The Wholesome Show

The Wholesome Show

<p>From tales of historical idiocracy and scientific genius to weird and wacky cultural phenomena, Dr Rod Lamberts and Dr Will Grant are here to take you on a wild conversational journey, deep diving into the crevices of science, history and culture that you never knew existed. </p>

  • 57 minutes 44 seconds
    Science Finds Heaven, Longevity Hacks and Smart Dogs

    Everyone wants to live forever, dogs are out here doing actual jobs, and someone has tried to work out where heaven might be using astronomy. We dig into the strange science of longevity, including research suggesting reproduction and lifespan might be linked in uncomfortable ways. Then they meet the working dogs sniffing out invasive species, guarding airport runways, and generally making the rest of us look lazy.

    From there, things get cosmic. An opinion piece argues heaven could sit beyond our cosmic horizon, which is a great way to accidentally spend your afternoon thinking about infinity. There is also a quick detour into gelatin-based culinary chaos, featuring the kind of vintage recipes that should come with a warning label.

    We wrap up with listener stories, including a cow named Veronica who can use a broom as a tool, because of course she can.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction 

    00:19 Exploring the Science of Longevity

    01:00 Psychology and Climate Action

    01:09 Mailbag and Birthday Surprise

    01:27 Lifestyle Changes for Longevity

    02:47 Reproduction and Longevity

    12:58 Dogs with Jobs

    21:07 Science Finds Heaven

    27:51 Cosmic Horizon and Hubble's Law

    29:39 Einstein's Relativity and Speed of Light

    31:18 The Mysteries Beyond the Cosmic Horizon

    40:49 Veronica the Tool-Using Cow

    48:03 Gelatin: A Culinary and Industrial Marvel

    54:58 Komodo Dragons and Asexual Reproduction

    56:25 Listener Mailbag and Fun Facts

     

     

     

    SOURCES:

     

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0092656622000423

    https://futurism.com/health-medicine/conspiracy-theories-psychology

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0092656622000423

    https://futurism.com/health-medicine/men-lifespan-castration

    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1109009

    https://www.aol.com/articles/heaven-real-science-may-reveal-130016778.html

    https://michaelguillen.com

    https://www.iflscience.com/we-didnt-even-think-about-looking-broom-wielding-veronika-shows-tool-use-in-cows-isnt-so-absurd-after-all-82260

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9963746/

    https://www.nature.com/news/2006/061218/full/news061218-7.html

    https://www.rspcaqld.org.au/blog/trending-now/dogs-with-unusual-jobs

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/health-wellness/2024/04/05/schizophrenia-hallucinationspsychiatric-assistance-dog/73171229007/

    https://www.anthropocenemagazine.org/2026/01/people-like-the-idea-of-being-green-but-they-hate-being-told-what-to-do-even-more/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    26 January 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 19 minutes 12 seconds
    FBI Hunts Bigfoot, Craft Beer's Hidden Science and Fame Kills Rockstars

    The FBI’s search for Bigfoot shows that even serious agencies can get swept up in a good mystery. Their investigation ended with a misidentified animal instead of a legendary creature, but the files are still a treasure for anyone fascinated by conspiracies and the unknown. Sometimes, the search is more interesting than the answer.

    Meanwhile, scientists in Queensland have been busy breaking down the secrets of your favourite brew. By analysing the proteins in dozens of beers, they found that craft brews really do stand apart from the mass-produced stuff. If your IPA tastes special, it is not just in your head. Science backs you up.

    On a darker note, the world of fame is not all it is cracked up to be. Research shows that musicians in the spotlight face far greater risks than the rest of us, with fame itself becoming the real danger. The pressure and constant scrutiny can take a heavy toll. Sometimes, chasing the dream comes with a price nobody wants to pay.



    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    01:13 The FBI's Bigfoot Files

    01:46 Exploring the Freedom of Information Vault

    03:37 The FBI's Investigation into Bigfoot

    07:08 Mass Spectrometry and Beer Proteins

    10:12 Craft Beer vs. Mass-Produced Beer

    13:01 The Dream of Being a Rockstar

    13:58 The Risks of Fame in the Music Industry

    18:09 Concluding Thoughts and Listener Engagement

     

    SOURCES:

    The FBI Released Bigfoot’s Official File

    Beer snobs, rejoice: Craft beer really is different

    The price of fame? Mortality risk among famous singers

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    13 January 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 14 minutes 44 seconds
    AI Inflates the Ego, Ancient Drop Crocs and Gen Z Survey Findings

    AI is giving people a confidence boost they might not deserve, especially among those who consider themselves tech-savvy. Studies show that using AI for problem-solving leads many to overestimate their own abilities, with higher AI literacy actually making users more likely to trust the machine and question themselves less. The smarter we think we are with technology, the more likely we are to fall for its digital flattery.

    Meanwhile, ancient Australia was home to predators that make today’s wildlife look tame. Fossil evidence suggests that five-metre crocodiles once hunted by dropping out of trees onto unsuspecting prey. This twist on the classic crocodile encounter adds a new layer of terror to Australia’s already legendary roster of dangerous animals. Forget snakes in the grass. Sometimes the real threat was lurking above.

    On the cultural front, Gen Z is challenging old standards and rewriting the rules on everything from ironing to mental health. Some in this generation long for a less digital era, question the value of traditional skills, and proudly reject the notion that neat clothes equal good character. They also claim credit for baggy jeans and even admit to being the most annoying generation to work with.

    From digital delusions to tree-dwelling crocs and Gen Z’s new priorities, the only thing we can count on is that the world refuses to stay boring.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction 

    00:48 AI and the Dunning-Kruger Effect

    02:11 AI Literacy and Overconfidence

    02:51 AI's Impact on Self-Assessment

    06:59 Australian Wildlife and Myths

    07:35 Legend of the Drop Croc

    08:57 Generational Differences

    10:10 Gen Z's Perspective

    11:03 Skills and Inventions

    12:52 Annoying Generations at Work

    13:40 Conclusion and Call to Action

     

    SOURCES:

    AI Is Causing a Grim New Twist on the Dunning-Kruger Effect

    Generation Conflicted: How Do Gen Zers Compare Themselves to Past Generations?

    Evidence of ancient tree-climbing 'drop crocs' found in Australia

    Australia’s oldest crocodylian eggshell: insights into the reproductive paleoecology of mekosuchines

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    6 January 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 18 minutes 18 seconds
    Chickens Choose the Hot Girls, Accidental Video Game WR and Are Jackalopes Real?

    It’s pretty natural for humans to gravitate towards the most attractive person in the room. But do animals do it too? At Stockholm University, researchers decided to see if chickens could spot a hottie. They trained these birds to peck at faces on a screen and found that chickens prefer the same facial features that humans rate as attractive. Apparently, hotness isn’t just a matter of human opinion. Even a chicken can pick out a looker. Does that make us RSPCA approved?

    Accidentally Breaking a Video Game World Record

    In 2007, Billy Baker started writing a book about jugglers. At the time,  there was a controversial movement to turn the performance art of juggling into a competitive sport but this story isn’t about juggling. It’s about video games. During his research, Baker’s curiosity led him from online juggling forums down the rabbit hole of video games where he learned the world record of Tetris stood at 327 lines. Here’s the twist…his own wife easily scored up to 500 or 600 lines on her old Game Boy at home. She was just casually breaking a video game world record without even knowing.

    Jackalopes: When Myth Meets Mutation

    You’ve heard of the jackalope, right? That legendary rabbit with antelope horns. Turns out, they might just be real. Back in 1933, virologist Richard Shope discovered a virus that causes rabbits to grow cancerous horn-like growths all over their face. Suddenly, the jackalope isn’t just a campfire story. What if the tales we’ve written off to be myths were actually sightings of cancerous rabbits? 

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Theories of Physical Attractiveness

    02:29 Chickens and Human Hotness

    06:27 Juggling and Competitive Sports

    07:46 Speedrunning Super Mario Brothers

    10:37 Cryptozoology and Mythical Creatures

    11:47 The Jackalope: America's Mythical Creature

    12:15 Historical References to Horned Rabbits

    14:38 The Shope Papilloma Virus Discovery

    17:08 Modern Day Jackalope Sightings

     

    SOURCES:

    'Bizarro World’: That's what my wife and I entered when we drove up to an arcade in Weirs Beach, New Hampshire, where she would attempt to break an official world record in the classic video game Tetris.

    Ghirlanda S, Jansson L, Enquist M. Chickens prefer beautiful humans. Hum Nat. 2002 Sep;13(3):383-9. doi: 10.1007/s12110-002-1021-6. PMID: 26192929.

    INFECTIOUS PAPILLOMATOSIS OF RABBITS

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    30 December 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 13 minutes 22 seconds
    Radio Ventriloquism, Conkers Controversy and Stone Skimming Cheaters

    A ventriloquist once ruled the radio waves, captivating millions with stage tricks that made no visual sense but somehow worked perfectly through a speaker. The world’s love for a good illusion runs deep, stretching from ancient oracles channeling voices through their bellies to audiences mesmerised by dummies with invisible lips. Humans have always been drawn to spectacle, even when it requires a leap of imagination.

    The world of competitive chestnut-smashing, known in England as Conkers, has moved far beyond childhood nostalgia. Now it is a battleground for grown-up pride, world championships and the occasional controversy. When the stakes are glory and bragging rights, even a simple game can become the centre of suspicion and scandal.

    Even stone skimming is not immune to drama. The World Stone Skimming Championships recently faced its own rule-bending episode, with contestants trying to perfect their throws in shady ways that organisers had to address. Whether it’s radio dummies, nut-bashing or stone skipping, humans will always find a way to turn even the silliest competition into a drama.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction 

    02:27 The Curious Case of Radio Ventriloquism

    05:18 King of Conkers Controversy 

    08:53 Stone Skimming Championships and Cheating Scandals

    12:18 Conclusion and Listener Engagement



    SOURCES:

    Cheating scandal rocks world stone skimming championships

    ‘King Conker’ cleared of cheating at World Conker Championships

    The Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy Show

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    23 December 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 32 minutes 51 seconds
    Ethics of Sex with Aliens, Dogs’ Cuteness Tactics and the StaffCop Office Overlord

    Academics are now seriously debating the ethics of sex with aliens, with questions swirling around intergalactic consent, the boundaries of romance and whether Captain Kirk’s escapades would pass the cosmic sniff test. Some call it unnatural, others say it’s all about happiness and agreement, and a few even claim to have had their own close encounters. Until E.T. shows up with a clear answer, the verdict is equal parts fascinating and unresolved.

    Back on Earth, dogs have been quietly evolving to manipulate us with their eyes. Thanks to unique facial muscles and lightning-fast eyebrow moves, modern pups can pull off that “feed me” look better than any wolf ever could. We bred dogs to be emotionally expressive, and now they’re experts at tugging our heartstrings, turning the human-canine relationship into a masterclass in mutual manipulation.

    Meanwhile, StaffCop is turning offices into digital panopticons, logging every keystroke and screenshot in the name of productivity. While management loves the promise of accountability, for employees it means more paranoia, less privacy and a creativity drought. With science and technology serving up weirder dilemmas than ever, it’s safe to say the workplace is starting to look a little too much like 1984.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:47 Ethical Dilemma: Sex with Aliens

    03:27 Exploring Alien Reproduction

    07:53 Human-Alien Sexual Encounters

    13:46 Ethics and Consent in Alien Relationships

    19:07 Dogs Using Their Eyebrows to Manipulate Humans

    23:01 Employee Monitoring Software

    27:16 Ethical Concerns and Privacy

    31:47 Conclusion and Listener Engagement



    SOURCES:

    This Guy Paints the Sex He Allegedly Has with Aliens

    Would you have sex with an alien?

    How many men here would be willing to have sex with a legitimate alien from another planet?

    Alien Attraction

    What is StaffCop?

    The science behind puppy-dog eyes, and other ways our canines communicate with us

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    16 December 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 37 minutes 41 seconds
    Poetry for AI Hacking, Flatulent Foods as Aphrodisiacs and Penile Tuberculosis

    A Rome-based research team discovered poetry can jailbreak AI systems by bypassing safety filters that normal prompts can't crack, making verse a genuine cybersecurity vulnerability. Medieval physicians believed flatulent foods like beans and onions were aphrodisiacs because intestinal gas supposedly enhanced sexual performance, Palmer Luckey, the tech billionaire behind Oculus, now advocates for submarines that tunnel through Earth's crust for national defense, while a Dublin man contracted penile tuberculosis from working with deer in a rarely documented case of genital TB.

    Poetry defeats AI security by exploiting how language models process poetic structure, proving Aristotle's warnings about poets in governance were surprisingly futuristic. Medieval fart-based aphrodisiacs never worked but show humanity's eternal optimism for simple bedroom solutions, while Luckey's crust-submarine idea sounds insane until you remember he actually made VR mainstream. The Dublin TB case demonstrates that tuberculosis can infect any body part and that working with animals carries risks nobody considers - including your genitals contracting lung diseases.

    The biggest threats to AI are poets, the worst aphrodisiacs involved intestinal wind, crust submarines might actually happen, and deer can give you dick tuberculosis. Science is weird, history is weirder, and Palmer Luckey wants to make it weirder still.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    02:07 Plato's Republic and AI Poetry

    03:54 The Power of Poetry in AI

    07:59 Historical Aphrodisiacs and Fertility

    19:01 Simultaneous Orgasms and Farting

    19:36 Windy Meats and Fertility Myths

    24:19 Palmer Luckey and Virtual Reality

    31:00 Penile Tuberculosis: A Rare Case

    36:50 Smart Toilets and Privacy Concerns



    SOURCES:

    ‘End-to-end encrypted’ smart toilet camera is not actually end-to-end encrypted

    Scientists Discover “Universal” Jailbreak for Nearly Every AI, and the Way It Works Will Hurt Your Brain

    Adversarial Poetry as a Universal Single-Turn Jailbreak Mechanism in Large Language Models

    Palmer Luckey on the Future of Warfare

    Beans, ale & 'windy meats': surprising 17th-century aphrodisiac

    When Beans were the Food of Lust

    Why you don’t want to get tuberculosis on your penis

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    9 December 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 40 minutes 24 seconds
    Interspecies Love, Annual Frozen Dead Guy Day, and Stinky Brazilian Butt Lifts

    Sika deer on Japan's Yakushima Island let macaque monkeys groom them in exchange for food scraps and sexual mounting, creating what scientists awkwardly call "interspecies sexual behaviour with mutual benefits."

    Nederland, Colorado hosts annual "Frozen Dead Guy Day" festivals celebrating Bredo Morstoel, whose body has been preserved in a shed on dry ice for decades after his grandson's cryogenic dreams failed.

    Brazilian Butt Lifts cause "BBL smell" - a rancid odour from fat necrosis when transferred fat cells die and rot inside the body, which surgeons rarely mention before surgery.

    Milan researchers found commuters offered seats to pregnant women more often when Batman was on the train, proving superhero costumes trigger prosocial behaviour because nobody wants to look bad in front of Batman.

    AI-generated recipes tell people to bake cakes for days and combine impossible ingredients, confidently presenting unworkable instructions that ruin dinner.

    Chinese researchers discovered rock, paper, scissors players stick with winning choices or switch after losses, revealing predictable patterns that can be exploited.

    From deer trading sex for grooming to frozen dead guy festivals and butt lifts that smell like death - nature is uncomfortable, humans are weird and technology can't cook. Maybe stick to human recipes, don’t try to freeze Grandpa and think twice before committing to a bouncy-butt medical procedure. 



    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:35 Interspecies Sexual Mutualism

    01:24 Unexpected Observations: Monkeys and Deer

    06:15 Frozen Dead Guy: A Bizarre Tale of Cryogenics

    14:03 Batman and Prosocial Behavior

    20:20 Hilarious AI-Generated Food Recipes

    30:39 The Ultimate Rock, Paper, Scissors Strategy

    33:54 The Dark Side of Plastic Surgery

    39:59 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

     

    SOURCES:

    Rock, Paper Scissors Study 

    Unexpected events and prosocial behavior: the Batman effect

    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/thanksgiving-dinner-ai-recipes-slop

    https://www.aiweirdness.com/ai-recipes-are-bad-and-a-proposal-20-01-31/

    https://www.aiweirdness.com/the-neural-network-has-weird-ideas-16-03-05/?ref=aiweirdness.com

    https://aiweirdness.tumblr.com/post/190721709472/ai-vintage-american-cooking-a-combination-that?ref=aiweirdness.com

    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/macaque-monkey-deer-mate-sex-ride

    https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/a60887514/diy-cryonics-frozen-dead-guy/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_Dead_Guy_Days

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/bbl-smell-is-real-and-just-as-gross-as-it-sounds/

    https://plasticsurgery.org.au/procedures/surgical-procedures/buttocks-lift/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    2 December 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 26 minutes 4 seconds
    Mad Scientist Misadventures, Mind-Reading AI, and the Fishy Origins of Fingers

    Horseshoe theory proposes that political extremes loop back around until far-left and far-right ideologies find disturbing common ground, sharing authoritarian tactics, propaganda methods, and contempt for democratic norms despite claiming opposite values. 

    Scientists are using AI to decode brain activity and caption your thoughts, raising serious questions about privacy and future thought-policing. The technology has remarkable potential for medical applications like helping locked-in patients communicate, but it's also concerning for policing applications where authorities might claim to know what you're thinking even when the AI is wildly guessing. Despite frankly not-so-great accuracy, it sets us on a path toward the dystopian surveillance that sci-fi has warned about for decades.

    Your fingers and toes developed from genetic blueprints originally designed for a fish's cloaca, meaning your hands evolved from ancient fish butt architecture through evolution's tendency to repurpose existing solutions. Your ability to type, paint, play piano or give someone the finger exists because millions of years ago evolution looked at fish butt genes and decided to work with them.

     Harry Whitaker's attempt to collect every element from the periodic table ended with police at his door after he stockpiled explosives and radioactive materials, proving that even well-intentioned scientific curiosity needs tempering before it crosses into illegal weapons manufacturing.



    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction 

    01:40 Exploring Horseshoe Theory in Politics

    03:33 The Impact of Trump on Science and Health Policy

    04:38 Pandemic Preparedness and Public Health

    09:33 AI Mind Captioning: Decoding Brain Activity

    14:13 Evolution of Tetrapod Digits

    14:55 Genetic Regulatory Landscapes

    15:33 Research on Fish and Mice Genes

    16:18 The Role of Hox Genes

    19:54 Harry Whitaker's Science Obsession

    25:19 Conclusion and Call to Action

     

    SOURCES:

    NIH Directors: The World Needs a New Pandemic Playbook

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ai-decodes-visual-brain-activity-and-writes-captions-for-it/

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1j8we4e52lo

    https://futurism.com/science-energy/police-uk-chemistry-explosives?utm_source=beehiiv&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=futurism-newsletter&_bhlid=4a7d20a111b1d23ddf489d65fbd96596ee739749

    https://www.sciencealert.com/fish-buttholes-may-be-the-reason-we-now-have-fingers-study-finds

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    25 November 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 27 minutes 21 seconds
    Atomic Gardening, Microwave Conspiracies and the Rise of Phubbing

    Scientists in the mid-20th century created "atomic gardens" where they bombarded plants with gamma radiation to induce beneficial mutations like disease resistance and higher yields. Microwaves have been accused of causing cancer, destroying nutrients,and functioning as listening devices.

    "Phubbing" - phone snubbing - describes ignoring someone in front of you to look at your phone, and it's become the modern signature of distraction. We've created connections across continents through technology yet find it increasingly difficult to maintain eye contact with people sitting across from us. The accidental side glance at notifications has become so normalized that we barely register the social damage it causes, making it a choice we make every time we prioritize the buzzing rectangle over the human in front of us.

    From gamma-ray gardens to microwave paranoia and phone addiction ruining dinners, this week showed that human curiosity and technological advancement create both excellent outcomes and noteworthy disasters. We've learnt to mutate plants with radiation and overcome irrational appliance fears, yet somehow can't put our phones down long enough to have a proper conversation - proving that some technological problems are harder to solve than others.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction 

    01:32 The Birth of Atomic Gardening

    04:09 Muriel Howorth and the Atomic Gardening Society

    12:25 The Legacy and Impact of Atomic Gardening

    12:59 CJ Spies and the Atomic Golf Balls

    13:39 Radiated Golf Balls: The New Sensation

    14:04 Introducing the Food Babe

    14:48 Microwaves and Nutrient Destruction

    17:17 Microwaves and Radiation Exposure

    19:57 Microwaved Water and Negative Energy

    22:45 Phubbing: The Modern Social Dilemma

    26:18 Wrapping Up: Listener Interaction and Feedback

     

    SOURCES:

    Atomic Gardening

    https://proto.life/2021/05/a-short-history-of-atomic-gardening/

    http://www.amusingplanet.com/2013/03/atomic-gardening-breeding-plants-with.html

    http://www.atomicgardening.com/1966/03/01/whatever-happened-to-the-atomic-garden/

    https://minnstate.pressbooks.pub/peppermintkings/chapter/global-peppermint/

     

    Microwave Conspiracies 

    https://www.science20.com/cool-links/the_food_babe_took_down_her_goofy_microwave_oven_post_science_win-140892

    https://www.vox.com/2015/4/7/8360935/food-babe

    https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jf970670x

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200714-is-it-safe-to-microwave-food

    Phubbing

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0747563218302978

     

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    18 November 2025, 5:00 pm
  • 32 minutes 25 seconds
    Living Without a Stomach, Simulation Theory, and Forensic DNA in the Air

    A woman survived without a stomach or small bowel after a catastrophic medical episode at her 18th birthday party, proving the human body is more adaptable than we thought. Philosophers and tech billionaires are convinced we're living in a computer simulation, though Canadian physicists disagree and insist our universe is real. And forensic scientists discovered that your DNA floats in the air wherever you breathe, meaning you're leaving genetic evidence in every room you enter - except mysteriously not in cars, which apparently offer some kind of DNA stealth mode.

    Today, we're exploring a world where essential organs are optional, reality itself is questionable, and simply breathing in a room could implicate you in a crime. These stories prove that whether we're talking about medical survival, existential philosophy, or forensic science, nothing about human existence is straightforward.



    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:30 Can You Live Without a Stomach?

    01:58 The Story of Gabby Scanlan

    06:29 Living Without a Stomach: Modern Medicine

    08:00 Are We Living in a Simulation?

    14:22 Understanding Dog Emotions

    16:12 Understanding Dog Behavior

    17:16 Dog Reactions to Positive and Negative Stimuli

    18:33 Human Interpretation of Dog Emotions

    22:54 Forensic Science and DNA Collection

    28:42 Dinosaur Discovery and Misleading Headlines

    31:55 Listener Engagement and Closing Remarks





    SOURCES:

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    12 November 2025, 5:10 pm
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