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LIMELIGHT PODCAST

LIMELIGHT PODCAST

Written by: LIMELIGHT
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Everyone has a unique perspective. It's shaped by so many factors. The more we can learn about each other, the better we will understand each other. Join us as we bring conversations to the limelight to do just that; understand more perspectives so we can grow. New episodes every Tuesday.LIMELIGHT Social Sciences
Episodes
  • How this man survived brain cancer with a 0% survival rate - EP43
    Jan 9 2026

    We flew to Ontario to meet Steve Allgood, the 2nd patient in Canadian history to receive psychedelic assisted therapy through the health care system.We can't even begin to imagine being diagnosed with cancer just days before your wedding, and not just any cancer, one that almost nobody survives.Steve has come a long way since then, defying all odds and still alive today to share his story, with his beautiful wife and two kids.If you are moved by his story - WRITE A LETTER TO YOUR MP: https://therapsil.ca/get-involved/More details:7 and a half years ago, Steve was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer just two days before his wedding. The diagnosis was DIPG, diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, a rare and aggressive pontine glioma located on the brainstem tumour near the pons tumor area. Doctors in oncology and neuro-oncology gave him a terminal diagnosis with zero percent chance of survival. He was told to go home and prepare for the worst.Instead of accepting that, Steve started his own cancer journey. After radiation therapy, he was offered chemotherapy, but began exploring alternative treatment options. He connected with long-term cancer survival stories online and discovered complementary medicine approaches like high-dose cannabis, cannabis oil, and Rick Simpson Oil (RSO). Medical marijuana became a major part of his protocol, along with vitamin C IV therapy, nutrition and cancer research, sugar-free diet changes, and overall lifestyle change focused on reducing inflammation and immune system rebuilding. These integrative medicine and functional medicine approaches challenged everything he thought he knew about the Canadian healthcare system.Steve also became the 2nd patient in Canadian history to legally access psilocybin therapy through Health Canada's Section 56 exemption and Special Access Program. His experience with psilocybin-assisted therapy helped him process deep trauma healing, PTSD, grief, anxiety, and depression. Through guided trip sessions with proper set and setting and a trip sitter, followed by integration therapy and psychotherapy, Steve experienced a spiritual awakening, going from atheism to spirituality. The therapy helped with acceptance of the unknown, meaning-making, life review, and neuroplasticity changes that reshaped how he sees the world.We also talked about his experience with MDMA therapy, his thoughts on microdosing, and why he's become a voice for psychedelic advocacy in Canada. Steve now advocates for patient rights, patient advocacy, informed consent, and healthcare reform. He's critical of how cancer charities operate and passionate about harm reduction and mental health advocacy.Beyond the medical side, Steve opened up about the family impact of his diagnosis, the wedding diagnosis story, fatherhood challenges, and how his wife and mother-in-law pushed him to fight. His story also touches on broader issues like Vancouver mental health, corrections system trauma, and community healing.Steve's been featured on Cannabis Health Radio and is part of an upcoming documentary interview. He continues to get MRI scans and remains in palliative care monitoring, but his tumor has been stable for years. He's living proof of what long-term cancer survival can look like when you explore every option.His message is simple: question everything, advocate for yourself, and don't be afraid to look beyond conventional cancer support. Whether it's blood-brain barrier research, advocacy for legalization, or just learning about brainstem tumour treatments like glioma and pons tumour cases, there's more out there than most people realize.Diagnosed with terminal brain cancer just before his wedding, this individual shares his compelling brain tumour story. Given no chance of survival, he advocates for medical cannabis and psilocybin therapy as alternative cancer treatment options. His experience sheds light on the difficult choices cancer patients face beyond traditional chemotherapy.

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    1 hr and 30 mins
  • Everyone missed the real reason she's acting like this (Akaash and Jasleen Singh) - EP42
    Dec 26 2025

    Well, is this whole Jasleen / Akaash Singh situation just for clout? Is it because Jasleen is not a good person/wife? We give our thoughts on the whole situation.


    We're breaking down the Akaash Singh and Jasleen Singh drama that's been all over the internet. This whole situation with Andrew Schulz's co-host has people talking about relationship drama, toxic relationship dynamics, and whether this is all just a publicity stunt or something deeper.


    Jasleen's viral TikTok about her college roster, white boy frat houses, and nostalgia for her college days sparked massive controversy in the Punjabi community and South Asian relationships discourse. The "popping" comments, virginity claims, and body count questions have the internet divided. We get into the awkward kiss situation, PDA avoidance, and why people think there's real issues behind the comedy.


    Jasleen did open up about her abusive dad, parental abuse, childhood trauma, and time in a battered women's shelter. We discuss how daddy issues, generational trauma, and trauma response might explain the toxic parenting cycle and current relationship red flags.


    We cover the prenup red flag controversy, stay at home wife lifestyle, gold digger accusations, and financial abuse concerns.


    Fresh and Fit's Myron Gaines (Amrou Fudl) previously appeared on Flagrant, sparking red pill and alpha male narrative discussions. We compare that episode to this Flagrant episode backlash and the internet outrage culture around relationship accountability.


    Indian podcast controversy and brown girl drama hit different when it involves South Asian dating, Indian dating culture, and cultural shame and honor. The brown community discourse around this touches on Indian hate, misogyny and backlash, and gender double standards that affect Indian comedian content and South Asian podcast spaces.


    Public relationship scrutiny through oversharing on social media and feeding the algorithm raises questions about authenticity vs performance.


    We reference similar situations like Will Smith Jada, Ayesha Curry, and Steph Curry dealing with celebrity marriage problems and public embarrassment. Reality of fame means celebrity publicity stunts and PR stunt rumors follow any marriage controversy or viral relationship drama.


    The narcissist prayer, narcissistic personality traits, and gaslighting in relationships show up in relationship double standards and toxic relationship dynamics. Emotional maturity, boundaries in relationships, and relationship advice matter more than internet memes and online clout chasing.


    Modern marriage debates cover trad wife vs modern wife expectations, modern dating discourse, modern women standards, and marriage problems beyond just prenuptial agreements. The psychological analysis of trauma and relationships shows how childhood trauma and women's shelter experiences create relationship red flags.


    Crowd work comedy and Akaash Singh stand up built his career, but comedian insecurities and marriage accountability now dominate the conversation. Indian comedian spaces, comedy podcast culture, and Punjabi culture debate intersect with viral podcast drama.


    Internet pile-on culture, parasocial relationships, and commentary podcast reactions flood YouTube trending podcasts and Spotify trending podcasts. The viral reels controversy, podcast clip reaction videos, and TikTok drama show how internet drama and podcast drama spread.


    Celebrity marriage breakdown, marriage advice, and empowerment vs disrespect questions matter for content creator toxicity and influencer accountability. Social media influence on marriage, social media persona maintenance, and internet commentary create public humiliation online.


    Healing trauma, therapy and relationships, and South Asian mental health resources help with walking on eggshells, OCD and control issues, and female vs male toxicity comparisons. Marriage controversy shouldn't overshadow real healing from abuse and breaking generational cycles.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • From YouTube videos to making films - EP41
    Dec 6 2025

    Jacquille Kambo, the man behind several films and many more to come, joins us this episode where we talk about how we have known each other over the years, and the impact we both had on each other without knowing it at the time.


    We talk about his experience being in the industry, what inspires his creativity, and how he’s learned to take care of his mental health.


    This was a great open and honest chat and we hope you enjoy the listen!!


    More details:

    We sit down with Jacquille Kambo, a Vancouver-based filmmaker, writer, and director who's been creating short films that tackle everything from gang violence to mental health in the Punjabi community. This conversation gets real about childhood friend reunions, creative journeys, and what it means to chase your dreams when everyone expects you to take the safe route.


    The story starts with greenday44 - a YouTube channel making Vancouver Canucks hockey highlights set to Green Day and punk rock back in the early YouTube era. Before algorithms and viral content, there were CDC forums, megaupload, and kids making music videos in their bedrooms with zero confidence to share them.


    That hidden creativity sparked something bigger than either of us realized at the time.Jacquille talks about his path through Capilano University film school, creating Help Wanted and Mentor - short films dealing with sense of belonging, cults, pyramid schemes, and the darker sides of searching for family. His work draws heavy inspiration from Christopher Nolan, The Dark Knight trilogy, film noir, cinematography and color theory, and storytelling with music.


    We break down Batman, Hans Zimmer's scores, Inception, Interstellar, Oppenheimer reactions, and why Marvel and Robert Downey Jr. still matter to cinema.The conversation shifts to mental health and creativity - therapy journey, clinical counselling, inner child work, and men talking about feelings without the usual bullshit.


    We discuss toxic masculinity, masculinity and vulnerability, Punjabi parents expectations, immigrant parent support, and how the South Asian community and Punjabi Canadian creators navigate corporate jobs vs art while dealing with ego and competition in Vancouver's cliquey creative scene.


    Vancouver vs Toronto comes up - why supporting local artists matters, collaboration vs competition, and whether the Punjabi creative scene can grow together or if comparison culture and social media pressure keep everyone separated. Content creation has exploded with TikTok and Reels culture, AI generated video, and podcasts in traffic becoming the norm, but building community through art still requires real human connection.


    We also get into Vancouver Canucks fandom, NHL loyalty, hockey highlights, what sports mean to a city, and why that orca logo represents more than just a team. Plus thoughts on ADHD and movies, editing and pacing, Bollywood influences, classic rock, movie genres, Hollywood standards, and creative burnout when you're trying to leave a legacy while staying true to yourself.


    This one's about childhood friends reconnecting, creative confidence, following creative dreams despite the noise, and understanding that film noir isn't just an aesthetic - it's a way of seeing the world. Whether you're into filmmaking, mental health in Punjabi community discussions, or just want to hear two people talk honestly about the creative process without the usual podcast BS, this conversation covers it all.

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    2 hrs and 3 mins
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