Miss Understood No. 5 β Pray For Kanye
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Summary
In this episode, we talk about our dogs, the wage gap, and why women don't get paid the same as men. We also talk about the fact that women are getting paid less than men, but not by much.
Transcript
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Welcome to Misunderstood, the show for the culturally and politically misunderstood lady
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or gent. We are your hosts. I'm Nat. And I'm Kat. And today, unlike other days, we are not
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going to do a culture shock moment. I feel like we've shocked people enough. Oh yeah.
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So instead, we're going to talk about our dogs. Shocking. They're really cute. They're so
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freaking cute. Yeah. Tell us about your dog, Nat. Okay. So my dog is a Brindle Pug named Pepe. He's
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almost two years old. Pepe the Pug. You can follow him on Instagram at HeyPepe the Pug. He is a little
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chubster, a little snuggly bunny, and he loves da foods. Oh, that's so cute. I love Pepe and he
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is a good guy. He's an icon. He is. He really is. He's an icon. Yeah. Tell us about your little
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pooch. Okay. My pooch is named Beatrice. She is a 70 pound coon hound with many nipples because she
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gave birth to seven puppies. She's six years old and she is the light of my life. We'll post photos.
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I'm going to post so many photos. And you're welcome. Yeah, you're welcome. And hopefully one
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day I would love to see Beatrice and Pepe in studio with us. Yeah, they have a lot to say. I would say
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Pepe leans left. So I think he'd really offer a lot of interesting social commentary about our
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show. Yeah, that'd be interesting to have a counterpoint. Yeah. Yeah. And we'll mute his
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mic. Yes. If he gets too lefty. We do believe in censorship. Beatrice is from Tennessee, so she's
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definitely right wing. The hard south. Yeah. Yeah. She's from the south. The deep south. Okay. All
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right. All right. Well, you're welcome for that. So now we'll talk about stuff that, you know,
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matters a little more, but not by much. Barely. Yeah, I think so. So there's this term being
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thrown around, Nat. The wage gap? Eh? What? Well, apparently it exists between men and women.
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First, we should maybe note that it's actually illegal to pay a man more than a woman. Yes. So
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I guess if the wage gap does exist, there might be some factors that are playing into that and
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contributing to that. Yes. So we're going to talk about that and maybe do a little debunking.
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I'd like to debunk it. There are so many notes here. Uh-huh. Oh my goodness. There are, okay,
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there's like two different acts in Canadian law. Yeah. That prevent you from paying someone more
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than someone else based on gender, sexuality, religion. Race. Race. So it's already illegal.
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It's illegal, folks. It's illegal. So why would women potentially, technically, be getting paid
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less than? Perhaps it's a social thing. Yes. So let's like talk about what they mean when they
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say paid less than. Yes. So conservative MP Michelle Rempel-Gardner, she did a Twitter thread on
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International Women's Day about the wage gap and she linked to an article from the Canadian Women's
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Foundation, which I'd never heard of. Uh-huh. Thanks, ladies. Um, in that article, the article
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was pretty much nonsense. Yes. Well, as all of them typically are. It was so silly. Yeah. It was
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extremely silly. But they, they linked as a source, uh, to StatsCan. Okay. So StatsCan is like a thing
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that, and, and, you know. Hopefully an unbiased thing. Ideally. Yeah. It's taken from the census and we
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can pretty much rely on that for like some good, uh, information. Yeah, definitely. So I went to
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StatsCan and I did a little test. I compared male wages on average in the year 2019, um, males 16 and
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up to women 16 and up. Average income for the year 2019. What I found was that men made, uh, $47,300
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in 2019 and women made, they made $39,100. So that's a 17% difference in the average income between men
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and women. So that's our basis. Now we can talk about why. Yeah. And I mean, so also too, when you
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look at people who actually work in the same profession, uh, with the same seniority, like
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the same working number of hours, et cetera, basically women earn 98 cents for every dollar
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that a man earns. So let's think about that. That's a 2%. Yeah. That's not 17%. That's not. Where's
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this difference coming from? Well, I'm going to guess it's a nature thing. It's in our nature
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as women, first of all, to not be, to be, well, to be poor because we want a rich man.
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Yeah. No, I'm just kidding. But in all seriousness, um, women are less assertive than men. So when
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you're in a job interview and they ask you about your salary expectations, you might be
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less likely to push back. Like most men are not agreeable. And of course, this is just a
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generalization. Every individual is of course an individual, but if you're more assertive, you're
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more likely to get what you want. And if you want more money, you're going to ask for it.
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So that, I think that's one thing that plays into it. But that's even like a comparison when
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you're talking about like, uh, careers with the same seniority. Like if you're a banker and I'm
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a banker and we've both been working for about five years, like that might explain that 2%.
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But the 17%, they said in the, in the article that Michelle Rempel-Gardner, um, sourced,
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sourced, they said that this disparity in salaries is based on this, um, the same income source.
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So I was like, Oh, does that mean that they literally took like a banker and a banker and
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compared them side by side? No. So when they say the same income source, they mean, are you
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employed? Are you unemployed? Are you self-employed? Did you make your money from like investments?
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Are you, one of them was, are you like, is your income coming from government programs? So when
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they say from the same income source, they are literally talking about like employment in general.
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So whether you work as a sandwich artist at Subway or you're a financial planner, they're
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counting you as the same income source. So essentially they're not breaking it down by
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age, by occupation, by hours worked, by seniority, by education, by danger. Danger is another thing
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that people don't like to talk about. Well, of course, because we do know that men are more
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likely to enter a field that is more dangerous. Like I don't, 90% of all workplace fatalities are
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men. 90%. So like, let's talk about the wage gap. Let's talk about the death gap. Safety gap. Yeah.
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Like, you know, I'm here in my studio while someone's out there like hammering a roof and
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they're falling off right now. But you know, we need more money. Yeah. Well, we do.
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But there are so many factors that go into the wage gap and, and we, in our research, I think we've
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both discovered that it exists. Yes, it does exist. There is a gap, but there's a, it's about
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justification for it though. And I think we should also talk about the fact that women do have a
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biological clock. Most women around our age are like, Hey, I maybe want to have kids now. And
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when you're in your late twenties, early thirties, that's when you are kind of at the height of your
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career perhaps. And you're like, well, I got to make a decision. Do I want to go full force in my
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career? Do I want to have babies and stay home and be a nurturing mom, which by the way, is an
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admirable career path as well. If you want to be a stay at home mom, like kudos to you, you are raising
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the next generation of, you know, successful, productive people. It's, I don't think those women get enough
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praise. Absolutely not. So on that topic, um, Michelle Rempel-Garner, who's a conservative
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MP. I don't know if I mentioned that, which is weird because, you know, conservative, you'd have
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a little bit, you'd hope for more. Um, she said, or actually this is from the article that she tweeted
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jobs that conform to traditional gender roles tend to be undervalued because they parallel domestic work
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that women are expected to perform for free. So I'm sorry, undervalued in motherhood. Like she's
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basically saying, if you say, if you take time off of your career and make less money than your
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male counterparts, because you're doing motherhood, that, that that's like doing free labor basically.
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And it's like, it's kind of like one of the most important jobs in the universe, I would argue.
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And you're not getting financially compensated for your hours worked, but like you're raising a human
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being. But also men can stay home as well. I just think it's in a woman's nature to want to stay
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home with her baby. Well, we give birth. Yeah. Right. Like we have a special connection with that
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child. Like we're going to want to be the ones that are there. Like, I don't know. Yeah. Whether
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that works for your individual family or not on the whole, on average, more women are more likely to
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want to be the primary caregiver of their child. Like you and Pepe. Yeah. Who's the primary caregiver?
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Well, I guess my dad right now. But okay. Maybe we should also talk about the fact that there
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also are like men are more willing to sacrifice like flexibility and their free time in order
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to work 70, 80 hours a week. Like I don't want to work that much. Like as I just want more flexibility
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in my schedule. I don't know if that's necessarily inherently male or female, but I do think men
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are willing to sacrifice a little bit more willingly, I guess. Yeah. And Jordan Peterson has spoken
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about this at length. There's that famous Kathy Newman interview where, you know, she's just
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like, so what she was saying is women are stupid. It's like, no, never said that. Not anything like
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that, but that's what people hear. And they start saying that he's a sexist or whatever. Yeah. But
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there's that study and they had babies and they showed them pictures of faces and then they showed
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them pictures of objects. And they found that the female infants were more drawn to the faces and the
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male infants were more drawn to the objects. And that just like, if you extrapolate, it's just like
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women are more likely to go into careers that are nurturing. Yes. Human relations. So like
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psychiatry, nursing, daycare, working, obviously motherhood is one of those. And then men are more
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attracted to objects. Right. So that's, that's just science. It's not like, and so people say, well,
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there's a bias against women in STEM and science, technology, whatever, whatever. Doubt it. Don't
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even know the acronym. Not interested. Science and technology, engineering and math. Money. I don't
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know if that's true. I just made it up. But, um, no, it's true. And also like women, you have a choice
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when you enter university, you get to pick whether you want to study English lit and women's studies,
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or if you want to be an engineer, like you can't, like we have equal opportunity. We have more than
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equal opportunity. I would argue that too. I have an anecdote. I love to hear it. When I was at Western
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and first year, I took comp sci, computer science, which was a terrible, a terrible idea, but you
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needed a science credit. My boyfriend at the time, um, he, he was a genius and he did my computer
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science project for me. He literally just copied his own and gave it to me. Um, don't tell our props.
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Yeah. Oops. I'm going to get a bad grade now. No. So he made mine pink and he kept his whatever gray,
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blue, whatever he, I submitted mine under my name. He submitted his, I got like a hundred percent on it
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and he got like a, an 80 something. And we were like, at the time I was like kind of offended.
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And he was like, eh, he was over it. He was like, eh, kind of expected that. But like, that was
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many years ago. That was like 15 years ago. Sorry. I'm so old. The point is they've been doing this for
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a long time. They have been pushing women into STEM for so long at the expense of men who were actually
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working harder or as hard as the people, the women. So I can't even imagine how bad it is now.
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Yeah. I, that it's scary. Well, I mean, even, even like a lot of big corporations are holding
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this meetings where they want to fill these quotas. Right. So they're like, oh, we need more
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women, you know, people of certain ethnicity, et cetera. And it's like, well, you're eliminating
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jobs that a man, like a man might be better qualified. Someone who's interested might be
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better qualified because they're actually interested, but you're trying to push women into it and taking
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race into consideration. Like as if that has anything to do with skill. Science doesn't care what color
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your skin is. No, I think all that matters at the end of the day is how hard are you working?
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Are you doing a good job? And, uh, you know, I think that's really all we should care about when
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it comes to jobs. I think it's really, really awesome that our government, like, again, this is
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super lefty of me, but I think it's really awesome that the government of Canada will pay you to go on
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mat leave. Yeah. It's, you'll get 40% of your income up into a certain level. I think it's 80K.
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So you'll only ever get like 40% of 80K. A lot of people make less than 80K. So they're going to
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be making a lot less than that. But the point is, is that like, that's where our tax dollars are going.
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And that's one of the social programs that I'm like, wow, that's actually great. Because if I get
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pregnant, I can't work up, you know, for some time while I'm nursing my child and whatnot, and I'll
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still get a little money to pay the bills. So that's awesome. However, I forget my point.
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I think my point was that, I don't know what my point was. Do you know?
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I think your point is that women are afforded this special social program that men would never,
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men don't get this opportunity unless you're a birthing person, which we'll talk about later.
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They've recently introduced that up until, it was only up until recently. That's very new though.
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It's new. And some people do take advantage of that. And that's awesome.
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A lot. There's so many things to say on this subject. I know. I'm like, I have so many notes
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here. Just like three pages of notes. And I can't remember anything. Yeah. Like the wage gap,
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the wage gap, 70% difference. No, it's not. It's 2%. Okay. Basically, let's just round this out here.
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Let's just round this out. What a nightmare. So that's okay. I see what my point was here.
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This quote from this Forbes article, which was about the dangers of the gender,
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the wage gap myth. Yes. Which is interesting because I did not expect that from a Forbes
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article. Yeah, we should talk about this. But a point that they made is that it disparages men
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to say that they really haven't earned their space in society because they're just like given,
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given it. Yeah. Because we just hate women and we don't want them involved in science and
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financial jobs and high paying jobs. And it's like, you're now saying that men haven't earned what
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they've earned. What they've literally earned. And I think also it doesn't encourage women to
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work hard and pursue like getting the CEO role, for example, because they're like, oh,
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I'm never going to get that. I'm never going to be a successful. I'm never going to get paid as
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much as a man. So why would I even bother trying? Yeah. And I just think that's a little bit dangerous
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for us as well, because we can do it if we want to. But like I said, there are certain things that we
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need to consider. Like maybe we need to put on our pants and kind of if you're going to compete
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against men, you got to compete like a man, unfortunately. Yeah. Well, it's the bigotry
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of low, low expectations. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. You do it with race in the same way. But I,
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you see it all the time when they're like, oh, females, you know, give yourself a round of applause
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for just being in this space. It's like, that's sexist as heck. It is. Do I need a special round
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of applause for just doing my job? Yeah. And by the way, that's not to say that like real sexism doesn't
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exist in the workplace. I do believe, I believe it does. We've all experienced it. Absolutely. But I
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think that we should let it fuel us. We should let it like incentivize us to be better and prove
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them wrong. Like don't be a victim. We don't need to be victims. Like you should use it to empower
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yourself. You know, go get it, girl. Go get it, girl. You can do it. And especially because they're
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actually trying to encourage you so much. Like when we say or when the feminists say that there's a bias
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against women in these in these jobs, that is wrong. Yeah. It's just categorically false. They're
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literally encouraging women. They're cheating and giving them better grades and certain things when they're
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doing the same project as men. Like they're encouraging, they're pushing women into these
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roles. And if the roles aren't being filled by women, it's not because there's a bias. It's
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because women aren't freaking interested in it. Yeah. Like on average. Which is okay too. That's
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okay. Exactly. Just stop complaining about it then. Yeah. There we go. I think we got there. I think
00:15:04.760
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save and use promo code rebelnews for 10% off. This has been an ad break. Should we talk about
00:16:10.300
some children being indoctrinated by inappropriate adults? Can we talk about this eco-feminist
00:16:15.680
article? Oh yeah. It's disgusting. Okay yeah we'll just touch on this quickly. A little bit more
00:16:20.020
feminism and then we'll get right into that. This is nasty. This is nasty. So this is an article from
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Teen Vogue. I don't know what the article's called but it's embarrassing. It's called Eco-feminism
00:16:31.220
explains how patriarchy has contributed to the climate crisis. Okay. So do you want to know something
00:16:36.760
really funny about this, Nat? Yeah. Do you want to know what our author of this article is called?
00:16:42.080
Oh no. Her name is Leah Thomas. It's not the same Leah Thomas. And we were like we're not talking
00:16:48.240
about Leah Thomas this week. But somehow we always end up talking about Leah Thomas. The spelling is
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different though. Yeah. So for those of you who don't know what eco-feminism is or ecological feminism
00:16:58.600
because I certainly did not. It's a branch of feminism that explores the relationship between
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women and nature. A key argument of eco-feminism is that the degradation of the planet
00:17:06.560
and the exploitation of women are all connected to the patriarchy and the devaluing of both has
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led to disastrous conditions for both the planet and women. I didn't know that. Oh my god. She's
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it's just such nonsense. Like the devaluing of my time leads to disastrous consequences. Yeah. And
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this author is not valuing my time. No. At all. And there's literally no science behind any of the
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things she says. She doesn't talk about science at all. No. She just talks about capital capitalism gender
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identity as if those things pertain. I just want to know girl. Leah. Girl. How are how do they
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correlate? Like please tell me how capitalism and feminism impact the environment. Like I don't
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understand. Like you want me to take climate change seriously? This is not helping you. So a couple of
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really fun quotes from this. Oh yes. Because they're hilarious. She's talking about what eco-feminism
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is. And she says from earth goddesses to creation theories. There are countless metaphors and
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symbolisms about women and their deep ties to the earth. What? Sorry. Earth goddesses to creation
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theories. Like are you trying to take yourself seriously as a science woman? Yeah. No she's not
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is the answer to that. I don't get it. Earth goddesses. This is where like we're like men don't take us
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seriously. We don't make enough money in STEM. You're talking about freaking earth goddesses? I know.
00:18:24.020
I thought you were talking about the environment. Like I just don't understand why this was published.
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Yeah. Like it's embarrassing. As a woman I feel embarrassed. It's embarrassing. The whole time
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I was reading it I was like is there any legitimacy to this at all? No there's not. None. It's super
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embarrassing. And basically she's just promoting her own book which she uh the article the book is
00:18:43.680
called uh intersectional the intersectional course uh climb environment oh the intersectional
00:18:51.200
environmentalist. That's yeah there it is. That's the name of her book. Oh there she is. Um so she's
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talking a lot about her book and trying to sell you her terrible book and one of the other quotes
00:18:59.300
I really enjoyed was in the book I also explore how other oppressive systems beyond the patriarchy
00:19:04.980
like racism homophobia xenophobia and beyond are also connected to the destruction of the environment
00:19:10.080
and devaluing of people. How? She how? I want to know. I actually am asking how. She'll just throw
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out a bunch of gobbledygook but like I love how she's talking about all these oppressive
00:19:20.640
systems but what about wokeism? Yeah. That's oppressive as heck. It is. That's a great point.
00:19:26.500
All these radical feminists always just try to like just like place blame on someone other than
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themselves. You know what if you really care about the earth all you can do is ultimately focus on how
00:19:34.760
you're stewarding the earth. Are you recycling? I bet she doesn't even recycle properly. I know. I bet she's one of
00:19:39.400
those people that doesn't even checks on everyone else. She doesn't even rinse out her thing before
00:19:42.720
she puts it in the blue bin. We're looking at you Leah. Yeah. We have a real problem with Leah's on
00:19:46.960
this show. Don't be named Leah. Yeah. We're off on a bad foot right out the gate. It's just like
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it's bad and you know it's scary that teenage women are reading this because this is teen
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vogue of course. It's absolutely terrifying. Like that's scary like is someone gonna read this and
00:20:02.720
be like oh my gosh yeah. Yes they are. Yeah. One more quote. I want to throw out. It's really bad. Probably the worst.
00:20:08.480
Uh oh. Okay here she says that's why I believe you can't save the planet without also dismantling
00:20:13.760
systems of oppression. So basically in order for her to save the planet which she's stated
00:20:17.920
as her goal I guess she can't do that until all of you guys change the way the entire world
00:20:23.020
believes. Like the whole infrastructure of ideology you gotta just throw that away. Just toss it away
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and then she can start to do her job. Leah start with China. Mmm. Baby. Mmm. Yeah like you have to
00:20:36.540
so she's just like pushing all the like you just said all the blame is not on her. She's
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like I want to save the planet but I can't do that until all of you stop using racist homophobic
00:20:46.480
bigoted language. That's the real problem with the environment. It's not that we're burning
00:20:51.000
like we're doing single use plastics and we're burning fuels and whatever. Whatever you want
00:20:56.160
to say it is. Yeah. That's not the problem. You're saying it's actually the language that
00:20:59.260
we use. It's the patriarchy. Could you be any more pathetic? It's you Leah you suck. Okay. I mean
00:21:06.660
you write for teen vogue. Yeah. So maybe when you grow up to write for actual vogue although
00:21:11.900
that's not gonna be any more scientific. You know what maybe you can talk about skirts and
00:21:14.760
stuff and that would be I would read that because I feel like that's your beat. That's
00:21:18.200
your beat girl. Do the do the like dinner gloves beat. Yeah do that. That's our next beat
00:21:23.220
too. Oh my god. All right. Let's move on. Okay. We're gonna be talking about some trans
00:21:28.260
gender issues but no we will not be talking about Leah because we just did that. So that's
00:21:34.000
great. That's so great. We're gonna talk about a little sex education and no we will not be
00:21:39.300
teaching you because that'd be extremely inappropriate and we'd probably lose our jobs. Someone bring
00:21:43.160
me a banana. But basically there is this family sex show. You heard that. A family sex show
00:21:50.960
that celebrates sexual pleasure equality and independence. So basically there's a team of
00:21:55.660
eight performers and they make a show about sex and relationships for ages five and up.
00:22:04.140
Five year olds at a family sex show. When you say the word sex show I think Amsterdam red light
00:22:15.980
district. So this is almost the same though. Kind of. It's a bunch of creepy
00:22:20.740
adults. Creepy adults. Singing about sex. Singing specifically to young children about the ode to
00:22:27.260
the. Nope we're not gonna say that word. But the family sex show does topple uh tackle topics
00:22:34.900
including boundaries, gender, relationships, and masturbation. So what? Masturbation for five-year-olds.
00:22:41.700
That's cute. Gender ideology for five-year-olds. Huh? What were you doing when you were five?
00:22:48.520
Oh barbies? Yeah. A lot of barbie work? Yeah a lot of barbie work. Yeah. I was pretty perverted
00:22:54.600
though. Like I always stripped my barbies naked. I think everyone did. I don't know why. Yeah well
00:22:59.520
that's okay. Like get these clothes off. Don't tell me how to dress my barbie. And I cut all their
00:23:02.880
hair. Oh I used to do that too. And then I'd be like why are my barbies look like like kidnap
00:23:06.760
victims? Like it's. I think I might have a little something going on. She was being creative though. She was exercising
00:23:11.720
a creative spirit. Okay. But I was not ready for actual like gender ideology conversations or actual
00:23:17.920
sex like. And you're learning about masturbation from strangers while your parents are right there.
00:23:22.800
Like come on that's that's creepy. Do you think parents should be teaching like what's what's the
00:23:28.100
answer here? Like so we don't want weird confused adults teaching our kids about masturbation.
00:23:32.640
Obviously at a certain age kids will start to engage in that. So like who should tell them? That's a good
00:23:38.280
question. I don't really know. I don't think it should be a strange adult and I don't
00:23:41.600
think you should be five. Like I think five is young. Five is really young. I think it's important
00:23:45.900
like like sex is not shameful. We shouldn't like we shouldn't create shame around it. I mean or
00:23:51.580
stigma but like I just don't think pre-pubescent kids need to be taught about it. Okay. Like it's
00:23:56.820
pretty reasonable. You know like I think it's all right to talk about like when puberty starts
00:24:00.840
coming. I think so. That's when conversations should start happening. Yeah and I mean I understand
00:24:05.260
like you know your your little kids are curious and stuff but you and then like maybe teach them
00:24:10.100
boundaries. Like maybe not to take their pants off in public. Stuff like that. But like I just
00:24:14.220
don't think we need to be like yes honey this is good. It's so normal to be touching yourself in
00:24:19.880
public. Like no. And one of the things the author of this article said was children aren't anxious
00:24:25.280
about the idea of the show. It's the older people who feel discomfort. Yeah because kids don't
00:24:29.700
understand. Because they don't know. Like of course their parents are uncomfortable with you
00:24:33.760
talking to their children about sex. Like these people are so sick. It's immoral I think.
00:24:39.580
It's totally immoral. It just creeps me out. Why don't you just focus on like reading and writing.
00:24:45.040
Yeah. Teach them about your friggin twisted environmental views. Fine. Yeah. Fine. Yeah
00:24:49.360
Leah. That's fine. That's fine. I'm liking Leah a whole lot more right now. Yeah she sounds a lot
00:24:53.140
more reasonable. She does. Things are things are very lopsided in the world. Yeah this is scary and it
00:24:58.380
gets a little scarier actually because the leader of Sexy Summer Camp recommends that children begin to
00:25:03.320
masturbate as toddlers. Oh! Maybe we should play this clip if you don't mind. We'll just react. That's how
00:25:10.640
we should. You know like get down with yourself. Explore your own body. Masturbation is really healthy
00:25:16.680
and I recommend it to people of all ages. All ages. As soon as my nephews could talk they were doing
00:25:23.460
that. That's what they were doing. Kids touch themselves. Kids start to ask questions and we
00:25:29.560
teach them the language for their bodies. Right? That's your nose. Touch your nose. Show aunt T.
00:25:35.000
You can touch your nose. But my sister's not saying that when they're tugging at their penis. Right?
00:25:40.020
Yeah. But it feels good. Right? We have to learn ways to talk to young people about this so that they
00:25:45.340
know how to explore their body consensually so that it's not in public. Right? We don't want people
00:25:50.560
exploring their bodies in public. That's not consensual but exploring your body at any age.
00:25:57.340
Grandmas. Grandpas. All of us need to be exploring our body. That's how we should. You know like get
00:26:03.160
down with yourself. Explore your own body. Masturbation is really... For me the weirdest part was she was
00:26:10.220
talking about masturbation with her nephews. Yeah like that's super inappropriate. And she's talking
00:26:14.680
about consent. Like did they give you consent to start a conversation with them when you're like touch your
00:26:20.080
nose. Touch your nose. Are you asking them to like where does that lead? No that's a great point.
00:26:25.940
It's just very creepy and I just think it speaks to how like there's this weird attack on kids and
00:26:31.700
we just need to protect their innocence. Yeah we do. We need to preserve it. I don't know. I just this is
00:26:36.060
a camp that people are willingly sending their kids to. Like what is wrong with these parents? I feel
00:26:39.840
like that camp's not going to do well financially. It's a good point. Yeah. Especially not after this. She doesn't have kids.
00:26:43.980
She's talking about her nephew. So like if it's your own kid who am I to like I can judge you from afar but
00:26:49.920
I can't I would never say like stop her. Like get the government involved and like take her kids
00:26:54.340
away. Like no that's if that's her own child like as long as she's not abusing it like maybe have the
00:26:59.780
conversations you want to have but like that's not even your kid. Yeah. Have you talked to your brother
00:27:03.540
or sister about what you're teaching your niece and nephew? Like is the mother of the child in this
00:27:07.540
video? No it's the weird aunt. Yeah. It's just very icky. Yeah and I just I think like just to let your
00:27:14.140
children go to a camp like that with these weird strangers. Don't do it. Don't do it. Yeah. Don't do
00:27:19.560
it. That's great advice. Listen to this one. It's nasty. She may have destroyed her Barbies but she's
00:27:23.460
smart. She knows this is wrong. It's wrong. Okay. It's wrong. Speaking of wrong. Do you want to take
00:27:30.140
it away with this next one? Yes. So here's the headline. Transgender man who thought he couldn't
00:27:34.920
conceive while transitioning. Yep. Is now a proud dad after a surprise pregnancy and put off his breast
00:27:42.060
surgery so he could nurse his son. So I would just like to start maybe and say that. Congratulations
00:27:52.980
to the happy new mother. I don't know but I think my favorite quote from this was. We're getting so
00:28:02.880
quiet. I think more trans men need to understand that they can get pregnant. I mean okay Kate.
00:28:12.060
Okay. When people say trans women are women but then they also say trans men can give birth. It's
00:28:17.400
like I'm very confused. I'm very confused. A trans woman does not have a uterus right? No. Okay so
00:28:23.180
not a woman but then this trans man who does have a uterus can give birth making her a woman.
00:28:31.660
So this whole like this trans lobby is trying to erase women argument is really really working.
00:28:37.380
I would say because biologically that's the one thing women have. Isn't it so nice also of this
00:28:44.520
father to put off his top surgery so that he can nurse his son. Isn't that so nice of him?
00:28:58.560
Um well actually it's chest feeding. Oh. It's not he he uses there's he uses feeding. I got to chest
00:29:07.240
feed Hendrick when he was born as I knew it was the healthiest and best way to aid him in his growth.
00:29:12.820
Yeah. So kudos to you. The mother's milk is the most nutritious source of food for a baby.
00:29:24.060
I feel like this is this has been a fruitful chat.
00:29:29.660
Lots of things. Should we move on? Anyways um speaking of gender affirming care
00:29:36.000
this is another Teen Vogue article and um you know I think maybe we should start off by saying
00:29:44.100
we are compassionate. I would call you a compassionate person and I would call myself
00:29:49.380
a compassionate person. I think we do care. I want to we want to treat people with dignity and kindness
00:29:53.160
but at what point are we just living in a you know in disillusionment to an extent right and what
00:30:02.000
at what point are we like where's the line here because okay gender affirming care sure but
00:30:07.160
health care is also you know getting to the root of an issue maybe seeing seeking counsel. No okay
00:30:15.300
that's sexist and bigoted. Okay well maybe we should pull up this article and we'll dive into this a little
00:30:22.200
bit. Okay so what does it actually mean? I didn't read this one. Okay so basically let me just read a
00:30:29.040
quick excerpt here and then we can I'll learn and then we can learn we can bounce bounce off of this
00:30:33.480
so it was 2016 and Daniel was nine. Out of habit Lizette began explaining Daniel's identity as a
00:30:39.880
transgender boy as a transgender boy when the doctor spoke but instead of being met with questions or
00:30:44.140
strange looks Lizette said the doctor simply said I believe you so the doctor just without asking
00:30:48.440
questions affirmed this nine-year-old's gender um when he and then he asked Daniel what his name and
00:30:54.940
pronouns were um so basically my thinking here is Daniel nine okay okay so doctors aren't allowed
00:31:01.600
to ask questions or raise awareness about side effects when it comes to transitioning and affirming
00:31:07.280
it's just we just have to affirm you because you said so is that health care I wonder if it's like
00:31:13.060
fruitful to have like maybe you know because of bill c4 I know this is an American article but
00:31:18.300
let's say it's a it's a Canadian mother bringing her Canadian transgender son Daniel and I'm sure it's
00:31:23.820
similar here doctor yeah yeah do you think that because the doctor um or the psychologist or the
00:31:28.820
pastor is not allowed to um give counsel to the child but do you think they give counsel to the
00:31:33.800
parent like hey good question what you doing what what kind of things are you tell like telling your
00:31:39.620
child yeah to make them think that they're an opposite gender because as we know gender dysphoria
00:31:44.520
in adolescence has bounced up to like four thousand percent of what it was seven years ago ten years ago
00:31:49.800
so do we really think that there's four thousand percent more like that's not not four thousand
00:31:55.000
more like four thousand percent yeah especially knowing historically that gender dysphoria is a rare
00:31:59.080
diagnosis diagnosis that usually affects boys little boys as young as two so it's not normal um so
00:32:05.200
that's a great point so the fact it's a small fraction of poppy of the population yeah here we have
00:32:10.060
all these four thousand percent more kids going through it shouldn't we be looking at the parent and
00:32:15.020
being like i can't counsel the child but i can talk to you yeah i wonder it i wonder where the
00:32:20.360
line is there that's a really good point um we should definitely we should look into this more
00:32:24.700
we should look we should look into it all yeah discuss it again um but i think the the biggest
00:32:29.460
thing about this article is that it they always talk about how like when you don't affirm someone
00:32:33.600
their their likelihood of committing suicide increases when that's actually not true because there was this
00:32:38.960
study that was in sweden that followed 324 sex reassigned persons from 1973 to 2003 and it
00:32:46.740
basically stated that suicide rates did not diminish but increase basically stating that sex reassignment
00:32:51.820
although uh alleviating gender dysphoria may not suffice as treatment um and basically this should
00:32:57.480
inspire improved psychiatric and somatic care after sex reassignment for this patient group so it doesn't
00:33:02.620
abolish your problems which we've talked about before i didn't i didn't know that that that stat but
00:33:06.860
that's really interesting because we've seen so many anecdotal stories i follow a couple of people
00:33:10.680
on twitter who were like detransitioning yeah and it's really interesting because a lot of them say
00:33:14.500
the same thing they were they were having mental um issues they were depressed they were anxious they
00:33:20.520
felt harming exactly and after they transitioned that did not go away they said at first there's like
00:33:25.900
especially if you go on um hormone replacement therapy there can be like a euphoria phase right but you end
00:33:31.360
up feeling the same way that you did before a lot of the time right so yeah and of course like no one's a
00:33:36.260
monolith everyone experiences all this differently and if you're a consenting adult and you transition
00:33:40.600
and you're content that's that's fine if it helps your mental health then like you know that's probably
00:33:45.240
a really good thing but for so many people it doesn't actually solve their depression their anxiety
00:33:50.120
their desire to self-harm i think it probably just makes things worse you're self-harming when you're
00:33:56.980
literally mutilating your body exactly yeah i know people get triggered by the word mutilating sorry i
00:34:01.440
understand that but but i agree like you're you're taking off a part of you thinking that that's going
00:34:07.460
to bring you like mental clarity and if it does fine but a lot of the time it doesn't yeah and then
00:34:13.340
you're now left with a an emptiness and scarring and the feeling that you're missing something that
00:34:20.700
potentially sterile potential sterilization it's just it's just weird that we would just like people
00:34:26.920
will jump down our throats for saying these things like using the word mutilation but like i think
00:34:31.860
that when you're when especially a young girl like a young girl yeah have you seen there's this doctor
00:34:38.580
on twitter that she she calls herself the tea eater and she's like yep gonna go yeet some teats today
00:34:45.080
and she like and she like brags about like how many teats she's yeeted which i guess is like the removal
00:34:50.100
of oh but it's health care yeah it's how it's like it's not about your ego and getting tiktok
00:34:54.900
followers and whatnot or twitter or whatever it is like you are bragging about your like your
00:35:01.880
procedures which you think are helping people fine but you're it's such a weird brag i it's a weird
00:35:07.480
it's a very weird brag um and i i just think like this is gonna this is controversial but i i think that
00:35:14.020
to suggest that maybe getting psychiatric help is like i just think that's the kindest thing you could
00:35:20.860
do because like we talked about last week on the show like speak the truth in love like tough love
00:35:25.880
is love yeah and i think that it's important to know because yeah we're being pretty critical right
00:35:29.740
now but like what you just said um seeking counsel you don't have to be judgmental about it and nasty
00:35:36.540
about it if you're like my daughter's like hey mom i want to transition i want to be called daniel
00:35:41.180
i'm not going to be like what are you stupid like you're going to grow out of it like i that wouldn't
00:35:45.480
be kind and christian and loving no to do so it would be like okay i don't know how i would react
00:35:50.640
but it would be like i hear what you're saying before i just affirm it yeah let's let's talk about
00:35:56.640
it why do you feel this way when did you start feeling this way like is there someone that you
00:36:00.140
would like to talk to who's not your mother who can maybe help you understand these questions more
00:36:05.140
like if you still feel like let's wait okay let's wait six months and see if you still feel this way
00:36:09.460
wait till you're consenting adults then let's wait till you're 18 and then i will support
00:36:14.120
whatever choice you want to make like but just to say like oh my nine-year-old is saying mommy i
00:36:19.040
want to be a boy like what nine-year-old doesn't swap genders once in a while like yeah like i've
00:36:25.640
mentioned this before like i thought i was a russian girl named vuda when i was like it happens like
00:36:29.540
you don't just affirm that that's just a kid going through a phase like a lot of the time and
00:36:34.620
like be loving like don't yell at them don't shame them but like let them grow and see what happens
00:36:39.580
and like you're a parent which means you need to parent yeah like you can't you're not
00:36:43.940
friends you're not friends and i'm i'm sure i can't imagine what how difficult that situation
00:36:48.940
would be but like you are called to say no you are called to steer them in the most productive
00:36:54.740
direction and of course with love and compassion but like come on parents like be parents again
00:36:59.400
yeah let's make parents parents again yeah okay love you bye should we move on yeah we're moving on
00:37:08.400
that was great though i feel good about that yeah me too they're gonna hate us so uh maybe we should
00:37:12.480
talk about some plastic surgery i got some done no i didn't both of us had our entire faces done
00:37:20.400
since last week can you tell i got this moved up here and then i got fox eyes look way back just all
00:37:27.600
of it just yanked so this is the newest treatment yes so that's what we want you like it that's called
00:37:32.340
the fox eye fox sided eyebrows yeah and apparently there's some possible side effects like deadly
00:37:39.780
sepsis facial paralysis um to get this look not no big deal um so that's great and apparently uh it's
00:37:50.200
uh bella hadid and kendall jenner are cited as the inspiration because they've never had plastic surgery
00:37:56.060
uh classic that they're the influencers of this though i'm really we were looking at pictures
00:38:00.580
of ariana grande's face like you know as we age our face changes usually it doesn't change in this
00:38:06.940
direction no it usually goes like this her she used to have like nice little round uh cheeks and
00:38:11.800
eyebrows and eyes and now round eyes she has a completely different like racial structure of her
00:38:17.120
face and it's it's the trend the fox eye and it's freaking gross guys they just basically just take your
00:38:22.500
skin and they just staple it back just create a little and i guess it's not as risk-free as it's
00:38:28.400
been described it's like you can just go get it in an afternoon get your face stapled up yeah and i i
00:38:33.060
okay so if celebrities are influencing this we're seeing it on social media cool okay but like the
00:38:38.380
celebs who undergo these procedures can afford to fix it if it and usually not they won't even have to
00:38:42.720
deal with that because they're seeing the best of the best plastic surgeons and i just like we are not
00:38:48.540
them we need to stop trying to be them because we if we get like like you know destroyed facially we
00:38:54.760
can't bounce back of the face that sounds really gross it does not sound cute like just stick with
00:38:59.640
your face structure okay oh my god maybe come on and and the fact that we all have to have the same face
00:39:05.380
yeah like so what some people have like more of like a fox eye look going on it's obviously gorgeous
00:39:11.740
but yeah we talked about this the other day where um runway models they can be really really young
00:39:16.940
they can be like 16 years old which is kind of creepy but yeah um the ones that are super super
00:39:21.580
young the the fashion models were a lot of the time they have like i think sometimes it's just
00:39:26.020
like makeup um but it's also clothing as well they'll take these girls faces with tape yes young
00:39:32.200
like 20 let's say 20 they tape their wrinkles yeah they have no wrinkles they have the tautest skin on
00:39:37.080
the planet and they take their face and they tape it back just below the hairline and then now they're
00:39:42.180
walking around like this but it's like so so when that model that gorgeous beautiful model comes off the
00:39:46.620
runway and they untape her face she's like oh i don't look like that anymore beautiful and now
00:39:52.280
i'm sitting in the audience and i've had my face done too and i'm looking at her face i'm like she's
00:39:56.900
so tight like it's just this weird like cold war or like like arms race yeah of like who can have the
00:40:03.680
tightest foxiest face and it's like super dangerous because at some point our eyeballs are gonna literally
00:40:09.800
be like on our ears yeah like what's the extent here like what lengths do we really need to go
00:40:14.660
like it's just it's never gonna end game yeah exactly like it's just the goal post is gonna
00:40:18.840
keep moving and shifting and shifting we all have to look like kim kardashian i guess it doesn't matter
00:40:22.820
who you are what race you are she's pretty but i don't want to look like her i know you look like
00:40:26.740
you i want to look like you but we just need to stop trying to look like rich people who are not
00:40:33.360
actually naturally beautiful us like yeah i understand wanting to look like the best version
00:40:37.460
of you sure yeah like enhance yourself and that's what makeup is for well and that's what the plastic
00:40:41.740
surgeon one of the ones noted in the article says he's like like cosmetic procedures are supposed to
00:40:46.620
enhance not physically alter and destroy a totally different face yeah it's so messed up and it makes
00:40:52.820
me really sad that women and we've talked about this in terms of like aging but what about you like
00:40:57.580
just young ones yeah who are just like you know i remember feeling those pressures when i was a kid
00:41:02.420
and i didn't realize how like i think that when you live in this like social media and it wasn't
00:41:06.920
even that bad when i was a kid but when you live in the social media echo chamber you see like the
00:41:10.640
same kind of face over and over and over the algorithm exactly you see kim kardashian you see
00:41:14.260
ariana and you're like they all kind of look the same yeah and then you think well i don't look like
00:41:18.140
that so i'm ugly but like as you grow older you realize and it's actually a quote i'm recently reading
00:41:23.520
1984 and one of the quotes that has nothing to do with big brother he's looking at this old woman who's
00:41:28.580
like cleaning rags and he was like she's beautiful and this person was like yeah but look at the size
00:41:33.660
of her she's huge and he's like yeah but that's her style of beauty like that's her brand of beauty
00:41:38.020
and it's like it's such an interesting quote because it's like why did we all have to have the same
00:41:41.160
brand yeah we can all have our own brand of beauty guys individualism should be celebrated and i think
00:41:46.280
that's that's one of the unique things that god's done like he literally knit us together in our
00:41:51.120
mother's womb like we're fearfully and wonderfully made and we're unique and that should be celebrated and if
00:41:57.040
you want to change your face okay that's i i mean there are more natural ways of going about this
00:42:03.380
there's an argument like where i wear makeup so like i'm not necessarily to enhance yeah like she
00:42:09.120
didn't like this is it like this is what she looks like yeah not that face i did basically draw on a
00:42:15.140
whole new face but like there is like where's the line like am i allowed to wear makeup because i'm still
00:42:19.700
changing my face as god created it like where where i think you're enhancing your beauty though i think
00:42:26.240
that you're celebrating your beauty by wearing makeup that's a good point i like that i don't
00:42:29.940
think it i don't think it needs to be a negative thing like how a beautiful dress celebrates a
00:42:33.860
woman's figure yeah it doesn't change it exactly and i think yeah i think we just need to celebrate it
00:42:38.900
and if you are going to get a cosmetic procedure do not cheap out yeah don't cheap okay i have a great
00:42:44.100
dermatologist i can tell you about right we'll link it in the description we will not because we don't
00:42:48.400
want any of you to look good no just us yeah um so now we're going to talk about some celebs who
00:42:55.020
admitted they actually got plastic surgery it happens folks they admitted oh my god yeah
00:43:01.040
she did that ariel winter looks like a whole new girl no i know oh my god why would she do that and
00:43:07.800
that's that's something really interesting to talk about too because so many of these women who are
00:43:11.180
beautiful oh my god i know they get these procedures though and they don't actually look better
00:43:14.640
i'm sorry i'm drinking so much perrier today because i we just had lunch and it was very salty
00:43:18.840
so i'm sorry it's my pink perrier kid it's beautiful it's our own if you want perrier if
00:43:24.520
you want to sponsor us um but like they never end up looking better for the most part and ariel winter
00:43:29.660
started on modern family when she was really really young and she was around beautiful women and i
00:43:34.960
wonder if being in hollywood and in that world made her more fuck oops more messed up in the brain i think
00:43:43.000
i i can't imagine it's healthy i can't imagine that's so sad i'm sure it's had a detrimental
00:43:48.480
let's look at the other let's see who's brave enough to tell us i would just like to say though
00:43:53.340
i do really hope that kendall admits it one day has she not i don't think so everyone always says
00:43:59.160
she's so naturally beautiful i know but like if you go back again still a beautiful girl no one's
00:44:03.600
but but she has the whole fox eye thing going on too and you think that's just her face and then you
00:44:08.160
look at pictures of her when she was like a teenager and you're like oh you had a regular
00:44:12.380
face and you got a new nose yeah yeah and lips and everything she just has a more subtle touch
00:44:17.800
than the other ones yeah like obviously kylie jenner's face is the most changed but i i respect
00:44:23.420
when at least it's like it's so different that it's like really obvious but she like is just
00:44:28.340
coasting on the fact that wolf and sheep's clothing yeah she's like i'm so naturally beautiful
00:44:32.560
speaking of it i want to talk about the family we've talked about them a couple times on uh
00:44:38.000
this episode already but uh the kardashians um yeah so we're gonna have a little kardashian moment
00:44:42.840
there's so much going on yeah but i think before we start maybe we should talk about why this family
00:44:49.520
actually is important to pay attention to um and celebrities in general actually because they're
00:44:54.280
basically the first family of the united states of america basically of hollywood of yeah of
00:44:59.840
billionaires of fashion like i mean when when obama and michelle obama were the first family i would
00:45:07.040
say that they were the first family but now oh who's i don't even know who's president right now
00:45:11.160
exactly so basically the kardashians are like the first family the kardashian west family was was even
00:45:16.900
bigger oh yeah and now that they have broken up like there's they're in the news all the time and
00:45:22.180
it's kind of their job so they got to stay in the news yeah they got to stay relevant but i think like
00:45:25.620
it just these people as you just said were the like the first family they are some of the most
00:45:31.440
influential people in the united states unfortunately the world if not the world exactly but they have
00:45:36.300
more influence on society than i think politicians do then i think doctors do then stylists do they
00:45:43.980
are icons and when people are paying attention to those people and looking to them for advice
00:45:49.120
that like we need to be speaking about this and criticizing it and exposing the bs that they're
00:45:54.320
spewing because they are not they're not on our level we shouldn't be listening to them and yet
00:45:58.380
they're idols for some people and if we just ignore the fact that these people exist then we're gonna
00:46:03.220
lose young people we're gonna lose the culture war and we're gonna we're just i don't know i think
00:46:07.940
society will crumble it's up to the kardashians it's important to know what your kids are looking
00:46:12.200
at yeah who's influencing them so we're gonna tell you yeah we're gonna tell you and it's not great
00:46:16.960
no this first headline is chloe kardashian defends the family's reported nine figure pay
00:46:22.920
paycheck for the hulu show we had to ask how many zeros we had nine figures is hundreds of millions
00:46:31.060
yeah hundreds of millions of dollars a hulu show about a bunch of girls with inflated buttocks
00:46:38.140
they did split it evenly though that's super sweet um but maybe we should read about how i'm sorry
00:46:44.240
talk about how uh chloe defended the money they're earning so uh we give so much of our personal lives up
00:46:51.740
for entertainment you do you give it up for give it up for oh no not for free oh giving it up
00:46:58.080
sorry how much was it again um nine figures was it oh giving it up or earning it or giving it up
00:47:06.220
yeah like excuse me she's acting like she's doing it for free like i give you this all for my heart
00:47:12.960
like no i feel like it's not a choice yeah like you could just not do the hulu show yeah just don't do
00:47:18.160
it give me the hundred million and as if they don't actually appreciate having the world in
00:47:22.460
their home seeing all of their drama their unscripted drama like come on you love it you
00:47:28.780
guys were nothing before like remember how this all started was a sex tape oh yeah like i keep being
00:47:35.780
like why are they so unclassy and then i'm like oh yeah the whole first family was born out of a
00:47:41.500
sex tape that the mother the matriarch of the family leaked that's what moms do oh loving mothers
00:47:47.140
loving they do so they put in the work you guys so don't be mad that they have hundreds of millions
00:47:52.020
of dollars because they give us so much they do so nice they're really sweet um and and that's why
00:47:59.260
it was also so sweet when kim kardashian gave uh some women career advice um play this clip
00:48:04.820
get your ass up and work it seems like nobody wants to work these days you have to you have to
00:48:11.480
surround yourself with people that want to work have a good work environment where everyone loves
00:48:17.300
what they do because you have one life no toxic work environments and show up and do the work what
00:48:23.600
a clip yeah so okay i do kind of agree with her in a way because it's important to put in the work
00:48:29.340
and do hard work but it's like kim do you know who you are like do you know who you are kim
00:48:34.620
oh like when she comes out with like a new line like it's not just her in her basement with her
00:48:41.880
like kids sleeping upstairs chemistry yeah and she's like oh i'm making this like this new matte
00:48:46.420
lip gloss in my basement and i'm like testing it out on myself and oh no i have a rash now like
00:48:51.260
no she has like a team of yeah of like probably already established like makeup technicians and
00:48:57.920
scientists who are just like oh this is great we have a formula which color do you like do you like
00:49:01.680
peach or rose rose yeah okay that's kim's line like exactly and i mean i do think our society
00:49:07.580
is a little bit lazier since the pandemic because our government has incentivized it in a way
00:49:12.360
unemployment via serb and again there's nothing wrong if you had to take serb my husband did for
00:49:17.080
a bit um you know exactly nothing wrong with that but i think like a lot of people like could have
00:49:22.120
gone back to work and they just didn't um but like most people just were not afforded the same
00:49:26.960
privileges as kim like most of us do get up and do the work but we don't have nannies and chefs and
00:49:31.920
stylists and makeup artists to help us get through the day kim yeah kim okay so it's a bad take and
00:49:38.740
apparently i didn't you told me this that one of her ex-employees said she was toxic yes um kim kim
00:49:45.860
like you know what it's not cute it's not cute worry about the boulder in your own eye before you
00:49:50.760
worry about the pebble in someone else's okay okay kim so uh this family so but we're gonna keep
00:49:57.560
talking about you kim yeah mostly i want to talk about uh this is not in our source list because it
00:50:02.800
happened on like saturday pete davidson and kanye their text exchange their text exchange so sad yeah
00:50:10.260
i feel bad for kanye me too like pete you're not being cute no i i want to delete all my dms
00:50:17.460
yeah i will i'm gonna go on track you're not being cute he's like so apparently kanye west and
00:50:24.660
pete davidson were texting over the weekend and kanye was like where are you right now for some
00:50:30.740
weird reason and pete was like in bed with your wife and then sent like a picture of him in bed and
00:50:35.960
kim's not in the photo um so he could have been in bed with you know just himself but it's like
00:50:43.480
no it's so inappropriate it makes me think that they're doing this just for the headlines i think
00:50:49.440
they're just it's so i agree and and people were like oh kanye has no right to care about this because
00:50:55.540
they're not married anymore well still the mother of his child they still did you know they did exchange
00:51:00.620
vows like they do have a pre-existing relationship like he has a right loves her exactly like who are
00:51:06.280
these people who say that oh feelings and are so important all the time especially when it comes to
00:51:11.340
like your own gender dad exactly like your gender dysphoria those feelings matter so much but like
00:51:16.620
the father of a child and the husband of a wife should have no right to be sad like he's being a
00:51:23.100
little weird about it like that climation thing of him that was that was a bad take it's weird yeah
00:51:28.040
it was it was bad it's art and he's an artist and like do we like it do we have to like it no
00:51:32.940
no like he's just a sad i feel bad for the guy too sad and i think honestly it would be weird
00:51:39.280
if he weren't angry that his ex-wife was in bed with some like white dude you know who's like not
00:51:46.000
cute sorry yeah who's like a diamond in the rough yeah who's like just this gummy looking dude yeah
00:51:51.700
who's not that funny not that funny so i don't know pray for kanye yeah we do pray for you kanye
00:51:57.400
yeah you are in the prayers um should we talk about kim kardashian's balenciaga feather yes um
00:52:05.660
i really wish that i had one with me now me too we're gonna go buy boas we are i think i'm gonna
00:52:11.460
save up for this one yeah i want i want the balenciaga one yeah me too problem i don't want
00:52:15.780
the dollar store no can we can you guys send us some money because i feel like this bow is gonna cost
00:52:21.820
an arm and a leg oh yeah so it's so fluffy it's so cute do we have a photo of it yeah there it is
00:52:28.180
oh look at her look at it like honestly i've i don't like a lot of the times she wears clothes i'm
00:52:34.460
like what are you doing like she's obviously gorgeous yeah she dresses well well plumped and
00:52:39.000
and siliconed but i really like this this is the best this is one of the best looks she's ever
00:52:44.040
her full body is covered the color is stunning yeah like i just love the vibe it's kind of like matrix
00:52:50.600
yeah but like it's cute i just love it cute and i think anyone can wear it i think so too
00:52:56.860
even you tess yeah tess you can hide up your anorexia with that giant boa
00:53:02.240
um okay are we done with our kardashian we have one more image okay one more image sorry no this is
00:53:10.300
it's important this is important so kourtney kardashian and travis barker are making out on a
00:53:15.780
public beach i just wanted to say public like too cheap to get a private one own beach didn't
00:53:21.260
you just make like nine figures yeah like you can't go to look it's like a family it looks like
00:53:27.260
animals and you know her cheeks are out like you can kind of see but she's obviously wearing one of
00:53:31.300
those like very very thongy bikinis which is just like there's children but you know what they're just
00:53:36.140
giving up so much of their personal lives it's true it's so nice of them to do that thank you for
00:53:40.920
that thank you guys go to a private beach next time because literally nobody wants to see that
00:53:45.280
no one wants to see that even us normies don't do that we're showing everyone but it's because we
00:53:50.720
had to see it yeah we just you have yeah we wanted you to suffer too we're just trying to shame them
00:53:55.280
because we know they watch hey girls hey kim um um do that at home yeah yeah maybe use some of
00:54:02.980
that hundred million dollars to like get a little privacy screen maybe i think you could you could
00:54:07.080
afford it i don't know okay would be cute would be cuter should we do like our blitz please segment
00:54:12.960
now let's do a blitz please okay so we're gonna round things out here we are uh and we're gonna
00:54:19.320
just do read some headlines some quick takes from some headlines all righty blitz please let's do it
00:54:25.840
and you want to take it away take it away i can't say her name that's why i told you to start
00:54:32.420
emily ratajowski you'd think of anyone i could say this name because it's kind of like mine
00:54:38.380
i can say the ouski part emily ratajowski celebrates her child sylvester's first birthday
00:54:46.600
with gender-neutral accents like a multi-colored cake and silver balloons yeah because your one-year-old
00:54:51.840
cares about having a politically correct birthday yeah sounds really fun for the one-year-old kid
00:54:56.700
whatever multi-colored it's fun yeah that's fun like any kid like kids love all colors she's just
00:55:02.580
so desperate to be in the news yeah that she has to talk about her stupid gender-neutral birthday like
00:55:07.820
a lot of birthdays are gender-neutral yeah they're just like balloons and and and cake good point
00:55:12.980
moving on moving on god bella hadid shows off some diamond dental work um yuck i think this is just
00:55:20.900
a consequence of having like too much money and not knowing what to do with it scroll down for us
00:55:24.800
because we're gonna look at this nasty because this is uh riri and she looks great yeah that she
00:55:29.180
looks good we don't want to so here's what bella hadid looks like these days okay keep going though
00:55:34.700
here's her tiny little if you can yeah so it's kind of hard to see but in one of her fangs there
00:55:41.300
there's a tiny little diamond tiny little diamond like she didn't did she leave the the sticker on
00:55:49.060
those glasses like are they supposed to say fubu right in front of her pupil i don't know she was too
00:55:53.860
busy like blinded by the tiny diamond when she was looking in the mirror she looks like she looks
00:55:58.800
like a nerdy girl that would be at like rory gilmore's high school in like the year 2000 but
00:56:03.260
she has like a slur like which is like a yeah guys like are you signing up for like the camping trip
00:56:09.860
this weekend no my face wasn't 200 000 yeah it's like oh with all that money like look better i guess
00:56:16.820
money can't buy you taste huh bella exactly good call all righty um moving on now that's dressing
00:56:22.860
down victoria beckham is mocked for new 1300 well sorry 1300 pound slip with a lace print that looks
00:56:31.340
like a nightie with a tomato soup stain okay so i have a theory i think scroll down can we go back
00:56:37.300
to it one time and then just show we'll just show that dress because it's no it's nasty it's
00:56:42.480
so nasty i do have a theory though once you guys see it okay okay there we go did she was she just
00:56:48.140
out and about one day she spilled soup on herself and now she's just trying to rectify that pr disaster
00:56:52.440
she's like oh guys it's a drip you see it is cool yeah look that looks like a nice like rosΓ© sauce
00:56:59.220
it actually looks to me like they took a nightie and like stapled stapled it to like a wife beater
00:57:05.200
would you wear this i would but i have terrible taste jk i wouldn't i wouldn't i would not but you
00:57:11.540
would never spend that much money okay no i wouldn't even if i had that much money i would
00:57:15.160
have a whole new face yeah not that bella hadid exactly uh not very posh posh nailed it representation
00:57:23.000
of women in the media still has a long way to go says an expert hello um we're right here
00:57:33.060
but we're conservative so we don't count okay true nailed it
00:57:36.500
next headline quote healthy quote women sorry let's start the end headline healthy woman hasn't
00:57:44.700
eaten fruit or veg in 22 years lives on chicken nuggets that's nasty define healthy yeah her like
00:57:53.740
her face is on her face but her organs are completely made up of chicken nuggets also she
00:58:00.000
looks older than 22 i'll tell you that right now that's what chicken nuggets does to you ladies look at
00:58:03.900
that box it's so greasy like that's inside i love chicken nuggets but my god like that's a big box
00:58:08.740
she lives off of that i don't know i just find that hard to believe me too she's gonna die soon
00:58:15.420
change your diet yeah all right talk to tess moving on um pizza hut urges teachers to watch out
00:58:20.120
for racist toddlers you know because pizza hut is so experienced in early childhood education
00:58:25.020
so i don't even know i don't this article's from rebel news i know i love rebel news um i don't even
00:58:34.660
know what to say yeah i don't even know what to say yep and that's a first for me yeah pizza hut
00:58:41.820
why are you talking about stay in your lane okay just work on that that cheesy crust okay i think so
00:58:48.560
too just keep an eye on that cheesy crust and don't overcook it i think that's the show i think that's the
00:58:54.160
show you guys that was a weird one that was a doozer but we are glad that you listened to the
00:58:58.880
whole thing oh my god thank you yeah that's so nice of you so for those of you uh who don't already
00:59:04.480
know this show is every tuesday at 7 p.m eastern time so be sure to tune in weekly you can also
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00:59:23.100
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00:59:47.420
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00:59:53.080
from last week so tune in tune in you guys we are your hosts i'm kat i'm nat follow us on social media