Épisodes

  • S02E14 Freddy was Fake - Church was Not
    Feb 8 2026

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    Growing up Gen X meant two things were always lurking in the background:
    horror movies… and moral panic.

    We watched Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, and Michael Myers slice their way through VHS tapes and late-night cable — and somehow, we understood the rules.
    It was scary.
    It was fun.
    And we knew it was fiction.

    Meanwhile, adults were losing their minds.

    Churches warned us that horror movies opened demonic portals, Dungeons & Dragons summoned Satan, and heavy metal music was basically a fast pass to hell. Welcome to the Satanic Panic — an era where grown adults couldn’t tell the difference between a movie monster and an invisible threat they insisted was real.

    In this livestream, I'm joined by:
    Robert from Skeptic Philosophy
    https://www.youtube.com/@UCnSO-OqK5dxeh6PoVMnuaog

    and Ed from The Rabyd Atheist
    https://www.youtube.com/@TheRabydAtheist

    We’re taking a nostalgic (and occasionally sarcastic) trip back to the golden age of horror — and contrasting it with the fear tactics used by the church that followed so many of us long after the credits rolled.

    Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:
    We grew out of horror movies.
    A lot of us are still unpacking church-based fear.

    We’ll laugh, we’ll reminisce, we’ll talk moral panics — and by the end, we’ll ask the question Gen X eventually had to face:

    What if the real horror wasn’t the movies… but the fear we were taught to believe was real?

    #mightyphilbert #deconstruction #exvangelical #genx

    Video we reviewed:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVs80KsiFYw&t=132s

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    1 h et 22 min
  • S02E13 The Movie that Validated a Generation
    Feb 8 2026

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    The Breakfast Club wasn’t just a teen movie—it was a mirror.

    For many Gen X kids, it was the first time a movie admitted that adults didn’t always understand us, institutions didn’t always protect us, and labels didn’t tell the whole story.

    In this livestream, I look back at The Breakfast Club and explore:

    • Why it resonated so deeply with Gen X
    • How it quietly challenged authority without being rebellious
    • Why its message still matters decades later

    This isn’t a movie review—it’s a cultural autopsy.

    Because sometimes the stories that raised us told the truth before anyone else did.

    #GenX #TheBreakfastClub #GenXCulture
    #WhyGenXWalkedAway #80sMovies
    #GrowingUpGenX #MightyPhilbert

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    9 min
  • S02E12 The Song that Taught Gen X to Stay Quiet
    Feb 3 2026

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    In 1987, a quiet song slipped onto the radio and into our childhoods.
    “Luka” by Suzanne Vega wasn’t loud, angry, or shocking—but for many Gen X kids, it told a truth no one else would.

    In this episode of The Mighty Philbert, we explore how “Luka” reflected a generation taught to stay silent about abuse, pain, and trauma—and why that silence often lasted well into adulthood.

    This is a thoughtful, compassionate look at Gen X childhood, cultural conditioning, and the power of music to speak when we couldn’t.

    #themightyphilbert #exvangelical #genx #deconstruction

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    8 min
  • S02E11 The New Coke Effect
    Feb 3 2026

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    What happens when something you trusted your whole life suddenly changes… without asking you?
    In 1985, Coca-Cola learned the hard way when New Coke nearly destroyed one of the most trusted brands in history. The company survived—but the relationship never fully recovered.
    In this episode of The Mighty Philbert, we explore why that same story explains Gen X’s relationship with the modern church—and why so many of us quietly walked away when faith became political, fear-driven, and unrecognizable.
    This isn’t about hating belief.
    It’s about broken trust.
    #GenX #WhyGenXWalkedAway #Exvangelical #Deconstruction #TheMightyPhilbert

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    50 min
  • S02E10 5 Events that Shaped Gen X
    Feb 1 2026

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    Gen X didn’t grow up on optimism—we grew up on breaking news.

    In this episode of The Mighty Philbert, we revisit five defining global events that didn’t just change history—they shaped how an entire generation learned to see authority, morality, and truth.

    From televised disasters to institutional silence, these moments quietly formed Gen X skepticism, resilience, and refusal to swallow easy answers.

    This isn’t nostalgia.
    It’s a reckoning.

    👇 Join the conversation in the comments:
    Which event hit you the hardest?

    #GenX #WhyGenXWalkedAway #TheMightyPhilbert #ColdWarKids
    #CulturalMemory #InstitutionalFailure #GrowingUpGenX

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    10 min
  • S02E09 Gen X Bullying
    Jan 28 2026

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    This episode discusses bullying, emotional neglect, and institutional failure. While there are no graphic details, some themes may resonate deeply. Please take care while watching.

    Gen X grew up being told that bullying “built character.”
    At school, we were told to ignore it.
    At church, we were told to forgive it.

    This episode looks at the darker side of Gen X childhood—the bullying that was minimized, spiritualized, or outright ignored—and how that silence became one more reason so many of us eventually walked away from religion.

    This isn’t about weakness.
    It’s about what happens when institutions protect themselves instead of people.

    If you grew up being told to toughen up, pray harder, or turn the other cheek while no one stepped in—this one’s for you.

    If this conversation mattered to you, consider liking the video or subscribing—not to boost an algorithm, but to help these stories reach the people who might need them.

    And as always:
    You don’t have to be religious to do the right thing.

    #GenX #WhyGenXWalkedAway #Bullying #ChurchTrauma #ReligiousDeconstruction
    #GrowingUpGenX #FaithAndHarm #MoralPanic #Exvangelical #TheMightyPhilbert

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    10 min
  • S02E08 Meet Skeptic Philosophy
    Jan 25 2026

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    This week on Saturdays with Philbert, I’m sitting down with the host of Skeptic Philosophy, a channel dedicated to one uncomfortable but necessary question:

    How do we actually know what we think we know?

    In an online world driven by algorithms, outrage, memes, and bite-sized certainty, bad information doesn’t just spread—it wins. Studies show false claims travel faster and farther than accurate ones, and that trend is quietly reshaping how people reason, argue, and even form beliefs.

    That’s where Skeptic Philosophy pushes back.

    In this conversation, we dig into:

    Why unfalsifiable claims are so appealing—and so dangerous

    How logical fallacies sneak into religious and pseudoscientific arguments

    The difference between feeling right and reasoning correctly

    Why epistemology matters far beyond philosophy classrooms

    And how sensationalism is eroding our shared understanding of reality

    This isn’t about “winning debates” or dunking on believers—it’s about protecting the process of arriving at sound conclusions in a culture increasingly allergic to nuance.

    If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by confident nonsense, frustrated by bad arguments that go viral, or just want better tools for thinking clearly in chaotic times, this conversation is for you.

    Because resisting misinformation doesn’t start with better soundbites—it starts with better thinking.

    Check out Skeptic Philosophy's channel here:

    https://www.youtube.com/@SkepticPhilosophy

    Don't forget to like and subscribe!

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    57 min
  • S02E07 Valley Girl Slang and the Moral Panic of the 1980s
    Jan 25 2026

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    In the early 1980s, Valley Girl slang escaped Southern California and somehow became a national emergency.

    Teachers warned it was ruining English.

    Parents said it meant kids were getting dumber.

    Church leaders treated it like a sign of moral decay.

    But this wasn’t really about language.

    In this episode of Moral Panic Autopsy, we take a look at how harmless teen slang became a symbol of cultural collapse—and why every generation seems convinced that the way young people talk means society is falling apart.

    From mall culture to media mockery to religious anxiety, Valley Girl slang reveals something deeper: moral panics are rarely about the thing people claim to fear. They’re about control, authority, and the terror of cultural change happening without permission.

    If you grew up watching adults freak out over something that turned out to be completely harmless… this one’s for you.

    Because the panic wasn’t new.

    And neither was the fear.

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    8 min