• Food Glorious Food, with Mara Kaufman
    Jan 28 2026

    Feeding children isn’t just about nutrition—it’s about navigating breastfeeding struggles, picky eaters, food allergies, and the endless debate over what’s “healthy enough.” Matthew, Mandy, and Pete are joined by special guest Mara Kaufman to explore the chaos and complexity of food decisions from infancy through adolescence, including the unexpected challenges that arise when your kid discovers Doritos.

    What we discussed:

    • How do parents navigate the breastfeeding versus formula decision when faced with unexpected challenges like tongue and lip ties?
    • What strategies work (and don’t work) for dealing with picky eaters and food refusal?
    • How do you balance nutrition ideals with the reality of kids who want nothing but chicken nuggets and mac and cheese?
    • What’s the deal with school food allergies, and how have restrictions around peanut butter and other allergens changed the classroom dynamic?
    • How do food struggles shift as kids become teenagers and gain more independence over their eating choices?

    Additional topics:

    • The comedy and reality of kids as “little food criminals” who share and trade despite strict school policies
    • How grocery costs and privilege factor into conversations about “ideal” nutrition.


    The TV show Matthew mentioned is called The Yard (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Yard_(2011_TV_series)) and is available on Amazon, but sadly now for a price.

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    59 mins
  • Holiday Magic, Santa Truths, and New Year's Traditions
    Jan 28 2026

    When the power goes out mid-recording, the show must go on. We were half way through a recording session with Matthew, Mandy, and Mandy’s friend Megan, when Matthew’s power went out, taking all they had already recorded with it! But the show must go on, and Mandy and Megan continued their holiday conversation, diving into the realities of managing winter celebrations as a retail-owning parent, the mixed emotions around Santa, and how New Year's Eve evolves from disappointing bar nights to meaningful family traditions.


    Questions We Explored

    • How do you balance holiday excitement with preventing post-January 2nd crashes?
    • When is the right time to stop lying about Santa, and how do kids handle the truth?
    • Can Santa disappointment teach children important lessons about coping with unmet expectations?
    • What's the strategy for managing presents across multiple holidays and generous relatives?
    • How do New Year's traditions shift from young adult parties to family-centered celebrations?


    Additional Topics

    • The bookstore owner's fate: Working retail through the entire holiday season
    • The great Elf debate: When one kid refuses to watch the family favorite
    • Evolution of gift-giving: From big ticket items to experience-focused spending
    • Hanukkah present strategies: Every night versus every other night
    • The Top Chef New Year's competition and New Year's Day open house brunch tradition
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    12 mins
  • From Diapers to Destinations: Surviving (and Loving) Family Travel
    Jan 21 2026

    Fresh off a trip to Italy with his three-month-old, Matthew is riding high on new-parent vindication: his baby slept through both transatlantic flights while chaos reigned around him. But Pete and Mandy are quick to remind him that the easy travel window is fleeting—and they've got the battle scars to prove it.

    In this episode, the trio swaps stories from the parenting travel trenches: Mandy's solo flight where her toddler baptized her in apple juice, Pete's infamous Baby Bjorn blowout that left his spouse covered in diarrhea for an entire red-eye, and the critical lesson both stories teach (pack. extra. clothes.). They also dig into the logistics that actually matter—Delta's sky bassinet service, the art of traveling light with maximum redundancy, and how to accept help from the secret community of parents who recognize that desperate look in your eyes.

    The conversation shifts to daycare transitions and the bittersweet process of learning to let go—from the anxiety of those first phone buzzes to the unexpected heartbreak of receiving an adorable video and wishing you were cuddling instead of working. Mandy shares a cautionary tale about a babysitter who took her joking "no fun tonight" instruction completely literally, leaving her son unable to play Batman.

    And in a hopeful coda, Pete offers a glimpse of the future: traveling with adult children is genuinely wonderful. They carry things. They pay for stuff. They're just... friends on a trip. Something to look forward to, parents—even if 14 years feels like a long wait.

    KEY TOPICS

    • Matthew's Italy trip triumph: baby Penn sleeps through international flights
    • The sky bassinet: Delta's bulkhead bassinet service for infants
    • Mandy's juice-soaked solo flight with toddler Casey
    • Pete's legendary diaper blowout / Baby Bjorn disaster
    • The golden rule: always pack extra clothes (Matthew packed three changes for 24 hours)
    • Navigating travel logistics with strollers, wheelchairs, and baby gear
    • The daycare transition: learning to trust and let go
    • When babysitters take instructions too literally
    • Traveling with only children: Mandy's solution of bringing Casey's best friend
    • The promised land: traveling with adult children
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    49 mins
  • Frustration & Letting Go: When Parenting Pushes Your Limits
    Jan 14 2026

    Parenting tests your patience in ways nothing else can. When your toddler refuses to cooperate, when schedules fall apart, or when you're running on empty—how do you handle the frustration without losing yourself in it? In this episode, we explore the uncomfortable truth that parenting will frustrate you, and what it means to actually let go instead of just suppressing your feelings.

    What We Discussed

    • Why does parenting frustration feel different from other kinds of stress in our lives?
    • What's the difference between suppressing frustration and genuinely letting it go?
    • How can we create space for our feelings without letting them control our reactions?
    • When is frustration actually a signal that something needs to change versus just part of the deal?
    • What practical tools help in the moment when you're about to lose it with your kid?
    • How do we model healthy emotional processing for our children while still being human?
    • Why does accepting that parenting will be frustrating sometimes actually make it easier?
    • What role does self-compassion play when you inevitably handle a frustrating moment poorly?
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    44 mins
  • Halloween & Homecoming
    Jan 7 2026

    Halloween as a parent means navigating everything from costume choices to candy negotiations, while also managing your own memories of trick-or-treating past. But when does healthy caution cross into helicopter parenting? And how do modern safety concerns compare to the anxieties our parents faced?

    Matthew, Mandy, and Pete explore the evolution of Halloween traditions, from the Wild West days of unsupervised neighborhood roaming to today's trunk-or-treats and group text coordination. The conversation shifts to homecoming culture, examining how high school social events have transformed and what pressure teens face around these milestone moments.


    Questions We Explored:

    • How has Halloween changed from our childhoods to parenting in the present day?
    • Are trunk-or-treats replacing traditional trick-or-treating, and what does that shift mean?
    • When does protective parenting become overprotective hovering?
    • How do we balance teaching stranger danger without creating unnecessary fear?
    • What role should parents play in teen social events like homecoming?
    • What happens when kids opt out of traditional milestone events altogether?
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    54 mins
  • Parenthood (The Movie) Part 2
    Dec 31 2025

    Mandy and Matthew complete their deep dive into Ron Howard’s Parenthood, focusing on the film’s most quietly devastating subplot: Frank Buckman’s relationship with his troubled youngest son, Larry. This conversation explores how the movie tackles parental favoritism, the limits of unconditional support, and the painful moment when a parent realizes they can’t fix their adult child—but might get another chance with an unexpected grandchild.

    The discussion examines how Larry’s gambling addiction mirrors more familiar addiction narratives, why Frank’s silent recognition that “it’s never going to change” hits so hard, and how Jason Robards delivers a masterclass in understated acting. Mandy and Matthew also reflect on the film’s refusal to wrap everything up neatly, the fleeting nature of those perfect family moments, and what it means to accept that our children will blame us for things—sometimes legitimately, sometimes as a necessary step toward their own growth.

    Questions We Discussed:

    • How does Frank’s enabling relationship with Larry mirror the dynamics of families dealing with addiction?
    • What does the quiet scene where Frank tells Cool “your father’s not coming back” reveal about accepting parental failure?
    • Why does the film refuse to give us a neat resolution, and what does that say about real parenting?
    • How does the “roller coaster” metaphor apply to both the euphoric ending and the inevitable downs to come?
    • What did Frank actually mean when he told his sons to “make your mark,” and how did each son interpret it differently?
    • How does early parenthood create the illusion of total control, and when does that illusion start to crack?
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    32 mins
  • Parenthood (The Movie) Part 1
    Dec 24 2025

    What happens to your sense of self when you become a parent? In this raw and reflective conversation, Mandy and Matthew share their experiences of identity transformation, relationship dynamics, and the profound disorientation that comes with a new baby, all through the prism of the classic 80’s movie: Parenthood.

    From the fantasy of parenting versus the reality of sleepless nights to the invisible mental load that often falls on mothers, this episode explores the emotional and practical challenges that accompany early parenthood. The hosts discuss how becoming parents changed their relationships with their partners, the struggle to maintain individual identity while caring for an infant, and why the phrase “sleep when the baby sleeps” feels impossible when your mind won’t stop racing.

    Questions we explored:

    • How does becoming a parent challenge your sense of identity and who you thought you were?
    • What’s the difference between the fantasy of parenting and the reality of caring for a newborn?
    • Why does the mental load of parenting often fall disproportionately on mothers, even in equitable partnerships?
    • How can partners navigate different parenting styles and instincts in those early weeks?
    • What does it mean to grieve the loss of your pre-parent self while also loving your new role?
    • Why is “sleep when the baby sleeps” such frustrating advice for new parents?
    • How do you maintain your relationship with your partner when you’re both exhausted and touched out?
    • What support systems actually help new parents versus the advice that falls flat?
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    53 mins
  • Parenting Through the Holidays: Navigating Family Traditions and Expectations
    Dec 17 2025

    The holidays bring joy, chaos, and complicated family dynamics. This episode tackles the real challenges parents face during the season: balancing traditions with your own family's needs, managing expectations from extended family, and deciding which holiday customs matter most to you. From religious observance to gift-giving philosophies, we explore how to create meaningful celebrations while setting boundaries that work for your household.

    Questions We Discussed

    • How do you balance your own family traditions with extended family expectations during the holidays?
    • What happens when grandparents have different ideas about gifts and celebrations than you do?
    • How can parents navigate religious holidays when family members have varying levels of observance or belief?
    • Should you maintain childhood traditions that no longer align with your values or beliefs?
    • What's the best approach to setting boundaries around holiday visits and activities?
    • How do you handle the pressure to create "perfect" holiday experiences for your kids?
    • When is it okay to skip certain holiday traditions or obligations entirely?
    • How can you communicate your parenting choices to family without causing conflict?



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    50 mins