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Planet Ava with Mrs. Ava Perrine & Khamare Shields
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Planet Ava, Reckless Abandon! Productions LLC,
In Da Mix Radio (WIDM-Db)
Sunday, June 21th, 2026 at 5:00 pm
Happy Father’s Day from the team here at Reckless Abandon! Productions, LLC!
Tune in with Ava Perrine & co-host, Khamaré Shields, Station Manager of DESU Radio/WDSU "The Hive", as we welcome back to the planet our special guests:
Kenneth Briscoe Jr., the Program Director of Delaware State University’s Center for Urban Revitalization and Entrepreneurship (C.U.R.E) buildings on Loockerman and Division Street.
And Prof. Perrine’s Spring 2026 Session of her Fundamentals of Public Relations Class at Delaware State University.
You're locked in to the greatest station in the minutes radio.
SPEAKER_04Hello and welcome. You've crash landed on Planet Ava here on In the Mix Radio. I'm Ava Perin, and with me today is my ever ready co-host.
SPEAKER_09What's going on, everyone? It's your boy, Kamar McShields, aka the Total Package. Might be the first time I'm hearing this name, I promise. It will not be the last.
SPEAKER_04Come on, I'm so excited. It's last in the glasses.
SPEAKER_09We got some students in here, and we also have a very special guest from one of the organizations we've been partnering with over the last year and a half or something. Yeah, absolutely. But let's get everybody introduced. Can everyone please introduce themselves?
SPEAKER_03Hi guys, Ariana Hudson, also known as Lene, also known as Lene Talks Back. How you doing? How you doing? Hey.
SPEAKER_02Hey everyone, it's Jaden Morton.
SPEAKER_01Hi, everybody. My name is Ariana Dixon. Hi guys, I am Lenny Campbell.
SPEAKER_05Hey everybody, I'm Ken Briscoe.
SPEAKER_04And so what we've got going on today is uh the last air classes. So uh what we decided to do is incorporate my students from my media management and my fundamentals of PR class, and I don't know, maybe one or two people from Cinema and Society. I don't know. Um but the point is we are uh incorporating our students into our podcasts, sort of killing multiple birds with one stone. And of course, we have our special guest, uh Mr. Ken Briscoe, representing the cure.
SPEAKER_09Yep. So Miss Parina essentially turned this into networking day. So the cool thing about the cure is uh we've been able to do two different podcasts there, both for Planet Ava. The one we did first was on Division Street with Miss Adrian Anderson, and then the second one we did was on the one with Lockerman with Dr. Grouchy, Greg Watkins, and Chuck Jigsaw Kriegmer of allHipHop.com. So, Mr. Briscoe, can you tell us what you do for the cure, please?
SPEAKER_05Oh man, that's a that's a big question. Uh, I'm the program director, uh, as well as handle a lot of the digital experiences for the cure. So those things overlap. So everything from web to some of the marketing, email marketing, social things of that nature, all the way down to programming, figuring out what programming is gonna be great for our membership, what programming is gonna be great for our community, uh, and what programming was gonna be great for the local entrepreneur community as well as DSU students. So it's kind of a broad role, but I really enjoy it.
SPEAKER_04Gotcha. So the thing about uh The Cure, and we sort of like want to explain to people that is a project that is a uh actually the brainchild of Dr. Michael Cass, who's the dean of the College of Business. And it was something that's been in the making for what seven to nine years. It involved a brand new building being built, the one on Division Street, and then of course the renovation, restoration of the historic building on State Street. Come to find out, I learned we also are the landlords for the dog going to the coffee coffee shop, right?
SPEAKER_09DSU downtown in the building essentially.
SPEAKER_04Absolutely. So since we are you sort of the you're the program director for the cure on State Street only or for both sites, for both locations. So really break it down for us. Um, what what's the impact of of the cure on the community? What's the goal, the purpose of it?
SPEAKER_05Okay, so the cure is uh an acronym for the Center for Urban Revitalization and Entrepreneurship. Uh and with entrepreneurship really being uh a path to success, a path out of poverty, a path to economic empowerment, sustainability in our communities, both locations provide services, resources, and opportunities for not just business professionals, but those who are currently entrepreneurs or aspiring to become entrepreneurs. Um we provide programming as in workshops, coaching. Um, there's a lot of virtual programming as well as in-person programming. We realize in-person programming is absolutely necessary to engage folks. I mean, I like to be taught one-to-one as well as watching videos on YouTube. So our impact is one that we're starting to see uh start to flourish. Uh as we start to grow our membership, we have a bunch of different membership tiers. We start to see folks who are just thinking about entrepreneurship coming to utilize the space. Um, it's also a co-working space. Let me say first and foremost, both locations are co-working spaces. So you don't have to be an entrepreneur in order to take advantage of the cure. You can just pop in and do work. I mean, I like working in different environments, it can be very inspiring. But as we start to see some folks move their businesses from something they may have done in their home to looking to secure funding to have a brick and mortar, looking to turn it into a viable digital business, or maybe looking to figure out how they diversify their revenue in order to grow and scale. The cure has resources not just from our membership, but from local professionals as well as some of our corporate sponsors to help fund this organization at both locations to serve the community. So the impact, we're really starting to see people talk about the cure and mention the cure and partner with the cure. Right now, um, SBDC has an office in both of our locations. Uh, they execute programming as well, like how to start a business, which is coming up, I believe, May 8th. So, if and all these things are absolutely free. So, as a member, you can take advantage of all of these services. And even as a non-member, we have public-facing services. So, a lot of the things that you may want to take advantage of from resources, training, workshops, marketing workshops, web development, things of that nature, they're made available just by entering into the doors of the cure, but hopefully becoming a member.
SPEAKER_09Absolutely. One of the things that I liked when we've been able to tour both the buildings is how the cure has kind of found ways to focus on different forms of podcasting. And each location has two sets of like podcasting rooms. You have the one direct room where it's maybe like one person just doing something intimate, and you have like two to three other rooms, whether it's a big conference room where you can have like two to four people in there, you can have the conversations, they even have different uh layout meeting rooms where people are able to use a smart TV, they can use their iPad, they can draw, they can have interconnects and things, and that really works when you're trying to reach the community and show them. This is basically right across the street from you in your backyard. It's a wonderful resource, and especially both are relatively close to both the Dover Public Library and down the street from Kent General. What's one of the major reasons why the locations for the cure was integral to where they were built and how it will build the Dover community as a whole?
SPEAKER_05Well, I think what is really great about the locations is they're entrenched in the communities where it's needed most. They're entrenched in the communities where these resources are not readily accessible. And if something isn't readily accessible, it doesn't become an opportunity. Ideally, what you want to do is increase the ceiling of what's possible in communities that don't get the focus when it comes to technology or business resources and entrepreneurship. So the State Street location is located right in the heart of the hood, so to speak, um, which makes it walkable, right? So now if you're interested or even curious about what entrepreneurship could look like, there's no challenge, hurdle, or friction for you to get that experience. You can literally walk a block or two and you're right there in the cure taking advantage of all the technology you just talked about. Bacherman is kind of centered more on a business district, but it's also walkable. So having those two locations within walking distance of each other gives you the ability to experience everything we'd like you to experience to show you what's possible.
SPEAKER_04So we have um, I mean, Delaware State is really doing um uh a good job of expansion in a strategic way. We have uh The Cure, we have the Schwartz, uh, which is the only theater. I need to reiterate that. We're the only theater in the city of Dover and the surrounding areas.
SPEAKER_09And time for the ones that we have on campus as well.
SPEAKER_04Well, I mean theater, actual movie theater kind of deal, and it has those historic aspects to it. Um, we of course have the downtown DSU campus, um, which is, you know, walkable kind of deal. So it is important for us to be able to tie all these things together. Um, I also want to say that we have the wonderful, I and and gosh, I know they probably changed the name multiple times, but it was the Center for Entrepreneurship right here on campus, right, in the BOA. And a lot of students are not aware of that, and this is why we talk about it. So that you're aware that these services to if you've got your your t-shirt business or whatever it is, whatever you got going on, you can go there and connect with people who will help you create a business plan, uh, will help you connect with all kinds of people in the community, such as Mr. Briscoe and so forth. So the services are here on this campus also, and then you can maybe maybe make your way to the game. Yeah, exactly. Make your way, hopefully via the uh DSU van if it's on time. I'm hearing sometimes that can be. But I'm not throwing shade at them because I know they provide a service. Exactly. So whatever, because it's a party, you know you're gonna get there. Right. You know, so so think about how you're gonna get downtown to connect with the folks from the cure. Um, potential uh opportunities for students.
SPEAKER_05Uh tons. Tons. So um we're always looking for support from an internship perspective. Um, we need resources across the board. I was talking to Kamari a little while ago about some uh some podcast support. We're looking to launch a podcast, uh, as well as there may be some administration opportunities, um, opportunities from a learning perspective to learn alongside of other um professionals who do this for a living. I think it's a great opportunity for you to network. Uh, I've run into students just having conversations and then realizing that wait, I have a skill set that you're in need of. Can we chat? Uh and a lot of times when you're on campus, you don't get to interface with a lot of the local professionals who need your services and are willing to uh to bring you on for support. So I think there's great opportunity there. As well, I think it's a great place to dream, right? When you when you get into the cure and the workspace is inspiring, both locations, the workspace is very inspiring. Uh it makes you think you can do almost anything. Sometimes leaving your dorm room or leaving the library or leaving a working space on campus, just changing your environment really opens up your mind to what the opportunities and what what possible what's possible. So I like when students attend. Um, I like seeing students' eyes get wide when we start talking about not just the money they can make, but just achieving the dreams that they have, whether it comes for a professional career or a business career. So um, yeah, I love it when students come there. And I like engaging with the students because you have a lot of talent that some of our old heads just don't have anymore, or actually haven't um haven't gotten proficient at. So where you're spending time and hours perfecting what you're doing, maybe through podcasting or things of that nature. We have some things like a mortgage and other stuff that we gotta work to pay for. Right. So, you know, having you in our community is far more valuable than you would know. Absolutely.
SPEAKER_08Oh, yeah, question.
SPEAKER_10Okay, yes. I have a couple questions because I wanted I'm in um need of launching my first podcast.
SPEAKER_04Say your name again, so folks.
SPEAKER_10Linda Campbell. And then I'm also known as uh cover by Campbell. There you go. Oh, okay. No, I was wondering we're gonna be.
SPEAKER_09Oh, okay, okay. Well, that also, and she's been all over social media recently, that's why we've been meaning to tap back into you for DESU radio. Okay. We'll make sure we get up after this.
SPEAKER_10Yes, I wanted to ask you about like the you said there's a lot of learning opportunities for students. When we were talking about Riverside and things like that, and when you're trying to launch a business, do you guys offer editing opportunities for students to come in and learn more about how to launch it and how to make it, you know, look clean and precise for their business?
SPEAKER_05Absolutely. So right now we're running a 13-week marketing cohort um that anybody who's a member can join, and we teach you how to not only build like your signature offer, which is absolutely necessary for a podcast, all the way to using social media and building a landing page that takes your customer from becoming aware of who you are to turning into a paying customer or a subscriber or an advocate. So we we surveyed our community when we first launched, and it seems that most uh new or even existing entrepreneurs are looking for support in uh in marketing. Like everybody feels like I already got the thing, now I need to know how to get people to buy it. But uh we've recognized that most of our students and business owners um are not as prepared as they think they are to market.
SPEAKER_06Right, right.
SPEAKER_05So one of the things we do is we try to prepare everyone who's interested in marketing their business, product or service is building the perfect offer and then finding the perfect audience and then giving you the perfect process of launching your particular uh product or service. Um so these cohorts pop up uh frequently. Uh we're also adding some kind of one-day workshops and looking to build in more virtual programming because being in Kent County, we recognize we have a definitely a captive audience, but there are so many people who come into Kent County as either students and then leave either after the summer or go home because this is only where they work. Right. So building in that virtual programming that parallels with our in-person courses is a priority for us right now.
SPEAKER_03Yes, and I always I have a question also. Hi, my name is Ariana.
SPEAKER_05Hi, Ariana.
SPEAKER_03So I am like, like just like Lyndon, I am trying to watch my podcast called You know Lene Talks Back. And I was wondering when it comes to internships, like, can you speak more about that? Like when it comes to your internship, what are the hours you're looking for, what age group are you looking for, like what certain soft skills or the process of getting into having an internship with the cure?
SPEAKER_05So I can tell you not to rain on your parade, but our internships are pretty far and few between. They're pretty much being built on the need. Um, but as we start to build more programming that will require internships, like we are looking to launch a podcast specifically for entrepreneurs in Kent County, hopefully in partnership with DSU. Um, we will be looking for interns to help support it. Uh, I would love to launch, uh, we did some programming a little while back on how to launch your first podcast and really teaching people some of the not just technical skills, but marketing skills in order to stand out from the rest of the podcast. Again, I would love to be able to bring some folks who have editing skills in to help some of those entrepreneurs who are ready to create the content but just don't have the skills or bandwidth to edit. So there may be some opportunities for us to build programming where you can showcase your talent around editing or we have in editors who could help you. That all remains to be built out as we take this summer to turn into our planning and growth. Um, we've been in existence over a year and a half, and now we have momentum. Now we see what people want, and now we can start building programming to not only support our potential customers as an entrepreneur or business professionals, but those who have services to provide. So, you know, kind of meshing all of that together to create an overall value for the community is where we're going.
SPEAKER_04So you've got a cool thing that you guys do uh one of your programs on Fridays. Oh, yeah, the First Fridays. Right, right. Tell us about that.
SPEAKER_05I really love First Fridays. So First Fridays is this convergence of business professionals, uh, art, and local catering and networking all in one room. So it's about two hours every first Friday from 5 30 to 7 30, and we find a local cater who makes something delicious. We find a local artist or artists, artists, they put their work up in the cure and we let the cure become a gallery for 30 days. So if you are featured at first Fridays, your artwork will stay in the cure for 30 days for people to see it. Of course, our business professionals come because everybody likes to eat, uh, and the food is normally really, really good. Uh and it's just a really a good way to almost feel like, almost like family. Uh, because once you walk in, you realize you're in a place where what you need exists. And the conversations usually extend past the 7:30 because everybody's excited to be there. Uh, and it creates a good awareness about what the cure is, what the cure offers, and the kinds of people who come and take advantage of it. So every first Friday, meaning like tomorrow, which would be May 1st. May first. May 1st, we have a First Friday. Um, we have a local artist. She, I'm hopefully she'll come through because one of our artists couldn't make it this this month, but we do have a great artist. She's always there to support us, so she'll be there, and there's always going to be food. And you get to hear and see the location, you get to see what we offer, and we have some really good networking opportunities to come out of it. I've met a lot of people who've come just for one first Friday and they come back the next month because they they build some connections and relationships.
SPEAKER_09Do you have anything you want?
SPEAKER_02On Mike.
SPEAKER_01Um I could think of something.
SPEAKER_02I can go ahead and ask. Alright, okay. Alright, so um, I major in wildlife management fisheries. So this is kind of conscious of your name. Uh Jaden Morton. Okay, so this is kind of like different for me, but um from this class I've gathered, like, I kind of want to take my passion for hunting and show other people like what I can ex what I experience and like my love for the outdoors. So I've started a YouTube channel. Um, it's my dog's name, so Stormy Dog Outdoors. And uh I made a profile picture with her and whatnot. I just kind of wanted some advice uh from you while you're here on like starting my YouTube channel and gathering content and like maybe like an editing platform and whatnot to use on the standout from other people.
SPEAKER_05That was a lot of questions, everyone.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_05Um, all right, so let me ask you what's the goal of your uh YouTube?
SPEAKER_02Honestly, like just share my passion for outdoors. I don't plan on like wanting to make a whole lot of money off of it, but just something for me to like look back and you know show my future kids or uh memories, kind of yeah.
SPEAKER_05Um so if you want to stand out, so are you are you looking for the general public to support you, or are you looking for just your friends and family to support you?
SPEAKER_02Uh I start out friends and family, I'd say, but maybe eventually grow to the Okay.
SPEAKER_05Um, I know this is gonna sound crazy, but one, I would tell you to just start. Have you recorded any episodes yet?
SPEAKER_02I have not done anything on YouTube. I have a couple uh photos up on Instagram right now, and I'm doing like short reels here and there that I need to edit.
SPEAKER_05All right, so there is a couple of ways to go about it. One, I would probably think about three things you want everyone to learn every time you create an episode.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_05Those would be what some people call them content pillars. Okay, but you want to stay within those three things, right? Because the algorithm now shows people what they're interested in. And if you have those three things and you stay on these three things, people will start to know you for those three things. Okay, and that starts to build the brand. That's the first. Second, or reps. I would probably tell you you want to create 30 to 40 videos before you start taking an analysis of who's looking at your videos and what they're doing. Okay, that'll help you determine what's working and what isn't. Now I know this gets really crazy, but the people that do the crazy stuff are the ones that actually win and don't just create videos and say, I'm doing another video. Every one of your videos create a look sell spreadsheet or Google Sheets and document what the engagement looks like, document what the views look like, document the title, all of that. So you can go back and see what works. So after you've done 30 to 40 videos, you'll find three or four content types that stand out. Triple down on those. Because that's what people are looking for, and that's what's drawing people to your video. The other side of that is anywhere you can go to talk about your YouTube video, talk about it. Everything you have, so there's this idea that personal brand and business brand are separate. I say they're not anymore. Right? Because when you tell me about your business, then I see you as the business. So your personal brand and your business brand now intersect. So anything you can do to talk about your YouTube channel, drive people to the channel, continue, continue to continue. And finally, in at the in any one of your videos or even in your comments, I would ask you to have a call to action. Okay. Here's the reason why. The people who are truly, truly interested in what you're talking about will take the next step in engaging with you. Subscribing is one thing, but every time you post, your subscribers don't necessarily see it. Even with notifications, they don't necessarily see or at their computer or know that you've posted another video. If you can capture their email address and send them the link to the video every time you launch a new one, then the people who are truly, truly interested will come back and watch. And ultimately, if you can drive engagement by sending an email, you'll be able to truly tell if your videos are catching fire. And you'll build an audience that is excited about what you're creating. That's the early steps. I wouldn't get into paid ads, I wouldn't do any of that until I perfected those three points, knew exactly who was interested, and then I would use paid ads to get more people like that.
SPEAKER_04Awesome. Thank you. Nice. That's what I'm talking about. Valid information.
SPEAKER_09Yeah, speaking of valid information, so we are halfway through the episode. So you guys are tuning in to play it Ava here on Indemix Radio. Um, since we're at this point, I do want to give a special shout out to Dr. Grouchy Greg Watkins. And this is the reason why. When we recorded the episode with all hip hop in the cure building, within the next day, mind you, Dr. Grouchy is a great friend of the station, but he's a big proponent of pushing those who he sees, especially when it comes to Professor Parine, because she was the one who coined that he was going to get his doctorate way beforehand. He got it, and now she's on the way to get hers. But after we finished filming that episode that day, which quick shout out to Zaire Woods and uh Nathan Goen, our people in the chair, because Nathan helped me coordinate all our audio situations for the day and make the sound spreadering tears. The day after we finished recording an episode, Dr. Grouchy sent me Mr. Briscoe's information. It's like, Kamari, there is a podcast position possible. I think you should be on it. You need to send this man your info. So within the next two weeks, I made sure to get my uh resume updated and my portfolio updated. And Mr. Briscoe and I have been paying telephone tag ever since. Today is the day we're first setting eyes on each other. But I'm appreciative of that because thanks to Ms. Perrin allowing me to be who I am, I was in the right position at the right time. But because Dr. Grouchy liked all the work that we've been able to do this year in the last few years with the hip hop summit, whenever they come, they show us love. He he looked out, and I appreciate him for that. Because I would not have had this wonderful opportunity without being president, but without the people there to help me with it.
SPEAKER_04Let me say this real quick. So, um this thing called school is is uh difficult and easy both at the same time. And so, for example, you're getting A masterclass from our guest today. I wasn't sure how the day was gonna play out and knew what I wanted to do and so forth. So when I say to you, just show up. If you don't show up, then you can't benefit from it. So you guys are gonna, you're not gonna have to go through me, you're not going through Kamari. You're meeting the guy, you get his contact information, and so forth and so on. He puts you on with other people. He was not the man I talked to last night. So the man that who actually is the what is he, the site director. And so I called him because that's who we met when we visited. And so Mr. Threet couldn't make it today. And so he says, Well, I said, Oh, well, okay. And he says, Well, I got I got Mr. Briscoe, he can probably make it. Let me call him. And so now we're expanding our network. But if you're not in the room, if you're not at the table, if you're saying for instance, you decided to bypass coming to class today, the last day of class, you could have been doing anything. But you all came, the rest of those folks came, the folks who came before, you decided to take that opportunity. Well, let me go ahead on the class, see what she's talking about, and all this other kind of stuff. This is the last opportunity. I'm trying to hear her mouth, and who knows what's gonna happen. Opportunities happen. So all we gotta do is the opportunities happen, we just walk through the door. So you all follow up. Make sure you follow up with him. Yes, ma'am. Okay, cool.
SPEAKER_09Absolutely. So we are almost out of time, but we have enough time to do this. Um, we're gonna do what's in your headphones, aka playlist of the week. So, quick shout out to Mr. Patrick Gloucester, the head of In the Mix Radio and the R Report magazine, which by the way, from when we're recording this, the next issue of the R Report should be hitting the Books a Millions store across from us within the next week or so. Hopefully. So we're looking forward to getting our hands on that. Yep. We also want to give a shout out to Commissioner Smack the Indie Plug. Because thanks to her, the show got named for what it is. But the way this works is we like to ask all our guests what's currently in their headphones. Let it be music, musicals, audiobooks, documentaries. If it's in your headphones, we're gonna hear from you.
SPEAKER_04It doesn't have to be the entire playlist, just one or two songs that you've been grooving to lately.
SPEAKER_05So, Mr. Briscoe. Oh, I gotta go first.
SPEAKER_04What's your headphones?
SPEAKER_05Man, let's see. What's been currently in my headphones? Um, I'm a big hip-hop fan. Okay. Um, shout out to Grouchy. Grouchy and I have been friends for a long time. I love the dude.
SPEAKER_04Awesome.
SPEAKER_05Um, I've been listening to a, I don't know, this might be beyond or before your time. Anyone ever does a storm? Ooh. So I've been listening to a lot of um fabulous mixtapes, like back in the day. A lot of freestyle mixtakes from Fabulous on YouTube. Shout out to YouTube Audio, like just got clued into that. Awesome. Um so I've listened to that. Um, Good to Great is a book I've been listening to. Repeatedly Make It Stick is another book I've been listening to. Um and I listen to NPR. Uh I really like NPR in the morning, kind of informs me in about 15, 20 minutes of all the things I should be paying attention to. But yeah, I've been I've been on the Fabulous thing for maybe about a week now. There's just there's just so much music out there that I forgot about.
SPEAKER_04And NPR, actually, just real quick, uh, we have WDDE, which is our NPR station, right here on this campus. Okay. And Professor Parks used to work there. She absolutely, that's how we got her. And like she and I made each other's acquaintance, and uh, because she was the the I guess the the director of marketing or something like that, raising money uh for them. And so then I visited with one of my classes and we connected, and then she was looking for opportunities because you know our president, and I don't mean Dr. Allen, I mean our president, does not like NPR.
SPEAKER_09And then we also met with uh Tom Burns as well. Absolutely, absolutely.
SPEAKER_01Recently I've been listening to Resentment by Beyonce and just that whole album. Okay, and yeah, I don't know, it's something about that album, and it just gives me a good feeling.
SPEAKER_10Nice. I've been listening to a lot of Beyonce too. I was gonna say the same thing. I've been listening to a lot of Beyonce lately. I don't know what it is. Trying to get through these last two weeks of class has been crazy. So yeah.
SPEAKER_03I definitely think for me also, I've been kind of listening to my um Jack's era. I think it took me back to, and no, it took me back to sitting in the car with my dad because you know, me and dad need to catch up. So just in the car ride as a kid, you know, him listening to Jack Quees, all about us, just listening to like in it it'd be the words that are in the music for me. It'd be the message. So listening to him, I knew that I could get him through his music. I knew that he was playing this to be to like trying to vent in a sense. So me listening to them type of music, it just like I can connect to him on a different way. So lately, yes, so lately I just been all jockeys.
SPEAKER_02Uh for me, one of my favorite country artists, he just dropped a new album, Songs About Us, uh Jason Aldean. Nice. So I've been trying to go through his album and listen to all those songs. I've caught myself not listening to as much music. I don't know why. Me too. But um I I guess just the time of year. I don't know. But yeah, I've been trying to get through his album and listen to that. Nice. Festival?
SPEAKER_04No, I I gee, I've been listening to my audiobooks. I I need to listen sometimes to things that just totally calm me down. And so that's when I go to my cozy murder mysteries. Now, you would think a murder mystery would not calm me down, but you know, like midsummer murders, that kind of thing.
SPEAKER_09And so that's crimes is a genre for a reason that a lot of people of a certain variety tend to like. Vicariously, yeah. Certain variety. Hey, I'm not throwing I'm not throwing sticks out, I'm just saying. Uh, for me, let me think. Uh, one of my favorite artists, Charlie Pooth, recently just put out his album, Whatever's Clever. I've always enjoyed Charlie's music street um from the original album he put out to now. I also like the way he's very technical in how he makes it. He reminds me of, and actually, this is the professor that got me into him, Dr. David Tolly, because he explains music to people the same way Dr. Tolly does, right? And it really is enjoyment when you see someone like, oh, wait, I know someone who's exactly like this, and watching his technique, he even made TikToks of like, what if I use this sound and I translate it this way, and then you see the building process of it. Someone who's a tech that really gets to me, and it's a way for fan engagement for people who want to get into it. So that one I've been enjoying. Um, and then in terms of my local friends, uh, my friend Rugerio just put out an album, Burn the Bookmark. My friend Vintage put out his first full album, Mr. Poindexter. He dropped that right around Valentine's Day. Um, and then my friends Kenny Avenue, Eli J, FTP Karma, who recently got sworn in for one of the uh fraternities here at DSU. I forget which one. I have to be checking.
SPEAKER_10You're not gonna remember.
SPEAKER_09Well, that well, the reason why is because I'm gonna tap in with him later so we can talk about it. But yeah, I always try and shout out my local friends because my job here as a radio personality, once I hear the music, I'm gonna put it out there and then it opens up the business pathway where hey, I shout you out. Now I can maybe work some MC events for you, you shout us out here at the radio so that we're all interconnected and like the cure, we bridge gaps. Super. Yep. Well, with that said, we're currently all out of time. But this has been a great conversation. I'm hoping everyone has been able to pick up some of the gems that Mr. Briscoe brought us because that is just ear candy, and it definitely helps for networking for it. But as always, tags. Where can people find you? Where can people tap in with you? Where can people reach out to you for more information?
SPEAKER_05Um, one, you can always send me an email through the cure team at the D S U Cure. Excuse me, team at dsucure.org. Um, but you can always find me on Instagram, every all of my handles Instagram, um, LinkedIn, they're all either Kenneth Briscoe or Ken Briscoe pretty easy to find.
SPEAKER_04And that's B-R-I-S-C-O-E.
SPEAKER_05Awesome. B-R-I-E-B-R-I-S-C-O-E. So LinkedIn is Kenneth Briscoe Kenneth with two names. Yep. And uh Instagram is Ken Briscoe threads is Ken Briscoe. All of the uh regular social handles are just Candy Briscoe.
SPEAKER_04Nice Lennon? Yours? Oh, we're doing that? Oh, I'm sorry, I thought it was him.
SPEAKER_10No, no, no, no, no, everybody. You guys can find me on Instagram at cover by campbell, all one word, and then LinkedIn is my name Lyndon Campbell, L-Y-N-D-E-N-C-A-N-P-B-E-L-L. Um, TikTok is also covered by Campbell. Nice.
SPEAKER_01Um, you guys can follow me on Instagram at underscore Ari Vanessa with two A's and two I's.
unknownNice.
SPEAKER_03You can find me on Instagram at Lenae Talksback All Together, and Lenae is L-A-N-A-E. And then you can find me on TikTok at love for lenae dot underscore.
SPEAKER_02Nice. Uh I have Instagram. It would be Jaden, J A Y D O N underscore 77, and then uh Stormy Dog Outdoors. So it's S-T-O-R-M-Y D-O-G underscore outdoors. Awesome.
SPEAKER_09Again, we want to give a quick shout out to Zaire Woods and Nathan Going, our guys in the chair. They're graduating seniors. We thank y'all so much for it. Um, as always, you can follow me at gamergod514 on Instagram. All my stuff will be updated later to match my total package branding. You can find me at Total Package Entertainment on both Instagram and Facebook. You can also find me on LinkedIn at Kamari Shields Total Package for Professor Parine. You can find her on LinkedIn, Ava Perine, Instagram, Ava 0821, Facebook, Planet Ava, uh, Instagram, also Reckless Abandoned Productions. All her stuff will be updated to Reckless Abandon going forward. And as always, please make sure y'all follow DESU Radio on all social platforms. That's Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, uh, LinkedIn, you name it, we're on it. That's it. Thank you, Mr. Briscoe. Thank you, everyone. Thank you, Miss Prie, for having us on.
SPEAKER_07As always, and before we go, we want to give a quick shout out to all dads, to the uncles, to the granddads, goddads, and other paternal figures. And say happy father's day.
SPEAKER_08And thanks everyone just for hanging out with us today. Follow me on Instagram at Ava 0821. Are you an entertainer? Do you want to come on the show to do? Do you have something special that you do? Email me at planetava at gmail.com. Now check out Planet Ava every Sunday, live at 5 p.m. and reruns on Monday and Tuesday at 3 p.m., Wednesday and Friday at 1 p.m., Thursday at 4 p.m. and Saturdays at 8 a.m. Here on Indomix Radio with live 365. I'm Ava Perine. I'm Kamari Shields, the Total Package.
SPEAKER_00Bye for now. It's the number one station, boys in the airwave. Right here, so keep it locked. This is Indomix Radio.