¶ The Headliner crew kicks off the search for Pod Zero
>> Nicholas: I love this podcast. Howdy, everyone, and welcome to the headliner Pod pod. We're a show about podcasts, featuring podcasts by podcasters that's hosted by people who help podcasters with their podcasting. On each episode, a few of us folks over at Headliner sit down to play a game that centers around listening to randomly selected clips from over 500 show submissions we've gotten from podcasters. Why? In order to find what we call Pod Zero, here are the rules.
Each lucky contestant will hear a 62nd podcast clip. Theyll then need to pick out the correct podcast title from a lineup of three choices before being shown the artwork for that show. Before we get the show on the road, though, lets say hi to each of our contestants for today, starting with Max. >> Max: Hey, hey, headliners. >> Nicholas: Hes back. Hes ready to win. He's wearing fake 3d glasses over his real glasses. >> Max: I took a week off to train, met my
sensei. He taught me in the ways of podcast title guessing, and I'm, uh, back and ready to win, stronger than ever. >> Nicholas: He basically told you to pick the third one when you aren't sure, basically, right? >> Max: You don't know what he told me. >> Nicholas: Secret, okay. Oh, it's a black box secret. Okay, we're just going to power through then.
¶ Max makes his grand comeback with podcast title guessing tactics
Next up, we have Jesse. >> Max: Hello. >> Kristy: Hello. >> Nicholas: Followed by christy. Um, let's go. And Prateik. >> Max: Hey, everyone. >> Nicholas: Great. And of course, we also have Elissa as our producer. Word on the street is you have a tiny little ad read for us. >> Elissa: Oh, I always do. So
today we're talking about podcast promo. Podcast promo finds new ears Podcast promos programmatic ad tool that leverages our publisher network headliner will find new ears and introduce them to your podcast for you based on targeting parameters and budget. Choose from over 5000 different options with things like geotargeting all the way down to the zip code level, demographic segmentation, device type, and interest based targeting. Visit our website to learn more or to submit a campaign.
>> Nicholas: All right, cool. That's really neat that we could do like zip code level targeting. You know, just want to hit people up in the, uh, good ol 1234 five zip code, just the middle of nowhere's Phil, Kentucky. Defaultsville, Kentucky, if you will. Anyway, with that out of the way, let's just dive into things and get this party started with eeny, meenie, miney moe. Why not Jesse? >> Kristy: Let's get.
>> Speaker E: But when we resist that, uh, it's actually when we have a hard time indulging in the creative process. >> Nicholas: Yes. >> Speaker E: Or if we just try to power through and do the creativity thing, but without the business structure, what I think happens, and I'm kind of speaking for myself, is you end up kind
¶ Elissa's ad read
of treading water. I've heard you talk, I've listened to some of your podcasts, and you have a lot of really, really wonderful resources on your website. So I think that's very generous. And I've heard a little bit about your background. I know that you grew up in the midwest and then became a ballerina and then went into music therapy. And I want to talk to you all about that, because I can tell how that informs
the way you think about business. But going back to the very heart of the matter is, why do we have this cultural narrative, the starving artist narrative, that sort of confounds creatives to the point that they can't even really see a future for themselves that is thriving? Yeah, I don't know where the narrative comes from. And I think it's so sad. >> Nicholas: I think it's really sad, too, guys.
Like, actually, I'm actually going to save this podcast and listen to it when we're done because this is something I was literally talking about the other day. Anyway, Jesse, let's fire off a couple of titles for you to pick from. Number one, clever. Number two, culture cast. And number three, movers, makers and shakers with Jordan Davis. >> Kristy: All right, so option one was. It's just one word. Clever. >> Nicholas: Just one word. Clever.
>> Kristy: Clever. All right, all right, so I'm seeing a pattern here. Um, we got one word and then two words and then more than two words. >> Nicholas: So I'm going to go. >> Kristy: I like the one word podcast title. >> Nicholas: I think. >> Kristy: I think clever is clever, whether or not it's correct or not. I'm really liking clever for it. So let's go clever. >> Nicholas: Okay. Option number one, clever is correct.
And I did think it was clever, personally. >> Kristy: Yeah, that's a great title. >> Nicholas: Yeah. Um, and this was from episode 209. Holly Howard on business growth for creative entrepreneurs. Here's a little bit about this show. Clever is a
¶ Jesse's creative intuition leads to a clever discovery
window into the humanity behind the world around us. In each episode, designer Amy Devers has candid and revealing conversations with the visionaries, culture makers, and creative forces who shape our world and inform our society. Clever peels back the layers to unearth the gritty, authentic, and sometimes surprising deal and sometimes surprising details of their creative paths. So there you have it. Also good artwork. I'm just, like, a fan of the
choices made on that artwork. It's obviously a picture of the guest for the episode, but just the actual font choice for Clever. And the way everything's squished together is, dare I say, a little clever. Uh, just saying. But yeah, really cool stuff all around. Actually going to listen to this because this is a topic I was literally, like, borderline arguing with one of my friends about the other night. So go figure. >> Max: You were arguing.
>> Nicholas: Jumping on for. Yeah, we were having an argument because he was spouting the tortured artist rhetoric stuff. And I was like, I think that's really shallow to think that you have to be a tortured artist to be successful. Hmm. >> Max: Mhm. >> Nicholas: Like, we shouldn't romanticize the fact that Van Gogh chopped his ear off. We should probably get that guy like Vicodin because he chopped his ear off. You know what I mean?
>> Max: Correlation does not equal causation. >> Nicholas: Yeah, exactly. >> Max: Chop your ear off if you want to be a good artist, that is not painting. >> Kristy: His paintings weren't great because of the ear. >> Nicholas: Yeah, exactly. Contrary to popular belief, chopping your ear off doesn't make you better at painting. >> Max: Like, everybody's just discounting his work. They're like, starry night's great. But, uh, I will say, though, of.
>> Kristy: All the artists I know that have cut their ears off, they've all been pretty good. >> Nicholas: That's true. But also, how long is that list? >> Kristy: It's one. >> Nicholas: Okay. Just making sure. >> Max: Can't argue with the facts. >> Nicholas: So. Yeah. Um. So on that note, let's dive on forward. It sounds like we're all in agreement that you don't need to be a tortured artist, which is good to know.
So let's go over to our next contestant and picking one out of the hat again, let's go with Pratik. All right. Is he covered? Yeah, he is. >> Elissa: It's also his birthday today. >> Nicholas: It is. Happy birthday, Pratik. >> Speaker F: There's something right in what you said. And Martin van Griefeld, he discovered that already in his book that, you know, the way medals are awarded in the second world war for the US army was totally
different than for the german army. In the german army, a lot of these high awards, they go to officers who are leading the church, so. And not to officers who are sitting somewhere in the back. You're not getting anything for that. So this the Legion of
¶ Kristy's shot in the dark hits the sweet spot
Merit or something? I don't even know that this exists in the Wehrmacht. You're just doing paper pushing and you did it in an extra way, so that's not even existing. So we have at that time, generals who have tank killer badges on their sleeve. So there was generals who were, you know, they're going forward and, you know, showing the guys how
it is done. They cannot imagine what that means if you have, like, a, uh, russian superiority at that time, like in some m battles, 18 to one or ten to one, and then suddenly the general shows up and he kills a t 34. >> Nicholas: Okay, there is your clip, and here are your options. Number one, black market leadership. Number two, black to back. And number three, leadersheep podcast. I like the pun in the last one. >> Max: Let's go with the first one.
>> Nicholas: Black market leadership. Okay, locking it in. And you're correct, sir. >> Max: Nice. >> Nicholas: It was indeed that. >> Max: Total guess. >> Nicholas: Total guess. Just shot in the dark. >> Max: Yep. >> Nicholas: Your brain wasn't tickled by leadership. >> Max: I feel like, uh, the people that were. The clip that I heard of would. >> Nicholas: Not have come up with that, but. Okay. >> Max: They just.
>> Nicholas: There wasn't. Yeah. Okay. >> Max: Seem like you just talk, but. >> Nicholas: Yeah. Well, kudos to Elissa for that one, because the oxymoron in that is delightful. And, yeah, this was from episode 75, command culture with Yorg muth, part, uh, one and two. So here's our show description. Modern leadership development is undeserving you. If you want to accelerate your growth and quickly raise your value as a leader, then you have to look beyond tradition and
convention. Black market leadership is made for you, the high achiever and disrupter, to give you a competitive edge no matter your title or position. Hosted by Forbes coach and leadership expert, Kevin Black. Learn the art and science of leadership the way military leadership and elite Fortune 500 leaders do. So there you go. And just a nice, clean piece of artwork for the show. You know, it's an old standby. What's that?
>> Elissa: When I got the podcast, I, like, totally misinterpreted the name, and I was like, black market leadership? Like, as in the black market? And I was like, oh, is this okay? And then I listened. I was like, oh, no, of course. This is like, this is fine. It's the host last night. I just wanted to. >> Nicholas: That would be really strange if a USA Today Forbes podcast, which I'm assuming it's affiliated because the logos are right there, it was about the black market.
>> Elissa: Yeah, I was just confused for many reasons. >> Max: Initially, the episode sounded like it was talking about a black market. >> Nicholas: He was talking about the military. >> Elissa: Yeah. >> Nicholas: Yeah. He was using military, uh, leadership hierarchy to talk about how to lead a company. So, interesting stuff. Now, I will only think about the black market when I hear this
¶ Prateek celebrates his birthday with a victorious guess
title. So thank you for that. I'm just going to imagine, like, an hour long podcast about. So you want to sell organs on the black market. >> Elissa: Here's how you thought. When I saw the name, I was like, I'm in. I'm intrigued. And then I clicked. >> Nicholas: Kidneys are hot this week. >> Kristy: They've always been hot. >> Nicholas: Oh, my God. Okay, yeah, moving on. Keep going before I just launch into 20 minutes of vamping.
Um, our next contestant, let's go with Kristy. >> Elissa: I can't see you where you're okay. >> Nicholas: Yeah, he's covering his face. >> Elissa: I see a book. Now. >> Nicholas: Let's do this. >> Speaker G: Uh, we casa puerto ibisilaglona de la cabeza. Mas plana ila de lado contrario masa bombada alo masa de lantada que la otra ali gual quina parte de la carita. >> Nicholas: Okay, hope you're listening closely. Yes. And here
we go. Here are your three options, translated from Spanish into english, because we just. We wanted to go easy on you this week, so. >> Max: Okay. >> Nicholas: Okay. Number one is the bittersweet joys of pediatric medicine. Number two, honey and lemon pediatricians at the microphone. And number three, podiatry over neurology. I'm going to go number two. This is going to be shot in the dark. There's, uh, uh, I know very little
Spanish. I. They were talking about, like, being in a house, and I I caught very little. So we're just going to shot in the dark. Uh, I'm comfortable where this ends up. Y'all are on fire this week, though. Three for three, actually. Yeah, you're three for three right now. Oh. Uh, the power is going to our heads. No pressure on
¶ Max faces the ultimate challenge and the agony of defeat
Max, but if he gets his right, I want him to scream buckets as soon as he does. >> Max: Nice. >> Nicholas: Just buckets, you know? Okay, so this was from the episode Honey and lemon pills, and I can't say this word, so pardon me, because I am not a doctor. Plagiocephaly. I think I might have actually said it right, but we'll just pretend I did and give me say with conviction and go, yes, exactly. Plagiocephaly. So there we go. I know
I killed it, guys. And here's our show description. Parenting and pediatrics share a sweet background with acidic, uh, notes. We welcome you to this independent sound space. We are Soledad Montero and Rosa Pavo to primary care pediatricians from the public health system who want to expand the walls of our consultations. And what better way than through a podcast? We want to share. We want to share interesting information about the
health of children and adolescents. Try to answer the most frequently asked questions that you ask us at the health center, we will enjoy chatting because we love new challenges and dissemination. We will accompany you whenever you feel like it, while you're out running, breastfeeding or bottle feeding, ironing, or on the way to work. And there you have it, honey and lemon. And their latest episode was seemingly about honey and lemon pills, which is cool, you know,
cool stuff. I also really like the artwork. I think that's really neat. And I think that lemon capsule on the left that they have is, um, intense. Maybe a juicer. I don't know what it is. Looks like a pill to me, but. >> Kristy: I think it's a microphone, the honey thing where you like, you dip it. It's what that little bead has on the cheerio box, you know, his little wand. >> Nicholas: It's a honeywell. >> Elissa: I think it's just a combo. Yeah, yeah,
yeah. That made into a mic. Very good. >> Nicholas: Yeah, exactly like the bottom capsule of the microphone is just the lemon. >> Kristy: It's definitely clever. >> Nicholas: Yes. Uh, but not the podcast clever, not to be mistaken. So now, no pressure, Max, but everyone has gotten theirs right so far. >> Max: Oh, uh, yeah, pressure's on. I'm just gonna yell buckets now. >> Nicholas: Buckets. Yeah, yeah, buckets.
>> Max: You gotta ask for forgiveness instead of permission. >> Nicholas: So that's the spirit. Did you get that from black market leadership? >> Max: Yeah, but the other one. No, actually I got it from, um, what was it? Leadersheep leadership. >> Nicholas: Right. Okay. Good to know. Good to know. If you'll cover your eyes, sir, so that we know you're actually. >> Elissa: Yeah, otherwise if you get this right, you'll be accused of top, so that.
>> Kristy: The bottom of the soccer ball is making contact with the track ball and inverted. And inverted it. >> Nicholas: Yeah. >> Kristy: Okay, so, so he has a little arcade setup and he has the big ball. And like, it's not going to be perfect, but that's a really cool idea. It's a really cool idea. >> Nicholas: But you can watch his video and.
>> Kristy: It'S not very long, but it kind of shows you how he's gone in and kind of created this, this way to like, somewhat play the game properly at home. And again, we'll, we'll throw the link. >> Nicholas: In there in the discord there. >> Kristy: But some of the other games on the hardware. Air combat 22, alpine racer. I've heard of alpine racer, aqua jet, cyber cycles, dirt dash, propcycle. But the big one is obviously time. >> Nicholas: Crisis and Tokyo War.
>> Kristy: So again, this is a really weird one. I'd love to try to find an actual board of this now that I'm going to have like, a trackball thing. I'm not going to say that I'm going to put deodorant sticks on my arcade cabin at home, but I do think that's. That's actually a really brilliant
¶ The team comes together for a final guess - but will they succeed?
way to come up with something to, like, play. >> Nicholas: Yeah. >> Kristy: To play one of these weird games. >> Nicholas: Okay, there you have it. Here are your three options for today, Max. Number one, podke Kong. Number two, the arcade. One up, podcast. And number three, Hadouken. >> Max: Wow, hard. Yeah, hard choices. I am gonna throw the dice on the second one, even though I realize I could see. Wait, I was getting a little signal from Jesse.
>> Kristy: Oh, no, I was doing, like, a drum roll. Sorry. >> Max: Oh, okay. Trying to give me a hint, like, card counting type of no. Blink twice if you agree with my no. >> Nicholas: You guys can talk it out. I will allow it. >> Max: I can get lifelines in here. >> Nicholas: You get one lifeline this week. It looks like alyssa doesn't agree, but overruled. >> Elissa: No, no. Just for the reason that everybody else has gotten it right.
>> Nicholas: Okay. >> Elissa: You need to do this on your own. >> Nicholas: Oh, uh, fair enough. >> Max: Guys, I need you help my life on beat to Google. >> Nicholas: No, certainly cannot. >> Kristy: What would you Google? >> Max: I would google all three. >> Nicholas: No, absolutely not. >> Elissa: I will say that multiple of those names are legitimate podcast names. I will say that much. >> Max: What was the first one? Podke Kong.
>> Nicholas: Yeah, Podke Kong. >> Max: I mean, I'm going to be surprised if that's a podcast name, but guess he blinked twice if you agree. >> Nicholas: Obviously not a donkey Kong fan. >> Elissa: Eyebrows that do it? >> Nicholas: Yeah. >> Max: Well, I. Okay, lifeline is, can somebody explain the last one to me? >> Nicholas: The last. I can explain what that is. I've heard it a reference to. Yeah, it's a reference to the side diagonal down
attack in street Fighter. The Hadouken. >> Max: That. >> Nicholas: Now. >> Max: Yeah. Okay, that one seems plausible. >> Nicholas: It's the down diagonal side, not the other one. That's the kick one. >> Max: Or as described as changing my decision. I need to know the right key combination. >> Nicholas: Yes. Yes. You've got this. Because if you get it right, you're going to be expected to do a, uh, hadouken on PlayStation.
>> Elissa: You had to, like, rapid toggle and spin. >> Nicholas: Just. >> Max: Well, I'm still leaning towards the second one. Kristy, blink twice if you disagree. >> Nicholas: I can't do this for the. For, like. You've got this. This is for an honest win. Okay, you're going to go with the second one, which was the arcade one up. Podcast suspense. I'm sorry, you are incorrect. Although that might be a podcast.
>> Max: It was Padukin that changes everything. I think it was just. >> Nicholas: No, no, it was Padukin. >> Max: I feel like that is a bit of moderator. >> Nicholas: I don't know. I think everyone. >> Max: I actually had no idea you said Padukin. I thought it was just the word Hadouken or whatever. >> Nicholas: Oh, you thought it was literally saying Hadouken. I don't know, man.
>> Max: Great title, but all right, I will accept the defeat, uh, with the caveat that I think the whole game was rigged. And such a humble loser. >> Nicholas: Such like a sore. You know what I mean? Just such a great loser about it. Like, I'll accept that I lost, but humble, humble winner. >> Elissa: Even better. Loser. >> Nicholas: I will fight this hand over foot, tooth over nail, third thing for the rest of my life.
>> Max: Yeah, I'll accept it, and you'll have to live with it. So here we go. >> Nicholas: Okay. >> Max: Live with the knowledge of what happened here today. >> Nicholas: Well, to make things worse, I did actually change the second option while it was playing. It was originally pack podcast, so I changed it to make it a little harder. >> Max: That's also a good one. >> Nicholas: That would have been a good one. >> Max: I legitimately did not know it was
Padukin. So, okay, maybe we want to implement some. Some visuals of the titles in the future. >> Elissa: I believe he said something to the effect of, like, it's like, hadouken. >> Nicholas: Yes, I did. At one point, I was like, it's Hadouken. Wrong street fighter. At any rate, the idea of a visual does sound fun. >> Max: You guys all have to live with this, though. You know what happened. Let this day live on in headline.
>> Nicholas: This is an honest, this is an honest moment. We did it. >> Kristy: We did the best we could. >> Max: You all did not blink. So that is, I was actually. >> Nicholas: I love, I love the longer we dwell on it, the more max directs his ire at his teammates. >> Max: Actually were helping me. I thought, like, oh, they're just not engaging, but they, they weren't blinking twice, so they were.
>> Nicholas: I would have gotten the slam dunk if my team understood that when I put my hands up and said uppies, I needed help reaching the hoop. This is. >> Max: Anyway, just to get that out. >> Nicholas: I'm kidding. I get it, man. We all need a help for the slam dunk. Um, um, we all need the old baseball rules of, it's still a home run if the ball bounces and then goes over the fence, which was actually the rules in baseball until the 1930s.
>> Max: I agree. And in the future, we're going to, when. When one of us says uppies, we're going to put the team on our back lift them up. >> Nicholas: Yep, exactly. And I'm really hoping our AI just calls this episode uppies now. So here's a little bit about podcast Ooken. It's from the episode arcade Obscura, parentheses, beast mode, episode 115. And our show description is a podcast for arcade lovers from the owners of 100 plus arcade and
pinball cabinets. And the proprietors of a real life arcade comes Padukin, a brand new podcast that takes a deep dive into the world of video game arcades and explores the history, story, strategy, art, music restoration, preservation, and fun of arcade games. If ever there was a podcast that sounds like it was something I would get into, it's probably this because I love me some old arcade games. And yeah, I love all that stuff. So very cool all
around. Neat, uh, artwork. You know, it looks like it is a actual hadouken just turned vertically with the word paduk in there in the street fighter font, I think so that's neat. With that out of the way, I think we have time for one final round. If everyone would like to band together and use all the lifelines they want, they can still have some semblance of a win if, if you guys do that. So let's do it. Let's just cover our eyes and roll with it.
>> Speaker G: And, uh, I wanted to ask if you can maybe give us some examples like how you guys have done that, because I think in your case, it's not such a web three native project. Um, I know it's a protocol, but at the same time, I think it works a bit differently and it's a bit more. It's appealing to, like, different types of audiences, let's say, compared to like, something that's very, very web
three native. So I think when it comes to, like, community building and marketing efforts, um, that this is one of the questions that I have for you. >> Nicholas: Yeah, sure. So, from a partnerships perspective, we've done, uh, around 100 key integrations so far. And all of these integrations is trying to expand the use of the product, of course. So that comes from the creation of poap through the distribution and the discovery of the poap. So a few examples of these. I've got three
to mention. Okay, there was our clip, and here are your titles, everybody. Number one. Oh, oh. A web three marketing podcast. And to be specific, so we don't have another padukan on our hands. That is the letter o three times. Ooh, if you will. Yes. Not zero o. It looks like the Karen O song that opened her 2014 album Crush Songs. >> Max: Could it be a two is it maybe. Is it maybe not a letter or a number at all? Is it just a circle?
>> Nicholas: It could be, but it's the letter o as it's written. >> Max: Uppercase or lowercase? >> Nicholas: Uppercase. Okay, and your second choice? Four P's podcast. And that's not the letter p four times max. It is the number four, followed by P apostrophe s, podcast. And number three. Swatcast. Sw o t. All caps, space cast. >> Kristy: What was the second one again? >> Nicholas: Four peas podcast.
>> Max: Is it the. Let the number four, or is it spelled out four? Number four. >> Nicholas: Number four peas podcast. Okay. Is there anything standing out to anybody? I think the first one is a little bit the most, like, complicated and weird. I usually kind of go for that. >> Max: Yeah, she's talking about Web 3.0, and, yeah, I guess that there's three O's in there, so maybe that's what it's about. >> Nicholas: But, uh, I don't know.
>> Kristy: I could just be Elissa trying to mess with us. >> Nicholas: I don't know. Jesse's got the pencil out, so I. This is. >> Kristy: This is nothing more than an emotional support instrument at this point. Um, I I have no clue. I have no clue. >> Elissa: Just opened up my marketing introduction 101 textbook and went to glossary and just was like, hmm. >> Nicholas: Okay, all right. >> Kristy: I'm understanding SWAT now. >> Nicholas: Okay. All right.
>> Kristy: But that's such a good title. Now, number three. I get it. >> Nicholas: What's SWAT? >> Kristy: Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. >> Nicholas: Okay. Is that something to do with web three? >> Max: I don't think so, but it's like, a. Just a general business management technique. I'm getting the sense that the web three part is specific to this episode. Episode, right.
>> Nicholas: Yeah. >> Kristy: We're also talking about, like, integrations, uh, distribution and other things like that. So, I mean, it could just be, like, a general. A general thing like that. And they're just diving into web three on this one. >> Nicholas: Right. What's the second one called? What's the. What was the second one again? Four podcast. >> Max: I think it's. That's also another marketing thing.
>> Nicholas: I mean, yeah, it's like, profit something, probably, right? >> Kristy: No, so that's the most clever. >> Nicholas: So it's like, it's not. It's like, ps, not p a s. So, like, it's Peapod. >> Max: The three P's, with the fourth one being the podcast. Yes, but what's the first one? Three O's out of office. >> Nicholas: Uh, maybe. Is it the out of office podcast? Is that
three O's? They're all capital, so, I mean, I. >> Max: Don'T know any other acronyms with three O's in business jargon. >> Nicholas: Oceans. Oceans. Oceans, man. Yeah. Uh, yeah, there's that one, too. What's the full title? You could make that a business term, by the way. You could be talking about blue ocean strategy. So. >> Max: And three of them. >> Elissa: Anything can be a business term if you try. >> Nicholas: Yes. >> Max: Thanks for that support.
>> Nicholas: All right. What's everyone feeling like? Gut reaction. What's everyone's numbers? Three. >> Kristy: Like, three. >> Nicholas: It's. >> Kristy: It's. It's catchy. >> Nicholas: I, like. So sorry, everybody. Swatcast is not the answer. The correct answer was Ocean's. Ocean's oceans. A web three marketing podcast. >> Kristy: It is. It was a whole web three podcast. >> Nicholas: It was. It was actually.
>> Max: Ooo. >> Kristy: Talked ourselves out of it. >> Nicholas: Yeah. >> Elissa: Good job, guys. >> Kristy: Ourselves. We're our own greatest enemy. >> Nicholas: Yes. There you go. And the episode we just heard a clip from was episode 50. Poab just reached 7 million minted po apps. How they got there, the case studies and bast practices with Jai Statiferd. I don't know if that's supposed to be best. It's written as best. I'm sticking to it.
>> Max: I know. >> Nicholas: Poap. There you go. I actually. Yeah, I think they talked about it in the episode. They. They mentioned that a few times. >> Max: I have a few po apps from attending some, um, web three events. >> Nicholas: Is it. What. What is a poap? >> Max: Proof of attendance protocol. >> Nicholas: Okay. >> Max: Kind of like a check in, I guess. It's like an NFT check in.
>> Nicholas: It's like an NFT version of those, like, bracelets you get when you go to the Bowery ballroom. M. Yes. >> Max: And it's neat. Instead of it on your wrist, it's on the blockchain. >> Nicholas: Okay. >> Kristy: What's the treatment for a Po app? >> Max: What? >> Kristy: Said, what's the treatment for a Po app? >> Max: I don't know what you're asking me. >> Kristy: It sounds like a medical condition.
>> Max: Oh, you have to attend an event. >> Elissa: Caffeine. >> Nicholas: All right, so here is our show description. Ooo out of Ordinary is a web three marketing podcast in which we bring forward the marketing people in web three that are building amazing communities,
brands, and products. Whether you are a marketer looking to transition into web three or just want to test the waters and see what's out there, who are already working for a web three company or you are a startup founder, this podcast is for you. Our main goal is to bring forward case studies from which you learn how they done it, get best practices, and implement that at your company. So neat stuff. I do like the artwork for this show. I think it's really cool how it's like a podcast
artwork within a podcast artwork, kinda. You guys know what I mean? I don't know. I think it's neat. Um, any rate, interesting stuff. So with that out of the way. >> Kristy: Just, uh, a little side note here. I did Google, since we were finished, that up there is a swat cast, and it looks pretty cool, too. So I'm gonna look that one up, too. >> Nicholas: There you go. Even when we're making up podcast names, we're finding interesting podcasts.
>> Elissa: Who says I make them up? >> Nicholas: Oh, fair enough. But you did. You did say you opened your business textbook at one point, your marketing textbook, and hit the glossary, so I figured that was the one. Nope. Okay, Nicholas, clip that. >> Kristy: Clip cut out. >> Nicholas: Yeah. Cut it, cut it, cut it, cut it. Cut.
At any rate, chaos. I'm just going to sample audio of Elissa, uh, from a different episode, saying the words, you're right, and I'm just going to put it there. It's not even going to be a clean cut. It's going to be your. The beginning of another word. Right? >> Elissa: Multiple different episodes. >> Nicholas: It's. It's per syllable even. >> Elissa: I don't know that I've said you're right. Ever on this podcast. >> Nicholas: You just did just now.
40 chess. Okay, on, uh, that enchanting note, thanks for playing, everybody. You got so close to a perfect game, but then again, you didn't. So let's see if next week will change that. Thanks for playing. Thanks for listening to everybody listening. So, yeah, bye.
