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by Viktor Wilt, Brenden Peach
The Noon Hour Of Madness & Mayhem can be heard live on KBEAR 101 weekdays at 12pm MST. Viktor and Peaches talk about a wide variety of topics depending on the day and you never know what to expect!
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Peaches and Viktor somehow begin this episode with a peaceful sunset walk that immediately turns into Peaches convincing himself he's having a heart attack while overlooking the city like the star of a dramatic movie. From there, the conversation takes a hard turn into radio station shenanigans, mysterious upcoming promotions, Gen Z slang overload, body-maxing before turning 30, and the ongoing fallout from the infamous sardine incident that earned Peaches a fish-themed reputation around the building. Then things get truly educational when Viktor discovers a theory that eating boogers might actually help your immune system, launching an intense debate involving homemade vaccines, toenail consumption, hot tubs, dirty pie servers, and whether any of these should ever be discussed during lunch. As if that wasn't enough, the guys tumble into a rabbit hole of celebrity feet, Steven Tyler's toes, LeBron James' battle-worn footwear, fish that eat dead skin off your feet, and a surprisingly serious discussion about foot enthusiasts. The episode wraps up with a reckless visit to Reddit's FiftyFifty subreddit where Peaches and Viktor test their ability to predict whether they're about to see cake, injuries, mushrooms, or something they immediately regret clicking. If you've ever wondered what happens when two radio hosts are left unsupervised with internet access and microphones, this episode has your answer.
Based on this episode, the running themes were Peaches turning into East Idaho's accidental weight-loss mascot, Victor declaring war on lazy radio personalities, an extended debate about whether sardines count as human food, and the growing concern that Peaches may eventually survive on nothing but fish bones and spite. The episode starts with Peaches battling treadmill-induced chafing while accidentally wandering around the gym looking like he'd just survived a cage match thanks to dried blood running down his face. From there, the conversation jumps into radio industry gossip, with Woody Show complaints leading to a passionate discussion about whether big-market radio stars should actually leave the studio and meet listeners. The middle of the show becomes an impromptu fitness movement as Peaches reveals members of his Discord are joining him on his health journey, inspiring the creation of the world's most terrifying community event: a Greenbelt walk featuring "fat dads" attempting to become athletes. Things somehow get even stranger when David Goggins enters the conversation through his habit of listening to hate comments during workouts, leading Victor to encourage listeners to send insults for motivational purposes. The show wraps up with Victor's frustration over bad country music, forgotten restaurant leftovers, Peaches' increasingly strict diet, canned sardines consumed bones and all, and a legendary TMZ story involving a bowl of ground beef and an unexpectedly flattering shirt compliment. If you've ever wondered what happens when two radio guys start with chafing and somehow end up discussing fish skeletons, fitness cults, radio politics, and celebrity beef bowls, this episode delivers.
Peaches and Viktor return for another edition of The Noon Hour of Madness and Mayhem, and this time things begin with an important question: if either of them became rich, how long would it take before they completely disappeared from public life and started buying luxury refrigerators for everyone they know? From there, the conversation somehow spirals into beard stylists, selling every possession that isn't bolted down, and learning metal vocals from a DVD that may or may not turn Peaches into the next underground deathcore sensation.The centerpiece of the episode is Peaches revealing he's dropped 32 pounds and has fully committed to a new lifestyle that includes endless Greenbelt walks, protein-packed lunches, a refrigerator that looks like a produce section, and a scale positioned directly in front of a giant mirror for maximum accountability. Viktor watches this transformation unfold in real time and becomes increasingly concerned that one David Goggins video away from turning into a sleepless fitness philosopher.Elsewhere, the guys discuss the unique struggles of being bald, including the moment Peaches accidentally removed a chunk of his own scalp while shaving his head and spent the next day looking like he'd survived a professional wrestling match. They also tackle the bizarre story of a metal band encouraging fans to attack a guy in a banana costume, debate whether anyone wears actual clothes underneath a banana suit, and try to determine if a viral cheating scandal involving a high-tech litter box was genuine heartbreak or the weirdest marketing campaign ever conceived.If you've ever wondered what happens when self-improvement, metal music, accidental bloodshed, banana costumes, and cat surveillance technology all collide in a single conversation, this episode has your answer.
Based on this episode, the standout thread is Peaches being abandoned by Viktor for an extended birthday celebration and immediately finding someone equally willing to debate video games, wedding songs, fishing, and life choices. The episode starts with a birthday horror story that somehow includes missing a first college class, a dead car battery, five miles of punishment running, and crawling home for cake like a defeated action hero. From there, Peaches and FJ settle one of gaming's biggest debates by determining that the people who dislike Xbox the most might actually be Xbox owners, while also preparing for the societal collapse that could occur if GTA VI somehow fails to live up to a decade of hype. They also tackle the important question of whether using a breakup song as your wedding's first dance is romantic or a legally documented warning sign, leading to FJ revealing that his dream wedding involves getting married during Metallica's "Enter Sandman" with pyrotechnics and absolutely no concern for venue costs. The show wraps up with discussions about dead fish taking over an Arizona lake, why catch-and-release fishing confuses Peaches, and whether Idaho's outdoor lifestyle could survive a visit from his extremely anti-fishing California family. In short: one part gaming convention, one part wedding planner, one part outdoor survival guide, and somehow all of it makes perfect sense.
Based on this episode, the clear headliner is Peaches turning into a melatonin-fueled action hero who somehow went from walking the entire Greenbelt while listening to sad music, to fighting a giant phantom moth while completely naked, to dreaming he was carrying an oversized baby through a shopping mall while strangers pointed and judged his parenting skills. Meanwhile, Viktor spent most of the show trying to determine whether his co-host was having a personal breakthrough or quietly unraveling in real time. Add in an AI-generated "Juicy Peaches" anthem, discussions about selling every earthly possession, a surprise East Idaho Aquarium appearance on the Joe Rogan podcast, movie-ending arguments that nearly turned into spoiler warfare, and an emotional detour into why grown adults still cry during Click, and you've got an episode that somehow manages to bounce between heartfelt, ridiculous, and completely absurd without ever losing momentum. If you've ever wondered what happens when two radio guys start with peach-themed nightmare fuel and somehow end up debating the emotional damage caused by Adam Sandler movies, this episode delivers from start to finish.
This week on The Noon Hour of Madness & Mayhem, Peaches and Viktor Wilt accidentally spend an entire episode realizing they're becoming responsible adults—and neither one seems thrilled about it. Peaches gives an update on his GLP-1 adventure, including dizziness, step counts, healthy fast-food orders that sound suspiciously like punishment, and the terrifying arrival of a new bathroom scale. Meanwhile, Viktor reveals he's cutting back on alcohol, monitoring his blood pressure, and preparing for a Yellowstone getaway where he absolutely does not plan on wrestling bison (probably).The conversation somehow spirals into addiction, fitness goals, fast-food temptation, becoming "that guy" who orders salad on purpose, and whether Viktor is mentally ready for the possibility of becoming Grandpa Wilt before he hits 45. From there, things get even stranger as the guys debate why metal fans lose their minds whenever bands evolve, why Morgan Freeman has spent an entire career playing the smartest person in every room, and why Hollywood refuses to cast him as a complete moron for once. Toss in stories about unexpected pregnancies, movie surprises, Ghost, AC/DC, black metal cave recordings, and Peaches' future plans to become a screaming metal vocalist, and you've got one of those episodes that somehow starts with step counters and ends with Morgan Freeman joining Scary Movie. If you enjoy conversations that make absolutely no effort to stay on a single topic for more than five minutes, you'll probably want to hear this one all the way through—and if it makes you laugh, a review helps more than Morgan Freeman narrating your life.
This episode starts exactly how you'd expect from Peaches and Viktor Wilt: with technical difficulties, accusations involving a proctologist appointment, and a heated debate over whether two inches of ketchup left in a bottle justifies buying a brand-new one. From there, things somehow escalate into confusion about celebrity names, discussions about 100-year-old television legends, and a surprisingly detailed breakdown of why Peaches would absolutely fail a sobriety test after accidentally poking himself in the eye while trying to scratch his nose.The guys spend a good chunk of the show promoting Peaches' appearance at The Gun Shop, but not before repeatedly confusing the event time, inventing the phrase "Come Peep Peaches' Pits," and turning a grill giveaway into a running joke about armpits, barbecue pits, and concert pit tickets. Meanwhile, Viktor and Peaches dive into their fitness journeys, where David Goggins gets blamed for inspiring people to make terrible workout decisions, pull-ups become public enemies, treadmills start resembling mountain-climbing expeditions, and Peaches openly admits he's watching transformation videos while trying to launch what he calls his redemption arc. Add in a debate about baby names, radio censorship, listener call-backs, gym struggles, and one unforgettable radio imager claiming that "Peaches gives me a rash," and you've got an episode that somehow manages to be about everything and nothing at the same time—in the best possible way. If you've ever wondered what would happen if a morning show meeting, a gym locker room conversation, and a comedy podcast got trapped in the same room together, this episode delivers exactly that.
Peaches and Viktor Wilt somehow managed to start this episode by discussing a tragic crowd surfing accident at a Sleep Theory show before immediately realizing they probably shouldn’t be joking during a conversation involving brain bleeds and emergency surgery. From there, things spiral into a completely different lane with Peaches promoting a pellet grill giveaway at The Gun Shop, Viktor explaining why he still doesn’t have his high school diploma at 43 years old, and the shocking revelation that Pocatello High School has apparently been storing his diploma in a drawer since the Clinton administration because of unpaid parking tickets, missing textbooks, and “senior dues.” The two also debate which careers AI can’t destroy, with suggestions ranging from plumbers and HVAC techs to choreographers — a category immediately disproven when ChatGPT successfully teaches them how to dance live on the air for their upcoming “Second Chance Prom.” Add in tanning bed paranoia caused by Final Destination, MRI horror stories, fathers reacting to forehead kisses, and Viktor preparing to become a middle-aged carpenter after radio inevitably collapses, and you’ve got an episode that sounds less like a podcast and more like two guys accidentally getting locked inside the internet for an hour.
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