After decades of staying close to Earth, the United States is finally pushing outward again.
In this episode, we talk about the Artemis missions and what they represent: not just another NASA program, but a return to the kind of ambition that once put men on the moon.
We cover the physics, the risks, the history—and the big question: Why did we stop in the first place?
Plus, some thoughts on space competition, moon bases, and what comes next if we actually follow through this time.
How did New York City elect Zohran Mamdani—and what does it mean for the future of America’s most important city?
In this episode of Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill, we review a citrusy blonde ale while unpacking the rise of NYC’s new mayor and the ideas driving his agenda: socialism, wealth redistribution, and an expansive vision of government power.
We dig into:
Mamdani’s background and rapid political rise
The appeal of socialism among younger NYC voters
Policies like free buses, government-run grocery stores, and rent control
The real-world consequences of taxing the rich and expanding government
Tensions between progressive politics, religion, and modern cultural movements
Along the way, we ask a deeper question: is this just another political cycle—or a sign of something more fundamental changing in New York and the West?
If you’re interested in NYC politics, socialism, or the future of major cities, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.
With special guest Longinus, the boys drink and review Noir, a black IPA from DuClaw, then discuss slang.
In this episode of Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill, we dive into a wide-ranging (and occasionally grumpy) discussion on slang — what it is, where it comes from, and why so much of it drives us up the wall.
From Valley Girl “like” to “literally” meaning its opposite, from “no worries” to “full stop,” we go through the phrases we love, the ones we tolerate, and the ones we refuse to say under any circumstances.
Along the way, we explore:
Why slang spreads (and why it spreads faster now than ever)
The role of influencers, media, and subcultures in shaping language
How words become clever… and then unbearable
* Whether language is evolving faster—or just differently
Why you’d be exposed instantly as a time traveler just by the way you talk
We also get into newer phrases like “based,” “not on my bingo card,” and “living rent free in my head,” and ask the deeper question: what does the way we speak reveal about who we are?
Bottom line: language is fun… until everyone starts saying the same thing.
You might remember the Police referring to “that book by Nabokov.” Well this isn’t it. It’s an earlier book about a Russian immigrant.
With special guest Longinus, the boys drink and review “Dance of Days” IPA by Atlas Brew Works, then take on Vladimir Nabokov’s Pnin — a novel that’s equal parts frustrating, funny, and quietly devastating.
At first glance, Timofey Pnin looks like a classic “nice guy who finishes last”: awkward, socially out of place, and constantly overlooked. But as we dig deeper, the question becomes harder to answer. Is Pnin really a loser, or is he one of the only genuinely decent people in the story?
We explore:
Whether Pnin is a victim of others… or of the narrator himself
The role of the unreliable narrator and what it does to your perception of the story
The strange structure of the novel—more like a series of vignettes than a traditional plot
The tension between Pnin’s outward awkwardness and the profound suffering underneath
Why this might be a book you appreciate more after reading it than while reading it
We also wrestle with a bigger question: what’s the relationship between intelligence, social success, and moral worth?
And of course, we start with a beer.
If you’ve ever struggled through a “classic” and wondered what you were missing, this one’s for you.
In this episode of Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill, we crack open a Steady Eddie IPA and take on a big cultural question: why are people who hate Star Trek directing, producing, and writing the show?
From the optimism of Star Trek: The Original Series and the (somewhat) moral clarity of Star Trek: The Next Generation to the confusion of modern efforts like Star Trek: Discovery, something clearly changed.
We explore:
Why classic Star Trek worked as a moral framework without preaching
The shift from storytelling to ideology
How strong characters like Picard gave way to “feelings-first” writing
The difference between a future where humanity improves… and one where standards disappear
Why newer shows feel more like social commentary than science fiction
Along the way, we revisit favorite series, debate underrated entries like Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and ask whether anything in modern Trek—like Star Trek: Strange New Worlds—still captures the original spirit.
This isn’t just about Star Trek. It’s about storytelling, culture, and what happens when a compelling vision of the future gets replaced by something else entirely.
And yes, there’s a beer review and a few Star Trek trivia detours along the way.
The boys drink and review a homebrewed porter, then discuss birthright citizenship.
The question of birthright citizenship hinges on one phrase in the 14th Amendment, which reads “and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” What does that mean?
The point of the amendment was to give citizenship to freed slaves, but it’s been interpreted to mean that the child of an illegal immigrant, born in the U.S., is a citizen. Is that justified in the text? The boys discuss.
This weird aspect of American law has led to many business opportunities for enterprising criminals. People make a lot of money bringing pregnant illegal aliens into the country. That’s bad enough, but the Chinese have found ways to exploit this as a national security issue. They’ve been creating “American citizens” who are then raised in China. To what purpose, we wonder.
While on the topic of the 14th amendment, the boys discuss the Obergefell decision, in which SCOTUS decided that states cannot prohibit same-sex marriage.
If the court addresses and overturns birthright citizenship, maybe (God willing) they’ll overturn Obergefell as well. (Not likely, but we can hope.)
P&C end the show with predictions about how SCOTUS will rule on upcoming cases about birthright citizenship.
Chuck Norris wasn’t just a movie star — he was the real deal. A multi-time martial arts champion with serious credentials, he built a reputation long before Hollywood ever noticed him.
And yet, Hollywood did notice. From a run of classic action films to the long-running hit Walker, Texas Ranger, Norris proved he could carry a screen just as well as he could win a fight.
He also wrote books, spoke openly about his faith, and built a broader legacy beyond film and television.
But in the end, what may keep him most alive in popular culture is something completely unexpected: the legendary “Chuck Norris facts.”
At the end of the episode, P&C share a few of their favorites—and reflect on how a genuine tough guy became an immortal punchline.
In this episode we trace the evolution of the Arthurian legend from its earliest Welsh roots to modern reinterpretations. The story didn’t start as knights and chivalry — it started with a war leader and a mad prophet in the woods. From there, it became a national myth under Geoffrey of Monmouth, a romantic tragedy in the French courts, and finally a moral and symbolic drama in writers like Alfred Lord Tennyson, C. S. Lewis, and Stephen R. Lawhead.
Along the way, the core tension of the story takes shape:
Arthur represents order, law, and civilization.
Merlin represents mystery, prophecy, and the unseen world.
Lancelot and Guinevere introduce desire — the human element that breaks even the best systems.
Mordred brings the final blow: the collapse that comes from within.
We explore how these layers built up over centuries — and how modern versions, including the Daily Wire’s, are really attempts to answer an old question:
Can a civilization hold together without something sacred at its core?
We’ll also talk about:
Why Arthur is almost strangely free of personal desire
Why Merlin is often the one who falls first
How the love triangle turns myth into tragedy
Why modern culture can’t seem to agree on what this story means anymore
And whether Rise of the Merlin is trying to recover something we’ve lost — or just retell the story with a different agenda
If you think this is just a fantasy story about swords and magic, you’re missing it.
This is a story about order, mystery, desire — and why every kingdom eventually breaks.
Pigweed and Crowhill drink and review Lindemans Pecheresse, a Belgian Fruit Lambic, then discuss the show’s uncanny ability to predict the future. In this episode we update past topics and predictions.
An earlier show discussed kill switches and cameras in cars. There have been some developments to that story.
On the show where we questioned whether psychiatry is science (mostly it isn’t), the boys asked if it was time to bring back involuntary commitment. We also discussed the over-prescription of psychiatric drugs and the interesting correlation between mental health and going to church.
Pigweed called attention to the problem of cousin marriage, and what do you know? — Britain is experiencing a huge rise in birth defects as a result of cousin marriage from Pakistani immigrants.
At peak trans madness, the boys predicted a time when the monsters who are promoting this barbarity were fined and jailed. We’re starting to see it happen. Recently, some of these ghoulish doctors were fined millions of dollars for performing a double mastectomy on a child.
The boys did a show calling out gerrymandering foolishness, but Maryland is still going full speed ahead. To “protect democracy,” of course.
Another show on Persia predicted the bombs would start dropping within ten days. That prediction was exactly right. They also predicted that the regime will fall in two months. That prediction is still outstanding. The boys discuss the ongoing Iran war.
Re: the infrastructure show we update the “sewage in the Potomac” story and wonder again why the “mainstream press” is so uninterested.
We recap the Julian Assange and Edward Snowden situation. Trump is now considering pardoning them and then bringing them in to help expose corruption inside the intelligence system. That would be interesting.
The show ends with a letter from long-time listener and contributor JR about whether Social Security is a Ponzi scheme.
The boys drink and review Finest Kind IPA from Smuttynose, then talk about efforts to make Alberta an independent nation.
Pigweed’s news feed has been full of talk about this burgeoning movement in Canada. Alberta is an energy rich province that sends a lot of money to Ottawa, but doesn’t get much in return. Albertans hate being under the thumb of a government thousands of miles away with completely different values.
The story seemed so exciting and right up Pigweed’s alley … until he realized his feed was exaggerating the popularity of the movement. It’s at about 30 percent.
But would Canada allow Alberta to leave even if Albertans voted for it? P&C have their doubts. Would Canada peacefully allow their cash cow to leave?
The boys drink and review a cream ale from Jailbreak Brewery, then discuss the dramatic decline in trust in our institutions.
Trust in institutions used to be the default. Today, it’s the exception.
From corruption and abuse of power to ideological capture and growing economic inequality, many people feel that the institutions that once anchored society — government, media, academia, and public health — have become distant, opaque, and unaccountable. When ordinary citizens see elites displaying obscene wealth, when justice appears unevenly applied, or when powerful organizations seem staffed by insiders and relatives, skepticism becomes inevitable.
But there’s a deeper problem: institutions are not people.
When trust breaks between individuals, you can repair it through conversation and accountability. With large bureaucracies that kind of repair is much harder.
The discussion also examines how ideological conflict fuels distrust. Some argue that skepticism toward institutions reflects a rejection of facts. Others counter that trust was damaged when institutions themselves misled the public on major issues — from shifting COVID narratives to the media’s failure to understand the political forces that produced Donald Trump’s rise in 2016.
So what happens when institutions lose credibility?
Can trust be rebuilt—or are we entering a new era where citizens simply stop believing the organizations that once guided public life?
Pigweed and Crowhill dig into the causes, the consequences, and the uncomfortable questions we can’t ignore.
The boys drink and review a peanut butter porter, then wonder about the nature of the mind and the self.
We like to imagine that our minds are simple and unified — that we think, decide, and evaluate the world rationally. But the more we learn about the mind, the stranger that assumption becomes.
Psychology talks about the conscious and unconscious mind. Behavioral economics divides thinking into fast and slow systems. Neuroscientists debate left brain vs. right brain. Moral psychologists describe the “elephant and rider.” Even the Bible describes a divided inner life: Jeremiah says the heart is so deceitful that we can’t understand it, and Paul admits that the things he wants to do he often doesn’t do. There’s a war of flesh vs. spirit.
So which part of all that is actually “me”?
In this episode, P&C explore the mysteries of the self. For starters, our perceptions are filtered before we even become aware of them. That brains that process that filtered information are shaped by millions of years of evolution. Our reasoning is influenced by emotion, culture, and hidden motives. Even when we take a long time to think carefully about something, the mind doing the thinking may not be as unified as we imagine.
That raises an uncomfortable question: if our minds are jury-rigged systems shaped by survival, how can we honestly evaluate big questions like the existence of God?
Along the way we touch on ideas from psychology, philosophy, and theology, with some laughs and jokes along the way.
If the mind is divided and our perceptions are filtered, the mystery may not only be whether God exists.
The mystery might be what is this strange creature asking the question.
And yes, this episode is partially inspired by “The Logical Song.”
P&C drink and review Manor Hill Brewing’s Dunkel, then wonder if the U.N. still matters.
The United Nations was founded after World War II with an ambitious mission: prevent global war, promote peace, and help nations cooperate on the world’s biggest problems.
But nearly eighty years later, a fair question arises: does it do anything useful?
The boys take a practical look at what the U.N. actually does today. It clearly hasn’t stopped major conflicts — from Ukraine to the Middle East — and it hasn’t been the engine that lifted countries out of poverty. So what role does it really play?
We dig into the less glamorous side of the organization: peacekeeping missions that try to keep fragile countries from sliding back into civil war, humanitarian programs that feed millions of people, refugee operations, disease control, and the quiet international standards that keep things like aviation and shipping functioning smoothly.
But that leads to deeper questions:
Is the U.N. a meaningful institution — or mostly a talking shop?
Does it solve problems, or just manage them?
Would the world look any different if it didn’t exist?
And if it’s not preventing wars or creating prosperity, what exactly is its purpose?
It’s a conversation about global institutions, unintended consequences, and the difference between what an organization was created to do and what it actually does.
The boys drink and review Dogfish Head’s Sixty-One, which is an IPA brewed with Pinot Noir grapes, then discuss the idea that AI will make us all wealthy while Pigweed’s cat prances around the studio.
Elon Musk recently said that AI + robotics will eliminate scarcity to the point that there’s no real point in saving for retirement. We’ll have “universal high income.”
It’s like the Star Trek vision of the future where all your needs are provided for.
Does that make any sense? Can an economy function like that? Will “AI abundance” arrive simultaneously for every human need? Who will pay the taxes?
What does “lack of scarcity” really mean? There can be an abundance of food, or healthcare. AI isn’t going to make more beachfront.
How do we get from here to there? What happens to property rights? Will the people who own the AI share their wealth with everybody else? Why? Who will make them do it?
When people start losing jobs (by the millions), how will they live? The idea that we’ll tax AI to pay the people who are laid off doesn’t make sense. If you tax the AI to pay the displaced workers, what have you gained?
The internal contradictions in the optimistic view of an AI-driven future are mind-boggling. The boys try to parse through it all.
P&C drink and review Pigweed’s homebrewed porter then discuss squatter’s rights. Can somebody just take over your house when you’re on vacation?
There’s a famous case in Maryland where some “activist” has moved in to a $2.3 million house that had been foreclosed on. Can she do that? Who’s to stop her, and how?
“Adverse possession” is the technical word for squatter’s rights. But it only applies in narrow situations. Not just somebody moving in.
Social media has made this worse. People share the location of unused houses and help people take possession of these homes. Sometimes they then rent the property out to others.
This is a daily occurrence in Baltimore.
The boys also reply to letters on recent topics we’ve covered, including psychology, consciousness and AI, and mental illnesses.
Pigweed also notices that other podcasts and shows are picking up our topics without giving us any credit.
The boys end the show with a reprise of the Potomac River problem.