Mischief Night, Family Traditions, and Growing Up
The hosts share personal Halloween and trick-or-treating memories, discussing how kids age out of family traditions and how Robbbie's relationship with his own father changed as he grew older. They debate the right age to let kids go trick-or-treating alone and swap stories about costumes over the years, from family groups dressed as meals to K-Pop demon hunters. The tone balances nostalgia with acceptance that these moments eventually end.
The I-70 Killer & Unsolved Serial Murder Cases
Dingo brings research on the I-70 killer, who murdered at least six store clerks in the Midwest between 1992 and possibly 2001, with victims spanning Indiana, Missouri, Kansas, and Texas. The hosts discuss survivor Vicki Webb, who was shot in the back of the head but survived when the bullet hit her vertebrae and the killer's gun misfired. They compare this case to the FBI's most wanted list and discuss how serial killers are defined, noting the FBI lowered the threshold from three victims to two.
Serial Killer Statistics & Global Murder Trends
The hosts explore statistics on active serial killers worldwide, discussing cases like Collins Jumanji (the Kenyan 'Vampire' accused of 42 murders), Canada's Highway of Tears, and Mexico's Highway of Death. They review records for highest victim counts in history, including Luis Garavito (193+ victims in South America) and Samuel Little (60 confirmed, 93 possible in the US). The discussion includes dark humor about America's relatively low ranking among serial killers globally.
RFK Jr., Autism, and Acetaminophen Conspiracy
The hosts discuss RFK Jr.'s widely debunked claim that acetaminophen (Tylenol) causes autism, announced on October 31, 2025. They highlight Trump's failed attempts to pronounce 'acetaminophen' and note the immediate refutation by news sources citing Amish communities with autism who never use Tylenol, and the fact that autism was studied since 1910 while Tylenol wasn't invented until the 1950s. The segment critiques how the government manufactures answers first, then works backward to justify them.
Historical Torture Methods & Darkest Human Practices
The podcast takes a grim turn exploring medieval and ancient torture techniques, including scaphism (Persian insects-in-boats method), the brazen bull, bamboo under fingernails, the blood eagle, staking, and various forms of dismemberment and mutilation. The hosts discuss torture scenarios philosophically—who would break under torture, what information is worth enduring pain for—before settling into horrified fascination with the documented brutality of human history. The segment ends with recognition that humans are fundamentally capable of profound cruelty.
I mean, they could just ask politely, I'll tell them. This country's already imploding. — Robbbie, on whether he'd resist torture for national secrets← All episode posts