Ep. 178 - The Serial Farter Survival Guide - 04/21/2026
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S1 E178

Ep. 178 - The Serial Farter Survival Guide - 04/21/2026

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If you’ve ever wondered what it sounds like when a normal podcast completely derails in the best possible way, this episode delivers immediately. Peaches opens with a concert story that somehow turns into a full investigation of a “serial farter” operating in the crowd like a biological clock—every ten minutes, no warning, just damage. Viktor tries to keep things on track, but instead gets pulled into a play-by-play of Peaches enforcing his own version of concert etiquette, which includes body-checking an overenthusiastic jumper and accidentally becoming the hero of everyone stuck in the blast radius. Somewhere in the middle of that chaos, a random guy with a handheld fan becomes the MVP of the night, Aubrie gets treated like a VIP under full-time protection, and an entire family quietly retreats while the surrounding crowd celebrates like justice has been served.

Just when you think the show might calm down, they casually realize they may have jumped the gun on announcing the Eastern Idaho State Fair lineup—featuring Flo Rida, Gabriel Iglesias, and Nate Smith—and proceed anyway like nothing could possibly go wrong. That turns into a side conversation about whether Flo Rida has released anything recently or is just coasting on songs everyone already knows, followed by a brief but honest admission that nobody is entirely sure who Nate Smith is without Googling it.

Then Peaches drops the Airbnb story, which might be the most relatable moment if you’ve ever trusted a listing description a little too much. Booking a “1920s basement” turns into a real-life lesson in ceiling height, ending with him smacking his head hard enough to make him reconsider all of his life choices leading up to that moment. Viktor, naturally, offers medical advice that sounds more like a prank than a solution, and the whole thing spirals into a conversation about how Airbnb went from a budget-friendly hack to something that now feels like it comes with rules, stress, and the possibility of being judged by a stranger who owns the house.

By the end, they’re breaking down things that have been completely ruined by getting too popular—thrifting, side hustles, podcasts (including a not-so-subtle jab at other local ones), and even climbing Mount Everest, which they reduce to standing in a freezing line for a photo that looks like every other snowy mountain picture. It’s the kind of episode that doesn’t try to be polished or structured—it just keeps stacking ridiculous stories, side comments, and unexpected turns until you realize you’ve been listening the whole time without even thinking about it.