エピソード

  • WTF - Pizza! Pizza!
    2026/05/31
    What happens when pizza, James Bond, Mikhail Gorbachev, artificial intelligence, Daylight Saving Time, Colorado hippies, and the color purple all collide in the same conversation? Welcome to another delightfully unhinged episode of What The Frock? This week, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod explore the fascinating concept known as the “Pizza Effect,” the strange cultural phenomenon where an idea, tradition, or belief leaves its original home, evolves somewhere else, and then returns to become accepted as authentic. It sounds ridiculous until you realize it explains everything from modern pizza to political narratives, social media outrage, and even international tourism. Along the way, our hosts discuss whether Italy really owns pizza, how a James Bond movie accidentally changed Mexican culture, why people seem willing to change their opinions overnight, and how the debate over Artificial Intelligence has reached even the mountains of Colorado. They also examine the curious relationship between AI technology, public perception, and the growing resistance to data centers across the American West. As if that were not enough, the conversation wanders into the mysteries of Daylight Saving Time, the science behind whether purple is a real color, and the philosophical question of whether reality itself exists outside our consciousness. If you enjoy current events commentary, cultural analysis, AI discussions, history podcasts, technology news, and the occasional pizza-fueled existential crisis, this episode is for you. Grab a slice, pull up a chair, and join Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod for an unforgettable journey through culture, perception, technology, and the wonderfully strange ways human beings convince themselves that things are true. Welcome to Pizza! Pizza!
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    55 分
  • DDH - An Appeal to Heaven
    2026/05/26
    The old pine tree flag has suddenly become controversial again, which tells us less about the American Revolution than it does about how badly modern Americans have forgotten their own history. In this episode, we trace the true origins of the “Appeal to Heaven” flag, from the towering white pines of colonial New England to the decks of George Washington’s improvised navy during the first desperate months of the Revolution. Along the way, we uncover the deeper meaning behind the flag’s famous motto, borrowed directly from John Locke’s Second Treatise on Government. “An Appeal to Heaven” was never a slogan of casual rebellion. It was a grave philosophical declaration that a people had exhausted every earthly avenue for justice and believed they now answered directly to a higher moral law. We also explore how the pine tree itself became a symbol of resistance after the British Crown attempted to seize New England’s forests for the Royal Navy, sparking riots, resentment, and eventually revolution. Most importantly, we examine how historical symbols are redefined in modern political battles by people who often know very little about the actual history behind them. Because once a nation forgets the meaning of its own symbols, it becomes dangerously easy for someone else to redefine them.
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    39 分
  • WTF - Fireworks?
    2026/05/24
    This week on What The Frock?, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod wander bravely into the increasingly foggy borderlands between reality and whatever the internet has decided reality ought to be this week. Artificial intelligence is rewriting politics faster than anyone expected. Viral AI videos now spread through social media before fact-checkers have even located their reading glasses. Campaigns are learning that attention matters more than airtime, and somewhere along the way politics stopped being politics and became entertainment infrastructure with attack ads. But the conversation does not stop there. Why do human beings believe strange things in the first place? Why does astrology survive in an age of science? Is modern society replacing organized religion with personalized spirituality assembled from crystals, horoscopes, internet gurus, and emotionally supportive algorithms? And perhaps most unsettling of all, what happens when AI begins manufacturing not merely information, but meaning itself? Then, because civilization is incapable of discussing existential dread for too long without snacks and explosions, the show turns toward the Fourth of July and the growing trend of replacing fireworks with drone shows. Cleaner? Certainly. Safer? Probably. But are we losing something primal when rebellion itself becomes synchronized battery management? Along the way there are discussions about fake history, church sermons written by AI, robot garbage trucks, Memorial Day, tinnitus, moon water, and why the universe apparently refuses to text anyone back. In other words, a perfectly normal episode of What The Frock?.
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    1 時間 4 分
  • Liberty 250 - The Music(al) Part 2
    2026/05/20
    Two hundred and fifty years ago, a handful of farmers, merchants, lawyers, preachers, smugglers, and stubborn troublemakers looked at the most powerful empire on earth and quietly began asking a dangerous question: what if government exists to serve the people, instead of the people existing to serve government? That question changed the world. But the road to independence did not begin with muskets at Lexington or signatures in Philadelphia. It began much earlier, in taverns thick with argument, in sermons warning about liberty and tyranny, in newspapers filled with outrage, and in ordinary people slowly realizing they no longer thought of themselves the same way. Piece by piece. Law by law. Grievance by grievance. This series is not just about battles or famous names. It is about ideas. About standing armies in city streets. About taxes and consent. About kings, crowds, mobs, Parliament, pamphlets, and the eternal struggle between power and liberty. It is about human beings trying to decide whether freedom is worth the cost that always comes with it. And because history is never just dates on a page, we are telling this story through music. Songs that sound like the Revolution felt, hopeful, angry, frightened, defiant, sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking, but always human. This is Liberty 250. The road to July 4th, 1776. And the story of how Americans learned to think like Americans. Yankee Doodle Standing in Our Streets Evacuation Day George's Concurrence Oh, Canada... Rome to Home The Word Safety & Happiness It's Not Us, It's you The Ghost of Cylon Ride, Rodney, Ride! The Greatest Sentence ever Written (Finale)
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    1 時間 10 分
  • DDH - By Your Command
    2026/05/19
    On September 17, 1978, millions of Americans sat down to watch a brand-new science fiction series called Battlestar Galactica. They expected spaceships, laser battles, strange planets, and chrome-plated robots marching under the chilling phrase, “By your command.” What they probably did not expect was that buried beneath the music, helmets, and Vipers was one of the oldest political warnings in human history. This episode of Dave Does History follows a thread stretching from the Acropolis of ancient Athens to the Roman Senate, from the writings of Plato and Aristotle to the grievances listed in the United States Declaration of Independence. Long before the Cylons appeared on television screens, the Greeks and Romans had already spent centuries wrestling with a terrifying question: how does a free society lose itself to tyranny? The story begins with Cylon of Athens, an ambitious Olympic champion who attempted to seize power in 632 BCE. It moves through the rise and fall of Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, the Roman hatred of kings, and the Founding Fathers’ belief that King George III had become a tyrant in the ancient sense of the word. Because the American Revolution was never simply about taxes. It was about a fear as old as civilization itself: that free people, if careless enough, eventually wake up one morning and realize they are no longer free.
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    38 分
  • WTF - Shadowboxing with Civilization
    2026/05/17
    This week on “What The Frock?”, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod wander into the Underworld of Homer and somehow emerge in modern America, surrounded by TikTok livestreamers, AI-generated summaries, driverless Waymo cars circling suburban cul-de-sacs, and a civilization increasingly obsessed with shadows instead of substance. The conversation begins with the internet outrage surrounding the casting rumors in Christopher Nolan’s upcoming adaptation of the Odyssey, but quickly takes a turn nobody expects. What if Achilles was never meant to be remembered as a triumphant warrior? What if Homer himself was warning us about the emptiness of glory? In Book 11 of the Odyssey, Odysseus encounters the ghost of Achilles, no longer a shining hero, but a regretful shadow whispering that fame was not worth the price. From there, the episode spirals into the Greek concept of skia, the idea of shadow-like existence, and sciamachy, literally “fighting shadows.” Along the way, Dave and Rod tackle AI culture, livestream economies in China, the death of real human connection, social media narcissism, and why young people are now afraid to dance in public. Ancient Greece meets the algorithm age, and frankly, Homer saw all of this coming.
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    59 分
  • DDH - It's Not Us, It's You...
    2026/05/12
    The Declaration of Independence is usually remembered as a thunderbolt, a bold declaration hurled across the Atlantic at a king and an empire. But near the end of the document, the tone changes in a way most people barely notice. The accusations stop. The anger softens. And suddenly the colonies begin speaking directly to the people of England themselves, “our British brethren.” That shift is the heart of this episode. This is not just a story about rebellion. It is a story about a breakup, one filled with regret, frustration, political calculation, and the painful realization that reconciliation is no longer possible. The Continental Congress carefully explains that the colonies warned Britain repeatedly, appealed to shared history and shared blood, and exhausted every peaceful option before finally concluding that separation had become necessary. Jefferson’s famous phrases about natural rights and consent of the governed were not written only for Americans. They were written for what he called a “candid world,” a global audience watching to see whether the colonies were principled revolutionaries or simply dangerous rebels. The episode also explores the extraordinary afterlife of the Declaration itself. Mocked by many in Britain in 1776, criticized for its contradictions, and challenged almost immediately over slavery and equality, the document nevertheless became one of the most influential political statements in human history. From the French Revolution to women’s suffrage to Ho Chi Minh quoting Jefferson in Vietnam, the Declaration became far more than America’s breakup letter to Britain. It became a promise the world keeps arguing over even today.
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    34 分
  • WTF - The Odd-yssey
    2026/05/10
    This week on What the Frock?, Rabbi Dave and Friar Rod climb aboard a metaphorical trireme and sail straight into the stormy waters of myth, movies, technology, and modern madness. Somewhere between Homer’s Odyssey, Star Trek, Star Wars, UFO files, malfunctioning computers, and the increasingly terrifying future of artificial intelligence, the pair attempt to answer a question humanity has apparently been wrestling with since bronze-age Greece: are we steering the ship, or are the gods just moving us around like puppets in an amphitheater? Along the way, Dave finds himself tempted by the digital Sirens promising faster processors and quieter fan noise, while Friar Rod calmly watches the chaos unfold with the patience of a monk who has seen this exact nonsense before. There are reflections on storytelling, the decline of modern filmmaking, the strange comfort of old science fiction, and the growing suspicion that maybe Homer understood human nature better than Silicon Valley does. It is funny, skeptical, occasionally philosophical, and just unhinged enough to feel strangely accurate. In other words, it is another perfectly normal voyage aboard the good ship What the Frock?, sailing proudly across the wine-dark sea of modern civilization.
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    58 分