This isn't "I Heart Podcast.
Guarantee human. You know Roll Doll.
He thought of Willie Wonka in the BFG,
but did you know he was a spy? In the new podcast, the secret world of Roll Doll. I'll tell you that story, and much, much more. What? You probably won't believe it either.
Was this before he wrote his stories? I'd must have been. Okay, I don't think that's true. I'm telling you. Okay, I was a spy.
Listen to the secret world of Roll Doll. On the "I Heart Radio App" Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Bailey Taylor, and Mrs. Icarol. This podcast is all about going deeper
with the women shaping culture right now. Yes, we will talk about the style and the success, but we are also talking about the pressure, the expectations, and the real work behind it all. As a woman in the industry,
you're always underestimated.
So you have to work extra hard in a way that doesn't compromise. Who you are in your integrity? You know, I like to say I was kind of like that. Silent Ninja.
Listen to It Girl with Bailey Taylor on the "I Heart Radio App" Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Ready for a different take on Formula One? Look no further than no grip. A new podcast tackling the culture of motor racing's most coveted series.
Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F1. Including the story of the woman who last participated in a Formula One race weekend, the recent uptick in F1 romance novels, and plenty of mishab scandals and sagas that have made Formula One a delightful, decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years.
Listen to NoGrip on the "I Heart Radio App" Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. If you're trying to keep up with everything happening on and off the court, we've got you covered on the podcast, "Blaigrant and Funny."
“You want to start with the first version for the big kid coach of the year?”
Oh, what do you want to do? Would you like to get a shot of the show? So you're a Spartan, is that what you think? So whether you're a bracket is busted, or you just want the real talk on what's happening during the tournament,
open your free "I Heart Radio App" search flavoring and funny with "Cary Champion" and "Jamelle Hill" and "Listen" now. Presented by Capital One, founding partner of "I Heart Women's Sports." I'm Laurie Seagull, and on my new podcast mostly human,
I'll take you to some wild corners of the tech world. I'm about to go on a date with an AI companion at a real world cafe right here in New York City. There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
Mostly human is your playbook for how tech can work for you. Anyone can now be an entrepreneur, anyone can build an app, and it's very empowering. Listen to mostly human on the "I Heart Radio App" Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Welcome in all your faithfuls, traders and survivors. You're in for another episode of "By Order the Faithfuls, Welles Adams, alongside Dolores, Katania Dolores, you look all done all done. Are you filming today? No, just for you. I figure out.
Just because I like when you tell me I look pretty. Just, and this is every day for you. Oh, you're the best. Welles, you're such a good guy. I love it. How you been? I've been good. Yeah.
Since I've seen you, my daughter got engaged. Sorry, it looks like she got engaged like on the top of a mountain. They were, they were snowboarding. And I didn't realize there was a time difference there in, in Aspen.
“So, that's why we didn't get the call when I expected it.”
She was really shocked, she was surprised, and I'm happy for them. So, that's now three weddings in the family coming up. Oh man, well, do you like this guy? I do, I like him. He, they're in love. Young love, they love each other.
So, you know, I had the man talk with him. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Did he ask, um, did he ask for your permission to do this? Yes, he did. Okay, good. That's nice.
Yes, he did. Well, uh, tell your, uh, your daughter, and your soon to be taught in law, um, congratulations and muscle. Thank you. And what have you been doing? Um, I do New York right now. My wife's finishing her Broadway run.
So, um, I flew out here to help her move back, and I found they get my wife back. And she'll no longer be making out with Jonathan Garoff at times.
And we put these. Wow. It's like a, it's like you guys are seeing each other for the first time.
Again, you know, I'm all about long distance, sometimes, and missing each other. That is so important to miss each other. And to be as, as confident, that, not confident. What it is to have the trust in your relationship that you have.
“I really think you have an amazing relationship.”
I love the two of you. I think she's adorable. I love when you post pictures of her dancing with the dogs, and he's so cute. I can't, you guys are, are a great couple. And I, and I love it. But speaking of being a part for a long time, you know, my show is coming back.
I got to know yesterday.
Are you excited about this? Yes, but there's new people coming on. Well, and I don't know who they are. So you, you know, you really, it's better. I believe the double, you know, than the double you don't. So after, you know, I feel bad that the whole cast didn't come back. That's rough. You know, a little rough.
Why, what's the politics behind that? Why don't all the, all the cast come back? They're not want to, or are they not invited? There was a shake-up NBC felt that they needed to move some things around.
“So that's what they did. And yeah, so, so it's bittersweet, but it's back to work.”
Well, I'm very excited about that. Congratulations. Thank you. Are you going to watch my show? I absolutely am going to watch your show. I mean, this is going to be the first, the first Housewives show I think I've ever watched. I want you to start getting into housewives,
well, it's because being a gentleman like you are, I want to know your opinion on things. Like I like your, your point of view on things, and I like the way you articulate it.
And it's always just very proper and nice and just right.
So I would love to hear your opinion on housewives shows. Well, and someone who I've worked with in the past in Ashley, I can Eddie and Jerry Campbell. I'm honestly going to be on the show. That's going to be, yeah, well, no, that's on Rhode Island. Yeah, New Jersey back.
“But Rhode Island's coming out and you know you have to watch that.”
Yes, I will, I will watch. Maybe we should recap that. We definitely absolutely should and just to give you a little teaser, she cries sometimes. Yeah, I remember. I remember a lot. Well, I'm excited about today's episodes. Today, we've got Kim Spradden Wolf, who's an American reality, TV personality and interior designer best known for winning survivor.
One world back in 2012 taking home the million dollar grand prize and being voted. The sprint player of the season by the fans after an extra win, she returned to compete on survivor winners at war in 2020, where she placed nine following survivor Kim transition into the interior design space with their business. Kim Wolf homes, she also hosts a home renovation show on HGTV, including why the heck did I buy this house with her husband, Brian Wolf.
Please welcome to by order of the faithful survivor edition, Kim Spradden Wolf. Hi, guys. Welcome to the show, Kim. Thanks so much for taking some time and chatting with us.
“Are you watching season 50? Are you in touch like we are?”
Oh, yes. We're very much watching season 50. I actually have not watched since 40 when I went on winners at war. I just took a hiatus from from watching and so this is my first season back watching and I am absolutely loving it. It's also the first time I've ever watched with my kids who are 9, 10 and 11 and that has completely changed and made it so much more fun to watch and they have lots of thoughts and opinions and so it's been great. No, that is so cute. Did you
teach them a lot about it? Well, they had never really watched. They came on Zong, on the family,
visit and they were like 3, 4 and 5 and so this summer they started watching for the first time. They watched my first season, which was 24, which was, you know, the ice ages of survival. And particularly the oldest is like very into it and wants to talk about it and tell me all of us that so it's fun. We're having fun. They have an understanding that you are like one of the greats and survivor lore. They do not think so. They like I told them, but they are like we don't
see how. We don't think they are good or also they watched my first season and they're like you look like AI. You know what? Well, someday you're going to have kids that don't think that you and your wife are cool. Don't worry. Yeah. Exactly. That is you'll know how we feel. You know, being one of the greats when you watch it back, what do you think it was about your game that really stuck out to people and and had you kind of win that first season and then get night in the second time you do
it on? Gosh, I think the farther I get from it, the more it just seems like such a crazy, you know, fluke thing that it just went so well for me. That's really the thing that I remember most is just how everything fell into place. It felt so easy. There was truly not like one vote that I did not know where it was going. And so it was just this like easy path to the end. It was weird almost kind of like eerily perfect. And then the second time was the complete opposite of that. So if now
but on that side of the table where it's like I didn't know most of the things and everything surprised
me and I was always on the outs and I was so frustrated the whole time. So I feel like I've kind of
watched these like polar extreme journeys on my two seasons, you know. So now that you know both sides
Is there a way that you can cement yourself in this game?
game a fluke on traders. So I don't know. I wouldn't I think it changes all the time but is there a
“way to do that? I think it's you know I think certain people maybe have you know if you think”
of like an arsenal of tools that you get to put in your tool about when you go play I think some people have you know a wider variety of tools that they're disposal to play with and have better chance of cementing themselves into something that has some longevity but I do think so much of it is is luck you know. I mean so much of it is where you land and I think it's really difficult. I think the game has changed so much. I mean winners at war was a great example of this.
There's so much change in movement from day to day that you know it just it really amplifies kind of the chaos of it because it's constantly moving. I think it's a really hard thing to stay on top of. [Music] 10-10 shots five city all building a silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered at the scene. From iHeart Podcasts and best case studios. This is Worshack murder at city hall.
Could this have happened in city hall? Somebody tell me that. July 2003 councilman James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest. Both men are carrying concealed weapons and in less than 30 minutes. Both of them will be dead. And everybody in the chamber is docked a shocking public murder. A scream get down, get down, those are shots, those are shots get down. A charismatic politician. You know he just bent the rules
all the time. I still have a weapon and I could shoot you.
“And an outsider with a secret. He alleged he was effective a flat down. That may have”
been not been political. That may have been about six. Listen the Worshack murder at city hall on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you could your podcasts. I became a millionaire overnight but lost everything that actually mattered. Wait a minute Sophia did you just say he lost everything? That's right it's an eriting too much drama week on the okay story time podcast so we'll find out soon. This person
writes, "I just inherited a fortune after losing my mom and now my girlfriend's entire family is coming out of nowhere with their hands up. One sibling wants me to fund their whole lifestyle. Another vanished for four years and suddenly reappeared and my girlfriend is already giving my money away." Hold on Sophia. So the girl he wants to marry is already sending money out
the door. And that's just the beginning. He makes a plan sets up a trust and finally thinks he has
everything under control. Okay, so things work out then. Let's just say the people he trusted the most are the ones who ended up shocking him the most to just the money end up being worth going through all this. To find out, listen to the okay story time podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Laurie Seagull, a longtime tech journalist, and consider my new podcast mostly human, your bridge to the future. Anyone can now be an entrepreneur, anyone can
build an app. And it's very empowering. Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future and we're going to break down what all of this innovation actually means for you. What I come to realize is that when people think the day of dating these AI companion, they're actually dating the companies that create this. We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history. And let's be honest, that can be messy. There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model
hallucinates a story about you. But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment. Mostly human, we'll show you how. My goal is to give you the playbook, so you can benefit. The reason I say agency is because, like, if you can give power back to people,
“then I think that's part of the best thing we can do for your mental health.”
Listen to mostly human on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckard found himself at the center of a paternity scandal. The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story. This began a year's long court battle to prove the truth. You doctor this particular test twice in selling stress. I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives
to crack the case. I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for. Some like the greatest disinfectant. They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. Break a recipe and I could manage any. My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is LoveTrap.
Laura, Scottsdale Police. As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at America, Pekania's Laura Owens has bee...
fraud charges. This isn't over until justice has served in Arizona. Listen to LoveTrap podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Bailey Taylor, and this is It Girl. You may know me from my It Girl series I've done on the streets of New York over the years. Well, I've got good news. I am bringing those interviews and many more to this podcast. Yes, we will talk about the style and the success.
But we are also talking about the pressure, the expectations, and the real work with the
women shaping culture right now. As a woman in the industry, you're always underestimated.
“So you have to work extra hard and you have to push the narrative in a way that doesn't”
compromise who you are in your integrity. I like to say I was kind of like a silent ninja. Each week, I have unfiltered conversations with female founders, creatives, and leaders to talk about ambition, visibility, and what it really takes to build something meaningful in the public eye. Because being in It Girl isn't about the spotlight, it's about owning it. I think the negatives need to be discussed and they need to be told to people who maybe don't do
this every day, just so they know what's really going on. I feel like pulling the curtain back is important. Listen to It Girl with Bailey Taylor on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. We're finding out that you know, Rizzo really wants to be one of the
great to keep talking about it. A little braggadociously almost. Do you have any advice for Rizzo going forward? Is it need to pump the brakes on some of this dialogue he's having about being one of the greats? Yeah, I did think it was so fascinating watching some of the other players talked to him last night at tribal about like he hadn't seen himself yet. And I do think that was such I mean, y'all know you go on reality TV and then you watch yourself back and there are certain things
that are great and there are certain things that are just wildly humbling about it and he has not
“had that that moment yet. I think that is a trying process to watch yourself on national television”
and get all the feedback positive and not positive. Rizzo just feels so young to me when I watch him. I mean, he just he is and you can sense that but I love his confidence and like you know, effort, vessance and that he is you know kind of unshakable in that way. I'll be so curious to see if survivor continues on. He continues to play like how he you know ages and kind of matures as a player. But he's funny. My kids love him. Yeah, you can see that he's like a puppy. I feel like he's the
puppy of the group. But what do you think separates a good survivor player from a great survivor player? That's a great question. So they're just you know, I feel like when you look across the board at the grades, they're also different. You're one of the grades. So in case you don't realize that does the dust off the bottle? I feel so funny doing this. I haven't done it in forever. I think the greats, I think it's a lot and how you treat people because I really think when it comes
down to the end, like all these you know, all the chaos happens, all the swaps, all the shifts. And I one of my core beliefs and I don't know if I got to think about if I still really believe this, but I think I do is that you know at the end of the day you get to the end and people really vote for, yes, the person that they think played a great game, but they vote for the person that they want to
“give the money to. And I think you have to kind of show up as someone that people want to”
hand a million dollars to, I don't think people want to give a million dollars to an asshole,
you know, truth. And I think that's underestimated. Yeah, and you can be a villain, you can, you know, be cut throughout and be strategic and still be likable. I don't think people get that. Yeah, I think some people miss on just the connection part, you know, I think there's even some players the season that like, you know, and again, this could all come down to the edit. I didn't watch Genevieve's original season, but, you know, there's a little bit of this thing that she's doing
to Aubrey, which doesn't feel likable to me. And it's subtle. And I think Genevieve's getting a great edit. I think she seems likable, but there's a way it kind of feels a little bit like the plastics for mean girls where it's like Aubrey's clearly on the outs and there's sort of a condescension to her. And I think that's where it gets interesting and emerge, you know, where potentially Aubrey gets with Ozzie and Ozzie's got his foot in the door with, you know, a group
and now Aubrey goes over and Genevieve's on the outs. So it's just, it's so fascinating. Speaking of edit, that's, I've been wanting to talk to Passerviver winners about the edit. You know, I come from this Bachelor Bachelor in Paradise world where a lot of people talk about, well, I got a bad edit. They villainize me. That's not really how it went. And you going back to Rizzo Rizzo hasn't seen, you know, himself that represented on TV yet. Is that a thing that
You guys talk about that like so and so got a bad edit or was made to look in...
than they really were? Yeah. I would be curious to hear what y'all's experience has been being,
“you know, from like different show where I could tell you mine. I think for me personally,”
every season that I have played and watched back and some of the ones where I just know the
people personally, there's obvious this like amplification of a character, but they always feel
somewhat in line with like how I know this person to be. I've never seen them take someone and completely turn them into someone else. It feels like it's, you know, you boil it down. It's like a reduction, right? And so, but I always feel like the person, I'm like, you did say that. You did show up in that energy or in that spirit and, you know, you just got a lot of it all at once and 30 minutes. But, you know, I've never seen them just like completely, you know, make someone look somewhere
like the words in their mouth that they didn't say. Yeah. I feel like coming from reality, where I come from, Ernie one who feels stupid about the way they acted kind of to echo what you're
saying or to say, oh, that's not what it, because your brain plays tricks on you, right? You're like,
I don't remember it to be that way, but it's clearly the cameras don't lie. So a lot of people want to blame it on the edit when they don't like the way they looked or the way that they came up. And it is amplified, yes, because it is in production and they want to make it look like a great scene and it's boiled down to this 30 minutes or whatever. But yeah, I don't really blame bad edits. I don't believe in bad edits. I believe like, you actually
did that and gave it to them to put up there. I definitely think people try to show up the way they think production wants them to be and they are trying to rise to some character that they feel like they've been casted to portray and sometimes that goes really well and sometimes that doesn't
“go as well. You have to accept, if you're a villain, you have to accept that you're a villain.”
Be a fun one. Be a fun one, exactly. I've always found that to your point of like, you think you're
being cast as a certain character. If you don't really know who you are going into any show, then you're going to act like something that you think you're supposed to be, which doesn't come across as authentic, which generally comes across as off-putting to the audience, because they can sense something's not right about you and that's an easy way to make someone look villainous. But from my standpoint, it's much easier to make someone look as much easier to make an asshole look good.
Then it is to make a good guy look like an asshole. Usually what I find is that more often than not when I'm watching a pact, I'm thinking, wow, that person got it such a good edit in comparison to what I remember experiencing during the show and how everyone felt about them. But you know,
“actually, I think that I can agree with. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I feel like I like to lessen”
person than I liked on the show. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I like to. You come, you come from, you know, back in the day, you're kind of an OG player. Do you think the new era players have it just as hard as you had on your seasons? No, I wonder that. I do feel like sometimes these old era players have more of a target on their back, but then you watch it and you're like, they shouldn't, because in a lot of ways they're behind strategically, because they had this very different experience
of, you know, real bonds and real relationships with it, which I think, you know, don't really seem to stand at the test of time in modern survivors. So I think that these new era players, you know, in some ways, are going to have just this big of a target on their backs as, you know, Colby or Ozzy or Coach, who I don't think are just these wild strategic threats, you know, they're kind of more of these like, you know, good old boys. See, I think Suri is a threat,
terrifying. She's terrifying to me. I would want to throw off the eye and the Suri. I love Suri, but out of respect, I want her off. I'm doing my nervous for everyone around her now. You know, Rizzo, it trusts her and he's doing all these things with her, and she's going to eat them alive. Like, you know, I just feel like at the end, she'll just, eviscerate you. Yeah, I'm so curious to watch Suri's journey, because I could not agree more with you. You know, I feel like she is like truly
a mastermind and is for everyone, we'll say probably the most dangerous player out there. I did, she is sitting duck because of that, you know, in at any point there, but I kind of think this is that part of the game where it gets scary as they merge and everything gets re-shuffled and somebody needs her and then she works her way in and there you go. You're taking Suri into a final
Five, final six, you know, it's, it's amazing that you like her.
And she won traders on her own. I mean, I just just watch. It's really hard. Do you think so far the show is going in the right direction? I personally love it. I haven't seen the last, you know, handful of seasons, but to me, this is the first season I've watched in a really long time. Yeah, I was saying, yeah. Yeah, it feels, but just that feels like survivor as I loved it. You know, it was like this mega fan of the show starting the first year at aired and we would
in college make rice bowls and like Tiki torches in our backyard. We watched every episode and so this has that feeling to me. I don't know how they did it or how they brought it back or how they lasted in the first place, but I know this went to me feels special. So there's nothing
“you would change so far. Well, I think, you know, I've heard like the rumblings of not”
loving, like the celebrity addition for sure. You know, like my kids didn't know who Zach Brown band was. And so they were kind of like, why are we watching this guy? You know, I think that's the only thing to me that sort of feels like how when they brought in all the tricks, you know, in the last 10 years. I feel like they added all these things that sort of felt like a distraction from just watching the game. And I think the celebrity addition, you know, could potentially feel that way,
but I would think it's fun for me as someone who played Survivor and is a fan of Billie Eilish. I think it's so cool that Billie Eilish was watching, you know, and mentioned in every episode,
which is a lot. It's a lot. But you know, it's always fun. I'm like, oh, how cool that, like,
Michelle Obama watched, you know, my season of Survivor, that excites me. I'm sure y'all can resonate with that. Yeah. She watched his housewife's New Jersey, too. She loves it. She was saying it the other day. We were like, okay. I never liked that. Yeah. So I have this idea. You know, did you, you still keep in touch with the people that you used to cook rice balls with and like torches to watch Survivor and College? Did they follow you through and were they excited
when you got on? Yeah. Some of them, I moved around so much growing up that I didn't have like a real home base. My parents moved 16 times before I graduated college. So I feel like I was just this great and no mad until, you know, around my late 20s. So now, you know, I have roots down in San Antonio. But before that, it was just I was bopping around. But yes, I do have lifelong friends. And of course, everybody was like, what in the world can Spraudland is going on Survivor? This is crazy. That's kind of exciting.
When deciding for them, too. But what was the hardest thing for you in this game? I'm always curious
of what was so, and everybody's different. This question is answered so differently.
“Yeah, I think it's the like, um, for me, it was maybe the guilt coming back. Like that was heavier”
than I anticipated it being, you know, you try to live your life and like, you know, honor people and have these great relationships and navigate your life in a way that feels really like healthy and beautiful. And then you have to go in this very clear, you know, opposite energy and lie and back stab and, you know, kind of do whatever you can do to make your way to the end, which is the game to me. I've always been like, it's a giant game of sorry and it is a game. And that's why this whole
honor thing with Coach and Joe and all that kind of is so interesting to me because there's really no way. I mean, I guess you're choosing what you're honoring, you know, and stay true to that and you tell yourself that you played honorably. But I assure you that a lot of the people that play the game with these people that say they're being honorable would completely disagree, you know, that they were honorable. So that whole part of navigating it, it was just that was tough.
“I found that success usually comes with a fair amount of delusion. And I think that that's what some”
of these guys are, are they're a little delusional about their, their, their honor in these games. You know, you were a part of a strong female alliance in the first season. Do you think that do you think a alliance is really work or like eventually you're going to get stabbed in the back? So it doesn't really matter both. Yeah. And I think this is, this is an interesting point in the
game to me where we are right now in 50, because this is where I always look back and I'm like, okay,
who is, who is emerging kind of as the strong alliance is from these three new tribes from the tribal swap. And then you have to go back and go, okay, and who are they aligned with in their initial tribes? And where do those two things come together? Like who really is in the best position? Not only from the swap, but from the initial tribe as they go back together. And you can start to see how this is going to sort of, you know, break out. And so then they're going to have the people from
their initial alliance. Only a handful of people have to be in conflict and choose between those two. Some people are going to be able to honor both their first alliance and their second alliance for a while. And I think those people are in a really good position if that makes them, you know,
They're kind of buried in the middle.
Or I think that's going for just about whatever. I mean, I do think that's a new
“era trait that seems to serve some people really well in others. Not I think Emily's in a good”
spot. You know, I think she's kind of, she's been funny and done some funny things. I think either she's in great grave danger in the next few episodes or she's in a good spot. I feel like these in a good spot. I really like Camilla for it. I think she's very clever. I think that was very smart for her to like kind of shift allegiance there and vote out Charlie. It's just going it's going to be so interesting to see how this plays out. Oh yeah. What it makes me, because I have
any in yet today and I'm about to pass out and it's only like 11 o'clock or 10. But how you were a challenge beast? Did you train a lot before you went and are you just kind of showed up and I'm me? Yeah, I trained a little. I was an athlete growing up at like very average above average high school
athlete. Like I was nothing remarkable but I've always been like a tomboy. You know, like I
loved to throw a football and so I went and got a grappling hook and like trained in a few things
“in my backyard. But I think it gives a look at who I'm competing against and I don't mean that to”
mean, you know, Chelsea or Lisa or Patrick, you know, Tarzan or whatever but it's like going into winners at war like that was physically very different competing against that group of people than it was the people that I was competing against for individual immunity in one world, you know. But you're not eating. Like how do you do it? Eating part is awful. I will not lie to you about that. And both of my seasons, the first season I was on the island 39 days, the second time I was on the
island 36 days because we had the edge of extinction. I lost 22 pounds the first time 17 the next time. Like we are not eating. It's miserable. The sleeping's miserable. What I love about it is how miserable you are. It's just a kind of low that we don't get in our real lives and so you just get so clear. You get so clear on who you are, what you miss, what you love, what you want to do when you go back. Like it really just like cuts all the crap, you know, and you just come back with like
such clear purpose. So I love that part. Sometimes I miss that part, you know, I get that is getting that. What did you miss the most? What did you find out about yourself that you realize
that you missed? I think I realized like I've always been a very social person and had, you know,
been like a 25 friend person and I spend a lot of time with a lot of people and I realized I really only really missed, you know, three or four people. And I don't prioritize those relationships enough because I spread myself so thin, you know. And so there were these, this just felt so clear. I was like, yeah, there's these people that I love, all these 100 people, but there's really just these few people that I don't spend enough time connecting with or prioritizing. And so I think
especially on winners that where I came home and I was like, I've been so worried about my career in building a brand and HGTV, which I went on to do, you know, that I'm kind of missing being a mom, you know, like they're not going to be at my house very long. I know, look, I'm like, they're all going to be gone. And, you know, seven, eight years, they'll all be in college. And, you know, I don't want to have missed that. No. That's kind of a big one.
I'm Laurie Seagull, a longtime tech journalist, and consider my new podcast, Mostly Human, your bridge to the future. Anyone can now be an entrepreneur, anyone can build an app, and it's very empowering. Each week, I'll speak to the people building that future. And we're going to break down what all of this innovation actually means for you. What I come to realize is that when people think that they're dating these AI companion,
they're actually dating the companies that create this. We're experiencing one of the greatest tech accelerations in human history. And let's be honest, that can be messy. There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you. But it's my belief that we should all benefit from this moment. Mostly human will show you how. My goal is to give you the playbook. So, you can benefit. The reason I say agency is because, like, if you can give power back to people,
“then I think that's part of the best thing we can do for your mental health. Listen to Mostly Human”
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. A silver 40 caliber handgun was recovered at the scene. From iHeart Podcasts, and best case studios. This is Worshack, murder at City Hall. July 2003, Councilman James E Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest. Both men are carrying concealed weapons. And in less than 30 minutes,
Both of them will be dead.
Have everybody in the chambers of dogs, a shocking public murder. A scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots, those are shots, get down. A charismatic politician. You know, he just bent the rules all the time. I still have a weapon. And I could shoot you. And an outsider with a secret. He alleged he was effective of flat now. That may have been not been political. That may have been about sex. Listen to Worshack, murder at City Hall, on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I became a millionaire overnight, but lost everything that actually mattered.
“Wait a minute, Sophia. Did you just say he lost everything?”
That's right. It's an aridine too much drama week on the okay story-time podcast, so we'll find out soon. This person writes, "I just inherited a fortune after losing my mom, and now my girlfriend's entire family is coming out of nowhere with their hands up. One sibling wants me to fund their whole lifestyle. Another vanished for four years, and suddenly reappeared. And my girlfriend is already giving my money away." Hold on, Sophia. So the girl he wants to marry is already
sending money out the door. And that's just the beginning. He makes a plan, sets up a trust,
and finally thinks he has everything under control. Okay, so things work out then.
Let's just say the people he trusted the most are the ones who ended up shocking him the most. To just the money end up being worth going through all that. To find out, listen to the okay story-time podcast on the IR radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. In 2023, former Bachelor Star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal. The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth. "You doctored this particular test twice in selling, correct?" "I doctored the test once." It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case. "I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for." Some like the greatest disinfectant. They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing. "Break a Westby and I can manage any." "My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is LoveTrap." "Bora, Scottsdale Police."
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news out of Maricopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges. "This isn't over until justice has served in Arizona." Listen to LoveTrap podcast on the IR radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
“Why hasn't a woman formally participated in a Formula One race weekend in over a decade?”
Think about how many skills they have to develop at such a young age? What can we learn from all of the new F1 romance novels suddenly popping up every year? He's still smelled of podium champagne and expensive friction. And how did a 2023 event called Wagged Getting change the paddock forever? That day is just seared into my memory.
I'm a culture writer and F1 expert Lily Hermann. And these are just a few of the questions I'm tackling on no grip. A Formula One culture podcast that dives into the under-explored pockets of the sport. In each episode, a different guest tonight will go deeper into the wacky mishab scandals and sagas, both on the track and far away from it, that have made F1 a delightful,
decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years. Listen to no grip on the IR radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Speaking of season 50, one, are you upset that you didn't get the call or maybe you did you turned it down? And then two, who's playing the best game? Who are you really watching that you're excited to see? Definitely not sad not to be there.
Did not. I don't think anyone from 40 is on 50, though. I did notice that, so I didn't feel sad to not do that. So yeah, it's better to know why they didn't ask me.
“I like, I like D. I didn't watch D. I think D's in a good spot.”
I love Christian. He's so fun. I don't think he's going to make the long haul, but I really like having joyed watching him very much. I really love Camilla. I did watch Camilla season because my kids were watching it, and I think she's super smart and super strategic, and I think she's in a good spot. I think Emily could go either way right now. But I don't see, I don't see like an Aussie coach, Jonathan, you know, Cole, I don't see
riso for it. I don't know if he has the, like the, the well, the depth of like experience to
Draw into like get through what he's about to walk through.
Yeah, they've got to be really drained. I mean, I think about how horrible I felt when I got back
for months. I mean, there's like a whole like refeating syndrome thing where you're bought really, but a lot of gastro stuff people end up in the hospital as they like re-aclimate. And so I'm sure he just, you know, he's so lean anyway. Like he's got to be super depleted. So that's impressive that he did it. I liked that. You know what? I love the most. That's impressive besides the fact that you're a winner in a fan favorite and all these things. I'm excited about
HGTV. I have to ask you about it. Tell me all about it. That's like winner for me. I filmed my own HGTV show called Why The Hacks and I buy this house and then like kind of had
another wake-up call about going back to my family and being president, but last year they asked
Chelsea Myesner who is one of my dearest friends and also was on survivor one world with me. She was in the final three with me. She went on to do Bravo Southern Charm, but we are one of the teams competing on HGTV's Rock the Block, which comes out in a couple weeks. And it's like their number one renovation competition show four teams for identical houses who did it best. So we filmed that in Vegas together in the fall, which was a blast. And I'm really excited about my house.
Please come to my house. I want you here so badly. I'm here for it, Dolores. I have, um, I own a home where my daughter lives next to her with her five dogs. And I, I read the house,
“didn't come out so great. And I need to make a dog proof house. Can we make a show about that?”
Yes, we still make it look good. I know. Great dog house. Absolutely. Thank you. A dog proof house? No, yeah. Can you explain that for me? No, my dog. It's at 3,200 square foot dog house. Yeah. I know you, I know what I'm talking about. So like, it's definitely possible, right? You just wanted to be bulletproof or you don't have to worry about anything, but it still looks really elegant. We need the furniture for them to be able to lay on that it doesn't get ruined.
What kind of material? All the woodworks ruined because they jump on the windows. And you could film big brother for dogs. Let's do it. The dogs could vote each other out. There you go. Well, as you could produce it. All right. I'm dead. Last question, Kim. What did you enjoy doing more survivor or HGTV shows? So different. One has food and beds. Yeah, it's a lot longer. I would say survivor. You know, one's got a million dollars at the end.
Survivor was like, I always say it was like Narnia for me. You know, like having watched it,
been so obsessed and then literally coming out through the forest, seeing the challenges hearing Jeff
“Pope's voice. Like, I'll never forget it. It was magical. Thank you so much for coming on by order”
of the Faithfuls. We're going to have you back on next episode to recap all of episode five real quick before we let you go. Where could people find you? Where could people follow you? And exactly when is the HGTV show coming out? Great question. It airs April 13th. I don't know what time on HGTV. I'm on Instagram occasionally. And other than that, you really can't find me. I'm just hiding out at my house. It's really hard. Because thank you for having me. It was fun. Thank you. Thank you, Kim.
You know Roll Doll. He thought a bully Wonka in the BFG. But did you know he was a spy? In the new podcast, the secret world of Roll Doll. I'll tell you that story and much, much more. What? You probably won't believe it either. Was this before he wrote his stories? I must have been. Okay, I don't think that's true. I'm telling you. It was a spy. Listen to the secret world of Roll Doll. On the I-Hart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. I'm Bailey Taylor, and Mrs. Itgirl. This podcast is all about going deeper with the women shaping culture right now. Yes, we will talk about the style and the success, but we are also talking about the pressure, the expectations, and the real work behind it all. As a woman in the
“industry, you're always underestimated. So you have to work extra hard in a way that doesn't”
compromise who you are in your integrity. You know, I like to say I was kind of like a silent ninja. Listen to Itgirl with Bailey Taylor on the I-Hart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Ready for a different take on Formula One? Look no further than no grip, a new podcast tackling the culture of motor racing's most coveted series. Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F1, including the story of the woman who last
participated in a Formula One race weekend, the recent uptick in F1 romance novels, and plenty of
Mishab scandals and sagas that have made Formula One a delightful, decadent d...
75 years. Listen to no grip on the I-Hart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
If you're trying to keep up with everything happening on and off the court, we've got you covered
on the podcast, Blagrant and Funny. You want to start with the first version for the big kid coach of
“the year? Oh, what do you would you like to get? Oh, you're a Spartan, is that what you think?”
So whether you're a bracket is busted, or you just want the real talk on what's happened
during the tournament, open your free I-Hart Radio App, search Flagrant and funny with Kari Champion and Jamel Hill, and listen now. Presented by Capital One, founding partner of I-Hart Women's Sports. I became a millionaire overnight and lost everything that actually matters.
“Oh, I'm so free. Did you just say they lost everything after becoming a millionaire?”
That's right. And it gets worse. It's an aridine too much drama week on the okay story-time podcast, so we'll find out soon. This person writes, "I just inherited a fortune after losing my mom,
“and now my girlfriend's entire family is coming out of nowhere with her hands out. And my girlfriend”
is already giving my money away." So the girl he wants to marry is already sending money out the door. Find out how it ends. Listen to the okay story-time podcast on the I-Hart Radio App, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. This isn't I-Hart Podcast.


