News You Do Not Need

Russia's 268-Drone Spam Attack: When Your Neighbor Goes Full Unhinged at 3am ft Exploding Mosquitoes

1 min · 3. maj 2026
episode Russia's 268-Drone Spam Attack: When Your Neighbor Goes Full Unhinged at 3am ft Exploding Mosquitoes cover

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Alle episoder

237 episoder

episode The Town That Crowned a Champion Toaster Starer and Made Us All Question Everything cover

The Town That Crowned a Champion Toaster Starer and Made Us All Question Everything

This is your News You do not Need podcast So I was scrolling through the news, as one does when procrastinating on real responsibilities, and I stumbled on a headline that made me say out loud, to no one, “This is exactly the kind of information no human being ever needed.” Naturally, I clicked immediately. Apparently, somewhere in the world, a town has just crowned its new champion in what can only be described as the Olympics of pointless dedication: a competitive event focused entirely on… staring at a household object. No sports, no strategy, just one person, one object, and the infinite void between their eyes and their life choices. The rules are simple and somehow still too complicated for what’s happening. Contestants take turns sitting in front of this object—picture something aggressively ordinary, like a toaster—and they must keep their gaze fixed on it. No talking, no laughing, no phones, no snacks. You look away, you’re out. You blink, that’s fine. You question your existence, that’s on you. This year’s winner apparently trained. They trained. For staring. Their friends were out doing normal things, like living, and this person was at home, silently gazing at their microwave, building up “ocular endurance” like they were preparing for the Eye-contact World Cup. They reportedly worked their way up from five minutes to an hour, which sounds less like preparation and more like the origin story of a supervillain whose only power is deeply unsettling eye contact. Spectators came to watch, which raises follow-up questions such as “why” and “no, really, why.” Imagine paying money and dedicating your afternoon to watching strangers look at an inanimate object while you, in turn, stare at them. It’s like a hall of mirrors made entirely of bad decisions. The event even has a referee whose whole job is to make sure no one cheats at… not doing anything. Someone trained their entire life, presumably, to become the authority on whether a contestant’s eyeballs have drifted three degrees off toaster. Somewhere, an Olympic judge is standing by a balance beam, wondering where they went wrong. Prizes were awarded, because of course they were. The champion took home a modest cash prize, a trophy shaped suspiciously like the object in question, and, more importantly, a lifetime of having to explain this to people. “Wow, cool trophy, what’s it for?” “I stared at a toaster longer than anyone else.” And then just a long, painful silence while both of you reconsider the direction of civilization. My favorite detail is that the organizer called this “a celebration of focus in a distracted era.” Which is a poetic way of saying, “Look, if you’re going to waste time, at least commit.” They could’ve chosen meditation, art, maybe community service, but no—this town collectively decided that the best use of iron will and free time is to see who can have the most intense non-relationship with kitchen equipment. And yet, on some level, I respect it. There are people out there doing bizarre, unnecessary things with absolute seriousness, and that is the fuel on which the internet runs. Some folks climb mountains, some run ultramarathons, and some lock eyes with a toaster for an hour and call it legacy. So if you’re having a rough day, remember: somewhere out there is a person whose greatest public achievement is being officially, competitively, and ceremonially the best at staring at something that doesn’t even know they exist. And the wildest part? That weird little fact is now in your brain forever. You’re welcome. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

14. juni 20264 min
episode When Your Kitchen Floor Has More Red Flags Than Your Dating History: The Asbestos Tile Saga cover

When Your Kitchen Floor Has More Red Flags Than Your Dating History: The Asbestos Tile Saga

This is your News You do not Need podcast In the last day, one of the strangest little stories floating around the news cycle was not about war, politics, or the economy, but about a Dutch man who discovered that his new kitchen tiles had a built-in surprise: they were made with asbestos and removed from a 1970s building being demolished nearby. The part nobody needed to know, but now definitely does, is that the floor in his home apparently had more history than a museum exhibit and more danger than a bad decision at a home improvement store. What makes the story bizarre is not just the asbestos, which is already a word that tends to make adults stand up straighter, but the sheer absurdity of how it ended up underfoot. According to the reporting, the tiles were recovered from the demolition site, repurposed, and installed before anyone realized they had basically turned a living room into a very expensive cautionary tale. The homeowner is now dealing with the cleanup, the paperwork, and the deeply unromantic truth that some bargains are suspicious for a reason. It is the kind of news item that feels like it was written by a committee of pranksters with a safety manual. On one level, it is a real public health issue, because asbestos is dangerous when its fibers become airborne. On another level, it is a reminder that modern life can still produce moments so weird they sound made up: a home renovation that accidentally becomes archaeology, a recycling effort that lands somewhere between inventive and alarming, and a floor so questionable it might deserve its own warning label. So if you were hoping for a story that would improve your day without actually being useful, this is it. Somewhere out there, a person learned the hard way that “reclaimed materials” is a phrase that can inspire either admiration or a very long phone call to an inspector. And if nothing else, it has restored an important truth to the universe: when something is free, charming, and from a demolition site, it is probably not a surprise gift. It is probably a plot twist. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

I går2 min
episode Octopuses Are Having Fever Dreams Under the Sea and Scientists Are Watching Them Sleep Like Creeps cover

Octopuses Are Having Fever Dreams Under the Sea and Scientists Are Watching Them Sleep Like Creeps

This is your News You do not Need podcast I learned today that the world is absolutely fine, because scientists have just discovered that octopus dreams might be even weirder than ours. Which, honestly, is comforting. Somewhere in the ocean, there’s an eight‑armed insomniac having a meltdown about absolutely nothing. Researchers filmed sleeping octopuses and noticed that every so often they slam into a kind of turbo sleep: their skin flashes wild colors, their eyes twitch, their arms wiggle, like they’re speed‑running a video game only they can see. It looks less like sleep and more like someone accidentally pressed “shuffle” on their entire nervous system. The current theory is that this is their version of REM sleep, the stage where humans dream. So yes, we now have respectable scientists standing around very expensive equipment saying, with a straight face, “We think the octopus is dreaming of… something?” Which is incredible, because you know at least one researcher wanted to say “He’s clearly reliving that time he ate a crab the size of a Hyundai.” Just imagine what an octopus has to process at night. All day it’s changing color, shape, and texture like a moody lava lamp. It has half a million taste buds in its suckers. Each arm can sort of think for itself. Meanwhile, we go to bed worried about email, and this creature is out here dreaming in full surround‑tentacle. I keep picturing an octopus waking up from a nightmare like, “Wow, I just dreamed I only had two arms and spent eight hours filling in spreadsheets. Absolutely horrifying. Never again.” Somewhere an octopus is telling its therapist, “Then I turned beige and stayed that way all day,” and the therapist gasps. The best part is that this is brand‑new data, gathered by people who had to hold meetings, apply for grants, and write serious proposals that basically boil down to: “Step one, watch cephalopods nap. Step two, call it science.” And the funding committee said yes. Which means there is hope for all of us and our questionable life choices. And this is knowledge you did not need. At no point today was your survival dependent on the sleep hygiene of a highly intelligent sea creature. Yet here we are, one step closer to knowing that while you’re lying awake wondering if you locked the front door, there’s an octopus under a rock having an IMAX‑level dream sequence about turning into a coral reef and ghosting a lobster. So if you find yourself overthinking tonight, just remember: somewhere out there, an octopus is also wide asleep, flashing colors, kicking its little arms, possibly dreaming that it, too, forgot to reply all. And that, for absolutely no practical reason whatsoever, makes the universe feel just a tiny bit better. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

10. juni 20263 min
episode Kangaroos, Crime, and Questionable Life Choices: When Australian News Gets Properly Weird cover

Kangaroos, Crime, and Questionable Life Choices: When Australian News Gets Properly Weird

This is your News You do not Need podcast A truly unnecessary piece of modern life arrived courtesy of the news cycle, which somehow found room for the revelation that a man in Australia was allegedly charged after police say he carried out a bizarre, deeply unhelpful act involving a stolen kangaroo and a bottle of alcohol, the kind of sentence that sounds like it was written by a distracted tabloid generator, not reality. It is the sort of story that makes you pause and ask not only why this happened, but why, of all the possible choices a human being can make, this one survived the journey from impulse to police report. According to the reports circulating today, the incident was recent enough to qualify as fresh, and strange enough to qualify as instant folklore. The details are still the kind that sit somewhere between comedy and public warning: a stolen animal, a questionable plan, and enough poor judgment to make the phrase common sense feel like a luxury product. If nothing else, the episode proves that human creativity remains undefeated, though not always in a direction anyone requested. What makes stories like this strangely compelling is that they are completely useless and therefore unforgettable. No one needed to know it. No one is better off for knowing it. And yet here we are, mentally filing away the image of a person apparently deciding that a kangaroo should become part of a crime story, which is an excellent reminder that the world is forever one bad idea away from becoming a very weird headline. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

8. juni 20261 min
episode Phoenixville's Ferris Wheel Gets Permanent Residency and We Need to Talk About This Commitment cover

Phoenixville's Ferris Wheel Gets Permanent Residency and We Need to Talk About This Commitment

This is your News You do not Need podcast So I woke up this morning ready to learn something profound about the state of the world, and instead I discovered what might be the most unnecessary news item of the week: a small town has become emotionally invested in the life choices of a ferris wheel. In Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, a carnival ferris wheel has just been brought back not as a ride, not as a temporary attraction, but as an official “dedicated landmark,” the way other places honor presidents or battlefields or, you know, actual buildings. Local news covered it like a moon landing, complete with interviews, crowd shots, and the kind of dramatic camera angles usually reserved for heroic firefighters and baby pandas. Apparently this ferris wheel used to show up with the fair, leave town like a metal tumbleweed, and then come back the next year. People fell in love with it. They rode it on first dates, proposed at the top, and presumably processed their motion sickness at the bottom. Over time, the town collectively decided, “You know what? We’re tired of this long-distance relationship. Let’s commit.” So they did the civic equivalent of asking the ferris wheel to move in and keep a toothbrush at their place permanently. Now it has a year-round home on the riverfront like some kind of retired celebrity, standing there doing absolutely nothing for most of the day while people take photos and say things like, “Wow, I remember when this used to leave after Labor Day.” City officials held a ceremony, because if you’re going to legally recognize a piece of rotating metal, you need speeches, a ribbon, and at least one person saying the words “this means so much to our community” without laughing. Somewhere out there, an architect who designed a critically acclaimed library is watching this and thinking, “I went to grad school, and I lost ‘landmark’ status to a portable circle.” Meanwhile, the ferris wheel is just vibing, knowing it has achieved what most of us never will: zoning approval and emotional permanence. The best part is that nothing about this affects your life in any way. Your rent is unchanged. Your boss still sends passive-aggressive emails. The global economy does not care. Yet, because a news crew showed up, you and I now share the knowledge that in one corner of Pennsylvania, people have decided that the highest and best use of municipal enthusiasm is to throw a party for an amusement park ride that no longer goes anywhere. And honestly, I kind of love that. In a world full of terrifying headlines, there is at least one place where the big story of the day is, “Good news, everyone: the ferris wheel is staying.” You will almost certainly never need this information. It will not help you in an exam, a job interview, or an argument on the internet. But if someone ever says, “Nothing weird ever happens anymore,” you can look them straight in the eye and say, “Actually, a town once gave a ferris wheel a permanent relationship status,” and then just walk away. You’re welcome. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

7. juni 20263 min