Funny, disorienting, and quietly devastating, Open Mike Eagle’s Neighborhood Gods Unlimited is a late-night transmission you don’t want to turn off. Open Mike Eagle has always been a master of turning the mess of modern life into something sly, funny, and unexpectedly moving. With Neighborhood Gods Unlimited, he delivers what feels like his most ambitious and personal work since Anime, Trauma and Divorce. The album plays like flipping channels on a busted cable box inside his head—equal parts sitcom laugh track, dream journal, and therapy session.
The concept of the album—a fictional TV station broadcasting fragments of Eagle’s psyche—could easily have come off as gimmicky, but he leans into it with just the right mix of humour and gravity. A goofy title card here, a half-sketched theme song there, and suddenly you’re deep in his world. When he raps about losing his phone on “ok but I’m the phone screen,” it’s not just a story about misplaced technology—it’s about losing pieces of yourself, your art, your memory.
Production-wise, Neighborhood Gods Unlimited is hazy and prismatic, stitched together by longtime collaborators like Kenny Segal. Beats warp and flutter like bad VHS tracking, giving Eagle’s conversational flow space to veer from absurdist one-liners to lines that sneak up and gut-punch you. By the end, Neighborhood Gods Unlimited doesn’t leave you with clarity, but with something better: recognition. This is what it feels like to live now—scrambling for meaning, laughing through the confusion, piecing yourself back together after loss. Open Mike Eagle has once again made an album that’s as much a mirror as it is a mixtape.























