Share Stupid Logic Podcast
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Zahraa A Al-Saif, Fatima S Al-Saif
The podcast currently has 22 episodes available.
It’s been a fun ride this year, but all good things must come to an end. With this, we bid farewell, and say goodbye for good… BUT, we’re not done yet. While saying goodbye, we wondered, why was it so hard to say goodbyes, and so, this episode was made.
Let’s do this one more time. Let’s double down. Since you liked the first part so much, here’s a second. I’m not going to go into too much details but yes, we do discuss battery life, missing images, and of course, as always, Greek and Roman history.
Answering one stupid question logically is fun, but have you considered the possibility of asking more than one…. in a single episode? We were in a silly, goofy mood and thought hey, let’s go for it! Here we challenged each other to answer each other’s questions in the shortest amount of time, wanna know who won? Tune in to hear it all.
Hello again my dear friends. Last we left off on a gruesome tail, Nicole could've hardly prevailed, but today... well today I'll stop speaking in rhymes. Today's mystery is a bit of a tragedy (there again I go, I can never stop this flow). Let's open this crooked book, and flip to the chapter labeled Glenn Brook.
True story, one day Fatima and a cousin of hers were in a hotel and decided to wake up early and eat the breakfast that it had to serve. There, the person who greeted them wore a tall, white hat, and it was inferred that he was the chef. They sat down and her cousin snapped and said, “Fatima, I have the perfect topic for you to discuss in your podcast: why are chef’s hats so tall?” The rest was history…
IMAGINE, you and your two friends are trapped in your college apartment. Everybody else you know is either dead or is a zombie. The only living person is your father who lives a town away, and he is developing a spray that can get rid of the zombie disease and turn people back to normal after 24 hours. The chemicals in this cure decay and revert into a noneffective cure after 3 hours, Can you and your friends survive the zombie apocalypse and cure enough people in order to stay alive?
The other day, we were in our grandparents house discussing the TV show Detective Conan. At some point, one of our cousins wanted to pull up the usual recap that’s played before each episode on YouTube. She couldn’t find it, but after five minutes later, Fatima found a video on this topic on her TikTok. There was a moment of silence. Were there spies among us? Who was the culprit behind the crime? So many questions… but one mattered more more than the rest. Did our phones spy on us?
What does the victory sign, a dove and olive branch, and a circle cut in three half’s have in common? They’re all signs of peace! Peace is a complicated concept, but today we’ll dive into something simpler: peace signs. Where did they originate from? What have they become? And, what are other lesser-known types of peace signs?
Sometimes you pick up an old bag from the time you lived in another place to go out in. Your friends would always smell that bag and go like “Ah you smell exactly like ‘insert place you lived‘! Good times.” You would always go back and smell it and wonder why you couldn’t smell the smell your friends smelt. Today, we ponder over this question and many more. With that, we unravel greater things that prove that you really shouldn’t take your sense of smell for granted.
Seeing is believing, but sometimes it’s deceiving. Do you feel like you’ve seen this before? A moment of rowing your boat? A second of standing still in the forest? A family gathering of a conversation that’s weirdly been discussed before? This and so much more is all tied in to a feeling called deja vu. But, what causes deja vu to begin with? In this episode we’ll dig deep and try to answer this question because you were probably too lazy to search for it.
The podcast currently has 22 episodes available.