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Whine with Some Cheese

Podkast av Michael Seong

engelsk

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Les mer Whine with Some Cheese

Whine with Some Cheese is an AI-generated podcast where two snobbish, perpetually inconvenienced hosts whine through classic literature and philosophy (Hamlet, Plato’s Republic, and more). Expect plot recaps, bite-sized context, and elite-level complaining—paired with imaginary wine and a frankly unreasonable amount of cheese.

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58 Episoder

episode Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 8: The C-Section Loophole and the Head-Carrying Finale cover

Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 8: The C-Section Loophole and the Head-Carrying Finale

Eugenia and Avery limp across the finish line of Macbeth, Act Five, Scene Eight, fueled by lukewarm coffee, oat milk betrayal, and the righteous belief that Shakespeare owes them compensation. The scene opens with Macbeth refusing to die like a “Roman fool,” which the hosts interpret as peak coward energy from a man who has spent the entire play detonating everyone else’s lives. Macduff storms in with “Turn, hell-hound, turn,” bringing an aggression level that is wildly inconsiderate of anyone’s morning routine. Macbeth tries to act like he has been politely avoiding Macduff, a claim Eugenia compares to dodging someone you ghosted by pretending to study organic kale in public. Then comes the centerpiece betrayal: Macbeth’s “charmed life” logic hinges on the prophecy that no one “of woman born” can kill him. Eugenia is ready to file a complaint with basic biology, until Shakespeare drops the loophole: Macduff was “untimely ripped” from his mother’s womb. Avery spirals at the realization that five acts of misery culminate in a legalistic twist involving early modern obstetrics and semantic fine print that Macbeth never bothered to clarify with the witches. Macbeth briefly tries the “I’m not fighting anymore” route, gets called a coward, and throws a tantrum about refusing to kneel to Malcolm, because apparently humility is only for people who did not commit regicide. The fight happens offstage, which the hosts find rude and cost-cutting in the worst way. We then get a brisk dose of stoic nobility as Siward learns of his son’s death with the emotional temperature of a flight cancellation notice. Finally, Macduff returns carrying Macbeth’s head, and everyone immediately pivots into “Hail, King of Scotland” mode like a crowd cheering a bland opening act. Malcolm launches into administrative rebranding, announces new titles, invites everyone to Scone, and casually mentions Lady Macbeth’s offstage suicide, which leaves Eugenia and Avery furious about the uneven onscreen suffering and the complete absence of a trauma-processing intermission. By the end, they agree the real tragedy is the audience’s ordeal: the prophecy loopholes, the abrupt coronation planning, the uncomfortable chair, the wrong room temperature, and the fact that Macbeth’s final downfall is less poetic justice and more “gotcha, C-section.” They sign off demanding reparations, a perfectly timed beverage, and a future episode about literally anything that does not involve Scottish succession or head-related imagery.

12. feb. 2026 - 9 min
episode Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 7: Stakes, Bears, and Everyone Exits Without Closure cover

Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 7: Stakes, Bears, and Everyone Exits Without Closure

Eugenia and Avery are dragged, once again, into Macbeth Act 5, Scene 7, a scene that opens with immediate alarums and the kind of chaotic stage energy that should come with a content warning and a hydration station. Macbeth storms in complaining he has been “tied to a stake” and must fight “bear-like,” which sends the hosts into a passionate defense of bears as dignified boundary-setters who do not deserve to be dragged into Scottish workplace drama. Before anyone can recover from the metaphor, Young Siward barges in with all the etiquette of a spam phone call and demands Macbeth’s name like he is entitled to a personal introduction mid-battle. Macbeth treats his identity like a reality-show reveal, Young Siward reacts with maximum theatrical outrage, and the two promptly start sword-fighting, which Avery finds exhausting to even imagine. Young Siward is killed, and Macbeth immediately congratulates himself with the extremely unserious flex that his opponent was “born of woman,” as if that is not… literally everyone. Then the scene doubles down on noise and emotional chaos. Macduff enters hunting Macbeth, loudly demanding the tyrant show his face and re-litigating his grief in the middle of a battlefield. Eugenia calls it attention-seeking; Avery calls it decorum failure; both agree the constant shouting is a direct attack on their nervous systems. Macduff refuses to waste his “unbattered” sword edge on random soldiers, insisting it is Macbeth or nothing, which the hosts interpret as revenge-driven main-character syndrome with a side of classism. Just when it feels like something might actually resolve, Malcolm and Old Siward appear to deliver bland victory updates and tell everyone to enter the castle like it is a casual restaurant walk-in. And then, of course, more exits. More “Exeunt.” More emotional abandonment. Eugenia and Avery end the episode exactly where Shakespeare leaves them: overstimulated, under-validated, furious about the lack of closure, and ready to file for compensation in truffle fries, cashmere, and a written apology from every institution that ever called this “culturally significant.”

12. feb. 2026 - 13 min
episode Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 6: Leafy Screens, Loud Trumpets, and Zero Project Management cover

Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 6: Leafy Screens, Loud Trumpets, and Zero Project Management

Eugenia and Avery drag themselves into Macbeth Act 5, Scene 6 at an hour that should be illegal, only to discover that Malcolm’s big tactical masterstroke is, once again, “everyone carry branches and pretend we are landscaping.” They are forced to process drum-and-colours chaos, bough-based “leafy screens,” and the kind of loud, visually aggressive staging that would get a modern venue shut down for sensory assault. Malcolm orders the army to throw down their leafy screens like it is a casual wardrobe change, and Avery immediately questions the labor practices, the splinter exposure, and the total lack of HR involvement. Eugenia points out that Old Siward is basically being voluntold into combat with a cheerful “fare you well,” which is not a goodbye, it is a workplace safety violation. Siward’s son is also dragged into the front line, which feels less “right noble son” and more “nepotism meets trauma during a gap year.” Meanwhile, Malcolm and Macduff keep the safer, prestige-heavy part of the plan for themselves, delegating risk while reserving glory like the most insufferable middle management duo in history. Macduff then adds trumpets to the mix, loudly announcing “blood and death” at top volume while the army is supposedly trying to be stealthy. Eugenia calls it strategy malpractice, Avery calls it noise pollution and ecosystem harassment, and both agree that if you must stage a siege, a strongly worded text and a block button would have been cleaner. The scene delivers no action, only posturing, percussion, and a sudden exit that leaves everyone carrying imaginary sap on imaginary costumes with absolutely no closure. Naturally, it ends with an “Exeunt” that feels less like a stage direction and more like Shakespeare personally walking out of the room mid-conversation.

12. feb. 2026 - 10 min
episode Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 5: Moving Forests, Terrible Timing, and the “Tomorrow” Spiral cover

Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 5: Moving Forests, Terrible Timing, and the “Tomorrow” Spiral

Eugenia and Avery are back in Macbeth Act 5, Scene 5, and once again Shakespeare refuses to give them a single scene where people eat brunch, communicate clearly, and heal with mimosas. Instead, they get a drafty castle, a siege, a mysterious “cry of women,” and Macbeth attempting to run a kingdom like it is a hostile coworking space. Macbeth orders banners hung and tries to act unbothered about “famine and ague,” as if he is not the direct cause of Scotland’s ongoing crisis. Seyton delivers news with the warmth of a weather app, first identifying the disruptive crying, then returning with the bigger bomb: the Queen is dead. Macbeth responds with the emotional availability of a broken espresso machine, casually tossing out “She should have died hereafter,” which sends Eugenia into a full-on rage about grief scheduling, basic respect, and the audacity of dying during someone’s workday. Then comes the centerpiece: Macbeth’s spiral into the famous “tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow” speech. Eugenia calls it repetitive, Avery calls it a cleaning problem, and both agree that “dusty death” sounds like something a robot vacuum could solve. Macbeth follows up with “Out, out, brief candle,” somehow managing to pick a fight with lighting itself, and declares life a noisy tale told by an idiot, which Avery notes is a bold stance for a man who murdered his way into the job and is now shocked the vibes are bad. Enter a Messenger, because privacy is illegal in Shakespeare. The Messenger hesitates, Macbeth demands speed, and the news lands: Birnam Wood is moving toward Dunsinane. Macbeth immediately calls him a liar and threatens to hang him, because nothing says leadership like punishing staff for reporting reality. Eugenia points out that the witches’ prophecy was always a loophole buffet and Macbeth simply did not read the fine print. Avery adds that any competent lawyer would have flagged “until” as a red-alert clause. By the end, Macbeth finally admits he is starting to doubt the “equivocation of the fiend,” which is roughly four murders too late, then tries to command the wind like it is an intern, and concludes they will die in armor because self-care is apparently banned in medieval Scotland. Eugenia and Avery sign off furious, under-caffeinated, and still denied the one thing they truly deserve: soft lighting, closure, and grapes.

12. feb. 2026 - 9 min
episode Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 4: Birnam Wood Cosplay and the Ableist Branch Assignment cover

Macbeth, Act 5, Scene 4: Birnam Wood Cosplay and the Ableist Branch Assignment

Eugenia and Avery wanted Netflix rom-coms and reality dating show meltdowns. Instead, they get Macbeth Act 5, Scene 4, aka the moment Shakespeare makes an entire army commit to an outdoor team-building exercise with drums, colours, and a suspicious amount of forestry. From the aggressively vague setting (“country near Dunsinane,” like it is a sketchy real estate listing) to the stage direction “a wood in view” (the least helpful location tag in human history), this scene immediately threatens their peace, their pores, and their brand. Malcolm announces the plan: every soldier must hew down a bough from Birnam Wood and carry it to hide the army’s true numbers. Eugenia calls it what it is: manual labor disguised as strategy, with a side of splinters and ruined manicures. Avery spirals over the environmental impact and the lack of SPF, while Eugenia points out that if Malcolm wanted to “shadow the numbers,” he could have simply used a better angle and a filter. Instead, he chooses foliage-based catfishing, which they argue should be investigated as influencer fraud. Meanwhile, Siward asks what wood they are looking at like he has never heard of maps, and Menteith contributes peak background character energy by agreeing with everything and adding nothing. Macduff drops in with dialogue that sounds like it was written to punish listeners with extra syllables, and the episode pauses to mourn the scene’s biggest omissions: no catering, no charcuterie, and Ross being present but denied a single line, which Eugenia labels toxic group dynamics. Then it ends with the ultimate insult: “Exeunt, marching.” No goodbye, no closure, just more walking, more mud, and more cardio nobody consented to. Eugenia and Avery close out unified on three points: Birnam Wood is overrated, Malcolm should have hired a TaskRabbit, and if anyone asks them to carry a branch, their lawyers will be the first to arrive.

12. feb. 2026 - 10 min
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