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Pat's Peeps Podcast

Pat's Peeps Podcast

By: Pat Walsh
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Summary

Join our Pat's Peeps family today and be a part of the exciting journey as renowned national talk show host Pat Walsh connects with Friends and Aquaintances. Together, they delve deeper into the captivating world of Pat Walsh's nightly national talk show, all while championing local businesses.

Whether you are a business owner, a devoted listener, or both, we extend a warm invitation for you to become a valued member of our ever-growing community. Don't miss out on this incredible opportunity to join us ASAP!

Pat Walsh

© 2026 Pat's Peeps Podcast
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Episodes
  • Ep. 445 Today's Peep Is Joined By Robin "The Interupter" for a Front-Porch Conversation (while listening to music), Getting Ambushed by the Yard Enforcer, A Garden Built By Hand, What One Date Can Change Forever and The Grateful Dead
    34 mins
  • Ep. 444 Today's Peep Finds Encouragement in Numbers and Everyday Hard Work, What to do with a Ragged Old Flag, Do Small Signs Help Keep Us Stay Aligned, Supertramp for "Socially Awkward" Rock Fans
    20 mins
  • Ep. 443 Today's Peep Issues A Fair Warning
    May 8 2026

    Fair Warning turns 45 and it messes with my head, because it still sounds like a band pushing the amps into the red right now. A Michael Anthony clip sent me down the rabbit hole, and once I started thinking about how long 1981 really was, I couldn’t stop.

    I trace that feeling back to 1978, when rock music seemed to reboot overnight. Van Halen’s debut hit like nothing else, and The Cars brought a new wave sound that felt just as fresh in a totally different way. I also share a personal story from my days working at an Oregon truck stop, when someone casually told me, “You’ll find out soon” about a band called Van Halen, before most of the country even knew the name.

    From there we get into a full-on Fair Warning appreciation session: why it’s often called the slowest-selling David Lee Roth era Van Halen album, why that “least commercial” edge makes it special, and why I think it’s some of the fiercest, hardest classic hard rock the band ever made. I talk Alex Van Halen’s underrated drumming, Eddie’s guitar aggression, Michael Anthony’s harmonies, and tracks like “Mean Street” and “Unchained,” plus the little synthesizer hint that foreshadows where the band goes later.

    If you love Van Halen, album deep-dives, classic rock history, and the messy gap between critics and fans, hit play, then subscribe, share the podcast with a friend, and leave a review so more rock obsessives can find us.

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    22 mins
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