to have and are trying to build and and trying to curate as well you know even the session musicians

were very much it was very important to them to foster the community around them it was

very important to them to you know go to other people's shows to you know facilitate for the other musicians who they knew when were friends and knew that were good people that's something that they they consciously chose to do because they knew that it helped the community not just one person like that's that's really super rare and a in a big music community that's really rare I mean there were semblance of that in Denver but the truth was is that everybody who I was hanging

with in Denver was just as poor as everybody else nobody really had the ability to put some real money into whatever project they were doing they were all trying to make the best with what they had they didn't have that access to major promotions or major marketing or major studios or a way to make their ideas greater than just them playing it live and they would play it live and they'd put their whole heart and soul into it and the performance was great but it only lasts

that far and it's important to know that you know to have people who know the music industry is more than just creating a flash and a pan it's about building something that has longevity and has legs and wheels if you will to be the vehicle to carry you someplace I wanted to to say in Denver but there wasn't a lot of people who really knew and understood that concept but when I walked into the studios here in Nashville they were telling me hey fucker

this is what we're doing here and that is that's that's awesome that's exactly the kind of community that I that I wanted to try to embed myself and to surround myself with people who really were making a conscious effort to to do something

lasting with the music talents that they had in which it's significant yeah I think

the community here is so great because you know everyone has the same goals and we're all working hard to even earn enough to be able to record that album in a studio here in Nashville we understand the work ethic we'll be right back with more with the taking a walk Nashville podcast I'm Clayton Eckard and in 2020 too I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor

unfortunately it didn't go according to plan he became the first bachelor to ever have his final

rose rejected the internet turned on him if I could press a button and rewind it all I would but what happened to Clayton after the show made even bigger headlines it began as a one night stand and ended in a courtroom with Clayton at the center of a very strange paternity scandal the media is here this case has gone viral the dating contract agreed to date me but I'm also

Showing you this is unlike anything I've ever seen before I'm Stephanie Young...

this season an epic battle of he said she said and the search for accountability in a sea of

lies listen to Love Trap on the iHeart Radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts

next Monday our 2026 iHeart podcast awards are happening live in South by South West we'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry and the winner creativity knowledge and passion will all be unfold display thank you so much iHeart Radio thank you to all the other nominees you guys are awesome watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern 5 p.m pacific free it feeps.com or the

feeps app hey i'm Jay shetty host of the on purpose podcast my latest episode is with

Hilary Duff singer actress and multi-platin martist Hilary opens up about complicated family dynamics

motherhood and releasing our first record in over 10 years we talk about what it's taken to

grow up in the entertainment industry and stay grounded through every chapter it's a raw and honest conversation about identity evolution and building a life that truly matters you desire in family like this picture and that's not reality a lot of the time it's for people my sister and i don't speak it's definitely a very painful part of my life and i hope it's not forever but it's for right now listen to on purpose with Jay shetty on the iHeart Radio app apple podcast

or whatever you get your podcast in 2023 a story gripped the UK of looking horror and disbelief the nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies is now the most prolific child killer in modern British history everyone thought they knew how it ended a verdict a villain a nurse named Lucy leppy Lucy leppy has been found guilty but what if we didn't get the full story the moment you look at the whole picture the case collapses i'm Amanda Knox and in the

new podcast doubt the case of Lucy leppy we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it to ask what really happened when the world decided who Lucy leppy was no voicing of any skepticism are doubt it'll cause so much harm at every single level of the British establishment if it's just wrong listen to doubt the case of Lucy leppy on the iHeart Radio app apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts

life and they're wonderfully complicated relationships with their fathers i think and hope

that's a good thing get to know ego follow thanks dad with ego wota and start listening on the free iHeart Radio app today welcome back to taking a walk Nashville when you came here you know you said you were doing open mics across the country before you landed in Nashville um you you were also doing videos on social media this time what was the clip that went viral for your band on tiktok and did you expect

it to have the outcome that it did no no not at all um so the clip that that went viral was actually one of the major influencers that we partnered with um had a took one of our songs in it

went you got like six or seven million views and it's it's reposted on tiktok you can go and

don't find it we saw a huge spike in the spotify numbers um because of it and so we made a post and said we got this until one million people and then that helped to get through nothing million people and it's i don't i don't even know man like the the truth of the matter is is that it that kind of that kind of shit it gets out of your hands and you just you put out a lot of this was allowing somebody to tell me what i should be posting and that normally was the process

how i would do it i would put up whatever i thought was you know what i was feeling at the moment or you know whatever i felt like doing and all and overall it was an inconsistent social media plan

Because it wasn't really a plan it was just me using it as the sounding board...

who i thought were listening once i started to understand the strategies behind what you post

and how you put it out and what everything that goes around it and all the different ways that you can promote it that doesn't have anything to do with the posting itself is kind of nutball like i don't i don't know if a lot of people have done influencer marketing for their songs but it's a weird world man and i will say it works it's not it's very counterintuitive

i think from most these nations but it was it was really it was really great to see that that kind of

of response i and it was really consistently you know 200 to 300,000 or so views on a lot of the the content that we were doing it was just the stuff that we recorded at blackboard studios we had gotten the mass in bird room well at least what i call the mass in bird room which is this room that has 100,000 one by one would spheres we'll say that our strategically and mathematically placed in the room to make it a perfect sounding room and

it's a really really amazing to be in there i mean it's everybody's favorite room

because it looks the coolest you know it looks super dope so we decided to shoot the

the the recording of the of the vocals that we were doing in that room and you know it just happened to to really capture people's eyes i guess and i have no idea how to to make it happen again maybe we'll do it maybe we won't i don't know you know it's it's i was really odd about it for me and the reason why i speak kind of tenently about it's because i wrote an apart blog in 2012

2013 about the trying a part of it part seven was about warning the community about putting likes

and views as a way to discern who's good and who is not because i saw what was coming which was we're going to end up fighting with dog videos we're going to end up competing with baby videos and that's not that's not the point of of what we're trying to do and we have to be able to understand that views and likes are a temporary litmus test they are not the end all be all of somebody's existence in or they shouldn't be the end all be all of somebody's existence in the music

industry and i'm pretty sure no we fucking listen to me so so we it's a little weird for me to get to that other side of you know getting a lot of views and knowing that a lot of people have seen my content when before you know i was talking to an audience of you know media a couple thousand and it's it's quite a it's quite a different feeling but i know that what it really does is set the table for me to start interacting on a greater scale with more and more people

and that's really the point and that's the great thing about it you've converted so many fans online to your music that you maybe wouldn't have been able to reach through doing live music

so i think that's definitely the great thing about it but you're also going viral in more ways than

one by working towards a more perfect union and partnership with free to love dot org can you tell us what this partnership is and how it came about yeah so that i that came around in 2019 i think and it was it's more of an alignment of goals pre love it has a a lot of different ambassadors who represent different aspects of life you know each of the different ambassadors they have have or advocates that they have have each other own unique story something to say

we partner on on really the goals of trying to use music as a advocacy platform and to have a set of values and intentions that we embody to make a statement you know i've been

In a lot of the planning stages and trying to get everything on like in my he...

all of the different moving pieces of what this whole business is like i'm still coming into everything that i actually have and utilizing all of the different aspects of who i am as a person in the entertainment industry for example i'm going to have a meeting next week with a

company that will help me write a book and that book is going to be up it's going to be the first

step because i already have multiple stories in an outlines that i've written for tv series for movies this is going to be the the next step to get my story and message across as the people can get a true vision of where this shit actually comes from and also as a great method for x

lnation of of what happened and why it's important you know that along with that there's there's

podcasts interviews and there's life you know tiktok life youtube life then there's life performances then there's advocacy work then there's music education there's so many different avenues to share your your talents across the board and i'm still figuring out all of the different ways to go and do that so it's been really really exciting to start seeing a bunch of different opportunities come up because i have a a certain level of people on spotify or certain level of

people on on tiktok to me i see it as just another barrier that i have to overcome in order to get me in the rooms that i need to be to say what i need to say to to play what i want to play to share what i want to share to express what i want to express and that's really the goal that

that's ultimately that's the goal as long as it gets me in a room with someone and they can have

an experience of understanding a moment of clarity a to see through something to feel something real about this rub not just be caught up in in the duplicity in the in the stupidness of how everything is really really fucked up and every single part of your life seems completely

organized and you don't have a fucking say in any of it at some point you have to have a moment in

which you can have a real conversation with yourself and that's put in my music is for that's why i play that's why i pick up the guitar and i sing with the intention that i do and i play with the intention that i do is to get through to people and not just be superficial i love that i couldn't agree more i think that for me that's the whole purpose of music and as musicians and people in music we should be advocates for other people in their stories and their voices so i think

that's great uh if people want to see the quarantine at an upcoming show or follow you where can they find you uh you can find me on uh social media picked up facebook instagram um our website the

quarantine.com you can find us on youtube as well uh we've got you know we're developing all of our

social media more and more um so give us a follow and a like on any of those things send us a message through our website um and we'll we'll you know get in contact with anybody that's funny

but you know it's great uh well my last question a famous question i always like to ask every

guest who's on taking a walk Nashville Sean do you have a favorite place that you like to take a walk in Nashville you know i actually haven't gotten around to walking much in Nashville but i will say this when i first got to Nashville i went to a place where i'm sure you know called painters that it was up off a Broadway and there was it gave me the same feeling that i had walking down last palmus in Los Angeles like a little grungy people say on that side smoke

can cigarettes you don't know who the hell they are all right there's you know four or five venues and every one of them is just hop and off and i went in there and um you know just hung out there for a while and realized there was an open mic at one of at one of the places i forget the name of it they had a situation where no mic was they would pick five musicians pull them up on stage and make them you know pick a song and play and so i went up there and i was already well

versed in this entire process because that's exactly what we did for LPWs and musicians as

The two so i spent three years doing this already so i'm completely ready to ...

what to do i'm prepared i've all my stuff you know ready to go i'm i'm ready before everybody else

is on stage and we go and play eight no rest for the wicked and it was very very surprising

for the majority of the audience because they've never really heard somebody play guitar and

because i play it fast i play it like a rap rock song not like a just sitting and grooving grooving back kind of thing like i'm trying to push it forward like a punk song and the audience response was fantastic and it was really a great experience and talking with the band leader the house band leader in asking them all about Nashville so i would say when that was the first little walk that i took in Nashville so that was the very serendipitous just walk that i happen to

take in Nashville and it landed me already in knowing that yeah i should probably come here and say

yeah i love yeah i love printers allie there's so many great bars there places to see like music

like alley tabs a lot of great boogie bourbon and blues and jazz restaurants and places to see live music there i love it and it doesn't feel like you're quite like downtown off Broadway but a little fun fact in case you didn't know printers allie used to be brothels back in the day and Nashville before they converted it to live music video so it definitely has its own kind of charm i guess yeah it kind of looks like that yeah you can see them history in there and like

you know you go to Portland Portland is the same thing like all all all all the buildings along

the waterways are old old buildings and they all used to be brothels yeah lots of stuff that are

like vegan through house restaurants now super nice used to be brothels like there's the real there's a real fun history and it's really like you you go there and it's like this is a little different this isn't you know what what's the Brad Paisley's you know it's super strange this is this is a little bit more grandjean it's a little bit more of my speed you know i like to yeah yeah it's definitely more grandjean as it's own little charm ocean thank you so much for

being on taking a walk Nashville today i hope everyone will check out your new album a version to normalcy thank you so much you appreciate that's so much for having me been awesome thanks for listening to taking a walk Nashville with Sarah Harrelson please check out our other shows produced by Buzz night media productions comedy saved me and music saved me hosted by Lynn Hoffman and take it a walk hosted by yours truly buzz night all shows are available on Apple

podcast Spotify and are part of the iheart podcast network i'm Clayton Eckard in 2022

I was the lead of ABC's the bachelor but here's the thing bachelor fans hated him

if i could press a button and rewind it all i would that's when his life took a disturbing turn a one night stand would end in a courtroom the media is here this case has gone viral the dating contract agreed to date me but i'm also doing you this is unlike anything i've ever seen before i'm Stephanie Young listen to love trapped on the iheart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts next Monday our 2022 6 iheart podcast awards are happening live

in south by south west we'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry and the winner in creativity knowledge and passion will all be unfold display thank you so much i heart radio thank you to all the other nominees you guys are awesome watch live next Monday at 8 p.m eastern five p.m pacific free it feeps dot com or the feeps app i'm a man to knocks and in the new podcast doubt the case

of lucy let be we unpack the story of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the uk in 2023 but what if we didn't get the whole story what if the truth was disguised by a story we chose

to believe oh my god i think she might be innocent listen to doubt the case of lucy let be

on the iheart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts

Good thing get to know a go follow thanks dad with a go out and start listeni...

radio app today hey i'm jishetty host of the on purpose podcast my latest episode is with

Hilary Duff singer actress and multi-plattener artist you desire in family like this picture

and that's not reality my sister and i don't speak it's definitely a very

painful part of my life and i hope it's not forever but it's for right now

listen to on purpose with jishetty on the iheart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcast

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