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Trading Vices, GLP-1 Backlash & The Truth That Catches Up to You CONDENSED
Season 1
Episode 965
Published 2 weeks ago
Description
Danny is back in his Yankees hat talking spring training, and this episode goes everywhere—in the best way.
Bill opens with a message from a loyal listener who called him out for saying GLP-1 weight loss drugs are the “easy way out.” In Bill’s defense, he was riffing, not researching, and there’s a difference. That sparks a bigger conversation about Ozempic, drug companies, lifestyle change, shortcuts, and why patience is basically extinct. Bill’s take? Life is the DMV. You show up, wait your turn, trust the process, and try not to lose your mind when the person behind the counter tells you that you might need more paperwork… but they’re not quite sure what paperwork. Bill had a very Bill response.
Dan then shares something deeply personal about his father being prescribed OxyContin after a routine surgery in the late 90s, before anyone really understood what those drugs could do. By the end of his life, his tolerance was so high the morphine barely helped. It leads to a moving conversation about suffering, end of life, and what faith says when medicine runs out of answers.
Then things take a turn, as they usually do. A new documentary titled Billy Idol Should Be Dead reveals the rock legend once smoked crack to kick heroin. Which leads Bill to wonder how many people have traded one vice for another because it felt like the lesser evil. Promiscuity for porn. Partying for CrossFit. Drinking for smoking. Humans don’t eliminate vices—we upgrade the operating system. Same addiction, different software.
Bill also throws out a thought that will make you look around differently the next time you’re stopped at a red light: how many drivers around you are actually sober? Not just alcohol—weed, prescriptions, whatever people are quietly rolling around with. Humans live hidden lives.
Along the way they talk about Rick Flair’s ridiculous origin story, bringing back some of their old FM morning show bits—courthouse mic drops, tanning bed calls, Waffle House Christmas carols—and why Dan was a little annoyed those bits quietly disappeared from the podcast rotation.
The episode closes with a very real and nuanced discussion about what you would do if a friend were accused of a sex crime involving a minor and then suddenly disappeared. It’s uncomfortable, complicated, and exactly the kind of conversation Dan thinks society avoids too often. Decide where you land when Bill floats what some might consider an outrageous idea about how to deal with minor-attracted persons.
Most people think the difference between saints and sinners is behavior. Bill thinks the real difference is what you do when the truth finally catches up to you.
Heavy stuff, honest stuff, and a few old radio bits that probably shouldn’t see the light of day. Enjoy.
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/billified-the-bill-moran-podcast--5738193/support.
Bill opens with a message from a loyal listener who called him out for saying GLP-1 weight loss drugs are the “easy way out.” In Bill’s defense, he was riffing, not researching, and there’s a difference. That sparks a bigger conversation about Ozempic, drug companies, lifestyle change, shortcuts, and why patience is basically extinct. Bill’s take? Life is the DMV. You show up, wait your turn, trust the process, and try not to lose your mind when the person behind the counter tells you that you might need more paperwork… but they’re not quite sure what paperwork. Bill had a very Bill response.
Dan then shares something deeply personal about his father being prescribed OxyContin after a routine surgery in the late 90s, before anyone really understood what those drugs could do. By the end of his life, his tolerance was so high the morphine barely helped. It leads to a moving conversation about suffering, end of life, and what faith says when medicine runs out of answers.
Then things take a turn, as they usually do. A new documentary titled Billy Idol Should Be Dead reveals the rock legend once smoked crack to kick heroin. Which leads Bill to wonder how many people have traded one vice for another because it felt like the lesser evil. Promiscuity for porn. Partying for CrossFit. Drinking for smoking. Humans don’t eliminate vices—we upgrade the operating system. Same addiction, different software.
Bill also throws out a thought that will make you look around differently the next time you’re stopped at a red light: how many drivers around you are actually sober? Not just alcohol—weed, prescriptions, whatever people are quietly rolling around with. Humans live hidden lives.
Along the way they talk about Rick Flair’s ridiculous origin story, bringing back some of their old FM morning show bits—courthouse mic drops, tanning bed calls, Waffle House Christmas carols—and why Dan was a little annoyed those bits quietly disappeared from the podcast rotation.
The episode closes with a very real and nuanced discussion about what you would do if a friend were accused of a sex crime involving a minor and then suddenly disappeared. It’s uncomfortable, complicated, and exactly the kind of conversation Dan thinks society avoids too often. Decide where you land when Bill floats what some might consider an outrageous idea about how to deal with minor-attracted persons.
Most people think the difference between saints and sinners is behavior. Bill thinks the real difference is what you do when the truth finally catches up to you.
Heavy stuff, honest stuff, and a few old radio bits that probably shouldn’t see the light of day. Enjoy.
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/billified-the-bill-moran-podcast--5738193/support.