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This week on What the Frock?, the world shows up all at once, loudly, brightly, and with absolutely no regard for your attention span. Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod take their usual seats at the intersection of faith, culture, and mild incredulity, only to discover that the universe has decided to pile on the Winter Olympics, the Super Bowl, T20 cricket, modern politics, and medical bureaucracy before breakfast.
It starts innocently enough with Olympic wonder, Italian mountains, music, and the simple joy of watching human beings do impossible things on snow. Then it veers, as it always does, into questions no one asked but everyone now has to live with, including how far elite athletes will go for a competitive edge and why you can never look at ski jumping the same way again.
Along the way there is laughter, skepticism, and a deeply personal detour through an emergency room experience that feels uncomfortably familiar in the modern age. Politics makes its entrance, spectacle does what spectacle always does, and cricket reminds us that hope is a fragile thing.
This is not a neat episode. It is not meant to be. It is a conversation for a crowded Sunday morning world, curious, amused, slightly appalled, and still willing to laugh. Welcome back.
By Dave Bowman and Roderick Cook4
66 ratings
This week on What the Frock?, the world shows up all at once, loudly, brightly, and with absolutely no regard for your attention span. Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod take their usual seats at the intersection of faith, culture, and mild incredulity, only to discover that the universe has decided to pile on the Winter Olympics, the Super Bowl, T20 cricket, modern politics, and medical bureaucracy before breakfast.
It starts innocently enough with Olympic wonder, Italian mountains, music, and the simple joy of watching human beings do impossible things on snow. Then it veers, as it always does, into questions no one asked but everyone now has to live with, including how far elite athletes will go for a competitive edge and why you can never look at ski jumping the same way again.
Along the way there is laughter, skepticism, and a deeply personal detour through an emergency room experience that feels uncomfortably familiar in the modern age. Politics makes its entrance, spectacle does what spectacle always does, and cricket reminds us that hope is a fragile thing.
This is not a neat episode. It is not meant to be. It is a conversation for a crowded Sunday morning world, curious, amused, slightly appalled, and still willing to laugh. Welcome back.

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