H3 Soundbites 〈AUTHENTIC — METHOD〉
The guest’s face went slack. Hila snorted. The entire crew burst into hysterical, gasping laughter. Even Ethan, mid-insult, lost his train of thought and just pointed at the ceiling, tears streaming down his face.
The crew behind the cameras lost it. Zach, the other soundbite lord, choked on his Red Bull. Dan, the producer, pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed. Ethan’s rage melted into a grin. The tension shattered.
The soundbites were more than jokes. They were a language. When Ethan began a long-winded, rambling apology for something trivial, Ian would press “I’m sorry… I’m SO sorry,” a clip of a tearful YouTuber, and the whole room would laugh, letting Ethan off the hook. When a guest said something surprisingly profound, the ethereal choir of “Ayyy… he’s a legend” would echo through the speakers. h3 soundbites
The room froze. It was a low blow, and it was true enough to sting.
“Thank you, Ian,” Ethan said, pointing at the glass booth. “That’s exactly how I feel.” The guest’s face went slack
Tonight’s episode was a minefield. Ethan Klein was already pacing behind the desk, rubbing his hands together with a manic glint in his eye. He had just read a tweet from a YouTuber he’d never met, and it had awakened something primal.
“Ignore him? He called our Teddy Fresh ‘overpriced garbage.’ Do you know how much organic cotton goes into a single hoodie?” Ethan’s face was turning a shade of pink that matched the set’s lighting. “It’s not garbage. It’s… it’s fashion . You know what he is? He’s a little scrawny boy .” Even Ethan, mid-insult, lost his train of thought
The guest left shortly after, defeated not by logic, but by the chaotic, beautiful symphony of the H3 soundboard. And in the control room, Ian took a sip of his cold coffee, pressed the “Papa Bless” button one last time for the road, and let the tiny, digitized voice of a dead meme echo into the night.
A single, loud, wet FART noise—the legendary “Sonic the Hedgehog” fart from a malfunctioning toy years ago—blasted through the studio speakers. It was so absurd, so perfectly inappropriate, that it didn’t just break the tension. It nuked it.
Hila, knitting a tiny sweater for one of their dogs, didn’t look up. “Just ignore him, Ethan.”
But tonight, a dark horse was in the studio. A former friend, a fallen co-host who had come on to “clear the air.” The air grew thick and cold. The guest started gaslighting, deflecting, rewriting history. Ethan’s smile faded. The crew went silent. The soundbite board, usually a source of chaos and joy, felt like a weapon cache.