In 1938 When I Sat Next to The Philco
Upcoming & Ongoing Events
Starting Date: Sunday, February 23, 2025
Ending Date: None
AI and Wealth Management – On-Demand
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Starting Date: Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Ending Date: Sunday, March 23, 2025
The Truesdell Military Portfolio – Seven Companies Profiled
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, March 21st, 2025 at 6:30 pm - All Reservations Taken
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, April 18th, 2025 at 6:30 pm - Reservations Available
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, May 16th, 2025 at 6:30 pm - Reservations Available
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Tunnel to Towers Benefit Concert
The Truesdell Companies was the primary sponsor of the Eirinn Abu benefit concert for Tunnel to Towers, which was held on February 28th at the Circle Square arena in Ocala, Florida.
https://t2t.org/
Podcast Personality
Paul Grant Truesdell | Founder & CEO
J.D., AIF, CLU, ChFC, RFC
The Truesdell Companies
The Truesdell Professional Building
200 NW 52nd Avenue
Ocala, Florida 34482
212-433-2525 - Switchboard
paul@truesdell.net - General Email
Websites
truesdellwealth.com
Truesdell.net
PaulTruesdell.com
youtube.com/@truesdellwealth
Find The Paul Truesdell Podcast also at:
Apple | https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paul-truesdell-podcast/id1586024560
Spotify | https://open.spotify.com/show/2BYDLetiMboIGRFPjIkglJ
Transistor | https://thepaultruesdellpodcast.transistor.fm/episodes
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-grant-truesdell?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BUuNTfp3aQRyLPjGywquQRQ%3D%3D
Rough Notes
# The Golden Age of Listening: From Radio to Podcasting
I remember sitting cross-legged on the hardwood floor of our living room, my ear pressed close to the fabric-covered speaker of our Philco radio. The year was 1938, and across America, millions of families just like mine gathered around these wooden boxes each evening as if they were hearths, warming ourselves not with flames but with stories that painted pictures in our minds.
There's a certain magic in listening that has been somewhat lost in our visual age. When I closed my eyes and heard the crackle of footsteps through autumn leaves on "The Shadow," I wasn't seeing some director's vision of what those leaves looked like—I was seeing my own. The rustling was the same sound I heard walking home from school through Mrs. Henderson's yard. The danger felt as real as my own racing heartbeat.
Ecclesiastes had it right all along: "There is nothing new under the sun." What we call podcasting today is just radio reborn in digital form. In the early 2000s, before the term "podcast" was even coined, I was broadcasting audio over the internet using a program called Icecast. Those were the dial-up days, when downloading a large audio file might take hours—streaming was the only practical solution. We were pioneers of sorts, though what we were doing wasn't fundamentally different from what Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre had done decades before.
The term "podcasting" initially described something very specific: downloadable audio content delivered through RSS feeds that could be played on portable devices like the iPod. Today, however, the word has been stretched beyond recognition. Now Netflix, Hulu, Paramount+, Disney+, HBO Max, and Amazon Prime are all lumped in with true audio podcasts. This linguistic drift frustrates me immensely. Words have meaning, and when we dilute them, we lose precision in our conversations.
The difference between audio and video isn't just technical—it's profound. When I record my podcast, I'm not showing you anything. Instead, I'm creating a framework upon which you build your own visual interpretation. Two listeners might hear the same episode and walk away with completely different mental images, each shaped by their own experiences and imaginations.
Remember when Tom Cruise played Jack Reacher? In Lee Child's books, Reacher is 6'5" and built like a tank. Cruise, talented as he is, stands at 5'7". The disconnect between the character readers had imagined and what appeared on screen created a cognitive dissonance that many found jarring. The later TV series, casting Alan Ritchson—a man whose physicality matched the character's description—was received much more warmly.
This is why I believe audio has a unique power. When I speak into the microphone, I'm not constraining your imagination—I'm liberating it. I'm providing dots for you to connect, encouraging you to "think about it." Those three words have become my mantra. I don't want to tell you what to think; I want to give you the ingredients to form your own thoughts.
Joe Rogan's podcast is a perfect example of this phenomenon. He's become an American institution, a figure who will likely be remembered for generations to come. But I firmly believe there's a different experience when you only listen to Rogan rather than watch him. The visual elements—facial expressions, studio setting, body language—can sometimes distract from the pure exchange of ideas.
There's also a practical efficiency to audio that video can't match. You can listen while washing dishes, folding laundry, commuting, or exercising. Try doing any of those while watching a screen! This multitasking capability isn't just convenient—it allows ideas to percolate in your subconscious as you go about your day.
That's why I rarely do video for the Paul Truesdell podcast. I'll use video when necessary for promotion or instruction, but I believe audio is worth ten times what you get from video. And you certainly shouldn't be watching video while driving a car!
So as you listen to this podcast, I invite you to close your eyes occasionally. Let the words paint pictures in your mind. Connect those dots. And most importantly—think about it. Just think about it.
Starting Date: Sunday, February 23, 2025
Ending Date: None
AI and Wealth Management – On-Demand
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Starting Date: Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Ending Date: Sunday, March 23, 2025
The Truesdell Military Portfolio – Seven Companies Profiled
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, March 21st, 2025 at 6:30 pm - All Reservations Taken
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, April 18th, 2025 at 6:30 pm - Reservations Available
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Friday, May 16th, 2025 at 6:30 pm - Reservations Available
Casual Cocktail Conversation at the Stonewater Club
In-Person – Reservations Required – Text or Call 352-612-1000
“or” use the Contact Form: https://truesdellwealth.com/events/rsvp
https://truesdellwealth.com/events
Tunnel to Towers Benefit Concert
The Truesdell Companies was the primary sponsor of the Eirinn Abu benefit concert for Tunnel to Towers, which was held on February 28th at the Circle Square arena in Ocala, Florida.
https://t2t.org/
Podcast Personality
Paul Grant Truesdell | Founder & CEO
J.D., AIF, CLU, ChFC, RFC
The Truesdell Companies
The Truesdell Professional Building
200 NW 52nd Avenue
Ocala, Florida 34482
212-433-2525 - Switchboard
paul@truesdell.net - General Email
Websites
truesdellwealth.com
Truesdell.net
PaulTruesdell.com
youtube.com/@truesdellwealth
Find The Paul Truesdell Podcast also at:
Apple | https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paul-truesdell-podcast/id1586024560
Spotify | https://open.spotify.com/show/2BYDLetiMboIGRFPjIkglJ
Transistor | https://thepaultruesdellpodcast.transistor.fm/episodes
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-grant-truesdell?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BUuNTfp3aQRyLPjGywquQRQ%3D%3D
Rough Notes
# The Golden Age of Listening: From Radio to Podcasting
I remember sitting cross-legged on the hardwood floor of our living room, my ear pressed close to the fabric-covered speaker of our Philco radio. The year was 1938, and across America, millions of families just like mine gathered around these wooden boxes each evening as if they were hearths, warming ourselves not with flames but with stories that painted pictures in our minds.
There's a certain magic in listening that has been somewhat lost in our visual age. When I closed my eyes and heard the crackle of footsteps through autumn leaves on "The Shadow," I wasn't seeing some director's vision of what those leaves looked like—I was seeing my own. The rustling was the same sound I heard walking home from school through Mrs. Henderson's yard. The danger felt as real as my own racing heartbeat.
Ecclesiastes had it right all along: "There is nothing new under the sun." What we call podcasting today is just radio reborn in digital form. In the early 2000s, before the term "podcast" was even coined, I was broadcasting audio over the internet using a program called Icecast. Those were the dial-up days, when downloading a large audio file might take hours—streaming was the only practical solution. We were pioneers of sorts, though what we were doing wasn't fundamentally different from what Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre had done decades before.
The term "podcasting" initially described something very specific: downloadable audio content delivered through RSS feeds that could be played on portable devices like the iPod. Today, however, the word has been stretched beyond recognition. Now Netflix, Hulu, Paramount+, Disney+, HBO Max, and Amazon Prime are all lumped in with true audio podcasts. This linguistic drift frustrates me immensely. Words have meaning, and when we dilute them, we lose precision in our conversations.
The difference between audio and video isn't just technical—it's profound. When I record my podcast, I'm not showing you anything. Instead, I'm creating a framework upon which you build your own visual interpretation. Two listeners might hear the same episode and walk away with completely different mental images, each shaped by their own experiences and imaginations.
Remember when Tom Cruise played Jack Reacher? In Lee Child's books, Reacher is 6'5" and built like a tank. Cruise, talented as he is, stands at 5'7". The disconnect between the character readers had imagined and what appeared on screen created a cognitive dissonance that many found jarring. The later TV series, casting Alan Ritchson—a man whose physicality matched the character's description—was received much more warmly.
This is why I believe audio has a unique power. When I speak into the microphone, I'm not constraining your imagination—I'm liberating it. I'm providing dots for you to connect, encouraging you to "think about it." Those three words have become my mantra. I don't want to tell you what to think; I want to give you the ingredients to form your own thoughts.
Joe Rogan's podcast is a perfect example of this phenomenon. He's become an American institution, a figure who will likely be remembered for generations to come. But I firmly believe there's a different experience when you only listen to Rogan rather than watch him. The visual elements—facial expressions, studio setting, body language—can sometimes distract from the pure exchange of ideas.
There's also a practical efficiency to audio that video can't match. You can listen while washing dishes, folding laundry, commuting, or exercising. Try doing any of those while watching a screen! This multitasking capability isn't just convenient—it allows ideas to percolate in your subconscious as you go about your day.
That's why I rarely do video for the Paul Truesdell podcast. I'll use video when necessary for promotion or instruction, but I believe audio is worth ten times what you get from video. And you certainly shouldn't be watching video while driving a car!
So as you listen to this podcast, I invite you to close your eyes occasionally. Let the words paint pictures in your mind. Connect those dots. And most importantly—think about it. Just think about it.