They casually celebrate the run from the hallway after ding-dong ditching, brag about not having run that fast since high school, and joke about hitting 700 followers while telling chat not to promote it.
Very clip-friendly because it’s a complete joke with a fast payoff and a good ending line. The high-school run line adds a memorable punch.
They notice followers and gifts are going to Schlatt even though he’s off camera, and start joking that they’re doing all the work for him. It turns into a funny meta rant about shared chats and streamer visibility.
Strong streamer-meta clip with a clear joke and a relatable Twitch complaint. The 'we’re working for you' line is a good payoff.
A truth-or-dare question about doing things alone spirals into them talking about public bathroom habits, then Jules tells a disgusting story about a friend using a storage unit bucket and wiping with motorcycle rags. It’s gross, chaotic, and very on-brand for late-night IRL.
This is one of the more outrageous story moments in the transcript and has a strong gross-out reaction. It feels self-contained and memorable.
They stop a woman in the hallway, ask if she watches Twitch, introduce themselves with fake-serious streamer names, and somehow get her interested enough to follow them. It’s awkward, low-stakes, and very IRL-coded.
Great standalone social awkwardness moment with a strong buildup and payoff. The fake names and overexplaining their streaming setup make it entertaining.
The crew keeps asking around for Ty, gets the room number wrong, and realizes they’ve been wandering the hotel for nothing. The bit lands because they’re exhausted, lost, and still fully committed to the bit of acting like they know where they’re going.
Clear mini-story with a payoff: they think they found the room, then immediately realize they’re wrong. Strong IRL chaos and easy to clip standalone.
After finally getting shared chat working, they do the 20-squat dare together, count through the reps, and start dying halfway through. The bit ends with them out of breath and laughing at how bad it went.
Very clean physical-comedy clip with clear setup, action, and reaction. The exertion makes it visually strong and easy to watch without context.