• Ep. 46 (Season 4 episode 6) -When Two Old Men Start A War, Let Them Fight Themselves
    Mar 8 2026

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    Ever tried to crack jokes for a jet-lagged crowd at 10:15 pm while keeping it “family-friendly”? That’s where I start: the reality of performing on cruise ships, the odd gift of anonymity, and why first-night comedy can feel like climbing a mountain in flip-flops. From tech cues and lighting hits to crowds who truly want to be there, I share the behind-the-curtain beats that shape a set before a single punchline lands.

    Then we steer into heavier water. We talk about the bombs, the statements, and the spin around whether we’re “at war” or running an “operation.” Words matter when lives are at stake. If conflict boils down to leaders with grudges, why not make the deciders take the punches themselves? It’s a blunt idea with a point: stop drafting the world into two people’s pride match. From there, we pull up the Clintons and political memory. Love them or loathe them, they don’t just play the game; they know the manual by heart. Remembering what impeachment actually means—and what it didn’t mean for Nixon—turns out to be a lesson in how narratives get weaponized.

    We also take a clear-eyed look at the “good old days” myth and the 24-hour news cycle that turns stress into a subscription. Black History Month pushed fresh receipts into view, and that led to the BAFTAs incident where a guest with Tourette’s shouted the N-word during a Black presentation. Compassion and boundaries must coexist; if one group is asked to carry the discomfort for everyone else, that isn’t equity, it’s neglect. On a lighter but telling note, I get into the absurdity of sharing a name with another comedian, SAG rules around names, and what it means when your identity becomes a logistical problem. We close with a hard truth: a cop’s texts confessing he hates Black people more than he hates his job. Policing isn’t conscription. If contempt lives in the uniform, harm follows.

    Come for the ship stories, stay for the sharp turns: cruise life, war semantics, political savvy, media overload, race, boundaries, and how we make room for each other without pretending pain isn’t real. If this mix made you think, laugh, or argue with your own screen, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review to keep the conversation moving.


    Email - OldManisRight60@gmail.com

    www.lamontferguson.com

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Ep. 45 (Season 4 episode 5) - Stupid is Loud
    Feb 20 2026

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    Missed the halftime drama, the Olympic gold, and the NBA’s latest excuse tour? We didn’t—and we brought notes. We start with a promise: skip the empty uploads and show up with something real. That “something” spans cruise ship life, a motel horror story, and the shock of $9 syrup and $9 brioche that turns free ship meals into a fitness strategy, not just a perk. The camera says what the mirror won’t, and that truth kickstarts a fresh plan for discipline on the road.

    From there, we test the outrage machine on the Bad Bunny Super Bowl show. Are people truly mad, or are bots feeding the fire? We call out the pride-in-ignorance takes on Spanish lyrics and remind everyone that Puerto Ricans are Americans. Then we side-eye Turning Point USA’s “real American” halftime, where flames and rap verses blur the lines of taste and ideology. Pick a lane. Humor helps us hold contradictions without letting them off the hook.

    Sports fans, buckle up. We unpack Winter Olympics pressure with empathy for athletes who carry a nation’s weight, including the “Quad God” and the lessons Simone Biles already taught the world. Then it’s the NBA’s tanking problem and the myth that an 82-game season suddenly broke modern, hyper-conditioned bodies. Maybe the issue isn’t length—it’s incentives, scheduling, and training for the clip instead of the grind.

    The sharpest turn lands on HGTV’s cancellation of Nicole Curtis over a four-year-old clip with a slur and immediate regret on camera. No defense of the word—ever. But if there’s no pattern and blackmail is in the mix, what outcome actually makes society better: exile or correction with accountability? We don’t settle for easy answers. We ask for smarter ones.

    We close with a lab-made “perfect” dance that looks like a red flag on a dance floor. Data without vibe is comedy gold. Join us for candor, laughs, and a real-time stress test of our culture’s hot-button reflexes. If this mix of honesty and humor hits home, follow, share with a friend, and drop your spiciest take—we’ll read the best ones on the next show.

    Email - OldmanisRight60@gmail.com

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    58 mins
  • Ep. 44 (Season 4 episode 4) - I Wanted A Bionic Knee And All I Got Was Pickleball
    Jan 31 2026

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    A doctor looks at my X-ray and calls it a ten on the bad scale. That line sits with me as I weigh pain management, cortisone, or a total knee replacement—and what it means when the thing you love most is movement. No bionic promises, just the unglamorous truth: rehab, patience, and picking the path that gives back a little more life.

    From there, we zoom out. We talk about the latest protest shooting in Minneapolis, the gap between training and responsibility, and why people can watch the same video and swear they saw different realities. The internet’s comment sections make it too easy to forget that names are people. I’m not chasing outrage; I’m chasing clarity and decency, even when it’s quieter than the noise.

    For balance, I hit play on The Martian and remembered how good it feels when a story respects your brain. Smart filmmaking can still be thrilling, and problem-solving is its own kind of heroism. We also celebrate that golden window with kids—roughly eleven to thirteen—when conversations sparkle and curiosity runs high. And because I love TV that raises stakes, we swap notes on villains who feel truly unstoppable: Siler from Heroes, Papa Pope, Kilgrave. The ones that make heroes think harder and stand taller.

    If you’re navigating a tough choice, missing smart stories, or just want a thoughtful hang that mixes humor with real talk, this one’s for you. Stream it, share it with a friend who loves The Martian, and send your all-time scariest TV villain picks. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell me: what would you choose—manage the pain, or chase the mobility?


    Email the show - OldManisRight60@gmail.com

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    34 mins
  • Ep. 43 (Season 4 episode 3) - From Top Pick To Last Pick: Aging, Ego, And Customer Service Battles
    Jan 24 2026

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    A knee that will not cooperate, a sport that exposes your pride, and a news cycle that eats its young—this one leans into discomfort and finds the laughs hiding in plain sight. I start with a clean admission: I got J.D. Vance wrong. Giving the benefit of the doubt felt humane until his statements made that grace look naive. From there we widen the lens to the speed of modern headlines, where yesterday’s crisis turns to dust before you’ve finished your coffee. Normal used to be boring; now boring feels like a luxury.

    On the home front, recovery meets reality on the pickleball court. I talk about the sting of sliding from first pick to last pick, how competition drains the chuckles as ratings go up, and why a 14-year-old beating the world’s No. 2 player says something complicated about the sport’s accessibility. It’s humbling, funny, and a little alarming. We balance that with practical honesty about aging: the body might be well designed, but user error—diet, maintenance, denial—does plenty of damage. Also, yes, I have two irrational fears: wild eyebrows and terrible feet. Grooming is respect, not vanity.

    We also explore rule-breaking in the wild at LAX and why I’d make a terrible cop. Watching drivers treat a loading zone like their private garage reveals how entitlement scales when accountability fades. That theme runs straight into the slow death of customer service, told through a missing-package saga where receipts and common sense lose to script-reading. When businesses assume every complaint is a scam and customers assume every agent is stonewalling, trust collapses. The fix isn’t flashy: empower people to solve problems and keep records that actually prove reality.

    If you’re here for candor with bite, small stories that point to big truths, and a few quality grumbles about modern life, hit play. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a laugh, and drop a review to help the faithful nine become eleven.

    Come see the shows: tickets and details at LamontFerguson.com. Email: oldmanisright60@gmail.com. Follow at Pickleball Comedian on YouTube, Instagram and Facebook.

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    50 mins
  • Ep. 42 (Season 4 episode 2) - What If You’re Wrong Is The Only Solution
    Jan 9 2026

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    One airport hop, two road gigs, and a GPS misadventure later, I landed back home with a head full of thoughts about how we argue, how we police, and how we find our way back from the brink. A clip of a wearable airbag for seniors nudged an uneasy laugh, then the timeline yanked me into the Minneapolis ICE shooting and the wildfire of takes that followed. That whiplash became the spine of this hour: we talk about certainty, fear, and why “maybe I’m wrong” might be the only tool left that actually lowers the temperature.

    I walk through what I saw in the video and why context matters—speed, distance, training, and the limits of “I feared for my life” as a magic phrase. From there, we stress-test our own consistency. If protests you agree with are “patriotic” and the ones you don’t like are “chaos,” that’s not principle; that’s preference. Leadership tone sets behavior, and when agencies adopt a swagger that treats people like obstacles, trust evaporates. We dig into de-escalation, the difference between public safety and public intimidation, and how a single moment of contempt—telling a would-be helper “we don’t care”—erases a thousand mission statements.

    This isn’t a sermon for one team. It’s a plea for congruence and humanity in a time when the internet will only make truth murkier. AI fakes, tight edits, and outrage cycles mean your discipline matters more than ever: ask for full clips, check your instincts, and keep a little doubt alive. Then we come up for air—updates on getting back to pickleball, a blueprint for a comedy-meets-pickleball fundraiser with legit comics who can actually play, and a cultural palate cleanser on why today’s chefs look like they’re cutting weight for a title fight while I still trust the big guy who cooks like Sunday.

    If this resonates, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a rating with the one place you strongly disagree. Let’s practice changing our minds together.


    Email - Ferguson.lamont@gmail.com

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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Ep. 41 (Season 4 episode 1) - Have You Seen People?
    Jan 2 2026

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    We come back after a long gap with a swollen knee, a restless mind, and a need to say the quiet part loud. Health takes center stage, cruise burnout gets real, and we break down how racism, media bias, and groupthink twist the country, then find relief in the craft of a new hour.

    • health scares and aging knees
    • travel grind across cruise lines
    • Trump as predictable brand behavior
    • crowd consensus, reviews, and herd thinking
    • racism as monetized outrage and its enablers
    • intelligence vs noise as the real divide
    • a calmer hope for 2026


    Check out where I'll be on land in the coming months and drop me a line via the fan mail channel.



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    56 mins
  • Ep. 40(Season 3 episode 3) - Why Didn't Any of You Warn Me?
    Mar 2 2025

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    This episode takes a deep dive into our relationship with news media and its impact on the fabric of society. Join me as I recount a week of entertaining stories aboard a cruise ship, where I encounter various characters and reflect on the joy and laughter that come with performances at sea. However, the journey takes a turn as I share my experiences consuming news that left me feeling overwhelmed and bewildered.

    We engage in a critical conversation about recent political events, examining how the media portrays powerful figures and the implications of their rhetoric on decorum and civility in public discourse. With an intention to illuminate the chaotic nature of the current media landscape, I explore the necessity of maintaining decorum while holding leaders accountable for their actions.

    In contrast to the heavy subject matter, we find respite in the world of entertainment, touching upon beloved television shows and fond memories of legendary actors like Gene Hackman. The podcast encourages listeners to find humor and joy amid societal tensions, fostering an environment where empathy and understanding triumph over division. Join me in reflecting on these pressing topics and discover how we can strive for a little more decorum in our daily interactions. Don't forget to subscribe, share, and leave a review!

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    52 mins
  • Ep. 39(Season 3 episode 2) - F Dementia! and Sometimes F Pickleball Too!
    Feb 22 2025

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    Ever feel like the world is running on fast-forward, leaving you grappling with the small stuff, like a missing USB drive? Join me in this episode of "Sometimes the Old Man is Right," as I return from a 27-day hiatus, brimming with tales of everyday frustrations and the unexpected joys of pickleball. With a humorous nod to the quirks of social media, we explore how it amplifies our grievances, while I fondly compare it to the golden days of old-time radio. This episode isn't just about the lighthearted; it's a journey filled with relatable stories, including a heartfelt visit to my mom in Chino, where the realities of dementia caregiving hit home.

    Navigating the emotional terrain of caring for a loved one battling dementia, we delve into the poignant moments and struggles that caregivers face. My sister Monique's unwavering dedication to our mother's care paints a vivid picture of love and sacrifice, as we discuss the challenges and heartaches of seeing someone you cherish fade away. Amidst the sadness, the episode cherishes fleeting moments of recognition and connection, emphasizing the power of love and kindness that transcends memory loss. These stories are not just personal; they resonate with anyone who has ever walked this difficult path.

    Switching gears to the realm of sports, I share my passion for basketball, highlighting the Lakers' recent acquisition of Luka Doncic and the bittersweet farewell to Anthony Davis. With my divided loyalty between the Dodgers and the Padres, this episode unravels the complexities of sports fandom and personal history. We also ponder the future of baseball's Automated Balls and Strikes system and its potential impact on the human element of the game. Through all this, a larger question looms: Are today's youth truly better equipped with information, or are they missing the foundational wisdom of common sense? Join me as we explore these themes with humor, candor, and a touch of nostalgia.

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    42 mins