The DORK Side

The DORK Side is a brutally funny comedy podcast where hosts Kevin Jackson and Noel Roberts take a gloriously irreverent swing at the world around us. Each week, they roast pop culture, toast new tech, and drag the future into the present just to be made fun of. This isn't your average tech podcast or dry pop culture show. It's where curiosity meets comedy—and neither comes out alive. Tune in for hot takes on everything from the latest gadgets and streaming obsessions to society's oddities and tomorrow's worst ideas. Join the conversation and get your weekly dose of hilarious and critical tech commentary and pop culture comedy.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Changing the Past - Ep 65

    There is no piece of technology more powerful than hindsight. It runs on zero electricity, costs nothing, and yet it convinces people every day that they would have been a genius if only the universe had followed their updated instructions. Everyone believes they would change something about their past. Different spouse. Different career. Different haircut in 2003 when we all collectively lost our minds and trusted frosted tips. The human brain is convinced that the past was a rough draft, and if given a red pen, we would turn our lives into a Pulitzer winner. But notice how selective regret is. Nobody says, “I wish I had bought less Bitcoin in 2012.” Nobody regrets that one time they took the risk and it worked. Regret is almost always retrofitted around outcomes we now understand, not decisions we made with the information we had. We rewrite history like a streaming service edits controversial episodes. We remove context. We forget uncertainty. We delete fear. And then we judge our former selves as if they were reckless interns instead of people making decisions under pressure, with incomplete data, surrounded by idiots, including themselves. This obsession with changing the past has exploded in the modern era because social media weaponized comparison. We don’t just imagine better versions of our own lives, we now binge-watch other people’s highlight reels and conclude we were robbed by fate. The algorithm quietly whispers, “You could have been this… if only.” See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    38 min
  2. 1 APR

    Find Out About your Bucket List

    Bucket lists used to be private thoughts. Quiet promises whispered between a person and the ceiling at 2 a.m. Now they’re laminated, hashtagged, and monetized. Somewhere along the way, “live before you die” turned into “prove you’re interesting online before the algorithm forgets you exist.” The phrase itself didn’t crawl out of ancient philosophy. It didn’t come from Aristotle or some monk staring at a candle. It came from a 2007 Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman movie, which is ironic, because nothing makes people confront mortality faster than watching two elderly men race death in a sports car. Since then, the bucket list became a cultural permission slip. Suddenly it was acceptable to admit you were scared of dying with nothing but a Costco membership and a really strong opinion about lawn fertilizer. What’s fascinating isn’t the list. It’s why we make them. A bucket list is optimism wearing anxiety’s jacket. It’s hope with a deadline. It’s the adult version of realizing recess is almost over. You don’t want to waste it. You don’t want to look back and realize your boldest adventure was switching toothpaste brands. And here’s the tension. Some people live beautifully small lives. Same town. Same roads. Same diner booth. There’s dignity in roots. But there’s also danger in confusing familiarity with fulfillment. Comfort is sneaky. It convinces you that curiosity is reckless and that ambition is something younger people should do. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    38 min
  3. 30 MAR

    Fictional BFF - If you could choose anybody

    Ever fantasized about ditching your boring pals for someone who can punch through walls or web-sling across town? We're launching this "What fictional character would you want to be best friends with?" arc with superheroes – those over-the-top do-gooders (and a couple of villains) who've been crashing into pop culture since the late 1930s, when the world was reeling from the Great Depression and needed larger-than-life escapes. Who wouldn't want Superman as your wingman? Talk about the ultimate bodyguard – he'd fly you out of awkward dates faster than a speeding bullet, though good luck explaining to your landlord why your roof has a new skylight from his "heroic entrances." Or Batman, the brooding billionaire who'd fund your wildest gadgets but probably ghost you during his endless vengeance quests – hypocrisy much? We cheer their lone-wolf style, yet secretly crave their loyalty without the therapy bills. Spider-Man? Your go-to for quippy advice on bad luck, swinging by with pizza after a rough day, but watch out for those villain magnets turning your barbecue into a brawl. Wonder Woman brings fierce girl-power vibes, schooling you on justice while lassoing the truth out of your lying ex. Iron Man, aka Tony Stark, would upgrade your life with tech toys and sarcasm, but his ego might turn every hangout into a TED Talk on himself.  See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

    38 min

About

The DORK Side is a brutally funny comedy podcast where hosts Kevin Jackson and Noel Roberts take a gloriously irreverent swing at the world around us. Each week, they roast pop culture, toast new tech, and drag the future into the present just to be made fun of. This isn't your average tech podcast or dry pop culture show. It's where curiosity meets comedy—and neither comes out alive. Tune in for hot takes on everything from the latest gadgets and streaming obsessions to society's oddities and tomorrow's worst ideas. Join the conversation and get your weekly dose of hilarious and critical tech commentary and pop culture comedy.

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