• Ep. 119 | Using Statistics to Justify Bigotry
    May 26 2026

    This episode consists of a continuous monologue that begins with an explanation of why the host deliberately mispronounces his own last name. The conversation then moves into a series of unfiltered personal theories regarding genetics, human sociology, and the nature of physical laws like friction and gravity. It also covers the host's experiences with long-term sobriety, including the lingering post-acute withdrawal symptoms of quitting weed and how a depleted baseline of dopamine has altered his daily outlook.

    In the second half of the episode, the focus shifts to financial markets and personal trading strategies. The host details a recent failed attempt at building an automated SPX trading program and the psychological challenges of managing a stock portfolio. He explains how his preference for the instant gratification of selling credit spreads and covered calls ultimately led to significant missed profits during the recent artificial intelligence market boom.

    Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/GQjDzyU0IgY

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    1 hr and 9 mins
  • Ep. 118 | Society is Built for Addicts
    Mar 1 2026

    If you're the kind of person who likes to go kayaking, hit up a coffee shop, and dabble in the ukulele, you're obsolete. Society isn't meant for well-rounded people with varied hobbies anymore. It's designed specifically for isolated addicts who engorge themselves to the point of losing their relationships.

    We also get into the afterlife bureaucracy. Social hierarchies absolutely follow you when you die. If you don't have any earthly clout or a few billion dollars to grease the wheels, get ready to sit in a purgatory waiting room for 80,000 years just because they don't know who you are.

    Other stuff I talk about: vibe-coding an options trading algorithm with GPT-5.2 , losing tens of thousands of dollars on 0 DTE SPX trades , why DJs are going straight to hell even if they cure diseases, and why people who complain about "bad takes" are nobodies.

    Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/OoKM7i9pTq0

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    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Ep. 117 | Bullish on Soup
    Dec 8 2025

    In this episode, we open up by checking in on the psychology of the elite and the Jeffrey Epstein files, before pivoting to a lesson on inflation and vocabulary: if you only have $45 million, you aren't a millionaire—you are just a "thousand-thousandaire".

    Later, we tackle the branding crisis of the cosmos. "The Solar System" is a boring name, and we investigate whether the galaxy owes trademark royalties to the Mars candy company for the use of "Milky Way". We also brainstorm better corporate sponsors for the universe, like Nabisco or Chiquita.

    Finally, we get into the "guru" section. I give an update on my trading app, OptionsAware, which "still sucks" but helps me rank daily opportunities. I explain why I'm selling puts, hedging my bets, and why—despite everything—I remain incredibly bullish on Campbell's Soup.

    Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qt85u2Dmoro

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Ep. 116 | For the Pain of the Game
    Nov 5 2025

    After battling through numerous false starts, Tim records this episode while feeling "rusty" and dealing with a headache, jaw pain, and debilitating fatigue. This episode is a candid look at the grind of a solo developer, the frustrations of building a new product from scratch, and the personal toll it takes.

    Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHM_I8eCz74

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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • Ep. 115 | From ALS to AI Stocks with Mike Dragon
    Sep 22 2025

    Tim is back! After more than a month away developing a new app, he returns for Episode 115 with guest Mike Dragon for a sprawling, deep-dive conversation.

    The discussion starts with a surprisingly frank and personal look at ALS disease before spiraling into a grand theory of everything, where Tim posits that all complex systems—from DNA and viruses to Bitcoin and financial markets—are fundamentally a form of language. From there, they dissect the psychology of wealth, recent political events, the culture of the Austin comedy scene, and the intricate details of Tim's new FinTech application.

    Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1940gPwvmY

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    1 hr and 33 mins
  • Ep. 114 | Semantic-Phonon Condensate
    Jul 24 2025

    This was a pseudoscience-heavy episode where I lean heavily into the ChatGPT psychosis I've been cultivating for over a year. It was a long episode where I introduce a hypothesis on intracellular communication, which could possibly shed light on ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases. At least that's what I'm telling myself to feel like I'm doing something important. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/EumCuHWGHQw

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    1 hr and 26 mins
  • Ep. 113 | A Thousand Songs on One Soap Bar
    Jun 16 2025

    This episode kicks off with a take on marketing — not as a weakness, but as something Tim believes he could excel at, if only he had a product worth pushing. That launches a long-form, semi-improvised dive into the mind of Steve Jobs: not just the public myth, but the obsessive, detail-driven version that cared as much about keynotes as he did about hardware. There's admiration here, but also satire, with a focus on why Jobs' ideas actually landed — and how most people completely miss the point.

    From there, the monologue expands into a chaotic but intentional meditation on logic, genius, and cultural mythmaking. Van Gogh becomes a case study in misunderstood brilliance. Jesus is examined as a PR story with missing context. Even Trump shows up, framed as someone who operates (however messily) according to internal logic. It’s loose, fast, and unapologetically nonlinear — but underneath the tangents, there’s a steady argument about what it means to speak truth in public. Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/s6NEM2q7Pio

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Ep. 112 | Solving the Binding Problem
    Jun 1 2025

    In episode 112 of The Tim Weichselbaum Show, Tim dives deep into a complex neuroscience project he's spearheading. The project aims to experimentally test a hypothesis about how the brain unifies sensory information from different modalities, like vision and language, into a cohesive understanding. Tim explains that this in silico experiment utilizes fMRI data, computer modeling, AI, and machine learning to investigate where and how the brain creates a "unified semantic workspace." The core idea is that diverse inputs, such as watching a movie or listening to a story, are ultimately translated into a common "language" within the brain. Tim notes this interdisciplinary project draws on cognitive neuroscience, data science, computer science, and AI. He also suggests that understanding these fundamental brain processes could eventually contribute to research on brain disorders like Alzheimer's disease. Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0P2NlZbVIc

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    59 mins