The discussion of "Shameful Late 90's Adult Contemporary That You Love" was pretty good. If I pick up a new mike in the next week or so I might submit a couple of my favorites for consideration.
The Street Fighter 4 complaints are perhaps understandable, perhaps. It's one thing not to have the reflexes for the timing, though you are pussies if you forgot the friggin' moves. You guys really can't do a dragon punch anymore? I don't feel like the game was really hyped up to be
that casual-friendly. Ultimately the only thing that makes fighters casual friendly is a large roster of very recognizable characters and easy, spammable moves (it's no coincidence how popular Smash Brothers and Marvel vs. Capcom were). A casual gamer's interest will wane pretty quickly once he has already seen all the characters though, and it will inevitably be time to move on to something else. I think you should ultimately be glad that they didn't turn the game into SSB or MvC2 though.
I'm sure that there will be an inevitable Wii version where all the moves are just performed with a limp-wristed waggle motion, and perhaps that will be a little easier on you.
the gaming segment ran longer because i figured this might be my only shot to talk about WWII games 
That's fine. The Geekbox has become my favorite of the post-1Up podcasts, and it struggles with similar focus challenges. They want to talk about all geek media, but it I think it becomes difficult to keep every listener interested when the discussion can shift wildly between comic books, videogames, movies, TV shows, etc. They do a good job holding your interest though my eyes glaze over when they go on about a TV show (Burn Notice) or comics universe (DC) that I don't have any real interest in. I think the problem is ultimately solved by not making any particular topic go on for too long or getting too inside with any of it.