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.
Speaker
Appearances over time
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Connections
Shows they appear on and people they share episodes with. Drag to explore.
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