• EVERYONE SMELLS HORRIBLE
    Jun 5 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Reddit can turn a tiny conflict into a full-blown morality trial, so we built an all-Reddit AITA night to test our own instincts on boundaries, relationships, and money. We start with a deceptively simple roommate problem: if you’re baking a birthday cake and cinnamon rolls as a gift, does your roommate get a taste just because you share a kitchen? We dig into what “being a good roommate” actually means, where generosity ends, and why repeated asking can feel less like curiosity and more like entitlement.

    Then the stakes jump to family and identity. One partner wants a Christmas trip so an international family can meet a new baby, while the postpartum spouse doesn’t feel safe traveling and doesn’t feel welcome around in-laws who never accepted her. We talk postpartum recovery, infant immune risk, and the underrated skill of managing your own family without throwing your partner under the bus.

    We close with two classic pressure cookers: emotional labor and sudden wealth. A hibachi dinner spirals after a brutal work week, and a forwarded Instagram recipe triggers a blowup that screams “this isn’t about the recipe.” After that, it’s money: selling a free car, office gossip, and a 19-year-old lottery winner whose parents demand half. If you like AITA debates, relationship advice, communication tools, and personal finance boundaries, this one hits all of it. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review with your verdicts.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 16 mins
  • Wait, did he get a BBL?!
    May 19 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Sean Strickland doing the unthinkable against Khamzat Chimaev is the kind of result that rewires your MMA brain. We break down how the fight shifts from “inevitable” to “wait, what’s happening?” and why Strickland’s composure, defense, and minute-winning choices matter more than pre-fight narratives or betting odds. If you’re tracking the middleweight picture, this conversation is all about what actually shows up in the cage when the pressure hits.

    Before that, we spend time on the night’s purest piece of violence: Jack Della Maddalena vs Carlos Prates. We talk through what makes Prates’ performance feel like a true striking clinic, from the layered offense and timing to the way he keeps finding new answers as the fight develops. It’s the kind of UFC fight breakdown that goes beyond highlights and into the details that decide matchups, rankings, and who’s really ready for title-level problems.

    Then we jump into UFC 328’s best moments, including the kind of fight where both athletes earn respect, plus the veteran grit and bonus-worthy finishes that keep the sport honest. We also look ahead to the surreal hype around Freedom 250, from stacked names to press conference drama, and what this “historic” style of UFC promotion says about where the league is headed.

    If you like smart, honest UFC analysis with real opinions, subscribe to Peak Points, share this with a fight friend, and leave us a review. What was your biggest takeaway from Strickland vs Chimaev?

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min
  • I GOT BEAR MACE ON MY WHAT?!
    May 1 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Fight nights have been on a sneaky hot streak, and we’re not letting the best moments fly by without a proper breakdown. We talk through the recent UFC cards that surprised us, from standout prelim performances to gritty decisions that stayed tense because both fighters kept pushing the pace.

    We spend real time on the headline stories: Mike Malott putting away Gilbert Burns and what it means when you beat a veteran “proof test” in the welterweight division, plus Aljamain Sterling’s continued run at featherweight against Yusuf Zalal and why the losing fighter can still come out looking dangerous. Then we look ahead at what’s coming next, including the Perth fight night headlined by Jack Della Maddalena vs Carlos Prates, the shape of UFC 328, and even the weird buzz around a “White House card” concept.

    After the previews, the mood shifts with confirmed news on Carlos Olberg: a snapped ACL, surgery in Las Vegas, and the reality that a long rehab can stall an entire title picture at light heavyweight. From there, we close with our Reddit confessions segment, where the stories range from a life-altering lie in high school to a surprisingly sweet “fake tip” and a final confession so painful it becomes a public safety announcement about bear spray transfer.

    If you like MMA analysis with a side of wild storytelling, subscribe, share the show with a fight fan, and leave us a review so more people can find Peak Point.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Spamming emotes in real life?
    Apr 17 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    A single UFC card can change how you feel about an entire division, and UFC 327 does exactly that for us. We start with the stuff fans love and refs hate: bloody exchanges, surprise submissions, and the kind of early-prelim chaos that makes you glad you tuned in from the first fight. We also get into the judging and officiating moments that actually matter, including point deductions for eye pokes and how consistent enforcement could reshape fighter behavior over time.

    Then the night swings hard between emotion and disappointment. We talk about Cub Swanson’s retirement win and why it feels so rare to see a veteran leave the sport with momentum and meaning. Right after that, we vent about Reyes vs Walker and the danger of two hesitant fighters turning a hyped matchup into a staring contest. And because the MMA gods love balance, we spend real time on Hokit vs Curtis Blaydes, a heavyweight fight with ridiculous strike totals and real heart that reminds everyone what “Fight of the Night” is supposed to look like.

    The biggest conversation is the light heavyweight title fight: Carlos Ulberg vs Jiri Prochazka, an early leg injury, and the split-second tactical choice that changes everything. We unpack the “mercy” debate, the online meltdown, and the injury timeline questions that could force the UFC’s hand on the belt. From there we preview the upcoming UFC schedule, including Burns vs Malott, Della Maddalena vs Prates, and UFC 328’s headline drama, plus we react to the UFC signing of Gable Steveson and what Olympic wrestling could inject into the heavyweight division.

    Subscribe for more MMA breakdowns, share this with the friend who never misses a card, and leave a review if Peak Points helps you watch smarter. What’s your pick for the real moment that defined UFC 327?

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Wait, am I going to die on this flight?!
    Apr 3 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    Travel fear doesn’t start with a headline. It starts with a small decision: taking the wrong ride, walking back alone, trusting the wrong “helpful” stranger, or assuming a hotel parking lot is safe because it has a fountain out front. We’re doing a full Reddit Traveler’s Edition and reading the kinds of true travel stories that make your stomach drop, then asking the only useful question: what would you do differently next time?

    We get into terrifying moments across Peru, Texas, Oklahoma, and the air. Think motorbike taxis deep in the Amazon, strangers demanding you follow them near the border, being watched outside a hotel, and that uniquely helpless feeling of flight anxiety when something goes wrong midair. We also talk about crowd panic, turbulence, medical emergencies, and how quickly fear spreads when nobody knows what’s happening.

    Then we pivot from doom to tools. We break down a long list of practical travel safety tips and travel hacks you can actually use: sharing your itinerary, downloading offline maps, smarter packing, carry-on essentials, avoiding common scams, handling money and banks, choosing hotels with better risk tradeoffs, and staying aware of pickpockets in busy tourist zones. The goal isn’t to scare you out of traveling, it’s to help you keep your gloves up and still enjoy the trip.

    If you’ve got a travel story that still haunts you or a tip you swear by, hit play and then drop it in the comments. Subscribe, share this with a travel buddy, and leave a review so more anxious travelers can find the show.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Kicked in the nuts vs punched in the face: which hurts more?
    Mar 19 2026

    Send us Fan Mail

    UFC fans love chaos until it shows up as bad refereeing, weird incentives, and title fights that do not match the label. We go rapid fire through recent UFC Fight Night storylines and land hard on UFC 326, where performance bonuses stack up early, controversy spikes fast, and the debates get louder with every round.

    We break down what stood out on the Strickland vs Anthony Hernandez card, why some finishes feel like automatic bonuses, and how a single win can jump a fighter into rankings talk. From the Mexico card, we hit the highs like King Green reminding everyone he is still dangerous, then we get blunt about uneven performances and what happens when a “save it for later rounds” plan backfires.

    UFC 326 is the centerpiece: the Cody Garbrandt foul mess raises real questions about point deductions and when a disqualification is the only responsible call. We also talk knockouts, betting odds movement chatter, and how MMA memes can spill into a fighter’s real life. Then we tackle the biggest argument: Charles Oliveira vs Max Holloway for the BMF belt, and whether “anything to win” can ever satisfy fans who want stand and bang.

    To finish, we preview upcoming matchups and pivot into our Reddit would you rather segment with prompts that get surprisingly intense. If you’ve got takes on UFC 326, the BMF title, or our ridiculous hypotheticals, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review, then reply with your answers and your hottest UFC prediction.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Sending pictures of my meat?
    Feb 24 2026

    Send a text

    A wild Fight Night lit up the scorecards while exposing a bigger truth about where MMA is headed: when excitement becomes policy, everything changes. We kick things off with the prelims on fire, a last-second submission that set the tone, and Dustin Jacoby’s emphatic finish that turned a callout into a real conversation. Then the debate starts: Basharat vs Matsumoto pushes damage vs volume to the front again, and we unpack why those judging nuances reshape training, corner advice, and career trajectories.

    The heavyweight story takes a sharp turn. A flat fight, a restless crowd, and a ranked heavyweight cut sent shockwaves through the division. We talk honestly about why 265 feels stuck, why the jump from 205 to 265 is broken, and how a 225-pound “cruiser” class could rescue matchups, protect athletes, and raise the division’s ceiling. It’s not just theory; it’s a practical fix to shallow depth and lopsided frames that sap pace and stakes.

    Balance returns with elite craft. Kyoji Horiguchi shows veteran grit and clean execution against a legit contender, staking a real claim toward a title shot. Mario Bautista continues his rise, shutting down the post-fight injury narrative with pressure, composure, and clean reads that play in any room. We look ahead to Strickland vs Hernandez and break down how a disciplined jab-heavy approach stacks up against a relentless clinch and takedown game. Keep an eye on Geoff Neal vs Uros Medic and Dan Ige vs Costa for pure violence, with Michel Pereira always a wildcard for viral moments.

    And beyond the UFC cage, MMA goes mainstream streaming: Ronda Rousey vs Gina Carano hits Netflix via MVP, a crossover moment that could bring new fans if the product matches the platform. We close with quick-hit AskReddit mayhem and a delicious Would You Rather that somehow has us opening a meat-only food truck.

    If you’re into sharp analysis, smart matchmaking ideas, and a little chaos along the way, you’re in the right corner. Tap follow, share with a fight friend, and drop a review to tell us where you stand on the 225 idea—does it fix heavyweight or just split the problem?

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Win by walk off middle finger?
    Feb 6 2026

    Send us a text

    Two numbered cards in a row, one wild conversation to unpack it all. We dive into how Paramount Plus changes the viewing experience with multicam replays and deep archives, why those mid-round ads feel brutal, and where the platform already shines by staying steady under massive traffic. Then it’s straight into the cage: early prelim chaos, shock finishes, and the strange math of damage versus volume that decided more than one fight.

    We go bout by bout across UFC 324–325. Umar Nurmagomedov showed layers that made an elite brawler look predictable. Arnold Allen and Jean Silva gave us grit and viral weirdness, while Natalia Silva out-positioned Rose Namajunas in a win that was more technical than thrilling. The heavyweight picture drew heat: Derek Lewis struggled for urgency and Tai Tuivasa’s gas tank questions resurfaced, fueling a larger debate about depth and standards in the division. On the precision side, Sean O’Malley dialed down volume and dialed up accuracy against Song Yadong, raising good questions about leg kicks, game planning, and what a Sandhagen matchup might reveal.

    Then came the centerpiece: Justin Gaethje vs Paddy Pimblett. Gaethje landed with authority, managed risk on the mat, and made history as the first to claim a second interim title. Pimblett’s chin and composure under fire boosted his stock even in defeat. We talk eye pokes, missed swarms, and what happens if that style meets Topuria’s clean lines. Over at UFC 325, comebacks and collapses defined the prelims, Salikhov flipped expectations with a quick submission, and Mauricio “Ruffy” turned sniper to punish Rafael Fiziev’s defensive gaps. Benoit Saint Denis broke Dan Hooker with pressure and grappling layers. And Alexander Volkanovski closed the show with a vintage champion’s performance—controlling pace, pre-empting adjustments, and reminding a dangerous Diego Lopes that IQ and economy still win world-class fights.

    Stick around for what’s next on the calendar, plus a closing curveball: would you take $750k guaranteed or chase a $90M hole-in-one over a year? Hit play, then drop your pick. If you enjoyed the breakdowns, follow, share with a fight friend, and leave a review—your support helps more fans find the show.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min