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This episode of Traffic School Powered by The Advocates detonates straight out of the gate with the myth, the legend, the mountain himself — Lieutenant Crain — materializing like a law-enforcement cryptid summoned by expired Monster Energy and unpaid citations. Within seconds, we’re spiraling into AI-generated ballads, Suno-powered anthems, and a looming basketball showdown between DJs and Idaho State Police that somehow escalates into a Mountain America Center fundraiser featuring Crazy Jay in a skull helmet and Ravonda possibly serving beverages mid-free-throw. Leadership has changed. The gloves are off. It’s cops versus chaos goblins, and Viktor Wilt is already winded.
Calls begin pouring in like unsecured cargo on I-15. Mark wants to know about pedestrian laws but definitely did not run anyone over (probably). Ravonda calls in actively drinking and driving like she’s auditioning for a Dateline episode, gets scolded, references Bob Saget for no reason, and vanishes into the bar ether. Carl is shopping for stripper-pole party buses in Las Vegas while simultaneously admitting to illegal aftermarket exhausts, and somehow we detour into the constitutional logistics of open containers in motorhomes versus pickup beds. The legal nuance is immaculate. The imagery is regrettable.
Peaches ignites a Facebook civil war over a red arrow at Exit 119, triggering an on-air seminar about how red arrows mean STOP, even if your cousin’s roommate’s barber insists otherwise in the Life in Idaho Falls group. $68 tickets rain from the heavens as Viktor pitches budget deficit solutions via mass citation farming. Meanwhile, someone asks if AI will take over the world, which is bold considering AI just wrote a six-minute metal anthem about Lieutenant Crain detaining goats while Viktor spirals over truck nuts. Musicians everywhere feel a chill.
We take a philosophical detour through headphone legality, coal rolling (illegal and rude), speeding on on-ramps (the accelerator AND the brake exist), T-bone accident conspiracy theories, and the sacred art of yellow-light timing. A disgruntled fiancé allegedly claims she was cited after rejecting romantic advances from an officer, only for body cam footage to absolutely annihilate that narrative. Justice prevails. The dump button gets used.
And then — the crescendo — Peaches unveils an AI-generated Lieutenant Crain anthem featuring multiple vocalists, harsh metal screams, and a mysterious entity known only as “Unit 12.” The song refuses to end. It loops. It chants. It becomes self-aware. The goats are detained. Viktor is immortalized. The mountain stands eternal.
Traffic School signs off, but not before solidifying itself as the only radio show on earth where you can learn open container law, debate artificial intelligence domination, recruit a basketball team featuring skull helmets and party buses, and listen to a government officer’s heavy metal AI tribute — all before 9 a.m.
Unit 12.
Clear.
By Viktor WiltThis episode of Traffic School Powered by The Advocates detonates straight out of the gate with the myth, the legend, the mountain himself — Lieutenant Crain — materializing like a law-enforcement cryptid summoned by expired Monster Energy and unpaid citations. Within seconds, we’re spiraling into AI-generated ballads, Suno-powered anthems, and a looming basketball showdown between DJs and Idaho State Police that somehow escalates into a Mountain America Center fundraiser featuring Crazy Jay in a skull helmet and Ravonda possibly serving beverages mid-free-throw. Leadership has changed. The gloves are off. It’s cops versus chaos goblins, and Viktor Wilt is already winded.
Calls begin pouring in like unsecured cargo on I-15. Mark wants to know about pedestrian laws but definitely did not run anyone over (probably). Ravonda calls in actively drinking and driving like she’s auditioning for a Dateline episode, gets scolded, references Bob Saget for no reason, and vanishes into the bar ether. Carl is shopping for stripper-pole party buses in Las Vegas while simultaneously admitting to illegal aftermarket exhausts, and somehow we detour into the constitutional logistics of open containers in motorhomes versus pickup beds. The legal nuance is immaculate. The imagery is regrettable.
Peaches ignites a Facebook civil war over a red arrow at Exit 119, triggering an on-air seminar about how red arrows mean STOP, even if your cousin’s roommate’s barber insists otherwise in the Life in Idaho Falls group. $68 tickets rain from the heavens as Viktor pitches budget deficit solutions via mass citation farming. Meanwhile, someone asks if AI will take over the world, which is bold considering AI just wrote a six-minute metal anthem about Lieutenant Crain detaining goats while Viktor spirals over truck nuts. Musicians everywhere feel a chill.
We take a philosophical detour through headphone legality, coal rolling (illegal and rude), speeding on on-ramps (the accelerator AND the brake exist), T-bone accident conspiracy theories, and the sacred art of yellow-light timing. A disgruntled fiancé allegedly claims she was cited after rejecting romantic advances from an officer, only for body cam footage to absolutely annihilate that narrative. Justice prevails. The dump button gets used.
And then — the crescendo — Peaches unveils an AI-generated Lieutenant Crain anthem featuring multiple vocalists, harsh metal screams, and a mysterious entity known only as “Unit 12.” The song refuses to end. It loops. It chants. It becomes self-aware. The goats are detained. Viktor is immortalized. The mountain stands eternal.
Traffic School signs off, but not before solidifying itself as the only radio show on earth where you can learn open container law, debate artificial intelligence domination, recruit a basketball team featuring skull helmets and party buses, and listen to a government officer’s heavy metal AI tribute — all before 9 a.m.
Unit 12.
Clear.