The Shakedown with Shooter and Mac G

Samuel Ochoa

Newly acquainted bros with nothing better to do after work so we decide to try this podcast stuff. We'll be having daily discussions about various topics from current events to whatever is on our minds. Let's get real and hopefully have a few laughs along the way.

  1. We Tried To Meet Love At The Club And Got Cockblocked By$20 Cocktails

    FEB 2

    We Tried To Meet Love At The Club And Got Cockblocked By$20 Cocktails

    The night starts cold and honest: a two-day hangover, weird weather, and the kind of mixed signals that make modern dating feel like a rigged game. We talk about the value of a clean no, why a warm maybe wastes time, and how safety shapes how people respond in big, crowded cities. It’s not a lecture; it’s two friends pulling apart the reality of bars, clubs, and the $20-drink economy that turns connection into a bill. We rethink where real conversations live. Speakeasies over shout-fests. Lounges and low-lit restaurants where you can hear a story. Bowling leagues, book clubs, yoga classes, painting-and-wine nights, and museums as better ways to meet people without pretending to be someone you’re not. We share play-by-plays from nights out, wingman strategies, and why “prime time” often means bad choices. Then we get practical about budgets, boundaries, and what it means to dress with intention while keeping the night focused on chemistry, not tabs. The heart of it is recovery—out of breakups, out of slumps, and back into a life that feels like yours. We talk workouts that cut the fog, routines that reset your mood, and creative plans to capture smarter content without faking a persona. And when the city gets too loud, we head to nature: Indiana Dunes, lakes, stargazing, and family campouts as a reminder that presence beats performance. If you’re tired of dating app delusion and nightlife noise, this conversation gives you a map: respect the no, pick better rooms, build your momentum, and let the right people find you doing what you truly enjoy. If this hit home, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs a reset, and drop a comment with your favorite non-bar spot to meet great people. Your ideas might shape our next night out. We trace a raw line from hangovers and cold nights to the real work of healing, standards, and finding connection beyond loud clubs. We weigh budgets, better venues, hobbies, and the push to make content while staying honest about heartbreak. • big-city dating norms and mixed signals • taking no with respect and clarity • nightlife costs, timing, and expectations • choosing lounges and low-key spots for talk • fitness and routines to beat the slump • meeting people through bowling, yoga, museums • social media standards versus real life • content plans, community support, and B-roll • camping and nature as a reset from the city Please hit that subscribe button Hit that like button We do have a Patreon happening, so there’s a link to that There’s also a BuzzCast link as well, if y’all are interested in helping us out Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 38m
  2. Rushing Toward Red Lights

    JAN 23

    Rushing Toward Red Lights

    Ever feel like you’re sprinting toward a red light? We open with the grind—two-hour commutes, sore feet, and the dopamine drip of delivery apps—and then dig into why “now” culture leaves us impatient, irritable, and strangely disconnected. From walking as a reset to getting cut off just to stop at the same light, we ask: what’s the rush costing us? The story widens into neighborhoods and nostalgia: where kids once ran pickup games until the streetlights blinked, screens swallowed sidewalks. We trade notes on safety at 3 a.m., packed buses, and how city density rewires social trust. There’s a detour into consumer culture—party-size flavors that don’t taste right, overpackaging that insults common sense—and a surprisingly earnest tangent on hygiene and why small upgrades get so much pushback. It’s funny until it’s not; then it’s useful. We get honest about coping. Alcohol as identity in certain zip codes. Depression hiding in naps, weed, and late-night snacks. The tells you can spot in yourself and the swaps that actually help: walk the errand, eat something real, skip the doom-scroll, call a friend. We wrestle with solo travel and the stigma of dining alone, then draw a line: your ticket is your contract, your table is your right, and your time is yours. Ask for better or say no. The heaviest stretch is Chicago deep dish: loyalty, gangs, grief, and how music and marketing can glamorize a life that takes more than it gives. We don’t moralize; we humanize. The counterweight is creation. We sketch out our DIY studio plans, sample packs, and making beats—not to chase clout, but to build skills, community, and a second self worth protecting. It’s creativity as harm reduction and hope. If you’re tired of living on fast-forward, this one’s for you. Listen, laugh, and leave with a few tools to slow your day, strengthen your boundaries, and make something that outlasts the scroll. If it resonates, tap follow, share it with a friend, and drop a comment about one habit you’re changing this week. Your story might spark someone else’s. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 55m
  3. JAN 9

    Put The Cart Back Or Meet Me In Hell

    A runaway joke about abandoned shopping carts turns into a full map for living well when no one’s watching. We kick off with a light roast on cart etiquette and end up tackling bigger questions: why intention matters in hunting, why park selfies go feral fast, and how jazz lounges do more for honest conversation than any club ever could. Along the way, we get real about reviews versus reality, the lure of $5k Italian villas, and the hidden costs that don’t show up in glossy videos. Food becomes a gateway to growth: one of us owns a “daycare diet,” the other campaigns for dumplings, salsas, and new textures. A single bite later, minds change and menus open. That same willingness to try shows up in relationships and boundaries—keeping partners out of friend dynamics, choosing safer venues, and remembering that mixed signals aren’t consent to chaos. We talk comedy lines with a nod to Shane Gillis, not as gossip but as a model for holding your ground without turning every moment into a war. Integrity can sound like a calm “What are we doing?” If you’re weighing a big move, a new plate, or a fresh creative leap, consider this your nudge. Cheap houses still need healthy towns. Chill bars still beat noise when you want substance. And tiny choices—returning the cart, taking an Uber, tipping well, drinking water—still build the kind of community we all wish we lived in. We’re building our DIY studio in public, learning as we go, and inviting you to ride shotgun. If this hit home, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs a push to try something new, and drop a comment with your spiciest cart-take or your favorite low-key bar. Your voice helps this crew grow. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 14m
  4. From Pizza Challenges To Sample Packs: Turning Hobbies Into Hustles

    JAN 3

    From Pizza Challenges To Sample Packs: Turning Hobbies Into Hustles

    What if the fastest way to level up your creative work isn’t more gear, but better systems? We open by tightening our format, building a clean video workflow, and backing up audio like pros. Then we take a sharp turn into the kind of stories that make a show sticky: food challenges, a chaotic pizza pickup that turns into social gold, and small street clips that stitch a night into a tight, shareable montage. It’s not about going viral; it’s about being present, shipping often, and building trust one real moment at a time. We also walk through a deliberate pivot in music: moving from personal tracks to sample packs and EDM loops for DJs and producers. That shift is part art, part strategy. We talk guitars, bass lines, MIDI controllers that mostly behave, and why wired headphones beat Bluetooth in the studio. Reliability wins. If a transport button doesn’t map to the DAW, it costs takes, not just patience. Layer that with a smarter content pipeline, and you have a creative engine that actually runs. Zooming out, we dig into the business behind good ideas. Tesla’s genius meets weak deal flow. McDonald’s turns process into scale. Gaming lives between exclusives and cross-play. We break down royalties and syndication as the quiet money creators forget to chase. Then it gets personal: clearing space, letting go of old ties, and building resilience—like buying land, camping light, learning hard skills, and being useful if the grid ever flickers. We close with a tight guide to auto shops: how labor is billed, why scopes matter, and how to get approvals that protect your wallet. Through it all, one thread holds: know your worth, cut friction, and ship work you’re proud of. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s building something, and drop a comment with the next challenge we should try. Your ideas fuel the next clip. Your review helps the right people find us. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 28m
  5. I Came For Brakes And Left With An Oil Change

    12/28/2025

    I Came For Brakes And Left With An Oil Change

    A quiet Christmas Eve turns into a full table of stories: family, food, a heavy red that sparked a chain of questionable choices, and a $350 “surprise” oil change that still has us heated. We open with why the holidays feel best when they’re simple—no pressure, no posturing—just good plates and familiar voices. Then we wander through a candid tour of booze: boxed wine regrets, mid-shelf wins, champagne basics, and the tequila brands that either hug you or wreck your morning. It’s funny, a little chaotic, and very human. From the kitchen we head into the living room: futons that murdered our backs, smart buys for small apartments, and the joy of a three-in-one couch that actually makes sense. Sports energy pops in with a Bears comeback that felt like the whole city breathing together for a minute. Then we slide into creator mode—first solo recordings, beat-making, and the plan to design sample packs that artists can flip legally. It’s DIY momentum with practical steps, not vague motivation. In the middle of that flow lands the big rant: a brake check that turned into an unsolicited oil change and a fat bill. We unpack the playbook of upsells, how to use an OBD scanner, and why city driving stacks costs: emissions, stickers, insurance, parking. So we map alternatives. Transit over traffic. CTA plus Uber for the last mile. Maybe an e-trike with a basket for produce. The goal is the same as our holiday philosophy: spend where it matters, cut what drains you, and protect your peace. We finish with morning habits that actually help—don’t start with your phone, drink water first, move a little, make something. No grand resolutions, just daily choices that add up. And yes, there’s a salty detour through shark-filled water on a Caribbean trip that cost too much and played too much Christmas music, but gave us a good story anyway. If this mix of city survival, creative grind, and honest laughs hits home, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves real talk, and drop a review with your worst mechanic story or your best morning habit. We’ll read a few on the next show. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 15m
  6. Frozen Roads, Warm Takes, The Iron Diesel Giant

    12/12/2025

    Frozen Roads, Warm Takes, The Iron Diesel Giant

    The morning starts on black ice and ends in a blistering debate about the stories we love, the ones we’re tired of, and the culture that keeps reshaping both. We talk near‑misses on winter roads, why late starts still count when you show up, and how a scrappy DIY studio can become a classroom when you treat every session like a screen test. From there we wander—on purpose. Monk life fantasies and diet myths collide with snake lore, salamanders, and the way fear gets exaggerated by memory and movies. That opens a vault of nostalgia: Mr. Ed, Looney Tunes, the WB frog, and why classic catalogs vanish when media giants change hands. We connect that to the decline of the theater trip, the sticker shock of popcorn, and the churn of “straight to streaming” titles that barely touch the marquee. Convenience rewires habits; it also flattens taste if you let algorithms do all the choosing. Then we get to the heart of it: why twists beat explosions. Parasite and Squid Game come up as proof that tension, stakes, and moral surprise stick longer than CGI. We revisit The Iron Giant—yes, Vin Diesel made us emotional—and laugh at the discovery that three words can carry a whole character. On the flip side, we dissect a book‑to‑film miss with Ender’s Game: when a director trims the story’s moral spine and tactical rigor, the spectacle can’t save it. Dune and Mad Max get shout‑outs for building worlds where resources and ruin feel frighteningly plausible, blurring sci‑fi and post‑apocalyptic grit without losing their core question. We wrap with travel rules, budget honesty, and our four‑day cap to dodge homesickness. We set a simple show plan—tighten the audio, test video as backup, celebrate milestones with a bottle of Lagavulin—and hand the mic to you. What should we watch next? Which adaptation got it right? And can you finally convince one of us to give Stranger Things or Squid Game a fair shot? If you enjoyed the ride, tap follow, share this with a friend who argues about movies, and leave a quick review. Your comments guide the next watchlist and help us keep building this weird, warm corner of the internet. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 11m
  7. 11/22/2025

    Are Artists Worth More After Death?

    What if the value of an artist’s work peaks after they’re gone—and the system is built to profit from it? We open the vault on posthumous fame, unpacking why streams surge, why unreleased songs appear “on schedule,” and how grief, scarcity, and label strategy shape the market. Along the way, we compare musicians to painters whose fortunes rose after death and ask the uncomfortable question: who actually gets paid when the legend grows? From there we get practical. We break down masters, publishing, and catalog control using Michael Jackson’s Beatles deal as a playbook for how rights move. We draw a line between public domain hymns and modern worship songs that still require licenses, and we share the safest approach for seasonal projects: royalty-free sources with clean paperwork. Then it’s band politics and splits—the moment when “we all made it” collides with who wrote the hook. The label stack comes into focus like a pyramid, where imprints feed into majors and stars launch sub-labels while still owing upstream. That structure explains forced-feeling collabs, public beefs, and why leverage is everything. Money myths get a reality check. We talk about how even famous artists go broke through advances, recoupment, and lifestyle creep, with a candid detour into Scotty Pippen’s contract to show how early deals set ceilings across industries. Sampling is a legal minefield we navigate with plain steps for clearing beats, logging splits, and avoiding the kind of disputes that can kneecap a breakout single. Then the conversation turns to culture and safety: Snoop’s impact, the politics of “checking in,” and why giving back should be strategic, not performative. The losses of Nipsey Hussle and Young Dolph underscore the risk of being visible at home, and the need to protect yourself while you build. We’re also leveling up the show. Video is coming, wireless mics are on deck, and we’re lining up guests who can speak to catalog strategy, indie releases, and the real math behind touring. If you care about music, ownership, and staying safe while you scale, this one hits home. Subscribe, drop a review, and tell us the one rights question you want answered next. Please leave a comment, or don't. Whatevs Clevs. Support the show

    1h 11m

About

Newly acquainted bros with nothing better to do after work so we decide to try this podcast stuff. We'll be having daily discussions about various topics from current events to whatever is on our minds. Let's get real and hopefully have a few laughs along the way.