Andrew Schulz and Akaash roast others for a living, but nuked their own sub when Akaash’s wife drama surfaced

The comedy world is buzzing after the FLAGRANT podcast hosts found themselves on the receiving end of the very treatment they’ve dished out for years—only this time, they didn’t take it quite as well as their targets.

Akaash Singh, co-host of the popular comedy podcast alongside Andrew Schulz, has become the subject of intense online scrutiny following viral content featuring his wife Jasleen’s attempts at building an influencer presence.

The situation escalated when old rival Myron Gaines from Fresh and Fit—a podcast the FLAGRANT crew had previously criticized for its controversial relationship advice—seized the opportunity to settle scores from a clash three years prior.

“Hey @AkaashSingh, shut the f**k up and NEVER talk s**t again. Focus on your RAN THROUGH thot wife!” Myron tweeted, reigniting tensions between the podcasting camps.

But it’s what happened next that has observers noting the irony. The FLAGRANT subreddit, once a freewheeling forum for fans to discuss and mock the show’s content and targets, underwent a dramatic purge of comments related to Akaash’s personal situation.

Fellow podcasters Aba and Preach highlighted the contradictory response during their own show. “When you go to their subreddit, they’ve actually scrubbed all the comments,” Aba noted, explaining how the cleanup delayed their preparation for discussing the topic. “I think it’s funny that the people who spend all this time cracking jokes about people and sh**ting on them and not apologizing for anything are actually censoring their own subreddit.”

The contrast wasn’t lost on anyone familiar with FLAGRANT’s approach. The podcast built its reputation on unflinching commentary about public figures, from high-profile celebrity relationships to controversial internet personalities.

Their philosophy has consistently been that public figures, especially those choosing to put their lives online, are fair game for comedy and criticism.

“If you’re gonna judge other people’s relationships and your partner is a public person, I think it’s completely fair game for people to judge you in return,” the podcasters noted, articulating what many see as a fundamental principle of internet discourse.

The controversy centers on content from Jasleen’s own podcasting and social media ventures, where she’s described herself as “a stay-at-home wife, but I don’t cook or clean because I don’t feel like it.”

Her content showcases a lifestyle funded by Akaash’s comedy career, operating under what she describes as a “his money’s our money and my money is my money” philosophy.

More eyebrow-raising material includes her repeated comments about another podcast couple, particularly praising the husband while campaigning for what she called a “couples’ orgy.” In one appearance, she stated: “This is the best husband I’ve ever seen. And I’m not even saying that hyperbolically. It’s a little annoying.”

The subreddit scrubbing has drawn particular criticism given FLAGRANT’s established brand.

Even Aba and Preach, who maintain their own often-controversial subreddit, acknowledged the precarious position this creates: “It’s funny because we do have a subreddit again and it’s gonna fire back on us if ever we delete a bunch of subreddits. But people on that subreddit were clowning us… I mean, it’s okay. Do your thing.”

The story continues to circulate, and in this age of screenshots and internet archives, scrubbing evidence often creates more problems than it solves.