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This week on Hoagie Time, the guys bounce from thrift-store fashion and dog shows to music legends, career pivots, and forgotten creative eras. Things kick off with a shoutout to local vintage culture before taking a sharp left into the Westminster Dog Show, where a surprising name pops up: Sixers star Tyrese Maxey. Yes — that Tyrese Maxey. Dog scene, confirmed.
From there, the conversation stretches into music history and creative “windows,” breaking down why it’s pointless to judge artists outside the era they were in. Bob Dylan, Dave Matthews, and the rise-and-fall (and rise again) of live bands all get the Hoagie Time treatment.
Heif Dog reflects on stepping into a new phase of adulthood — including landing a job, navigating real commutes, and officially becoming “laptop guy” — while Mike revisits peak Dave Matthews fandom, tape trading, and the obsessive joy of live recordings before the internet ruined everything.
The episode winds through lost four-track recordings, forgotten gigs, and the realization that maybe nobody ever really quits music — they just pause it for a while.
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Get your Gear here: htpodcast.myshopify.com
By Hoagie Time Podcast: Money Mike and Heif Dogg4.9
2525 ratings
Send a text
This week on Hoagie Time, the guys bounce from thrift-store fashion and dog shows to music legends, career pivots, and forgotten creative eras. Things kick off with a shoutout to local vintage culture before taking a sharp left into the Westminster Dog Show, where a surprising name pops up: Sixers star Tyrese Maxey. Yes — that Tyrese Maxey. Dog scene, confirmed.
From there, the conversation stretches into music history and creative “windows,” breaking down why it’s pointless to judge artists outside the era they were in. Bob Dylan, Dave Matthews, and the rise-and-fall (and rise again) of live bands all get the Hoagie Time treatment.
Heif Dog reflects on stepping into a new phase of adulthood — including landing a job, navigating real commutes, and officially becoming “laptop guy” — while Mike revisits peak Dave Matthews fandom, tape trading, and the obsessive joy of live recordings before the internet ruined everything.
The episode winds through lost four-track recordings, forgotten gigs, and the realization that maybe nobody ever really quits music — they just pause it for a while.
Support the show
Get your Gear here: htpodcast.myshopify.com

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