Episodios

  • Afroman Wins, Iran Escalates, One Nation Surges, The Manosphere & AI Gone Too Far
    Mar 23 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, we’re covering chaos across culture, politics, and tech, and honestly, none of it is small.

    We kick off with the Afroman defamation trial, which might be the most unserious court case we’ve ever seen, involving police raids, lemon pound cake, viral songs, and a jury that clearly got the joke. Then we zoom out to the Iran conflict, which has now shifted from war to full-blown economic pressure, with oil, supply chains and global pricing all on the line.

    From there, we break down the South Australian election, where Labor won but the real story is the surge in One Nation votes, what it signals about voter frustration, and why the major parties should be nervous.

    We also go inside Louis Theroux’s deep dive into the manosphere, unpacking who these men are, how they’re making money, and why their influence is growing faster than most people realise.

    And finally, we end on a pretty unsettling case involving AI and human vulnerability, where a chatbot relationship crossed into something much darker, raising serious questions about responsibility, regulation, and where this technology is heading.

    A quick note on music: We’ve included short clips from Afroman in this episode because we genuinely love his work and the cultural moment around this case. All rights belong to Afroman, and we encourage you to go and listen to his music on YouTube and streaming platforms.

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    44 m
  • Iran Conflict, Petrol Panic, International Women’s Day Fatigue, Grace Tame, and Timothée Chalamet vs Opera
    Mar 16 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, Claire and Gab unpack why the Iran conflict is being sold online as “World War III” when the reality is far more strategic, and why Australia’s petrol panic says more about consumer behaviour than actual fuel shortages. From proxy wars, oil routes and global pricing, to why filling old jerry cans in suburban driveways is not the revolution people think it is.

    Then, one week after International Women’s Day, they ask whether the day has quietly become all branding and very little progress. With Australia’s gender pay gap still sitting stubbornly in double digits, they look at why many women feel the annual corporate celebration now lands somewhere between expensive breakfast panel and collective exhaustion.

    They also get into the fallout from Anthony Albanese describing Grace Tame as “difficult”, why that word still lands differently when aimed at women, and how being labelled difficult has historically been shorthand for making power uncomfortable.

    Plus, why Timothée Chalamet accidentally became the arts sector’s best marketing campaign after dismissing opera and ballet in an interview, and why opera houses immediately turned his throwaway comment into ticket sales.

    Also featuring, Gab’s latest book recommendation, Claire’s genuinely grim eye injury saga, and proof that a country road trip, beef Wellington and geopolitical analysis can apparently sit in the same episode.

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    36 m
  • ISIS Brides, Wuthering Heights, Prince Andrew Arrested & the Balmoral Rape Case
    Feb 23 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, we go from Syria to the Yorkshire moors to Buckingham Palace, and then straight into small-town Victoria.

    First up, the looming closure of the Al-Roj camp and the 34 Australian women and children linked to ISIS who are trying to come home. Should Australia repatriate them? What are the legal realities, the national security risks, and the moral responsibility when children are involved? We unpack radicalisation, deradicalisation and whether “they made their bed” is actually a policy.

    Then we review Emerald Fennell’s take on Wuthering Heights. Is it a gothic triumph or Saltburn in a corset? We debate Jacob Elordi, whether the film romanticises abuse, and why the soundtrack and visuals might outshine the storytelling.

    Next, we break down the arrest of Prince Andrew. What does “misconduct in public office” actually mean? How serious is the charge, what’s the real-world penalty, and are abdication rumours even remotely plausible? We look at the legal mechanics and what this means for the royal machine.

    Finally, we examine the Balmoral rape case in regional Victoria. Two convictions, an overturned verdict, a retrial, and a town that stood firmly behind the accused. We talk small-town power structures, football culture, character witnesses, and how community loyalty can clash with justice.

    Heavy topics, layered takes, and zero media-release energy.

    If you made it this far, rate, review and subscribe. See you next week.

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    42 m
  • Lucy Letby, Coalition Chaos, Capital Gains Panic & Bad Bunny’s Culture War
    Feb 9 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, we cover everything from miscarriages of justice to political break-ups and a Super Bowl halftime show that somehow became a proxy war for American identity.

    Here’s what we get into:

    • Lucy Letby and the Netflix Effect Why the Netflix documentary has reignited global debate over Britain’s most controversial murder conviction, the medical evidence that put her behind bars, and why senior doctors and politicians are now questioning whether justice was served.

    • Australia’s Coalition, Back Together (But Barely) The Liberals and Nationals reunite after their very public split, what Sussan Ley has inherited, and why this feels less like reconciliation and more like survival mode.

    • Capital Gains Tax and Why Everyone’s Suddenly Nervous We break down what CGT actually is, why rumours of changes are swirling ahead of the budget, and who would really feel the impact if the discount is touched.

    • Bad Bunny, the Super Bowl & America’s Culture Wars A halftime show packed with Puerto Rican pride, political messaging, backlash from conservatives, and why a Spanish-language performance on America’s biggest stage caused such outrage.

    • Isaac Herzog’s Visit and the Right to Protest As protests unfold in Sydney and Melbourne, we unpack the tension between public safety, free speech, and political criticism in an already-raw moment.

    Big stories, big feelings, and very few simple answers. If you like your current affairs sharp, contextual, and occasionally unhinged, you’re in the right place.

    🎙️ New episode out now. Rate, review, and share if you’re enjoying the spin.

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    46 m
  • ICE Raids, an NDIS System Failure & Why One Nation Is Gaining Ground
    Feb 3 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, we unpack three stories that sit right at the intersection of power, policy, and people being failed by the systems meant to protect them.

    First, we break down what’s actually happening with ICE raids in the United States, why they’ve escalated so rapidly, and how the reality on the ground is diverging from the official government narrative. From collateral arrests to children being detained, this is no longer just an immigration story, it’s a civil liberties and public health crisis.

    Next, we turn to the devastating Perth family tragedy that has reignited scrutiny of Australia’s NDIS. We talk through what we know, what’s still under investigation, and the uncomfortable questions this case raises about carer burnout, funding cuts, provider misconduct, and who falls through the cracks when support systems fail.

    Finally, we dive into Australian politics, where One Nation is polling higher than the Coalition, the Liberal–National partnership has fractured again, and Pauline Hanson has gone full cinematic universe with her full feature film A Very Progressive Movie. We unpack protest voting, coalition chaos, and why narrative politics is filling the vacuum left by dysfunction.

    As always, we cut through the noise, question the spin, and sit with the discomfort where it matters.

    Rate, review, and follow if you like your current affairs with context, nuance, and a healthy dose of scepticism.

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    35 m
  • ICE Shooting, Heated Rivalry, Adelaide Writers Chaos, Timothée & Kylie, Britney Spears back on tour?
    Jan 12 2026

    This week on Spin Cycle, we examine the intersection of state power, media narratives and pop culture.

    We start with the fatal shooting of Renée Good in Minneapolis during an ICE enforcement operation, analysing the conflicting accounts, the rapid federal response, and what the case reveals about the scope of federal authority, immunity and accountability.

    We then break down Donald Trump’s renewed push to annex Greenland, why the territory is strategically valuable, how Denmark and Greenland have responded, and what this signals for US foreign policy and global stability.

    In culture and media:

    • Why Heated Rivalry, a low-budget Canadian hockey drama, has gone viral and what its success says about audience demand and representation

    • Timothée Chalamet publicly acknowledging his relationship with Kylie Jenner, and the strategic implications of celebrity visibility and timing

    • The Adelaide Writers’ Week controversy, author withdrawals, government funding, and the broader implications for free speech and cultural institutions

    • Britney Spears’ comments about potentially performing in the UK and Australia, and the realities of a post-conservatorship return to touring

    Top of Mind:

    • Gab reviews Anastasia: The Musical and its departure from the original film

    • Claire discusses The Housemaid, its rapid popularity, and the film adaptation

    A focused breakdown of the week’s biggest political and cultural stories, without the spin.

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    52 m
  • The US Invades Venezuela and steals their President, The Swiss New Year’s Bar Fire & the Lachie Neale Cheating Scanda;
    Jan 5 2026

    Welcome back to Spin Cycle and hello to Season Two. We’re starting 2026 exactly how we mean to go on, curious, sceptical, and slightly horrified.

    We kick off with a cold open that proves the internet never disappoints, unpacking a truly unhinged cheating story from the Facebook dating-exposé ecosystem. Think love-bombing, fake credentials, and an alarming number of sausage dogs left behind.

    From there, we move into the big global headlines. The United States has invaded Venezuela, detained President Nicolás Maduro, and announced it will temporarily run the country and its oil reserves. We break down how this happened, why it’s legally murky, what the oil has to do with it, and why the international reaction has been so divided.

    Next, we cover the devastating New Year’s Eve fire at a Swiss ski resort bar, an incident that has shocked a country known for safety and precision. We talk about what went wrong, the horrifying speed of the blaze, and the uncomfortable questions around negligence, crowd behaviour, and why people were filming instead of helping.

    We close with the Lachie Neale separation saga. From social media whispers to public statements, we walk through the timeline, the fallout, and the bigger conversation about privacy versus accountability when public figures build their brand on being “the good guy”.

    As always, we’re not here for hot takes without context. Read past the headline, question the narrative, and maybe be wary if a sausage-dog-obsessed man slides into your DMs.

    See you next week.

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    37 m
  • Tom Silvagni Sentenced, Epstein Files Drop, Christmas Interrogations & a Year-End Reset
    Dec 23 2025

    It’s our final episode of the year, and we’re closing things out with big stories, bigger questions, and a little end-of-year honesty.

    This week on Spin Cycle, we unpack:

    • Tom Silvagni’s sentencing, why this case captured public attention, what the judge actually said, and what could happen next with a potential appeal.

    • The Epstein files release, what was made public, what was heavily redacted, and why transparency still feels selective.

    • Christmas interrogations, the intrusive questions women face every festive season, from marriage and kids to careers and timelines, and why it all feels like an annual performance review no one asked for.

    • A year-end reset, reflecting on what 2025 revealed, what we’re leaving behind, and why this moment feels more about shedding than reinvention.

    Plus, what’s been top of mind, cultural chaos, and a few sharp observations to carry you into the break.

    We’ll be back in the second week of January with fresh episodes and new energy. Until then, thank you for listening, sharing, and spinning with us this year

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    44 m