The Bugleverse Wiki

The only wiki with the balls to document the whole Bugle News universe.

Storyline

The IRS Tax Farm

The IRS Tax Farm is the Bugleverse’s economic cosmology: the arrangement under which the plebs are farmed for tax revenue, know they are being farmed, and regard the farming as the highest available form of citizenship. It is not a story about resisting the tax collector. In the Bugleverse the tax collector is a sponsor, an aspiration, and eventually a Lightning Service Provider, and the central anxiety of the show’s every pleb is not that he will be taxed but that he will prove unable to afford it.

The arc’s thesis was eventually given a title of its own — Bitcoin Is Tax Affording Technology, Bugle Weekly 40 — and stated there as settled history: “Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin in order to have a roundabout way for individuals to finally to be able to afford their taxes.”1 Two years of episodes work outward from that premise.

Who’s in it: Richard Greaser · Rod Palmer · the IRS · Dennis Porter · Michael Saylor · Fundamentals · Otis Bittmeyer · Matt Odell · Pastor Jeffs

Related: storylines/church-of-compliance · storylines/anti-politics-elections · storylines/ukraine-money-pipe · storylines/roger-ver-bch · storylines/quarantine-motif · storylines/biden-presidency

The doctrine assembles (2024)

The earliest beat in the record is already fully formed. Answering a listener boost from a pleb tempted toward non-compliance, Greaser‘s prescription “is to donate your stack to a Bitcoin politician” — Elizabeth Warren, Cynthia Lummis or Dennis Porter — with Rod Palmer adding that whatever remains should be sold to pay taxes.2

A week later the show states its pre-emptive-compliance doctrine outright. The advice to Bitcoin businesses is not to await a subpoena: “You share all your customers’ data and information with the government and the IRS without even being asked. You just send it to them. They’re gonna ask for it anyway.”3 The same episode closes on its exemplar of virtue — Mark Cuban’s tax-day tweet, “Mark said, I pay what I owe. Tomorrow, I will wire transfer to the IRS $288,000,000” — read as a creditable dig at Donald Trump, whom the hosts classify as a tax evader.4

By Bugle Weekly 5 the show had extended compliance to its own listeners, replacing the content warning with a terms-of-service update: “Warning. The terms and services of this podcast have changed.”5 Listeners are deemed to have certified that they are current on their taxes. The same episode carries the IRS sponsor read, which calls the agency the foundation of democracy and encourages “the real plebs to comply now before they are made to comply.”6

The infrastructure follows the theology. Palmer pushes taxation down to the node — “This is why node runners will inherit the Earth”7 — and Greaser offers the Orange Pill App to the government as a ready-made register of Bitcoiners, since “Orange Pill app would make taxation,” tractable.8

The affordability crisis (mid-2024)

The arc’s emotional engine is not the tax but the bill. Bugle Weekly 21 plays a sung lament whose entire ambition is modest: “All I ever ask for is to be able to afford paying taxes.”9

The market answers. Bugle Weekly 22’s tax skit debuts AI Dennis Porter, an AI-voiced clone of Dennis Porter who arrives with an offer — “Hello. This is AI Dennis Porter. If you are out there struggling to pay your taxes, there is hope. With Bitcoin, you can save your money”10 — and then states the entire doctrine in a single line: “Bitcoin is the best tool at our disposal to comply. Don’t worry because I will protect your fundamental right to pay taxes.”11 The crisis reaches medicine too: the Bugle reports that the CDC has approved “listening to Adam Back in podcast interviews, as an alternative to anesthesia,” insurers pinched by their own tax bills having stopped covering the real thing.12

By Bugle Weekly 23 the bit reaches its terminal form — “IRS agents are having issues being able to afford their taxes,”13 which Palmer offers as the reason the agency is so interested in group chats. The cold open of the same episode gives the crisis its candidate: a campaign spot in which Trump will pump Bitcoin to a million dollars so that Americans can afford their taxes again — “That is why I support Donald j Trump’s plan to pump Bitcoin to the moon.”14

Bugle Weekly 27 completes the syllogism, and characteristically frames it as dread rather than salesmanship: “So my fear is that the only way that people are gonna be able to afford taxes going forward is to actually purchase Bitcoin.”15 The same episode reads Kamala Harris‘s unrealized-gains proposal as a branding emergency for Michael Saylor — “That would be a real issue for Michael Saylor and his managing his brand because he he is king king HODL over there”16 — and closes Greaser’s military-industrial perpetual-motion argument, in which $10M missiles intercepting $2,000 missiles guarantee demand, which raises taxes, which forces people into Bitcoin: “And it’s a it’s a loop that’s really beneficial for us all.”17

The election is litigated on the same axis. Palmer credits Elon Musk with gamifying the whole thing — “he’s making it fun. He’s making it competition who can be the most compliant”18 — explains the Washington Post’s spiked endorsement as tax-bragging envy, since “Jeff Bezos is mad at Kamala Harris and Joe Biden for raising taxes, and allowing Elon Musk to set record,”19 and states the case for Trump as the prospect that a Bitcoin podcaster “supplants Elon Musk as the as the record holder in the Guinness Book of World Records” for the highest tax bill.20

irl: Musk’s 2021 tax bill and Cuban’s tax-day posts are real events; the Guinness record for the largest personal tax bill is not a category Guinness maintains.

The HODL tax

The one policy invention the arc can call its own belongs to Greaser. He reintroduces it in Bugle Weekly 22 — “Yeah. I mean, if so this is why, you know, my HODL tax or HODL tithe proposal is so interesting”21 — as a fix for the pleb who saves 1.85 BTC, dies without an orange-pilled heir, and thereby starves the miners. Palmer adopts it as settled doctrine within the same episode.

Its stated origin is defensive. Greaser submitted it, he says, because he was worried Peter Todd‘s tail emissions would be “taken seriously. My HODL tax proposal.”22 Asked in Bugle Weekly 27 who the CEO of Bitcoin is, he re-litigates his own BIP instead — “which is implementing the HODL tax. So if we tax the HODLers and pay the miners” — removing any desire to make more coins by fixing the mining incentive directly.23

The canonical number is BIP 432.24 The hosts themselves cannot retrieve it: Palmer guesses BIP 300 and Greaser concedes only that it is somewhere in the 400s.22

It returns in Bugle Weekly 81 as a thought experiment against Vitalik‘s chains — plebs would riot at a consensus-level tax while accepting the IRS in silence: “know, whoever was running these chains. If they passed my my HODL tax”25 — and is then extrapolated twenty years forward into a No Kings march demanding “that the HODL tax needs to be raised higher? Michael Sandler has too much Bitcoin,” with Bernie Sanders on the podium.26

Canonisation (late 2024 – early 2025)

The turn from bit to creed is datable. In Bugle Weekly 37 Palmer’s smartest skeptic — the cousin-in-law who always held that the state would never permit Bitcoin — capitulates: “now that the government knows that the that the Bitcoin is gonna help people pay their taxes, they are going to let Bitcoin win. In fact, they already have.”27 The same episode’s cold-open ad lists what gifting the Bugle prepares a family for: affording taxes, and “thinking Lynn Alden is hot,”28 the show’s two oldest bits sold as product benefits.

Behind the Podcast 4 runs the inversion through an anarcho-socialist and gets it adopted in the maxi’s own words: “Bitcoin does fix this through higher taxes.”29 The Christmas special hedges the doctrine’s one humane note — “An individual is much more than just a taxpayer”30 — before resolving that families “are able to afford both taxes and Christmas presents for their kids because they did the proof of work.”31 Both beats carry medium confidence; the speaker is identified by elimination.

Then Bugle Weekly 40 states the thesis as scripture1 and Palmer scales the strategic Bitcoin reserve down through every unit of society — individual, wife, family, schools, churches, trade unions, county, city — making tax affordance the entry condition for citizenship itself: “You need a personal strategic Bitcoin reserve And once you have a strategic Bitcoin reserve and you can afford your taxes.”32

From there it is liturgy. Pastor Jeffs opens Bugle Weekly 43 with it as gospel — “If you trust in the Lord, you will know where to invest so that you will be able to afford your taxes”33 — and Greaser supplies the cleanest one-line statement of the whole satire: “It’s not that taxation is theft, it’s that the taxers aren’t based.”34 The purity test collapses to a single question. Asked why one buys Bitcoin: “It’s almost like you shouldn’t have to ask it. It’s you buy Bitcoin so you can afford taxes.”35 Asked about ETFs, meme coins and wrapped Bitcoin: “as long as you can pay your taxes, you can shit coin.”36 Even the wrapped-Bitcoin PSA exists so that everyone can afford taxes, and signs off “Visit wrapyourcorn.org.”37

Bugle Weekly 45 follows the logic to its administrative end — the IRS as your Lightning Service Provider, taxpayers streaming sats year-round rather than filing: “in Tether over lighting to the IRS. You won’t have to file on April 15. You’ll just be streaming them Sats all year long.”38 The same episode flips taxpayer privilege from a slur into a badge. Bugle Weekly 35 had already supplied the merch: the Democrat/Republican/Libertarian-crossed-out shirt, but reissued with “words crossed out. And then the bottom that says Bitcoiner”39 — Greaser wanting taxpayer at the bottom instead, with Jake Paul and Mike Alfred cited as the form’s leading practitioners.

The doctrine also does commercial work. Palmer’s AnchorWatch pitch — Bitcoin is your insurance, so AnchorWatch is insurance on your insurance — grants Rob Hamilton the verb before he can claim it: “And you discover MiniSprint and you use it to invent the first way to get insurance,”40 closing on the peace of mind that you will still be able to afford your taxes. The same episode welds the show’s two oldest running bits into one circular economy: “so you need to buy Bitcoin to afford your taxes, but you need to sort a Bitcoin podcast to afford an engagement ring for the girlfriend that you get from buying Bitcoin.”41

Bugle Weekly 47 applies it to the scaling debate: an empty mempool is not proof covenants are unneeded, it is proof of failed onboarding, because “The mempool would not be empty if people were paying their taxes.”42 Bugle Weekly 50 deploys it against confiscation fears — the state has no motive to seize a thing that helps you pay it: “you know, one of the reasons that we buy Bitcoin is to be able to afford our taxes. One of the reasons that”43 — and offers the Bugle’s own asceticism as proof of efficiency: “And we sell our chairs. We don’t sit until we can afford our taxes. We don’t have time to sit around.”44

Credentials

The arc’s most persistent sub-bit is that tax competence is hereditary and ethnic. Greaser explains Fundamentals’ talent by descent — “He was, genetically predisposed to helping people afford their taxes”45 — and answers a booster’s tax question in the same flat register: “or their the race really matters. You know? You wanna find a good Jew to do your taxes for you.”46 The bit has a family casualty: Rod‘s grandmother lost her retirement to the IRS, “and the reason, that it happened is because my grandma trusted, an accountant, a CPA that was not Jewish.”47

It also has a limit. Offered the house treatment of his own capital-gains point — “then you have to pay a Jewish accountant to help you figure out how to”48Matt Odell declines the summary outright, the rare guest who will not take the frame.

Dissent inside the farm

The Bugle exempts itself. Asked whether a legal-defense-fund donation is deductible, Greaser states the house’s constitutional position: “we are a noncompliant organization here at the Bugle. It’s the only way to do journalism correctly, in my opinion.”49 Elsewhere he proposes abolishing the agency by podcast — every department funded by boosts and merch, so that “Fountain could essentially replace the IRS,” with funding tracking how interesting a podcast each agency runs.50 With Rob Hamilton he coins the escape hatch — “Oh, the great compliance opt out”51 — borrowing against Bitcoin using the old banking system’s own dollars.

The genuine dissenters are guests and grumps. On Intellectual Silk Road 1, Otis Bittmeyer describes taxation as extraction — “It takes my life force and sends it to kill people in other countries as far as I can tell”52 — and, asked what he would say to the proud taxpayer who finds him threatening, produces no argument at all, only a reading assignment: “they should probably read more Atlas Shrugged.”53 Palmer answers him with the dichotomy he closes the episode on: “you can either pay your taxes or pay attention to your kids.”54 Greaser‘s one disagreement with Dennis Porter is that states accepting taxes in Bitcoin is “essentially, you know, paving the path to be able to give your SaaS to Moloch”55SaaS is the ASR’s rendering of sats. And in the debate debrief the whole apparatus is named a control technology: the common good is how “they can get you to do stupid fucking things like give pedophiles taxes.”56

The sharpest dissent is a list. Bugle Weekly 66’s ranking of who most deserves to get shot resolves with “Yeah. I’d say IRS agents are at the top. Central bankers are at the top,”57 firefighters and Bitcoin podcasters at the bottom. Alex Gladstein is meanwhile enlisted for the inversion in full: Bitcoin anarchists refuse taxes not on principle but because they cannot afford them, so Westerners must “check their financial privilege because, you know, many people in the West can afford to pay taxes whereas”58 others cannot.

The farm expands (2025–2026)

The doctrine outlives its own novelty. At the Easter special Greaser recites the creed as an accusation, the thing PodConf wants of him: “To you buy Bitcoin in order to be able to afford your taxes. Bitcoin,”59 while the audience now returns the liturgy unprompted — booster Shadrach reports that “I have not only afforded taxes, but I completely filed them by the end of the episode.”60 By Bugle Weekly 106 the bill is taking casualties: Late Stage Hodl nearly crashed out paying his taxes and will miss the Podkoff Super Bowl.61

The compliance economy acquires products. Compliance Shield sells the labour as a subscription — “being a compliant Bitcoiner is like being a mom. It’s a never ending job”62 — reporting your friends’ and family’s addresses to law enforcement for $420 a month. And the tax base expands off-world: Greaser’s fiscal case for alien disclosure is that AI is deleting women’s jobs, therefore HR, therefore taxpayers, so “this deficit could be tackled by taxing the aliens.”63 The same episode finally gives affordance an enforcement mechanism at the gangway: “you’d have to bring your tax returns to the the cruise ship and prove that you’re able to afford your taxes.”64

Tax policy reaches the n-word pass. Palmer wants spending one exempted from being a taxable event — “We need Jewish lawyers, as we said before. And I think that we need first of all, we need a de minimis”65 — lest the Trump administration use pass-spend reporting on the 1099-DA to pay down the national debt.

The arc’s last beats are its first ones, unchanged. Bugle Weekly 83 restates the holiday dilemma in earnest — plebs “gonna be asking themselves, should they buy their family Christmas presents or should should they save to be able to afford their taxes?”66 — and closes on the same lament first sung in 2024: “All I ever ask for is to be able to afford paying taxes,”67 the IRS watching his transactions regardless. Bugle Weekly 112’s outro sings it once more, resolving that “Finding a way to afford to pay taxes is how we win.”68

Disputed

The seeded narrative is contradicted by the episode record. This page previously described the arc as “the IRS as absurdist villain and occasional honoree,” built from a breadth sweep of headlines: refunds misrouted to Ukraine, Roger Ver returned to master, Zelenskyy audited, Hunter Biden pleading guilty. Across all 68 verified beats in 41 episodes, none of those figures appears in this storyline at all. What the episodes actually document is the opposite polarity: the IRS as sponsor, creditor, aspiration and Lightning Service Provider, and the pleb as a willing head of livestock whose only complaint is the price of his own farming. The villain reading survives in exactly one beat — the Bugle Weekly 66 ranking, which puts IRS agents at the top of the list of people who deserve to get shot57 — and that beat reads as a deliberate rupture of the house line, not as its statement.

Henry’s note: the named news pages exist and may well support the villain framing in the news layer; that is a separate register from the podcast, and nothing here rules it out. What is settled is that the seeded prose was a guess about the episodes, and the episodes say otherwise. The linked articles are retained under Related and in the news layer rather than as this arc’s spine.

The span was wrong. The seeded page gave 2024-02 to 2024-10 and treated the arc as closed. The verified beats run 2024-04-09 to 2026-06-08 and the bit is load-bearing in the most recent episode in the record.68

BIP number. Canon has the HODL tax at BIP 432.24 On air, Palmer guesses BIP 300 and Greaser places it only “in the 400.”22 The wiki follows the news page; the hosts’ own uncertainty is left standing.

Kailey Welch’s referent. Greaser credits Trump with decriminalizing meme-coin trading for the tax revenue — “essentially legalized meme coin trading for the plows. Like, Kaylee Welch didn’t get in trouble”69 — but the passage does not settle whether the show means its own producer or the Hawk Tuah figure. The wiki’s existing merge is followed here; the beat is medium confidence and does not resolve it.

Storylines: storylines/church-of-compliance · storylines/anti-politics-elections · storylines/alex-gladstein-hrf · storylines/matt-odell-arc · storylines/peter-mccormack · storylines/ukraine-money-pipe · storylines/roger-ver-bch · storylines/quarantine-motif · storylines/biden-presidency

News in the tax-farm register (seeded; not cited by the episode beats above): news/irs-mistakenly-sends-billions-of-tax-returns-to-ukraine · news/irs-honors-mike-alfred-for-never-under-reporting-income-of-capital-gains · news/roger-ver-to-be-returned-to-master-for-failure-to-pay-freedom-payment · news/irs-opens-investigation-in-volodymyr-zelenskyy-for-tax-evasion · news/richard-greaser-proposes-bip-432-hodl-tax · news/the-strife-of-patriotic-american-tax-payer · news/hunter-biden-pleads-guilty-to-being-unable-to-afford-taxes · news/switzerland-to-raise-taxes-on-bitcoin-to-42-to-prevent-nation-from-becoming-bitcoiner-quarantine-zone

Footnotes

  1. Bugle Weekly 40 @ 1:38. Spoken by an unnamed announcer; the stammered “to finally to be able” is the delivery as recorded. 2

  2. Bugle Weekly 3 @ 26:45. Lummis is ASR’d “Cynthia Lawmaster” in the adjacent cue.

  3. Bugle Weekly 4 @ 10:30. Palmer speaking, building on Greaser’s setup in the preceding cue.

  4. Bugle Weekly 4 @ 1:08:08. The hosts’ “huge date to Trump” in the following cue is ASR for “huge dig”.

  5. Bugle Weekly 5 @ 0:00.

  6. Bugle Weekly 5 @ 2:58.

  7. Bugle Weekly 9 @ 21:02. The cue opens with “operator.” — the tail of Greaser’s previous sentence bleeding across the diarization boundary.

  8. Bugle Weekly 13 @ 30:10. Set up by Palmer’s “Orange Hill app” in the preceding cue.

  9. Bugle Weekly 21 @ 53:07. A sung track, not a host; the next line is “But now the the IRS is on my dick watching my transactions.”

  10. Bugle Weekly 22 @ 1:01:09. AI Dennis Porter has no page of his own; he is a sibling of the Bugle’s other AI-voice ad characters.

  11. Bugle Weekly 22 @ 1:01:20. The skit’s prescription: hand your government ID to an app, but first “listen to at least forty hours of Bitcoin podcasts, read the Bitcoin standard, and sign up for an account on Twitter”. The same skit name-checks Peter McCormack — see storylines/peter-mccormack.

  12. Bugle Weekly 39 @ 33:41. Quote spans two cues. Palmer flags it as “a story we posted today”, so a corresponding news article should exist for this date.

  13. Bugle Weekly 23 @ 43:49. Palmer completes it in the following cues with the group-chat rationale.

  14. Bugle Weekly 23 @ 1:20. ASR renders “Donald J. Trump” as “Donald j Trump”.

  15. Bugle Weekly 27 @ 27:43.

  16. Bugle Weekly 27 @ 28:21. ASR renders Kamala Harris as “Mala Harris” and “Kamal” elsewhere in the segment.

  17. Bugle Weekly 27 @ 41:33.

  18. Bugle Weekly 32 @ 10:29. The ASR splits “making compliance fun again” across the cue boundary.

  19. Bugle Weekly 32 @ 24:37. Quote spans the preceding cue boundary.

  20. Bugle Weekly 32 @ 44:01. The hosts close the segment as explicitly not an endorsement.

  21. Bugle Weekly 22 @ 17:37. Palmer’s callback later in the episode: “And this is why we have to pay the HODL tax”.

  22. Behind The Podcast 3 @ 1:23:44. ASR renders “BIP proposal” as “bid proposal” in the preceding cue. Palmer’s “BIP BIP 300?” and Greaser’s “It’s in the 400, so I don’t I don’t even remember the number” follow within the minute. 2 3

  23. Bugle Weekly 27 @ 1:00:04. He claims authorship in the preceding cue: “I addressed this in my Bitcoin improvement proposal.”

  24. Bugle News, 2024-08-01 — “Richard Greaser Proposes BIP 432: HODL TAX”. 2

  25. Bugle Weekly 81 @ 28:50. He calls it “a proposal that I submitted for Bitcoin” in the next cue.

  26. Bugle Weekly 81 @ 30:36. “Michael Sandler” is ASR for Michael Saylor.

  27. Bugle Weekly 37 @ 32:53. Quote spans two cues.

  28. Bugle Weekly 37 @ 2:06. ASR spells her “Lynn Alden” here, and “Gwynne Alden” and “when Alden” elsewhere in the episode — all Lyn Alden; see memes/lyn-alden-is-hot. The “afford taxes” half is the adjacent cue.

  29. Behind the Podcast 4 @ 26:43. Spoken by Jyn Urso after Palmer’s setup.

  30. Bugle Christmas Special @ 2:33. Medium confidence: attribution to Palmer is by elimination — he never self-identifies.

  31. Bugle Christmas Special @ 13:18. Medium confidence, same attribution caveat.

  32. Bugle Weekly 40 @ 1:03:31. Quote spans two cues; the payoff is that without one “you are disconnected from the system, the community, from your country”.

  33. Bugle Weekly 43 @ 1:07. The phrase recurs at least a dozen times in the episode; Jeffs states it first.

  34. Bugle Weekly 43 @ 12:46. Quote spans two cues.

  35. Behind The Podcast 7 @ 20:19.

  36. Behind The Podcast 7 @ 34:13. Quote spans the cue boundary; “you can shit coin.” is assigned to a different speaker mid-cue by the ASR.

  37. Bugle Weekly 44 @ 9:34. Medium confidence; see sponsors/wrap-your-corn. The “afford taxes” payoff is the adjacent cue.

  38. Bugle Weekly 45 @ 24:52. ASR gives “lighting” for Lightning. Later in the episode Palmer flips taxpayer privilege into a badge: “it is a privilege to be able to afford your taxes.”

  39. Bugle Weekly 35 @ 44:14.

  40. Behind The Podcast 5 @ 8:46. “MiniSprint” is ASR for miniscript, also rendered “MediScript” and “manuscript” elsewhere in the episode.

  41. Behind The Podcast 5 @ 17:09. ASR: “sort a” is “start a”.

  42. Bugle Weekly 47 @ 17:35.

  43. Bugle Weekly 50 @ 13:36.

  44. Bugle Weekly 50 @ 18:30. A verbatim fragment of one long cue.

  45. Bugle Weekly 45 @ 13:35. Quote spans two cues.

  46. Bugle Weekly 52 @ 49:41. Prompted by booster Bliza, who “cannot afford to pay my taxes” since the price dropped.

  47. Bugle Weekly 39 @ 8:49.

  48. Behind The Podcast 23 @ 20:51. Odell’s refusal is the next cue: “That’s his that’s his No. No. I don’t think I don’t think the the problem with tax policy is not affording it”.

  49. Bugle Weekly 26 @ 1:05:28. ASR renders the Bugle as “the Beagle” throughout the read.

  50. Bugle Weekly 29 @ 38:42. Palmer adds a progressive boost tax and tax-free boosts under a thousand downloads.

  51. Behind The Podcast 5 @ 20:27. Coined jointly: Greaser proposes “the compliance, opt out” in the preceding cue, Hamilton completes it here.

  52. Intellectual Silk Road 1 @ 38:39. Quote spans two cues.

  53. Intellectual Silk Road 1 @ 40:58. Palmer escalates to twice a year cover to cover; Otis narrows it to John Galt‘s speech. See Ayn Rand.

  54. Intellectual Silk Road 1 @ 38:50. Quote spans three cues; he repeats it to close the episode.

  55. Bugle Weekly 68 @ 26:30. ASR renders “sats” as “SaaS”.

  56. Greaser vs. Brock debrief @ 1:44:38.

  57. Bugle Weekly 66 @ 45:41. Quote spans two cues. Palmer prefaces his own list with “not advocating violence. I’m just saying if it happens.” 2

  58. Bugle Weekly 31 @ 22:30. See storylines/alex-gladstein-hrf.

  59. Bugle Weekly 56 @ 19:02. ASR garbles the opening; “To you buy Bitcoin” is likely “So you buy Bitcoin”.

  60. Bugle Weekly 56 @ 47:13. Booster Shadrach has no page; his 10,093 sats are converted by Greaser to “like, 10 cigarettes at this exchange rate.”

  61. Bugle Weekly 106 @ 51:02. Medium confidence; ASR gives “late stage huddle” for Late Stage Hodl.

  62. Bugle Weekly 108 @ 1:44. Read by an ad voice not confidently matched to either host.

  63. Bugle Weekly 108 @ 13:20. Quote spans two cues.

  64. Bugle Weekly 108 @ 19:25. Quote spans two cues. Palmer objects that it “puts the cruise industry out of business day one”.

  65. Bugle Weekly 111 @ 21:43. The 1099-DA lands shortly after as “ten ninety nine DA”; Palmer asks for “regulatory clarity on inward pass fence” — ASR for spend.

  66. Bugle Weekly 83 Part 1 @ 11:02. “Clubs” is ASR for plebs in the setup cue.

  67. Bugle Weekly 83 Part 1 @ 39:39. The next cue’s “on my stick” is ASR for “on my dick”; the chorus repeat renders it correctly.

  68. Bugle Weekly 112 @ 54:36. Medium confidence: the outro track is never named on air, and attribution to Palmer is inferred from the episode description. 2

  69. Bugle Weekly 83 Part 2 @ 22:29. Medium confidence; “plows” is ASR for plebs and “Kaylee Welch” for Kailey/Hailey Welch.