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by Ian Primmer & Jared Mayzak
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There are artists who perform. Then there's Daniel Villegas -- a Colombian-born slam poet, bilingual hip-hop emcee, and conga player who has spent over a decade making music that actually means something, without a label, a machine, or a shortcut behind him.In this episode, we get into how a Hamlet assignment in English class at 16 cracked him open, what it took to come back after a decade of near-silence caused by Lyme disease, and the night a stranger walked up after a college open mic and told him a poem kept them from ending their life.We also talk about how he writes in both English and Spanish and why it took years to get there, what the cultural weight of a song like "Time Travel" means right now, the real economics of being an independent artist in the streaming era, and how he's using creative writing workshops to unlock voices in young people who've been told they have nothing to say.Plus: an epic story about going completely blank on stage while opening for Immortal Technique, and the moment in a hospital bed when he decided to go all in anyway.Daniel's new album "Beats and Lyrics" is out now on all platforms. His vinyl "Evolution Gold" is available at his shows.→ Going from the back of an English class to performing spoken word in front of crowds→ How "Time Travel" captures the cultural moment around immigration, identity, and freedom→ Big Pun, DMX, Vico C, and the 90s golden age that shaped his craft→ Why independent artists win on creativity but lose on the business side→ The bubble technique he uses to unlock voices in young people→ What happened when he blanked onstage opening for Immortal Technique→ The turning point: a stranger's confession about "I Wanna Live in America"Find Daniel:Instagram: @DanielVjGuys MusicYouTube: Daniel Villegas MusicAlbum: "Beats and Lyrics" -- out now on all platforms---00:00 Intro / Welcome to CommonX00:57 Colombia, his grandmother, and the first music01:49 The Hamlet poem that changed everything03:38 Hip-hop influences: Mos Def, Big Pun, DMX, Vico C05:07 How bilingual music evolved over time07:04 "Time Travel," immigration, and cultural weight10:13 Writing without a target in mind11:36 Do artists have a responsibility to speak truth?13:15 Pressure to represent vs. just being yourself14:31 Stepping outside the lifestyle matrix16:33 How he describes his own sound18:19 "Jaguar" and writing music to lyrics (not the other way around)20:27 Merging slam poetry and hip-hop21:19 The hardest part of staying independent23:38 Teaching creative writing to youth25:12 The bubble technique for unlocking student voices27:03 Epic stage fail: going blank opening for Immortal Technique28:35 The hospital moment he almost walked away31:21 Biggest breakthroughs: KRS-One, Flowbots, and "I Wanna Live in America"34:32 New album "Beats and Lyrics" + where to find Daniel36:09 Jared's Five---Like what you heard? Subscribe so you don't miss what's coming next.CommonXPodcast.com | Check the X-Files⚠️ Chapter timestamps are estimated from transcript. Spot-check against final edit before publishing.The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
You pull the lever, but who really decided what's on the ballot?Metin Pekin, author of Breaking Democracy's Chains, joins Jared and Ian to make the case that the real problem with democracy isn't the politicians - it's the party system behind them. When billionaire donors and major financiers control which candidates even make it to the ballot, your vote doesn't choose your representative. It just ratifies someone else's shortlist.In this conversation:-> The "party bottleneck" - why you're voting between two managers of the same system-> Why campaign finance reform keeps failing (and why tinkering won't fix it)-> What a no-party democracy actually looks like in practice-> The Democracy Tax: a structural fix for money in politics-> The Vaclav Havel greengrocer analogy - and what it says about your vote-> How ranked choice voting and independent reps could break the cycle-> Why 45% of Americans call themselves independents but still vote for a party-> What to actually do if you want to change the systemMetin Pekin is the author of Breaking Democracy's Chains, available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble.If this episode got your wheels turning, check out:- E83: Ramon Perez on the Digital Democracy Project- E81: Tom Joseph on America's Main Street PartySubscribe and visit CommonXPodcast.com for more.The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
She didn't just write a book about wishing. She mapped the science behind it across over a dozen disciplines. And once she explains it, you'll never blow out birthday candles the same way again.Brownell Landrum is the author of "The Art and Science of Wishing" and founder of the Cosmic Wish Experiment. In this episode she breaks down why most people wish wrong, what separates a wish from a prayer from a goal, and how neuroplasticity, the reticular activating system, quantum physics, and ten other sciences activate every time you make one.Also: limiting beliefs, collective wishing, why protest energy keeps us stuck, and whether Jared's hemp obsession already qualifies as a wish.Cosmic Wish Experiment: cosmicwishexperiment.comLearn more: commonxpodcast.comThe CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Rob Rosen spent decades inside the machine. From KCBS Los Angeles to five seasons producing Reasonable Doubt on HBO Max, he has watched journalism drift from fact-gathering into something closer to activism -- and he has documented exactly how it happened.His new book, Crimes of Omission, makes a case most people already suspect but can't quite articulate: the media's biggest problem isn't outright lies. It's the stories they decide you never need to hear.In this episode, Rob walks us through the cases, the newsroom culture, and the moment around 2012 when legacy media stopped holding up a mirror and started choosing sides. If you grew up trusting Cronkite and Brokaw, this one will hit.TOPICS COVERED:-- The "crimes of omission" concept: bias through silence, not fabrication-- The 2012 inflection point when soft bias became active advocacy-- Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray: what the coverage left out-- Tony Timpa: the police killing that was worse than anything you saw on TV -- and that you've never heard of-- Why newsroom monoculture is the structural root of the problem-- What the morning meeting decides about your reality-- Reasonable Doubt: why 3 out of 4 cases they investigated, the convict was actually guilty-- How to protect yourself as a news consumer-- FCC pressure on legacy media and whether the market is the answer-- The vibe shift: is the public ready for objective journalism again?TIMESTAMPS:0:00 -- Intro and Dead Files tangent (Jared is a fan)1:17 -- What "Crimes of Omission" means3:51 -- Why omission is more dangerous than an outright lie5:01 -- The 2012 inflection point10:21 -- Newsroom culture and who populates the room13:30 -- Morning meetings set the national agenda15:27 -- Behind the scenes during Ferguson and BLM17:43 -- Where the pressure actually comes from23:34 -- Reasonable Doubt: a real search for truth on HBO Max27:46 -- Is there a path back to objective journalism?35:13 -- Why covering Trump put the media on tilt38:59 -- FCC and government pressure on legacy media40:44 -- Why Rob wrote this book now47:55 -- How to be a better news consumer53:09 -- Tony Timpa: the case no one covered1:01:25 -- Jared's Five rapid-fireCrimes of Omission is available for presale now. Out June 2nd.SUBSCRIBE for new episodes and follow us at CommonXPodcast.com.The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode of the Common-X Podcast, we sit down with Lehigh County Controller Mark Pinsley to break down the controversial decision to remove ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) from a county government facility.This move has sparked intense reactions across the political spectrum — raising critical questions about immigration policy, federal vs. local authority, taxpayer accountability, and leadership responsibility.Mark Pinsley shares the inside story of how the decision unfolded, what he discovered about ICE operating in the building, and why he ultimately chose to take action.Whether you agree or disagree, this conversation dives deep into one of the most polarizing issues in America today.👉 Topics Covered:ICE presence in local government buildingsFederal vs. local authorityImmigration policy and enforcementGovernment transparency and taxpayer accountabilityLeadership under pressure🎙️ Subscribe for more real, unfiltered conversations with leaders, innovators, and disruptors.The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What would it look like if everyday Americans could weigh in on actual legislation, not just every few years at the ballot box, but in real time, on every bill being debated in Washington or their state capitol?Ramon Perez is a Georgia Tech-educated engineer who changed course after 9/11, became a military intelligence officer, deployed to four combat zones, and lost a friend to a sniper in Fallujah. That experience shaped his understanding of what democracy means and what it costs when it starts to fail.After January 6th and the protests in Portland, Ramon saw the same pattern he'd watched abroad: when people stop believing the system works for them, they start looking for alternatives. His answer was Digital Democracy Project, a nonprofit using blockchain-based mobile voting software to let verified U.S. citizens vote on real legislation and see exactly how their representatives voted on the same bills.The result is a scorecard, like a baseball card, that shows every legislator's alignment with the people who elected them.We get into the structural reasons democracy feels broken (gerrymandering, one-party districts, politicians who write the rules they compete under), why the Princeton study on public opinion vs. legislation passing should make your blood boil, and why Ramon thinks AI and fusion energy are reasons to be genuinely optimistic right now.Also: the best answer we've ever gotten to "what would you tell your teenage self."Visit digitaldemocracyproject.org to verify, vote, and see how your legislators score.CommonX is two Gen X dads talking to people actually doing things in the real world. Subscribe on YouTube and visit CommonXPodcast.com for more.Related episode: E81 -- Thomas Joseph, Main Street Party (directly connected to the structural reform conversation in this episode)The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Raymond Lavine has spent 16 years helping families prepare for one of the most emotionally brutal — and financially devastating — things that can happen: a parent, spouse, or sibling needing long-term care. He's an author, podcast host, and financial services professional. He's also watched his own family navigate it — his mother used a long-term care policy for 18 years and lived to 103. He gets it from both sides.In this episode, Raymond breaks down what long-term care actually means (hint: it's way more than diapers), why Gen X is uniquely squeezed between raising kids and caring for aging parents, and why "I'll figure it out when it happens" is the most expensive plan you can have. He also admits something most people in his industry won't say out loud: he doesn't enjoy being a caregiver. And that's exactly why he plans for it.If you've been avoiding this conversation — this one's for you.🎙️ Guest: Raymond Lavine — Co-author of Empathy and Understanding in Business, host of Planning with Purpose and The Caregiver's Blueprint📌 Topics covered:→ What long-term care planning actually means for a regular family→ Why caregiver burnout causes real mental health crises→ How LTC insurance works (and what it actually pays for)→ The "sandwich generation" squeeze on Gen X→ Why self-insuring is a bigger gamble than most people realize→ How to start planning even on a tight budget🌐 CommonXpodcast.com📺 Subscribe on YouTube | 🎧 Listen wherever you get podcastsThe CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Your congressman probably wasn't picked by you. Tom Joseph — founder of America's Main Street Party — breaks down the machinery that decides who even makes it onto your ballot, why gerrymandering is less about drawing lines and more about burying opposition votes, and how he found a legal loophole that lets a political party run a free, moneyless nomination contest completely outside the reach of the FEC.If you've ever felt like the process is rigged — that the real decisions happen before you ever see a name on a ballot — this one's for you.🌐 mainstreetparty.org | wilsonsfountain.us📋 Sign the petition at mainstreetparty.org——🕐 CHAPTERS0:00 — Intro: politics as a group text nobody can leave2:07 — Meet Tom Joseph, founder of America's Main Street Party2:14 — What is gerrymandering, actually?4:52 — The COVID breaking point that started all this7:05 — How the people's primary app works9:10 — Getting nominees onto the actual ballot10:17 — The ideologically neutral Super PAC12:25 — When did Tom realize the whole nomination process was broken?15:49 — How this cuts the cord between candidates and donors16:40 — Operating inside the current legal system without changing it18:49 — What a people's primary looks like for an everyday citizen21:18 — Local committees and keeping them incorruptible22:28 — The term limits debate24:03 — The Digital Democracy Project (Ramon Perez is coming on the show)25:20 — Keeping it non-ideological: equal red and blue districts26:42 — Reaching younger voters who've already checked out27:44 — Can this actually break gerrymandering?28:40 — Public response so far — and why mainstream media won't cover it30:04 — James Wilson and the "fountain of democracy"31:59 — Who's most threatened by this idea (the answer will surprise you)33:08 — To the skeptics: someone will just corrupt this too34:44 — A system from 1929 that hasn't caught up with technology37:31 — What's kept Tom going when everyone said it couldn't be done38:52 — What America looks like in 5–10 years if this works40:20 — A message to the politically homeless41:32 — Mobile voting security: blockchain, face ID, and Carnegie Mellon42:38 — Jared's Five: movies, cartoons, and collecting John Lennon's autograph49:10 — Outro——CommonX is two Gen X dads talking to people actually doing things in the real world. New episodes weekly.🎙️ CommonXPodcast.com📺 Subscribe on YouTube📝 X-Files Blog: CommonXPodcast.comThe CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The CommonX Podcast is a Gen-X media platform built for listeners who are done with manufactured narratives and shallow debates. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, identity, work, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—through long-form conversations with people who’ve actually lived it.Past guests include Ivan Doroschuk (Men Without Hats), Rudy Sarzo (Ozzy Osbourne, Quiet Riot), veterans, creators, entrepreneurs, and small-town innovators —voices rarely heard but deeply felt. Balanced. Independent. Human.visit CommonX — A Gen-X Media Platform to learn more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more informa
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