Episode Details
Back to EpisodesFirst KISS Concert As A Kid & Afroman's Big Legal Win
Description
**Episode #1181: First Concert Magic & Afroman's Big Win – Stories from the Road to Redemption**
Clay Edwards takes a nostalgic trip down memory lane with one of his all-time favorite personal stories: his 13th birthday spent alone at the Mississippi Coliseum for the KISS "Hot in the Shade" tour in August 1990. With his mom in the hospital recovering from surgery and his dad dropping him off for his first solo concert experience, young Clay navigated the crowd as a wide-eyed kid. The highlight? Running into Stevie Blaze from Lillian Axe—one of his favorite local(ish) bands—who let him hang out, sit together through the show, and share stories. Clay reflects on how that random act of kindness from a rock star turned a tough day into a lifelong memory, building loyalty that still has him blasting their albums decades later. He ties it to a bigger lesson: Treat people right—especially the young fans—and you'll create fans for life. (Shoutout to Lucy on her 13th birthday too—hope the show's birthday wish made her day!)
Then, Clay jumps into the fresh headlines with pure satisfaction: Afroman's total courtroom victory against those Ohio sheriff's deputies. In a defamation lawsuit over music videos mocking their 2022 raid on his home (using his own security footage), the jury sided with Afroman on every count—no plaintiff verdict prevailed. Clay—99% pro-police but calling this one straight—breaks down why he backs Joseph (Afroman) here: the raid was botched (no charges, damaged property, even a disconnected camera and missing cash allegations), and turning it into satirical tracks like "Lemon Pound Cake" was fair game. He shares his own old-school connection: Afroman crashing on his couch back in the day during the "Because I Got High" peak, even serving as Clay's designated driver once (a wake-up call on the party life). Clay paints the scene of Afroman strutting into court in an American flag suit and white fur coat, pimping it hard, and walking out victorious. Free speech wins, bootlicker label be damned.
Full of defiance, storytelling, and zero apologies, this episode mixes heartfelt nostalgia with current-events triumph. If you love unfiltered takes on life lessons, rock 'n' roll memories, and sticking it to overreach—strap in. Still standing, still telling it like it is.