The crew kicks things off with some peak pre-show chaos, bouncing from deep life talks about health, blood work, and existential truck ownership (Rafe is this close to buying a Tacoma and embracing his emotional support pickup era) to a truly unhinged discussion about a car with a built-in toilet—because nothing says innovation like risking your dignity at 70 mph. From there, they spiral into debates about RV survival plans, messy homes ruining your mental health, and whether adulthood is just cleaning your house until you die. The show somehow gets even more personal with a surprisingly heated argument about washcloths vs. hands vs. loofahs (turns out only 17% of people are Team Washcloth, and yes, people are judging HARD). They wrap this segment with morning routine hacks, snooze button confessions, and the reality that everyone’s just trying to survive early mornings—preferably by getting back into bed as soon as humanly possible. The gang recovers from 4/20 in very on-brand fashion (some celebrated, some “observed,” some just judged), then dives into a mix of history, celebrity chaos, and music talk. They run through “on this day” moments—from the Red Baron to Prince—before shifting into celebrity news and music debates, including a passionate breakdown of Bob Seger as the ultimate blue-collar legend (basically everyone’s dad, emotionally). There’s also talk of a viral guy labeling “Bob Seger-approved bars,” Fred Durst trying to start a festival for snubbed artists, Jelly Roll training for a marathon while casually talking about removing excess skin (which… the crew has thoughts on), and Disturbed’s billion-stream milestone. They round it out with TV updates, including Nikki Glaser, Bear Grylls, and Euphoria drama, all while maintaining that perfect mix of pop culture insight and “how did we get here?” energy. The show leans fully into listener chaos with the “Three and Five” game, where contestants have five seconds to name three things without fumbling—and spoiler alert: a lot of fumbling happens. From questionable answers like “bananas” for things that come in pairs to accidental self-sabotage with “uh” penalties, the game delivers pure, unpredictable comedy. Some contestants clutch it, others crash and burn spectacularly, and the crew roasts them every step of the way. There’s also a lingering mystery about whether someone farted in Riz’s chair (yes, there’s apparently a full investigation video, because journalism matters). Between awkward silences, chaotic judging, and brutally funny moments, the segment is a perfect snapshot of the show’s interactive, anything-can-happen vibe. Follow The Rizzuto Show → linktr.ee/rizzshow for more from your favorite daily comedy show. Connect with The Rizzuto Show Comedy Podcast online → 1057thepoint.com/RizzShow. Hear The Rizz Show daily on the radio at 105.7 The Point | Hubbard Radio in St. Louis, MO. World Sleep Day 2026Most & Least Stressed States (2026)'Allergic' to your office? You might have 'sick building syndrome'Reserve your child’s username in Proton MailTitanic survivor’s life jacket — from the lifeboat that coldly ignored drowning passengers — sells for $700k12-Year-Old Boy Dragged Over 380 Yards Along Road by School Bus After His Arm Gets Caught in DoorHumanoid robots outrun everyone in Beijing half-marathon, beats world-record timeFacebook post helps track down man suspected of masturbating on the roadHero Oklahoma principal Kirk Moore crowned prom king after taking a bullet while tackling school shooterSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.