Episodes

  • Dear Mom: I Finally Found a Job Where Not Thinking Gets a Promotion
    Jan 31 2026

    Doing my part for freedom, quotas, and beer money. Cleetus, a new ICE agent, writes a darkly satirical letter to his mom about quotas, family separations, and the bureaucratic 'brilliance' of his new patriotic job.

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    4 mins
  • The Catatonic Miracle of the 405
    Jan 26 2026

    Proof that we can do anything, so long as we’re in a metal death machine and completely zoned out


    Sitting on a balcony high above the 405 when something clicked. I was at that hotel off Sunset that looks like a grain elevator with windows. Used to be an old Holiday Inn. Now it’s $450 a night for a view of brake lights.

    Anyway, what clicked was, while I was watching traffic, I thought about all the people travelling on the freeway. Thousands of metal death machines hurtling along at ridiculous speeds.

    Everyone driving had their own agenda. Some were focused on what they were doing, obviously. Others were totally distracted. They had to be. Most of us are.

    Knowing humans the way I do, you’d think it’d be a war zone. Maniacs on all sides doing 80. Cars should be skidding and swerving. Crossing lanes and running into walls. Drivers would race each other and knock those in the way off the road. People screaming, fire everywhere. Picture Mad Max with better air conditioning.

    I mean, come on. These are the same people who lose their minds if you take too long at the ATM. They’ll scream at a McDonalds employee because they get shorted one fucking chicken nugget. They’ll fight over a parking spot like it’s the last lifeboat on the Titanic.

    But put them on the freeway? Suddenly we’re all in a harmonious flow. Like synchronized swimmers in bumper-to-bumper hell. There was something orderly.

    We, collectively, can go on autopilot. You get in the car, you zone out, you arrive at your destination, and you have a zero recollection of the journey.

    You can listen to a podcast and not remember most of it. Take a phone call? Can’t recall what you talked about. If you have a passenger you both could have a conversation and arrive at your destination before you know it. It’s like time travel.

    What is this sorcery? We’re in this trance. One collective trance. That’s what it is. We’re all plugged into the same current. You slow down; I slow down. You speed up; I speed up.

    And the second we exit? Boom. Trance shattered. The guy who politely merged? Now he’s yelling at no one in particular because a parking spot is too far from the entrance. The lady who pumped the brakes to keep one car length separation for twenty miles? She’s now in line at Whole Foods arguing that her kale hasn’t been artisanally sprayed enough.

    We can cooperate at death-defying speeds, but we can’t share an elevator without someone pressing every button just to be a jerk.

    I’m sitting there on the balcony, staring at this miracle of human behavior, and all I can think is this is the only place left where society still works. The freeway. Up on the 8th floor it’s almost peaceful. Down there? It’s a potential rolling disaster accompanied by radio stations.

    The freeway keeps us moving just long enough to go back to hating each other properly.

    I go inside, slam the sliding door. The hum fades. And just like that, I’m annoyed at the fucking world again.

    Pretty neat trick, huh? We’re all just travelling along mostly smoothly. How is that? We’re at each other’s throats usually. But, on the freeway, we’re all like one energy. The energetic highway. Like your chakra system with GPS.

    How are we not all dead?What a system. What a beautiful, catatonic system.

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    3 mins
  • The Award for the World's Best President
    Jan 24 2026

    The morning of the Nobel Peace Prize announcement, the President of the United States woke up surrounded by gold-plated everything at the White House. He excitedly kicked off his covers and checked his phone.

    An icy chill ran through him when he read the text. Some unassuming diplomat from a country most people had forgotten about had been awarded the Peace Prize by the Nobel Committee. Not to him, the leader of the free world, whose many posts about how he deserved the prize resulted in a nasty case of strained thumbs.

    “Outrageous!” He said to his gold-framed mirror.


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    5 mins
  • Lighten Up, You Existential Mopes! Or, How Not to Be a Gravity-Induced Tumbleweed and Levitating Past Life’s Bullshit.
    Apr 2 2025

    Ever notice how fast things are, like, way lighter than slow stuff? Makes total sense, right? Think about it — birds are all active and quick because they’re light as feathers.

    Meanwhile, a rock just sits there because it’s hard, slow, and dense. When it does move, it’s by force and gonna tumble downhill because, well, hardness is basically not good for much.

    But birds? They can fly ’cause being soft isn’t weak. It’s actually like, the ultimate cheat code, but instead of shooting laser beams, you get to chuckle at stuff. It’s like a magic carpet, only way more fun and less likely to get you stuck in a tree.

    But birds? They can fly ’cause being soft isn’t weak. It’s actually like, the ultimate cheat code, but instead of shooting laser beams, you get to chuckle at stuff. It’s like a magic carpet, only way more fun and less likely to get you stuck in a tree.

    Some brainy people who study miracles have figured out a lot of saints could levitate. Cool, but you know what’s even cooler? They were probably just really good at being lighthearted and weren’t weighed down by existential angst.

    Old Christian paintings always have this blue sky with clouds that are lighter than air. Everyone looks ready to float up to heaven.

    Those stuck-up folks in their gold and fancy robes? They’re all gonna stay stuck down there. Pride is heavy, and can’t fly. Pride drags everything down.

    And while we’re at it, let’s not forget about ol’ Satan. That guy took himself way too seriously, and look where it got him — a one-way ticket to a gravity-induced tumble — no wonder he’s bummed out all the time.

    Being serious isn’t really a good thing. It might sound crazy, but being too serious might actually be a bad thing. A trap we fall into. We tend to get all serious and self-important because it’s the easiest thing to do.

    You “settle down” and get all serious and selfish. Ever notice how people “fall” into depression, but you have to “rise up” to get a good attitude?

    Writing a boring, serious speech is way easier than writing a good joke. Being all solemn and stuff comes naturally, but being able to laugh takes real effort. You gotta lighten up to get over yourself.

    Being serious all the time is about as much fun as a root canal. No, scratch that — it’s like choosing to get a root canal. Voluntarily. Without anesthesia.

    You gotta lighten up to get over yourself. Ain’t no ride for the timid. Takes skill and practice. Gotta be willing to unleash your inner goofball, embrace the absurd, and maybe even snort when you laugh.

    So, ditch the seriousness, folks. It’s overrated. Choose laughter, choose lightheartedness. It’s like flying first class, only the movies are better. Trust me, being heavy is for amateurs. The real pros know that looking for the joke is where the magic happens.

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    3 mins