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**You can find us at: discord.gg/ygv56qM.**
The quickest way to understand Stone of Babble is to watch a normal thought get demolished by curiosity. We start with a deceptively simple argument about pears: what they look like, what they’re “made from,” and why eating fruit skins feels either lawful or unhinged. Within minutes, the conversation turns into a loud little study of how humans invent rules, build narratives from vibes, and defend their preferences like they’re facts.
From there, we pour one out for Chuck Norris and relive the strange grip Walker, Texas Ranger can have on your childhood memory. That nostalgia becomes a launchpad for bigger questions: if the alphabet is “in order” because we were told it is, what other systems do we accept without proof? We tumble into time dilation, the speed of light, aliens, and the uncomfortable logic of changing the future by visiting the past. Then a real-world antimatter headline hits, and suddenly we’re pitching a blockbuster plot that somehow makes total sense in the moment.
The back half gets even weirder and more grounded at the same time: “glitter lung,” particle exposure, robot crime stories, and the looming fear that AI will demand resources we can’t spare. We sketch our 2030 survival plan with duck and goose farming, the invention of a hybrid “deuce,” and a half-serious belief that water wars are closer than people think, especially around the Great Lakes. We cap it all with fast food takes, Domino’s devotion, and a closing poem that seals the vibe.
If you like comedy podcasts, improvised conversation, pop culture riffs, AI anxiety, sci-fi speculation, and dumb arguments that accidentally reveal something true, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves chaos, and leave a review with your most unhinged 2030 prediction.
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By Stoner Babble5
2323 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
**You can find us at: discord.gg/ygv56qM.**
The quickest way to understand Stone of Babble is to watch a normal thought get demolished by curiosity. We start with a deceptively simple argument about pears: what they look like, what they’re “made from,” and why eating fruit skins feels either lawful or unhinged. Within minutes, the conversation turns into a loud little study of how humans invent rules, build narratives from vibes, and defend their preferences like they’re facts.
From there, we pour one out for Chuck Norris and relive the strange grip Walker, Texas Ranger can have on your childhood memory. That nostalgia becomes a launchpad for bigger questions: if the alphabet is “in order” because we were told it is, what other systems do we accept without proof? We tumble into time dilation, the speed of light, aliens, and the uncomfortable logic of changing the future by visiting the past. Then a real-world antimatter headline hits, and suddenly we’re pitching a blockbuster plot that somehow makes total sense in the moment.
The back half gets even weirder and more grounded at the same time: “glitter lung,” particle exposure, robot crime stories, and the looming fear that AI will demand resources we can’t spare. We sketch our 2030 survival plan with duck and goose farming, the invention of a hybrid “deuce,” and a half-serious belief that water wars are closer than people think, especially around the Great Lakes. We cap it all with fast food takes, Domino’s devotion, and a closing poem that seals the vibe.
If you like comedy podcasts, improvised conversation, pop culture riffs, AI anxiety, sci-fi speculation, and dumb arguments that accidentally reveal something true, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves chaos, and leave a review with your most unhinged 2030 prediction.
Support the show