22 A Guy Who Needs a Lot of Crutches

1:23:42

Sean gets home from traveling and gets a package, Elias publishes a thing, and they talk about New Year's resolutions – as a concept, and some of their own hopes and ambitions going into the new year.

21 Five Candles and a Color Scheme

1:33:43

Sean and Elias talk about Christmas traditions growing up, getting strangely fixated on advent wreaths and potato salad. In the aftershow, they talk about time management systems.

20 Programming-Adjacent Language

1:37:55

In perhaps the quintessential Breadcrumbs episode, Sean and Elias talk about where they've come from and where they hope to go with a creative-yet-technical topic, in this case programming. Recorded in September.

19 My Eyes Were Rolling So Hard

1:05:49

Elias and Sean talk about the anti-technology/social media message in a couple of videos from a couple years ago and a much more recent article.

18 Muffins Are Awesome

1:16:29

Elias and Sean discuss: some photography follow-up, a little bit of movies and Netflix, the iPhone 7 Plus camera features, Elias's downgrade to an iPhone 6, changes for both of them in task management, and the artist formerly known as EJ going public.

17 On the Fancy Camera Train

1:12:51

Recorded in August, EJ and Sean talk photography—their gear, their backstories, and what they enjoy about it.

16 Graveyard of Social Media

1:12:56

Sean and EJ follow up on Tesla, talk about Adobe's new "Photoshop for voice", and then dive into a discussion of Twitter and other social networks.

15 A Side Projects Kind of Guy

49:20

Sean and EJ discuss: more about Úll, side projects—including some navel-gazing about the show—news related to their self-driving cars wager, VR, and an update on Sean's attempt to write a novel in a month.

14 Face Spoiled in Person

1:12:56

With EJ recording from Ireland, he and Sean discuss Úll, Apple's MacBook Pro event, doing work you enjoy, and more.

13 How Not to Throw Toys at Other People

2:04:22

Sean and EJ discuss education – some of their experiences, the merits of different methods, and whether people should have to learn things they'll never need again.