#0349 - Do Men Or Women Have Worse Smelling Farts? - 04/23/2026
The episode opens with a man who has spiritually left his body after watching Shutter Island too late and is now clinging to life via caffeine and pure resentment, immediately launching into a war against sleep, weather, and existence itself . He promises productivity but instead spirals through Reddit threads he absolutely refuses to read because they are “too disgusting,” which somehow leads him into life advice like “don’t talk sometimes,” which he immediately ignores for the next 45 minutes. From there, we descend into a philosophical breakdown about subtitles, hearing loss, and why everyone under 45 is apparently watching TV like it’s a literacy exam, culminating in a passionate rant about how English dubbing is a crime against humanity—EXCEPT for one cursed anime (Ghost Stories) where the dub is apparently a lawless wasteland of off-script chaos.
Then, with zero warning, we veer into concert FOMO panic mode as he realizes summer is a logistical nightmare of missed shows, PTO limitations, and emotional damage, before abruptly pivoting to a story about a circus troupe committing what can only be described as tree-based war crimes against ancient Japanese ruins by burying 11 TONS of trees like eco-villains with a shovel addiction. This somehow escalates into a tiger yeeting itself into a crowd in Russia, followed immediately by flesh-eating bacteria that will apparently delete you in 48 hours if you so much as LOOK at natural water wrong.
Just when your brain begs for mercy, the show detonates into a discussion about a man committing pasta-based fraud by replacing LEGO sets with noodles (a crime against both children and Italian grandmothers), which is then completely overshadowed by the single most important scientific discovery in human history: women’s farts are deadlier than men’s. This triggers a full investigative breakdown into fart storage logistics (bags? jars? trapped car interiors??), smell rating scales (WHY ZERO TO EIGHT??), and the existence of a man known only as The King of Farts, a title that should legally come with a cape and a warning label.
As the chaos peaks, AI enters the chat—not as a helpful tool, but as a rude, passive-aggressive phone operator that yells “I’M TALKING, BRENDAN,” signaling the beginning of the robot uprising, which is then immediately undercut by the revelation that companies are firing AI because it’s too expensive, meaning humanity might survive purely because robots are financially inconvenient. The episode ends in a drought-fueled existential crisis about water shortages, data centers, and the inevitability of fire season, before collapsing into exhaustion, back pain, and the haunting realization that this entire broadcast was somehow considered “public service.”
