The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz 'The Big Suey: The Frozen Olaf' Review
If you've ever wondered what happens when smart people with microphones spend 45 minutes dissecting a video of a robot Olaf having what looks like a mechanical seizure, welcome to The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz. In this episode of The Big Suey segment, the crew stumbles onto pure comedy gold—a malfunctioning Olaf animatronic that apparently was designed to traumatize children and entertain adults in equal measure. It's absurd, it's funny, and it's exactly the kind of chaotic bit that makes this show worth your time.
What Works Here
The episode's strength lies in the hosts' genuine confusion and fascination with this horrifying frozen snowman. Dan and the crew debate the precise mechanics of childhood trauma with the seriousness of philosophers. One moment they're discussing at what age a kid would actually be disturbed by Olaf's "instant paralysis" and "seizure-like" movements, the next they're marveling at the carrot nose falling off with what they describe as a horrifying clapping sound.
What makes it land is the specificity of their reactions. It's not just "that's weird"—it's the detailed breakdown: the robot movement that suddenly freezes, the eyes that lock in place, the bizarre fall to the ground. They're treating a malfunctioning Disney character like it's a genuine unsolved mystery. One host notes that Tony's 15-month-old daughter "wouldn't give a rat's ass about it," while another suggests Roy's daughter Claire would absolutely be traumatized if she's a Frozen fan. The logic is absurd, the hypotheticals are endlessly debatable, and that's exactly the point.
The group dynamic shines too—you get the sense these people genuinely riff off each other well. Chris is home with his kid, Roy and Tony and Mike have children of their own, and their varying perspectives on what counts as "traumatizing" create natural comedy. They're not manufacturing laughs; they're just honestly confused about a terrible robot.
The Ad Load
Let's be real: 11 ads in a 45-minute episode is a lot. That's 4.8 minutes of commercial time—roughly 11.4% of your show. The sponsors this time around are Microsoft 365 Copilot, Simpleend craft products, Xfinity Wi-Fi, Draft Kings (appearing twice, because of course they do), Zinn nicotine pouches, Emplus prescription medicine, Hulu, and Craft Mac and Cheese. It's a typical sports-podcast sponsor mix: workplace software, gambling, alcohol, nicotine, streaming, and comfort food.
The good news? PodSkip's on-device AI listens ahead and skips these automatically, so you get straight to the actual show.
Verdict
7.5 out of 10 — This is a solid episode that delivers exactly what you want from The Big Suey: absurd conversations, group chemistry, and genuine moments of "did we really just spend 15 minutes talking about that?" It's not a home run, but it's absolutely worth the listen if you like this crew.
FAQ
Is this episode worth listening to if I don't watch Frozen?
Absolutely. You don't need any Frozen knowledge—the comedy is entirely about how weird and disturbing the robot is, and how the hosts collectively lose it trying to quantify "trauma for kids." The episode works as pure absurdist comedy.
How bad is the ad load for The Dan Le Batard Show?
This episode has 11 ads across 45 minutes, which is on the high side. Most episodes hover around this range. With PodSkip, that 4.8 minutes of ads gets skipped automatically, giving you an ad-free version.
Can I listen to The Dan Le Batard Show without ads?
Yes—PodSkip runs free on-device AI that detects and skips ads automatically across thousands of podcasts. You get to the content you actually want to hear.
Ready to Skip Podcast Ads?
PodSkip uses AI to automatically detect and skip ads in any podcast. No subscriptions, no manual work.
Get PodSkip Free Forever →