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"We keep the tote bag out of stock because reordering it would require a spreadsheet," Leo admits during a recent episode. "And I am not doing a spreadsheet for a tote bag. That is not the dweeb way."

In the sprawling, algorithm-choked landscape of modern content creation, it takes a peculiar kind of bravery to be boring. Or, more accurately, to be unapologetically, gloriously dweeby . Enter The Daily Dweebs TV —a low-fidelity, high-wattage internet series that has quietly amassed a fiercely loyal following by doing what most shows are terrified of: celebrating the mundane.

By Alex M. Thompson April 14, 2026

"We weren't trying to be creators," Mars explains in a rare email interview, conducted over three days because she kept forgetting to hit send. "We were trying to be annoying to our mothers. My mom loves hearing me complain about the price of avocados. It turns out, so do 40,000 other people."

One viral thread accused the hosts of "weaponized mediocrity," arguing that the show celebrates low ambition. The accusation stung enough that the trio addressed it on air—for 45 seconds. "We’re not anti-ambition," Sam said, shrugging. "We’re just pro-nap."

It is, by any conventional metric, absurdly dull.