Peaches and Viktor spent this episode doing what they do best: lovingly tearing into the dumbest corners of modern life. They kicked things off by putting Undercover Boss on trial for being about as believable as a gas-station wig and fake mustache somehow fooling an entire workplace. From there, they imagined what would happen if a local billionaire tried to sneak into the station pretending to be radio’s next big thing, which is already worth hearing for that mental image alone.
Then they took a detour into terrible radio, including a morning-show break built around a fake tough-guy voice and an endless parade of Chuck Norris jokes dragged in from the dusty corners of the internet. It becomes a full-on autopsy of corny radio habits, fake accents, and the kind of delivery that sounds like a guy orders Taco Bell as if he’s narrating a cattle drive.
The episode also swerves into people calling random businesses just to hear regional accents, which somehow turns into a discussion about how badly KBEAR needs more weird local voices for liners. That whole section feels like two people being one bad idea away from starting a completely unnecessary nationwide accent-hunting project.
They also get into smart glasses and privacy paranoia, talking about a future where everybody might be filming everybody else, your house is blurred on Google Maps, and the most private person you know instantly becomes the most suspicious person you know. It’s the perfect mix of “this is ridiculous” and “this could absolutely happen.”
And then it turns gloriously petty with rock opinions: social media hot takes, defending unpopular band slander, dragging Pearl Jam and Nirvana for being overplayed, and making the case that Alice in Chains wipes the floor with Nirvana. By the end, they’re wondering how much money Krist Novoselic still makes off teenagers wearing Nirvana shirts like it’s a fashion label, which is a sentence alone that deserves a five-star review.