エピソード

  • #93-Everyone’s Got a Take
    2026/03/28

    When did everyone become an expert on everything… immediately?


    Bret and Josh cover a little bit of everything this week — from 5AM track meets and roller coasters at Busch Gardens, to business trips in Europe and the universal ability for people to have strong opinions on things they just learned about.


    They unpack how we went from thinking things through… to reacting in real time — whether it’s breaking news, gas prices, or whatever’s blowing up online.


    Also: why you should trust Josh on the Denver Broncos roster… but maybe not global geopolitics.


    The real question — are we actually forming opinions… or just reacting faster than ever?


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    50 分
  • #92-Do we really need a reboot?
    2026/03/08

    This week we talk reboots, remakes, and why Hollywood keeps reopening stories that already had an ending.

    From Top Gun getting it right to Jurassic Park, Karate Kid, and the growing list of revived shows like Scrubs (and the potential of a Knight Rider..wha???) and other 80s/90s TV favorites, we ask why some reboots work while others feel completely unnecessary.

    At what point does bringing something back honor the original… and when does it just feel like Hollywood ran out of ideas?


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    38 分
  • #91-Did We Optimize the Magic Out of It?
    2026/03/04

    Remember when you had to wait for things?

    A new episode each week. Saving up for a CD and listening from front to back. Planning your night around one game you couldn’t miss.

    Now we binge entire seasons, skip songs after 15 seconds, and watch highlights before the game’s even over.

    This week, we talk about what happens when scarcity disappears, and everything becomes instantly available. Does unlimited access flatten the experience? Are we savoring less and consuming more?

    Did convenience make life better… or did we quietly optimize the magic out of it?


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    45 分
  • #90-Predictable Isn’t Bad… Right?
    2026/03/02

    We used to say yes. Order the weird thing. Take the risk. Now we read the reviews, give a show three episodes, and know exactly what we like.

    This week we talk about the shift from being the main characters to becoming the editors — how competence replaced some of the chaos, and whether that’s growth… or predictability.

    Robot competitions, Carolina Reapers, “Shrinking,” and one real question:

    Are we less curious… or just more experienced?


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    43 分
  • #89-The Myth of Catching Up
    2026/02/09

    This week, Bret and Josh take on one of adulthood’s biggest lies: the idea that we’ll eventually “catch up.” From inbox-zero fantasies to the promise that life will slow down after just one more thing, they unpack why being “done” no longer exists—and why that’s not a personal failure.


    It’s a light, funny look at modern life, endless to-do lists, and the relief that comes from realizing there was never a finish line in the first place.

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    44 分
  • #85-You are not a loser
    2026/02/08

    This week on TFMT, Bret and Josh unpack why we’re always losing and forgetting things — from keys and phones to entire trains of thought. Spoiler: it’s not aging or carelessness. It’s interruption. A funny, relatable look at how modern life quietly wrecks our memory… and why it’s not something to beat yourself up over.

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    33 分
  • #87- Nobody Agreed to This
    2026/01/09

    This week, Bret and Josh break down the unspoken rules of adult life that everyone follows—and no one remembers agreeing to. From workplace etiquette and social norms to travel behavior and tech expectations, they unpack why we comply, what happens when we don’t, and which rules deserve to disappear forever. Funny, relatable, and slightly therapeutic.

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    48 分
  • #86 Holidays! Why is so dark outside? Family and Friends, Full plates, Presents, & Twinkle Lights
    2025/12/23

    This week, Bret and Josh slow things down for a holiday special built for everyone celebrating this season — Christmas, Chanukah, or just the rare gift of a quieter calendar. They dig into why this time of year feels heavier and more meaningful than the rest, where our traditions come from, and why light, nostalgia, and togetherness matter so much when the days get shorter.

    It’s a thoughtful, funny look at the stuff we think we know about the holidays — the stuff that should go and the stuff that actually makes them meaningful.


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    44 分