Dispelling The Common Myths Of Feminism | Pearl Daily
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
157.25772
Summary
Brett Cooper announces her departure from The Daily Wire. Producer Reagan fills in again for Brett, who will be back on Monday. What does this mean for the future of the Daily Wire? Is this a sign of things to come?
Transcript
00:02:01.020
Welcome to another episode of Pearl Daily here on the Audacity Network.
00:02:04.980
So the first thing we're going to talk about today is what men really want for Christmas.
00:02:10.000
You know, I thought long and hard about the best thing that you guys can get your husbands.
00:02:27.660
So the first topic that we're going to talk about today is Brett Cooper leaving the Daily Wire.
00:02:33.380
So as you guys know, when women leave industries, we just have a tendency to never be able to leave without drama.
00:02:39.920
Now, you know, men, when they get fired, they have a tendency, remember, not all, not all, but they do have a tendency to leave and call it quits and just take the L when they get fired or when there's a disagreement at work.
00:02:53.800
But it just seems like in conservative media, we just have a tendency to make it a spectacle.
00:02:59.720
We saw Candace Owens get fired from the Daily Wire and she made it a whole entire show, completely dramatic.
00:03:06.900
And you guys know that there is incentives to do these type of things.
00:03:11.200
There is incentive to bring these, you know, contractual disagreements public and just make a spectacle out of it.
00:03:19.340
That is one of the downsides of dealing with, you know, the influencer type.
00:03:23.500
Now, initially, when Brett Cooper was let go or she left, I think that was her official stance.
00:03:31.280
I was really proud of her because she didn't make it a spectacle.
00:03:34.540
Now, there was a video talking about how that's going to go over the details of Brett Cooper leaving.
00:03:46.500
I am producer Reagan filling in again for Miss Brett Cooper.
00:03:54.380
Today, December 10th, will be my last day hosting the comment section and working for the Daily Wire.
00:03:58.500
While the rumors were true and just after a month of denying it, Brett Cooper announces she is leaving the Daily Wire.
00:04:04.540
There's a lot to unpack here from this inorganic scripted statement from Brett.
00:04:08.580
The confirmation of rumors about why she's leaving and if I think the Daily Wire is officially doomed.
00:04:14.280
As within a year, they've lost not one, but two of their top talents as Candace Owens' departure was just eight.
00:04:20.940
Now, I'd like to say, ladies, this is terrible marketing for hiring us.
00:04:26.440
When Candace Owens makes this a spectacle when she leaves, do you know what they're going to think about the next time when they hire another woman?
00:04:41.380
She hasn't really gone off the rails, but there's still a little bit of stuff that I just would have, I don't want to say preferred not to see.
00:04:50.840
I get something to talk about on my show, right?
00:04:53.600
There's no downside for me, but it's not great marketing for us.
00:04:59.480
But as for the rumors, I'm thinking they're true.
00:05:02.280
And it's not just that the Daily Wire is pushing out Brett Cooper.
00:05:05.540
It's actually that Brett Cooper is, A, under one of these contracts that has her basically tied to secrecy and silence.
00:05:13.400
Under NDA and can't say anything about it while they spin whatever narrative they want about it.
00:05:16.960
They are promoting her best friend, who was her maid of honor at her wedding.
00:05:21.580
They apparently, allegedly, gave her acting classes to help her imitate Brett's mannerisms.
00:05:26.720
And when I was talking to a girl with the family I was staying with before, she's like an 18-year-old chick that loves Brett Cooper.
00:05:33.660
She was like, yeah, the Reagan episodes are kind of weird.
00:05:38.460
So obviously, I talk car brand into a whole new stratosphere of woke confusion.
00:05:46.560
But before we get into today's episode, make sure you like this video.
00:05:49.300
Before we dive into this episode, though, make sure that you like this video.
00:05:51.780
If you have not already, if you have not already.
00:05:53.740
As I understand, two best friends are going to have similar mannerisms.
00:05:57.420
But you can't convince me this isn't done in time.
00:06:04.180
As this just looks like when all the same moves with a different color scheme.
00:06:07.920
And at one point in time, it worked as a first time.
00:06:10.400
Also, guys, if you want me to read your comment, go to the audacitynetwork.com.
00:06:21.880
And you get unlimited comments on the live stream, which I do read.
00:06:31.380
They wanted to see an episode that featured them together.
00:06:34.300
Speculating she will be a stand-in for when Brett gets pregnant.
00:06:37.640
But looking back on those top comments, I honestly wonder if those weren't planted by the Daily Wire themselves.
00:06:43.040
To try to astroturf a narrative of, Reagan is just as good as Brett.
00:06:50.100
But unlike sports teams that have star players come and go, I don't think people see the Daily Wire like the Dodgers or the Celtics.
00:06:57.440
I think YouTube stars are more seen like musicians on a record label.
00:07:01.320
Sure, the production team can swap out a singer and make an identical song.
00:07:05.060
Which is exactly what the Daily Wire is doing here.
00:07:07.640
But the fans developed these parasocial relationships with the individual, not the platform from which they discovered that.
00:07:17.100
So, the company spends millions of dollars making her famous, right?
00:07:31.020
And I know firsthand it's so much easier when you have a company, you know, booking guests for you, getting huge collabs that has all of this editing experience so you don't have to figure it out on your own.
00:07:46.880
Like, when I first started, I didn't know any of the equipment.
00:07:52.480
So, the challenge is, though, when you build these people up, they now have clout and they now have way more power than, like, a normal employee that you would train.
00:08:06.440
So, you know, if you owned a company and you spent three years training an employee, sure, they have more bargaining power, but they don't have star power.
00:08:14.720
So, that's something that's unique in the media industry is, you know, the talent is always aware of the leverage that they have, which Candace Owens used, right?
00:08:26.300
She could have left the Daily Wire and just made it a quiet thing, not made it super dramatic, just left.
00:08:38.040
I mean, as a, as someone that enjoys entertainment, I'm like, I'm enjoying this, but it doesn't look the best long-term for hiring us as late, as women, right?
00:08:54.220
As the fans began to notice Reagan replacing Brett more frequently, so recently, whenever Reagan recorded an episode for the comment section,
00:09:01.640
their comment section started to sour on Brett's absence, saying they only watch the show and the Daily Wire because of Brett Cooper,
00:09:09.300
and if she leaves the Daily Wire, so will their money.
00:09:12.360
And when Brett recorded her final episode, officially announcing her to, they'll follow her in whatever she does next, even a forming channel,
00:09:21.140
...take on a new direction, both personally and professionally.
00:09:23.660
...which was followed with an HR-sounding statement from the CEO.
00:09:26.920
We're sad to see Brett go, but we're excited to see her take the next step in her journey.
00:09:30.420
Brett's an amazing talent, both as a personality and as an actress.
00:09:34.720
It's been a pleasure to see her bring the comment section to life these last three years,
00:09:38.340
and her performance in the Pendragon cycle is sensational, and we wish her nothing but the best.
00:09:43.080
And I imagine every word of those statements were pre-scripted and lawyer approved,
00:09:47.380
as it really comes down to who had the final cut of this clip.
00:09:51.140
Because even if Brett wrote it herself, she recorded it knowing nothing other than the narrative that Daily Wire wanted
00:09:57.020
was going to get posted on the channel The Daily Wire owns,
00:10:01.020
which sadly was something Steven Crowder had discussed back in the beginning of 2023.
00:10:08.400
We need to build a bench here in this movement.
00:10:15.080
Effectively, full ownership of all your social media platforms, channels, and perpetuity.
00:10:21.900
Now, I actually know a couple people behind the scenes, right?
00:10:27.020
And I know someone that was going to potentially be cast in Brett Cooper's role, right?
00:10:34.140
So she was essentially going to be in her position.
00:10:39.720
You know, and Crowder, the way he views these contracts is predatory, right?
00:10:48.300
So she built up that channel, and now they will get to keep it and give it to her friend, Reagan.
00:10:56.460
I, one, think it's a bad strategy because I don't think the audience will necessarily move.
00:11:09.620
The second thing is, I don't think that's predatory because the woman that was going to be in Brett Cooper's place, I mean, she's sitting, streaming out of her room.
00:11:29.020
She could start her new channel and blow past anybody that never took that initial contract.
00:11:35.040
The rights to your content name, image, likeness.
00:11:45.140
This is ownership of you and everything that you do.
00:11:52.180
They can be wage slaves for a little bit, come over and make a salary and grow their brand.
00:12:00.440
They can, when their contract's up, they can still go out and they'll still be famous.
00:12:03.840
They can keep doing their show, so go do a show somewhere else.
00:12:11.100
This contract owns it in perpetuity, even after the contract.
00:12:24.380
I didn't view that as unfair because the benefits you get from working with a company that big...
00:12:31.380
I mean, just to get your name out there, I just see the difference in the two channels of the woman that almost got that job and the woman that got it.
00:12:39.580
And even though Brett's starting from zero, she's still getting 200,000 followers with no videos on the new channel.
00:12:55.260
I'm outraged to hear him say wage slaves, but I somewhat understand what he's saying here.
00:13:01.040
As I used that record label analogy earlier, because I truly believe social media influencers are the rock stars of Gen Z.
00:13:08.780
As kids no longer want to be musicians and professional athletes, they want to be TikTokers, Twitch streamers, or YouTubers.
00:13:16.300
So just like how record labels would sign unknown singers into predatory contracts to take the lion's share of the revenue,
00:13:23.020
before home studios and social media, musicians needed the infrastructure of a record label to attain stardom.
00:13:29.060
Which was basically the same thing that Daily Wire did for Brett Cooper, as she is a superstar right now,
00:13:35.460
but how quickly do people forget that she was essentially an industry plant?
00:13:39.680
It isn't necessarily a negative thing, but unlike most YouTubers starting off in their studio...
00:13:45.840
With 480p webcams talking into a headphone mic,
00:13:48.940
Brett started her channel doing collaborations with huge YouTubers,
00:13:52.020
with hundreds of thousands of dollars of professional video production,
00:13:55.840
and most importantly, mentorship from people at the top of her niche.
00:13:59.700
So even if you believe that Daily Wire is the villain in this scenario,
00:14:03.380
if you love Brett Cooper, you should still somewhat be appreciative for platforming her in the first place.
00:14:08.880
Because even if the Daily Wire sinks, Brett Cooper is the Justin Timberlake.
00:14:18.580
It appears the channel is starting to lose subscribers by the tens of thousands,
00:14:22.820
while Brett Cooper's new YouTube has over 100,000 subscribers before even uploading a single video.
00:14:29.180
Which is especially significant as the channel that she's leaving,
00:14:32.300
has every single video receiving well over 300,000 video views.
00:14:42.080
sometimes struggles to get even over 50,000 views.
00:14:45.180
Which should be alarming, as this one-man bootleg operation at Decoy Voice
00:14:55.280
The thing is, subscribers don't mean as much anymore,
00:15:04.440
So just because people are watching your shorts,
00:15:06.580
it doesn't mean they're watching your long shorts.
00:15:08.180
But if you look at the Daily Wire's other personality that left the network,
00:15:11.720
Candace Owens looks like she's at the top of the niche,
00:15:14.280
regularly receiving over a million views per video.
00:15:17.120
Now, you know what's interesting about Candace?
00:15:19.280
So, I've heard mixed things about what people think her career is going to be.
00:15:27.580
but I've heard this from two people that I would deem
00:15:29.900
really, like, credible, or two or three people.
00:15:32.640
So, one has the opinion that her career is taking off.
00:15:39.360
One has the opinion that nobody will take her seriously anymore,
00:15:43.920
because she's gone, she's alienated her audience too much.
00:15:54.560
and I don't have an opinion on it, but, like, the Palestine, Israel,
00:15:58.000
you know, there's a secret group running the government.
00:16:06.180
But, um, I've heard that that in the long term,
00:16:17.280
With her live stream seeing identical, if not better viewership,
00:16:21.220
which I think Brett Cooper will see similar success on her solo channel.
00:16:24.640
As even though the Daily Wire controlled Cooper's career during peak election season,
00:16:29.300
likely raking in millions of dollars from ad revenue and brand deals,
00:16:35.240
As I think most people would rather be in a mission that provides concise.
00:16:53.080
It says, Brett Cooper has unfollowed the Daily Wire,
00:17:05.780
It was reported that she was fired following a disagreement with the Daily Wire CEO,
00:17:19.080
There is no way that she does not know that people are going to be speculating now.
00:17:26.780
And if she didn't want the drama from this, she wouldn't have unfollowed.
00:17:32.380
It seems like small stuff, maybe, to the outside.
00:17:40.000
And I really don't recommend making this a big spectacle,
00:17:44.120
because people will not want to hire you in the future.
00:17:52.340
I would be, I could see I'd be pretty pissed, too, if my friend took my job, right?
00:17:59.880
But if I were her, I just wouldn't have played into this at all.
00:18:05.900
It'll be interesting to see what she does next.
00:18:09.120
Some people think she's going to, you know, get married and go off the internet.
00:18:17.880
So I'm going to, I want to check out the latest YouTube from her.
00:18:29.220
I want to see the comment section with the latest.
00:18:34.740
Okay, so it looks like the last video got 100,000 views.
00:18:43.000
If I was, if I was the Daily Wire, I would go live with Reagan.
00:18:48.560
And the reason I would go live is because right now, the, everyone views her as scripted.
00:19:01.360
And I don't think you're going to get that with pre-record.
00:19:04.280
I would switch to live for a little bit, or at least a couple shows,
00:19:08.060
because I think you're going to gain the trust of your audience.
00:19:35.380
Did they just Joe Biden, Brett, and give us Kamala?
00:19:42.620
Brett literally unfollowed this girl on Instagram, but she still wants to pretend like they treated Brett fairly.
00:19:51.740
So, I mean, I've posted dumber things online than, like, unfollowing someone that screwed me over.
00:19:57.600
But I just, long term, I really would recommend staying away from that.
00:20:08.020
The drama's going to help bring up her channel.
00:20:10.980
But, you know, people will be more skeptical the more you play into this.
00:20:19.780
You know, lucky for you, most people are going to give you the benefit of the doubt because you're a woman.
00:20:29.580
So, it's not too bad, but I don't, I wouldn't go.
00:20:43.460
The challenge that we have, though, with women in media is we just have a tendency, we can't just leave, right?
00:20:50.140
And there will always be a simp to tell us that we're right.
00:20:56.460
And as most of you know, I have been fighting on the front lines of the simp epidemic for years.
00:21:01.860
But I need to tell you about a quiet weapon being ratcheted up against men that is rarely talked about.
00:21:08.400
It's not just the relentless anti-masculinity propaganda and OnlyFans hoes causing the societal issues that we discuss on my show.
00:21:16.080
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00:21:28.960
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00:21:31.300
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00:21:35.280
That's five grams of plastic a week on average.
00:21:38.300
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00:21:47.220
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00:21:50.480
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00:22:49.300
So next on the agenda, you know, recently I saw a post from Xavier.
00:23:03.500
But I want to address this point because I've seen it circulating on Twitter.
00:23:12.160
And recently the pictures of the winner of Miss France have been circulating.
00:23:30.780
Now, I'd like to say I do not compete in beauty pageants.
00:23:34.520
I no way think that I can compete with them from a look.
00:23:39.960
But what I'm about to say is about the peak beauty in society.
00:24:01.620
I think most men, if you pull them, are going to say these are the two runner-ups or the,
00:24:11.900
So he said some of you legitimately just hate black women.
00:24:15.320
And I don't have time for this discourse today.
00:24:17.660
Now, he's trying to play this as a race thing, and I just vehemently disagree.
00:24:23.800
There are better looking black women that they could have put in this position,
00:24:31.940
What this is is what I call the Taylor Swift effect.
00:24:34.900
Now, you know, one of the guys that I know, he hates Taylor Swift.
00:24:44.720
And sometimes I'm thinking, like, what is the deal?
00:24:51.000
What, like, I mean, yeah, she's kind of annoying, but she's got some bops, okay?
00:24:57.020
And what I call this, the Taylor Swift effect, is average women getting significantly above average results.
00:25:07.480
So Taylor Swift is more famous than Michael Jackson, probably the Beatles, you know.
00:25:15.500
She is more famous than so many musicians that are more talented than her.
00:25:22.500
And what you have when that happens is you have an average woman that gets above average results,
00:25:29.020
because when companies start catering to women, we go into relatability and the female fantasy.
00:25:38.300
The female fantasy is dating men out of our league.
00:25:42.720
The female fantasy is waiting as long as possible to get married and still bagging an NFL superstar.
00:25:55.540
Like, would you guys, do you really fault Taylor Swift for doing that?
00:26:01.900
I mean, becoming a billionaire and then bagging an NFL superstar after dating a plethora of high-level men?
00:26:17.120
I'm saying incentive-wise, I can't really blame her.
00:26:33.380
Now, I want to, I want to, I use the Kevin Samuel scale, right?
00:26:40.780
I don't like to give sevens, but seven, eight, I would say is the prettiest girl in a small town.
00:26:47.480
Nine, ten is, they could just be paid to exist.
00:26:51.380
So, you know, one time, my whole team, the women that were backstage were like,
00:26:57.980
probably the most beautiful to make this a race thing.
00:27:02.200
This is, those two are too much hotter than the other two.
00:27:19.580
Now, again, I am not saying she's not beautiful.
00:27:30.880
We can assume some of them would rate her lower.
00:27:45.480
We all, like, that girl is, walks into a room, everybody notices her first.
00:27:50.220
This girl is, half the men think she's a six or lower.
00:28:23.120
Look, if you're watching this, you know, you can put your number in the chat.
00:28:30.960
He saves, he saves children on the weekend out of burning buildings, you know.
00:28:38.160
Really, it's just a millionaire, but doesn't, doesn't show off.
00:28:58.380
So, the, okay, so next I wanted to talk about, I made a PowerPoint.
00:29:06.300
And this PowerPoint slideshow, oh, wait, let me get rid of one of these.
00:29:14.260
I, I, I wanted to talk about the lies that we have a tendency to, um,
00:29:23.800
I'm going to have to delete this one too, the lies that we have a tendency to get.
00:29:29.980
So, I've been debating about feminism for a couple of years.
00:29:33.820
And one thing I think that we miss as ladies is we forget how privileged of a class we are.
00:29:39.960
We really are the most privileged class in all of history.
00:29:42.420
And sometimes when I learn about history, a lot of the stuff they used to do seem pretty hard.
00:29:54.780
I was watching some of the old videos and, you know, in order to make a chicken,
00:30:00.560
they had to go get a chicken, chop it, and then cook it on an actual fire.
00:30:08.740
But the air fryer I can do in like 50 things that I heard about was that women could not work.
00:30:18.940
And that's one, one thing that, and I would go on all these shows and they would just said,
00:30:23.760
women, I guess we had a gun to our head saying that we could not work.
00:30:32.440
And I wanted to see what our responsibilities would have been in the 1800s.
00:30:45.800
But instead of cooking for your one child today, maybe two,
00:30:51.960
you had to cook for a large family which could number more than 10 people.
00:30:56.180
They also cooked for neighbors who helped during busy times.
00:31:03.720
We fed farms, animals, gathered eggs, tended chickens.
00:31:07.140
They also milked cows, which was usually done by teenage girls and women in their 20s.
00:31:15.560
Women tended large gardens, raising and preserving most of the family's food.
00:31:24.080
including one set for each member of each family member for every season.
00:31:32.400
Women cared for their children and were primarily responsible for the aging relative.
00:31:41.720
Women did laundry by hand and ironed with heavy irons heated on the stove.
00:31:49.040
Women drew water from wells, springs, and carried it back to the house.
00:31:54.080
Women also worked in fields where crops needed planting, cultivating, or harvesting.
00:31:59.700
Farm women were integral to the farming operation on small family farms between 1880 and 1950.
00:32:07.160
So, the interesting thing is, the men were working on the farms too.
00:32:13.700
Now, it seems like during this time, during the Industrial Revolution, the men did start to, you know, take on other professions as well.
00:32:26.780
But 90%, 80 to 90% of people, it drops, but at one point, lived on a farm.
00:32:35.020
So, you know, this idea that how people survived.
00:32:47.160
And now, the ladies will say it's so much harder now.
00:32:51.640
And I'm just, I'm just thinking, what is harder?
00:33:09.200
I'm not saying it's a bad thing to learn those things, right?
00:33:12.400
But I'm really getting tired of the feminists saying, it's so hard now because I have to be a mother and raise children, or work and raise children.
00:33:26.260
When, before you would have been milking a cow.
00:33:30.660
I mean, do you think most millennial women have it in them to milk cows, scoop poop?
00:33:36.720
Look, in the 1800s, cooking dinner involved a variety of methods and tools, and people ate at different times they do today.
00:33:49.080
People cooked with open flames or stoves, which were gaining popularity.
00:33:55.220
Stoves had either wood or coal fire and allowed for eaten on the bottom floor of a home and away from the main entrance.
00:34:01.380
The ice house was the closest thing to a refrigerator.
00:34:03.780
Dinner was usually eaten around 2 to 3, but could be as late as 4 to 5 in the 18th century.
00:34:09.580
Dinner was the primary meal, but supper was also eaten in the evening.
00:34:13.140
Typical foods included sausage, dried pumpkin, pig's feet, turnips, or beans and butter.
00:34:26.020
Life in the 1800s varied greatly depending on where someone lived.
00:34:33.780
However, there were some common experiences and challenges that shaped life for many people during this period.
00:34:39.820
Here's what life was like for an average person during this time.
00:34:44.020
The majority of people in the 1800s lived in rural areas.
00:34:50.000
Living conditions were modest, and many homes were simple, often made of wood or stone with a fireplace for warmth.
00:34:58.060
Farms were self-sustaining, with people growing their own food, raising animals, and making their own clothes.
00:35:05.800
By the mid-1800s, especially after the Industrial Revolution, cities were growing rapidly.
00:35:11.320
Factory workers lived in crowded, often unsanitary conditions with small, dark tenements.
00:35:18.240
In cities, family lived in close quarters with little ventilation and poor sanitation.
00:35:25.480
The rise of factories brought about both economic opportunities and health risks.
00:35:31.040
In rural areas, people lived in one- or two-room homes with basic furniture.
00:35:35.960
There was no indoor plumbing, and most people relied on an outhouse or chamber pots for sanitation.
00:35:42.280
Water was often fetched from a well or a river.
00:35:44.880
In cities, sanitation was a growing problem, with waste piling up on the streets when water supplies often contaminated.
00:35:52.920
Indoor plumbing, while starting to be developed, was a luxury for the wealthy.
00:35:58.200
For most of the 1800s, farming was the main occupation for the majority of their parents,
00:36:03.080
helping them with tasks like milking cows, gathering eggs, or feeding animals.
00:36:07.580
By the mid-1800s, the Industrial Revolution was in full swing, particularly in Europe.
00:36:12.700
And the U.S. cities saw the rise of factories that produced textiles, irons, and other goods.
00:36:19.240
Working in factories, especially for women and children, often meant long hours.
00:36:38.540
Factories were often poorly lit, poorly ventilated, and lacked safety regulations and led to frequent accidents.
00:36:46.200
Skilled later, labor artisans such as blacksmiths, carpenters, tailors, shoemakers, and bakers were in demand in both cities and rural areas.
00:36:54.400
People could perform a craft or trade and had somewhat more comfortable life, although they faced long hours and hard work.
00:37:01.280
Many women, especially in wealthier households, worked as domestic servants.
00:37:05.920
This involved tasks like cleaning, cooking, and laundry.
00:37:08.940
For many poor women, domestic service was one of the few available employment options.
00:37:14.740
Okay, you know, I just really wanted to go over a little bit of what life was like back then.
00:37:21.020
And I keep hearing this, you know, 82% of women work today.
00:37:31.280
I would argue that we do not work as hard as the women did a hundred years ago, even though some women balance work and motherhood.
00:37:40.620
The difference was women worked in the home before, and they valued family more.
00:37:46.720
The next thing that feminists always tell me is that women could not own property.
00:37:54.260
That is something that I am often hearing about, that women were just, it was so hard and that they could not own property.
00:38:02.960
Well, then tell me, how was the first property owner in the United States in the 1600s?
00:38:15.160
But one of the first female property owners was black.
00:38:19.520
So this idea that we were just crushed by this patriarchy, you know, we had different choices back then.
00:38:28.660
And women made different decisions based on the choices that were available.
00:38:36.800
The next thing that I wanted to talk about is Bill, I saw a clip of Bill Burr
00:38:54.980
So the next clip that we're going to go over is Bill Burr shutting down disrespectful interviewers.
00:39:02.100
Some interviewers think they can outsmart Bill Burr, but they quickly realize they're in way over their heads.
00:39:12.120
From cringe-inducing blunders on live TV to tense debates with his fellow comedians.
00:39:17.660
Today, we're diving into his best takedowns, starting with one that had a morning show scrambling.
00:39:23.700
In 2015, Bill Burr appeared on Good Day New York to promote his animated series F is for Family.
00:39:31.540
The interview started off rocky, with the host immediately labeling his show as offensive.
00:39:37.360
Burr, however, did not miss a beat and was quick to fire back.
00:39:41.100
The host, clearly unprepared for Burr's pushback, scrambled to justify herself while Burr skillfully transformed.
00:39:58.760
Did you feel you were being disrespectful, or you were just having fun with some of the crucifixes and stuff like that?
00:40:05.920
I don't even know what you had. I mean, we did maybe two jokes about it.
00:40:11.160
A couple of jokes. I know this is a morning show. You can't bring up all those crimes.
00:40:18.640
You know, like those killer whales at SeaWorld, after it kills a trainer, they'll then move it up to Seattle.
00:40:24.140
By the end of the interview, Burr not only defended his material, but turned a disrespectful host into the punchline.
00:40:31.740
Why don't you meet those religious people that got upset? I want to quiz them on their religion.
00:40:35.000
Oh, gee. All right. We'll talk about why did I bring that up, Bill?
00:40:38.820
It's a morning show. It's supposed to be an easy one.
00:40:41.480
Burr's next encounter, however, would go in a much worse direction,
00:40:45.120
as host Southside Steve's blatant disrespect and unprofessionalism ignited real tension.
00:40:50.520
It's a Southside Steve, and this is Southside Steve TV, and this is Bill Burr.
00:41:00.340
Warn him that you're going to put the mic in his face without asking him a question.
00:41:03.340
Be prepared for that. Apparently, he didn't take me seriously.
00:41:06.100
But when Southside Steve started shoving his microphone in Burr's face just to get under his skin,
00:41:11.780
the fed-up comedian decided he'd had enough and completely hijacked the interview.
00:41:28.920
As I learned that in broadcasting school, you never give up the microphone.
00:41:42.280
And while Burr managed to shut down Southside Steve's antics, his interview with Sarah Silverman
00:41:48.600
Comedians are dangerous. They're dangerous to interview because if you ask them a dumb question or you're a little bit off,
00:41:58.000
Brought a different kind of tension, kicking off with an introduction that immediately rubbed Burr the wrong way.
00:42:07.020
I'm not related to my next guest, but we fight like siblings.
00:42:11.020
Please welcome brilliant comedian who I love to pieces, but who makes me f***ing crazy, Bill Burr.
00:42:26.280
Burr then brought up how Silverman had previously overstepped by trying to edit his material,
00:42:31.800
turning the moment into an awkward, unscripted airing of grievances in front of a live audience.
00:42:40.100
It's because, no, because I go on stage and then you try to correct my jokes.
00:42:45.820
But what if you said if the woman did this because of this?
00:42:49.320
That was one time, and I admit I was being aggressive.
00:42:52.760
The interview then devolved into a painfully cringy back and forth,
00:42:57.060
with Burr and Silverman each trying a little too hard to prove they actually liked each other.
00:43:02.540
All right. I do like you, and I just, I always feel like you're frustrated with me.
00:43:06.860
I'm like, I'm as far over into this chair as I could possibly be.
00:43:12.560
But this is what, women always have a tendency to police speech.
00:43:18.040
So, not all women, but it's, that's just what tends to happen.
00:43:25.200
That really came into play when women entered the workforce.
00:43:30.440
I f***ing hate this guy. He's a douchebag, but he came down here.
00:43:33.600
But it was Silverman's presumptuous assumption about Burr's true nature that didn't sit well,
00:43:41.860
I don't like being told what to do, but I do like changing with the times or something.
00:43:46.700
I don't really resist that. I feel like you resist that a little more,
00:43:51.340
I'm really, I hate Sarah Silverman, but I history and will be the first musical to tour stadiums
00:43:58.860
rather than Broadway and theaters. This musical is epic, and the show is a love story between a
00:44:03.920
soldier and an infected military nurse during a zombie apocalypse. Here's a bit of cool trivia.
00:44:10.220
Originally, the writer wanted to open the show on Broadway in New York City, but they boycotted
00:44:15.860
and banned him because he wouldn't submit to the woke agenda. So they created a monster.
00:44:20.720
Subscribe here to their YouTube channel or sign up to their newsletter at undeadvalley.com
00:44:26.020
for behind-the-scenes and updates. Here is a clip from their show.
00:44:45.480
You thought I was wrapping it up. F***ing ripped another.
00:44:48.820
Also, guys, I'm going to read comments really quick from the chat. So if you guys have a comment,
00:44:53.480
go to theaudacitynetwork.com, and we do read all of your comments. Normally, with a super chat,
00:44:59.020
you know, you have to pay every time you comment. Here, it's unlimited comments. 10 bucks a month,
00:45:06.740
Beat in Cheek said, hope you and Glenn collab more just catching up on your stuff. The two of you
00:45:10.840
could become a serious kick-ass duo. Yeah, that was really fun having them in.
00:45:14.720
Richard, Brett's audience demographic is way more female than Candace. Yeah, I would guess that
00:45:21.740
because her stuff isn't edgy. Greem says, fellow misogynists, Joanie Reb, the French fought wars
00:45:28.680
to preserve French and French culture only to surrender to alien invasion and the globalist
00:45:33.520
cabal that endangered it. Now defending your culture is racist if it's white. I just thought
00:45:38.620
she wasn't as hot. She just, it wasn't close. It wasn't, I mean, in beauty standards, right? And
00:45:46.020
we're in America. We're all fat here. So, okay. She's, they're both the hottest woman in a room
00:45:52.220
in America, but they're not, she's not close in a room of beauty contestants. No way.
00:45:58.920
Hey, Pearl, when you are going to get the sweetest anti-feminist lady in the world,
00:46:03.500
Janice Flamingo, sorry, you're hotter, but she is who she is on your show. I've had her on before.
00:46:08.780
It was just one of the videos that was cleared, but we've, I've had her on. She's nice.
00:46:12.000
Attempt wasn't enough. The Your Mom's House podcast would take its own shot at psychoanalyzing
00:46:17.820
Burr, and it goes just as badly. Yeah, you're full of anger.
00:46:22.380
Because you vlog yourself for, for being vulnerable. Oh, would you stop it? Like you have some sort of
00:46:27.300
psychology degree. Ten years of therapy. So what? I've watched football for 40 years. I
00:46:32.600
shouldn't be somebody's coach. Oh, that was brutal. Oh, that was so bad.
00:46:41.820
However, there's no quicker way to derail an interview with Bill Burr than sticking him
00:46:46.980
in an uncomfortable chair. Well, I'm excited to be here. These chairs are horrific. It's
00:46:51.320
not quite adult size. It's not kid's size. I already slouched. It's going to be a bad interview,
00:46:56.980
dude, and I'm blaming the chair. I literally feel like I'm going to fall onto the floor. This
00:47:00.560
is insane. You really went all out with the audience, though. They got full-size adult
00:47:04.880
chairs. I cannot get comfortable in this chair. This is just like one of the worst things.
00:47:10.160
It should be like in a museum. It's like the prototype.
00:47:12.880
A producer then brought in a different chair, but it only added to the already awkward situation.
00:47:18.720
No, but now this is like the ego one. Now I'm going to be sitting above you. You got to come with two.
00:47:23.260
No, it's fine. It's fine. Sir, the one comedy through line that's working here is
00:47:28.200
on this chair. Why would you take that from me? Radio host Charlemagne the God learned the hard
00:47:33.740
way that interrupting Burr mid-story, especially one about his wife, is a surefire way to get
00:47:39.560
shut down by the comedian. Love it for a sight, basically.
00:47:43.680
Yeah, like I've only met two people that had like a vibe like her in my...
00:47:50.680
No, he was like, no, just walked in the room, you know, and he just knew the person was coming
00:47:58.500
Hold on, you got to clear that up. I want to be clear about that. You didn't date the guy.
00:48:04.320
When are black people going to let go of this homophobia? You always got to check.
00:48:11.120
With your manicured eyebrows. Like, I'm going to sit here and act like you're all good over
00:48:15.580
there. Like, you don't swing a leg over the fence every once in a while.
00:48:19.480
Like, wait a minute. You got sandals on and white socks. You look like you just came from
00:48:25.140
And while Burr rarely misses a beat, he appeared uncharacteristically uncomfortable on the H3
00:48:30.760
podcast as host Ethan Klein pushed the conversation a little too far into his personal life.
00:48:37.500
I don't know, dude. The internet's weird to give out all that information.
00:48:40.960
Oh, you don't even want to say how many because you're afraid that it will not compromise your
00:48:45.480
Yeah, by all means, keep talking about it. Is there any way you can cut this out? I'm honest,
00:48:49.240
Yeah, no, dude. Yeah, there's lunatics out there.
00:49:00.080
Well, Burr, unimpressed by the questions, didn't hold back. Mocking Klein's awkward
00:49:12.780
Then he got really. If they're going to sell out, cater to the female eye.
00:49:23.420
Tell me about all things comedy. I don't know. You say I'm nervous. I'm sweating.
00:49:34.160
Look at you. You're all sweaty. You're touching.
00:49:36.260
Things went from bad to worse when Klein brought up Burr's infamous viral takedown of a hostile
00:49:42.120
Philadelphia crowd, a topic Burr has been asked about countless times over the years and is
00:49:50.140
When you were getting booed by thousands of people in Philly.
00:49:53.760
I was hoping you were. I was like, when you said my favorite YouTube video, I was like, oh God, not the Philly thing again.
00:49:58.560
And then you did the Sherry's Berries. I was like, I love this podcast. Now I hate you.
00:50:08.320
But do you, but, but, no, I'm not going to, I'm not going to ask you.
00:50:16.340
Frankly, I like making young, I like making young, I like making young company.
00:50:20.080
And while Burr's frustration on H3 was hard to miss, the Philadelphia incident itself stands as a defining moment in his career,
00:50:28.720
showcasing one of the most legendary takedowns in comedy history.
00:50:33.000
It all happened in 2006, during a set where Burr faced an openly hostile Philadelphia crowd that had been booing every act before him.
00:50:41.980
Most comedians might have folded under the pressure, but not Burr.
00:50:46.000
Instead, he launched into a relentless 12-minute tirade, ripping the city apart.
00:50:52.040
One bridge happened, piece of f***ing city, that no one gives a f*** about, because you're f***ing worthless, and no one cares about you.
00:51:01.840
You know what, you f***ing losers, I hope you all f***ing die, and I hope the f***ing Eagles never win the Super Bowl.
00:51:12.100
Tearing into everything from Philadelphia's culture to its history,
00:51:17.940
Rocky is your hero, the whole pride of your city is built around a f***ing die that doesn't even exist.
00:51:23.800
So you make a f***ing statue for some f***ing Italian, you stupid, Philly cheesy, f***ing jackasses.
00:51:31.400
I hope that cheese melts your f***ing faces off.
00:51:34.520
The comedian didn't stop until the crowd, originally booing, was laughing, clapping, and even cheering.
00:51:41.200
By the end, Burr had transformed one of the toughest crowds into one of his greatest moments.
00:51:55.800
Burr's Philly rant is the stuff of legend, but this next interview proves he's just as sharp offstage,
00:52:02.220
shutting down a reporter who hit him with a loaded question.
00:52:10.400
Some people have a hard time saying yes, though.
00:52:12.140
There are a lot of angry young men on the internet that are like, women can't.
00:52:23.560
Dave Chappelle, I have never seen a woman close.
00:52:26.620
I did, there was one comedy show I saw in London, and you know what's funny?
00:52:35.560
I can't remember the name, but I guess the guy's semi-famous.
00:52:40.040
The someone, I don't know, they gave my team tickets, whatever.
00:52:43.840
And I go to this show, and then the guy goes, and then his wife goes after.
00:52:50.740
Um, the guy goes, and then his wife goes after, and then, um, I told her after the show that
00:52:59.600
she was the funniest woman I'd ever heard, and she agreed with me.
00:53:02.680
I was like, you were the only woman that didn't berate your husband or just say that you were
00:53:13.140
Will you guys just grow up and just sit down and write your own whore and come up with it?
00:53:20.080
Quit waiting around for other people to do s*** for you.
00:53:24.340
If you guys had your own big club and I was standing outside of it, you'd never f***ing
00:53:32.220
But Burr wasn't done there, as the pointed nature of the question clearly agitated him,
00:53:37.540
prompting a passionate extension of his response.
00:53:40.680
It makes no difference whether you gotta s*** or s***.
00:53:44.580
Just do what s*** you want to do, and hopefully people respond to it.
00:53:47.960
But the s***, the quotas, and all of this s*** become undeniable.
00:53:53.520
When was the last time you went on stage and you killed so hard the person after you bombed?
00:53:58.120
If you're s*** doing that on a regular basis, people are gonna notice, regardless of what
00:54:04.720
Burr, however, would find himself in a very different kind of confrontation on Bill Maher's
00:54:12.080
This time, it was a fiery debate about college protests over the Middle East, with Maher dismissing
00:54:18.220
student support for Palestine as ridiculous, only for Burr to step in and challenge him
00:54:24.280
Have you heard what's going on on college campuses these days?
00:54:28.360
You don't realize that college campuses erupted with the kids demonstrating for Hamas?
00:54:46.540
Maher continued to push back, yet Burr did not flinch and held his ground.
00:54:59.900
No, I'm the one who was actually brave on this.
00:55:15.600
I'm not saying that they didn't have a right to go back.
00:55:17.340
I'm just sitting there going, like, how do I look at what?
00:55:19.100
We're the only country in the world that they get attacked, and then as soon as they
00:55:22.780
counterattack, it's like, well, we got to stop now.
00:55:26.640
There's a very simple solution to all this problem in the Middle East.
00:55:31.700
I don't understand how anyone thinks they know what they're talking about when it comes
00:55:38.080
All you know is what people are reporting, and you don't need an activist.
00:55:43.240
I'm going to do rotating co-hosts in here just to see how you guys like it.
00:55:47.420
So one of them, super left, far PETA activist, really good guy.
00:55:51.720
And he had these opinions on, I can't remember what it was.
00:55:58.540
And I just told him, I'm like, how would you know anything?
00:56:02.040
Because, like, you've never served in the military, and you're in music.
00:56:14.480
I'm like, how would, I can't give advice on how to war.
00:56:30.240
By this point in the conversation, it was clear the Burr had stopped holding back,
00:56:38.740
commanding the exchange with his absolutely scathing sarcasm.
00:56:47.240
Let me hear your hard-nosed decision about that.
00:56:57.400
You're like that guy that has a fantasy football team and thinks he's...
00:57:05.340
He is very, um, like, not scripted, like, off the cuff.
00:57:13.400
Like, why am I f***ing listening to you like you've done something?
00:57:18.680
Burr's biting sarcasm left Marr fumbling as Burr once again proved he doesn't back down from a challenge.
00:57:26.700
Most of the f***ing, we need to just bring him on the show and hash this out.
00:57:32.140
These back and forths are too entertaining and there's no one to watch, so I'm bringing
00:57:37.760
And I want you guys to, um, in the comments, if you guys like a guest, um, because I'm going
00:58:18.160
His wife was talking-ish about Trump, so I obviously had to go back.
00:58:29.060
They said, your guitar teacher's gonna get wrecked.
00:58:41.920
Like, if they want to not eat meat, I don't care.
00:58:52.820
With things immediately getting off to a bad start.
00:58:55.540
A lot of people think that, uh, they're uncomfortable with my, uh, my...