About this episode
You’re about to learn how modern politics has fully crossed the line from “serious business” into full sketch comedy — and why the internet is doing a better job reporting it than the media. In this episode of 10 Minutes of Truth , Steve and Bob unload a week’s worth of political insanity, viral clips, and unintentional comedy that simply demanded commentary. From Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey’s painfully awkward Somali food stunt (the facial expressions say it all), to the growing taxpayer fraud scandals in Minnesota, to the rise of what might be the most accurate phrase of the year — “suicidal empathy” — this episode connects the dots between performative politics, misplaced compassion, and real-world consequences. Spoiler alert: the taxpayers are the punchline. Then it’s on to Jasmine Crockett’s baffling Senate campaign ad, where Donald Trump does all the talking, she does none, and somehow that’s the strategy. No policies. No ideas. Just vibes, blinking, and folded arms. If Idiocracy felt prophetic before, it now feels like opposition research. This episode breaks down why modern politics is increasingly driven by viral moments, grievance branding, and “I hate Trump” as a substitute for an actual platform — all with sharp humor, brutal honesty, and zero guardrails. #BarrettAndBaxa #10MinutesOfTruth #PoliticalComedy #MediaSchmedia #JacobFrey #JasmineCrockett #MinnesotaFraud #PoliticalSatire #ViralPolitics #Idiocracy #TaxpayerFraud #ModernPolitics #MediaBias #PodcastClips #PoliticalPodcast Jacob Frey Somali food video, Jasmine Crockett campaign ad, Minnesota fraud scandal, Somali fraud Minnesota, political satire podcast, conservative comedy podcast, viral political clips, media bias commentary, taxpayer fraud Minnesota, suicidal empathy politics, bad political ads, modern politics satire, Trump campaign ads reaction, idiocracy politics podcast, Barrett and Baxa