Sergio Lugo IIās day job is as a real-time operations supervisor for Comcast, but when he is not managing scheduling or performing other tasks for work, he hosts popular local podcast āReality Breached.ā
Lugo got involved with podcasting when his friend, Carl Minor, who was a contributor on podcast and web community āTechpedition,ā wanted to go to video-game expo E3.
āI was like, āOK, cool, I want to do that,’ā Lugo says. āHe said, āIf you write for this website and get on the podcast, we can try to finagle our way to get there.’ā
They ended up going to E3, and afterward, Lugo became a mainstay on āTechpedition,ā eventually transitioning to host. In 2011, Lugo decided to launch his own podcast, āReality Breached.ā
When coming up with a plan for it, he and his then-co-hosts, Reid Walker and Josh Alcaraz, decided to make it a video-game podcast. To keep the content fresh, their idea was to talk about specific topics, such as used games or female protagonists in games, on each episode.
ā(We wanted to have) very focused conversations, so weāre not just idiots who record themselves,ā he says.
Lugo says the biggest challenge in podcasting is finding an audience.
āPodcasts are so easy to produce and easy to put out there for people to hear, and theyāre free because (most people donāt) charge for their podcasts,ā he says. āSo everyone wants to do one, and everyone thinks theirs is better than everyone elseās. In a sea of three million podcasts, how do you get attention? ⦠You want to have a focused enough podcast that people come and find you, but you donāt want to be boxed in.ā
Since its early days, āReality Breachedā has expanded to feature a rotating lineup of co-hosts talking about multiple facets of nerd culture. Lugo has started partnering with other local podcasts, such as āTechpedition,ā and about a year ago, he started doing a monthly āLocal Spotlight.ā
āItās been really what has pushed us through into the next level,ā he says. ā⦠⦠We donāt always focus on exclusively Jackson stuff, but thereās stuff to do in this town. There are places to go; there are interesting people. Thereās a culture here that I donāt think gets enough attention outside of the clique that is Jackson. If youāre in the Jackson culture, you know about the Jackson culture. Outside of that, this is just that place with potholes.ā
Lugo is married to local musician Ariel Blackwell, and they two kids.


