Breaking Curfew

Deathly Ill Entertainment

Breaking Curfew takes you back to growing up in the 80s and 90s, when freedom came with scraped knees and consequences. We talk streetlights, unsupervised summers, VHS tapes, landlines, and the stuff we probably shouldn’t have been doing. It’s not a history lesson. It’s remembering what it felt like before everything was monitored.

Episodes

  1. The Mall Was The Internet

    May 23

    The Mall Was The Internet

    Hanging Out With No Plans... or money. Before social media, before online shopping, before everybody lived on their phones… there was the mall. In this episode of Breaking Curfew, we dive into the era when the mall was more than just a place to shop. It was the social network, the entertainment center, the food court meetup spot, the dating app, the fashion feed, and the place where everybody eventually ended up on a Friday or Saturday night. We talk about what it was like wandering the mall for hours with no real plan. Hitting the theatre, checking out music stores, trying on clothes you weren’t buying, grabbing food with whatever money you had left, and somehow running into everybody you knew in a single night. From music stores and Spencer’s trips to awkward encounters, mall drama, and the unspoken rules of where different groups hung out, this episode is all about a time when hanging out in person was the entire experience. The mall wasn’t just a building. It was where trends spread, friendships happened, relationships started, and memories got made in real time. We also get into how different things feel now that so much of that world exists online instead. What we gained, what we lost, and why the mall era still feels impossible to recreate. There’s a lot of laughs in this one, but also a real appreciation for a time when boredom led to adventure and simply “going to the mall” could turn into an entire night. If you remember Piercing Pagoda, Sears, Squeeze-Play, CD stores, or spending hours there without buying anything… this one’s for you. Join The Conversation on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/17QnTeXv1r/ Merch available now! Visit and shop here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/FilthandFeralCo

    49 min
  2. The First Thing You Weren't Supposed To Watch

    May 8

    The First Thing You Weren't Supposed To Watch

    Probably Shouldn't Have Seen That... Before streaming, before parental controls, before the internet put everything in your pocket… there was the first thing you accidentally, secretly, or intentionally got access to that you definitely weren’t supposed to. In this episode of Breaking Curfew, we dive into the movies, music, TV shows, magazines, and late-night moments that felt forbidden growing up. The stuff older kids introduced you to. The CDs hidden in somebody’s room. The movie scenes everyone talked about at school. The magazines you found where you definitely weren’t supposed to be looking. The late-night channels, scrambled stations, and random things that somehow changed you forever after one viewing. We talk about how access used to feel different when everything wasn’t instantly available. You had to sneak around, borrow things, wait until your parents left, lower the volume, switch channels fast, or trust that one friend who always somehow had access to everything. From horror movies that genuinely scared us to music our parents hated, from comedy we were too young to understand to the weird curiosity that came with forbidden media, this episode is all about those first experiences that made you feel older before you actually were. And honestly, half the excitement came from knowing you probably weren’t supposed to be experiencing it in the first place. There’s a lot of laughs in this one, but also a real look at how different growing up felt when access was limited, mystery still existed, and discovering something “off-limits” felt like a major moment. If you remember sneaking media past your parents, watching things with the volume barely on, or pretending you understood something way before you actually did… this one’s for you. Join The Conversation on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/17QnTeXv1r/ Merch available now! Visit and shop here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/FilthandFeralCo

    26 min

About

Breaking Curfew takes you back to growing up in the 80s and 90s, when freedom came with scraped knees and consequences. We talk streetlights, unsupervised summers, VHS tapes, landlines, and the stuff we probably shouldn’t have been doing. It’s not a history lesson. It’s remembering what it felt like before everything was monitored.