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Two Noras and a Mic

Kids & Family Podcasts

Oh hello! We’re Nora and Nora and we’re glad you’re here! From parenting and local faves to current trends and recipes, we are two Noras discussing it all with a whole lot of laughter along the way. As we raise our families in the west suburbs of...

Location:

United States

Description:

Oh hello! We’re Nora and Nora and we’re glad you’re here! From parenting and local faves to current trends and recipes, we are two Noras discussing it all with a whole lot of laughter along the way. As we raise our families in the west suburbs of Chicago we invite you to listen weekly as we dish about all the highs and lows and ridiculous amount of tomfoolery that ensue on this journey. Follow us wherever you get your podcasts as we check out new local spots, interview all sorts of interesting people, and catch up with each other! It’s like inviting two friends over to visit and catch up with without all the hassle of getting ready for company. Leave the entertaining to us and be sure to tune in for a new episode each Monday.

Language:

English


Episodes
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Calendar People

4/20/2026
Send us Fan Mail Your calendar isn’t just dates and boxes. It’s the story of your life, the mental load you’re carrying, and the one tool that can either calm the chaos or make it louder. We’re two Noras comparing notes on how we actually keep a family schedule running, from paper planners and wall calendars to shared phone calendars that everyone can see. We get specific about what works: weekly planning on Sundays, color-coding each kid’s appointments, and why school calendar subscriptions can be helpful or completely overwhelming. We also talk honestly about the exhausting dynamic of being the only person who “knows everything,” especially when kids won’t write anything down, and how a shared system can give you your brain back. If you’re searching for real-world time management, planning routines, and family organization tips, this is the kind of conversation that makes you feel less alone and more equipped. And because our lives are never just one topic, we weave in the day’s headlines and real moments too: jury duty surprises, a flock of sheep taking over a store in Germany, a pen name scandal around a bestselling thriller author, and a wild wedding story that ends with jail time. We even nerd out on the Gregorian calendar reform and the missing days of 1582, plus why the month names still don’t line up. Subscribe for more, share this with your favorite calendar person, and leave a review if it made you laugh or rethink your system. Are you team paper planner or team phone calendar? Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:45:51

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Swimsuits and Spacesuits

4/6/2026
Send us Fan Mail Swimsuit season brings out everyone’s opinions, insecurities, and oddly strong preferences, so we finally say the quiet parts out loud. We talk through what we actually wear to the pool and beach, why a bikini can feel like a full-time sunscreen job, and why cover-ups, linen pants, and rash guards sometimes do more for our confidence than any “perfect” suit ever could. If you’ve been hunting for real-world swimwear advice, we get into one-piece vs two-piece vs tankini, support and fit, and how the UV index somehow becomes the main character of family vacations. Then we take a left turn into the best kind of chaos: the basket-shaped Longaberger building in Ohio, paying “line sitters” to wait in TSA, and an ice cream dessert at Yankee Stadium that looks exactly like a chicken drumstick. We also try to wrap our heads around a theft of 400,000 European Kit Kats, because where would you even put them, and how would you sell them when everything is barcoded? Somewhere in the middle, we realize we need a refresher on space travel too, including what the International Space Station is and why people are suddenly talking about the moon again. We also share a little swimsuit history that’s wilder than you’d think, from heavy old bathing gowns to the moment the bikini got its name from Bikini Atoll and the idea of an “atomic” fashion impact. We close with our weekly highs and lows, including a broken elbow update, a small moment of not speaking up when we should have, and the joy of finding a show we can actually watch with our kids without stress. Subscribe so you don’t miss what we’re talking about next, share this with a friend who’s packing for spring break, and leave a review if our swimwear real talk made you feel a little more normal. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:35:45

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A Tisket, A Tasket, An Episode About Baskets

3/30/2026
Send us Fan Mail Coffins, AirPods, TSA, rom-com reboots, and baskets: we know, it sounds impossible to connect, but that’s exactly the fun. We kick things off with real-life catch-up, then stumble into a genuinely startling wellness trend from Japan called coffin laying, a meditation practice meant to sharpen your “gaze at life” by getting closer to the idea of death. It sparks a bigger question about what self-care is supposed to feel like, and where your personal hard lines are. From there, we go full modern-life mode: sleep routines with noise-canceling earbuds, the very real choking-hazard moment of waking up with AirPods in your mouth, and the small tech annoyances that somehow become part of daily survival. Spring break travel brings up TSA lines and airport stress, and we react to the airline comfort arms race, including United’s plan to let passengers buy a whole row and turn it into a mattress-like setup. We also squeeze in a pop culture check on the 13 Going On 30 reboot rumor and when nostalgia crosses into “please don’t remake that.” Then we settle into our main theme: baskets, not caskets. We trace Easter baskets back through spring equinox traditions, old symbols like hares and eggs, and how those stories shape what we still do with our kids today. We talk practical family traditions, why traveling makes holiday routines weird, and how switching to paintable plastic eggs can save your sanity. We also get into bike baskets, toy storage, gift baskets, Longaberger basket nostalgia, and the surprisingly dark (and likely mythic) origin of the phrase “basket case.” We wrap with a classic high-low, including a maddening Samsung beverage center pitcher fail and the peace that comes from decluttering and a quiet moment to yourself. If you enjoyed the ride, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find us. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:35:19

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Night Cap with the Noras and our Guest Dee Dee Saracco

3/23/2026
Send us Fan Mail A lot of businesses claim they’re built on community. Dee Dee Siraco actually proves it, one tray of stuffed shells at a time. We sit down in her gorgeous new event space for a Nightcap With The Noras and talk about the real work behind a successful catering business, from parish life and early fundraising dinners to feeding packed schedules and building a brand people genuinely want to support. Dee Dee shares the moment her side hustle turns into a full-time leap, how her family’s cooking culture shapes the menu, and why “Gravy Lady” isn’t just a cute nickname. We get into the less glamorous parts too: shared kitchen headaches, the growing pains of scaling, and the operational systems that prevent mistakes when orders get complex. Her partnership with Ann is a masterclass in moving from handwritten chaos to digital processes that free up time for creativity and customer care. If you’re planning a baby shower, bridal shower, first communion, book club night, or any at-home party, Dee Dee’s advice is gold: start with headcount, avoid endless last-minute changes, and stop white-knuckling hosting. Her best tip is also the simplest one: hire a server so you can actually enjoy your own home, your guests, and your food. Listen now, then subscribe, share this with your favorite host, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:38:08

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What's hAPPening?

3/16/2026
Send a text A $100 hot dog topped with caviar and gold flakes should taste like magic, right? We dig into why viral “luxury food” often lands like a regular snack, and how the internet turns menu stunts into must-click culture. From there, we zoom out into the bigger question behind the joke: when does food stop being food and start becoming performance art, and who’s paying the price for it? We also talk about restaurant prestige and the messy ethics that can sit behind it, including the Noma chatter and what it means when young chefs tolerate toxic kitchens for a resume line. Then we lighten it up with wellness trends that feel suspiciously familiar, like Viking-style retreats built on cold plunges, saunas, communal meals, and “nature as a gym” aka camp with better marketing. Finally, we get literal about “apps” and go both directions: appetizers (hors d’oeuvres vs first course, shareable starters we love, and why we’re picky about boards) and applications (the early days of Snake, today’s most-downloaded apps, how to check Screen Time, and when a website still beats an app). We wrap with our highs and lows, including roof leaks, weird prop problems, Nora shoes, and the joy of going home and feeling like a daughter again. If you laughed, cringed, or strongly disagreed with us, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:36:29

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Showers

3/9/2026
Send a text Ever notice how the smallest rituals shape a whole week? We start with pancakes and land in a smart tour of everyday choices that actually move the needle: strength training as metabolic armor, sunscreen that matters even by a window, and flossing that quietly adds years. Along the way we celebrate two back‑to‑back school galas—one a joyous dance party, the other a sleek cocktail vibe—and talk about how inclusive games like Plinko and raffles make fundraising feel welcoming instead of exclusive. The conversation then shifts to the heart: a brief Sesame Street segment where Andrew Garfield talks grief with Elmo, and why clear, gentle language helps both kids and adults. We test our attention with a New York Times 10‑minute art challenge, slowing down long enough to notice hidden initials and layered patterns in Klimt’s Woman in Gold. That practice of deliberate focus pairs with a story of radical longevity: an 82‑year‑old ultrarunner sporting a 20‑year‑old’s VO2 max and a 3:39 marathon, proof that late starts and steady habits still rewrite limits. Then we open the word “showers” from two sides. First, bathing: a quirky history from waterfalls to hand‑pumped recirculators, plus real‑world routines, hot vs cold debates, post‑workout cooldowns, and the towel systems that keep laundry from taking over your life. Second, celebrations: baby and bridal showers in a world where many couples already live together. We swap stories on registries, diaper raffles, and why a simple luncheon with a thoughtful basket sometimes beats a performative party. We wrap with highs and lows—from community wins to a mudroom makeover that de‑clutters the kitchen—and an invitation to choose presence over autopilot. If this mix of warmth, wellness, and real life made you smile, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick rating or review to help others find us. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:33:13

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Plot Twist...Part Two

3/2/2026
Send a text Ever feel like your week is choreographing a musical, hosting a gala, and dodging a turkey… all before lunch? We open with the light stuff—kid choreography hacks, bold 80s spring trends, and why buffed nails beat chips—then weave into the deeper heartbeat of the show: how to handle life’s plot twists without losing your center. A viral turkey chase in Canada turns into a story about everyday heroism, while a fast-food classic gets a quiet glow‑up that says a lot about listening and improving. From there, we get personal about food routines and that viral 30‑30‑3 idea: 30 grams of protein at breakfast, 30 grams of fiber a day, and three servings of probiotic foods. We share easy wins that actually stick—low‑sugar Greek yogurt, protein waffles, nut butters—and talk about building a pantry that saves you when mornings go off script. Then we step into the big theme: plot twists and AQ, the agility quotient. Are you the neurosurgeon, the novelist, the firefighter, or the astronaut? We compare notes on what happens in our brains when plans change, how to stay steady for our families, and where “being great in emergencies” quietly steals time from long‑term strategy. We round it out with stories that make resilience feel human: renaming stitches as “donuts” to shrink fear, the ethics of clean versions for kid playlists, and why it’s okay to send your friend the link to your romper. Movies and songs with famous twists remind us that surprise is baked into good storytelling—and into everyday life. Through it all, we keep a first‑person lens: honest, warm, and a little ridiculous, because that’s how real days sound. If this made you smile, think, or breathe a little easier, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves a good pivot, and leave us a quick review so more curious listeners can find us. What’s your AQ type—and your latest plot twist? Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:32:20

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Whoops...Plot Twist

2/23/2026
Send a text Ever plan a tidy theme and watch real life kick the door in? That’s the ride today, and it’s a good one. We open with Love Your Pet Day, a 7:07 adrenaline wake-up, and the delicate art of salvaging a morning when the dog, the kids, and the treadmill all conspire against your plans. From there we careen into a viral classic: a UPS driver outmaneuvering wild turkeys, narrating his escape with pure comedic honesty. It’s ridiculous and revealing—about work, grit, and laughing when the internet is watching. Money enters the chat with grocery store price rankings, including why Whole Foods sits high, warehouse clubs sit low, and how Target occasionally sneaks in with cheaper pantry staples. We trade practical takeaways on unit prices, store vibes, and buying only what you’ll actually use. Pop culture stirs the pot: Chapel Roan’s Grammys look and the strange allure of prosthetics for shock value, followed by a debate on American Girl’s shift toward modernized classics. We ask what made those dolls powerful in the first place—context, history, and questions that teach kids how to think, not just dress up. Connection threads it all together. New NYC supper clubs sell tickets to home-cooked dinners for strangers craving offline conversation, a post-COVID solution that feels both brave and bizarre. Our highs and lows bring the human scale back: a 126-pound Wayfair box with wrong instructions, a neighbor named Karen who saves the day, a teen’s simple “you’re a really good mom,” and a DJ friend who composes the perfect event playlist in minutes. It’s messy, funny, and full of those small moments that keep the big stuff moving. Hit play for laughter, real talk, and a reminder that the best plot twists often show up when the outline doesn’t. If this episode made you smile, share it with a friend, tap follow, and leave a quick review—what was your favorite moment? Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:35:55

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Jeans

2/16/2026
Send a text A $180 stadium burger with a literal bone, Olympic medals popping off ribbons mid-celebration, and a woman who blends and snorts her meals—this week’s ride is as wild as it sounds, and somehow it all lands on one timeless comfort: jeans. We start with the Super Bowl hangover and the kind of concession prices that make you nostalgic for a plain hot dog, then pivot to an oddly compelling launch—wild cherry Pepsi lip gel with SPF 30. It’s equal parts marketing fever dream and practical pocket win, which is exactly why we can’t look away. Sports drama keeps the energy high as we unpack an alpine crash that had us wincing and a medal design flaw that turned victory laps into repair tickets. Between empathy for the athletes and side-eyes at the hardware, there’s a real conversation about how big moments should be built to handle big emotions. Then we dive into the strangest headline on our screens: five years of nasal dining. We cringe, we question, we set a hard boundary for straws and grits. Our main thread pulls everything together: denim that fits real life. We talk about the evolution from flares to skinnies to relaxed and wide-leg, how shoes shift with hems, and why the right pair can reset your whole day. We also break down the price-to-quality gap—100% cotton, tighter weaves, and stitch density make a difference—and share practical care tips. Spoiler: your jeans don’t want a spin after every wear. Air them out, spot clean, and reserve the wash for when the “knee test” says it’s time. By the end, you’ll have laughs, fresh takes, and a smarter way to treat the hardest-working thing in your closet. If you enjoyed the ride, tap follow, share with a friend who loves their denim, and leave a quick review telling us your favorite jeans era—we’ll feature the best replies next week. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:26:40

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Pillow Talk

2/9/2026
Send us a text Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:37:31

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90s for the Win!

2/2/2026
Send us a text A cozy robe, a household mystery, and a headline you can’t unsee set the tone for a wide-open conversation that lands right where our hearts live: the 90s and the art of patience. We start with unclaimed underpants in the guest room and a family group text that gets way too real, then veer into a "chilling" cautionary tale about a port-a-potty, the rule of hovering, and why some stories go instantly viral. From there we geek out on everyday tools—erasable pens, grip grooves, and why the right pen can make or break your to-do list—and dig into hair perfume, scent layering, and how teenagers turned fragrance into a hobby. Fresh air becomes a theme when we talk about “burping” the house, a simple German habit of opening windows to clear stale air that doubles as a reset ritual. That sparks a conversation about respect and labor inspired by a couple who hid 100 toy ducks to “test” their cleaner. We call for generosity with people and discipline with our environments, then pivot to a surprisingly wholesome craze: kids trading tiny acrylic animals with “CEOs,” money guys, and security staff guarding their playground empires. The second half turns full nostalgia. We remember 90s optimism, TRL, Pop-Up Video, AOL dial-up, answering machines, and regional fashion that existed before algorithms collapsed taste. We talk TV and rom-coms, mixtapes and burning CDs, the spontaneity of walking into whatever movie started next, and how patience shaped who we are. Along the way, you’ll hear our highs and lows—disintegrating boots, a sick but recovering pup, the bliss of a long-overdue haircut—and a quiet defense of paper lists, planners, and the small tools that keep us grounded. If 90s culture, everyday productivity, and warm, funny storytelling are your jam, hit play, subscribe, and leave a review with your most vivid 90s memory. What would you bring back: the mixtapes, the answering machine, or the patience? Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:35:37

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Oodles of Pools and the most Disgusting Chip Ever

1/26/2026
Send us a text We kick off by unpacking Denmark’s approved name lists and the cultural logic behind banned or protected names. It’s part language, part legacy, part gatekeeping. We share the odd, the sensible, and the eyebrow-raising examples. From there, we shift to a case that rattles any listener with a heartbeat: a young woman pronounced dead, later found alive at a funeral home. The term “Lazarus syndrome” surfaces as a legal defense, and we explore what’s rare but real, how errors unfold, and what accountability looks like when systems fail. We recalibrate with a list of America’s favorite franchise restaurant brands—sweet surprises and coffee-led loyalties included—and then dive headfirst into a taste test catastrophe. “Old hot dog dust” becomes the phrase of the day as a $1.99 bag of novelty chips teaches a harsh lesson about product development and common sense. Beauty talk follows with “slugging,” the petroleum jelly seal that promises glow while threatening pillowcases everywhere; we trade practical tips and harmless skepticism without the hype. Finally, we wade into pools: childhood swim teams, community pool realities, adult pool party etiquette, and the modern twist of renting private pools by the hour through Swimply. It’s equal parts nostalgia and negotiation—about safety, cleanliness, time, and what counts as summer joy. We wrap with personal highs and lows: a printer saga that turns into a small win, neighborly saves that make a week easier, and the pure delight of communion dress shopping. Hit play for a smart, warm, sometimes messy tour through the rules we live by, the risks we navigate, and the comforts we chase. If this episode made you think or laugh, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—we read every one.

Duration:00:40:48

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Dresses but also Deodorant, Caviar, and 6-7

1/19/2026
Send us a text The kind of week where you fix a broken deodorant with sheer will, crawl back onto the Peloton, and somehow end up at a house party with caviar pie and pigs in blankets is exactly our tempo. We’re juggling four-kid calendars, long drives to the wrong gym, and those quiet late-night moments when a red eye and a to-do list won’t quit—and we still manage to squeeze in a laugh (or ten). We dive into everyday myths and trends that shape our lives more than we admit. SPF isn’t “hours of protection,” no matter what your sister says. A Florida baby named "Six Seven" sparks a real talk about names, identity, and how choices age. The Bears-Packers game delivers a live lesson in sportsmanship for our kids, reminding us that community often shows up when the score doesn’t. Then it’s style time: poet core gets a vote, turtlenecks earn side-eye, loafers get love, and the universal joy of dresses with pockets becomes nonnegotiable. We share fit hacks—adjustable straps for uneven shoulders—and that electric nostalgia of wedding and communion dresses, petticoats and all. Work culture is changing too. After-work happy hour is fading as hybrid schedules and sober curiosity rise, but mentorship and camaraderie don’t have to disappear. We talk better replacements—mocktails, coffee walks, bite-size gatherings that build trust without pressure. And yes, we go full foodie: Noma’s $1,500 LA pop-up and its free table for young hospitality pros, plus our own kitchen courage, trying a classic caviar pie and admitting what we liked. It’s comfort, curiosity, and a little chaos stitched together by humor, heart, and dresses that let us breathe. If this blend of real life, style smarts, and culture shifts hits home, tap follow, share with a friend who loves pockets, and drop a review to tell us your unexpected high this week. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:37:51

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That's the Ticket!

1/12/2026
Send us a text We dive into tickets—how prices balloon with fees, why scarcity makes some seats legendary, and how to time your buy without gambling away the experience. Along the way, we detour through Denmark’s street fireworks, the great pizza-and-ranch candle controversy, and a laugh-out-loud reel of rejected vanity plates that somehow says everything about the internet’s sense of humor. We get honest about family logistics and the cost of memories: when to splurge on theater, why football’s price curve stings more than most, and how digital tickets removed paper headaches but also erased the small joy of a torn stub tucked into a scrapbook. We traded hacks on picking seats, gifting shows without a physical ticket, and the pros and cons of resale roulette. Then it’s the real world of friction: red-light cameras that bill your mailbox, a passport errand that turns into a lesson in patience, and the relief when technology works as promised—like choosing movie seats in advance and breezing to the middle of the row. What ties it all together is the pursuit of the moment. Whether you’re chasing Broadway, playoff energy, or a comedian under the summer lights, the value comes from who you share it with and how present you feel once you find your seat. Hit play for wit, warmth, and practical takeaways that help you save money, save time, and maybe save a stub or two in spirit. If this episode resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves live events, and leave a quick review—what’s the one ticket you still want to score this year? Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:37:23

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Ringing in 2026!

1/5/2026
Send us a text The holidays are over, the house is quiet, and the batteries—literal and social—need a recharge. We open the door on that in-between mood: the relief of wrapping paper cleared, the small panic when a favorite tool (hi, Dyson) dies, and the surprising joy of a new coat, fresh socks, or a perfect iced tea cup that makes winter feel a notch warmer. From there, we zoom out. We compare reading goals to the comfort of nightly word games and design a plan that doesn’t pit pleasure against growth. We talk boundaries through the lens of “social battery” science, spotting early signs of burnout and choosing better exit ramps before you’re tapped out. Our take on stress flips the script, favoring meaningful action—movement, helpfulness, tidy wins—over retreat-only self-care. You’ll leave with practical, low-friction ways to feel better without waiting for motivation to strike. We also have fun with New Year rituals around the world and the ones we can craft at home: color-coded intentions, wish confetti, plates in Denmark, waves in Brazil. And yes, we detour into iguanas “freezing” in Florida and the chaotic charm of local countdown TV before landing on what really makes a reset stick—consistency with heart, goals that fit your real life, and rituals that make ordinary days feel new. If this conversation made you smile or gave you one idea to try tonight, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your notes help more people find the show and keep this community growing. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:32:36

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Wrapped And Ready

12/22/2025
Send us a text The shortest day of the year brought big energy: we kicked off with solstice coziness, then plunged into a Chicago adventure that ended with a minivan reversing down Lower Wacker so we could make the Nutcracker! We trade laughs and real talk about value and scarcity—from wild penny auctions to a color-of-the-year that didn’t quite land—before landing on the joyful noise of a kid-made song that refuses to leave our heads. From there, we zoom into practical habit science and why Wednesdays are a smarter start line than Mondays. It’s a lighter lift, faster wins, and a better shot at keeping momentum through the holidays without the guilt spiral. Then we unwrap the good stuff: how to wrap gifts that wow without overspending. We share where to find sturdy paper that doesn’t tear, why wire ribbon changes everything, and how to make playful pom-pom toppers from leftover scraps. We dig into the psychology of presentation (yes, wrapping changes how a gift is received) and the surprising history of modern wrapping thanks to the Hall brothers. We also debate unwrapped wedding showers and how to honor givers whether you display gifts or open them live—gratitude is the key either way. We close with our highs and lows—eye drama, laundry fails, Nutcracker magic—and the traditions that make Christmas morning stretch longer. If you want a warm, witty guide to making this season feel intentional, beautiful, and actually doable, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who loves a big bow, and tell us: tags or stickers for your gifts? We’re taking votes. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:29:48

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Let it Snow!

12/15/2025
Send us a text December hits different when the lights go up early and the shopping falls behind. We open with that honest tension—trees trimmed, carts half‑filled—and a little serendipity: Sidewalk Surfer, the skate shop Nora grew up admiring, just landed on a NY Times national “best stores” list. From there we steer into language shaping our timelines, decoding Oxford’s “rage bait,” the hype around “biohacking” and “aura farming,” and why Cambridge’s “parasocial” feels uncomfortably familiar. The words aren’t just trends; they’re a map to how we prod, posture, and sometimes get pulled into scams that exploit our need to belong. Food brings levity and nostalgia. We laugh at the Cheez‑It crusted turkey leg on a bowl‑game menu and turn it into a practical kitchen win: oven‑baked Cheez‑It chicken tenders with panko crunch, kid‑approved and weeknight‑friendly. It’s a reminder that December rewards low‑lift comfort, especially when schedules run hot and daylight runs short. Then snow takes the mic. We admit we love the first clean blanket and the all‑clear of a true snow day, even if driving is dicey and parking lots become slush quarries. Along the way we trade memorable stats—from Mount Baker’s jaw‑dropping totals to Chicago’s legendary 1967 blizzard—and talk about staying safe, staying sane, and letting the weather give us permission to slow down. The heart of this conversation lives in small rituals: carols on repeat, hot chocolate under winter lights, kids asking Santa for sweaters, and a seven‑year‑old’s band called The Hot Coco debuting an outrageously catchy track named “Reconciliation.” These moments don’t erase the chaos; they anchor it. If you’ve been craving a pause, a laugh, and a nudge to choose warmth over noise, you’re in the right place. Listen, share with a friend who needs a snow‑day vibe, and leave a quick review to help more people find the show. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:31:53

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Our Topic was Skating...but our Brains Had Other Ideas

12/8/2025
Send us a text The first big snow didn’t drift in; it dropped like a hammer. We swap white‑knuckle drives and holiday detours, laugh about leaves buried under ice. Then curiosity takes over: a Japanese “human washing machine” promises micro-bubble bliss, London falls for Trader Joe’s totes, and a beauty headline reignites the parasite cleanse debate. A canned sparkling “Proscato” becomes our most honest taste test yet—more kid champagne than prosecco—and somehow the gateway to better bubbles, French 75s, and the idea that tiny, low‑stakes experiments can rescue a dark afternoon. From there we glide into skating: roller rinks in unfinished basements, first crushes with wallet chains and Stüssy, and the jump from rollerblades to ice. We dig into the history, from bone blades on frozen lakes to the Dutch metal revolution, and why hockey is double talent—edge control plus puck sense—in a sport that rewards grit and grace. The emotional center lands with our highs and lows: the churn of family life, the longing for even ground, and a blissful surprise spa night with hot pools, cold plunges, and one unforgettable massage miscommunication. It’s a winter survival guide disguised as a hang with friends—part science, part nostalgia, and a lot of heart. If you’ve ever tried to keep a house feeling like Christmas while the snow stacks and schedules wobble, this one’s for you. If you smiled, learned something, or felt seen, tap follow, share with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your notes shape the show and keep this cozy corner of the internet warm. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:41:00

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Talking turkey...and bears and backs

11/24/2025
Send us a text A bear behind a dollar store counter isn’t how most holiday chats begin, but that’s where ours goes—straight into the absurd, the timely, and the surprisingly useful. We start with a lightning round of cultural curiosities: a 17-year-old who turned cozy hoodies and dreamy unboxing into a booming brand, the mystery of National “Have a Bad Day” Day, and the Midwest-made story of Sweetest Day. Then we poke at Heinz’s “leftover gravy,” asking whether it’s a real condiment or just a novelty container dressed in nostalgia. From there, we pull the chair closer to the table and carve into turkey. We explore how turkey became the Thanksgiving centerpiece—from Sarah Josepha Hale’s relentless advocacy to the practicality that made the bird a staple—and why so many of us love a thin-shaved turkey sandwich yet shrug at the holiday roast. We share smart planning tips to cut food waste, talk stuffing without the sage wars, and lay out the case for spatchcocking: a faster, flatter, crispier path to juicy meat that any butcher can prep. For a dose of wonder, we add wild turkey facts—25 mph sprints, short bursts of flight, color-changing heads—and a simple Mylar trick to keep them away from your porch. Hosting this season? We offer clear, kind scripts that nudge RSVPs without nagging and set firm boundaries without sending a Venmo request for pastries. We untangle the “Nona” décor trend and land on a warmer idea: curate what actually sparks joy, skip the rest, and protect your peace. We close with real life—back twinges from hair-whipping and yard work, a street finally repaved, and a kid’s birthday dinner that turns into pure laughter with older friends and no screens. That’s the point of the season: fewer perfect moments, more true ones. If this conversation made you smile, think, or rethink your turkey plan, hit follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Tell us: spatchcock, classic roast, or team sides all the way?

Duration:00:36:05

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All Cleaned Up!

11/17/2025
Send us a text The best conversations start with a small spark, and ours begins with World Kindness Day before ricocheting through weather whiplash, missed northern lights, and two jaw-dropping world records: 374 bagpipers blasting ACDC and a PE teacher drilling 1,516 three-pointers in a row. From there we wander into a modern folklore lesson on Jeep “ducking,” why tiny rubber ducks on dashboards are a rolling chain of goodwill, and a surprisingly competitive taste test pitting Trader Joe’s PB&J pockets against the classic Uncrustables. Then we roll up our sleeves and get truly sudsy. Soap hasn’t always been a given; it was once taxed as a luxury and arrived in our homes far later than most of us realize. We trace the arc from ancient fats-and-ash recipes and Roman oil scrapers to the rise of industrial soap, the late bloom of liquid hand soap in the 1970s, and the everyday culture wars of bar versus body wash. Along the way we dig into scents, skin sensitivity, antibacterial labels, and why foam pumps win with reluctant hand washers. We swap stories about public bathroom nostalgia, the pitfalls of using body wash as shampoo, and a little DIY curiosity—plus a reminder that the best hygiene habit is the one you’ll actually keep. It’s a cozy, curious tour of how small rituals shape home life: a bottle by the sink, a seasonal scent, a kid who defaults to sanitizer, a parent who says “soap and water.” We share practical tips, laugh at our own mishaps, and find meaning in the mundane. Press play for a kind, funny, and unexpectedly informative ride through records, rubber ducks, and the science of clean. Enjoyed the episode? Follow, rate, and share with a friend. Tell us your go-to hand soap and whether you’re team foam or team gel—we’ll read the best takes on the show. Mike Haggerty Buick GMC Right on the corner, right on the price! Head down to 93rd & Cicero & tell them the Noras sent you! Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Duration:00:33:04