Traffic School - A Guy Is Driving 90 MPH Flashing Lights And Nobody Can Stop Him - 05/01/2026
This episode opens like a deceptively calm Idaho sunrise before immediately spiraling into absolute chaos, as Lieutenant Crain and the crew emerge from their winter hibernation to discover that yes, it is technically spring—but also somehow still ice-covered crop season because Idaho weather is a psychological experiment conducted by God. Meanwhile, Viktor casually drops that he attended Sick New World like a normal person, except NOT NORMAL because instead of fully attending, he basically hotel-room goblin’d the concert like a cryptid watching bands through a window, whispering “this is just like our wedding” while probably wrapped in a blanket like a burrito of bad decisions.
Things escalate into paranormal nonsense as he willingly walks into Zak Bagans' Haunted Museum, where instead of ghosts it’s just SERIAL KILLER STARTER PACKS™ on display—INCLUDING ACTUAL Ted Bundy ARTIFACTS—because nothing says “fun weekend getaway” like staring directly into the abyss and then saying “yeah I think I’m curse-free” like a man who has absolutely already been spiritually marked for deletion. Somewhere in that museum is a cursed doll so evil even Zak Bagans won’t look at it, which obviously means Viktor made direct eye contact and is now on a 3–5 business day delay before becoming the villain origin story.
Then we slam into TRAFFIC SCHOOL, which is less “education” and more “barely controlled verbal demolition derby.” Callers roll in like NPCs in a fever dream: one guy is deeply concerned about blue reflective lug nuts, prompting a legal breakdown that somehow turns into “why do you even WANT blue lug nuts?”—a question that echoes through the void unanswered, much like our purpose in life. Another caller tries to organize a car show convoy like he’s planning a Fast & Furious spinoff called Grandpa Drift, asking if he should CALL 911 to coordinate it, which is the energy of someone who absolutely should not be in charge of anything but vibes.
Then—WHIPLASH—an emotional call drops about a real-life tragedy ending in THREE CONSECUTIVE LIFE SENTENCES, and for a brief moment the chaos pauses, reality punches everyone in the throat, and the show becomes human again… before immediately returning to discussions about sleep-talking harassment, Snapchat evidence of Viktor speaking in tongues at 6:30 AM, and whether it is a CRIME to emotionally terrorize your partner while they’re unconscious (jury’s still out, but morally? straight to jail).
From there it devolves further into pure madness:
- A rogue highway demon driving 90+ mph with bright lights like a GTA side quest boss
- A man allegedly driving while… uh… “cooling himself down” in ways that should NOT be multitasked
- Debates about whether hanging out of car windows is illegal (answer: also just don’t recreate Hereditary, please)
- Scooter bandits in the streets like Walmart has become Mad Max
- And a philosophical war over roundabouts, where Viktor declares himself future dictator of circular traffic systems
By the end, the episode collapses into political satire, workplace slander, partial water bottle conspiracies, and the haunting realization that nobody in that studio has a chair, a working phone system, or control over anything—including their own lives. The show signs off the way it lived: confused, chaotic, and one bad decision away from becoming evidence in a court case.
