Stuff You Should Know Colbert Challenge

American podcast and video series

Stuff You Should Know
Stuff You Should Know logo
Presentation
Hosted by
  • Josh Clark
  • Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant
Linguistic communication English
Updates Triweekly
Length twenty–60 minutes
Production
Audio format Stereophonic/MP3
No. of episodes 1400+
Publication
Original release Apr 17, 2008 – present
Provider iHeartRadio
Website stuffyoushouldknow.com

Stuff You lot Should Know , often abbreviated as SYSK, is a podcast and video series published by iHeartRadio and hosted by Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant. Since debuting in 2008, the podcast is consistently ranked in the Summit 10 on iTunes and is one of the almost popular podcasts in the world, beingness downloaded millions of times each month.[1] [2] On October 3, 2018, the podcast started releasing additional brusk episodes titled Short Stuff, where they cover topics that don't warrant the length of a full episode.[3]

The podcast, which releases episodes several times a week, educates listeners on a wide variety of topics, frequently using popular culture as a reference giving the podcast comedic value.[iv] A number of other types of media, including a TV evidence and books, have been spun off past the podcast.

Josh & Chuck [edit]

Stuff You lot Should Know is hosted by two podcasters who showtime met while working equally senior editors at HowStuffWorks.com, Josh Clark[5] and Charles Wayne "Chuck" Bryant.

Clark was a host of the show since the get-go, and before Bryant took over the co-hosting duties Clark was joined past several other editors.[four] [half-dozen] The chemistry between the two was immediately apparent, and Bryant became a permanent co-host. [7] [8] Bryant started working at HowStuffWorks near a calendar month subsequently Clark.[9] They had desks kitty-corner beyond from each other and would oftentimes pop up to share their inquiry.[10] They became good friends within a week.[9]

Josh M. Clark [edit]

Josh Malcolm[11] Clark was born July 15, 1976.[12] [13] [14] He grew up in Toledo, Ohio[half dozen] and was raised Catholic,[fifteen] attending a Catholic school.[16] He studied at the University of Georgia, only left with vi classes left to start a newspaper.[17]

He moved to Marietta, Georgia as a teenager.[6] Clark's father's proper noun is Mal,[18] an HVAC engineer.[xix] He had a sister named Karen, who died in 1992 in a car accident when Josh was sixteen years quondam,[20] [eighteen] and two brothers-in-constabulary,[21] 1 of whom is also named Josh.[22] In 2010 Clark lived with his then-girlfriend Umi (who is half dozen months younger than him[23]) in midtown Atlanta;[half-dozen] he proposed on August 13, 2011[24] [25] and the couple has since married. The couple parents a small dog named Momo.

He is a erstwhile smoker,[26] drinks a lot of coffee,[26] and is an amateur mixologist.[27] His hero is Muhammad Yunus.[28] His favorite books include 1491 and 1493 past Charles C. Isle of mann which he frequently quotes and/or references in the SYSK podcast. Josh is too a fan of The Simpsons, Firefly, Dollywood, Quentin Tarantino[eight] and shares an analogousness with his cohost Bryant for the band Pavement.

He attended Sprayberry Loftier Schoolhouse[6] and studied history and anthropology at the University of Georgia.[5] [29] [thirty] [31] As a youth interested in the paranormal, he wanted to report parapsychology at Knuckles University.[32] Also as a child, he was an avid reader of Uncle John's Bath Reader, as mentioned in many podcasts, and he jokingly cites Uncle John's Bathroom Reader every bit the source of the majority of his noesis. This admiration was eventually reciprocated when UJBR mentioned SYSK on their website and had one of their employees feature as a guest on SYSK's Barbie doll podcast.[33]

Afterwards college he pursued a career in journalism,[vii] working as "a cub reporter" in Henry County, Georgia,[34] and was the founding editor of The Washboard Weekly, an "edgy tabloid" in Johnson City, Tennessee.[6] [9] Information technology went out of business due to a lack of advertising.[6] [9]

Before joining HowStuffWorks in 2007[6] [35] he was a cocky described factotum who held many jobs.[26] He had a paper route, washed dogs, and held "jobs that involved shovels."[26] Before recording his get-go episode in 2008, Clark had never listened to a podcast,[thirty] and didn't know what i was.[36]

Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant [edit]

Charles Wayne[28] [xi] Bryant is always introduced on the show as Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant, merely fans often refer to him as "Chuckers."[37] Born March 15,[38] [39] 1971,[14] Bryant was raised Baptist[16] and played church league sports,[40] although his "abiding struggle with [his] religious upbringing" has been "well documented over the years."[41]

Bryant grew upward in DeKalb County, Georgia but his family lived in "rural Mississippi since the dawn of time,"[42] also as Tennessee. Chuck is as well part Choctaw Indian.[43] He attended Redan elementary school where his male parent was the main[44] and graduated from Redan High School.[6] He earned a bachelors degree from the Academy of Georgia with a major in English.[17] His female parent, Dianne,[45] was also a teacher.[46] He has a brother named Scott[47] who is iii years older.[48] His sister Michelle, who is six years older,[48] is married to Karsten South. Heckl, a Marine Corps Full general.[49] [50] His uncle, Ed Bryant, is a sometime Republican fellow member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Tennessee. Bryant once appeared on the cover of Guideposts mag.[51]

Bryant attended the Academy of Georgia[6] where he studied English.[31] Afterwards college, he took classes in screenwriting at New York Academy's film school and then moved to Los Angeles for four years.[six] He has as well lived in New Jersey.[52]

Bryant is married to Emilie Sennebogen,[27] and in 2015 the couple adopted a daughter, Carmine Rose, who shares a birthday with Clark.[53] [54] As a self-described "crazy animal person," he has multiple pets.[55] He plays the guitar in an "old man band," called "El Cheapo."[27] [30] Humorist John Hodgman is a "dear friend."[56]

He is the author of six screenplays,[6] including i most a Southern Baptist church called "Sweet, Sugariness Spirit,"[9] merely did not find success in that field.[9] [57] [36] While in Los Angeles, he was a production assistant on Tv set commercials, a few indie movies, and music videos, which he says helped with the TV version of Stuff You Should Know.[57] [36] He was hired at HowStuffWorks later a friend got a job at that place, and submitted the get-go act of a screenplay as a writing sample.[seven]

Podcast [edit]

History [edit]

The podcast was launched on April 17, 2008, with Clark as the solo host. Bryant made his debut a calendar month later May 13, 2008.[9] Bryant became the permanent cohost on July 15, 2008.[9] The podcast, which was named past Clark,[6] began every bit an try to re-purpose some of the written content on HowStuffWorks.com.[8] [58] Clark had never listened to a podcast before he recorded his starting time episode in 2008.[4] [xxx] Jesse Thorn has held the proper name up equally a model of how a podcast should be named maxim "information technology's like daring the listener non to listen to it."[59]

The podcast has steadily grown in popularity since its introduction and has made appearances at events including S by Southwest and Comic-Con. On October 26, 2017, Stuff You Should Know released their 1000th episode. Several episodes have been recorded during live events, including two during their Earth Bout of Canada in September and October 2014.[60] While in Canada they too participated in the Northwest Podcast Festival,[61] at SXSW in 2011 and 2012,[62] and New York Comic Con in 2012 where they recorded their discussion entitled "Fourth dimension Travel: Science Fact or Science Fiction?"[eight] [63]

During the 4th of July weekend in 2011, there was a Stuff You Should Know About America marathon on Sirius XM radio.[64] It featured previous episodes, as well equally a live segment with Wyatt Cenac and Hallie Haglund of The Daily Show also as Joe Randazzo, Joe Garden and Jill Morris of The Onion.[64] Their 420th episode was on medical marijuana, although this was reportedly a coincidence.[65]

In 2011, the podcast added "Bonus Videos" to the podcast feed. These consist of humorous sixty second videos where Clark and Bryant antipodal about subjects they covered on previous podcasts while doing a variety of random activities (playing checkers, getting fitted for a adjust, going to a dr., driving through a auto wash). As they speak, the scene changes repeatedly to something completely different, though their chat continues uninterrupted as though nothing had happened. These clips accept also aired during commercial slots on Science and appear on their YouTube channel.

There is i unaired episode on animal detectives that they hope will never be published.[36] They take repeated a topic three times. They revisited the topic of Murphy's Law in 2011 later first doing it in 2008. As one of their first episodes, it was under 6 minutes in length. They also accidentally repeated a podcast on customs. The first time was in 2010 and the second was in 2016.[66] In July 2018, they released an episode on recycling as an update on their first 1, recorded over a decade ago.[67]

On November vii, 2018, Josh Clark created a podcast called The Cease Of The Earth with Josh Clark, a 10-episode series that discusses what dangers prevarication in humanity'southward future.[68] As of 2017[update], their office and studio was in the Ponce City Market in Atlanta.[2] and their studio is slightly larger than a broom closet[ane] and features "kooky" items listeners have sent in, including wedding invitations and photoshopped picture show posters with Clark and Bryant'southward faces on them.[ii] The office has a large landscape depicting the formation of an idea, a research library, and giant question mark-shaped briefing table.[two]

Format [edit]

The podcast, which was the 2d on HowStuffWorks,[six] has been described every bit the "heart and soul of the operation,"[30] with the "well researched" episodes cover a variety topics from the fields of "scientific discipline, history, urban legends, and pop culture, with the occasional conspiracy theory thrown in for skilful measure out."[eight] Clark and Bryant take a conversation well-nigh the given topic such that, by the end, listeners have a "basic working knowledge of that subject."[viii] Clark has said they are on a "never catastrophe quest to explain admittedly everything there is on planet world and beyond."[69]

Their "biggest hits" include episodes on Spam, hangovers, tipping in restaurants, cheese, Barbie, and pinball.[30] The topics that get the greatest response from listeners include expiry and grieving,[30] and episodes that received "less enthusiastic feedback" include shows on homelessness/addiction, Tourette's Syndrome, and transgender bug.[8] Episodes are commonly around 45 minutes in length, although for more than in-depth topics the show occasionally runs long every bit an hour or more. Initial episodes were much shorter in elapsing, often less than x minutes.

1 of the reasons the hosts believe the show has been so successful is that they are "definitely not experts" in the myriad subjects they explore, just are instead "just guys who enjoy research and [are] very curious."[30] Their formula "is part self-deprecating humour, part infectious wonder and role self-discipline to go their carve up ways and exercise all their own inquiry and reflection before they get to the studio."[30] They ofttimes attempt to surprise one another with their research,[8] [36] and practice not accept a script or a time limit before they sit downward to tape.[half-dozen] [thirty] Likewise, they do non rehearse beforehand.[ii]

Most episodes terminate with listener mail service, although at that place is an occasional segment known as "Administrative Details." Listener mail debuted on November 25, 2008, in the episode named "How Albert Einstein'due south Encephalon Worked".[70] On that episode, they called it "Correction Time." The first time it was known equally "Listener Mail" was on January 8, 2009, an episode that was inspired by a listener'southward email.[71] During the Listener Postal service portion of the podcast on April 11, 2013, a new jingle for the show was introduced.[72] Information technology was written and recorded by Rusty Matyas of Winnipeg, Manitoba in Canada, a musician and fan.[72] Jon Biegen, another fan who covered Matyas' band, The Sheepdogs, has produced several new jingles for the prove.[73]

The show's regular producer is Jeri "Jerome" Rowland, and she is assisted by a variety of regular guest producers, including Matt and Noel.[74] [6] [28] [75] Other staff includes Rebecca, the web producer, besides as Sherry and Joe.[75] In 2017, in that location was a staff of 35.[2]

YouTube [edit]

Stuff You Should Know too has a YouTube channel, merely stopped updating information technology regularly in 2017. Blithe shorts are released on Mondays, This Day in History videos are released on Tuesdays, and Clark's series Don't Be Dumb airs a new episode on Thursdays.[76] In addition, the pair also offers live shorts and motion-picture show reviews.[77]

In "Don't Exist Dumb," Clark explains a topic while wearing a tweed jacket and bow tie. His posture, gestures, and stilted language are intentionally uncomfortable and awkward. Each episode ends with Clark saying: "So, next time someone tells y'all [subject of video], you set them straight! And tell them Josh sent y'all."

Internet Roundup is a new video segment filmed in the studio. Chuck and Josh highlight a couple of posts found deep in the spider web that they detect interesting, entreating or amusing. In 2009, Clark and Bryant began a "curt lived" webcast.[78] [79]

Television receiver show [edit]

A total-length Stuff You Should Know TV show premiered on January 19, 2013 on the Science Channel, which was owned by Discovery Network, the then-parent company of HowStuffWorks. The show included a pilot and 10 episodes each xxx minutes in length.[80] [81] The serial was produced by production company School of Humans.

Described as the "love child of the British version of The Function and an overheard conversation well-nigh science between two reasonably informed guys,"[82] the show was about a real podcast that is set in a fictional earth. Each episode followed Josh and Chuck inside and outside the recording booth, combining the factual data of their podcast with humorous, fictional story lines that marshal with each podcast topic.[83]

The bear witness had "the attention span of a teenaged male child" and "bounces from scene to scene without explanation or sense."[82] Focus groups at the 2012 Due south by Southwest screened episodes and provided feedback for the development of the show, and its pacing in item.[eight]

The lead extra on the evidence was Caitlin Bitzegaio of the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre.[36] The shows were directed past L.C. Crowley[84] with a theme vocal and score composed by The Henry Clay People,[62] the "unofficial house band" of Stuff You Should Know.[23] Guests on the show included John Hodgman, Sarah Silverman, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Rufus Wainwright, and Michio Kaku.[85]

The show was canceled after the get-go season "due to poor ratings",[86] although each episode is made available for buy on iTunes and Google Play. It was the almost expensive pilot episode ever produced by the Discovery Channel.[8]

Outside activities [edit]

As with the other podcasts offered by HowStuffWorks, Stuff You lot Should Know has its ain blog updated daily by its hosts and oft featuring the same type of textile found in the podcasts, oftentimes with testify follow-ups. There is also both a Twitter account and Facebook folio for SYSK. Clark and Bryant were the co-hosts for the Science of Cyborgs event hosted past the Scientific discipline & Entertainment Exchange.[seven]

Microlending [edit]

Starting in 2009, subsequently doing an episode on how microlending works, the show began encouraging listeners to make loans on the online microlending site Kiva.[iv] A Stuff You lot Should Know team had raised $150,000 by the middle of 2010,[4] and more than $two.75 million by November 2014.[87] In 2009 they challenged Stephen Colbert to see whose team could raise $100,000 first[88] and they "beat the pants off of" him, reaching that goal in three months.[89]

The lending team is at present run by fan volunteers,[4] has since consistently ranked among the top five teams in terms of both donations and users. As of November 2014[update] the team ranked #vii for new users among new Kiva users, and in the "Friends" category of teams, ranked #2 for new users and amount loaned.[87]

Books [edit]

Clark and Bryant likewise present two longer and more in-depth audio programs featuring interviews and portions recorded on location available for purchase as audiobooks, which are entitled The Super Stuffed Guide to the Economy and The Super Stuffed Guide to Happiness.

The 2 podcast hosts have also written a volume with Nils Parker entitled Stuff Y'all Should Know: An Incomplete Compendium of Generally Interesting Things. The volume was published in Nov 2020 and covers a wide-range of topics including; history, psychology, pop civilization, and science.[xc] [91]

Cooperative for Education [edit]

In February 2010,[92] Clark, Bryant, and Rowland traveled to Republic of guatemala to promote Cooperative for Education, an organisation which gives textbooks to schools in Guatemala to be rented past students for a modest fee that is then deposited into an account that volition exist used to replace old textbooks in the future.[31] They produced a pair of podcasts on the topic.[92]

Trivial Pursuit [edit]

On July 7, 2021, Hasbro released a special edition of Trivial Pursuit: The Stuff You Should Know Edition.[93] The game is based on episodes from the podcast and contains categories of History, Pop Culture, Myths, Legends, & Conspiracies, Science & Tech, Humans, and SYSK Selects. These topics were chosen by hosts Josh and Chuck. Designed for iii to half dozen players, ages 16 and older, the game includes 600 questions with answers from various SYSK episodes. The game offers those stuck on questions various lifeline help such as "Stuff You Should Skip". The first player gaining each ane of the half-dozen category tokens wins.

Reception [edit]

The show is downloaded more than than 1 million times per week and is consistently on the iTunes Top ten podcast rankings,[80] [2] peaking at #1.[4] It is "ane of the most downloaded podcasts on the planet."[9] The show won the 2014 People's Voice Webby Award in the Mobile – Podcast sectionalisation.[94] and a place in Podcast Awards'south Education category.[4] At alive events the demographics of the audiences are "all over the map. At that place are some geeks hither and there, but also super absurd people, and families and kids, and former people."[95]

Entertainment Weekly chose the Tv set show in early on February 2013 as #7 for their "The Must List: The Top x Things We Dear This Week," writing, "Whether you're curious about bee colonies or weather control, Josh Clark and Chuck Bryant have the scoop."[96] The podcast has been said to cover "a truly staggering range of topics."[8]

Clark and Bryant have been described equally "hosts so lovely you may merely fall in beloved with them,"[97] and provide the show with "an everyman, conversational feel to the show — two pals sitting back and picking apart one topic afterward some other."[nine] Several couples take been brought together because of their mutual fondness for the podcast, and 1 even had a Stuff Yous Should Know-themed nuptials.[9]

They receive over 350 pieces of fan mail a calendar week.[4] [7] After two months, their Facebook page had over 10,000 likes,[4] and equally of September 2015 it had more than than 750,000. One reviewer said of it: "It is never non fun to heed to."[98]

Stuff You Should Know 'south "beautifully, beautifully done" product has set "the sound standard," according to podcast reviewers Pod on Pod. They added that the audio quality "could not be improved" on the NPR-level product.[98]

The podcast won the 2016 Webby Honour for "People's Vocalisation".[99] The podcast was the "People'south Vocalization Winner" at the 2017 Webby Awards as well as an Honoree for "Best Host".[100]

Awards [edit]

Award Date Category Outcome Ref.
Webby Awards 2011 Best Spider web Personality or Host Won [101]
2012 Best Web Personality or Host Won [102]
2012 Radio & Podcasts Won [103]
2014 People'southward Voice Winner Won [104]
2015 Apps and Software - Podcasts Won [105]
2015 People's Voice Winner Won
2016 People's Voice Winner Won [106]
2017 People's Vox Winner - Arts & Civilisation Won [107]
2017 All-time Host Won
Podcast Awards 2010 Pedagogy [four]
iHeart Radio Podcast Awards 2019 Podcast of the Year Nominated [108]
2019 All-time Curiosity Podcast Won [109]
2019 Most Bingeable Podcast Nominated
2020 Best Podcast of the Year Nominated [110]
2022 Podcast of the Yr (Socially Voted Category) Nominated [111]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Ho, Rodney (September ane, 2016). "Podcasts replacing radio for many, especially millennials". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved September 6, 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Huseth, Grace (June 14, 2017). "Intown is home to popular 'Stuff Yous Should Know' podcast". Atlanta Intown. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
  3. ^ "Short Stuff: Grandfather Clocks" (Podcast). iHeartRadio. Oct 3, 2018. Retrieved March 21, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d due east f g h i j m Glaser, Mark (June eleven, 2010). "How Josh & Chuck Made 'Stuff You Should Know' a Hitting Podcast". PBS. Retrieved November 14, 2014.
  5. ^ a b "Near Josh". HowStuffWorks. Retrieved November 14, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d east f g h i j k l chiliad n o p Rankin, Bill (Dec 27, 2010). "Atlanta duo's podcast in meridian 10 on iTunes". Atlanta Constitution-Journal. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j thou Grady, Lora (July 22, 2012). "Stuff You Should Know Does Comic-Con on its Way to Science Channel". Big Picture Large Sound. Retrieved Feb 20, 2015.
  8. ^ a b c d east f g h i j k Rankin, Bill (December 28, 2010). "'Stuff You lot Should Know' grows up". The Daily Comet. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  9. ^ Josh Clark. Live show in Boston, question and respond period. October 28, 2016. Wilbur Theater.
  10. ^ a b Joseph, Debra (June 2, 2015). "Chuck Norris' Birthday (and Other Historic Events) (March 10) / This Day in History #49". Retrieved July 18, 2015.
  11. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (August 28, 2008). "What Are Smart Mobs?" (Podcast). Retrieved December 31, 2014. July 20th, 1969, exactly 5 years and 360 days before my birth.
  12. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (June 5, 2014). "How the Space Race Worked". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved December 31, 2014. July 20th, 1969, exactly 5 years and 360 days earlier my nativity.
  13. ^ a b Josh Clark and Chuck Bryant (December 22, 2014). A Very SYSK Christmas (YouTube). Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  14. ^ Josh Clark and Charles West. "Chuck" Bryant (December 24, 2009). "How Christmas Worked". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved January v, 2015.
  15. ^ a b Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (October 30, 2014). "How Haunted Firm Attractions Piece of work". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved Dec 23, 2014.
  16. ^ a b "Charles W. Bryant & Josh Clark: celebrity supporters of the Amazon Institute". The Amazon Institute. November two, 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2021.
  17. ^ a b Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (November 3, 2009). "Can you lot remember being born?". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Retrieved May 25, 2015.
  18. ^ Josh Clark and Charles West. "Chuck" Bryant (September 24, 2015). "Geothermal Free energy: Earth'southward Gift to Mankind". Stuff Yous Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  19. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (Dec 1, 2017). "Cake: So Bully. So, And so Great" (Podcast). Retrieved August thirteen, 2019.
  20. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (January 22, 2009). "How Moonshine Works". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Retrieved February v, 2015.
  21. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Due west. "Chuck" Bryant (August 6, 2015). "How Droughts Work" (Podcast). Retrieved August ten, 2015.
  22. ^ a b Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (July 27, 2010). "Why Ticks Suck". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
  23. ^ Nash, Nicole (June 23, 2011). "Stuff Yous Should Know team on Scientology, physics, and superpowers". Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  24. ^ @josh_um_clark (August thirteen, 2015). "i/10 Today's @cutecarcass and my engagement-versary. 4 years ago at New Museum Umi said yep! It looked like this:" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  25. ^ a b c d Josh Clark (March 19, 2013). Interview with Josh - Stuff You Should Know (YouTube). Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  26. ^ a b c "STG On Auction Declaration: Fortune'south Bones, Kim Gordon's: Girl In ABand, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, Stuff You Should Know, and Philip Selway". January fourteen, 2015. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  27. ^ a b c "The Ultimate Stuff You Should Know Quiz". HowStuffWorks. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  28. ^ "About Josh Clark". HowStuffWorks.com. Retrieved March 1, 2013.
  29. ^ a b c d eastward f grand h i j Gordon, Andrea (September 19, 2014). "'Stuff Yous Should Know' podcasters host two sold-out shows in Toronto". Toronto Star. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  30. ^ a b c Wynn, Ivana (February vii, 2011). "Podcast "Stuff Y'all Should Know" teaches with sound bites of knowledge". The Daily Bruin. Retrieved December 22, 2014.
  31. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (January 22, 2015). "Nostradamus: Predictor of the time to come? Not and then much". Stuff Y'all Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved Jan 22, 2015.
  32. ^ "Stuff You Should Know". Uncle John's Bathroom Reader. December 24, 2012. Retrieved September 2, 2016.
  33. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Westward. "Chuck" Bryant (March 23, 2010). "How Urban Planning Works". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
  34. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Due west. "Chuck" Bryant (June 12, 2014). "Sugar: It Powers the World". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved Dec 23, 2014.
  35. ^ Nash, Nicole (June 23, 2011). "Stuff Y'all Should Know squad on Scientology, physics, and superpowers". CBS Interactive. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  36. ^ "Hey everybody, it's Chuck's birthday! Happy Birthday, Chuckers!". March 15, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  37. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (April ix, 2015). "What'south the deal with claret types?". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved Apr 9, 2015.
  38. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Westward. "Chuck" Bryant (Dec 27, 2012). "How Dog Shows Work". Stuff You lot Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  39. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (May 6, 2014). "How Gypsies Work". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved January 5, 2015.
  40. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (January 20, 2015). "How the March on Washington Worked". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  41. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (April 6, 2017). "How Empathy Works". Stuff You lot Should Know (Podcast). Retrieved October v, 2021.
  42. ^ "I still think in the 5th grade, sitting in course when my dad (also my principal) came on the intercom and announced that "the president has been shot."". May 27, 2016. Retrieved May 27, 2016.
  43. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (Nov 14, 2017). "How the Flu Works". Stuff Y'all Should Know (Podcast). Stuff Media LLC. Retrieved Nov 21, 2017.
  44. ^ @HowStuffWorks (October 25, 2017). "Subscribe to @SYSKpodcast and allow Chuck and Josh exist your 21st century teachers! #SYSK1000 #podcast" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  45. ^ How Opposite Psychology Works, December x, 2015
  46. ^ a b Levine, Katie (January 21, 2016). "THE JV CLUB #185: LIVE FROM SF SKETCHFEST WITH VERONICA BELMONT, CHARLES Due west. "CHUCK" BRYANT & MATT NATHANSON". The Nerdist (Podcast). Retrieved February 11, 2016.
  47. ^ Josh Clark and Charles West. "Chuck" Bryant (July 21, 2015). "How Citizen'due south Arrests Piece of work". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  48. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Westward. "Chuck" Bryant (July 7, 2016). What'south with this "Cyberspace of Things"?. Stuff You Should Know. Blucora. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
  49. ^ "The "Satanic Panic" of the 1980s". HowStuffWorks. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  50. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (March 5, 2015). "How Stonehenge Works". Stuff Y'all Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  51. ^ "Hey, folks. Wanted to share some EXCITING news - Emilie and I adopted a baby!". July 20, 2015. Retrieved July 21, 2015. Hey, folks. Wanted to share some EXCITING news - Emilie and I adopted a baby! The route to parenthood has been long and winding for us and we are absolutely over the moon. So without further ado, nosotros're super pleased to introduce the newest SYSK mascot, Ruby Rose Bryant! And become this - she was born on Josh's birthday - tin yous believe that?!
  52. ^ Josh Clark and Charles W. "Chuck" Bryant (July 29, 2015). "How Racial Profiling Works". Stuff You Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  53. ^ Josh Clark and Charles Due west. "Chuck" Bryant (October 21, 2013). "How Guide Dogs Piece of work". Stuff You lot Should Know (Podcast). Blucora. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  54. ^ John Hodgman (September 24, 2014). "Judge John Hodgman Episode 177: D-I-Why?!" (Podcast). Maximum Fun. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  55. ^ a b Benjamin Ahr Harrison and Chris Bowman (September 25, 2014). "Episode 28: Phase fright, 25 year reunion, and video game anticipation with Chuck Bryant" (Podcast). Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  56. ^ "Q&A with Josh and Chuck". Retrieved December 23, 2014.
  57. ^ Randazzo, Joe (May 19, 2015). Funny on Purpose: The Definitive Guide to an Unpredictable Career in Comedy. Relate Books. p. 272. ISBN9781452135595.
  58. ^ "SYSK LIVE! World Bout of Canada". How Stuff Works. August 29, 2014. Retrieved December 23, 2014.
  59. ^ Connor, Shawn (September thirty, 2014). "Northwest Podcast Festival: Detect sex, human drama and more in a podcast". Calgary Herald. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
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External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • SYSK weblog
  • Link to iTunes listing
  • Stuff Yous Should Know on Twitter Edit this at Wikidata
  • Official YouTube channel
  • SYSK Kiva team
  • Stuff You lot Should Know: The Television receiver Show

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuff_You_Should_Know

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