?>

Features
Interviews
Columns
Podcasts
Shopping Guides
Production Blogs
Contests
Message Board
RSS Feed
Contact Us
Archives

 

newhead2.jpg

SModcast is the meandering palaver of a pair of dudes whose voices are so dull, they don’t deserve to be on the radio (and, hence, aren’t). Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier are SModcast.

The best thing about SModcast? It don’t cost nothing.

line.gif

SModcast 32: I’m No Fool –

In which our heroes learn to fear a very tiny water-dwelling killer, mark a passing with little pity, discover why a future in food services might not be the path to take, gift Kentucky with a new license plate slogan, wonder as to the whereabouts of beloved fast food icons, and impart a little lesson about common sense.

[CONTENT WARNING] SModcast features harsh language and even harsher notions of propriety. Listener discretion is advised.

DOWNLOAD: (right click to save)
SModcast 32 (MP3 format) – 48.14 MB

[display_podcast]

SUBSCRIBE
Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes
Subscribe to this Podcast via FeedBurner

Wanna add your two cents? Spend it here, in the SModcast mailbag.

line.gif

CLICK HERE FOR THE SMODCAST ARCHIVES

line.gif

##

Comments: 2 Comments

2 Responses to “SModcast 32”

  1. Twister Says:

    By far, the dumbest person in all of this was the female manager.

    The girl was probably terrified, especially after 3 hours of being held in the back room…buy her boss and then by a strange man, so she probably did it out of fear/intimidation more than anything.

    The Fiance thing was creepy. He probably knew it was bullshit and decided to coerce a blowjob out of it. Why the manager called her fiance instead of say, another mcdonalds staff member or manager is also kind of suspect.

    It’s so far outside common sense you have to wonder if the whole thing was set up before hand – some guy on the internet puts an add up for a scheme for violating co-workers or some thing.

    And why didn’t anyone call the actual police? I mean if she was crying and the janitor saw what was going on, why didn’t anyone think to call the police?

  2. Kelly Says:

    Sadly, there’s far more tragedy here than is discussed on the cast. The child rapist who killed himself is not likely to only have the one victim. A rapist is several times as likely to attack someone he knows than a stranger. We can only pray that he did not victimize his own children and the children of people who trusted him. These children would be less likely to get proper treatment. And here’s the rub,–without that treatment, 50% of those children he’s victimized will themselves grow up to be abusers.

    Even worse, nobody’s really sure how many children in the United States are victims of sexual abuse. There are some who claim that as many as 1/4 children are sexual trauma survivors. These figures, though useful in treatment and prevention, also threaten to reduce perception of the problem to just a perverse math equation.

    I don’t know what should be done with the man who tried to ruin the little girl’s future; and I don’t care as long as he is never free to try it again. But we cannot forget that long after he’s gone, what he did has the potential to destroy lives. Contain the man, but it’s far more important to contain the damage.

Leave a Reply

FRED Entertaiment (RSS)