Miss Understood No. 32 — We Do Not Consent
Episode Stats
Words per minute
200.18489
Harmful content
Misogyny
61
sentences flagged
Hate speech
33
sentences flagged
Summary
In this episode of Misunderstood, Nat and Kat talk about consent and why it is the bare minimum requirement in a sexual encounter. Then they talk about the dumbest women in Hollywood right now, and our culture shock moment of the week.
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Misunderstood, a show for all you culturally and politically misunderstood
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ladies and gents. We're your hosts. Oh, I'm Katty Nat. And I'm Nat. And today we're going
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to talk about consent and why it is the bare minimum requirement in a sexual encounter.
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Then we're going to talk about the dumbest women in Hollywood right now. But first, our
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patent and culture shock moment of the week. Speaking of consent, take it away, Kat.
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Well, y'all, you might have seen this going around the internet. How could you miss it?
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Yeah, you couldn't miss it because they'll slap you right in the face, they will. There
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is a teacher and the school that the teacher belongs to is actually Oakville Trafalgar High
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school. Yeah. And this teacher last year came out as trans. So it's a trans woman. Possibly.
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And this teacher is wearing comically sized. I was gonna say butter boobs, rubber boobs in
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her shop class. That's first of all, safety issue. Nipples the size of teacups. You get
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one and stuck in a saw. And like, I mean, the good news is, is that they're made of
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rubber. So good news. That's the good news, guys. Good news. That's the good news. But
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the bad news is what like, you remember like being a student and you asked a teacher a
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question and sometimes they'd like reach over to you and their, their breast would touch
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you and you're kind of like horrified. Yeah. What is that? What is that? What is that?
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Not to mention, you know, girls at school are required to cover up. Yeah. We're required
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when we were growing up. I know. We couldn't wear spaghetti straps. Exactly. Yeah. I don't
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think that's a thing anymore. Okay. Well, it should still be a thing, I think, because
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we don't want our male teachers to feel uncomfortable and you don't want any false accusations of a
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young student being like that teacher's looking at my chest. It's like kind of hard to miss
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it, sweetie. There's a hickey right there. Yeah. But, um, this, this completely, this is completely
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inappropriate. I don't understand why they need to be so big and have rock hard. I think
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these people want you to go with what they want so badly that they're like, even though
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they know it's ridiculous and uncomfortable, they still want to push. They want to be authoritarian
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almost and say, ha ha, you have to accept me. Otherwise you're a bigot. Yeah. And it's
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like, ha ha ha. Exactly. But it's, it's sexual. Don't look at them. Exactly. Exactly. It's
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like, can't miss it, sweetie. That's sexual harassment. It's sexual harassment. It's so
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inappropriate. This teacher should be fired. Yeah. And if you say anything about it, you're
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a bigot. Yeah. You disgusting bigot. You disgusting bigot. You're sick of me. Nobody consented to
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looking at those. Nobody. And is that what this person thinks real women look like? Yeah,
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clearly. Because huller. Huller. Real women. Huller. Itty. I'm just a black bomb. Titty committee
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club. Yeah. Okay. Like, like there are women with giant natural boobs that don't even come in
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with the same stratosphere as those ones. I know because my mom had the biggest boobs
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I've ever seen in my life. And guess what? Most women who have large breasts want them
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to be reduced. Reduced. And my mom got a breast reduction. Exactly. So you're just walking
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around with these fake rubber things as if you understand what it feels like to carry
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the weight of real breasts. Well, you don't. Imagine how sweaty it is under there. Ew.
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Like, his man chest is, like, probably covered in hair under rubber, like, bulletproof. Chafing.
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Ooh. And, like, how do you get a shirt to fit over that? Anyway, we're diving. Anyways.
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We digress a little bit. Yeah. But you know what? You know, it's just so... It's gross.
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And it's happening right here in Canada, in Ontario. Which is completely unsurprising.
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Yeah. No. When I saw it, I was like, oh, that's got to be, like, Milwaukee or something.
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Seattle or something. Yeah. But, no. Nope. It's just down the 401. It's our own backyard.
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Yeah. So. Move away from Canada? Don't send your kids to public school. Maybe. Yeah.
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I don't know. Maybe a public school. Maybe consider homeschooling. Mm-hmm. And let's, like,
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let's reel it in. Reel it in. Reel it in. Just a little bit. Okay. We've lost the plot, everyone.
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Okay. So, now we're going to talk about consent. Because it kind of falls into that category.
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Nobody consented to those bazongas. Yikes. It's one word to describe those. Okay. So,
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consent. A couple things we want to touch on here. A couple different stories. But, okay. So,
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there's this author named Louise Perry. She's from England. And she recently wrote a book. It's
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actually from a secular perspective. But it kind of is aligned with biblical notions. And...
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Yeah. She's, like, a leftist. Yeah. She's a progressive, like, not really feminist. But
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sort of, I guess, in the way that maybe we would identify with feminism. Anyway, so, she
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wrote a book that basically challenges the conception of all the sexual revolutions, downstream effects
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that have been universally positive for women. So, she was also on Alibaz Ducky recently.
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Hmm. And she talked about the consequences of consent as being the only standard of decency
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for sex. Like, it's, like, the bare minimum. Yeah. It's the bare minimum. Right. And so,
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some of the things she says is sex is... In the way our culture defines sex is that it's not
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significant and can be morally neutral. And you don't have to invest any meaning in it based
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on our culture's standard. It's, like, shaking hands or anything. So, this means you can buy it,
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you can sell it, and you can objectify yourself. But the problem is that if you say sex is no
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different from any other kind of social interaction, you can't give rape a special status because sex
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means nothing. So, the same would go for sexual harassment. So, it's... As it goes with that
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teacher, it's, like, well, is this person sexually harassing these students because all things are
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fair game? And we've seen that kind of... Those kinds of weird sexual niches become normalized in our
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society with things like Fifty Shades of Grey, for example, where it's, like, okay, you can now
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whip your partner if they consent to it. But really, that's something that was never,
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like, mainstream before. It blurs lines. There's a lot of blurred lines. So, it's, like,
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what is consent? Well, consent should be the bare minimum, I guess. But, like... But, like,
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what about respect? Yeah, exactly. And, like, emotional attachment. And, like,
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emotional attachment. Yeah. Love, you know? Like, because I don't think women can disassociate,
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like, feelings from sex. I think we've tried to in our culture, but I don't think it's, like,
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the norm for us. I think it's, like, anything where if you're exposed to it so much, like,
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if you're a prostitute from a young age, maybe you can because you've had so much of it and you
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literally can disassociate. And that's super, super sad. Yeah, it is sad. But I think it's not the natural
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state of any human, mostly, specifically women. Yeah. And I think, like, one of the things she
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touches on is the fact that, like, men are programmed differently from us in how we have
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sex. No. And the... Yeah, exactly. It's the same. It's the same. But our culture is trying to empower
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us to have sex like men. And it's, like, well, why are these women all not satisfied? It's because
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we're not supposed to be like men. We're not supposed to have sex like men. And men are barely
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satisfied. Exactly. That's the thing. That's why they have to spread their seeds. Spread
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their seeds. Spread their seeds. Yeah. No, exactly. That's interesting. Yeah. I thought
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it was really interesting, too. Because, like, if sex has no special status in society, how
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can you argue that rape has special status? And it's interesting because we know, and one
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of the things she talks about is how obviously rape is so viscerally different because it's
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violent. Yeah. And it's obviously forced. But it's like, is this kind of what's happened
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because of sex positivity? Like, can rape have special meaning if everything's on the table?
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I don't know. I don't know the answer. I just think it's something that's interesting to think
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about. So it's like we're experimenting so much. And if consent is the bare minimum, but
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you can, like, once you have consent, you can do anything. Anything. Yeah. And then it's like,
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okay, well, where does rape enter into the conversation? Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. I just,
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I don't know the answer. I just think it's interesting. No. I read a lot of Reddit and
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I was actually reading a story about this guy. He posted that him and his girlfriend wanted
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to do some, like, BDSM play. Right. And they had a safe word. And he started doing, like,
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he started whipping her or something like that. And he said she was super quiet and didn't say
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anything. And then he noticed she was crying. And he's like, she didn't even use the safe
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word. And people in the comments are like, it's not so easy. Like, you're getting beaten
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with a belt or whatever. Like, you don't even, like, you just break down and she wasn't ready
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for it. And it's like, it's just because she gave consent to let him do that. Like, it doesn't
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mean that she can't be upset about it while it's happening or like. Right. Well, especially
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because women are more vulnerable in a sexual situation than a man. Every single time we're
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usually smaller, weaker. And that, that is kind of frightening. Yeah. So when a man is
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like doing something aggressive to you, even if you did consent to it, it's a little frightening,
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I would imagine. Yeah. You know, I don't know. One time my boyfriend, he was my husband now,
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we were, he was tickling me. And, and he was tickling me so much that I, for a moment, like,
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thought he would never stop. That's terrifying. And I started sobbing. That's so scary. It was
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honestly so scary. And he was, and like, we talked about it just the other day. It was
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like 10 years ago. So scary. And he's like, I've never tickled you since because it was
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so traumatizing for both of us. Tickling is torture. It's torture. It's literal torture.
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But we were having fun and I was enjoying it. And then it was like, it went too far and
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I sobbed and it was the end. Yeah. So that's, that's funny. And also a horrifying, I do feel
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your pain. I hate being tickled. But yeah, I mean, I think consent is important to discuss
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because like, you know, maybe movies should be more like movies is kind of why we started
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wanted to talk about this. Cause there's that article about that nonprofit who wants lack
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of consent labels on movies and TV with objectionable sex scenes. I like this idea a lot.
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I actually do too. At first I was like, Oh, more wokeism. But then I was thinking about
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it and it's like, we have, we have warnings on violent scenes. We have warnings on smoking,
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gun violence and sex, but sex is not rape. Those are totally different things. And what
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if you're just like, are they just classifying rape and sex as the same thing? Oh, it's a
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sexual scene. It kind of seems like they are, which is kind of interesting. And then we wonder
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why young men have such a twisted, distorted view of what sex is. Yeah. Beyond all the porn
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they're probably watching. Yeah. But it's like, it's, it really blurs the line. So it's actually
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a really great idea to be like, this is not sex. This is forced sex, a completely different
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thing. I also think though, wouldn't it be nice if movies and the entertainment industry
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were just more responsible about not having scenes that didn't need it? They're never.
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I know. But like, I just think like, why, why should everyone else change around Hollywood?
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Like maybe it's time for Hollywood and entertainment to be like, Hey, maybe we should be a little
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more responsible about the kinds of messages we're trying to send young women, especially
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in movies aimed towards a younger audience. Yep. Cause you and I can watch a movie where
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a guy's kisses a woman, you know, he forces himself on her and it's supposed to be portrayed
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as sexy, but we're like, Oh, that's kind of, yeah. We have the critical thinking skills to be like,
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eh, it's not cool. But kids don't. Yeah. I don't know. But, and you really like these days,
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like a kid gets a cell phone at 10 years old. True. You don't know what they're watching on
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there. Like you can, you can put on safe search, but they're kids are smart. They're going to get
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away. They're going to get around it somehow. Yeah. Even if they're just at their friend's house.
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Exactly. So they're going to be exposed to those things no matter what. So like having,
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I don't even know like how you protect them because it's like, the question is like, why
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do we need so much violence in movies? Yeah. Like I love James Bond. I love it. It's super
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violent and there's always sex in it, but like, does it make the movie? I don't know. I guess.
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The sex scenes don't make the movie for me. I don't, I don't want to watch. No, I like the
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gadgets. Yeah, me too. And like the, the casinos. And like the hot people. But if you just
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have gadgets and casinos, would people watch it? Like, I think it's a problem that we have
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that's a lot deeper than just Ken Holly would be more responsible. It's like, why do humans
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need to watch violence in general? I have no answer for that because I, I, I like watching
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MMA. Like I like watching people beat each other up. Like, is that, am I sick? Yes.
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No, it's, it's, you, you raise a good point. Um, but I do think that the trend in movies has
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become more and more violent and more and more sexual. Like any Netflix movie, their violence
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because they have the money to do it. It's so realistic that it's truly disturbing.
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And it's like, is this so necessary? We get you have great special effects teams, but I
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don't want to watch that. No, I don't, I don't enjoy it. I don't enjoy it either. I love,
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like, I think I've said this before. I love a psychological thriller. Yeah. But when it's
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like gory, horror, bloody, I'm just, or it's like sex and gore. I'm just like, who is this
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made for? Who are these sick people? It's, and even if it is like a true story, I still think
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there are ways you can be tasteful about it. Like my husband and I tried to watch the Pam
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and Tommy show. And I, I do think it was really, it's really thoughtful and interesting, but
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like, it's so sexual and there's so much nudity and you're like, I don't really apply it.
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Yeah. Like I don't want to watch that with my husband. Like we, I don't want to, who are
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you supposed to watch it with? Like who? Exactly. I don't want to watch it with anyone. I don't
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want to watch it with you either. Like it's like, there's just tits and penises everywhere.
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And you're like, this is super awkward. Yeah. It's like a prosthetic penis and it's like animated.
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And it talks, but it's not cool. It's like very like jarring. You're like, this is not,
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I don't want, like my husband's probably like uncomfortable that I'm staring at this weird
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talking penis and I'm uncomfortable that he's staring at Lily James fake tits. Like, it's
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just weird. It's not healthy for people to, you know, I don't know. Like they can tell
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the story without all that. I like when they imply it. Like if you're having a sex scene
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and they're like, Ooh, like we, we pan to the window. Yeah. Like they're struggling with
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their keys and then they close the door. Yeah. Exactly. Like we know what you do and
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you don't need to show it. It's so true. Yeah. Um, yeah. I just, there's so many articles
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here that are great. Yes. There's a lot, there's a lot of interest. And I mean, it just speaks
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to the fact that our culture, we've talked about this a lot the last couple episodes,
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just like people, like the over-sexualization of our culture. And it's just so unnecessary.
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And I don't understand why it's like, they, they want to try to normalize sex outside of marriage
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so that everyone is just miserable and just having all this sex and they're like not entering real
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meaningful relationships. So they're not getting married and they're not having kids. Maybe I'm,
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maybe I'm having a tinfoil hat moment right now, but I'm like tinfoil in that moment.
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Tinfoil in that moment. But it's like, we know that like sex is only really compensate,
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complicated outside of marriage because in the confines of marriage, there's stability.
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I just wanted to, I had a thing about the history of the sexual revolution.
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Yeah. But basically it was interesting because the, let me try to remember. So the greatest
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generation, which was our parents' parents, like our grandparents' generation, they had
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on average three sexual partners in their life. Wow. And then our parents after the sexual revolution
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had on average 11 sexual partners in their lifetime. Mom, dad, gross. And then our generation
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actually has less. We're at eight on average. Yeah. And I think the, the generation below us is even
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less. Maybe. Because it's like, that's kind of interesting. Cause although our, our culture is
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so much, it's so hypersexual. Yeah. We're almost like, I don't understand. Maybe we consume so much.
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We don't actually. Yeah. It's kind of like maybe like your parents raised you to be conservative. So
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you reject that. So our like millennial parents raised us to be so not our parents per se, but
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like it on average, so sex positive. Like I had like friends and classmates who were having sex so
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young, like, and you're like, and their parents knew about it. They weren't even hiding it from
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their parents. I'm like, this is not normal. You haven't even finished puberty yet. Or like the
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cool mom buying her like teenage daughter liquor and condoms and stuff. Right. And so like the
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pendulum has maybe, maybe swung so far. It also might be, I feel like we talked about this on a
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previous episode where, um, our generation or even the gen, um, Z are like kind of scared of the
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opposite sex and like people consume so much pornography and digital media in sexual, like
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form, like sexual forms of digital media. I don't know what I'm saying. But like they consume so much
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of it online that in person they're like, it's like awkward. It doesn't live up to their expectations
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and it's like devoid of meaning. So they're just like not interested in doing it at all. And then
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there's like the MGTOW movement. Yeah. Like it's kind of like incels. And now there's a new movement
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called Fem Cell, which is a little less like violent and scary. Still stinky though. But it's
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still not, it's not great. Yeah. But, and then one of the things, um, this Louise, what's her name
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again? Thumbnail. Louise Perry. There we go. One of the things Louise Perry talked about on this episode
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with Allie Beth Stuckey is that this is this over-sexualized culture of maybe why young women
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are becoming transgender because they're uncomfortable with the over-sexualization of their bodies. And
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they're like, the only way to get rid of this is to become a man. Yeah. Which is so scary. It's so
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sad. Like what a horrible side effect of the sexual revolution. Yeah. One of the, like, there's so many
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bad side effects. Well, that's the thing. Like, um, I think that the sexual revolution was a natural
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part of human history where instead of being like, oh, top button, like don't talk about sex,
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don't talk about feelings. Yeah, no, I like, I like a top button. But, um, I actually, we actually have
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a baby outfit that looks exactly like this. I'm going to put a picture of it.
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Goo goo ga ga. Exactly. Infantilization. Yeah. Happening right here. Or is my baby a skank? I don't
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know. Um, um, what was it saying? Okay. So I think the sexual revolution was a natural part
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of history. And like, I think it was a good thing to an extent, but like so many things,
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the pendulum has swung so far. Of course. Where we're just like, show me your tits. And it's like
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empowering. And it's like, no. And then you've got this teacher with its big nipples like
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in your face. And it's like, that's not empowering for nobody. It's not. No, it's not. No, I agree
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with you. So we need to like, we need to like reel it back. Yeah, I think so. And I think it all
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stems from, you know, I mean, I mean, the way we need to, the direction we need to go is like,
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get married and have kids. You sound so crazy. Sorry. Be in a stable relationship because that's the
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most fulfilling thing for both a man and a woman. Like that's, that's where people we know
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statistically are more content. So I understand, man, we've all had our slutty years. Okay. But
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they were kissed a boy. I kissed one boy before my husband. Let me tell you. Oh my God. It was
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great. No, he has, she has redeemed herself. I've redeemed myself, but you know, it's just,
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it's not fulfilling. I I've been there. It's not fulfilling. Yeah. It wasn't fulfilling for me.
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It's not fulfilling for any of my slutty friends. No, it's not. And, and they lie to themselves
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and culture's lying to you. Yeah. And there's this crazy pressure and that kind of leads into
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the Kelly Clarkson article from Evie, but there's this crazy pressure on women to be sexy. And this
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is not new at a young age. At a young age. We've talked about this a million times. We talked about
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it last week, the week before, probably the week before. Yeah. With infantilization and
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Britney Spears and her little kilt and Ariana Grande. Yeah. And it's so this article is from
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Evie magazine. It's Kelly Clarkson was pressured to be sexual as a young rising star. She had
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to fight just to be herself. Now, Kelly Clarkson is a really interesting example of this because
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she went from literally a regular human being one day and then she won American Idol. And then
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the next day she was super famous. Yeah. And this was before social media. So her fame was
00:19:43.200
literally like on zero to a hundred in on television. Like I remember I, I don't watch
00:19:49.140
those shows, but at the time I did, cause it was so long ago. I was like 12. Um, but she
00:19:53.920
was thrust into the limelight so fast. And one of these quotes is, um, uh, she taught, she's
00:20:01.040
talking to variety and she recalls what it's like to be thrust into the limelight after winning
00:20:04.220
American Idol. She said it was not great. It was just really hard for me to navigate the
00:20:07.720
industry. She goes on to say, I remember this one tool I worked with. Uh, this dude
00:20:12.820
came over to my house and put down some magazines and it was like, so this is what you're competing
00:20:16.820
with. And she said there was naked people on it. Do you think they ever do that to
00:20:20.180
men? I don't know. I don't think so. Cause Leonardo DiCaprio would never work again.
00:20:24.520
Yeah. Um, and it's just like, so she is famous for her voice cause she's incredible. She's
1.00
00:20:30.260
incredibly talented at singing. Why does she need to be naked to do that? And it's just
1.00
00:20:34.560
like this whole, it's not America's next nude model. No, exactly. We have those. Yeah.
0.80
00:20:39.120
We literally have those. Yeah. And even models like America's next top model. I used to watch
00:20:43.540
that too. Those girls are running around naked in the back all the time, all the time. Well,
1.00
00:20:47.400
and apparently it's come out even about that show that there was so much pressure for them
00:20:52.000
to take their clothes off other. Otherwise they get eliminated. Like all the Christian models,
1.00
00:20:56.020
which is kind of an oxymoron in a way, I guess, if you think about it, but they were like
00:20:59.900
pressured by Tyra Banks to take off their clothes and they were like, I don't feel comfortable
00:21:03.200
doing this. She's a perv. Like, it's like, but why do they have to take off their clothes?
0.86
00:21:07.160
I thought, I thought it was all in the face. Yeah. And I thought it's about modeling clothes.
00:21:12.720
Clothes? Like that actually, um, where's that article about, Oh, the models wear nothing but
00:21:18.860
sex tape on New York fashion week runaway. So this one is, I was thinking this one inspired
00:21:24.660
me. I was thinking we should start our own line. We should absolutely, we should absolutely
00:21:29.140
do it because I literally have some gorilla electrical tape at my house. I got some duct
00:21:33.520
tape. We can make it work. We can make it work. Now I'm going to use more of it. Me too. Yeah.
00:21:37.780
It'll be like modest sex tape. Yeah. But okay. So they, they talk about how it's sex tape. Have
00:21:42.460
you ever heard of such a thing? I don't know what sex tape is. What is sex tape? I know about the kind
00:21:48.880
of tape where you like use it as a bra and you're like, Oh yeah. I don't think that's what they're
00:21:52.500
talking about. Okay. That's like bra. That's like boob tape. Okay. Yeah. They sell it to Ritzia.
1.00
00:21:56.780
Right. But this is like, Oh, I love that brand. Yeah. Um, Ritzia sponsor. What did they say?
00:22:02.000
They're like something about bringing sex tape to the next level or something. And I'm like,
00:22:05.780
first of all, backup. And apparently there's a wardrobe malfunction. Course. Course there was
00:22:11.700
like, this isn't fashion. No. And it's not cute. And it's a man. The designer is a man. And,
00:22:18.260
um, the, so this is a quote from the article, the hot and sticky showcase. Gross. Okay. Gross.
00:22:24.120
Nobody likes no cotton involved. So of course it's hot and sticky. Um, the hot and sticky
00:22:28.780
showcase was part of the sold out. No kidding. Black tape project, an unconventional sartorial
00:22:35.740
initiative dreamed up by self-proclaimed, dreamed up by self-proclaimed body tape pioneer, Joel
00:22:42.920
Alvarez. Interesting. Everyone in the audience was a dude. Probably. Yeah. Like this guy's
00:22:48.240
no pioneer. It's not, it's like a modern day Davy Crockett. Like he's just like pioneering
00:22:52.600
fashion. All he wants to do is tape up models. He just wants to, he wants to look at their
00:22:58.140
tits and tape them up. Yeah. But he was taping them like downstairs too. Yeah. That's so
0.90
00:23:02.300
inappropriate. You know, the feeling of like ripping tape off your skin and it pulls up all
00:23:05.860
the little, and the little hairs coming up like, Oh yeah, that's not sexy. What is sexy about
00:23:11.400
that? No. And it's speaking of consent. Like, yeah, like, no, but if you want to be a model,
00:23:16.380
are you going to let this guy tape up your, your, your, I guess so. Whatever gets you
00:23:20.800
paid. Yeah. Yeah. It's creepy. And like, of course it looks good. They're all frigging
00:23:25.440
tens. They're 12s out of 10 walking down the, like put that tape on a regular body. It's
00:23:30.440
like, woo. Put it on David Menzies and let me know if you still like it. Okay. Freckled
00:23:36.220
and hairy. Don't get too specific. Okay. I'm sorry. I've seen him in a leotard. I
00:23:41.900
apologize. Yeah. Um, beautiful man. Yeah. It's just, um, it's not fashion and it's gross
00:23:48.700
and Joel Alvarez should be ashamed of himself, but he's probably rolling in cash because they're
00:23:53.640
like, Oh my God, it's so brave. Yeah. Hot women wearing nothing. Like, Oh, who had to rip
1.00
00:23:59.320
that tape off them at the end of the night? Hopefully they didn't have to do it to themselves
00:24:02.440
because they had some sort of like solvent that like dissolved the sticky part. I would
00:24:06.060
love that for them. We'll, we'll be sure to follow up with them. Like what they do to
00:24:09.220
canola oil, like a solvent bath. Oh yeah. That's good. You've got a future career in, I don't
00:24:15.580
know. Yeah. I don't know what the career is. Anyways. Um, what else do we have next here?
00:24:22.780
Yeah. The, what about the one from Buzzfeed? Oh yes. This is actually, this is interesting.
00:24:27.460
This is actually something that Louise, what's her name again? Oh my God. Is Louise
00:24:32.320
Perry. Lauren, I mean, she actually talked about how monogamy is actually the most preferable
0.73
00:24:38.880
for women because it actually protects women and children the most because in a polygamous
1.00
00:24:44.140
relationship, men are able to go willy nilly. There's typically more abuse, apparently more
00:24:48.260
crime. And, um, it's obviously not great for women to see that there, cause it's typically
0.95
00:24:53.760
men with multiple women in history and in other cultures and stuff like that. It's not great.
0.62
00:24:58.540
I imagine to see your baby daddy, I guess Nick Cannon can speak to this better than we
00:25:03.780
can. Oh, got called out Nick. All of his baby mamas. But it must not be nice to see the father
00:25:10.200
of your child run around with other women. Tristan Thompson. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Although
00:25:16.780
that's like cheating. Oh, they're not even together, but it's like, she's like, we're not together
00:25:21.160
cause he's not here and he's cheating on me. Yeah. So we're not together. We're not together.
00:25:24.900
Um, but this article basically tries to argue that monogamy is super out, which I didn't
00:25:31.400
know that. Yeah. This is, um, there's a couple of quotes from here that are freaking hilarious.
00:25:35.960
Yes, there are. Um, so I just want to say like, so the article talks about polyamory and I'm
00:25:42.980
a Christian and I'm not prone to polyamory and I never will be, but I know people who are
00:25:51.040
and they're happily married and I, it's not my place to judge again, as a Christian, it's
00:25:55.660
not my place to judge their marriage. And I think that they have something that works for
00:26:00.560
them. However, this article takes it to a whole like this. So, okay. Here's a quote from
00:26:06.300
the article. I'm scared. Both of my husbands are also in relationships with my girlfriend.
00:26:17.400
What? What? You can't be. Okay. Anyways. Um, another line from the article is forms of sexual,
00:26:27.080
uh, sorry, forms of sexual consensual non monogamy have been popular or at least openly visible
00:26:32.920
among gay men for a long time. It's called an orgy. Yeah. And they're also contracting
1.00
00:26:37.920
a monkey pox monkey. Like what a time to be pushing non monogamy. I love the way they're
0.99
00:26:46.240
talking about this as if it's actually mainstream. And then they say that four to 5% of us adults
00:26:51.080
are non monogamous. It's like, that's not, that's not the mainstream. And then my favorite
00:26:56.000
was, but monogamy is in its flop. It's in its flop though. You guys, it's like 5% of people
00:27:02.600
are doing it still, but it's like, it's a flop. Most people monogamous, but it's mainstream.
00:27:07.900
Um, my favorite was this girl named Allie, a 36 year old from Chicago. She shared a story
0.94
00:27:13.400
about her current partner to reflect on how she's changed. They'd planned a date after
00:27:17.520
not seeing each other in weeks. This is her and her, I don't know, mayhaps. Like when
00:27:21.480
I have a bad day and I go home and I feel better when I see my husband because he makes
00:27:27.520
me happy. Yeah. And a snack, hopefully. No, he won't. Oh, that's okay. No. He killed
00:27:33.900
DoorDash or something. That's the sweetest thing. But like, come on people. Like you're
00:27:38.980
really, really grasping at straws here. If you're trying to convince the population.
00:27:43.160
If we were monogamous, like we wouldn't have stability at all. I would have had to perform
00:27:48.240
a fan dance for him. What year is this? What does she think women do for their husbands?
1.00
00:27:53.660
She has no idea. She has obviously no, I think that's probably the same girl who said, maybe
00:27:58.480
it is. My husband, both of my husbands are in relationships with my girlfriend. Like,
00:28:02.840
what are you saying? You're not in anything. You just, you have friends and you casually
00:28:08.040
hook up with your friends. And I think the saddest part about this though, is that we know
00:28:11.940
for the most like, okay, sure. Maybe you're, your friends are satisfied. I don't think that
00:28:17.740
that's going to be longterm. I think that we're, maybe it's a phase. Maybe it's a phase.
00:28:22.080
I don't, I don't see how that can be fulfilling just in like a spiritual sense, but they're
00:28:27.140
not trying to live a Christian life. Yeah. But we have like an inherent, we have a soul
00:28:30.660
and like, I still think that, I don't know. I still think it's not for me. It's not for
00:28:34.300
me. I'll tell you that. I just think like, like God gave us a nature and to yearn to be
00:28:38.860
with someone for that, like stability. And again, like no one's a monolith. You're right.
00:28:42.440
But like, I, I think inherently that's just like the way we're built. But like, I just,
00:28:47.740
like, we know for the most part, I'm going to say most people who are in those kinds
00:28:52.560
of relationships are not going to end up being fulfilled. Like they're just, it just,
00:28:55.820
yeah, that's fair. Because we know, first of all, like society's going to crumble if
00:28:59.240
we like continue to pursue these kinds of things. And like, you just, you can't, you
00:29:03.940
can't ignore the stats. Like men and women who are married happier. Yeah. And it's also
00:29:09.120
like our children in the picture or not. Exactly. Like, yes. That's that also plays a huge role.
00:29:13.640
These couples, they're not. Thank God. Yeah. It wouldn't, it couldn't, like, it's almost
00:29:19.260
like child abuse if they were. I think so too. Yeah. And if everyone, like you, to what
00:29:23.560
you were saying, if everyone did this and no one had children, like we're literally
00:29:28.460
doomed. We're done. We're doomed. Yeah. It's like, it's like Dante's first level of hell
00:29:33.020
or something like that. Sounds really fun. It's like orgies, but no children. And then
00:29:37.340
jealousy and rage. And then the next level. So unfortunate that this is mainstream. Yeah.
00:29:42.800
Yeah. Oh wait, it's not. Yeah. But it's just funny. They're like, and monogamy is in its
00:29:47.140
flop era. It's 95% of the population that are still monogamous. I bet it's more because
00:29:52.920
like you mentioned. Nice try, bitch. I'm sure like half of these people who are, half of
0.99
00:29:57.780
this 5% of these people are probably going to just be like, nah, I'm going to stick with
00:30:02.000
my favorite partner. You know, I don't know. I actually read a story about that on Reddit
00:30:07.320
as well. Oh good. This woman was, got married to a man and once they were married, she said,
00:30:13.740
oh, I want to be in an open relationship. I want to be polyamorous. And he was like, not
00:30:17.400
about it at all. He's monogamous and he was heartbroken. Yeah. Well that's, she completely
00:30:22.060
catfished him. So she was pushing it and pushing it. And so she started dating other people and
00:30:26.320
she was like, I always came home to him though. And then eventually he met a woman and fell
00:30:30.300
in love with her and divorced this woman for this other woman. And she's like, I've totally
00:30:34.640
messed up. Like I love him. And it's like, you, yeah. Yeah. You, you tried to force a monogamous
0.99
00:30:41.660
man to be polyamorous. It destroyed his heart. Yeah. You broke your marriage and now you're alone
00:30:47.740
because people are so like desperate to seek pleasure. Yeah. Everyone's just obsessed with
00:30:52.660
pleasure. Well, guess what? Pleasure doesn't keep you warm at night. Have a nice piece of pie.
00:30:57.580
Yeah. With ice cream. Honestly, just like indulge in like a brownie or something. Yeah. Don't
00:31:02.940
overindulge. Okay. All right. It's just like, yeah. Yeah. You know, and also even that gluttony
00:31:11.560
is one of the sins, right? I don't know. I have to tell myself that all the time. Just,
00:31:16.920
just enjoy it. Yeah. Just enjoy being pregnant. Yeah. You're beautiful. Thank you. All right.
00:31:21.060
Speaking of beautiful, should we move on? Yeah. To the women in Hollywood who are the biggest
1.00
00:31:25.480
idiots so far? We have four for y'all today. Yeah. We're going to feature four dumb snitches.
1.00
00:31:33.300
Snitches get stitches. Snitches get butches. All righty. So everyone's favorite Oscar winner,
0.94
00:31:39.820
Oscar winner. Oscar wiener. Oscar wiener. Jennifer Lawrence from the beautiful state of Kentucky,
00:31:45.580
everybody. Well, that seems like a somewhat conservative place to grow up if you ask Murr.
00:31:51.240
Um, so we all remember from a couple of weeks ago that she claimed that she has nightmares about
00:31:56.400
Tucker Carlson. Ah! Not Harvey Weinstein, though. Yeah, I know. She's fine with Harvey Weinstein,
00:32:02.240
who I'm like, gonna assume she, whatever. Finaggled. Maybe. Allegedly. Not fact. Not a fact. Um,
1.00
00:32:12.300
but she has nightmares about Tucker Carlson. She was praised for fighting, starting picking fights
00:32:19.200
with her conservative slash Republican father. That article is, we don't need to like dive into it,
00:32:25.440
but I just found it so, I think it's BuzzFeed. Yeah. Um, yeah. Jennifer Lawrence is being praised
00:32:31.120
for admitting that she can't get over her Republican dad's political views after she revealed they fell
00:32:35.280
out during the 2016 election. So you, you people are praising this woman for falling out with her
00:32:41.900
father. Yeah. For not respecting her dad's opinions. That's what we're doing now. Pretty open-minded,
00:32:46.880
if you ask me. So mature and open-minded. Yeah. And it comes on the back of, remember a couple weeks
00:32:51.280
ago too, Sydney Sweeney, that actress. Yes. I keep moving this. Me too. I'm so sorry. It's awful. Um,
00:32:56.480
she had, there was a 60th birthday party for her mother and there was some people in her family that
00:33:01.140
were wearing MAGA hats and blue life matter hats and people like freaked out on her. Cause it's her
00:33:05.500
fault. Cause it's her fault. To her mom's birthday. It's not even her party. And she's supposed to,
00:33:09.760
because I'm famous and I can't be seen with you people. Like we're supposed to, so now we're
00:33:14.820
praising people. Like it's sad when family relationships devolve, but now we're praising
00:33:20.240
people for breaking up their families over politics because of an election, because of freaking Trump.
00:33:24.880
Are you crazy? Are you crazy? It's crazy that you let Trump have that much power over your life y'all.
00:33:29.820
Yeah. Just saying. Um, when that happens, it's sad. We shouldn't be praising people for it. No,
00:33:36.260
it's, it's so true. And she, um, she said that the Roe v. Wade, Jennifer Lawrence was what really,
00:33:44.640
really inspired her to open up, which is interesting because this, this comes after she just gave birth
00:33:49.920
to a human baby that she carried for nine months. So it's like, sorry. I find it so confusing when
00:33:54.940
women who are pregnant or have just given birth are like super pro abortion. And I'm like,
0.99
00:33:59.020
you can tell your baby. Yeah. Like hello. Hello. Do you not remember? You grew one inside of you for
00:34:05.040
nine months, man. It's just weird. Like I get still being pro choice, having a baby, but I don't
00:34:11.720
understand being like so hardcore about it and being like, this is my, this is the moment to talk
00:34:16.440
about it. It's like, it's really not. Yeah. Like don't you value the life that you, anyways. Yeah.
00:34:22.660
Yeah. So she's annoying, but also she like, side note, she complained about making $25 million on
1.00
00:34:28.740
don't look up, which was a movie. Sorry. Such a bad movie. Um, she's mad because Leonardo DiCaprio
00:34:34.740
made 30 and she made 25. Like perhaps she has a grievance. They were both lead actors. Yeah.
00:34:41.040
Like, well, I think she could have probably negotiated better from the get go. I don't
00:34:46.220
know. I don't know. Like maybe she deserved more money. I did. I, I would argue they both
1.00
00:34:51.100
deserved less money. I think so too. Like for such a crappy film, it was crappy. And it's
00:34:55.480
just so obnoxious that people like her who push these progressive policies that impact the
1.00
00:34:59.800
economy so poorly are like, Oh my gosh, $25 million. That's it. Like you're like, excuse me.
00:35:05.780
There's hell. Have you heard of inflation? No, you haven't. Cause it's not affecting you.
00:35:09.620
And I'm also sick of her face. I know she's beautiful, but like, I'm sick of him. I'm
00:35:13.480
sick of Leonardo DiCaprio's face. I'm sick of her face. I'm sick of literally all the
00:35:16.900
same people in all the same movies. You're lucky that you have a job and that people want
00:35:20.720
to see your face. Yeah. Is what I think. Yeah. So I wouldn't be complaining. And if I was
00:35:25.460
a filmmaker, I mean, I wouldn't cause I would, I would just be, you know, anyways, I wouldn't.
00:35:33.960
Yeah. Okay. Um, I'm thinking of not asking people to show me their butts is what I'm thinking.
00:35:40.600
Um, so it wouldn't work cause I wouldn't be that deprived. However, I wouldn't cast her
00:35:45.580
after complaining about only making $25 million. I'd be like, you know what? We'll just get
00:35:49.980
some other girl. Yeah. Because what you did was not that exciting. Yeah. It's true. And,
00:35:55.700
um, Steven Crowder made a really good point about her because in 2012 or something, she, she
00:36:00.600
was in an interview where she talked about how she's going to buy herself a dog and a
00:36:04.260
girl and that's a dog and a gun. Oh. And it's interesting because it's like, she goes to
00:36:09.840
Hollywood. It's like eight, it's been 10 years since that 2012 interview. I don't remember
00:36:13.940
which magazine it was with and she's changed so much. So it's like, is Hollywood just like,
00:36:18.060
do they force people to conform or do these people just think it's what the public wants
00:36:23.200
to hear? I think it's both. I think everyone thinks that it's what they want to hear. And then
00:36:27.080
it, and then it becomes like, it almost like insists upon itself and it becomes the reality.
00:36:31.780
And then if you are like, Hmm, I'm in Hollywood, but I kind of like, I still want a dog and a gun.
00:36:37.480
People are going to be like, Oh, you're not working again. Right. You're not coming to the
00:36:40.660
vanity fair after party. But it's so interesting because one of the points Steven Crowder made
00:36:44.700
is that all these people in Hollywood come from other States. Most of them are raised in
00:36:48.480
Hollywood. So that means they come from different values and backgrounds. And they all merge together.
00:36:52.880
And then they all merge together. It's like, that doesn't, that's not how it works.
00:36:55.560
The melting pot. And for, for an industry that's so obsessed with diversity, you'd think that
00:36:59.800
we would be able to value and appreciate other people's belief systems, but no, no, no, no.
00:37:03.880
It's not diversity of thought. Exactly. My mistake, my mistake. It's just diversity of skin
00:37:08.440
color and waistline. Interesting. That's all that matters. Well, yeah. Sad. Who else stinks?
00:37:14.860
Um, Olivia Wilde. Olivia Wilde stinks. She's such a biznatch. She stinks. Get her out of here.
1.00
00:37:22.000
She's, uh, okay. Where do you even begin? For context. Um, okay. So people think that she
00:37:28.940
cheated on her husband, Harry, uh, not Harry Styles, Jason Sudeikis with Harry Styles while
00:37:33.500
filming. Don't worry, darling. The film she directed, uh, starring Florence Pugh and Harry
00:37:38.440
Styles. Um, apparently like people saw Jason Sudeikis visiting her on set and then also saw
00:37:45.040
her like canoodling on set. So it's like, that's an overlap. Exactly. And that's why there's
00:37:51.300
also apparently a feud between Florence Pugh and Olivia Wilde. And people think that that's
00:37:55.180
actually where it stems from. Yeah. The fact that she caught her being a slur with a guy
00:37:59.580
who wears dresses all the time while her husband and kids were just out back eating cookies. Yeah.
1.00
00:38:04.340
So like this, this movie, uh, don't worry, darling, uh, premiered last week. There's a,
00:38:09.160
there's a ton of controversy around it. It's subject matter, but just the production in itself.
00:38:13.400
She claims that she fired Chia LaBeouf. Yes. Who was originally supposed to play Harry Styles part,
00:38:18.480
but it would have been way better, but he has receipts that prove. And I watched one of the
00:38:23.880
videos. Um, that, that is not the case. He says he quit because he didn't have enough time. He felt
00:38:29.220
pressured to like rehearse. Yeah. I didn't have enough time to prepare and rehearse. Um, so there's
00:38:33.840
a video, there's apparently emails, texts, and a video. And I watched the video myself and it's
00:38:37.600
literally, okay, first of all, she's driving in her car while taking the video. Cause she's signaling
00:38:43.180
and like looking and it's like, okay. Anyways, that's a side note, but she's literally like,
0.86
00:38:50.720
I wrote down what she said. She writes, uh, she's driving and basically says, I'm not ready to give
00:38:57.920
up on this yet. And is there still any hope? And she says like, Oh, this is a good wake up call for
00:39:02.560
flow, Florence Pugh. So in her story, she says, Oh, I fired Shia LaBeouf because he made Florence
00:39:09.600
Pugh uncomfortable and he, and not creating a safe place and he was confrontational. But in
00:39:14.980
reality, it seems that Shia left on his own accord and Olivia Wilde completely threw Florence Pugh
0.98
00:39:21.120
under the bus when trying to get him to come back. And then she starts hooking up with his
0.88
00:39:26.260
replacement while she's still, and she wasn't married to, she was engaged to Jason Sudeikis and
00:39:32.200
they had two children together and they were engaged for seven years. So what did, did he served her
00:39:36.520
custody papers? Yeah. Okay. Yeah. So they just have custody, they both share custody of
00:39:40.260
the kid. Yeah. Okay. Um, so they were together a very long time. Um, interesting because the
00:39:48.300
way she speaks about Shia LaBeouf, it's like when, if he's such an aggressive person, you
00:39:54.300
would know that already in the industry. Like it's a small, I mean, I think we all know
00:39:57.380
that. Yeah. But like, it's a tight knit industry. So like, if there's, if you knew about issues
00:40:02.200
about his aggression before, why cast him in the first place? Like, it just doesn't make sense
00:40:06.220
to me. I find that to be really suspicious. Yeah. Super sus. Um, and also seemingly untrue
00:40:12.100
based on the fact that there's a video of her. Yeah. Literally. And he released it.
00:40:16.160
So, okay. So that happened a couple of weeks ago. Um, she's basically, I think this is just
00:40:21.580
a big PR stunt, frankly. Like, well, there's tons. That's the thing. No publicity is bad
00:40:26.220
publicity. And this movie is getting so much publicity. Bad publicity because no one's talking
00:40:30.760
about the actual film, by the way. Like no one cares about the movie. Apparently it's super
00:40:34.440
feminist. Oh, it's about Jordan Peterson. Yeah. Apparently, uh, the character played by, uh,
00:40:40.480
Chris Pine is supposed to be a Jordan Peterson type character. And she's apparently an incel.
0.99
00:40:45.700
Yeah. Jordan Peterson, who's happily married with two children, is an incel. Who has openly critiqued
00:40:51.800
incels multiple times. You can tell she's never listened or watched him at all. Yeah. That's what other
00:40:57.880
people have said. It's like, yeah. Okay. Anyway, so she's, she's interesting. Maybe at the end of
00:41:03.680
the show, we'll rate who we think's the worst. Yeah. That'll be fun. This one's a doozer. This
00:41:07.700
one's a doozer. You guys. This is one of my least favorite people in Hollywood. And of the,
00:41:12.840
of the four women that we're profiling, this is one of the two who are famous for nothing. Yes.
0.99
00:41:18.300
That's interesting to point out because at least Olivia Wilde and at least what's her face?
0.83
00:41:22.280
Jennifer Lawrence. Jennifer Lawrence. What's her, what's her blank dead stare face? Yeah. Uh,
00:41:28.400
they at least have jobs. Yeah. They're performers and directors. And they have, well, I think Olivia
00:41:33.520
Wilde's very mediocre, but Jennifer Lawrence is a very good actor. She is. She is. I've enjoyed her
00:41:37.020
in the past and she, they work. Okay. But now we're profiling the two on our list who are famous for
0.74
00:41:42.800
being famous. The first is Chrissy Teigen. Yes. And take it away. Okay. So Chrissy Teigen, uh,
00:41:50.360
apparently her miscarriage in 2020 was really an abortion to save my life. Uh, so Chrissy Teigen is
00:41:56.020
speaking out on the death of her 20 week old unborn child, Jack in 2020 saying she actually had an
00:42:00.900
abortion, not a miscarriage as was originally reported. Um, so Evie reported, there are a few
00:42:07.020
red flags, but the whole situation that people couldn't help, but notice for starters. So that she
00:42:10.860
posted photos of this, which people thought were really strange of her when she had the miss, the
00:42:15.060
alleged abortion in 2020. So the photos she shared were professionally taken. People thought that was
00:42:21.240
weird. Um, and those who were skeptical looked a little closer at the photos and noticed that if
00:42:26.420
you zoom in on where she was crying in the hospital bed, there's a bracelet. Her hospital bracelet has a
00:42:31.040
different woman's name on it. Super weird. That's weird. So anyway, the, what really happened is that
00:42:39.720
they, they gave her, they induced labor. Yeah. So she, she was 20 months pregnant. Yes. Um, sorry.
00:42:46.140
20 weeks. Weeks. My goodness. Um, 20 months pregnant. What is she? Well, um, so she was 20
0.75
00:42:53.080
weeks pregnant. Um, and like you were about to say, I just want to give a little context because she was
1.00
00:42:58.020
bleeding for a month prior to being admitted to the hospital. Okay. Sorry. Yes. Um, so she was
00:43:05.240
diagnosed with partial placenta abruption basically. Yeah. And she, I guess had struggled
00:43:10.660
with placenta issues in the past. So, uh, so she was induced and they gave her an epidural to deliver
00:43:15.880
her son. And basically she delivered this baby who can't survive, couldn't survive on its own. So
00:43:22.560
I don't know all the details about abortions, but I'm pretty sure it's not an abortion. Pretty sure
00:43:29.220
that's a miscarriage. That's the thing. You can just, I think the definition of abortion has been
00:43:33.220
shifting because I've, which is what the article talks about. I think we talked about this in a
00:43:37.320
previous episode when Roe v. Wade had just been overturned about how people are freaking out
00:43:41.460
because, Oh, what if you need chemo for cancer treatments? It's like, okay, if you do a life
00:43:45.100
saving measure on yourself and as a result, your child dies, that is not an abortion. That is not
00:43:51.580
a frigging abortion. Like, cause you didn't, it's not a, it's not a, what, what's the word? Like
00:43:58.420
you're not opting. Yeah. You're not choosing to murder your baby. It's so different.
00:44:03.220
And I think she, she mentions that, um, it wasn't a couple until a couple months ago from
00:44:09.100
like this week or last week that she realized that this wasn't a miscarriage. It just smacked
00:44:14.280
her in the face. It just smacked her in the face. But it's like, what happened a couple
00:44:17.740
months ago that may want change her mind. Hmm. Hmm. Did a major lot like a legal proceeding
1.00
00:44:25.840
get overturned? Oh my gosh. And then celebrity, yes. And then celebrities, all of a sudden started
00:44:31.320
coming out about their abortion stories and it's like, oh, this week, this person's talking
00:44:34.740
about, oh, how I think, you know, my career, Michelle, what's her name? Williams. Yeah.
00:44:39.260
Like, oh, I would never have won this Academy award if I didn't have my abortion. Yeah.
1.00
00:44:43.960
Michelle Williams, because people care so much about you. Yeah. You know, um, I just think
00:44:48.320
it's pretty evil actually to blur, like to blur the lines between an abortion and a miscarriage
00:44:55.060
because they're so completely different and words matter and the meanings of words matter.
00:44:59.700
And like, we, we know that we talk about that a lot on the show. And in this case,
00:45:03.180
it matters too, because like a woman who miscarriages, that's a horrible thing that happens to her.
0.97
00:45:08.660
And that's so emotional, but that's how she's, that's how it looked like. And that's the way
00:45:12.820
she portrayed it. Exactly. And I believed her baby. Yeah. She named her baby and she was crying
00:45:17.140
in the pictures. And I remember at the time, like, I really don't like Chrissy Teigen either,
00:45:20.820
but you sympathize. I completely sympathize with her. It was really, really sad. And they,
00:45:24.900
and she said, because she was losing so much blood, she was having all these transfusions
00:45:28.020
and they were going through bags and bags of blood until the doctors were like,
00:45:30.740
it's just falling out of you. You can't do this. So it's like, so were you,
00:45:35.060
so was this an optional abortion where you're like, eh, I don't think so.
00:45:41.140
Because she even celebrated the baby's one year anniversary, like went after the baby had died.
00:45:46.020
So it sounds like you really wanted that kid. And it sounds like a miscarriage is super sad
00:45:50.020
on its own. Why do you need? Why politicize it? Well, because it's,
00:45:53.860
because it's super in vogue. And like I mentioned at the top of this Chrissy Teigen segment,
00:45:58.260
she is famous for nothing. Yeah. She just needed to get her name out there again. She needed to get
0.94
00:46:01.940
out there again. It's like every week Demi Lovato does something atrocious. It's like, oh, well,
00:46:06.020
how can I get in the headlines again? It's like, well, oh, I just realized that I had an abortion.
00:46:12.180
Like, no, you did not. Pretty sure it's different kind of trauma between a miscarriage and an
00:46:16.820
abortion. And I just think like, we got to stress delivering a baby early in order to protect the
00:46:23.060
life of a mom is not an abortion. It's not an abortion. Okay. The baby was never going to live.
0.98
00:46:28.580
Yeah. The doctors told her that she could have died if she kept bleeding as much as she did.
00:46:32.740
Yeah. They wanted the kid. She's pregnant again. Yeah. They named the child, celebrated its
00:46:37.940
anniversary. Like, doesn't sound like an abortion, Chrissy. If the baby came out
0.95
00:46:42.740
and somehow, because even at 24 weeks, the baby's viable. So it, maybe the baby could have survived.
00:46:48.580
It could have survived. I've seen like 19 week old fetuses survive. And sometimes they don't,
00:46:54.100
which is tragic. Of course, most of the time they don't. Like, there's always, it like,
00:46:57.140
it goes up and up percentage wise every week. Um, so I'm sure she would have kept it. Yes. She
00:47:02.820
wasn't flushing it. No. Like you were going to keep, you named it. Like you loved that kid already.
00:47:07.780
Yeah. It was super sad for everyone to watch you go through that. Yeah. And then now you're like,
00:47:12.180
no, oopsies. It was an abortion and Roe v. Wade. And I'm me too. Yeah. Like get off it. Go away.
00:47:18.420
Just go away. You need to go away. Just get out of here. Just get out of here. The worst. Okay. You are
00:47:23.780
the worst. Um, but I don't know. This person might be the worst. Yeah. Well, we have one more. We have one
00:47:27.860
more and then who would have guessed this person would make our list. Oh, cat, cat, cat. What do we,
00:47:34.980
what do we have to say about this? Honestly, I only wrote, she's the worst in general. Okay.
00:47:39.140
So let's just provide some context. Kim Kardashian is who she's talking about. So Ray J goes off on
00:47:45.300
Kris Jenner, Kim Kardashian saying they lied about the sex tape. So, um, they're apparently actually,
00:47:50.580
okay. So we talked about this briefly, briefly, like months ago, but on the Kardashians new show,
00:47:56.340
the Kardashians, there's a scene where Kim Kardashian discovers on the internet that Ray J,
00:48:01.540
who is, was involved with allegedly releasing the first sex tape that got her famous in 2007 or
00:48:07.620
something, had a second copy or like a different tape. Okay. It, it turned out take two, take two.
00:48:14.260
Yeah, exactly. Um, so Ray J is now claiming he shot three sex tapes with Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner picked
00:48:21.540
the best one. Oh my God. Oh, can you imagine? That's your mom watching you have sex. I actually
00:48:32.340
think that's demonic. Like I actually think that's demonic. And she picked the one that Kim looked
0.92
00:48:36.180
best in. What are you, what? Yeah. So these people are just so depraved and so disgusting and just evil.
00:48:45.540
Like that's your child. That's so weird. That's your child. Like that should be illegal. It should
00:48:51.220
be illegal. It's kind of, it's like your child and it's porn. Is it not child porn? Like it's so gross.
00:48:56.100
I don't know. It's just so gross. Like three times he watched you do it. She watched you do it three
00:49:00.820
times. And then she was like, Oh, the lighting's better in this one. Like her. And you want our
1.00
00:49:06.020
sympathy for this guy allegedly releasing these tapes, which we know, obviously that's completely
00:49:10.820
contrived. And you guys, it was, this is a concerted effort to get your, your baby Kim famous. And it
00:49:16.500
worked, it worked, but like, goodness gracious, like this is, it's just so disgusting. And they're
00:49:22.180
trying to defame Ray J now saying that he like stuck things up her butt while she was sleeping and stuff
00:49:27.380
like that. And it's like, I don't, I mean, he's obviously not an upstanding citizen, but I kind of
00:49:32.740
sympathize with him a little bit because like what they're making. Well, I saw the text that he sent to
00:49:38.340
Kim about that. And he was like, can you not tell people that I basically raped you while they were
00:49:42.980
sleeping? Yeah. He's like, would you not have woken up? Like, what kind of a story is that?
00:49:48.420
Yeah. Like, is your butt so fake that you just can't feel anything like completely numb? Yeah.
00:49:53.860
It's just, it's so gross. And like these people, like she's a mother and they're exploiting this
00:49:59.300
person who they, they all were clearly in cahoots. It's like, why are you playing a victim when you're not
00:50:04.340
like that? Yeah. And he's had it. Yeah. He's had it. Which is good. Like, I really hope that more
00:50:08.500
truth, like more of the truth starts to come out about this because it's just, it's gross. And
00:50:13.380
like the Kardashians just need to go. They need to go. They need to go. She's just the worst in
00:50:18.340
general. And so is like, I think Chris is the worst. She's the worst, but she's not,
00:50:22.740
we should have put her on the list. But one of the things that bothers me the most about Kim Kardashian
00:50:27.060
is how much she lies about her plastic surgery. I know. Like she still hasn't admitted to her butt implants.
1.00
00:50:32.820
Yeah. No, she is just like, she's the worst example for women. She's the worst. She's had
1.00
00:50:39.380
a nose job cheeks. Like she's had her whole face done. Yeah. Her whole body and her breasts.
1.00
00:50:45.060
Yeah. Completely redone. Like if you want to be plastic, just be like, yeah, I'm plastic. Yeah.
00:50:49.460
Like, and it's working. This is something that Sebastian and I've talked about too. And sorry,
00:50:53.220
we're going to wrap things up here because this is going a little long, I think. But
00:50:56.900
when you had so much work done, how can people actually call you beautiful when it's all fake? Like
00:51:02.020
true beauty is true beauty. That's like Bella Hadid. She's had hundreds and hundreds of thousands
00:51:07.220
of dollars of facial reconstruction. We shouldn't look to these people for like beauty standards.
1.00
00:51:12.100
They're not setting them. They're buying them. Yeah. And that's so unfair. You're not ugly. You're
00:51:15.780
just poor. Yeah, exactly. Like the rest of us have to suffer with whatever is going on here. Okay.
00:51:21.060
Thank God. You know? Yeah. It's we were blessed and it's the lighting obviously. Thanks to our
00:51:26.180
wonderful producer. Um, but like, I just don't think it counts. No,
00:51:30.500
and you shouldn't be allowed to be an influencer or a model if it's all fake. I'm sorry. Cause like,
00:51:34.420
unless you're only influencing other plastic surgery addicts,
00:51:37.700
you could be like a model for a plastic surgery company. That'd be cool. Yeah. And you have
00:51:42.100
children and I've, I've mentioned this before, but it's another atrocious thing about her. Not
00:51:45.700
quickly, quickly. She photoshops her children's photos on Instagram. She makes their nose is smaller,
00:51:51.780
their lips bigger, their eyes bigger, their belly's flatter. Like it's good for their health. I don't
00:51:56.580
need mental health. I don't even need to comment on it. Cause you guys know,
00:51:58.900
you already know. It's just, it's disgusting. Okay. So who's the worst?
00:52:01.780
Okay. Before we finish things off. Honestly, I think Kim, just because she's the most famous
0.96
00:52:06.580
and I say it goes Kim. She does the most damage. Kim, Chrissy, Olivia Wilde, Jennifer Lawrence.
00:52:11.060
That's my order. Yeah, I agree. Okay. Great. Well, that's the sure. That's the sure. Okay.
00:52:15.780
Thank you all for listening or watching. Uh, this show airs every Tuesday on rebel news plus at 7
00:52:22.340
PM Eastern time. You can go to misunderstood show.ca to subscribe now. It's only eight bucks a
00:52:26.340
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00:52:31.300
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00:52:36.500
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00:52:43.140
I'm going to get that one day. One day. And on our YouTube channel, watch misunderstood. Yeah.
00:52:48.740
So subscribe, like, like this video comment. It helps with our engagement, you know,
00:52:53.220
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00:52:57.380
Oh yeah. Tell us who you think is the worst and send an e-transfer.
00:53:02.900
And follow us on social murderer, social murderer, Instagram, tick tock,
00:53:07.380
Twitter, Twitter. Yeah. Okay. That's it. Okay. Love you. Bye. Bye.
00:53:13.940
People are going to think we're Illuminati. Yeah.