Two-Eighty, Pothole (The Daily Diss Ep. 14)

Episode 14 of The Daily Diss — a petty first-person diss track for everyone who hit one pothole on a normal Tuesday and walked away $280 lighter, forty-three minutes of roadside waiting deeper, and armed with a 311 confirmation that the city is, in fact, fully aware.

Two-Eighty, Pothole (The Daily Diss Ep. 14)
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The Daily Diss — Episode 14: Two-Eighty, Pothole

You weren't speeding. You weren't distracted. You were just driving down a road that the city has apparently decided to manage as a geological feature. Then the front-left tire found a crater — the kind of pothole that doesn't just flatten rubber but takes something from you spiritually. The THUD hits. The PSHHHH follows. You pull over, step out in calm disbelief, and stand there staring at a shredded sidewall like it owes you an apology. It doesn't. The pothole does. But the pothole doesn't have a phone number.
That's episode 14: forty minutes on the shoulder, one roadside tech who took one look and just said "yep," a shop quote that arrived slowly and apologetically at $280, and a 311 ticket response confirming the city is, in fact, aware. They have been aware. The track chops the actual sound of that blowout thud into the beat alongside the air-ratchet spin of the lift bay — the two sounds that bookend the whole catastrophe — and lets the narrator process his grief at 95 BPM.
The pothole was still there the following week. Category four. Under review.

Creative background

The pothole-destroys-tire scenario is one of the most reliably infuriating shared experiences in American driving culture — because every single element of it feels preventable, every bureaucratic response is technically correct while doing nothing, and the financial damage lands on the person who had absolutely no say in the road's condition. The $280 number stings not because it's enormous but because it's just large enough to ruin a Tuesday without qualifying as a real crisis. The 311 "we are aware" response is real municipal language that has become its own punchline: awareness with zero commitment to timeline.
This track is a purely original comedic composition. No external data sources, social-media posts, or real individuals were referenced. Every detail — the 43-minute wait, the 17-year-old spare, the category-four report — is an archetype built from a frustration everyone who drives on American roads already carries. The beat's two signature chops (blowout thud, air-ratchet whirr) are this episode's contribution to the sound-chop tradition the channel has run since episode one: one sound for the inciting incident, one for the aftermath.

[Verse 1] I was cruising on the boulevard, windows down, life is good Ain't a thought in my head, quarter-tank, all understood Then the asphalt said PSYCH and it sent me a gift A crater wide as my chest at a forty-five-degree cliff BOOM — felt it in my spine, felt it in my soul That's not a pothole, that's a geological hole Heard the THUD, heard the PSHHHH, pulled over to the right Stepped out looking calm but I was fighting for my life Stared at the sidewall — busted, blown, divorced from the rim That tire did nothing wrong, it was loyal, it was trim The pothole? Still out there. Sitting. Unbothered. Tax-free. My tire just died on a Tuesday and the city's actin' free
[Hook] Pothole, pothole — you absolute void (void, void) You ate my front-left tire and you seemed overjoyed (overjoyed) I filed a 311 — they said "we are aware" (aware, aware) AWARE? You been AWARE since the Bush administration era! (era!) Two-eighty at the shop, they lookin' at me smiling Forty-minute roadside wait, on the shoulder, just vibing I don't want your cone, I don't want your orange sign I want the twelve-inch gap that blew my tire filled in fine
[Verse 2] Roadside finally pulls up forty-three minutes deep I played seventeen rounds of snake and I almost fell asleep Dude gets out, kneels down, takes one look, just goes: "yep" Like the situation needed a formal death-cert step Shop puts it up on the lift, air-ratchet going brrrr Tech comes out with that face — I already heard the slur "Two hundred and eighty dollars" — said it kind of slow Like the number itself was embarrassed. It should know. I looked it up — that pothole's in the public works report Category four, submitted twice, "under review" in the court Meanwhile I'm out here rotating a spare that's seventeen years Cracks in the sidewall, prayer in my chest, faith in arrears And I passed it going home — still gaping, proud, and wide Big enough to raise a child inside No cone, no patch, no paint, no temporary fix Just the city out here serving pothole-as-the-mix
[Hook] Pothole, pothole — you absolute void (void, void) You ate my front-left tire and you seemed overjoyed (overjoyed) I filed a 311 — they said "we are aware" (aware, aware) AWARE? You been AWARE since the Bush administration era! (era!) Two-eighty at the shop, they lookin' at me smiling Forty-minute roadside wait, on the shoulder, just vibing I don't want your cone, I don't want your orange sign I want the twelve-inch gap that blew my tire filled in fine
[Outro] Category four, under review since forever They patched the road one street over — you figure that together My tire: deceased. My wallet: violated. The pothole: thriving, unbothered, highly-rated. ...We are aware. (we are aware) (we are aware) ...yeah.

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