The Audience Won't Like It

Rob and Leslie Shoecraft

Married hosts Rob and Leslie Shoecraft invite you into their closet (literally) for a podcast that’s equal parts nostalgia trip, music nerd-out, and absurd banter. Born from a joke about how the audience probably won’t like it, the show leans into that spirit—riffing on everything from Star Trek episodes and Kitty Wells deep cuts, to feet, crockpots, and cover songs that live on YouTube thanks to copyright. Each week, the conversation drifts like two people killing time in line for a concert—unexpected, hilarious, and sometimes strangely profound. Future episodes explore growing up in the 80s and 90s, The Dollhouse Murders, “5 of 5” and borrowed chords in music theory, bodybuilding meal prep, Wu-Tang Clan, Gordon Lightfoot, Alan Thicke, Herb Alpert, and whatever other rabbit holes pop up along the way. If you like side tangents, forgotten pop culture, and covers of songs your mom might love, you might just find that you do like it after all.

  1. 3d ago

    Growing Up 90s: Summer Memories, Movies & Lovefool | Ep 37

    We bounce from movies and music into the messy truth of 90s summer freedom, where boredom is the feature and not a bug. We revisit everything from Star Trek IV comfort-watch energy to Lovefool chord talk, then circle back to what it feels like raising kids when you can “always know” where they are.  • our standing-in-line concert podcast setup and why YouTube is part of the bit  • remembering artists and creators we grew up with, plus the weird way news lands now  • Sublime’s new era with Jacob Nowell, and why homage can still feel real  • quick-hit review of The Punisher One Last Kill and what we wanted more of  • Strong Songs as a deep-listening rabbit hole, from Talking Heads to The Cardigans  • Koji Kondo, Japanese jazz fusion, and why retro game music works  • Enemy of the State and the fun of “enhance” tech paranoia  • Star Trek IV as pure escapism and a rare rewatch temptation  • Project Hail Mary adaptation choices, including puppetry and pacing  • parenting in dead zones, independence, and why tracking changes the vibe  • summer mornings, hanging out alone, and what we ate when nobody watched us  • water balloons, teenage intimidation, and the stories that still stick  • 90s summer food and drink nostalgia, plus sensory memories that snap you back  • Lovefool context, album tone, guitar shapes, and dream cover versions  if you really like to uh see the concert with us, then you'll have to skip over to the YouTube if you're just a listener.  check out Strong Songs.  Send us Fan Mail 📺 Watch this episode on our YouTube Channel! This is also where you can watch our covers of the songs we discuss. 👉 youtube.com/@TheAudienceWontLikeIt

    1h 33m
  2. May 25

    The Wanderers (1979): Everything an Adolescent Boy Wants, Nothing He Needs | Ep 34

    We stand “in line” for an Outkast concert and let the conversation wander from parenting math and bedtime TV to a full-on breakdown of a movie that entertains us while also making us feel genuinely uneasy. We end in our happy place, geeking out over Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik, why Outkast keeps evolving, and what it really takes to learn a song well enough to perform it.  • third-child “dog years” and what content feels age-appropriate  • why 24 still works as a cliffhanger machine  • the Jeffries Data Sheet and why we want it to become a searchable app  • What We Do in the Shadows as a mockumentary and the Norma Tanega theme song  • The Wanderers (1979) as coming-of-age drama with genre whiplash  • the classroom scene, what it normalizes, and why it hits so wrong  • soundtrack highs, scene pacing lows, and the parts that feel unresolved  • Outkast’s debut album, Organized Noize, and Southern hip hop history  • covering rap songs by singing the whole verse and practicing with intent  Hey, why don't you go ahead and write in um the comments? What age, what yeah, how you think it works? Dog years for the third child. Way in on that.  Here's the Jeffries Data Sheet: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ldtSRbUtmIVvhDSMZiClQS02gNFfIjFqE9OgBdoM85M Send us Fan Mail 📺 Watch this episode on our YouTube Channel! This is also where you can watch our covers of the songs we discuss. 👉 youtube.com/@TheAudienceWontLikeIt

    1h 45m
  3. Apr 20

    Dylan's "Blood on the Tracks", Bedtime Sitcoms Updated & Mr. Big | Ep 30

    We bounce from music, TV, and games the way we actually talk while “waiting in line” together, and it somehow turns into real recommendations. We nerd out over Bob Dylan, argue our bedtime sitcom rankings, compare Hogwarts Legacy with Disco Elysium, and finish by covering “To Be With You” by Mr. Big.  • the “waiting in line” podcast premise and why we might add a stanchion or ballet bar  • building a searchable episode data sheet with timestamps and AI help  • Blood on the Tracks as a 1975 Bob Dylan album worth sitting with  • standout tracks and why Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts is hard to follow  • the Minneapolis Six session player credit mess  • quick book corner with A Little Hatred and The Wisdom of Psychopaths  • redefining “bedtime sitcoms” and updating our rankings with Community and Rick and Morty  • Great Courses and other “sleep shows” that help us wind down  • Hogwarts Legacy as an approachable first RPG and why easy mode is valid  • immersion breaks, linearity, and what we wish the game did differently  • Disco Elysium first impressions, decision fatigue, and why failing can be fun  • covering “To Be With You” with key changes, solos, and favorite covers  Hey guys, uh follow us on uh YouTube, subscribe, like if you like. We’re also on Instagram, the audience won’t like it. We’re also on all the podcast platforms. And if you want to email us, that’s a little different. Take notes. It’s called AudienceWon’t Like It at gmail.com.  Send us Fan Mail 📺 Watch this episode on our YouTube Channel! This is also where you can watch our covers of the songs we discuss. 👉 youtube.com/@TheAudienceWontLikeIt

    1h 47m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Married hosts Rob and Leslie Shoecraft invite you into their closet (literally) for a podcast that’s equal parts nostalgia trip, music nerd-out, and absurd banter. Born from a joke about how the audience probably won’t like it, the show leans into that spirit—riffing on everything from Star Trek episodes and Kitty Wells deep cuts, to feet, crockpots, and cover songs that live on YouTube thanks to copyright. Each week, the conversation drifts like two people killing time in line for a concert—unexpected, hilarious, and sometimes strangely profound. Future episodes explore growing up in the 80s and 90s, The Dollhouse Murders, “5 of 5” and borrowed chords in music theory, bodybuilding meal prep, Wu-Tang Clan, Gordon Lightfoot, Alan Thicke, Herb Alpert, and whatever other rabbit holes pop up along the way. If you like side tangents, forgotten pop culture, and covers of songs your mom might love, you might just find that you do like it after all.

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