A Drunk Math Podcast

We're Drunk Math, and You Can Too.

Hold onto your hats, folks, because this episode is going to blow your mind! Cory sits down with the one and only Winston “Winnie” Royal Steele, a 9-year-old acting phenom who’s already stealing the show at the Springfield Little Theatre (move over, Branson!). This kid’s got more talent in his pinky finger than most of us have in our entire bodies.

We’re talking photographic memory, baby voices, and enough charisma to make The Rock jealous. Winnie spills the tea on his past roles (including a duckling who was REALLY good at bullying), his future aspirations (world domination via acting, obviously), and his love for all things nerdy (comics, video games, you name it).

Plus, get the inside scoop on Winnie’s brand new talk show, “The Winnie Steele Show,” where he’ll be interviewing his dad, his granddad, and maybe even a few other unsuspecting victims!

Podcast also available on PocketCasts, SoundCloud, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, and RSS.

Leave a comment

The Podcast


Two guys, two mics, too much time on their hands. Join musicians Cory King (Springfield, MO) and Jurd Ratley (Long Beach, CA) for a podcast that’s like a public access TV show, but with less nudity and more existential dread.

About Cory King:

Cory King is a musician from Springfield, Missouri, which is a real place. He once wrote a song so catchy that it got stuck in his own head for six weeks. He had to go to a hypnotherapist to get it out, and now he can’t remember how to play the guitar. True story. He also claims to have seen a UFO, but it was probably just a frisbee. Or a really ambitious pigeon.

About Jurd Ratley:

Jurd Ratley is a musician and “philosopher” (his words, not ours) from Long Beach, California. He believes that the meaning of life can be found in the patterns of seafoam. He also believes that socks are a tool of the government. We’re not really sure what he means by that, but he seems very passionate about it. He once spent an entire summer trying to teach a squirrel how to play the ukulele. The squirrel ran away.

Each week, they’ll attempt to interview local artists, musicians, poets, wrestlers, and other “interesting” individuals who probably wandered into the recording studio by mistake. Expect awkward silences, tangents, and the kind of “comedy” that makes you question your life choices.