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This week on the Verbal Warning Podcast the boys somehow manage to turn one conversation into about twelve different conspiracies, arguments, childhood flashbacks and possible government watchlists. We break down Josh’s ongoing “problem” and whether it’s getting out of control, Dylan tells us about his camping trip and the absolute chaos that came with it, and somehow the Pope gets dragged into the legendary 67 meme for reasons nobody can properly explain.
From there the conversation completely derails into the brutal reality that apparently the only way to make money in Australia anymore is selling drugs, before diving headfirst into one of the wildest theories yet — Michael Jackson secretly saving kids from Epstein’s island. Is it factual? Probably not. Is it entertaining? Absolutely.
To balance out the chaos, we finish things off with a nostalgic trip back through the best childhood shows that raised us, from classic cartoons to absolute Aussie TV staples that every kid grew up watching after school.
It’s unfiltered, chaotic, stupidly funny and somehow still one of the deepest episodes yet. Classic Verbal Warning energy from start to finish.
By Josh and DylanThis week on the Verbal Warning Podcast the boys somehow manage to turn one conversation into about twelve different conspiracies, arguments, childhood flashbacks and possible government watchlists. We break down Josh’s ongoing “problem” and whether it’s getting out of control, Dylan tells us about his camping trip and the absolute chaos that came with it, and somehow the Pope gets dragged into the legendary 67 meme for reasons nobody can properly explain.
From there the conversation completely derails into the brutal reality that apparently the only way to make money in Australia anymore is selling drugs, before diving headfirst into one of the wildest theories yet — Michael Jackson secretly saving kids from Epstein’s island. Is it factual? Probably not. Is it entertaining? Absolutely.
To balance out the chaos, we finish things off with a nostalgic trip back through the best childhood shows that raised us, from classic cartoons to absolute Aussie TV staples that every kid grew up watching after school.
It’s unfiltered, chaotic, stupidly funny and somehow still one of the deepest episodes yet. Classic Verbal Warning energy from start to finish.