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Seems Sus

Seems Sus

Written by: Brandon R Wright
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About this listen

Seems Sus is a commentary podcast that questions narratives, exposes hypocrisy, and cuts through the noise of modern life. Hosted by Ed and Brandon, the show explores media manipulation, government overreach, social division, conspiracy theories, cultural contradictions, and the uncomfortable patterns that keep repeating no matter who’s in power.

From surveillance states and manufactured outrage to fake news, social media doom-scrolling, and a world obsessed with compliance and resistance at the same time, Seems Sus looks at how truth gets buried beneath narratives — and how people willingly defend systems that work against them. This isn’t left vs right, politics vs politics, or good guys vs bad guys. It’s about selective outrage, shifting principles, and a society drowning in information while starving for understanding.

No preaching. No team jerseys. Just real conversations about a world that doesn’t add up.

Question everything.
Trust nothing blindly.
We bring the heat.Copyright Tinfoil Tales LLC
Political Science Politics & Government Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Ep. 7: Redacted Accountability
    Feb 13 2026
    The Epstein files were released. So why are names still hidden?

    In this episode of Seems Sus, Brandon and Ed dig into the newly released documents surrounding the Epstein case — and the glaring redactions that remain. If transparency was promised, why are key details still blacked out? Who benefits from sealed records, protected identities, and a judicial system that seems to stall when power is involved?
    We break down: • What was actually released • What is still redacted — and why that matters • The legal shielding of powerful individuals • The broader pattern of institutional protection • Whether accountability truly exists for the elite class This isn’t about partisan outrage.

    It’s about consistency. If justice is blind, why does it always seem to look away when money and influence enter the room?

    When the files are released but the truth is still covered in black ink… that’s not transparency. That’s protection.

    Question everything. Trust nothing blindly.

    Watch live every Thursday night at 9:00 PM EST at the Tinfoil Tales Podcast YouTube Channel!

    http://www.youtube.com/@tinfoiltales
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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Ep. 6: Selective Outrage
    Jan 30 2026
    In this episode of Seems Sus, Brandon and Ed tackle selective outrage, political tribalism, manufactured narratives, and the growing emotional fallout of the last decade. From social media misinformation and viral panic to post pandemic anger and identity driven conflict, the conversation explores why society feels more divided, hostile, and confused than ever. We question why people blindly defend systems they distrust, why outrage shifts depending on who is in power, and how fear based narratives keep repeating with new faces and new excuses.

    Outrage has become the default state of modern society. In this episode of Seems Sus, Brandon and Ed examine how selective outrage, misinformation, and political obsession fuel constant conflict while nothing ever truly changes. The discussion covers social media manipulation, fake headlines, AI misinformation, and how easily false claims spread when they align with existing beliefs. From exaggerated crisis narratives to outright fabricated stories, the episode highlights how little verification happens before people react emotionally. The conversation also dives into the long term psychological effects of isolation, pandemic era fear, and loss of trust in institutions.

    Brandon and Ed talk about compliance, resistance, shifting narratives, and why people who once demanded obedience now condemn it.

    Topics expand into political hypocrisy, voting disillusionment, government power, education and indoctrination, taxation, surveillance, and the realization that public outrage rarely leads to meaningful change.

    Topics Discussed
    Selective outrage and political hypocrisy
    Media manipulation and misinformation
    Social media fear cycles
    AI generated misinformation
    Post pandemic psychological effects
    Compliance versus resistance narratives
    Government trust and disillusionment
    Education and political conditioning
    Surveillance and loss of personal agency
    Cultural division and identity politics
    Consumerism and manufactured tradition
    Religious symbolism and cultural myths
    Conspiracy theories and historical patterns

    Watch live every Thursday night at 9:00 PM EST at the Tinfoil Tales Podcast YouTube Channel!

    http://www.youtube.com/@tinfoiltales
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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Ep. 5: Snowmageddon
    Jan 29 2026
    In this episode of Seems Sus, Brandon and Ed take a wide ranging look at weather manipulation theories, government secrecy, outbreak preparedness, and how quickly society collapses under pressure.

    What starts as a discussion about strange storms and unusual weather patterns turns into a deeper conversation about control, fear, and how unprepared people really are when systems fail. From chemtrail speculation and unexplained aerial activity to zombie apocalypse hypotheticals and pandemic behavior, this episode questions whether humanity could survive a real large scale crisis without turning on itself.

    Extreme weather events, supply shortages, and emergency narratives have become normal parts of modern life. In this episode of Seems Sus, we examine why storms feel larger, crises feel constant, and public reaction feels increasingly irrational.

    Brandon and Ed discuss weather modification bans, chemtrails, unexplained flares and aerial phenomena, and strange activity near military installations. The conversation expands into government secrecy, surveillance, and why official explanations often raise more questions than answers.

    The episode also dives into zombie apocalypse scenarios as a thought experiment, using past pandemic behavior, lockdowns, shortages, and social compliance to ask a simple question. If people fought over toilet paper and bread, how would society react to a real collapse or infectious outbreak?

    Topics include outbreak preparedness, social panic, manufactured fear, media narratives, compliance, resistance, and the repeating cycle of crisis driven control.

    Topics Discussed
    Weather manipulation and climate anomalies
    Chemtrails and aerial activity
    Military secrecy and unexplained flares
    Government control and emergency powers
    Pandemic behavior and public compliance
    Supply shortages and panic buying
    Zombie apocalypse hypotheticals
    Outbreak preparedness and social collapse
    Media fear cycles and distraction
    Surveillance and institutional distrust

    Watch live every Thursday night at 9:00 PM EST at the Tinfoil Tales Podcast YouTube Channel!

    http://www.youtube.com/@tinfoiltales
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    1 hr and 3 mins
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