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The Wholesome Show

The Wholesome Show

The Wholesome Show

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. 

  • 42 minutes 16 seconds
    Gut Microbiome Romance, Defensive Rewilding and Sharks on Cocaine

    High school students launch blood samples into near space, a real life love story involves a faecal microbiota transplant (FMT), and scientists find cocaine in sharks off The Bahamas. Today we bounce between space medicine, the gut microbiome and mental health, and the uncomfortable reality of ocean pollution.

    We break down what those student rocket experiments could mean for space exploration and future medical procedures, then dive into the emerging science of gut bacteria, antibiotics, and how the microbiome may influence conditions like bipolar disorder. It is fascinating, hopeful, and also a bit gross, which is basically the scientific sweet spot.

    Then we hit the ocean for the headline nobody asked for: sharks on cocaine. It is not just a meme, it is a sign of how far human contaminants travel through marine ecosystems, and why environmental science keeps finding our mess in places we thought were pristine.

    We also unpack why we yawn, including research on brain temperature regulation and whether yawning patterns act like a physiological fingerprint. 

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    01:08 Chivalry Frog Meet Cute

    03:37 Bipolar Confession Backstory

    05:21 Gut Brain Link Evidence

    06:50 DIY FMT Love Story

    08:27 FMT Risks And Hype

    11:10 Defensive Rewilding Idea

    16:40 Cocaine Sharks Explained

    17:52 Bahamas Study Findings

    22:40 Pollution Everywhere

    23:30 Why We Yawn

    26:00 Contagious Yawns

    27:22 Yawns in the MRI

    28:37 Yawning Fingerprints

    30:21 Brain Goo Hypothesis

    32:06 Student Science Journal

    38:12 Blood to Space

    39:39 Four-Dimensional Minds

     

    SOURCES:

    • https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-28/faecal-microbiota-transplant-credited-with-curing-bipolar/105541522
    • https://futurism.com/science-energy/sharks-high-levels-of-cocaine
    • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969724049477
    • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0269749126001880
    • https://emerginginvestigators.org/
    • https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03071847.2026.2646067#d1e362
    • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1569904826000340?via=ihub

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    6 May 2026, 2:09 am
  • 35 minutes 12 seconds
    Bixonomania, Adversarial Hermeneutics, and Strontium in Baby Teeth

    AI chatbots (and lazy researchers) can be convinced a fake disease is real, Gen Z is side-eyeing the whole “helpful assistant” thing, and apparently, the best way to jailbreak AI is to ask it nicely in the form of cyberpunk short fiction. This week, we bounce between medical misinformation, bureaucratic chaos, nuclear fallout hiding in baby teeth, and the U.S. Space Force anthem doing whatever it is doing, which is a lot to process in one sitting, but here we are.


    We start with a medical warning that is both funny and genuinely unsettling. A researcher basically invented a fake illness, “Bixonomania”, then seeded enough convincing-looking nonsense online that AI chatbots started repeating it like it was in a textbook.


    After that, we head into one of the most ridiculous corners of AI safety. Researchers have found that you can sometimes trick chatbots into revealing restricted information by wrapping your request in a poem, or a short story, or a cyberpunk scenario. This has a name, adversarial hermeneutics, which sounds like a philosophy seminar, but is really just “jailbreaking with vibes”.


    Among other little bits of science, to finish, we step back to the 1950s, when researchers collected thousands of baby teeth to track radioactive strontium from nuclear fallout. It is one of those stories that feels spooky even when you know it helped. Tiny teeth, big consequences. The data showed contamination rising, and it played a role in pushing back against atmospheric nuclear testing.

    CHAPTERS:
    00:00 Science Chat Kickoff
    00:51 Fake Disease Goes Viral
    02:04 How It Fooled Chatbots
    03:55 LLMs Repeat It Everywhere
    04:55 From Preprints to Journals
    07:02 Medical Chatbot Accuracy Reality
    09:43 Gen Z Turns on AI
    13:29 Workplace AI Sabotage
    15:06 Adversarial Hermeneutics Hacks
    17:43 Adversarial Hermeneutics Hacks
    18:49 AI Flooding Regulations
    22:28 Gemini Speed vs Safety
    23:46 Humans as Test Cases
    24:45 Baby Teeth Fallout Study
    28:54 Strontium 90 and Test Ban
    29:40 Space Force Theme Song
    32:00 Wrap Up and Plug

    SOURCES:
    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01100-y?_bhlid=a10e41ad7eb12d68ab8fd4f81a75625fc74323ac
    https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/please-dont-trust-your-chatbot-for
    https://ahb.icaro-lab.com/index.html
    https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/ai-is-10-to-20-times-more-likely-to-help-you-build-a-bomb-if-you-hide-your-request-in-cyberpunk-fiction-new-research-paper-says/
    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/trump-regulations-ai
    https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-artificial-intelligence-google-gemini-transportation-regulations
    https://www.gallup.com/analytics/651674/gen-z-research.aspx
    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/zoomers-ai-sabotage
    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/gen-z-attitude-ai

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    28 April 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 35 minutes 12 seconds
    Bank-Swindling Deepfakes, Cigarette Butt Bird Nests, & Ocean Current Chaos

    Deepfake scammers are now running full Zoom meetings, birds are lining their nests with cigarette butts like it’s a homewares trend, and Europe’s climate could be one ocean current wobble away from doing something dramatic. This week, Will and Rod bounce between AI crime, urban wildlife hacks, climate tipping points, and a fruit fly brain getting uploaded like it’s just another file transfer.

    We start in Hong Kong, where scammers used AI deepfakes to impersonate colleagues on a video call and convinced a CFO to transfer a huge amount of money. We then headed outside, where birds have started collecting cigarette butts for their nests.

    From there, we get serious with the ocean currents that help keep Europe mild, and why scientists are worried about what happens if that system collapses. And because the future refuses to wait its turn, we also look at a fruit fly brain mapped neuron by neuron and uploaded into a virtual simulation, plus a quick detour into hats as status symbols and tools of punishment.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 AI Zoom Scam

    01:31 Show Intro and Lineup

    03:02 Pipe Smoking Animal Tales

    06:28 Birds Using Cigarette Butts

    08:32 Nicotine as Parasite Control

    11:20 School Smoking and Odd Uses

    15:29 AMOC Climate Tipping Point

    19:33 Uploading Brains Fruit Fly Model

    23:50 Connectome Driven Fly

    24:47 Virtual Embodiment Claims

    25:20 Scaling Up To Mouse

    26:48 Hybrid Bio Machine Futures

    28:13 Hat History Detour

    30:27 Hats As Social Signals

     

    SOURCES:

    • https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/apr/15/critical-atlantic-current-significantly-more-likely-to-collapse-than-thought
    • https://edition.cnn.com/2024/02/04/asia/deepfake-cfo-scam-hong-kong-intl-hnk?_bhlid=3bc010593bc73c17aa86ed0b6e79b5ae720c787f
    • https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/BE4E11BFE7F8CCF5A5A7081869710925/S0018246X26101460a.pdf/the-cultural-social-and-ideological-role-of-the-hat-in-early-modern-england.pdf
    • https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2026/ay/d5ay01801c
    • https://futurism.com/science-energy/birds-cigarettes-nest
    • https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347226000011
    • https://nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jav.01324
    • https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2024BiInv..26.1705P/abstract
    • https://futurism.com/science-energy/research-fly-brain-matrix
    • https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07763-9
    • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39533006/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    22 April 2026, 1:08 am
  • 50 minutes 17 seconds
    Organ-Growing Meat Sacks, Fart-Measuring Underwear, and Tropical Tree Friendships

    Cloning is getting more useful and more unsettling, tropical trees may be better at cooperation than we are, and smart underwear is now tracking human flatulence in extraordinary detail. This week, Will and Rod move from organ-growing biotech to forest teamwork, fart analytics, and a deeply worrying case of AI gone wrong.

    They look at the push to grow organs using non-conscious biological structures, and why that could transform medicine while also sounding like the start of a sci-fi horror film. Then they head into the forest, where new research suggests tropical trees are better at helping their neighbours than trees in colder climates, raising some mildly awkward questions about whether plants are beating us at community building.

    And because science never knows when to stop, the episode also dives into the world of smart underwear, digestive health, and what actually counts as a normal amount of flatulence. Along the way, there is also a sobering look at a Tennessee grandmother wrongly jailed after faulty facial recognition, which is a useful reminder that technology can be both brilliant and deeply stupid.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Cloning Nightmares Recap

    01:45 Monkey Organ Sacks Idea

    04:34 Human Organ Replacement Debate

    07:45 How It Could Work

    08:57 Surrogates And Storage Problems

    12:39 Trees That Get Along

    15:45 Why Tropical Trees Are Friendlier

    17:25 Not All Prodigies Win

    19:47 Late Bloomers And Training Myths

    24:10 German Forest Bathing Tease

    24:52 Forest Sounds Boost Mood

    25:35 Massage Stories Detour

    27:58 Local vs Tropical Forests

    30:14 Fart Science Gets Serious

    34:37 Smart Underwear Study

    36:55 Farting Baselines Explained

    39:19 Farter Types Atlas

    43:00 AI Facial Recognition Fail

    46:53 Why AI Enhancement Lies

    49:13 Wrap Up and Callouts

     

    SOURCES:

    https://futurism.com/health-medicine/startup-pitching-cloned-human-bodies

    https://www.wired.com/story/a-billionaire-backed-startup-wants-to-grow-organ-sacks-to-replace-animal-testing/

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg26935844-200-the-human-flatus-atlas-plans-to-measure-the-explosivity-of-farts/

    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1115965

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590137025001268?via%3Dihub

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2509261-high-achieving-adults-rarely-began-as-child-prodigies/

    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40279-023-01840-1

    https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-grandmother-jail-mistake

    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1123556

    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1123008

    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1123312

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    14 April 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 35 minutes 40 seconds
    Parrot Seduction, Clone Fatigue and The Most Stressful Truck Delivery in Europe

    A parrot in New Zealand makes conservation work wildly uncomfortable, scientists cloned mice until the whole thing started breaking down, and someone has now successfully trucked anti matter across Europe. This week, we bounce between endangered parrots, biological copy and paste and the least relaxing delivery job on Earth, which is a fairly strong effort even by science standards.

    We start in New Zealand, where Sirocco, a critically endangered kakapo with famously misdirected romantic instincts, helped inspire one of conservation’s strangest inventions. Scientists designed a special helmet in the hope of collecting semen for breeding efforts, after Sirocco kept directing his attention toward human heads instead of other birds. Then we head to Japan, where researchers spent twenty years cloning mice across 58 generations before the whole line began to collapse, with mutations building up and the clones dying early. After that, we hit the road in Europe, where a trucker successfully transported a tiny cloud of anti matter, proving that one of the rarest and most volatile substances in the universe can now apparently survive a delivery run.

    Finally, we end up in Scotland, where a robotic dog with an electronic nose is being used to sniff out ethanol leaks in whisky warehouses. It sounds ridiculous, because it is, but it is also a clever way to protect barrels and cut waste in one of the world’s oldest industries. 

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    02:17 Kakapo Basics

    03:59 Lek Breeding Explained

    05:24 Sirocco Imprints on Humans

    07:30 The Helmet Experiment

    12:06 Infinite Cloning Idea

    14:17 58 Generations Later

    15:40 Why Clones Degrade

    17:16 80s Cloning Logic

    18:11 Antimatter Trucking Breakthrough

    19:23 What Antimatter Really Is

    20:35 Making and Measuring Antiprotons

    23:11 Fridge Trap on the Road

    26:16 Whisky Aging and Angels Share

    28:30 Warehouse Leak Detection Problem

    31:20 Robot Dog Barrel Sniffer

    33:10 Spider Robots and Drones Next

    34:52 Wrap Up and Listener Feedback



    SOURCES:

    https://www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts/birds/sirocco-kakapo-ejaculation-helmet 

    https://www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts/birds/kakapo-parrot 

    https://www.audubon.org/magazine/what-heck-lek-quirkiest-mating-party-earth 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jlk9u8MIv7o 

    https://futurism.com/science-energy/scientists-cloned-recloned-mouse 

    https://www.wired.com/story/meet-scotlands-whisky-sniffing-robot-dog/ 

    https://home.cern/news/press-release/experiments/base-experiment-cern-succeeds-transporting-antimatter 

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-69765-7 

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    9 April 2026, 1:01 am
  • 41 minutes 46 seconds
    The Breaking Bad Effect, Obstetric Chainsaws and AI Trip Sitters

    Breaking Bad looks a little more plausible than you would hope, the chainsaw has a deeply unsettling medical origin story, and people are now asking whether AI can guide them through a psychedelic trip. This week, we bounce between crime, childbirth, and chatbot consciousness, which is not a sentence anyone should have to write, but here we are.

    We start with the so-called Breaking Bad effect, looking at research from Denmark suggesting that a life-changing diagnosis like cancer can increase the likelihood of criminal behaviour. When people feel like time is running out, the usual rules can start to look a lot less solid, which makes Walter White feel slightly less fictional than anyone would like.

    Then we head into the darkest corner of medical history, where the chainsaw turns out to have been invented for childbirth. Long before it became a tool for cutting timber or starring in horror films, it was used in procedures designed to make difficult deliveries possible. It is grim, fascinating, and a very effective way to make modern medicine look fantastic.

    Finally, we look at the strange idea of AI as a psychedelic trip sitter. While a chatbot might be able to offer calm prompts and simulated reassurance, it still has one major limitation. It has never had a body, never been high, and never experienced consciousness the way humans do. Like, subscribe, and tell us which weird science story we should chase next.

     

    00:00 Breaking Bad Setup

    01:10 Science Show Preview

    02:03 Danish Cancer Crime Study

    04:36 Why Crime Increases

    06:23 Shorter Survival More Crime

    07:44 Chainsaw Origins Quiz

    09:16 Childbirth Before Modern Medicine

    14:09 First Medical Chainsaws

    16:00 From Obstetrics to Amputations

    18:21 Portable Chainsaws Arrive

    20:05 Time Travel Tradeoffs

    20:40 Contact Lens Horror Story

    24:31 AI Trip Sitters

    27:44 Can AI Get High

    28:57 LLMs Simulating Psychedelics

    33:06 Brain Cells Play Doom

    38:07 Mailbag Strandbeests Gelatin

    41:10 Wrap Up And Ratings

     

    SOURCES:

    https://www.bbc.com/news/health-40630852

    https://www-bmj-com.virtual.anu.edu.au/content/358/bmj.j2783

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1633599/full?ref=404media.co

    https://www.sciencealert.com/the-breaking-bad-effect-from-cancer-is-real-study-finds\

    https://www.iflscience.com/can-artificial-intelligence-get-high-and-why-are-scientists-even-trying-82560

    https://futurism.com/ai-therapy-psychedelic-trip-sitter

    https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-8682370/v1

    https://erowid.org/experiences/exp_info3.shtml

    https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/why-were-chainsaws-invented.htm

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    31 March 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 25 minutes 46 seconds
    Brain-Eating Amoebas, Economists vs. Everyone and Da Vinci's Robot Lion

    Brain-eating amoebas, climate change, economists, and Leonardo da Vinci’s robot lion all collide in this week’s episode. We dig into how warming freshwater is helping dangerous amoebas spread into new places, why these rare but terrifying organisms are linked to water going up the nose, and what that means for swimmers, public health, and the very specific fear of warm lakes. It is science, climate, and nightmare fuel all in one neat package.

    We also unpack a strange finding from economics research. The more economists agree with each other, the more their views can drift away from the general public. It is a fascinating look at expert consensus, groupthink, public opinion, and why economic theory can sometimes feel completely detached from real life. If you have ever wondered why economists sound like they are living on a different planet, this one may help.

    Then we head back to the Renaissance for one of the greatest flexes in science and engineering history. Leonardo da Vinci reportedly built a mechanical robot lion that could walk and reveal flowers from its chest, blending robotics, invention, art, and spectacle centuries before modern technology caught up. If you love weird science, history, innovation, robots, and bizarre true stories, this episode is for you.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    01:10 Brain-Eating Amoeba Basics

    02:43 How It Infects You

    03:57 Warming Spreads the Risk

    04:39 Economists vs Everyone

    10:10 Assumptions and Governance

    11:03 Medici Exile Storytime

    12:23 Bologna Power Play

    13:07 Medici Politics Banter

    14:32 Da Vinci Gift Idea

    16:46 Robot Knight Blueprint

    18:48 Building the Lion

    19:44 Courtroom Lion Reveal

    23:22 Modern Art Machines

    24:43 Ratings and Farewell

     

    SOURCES:

    https://www.aeaweb.org/articles/pdf/doi/10.1257/aer.103.3.636

    https://www.sciencealert.com/brain-eating-amoebas-may-pose-a-growing-global-threat-scientists-warn

    https://www.history.com/articles/da-vinci-robotic-lion

    https://www.history.com/articles/7-early-robots-and-automatons

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    25 March 2026, 1:50 am
  • 45 minutes 17 seconds
    The Psychology of Conspiracies, Mushroom Hot Pot Trip and the Longest Botany Experiment Ever

    Conspiracy theorists hate uncertainty, a mushroom hot pot in China can apparently summon tiny imaginary people, a bunch of seeds have been sitting underground since the 1800s waiting for their moment and scientists are trying to quantify why words like boobs are funny. This week is a mixed bag of psychology, botany and childish humour, which is basically the entire scientific enterprise when you strip away the grant applications.

    We start with conspiracy thinking and why it is often less about facts and more about feelings. Research suggests people who lean hard into conspiracies can struggle with ambiguity and prefer simple explanations in a complicated world. Certainty feels good, chaos feels awful and conspiracy stories offer villains, motives and a neat ending. Even when the story is wrong.

    Then we head to Yunnan, China, where prized mushrooms can cause hallucinations if they are eaten too early, including reports of seeing tiny people. Researchers still have not nailed down the exact chemical responsible, and it may be a mix of biology, preparation and expectation. The takeaway is simple. If the locals tell you to cook the mushrooms properly, listen.

    We look at one of the longest running experiments in science, where seeds buried in glass bottles in the 1800s are still being dug up and tested to see what can germinate. We also dip into the science of funny words and why certain sounds and associations make some words reliably hilarious. So, stay curious, cook your hot pot properly, and if you start seeing tiny people, maybe stop eating the mushrooms.

     

    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:48 Conspiracy Believer Traits

    03:13 New Study On Coverups

    05:14 Ambiguity And Unfairness

    06:42 Skepticism Vs Conspiracy

    07:59 Mushroom Hot Pot Warning

    10:19 Tiny People Hallucinations

    14:01 Hunting The Active Compound

    17:35 Seed Bottle Time Capsule

    21:24 Custodians And Map

    21:56 Bottles Remaining Timeline

    23:12 Succession And Secrecy

    24:51 2021 Dawn Dig

    26:30 Why The Experiment Matters

    29:10 Long Term Projects

    30:48 Science Of Funny Words

    36:31 Modeling Humor Categories

    40:21 Phonemes And Incongruity

    43:22 Destroying Humour And Wrap

     

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

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

    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/21/science/beal-seeds-experiment.html 

    https://magazine.wfu.edu/2022/10/05/unearthing-time-in-a-bottle/ 

    https://www.sciencealert.com/the-worlds-longest-running-lab-experiment-is-almost-100-years-old?utm_source=news.sciencealert.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=superagers-have-two-key-advantages&_bhlid=8fd449a2c8ea1d56a84867da881e4444546af69c 

    https://www.mentalfloss.com/science/15-longest-running-scientific-studies-history https://people.howstuffworks.com/why-poop-and-wiggle-are-funny-words-according-to-science.htm?utm_source=HowStuffWorks+Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=themed-words-3-6-25

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    17 March 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 30 minutes 33 seconds
    Why Venting Makes You Angrier, Neanderthals Preferred Human Women, and Fetuses Hate Kale"

    Venting might be making you angrier, Neanderthals apparently had a type, and unborn babies are already forming strong opinions about kale. This week we bounce from modern psychology to ancient DNA to fetal facial expressions, with a quick detour into pokie machines and how they might be made a little less addictive.

    We start with a meta analysis suggesting venting is not the healthy release we have been sold. Instead of calming you down, it can keep your body fired up and make the anger stick around longer. The less satisfying fix is also the more effective one, doing things that lower arousal like breathing, yoga, and anything that stops you replaying the same rant on loop.

    Then we head back to prehistory, where research suggests Neanderthal DNA patterns point to pairings that may have involved Neanderthal men and human women more often than the reverse. The details are complicated, but the headline is simple. Neanderthals are not just history, they are part of us, and the human story has always been messier than we like to admit.

    Finally, we look at a study that might explain why some people hate vegetables with the passion of a thousand suns. Fetuses exposed to carrot flavours appeared to react more positively than those exposed to kale, hinting that taste preferences may start before birth. We wrap up with a surprisingly practical idea for pokie machines, adding sounds for losses as well as wins to make the experience less psychologically sneaky.



    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Venting Myth 

    02:40 Science Debunks Catharsis

    04:06 Meta Analysis Breakdown

    05:40 Calm Down Not Amp Up

    06:59 Jogging And Anger

    09:25 Why We Love Anger

    10:53 Play Metal And Fun

    11:48 Neanderthal DNA Mystery

    13:07 Who Mated With Whom

    14:17 Neanderthal Dating Bias

    15:16 Hybrid Myths and Mechanics

    16:28 Picky Eaters Rant

    18:54 Fetuses Taste Flavours

    20:08 Carrot Smiles vs Kale Grimaces

    23:30 Pokies Need Losing Sounds

    27:47 Petition and Sign-Off



    SOURCES:

    • Interbreeding between Neanderthals and modern humans was strongly sex biased
    • Why I risked prison to add a 'Losing Sound' to poker machines
    • Flavour Sensing in Utero and Emerging Discriminative Behaviours in the Human Fetus
    • https://www.sciencealert.com/venting-doesnt-reduce-anger-but-something-else-does-review-finds

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    10 March 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 57 minutes 6 seconds
    When AI Chooses Nukes, Norway's Brain Gun, and the Syndrome That Makes You a Foodie

    This week, AI is casually reaching for the nuclear button, a Norwegian scientist has accidentally recreated something that looks a lot like Havana Syndrome, and a brain lesion has turned a marathon runner into an intense foodie. It is a neat little trio of stories that sits right on the edge of science fiction, except the uncomfortable part is that it is all real.

    We start with simulated war games where major AI models were put in charge of military decision making. The result is grimly simple. In these scenarios, the systems chose to deploy tactical nuclear weapons most of the time, showing none of the cultural taboo or restraints humans have built around nuclear escalation.

    Then we head to Norway, where a scientist tested a pulse energy device on himself to see if it could plausibly cause Havana Syndrome-style symptoms. It did. Which is both a scientific result and a personal mistake, and it raises the obvious question of what happens when this kind of technology moves from theory to wider interest.

    Finally, we look at Gorman Syndrome, a neurological twist where a brain lesion appears to flip someone from long distance running to an intense obsession with fine food. It is funny, strange, and a sharp reminder that personality can be less fixed than we like to believe. 

     

    CHAPTERS:

     

    00:00 Fire Alarm AI Fail

    00:46 LLMs in War Games

    06:34 Nukes and No Surrender

    09:36 Pentagon Wants Anthropic

    10:33 Testing AI Weirdness

    12:50 Dead Cow Prompt Update

    15:07 Car Wash Question Trap

    18:10 Lost in the Middle Fix

    22:01 Maps and Recursive Islands

    23:32 Chasing Longest Line of Sight

    26:53 All the Views Map

    27:49 What Limits Sightlines

    29:23 Havana Syndrome Emerges

    31:58 Theories and Investigations

    35:14 Norwegian Microwave Experiment

    42:20 Official Stance and Confusion

    44:04 Extreme Foodie Case Study

    47:39 Gourmand Syndrome Explained

    51:21 Brain Lesions and Cravings



    SOURCES:

    • AIs can’t stop recommending nuclear strikes in war game simulations
    • AI Arms and Influence: Frontier Models Exhibit Sophisticated Reasoning in Simulated Nuclear Crises
    • The Longest Line Of Sight
    • https://pub.towardsai.net/the-car-wash-question-that-breaks-every-ai-and-the-2-word-fix-nobody-talks-about-21db5c78fc29
    • https://www.vice.com/en/article/brain-damaged-gourmand-syndrome-foodies-cant-register-your-disgust/
    • https://www.iflscience.com/gourmand-syndrome-when-brain-injuries-spark-an-obsessive-craving-for-fine-food-and-gastronomy-82546
    • https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/gourmand-syndrome-26067295/
    • https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/02/14/havana-syndrome-cia-norway-experiment/
    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Havana_syndrome
    • https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/pentagon-reportedly-testing-radio-wave-device-linked-to-havana-syndrome/
    • https://edition.cnn.com/2026/01/13/politics/havana-syndrome-device-pentagon-hsi

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    3 March 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 43 minutes 33 seconds
    Hippo Castration, Heart Bypass Brain Fog and Sperm From Unexpected Places

    This week we have hippos with hidden bits, hearts that take a mechanical detour, and a medical case study that will make you sit down and reconsider every life choice that led you to having a body. It is science at its best and worst, fascinating, useful, and deeply inconvenient.

    We start at the zoo, where hippo castration is a real population control tool, partly to manage breeding and partly to reduce aggression. The catch is hippo anatomy is not built for human convenience, with internal testes that turn the whole procedure into a high stakes game of hide and seek inside a very large, very grumpy animal.

    Then we move from hippos to hearts, looking at cardiac surgeries that use a heart lung bypass machine. Some patients report a temporary cognitive dip afterward, often called pump brain, and nobody is fully sure why it happens. It might be the machine, the stress of surgery, or subtle changes in blood flow and inflammation, but the mystery is still very much alive.

    Finally, we end with a story that makes every listener cross their legs in sympathy. A man developed a rectal urethral fistula after previous surgery, likely linked to a catheter complication during a coma, and his internal plumbing rerouted itself in the most unhelpful way possible. The takeaway is simple. Bodies are fragile, embarrassment is useless, and if something feels wrong, get it checked.




    CHAPTERS:

    00:00 Hippo Castration Study

    05:50 Why Zoos Castrate Hippos

    08:11 Internal Anatomy Surprise

    13:04 Surgery Method and Timing

    15:14 Recovery and Blood Sweat

    17:12 Aftereffects and Social Dynamics

    18:11 Science Communication Pivot

    18:46 Alcohol Messaging Study Setup

    21:27 Violence as Communication

    21:57 Alcohol Messages That Work

    23:25 Counting Drinks Cancer Risk

    25:08 Comfortable With Surgery

    25:49 Heart Bypass Miracle Machine

    29:12 Pumphead Cognitive Decline

    33:43 Why the Pump Makes You Dumber

    35:46 Fistula Case From Catheter

    42:34 Spinosaurus Tank Top Sendoff



    SOURCES:

    Rosetta scientist Dr Matt Taylor apologises for ‘offensive’ shirt

    Astonishing Spinosaur Unearthed in The Sahara Is Unlike Any Seen Before

    There's One Simple Method to Lower Alcohol Intake, And It Works

     A randomized controlled trial of the effectiveness of combinations of ‘why to reduce’ and ‘how to reduce’ alcohol harm-reduction communications

    Westbury, C., & Hollis, G. (2019). Wriggly, squiffy, lummox, and boobs: What makes some words funny? Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 148(1), 97–123.

    https://doi.org/10.1037/xge0000467 https://people.howstuffworks.com/why-poop-and-wiggle-are-funny-words-according-to-science.htm?

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000169182600171X

    https://futurism.com/health-medicine/exercise-cardio-stress-research

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0093691X13004275

    https://www.discovermagazine.com/why-its-nearly-impossible-to-castrate-a-hippo-4775

    https://futurism.com/neoscope/doctors-rectourethral-fistula

    https://www.cureus.com/articles/68327-a-curious-case-of-rectal-ejaculation#!/

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    24 February 2026, 4:00 pm
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