Épisodes

  • One Year Into Trump 2.0: Red & Blue Scorecards
    Jan 23 2026

    What happens when two Americans with sharply different ideologies stop screaming, start listening, and actually compare notes?

    In this episode of Bald & Bloviating, Mookie Spitz and Ed Powell — political opposites with a shared allergy to tribal nonsense — conduct a brutally honest audit of the first year of Trump’s second term. Instead of trading talking points, they build parallel red and blue scorecards, grading Trump’s performance issue by issue, policy by policy, and consequence by consequence.

    Mookie approaches the administration from a libertarian-progressive angle, skeptical of power, allergic to authoritarian drift, and deeply concerned about economic inequality, cultural polarization, and democratic erosion. Ed comes from a constitutional conservative and libertarian tradition, prioritizing border security, national sovereignty, economic nationalism, and institutional accountability. Their worldviews often clash. But instead of detonating into predictable outrage, they dissect, challenge, concede, and recalibrate in real time.

    They examine immigration and border enforcement, economic policy and tariffs, deregulation and industrial reshoring, AI-driven economic upheaval, government waste and bureaucratic inertia, military posture, foreign policy realignment, cultural fragmentation, and the expanding role of executive power. Every topic is debated through both red and blue lenses, exposing not just policy outcomes, but the moral assumptions underneath them.

    Along the way, they find surprising areas of agreement, sharp philosophical fault lines, and uncomfortable truths that neither side particularly enjoys confronting.

    Their conversation is less about defending Trump than it is about defending the possibility of meaningful political conversation itself: a space where disagreement sharpens thinking instead of hardening identity, and where argument becomes a tool for understanding rather than domination.

    If you’re tired of algorithm-fed outrage, tribal loyalty tests, and conversations that generate more heat than light, Ed & Mookie showcase a model for how Americans can still talk honestly, forcefully, and productively across deep ideological divides.

    The Guest

    Ed Powell received his PhD in Astrophysics (Plasma Physics and Controlled Thermonuclear Fusion) from Princeton University and has worked as a contractor for the Department of Energy, Department of Defense, and the Intelligence Community since graduating. Today he owns his own consulting company specializing in systems and simulation architecture and engineering.

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    2 h et 8 min
  • Occam's Razor: Slicing Through the Byzantine Clusterf$ck
    Jan 20 2026

    The first episode of Season Two of Bald and Bloviating features Mookie Spitz on a solo rant as he takes a razor to one of humanity’s favorite defense mechanisms: turning simple truths into baroque piles of intellectual bullshit. Fear isn’t just pain—it’s pain with imagination. And when that fear gets dressed up as sophistication, theory, ideology, or “deep analysis,” you get what Mookie calls the Byzantine Clusterfuck: complexity used as camouflage.

    His rant is a ruthless exploration of how otherwise reasonable people, including writers, thinkers, institutions, couples, conspiracists, corporations, and entire cultures hide their confusion, cowardice, and bad decisions behind layers of overthinking. From conspiracy theories and political narratives to therapy culture, failed relationships, impotence, career paralysis, and bad science fiction, the pattern is the same: when honesty hurts, people pile on explanations.

    Mookie dissects:

    • Why fear is pain plus simulation—and how that fuels over-intellectualization
    • How conspiracy theories are ego protection masquerading as insight
    • Why Occam’s Razor terrifies people more than chaos
    • How bad sequels (looking at you, 2010) ruin great stories by explaining too much
    • Why great storytelling, like life, works best with simple rules and real stakes
    • How “depth” is often just insecurity in expensive clothing
    • Why many personal crises aren’t mysterious at all: you’re just in the wrong life

    Mookie believes in self-exposure more than self-help. So if you’re addicted to sounding smart, allergic to simplicity, or hiding behind endless analysis instead of making a hard choice, his rant will hopefully piss you off, and perhaps help save your life.

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    1 h et 19 min
  • The Amazon Flywheel vs. A Blizzard of Bullshit
    Jan 2 2026

    The first Bald and Bloviating episode of Season Two provides a retrospective on 2025, and inspiration for the year ahead.

    Mookie celebrates and slams a year of relentless creation—244+ podcasts across five shows, daily content, thousands of posts, a full science-fiction novel, new communities, endless publishing—and he asks the blunt question: is he building an Amazon Flywheel, or just hurling a blizzard of bullshit into the void?

    He walks straight into the psychology of creative obsession: The thrill, the compulsion, the joy of actually loving the work. He owns the truth out loud: He chose happiness over “success.” didn’t chase polish, monetization, or careful strategy. Instead, he chased fulfillment, play, discovery, voice, identity, momentum, and sheer artistic eruption. He rejected perfectionism and paralysis, and stopped waiting for a mythic “right moment.” He created because he wanted to feel alive, and couldn't have done otherwise.

    But Mookie doen't romanticize the chaos. The world doesn’t reward volume. Algorithms don’t care about passion. Platforms don’t hand out visibility for heart and effort. “Just keep creating” often masquerades as strategy while failure quietly compounds. Being honest, he tears apart the illusion that activity equals progress, and confronts the aloneness of building without scale, forcing himself to face the brutal tension between expression and relevance. Bottom line, he acknowledges that quality and quantity still fail without targeting, amplification, discipline, and intent.

    So this solo rant lives right in the collision: joy vs. results, freedom vs. structure, art vs. market, fulfillment vs. recognition. The Amazon Flywheel runs on deliberate design and relentless momentum, while a blizzard of bullshit runs on catharsis and adrenaline—and rarely sticks. Mookie unpacks what he learned the hard way, and refuses to apologize for choosing joy. Committed to evolving in 2026, he suggests a sharper craft, smarter strategy, clearer branding, intentional amplification… while equally dedicated to not murdering the happiness that fuels all of it.

    If you create like hell, drown in your own output, wonder why effort refuses to convert into momentum, or struggle between wanting recognition and wanting to feel alive, this episode won’t flatter you, but it sure as hell might inspire you. At the end of the digital day, whether you succeed or fail, NOBODY CARES. And that, more than any other feeling, is liberating as hell.

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    1 h et 54 min
  • Shaking the Beltway Trees with TH Forest
    Nov 20 2025

    What happens when a bald bloviator pods with an MM romance author to save America? Listen around, and find out on this 66th episode of the Bald and Bloviating podcast, where TH Forest and Mookie Spitz play an invigorating game of political tennis.

    Their intense and fun conversation swings from Reaganomics and the imminent attack on Venezuela to immigration raids and Nixon's Southern Strategy, from the Epstein Files to the bunker below the refurbished East Wing only to end where they started: acknowledging that the United States is deep in a structural crisis, and both parties helped build the mess.

    TH Forest serves it up: She dismantles the myth of the “small government” right, shows how MAGA weaponized fear, and explains why working-class Americans keep voting for the people bleeding them dry. She lays out the collapse of regulation, the gutting of the CFPB, the lies pumped out by conservative media, the mental-health disaster on the streets, and the weaponized grievance machine targeting young men.

    Mookie swings back, probes, and plays devil’s advocate where needed, breaking into a sweat over Biden’s failures and inflation denial to the Democrats’ messaging vacuum and their chronic inability to hold onto working-class and now even minority voters. By the last set, he's excited by TH's embrace of Gavin Newsom, a hopeful sign that progressives are starting to get practical.

    Jump in! Immigration. Inequality. Crime. Corruption. Billionaires. The militarization of cities. The failure of institutions. The weaponized attention economy. Their spirited conversation is blunt, intense, and unfiltered, two Americans refusing to pretend everything is fine while the country accelerates toward groyperism while still rebounding from the Left's blunders.

    The Guest

    TH Forest lives in Massachusetts with her husband, sons, cats, Major Tom & Bowie, her German Shepherd, Freya, and one very loud macaw, Loki. She loves to cook, read, and listen to all genres of music (except country) and is passionate about the things that matter to her, like representation, inclusivity, and being an LGBTQ+ ally. She is also a shameless promoter of her novels and is happy to talk your ear off about them.

    Listen to Mookie and TH talk about her creative journey and books on The Writers' Pod, visit her Holdorf Press for indie authors, and check out her Website & Social Channels.

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    1 h et 59 min
  • The Cockroach as Critic
    Nov 4 2025

    In this raw, sardonic, and strangely uplifting solo rant, Mookie Spitz revisits his own metamorphosis from a self-flagellating perfectionist to a liberated creator. Framed through the lens of Franz Kafka’s existential nightmares, The Cockroach as Critic is part homage, part exorcism, and part manifesto for late-life reinvention.

    Mookie draws parallels between Kafka’s bureaucratic dread and the generational trauma of growing up under a father who weaponized criticism. Through his signature dark humor and biting introspection, he reads a short story he wrote decades ago: a twisted inversion of The Metamorphosis, where a talking cockroach becomes the voice of his own inner saboteur. What begins as absurd comedy spirals into something eerily honest: a meditation on isolation, self-critique, and the trap of confusing suffering with creativity.

    But this isn’t a pity party, instead a declaration of freedom. Mookie grinds that cockroach — literal and psychological — underfoot and reclaims joy in creation. The episode becomes a celebration of rebirth as the artist learns to share, to give back, to enjoy his output without apology. Kafka’s hunger artist finally eats.

    Along the way, expect rants about Max Brod’s betrayal (or salvation), the absurdity of self-importance in art, the emotional cost of perfectionism, and a surprisingly tender reflection on fatherhood and gratitude. By the end, Mookie connects his late-life creative surge to something universal: that the “metamorphosis” isn’t about decay, but about finally hatching into yourself.

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    37 min
  • Don't Be a Picassole!
    Oct 14 2025


    In this blistering solo rant, Mookie Spitz takes the 2025 Nobel Prize for Literature and turns it into a mirror for every would-be artist, procrastinating perfectionist, and self-styled “creative” who talks more than they make. Trigger warning for your inner hack: this one hurts.

    From Laszlo Krasznahorkai’s single-sentence novels to Picasso’s 50,000 pieces of relentless output, Mookie dismantles the myth of “someday” artistry — the fantasy that genius waits for perfect conditions. He drags the coffee-shop philosophers, the pandemic-era Zoom posers, and even his past self — the guy who mistook talking about art for doing it.

    This 64th Bald and Bloviating episode is part confession, part sermon, part flamethrower. Mookie draws lines between the ease-poisoned world of AI art and the sweat-stained grind of real creation, between the sous-chef’s burn scars and the diner’s luxury, between heaven and hell as two rooms divided by one thin wall. The verdict? If you’re not bleeding for it, you’re probably bullshitting.

    A Picasso...

    • Works daily — even when uninspired, broke, or ignored.
    • Creates out of compulsion, not validation.
    • Finds joy in the process, not the applause.
    • Welcomes discomfort as proof that something real is happening.
    • Treats art like labor — a grind, a calling, a job you can’t quit.
    • Doesn’t wait for “the right time” or “perfect idea.” They make time.
    • Knows that meaning comes during the work, not before it.

    An Assho'...

    • Talks about creating more than they actually create.
    • Mistakes taste for talent, and intellect for output.
    • Hides behind perfectionism — “It’s not ready yet.”
    • Curates the appearance of artistry instead of doing the work.
    • Thinks inspiration is earned by thinking, not doing.
    • Quits when applause doesn’t come fast enough.
    • Believes effort should be easy — that creation shouldn’t hurt.

    Which are you?

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    40 min
  • How I Almost Partied with Bari Weiss
    Oct 7 2025

    In this 63rd episode of Bald and Bloviating, Mookie Spitz peels back a decade of intertwined ambition, friendship, and ideology that runs from Toronto brainstorming sessions to New York WeWorks beer taps to the editorial suites of CBS News.

    Starting with Barry Weiss’s meteoric rise from Substack renegade to corporate media powerhouse, Mookie rewinds to 2015 to trace his own improbable web of connections: Ali Rizvi, the doctor-musician op-ed writer; Faisal Saeed Al-Mutar, the Iraqi refugee who built Ideas Beyond Borders; and his cofounder Melissa Chen, the provocateur-intellectual whose incendiary tweets landed her on Joe Rogan and in the orbit of media’s new ruling class.

    But the beating heart of this episode is Mookie’s volatile, funny, and deeply human friendship with Faisal — a relationship that swung between mentorship and dependency, affection and exhaustion. Half Wayne's World bromance, half De Niro–Keitel in Mean Streets, theirs was a 95/5 friendship: one man giving, the other consuming, both feeding on the electricity of shared trauma and manic humor. Late nights in Brooklyn bled into philosophical brawls, metal shows, and endless laughter — until it all collapsed under ego, fatigue, and the unspoken truth that one was always performing for the other.

    Their story is of mentorship gone sideways, of PR ideals colliding with post-truth branding, and of the uneasy blend of altruism, ego, and spectacle that powers modern advocacy. Mookie dissects how social capital morphs into moral capital, how contrarians become institutions, and how even the most self-aware blowhard can find meaning in being both gardener and plant.

    Equal parts confessional memoir and cultural autopsy, this episode delivers wit, candor, and uncomfortable honesty about fame, friendship, and the shifting moral gravity of our media age.

    In the end — as Vonnegut wrote — so it goes. Every movement becomes mainstream, every outsider becomes establishment, and every friendship, however electric, burns itself into a kind of truth that can only be told after the smoke clears.

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    1 h et 22 min
  • LA Comic Con 2025: View from Booksellers Row
    Sep 30 2025

    Step into the chaos and communion of LA Comic Con 2025 with your bald and bloviating host, Mookie Spitz. From booth-side book barking with sci-fi author Ingrid Moon to weaving through seas of stormtroopers, cosplayers, and holographic Stan Lee, this episode captures the raw energy of a cultural carnival where camp, commerce, and creativity collide.

    Mookie shares what it really feels like to stand for three straight days selling books to strangers, why covers sell more than content, and how selling techniques straight out of SPIN Selling and Glengarry Glen Ross can make or break your day. Along the way, he unpacks the deeper meaning behind cosplay as camp, the difference between L.A. Comic Con and its cousins in San Diego and New York, and the eternal struggle every creator faces—chasing attention in a saturated digital world without selling out your soul.

    He also lays down battle-tested best practices for any creator trying to sell at a con:

    • Put QR codes everywhere (Amazon links, newsletters, payment apps).
    • Covers matter more than content—make them bold, professional, and on-genre (MAYA: Most Advanced Yet Acceptable).
    • Invest in signage, posters, and visuals that legitimize your booth.
    • Give away freebies (bookmarks, stickers, cards) that double as conversion tools.
    • Personalize signings with the event name—it turns a book into a keepsake.
    • Always be converting: if they don’t buy, leave them with your QR code or email.
    • Engage passersby with humor and small talk—don’t wait for them to approach.
    • Lead with the pitch, not the synopsis (“Fallout meets Hunger Games” sells faster than 60 seconds of plot).
    • Tailor your pitch to their tastes—make it about them, not you.
    • Value networking as much as sales—the long game matters.

    Mookie's rant isn’t just a recap of a convention; but a meditation on why we create, why we sell, and why we still show up. Expect stories of sore feet, overpriced sandwiches, surprising sales wins, unexpected encounters, and the lessons that stick long after the crowds go home.

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    1 h et 16 min