The Crazy Town cohosts Asher, Rob, and Jason are a trio striving for a more sustainable and fairer planet. They'll do it no matter what bizarre realities and frustrations they uncover. They're also longtime directors and affiliates of Post Carbon Institute. PCI is a California-based organization with the same goals. That experience makes them familiar with the battle and daunting tasks ahead. But it informs their approach to podcasting. Their humor keeps listeners sane as the sometimes-grim, sometimes-hopeful discussion unfolds.
Crazy Town cohost Asher Miller is PCI's executive director. Cohost Dr. Jason Bradford wrote The Future is Rural: Food System Adaptations to the Great Simplification. Cohost Rob Dietz is author of Enough Is Enough, a book on sustainable economics.
Podcast seasons go by theme and include book reviews, interviews, and social critiques. For example, Crazy Town explores what the hosts call Phalse Prophets in Season 5. Phalse Prophets are the leaders of "Crazy Town." Those are people who hold others' heads in the sand as the world suffers. For a much longer explanation, the podcast links to a white paper. In it, cohost Jason examines the taxonomy of Phalse Prophets as if they were a species.
One episode explores former US President Bill Clinton's role as a Phalse Prophet. The hosts claim that he converted the Democratic Party. They say he turned them into a group of "less loathsome neoliberals." They back up that claim with convincing examples and analysis.
Crazy Town's book reviews, social critiques, and interviews are thorough and often multi-parted. Cohost Asher Miller has interviewed renowned linguist and social critic Noam Chomsky twice. Miller and Chomsky explore the faulty reign of neoliberalism, or "class war" outcomes, as Chomsky calls them.
Another Crazy Town interview brings on author and human rights activist Danielle Celermajer. Miller also spoke with author and documentarian Douglas Rushkoff. Conservationist and ocean explorer Sylvia Earle is also featured. The podcast's weekly episodes run between 30 minutes to an hour plus.
Episodes