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This week on The Chris Moon Show, Moon does what he does best — laughs at the nonsense of modern life while trying to make sense of it.
The episode dives into people who take mild hobbies way too seriously, why everyone claims they’re burnt out but never logs off, and the science behind why scrolling feels like rest even though it makes us more tired. Moon also talks about why nobody trusts reviews anymore, adults who refuse to learn new technology, the strange comfort of nostalgia for things that weren’t even good, and why absolutely everything now wants a monthly subscription.
But this week’s Long Goodbye is different.
Moon closes the show by saying goodbye to Sophia, his dog — a real, personal loss that cuts through all the jokes and noise. It’s a moment about love, grief, and how sometimes the quiet goodbyes matter more than anything else we talk about.
Funny, honest, silly, and real — this episode is about modern nonsense… and the hardest goodbye.
By Die Tryin MediaThis week on The Chris Moon Show, Moon does what he does best — laughs at the nonsense of modern life while trying to make sense of it.
The episode dives into people who take mild hobbies way too seriously, why everyone claims they’re burnt out but never logs off, and the science behind why scrolling feels like rest even though it makes us more tired. Moon also talks about why nobody trusts reviews anymore, adults who refuse to learn new technology, the strange comfort of nostalgia for things that weren’t even good, and why absolutely everything now wants a monthly subscription.
But this week’s Long Goodbye is different.
Moon closes the show by saying goodbye to Sophia, his dog — a real, personal loss that cuts through all the jokes and noise. It’s a moment about love, grief, and how sometimes the quiet goodbyes matter more than anything else we talk about.
Funny, honest, silly, and real — this episode is about modern nonsense… and the hardest goodbye.