DARK ROOM HORROR PRESENTS
The Reprobates Podcast with Josh Hyde
The Reprobates is a bi-weekly podcast about living in the 21st century as an enemy of god.
Josh Hyde engages with freethinkers, musicians, artists, occultists, and more…
Join us every other week as we talk about our individual experiences as outsiders getting by in a world that wants us to conform.
Subscribe to The Reprobates wherever you listen to podcasts.
Available on Spotify, Apple, iHeart Radio, Amazon, and YouTube
Hosted by Josh Hyde
Joshhyde666.com
IG: @joshhyde666
Josh Hyde was born and raised in the “Land of Enchantment”—Albuquerque, New Mexico—where he lives today with his wife and three children.
Josh is a graphic artist, musician, photographer, and writer. A product of goth subculture, Josh retains close ties to off-the-grid movements, which fuels the originality of his design. He has promoted and sold out events for horror, goth, punk, and alternative audiences bringing community to the things that make us rebels.
In 2016, Josh created a blog to act as a portfolio for his artwork. After several film and book reviews, that blog evolved into the Dark Room Horror seen today.
Josh’s work tells us that we are capable of more than we’ve been taught to realize. He believes that the greatest barrier to personal development—including the art and design that express us—is dogma and the desire for respectability, and that we should find ourselves on our own terms and live from that light.
This podcast is produced by Dark Room Horror
For inquiries, comments, or to submit your unsigned band’s song for the end of the show, contact josh_at_darkroomhorror.com with “Reprobates” in the subject line.
The Reprobates is a bi-weekly podcast about living in the 21st century as an enemy of god.
Join us every other week as we talk about our individual experiences as outsiders getting by in a world that wants us to conform.
Subscribe to The Reprobates wherever you listen to podcasts.
Josh Hyde was born and raised in the “Land of Enchantment”—Albuquerque, New Mexico—where he lives today with his wife and three children. In 2016, Josh created a blog to act as a portfolio for his artwork. After several film and book reviews, that blog evolved into the Dark Room Horror seen today.
Josh’s work tells us that we are capable of more than we’ve been taught to realize. He believes that the greatest barrier to personal development—including the art and design that express us—is dogma and the desire for respectability, and that we should find ourselves on our own terms and live from that light.