Stephen talks about mushroom coffee and 1949 weight loss ads. Later, Josh Spurling and Erin Peris join to discuss the faint hope of watching a movie they actually enjoy.
Stephen reports on the latest "Barney Google and Snuffy Smith" comic strip, the Golden Globes, an Oregon wolf, and more. Later, Stephen and his guests review The Song of the Birds (1935) and Song of the Birds (1949) and decide which one must die.
The new guest, Billy Bennett, makes a bold distinction between the chef who trained him and the Swedish chef from the Muppets. Stephen puzzles over the belief in inanimate ventriloquist dummies. Plus: Mamie Van Doren, Dr. Seuss, and more.
Cilantro-hater, Billy Bennett, joins Stephen to discuss trivial political issues before getting down to the serious business of bonobos, gorillas and Bugs Bunny.
Stephen distracts himself from his microphone-related woes by talking to Ken Hurley about two longtime friends who discover they are sisters, an exorcist who wants to cancel horror movies, and more.
Billy Bennett and Ken Hurley join Stephen to talk about the cancerous cancel culture, that superhero TV series about old sitcoms, the vegetarian diet of that Viking horns guy at the Capitol, and more.
Ken Hurley, who may or may not be a jazz opera singer, talks with Stephen about whether it was an evil conspiracy or gross incompetence killed off Jeffrey Epstein.
Stephen confuses the bigotry against babies with the bigotry of babies and decries that scientists have not reversed aging in time to save the inventor of cassette tapes and CDs.
June from the MURDERS, MYSTERIES AND MEOWS podcast joins Stephen to speculate on the motivations of a cat stuck in a Boeing 737. Later, Jaron (aka Mr. Dabbler) talks health care in a way even Stephen can understand.
Stephen talks to Ken Hurley and the fabulous Marlee Rebecca (aka Marlee Hepburn) about holographic audiences, the on-set improvisations of Robin Williams, and the new age restriction for bars in Florida.
Old guest Billy Bennett and new guest Matthew Bennett discuss the wonderful world of Oz and the equally (some say NOT equally) wonderful world of Disney. Plus: Queen Elizabeth II and Woody Allen.
Stephen struggles his way through the bad writing in a once-popular magazine. Later, Ken joins Stephen to discuss the wonders of those illegal things that naughty persons will sometimes illegally and naughtily ingest.
Stephen looks at the racism of Sharon Osbourne's tears, the hotness of the naked arsonist who burned a potato chip rack at an Anaheim Subway restaurant, and the sudden return of onetime child actor Tommy Cook.
Billy Bennett joins Stephen to discuss the perils of ripped jeans, Subway Sandwich Shop tuna, Nostradamus or whoever that is on 4chan, misgendering in Canada, tweeting while teen-aged, and more.
Sabotage hits Stephen's mic yet again, and Fantasy Horse is the prime suspect. Billy Bennett joins to discuss Chinese food, British swear words, and the comics section in the Indianapolis Star.
Stephen looks at forgotten old celebs that everyone remembers, TV doctors who slap Jeopardy! (1984) fans in the face, and a soft drink that goes hard on mosquitoes and paint jobs.
Stephen talks about Ghost Barbara Billingsley's role in Ellen DeGeneres' declining ratings and the 13-year-old girl spawned from two different human species.
Stephen discusses: fatbergs; the overrating of crickets; the extortion of a U.S. rep; and more. Later, a musician, a chef and a Disney expert walk into a bong. In a bonus segment, Stephen steps into the world of ASMR.
Stephen is thrilled to read about Charlie Chester and Adrian Bonenberger because what great names, right? Meanwhile, Stephen's cat licks a clean iron skillet.
Stephen concerns himself with a man who steps on plastic barrettes to save a guy with ravioli in his navel, a cartoon walrus who writes for People magazine, and more.
Stephen reads Glenn Greenwald, John McWhorter, and finds out what Twitter wants us to know about Israel, Palestine, Leonardo DiCaprio, Car Talk, and more.
Stephen reads the first chapter of "A Modern Hercules" by Melvin G. Winstock, looks into what Twitter wants us to know about Liz Cheney, and dives into Glenn Greenwald's attack on AOC.
Stephen finds out what Twitter wants us to know about "breakout" infections, then looks into Greenwald vs. Liz Cheney and Taibbi vs. apologizing to the Woke.