Bobby and Andrew announce The Bad Game Show, a 10-episode series they created themselves, dropping every Wednesday on the Bad Friends podcast channel. They call all 10 episodes strong with phenomenal guests.
Bobby Lee just got his first pair of glasses at 55 and has been driving nearly blind for years, navigating entirely by instinct and memorized roads.
Bad Friends
Bobby Lee just got his first pair of glasses at 55 and has been driving nearly blind for years, navigating entirely by instinct and memorized roads.
TL;DR
Bobby Lee gets his first pair of glasses and can suddenly see Universal Studios rides, trees in his backyard, and the lines on the road he's been driving blind for years [1] — Bobby Lee "Bobby Lee got his first pair of glasses at around 55 and suddenly discovered trees in his backyard, roller coasters at Universal, and the l…" 02:58 . The episode also features Andrew Santino's chaotic Comics Unleashed pitch (narcoleptic fits, rabid dogs, Byron Allen) [2] — Andrew Santino "NOAA's Climate Prediction Center puts 2-in-3 odds on this Super El Niño becoming historically intense, peaking this winter and funneling re…" 15:56 , a Super El Niño weather tangent, Ferrari's controversial first EV, a 45-minute jump scare Bobby set up for his girlfriend [3] — Bobby Lee "Inspired by the horror movie Obsession, Bobby Lee built a decoy body on his bed with pillows, pushed his nightstand against the wall, crouc…" 34:54 , Quinnipiac film students pitching increasingly unhinged movie ideas, a surprise coming-out moment on air, and a hair transplant Q&A with Bosley's Dr. Deutsch [4] — Andrew Santino "Andrew Santino fell asleep on his couch eating chips and salsa while watching SportsCenter, and woke up to a salsa disaster so extreme it l…" 32:32 . The single best takeaway: Bobby drove for years nearly blind, navigating entirely by instinct and memorized routes.
Bobby Lee gets his first glasses and finally sees the world clearly, Andrew pitches chaos on Comics Unleashed, Super El Niño is coming, Ferrari releases an electric car, Quinnipiac interns pitch horror movies, a student comes out live on air, and Dr. Bosley explains Carlos's hair transplant.
The episode opens with Andrew Santino hyping his upcoming two-show run at The Sound in Del Mar on June 20th, directing listeners to andrewsantino.com for tickets. Both hosts then announce The Bad Game Show — a 10-episode series they created together, dropping every Wednesday on the Bad Friends YouTube channel. From there, the mood shifts to comedy gold when Bobby Lee reveals he got prescription glasses for the very first time, at approximately age 55. Driving through Los Angeles earlier that day, he suddenly noticed the roller coasters at Universal Studios theme park — rides he had never been able to see through the blur. He admits he navigated for years by memorizing only two or three key roads and driving Mulholland Drive by feel, unable to see lane lines. Andrew is genuinely stunned, and the two riff on how Bobby's car is covered in dings that will now presumably stop forever.
Bobby Lee confesses he has become obsessed with the late-night syndicated comedy panel show Comics Unleashed, hosted by Byron Allen, sending Andrew multiple clips at odd hours. He then reveals that his manager actually represents the show's executive producer, which gave him a direct line to pitch an appearance. The pitch itself is gloriously unhinged: Bobby, Andrew, Tim Dillon, and Bert Kreischer would appear on the show, refuse to answer any pre-approved questions, with Bobby faking a full narcoleptic collapse and staying on the floor for the rest of the taping. The bit would culminate in Bobby 'waking up' and introducing an invisible rabid dog named Julio, while Jules's mom walks out in a dominatrix costume. His manager heard approximately two sentences before shutting the entire thing down. Andrew, intrigued, promises he can make it happen himself — on the condition that Bobby fires his manager if Andrew succeeds. [1] — Bobby Lee "Bobby Lee's fully-formed plan to appear on Byron Allen's Comics Unleashed involves refusing to answer any questions, faking a narcoleptic f…" 06:30
Andrew reads a real NOAA bulletin: forecasters give 2-in-3 odds of a historically intense Super El Niño peaking in winter 2026–2027, with the jet stream funneling storms directly into Southern California. This sparks a genuine science tangent on cloud overseeding — the technique of injecting excessive silver iodide particles into storm clouds to create water droplets too small to fall as rain. Andrew's take on long-term ecological consequences: the next generation can sort it out. The episode then moves into sponsor territory, with Bobby and Andrew delivering reads for NOCD — the world's leading OCD treatment provider offering virtual ERP therapy covered by insurance for over 138 million Americans — and Mountain Dew, whose American Dew limited-edition packaging they enthusiastically celebrate ahead of America's 250th birthday and the Fourth of July.
Andrew reads a real NOAA bulletin: forecasters give 2-in-3 odds of a historically intense Super El Niño peaking in winter 2026–2027, with the jet stream funneling storms directly into Southern California. This sparks a genuine science tangent on cloud overseeding — the technique of injecting excessive silver iodide particles into storm clouds to create water droplets too small to fall as rain. Andrew's take on long-term ecological consequences: the next generation can sort it out. The episode then moves into sponsor territory, with Bobby and Andrew delivering reads for NOCD — the world's leading OCD treatment provider offering virtual ERP therapy covered by insurance for over 138 million Americans — and Mountain Dew, whose American Dew limited-edition packaging they enthusiastically celebrate ahead of America's 250th birthday and the Fourth of July.
Returning from the sponsor break, Bobby shows off his new Tom Ford prescription glasses and considers LASIK before dismissing it. The conversation pivots to the night before, when Bobby and his girlfriend saw the indie horror film Obsession at the North Hollywood Regal in a 4DX screening — made for under $1 million, now grossing an estimated $75–80 million worldwide via Blumhouse. Andrew immediately notes the dangerous inspirational effect this will have on every aspiring filmmaker who thinks they can do the same. Bobby counters with the George Miller model: 30-plus years of meditating on a vision before executing Mad Max: Fury Road at age 70. Andrew argues Bobby's been doing the same thing with Comics Unleashed. The segment also includes a vivid setpiece: a large man in the theater slurping a double-flavor ICEE loudly enough to drown out the 4DX vibrating seats, and Bobby unable to read on-screen text without his new glasses.
Andrew, a self-described Ferrari devotee, pulls up images of the brand's first all-electric vehicle and asks Bobby for an unfiltered first impression. Bobby: 'Love it.' Andrew: genuinely sad. For Andrew, the design is one of the most atrocious Ferrari has ever released — online media apparently agrees — and at $640,000 or $7,000 a month to lease, the disappointment stings harder. Bobby wants to matte it. From there the conversation drifts domestic: Andrew fell asleep on the couch the previous night eating chips and salsa while watching SportsCenter, woke up to find salsa distributed across his furniture in volumes that defied the jar it came from, and didn't want to go upstairs and wake his wife. Bobby's rebuttal: he eats every meal alone at a kitchen table while looking into the living room, refusing to bring food to the couch because of an expensive rug. [1] — Andrew Santino "Ferrari released its first all-electric car, the Ferrari Luce, priced at $640,000 with a $7,000/month lease. Bobby loves it. Andrew, a self…" 31:00
Bobby and Andrew deliver the Shopify sponsor read, highlighting that the platform powers 10% of all US e-commerce and is used by brands from Allbirds to Skims. The Shop Pay button's conversion rate gets particular praise. After the read, the episode shifts into an in-studio segment previewing The Bad Game Show with the Quinnipiac university interns already in the studio. The preview is pure chaos: guests are asked to write slang terms for objects, celebrity names are guessed wrong, and marshmallows are involved. It functions as both an advertisement for the forthcoming series and a demonstration of why the show's format works.
The first pair of Quinnipiac film interns — Jack and Catherine — are brought in to pitch horror movie concepts while Bobby and Andrew act as producer-interlopers. Catherine pitches a Western set in 1899 about a character named Thomasin Bell on a terrorized ranch. By the time Bobby and Andrew are done, it's set in 1940 (for AA program reasons), the ranch is the world's first crystal meth laboratory, the villain is Lithuania (the country, operating as werewolves), the main character is renamed 'Big T,' and the love interest is a Lithuanian double agent helping Big T get sober. Jack's pitch is a sculptor who made his magnum opus — a statue of Marco Rubio — which comes to life. Two Marco Rubios now coexist. They fall in love in Little Havana. Bobby declares both projects funded and then immediately loses interest. [1] — Bobby Lee "Three Quinnipiac film students pitch horror movie concepts that get immediately hijacked by Bobby and Andrew: a ranch becomes the world's f…" 43:55
The next intern pair, Riley and Jacob, walk in already at odds — Riley immediately complains that Jacob doesn't know when to stop talking. Andrew detects a possible crush; Riley shuts it down by clarifying she likes girls. The room processes this. Andrew cheerfully notes that Riley's father — who apparently doesn't watch YouTube — is about to find out via his coworkers sending him clips. Riley seems unbothered, reasoning her dad probably already suspects it and would mostly be disappointed she's the youngest of four with no grandchildren prospects. But the moment that lands hardest is her description of coming out to her mom: she did it while driving, so that if things went badly, a crash would at least take them both out. [1] — Riley (Quinnipiac student) "Quinnipiac intern Riley mentioned she usually pays for everyone's dinner, and the conversation casually arrived at her coming out as a lesb…" 51:35 Bobby gives her money for the group's dinner. Jacob gets roasted throughout.
The final group of Quinnipiac film students includes Jack, who pitches a horror concept where a college student feels followed everywhere. The terrifying twist? The thing following him was the anxiety of a forgotten test the whole time. Bobby and Andrew respectfully note this is essentially It Follows, which Jack hasn't seen. Their most meaningful contribution to the project: the protagonist must have an extraordinarily long penis that drags on the floor, the footsteps he hears are actually it dragging, and the film's ending involves his penis independently writing his test. Oliver pitches a meth-addicted grocery delivery driver — Bobby immediately casts Simon Rex — who breaks into an elderly customer's house and accidentally calls the police on himself after stealing something that might be meth. Andrew demands the driver kill the old lady. Bobby declares the movie uncastable because they need an Asian actor with an ankle-length penis.
Andrew immediately senses that Katie and Angie are the two most fun people in the room, and they confirm it: Angie forces everyone else to party, and both admit to casual drug use. Bobby promises to Venmo Angie money for the whole group's dinner with a soft suggestion that some of it goes toward weed. Angie is put in charge of the budget. For the episode's journalism segment, Andrew sets the scene: a 10-car pileup in Puerto Rico with elementary school buses, 18-wheel trucks, intestines on lampposts, and a Puerto Rican eyeball that flies into the reporter's face mid-broadcast. Only one child — Timmy — survives. Angie delivers the live report with professional composure, even brushing off the eyeball without flinching. Bobby attempts the same and immediately calls it a 'cover-up' and names the city Puerto Mexico. The segment ends with Bobby offering the interns dinner money and the group saying their goodbyes.
Dr. David Deutsch from Bosley joins to discuss the hair transplant he performed on producer Carlos. The numbers are staggering: Carlos lost approximately 60,000–70,000 of the average head's 90,000–150,000 hairs, and Dr. Deutsch replaced about 7,000–8,000 via FUE — follicular unit excision — taking individual follicles from the safe donor zone at the back of the head. He explains androgenetic alopecia (the hormones-plus-genetics root cause of most baldness) and the concept of donor dominance, which means transplanted follicles maintain their growth properties wherever they land — meaning you could theoretically grow hair on your calves, your palms, or anywhere else. [1] — Dr. David Deutsch "Dr. David Deutsch from Bosley breaks down producer Carlos's hair transplant: roughly 70,000 hairs lost, about 7–8,000 transplanted from the…" 1:09:50 Bobby immediately asks about a beard transplant for when he turns 60, and whether pubic hair can be used as donor hair (technically yes, but curly). Andrew reveals he grew a beard at 15 and has maintained it since because it covers 'how fucking weird his face looks.' The episode closes with both hosts expressing mock existential dread about Bobby turning 60 in five years.
Chapter 1 · 00:00
The episode opens with Andrew Santino hyping his upcoming two-show run at The Sound in Del Mar on June 20th, directing listeners to andrewsantino.com for tickets. Both hosts then announce The Bad Game Show — a 10-episode series they created together, dropping every Wednesday on the Bad Friends YouTube channel. From there, the mood shifts to comedy gold when Bobby Lee reveals he got prescription glasses for the very first time, at approximately age 55. Driving through Los Angeles earlier that day, he suddenly noticed the roller coasters at Universal Studios theme park — rides he had never been able to see through the blur. He admits he navigated for years by memorizing only two or three key roads and driving Mulholland Drive by feel, unable to see lane lines. Andrew is genuinely stunned, and the two riff on how Bobby's car is covered in dings that will now presumably stop forever.
Bobby and Andrew announce The Bad Game Show, a 10-episode series they created themselves, dropping every Wednesday on the Bad Friends podcast channel. They call all 10 episodes strong with phenomenal guests.
Bobby Lee and Andrew Santino created The Bad Game Show, a 10-episode series airing every Wednesday on the Bad Friends YouTube channel.
Bobby Lee got his first pair of glasses at around 55 and suddenly discovered trees in his backyard, roller coasters at Universal, and the lines on the road he'd been ignoring for decades. He drove Mulholland Drive blind, navigating entirely by memorized routes and vibes.
Bobby Lee admitted he has been driving without glasses his entire life, navigating by instinct and memorized routes, unable to see lane lines or road details.
Bobby Lee got prescription glasses for the first time at approximately age 55, suddenly able to see Universal Studios roller coasters and trees beyond his backyard fence.
Chapter 2 · 06:30
Bobby Lee confesses he has become obsessed with the late-night syndicated comedy panel show Comics Unleashed, hosted by Byron Allen, sending Andrew multiple clips at odd hours. He then reveals that his manager actually represents the show's executive producer, which gave him a direct line to pitch an appearance. The pitch itself is gloriously unhinged: Bobby, Andrew, Tim Dillon, and Bert Kreischer would appear on the show, refuse to answer any pre-approved questions, with Bobby faking a full narcoleptic collapse and staying on the floor for the rest of the taping. The bit would culminate in Bobby 'waking up' and introducing an invisible rabid dog named Julio, while Jules's mom walks out in a dominatrix costume. His manager heard approximately two sentences before shutting the entire thing down. Andrew, intrigued, promises he can make it happen himself — on the condition that Bobby fires his manager if Andrew succeeds. [1] — Bobby Lee "Bobby Lee's fully-formed plan to appear on Byron Allen's Comics Unleashed involves refusing to answer any questions, faking a narcoleptic f…" 06:30
Bobby Lee's fully-formed plan to appear on Byron Allen's Comics Unleashed involves refusing to answer any questions, faking a narcoleptic fit mid-show, and having producer Jules's mom walk out in a dominatrix outfit with a rabid dog named Julio. His manager shut it down immediately.
Chapter 3 · 13:00
Andrew reads a real NOAA bulletin: forecasters give 2-in-3 odds of a historically intense Super El Niño peaking in winter 2026–2027, with the jet stream funneling storms directly into Southern California. This sparks a genuine science tangent on cloud overseeding — the technique of injecting excessive silver iodide particles into storm clouds to create water droplets too small to fall as rain. Andrew's take on long-term ecological consequences: the next generation can sort it out. The episode then moves into sponsor territory, with Bobby and Andrew delivering reads for NOCD — the world's leading OCD treatment provider offering virtual ERP therapy covered by insurance for over 138 million Americans — and Mountain Dew, whose American Dew limited-edition packaging they enthusiastically celebrate ahead of America's 250th birthday and the Fourth of July.
Claims made here
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center estimates a 2-in-3 chance that the developing Super El Niño will become historically intense, peaking in winter 2026–2027.
Super El Niño shifts the jet stream to funnel active moisture-laden storms directly into Southern California.
Cloud overseeding involves injecting excessive silver iodide particles into a cloud, creating too many microscopic water droplets that are too small to fall as rain, effectively dispersing the cloud.
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center puts 2-in-3 odds on this Super El Niño becoming historically intense, peaking this winter and funneling relentless storms into Southern California. Andrew Santino's proposed solution: cloud seeding in reverse, flooding the clouds with silver iodide so the droplets are too tiny to fall as rain — consequences to be sorted out by the next generation.
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center estimated a 2-in-3 chance that the developing Super El Niño event will become historically intense, peaking in winter 2026–2027.
Chapter 5 · 24:30
Returning from the sponsor break, Bobby shows off his new Tom Ford prescription glasses and considers LASIK before dismissing it. The conversation pivots to the night before, when Bobby and his girlfriend saw the indie horror film Obsession at the North Hollywood Regal in a 4DX screening — made for under $1 million, now grossing an estimated $75–80 million worldwide via Blumhouse. Andrew immediately notes the dangerous inspirational effect this will have on every aspiring filmmaker who thinks they can do the same. Bobby counters with the George Miller model: 30-plus years of meditating on a vision before executing Mad Max: Fury Road at age 70. Andrew argues Bobby's been doing the same thing with Comics Unleashed. The segment also includes a vivid setpiece: a large man in the theater slurping a double-flavor ICEE loudly enough to drown out the 4DX vibrating seats, and Bobby unable to read on-screen text without his new glasses.
Claims made here
George Miller directed Mad Max: Fury Road approximately 30 years after Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985), at age 70.
The indie horror film Obsession grossed an estimated $75–80 million worldwide on a budget under $1 million, distributed by Blumhouse.
Jordan Peele's Get Out was made for approximately $1 million by Blumhouse Productions.
George Miller directed Mad Max: Fury Road approximately 30 years after Beyond Thunderdome (1985), making it at age 70.
The indie horror Obsession earned an estimated $75–80 million worldwide on a budget under $1 million, distributed by Blumhouse. Get Out followed the same model: roughly $1 million budget, career-launching returns. Bobby and Andrew marvel at the formula while acknowledging these outliers will give aspiring filmmakers false hope.
The indie horror film Obsession had a budget under $1 million and grossed an estimated $75–80 million worldwide, distributed by Blumhouse.
Bobby Lee and Andrew Santino noted that Jordan Peele's Get Out was made for only about $1 million by Blumhouse Productions, launching Jordan Peele's film career.
Chapter 6 · 31:00
Andrew, a self-described Ferrari devotee, pulls up images of the brand's first all-electric vehicle and asks Bobby for an unfiltered first impression. Bobby: 'Love it.' Andrew: genuinely sad. For Andrew, the design is one of the most atrocious Ferrari has ever released — online media apparently agrees — and at $640,000 or $7,000 a month to lease, the disappointment stings harder. Bobby wants to matte it. From there the conversation drifts domestic: Andrew fell asleep on the couch the previous night eating chips and salsa while watching SportsCenter, woke up to find salsa distributed across his furniture in volumes that defied the jar it came from, and didn't want to go upstairs and wake his wife. Bobby's rebuttal: he eats every meal alone at a kitchen table while looking into the living room, refusing to bring food to the couch because of an expensive rug. [1] — Andrew Santino "Ferrari released its first all-electric car, the Ferrari Luce, priced at $640,000 with a $7,000/month lease. Bobby loves it. Andrew, a self…" 31:00
Claims made here
Ferrari's first all-electric car is priced at approximately $640,000 with a lease of $7,000 per month.
Ferrari released its first all-electric car, the Ferrari Luce, priced at $640,000 with a $7,000/month lease. Bobby loves it. Andrew, a self-described Ferrari diehard, calls it one of the most atrocious designs they've ever released and is genuinely sad.
Ferrari's first all-electric car, the Ferrari Luce, was priced at $640,000 with a lease price of approximately $7,000 per month.
Andrew Santino fell asleep on his couch eating chips and salsa while watching SportsCenter, and woke up to a salsa disaster so extreme it looked like someone had broken into his house with extra salsa and then left with the bottles. Bobby's response: he eats at a kitchen table like a civilized person.
Inspired by the horror movie Obsession, Bobby Lee built a decoy body on his bed with pillows, pushed his nightstand against the wall, crouched in the corner in a backwards hoodie with the hood over his face, and waited 45 minutes in total darkness for his girlfriend to come wake him up. She screamed.
Chapter 7 · 35:00
Bobby and Andrew deliver the Shopify sponsor read, highlighting that the platform powers 10% of all US e-commerce and is used by brands from Allbirds to Skims. The Shop Pay button's conversion rate gets particular praise. After the read, the episode shifts into an in-studio segment previewing The Bad Game Show with the Quinnipiac university interns already in the studio. The preview is pure chaos: guests are asked to write slang terms for objects, celebrity names are guessed wrong, and marshmallows are involved. It functions as both an advertisement for the forthcoming series and a demonstration of why the show's format works.
Claims made here
Shopify powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States.
Bobby Lee crouched in the corner of his bedroom disguised as a pile of pillows for 45 minutes waiting to scare his girlfriend after they watched the horror film Obsession.
According to the sponsored segment, Shopify is behind 10% of all e-commerce in the US and is used by millions of businesses worldwide.
Chapter 8 · 42:30
The first pair of Quinnipiac film interns — Jack and Catherine — are brought in to pitch horror movie concepts while Bobby and Andrew act as producer-interlopers. Catherine pitches a Western set in 1899 about a character named Thomasin Bell on a terrorized ranch. By the time Bobby and Andrew are done, it's set in 1940 (for AA program reasons), the ranch is the world's first crystal meth laboratory, the villain is Lithuania (the country, operating as werewolves), the main character is renamed 'Big T,' and the love interest is a Lithuanian double agent helping Big T get sober. Jack's pitch is a sculptor who made his magnum opus — a statue of Marco Rubio — which comes to life. Two Marco Rubios now coexist. They fall in love in Little Havana. Bobby declares both projects funded and then immediately loses interest. [1] — Bobby Lee "Three Quinnipiac film students pitch horror movie concepts that get immediately hijacked by Bobby and Andrew: a ranch becomes the world's f…" 43:55
Three Quinnipiac film students pitch horror movie concepts that get immediately hijacked by Bobby and Andrew: a ranch becomes the world's first crystal meth lab terrorized by Lithuanian werewolves; a sculptor's Marco Rubio statue comes to life and falls in love with the original; and a college student is 'haunted' by anxiety over a forgotten test.
Chapter 9 · 49:00
The next intern pair, Riley and Jacob, walk in already at odds — Riley immediately complains that Jacob doesn't know when to stop talking. Andrew detects a possible crush; Riley shuts it down by clarifying she likes girls. The room processes this. Andrew cheerfully notes that Riley's father — who apparently doesn't watch YouTube — is about to find out via his coworkers sending him clips. Riley seems unbothered, reasoning her dad probably already suspects it and would mostly be disappointed she's the youngest of four with no grandchildren prospects. But the moment that lands hardest is her description of coming out to her mom: she did it while driving, so that if things went badly, a crash would at least take them both out. [1] — Riley (Quinnipiac student) "Quinnipiac intern Riley mentioned she usually pays for everyone's dinner, and the conversation casually arrived at her coming out as a lesb…" 51:35 Bobby gives her money for the group's dinner. Jacob gets roasted throughout.
Quinnipiac intern Riley mentioned she usually pays for everyone's dinner, and the conversation casually arrived at her coming out as a lesbian on a podcast she says her dad doesn't watch. She explained she came out to her mom in the car so if things went badly, a crash would take them both out — a joke that landed like a gut-punch.
Chapter 10 · 55:00
The final group of Quinnipiac film students includes Jack, who pitches a horror concept where a college student feels followed everywhere. The terrifying twist? The thing following him was the anxiety of a forgotten test the whole time. Bobby and Andrew respectfully note this is essentially It Follows, which Jack hasn't seen. Their most meaningful contribution to the project: the protagonist must have an extraordinarily long penis that drags on the floor, the footsteps he hears are actually it dragging, and the film's ending involves his penis independently writing his test. Oliver pitches a meth-addicted grocery delivery driver — Bobby immediately casts Simon Rex — who breaks into an elderly customer's house and accidentally calls the police on himself after stealing something that might be meth. Andrew demands the driver kill the old lady. Bobby declares the movie uncastable because they need an Asian actor with an ankle-length penis.
Chapter 11 · 1:01:00
Andrew immediately senses that Katie and Angie are the two most fun people in the room, and they confirm it: Angie forces everyone else to party, and both admit to casual drug use. Bobby promises to Venmo Angie money for the whole group's dinner with a soft suggestion that some of it goes toward weed. Angie is put in charge of the budget. For the episode's journalism segment, Andrew sets the scene: a 10-car pileup in Puerto Rico with elementary school buses, 18-wheel trucks, intestines on lampposts, and a Puerto Rican eyeball that flies into the reporter's face mid-broadcast. Only one child — Timmy — survives. Angie delivers the live report with professional composure, even brushing off the eyeball without flinching. Bobby attempts the same and immediately calls it a 'cover-up' and names the city Puerto Mexico. The segment ends with Bobby offering the interns dinner money and the group saying their goodbyes.
Dr. David Deutsch from Bosley breaks down producer Carlos's hair transplant: roughly 70,000 hairs lost, about 7–8,000 transplanted from the safe donor zone at the back of the head. He reveals that the same technique can grow hair on calves, beards — even your palms — because transplanted follicles maintain donor dominance wherever they land.
Chapter 12 · 1:10:00
Dr. David Deutsch from Bosley joins to discuss the hair transplant he performed on producer Carlos. The numbers are staggering: Carlos lost approximately 60,000–70,000 of the average head's 90,000–150,000 hairs, and Dr. Deutsch replaced about 7,000–8,000 via FUE — follicular unit excision — taking individual follicles from the safe donor zone at the back of the head. He explains androgenetic alopecia (the hormones-plus-genetics root cause of most baldness) and the concept of donor dominance, which means transplanted follicles maintain their growth properties wherever they land — meaning you could theoretically grow hair on your calves, your palms, or anywhere else. [1] — Dr. David Deutsch "Dr. David Deutsch from Bosley breaks down producer Carlos's hair transplant: roughly 70,000 hairs lost, about 7–8,000 transplanted from the…" 1:09:50 Bobby immediately asks about a beard transplant for when he turns 60, and whether pubic hair can be used as donor hair (technically yes, but curly). Andrew reveals he grew a beard at 15 and has maintained it since because it covers 'how fucking weird his face looks.' The episode closes with both hosts expressing mock existential dread about Bobby turning 60 in five years.
Claims made here
Producer Carlos lost approximately 60,000–70,000 hairs, out of a human head's total 90,000–150,000.
Bosley transplanted approximately 7,000–8,000 hairs into producer Carlos's head.
The primary cause of hair loss is androgenetic alopecia, caused by the interaction of androgens (hormones) and hereditary genetics.
Hair follicles from the safe donor zone at the back of the head maintain their resistance to baldness (donor dominance) wherever they are transplanted on the body.
Dr. David Deutsch of Bosley estimated that producer Carlos had lost approximately 60,000–70,000 hairs, out of a typical human head's 90,000–150,000 total.
Dr. Deutsch transplanted approximately 7,000–8,000 hairs into Carlos's head, a fraction of what was lost but sufficient for cosmetic density.
Dr. Deutsch explains that the vast majority of hair loss is androgenetic alopecia — driven by androgens (hormones) and hereditary genetics. The 'safe donor zone' at the back of the head is immune to this process, which is why it persists even in completely bald men and makes it the gold standard source for transplant hair.
Dr. Deutsch explained that the 'safe donor zone' at the back of the head maintains hair even in fully bald individuals due to donor dominance, making it ideal for transplants anywhere on the body.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
Owner of Entertainment Studios and host of Comics Unleashed; Bobby pitches a chaotic plan to appear on his show.
LA Dodgers baseball star used as the jumping-off point for jokes about the Japanese presence at Dodger Stadium and the changing demographics of American sports.
Director of Mad Max: Fury Road, cited as an example of an auteur who waited 30+ years between installments and directed his masterpiece at age 70.
Director of Get Out, cited as an example of a Blumhouse breakout success made for approximately $1 million.
Hair restoration company whose doctor Dr. David Deutsch appears on the show to discuss Carlos's hair transplant procedure.
Connecticut university whose film program interns visit the Bad Friends studio and participate in movie pitching and journalism exercises.
Sponsor of the episode; described as powering 10% of all US e-commerce with its Shop Pay checkout system.
Low-budget horror film production company credited with distributing Obsession and Get Out, both massive hits on tiny budgets.
Sponsor and OCD treatment provider offering virtual ERP therapy covered by insurance for over 138 million Americans.
Government agency cited for forecasting a 2-in-3 chance the developing Super El Niño event will become historically intense.
Byron Allen's comedy panel show that Bobby and Andrew are obsessed with and want to appear on, with Bobby pitching a chaotic sabotage plan.
Ferrari's first all-electric car priced at $640,000; Andrew loves the brand but hates the design, Bobby loves it.
New 10-episode game show created by Bobby Lee and Andrew Santino, airing weekly on the Bad Friends YouTube channel.
Theme park in LA that Bobby could finally see the roller coasters of for the first time after getting glasses.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center estimates a 2-in-3 chance that the developing Super El Niño will become historically intense, peaking in winter 2026–2027.
Super El Niño shifts the jet stream to funnel active moisture-laden storms directly into Southern California.
Cloud overseeding involves injecting excessive silver iodide particles into a cloud, creating too many microscopic water droplets that are too small to fall as rain, effectively dispersing the cloud.
The indie horror film Obsession grossed an estimated $75–80 million worldwide on a budget under $1 million, distributed by Blumhouse.
Jordan Peele's Get Out was made for approximately $1 million by Blumhouse Productions.
George Miller directed Mad Max: Fury Road approximately 30 years after Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985), at age 70.
Ferrari's first all-electric car is priced at approximately $640,000 with a lease of $7,000 per month.
Producer Carlos lost approximately 60,000–70,000 hairs, out of a human head's total 90,000–150,000.
Bosley transplanted approximately 7,000–8,000 hairs into producer Carlos's head.
The primary cause of hair loss is androgenetic alopecia, caused by the interaction of androgens (hormones) and hereditary genetics.
Hair follicles from the safe donor zone at the back of the head maintain their resistance to baldness (donor dominance) wherever they are transplanted on the body.
NOCD therapy is covered by insurance for over 138 million Americans.
Shopify powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States.
We use essential and analytics cookies to run Vuci. To understand how the site is used: Privacy Policy.
Install Vuci on your phone
Add it to your home screen for a faster, app-like experience.
Install Vuci on your phone
Tap the Share button, then “Add to Home Screen”.
A new version is available
Reload to get the latest Vuci.