The virulently racist Stone Choir has announced that they’ve shuttered their podcast and won’t be releasing any more new episodes, explaining that “Stone Choir’s 107 episode canon is now closed.”
The Stone Choir was the brainchild of Corey Maher and Ryan Ryan Dumperth, the latter known as Trebelewo.
We’ve covered Mahler in the past, who is known for rage-baiting his followers with pointed pro-Hitler posts, claiming Black folks are un-American pigs and that marrying them is tantamount to ‘murder. Case in point:


We’ve also covered Dumperth after a trove of old messages was unearthed online, comprisng of fiilthy, violent and sexual messages.


”Treblewoe’ broke news of their closed canon on X:

He also shared in an audio message:
“Our departure has nothing to do with personal circumstances. It became clear to me and I talked to Corey and we agreed that what we had set out to do with Stone Choir from the beginning for years before we even began doing this, when we had talked about it.
We have effectively accomplished those goals. And one of our explicit non-goals was to be content producers that sit here every week and talk in your ear to rattle off whatever the latest thing is and give you our hot takes. Despite appearances to some, that is not what we intended. And I don’t think it’s ever what we did. I think that the reason that the library we have produced has stood the test of time for the past three years.”
Describing the show as “a library that people would refer back to in the future” and concerned that every episode would “stand the test of time,” they explain that “there’s really a finite set of things about which you can say that there’s always stuff to talk about,” and that the library they created addresses the vast majority of issues that have existed and will likely exist in the future.
So I say this will probably be the last episode, because we’re not shutting anything down. My microphone is going to stay where it is. The feed is going to say where it is and websites going to stay up. Nothing’s going to change except that we don’t plan on releasing another episode simply because we don’t believe that there’s anything else that’s going to come up in the future that would rise to the level of, we need to expand the library.
It’s possible there may be something that we have not foreseen in the future. I don’t think there are any subjects that are obvious today. If we thought of anything that could have been addressed, we would keep going to address it. We’ve done that. I give a 0.05 % chance that there’s some unforeseen circumstance that would both require our input and we would be around to possibly say anything. If that happens, then we will pop back up.
The two conclude by comparing the death of their podcast to the death of Christ, with Mahler arguing that while Jesus’ enemies think they won when he died, it was not to be:
Now, in the immediate aftermath of this episode’s release, undoubtedly many of you already know and as Woe commented on in his remarks, the enemies, the opponents, will believe that they’ve won some sort of grand victory. But of course, some of the demons believe the same thing at Calvary. And they haven’t won. They’ve suffered a fatal wound and they don’t know it yet.
Mahler noted that while the show was ending, he had no plans to cease being active on social media.










