Move the Monument, Pass the Bun: Statues, History, and Why We Argue
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At midnight behind the courthouse, two comedians confess they brought rope, a dolly, and an arsenal of bad jokes to tackle one big question: should monuments to problematic figures stay on their pedestals or come down? The episode opens like a heist—only instead of bank vaults there are bronze men in capes and the tools are satire and stubbornness.
They walk you through the uneasy history carved into public squares: who erected these statues, why, and how those choices echo through generations. With sharp humor and vivid asides—a plan to replace tyrants with giant bunnies, clown wigs on confederate generals, and Yelp-style plaques—they invite listeners to feel the stakes: symbols that celebrate cruelty hurt communities, while museums can turn those same artifacts into lessons.
Equal parts provocation and consolation, this episode blends history, outrage, and levity into a clear call for conversation. By the end you’ll laugh, bristle, and maybe imagine a downtown lined with heroes you’ve never seen—then decide whether to bring rope, a petition, or a giant pasta noodle.