• Friending: A Real-World Cure For Loneliness
    Apr 6 2026

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    Loneliness doesn’t always look like sadness. Sometimes it looks like a full contact list, nonstop group chats, and a Friday night with nobody to actually meet. We sit down with Gaborg, co-founder of Friending, to talk about why modern life is producing more isolation in spite of constant connectivity and what we can do about it before it gets worse. If you’ve felt burned out by social media, tired of shallow scrolling, or unsure how to make friends as an adult, this conversation gets practical fast.

    We unpack the real-world problem Friending is built to solve: people mistaking screen time for friendship. Gaborg explains how the app pushes you toward in-person connection by limiting texting, matching you through shared-interest “RU In” activity cards, and focusing on people in your local area. We also dig into safety and trust, including third-party identity verification to reduce catfishing, a Bluetooth requirement to confirm friendship only after you meet face to face, and future plans for emergency alert features.

    Then we zoom out to the bigger cultural shift: AI companions, humanoid robots, and the risk of replacing human relationships with always-available tech. We talk about kids and teens losing basic social skills, why “no phones at the table” matters, and small habits that bring real community back into everyday life. If you’re ready to trade endless messages for actual coffee, walks, concerts, and conversations, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review telling us: what’s one screen habit you want to change?

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    30 mins
  • The Man Behind the Badge joins us with special guest Eric Robinson
    Apr 6 2026

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    A lot of people want the wild FBI stories. We wanted the part that lingers after the story ends, what the work does to your nervous system, your faith, your marriage, and your view of other people. Former FBI agent Eric Robinson joins us with zero script and a ton of honesty about how you stay human when your job is to stare at the worst of human behaviour all week.

    Eric talks SWAT life and the “can’t turn it off” moments, including how a simple sound can kick your body into go mode. We get into his biggest long-haul financial fraud investigation, the surreal world of fake foreign bonds, and why calm curiosity beats chest-thumping when you need a confession. He also connects his years as a pastor to law enforcement, explaining how he sees justice as service, not ego.

    We go wider into real prevention: mass shooting warning signs, the fear of “looking foolish” that keeps people silent, and what intervention can look like when someone is suicidal or dangerous. We also talk teen prostitution and the manipulation tactics pimps use to control vulnerable kids. Eric closes by sharing his upcoming book, Irreverend: From Saving Souls to Chasing Sinners with the FBI, built from cases, humour, and hard-earned after-action lessons.

    If you like grounded true crime, FBI stories, first responder mental health, and practical safety insight, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What part of this conversation hit you the hardest?

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    53 mins
  • Coffee Beans, Misheard Words, And A Very Honest Marriage
    Apr 6 2026

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    A Broadway-directing Hollywood powerhouse drops in, tells Michael he’s flat-out wrong about being “bad at podcasting,” and then takes it further by reading Faith’s poem on air. That single moment cracks the whole night open. We talk about what authentic confidence sounds like, why a real voice beats a polished persona, and how the right encouragement can change the way you show up in your work and relationships.

    From there, we shift into what influence actually means when the cameras are off: Victoria’s recognition as a top empowered women leader, getting approached by strangers who feel safe, and the quiet responsibility of being someone people trust with trauma stories. We also highlight practical resources through the Contagious Smile Academy, including free and low cost courses and the growing scholarship impact for survivors, veterans, caregivers, amputees, and special needs families. If you’re searching for empowerment coaching, trauma support, survivor education, or authentic podcasting advice, you’ll find plenty to hold onto here.

    Then we go where a lot of people are afraid to go: viral teen dating videos, sexualised content for clicks, and what it does to standards, consent, and self-worth. We bring it back to relationships and healing, including why inner character outlasts looks, and how intimacy shows up in small, everyday acts of care. Along the way, we also celebrate our Creepy Coffee partnership and the chaos that comes with a bag of whole beans and two stubborn hosts.

    Subscribe, share this with someone who needs a boost, and leave a review with the one takeaway you’re keeping. What part of the conversation hit closest to home?

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    57 mins
  • Arim Arison Tells Michael about how great he is at Podcasting
    Apr 5 2026

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    2 mins
  • How Narcissistic Parents Lose Control When You Heal
    Apr 2 2026

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    Some people don’t hate you because of what you did. They hate you because you healed, and now they can’t control you. Tonight we get honest about narcissistic parents, the scapegoat role, and that gut-punch realisation Victoria shares: “She doesn’t like me because I fixed what she broke.” We talk about how toxic family systems survive on leverage, blame, and silence and what changes when a partner helps you rebuild boundaries and self-trust.

    Then we go where most couples won’t go on mic: cheating, betrayal, and the slow work of rebuilding trust after infidelity. Michael owns his past and we dig into the real question listeners ask in private, can a cheater change? We break down what made change possible for us, why transparency matters, and how you protect your relationship when someone tries to plant doubt in your head. It’s raw, funny in places, and still respectful to the pain underneath.

    We also talk body image and survival, including scars from surgeries, weight changes during recovery, and a real-world GLP 1 weight loss update. And we balance the heavy with the everyday love that actually keeps a marriage steady: the bath stopper, the fresh towel, the goofy routines, and yes, the frozen waffles in bed. We close with what’s next for the show, including events, new projects, and an upcoming guest we’re genuinely excited about.

    If this resonates, listen, share it with someone rebuilding their life, and please subscribe and leave a review. What part of healing has been the hardest for you to protect?

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • You Can Rebuild Safety With Small Daily Steps with Guest Joshua Hess
    Mar 30 2026

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    Somebody can be sitting in an urgent care exam room with bruises, fear, and an abuser answering every question and still have no clear way to say, “I’m not safe.” We go there, plainly and practically, with our guest Dr. Joshua Hess, a physician and former teacher who now hosts the research-driven podcast Oh, That’s a Fact.

    We talk about what medical teams can notice when a patient can’t speak freely, plus simple ways to ask for privacy without escalating danger. From nonverbal cues to requesting a private consult or a social history update, the goal is one thing: create a moment of safety. We also dig into why leaving can be the most dangerous time, what a real safety plan can look like, and how small steps like digital hygiene, cash stashing, and changing routines can reduce risk.

    Then we zoom out to health and recovery. We get into power naps, sleep quality, and the very real consequences of untreated sleep apnea including the danger of falling asleep while driving. If CPAP hasn’t worked for you, we cover practical options like different mask styles, refitting, and adding humidity for comfort. We also share microhabits that rebuild agency, from mirror greetings and a written victory log to hydration, saying no, and box breathing to calm your nervous system.

    If you care about trauma-informed care, domestic violence support, sleep apnea education, and real-world habit change, you’ll find tools you can use today. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the takeaway you’re actually going to try.

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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • We Tried To Help His Dad And Uncovered A Nightmare
    Mar 25 2026

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    He’s supposed to be “Dad” and he’s supposed to be safe. Then one phone call turns into months of ambulance rides, doctor appointments, opioid red flags, and a home that slowly stops feeling like home. We share what happened when we took in Michael’s biological father after a death in the family, believing we were doing the right thing and trying to build a relationship that never had a real chance to grow.

    Along the way, we also talk about a different kind of vulnerability: what it takes to trust your spouse with the parts of you that still feel tender. We get honest about trauma scars, body dysmorphia after domestic violence, and the lingering medical impacts of strangulation injuries. A mammogram and follow-up breast ultrasound adds another layer, reminding us how fast fear can spike and how powerful real support can be in a moment when you feel alone.

    Then the story goes darker: an overdose reversed with Narcan, a demand from doctors to take over medication management, escalating manipulation, and pressure to get involved in illegal activity. When suicide enters the conversation, firearms safety becomes immediate and non-negotiable. We talk about what we found, what professionals told us, and the cost of trying to save someone who refuses help, including job loss and financial fallout. If you’re navigating elder care, addiction, caregiver burnout, mental health crisis, or family fraud, this conversation is a blunt reminder to document everything, trust your gut, and set boundaries early.

    If this hit home, subscribe, share it with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What boundary do you wish you had set sooner?

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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • Teaching Responsibility Without Shame
    Mar 23 2026

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    Responsibility sounds like a boring word until life makes it personal. We kick things off with a question we’ve all wrestled with: how do you actually teach responsibility, especially to teens, without turning your house into a battleground? From a blunt teen pregnancy “what if” to the very real chaos of a brand-new puppy, we talk about how responsibility isn’t a speech, it’s a pattern: face what needs to be faced, stop procrastinating the hard talk, and follow through even when it’s inconvenient.

    Then we go deeper into why avoiding truth is so exhausting. We share what it’s like living around narcissistic behavior, abuse dynamics, and the “black sheep” role where the person holding the facts becomes the biggest threat. We get into why survivors cling to their word, why evidence matters when people rewrite history, and why silence gives abusers room to keep winning. We also touch on a cease and desist letter tied to Victoria’s evidence-based writing and what happens when people accidentally identify themselves by trying to shut the truth down.

    We also bring it back home to parenting and day-to-day life: loving your kid while still holding the line, using calm consequences instead of yelling, and giving children room to decompress after a brutal day. Along the way, we share a few lighter stories about celebrities, respect in relationships, and an upcoming co-hosting moment we’re genuinely excited about.

    If any of this hits close to home, listen, share it with someone who needs it, and leave us a review. What’s one boundary you’ve set that changed your life?

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    56 mins