Oct. 3, 2025

(no music) (10 hours) #1453 Let me bore you to sleep

(no music) (10 hours) #1453 Let me bore you to sleep

https://www.jasonnewland.com/ Let Me Bore You to Sleep (#1453, October 3rd, 2025) is a long, rambling, intentionally drowsy podcast hosted by Jason Newland. It runs about 1 hour and 31 minutes. Jason wanders between everyday observations, playful...

https://www.jasonnewland.com/
Let Me Bore You to Sleep (#1453, October 3rd, 2025) 
is a long, rambling, intentionally drowsy podcast hosted by Jason Newland. It runs about 1 hour and 31 minutes. Jason wanders between everyday observations, playful tangents, and one central Q&A Friday question: “Have your new neighbors moved in?” Key Themes & Segments Opening (0:00 – 10:00)
  • Jason greets listeners, jokes about doing 1,452 previous episodes, and scratches an itch mid-intro.
  • He thanks listeners but struggles to sound sincere without laughing.
  • Mentions his podcast’s modest downloads, giving shoutouts to listeners in Minnesota and Oregon.
  • Explains Q&A Friday tradition—this week with only one submitted question.
Meta-Podcast Talk (10:00 – 20:00)
  • Jason discusses how few questions come in, suggests people could email him at his Hotmail address.
  • Talks about drinking water quietly to avoid editing out gulp sounds.
  • Reflects on how his voice and style come across—often rambling, repetitive, and humorous through mundane details.
Everyday Tangents (20:00 – 35:00)
  • Discusses rain, clouds, and whether birds can fly in storms.
  • Shares stories about childhood fear of jumping from trees and a friend’s odd “your feet are lower than your eyes” explanation.
  • Recounts how his dog Vinny once panicked at the sight of a hot-air balloon.
ChatGPT Experiment (35:00 – 55:00)
  • Jason describes feeding his TurboScribe transcripts into ChatGPT and being surprised that AI could mimic his rambling style.
  • Reads back AI-generated responses to the week’s question (“Have your new neighbors moved in?”), laughing at its ghost and bus analogies.
  • Reflects on the weirdness of having AI describe his “style” as repetitive, mundane, self-aware, and surreal.
Answering the Question – Neighbors (55:00 – 1:07:00)
  • Jason finally answers: yes, two new neighbors have moved in.
    • One downstairs (has deliveries but Jason hasn’t met them).
    • One opposite his flat (they’ve exchanged greetings twice).
  • Shares awkward encounters: offering help with moving furniture, feeling self-conscious about being seen waiting for deliveries, and worrying whether his neighbor believed him.
  • Reflects on how his building used to be very social but may become quieter as long-term residents move away.
Reflections on Change & Community (1:07:00 – 1:15:00)
  • Wonders if he’ll eventually become like “Uncle Sausages,” the older neighbor who kept to himself.
  • Notes the building feels less lively now compared to when he first moved in.
  • Thinks about how neighbors cycle in and out, and how one day he’ll be “the old man upstairs.”
Daily Life & Random Observations (1:15:00 – 1:26:00)
  • Talks about deliveries (razor, shampoo, Ready Brek cereal).
  • Complains about rising grocery prices.
  • Explains how Brits tell the time differently (quarter to/past instead of “fifteen after”).
  • Jokes about sundials giving inconsistent times at a garden centre.
Closing (1:26:00 – 1:31:00)
  • Plans a future episode about iconic British comedy characters (e.g., Patricia Routledge’s Hyacinth “Bouquet,” Alan Partridge, Frank Spencer).
  • Wraps up with a reminder for listeners to be kind to themselves and ends with his trademark gentle sign-off.
Overall Tone & Style
  • Conversational, meandering, and self-deprecating.
  • Mixes humor with personal anecdotes about neighbors, pets, childhood memories, and trivial daily life.
  • Frequently acknowledges the “pointlessness” of his rambling but leans into it, reinforcing the podcast’s sleepy, hypnotic effect.
✨ In short: This episode blends Jason’s classic sleepy rambling style with a surprisingly reflective discussion about neighbors, AI imitation of his voice, and how his living environment is slowly changing.