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Dream Idiots
Morris Franklin & Bryan Treat
186 episodes
4 days ago

A progressive and comedic take on history, culture and current events. Plus, the Curse Word of the Week.


Hosted by Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat. New episodes every TUESDAY!

Get everything Dream Idiots at www.dreamidiots.com.


Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat have known each other for many years: they met while performing in high-school theatre and later both worked in public radio (including during their college years at Trinity University) as producers and on-air hosts. The podcast’s origin story is playfully explained on their website: once they “hit middle age” they decided (per the fictional “Radio Act of 1934”) to start a podcast, focusing on stories they’ve shared and new ones aligned with their interests in politics, art, history, and culture.


The show describes itself as “progressive and comedic” in its orientation. From the episode descriptions, one sees a consistent ethos of social concern: for example, one episode includes the note “Stand together, know your rights and keep on being good to each other.” While the tone remains light-hearted and humorous, there is an underlying commitment to progressive values—immigration, civil rights, equity, cultural history—and a context of commentary in culture and politics. In short: the show isn’t ultra-political in a partisan sense, but it leans far left and engages topics through that lens.


The podcast covers a broad and eclectic range of subjects. Some of the recurring formats and subject-areas include:

  • History and forgotten stories: For example, one episode handles obscure science (the Ig Nobel Prizes), another covers a little-known figure in 19 th-century Texas, another a mid-century musician.
  • Culture and society: They talk about food rivalries, generational notes (e.g., “Notes from a Gen Xer”), music, sports nicknames, civil-rights-era figures.
  • Current events and civic commentary: They frame “what’s going on today” (politics, societal challenges) via historical or cultural lens. An episode title: “Surviving Trump 2.0 / Jazz Ambassadors, part 3 – Dazzle.”
  • Personal stories and quirks: The hosts often share stories from their own lives, or old theatre roots, or humorous “two white guys” in mid-life reflections. The tagline emphasises the “personal lives of two guys who have known each other for too long.”
  • Each episode also features a light-hearted recurring segment: “Curse Word of the Week.”

In terms of structure, episodes typically run somewhere around 40 minutes to over an hour, and new episodes drop every Tuesday. The hosts may each cover separate story-threads within the same episode (for instance one telling a historical tale, the other handling a cultural story).


What makes Dream Idiots distinctive is the mixing of genuine curiosity in history and culture, a progressive outlook, and a casual, conversational, often irreverent tone. The hosts’ long friendship and shared background in theatre and radio add a camaraderie and comfortable banter to the show. The fact they decline to be overly formal or “host-and-guest” serious gives the podcast a relaxed, slightly off-kilter vibe: they’re self-aware, sometimes goofy, but interested. And by covering both “big” topics (civil rights, science prizes, politics) and “small” quirky ones (restaurant rivalries, curse words, old news) they keep things varied.


Dream Idiots holds a progressive viewpoint, engaging with history, culture, current events, and society with humor and intelligence. Typical episodes weave two or more story-threads – often one more historical or factual, the other more personal or cultural – and are wrapped with a “Curse Word of the Week” segment for fun. Listeners should expect smart, friendly conversation with left-leaning undercurrents, an emphasis on storytelling and curiosity, and a willingness to be irreverent and amused along the way.

Show more...
Improv
Comedy,
Society & Culture,
Philosophy,
History,
True Crime
RSS
All content for Dream Idiots is the property of Morris Franklin & Bryan Treat and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

A progressive and comedic take on history, culture and current events. Plus, the Curse Word of the Week.


Hosted by Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat. New episodes every TUESDAY!

Get everything Dream Idiots at www.dreamidiots.com.


Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat have known each other for many years: they met while performing in high-school theatre and later both worked in public radio (including during their college years at Trinity University) as producers and on-air hosts. The podcast’s origin story is playfully explained on their website: once they “hit middle age” they decided (per the fictional “Radio Act of 1934”) to start a podcast, focusing on stories they’ve shared and new ones aligned with their interests in politics, art, history, and culture.


The show describes itself as “progressive and comedic” in its orientation. From the episode descriptions, one sees a consistent ethos of social concern: for example, one episode includes the note “Stand together, know your rights and keep on being good to each other.” While the tone remains light-hearted and humorous, there is an underlying commitment to progressive values—immigration, civil rights, equity, cultural history—and a context of commentary in culture and politics. In short: the show isn’t ultra-political in a partisan sense, but it leans far left and engages topics through that lens.


The podcast covers a broad and eclectic range of subjects. Some of the recurring formats and subject-areas include:

  • History and forgotten stories: For example, one episode handles obscure science (the Ig Nobel Prizes), another covers a little-known figure in 19 th-century Texas, another a mid-century musician.
  • Culture and society: They talk about food rivalries, generational notes (e.g., “Notes from a Gen Xer”), music, sports nicknames, civil-rights-era figures.
  • Current events and civic commentary: They frame “what’s going on today” (politics, societal challenges) via historical or cultural lens. An episode title: “Surviving Trump 2.0 / Jazz Ambassadors, part 3 – Dazzle.”
  • Personal stories and quirks: The hosts often share stories from their own lives, or old theatre roots, or humorous “two white guys” in mid-life reflections. The tagline emphasises the “personal lives of two guys who have known each other for too long.”
  • Each episode also features a light-hearted recurring segment: “Curse Word of the Week.”

In terms of structure, episodes typically run somewhere around 40 minutes to over an hour, and new episodes drop every Tuesday. The hosts may each cover separate story-threads within the same episode (for instance one telling a historical tale, the other handling a cultural story).


What makes Dream Idiots distinctive is the mixing of genuine curiosity in history and culture, a progressive outlook, and a casual, conversational, often irreverent tone. The hosts’ long friendship and shared background in theatre and radio add a camaraderie and comfortable banter to the show. The fact they decline to be overly formal or “host-and-guest” serious gives the podcast a relaxed, slightly off-kilter vibe: they’re self-aware, sometimes goofy, but interested. And by covering both “big” topics (civil rights, science prizes, politics) and “small” quirky ones (restaurant rivalries, curse words, old news) they keep things varied.


Dream Idiots holds a progressive viewpoint, engaging with history, culture, current events, and society with humor and intelligence. Typical episodes weave two or more story-threads – often one more historical or factual, the other more personal or cultural – and are wrapped with a “Curse Word of the Week” segment for fun. Listeners should expect smart, friendly conversation with left-leaning undercurrents, an emphasis on storytelling and curiosity, and a willingness to be irreverent and amused along the way.

Show more...
Improv
Comedy,
Society & Culture,
Philosophy,
History,
True Crime
https://feeds.podetize.com/WjUoy347l.jpg
160: 'Let's All Go to the Movies', part 5: 13 for 31 / Roaring Valley
Dream Idiots
1 hour 2 minutes
1 month ago
160: 'Let's All Go to the Movies', part 5: 13 for 31 / Roaring Valley
Dream Idiots

A progressive and comedic take on history, culture and current events. Plus, the Curse Word of the Week.


Hosted by Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat. New episodes every TUESDAY!

Get everything Dream Idiots at www.dreamidiots.com.


Morris Franklin and Bryan Treat have known each other for many years: they met while performing in high-school theatre and later both worked in public radio (including during their college years at Trinity University) as producers and on-air hosts. The podcast’s origin story is playfully explained on their website: once they “hit middle age” they decided (per the fictional “Radio Act of 1934”) to start a podcast, focusing on stories they’ve shared and new ones aligned with their interests in politics, art, history, and culture.


The show describes itself as “progressive and comedic” in its orientation. From the episode descriptions, one sees a consistent ethos of social concern: for example, one episode includes the note “Stand together, know your rights and keep on being good to each other.” While the tone remains light-hearted and humorous, there is an underlying commitment to progressive values—immigration, civil rights, equity, cultural history—and a context of commentary in culture and politics. In short: the show isn’t ultra-political in a partisan sense, but it leans far left and engages topics through that lens.


The podcast covers a broad and eclectic range of subjects. Some of the recurring formats and subject-areas include:

  • History and forgotten stories: For example, one episode handles obscure science (the Ig Nobel Prizes), another covers a little-known figure in 19 th-century Texas, another a mid-century musician.
  • Culture and society: They talk about food rivalries, generational notes (e.g., “Notes from a Gen Xer”), music, sports nicknames, civil-rights-era figures.
  • Current events and civic commentary: They frame “what’s going on today” (politics, societal challenges) via historical or cultural lens. An episode title: “Surviving Trump 2.0 / Jazz Ambassadors, part 3 – Dazzle.”
  • Personal stories and quirks: The hosts often share stories from their own lives, or old theatre roots, or humorous “two white guys” in mid-life reflections. The tagline emphasises the “personal lives of two guys who have known each other for too long.”
  • Each episode also features a light-hearted recurring segment: “Curse Word of the Week.”

In terms of structure, episodes typically run somewhere around 40 minutes to over an hour, and new episodes drop every Tuesday. The hosts may each cover separate story-threads within the same episode (for instance one telling a historical tale, the other handling a cultural story).


What makes Dream Idiots distinctive is the mixing of genuine curiosity in history and culture, a progressive outlook, and a casual, conversational, often irreverent tone. The hosts’ long friendship and shared background in theatre and radio add a camaraderie and comfortable banter to the show. The fact they decline to be overly formal or “host-and-guest” serious gives the podcast a relaxed, slightly off-kilter vibe: they’re self-aware, sometimes goofy, but interested. And by covering both “big” topics (civil rights, science prizes, politics) and “small” quirky ones (restaurant rivalries, curse words, old news) they keep things varied.


Dream Idiots holds a progressive viewpoint, engaging with history, culture, current events, and society with humor and intelligence. Typical episodes weave two or more story-threads – often one more historical or factual, the other more personal or cultural – and are wrapped with a “Curse Word of the Week” segment for fun. Listeners should expect smart, friendly conversation with left-leaning undercurrents, an emphasis on storytelling and curiosity, and a willingness to be irreverent and amused along the way.