Soaplore

Jett Shae

Ever wondered what you missed out on before the golden age of streaming? Welcome to Soaplore, the podcast where we dive headfirst into the wonderfully over-the-top world of vintage soap operas from the 80s and 90s. I’m Jett, a TV-loving Millennial who’s finally escaping the monotony of modern shows and embracing the drama, the shoulder pads, and the catfights of yesteryear. Join me as I experience the soapy sagas of "Dynasty," "Dallas," "Falcon Crest," and "Knots Landing" for the first time, episode by episode. With over 200 shows, we’ll laugh, we’ll cry, and we’ll probably question our life choices—just like the characters do, but with slightly less fabulous wardrobes. Whether you’re a Gen X kid who grew up with these iconic series, a Xillenial /Millennial like me who missed out the first time around, or a new fan discovering the glorious chaos of primetime soaps, "Soaplore" is your time machine to the melodramatic past. Tune in, relive the magic, and let’s marvel together at how people ever survived without binge-watching. Pour yourself a glass of something strong, because, trust me, you’ll need it. This isn’t just nostalgia; this is Soaplore—where every episode is a rollercoaster of emotions, and nothing is ever as it seems.

  1. قبل ٥ ساعات

    Bonus-“The Class of ’74 Meets Soaplore: The "“Scripts, Secrets & Survival: Laura Van Wormer on the Craft of Serial Storytelling” Episode

    Send us Fan Mail A single conversation can connect a suburban childhood, a Manhattan publishing office, and the glittering universe of Dynasty in a way that makes storytelling feel brand new again. We’re joined by author, editor, and audio drama creator Laura Van Wormer, and she brings the kind of behind-the-scenes history that soap fans and writers live for. We talk about how her mother trained her imagination with Life magazine photo prompts, why reading and research shaped her voice, and how she pulls character truth from real people to build fiction that feels lived-in. Laura also shares what inspired her serialized audio drama podcast Class of 74, a teenage soap set in 1971 that captures the awkwardness of adolescence, the start of the women’s movement, and what it meant to grow up before cell phones, social media, and constant parental tracking. Then the conversation swings into publishing and primetime soap opera history: Laura’s years at Doubleday, what she learned about the editor’s craft, and the surreal reality of seeing Jacqueline Onassis at work. From there, we get deep into serialized storytelling as a tradition, from Victorian novels to nighttime soaps, and Laura reveals how the Dynasty and Dallas companion books were built under intense deadlines with stacks of scripts, tight rights rules, and a relentless need for continuity. We also touch on sobriety, creative recovery, and how reinvention becomes possible even after life-changing trauma. If you love Dynasty, Dallas, Knots Landing, audio fiction podcasts, and the craft of writing scenes that keep people coming back, hit play. Subscribe, share with a fellow soap lover, and leave a review with the primetime soap that made you fall in love with serialized stories.

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  2. قبل يوم واحد

    Soaplore Mini Announcement -I Want To Text You Back While You Watch

    Send us Fan Mail I’m obsessed with vintage primetime soap operas for all the right and wrong reasons: the glamour, the mystery, the scandal, the shade, and the way a single storyline can echo for seasons. But here’s the twist I didn’t expect as a host of a soap opera podcast and a first-time watcher of some of these classics: I’m watching through borrowed nostalgia. I don’t know who’s about to leave the show, who’s about to join, or what the behind-the-scenes drama was. I just get to enjoy the build in real time, and that changes everything.  That fresh perspective is fun, but it also means I’ve been missing a key part of what makes soap operas legendary: the community. If you grew up with these iconic shows, you’ve got memories, opinions, and “wait, that’s not what she said” moments that deserve a place to land without spoiling future seasons. So I’m making it easier for us to talk like real humans, not just posts floating into the void.  You can still email, but now you can also text me from the show notes, and I can actually text you back. Even better, you can leave a voicemail and tell me about your favorite characters, the storyline that made you furious, or the moment you watched people argue about soaps in public. If you want a stronger vintage soap opera community with spoiler-safe conversation, hit the link, send your note, and let’s build this together. Subscribe, share the show with a fellow soap lover, and leave a review so more fans can find us.

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  3. قبل يومين

    S5 EP8 Falcon Crest: Storm Warning-The " Truck Beds, Twin Beds and The Temptation in The Vineyards" Episode

    Send us Fan Mail A semi truck honks its way up the Falcon Crest driveway and you already know the peace is over. We’re recapping Falcon Crest Season 5 Episode 8 and following that first “something’s off” feeling as it turns into full-on soap opera weather: power plays, secret calls, reckless romance, and the kind of decisions people only make when they finally get what they want.  We start with Angela Channing in peak control mode, fresh off crushing Chase’s plans and ready to run the valley like a personal kingdom. Then Emma blows the routine to pieces, rolling in with Dwayne Cooley and zero shame, while Angela scrambles to block phone calls and separate them. Across the estate and across town, Lance tries to build a music empire with Apollonia, but one lie about the Globe gets him tossed out again, proving that ambition without a safety net always comes due. The episode stacks chaos on chaos: Father Christopher admits temptation while Melissa’s feelings keep rising, Father Bobby stirs the pot at the worst time, and Terry Ransom gets a glossy “business savant” makeover that turns into a shady entrapment plan aimed at Chairman Costello. Plus, we break down the wild tonal pivot where a hot night at Apollonia’s turns into a home invasion and Lance goes into full action-hero mode. If you love 80s soap opera recaps, Falcon Crest character analysis, and behind-the-scenes TV trivia, this one has all the ingredients.  Hit play, then subscribe, share with a fellow soap lover, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Who is the baddest baddie in Tuscany Valley right now, Angela, Melissa, or Terry?

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  4. ١ أبريل

    S5 EP7 Dallas :Blocked- The "Dirty Deals Don't Deter Dusty's Daddy" Episode

    Send us Fan Mail JR Ewing wants revenge the loud way, but Dallas Season 5 Episode 7 is a masterclass in how the long game humiliates the bully. I kick things off with a simple question that ends up explaining almost every plot turn: do you go scorched earth, or do you let people hand you the rope and step back? From oil deals to custody threats, this hour keeps showing how easy it is to get “blocked” by your own ego. On the business side, Ray and Donna push into real estate with the Krebs Park Villas in San Antonio, and a few missing basics hint at future fallout. Across town, Afton Cooper’s “star” path gets uglier as JR pressures her to keep unpleasant industry favors flowing, while Lucy celebrates Mitch staying in Dallas without fully seeing what that kind of life rewrite can cost someone later. It’s classic Dallas: shiny plans, hidden bills. Then the emotional and moral mess hits. Pam’s time in treatment brings up childhood gaps she can’t ignore, and Bobby is stretched thin as a senator, husband, and reluctant detective in the Kristen baby mystery. A blood type twist blows up the obvious paternity story, and the baby’s caretaker turns cash and access into leverage. Finally, JR’s oil scheme squeezes Clayton Farlow to the brink, but Clayton answers with patience, foresight, and a brutal reminder that the market can turn on anyone holding the bag. If you like Dallas recaps with sharp takes, power plays, and character psychology, hit play, subscribe, share the show with a fellow soap lover, and leave a review so more people can find us. What’s your rule for revenge: fast and loud or slow and surgical?

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  5. ٢٧ مارس

    Bonus: The Soaplore Society For Dramatic Arts Presents: All About Eve- The " Dream Come True, Fairy Tale .....with a Fuse" Episode

    Send us Fan Mail A streaming app flips one tiny switch and suddenly we’re staring at the silver-screen résumé behind our favorite soap-era stars. That little moment turns into a bigger idea: if you love soap operas, you already love the engine that powers classic Hollywood drama. So we start something new, a classic film review under our own made-up banner, and we pick an icon for the first ride: All About Eve. We go from initial black-and-white hesitation to full-on delight the second Bette Davis shows up as Margot Channing, a stage legend with bite, wit, and a tired patience for everyone who wants a piece of her. From there, the story drops us into an awards dinner where theater critic Addison DeWitt narrates with maximum snobbery and minimum mercy. When Eve Harrington accepts a major award, the reactions around the table tell us everything: something happened, and we’re about to find out what. We follow Karen’s flashback to the night Eve finally approaches, we unpack Eve’s tragic backstory and obsessive devotion, and we track how “helpful” turns into “inserted” the moment Bill heads to Hollywood. By the end of Part 1, Eve is in Margot’s home, in her clothes, and maybe even in her head, while Bertie stands nearby looking like she’s seen this movie before. If you’re searching for an All About Eve recap, classic Hollywood podcast commentary, or a character-driven film analysis of Bette Davis at her best, you’re in the right place. Hit play, then subscribe so you don’t miss Part 2. If you’re enjoying the new classic film lane, share the episode and leave a review, and tell us what movie we should tackle next.

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  6. ١٩ مارس

    S5 EP7 Dynasty: Amanda- The " Dramatic, Dramatic-er & Dramaticist!" Episode

    Send us Fan Mail A murder conviction should not hinge on a cape, a balcony, and an unlocked penthouse, but Dynasty never misses a chance to turn a detail into a detonation. We pick up with Alexis Carrington Colby in jail, scared for once, while Dex Dexter and Adam Carrington team up in the most chaotic “buddy cop” way possible to undo a trial that went off the rails. The deeper they dig, the clearer it gets: someone wanted Alexis framed, and they counted on everybody being too dramatic to notice what mattered. Meanwhile, the rest of the Carrington universe keeps spinning. Steven makes aggressive moves around ColbyCo and oil land deals, and his marriage to Claudia starts showing real strain as guilt and ambition leak into every conversation. Over at the mansion, Dominique Devereaux’s money revives Blake Carrington’s business prospects, but her real goal is sharper than gratitude. The revenge plan comes into focus, and even Brady’s role starts to look like strategy, not romance. Then the case breaks wide open with a photo twist that feels peak 1980s primetime soap: Polaroids, a darkroom zoom, and a suspect who went all the way into Alexis’ wig closet to sell the frame-up. Justice lands, Alexis steps out, and the episode still saves its biggest shock for the final beat with a brand-new character reveal that changes the family tree overnight.  If you love Dynasty recaps, soap opera commentary, and plot twists that reward close watching, hit play, subscribe, and share the show with a fellow fan. After you listen, leave a review and tell us: was the wildest part the disguise, the evidence, or Amanda’s entrance?

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  7. ١٣ مارس

    S5 EP7 Falcon Crest: Changing Partners-The " Radio Dreams and a Scandalous Dam Scheme" Episode

    Send us Fan Mail Pop culture myths get corrected and power plays get sharper than a pruning knife. We kick off by untangling Vanity 6 vs Apollonia 6 and how that mix-up reframes Apollonia’s storyline, then dive headfirst into one of 1985’s juiciest hours of Falcon Crest. Angela Channing turns civic planning into a weapon, championing an irrigation project that conveniently threatens to drown Chase’s vineyard. It’s political theater at its most personal: a poised speech, a stacked vote, and a public gut punch that proves old money still sets the tempo in Tuscany Valley. Across town, Lance rides a high-wire act—trading his stake in the Globe to chase Top 40 glory and rocket Apollonia onto the airwaves. It’s bold, impulsive, and maybe brilliant, maybe reckless. Terry shows up with $30 million and zero interest in being a silent partner, forcing Richard to make room for her ambition while quietly tightening his own grip on the paper. A neon-lit country bar becomes the night’s emotional crossroads: Emma catches a hint of freedom on the dance floor, and Apollonia belts a set that’s half spotlight, half manifesto. But the soul of the hour belongs to Melissa and Father Christopher. Their scenes hum with restraint: park benches, soft reassurances, the ache of two people who understand belonging from opposite sides of loss. When Melissa admits she no longer loves her husband and loves someone else, the moment feels terrifying and true. No grand affair, no melodrama—just a line crossed in a whisper that could rewire a family, a faith, and the fragile truce holding them. If you love slow-burn storytelling, razor-clean character turns, and soap politics disguised as city business, this one shines. Subscribe, share with a fellow Falcon Crest fan, and leave a review with your take: Who played the smartest hand—Angela, Richard, Terry, or Lance?

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Ever wondered what you missed out on before the golden age of streaming? Welcome to Soaplore, the podcast where we dive headfirst into the wonderfully over-the-top world of vintage soap operas from the 80s and 90s. I’m Jett, a TV-loving Millennial who’s finally escaping the monotony of modern shows and embracing the drama, the shoulder pads, and the catfights of yesteryear. Join me as I experience the soapy sagas of "Dynasty," "Dallas," "Falcon Crest," and "Knots Landing" for the first time, episode by episode. With over 200 shows, we’ll laugh, we’ll cry, and we’ll probably question our life choices—just like the characters do, but with slightly less fabulous wardrobes. Whether you’re a Gen X kid who grew up with these iconic series, a Xillenial /Millennial like me who missed out the first time around, or a new fan discovering the glorious chaos of primetime soaps, "Soaplore" is your time machine to the melodramatic past. Tune in, relive the magic, and let’s marvel together at how people ever survived without binge-watching. Pour yourself a glass of something strong, because, trust me, you’ll need it. This isn’t just nostalgia; this is Soaplore—where every episode is a rollercoaster of emotions, and nothing is ever as it seems.

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