De Drunk Podcast

De Drunk Podcast De Drunk Podcast is a Pidgin English Podcast discussing interesting topics in all areas of life just the way it is to help you discover untold facts.
(7)

De Drunk Podcast is a Pidgin English Podcast discussing interesting topics in all areas of life. We say it the way it is to help you discover untold facts.

05/10/2025

Why you do BBL?

29/09/2025

True Crime: Las Vegas, Nevada - The Dealer’s Hand

I was a dealer at the Oasis casino. I saw a man lose a million dollars in a single night of high-stakes poker. He didn’t scream or cry. He just smiled, a terrible, empty smile, and said, “The house always wins.” Then he placed his final bet. Not with chips. He laid his own left hand on the table, severed cleanly at the wrist, the stump not bleeding, but looking petrified, like wood.

Security dragged him away, but he left the hand. My boss told me to get rid of it. I put it in a trash bag, but as I carried it, I felt the fingers twitch. I dropped it in a dumpster in the alley, my heart hammering.

That was a week ago. Last night, I was dealing to a high roller. He had a cold aura. When he took his cards, I saw his left hand was missing, replaced by a prosthetic of dark, polished wood. He looked at me, and I knew him. It was the same man. He never spoke, just played with a chilling precision. On the final hand, he won everything. As he raked in the chips, he looked at me and said, “A deal’s a deal.” He stood to leave, then paused, leaning close. His wooden hand reached out and tapped the felt table. “I’ll be needing my original back. You have it.” He walked away. I just got a text from an unknown number. It’s a picture of the dumpster in the alley. The message reads: “You have until sundown.”

29/09/2025

True Crime: Denver, Colorado: The Thin Man

The air is thin here. So are the things that live in it. They call him the Thin Man. He’s not a man at all, but a thing that looks like a man stretched on a rack, seven feet tall and no wider than my arm. He wears an old, wide-brimmed hat that shadows a face with no features, just a smooth, pale plane.

He appears on lonely mountain roads at twilight, standing perfectly still. If you stop, if you even slow down, he’s suddenly right next to your car, his face pressed against the window, that blank expanse of skin staring in.

I was driving back from a ski trip, taking the pass. The sun was setting, and there he was. I slammed on the brakes. Mistake. He was at my window in an instant. I hit the gas, the tires screeching. I looked in my rearview mirror. He was gone. I thought I was safe. Then I heard a soft *thump-thump-thump* from the roof of my car. He was up there. I swerved, trying to throw him off, but the thumping continued, a slow, patient rhythm.

The thumping stopped. I dared to hope. Then, slowly, his head lowered into view, upside down, right in front of my windshield. That smooth, featureless face was inches from the glass. It began to press against it. I saw the safety glass start to splinter, a web of cracks forming around the pressure point. I’m driving blind now, swerving down the mountain, the sound of cracking glass and a high, thin whistling sound filling my ears. I don’t know if I’m going to crash or if the glass is going to break first. All I know is that the Thin Man wants in.

29/09/2025

True Crime :New York - The Cacophony

I’m a sound engineer. New York is a symphony of noise, but I’ve found a new frequency. It’s a sound just below the threshold of hearing, a vibration that makes your fillings ache. People exposed to it for too long go mad. They start screaming, but not in terror. In unison. A single, perfect, horrifying note.

It’s strongest in the subway tunnels. I went down there with my equipment, into a maintenance tunnel sealed for decades. I found the source. It wasn’t a machine. It was a growth. A pulsating, crystalline fungus covering the walls, vibrating in the light of my headlamp. It was beautiful and terrible. And it was singing.

As I recorded it, the vibration intensified. The note wormed its way into my skull. I felt an overwhelming urge to open my mouth and join the chorus, to add my voice to its terrible song. I fought it, scrambling back, the sound pursuing me like a physical thing.

I’m in my soundproof studio now. I have the recording. I shouldn’t listen to it, but I can’t help myself. I play it back, with the bass boosted, so I can feel it. The note is changing. It’s forming words in a language I’ve never heard, but somehow understand. It’s a name. It’s my name. The fungus knows I recorded it. It’s not just a sound anymore. It’s a voice. And it’s calling for me. The hum of my refrigerator, the drip of my faucet, the distant sirens… they’re all starting to sync up, to form the same, terrible, beckoning note. The Cacophony is tuning the city itself, and I am its final, missing instrument.

Question: The city's noise is forming into a voice that knows your name. It offers you a deal: become its vessel and be famous forever, or be silenced permanently. Which do you choose, and what is the first thing "you" do with your new, terrible voice?

08/05/2025

Doing that will not keep a woman either 🤣

06/05/2025

Free Verydarkman Now

04/05/2025

Na Mumu Dey Love

04/03/2025

Citizens of this country can travel to the U.S without Visa.

Make I tell you, I no dey believe people wey talk say marry single mama na bad thing, but my wife, Dara, she prove me wr...
04/03/2025

Make I tell you, I no dey believe people wey talk say marry single mama na bad thing, but my wife, Dara, she prove me wrong, chai! She get two pikin before we meet. On the day we dey do naming ceremony for our own pikin, her boyfriend come attend the party, imagine! Even some big men wey I respect well well for industry, dem dey sleep with my wife, I no dey lie, dem reach 21! When she finally comot for marriage, I remain with just 7,000 naira. Na so so actor Ijoba Lande talk about him marriage palava with him ex-wife, Dara.

Here are some fascinating and little-known facts about cats:Strange: Cats have scent glands on their faces: Cats have sc...
04/03/2025

Here are some fascinating and little-known facts about cats:

Strange: Cats have scent glands on their faces: Cats have scent glands located on either side of their nostrils, as well as on their lips, chin, and near their whiskers. These glands produce pheromones that help mark their territory.

Hideous: Cats can't taste sweetness: Unlike humans, cats lack the taste receptors for sweetness. This is because they are obligate carnivores, meaning they primarily feed on meat, and don't need to detect sweetness in their diet.

Scary: Cats have retractable claws: Cats have sharp, curved claws that they use for climbing, hunting, and self-defense. These claws are made of keratin, a tough protein, and are retractable, meaning they can be withdrawn into the paw for safekeeping.

Smart: Cats are highly territorial: Cats have a keen sense of spatial memory and can remember the layout of their territory. They use scent markings, vocalizations, and visual cues to maintain their territory and keep other cats away.

Amazing: Cats have excellent night vision: Cats have a reflective layer in the back of their eyes called the tapetum lucidum, which helps them see better in low light conditions. This layer reflects any light that enters the eye back onto the retina, allowing the cat to see more clearly in the dark.

Unbelievable: Cats can sleep for up to 16 hours a day: Cats are notorious for their love of sleep, and they spend a significant amount of time snoozing. On average, a healthy adult cat sleeps for 12-14 hours a day, but some cats can sleep for up to 16 hours in a 24-hour period.

I hope you find these facts as fascinating as I do!

24/12/2024

Mary Slessor's Mission in Nigeria

23/11/2024

Address

Lagos

Telephone

+2348108513394

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when De Drunk Podcast posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to De Drunk Podcast:

Share

Category