
Insights from recent episode analysis
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Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
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Total monthly reach
Estimated from 33 chart positions in 33 markets.
By chart position
- 🇺🇸US · Earth Sciences#16300K to 1M
- 🇨🇦CA · Earth Sciences#16300K to 1M
- 🇩🇪DE · Earth Sciences#17300K to 1M
- 🇬🇧GB · Earth Sciences#26100K to 300K
- 🇦🇺AU · Earth Sciences#27100K to 300K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
1.0M to 3.4M🎙 ~2x weekly·165 episodes·Last published 1w ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
2.1M to 6.7M🇺🇸15%🇨🇦15%🇩🇪15%+30 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
836K to 2.7M
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 14 epsHosts
Recent guests
Recent episodes
What Lies Beneath: AMOC, El Niño, & Climate Chaos with Emily Schoerning
Jun 17, 2026
Unknown duration
Join the 2026 Crazy Town Hall
Jun 10, 2026
1m 55s
The Hypocrite’s Guide to the Galaxy: Muddling Toward a Sustainable Footprint
Jun 3, 2026
1h 04m 59s
The Lighter Side of Dark Ages with Chris Smaje
May 20, 2026
57m 47s
Take Me to the River: Getting Rid of Deadbeat Dams
May 6, 2026
58m 06s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/17/26 | ![]() What Lies Beneath: AMOC, El Niño, & Climate Chaos with Emily Schoerning | It’d be easy, with the clusterf**k of crazy-making economic, geopolitical, and democracy-in-decline news dominating the scene, to forget that the unraveling of environmental systems waits for no person. That’s why we’ve asked Emily Schoerning to return to Crazy Town. Asher and Emily sit down together (uh, virtually) to discuss the oceanic dynamics – from worrisome to downright apocalyptic – that could make the Strait of Hormuz disruption look like a five-minute wait at the Starbucks drive-thru. In this episode they discuss the possibility of a 2026-2027 Super El Niño, the growing risks of an AMOC collapse, and how each of us can approach near- and longer-term resilience.Originally recorded on 5/20/26.Sources & LinksAmerican ResiliencyLinks to graphs/resources that Emily mentioned:NOAA ENSO Update (see page 23) Columbia El Nino UpdateClimate Reanalyzer (to visualize average SST changes as a graph)Zach Labe's visualizations (to visualize currently non-apocalyptic Antarctic sea ice)Copernicus (to visualize SST anomalies on world map)Atlantic meridional overturning circulation slowdown modulates atmospheric rivers in a warmer climate by Mimi, M. S., Liu, W., Ma, W., & Chen, G. Nature Communications, 2026 Articles/papers related to AMOC and El Nino:Observational constraints project a ~50% AMOC weakening by the end of this century by Portmann, V., Swingedouw, D., Khattab, O., & Chavent, M. Science Advances, 2026Critical Atlantic current significantly more likely to collapse than thought by Carrington, D. The Guardian, April 15, 2026 El Niño/Southern Oscillation (Enso) Diagnostic Discussion, Climate Prediction Center, 14 May 2026A'super El Niño?‘ The Conversation, May 14, 2026Related EpisodesEpisode 119, “Getting Real about Resiliency with Emily Schoerning”CreditsProduction and editing by Alex Leff. Editorial assistance and transcripts by Taylor Antal.Theme music is “Way Huge” and “Don’t Give Up” by Midnight Shipwrecks, used with permission.Thanks to all the Crazy Townies, our listeners who are trying to understand humanity's overshoot predicament and do something about it. | — | ||||||
| 6/10/26 | ![]() Join the 2026 Crazy Town Hall✨ | community resiliencelive event+3 | — | Post Carbon Institute | 2026 | Crazy TownTown Hall+5 | — | 1m 55s | |
| 6/3/26 | ![]() The Hypocrite’s Guide to the Galaxy: Muddling Toward a Sustainable Footprint✨ | hypocrisysustainability+4 | — | Homegrown National ParkPsychology Today+5 | — | hypocrisysustainability+5 | — | 1h 04m 59s | |
| 5/20/26 | ![]() The Lighter Side of Dark Ages with Chris Smaje✨ | sustainable agriculturecommunity organization+3 | Chris Smaje | Post Carbon InstituteFinding Lights in a Dark Age | — | sustainable farmingagrarian populism+3 | — | 57m 47s | |
| 5/6/26 | ![]() Take Me to the River: Getting Rid of Deadbeat Dams✨ | dam removalenvironmental restoration+4 | Tara Lohan | Post Carbon InstituteUndammed: Freeing Rivers and Bringing Communities to Life+2 | MiamiMiami Beach | dam removalenvironmental restoration+5 | — | 58m 06s | |
| 4/22/26 | ![]() Mailbag: The Crazy Townies Speak!✨ | listener engagementmailbag episode+4 | — | Post Carbon InstituteI Can’t Drive… 35! The Rationale for Rationing+1 | — | mailbaglistener questions+4 | — | 53m 12s | |
| 4/8/26 | ![]() Birdbrained: When Nature and Technology Collide✨ | technologynature+3 | — | Listers: A Glimpse Into Extreme BirdwatchingThe Big Year | — | birdwatchingtechnology+4 | — | 51m 10s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() Being Team Human in Crazy Town✨ | collapse awarenesslate stage capitalism+3 | Douglas Rushkoff | Team Human PodcastHulu+6 | — | collapsecapitalism+3 | — | 54m 29s | |
| 3/11/26 | ![]() You Ain’t Gonna Live Forever: The Dos and Don’ts of Legacy Building✨ | immortalitylegacy building+5 | — | The Art NewspaperOutside Magazine+8 | — | immortality projectsdeath anxiety+5 | — | 40m 40s | |
| 2/25/26 | ![]() Crazy Town Classics - Terror Management Theory✨ | death anxietycultural beliefs+3 | Michael Hebb | Let’s Talk about Death over Dinner | — | deathanxiety+4 | — | 1h 01m 04s | |
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| 2/11/26 | ![]() Getting Real about Resiliency with Emily Schoerning✨ | climate scienceenvironmental stories+4 | Emily Schoerning | American ResiliencyInternational Panel on Climate Change+1 | — | climate changeresiliency+3 | — | 55m 21s | |
| 1/28/26 | ![]() Choose Your AI Adventure: Immiseration or Extinction✨ | AIenvironmental risks+4 | Elon Musk | Post Carbon InstituteColossus 1+5 | — | AI superintelligenceenvironmental risks+3 | — | 34m 09s | |
| 1/14/26 | ![]() EVs on Speed: The Jevons Paradox Strikes Again✨ | efficiencyclimate change+3 | — | Post Carbon InstituteWired+6 | — | Jevons Paradoxelectric vehicles+3 | — | 43m 18s | |
| 12/17/25 | ![]() Sane Town: A Realistic Vision of Life 100 Years from Now✨ | futuresustainability+4 | Alex Leff | Human Nature OdysseyPost Carbon Institute | — | futuresustainability+3 | — | 55m 30s | |
| 12/3/25 | ![]() Toasting Bread Is WAY Harder Than You Think: The Challenges of a Renewable Energy Future✨ | renewable energyenergy literacy+3 | — | time-travel deviceHuman Nature Odyssey+1 | — | renewable energyenergy transition+3 | — | 37m 11s | |
| 11/19/25 | ![]() Worried about the Future? Join the Club | There’s the book club, the Rotary Club, the Mickey Mouse Club, and the club sandwich. Whatever your preference, you might want to think about joining a club. Social clubs, fraternal orders, and the like have had a storied and critical role in public life. That is, until government programs and technology gave us an out from having to deal with each other. But with modernity failing, will clubs and community organizations make a huge comeback? In this episode we explore club life – past, present, and future, if there is one. Originally recorded on 11/6/25.Sources/Links/Notes:Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, Simon & Schuster, 2000.John Michael Greer, "Secret Handshakes," The Archdruid Report, January 21, 2010.Related episode(s) of Crazy Town:Episode 65, "Why the Polycrisis Is a Statistical Anomaly: The Willful Delusions of the World’s Leading Pseudointellectual" | — | ||||||
| 11/5/25 | ![]() Searching for the Golden Toad with Kyle and Trevor Ritland | Frog and Toad Are Friends, at least according to a venerable children’s book. And so are Jason (Crazy Town’s resident biology nerd) and conservationist brothers, Kyle and Trevor Ritland, authors of The Golden Toad: An Ecological Mystery and the Search for a Lost Species. The three eco-explorers connect over wondrous habitats and critters in Costa Rica's cloud forest and swap stories that cover Lazarus species, global pandemics, self-taught naturalists, birding, and even pregnancy tests. Spliced into the nostalgia and stories are reflections on how to cope in a world where biodiversity is declining and how to regain the connections that modernity has severed between humanity and wild nature. Originally recorded on 10/9/25.Sources/Links/Notes:Kyle and Trevor Ritland, The Golden Toad: An Ecological Mystery and the Search for a Lost Species, Diversion Books, 2025.Adventure Term, Kyle and Trevor's nonprofit experiential learning initiativeRelated episode(s) of Crazy Town:Episode 40, "Nature Detachment and Ecocide, or… the Story of the Marauding Mountain Lion"Episode 49, "A Day at the Zoo Is No Walk in the Park: Humanity’s Overexploitation of Animals and Nature" | — | ||||||
| 10/22/25 | ![]() Unsung Heroes: Sustainability Gurus Who Influenced the Crazy Town Worldview | Some key understandings in Crazy Town: the Earth is finite; the economy cannot grow forever; people can harm ecosystems and cause global warming; physics, chemistry, and biology are real; inequality hurts everyone; healthy humans need community, and it’s more fun to laugh than to cry. But where did principles like these originate? In this episode, Jason, Asher, and Rob use the format of a fantasy football draft to pick the pundits who most influenced their thinking on sustainability, resilience, community, science, economics, and politics. Like starry-eyed fanboys (but hopefully a bit more articulate) they gush over their heroes and tell behind-the-scenes stories about how they came to be influenced. And they ask listeners to share their top picks for influencers (in the best sense of the term). Originally recorded on 9/29/25. Visit Crazy Town on the web. | — | ||||||
| 10/8/25 | ![]() Burned by Billionaires, with Chuck Collins | Billionaires. They should be objects of scorn rather than envy. While they ride around in their super-yachts and private jets, producing the climate-damaging pollution of entire nations, they’re doing things to extract even more wealth, harm your health, diminish democracy, and rig the whole system in their favor. How did this happen? Why do we tolerate it? How can we stop the billionaires? And can we get a hold of our own super-yacht for Crazy Town pleasure cruises? Chuck Collins returns to Crazy Town to offer insights from his new book, Burned by Billionaires: How Concentrated Wealth and Power Are Ruining Our Lives and Planet. Originally recorded on 10/3/25.Sources/Links/Notes:Chuck Collins, Burned by Billionaires: How Concentrated Wealth and Power Are Ruining Our Lives and Planet, The New Press, October 2025.Chuck Collins, Born on Third Base: A One Percenter Makes the Case for Tackling Inequality, Bringing Wealth Home, and Committing to the Common Good, Chelsea Green Publishing, September 2016.Chuck Collins, The Wealth Hoarders: How Billionaires Pay Millions to Hide Trillions, Polity, January 2022.Related episode(s) of Crazy Town:Episode 10, "Tackling Inequality, One Pair of Lederhosen at a Time"Episode 43, "Overproduction of Elites and Political Upheaval, or... the Story of Rich People Doing Stupid Things" | — | ||||||
| 9/24/25 | ![]() Crazy Town Classics - Maximum Power and Scarcity, or... the Story of the Birdbrained Backhoe on the Beach | The “maximum power principle” may sound like the doctrine of an evil supervillain, but it actually applies to all living creatures. The principle states that biological systems organize to increase power whenever constraints allow. Given the way humans adhere to this principle, especially by overexploiting fossil fuels, we often do behave like supervillains, wielding power in wildly irresponsible ways and triggering climate change, biodiversity loss, and other aspects of our sustainability pr... | — | ||||||
| 9/10/25 | ![]() Et Tu, Bhutan? Cryptocurrency and Late-Stage Capitalism | Maximize profits, exploit nature, hoard money, and, like Buzz Lightyear, grow the economy to infinity and beyond! That’s the modern economic playbook. But for decades, one renegade country has taken a contrarian stance that actually cares about people’s wellbeing and environmental health: the Himalayan nation of Bhutan. When Bhutan embraced “Gross National Happiness” and a sane notion of progress, environmentalists and social reformers rejoiced. They spotlighted Bhutan as an example of how we... | — | ||||||
| 8/27/25 | ![]() Artifacts of Collapse: Touring the Crazy Town Museum | In this episode we travel in time to the year 2125, to visit the Crazy Town museum, which showcases today’s world of wanton consumption and profligate waste. How will humans in 2125 – if there are any of us left – judge the things everyone sees as normal today? Jason, Rob, and Asher take turns serving as expert curators of this future museum, nominating items that best encapsulate how foolish and environmentally ruinous our priorities are. At the end we call on you, dear listener, to share wh... | — | ||||||
| 8/13/25 | ![]() Crazy Town Classics - Net Energy and Sustainability, or… the Story of the Overstuffed Strongman | All of humanity’s feats, whether a record-setting deadlift by the world’s strongest man or the construction of a gleaming city by a technologically advanced economy, originate from a single hidden source: positive net energy. Having surplus energy in the form of thirteen pounds of food per day enables a very big man, Hafthor Bjornsson, to lift very big objects. Similarly, having surplus energy in the form of fossil fuel enables very big societies to build and trade very big piles of stuff. Ma... | — | ||||||
| 7/30/25 | ![]() Just One Word: Microplastics, with Matt Simon | Put on your best polyester pants, grab a bunch of gleaming mylar balloons, and crack open a case of bottled water. In today's episode, we're entering the plastic world of plastic pollution in all its glorious plasticity. We're on the hunt for microplastics – and we won’t have to go very far, as they're present everywhere – in the soil, in the water, in the air, and in our bodies. We'll be looking for systemic solutions and talking with Matt Simon, author of the book A Poison Like No Other.&nb... | — | ||||||
| 7/16/25 | ![]() Crazy Town Classics - Lord of the Swans: The Tragedy of the Enclosure of the Commons | The “tragedy of the commons” is an idea that has so thoroughly seeped into culture and law that it seems normal for people and corporations to own land, water, and even whole ecosystems. But there’s a BIG problem: the “tragedy” part of it has been debunked – it really should be the triumph of the commons. Learn the origin story of privatization and explore the true meaning of commons and how to manage them for sustainability and equity. Also check out our suggestions for championing the commo... | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
36 placements across 33 markets.
Chart Positions
36 placements across 33 markets.
