『The John Henry Soto Show』のカバーアート

The John Henry Soto Show

The John Henry Soto Show

著者: John Henry Soto
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概要

"The John Henry Soto Show" brings together two Puerto Ricans from the Bronx—John Henry Soto, a filmmaker, musician, and digital marketing expert, and George Batista, a musician and wellness expert. With humor at the heart of every episode, they ask the tough questions while exploring the worlds of creativity, wellness, and entrepreneurship. Their candid conversations offer insight, motivation, and inspiration for anyone seeking success, with a touch of Bronx flavor and wit. Tune in for stories that challenge, uplift, and entertain!

https://www.johnhenrysotoshow.comCopyright John Henry Soto Show
アート 衛生・健康的な生活 音楽
エピソード
  • Is Late Night Dead_ - May 3rd 2026
    2026/05/09
    Over the last decade, late-night television has gone through a steady financial and cultural decline. What used to be a highly profitable, mass-audience format—built on large broadcast ratings and national advertisers—has seen its viewership shrink dramatically as audiences move to streaming, YouTube clips, podcasts, and short-form social media. Major network shows have reportedly lost millions of viewers compared to their peak years, while advertising revenue for the entire late-night category has nearly been cut in half in less than a decade. The economic model that once supported big band budgets, writing staffs, and celebrity guests simply doesn’t generate the same return in a fragmented media environment.
    At the same time, the content itself has changed in noticeable ways. Many of today’s late-night hosts—Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, and others—spend a large portion of their monologues reacting to political headlines and breaking news cycles. Instead of primarily being joke-driven variety shows, they often function like comedic editorial programs, blending satire with commentary on current events. Critics argue this shift has blurred the line between comedy and news analysis, with some hosts increasingly resembling opinion journalists who filter daily politics through a comedic lens rather than entertainers focused on pure humor and escapism. This evolution has created a perception that the shows are less about variety entertainment and more about nightly commentary on the news.
    That perception has also contributed to a broader debate about tone and purpose. Supporters of modern late-night argue that satire has always reflected current events, especially in politically charged eras. But detractors feel the balance has tilted too far toward ideology and commentary, with fewer sketches, absurd bits, or lighthearted celebrity-driven comedy that once defined the genre. Even industry observers have noted that late-night’s traditional “middle ground” audience has fractured, with viewers increasingly choosing content that aligns with their political identity or personal taste on digital platforms rather than a shared national broadcast experience.
    Looking forward, the future of late-night television is uncertain but not necessarily nonexistent. The traditional model—fixed time slots, expensive productions, and broad national audiences—is clearly under pressure. However, the brand of late-night itself is already evolving into something more digital and fragmented: viral clips, podcast-style interviews, and niche streaming audiences. It may no longer be the cultural centerpiece it once was, but it could survive as a hybrid format that lives more online than on broadcast TV. In that sense, late-night isn’t disappearing—it’s being reshaped into something closer to a content ecosystem than a single nightly show.
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    1 時間 9 分
  • Taking The High Road- April 26th 2026
    2026/04/28
    Taking the high road isn’t always the easiest move—it usually feels like the exact opposite in the moment. Everything in you might want to react, clap back, or prove a point. But I’ve learned that reacting out of emotion almost always creates more noise, not more clarity. The high road is quiet, it’s steady, and yeah… sometimes it feels like you’re letting something slide. But what you’re really doing is protecting your peace and your long-term direction.
    Here’s the truth—just because something feels right in the moment doesn’t mean it is right. Emotions can trick you into making short-term decisions that leave long-term damage. Taking the high road means you’re playing a bigger game. You’re choosing self-control over ego, growth over reaction. And most people don’t have the discipline to do that consistently, which is exactly why it stands out when you do.
    And over time, it pays off. Maybe not instantly, maybe not in the way you expect—but it does. People see it. Opportunities come from it. More importantly, you can look at yourself and know you handled things with integrity. That matters. So even when it feels uncomfortable, even when it feels unfair, stick with it. The high road isn’t about winning the moment—it’s about winning your life.
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    1 時間 4 分
  • SPAM! - April 19th 2026
    2026/04/27
    There’s something oddly fitting about using Spam as the starting point for a deeper conversation about what we put into our bodies—and our lives. SPAM has become a cultural shorthand for “questionable” food, the punchline in jokes about what not to eat, yet it refuses to disappear. People still buy it, cook with it, and even celebrate it in certain parts of the world. That contradiction is powerful. It shows how something can carry a reputation while still being deeply embedded in everyday life—much like the habits, beliefs, and influences we carry without fully examining them.
    When you look past the joke, SPAM becomes a mirror. It asks: what are the ingredients we’re accepting, not just physically but mentally and spiritually? We all consume more than food—we take in ideas, conversations, media, and energy from the people around us. Some of it fuels growth, clarity, and strength. Some of it just fills space. The danger isn’t always obvious; it’s in the slow accumulation of things that don’t truly nourish us. Just like reading a label can change how you see what’s on your plate, becoming aware of what you’re feeding your mind and spirit can reshape the direction of your life.
    So the real message isn’t about rejecting SPAM—it’s about awareness and intention. If something that’s often joked about as “bad” can still hold a place on the table, then it’s a reminder that we don’t always act in alignment with what’s best for us. The goal is to close that gap. To choose better ingredients—not just in diet, but in knowledge, purpose, and spirit. Because at the end of the day, what you consistently take in—physically, mentally, and spiritually—becomes what you’re made of.
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    1 時間 2 分
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