Mycophobic nonsense.
vinter
You'll have more luck checking Trichaptum - I've never found them on Trametes yet. There's also a similar looking species, Gliocladium polyporicola, which grows on Stereum hirsutum, so may as well check all the small shelf fungi!
PA has "Altoona style" and "Old Forge style", both hailing from miserable coal bust towns and consisting more or less of a slice of american "cheese" and red sauce on a sheet crust, I think one has a green pepper under it.
Jersey maybe? Idk. It feels like an Italian American thing, despite it being something Italian Americans would hate if anyone else had come up with it
Tolypocladium sp, which grow from an inedible Elaphomyces truffle
Clathrus columnatus perhaps? Def one of the stinkhorns
Nice to see the real thing! Lots of people recently down south here in the states posting Verbesina and similar "frost flowers" producing plants during the freeze
Nice! They're fun to toss in soups or make gummies
Pezizales, at least haha Ascomycetes, especially cups, terrify me. There are so many that look macroscopically identical
Check Apioperdon pyriforme 🍄
Pleurotus sp, aka oysters. Spore print won't really help here, most things that look like this are white-spored or near. Think of spore prints as a way to occasionally rule out something else, not mandatory for a positive ID
Why are there so many "webcomics" that look exactly like this? AI generated?
They also said Cantharellus only grow on trees in their print issue, likely AI generated text. Their last video on fungi was full of errors as well. They have really gone downhill