Death, Destruction, Armageddon, Nuclear Meltdown, and the Y2K Connection

“Death, Destruction, Armageddon, Nuclear Meltdown, and the Y2K Connection” is the fifth demo episode, aired on December 30, 1999.

That’s a very long title!

This episode was the first Theme Show episode to break away from the one-word format.

Posted on the verge of New Year’s Eve 1999, it is influenced by the belief of some people that the world and all its machines would come screeching to a halt due to the millennium change (and possibly the Prince song) and that the resulting outage would cause nuclear Armageddon.

Although I didn’t subscribe to this theory (and, as I’m updating this entry in 2025, it seems we’ve survived), I figured that if we were all going to disappear into a fiery oblivion, the least we could do was laugh on the way out, so the entire episode is filled with apocalyptic songs.

This Demo has been recreated for your enjoyment at:

Image link to Spotify Streaming Music
Image link to YouTube Music Streaming Service

Like earlier demos, this episode was built around three defining segments:

  • Theme Show Warm-Up: Every broadcast kicked off with five fast-paced, high-energy tracks, setting the tone. Then, after the fourth song, I would check my Yahoo! Messenger, eagerly awaiting the first correct guess of the theme. The person who answered first won a prize, which, more often than not, was a Pez dispenser.
  • Requests: This segment was designed to blend pre-arranged selections with real-time audience engagement.. While a significant portion of the song choices were curated in advance, if someone had an exciting song idea that fit the theme, they could message me, and—provided I had the track in my library, I’d weave it into the setlist.
  • Obligatory Polka: Of course, I tried to end every episode with a Polka song. Even if the final song didn’t match the overarching theme, that was entirely fine. I’ve always found Polka entertaining, and as a longtime fan of “Weird Al” Yankovic, I did my best to make sure this unexpected finale stayed intact.

As time passed, the show evolved. Eventually, I decided to simplify the podcast pre-recording process by trimming down these segments. Despite that, elements of the “warm-up” concept continue to live on—often appearing in newer Spotify and YouTube Music playlists, where I still organize songs based on BPM and energy level.

Variations on a theme about death or destruction would return in:

Episode 27: The Big Bang

Episode 54: Teenage Rampage

and

Episode 57: How I stopped Worrying, and Learned to Love “The Bomb”

Color KeyNot Available on SpotifyNot Available on YTMusicNot Available on Either

Theme Show Workout

SongArtist
1999Xorcist
Red AlertBasement Jaxx
RadioactivityKraftwerk
Oblivion/HumansMeat Beat Manifesto
Here Comes the ComedownLov & Rockets

Standard Playlist

SongArtist
No OzoneLoud Sugar
Time, the End of TimeThe Chameleons
Scatter JanuaryLove Spirals Downward
These Fleeting MomentsLoveliescrushing
Last FarewellKula Shaker
Judgement HourThe Tear Garden
Dead HeavenGary Numan
It’s the End of the World as We Know ItR.E.M.
PlutoniumBizarre Alliance
Battle Ground (KGB Slam Edit)Leæther Strip
DestructionMinistry
Ranch ApocalypseSkatenigs
Anomaly (Calling Your Name)Libra presents Taylor
Atomic Moog 2000 (Post-Nuclear Afterlife Lounge Mix)Coldcut
Zero SignalFear Factory
Electronic WarfareApoptygma Berzerk
The Downtrodden SongDenis Leary
You, Me, and World War ThreeGavin Friday
Destroy 2000 Years of CultureAtari Teenage Riot
Napalm in BohemiaBoy Eats Girl
Judgement DayArmy of Lovers
RadioactiveGrumpyhead
AtomicBlondie
Atom BombFluke
R.I.P. 20C (Millennium Mix)Love & Rockets

Obligatory Polka

SongArtist
Champagne PolkaLawrence Welk
Photo by Miguel Lindo on Unsplash