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Episode 2322 - This episode starts exactly where civilized society collapses: discussions about Hot Girl Summer logistics, post-breakup weight loss predictions, and whether men and women are even allowed to understand each other anymore.
Kid and the crew bounce between cultural double standards, algorithm-driven outrage, media polarization, and the weird pressure modern society puts on everybody to immediately pick a side and stay angry forever.
Hat Trick unloads stories involving co-parenting headaches, relationship dynamics, motel meetups, and the complicated balance between emotional connection and casual fun.
That leads into conversations about infatuation, limerence, jealousy, and why modern relationships feel like a chemistry experiment mixed with social media warfare.
The back half of the episode swerves into late-night TV nostalgia, Stephen Colbert's Bay City connection, conspiracy-fueled political rants, AI paranoia, listener-line insanity, and Kid realizing he's spent 2,300 episodes collecting human weirdness like a raccoon dragging shiny garbage into a garage studio.
By The Kid A.G.3.8
1919 ratings
Episode 2322 - This episode starts exactly where civilized society collapses: discussions about Hot Girl Summer logistics, post-breakup weight loss predictions, and whether men and women are even allowed to understand each other anymore.
Kid and the crew bounce between cultural double standards, algorithm-driven outrage, media polarization, and the weird pressure modern society puts on everybody to immediately pick a side and stay angry forever.
Hat Trick unloads stories involving co-parenting headaches, relationship dynamics, motel meetups, and the complicated balance between emotional connection and casual fun.
That leads into conversations about infatuation, limerence, jealousy, and why modern relationships feel like a chemistry experiment mixed with social media warfare.
The back half of the episode swerves into late-night TV nostalgia, Stephen Colbert's Bay City connection, conspiracy-fueled political rants, AI paranoia, listener-line insanity, and Kid realizing he's spent 2,300 episodes collecting human weirdness like a raccoon dragging shiny garbage into a garage studio.