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Stoner Babble

Stoner Babble

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Join JJ and Burke as they fire off aggressively opinionated takes on the world while absolutely elevated. No topic is safe from Burke’s gloriously abrasive attitude, and the real game is watching JJ attempt—often unsuccessfully—to finish a single thought before drifting into the void. It’s loud, it’s reckless, it’s probably a bad idea. Find them on Twitter @babblestoner, hit subscribe so you don’t miss new episodes, and leave a review if your brain survives the experience. Also join the discord: discord.gg/ygv56qM.

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  • Stoner Logic And Space Doubts
    Apr 25 2026

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    The more “official” something sounds, the easier it is to swallow and the harder it is to question. We push back on that instinct and follow the rabbit hole wherever it goes, from NASA doubt and moon-landing suspicion to the uncomfortable reality that AI can fake almost anything you see on a screen.

    We talk “central casting” claims about astronauts, the story of a museum “moon rock” that reportedly tested as petrified wood, and the tiny details that make conspiracy brains light up, like a capsule that looks burnt to hell but still has a perfect logo. From there we pivot into simulation theory, because real life starts getting strange too: a brutal static shock that flashes like a camera, a lightning strike minutes later, then a stoner thought about a kid on a scooter that plays out exactly as imagined. Coincidence, pattern-seeking, or a nudge from the universe?

    The back half turns into a debate about modern tech and attention. If you could erase one invention, would you kill the internet, the smartphone, or the part of culture that makes every ping feel urgent? Along the way we hit dreams, aliens, dying-scientist rumors, Oak Island fatigue, Easter egg logic, and a return to threes with red skies, red seas, and the Dead Sea “coming back to life.” We close with a simple challenge: we’re testing manifestation this week and paying attention to what shows up.

    Subscribe for more stoner philosophy and honest chaos, share this with a friend who loves conspiracy talk, and leave a review if you want more episodes like this. What’s one “small detail” that made you stop trusting the big story?

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    37 min
  • We Try To Explain Red Skies And End Up Buying Go Karts
    Apr 14 2026

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    One minute we’re arguing about mic volume and who’s “too loud,” the next we’re stuck on a question that won’t let go: what are you pretending not to know? That single line turns into a weirdly honest tour of modern denial, from knowingly eating sketchy food to acting like the world isn’t running on distractions and glitches. We keep it funny, but we also chase the uncomfortable point hiding underneath the jokes.

    Then the rabbit holes open. We get into simulation theory and our ongoing “energy hands” bit, sacred geometry, and a genuinely creepy story about geometric shapes snapping together into a face for a few seconds in that half-awake zone. From there it’s AI smart glasses and “meta glasses,” night driving glare, and the question we can’t resist: if sensors can see what our eyes miss, could they catch ghosts in a cemetery or something even stranger?

    The middle of the conversation swerves through portal paradoxes, red skies around the world, and our prediction-prone habit of connecting dots we probably shouldn’t. We also pitch a dream escape plan: off-road go-karts on sand dunes and a massive dirt track that somehow includes hot dogs, baked beans, a laundromat, and a car wash. Science news pops in with cryosleep and a frozen mouse brain experiment, which spirals into alien hand syndrome, 5G paranoia, Faraday room fantasies, and finally mermaids, sirens, and the mission to track down a guy who claimed he got abducted and put to work.

    If you like comedy podcasts, conspiracy talk, weird science, and late-night philosophy that keeps moving but still lands a few real thoughts, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves strange ideas, and leave a review. What’s the one thing you’re pretending not to know right now?

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    36 min
  • The Deuce Bird Business Plan
    Mar 28 2026

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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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    38 min
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