Wisconsin Wonders and Stand Up Comedy  (Hour 2)

Transcript

Wisconsin Wonders and Stand Up Comedy (Hour 2)

Nite Lite with Pete Schwaba and Greg Bach · Wed Jan 21, 2026

Pete Chwaba (host)

Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.

This is Night Light with Pete Chwaba.

Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.

And now, a guy who does his own stunts, Pete Chwaba.

Welcome to Night Light, ladies and gentlemen.

Great to have you here folks.

Happy Wednesday everybody as we kick off this short week of live shows.

I was out Monday night and Tuesday night.

So I love when we still get texts even though we're not technically here.

So we'll try to address those throughout the course of the show.

It's nice to know people are still listening.

But I am back live tonight through the rest of the week and all next week as well.

So great to have you with me wherever you're joining us from tonight in the beautiful chilly state of Wisconsin.

Thank you for being here.

And we hope to put a smile on your face and, you know, have people walk away.

I don't know, kind of just a little smarter or informed.

Yeah, informed for sure.

Be it about movies or the weather or whatever, right?

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Yes, I totally agree.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah.

So great show tonight, folks.

It was fun to put this one together because we've got outstanding guests and some great question and some really fun talking points tonight.

We'll talk about Wisconsin drivers and where you think Wisconsin might measure up in the scope of good to bad drivers.

And maybe you'll be surprised.

Maybe you won't.

But either way, great show.

Lots of fun to be back behind the microphone here, and I had a good weekend.

Conn, how are you doing tonight?

Conn, Red Krieger, folks.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

I'm doing great.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah?

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Yeah, I'm finally over the little sickness I had.

You sound like you're not

Pete Chwaba (host)

fully over it yet.

You know, I'm getting there.

Yesterday, I felt like a million bucks.

And then last night, I slept like a baby, and I still woke up.

And you ever do that thing where you like cough for like two hours when you wake up?

And you are hacking up just the most unholy looking nonsense.

It's just awful.

So, um, but yeah, and I have like no voice this morning and then all of a sudden I can talk.

So I'm getting there and it's been about a week.

I think you took off last Wednesday.

Yeah, correct.

I remember I was leaving and you sneezed right on me when I left and then I got sick.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Well, not to mention before you got in, I sneezed all over your seat too.

I knew you did something.

Pete Chwaba (host)

But either way it is great to be back and what did you do what so you were here last night?

Conor Krieger (contributor)

No,

Pete Chwaba (host)

I weren't

Conor Krieger (contributor)

yeah, I made I made what I needed to the

Pete Chwaba (host)

best of show

Conor Krieger (contributor)

put it into the system well Aaron Zomers did thank you shout out Aaron Zomers

Pete Chwaba (host)

Thank You AZ

Conor Krieger (contributor)

and yeah, you know I was watching a bunch of I just watched a bunch of films over the I Tried to get back into my routine of working out again because when you get sick it's tough to even Think about going to do that

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah, no kidding.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

So I finally got back into a rhythm now.

So I'm happy about that.

Pete Chwaba (host)

It's funny you mentioned that when my daughter was still home last week, before we left town on Saturday, we hit the gym.

And I was still not, I worked out thinking, well, I can do this.

I was trying to like, I don't know, be a tough guy or something.

I'm gonna work out before.

And I felt okay.

And then later that night, I felt like death.

I was like, that was really stupid.

Like, what am I trying to join a Mr. Universe competition or something?

And it was just silly.

So

But in any event yeah, it's tough to get back into working out when you've when you've hung it up for a while Do you are you one of those people that just jumps in or do you give yourself?

I'll get myself another day

Conor Krieger (contributor)

No, I like I was you know Wednesday Thursday.

I was I didn't even want to like move Pretty much, but then you know Friday.

I was like it's time.

I need to get back into it Yeah, man,

Pete Chwaba (host)

you

Conor Krieger (contributor)

know, I didn't do the best workout, but I still got there.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah

Conor Krieger (contributor)

and did it.

And then Saturday, I felt a lot better.

So I did a full workout again that day.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Well, it's going to be tough for anybody to want to leave the house over the next few days.

I would say for the next four days, people, the weather is going to be awful.

And I don't mean weather.

I should just say the cold.

The cold is going to be it's going to be like 15 to 20 below in certain areas here in northeast Wisconsin.

I know Milwaukee is going to get hit, Madison.

And that's without windshield that I think

I could be wrong, but I don't remember it being that cold in my lifetime.

Just with the basic 10, maybe 15 or 12 below.

I don't know that I've ever experienced like 19 or 20 below though.

So whatever you have to do, get your stuff.

And it's funny when it's gonna get that cold, like today I'm going, like I said to my wife, well, it's supposed to be nice tomorrow.

We should go out and get groceries tomorrow.

19 today was the high.

That's nice compared to what it's gonna be.

That's how I'm talking about, oh, it's gonna be, you know, balmy tomorrow.

Let's go out and get our groceries before it gets really cold.

But we will have new sports and weather coming up at 5.30.

We're trying to get Mace Michaels here to join us at some point tonight so he can kind of give us an idea of what to expect outside of just reading the temperatures on a phone.

Like what we should do, safety issues or factors we should bring into play during the weather, during the next few days of weather because it is going to be really bad.

Um, so I had to, all right.

So I went to this funeral for my uncle Pat over the weekend and here's why humor is the greatest stress reliever or tension cutter.

I walk in to the service and this was Monday morning and the first person I see is my dad and my aunt Sarah who drove up from Chicago.

She's my dad's sister, but still came up to pay her respects to my uncle Pat and

I see Sarah and my dad.

I say, hi, dad.

I give Sarah a big hug.

I haven't seen her in a couple years.

And then I immediately turn and use some hand sanitizer.

And it shoots all over my aunt Sarah.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Whoa.

Pete Chwaba (host)

My brother Andrew starts laughing like he has never laughed before in his life.

His shoulders were convulsing.

Like it was such a like a Chevy Chase moment.

Sarah, oh my God, how are you?

And I hug her.

And then I turn and I do one of these.

And it obviously hadn't been you since COVID because it's shot everywhere.

And I said, I'm sorry, I got some hand sanitizer in your sweater.

And I start to wipe her arm as a sweater sleeve off.

And she goes, oh, that's okay.

And then she goes, oh, actually you kind of got it everywhere.

And she started wiping off her vest.

But the best thing about it and those, you know, those little moments in life where you aren't expecting to laugh.

Like what I'm saying is I'm happy to have acted like a horse's ass because I saw how hard it made my brother laugh And it's that song that's in dumb and dumber by the jiggalow ants called I think it's called where I find my heaven and there's a line in the song that says and the sacred moments of silliness are where I find my heaven and it was just so such a great moment because everyone was You know not somber.

I mean my uncle was 85, but he still did go kind of unexpectedly

So to have that happen and just have a huge laugh to start off the morning was kind of set a lighter tone at least or as light as it could possibly be expected.

But it was a beautiful weekend, great to see family, but also good to be back home and good to be back on the air.

So what did you do, Con?

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Well, so we're talking about the cold weather.

Yeah.

I just sent you a little picture if you look on your chat and you can read that off.

It's from Christina Laurie, actually.

She posted it last year.

Almost gonna be 30 years ago now, but...

Pete Chwaba (host)

Oh, yeah.

29 years ago, Wisconsin recorded the coldest temperature in history.

What?

55 below?

Yeah.

Get out of here.

I don't think I lived in Wisconsin then.

I feel like I'd remember that.

Located in Sawyer County...

the small and nondescript village was the victim of a frigid air mass that settled in and shattered records.

That is insanity.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Yeah, I feel like even like with that, you know, temperature, your house is working like triple over time.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Trying to keep you warm.

Like you had to put that to at least like what

Pete Chwaba (host)

80 you think it was.

I have no idea would that even work.

I don't know.

Would it freeze?

Would your pipes freeze?

I mean,

that's my biggest fear.

And I looked at my utility bill the other day, and I saw this great article by our pal Terry Barr, who said that in the article, you could check it out at civicmedia.us, utility costs are just a lot higher because either the prices of natural gas or utility companies raising the prices.

But my bill was twice what it was the previous month.

I had

two kids home for a couple weeks and a Christmas lights out but they're LED lights they're not that's crazy um

Conor Krieger (contributor)

you want to know how much it was for not my current place but my last place is a little bit bigger uh and it kept the heat on you know even when i didn't want it on uh i also have a pretty nice pc and then i you know i have two tv so it's like what do you think

What do you think my bill would be around?

In the

Pete Chwaba (host)

winter?

700 square foot apartment-ish?

Conor Krieger (contributor)

It was, I'd say, around 850.

Somewhere around there.

Ah, that's good.

100?

It was... No, it was about 112 somewhere around

Pete Chwaba (host)

there.

112, okay.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

And I didn't even think I used that much.

I was like, how was it this

Pete Chwaba (host)

expensive?

But they always had the heat cranked in that place.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Yeah, I couldn't do it Well, I think it's actually that the heat was rising in the place, but I don't know I just could never turn it off and I had to get someone because I don't know if you remember I told last year that my apartment was still like hot like super hot in the summer.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Because the heat was still hot.

Pete Chwaba (host)

That's

Conor Krieger (contributor)

insane.

I felt the you know the furthest at the bottom was like why is it still hot and yeah

Pete Chwaba (host)

That's actually, it was kind of a high guess, because 850 square feet, my house is like 2200 square feet, and our bills have been like 150.

But that's a lot, I think, for

Conor Krieger (contributor)

just me too.

Pete Chwaba (host)

This is, in one way, we can fight the cold folks by hugging.

This is National Hugging Day.

And I have discovered, as an adult,

There's nothing more fun for me than creating awkwardness by hugging someone who you realize mid-hug is not a hugger.

And they just kind of go stiff and they're not comfortable with being embraced.

And I've changed my tune on this, Con.

I used to hug everybody.

Like, if I hadn't seen, like, you know, if I hadn't seen you in three months, I might do the bro thing where we handshake between us and then I'll do the wrap around just so there's no bodily touching, but...

I like to hug and I think times have changed I don't think people like to be and which is weird because I know in the past I've said I don't Particularly care to shake the hands of those.

I don't really know well But I think things have changed.

I don't think as many people are huggers as they used to be I don't know,

Conor Krieger (contributor)

you know, it's it's funny when you do like give someone a hug in their arms just like go you're

Pete Chwaba (host)

like

down on their

Conor Krieger (contributor)

sides.

Totally.

And then you're like, oh, okay, all right, never hug.

Pete Chwaba (host)

It's paralyzing.

Yeah, they don't know what to do.

They're like immobile because they're so, they feel so awkward.

New sports and weather coming up in about 13 minutes, folks.

Congratulations Packers fan.

Packers fans,

there was

a big win over the weekend.

The bears collapsed in a way that I couldn't even believe after an amazing throw.

That was nuts.

Conor Krieger (contributor)

An amazing throw.

Yes.

I didn't I didn't even know what to slide.

It was speechless after that.

I was watching the game with some of my friends

Pete Chwaba (host)

We are all just like what you see a throw like that.

You're like, oh, here we go The Bears are gonna win and that's what I thought and I was watching it at the Milwaukee Marriott West with about 20 family members Kind of in the sports bar lobby and we just went crazy and we thought it was a game The Bears should be winning they squandered a lot of opportunities, but then Then you hold Matthew Stafford off in overtime and you get the ball back you advance it past the 50

That last throw should not have been thrown and there's all this discrepancy did DJ more kind of dog it on the route I it's it's Williams who threw it.

He made the throw and he could have run I

Conor Krieger (contributor)

Don't

Pete Chwaba (host)

know

Conor Krieger (contributor)

why it wasn't a run play to start to be honest.

Yeah That's yeah, you know some of those fourth down plays, you know, we're good some of them were you know why?

Pete Chwaba (host)

Some of them were lying, you go, I thought we had the offensive genius here calling the plays.

So congratulations Packers fans.

I'm sure you enjoyed that.

Well, I'm happy for it.

The only

Conor Krieger (contributor)

person I'm happy for is Devonta Adams.

That's the only person I'm happy for.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah, he had a pretty good, or he had a big catch toward the end.

Yeah, he

Conor Krieger (contributor)

didn't have the best game, but that catch was crucial.

Pete Chwaba (host)

Yeah, it was huge.

All right, folks, we're going to do a quick break.

And when we come back, I'm going to tell you what our question of the night is.

It involves bacon.

That's all I'll say.

I'll tell you who's going to be on the show.

and talk a little bit about kids wearing, and if that's acceptable.

Alright, that's all coming up.

This is Pete Chihuahua in Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio

Music Segment

Network.

That it won't take them all of my love.

Hallelujah.

My sweet Lord.

Pete Schwab

This is Night Light.

I am Pete Schwab.

It is great to have you here, folks, on this Wednesday in our cold chilly state of Wisconsin.

Joining me in just a few minutes after the news will be Wonderfully Wisconsin's Paul Vandenplatz.

Paul is the creator of Wonderfully Wisconsin, an outstanding social media platform that celebrates all the fun, cool things to see in our state.

He does really cool stuff with his...

With his postings regarding Wisconsin eateries and hotels and places to visit He I think I got to the bottom of this con he is at He's doing a couple visits ago.

He told us he's doing a breakdown of the 100 best hamburgers in Wisconsin And I don't know what I was thinking I thought when we had him back on a couple months later It's like oh, let's hear what the top 100 are well.

He was only on like 15

And then I realize, yeah, that's going to take a while.

100 burger places.

That's a huge undertaking.

So Paul is at about 20.

So we'll get an update on that.

It's actually coming along pretty nicely.

He's 20% done, and he'll have stuff to post probably for the next year or so.

So that's exciting.

And he's got a lot of cool stuff that he recently explored.

So we'll talk to Paul about that.

That's at 535.

And we've got a quiz for him.

about Wisconsin landmarks.

Conrad put together one of his cool quizzes that we do from time to time, and we will give Paul a quiz.

He's always a blast to have on the show that it's coming up after the news in just a few minutes.

Then at 6.35, comedian, Milwaukee based comedian Chastity Washington will be here.

Chastity is a very accomplished comedian and has made her home base Milwaukee, but she's been all over the place.

Comedy festivals, she's done her own specials.

She's also a teacher.

So, I'm very excited to talk to her about that as well.

I'm sure she gets, you know, some material from her classroom.

My wife always has funny stories when she comes home after a long school day.

So, we'll talk to Chastity.

She's been on the show before and it'll be great to reconnect with her at 6.35.

Then, my pal Frank Anderson will be here at 7.20.

Frank is the founder of Wisconsinology.com.

accomplished director, producer, and musician, fresh off yet another appearance at Joey's song, which took place in Madison a couple weeks ago.

So we'll talk to Frank about how that went.

And then he's going to tell us about some really cool stuff that was created here in Wisconsin.

Stuff I didn't even know about, but it's, I'll give you a hint.

One of the things, Con, is we were in a hotel in Waukesha over the weekend.

And I made a late night grocery store run.

with my daughter and we get in the car and the GPS tells us to pull out onto Les Paul Drive.

And I was like, that's right, Les Paul created the Les Paul guitars here in Wisconsin.

He's got a huge boulevard or street or way or drive named after him in Waukesha, his hometown.

But Frank knows about a lot of these cool things that were created here in Wisconsin.

So we'll talk about that with Frank at 720.

All kinds of fun stuff right now.

I think it's time we get to our night like question of the night.

Unidentified Speaker

Let's talk about the question.

Okay, question.

Question.

Question.

Pregunta.

Question.

Question.

Okay, I have a question.

Questions.

This question.

Domanda.

Question.

Question.

Questions.

Pete Schwab

What is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

It's high time we talked a little bacon on this show.

And you know what I forgot to do?

Check out...

How many degrees of separation I am from Kevin Bacon?

I think I'm like one.

But we should do that.

We'll do that during the break.

I meant to do that before the show.

I actually meant to do that last night, but I kept kicking the can down the road.

But that is our question tonight.

And I think it's because his horrible show, the following, dropped on this day maybe 10 years ago, 15 years ago.

It's a bad show.

But Kevin Bacon's got an incredible resume.

He's been in movies you've forgotten about too.

So that is tonight's question.

What is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

I say a few good men and she's having a baby.

He's really good in just about everything.

But I love his performance and she's having a baby as the young husband who has the crazy wild friend in Alec Baldwin, but is trying to be a good husband, working his way up the ladder.

It's a John Hughes written film.

It's a really sweet story.

But I love him in A Few Good Men as well.

He was great in tremors, footloose.

He got all the big ones.

And a couple of people on social media even said Animal House, because he is the guy who is getting paddled in his underpants.

I think his only line in the movie is, thank you, sir, may I have another.

But he's one of the pledges of the douchey fraternity, so.

But let us know what your favorite Kevin Bacon movie is, 855-752-4842-855.

7-5 Civic you can also text us on the app or if you're watching the radio on the stream at Facebook YouTube or X Drop us a stream comment.

Just be part of the show folks.

We love it when you join the show.

Con you got a favorite coming bacon?

Conrad

Yeah X man X men

Pete Schwab

Yeah, I saw that on the sheet.

Conrad

Yes, that's

Pete Schwab

one of my seeing

Conrad

that I Just had it might okay.

I'd lost it Steven

Pete Schwab

Steven

Just Steven.

That's his name in a superhero movie.

And that's Steven,

Conrad

Kevin Bacon.

He is... Oh, Sebastian Shaw.

Wow, I got that.

Yeah, I had that in my head and it just

Pete Schwab

vanished when you asked it.

Is he a

Conrad

superhero?

Kinda, yeah.

Okay.

Yeah, he's a fun character in it.

Alright.

Sebastian Shaw.

Pete Schwab

He's one of those guys, he's likable.

He posts fun videos of he and his wife Kira Sedgwick dancing.

And he's got that dancing gene from Footloose.

or that it was made popular in Footloose.

He was also in another movie called Quick Silver from the 80s about bike messengers in Chicago.

I remember seeing that kind of being pleasantly surprised.

Tiff Burry on social media says, Footloose, thank you Tiff.

Eric Ratsack from Ask Your Mother says, Tremors with Reba.

God, I forgot Reba McIntyre was in that movie.

She was funny.

Tremors, have you ever seen Tremors?

I have not, no.

It's good.

He and the dad, Michael Gross, I believe is his name from Family Ties, play these two guys who are always doing paper rock scissors as to who should do the, and these tremors of these humongous worms under the ground.

It's really campy, but really

Conrad

funny.

Did you say paper rock scissors?

I think so.

That sounds weird.

Pete Schwab

Rock paper scissors.

Conrad

That's gonna be like, is that a Chicago thing?

But you knew what I was talking about.

I was making sure, you

Pete Schwab

know.

Scissors.

I don't like it.

I don't like it.

I don't like it.

And my pal, Rachel Manick from Fox 11 News here on Greenbases, Footloose.

Rachel, come back on the show.

We'll discuss Footloose.

I love it.

Great responses.

Keep them coming, folks.

We are going to break for the news, sports, and weather here.

And when we come back, wonderfully, Wisconsin's Paul Vandenplatz will be here.

We're talking Wisconsin tonight.

It's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.

Co-Host

Welcome

Peach Wabba (Host)

back.

This is Nightlight with Peach Wabba.

I am Peach Wabba.

It is a Wednesday night.

in the very chilly state of Wisconsin.

So gather the family around the radio folks, get a fire going in the fireplace, and let's go old school here.

Let's retro radio listen right here and stay warm because it's only gonna get worse as we just heard over the next few days.

Our question of the night is, what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

That's right, we're talking Bacon, and we have to do, can you Google Con, find out what your degree of separation is from Kevin Bacon.

Do you know of that whole thing?

The six degrees of separation from Kevin Bacon?

I don't, but I can look it up.

It's a huge thing, and he's been in so much stuff that everybody is some degree away from Kevin Bacon, I guess.

Myself?

Co-Host

Maybe.

I don't, I don't think so.

Well... Is

Peach Wabba (Host)

it the

Co-Host

oracle of bacon that I need to look up on?

Peach Wabba (Host)

The oracle, I don't know about that.

I don't know.

I would type in...

Six degrees of separation.

How does the six degrees of separation from Kevin Bacon work and see what you come up with?

You could be first cousins.

You don't know.

I think you would

Co-Host

know.

Yeah, I think I'd know.

Peach Wabba (Host)

All right, so let us know folks.

What is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

I said a few good men and she's having a baby.

Conrad said X-Men Avengers.

First class.

First class.

But let's find out what our first guest.

thinks about Kevin Bacon.

He works his butt off, folks, traveling our beautiful state, posting really cool stuff about our state, whether it's supper clubs or bars or hotels or cool attractions.

He does it all at Wonderfully Wisconsin, a really cool content creator.

And he joins us here from time to time.

We love it when he's here in the studio.

Mr. Paul Vandenblase, buddy.

Hey Pete, thanks for having me on.

You got to swag on if you're watching on the stream.

Where can people get a really cool t-shirt like that?

I love the green, or sweatshirt I should say.

I love the green.

They can't.

They

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

can't?

Not

Peach Wabba (Host)

yet.

Not yet.

I'll be working on that.

Paul, when you're trying to promote yourself, you don't just make swag for yourself.

You gotta get it up.

I knew it.

I got no swag, so what am I talking about?

Hey, it's great to have you here, buddy.

How are you?

I'm great.

I'm great.

Yeah, good.

So, do you have a favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

Oh, of course.

Your show.

Of course, Footloose.

Footloose, great.

Oh,

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

I just identify with it growing up in a small Wisconsin town.

Yeah.

It's like, yeah, I get it.

Were you not allowed

Peach Wabba (Host)

to dance in the town you grew up in though?

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Well, yes, but not because there was just a general law.

I mean, they just saw me and they're like, no, you don't, please don't dance.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Paul, please go visit Wisconsin Keepsakes.

Do not dance in front of anyone.

I love that movie.

And I liked it.

It was about dancing.

I thought it was funny that, you know, I think it was for religious... Oh, it was a pastor played by John Lithgow who said, you can't dance.

And it was because a girl had died in a car accident like 20 years earlier because they were drinking and he equated that to dancing somehow, whatever.

But my point is, in the movie, there's no dancing in this town.

But then at the end of the movie, the kids in the town get together and overturn the dancing law and they get to have a dance.

And all of a sudden, everybody in the town knows how to break dance.

It's like, wait a minute.

They couldn't dance for 20 years and now they're popping and locking it.

Either they were cheating.

And practicing, I just thought that was a really fun movie.

Sure.

Great movie.

So is your year off to a good start?

How are things going with Wonderfully Wisconsin?

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Oh, just busier than ever.

Yeah.

Still in the middle of my burger tour.

So, you know, I've been working, we're coming up on a year of the burger tour, which sounds insane, but if your listeners don't know, I am going to at least 100 burger.

Places around and it's probably looking like I'm probably gonna try to get to like 125

Peach Wabba (Host)

So how are you researching that?

Are you like there's so many like Wisconsin's like probably right in the middle of in terms of state population nationwide?

But do you go?

Are there a hundred burger places that are great or are there 200?

How did you settle in on a hundred to start and maybe

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

125 I think a hundred, you know, it's it's a nice round number obviously But I think that's where it starts to be where somebody will kind of take it seriously You

Peach Wabba (Host)

know if you

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

go to 20 burger places.

Okay.

Yeah, but there is

1500 more in the state right

Peach Wabba (Host)

but

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

if a hundred I think is the beginning of like okay somebody really will take that number seriously

Peach Wabba (Host)

like this guy's done his homework right like that's a serious because honestly I said this is the beginning of the show when you first told us what you're doing

I expected you to come back three months later and have the list.

I'm like, wait a minute.

I started thinking about it.

I'm like, 100 burger places.

That's like, they're not all in the Fox Valley.

So where do you, how do you pick them?

Do you pick them randomly or based on

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

reputation?

Sometimes it's randomly.

It's like, Hey, here's a place.

Let's stop and just check it out.

Why not?

But I do have a very passionate fan base.

And one thing, if you want to get people riled up in Wisconsin, ask them what the best cheese curd is, where the best

fish fry is and who has the best burger.

So

Peach Wabba (Host)

people

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

people really

Peach Wabba (Host)

maybe old-fashioned

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

old-fashioned too but yeah people are really passionate about their favorite burger in the state of Wisconsin so it's it's easier than you'd

Peach Wabba (Host)

think so here's here's what I want to say because you're a pretty positive guy sure and I thought how is Paul gonna go into a place hate the burger I mean do you just not post then or what do you do because you did go to Lambo Field and I was surprised at your candor you said it's okay but

You're also saying you don't go to Lambeau Field for the burgers.

You know, it's a pretty safe thing to go to stars, you know, because you got the Packers there.

That's why you're there.

But have you been to a lot of places like that where there was just like, yeah,

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

a few and far between.

I've been lucky enough.

I made the decision if I went to a place and it was a terrible burger, I just would not post the content because I've seen the.

good that my content can do for a business.

So I know it can be equally damaging.

Peach Wabba (Host)

So

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

I've been lucky enough, though, to not run into that.

And like I said in my Lambo, I always look for something positive.

Peach Wabba (Host)

So in

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

the Lambo Field video, I said, hey, after an afternoon of barley pops,

Peach Wabba (Host)

this

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

burger will do.

All

Peach Wabba (Host)

right, that was

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

great.

Peach Wabba (Host)

What about you also posted something recently, and I've heard this before somewhere that the hamburger was created.

in Wisconsin, possibly Seymour, or has some origin here.

That was an interesting post.

Tell us about that.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Yes, I forget the year 1800s at the Seymour County Fair.

Oh, to game me, I believe.

Whatever fair is in Seymour, I apologize.

But there was a man selling

Meatballs and apparently as the story goes they weren't selling that well and he thought of a way that he could make them Something you could eat kind of on the go and therefore the hamburger was born was just a matter of convenience Yes, yes, how do I take this goodness with me?

Yeah, and and ironically enough in researching the story I found out there's a hamburger Hall of Fame in Seymour So

Peach Wabba (Host)

a great

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

video

Peach Wabba (Host)

idea.

I have no clue what it all entails, but why not?

Now, is there a place in Seymour that has a great burger that you've been to?

Is there going to be one on your list, do you think?

I

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

haven't yet.

There is a bar and grill there that a lot of people say is fantastic, that I was unaware of before people were telling me about it.

The only burger place that I knew of in Seymour was McDonald's.

Peach Wabba (Host)

And they're burgers, you know.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

It's all Mickey

Peach Wabba (Host)

D's.

Billions and billions served.

And apparently, I think Terry Barr did something on the burger a couple of years ago on the Civic Media website.

They smashed it, I think, and put a bun around it.

Because the burger used to be like a meatball, right?

Yes.

Okay.

Brilliant.

Yeah.

Innovative.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Yeah, and I believe a burger's actually supposed to be served with the rounded part down was traditionally how that was done to soak up more juices.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Interesting.

Wow, that's so cool.

All right, so we got burgers.

I love the post you did recently about...

Freezing to death on the way to quick trip.

Where did that come from and let's get a lesson for Conrad here because he spends a lot of time at quick trip And we don't want to lose anybody on the track so oh,

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

I don't know.

I just think of funny things

Peach Wabba (Host)

You know

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

funny, Wisconsin is um,

Peach Wabba (Host)

yeah,

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

I thought I'm like I would like to tell a funny joke about how cold it is here and kind of how on Mount Everest, you know the Sherpas are guiding people and

People don't make it back, and so, unfortunately, they use bodies as landmarks

Peach Wabba (Host)

on Mount Everest,

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

so we'll

Peach Wabba (Host)

equate that to Wisconsin.

He just went in for cheese curds, and now he's part of the landscape.

You know what, I went to Quick Trip on the way down to Milwaukee on Saturday, I think, and they have these cheesy-like potato dealios.

Oh, yeah.

Man, those are good.

And they always have cheese curds, and cheese curds are fine, but whenever they have them,

Even if I'm fasting or on some kind of program, I'm like, oh, I'm sorry, they have cheesy potato puffs.

I have to get those down.

But they don't always have them like they have the cheese

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

curds.

No, the loaded cheese spuds, I think.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Cheese spuds, yeah.

Oh, those things are addicting.

Dynamite.

And really healthy, too.

Yeah.

So where are you before we move on from the burgers?

Because who doesn't love hamburgers?

Do you have two or three places that you've been to so far that you can really tout their work?

Oh, it comes to the burger.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Absolutely.

I like to say, giving more of a generalized answer, the places that have been around for like 80 years and haven't changed anything are the places that really have been standouts to me.

A place that I went to recently that really was a surprise was just a bar and grill in the small town of Michicot.

It's a newer bar.

And so a couple of people like, go check it out.

It was one of the best burgers I've had.

Great service.

Just, yeah, just a surprise.

Peach Wabba (Host)

You know, not

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

the best burger I've had so far, but-

Peach Wabba (Host)

You stumble onto it.

Yeah, you stumble into some place and it's just an incredible

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

burger.

Peach Wabba (Host)

That's the voice of Paul Vandenplatz, folks.

Follow him at Wonderfully Wisconsin.

Facebook, Instagram.

Yep.

Everywhere.

TikTok.

Everywhere.

Really?

Sure.

So what am I missing?

Oh, I'm on X on you.

Okay.

Okay, cool.

That's a lot of work, man.

Keeping up all those-

Do you have to post?

Because every time you post, I guess the posting doesn't take time, but cutting the videos together.

How long does that take you?

Because I don't know if people realize what you put into this content creation.

You've got to drive there.

You've got to film it.

You've got to edit it.

And you do have edits.

And you have sound.

It takes work.

So tell us, walk us through that process.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Oh, sure.

traveling and then when you're at the location, it's just like any or other videographer.

You're looking at the shots that you want.

You want the general idea of what you want this video to be.

Can't just take random shots and like, okay, I'll just cut it together.

You want to tell a story with your video.

So you're taking the shots that you want and then you're editing that video down and then I do voiceovers over most of my work.

So then I have to tell the story with my voice that I'm trying to convey in the video.

So it's

You know, without the travel, just the editing part is several hours per video.

Well, and that's just for short form.

So people who do YouTube long form content for half hour hour videos, I can't even imagine.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Yeah.

Have you, what have you learned since you've been doing this?

Have you become a better filmmaker?

Because you are creating little movies.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

Yeah.

Yeah, I've learned a lot in the way that I do want to story tell in the beginning.

It was just piecing things together.

I'm like, I'm here and I don't know what to do.

I didn't go to school for film or videography or marketing or media or anything.

So it's just learning that along the way of how to tell the story.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Yeah.

That's so cool.

Well, you're very good at it.

We've got John on the stream says, he's not a fan of Culver's burgers, but he says way over cooked.

But he does say, this is for Paul, does your guest prefer his burgers medium rare?

How about fresh or frozen meat?

That's a good question.

Sure.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

I do like medium rare or rare, depending if it is a really good quality meat.

Okay.

I've had decent frozen burgers, to be honest, if they're like flash frozen and high quality beef.

But of course, tend to prefer fresh.

Peach Wabba (Host)

Yeah.

I think the frozen ones are better on the grill, maybe, if you put them on the grill.

You prefer not to have frozen.

Right.

But you're right, they can taste okay.

Pardon me.

All right, Paul van den Plaas is my guest.

We've got if you have a question for Paul, first of all, follow him, folks.

He does great stuff.

You'll be very proud of our state and you will love the work he does and you want to go to some of these places.

He recently visited a hotel.

We'll ask him about that.

And we'll talk about, oh, you like Brewer.

You said the Lambo burgers are better than the Brewer burgers, right?

Yes.

Yes.

Oh, that's good.

Paul Vandenblase (Guest)

By a

Peach Wabba (Host)

smidge.

By a smidge.

So we'll have a lot more coming up with, have you been to Leon's and Oshkosh?

I have, but not for video.

I love Leon's.

The Juice Burgers are fantastic.

Alright, we're coming right back with Paul Vanden Plaus.

This is Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio

Co-Host

Network.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Welcome

Pete Schwab (host)

back.

I'm Pete Schwab.

This is Night Light.

Great to have you here, folks.

News, sports and weather coming up in just about seven minutes.

My guest in studio.

This is always fun.

Paul Vandenplatz is here.

He is the content.

He is a content creator and has created the platform wonderfully, Wisconsin, which is a wonderful follow.

You have to check him out.

He's on all the social media platforms.

He goes from establishment to establishment, event to event, landmark to landmark here in Wisconsin.

And he will make you very proud of our state.

He does great work and it is always fun to have you here, buddy.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Well, thanks for having me.

Pete Schwab (host)

You're welcome.

I heaped so much praise on you, you probably were expecting me to comp you a drink.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Oh, of course.

Pete Schwab (host)

There's your water right there.

So you were at a hotel recently, I thought, and this was the first time I had seen a post you had done about hotels.

Sure.

And I thought, oh, those are great to visit too.

There's some great old historic hotels here in Wisconsin, but it was the Charmont Hotel in La Crosse.

How come you liked it so much?

What was so great about it?

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Oh, it's just kind of like...

everything all rolled into one.

History is very luxurious.

They take very good care of you.

The room was cozy and comfortable, but very high end.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah,

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

just a really cool experience.

Pete Schwab (host)

You love going to places like that.

I mean, because let's be honest, I feel like unfortunately in our country right now, if you pay top dollar $500 a night for a hotel room, you get great service.

But then there's the rest of us.

who, you know, don't go beyond 200 bucks or whatever, whatever, $100, 80 bucks, it's just like take it or leave it.

You know, there's could be stuff broken in your room and they're like, ah, sorry about that.

Like, I feel like the middle class, when it comes to hotels, it's not a great fit right now.

Like people aren't really attentive at some of those chains.

But when you go to a place like this, you expect great treatment because they obviously take pride.

in their space, in the history surrounding the establishment.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Right, right.

And that's why people are probably familiar with the Michelin Guide as far as restaurants, Michelin Star restaurants.

So the Michelin Guide recently started doing hotels.

So there is a key rating system, I believe one through three.

So there are only two Michelin Guide rated hotels in the entire state of Wisconsin.

One's in Beloit.

And then the other one's the charm.

No kidding.

Yeah.

And it, it really is.

It is unbelievable.

You go there, service is incredible.

And like I say in the video, you think a stay like this, if you were in LA or Chicago or New York, you know, this is going to be a $700 a night room.

Little lacrosse, it's $220 a night.

And you're overlooking the Mississippi River.

So just beautiful views and really a great bang for your

Pete Schwab (host)

buck.

And I'm always worried because people say, well, check the reviews.

So there's a thousand reviews, but with

AI, I don't know, like honest to God, I don't know if those are real people now.

I think 10 years ago they probably were, but I don't know what I'm looking at right now.

I just look at the star rating and I'm like, well, all right, the pictures look okay, I guess,

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

but I don't know

Pete Schwab (host)

what you're walking into.

Have you ever heard of the Chiquamagon in Ashland?

Is this the Chiquamagon?

It's up in Ashland.

It's right on Lake Superior, beautiful old hotel.

No.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Oh, you got

Pete Schwab (host)

to check it out.

I did stand up there like,

30 years ago and it was like just this it was a heck of a drive from Chicago where I was based at the time but when you got there it was like oh my god it's like it's like the Grand Hotel in Mackinac Island you're stepping back

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

sure you know sure

Pete Schwab (host)

um let's talk about that because you did a recent post about why isn't Michigan's upper peninsula part of Wisconsin

What can you tell us about that?

What did you find

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

out?

It was due to, I forget the name of a war.

It wasn't a real war, but there was a huge disagreement back before these states here were states.

They were territories.

And at the time that I believe Ohio and Michigan were getting ready for statehood, they were kind of battling over this area at the lower part of Michigan.

They came to an agreement that it's like, you know what, we'll give Ohio this, but then Michigan gets the upper peninsula.

No kidding.

Yeah, and it's like, well, that makes sense because there is no reason it should be a part of Michigan.

Pete Schwab (host)

It is kind of weird, but I mean, let's be honest.

Do we want the UP?

Yeah.

We would want it as part of Wisconsin.

Oh, it's beautiful up there.

Oh, it's gorgeous.

No question about it.

But as far as bang for your buck goes, I think there were 300,000 people in the whole.

I don't know, it just seems like a lot more land to take care of and I don't know.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

I don't know, I like Upers, I just consider them extra drunk Wisconsinites.

Listen, I'm not trying to

Pete Schwab (host)

start

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

a fight between us and the Upers, I think they're

Pete Schwab (host)

wonderful people, I'm just saying.

What do you, alright, when it comes to the time of year, Paul?

We talked about, you know, you just mentioned a hotel where it's really cozy in that winter is very special in Wisconsin.

Not all of us love it, but we appreciate it at times, you know, for times like that when you're at a great hotel.

What's your favorite time to travel around the state?

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

It's summer.

Yeah.

Wisconsin is really known for our summers.

That is the best place to live for three or four months out of a year, unfortunately.

But no, that's my favorite time.

There is anything you could ever want to do.

You can do here in

Pete Schwab (host)

summer.

particular part of the state you would prefer to go to in winter or fall or spring say?

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

I would say summer is probably driftless area because you can go and there's a lot of hiking opportunities.

It's just very incredibly gorgeous.

Yeah and then you head up north in the winter.

Nice cabin, roaring fire, a lot of great skiing opportunities.

Just downhill, a lot of cross country.

I think the Berkey is the biggest cross country race in North America, I think, or maybe the world.

Are

Pete Schwab (host)

you a snowmobiler or a skier?

Do you like any of those

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

winter sports?

I used to do all that when I was much younger and more flexible.

Pete Schwab (host)

Now you just, if you're like me, you just avoid injury if you can.

John on the stream says, does your guest like Angus beef?

Do you get into what kind of beef is on the burger?

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

That would be a serious

Pete Schwab (host)

deep dive.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Sure, I don't make any content on it, but I am huge into Texas style barbecue.

That is one of my personal.

Massive passion.

Okay.

Oh, yeah, I could talk beef all

Pete Schwab (host)

day What about when you're at home and you make something like that?

Would you is there a particular kind of beef you go to?

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Oh, yeah, it's I'm going for like prime grade stuff usually, but I'm usually not working with ground

hamburger.

I'm usually working with actual cuts of good stuff.

Look at

Pete Schwab (host)

you, man.

All right.

Paul VandenPost is my guest, folks.

He's going to stick around with us through the news.

We're going to give him a Wisconsin.

Is it a landmark quiz con?

Wisconsin landmark quiz.

I think you're going to crush this thing, buddy.

Paul Vandenplatz (guest)

Well, if I fail, I'm blaming you.

Pete Schwab (host)

Fair enough.

All right, we are coming back after the news.

This is Pete Schwabba and Nightlight.

And also in hour number two, Comedian Chastity Washington will be here.

Hour number three or act three, Frank Anderson will be here talking about our state as well.

It's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.

Announcer

Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.

This is Night Light with Pete Chwaba.

Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.

And now a guy who still likes to build a fort.

Pete Chwaba.

Pete Chwaba

Welcome back, folks.

Great to have you here.

gorgeous, beautiful Wednesday night here in the state of Wisconsin.

You probably think I'm being sarcastic, but I'm not.

That is just how I roll, and any day, regardless of weather, is a beautiful day, and it is even more beautiful that you are here.

Please be part of the show, folks.

Our phone lines are always open at 855-752-4842-8557-5CIVIC.

We are talking, we have kind of an extra focus on our state tonight.

We always talk about entertainment stuff, but a little Wisconsin heavy tonight, which is fun.

I've missed talking about Wisconsin because we were off for a few days, so it's great.

Paul Vandenplatz is here from wonderfully Wisconsin, an outstanding social media platform that he created.

We will be back with Paul in just a moment.

Coming up next hour, Chastity Washington, very funny Milwaukee based comedian will be here.

She's been on the show before.

And then our pal Frank Anderson, who is the creator of Wisconsinology.com, a great site that celebrates everything weird and historical and fun about our state.

We will talk about some cool things that have been created here in Wisconsin tonight with Frank.

Frank has that rare ability.

He can trace anything to Wisconsin somehow.

I'll say like Betty White and he'll say, oh, well, she was married to someone.

So who went to Pulaski High School?

You know, like he's just that guy.

Conrad Krieger

He is that that the Kevin Bacon thing, but with Wisconsin.

Pete Chwaba

Exactly.

Conrad Krieger

Hey, what did you find out about that?

Sorry.

So Pete Schwab has a bacon number of two.

Pete Schwab was in relative strangers with Dave Bautista.

And he was in the Guardians of the Galaxy holiday special with Kevin

Pete Chwaba

Bacon.

So I'm two degrees removed from coming.

I was in relative strangers.

I remember that I played a meat delivery man.

I didn't know David Batista was in the movie.

Conrad Krieger

I've seen it, but I don't remember what he was.

He was actually playing himself as a wrestler in

Pete Chwaba

it.

Okay, got that movie his connecting me to so many people like The amount of cameos in that movie by really famous people is incredible And what is yours?

Do you have a

Conrad Krieger

it didn't

Pete Chwaba

come

Conrad Krieger

up?

I don't you got a weasel your way into this I typed in my name, but

It didn't show anything.

So all right.

Well, that's what

Pete Chwaba

we're talking about tonight folks That is our question of the night is what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie or show?

I said a few good men and she's having a baby Conrad said the what is it again?

X men first class X men first class see and eat like Kevin Bacon is in all these different kind of movies our guest Paul Vana plus said footloose correct.

All right

So there you go, folks.

But lots of fun here tonight on Nightlight.

It is great to be back on The Air Live.

Conrad Krieger working the board.

We had a great talk with Paul in hour number one about his burger search.

He is reviewing the top 100 burgers in Wisconsin.

And he has got a delicious path in front of him.

He's only 20 in?

About 30.

About 30.

OK.

But you've posted about 20.

Yes.

Paul Vandenplatz

Or

Pete Chwaba

something.

Why do I have 20 in there?

OK.

Because I just posted 20.

Do double burgers count?

Double just single burgers single okay as far as the chains go Culver's McDonald's Burger King whatever Tom's you know Do you have a favorite in those in the mass producing of the hamburger?

Probably Culver's Culver's

Paul Vandenplatz

yeah, it's always solid.

Pete Chwaba

Yeah Well, that's the thing about that.

You know what you're getting and that's all I asked for like I I feel like sometimes when I go out to eat in the Marinette area Which is not known for its culinary genius, but you know, there's some nice places

I just, I can't stand when you get something and it's the greatest thing you've ever eaten and then you go back and it's totally different.

Like, what is going on here?

There should be a formula here, right?

I feel like Larry David.

So we also talked about how cold it's going to be, folks.

The next couple of days are going to be brutal, actually all through the weekend.

So bundle up, take care of yourself, don't take unnecessary risks.

I said,

that 15 degrees, I think, is the coldest temperature I've ever experienced in my life, or maybe edging close to 20, but I don't remember 20 degree days, but I've been corrected.

Many people on the stream, and Christina Laurie's post on her, she said the record in Wisconsin was 37 below, without windshield.

John on the stream says Milwaukee's coldest temp was minus 26, set back in 1982.

So...

There you go.

Oh, and he said Madison, yeah, 37 below was set in 51, 1951 January 30th.

That's insanity.

Would you even go out of the house on a day like that, Paul?

Paul Vandenplatz

Yeah, yeah, actually that day in 96.

I walked to school that day without realizing the school was closed.

So they, I got to school and they wouldn't let me walk back home.

Pete Chwaba

With good reason yeah, yeah, and you're wearing a sweatshirt tonight.

You're just rocking the sweatshirt now.

It is balmy out there It's only like what 15 20 tonight.

Yeah, I think it was 11 when I came in all right That's not too bad and are you have you always been like a like Conrad's kind of a shorts in the winter kind of guy are you that guy?

Paul Vandenplatz

Yeah, but I just wear pants so people don't question my sanity

Pete Chwaba

okay very good

That is Paul Vanden applause folks check out wonderfully, Wisconsin a great social media platform that he created it's on Facebook YouTube X Twitter, whatever you want to call it and Instagram you said I saw on a post recently when I was kind of scrolling through your post today a year ago you were about to give up and You were frustrated because Twitter was gonna be shut down and or X I guess it was called X then so

What happened?

Like, did you just go, no, I love doing this or did certain things become easier?

How did you keep going?

Well, that

Paul Vandenplatz

was, it was TikTok.

TikTok.

I'm sorry, that's right.

And so I had just grown everything on there.

So I only had one platform that I had any sort of following.

I kind of just put all my eggs in one basket.

As I stated earlier, you know, I grew this from nothing.

I didn't know what I was doing.

It kind of happened by mistake, honestly.

And so I'm like, well, you know, if TikTok goes away, what is the point of I'm starting all over from scratch on all these other platforms?

And so thankfully it didn't.

But then that's the one thing that made me realize, boy, I really needed to diversify.

And I mean, and it's worked out really well.

I mean, I'm almost as many followers on Facebook as I have.

on TikTok.

Pete Chwaba

Oh, that's crazy.

Wow.

Good for you.

And here's what I've found.

I think the diversifying is absolutely correct.

And I've never thought I don't want to be on one because I have 250 Twitter followers, three TikTok followers, and then a few on Facebook.

So I like to spread it around a

Paul Vandenplatz

little bit.

Sure.

Hey, those three people, they're very important.

Pete Chwaba

You know who the three Twitter or TikTok followers are?

Rob Brackenridge, who just followed me back.

Cause I followed him and he's a frequent guest in the show and my two kids cause they post stuff.

Paul Vandenplatz

So

Pete Chwaba

I just go on there and share it.

There you go.

Small circle.

No effort.

Three followers, Paul.

It's something I'm just saying.

I'm not trying to intimidate anybody here.

Uh, so we've got a fun quiz.

Paul took a quiz last time.

Do we remember what quiz you took last time you were here?

Paul Vandenplatz

Oh, it was a Wisconsin quiz.

I don't quite remember.

Pete Chwaba

Do we con?

Did you, uh,

Paul Vandenplatz

uh, let's see.

It's okay.

Don't let's not waste any time.

Conrad Krieger

Was

Paul Vandenplatz

it the Curt or Turd?

Conrad Krieger

Yes, it

Paul Vandenplatz

was

Conrad Krieger

the Curt or Turd.

Yes, it was.

What was

Pete Chwaba

that?

Conrad Krieger

Was I not even here that day?

I don't remember.

It was the Curt or Turd quiz, yeah.

Pete Chwaba

That's a terrible sounding quiz.

Did we come up with that?

I did.

Okay.

What was it?

The Curt

Conrad Krieger

or Turd?

It was about cheese curds.

Pete Chwaba

Yeah.

Okay.

Well, we have a Wisconsin landmarks quiz.

that we thought we would give you.

We've got a few minutes left here with you, buddy.

You mind taking our quiz?

Sure.

Okay.

Do you think all of your listeners are listening right now?

Paul Vandenplatz

If

Pete Chwaba

you crush this, you can repost it.

If you don't do well, you can just go, I'm never going back on

Paul Vandenplatz

that.

Every single of my followers on X. So that's all one of them.

Pete Chwaba

Same with me.

I've got three.

So here we go.

All right, Wisconsin landmarks quiz.

Our nightlight Wisconsin landmarks quiz.

Paul van Applaas from wonderfully Wisconsin folks is here in the studio about to take this quiz And I have no doubt he will do very well.

All right number one Which Wisconsin landmark is known as the eighth wonder of the world?

Is it a Lambo field be house on the rock see peach wabba's house?

It's actually not peach wabba's house is it see Pete Shauba's house You'd think for after two years of working together, you know it is filming or is it D the bean I would say house on the rock

Very nice.

Well done.

Off to a great start.

Paul Vandenplatz, number two.

Where are the famous Wisconsin Dells rock formations located?

A, along the Pacific Ocean.

B, along the Wisconsin River.

C, along the Mississippi River.

D, along Pete Shalba's house.

Paul Vandenplatz

Wisconsin River.

There you

Pete Chwaba

go.

He actually spelled it right that time.

All right.

Number three, Paul is two for two, which Wisconsin landmark is the oldest continuously operating zoo in the United States?

Is it A, the Henry Vilas Zoo?

B, the Milwaukee County Zoo.

C, Peter Schwabba's backyard.

Is it Peter Peter?

He just changes it up every time.

D, Bay Beach Wildlife Sanctuary.

Oh boy, that's tough.

That is tough.

Paul Vandenplatz

I

Pete Chwaba

would have gotten this one wrong.

Paul Vandenplatz

We'll go with Henry Vilas, but I might be wrong.

Pete Chwaba

Well done.

When in doubt, Andrew out.

He went with a Henry Vilas.

Excellent stuff.

Three for three.

Paul Van Applaus.

Here we go.

Question number four.

Which landmark is the most, is the former home of architect Frank Lloyd Wright?

Is it A, Taliesin?

Pardon me.

B, WGBW Studio.

C, Minona Terrace.

D, the Papst Mansion.

Paul Vandenplatz

A.

Pete Chwaba

Wow sketch crush folks.

It's not it's wonderfully Wisconsin for a reason Paul knows was kind It's not wonderfully Paul or wonderfully random stuff.

It's wonderfully Wisconsin and he is four for four number five What was constant landmark features the famous forever Tron Sculpture Park?

Is it a bearable be key wascom see Christmas City, USA dash Marinette.

That's what I called my hometown D la Valley Laval

Paul Vandenplatz

Laval

Pete Chwaba

Laval

Paul Vandenplatz

Gosh, we'll go with D.

Pete Chwaba

Boom.

Are you just toying with us Paul?

Do you

Paul Vandenplatz

really know these right

Pete Chwaba

away, but then you're just like act like you have to think about it?

That one was a little tough.

Okay.

You knew it wasn't Christmas City USA, Marinette.

That's horrible.

It's not really catching on like I thought it would Christmas City USA.

I think it needs to be me and more than two of my Twitter followers or TikTok followers to do that.

All right.

Number six, which island chain is located in Lake Superior?

Is it A, the Apostle Islands, B, San Juan Islands, D, Dominican Republic?

Here's the Florida.

I'm sorry, D, Florida.

Paul Vandenplatz

That's a puzzle.

Pete Chwaba

Paul, if you would have got that one wrong, I would have ended the quiz.

Sure.

That was great.

Number seven, what landmark is known for its historic circus heritage?

A, Circus World Museum, B, Milwaukee County Zoo, D, Madison Circus Space, or D, the Domes?

Paul Vandenplatz

That's Circus

Pete Chwaba

World.

Dude, have you been there?

No, I need to go.

I'm same.

Number eight, the Milwaukee Art Museum is famous for which feature?

Is it A, the history of cheese curds with the first curd ever made displayed in a case?

B, a retractable wing-like structure.

C, a rotating tower.

D, a quick trip located inside.

As much as I would love it to be D. We're gonna go with B on that one.

None of those would have surprised me, actually.

That's great.

Milwaukee Art Museum is incredible.

Beautiful, beautiful space.

Uh, number nine, which Wisconsin landmark is a freshwater national marine sanctuary?

Is it A, Devils Lake, B, Apostle Islands, C, under Lambeau Field?

Or D, Horicon Marsh?

Horicon Marsh.

You sure it's not under Lambeau Field?

Yeah, maybe it is.

What did you say?

Horicon Marsh.

Paul Vandenplatz

Did I miss one?

Pete Chwaba

We're grading on a curve.

You're still getting an A, Paul, but that's your first miss Q, Miss Fire.

Conrad Krieger

It's a fossil islands boat.

That's a tough one.

Yeah that

Pete Chwaba

because I would have I would have probably said horror con marsh too because Apostle islands islands were already the

Paul Vandenplatz

correct answer Horicon is the largest freshwater cattail marsh in

Pete Chwaba

North America.

You know what we got to give them that good For that bit of knowledge alone that you know that

That's acceptable.

All right.

You're 9 for 9, Paul.

That's ridiculous.

I don't know what Conrad was thinking about that

Conrad Krieger

question.

Sorry.

Pete Chwaba

All right.

Number 10, Devil's Lake State Park is best known for what natural feature is it A, Devil's statue, B, boat in theater, C, court site bluffs, or D, sea caves?

Paul Vandenplatz

Uh, court site bluffs.

Pete Chwaba

Dude.

10 for 10.

All right, we're gonna do the last five questions next time we're here.

Dude, you crushed it.

You embarrassed us once again, Paul.

Thank you, sir, very much for your time tonight.

Thank you for having me as well.

Keep up the great work.

Let us know how the fister is and how the hamburger thing progresses.

You're always fun, buddy.

Thanks.

Paul, fan applause.

Follow him at Wonderfully Wisconsin on any platform, even a live stage.

Follow him there, too.

This is Pete Schwab at Nightlight.

We're coming right back to read your text on the Civic Media radio network.

SPEAKER_??

you

Pete Schwab (host)

Jammin' through Act 2 here.

I am Pete Schwab.

This is Nightlight.

So great to have you here.

We're talking about a lot of fun stuff tonight.

And our question of the night is, what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

We've got some great texts.

And we will read those in just a moment.

Coming up at 7.20 in the third hour will be Frank Anderson, folks.

Frank is always a blast to talk to.

And then at 6.35, Chastity Washington will be here.

to talk about comedy.

She's a very funny Milwaukee based comedian and she will be on right after news, sports and weather in just about six or seven minutes.

Our question of the night, what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

And this is one of those guys or actors that, you know, you can ask a question like this of because his resume, I bet he's done 200 films and he's one of those guys like Woody Harrelson, you know, that people just want them in their movie.

He does small roles.

He can open a movie as the lead.

It just doesn't matter because he's that famous.

He's done good work And I don't love him in everything sometimes I feel like he's over the top like There's a show called a city on a hill Where he plays an FBI agent named Jackie raw Jackie raw with that Boston accent and he's kind of over the top.

He's good.

I just I kind of don't I Don't love him in the role, but he's a really really good actor

So going to the stream here Dave on the stream says footloose and Conrad's mom checks in Paula says a few good men great movie agree Paula That's one of the movies.

I can't turn off when it's on love love love a few good men Going to the text line here in the 818 Bridget says she's having a baby.

I said that to a Bridget.

She says great story great music

Boy, that's a great point that the soundtrack on that film for she's having a baby is really really solid and the writing is great too.

It's a John Hughes film and It's probably sounds like a chick flick, but it's not it's just a nice story about a couple trying to get pregnant and They're kind of like it's not like a shotgun marriage, but they're trying to figure things out.

There's some really good laughs in it

It's a really sweet story.

Thank you for the text Bridget Jim from Appleton and the 920 says I am a school bus driver every year We have at least three days in January where the temperature is near 20 below degrees Fahrenheit got to make the ice Got to make the ice for sturgeon season sometime.

Oh man.

That's that's overkill though Jim 20 below Where have I been is that a normal temperature?

I don't remember 20 below I do really mm-hmm

Maybe I just like tune it out because of like

Conrad (co-host)

PTSD or

Pete Schwab (host)

something.

Conrad (co-host)

You always say you're an indoor guy, so you never go outside.

Yeah,

Pete Schwab (host)

and it's always sunny and 70 when I'm inside.

Matt from Eau Claire says tremors because it's ridiculous.

It is Matt, but it's fun.

It's very campy and I really like tremors.

That was up there on my list.

I almost went with tremors.

He says

Did you discover a better year?

I acquired some Cinema Knowledge 2005 best year ever.

Bro with the Flow on my FM radio.

Looks like Joe got his very own show.

I gotta go.

I have to say, I don't know what movie that's from.

Matt is a cinephile, a music file.

I would have to do some research on that, Matt.

Great text, though, buddy.

Thank you.

Monica from Mount Horam in the 608 says Mystic River.

Yeah, another great one.

Great movie despite being incredibly disturbing on so many levels.

Very true.

And a great movie you're right, Monica.

Clint Eastwood directed, I believe, and I believe it was Oscar-nominated.

Brett from the 920 says, I liked him in Apollo and Flatliners.

God, I forgot he was even in Flatliners.

It was like Kiefer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, and yeah, Kevin Bacon.

Thank you, Brett.

Brett also says, or Apollo 13.

Yeah, we know what you meant.

Jim from Appleton says, my favorite not quite a movie he was in is Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special.

Do you see that, Con?

Conrad (co-host)

I didn't actually watch that, no.

But he says, wow.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah.

He says he has the new favorite replacement for Quill, aka Star-Lord, since they couldn't sign David.

Conrad (co-host)

I do not like that at all.

Kevin Bacon is Peter Quill.

I don't.

Pete Schwab (host)

You don't like that?

Nope.

Conrad (co-host)

All

Pete Schwab (host)

right.

You and Jim have had some issues lately.

How

Conrad (co-host)

about an arm wrestle?

I can't say anyone in that role besides Chris Pratt now.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah.

Steve from Florida Conrad's dad says, I remember back in the late 70s, Kevin Bacon made the iconic phrase, thank you, can I have another?

Yes, from Animal House.

Absolutely.

In the epic movie Animal House, a phrase that will live on for eternity.

Another great movie I like is Apollo 13.

What a great way to break into movies.

You're gonna get paddled in your tidy whiteies with this iconic amazing cast surrounding you.

Such a great movie.

Barb from Walk of Shaw says, she's having a baby and I have the videotape to prove it.

Yes.

Late 80s maybe Barb?

I think was she's having a baby, maybe 88?

Hold on to that videotape.

Maybe it'll come back like vinyl.

Matt from Mclare says, that's the year the Godfather of Green Bay came out.

Oh my god.

No, but that's not.

All right, Matt.

Listen, dude.

Matt is a tiger when it comes to movie lines and music.

Obviously, very, very well.

Great knowledge.

Bro with the flow.

He's talking about the scene where Lance Barber's character says, come on, Joe, you got to go.

Close though, Matt.

He could have just as easily said that, to be honest.

The lyrics or the words are less important there.

All right, we are gonna break for the news in just a moment and when we come back Milwaukee funny girl Chastity Washington will be here.

Oh man Conrad you're gonna love this Sydney politics on the stream Says happy new year Conrad

Conrad (co-host)

Happy new year.

You know, I keep

Pete Schwab (host)

that going into the summer.

Conrad (co-host)

You didn't realize that no one said that to me this week So that feels good.

Pete Schwab (host)

Well, it's about time He also says Balto Kevin Bacon movie or some sort of greeting

from Sidney's, I don't know.

He also says, what's up Dave?

Dave, holler at your boy, Sidney's on two.

Always loving those guys talk on the stream.

Okay, we're coming back with Chastity Washington.

What is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie, folks?

Lay it on me, we've still got social media responses to read and we will do that throughout the course of the show.

Frank Anderson is here on hour number three, Chastity Washington, the very funny Chastity Washington.

Coming up next, it's Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.

Conrad (co-host)

Welcome

Pete Schwab (host)

back.

I'm Pete Schwab, and this is Nightlight, and it is a beautiful Wednesday night here.

A balmy Wednesday night compared to what is on the way here in Wisconsin, so stay warm out there, folks.

My next guest is a very funny standard comedian who is based in Milwaukee.

And you know what, Con, let's play the clip before we bring Chastity on.

Here is a sample of her comedy stylings, the very talented at Chastity Washington.

Chastity Washington (clip)

It's a different time, right?

Like kids now, they don't even want to ride the bus to school.

They want to take a Uber, a Lyft.

We rode the school bus every week, we almost died.

You on the bus, you ever been on, you ever been on the school bus?

You coming out of the seat, you hit your skull on the roof.

Hit your face on the window, one of your friends would throw up on the bus every week.

You sliding out the seat, your bus driver driving the bus like it's a mystery machine.

You hit your face on the seat in front of you.

Concussion, it was fun.

Pete Schwab (host)

That is my next guest who joins us over the stream now from Milwaukee.

She's been here before the wonderfully talented Chastity Washington.

Hi, Chastity.

Chastity Washington (guest)

Hey.

Hey, Pete, how are you?

Pete Schwab (host)

I'm doing very well.

Thank you.

Great to have you back.

Chastity Washington (guest)

Absolutely.

Thank you for inviting me back.

Yes.

Pete Schwab (host)

Anytime.

I have a funny, uh, it's funny that I found that clip today because I have a school bus story that didn't affect me directly.

But my wife's best friend, when she was in middle school, lived kind of out in the country up in Northeast Wisconsin.

And the school bus driver, this is just a sign of the times, the school bus driver would pick her and her brother up because they lived like five miles out of town.

And he had like,

10 minutes to kill before he had to pick somebody else up so he would just pull over and the two of them would sit in the back of the bus while the school bus driver just smoked a couple cigarettes.

It is great to have you here.

How have you been?

You were here probably about eight months ago.

How is the stand-up world and the teaching world treating you?

Chastity Washington (guest)

It's been great.

The stand-up's been great.

Teaching, we're sliding into, we're into second semester.

So now, you can see the light at the tunnel.

It gets a little brighter.

You know what I mean?

The sun is a little bright.

Conrad (co-host)

Yeah,

Chastity Washington (guest)

for sure.

So it's been going, you know what I mean?

And I always, you know, I appreciate, because I get to teach my theater classes during the second semester.

So that always gives me...

even more joy.

You know

Pete Schwab (host)

what I mean?

Even on

Chastity Washington (guest)

those tough points.

So yeah, so it's been cool to stand up.

It's been incredible, amazing opportunities as of late and just good work, you know?

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah, we've got a lot to talk about because you've had some cool stuff happen in the world of stand-up comedy.

But will you teach theater?

I didn't know that.

And what grade do you teach?

Chastity Washington (guest)

I have middle school and then at the end of the year I'll do well middle school I have middle school at the end of the year and then high school all of second semester so we're about you know four weeks into our high school theater class so

Pete Schwab (host)

man you know it's funny when I was in high school I played sports I wasn't a particularly great athlete but I did theater as well and

My memories of theater and horsing around behind the scenes and the theater teachers, theater teachers are always fun.

They're so cool.

And do you have that relationship with your students when it comes to theater?

Chastity Washington (guest)

I do.

I like to think that I do.

I mean, this is my third year with this, you know, with my high school kids at my school.

And so I feel like it's a safe space.

They can come in and so many of them, this is their first

you know rodeo so

Pete Schwab (host)

they

Chastity Washington (guest)

are really coming in never having taken a theater class before you know not really ever getting a chance to really act or or even you know know the the ins and outs you know what i mean so for that part to to open their eyes to it uh to give them some some history and some background and some you know like hey this is this this is that and it gives them a chance to look at

the things that they enjoy, the shows and movies and things like that in a different way, in a deeper way.

And then they get to come in and play games and do tongue twisters and laugh at each other and laugh at themselves.

Conrad (co-host)

So

Chastity Washington (guest)

that part was always awesome.

And it's a safe space.

I always say that to them, like, well, this is Vegas.

Like, whatever happens to here stays in here, right?

Right?

So nobody can roast anybody later.

You're like, remember when you was playing that giraffe in class?

You know what I mean?

You remember you jumped off the table like no, you know, so that that can be in and be safe and be silly and it's okay, you know what I mean?

So,

Pete Schwab (host)

so yes, I

Chastity Washington (guest)

believe that I do have that type of hopefully I do that type of rapport.

Pete Schwab (host)

I'm sure you do.

I would imagine having a teacher that's also a really successful stand-up comedian would just be such a kick for these kids.

Like, you know, they probably just think that you've, you know, you've gone out and done things that they might want to do after they study theater in high school or middle school.

I mean, that's a really cool thing for a teacher to be able to tell their kids.

Let's talk about that because teaching is kind of a performance in a manner of speaking.

Do you bring elements of your comedy to the classroom and vice versa?

Chastity Washington (guest)

You know, and I say this all the time.

It's really about a timing.

The timing and commanding the space.

Because, you know, like, you know, I got a room full of first graders.

It's 21st graders.

They don't care if you tell jokes.

They don't care you had a show last night.

They do not care.

They don't care if something you said was funny.

They don't.

care.

They want to chase and hit each other.

They want to eat snacks in the middle of the gym.

You know what I'm saying?

They want to take stuff off your cart.

They steal.

It's a lot.

You know what I'm saying?

It's a lot, Pete.

They don't care, man.

It's really commanding the room, and I have to answer 50 or 60 questions in a two-minute span.

15 people got to go to the bathroom.

Everybody needs tissue.

I need help.

Tie

Pete Schwab (host)

my

Chastity Washington (guest)

shoes.

Tie my shoes.

Oh, your shoes wet.

I don't want to.

You know.

Pete Schwab (host)

You know, it's so funny.

Everything you're saying, because my wife teaches kindergarten, it's the same thing.

Like you need more bodies in the school, not less.

Stop cutting money, get teachers help.

It's very, if you want them to teach kids, you've got to make it easier on the teachers too.

They can't, you know, if they're just tying shoelaces all day, you know, you can't, you can't have it both ways.

Have you encountered, pardon me, the six, seven?

phenomenon.

Chastity Washington (guest)

Oh my god.

It's nuts.

They have no answer.

I'm like, what does it mean?

It's whatever.

What does that mean?

It's whatever.

That mean it's whatever.

They build, they lead into, I'll be like, what are we doing?

One, two, three, four, that'd be like sick.

Conrad (co-host)

And they're

Chastity Washington (guest)

waiting for it.

Waiting for it.

Yes, I have.

In droves, man.

Pete Schwab (host)

It's a party.

I

Chastity Washington (guest)

don't even understand.

Yeah.

Pete Schwab (host)

I love it.

All right.

So let's talk about comedy.

Do you get much material from teaching?

Or, you know, I've watched several of your videos, and maybe I've seen you go into it a little bit, but or is that your escape from your day job, so to speak?

Chastity Washington (guest)

It's like a release.

actually to get to be able to tell stories of the week, the day, the market period.

You know what I'm saying?

Like, it's really a release.

I tell, like right now, you know, I do a lot of comparisons of, you know, what it was when we were in school and what it is now.

And, you know, I talk about even with kids having supplies, like we

We were, you know, prepared.

We came to school.

We had paper.

We had pencils.

You know, if you were smart, you had a pencil box.

You had ruler.

You know what I mean?

Your book bag was clean.

You know what I'm saying?

That ain't, that's not what they got.

They got, that's not what they got in their book bag.

They got a game controller and a weed bait.

That's what they got in their book bag.

You know what I'm saying?

Right?

So, you know, they come in dragging like they, like they drinking coffee from Starbucks, you know, early.

Really?

Like what?

Wait a minute.

I'm the one.

That should be,

That is so

Pete Schwab (host)

crazy.

You're right.

Like high school kids drop 10 bucks a day on Starbucks.

Like we didn't have I didn't drink coffee.

I was probably 28.

Like, and I remember teachers.

Chastity Washington (guest)

Yeah.

Listen, and they don't want to we rolled the bus to school like that.

You played that bit before.

But that is a true story.

Like kids literally

They'll be, they'll ride the motor scooters.

They ride the motor scooters and some of them do.

The line scooters that you see around different cities.

And then some of them, we rode the school bus or the city bus, especially in high school.

You know what I mean?

The city bus to high school, because that was the thing to do.

You got to ride to school and you walked or whatever.

They don't want to do any of that.

They are very like, ugh, who wants to ride the bus?

That's disgusting.

And you know, we're bringing takenovers to school, you know?

Conrad (co-host)

Wow,

Chastity Washington (guest)

who was gonna 30 bucks?

Who's gonna spend 30 bucks for me to come every day?

You know what I mean?

Yeah, it's a yeah, it's it's a I don't know I don't know if I want to call it boozy or I've heard some folks say boozy Yeah, or just they just I don't know if it's privilege.

I don't I don't know what it is, but They just have a different vibe like the the

the trudge that we would go through.

I remember getting off the bus at, you know, at 6.45.

You know what I mean?

Pete Schwab (host)

We start

Chastity Washington (guest)

and we gotta be in by 7.

And it's, you know, bone chilling cold outside.

And, you know, and it's 50 of us on the bus, the bus driver telling them, move back!

You move back!

Get out the doorway!

You know what I mean?

Get out the doorway.

Who's that?

The door won't shut.

It's beeping, you know?

Right.

And all of us getting off the bus, rushing across the Sherman Boulevard, trying to get in.

You can't be late.

You know, after two, two, uh, you know, two, two late days, you get a, you know, a detention and you didn't want to go in the detention hall.

It's 300, 300 of us in silence, you know?

And it's not, it's just a different, different vibe.

Conrad (co-host)

Yeah.

Chastity Washington (guest)

that, you know, they're, they're somewhat passive, like work wise, you give an assignment and they'll be like, what was that?

You said, you said something about what?

Wait,

Pete Schwab (host)

it's a

Chastity Washington (guest)

grade.

Like you,

Pete Schwab (host)

a lot of what I'm saying up here is important.

Really.

You should kind of tune in and, um,

Chastity Washington is my guest.

She's a very funny Milwaukee based comedian.

Uh, where can people see you do your standup act Chastity?

You got any dates coming up in Milwaukee or around the state?

Chastity Washington (guest)

I do.

I do.

I have quite a bit.

I have quite a bit coming up.

Um, tomorrow night, I actually be doing a show called Hottie's only, um, over at the Lincoln Lodge and at Lincoln Lodge.

That's in Chicago.

Forgive me.

It's on Lincoln Avenue.

Um, and it's the sugar maple and it's on Lincoln over in Bayview.

Conrad (co-host)

Okay,

Chastity Washington (guest)

so that that's tomorrow night at eight o'clock this Saturday.

I'll be at coaches corner in Belvedere, Illinois Not too far from Beloit and so that that that's gonna be though laughing liberally February 7th at the comedy sports over on 1st Street Cross worlds.

I've been doing crossroads comedy in

in Platteville on Valentine's Day.

So if any couples

Pete Schwab (host)

want

Chastity Washington (guest)

to come out and enjoy and hang out with us, it's going to be dope.

Late County comedy, that's March 7th.

Copper comedy in Milwaukee, over on Blue Mile.

That is February 21st, February 18th.

I'll be at comedians you should know in Chicago at Timothy O'Toole.

So quite a bit.

So you can check me out in Bellingfield.

You can check me out here, here in the city over the next couple of days.

I mean, we can do the sugar maple.

Pete Schwab (host)

There you go.

Hey, if you need help grading papers because you're out doing a stand up Conrad could like to make a few extra bucks on the side.

So don't.

Yes.

Chastity Washington (guest)

Then you know what?

I'm gonna email Conrad.

I'm gonna email you like sir.

Pete Schwab (host)

We are we are coming right back We'll have a few more minutes with Chastity Washington after this very short break.

Don't go anywhere folks This is Pete Schwabba and nightlight on the Civic Media radio network

Chastity Washington

Welcome

Pete Schwabba

back.

I'm Pete Schwabba.

This is Nightlight with Pete Schwabba, our question of the night, folks, is what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie or show?

My guest right now is the Milwaukee-based stand-up comic, the very funny Chastity Washington.

We heard a sampling of her comedy earlier.

We talked to her a little bit about her day gig, which is teaching, but she's busy, busy in the stand-up world as well.

Do you ever just think about quitting teaching Chastity, or is it too much in your blood?

It sounds like you're busy enough where you certainly could.

Chastity Washington

Every day.

Pete Schwabba

Nice answer.

Chastity Washington

Yes, I do.

I do.

It is something that I am in deep contemplation about right now and in deep prayer.

And just so, you know, I believe I'm very, very close to.

You know making a decision in terms of you know going into this next phase, you know in the next phase of my career Yeah, I mean so it seems

Pete Schwabba

like you're you're kind of you've done an HBO your HBO comedy wings winner You've done that Montreal just for laughs festival.

You've had your own special live at dandy, which people can see on Amazon Prime You just listed all the places we can see you What

How have you changed as a comedian?

You've been doing this for 25 years.

You've perfected, you're always evolving, but you've obviously, you're in a good groove.

So how do you, how have you changed in 25 years?

Has your writing changed, your performing style?

Chastity Washington

My performance style is pretty much the same.

My writing style has changed, my concepts have changed.

You know, I mean, as you mature and get older and you're like, oh, I'm gonna move away from this.

You know and really get in the pocket of my voice and my perspective, you know what I mean?

So that's the biggest thing with with stand-up.

So, uh, within the last, you know, 15 years, uh, really 20 years, I really just transitioned because this is my 30th year, my 32nd year.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Cause I started in 94.

And so, uh, my first 10 years really was just

finding my pocket and being able to, you know, be free enough to get everything out that I wanted to get out.

And so that's still there.

But now there's more of where am I at?

And what else?

What else do I want to get out and what and in what way?

You know, if that makes sense, you know, and and so, you know, the the the wisdom of life starts to come out more so in the work.

if that makes sense because I'm an I'm a comic but I'm an artist if that makes sense right so so uh the same as uh as a sculptor or painter uh the evolution that it's the same thing for me uh and so for me it's now it's it's nostalgic and it's about just really uh paying homage to uh

you know days gone by and I like you know I tell stories about how Christmas is completely different than what it was when we were kids when we were kids we looked at toys and catalogs right yeah oh my gosh which is insanity right now you gotta look at the app you gotta get the you know 50% off you gotta get the quadruple black Friday deal you know what I mean like you right and so

It's it's completely different or we would go I remember my mom buying me a dial from from Woolworth, right?

Like it was like a knockoff Barbie.

I called her a RB and you know

And you could go to Woolworth, right?

Which was before CVS and, and, and Walmart and, and Walgreens.

Well, maybe not Walgreens, but you know what I mean?

It was early and you could go in the back and there was, you could go eat hamburgers out of the counter.

Yeah.

The counter and right.

And people would be in the bay.

It looked like the regal beagle, right?

And people were in the back smoking cigarettes and kids fates.

It was great.

You know what I'm saying?

Right different different time you get your school supplies and get a burger.

It was right.

They do it now.

They do it now

Pete Schwabba

You just said all the dates before the break of where you're gonna be and where people could see you Do you have somewhere they could follow you so they could see those dates or you

Chastity Washington

know find out how to watch

Pete Schwabba

your comedy special?

Chastity Washington

Yeah, everything go to chastitywashington.com and go to my website.

They can I do gotta update my date

And Instagram they can probably be on Instagram chastity underscore Washington same tiktok and they can also Facebook, you know, you know in Antarctica Facebook Yeah, and people can I'm joining Charlie Barron's on his his his new tour that he's on Make sure they check out his new special neighborly

Which I was so blessed to be be there and witness it.

It was it was it was awesome to see That's on YouTube, but I'll be with him in Minneapolis Coming up January 30th through the first February 1st at the State Theater in Minneapolis.

So, yeah, so anybody is Charlie Barrett's fan.

He's he's out here on the road I'll be joining him for a couple so so yeah, but yeah, then go to my website They can go and check me out, you know on social media

Uh, they can go to youtube and also check out other things.

So So yeah, absolutely

Pete Schwabba

awesome.

We have about a minute left I want to ask you who are your influences like who did you grow up watching do stand up?

Chastity Washington

Um, I watched everybody I really watched everybody.

I mean, of course, you know the the the Essential are you know Richard Pryor

And Whoopi Goldberg, Eddie Murphy is a huge influence.

It's a huge Lucille Ball, Carol Burnett fan, also Lily Tomlin.

Nice.

Don Rickles, I love Don Rickles, Bob Hope, right?

And then, you know, somebody, you know, like Jackie Mom's Mably, right?

Even with all the controversy people I hear people's you know, whatever Bill Cosby because it was incredible.

Um, you know, many many years ago, um So yeah, so I I watched everybody.

I was a big fan of stand-up I remember watching, you know, HBO showcases when I was a kid just because I liked funny stuff, right?

Um, Jerry Lewis.

I love Jerry Lewis films.

My mom's was a big fan

of Jerry Lewis to all his films, the Marx Brothers, right?

So I like all these different styles of comedy.

So all of those things were influences on me.

You know what I mean?

Pete Schwabba

That is a great answer because you're right.

When we were young, we watched all those things and they all have some effect on you.

Chastity Washington, thank you so much as always for being on the show.

Let's do it again.

Let's not let eight months go by next time.

Chastity Washington

Exactly.

Let's

Pete Schwabba

do

Chastity Washington

it.

Break a leg out

Pete Schwabba

there and good luck in the classroom as well.

Thanks so much.

Chastity Washington

Thank you.

Have a good

Pete Schwabba

one.

Thank you.

All right.

That's Jassidy Washington.

Check her out live or

Announcer

Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.

This is Night Light with Pete Schwabba.

Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.

And now a guy whose house has an actual wiggle room, Pete Schwabba.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Welcome back.

2 Act 3 of Nightlight on this beautiful Wednesday night in our frigidly cold, but still beautiful state.

I am Pete Chihuahua and We've had a lot of fun so far folks if you missed the first two hours of nightlight they are available at civicmedia.us You can download or listen to the podcast there in hour number one.

We talked about hugging it is national hugging day And I don't know if those of you listening are huggers

I am or was, but I've been in some awkward hugs where it's just made people uncomfortable all the way around.

And you realize sometimes in the middle of a hug that the other person is not a hugger and that is horrible.

They go stiff, they go rigid, or they completely become dead weight because they are so uncomfortable.

So celebrate hugging day folks with caution.

That's all I'm saying.

In the first hour, we had Paul Vandenplatz here.

He is the...

creator of the social media content.

He is a content creator of wonderfully Wisconsin, an outstanding follow on Facebook, TikTok, Twitter, X, whatever you want to call it, Instagram.

He visits places in our state and reports back on what he has found and he's got great energy.

He visits bars and hotels and attractions and just it's a great way to feel.

Excited about living in Wisconsin.

Paul does a great job.

And we gave him a quiz in hour number two.

So check that out too.

He took our Wisconsin quiz and got a 10 out of 10.

He aced it.

And then in hour number two, we talked to Milwaukee comedian Chastity Washington, the very funny Chastity Washington.

You can check out her special on Prime.

It's called Live at the Dandy.

She is also a follower on socials too, folks, because she's got all of her dates.

She listed like 10 dates.

coming up over the next couple of weeks where you can see her in Wisconsin and down into Chicago.

A very funny comedian and very accomplished comedian who is also a teacher.

How do you like that?

And coming up at 7.20 in just a few minutes, Frank Anderson will be here.

Frank and I are going to talk about first things that were created or started here in Wisconsin.

Frank is the founder of the website Wisconsinology.

All things weird, fun, insightful.

and cool stuff about Wisconsin at Wisconsinology.com.

Give it a check out.

It is totally worth it.

Frank is also an accomplished musician, producer, and director.

So lots still to come in this third act on Nightlight.

And in just a minute or two, Mace Michaels will be here.

We're gonna get an update on what we can expect weather-wise here in Wisconsin over the next few days.

It's gonna be pretty brutal.

And I'm hoping Mace will say, well, it's actually Pete.

It's all a mistake.

It was a typo.

It's going to be sunny in 70, but we'll see what he says.

So lots of shows still to come.

If you want to get in on the question of the night fun, folks, it's what is your favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

And I can't remember what made me think of that question.

I think one of his shows dropped or something, but he's got an incredible resume with tons of great credits on it.

So let us know.

We've kind of run the gamut tonight on Kevin Bacon credits.

Some great answers.

A few good men.

Footloose.

They've all been mentioned tonight.

Craig on the stream says, Conrad, in The Guardian's Christmas, Christmas special, Drax, you know, I'm gonna let you read that, Con.

I don't, I can't understand, I needed like a translator.

Conrad (co-host)

Yeah, well he's just, he's cleared it up that Kevin Bacon's not playing Peter Quill.

But didn't you clear that up?

No, I was saying, I thought- You thought he did.

I never seen this Christmas special, so I thought that-

They're saying that okay Kevin Bacon was playing Peter Quill, but he's not that is what Craig is clarifying

Pete Schwabba (host)

I would be willing to bet Craig is right about that because he's very knowledgeable lot all that kind of stuff Thank You Craig Craig also says Pete for me.

I'd add another vote for tremors.

It was a lot of fun It sure was that's a great movie folks.

In fact, if you're looking for something fun to watch at home with a group Tremors is great.

It's funny.

It's a little scary

And you know what?

In a weird way, not that far off for what they are saying could happen with these huge earthworms that travel under the earth.

I feel like that could be more likely than aliens just because you don't know what's down there.

There was some kind of weird plausibility to that movie, even though it's outlandish.

But either way, it's just really fun.

So I would highly recommend Tremors.

It's also a very fun movie that Kevin Bacon was part of.

All right.

Do we have a MaceCon?

Yes, he is.

I am so excited because the weather outside is... What, frightful?

Are those the words?

But it's gonna be, and it's gonna be for a few days, but let's bring Mason and get his opinion and find out why this is happening because I do not approve.

He does great work here at Civic Media and is an outstanding meteorologist.

Mr. Mace Michaels joins us now over the stream.

Hey, Mace.

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Hello, thank you for having me.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Well, thank you for joining us tonight.

I know it's a little late.

I don't know if you're an early riser, but hopefully it's not past your bedtime.

We love having you on the show.

I

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

am usually a late person, but tomorrow morning I'm working TV over here in the Twin Cities, so I will have to be a morning person.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Force yourself.

So no Kevin Bacon movies tonight late into the evening.

Do you have a favorite Kevin Bacon movie?

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Well, I think at the, you know, the first Kevin Bacon movie I probably saw one as a kid was Footloose.

So,

Pete Schwabba (host)

you know,

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

that's been said, as you said, but of course,

Pete Schwabba (host)

that's a great one.

Yeah, that is a great one.

Um, well, I listen, I know this was kind of spur of the moment.

I appreciate your time.

Let's jump right in.

What is going on?

Um,

Last winter seems so mild or maybe I'm just remembering the good parts Here in northeast Wisconsin.

We've got negative 10 negative 16 negative 15 over the next three days And it doesn't really let up till next week.

Is there something can you add some sanity to this crazy weather we're having?

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Well, I don't know if I can add sanity to it.

But I'll at least do my best attempt to explain it a little further.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Okay.

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Yeah, you mentioned last year, that was just kind of an outlier.

We were we were warm for so much of, you know, the winter.

Yeah, I barely felt like my ground froze here sometimes.

I mean, it was just kind of mushy.

I was able to take the dog for a walk every day and not freeze.

So yeah.

coming on the heels of last winter.

And even this year, it was such a mild fall until right at Thanksgiving.

And then everything seemed to change at Thanksgiving.

Huge pattern shift in the jet stream.

It dislodged the cold air that had been pooling up in Siberia near the North Pole.

And that was our first shot.

And we've been in it ever since and it hasn't changed.

Pete Schwabba (host)

So, all right, so can we, is this, I mean, maybe you can't look that far ahead, but.

It says, at least on my app, it's going to continue into next week.

We're going to be looking at maybe sub zero temperatures, at least here in northeast Wisconsin.

But how long will this, can we expect, is there a trend where maybe it might be a little warmer than usual after this?

Or is this what we're looking at for the rest of the winter?

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

We are looking at this at least through the rest of the month Just not at these bitter levels, but varying levels of either bitter or cold There's a couple of days that try to sneak back up as we roll into early February But even February it doesn't look you know, obviously as cold as

this snap.

And this is typically our coldest time of the year, the second, third, fourth weeks of January.

That's just good old climate.

You always end up being the coldest periods of this time of year.

So this is not of the realm of normality of when it arrives.

It's just this is an extra bitter stretch.

And for many areas, I believe this is our coldest snap we've seen, especially with wind chills, and at least four or five years.

I was looking back here in the Twin Cities, and it was 2021 February was the last time we were this cold.

with, you know, predicted near 20 below loads.

Pete Schwabba (host)

We've got quite a few listeners over near the Twin Cities on the western part of the state.

Is it just as bad there?

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Oh, yeah, yeah, we're going to be near 20 below the next couple of nights and wind chills down almost to 40 below, at least 30 below.

Yeah, we're all hitting this one.

No escaping.

If you look at the National Weather Service's big old map that has all the watches, warnings and advisories, all of North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin and the U.P.

are all in

warnings for cold, extreme cold warnings at some point in time over the next couple of days.

So no escaping it unless you head south and you may have to go way south to

Pete Schwabba (host)

get

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

away from it, get in the car and get going.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Are there any tips you can give people like something they might not have thought of?

Obviously, you don't leave your face exposed for longer than such and such, but what is something people might not anticipate that they need to like be aware of?

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Well, the thing I think about is I never worry a lot.

in the winter i have my stuff in the car uh i'm usually not one who's outside for a long period of time in the winter unless you know we're just hanging out with friends but yeah if you're somebody who likes to go out in snowmobile or you're out there on uh you know pond hockey playing out on the ponds playing out in the backyard whatever just having fun things even ice fishing right we're gonna have yes son but we're gonna have a lot of a breeze and if for some reason something was to happen

you're going to have the risk of frostbite in a real quick amount of time.

So it's not that you can't do these things, but just think about what would happen if something went wrong.

Have that extra layer of clothes with, make sure you've got all the gloves and hats you need, and a way to contact somebody if, for some reason, the snowmobile breaks down in the middle of nowhere if you're up in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.

Pete Schwabba (host)

That's a great point.

And keep stuff in your car, whether it's window fluid or blankets or whatever.

Outstanding stuff.

I wish you had better news, Mace.

Like I told Conrad, I was hoping for a typo.

No, no, no, no.

It's going to be 60 and sunny, actually.

Not these frigid temperatures.

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Unfortunately, even in February, it looks kind of cold.

Just not as cold, but

Pete Schwabba (host)

it

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

looks like it's on a colder trend.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Great stuff.

Thank you, sir.

Really appreciate your time tonight.

And stay warm.

And don't forget to set that alarm tomorrow morning.

Mace Michaels (meteorologist)

Yeah, I already have.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Have a good one.

You too, buddy.

All right, that's Mays Michaels.

He does such great work here in Wisconsin.

Conrad, did you know that the National Weather Service was started in Wisconsin?

I did not.

We are going to ask Frank Anderson that.

In just a few minutes, he will be here to discuss things that were started in Wisconsin that people might not know about.

But if anyone can do it, Frank can.

Tony, the trucker in the 608 says, Pete, Kevin was a good villain in...

RIPD

Conrad (co-host)

the rest in peace division.

I believe that's what it is.

I can't

Pete Schwabba (host)

say

Conrad (co-host)

true.

It's it's a it's a movie Yeah, it's a honestly really liked a movie.

It's it's with your favorite actor Ryan Reynolds.

Pete Schwabba (host)

I don't think I've ever seen that He says but I thought the sheriff Jeff Bridges played was hilarious.

Yes.

He was

Conrad (co-host)

hilarious in that.

How old

Pete Schwabba (host)

is that movie?

I think

Conrad (co-host)

that's 2000 like Somewhere around 2013 maybe

Pete Schwabba (host)

Cool.

Thank you for the text, Tony.

Appreciate it, as always.

Matt in Eau Claire says, back to bacon.

The co-star in Bondsman, Jennifer Nettles, has to be Robert Plant's daughter.

No one is convincing me otherwise.

If you're a Zeppelin fan, just watch some of her early work from or with Sugarland.

Matt's an entertainment guy, dude.

I love that.

I will definitely do that, Matt.

Thank you, sir.

And Jennifer Nettles, what else was she in?

Her name sounds so familiar.

Conrad (co-host)

She's in Righteous Gemstones.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yes.

Okay.

Perfect.

Um, great stuff.

We've got some social media texts here.

We need to continue with Scott Tom.

My pal says a diner.

Great movie with Kevin Bacon, Steve Gutenberg, Mickey Rourke.

Uh, one of the classics Sean on social media also says diner.

Amanda Nimmer, our WGBW social media guru says personally love when he plays a villain.

He's so good at it.

That's a great text.

I agree.

He's got that like kind of

His face can look very evil, which is weird because he's a handsome guy.

Jody on social media says, Footloose, it was iconic.

Our pal Boris Hamilton says, Animal House and Tremors.

So I think we've covered all of the great Kevin Bacon movies tonight so far, but we've got a ways to go.

If you want to let us know what your favorite Kevin Bacon movie is, please do so at 855-752-4842.

You can also text us on the app or the stream and we will read it on the radio when we come back Frank Anderson will be here folks We're gonna talk about things that were started in Wisconsin and get a Joey song Wrap up from Frank as well.

It'll be good to talk to our pal.

This is Pete Schwab in nightlight on the civic media radio

SPEAKER_04

network

I gotta get away, gotta get away, I don't know where to go

Pete Schwab (host)

Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.

Tis a beautiful night here in the state of Wisconsin.

It is 70, it's a balmy 70 degrees here in the studio.

Hope you're staying warm wherever you are.

It's only gonna get worse according to our pal, Mace Michaels.

And it could be like this, not quite like this, but very cold all through February.

Con (contributor)

So we have that

Pete Schwab (host)

to look forward to.

Bet you wish you wouldn't have burned all those vacation days, huh Con?

Con (contributor)

Well, I had to be sick, you know?

Pete Schwab (host)

You need to weekend in Florida through the month of February.

Con (contributor)

I should just do that every weekend.

Just, you know, go down to my parents' house.

Pete Schwab (host)

If you've got the means.

Ladies and gentlemen, it is my pleasure always to welcome my next guest.

He is one of our best pals.

He is a producer, director, incredibly talented musician, and the creator of the website, Wisconsinology.com.

home to all the fun, weird, insightful, and really interesting things about our state.

Joining us now as he does from time to time is Mr. Frank Anderson.

Hey, buddy.

Hey, how are you, Pete?

Frank, you're on the stream.

Did I know that was happening?

I didn't.

You tripped and fell and hit a button, and here you are.

You can tell how cold I am.

Yeah.

Are you, uh, you've got the scarf on, but not, not a hat though.

And I hear the hat is the, the unit, the thing that keeps everything warm.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Yeah,

Pete Schwab (host)

it's not that cold.

It's not that cold.

Yeah.

Not in your house, I hope.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Um,

Pete Schwab (host)

yeah.

You've lived all over the world and you came back to Wisconsin and that, that fascinates me.

Now I lived in warm weather

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

back to Wisconsin.

I was not born here.

Pete Schwab (host)

Right, but you've lived in other places that were warmer and you still choose to live in your home, well, maybe not your hometown, Appleton?

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Not my home, well, 38 years, does

Pete Schwab (host)

that count?

That counts, yeah.

And you brave the cold because you love Appleton and Wisconsin so much, I assume.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Well, I love Wisconsin.

I was born in the Philippines and raised partially there.

quite a while actually,

Pete Schwab (host)

and

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

then came here, and this is where my family is from, my mom and dad.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah, it's a great place.

You could do a lot worse than Appleton, Wisconsin, my friend.

Oh,

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

I'm finding that out with everybody who's moving here from LA.

Oh, really?

And driving our prices up.

Pete Schwab (host)

Well, that's good for you, though, right?

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

No.

I want everyone to be able to have an affordable

Pete Schwab (host)

home.

Well,

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

yeah,

Pete Schwab (host)

that's a good point.

I was being selfish on your behalf thinking you could stick it to one of these suckers from the West Coast and they would way over paper your house.

It is great though.

Do you have a favorite Kevin Bacon movie, Frank?

Are you a fan?

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

No.

I don't even think about Kevin Bacon.

Well, I mean, not I've never thought about Kevin Bacon.

Pete Schwab (host)

He doesn't ever just seep into your brain when you're animating or playing here.

Okay.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

No.

Wow.

And I'm first and foremost, a huge movie fan.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Is he the footloose guy?

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah.

All right.

I just thought of him.

A few good men, Footloose, he was the guy in his underpants in Animal House that says, thank you sir, may I have another?

Not maybe his best work, but interesting credit nonetheless.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

I don't think of him at all.

That's four people younger than me, I think.

Pete Schwab (host)

Okay.

I'm pretty old.

That's fair.

We'll just go with Footloose.

How was Joey's song?

You introduced me to Mike Gamal, the creator, founder of Joey's song, just a spectacular event.

And he was on the show a couple times talking about it and you're a fixture there every year Playing music with some of the best musicians who have ever lived What was that like this year?

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

This year was probably the best show Saturday night show it keeps getting better and I've heard through the grapevine that some real big

Hitters will be appearing next year's show.

It keeps it keeps expanding getting better.

The stage is more populated than ever Wow, and what began as a bunch of Madison musicians who Knew each other right we're the backup and now it's what four five five guys from Appleton

Pete Schwab (host)

That's unbelievable.

So bigger than what you already have you've already you guys have put together some some while you put some pretty big stars out on the stage It's gonna be bigger next year.

What do you know you

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

yeah?

I mean word has it.

I can't

Pete Schwab (host)

confirm.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

Okay It keeps getting bigger anyway.

It never it always tops itself every year

Pete Schwab (host)

Do

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

and it has two concerts as you know and the acoustic concert was quite wonderful on Friday night

Before the big electric thing on Saturday night.

Pete Schwab (host)

Yeah, I was amazed it when Mike was on the show Frank and thank you for the introduction again that he He was just talking about how much rehearsal goes into looking like you're casually playing with other great musicians like how Seriously, they take it even though it's a benefit concert and they don't even take any money for being there.

That's so impressive

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

It's also become a family.

You see the same people year after year

And it's a reunion, really,

Pete Schwab (host)

when we

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

all get back together.

But rehearsal is intense and long.

And it's like, you know, herding a bunch of little kids.

And Butch Vig took over the role of herding everybody and getting them on time and reading the bullet points and getting everybody, you in, you out, you in, you out.

You can't have an ego.

Pete Schwab (host)

Right.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

If you're not wanted as an extra musician on a song, get out.

Pete Schwab (host)

How much were you on stage this year?

70%.

Nice.

Oh, that's fantastic, Frank.

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

I'm on the leading edge of age-wise.

Butch and I are slightly shy of being the oldest ones there.

Really?

Both of us are working hard to get rid of us.

Pete Schwab (host)

You should fire each other.

I think

Frank Anderson (interviewee)

butch will always be there.

But people like us should be removed.

You got to keep up with the times and you got to keep a younger, newer,

He

Pete Schwab (host)

keeps some turnover.

Frank Anderson is here, folks.

He's the founder of Wisconsinology.com.

When we come back after the news, we're going to talk about really cool stuff that started here in Wisconsin that you might

Con (contributor)

not know about.

Pete Schwab (host)

This is Pete Schwab.

And tonight, coming right back on the Civic Media Radio

Con (contributor)

Network.

Unidentified Speaker

Alright,

Pete Schwabba (host)

so Balto is an animated movie from 1995.

That was what Sidney Politics was saying.

His favorite Kevin Bacon movie is also starred Bob Hoskins, Bridget Fonda.

And Phil Collins.

Wouldn't be an animated movie without Phil Collins.

Thank you again, Sydney Politics.

My guest right now, folks, is Frank Anderson.

Check out Wisconsinology.com or see his work every year.

Go to a Joey's song in Madison every January.

A great benefit.

And see some great music.

Frank is a major part of that.

But we love to have Frank on to talk about all things Wisconsin, which is kind of what Wisconsinology does.

Frank what let's okay.

So here's here's why I got this idea I was in Waukesha this past weekend for a family thing and I made a late-night grocery store run with my daughter and I pull out on the street called Les Paul Boulevard Drive whatever it was and I was like, oh, yeah Les Paul guitars are from Wisconsin or were created here.

He's from Waukesha.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Oh Absolutely Les

Some say he invented the electric guitar.

He did not but he was among the first and he was 14 years old when he began experimenting with the creation of what would be a practical

electric guitar, which he introduced to the world in 1939.

But the first electric guitar was a steel guitar, which is what I play.

Unidentified Speaker

And

Frank Anderson (guest)

that was in 1931.

But before that, a young teen aged, Les Paul in the 1920s, had an amplified log with strings on it and telephone parts being the pickup and amplification of the instrument.

So, he might have invented the electric guitar, maybe, but I've read so many things that allude to the fact that the first person ever to play an electric guitar was a black entertainer in Coney Island in 1928.

Actually play in front of people and have a practical instrument.

Yeah, well Les Paul invented almost everything in recording.

Everything, multi-track recording, echo, sound on sound, he did it all.

And Wisconsin has so many firsts in music.

It's insane.

Unidentified Speaker

The

Frank Anderson (guest)

first million-selling single of all time, song of all time, million-selling sheet music copies.

was After the Ball by Charles K. Harris of Milwaukee.

And the first certified platinum single ever certified platinum is Disco Lady written by Harvey Scales, twist in Harvey Scales from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

And the first million seller written by a woman is

I love you truly.

So we are so loaded with Musical Firsts, the first sampling keyboard, the first programmable sampling drum machine.

These are huge things that changed how records are made.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Wow.

Disco Lady, 1976, Johnny Taylor.

I'm fascinated, the older I get.

I'm more and more fascinated with disco and I absolutely love the music I don't know that I've ever heard that song though.

So I have to check that out Frank.

Did you ever meet Les Paul?

No, I never met

Frank Anderson (guest)

Les Paul.

I saw him in concert.

Okay.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Did he do all of these things from Wisconsin or had he moved away?

No, no,

Frank Anderson (guest)

he did.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Okay.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Well, all the electric guitar experimentation was

partially in Wisconsin.

Okay.

He moved to Fort Lee, New Jersey later, you know, during his great fame in the early fifties and did a lot of that there.

But they were all ideas that lingered in his head from his Wisconsin childhood of tinkering and making and thinking about sound.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah.

Wow.

All right.

So let's let's move on to the onion.

which is another great contribution to the comedy world, certainly, or the journalistic world, the way things are now.

I don't

Frank Anderson (guest)

think great is a big enough word.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Earth shaking, change.

In comedy, the onions as big as the beetles.

Pete Schwabba (host)

It just

Frank Anderson (guest)

wiped everything before it and changed the comedic mindset of the United States.

And not only that, it fostered

dozens and dozens of writers out into the

Pete Schwabba (host)

industry.

In some ways, it's like, I know the Harvard Lampoon is very famous and hatched a lot of comedy writers, but the Onion is almost more special because it's from Little Madison, Wisconsin.

And these writers, some of them are well known, but these guys did this without some of the fanfare, I think, that the Lampoon got.

And I think it's funnier.

Frank Anderson (guest)

The Harvard Lampoon is BS.

BS.

It's mean.

The humor is mean.

If you go back and read those issues, it's mean.

It's cruel.

It makes fun of things we can't make fun of anymore.

Shouldn't make fun of.

It's horrible.

People with disabilities.

It just goes hard and all in on easy targets.

And we're supposed to go, ha, ha, ha, like, you know, the class smart guys making comments that are quite obvious.

Um, the onion didn't have to go there and it's lasted longer.

The humor of, uh, the national ampoule, dad is a dad.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah, great point.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Dad.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yes.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Do you laugh at 1975, uh, SNL?

Pete Schwabba (host)

I don't even know if I would.

I have no desire to go.

I liked it at the time, but I have no desire to go back in.

But an onion book, I'll page through an onion headlines book that came out 20 years ago and still laugh my butt off.

Frank Anderson (guest)

It's timeless humor.

Yeah.

And it stayed with all of us.

It's the biggest thing they had comedy.

And it's much like Dungeons & Dragons, another Wisconsin first,

Pete Schwabba (host)

that

Frank Anderson (guest)

changed.

Really?

the entire mindset of how you play a game.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Wow.

That started in Wisconsin?

Frank Anderson (guest)

Yeah, in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.

Pete Schwabba (host)

No kidding.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Gary Gygax, founder of Dungeons and Dragons.

And I remember it long ago when it was first created.

It was just a little bagged game and a plastic bag with

random pieces inside and it hung on a kiosk and you could pick it up.

I forgot how much it cost.

I had no idea that would change the entertainment world.

It foreshadowed what we now call the gaming industry, really.

And it brought one's own storytelling skills into the game.

That's the one thing I never you know, I tried to play it long ago, but I couldn't get over the fact that you don't have That it's board game

Unidentified Speaker

dice

Frank Anderson (guest)

Yeah, well there's dice, but you're you're you're asked to bring your own imagination and world-building and creation and Imagination and it literally said anybody can play anybody

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah, wow

It's funny, you were talking about lampoon versus the onion, and they are stuck in the 70s.

My friend, Mike Schmidt, who is a regular on this show, had a meeting with National Lampoon like in 2003.

And he's in this job interview, and the guy is an old lampoon guy from back in the 70s.

He says, all right, let's say this is you, and this is, I don't know, Nixon.

and Mike is like, it's 2003.

Nixon is, you still go back to Nixon references.

Like, it was just as great, but that kind of describes the lampoon, even though great writers have come out of there and graduated past that.

I found that hilarious.

Another thing, I didn't know, supercomputers or jockey shorts, Frank.

And this is just from the internet, but I mean, and jockey shorts aren't quite the invention the onion is or.

you know, but

Frank Anderson (guest)

what else?

Where's Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, the supercomputer of Cray Industries?

Yeah.

Pete Schwabba (host)

That's where the supercomputer was was invented?

Frank Anderson (guest)

It's that's kind of a broad term.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Okay, you

Frank Anderson (guest)

know, the invention of the supercomputer, a supercomputer that was very here's what came from Wisconsin, the very practical version, usable versions.

of things people had thought of, but had not made for everybody.

Pete Schwabba (host)

That's interesting.

And

Frank Anderson (guest)

there's so much.

You know, Wisconsin is, well, I call it on my website, the sounds old fashioned, the home of firsts, mosts and greatest, whatever it is.

One of those, you know, many, many subject.

And one of those things is,

a guy from Wisconsin or was invented in Wisconsin.

Pete Schwabba (host)

That's so great.

Frankie Anderson is my guest.

He is the founder of Wisconsinology.com, plays a mean steel guitar and is also a director producer.

He joins us here a night like we're talking about things that started in Wisconsin.

I've got a few more Frank, but you know, if you want to go with another one or two, let's do that because you're the guy with all the knowledge here.

Oh, you want

Frank Anderson (guest)

me to

Pete Schwabba (host)

do one?

Sure, the ones I had were architecture, the National Weather Service, which I didn't know, I guess that doesn't surprise me, but yeah, I would love to hear some of the ones that you would love to elaborate on.

Oh,

Frank Anderson (guest)

Wisconsin drives everything, everything.

Speaking of driving, the first automobile race in the world, the great race of 1878, Green Bay to Madison, the Wisconsin legislature offered, I think it was $10,000 to the winner.

six entrants, and they had to invent

Unidentified Speaker

and

Frank Anderson (guest)

then build a vehicle from scratch.

Unidentified Speaker

And

Frank Anderson (guest)

only two showed up, the city of Green Bay and the city of Oshkosh.

And the city of Green Bay vehicle was fast, I think it went 10 miles an hour, but was unpredictable,

Unidentified Speaker

wheels fell off.

Frank Anderson (guest)

And the city of Oshkosh was slow and steady, and I believe four miles an hour, and it won.

Oh, that

Pete Schwabba (host)

is.

Frank Anderson (guest)

And what year was that?

1878.

Oh, my God.

Green Bay to Madison.

Everyone was talking about it back then.

Pete Schwabba (host)

I. Well, and let's not downplay the creation of jockey shorts here in Wisconsin.

Or we'd all be going commando right now in this frigid weather, which isn't a

Frank Anderson (guest)

good.

No, we'd be going boxer

Pete Schwabba (host)

by others.

There would have been other options that came along eventually.

There

Frank Anderson (guest)

always was that other

Pete Schwabba (host)

fair point.

I saw that today architecture was created in Wisconsin and I don't know It couldn't really find anything to back that up.

Frank Anderson (guest)

That's a silly way of putting it.

Let's just say that the architect Who is from Wisconsin is is mythic a legend,

Pete Schwabba (host)

right?

Frank Anderson (guest)

I mean Frank Lloyd, right?

Frank Lloyd, right?

Yeah, you can't say architecture was that's ancient.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah Yeah, that was

Frank Anderson (guest)

the world's you know, whether he deserves the title or not

Everyone knows who Frank Lloyd is.

Pete Schwabba (host)

He could make a claim.

You wouldn't be called insane if you said he's one of the greatest architects of all time.

Frank Anderson is here, folks.

We are going to talk to Frank.

We're going to do a short break, and we'll have a couple more minutes with Frank after this.

Frank, I want to ask you about the sinkholes in Lake Michigan that I saw you posted about recently on Facebook.

St.

Coles fascinate me.

I know very little about them.

So maybe we could jump into that for a couple minutes when we come back.

Unless you have another Wisconsin invention, we could do that as well.

But we'll do that all with our guest.

Frank Anderson folks is here.

And it's a great, beautiful, cold, chilly night here in our awesome state of Wisconsin.

This is Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio

Unidentified Speaker

Network.

Conrad (producer)

Welcome

Pete Schwabba (host)

back.

I'm Pete Schwabba.

This is Nightlight.

We are in the home stretch here.

Tomorrow night on the show...

Hanna Lopez from NBC26 will be here.

She's going to make the popcorn pick of the week at 6.35.

And then Irish author Molly Aitken joins the show to talk about her outstanding work.

So another fun night on Nightlight tomorrow.

And then Joseph Williams from Toto will be here on Friday, Conrad.

Yeah, correct Friday.

Yeah, and then Rob Thomas Madison film critic and it's a bar ban Friday night So terry bar will be here at 735 right now.

We have a few more minutes with our pal Frank Anderson Frank sinkholes Where do you stand on sinkholes are these polarizing is the lowly recent political climate or or can we all come together and fight the sinkholes?

What's happening in Lake, Michigan?

Frank Anderson (guest)

The sinkholes just are they've always been there

from what we know so far.

They haven't really investigated them yet.

And I believe they might be this summer.

I love the sinkholes.

We have a lot of great geographic anomalies in Wisconsin.

A lot of magnetic lines cross outposts from ancient civilizations.

the middle Mississippian ruins that are about the state along our rivers.

And yeah, it's just added to another mystery right now.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Well, are you surprised?

And listen, I'm fascinated by science.

I don't know a lot about science.

I was never it was never my best subject.

But I anytime I see something and read it, I'm blown away.

I cannot believe that sinkholes like I know Lake Michigan is like 900 feet deep at its deepest point.

And

It's hard to get down there, they say.

And this article I was reading, I think, from your post, it seems like this is something we should have been able to explore.

It's just the Great Lakes.

Not that the Great Lakes don't have their issues, but it seems like it's something we probably could have done a better job looking into.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Well, think of its depth.

In 1938, the world's deepest dive ever.

was accomplished by a Wisconsin diver who invented with fellow researchers scuba diving.

And that world's deepest dive took place right off of Milwaukee.

Conrad (producer)

So

Frank Anderson (guest)

that alone should tell you, deepest human dive.

So that alone should tell you how deep it is and how vast it is.

It's huge.

Pete Schwabba (host)

I don't

Frank Anderson (guest)

think of them as lakes.

And I call Wisconsin's east side, the east coast of Wisconsin.

People used to laugh at that.

You know, just a lake, right?

But they don't anymore because we're becoming to, we come to realize these are great inland seas, the great lakes.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah,

Frank Anderson (guest)

such a part of

Pete Schwabba (host)

them.

It's funny.

I, before I left the Midwest, I didn't give.

a thought about the Great Lakes.

I liked swimming in them and going places and that was great, but now I am just through all the shipwrecks and stuff.

We've talked about on this show with you some of the fascinating things about the Great Lakes and now I can't get enough of it.

It fascinates me.

The lakes fascinate me on every level and as do sinkholes.

What are you watching, Frank?

You watching anything you could recommend?

You always have good

Frank Anderson (guest)

suggestions.

I'm watching that new...

Game of Thrones offshoot.

I forgot

Pete Schwabba (host)

the

Frank Anderson (guest)

title.

Pete Schwabba (host)

What is it, Conn?

You're watching that too, right?

Conrad (producer)

Well, there's two now.

The Night of the Seven Kingdoms is the newest one.

That

Pete Schwabba (host)

one?

Conrad (producer)

Yes.

That one has one episode out so far.

I thought it was hilarious.

Frank Anderson (guest)

It's funny.

It's gentle.

It doesn't have all that opera.

Game of Thrones had.

Yeah.

And it's very winning.

You know, you start to like all these characters.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Oh, really?

Frank Anderson (guest)

That's what I'm watching.

Cool.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Did you like Game of

Frank Anderson (guest)

Thrones?

Yes, I did.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah, same.

I didn't think I would.

I didn't think it was my cup of tea.

And then like in 2017, I started watching and I think I blew through every episode in like four days.

It was so addicting, you know.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Well, ask the author of Game of Thrones what Dungeons and Dragons meant to

Pete Schwabba (host)

him.

Oh, nice.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Look

Pete Schwabba (host)

at

Frank Anderson (guest)

that.

Frank,

Pete Schwabba (host)

that is what you do.

You just tied Game of Thrones to Wisconsin by way of Highway 41 and Dungeons and Dragons.

I love it, buddy.

Thank you so much as always.

Stay warm and we'll do it again soon.

Love having you on, pal.

Frank Anderson (guest)

Thanks so much for having me.

Pete Schwabba (host)

You got it.

All right, that's Frank.

Frank Anderson, check out Wisconsinology.com folks.

If you love Wisconsin or just knowledge, you will love it.

There's some great, weird, fun, insightful stories there and some great historical facts about Wisconsin.

It's a really great, it's a great checkout, if you will.

My thanks to Frank and Paul Vandenplatz from Wonderfully Wisconsin and Chastity Washington.

Thank you for all your calls and texts.

And thank you to Mace Michaels for jumping on.

Sort of last minute.

I don't- Were you encouraged or discouraged by Mace's

Conrad (producer)

what he had to say?

So discouraged.

Pete Schwabba (host)

It was pretty discouraged.

Conrad (producer)

Yeah, you know, we appreciate him coming on and telling him, you know, what's going on, but I'm sad.

But come on,

Pete Schwabba (host)

Mace, can you write a better story?

Conrad (producer)

Yeah, just, you know, you could lie.

Pete Schwabba (host)

I'm asking a meteorologist just to make

Conrad (producer)

stuff

Pete Schwabba (host)

up.

We don't want to do

Conrad (producer)

that.

I'm really hoping for, you know, 70 and Sunny in like two months.

Well, is that too much to ask?

It's a big ask, but I don't think it's beyond the

Pete Schwabba (host)

realm of possibility

Conrad (producer)

I'm hoping for a really good spring because nothing makes me happier than Finally being able to open the windows.

Yeah smell You know the fresh grass back in yeah fresh you know some the nights of the rain in the spring, you know and smelling that rain It's I can't wait for that

Pete Schwabba (host)

Definitely

Folks, this was fun.

Thank you so much.

I'm excited to have Joseph Williams from Toto on on Friday.

That's gonna be fun Sean Cassidy Ladies and gentlemen will be on the show next Monday Talking about his Wisconsin date.

He has he's gonna be performing here in the dairy state.

We'll talk about that with Sean next Monday.

My wife will finally think I'm cool Because I have Sean Cassidy on the show and lots of fun tomorrow night with

We're talking Fox Valley Top Dog, a great contest with Ryan Albers tomorrow at 5.35.

Honolopez from NBC26 makes the popcorn pick of the week on this short week, and then Molly Aitken, Irish author, helps us close things down.

This is Pete Schwabba in Nightlight on behalf of the lovable producer Conrad.

Good night, Wisconsin.

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