MICF - I Love Green Guide Letters (1)

This was the first podcast recording that I've been to that I've already listened to the podcast prior to attending an actual recording. With Splendid Chaps, which I've been to before I hadn't actually listened to their first podcast; episode zero.

But with I Love Green Guide Letters (ILGGL) I had, and it was brilliant, amazing.
And I will be buying tickets to the other recordings of the podcast (and am regretting not getting the full season special pack of 4 tickets for price of 3).
I have I think not laughed as hard or as frequently as I did during the hour of ILGGL before.

For anyone attending it's on quite early in the day 4:15pm, which means it's an ideal way to kick off your night of comedy. Or if you’re not a night person see ILGGL and FanFiction Comedy together and you get 2 shows in before 7pm.

It's in the Supper Room of the Melbourne Town Hall. Being on so early it'll look like the Town Hall is closed, it's not, there's just nothing else on at the time that ILGGL is on.
The Supper Room is at the very top of the Town Hall, so you go up the initial set of stairs into the Town Hall, turn right take a slightly left through the doors to the stairwell and then take the stairs up to the top. It's quite a few sets of stairs, more than I actually thought it was going to be.
They are nice stairs; marble.
There is a lift, which I didn't take, although wished I did when I got three quarters of the way up.

The ILGGL podcast recording had Steele Saunders hosting as he usually does.
Things to note about Steele Saunders; his posters do not do him justice, or rather without his facial hair he's rather dashing.

The guests for the the recording were Tom Ballard, Sam Pang and Tony Martin, which is a great number of people for what is a small amount of money.

It looked like 99% of the people in the Supper Room had heard the podcast before.

You don't however really need to have listened to the podcast before to see the show, all you need to know is that the Green Guide is the radio and TV lift out in The Age and that Steele Saunders reads the letters in a high pitched voice.