Ep 1150 | My Timothée Chalamet Conspiracy Theory, Dems Sell Out Girls & Oscars Lowlights
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 11 minutes
Words per Minute
170.21277
Summary
On today's episode of Relatable, we're talking about the Oscars, the Democratic Party blocking a bill that would have protected girls in sports from men, and the secret PR campaigns that subtly change our views on certain stars like Timothee Chalamet.
Transcript
00:00:00.680
Democrats have blocked a bill that would have protected girls' sports from men.
00:00:07.520
We are calling out those Senate Democrats today.
00:00:10.760
Also, we are talking pop culture and Hollywood, the secret PR campaigns that subtly but surely
00:00:18.320
change our perspective on certain stars like Timothee Chalamet.
00:00:23.140
We've got that and Bree's thoughts on the Oscars on today's episode of Relatable.
00:00:41.340
Hope everyone is having a wonderful week so far.
00:00:47.600
Last time I checked, I loved reading the comments.
00:00:50.180
If you haven't listened to or watched my very fun and full conversation with Alex Clark,
00:00:57.360
A lot of you were saying that you wish it had been a lot longer.
00:01:01.060
We were kind of limited on time, but we really could have just chatted forever.
00:01:06.160
And some of you out there hadn't listened to her before.
00:01:08.640
For example, my husband, Chief Relatable, was like, she is super entertaining.
00:01:14.620
So it's really for everyone, even though we talked about some girly things, it's a fun one.
00:01:21.700
We've got some announcements, some housekeeping things before we get into everything that
00:01:28.680
And it is a lot, but I'm going to try my darndest to get through it all.
00:01:32.560
First of all, I haven't talked to you guys since the Share the Arrows tickets went live
00:01:38.840
And wow, you guys so far exceeded our expectations.
00:01:45.900
We allowed ticket access to Blaze TV subscribers first, opened it up to everyone.
00:01:52.600
And those early bird tickets, which were limited to 2,000 tickets, went like that.
00:02:05.100
I don't feel like the central force pushing Share the Arrows.
00:02:10.040
It feels to me like it is a movement that is driven, yes, by the Lord, and also just by
00:02:15.200
y'all's enthusiasm and desire for clear teaching.
00:02:18.600
And you guys know that at Share the Arrows, just like we did last year, we are going to
00:02:26.160
And for those of you who might assume this would probably be a safe assumption that this
00:02:31.080
is kind of like a political conference, it's really not.
00:02:34.580
Even though I talk a lot about politics, politics matter because policy matters, because people
00:02:38.780
matter, it would be fine if this were that kind of conference, but it's really not.
00:02:44.340
Last Share the Arrows, even though it was right before the election, we didn't focus
00:02:54.880
We wanted to talk about what was upstream from that and what was underneath all of that
00:03:01.120
What is underneath a lot of the cultural and political moral deception of our day?
00:03:06.680
And so we got right into scripture, basic theology, but hard-hitting theology, tough things that
00:03:13.720
we don't typically hear from the pulpit about sexuality and gender and reproduction and apologetics,
00:03:20.740
the apologetics course that we got from Elisa Childers last year, just absolutely incredible
00:03:27.400
And as far as I know, there is nothing like this for conservative Christian women.
00:03:37.920
I'm so thankful for how excited you guys are about it.
00:03:40.500
If you haven't gotten your tickets to Share the Arrows, you can still do that.
00:03:43.860
Just go to sharethearrows.com, October 11th, Dallas, Texas.
00:03:54.620
Grab your friends, grab your small group, grab your mom, your sister, your daughter,
00:04:03.760
Just one more really small request for those of you who have not already done this.
00:04:08.900
Please leave us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, on Spotify.
00:04:13.800
Also, if you don't subscribe on YouTube, please do that.
00:04:20.380
You know, things are somewhat better when it comes to speech and big tech, but not really.
00:04:26.700
And you never really know who is pulling the strings behind the scenes, and you never know
00:04:36.320
It makes sure that it reaches as many people as possible.
00:04:38.940
So please leave a five-star review wherever you can.
00:04:47.480
And tariffs, a lot of people are asking me about that.
00:04:55.520
But my dad and I, he will be back on the show soon.
00:04:58.800
He's recovering from surgery and he's doing well.
00:05:02.140
But the last time he was on the show about a month ago, show 1135, we talked about tariffs,
00:05:07.980
what tariff policy actually accomplishes, what it has already accomplished when it comes
00:05:18.140
If you want kind of like a basics crash course on tariffs, go listen to 1135.
00:05:22.720
With my dad, we will be talking about Ukraine tomorrow.
00:05:26.400
Everything that happened in the Oval Office last week, we weren't able to discuss it, but
00:05:33.740
Actually, my episode that I did with him coming up on three years, I think it was three years
00:05:38.620
ago that Josh and I did our episode on Ukraine and Russia.
00:05:43.100
That is one of my most listened to episodes ever.
00:05:46.600
He is incredible at breaking down complex geopolitical issues in very simple terms.
00:06:00.780
So yesterday, in a Truth Social post, he posted in all caps, tomorrow night will be big.
00:06:11.520
He will address a joint session of Congress at 9 p.m. Eastern time.
00:06:19.300
It will likely follow kind of the same customs as a formal State of the Union, basically just
00:06:24.000
to say, look, like, here's what we have accomplished.
00:06:27.440
Here's what we are going to be even more aggressive on.
00:06:29.800
And by the way, here's what we need you to do, Congressional Republicans.
00:06:34.380
He's probably going to have some harsh words for Democrats, which I think is necessary.
00:06:40.960
Blaze TV is going to be hosting live coverage tonight, starting at 7.30 Eastern time, 6.30
00:06:51.740
I will be there also providing coverage before and after the speech.
00:06:59.460
You can tune in if you're a subscriber to blazetv.com.
00:07:04.220
So I will be there talking about what I think about his accomplishments, what's getting in
00:07:09.300
the way of further accomplishments, what I hope that he does, things that I disagree with
00:07:22.080
I want to correct the record on something that was said yesterday on yesterday's episode.
00:07:27.980
So Alex mentioned that the person who is leading the Department of Agriculture under Trump is
00:07:39.000
And Brooke Rollins is the one that is heading the USDA.
00:07:46.820
And I said yesterday, oh, I'm going to have to check on that.
00:07:50.040
I'm not sure if that's true because I hadn't heard that.
00:07:53.220
Really, what was meant to be said, I believe, I checked this.
00:07:56.680
This is according to the Federalist that the chief of staff in the new USDA is a former
00:08:13.440
So she previously worked for the National Oil Seed Processors Association and the Edible
00:08:20.500
These are massive organizations lobbying for seed oil production.
00:08:24.760
If you don't know the dangers of seed oils, we have talked about them in the past.
00:08:29.860
They can cause cancer, all kinds of inflammation in the body.
00:08:33.540
This doesn't mean that this person is still advocating on behalf of these groups.
00:08:38.020
By the way, this is a former association and this is not the head of the USDA, but just
00:08:45.920
And I just wanted to make sure that we corrected the record on that.
00:08:50.280
Since this is my first episode that I am actually recording this week, I wanted to just end the
00:08:56.860
introduction with some biblical encouragement before we get into stories.
00:09:01.060
And that's just kind of a random thought that I had yesterday.
00:09:04.360
I was in the dentist's office and I was reading through a, like a gardening magazine.
00:09:10.820
And this idea or this kind of line came to my head.
00:09:15.260
And I don't think this has been said before verbatim.
00:09:18.800
Certainly this concept is not new at all, but I apologize if this is actually someone's
00:09:26.520
But as I was reading this magazine and I'm just thinking about so many things that Chief
00:09:31.200
Related Bro and I have coming up, decisions that have to be made, pulled in a thousand
00:09:38.120
I am a very busy person in my mind and have a million different ideas for things that I
00:09:43.200
want us to do and build together and put out there.
00:09:46.820
And sometimes it's really hard to have the discernment to know where we should invest our
00:09:52.820
And I thought about this phrase that really you should only be as a believer planting seeds
00:09:59.280
that bloom in eternity, plant seeds that bloom in eternity.
00:10:03.740
There are some endeavors and hopes and dreams that I have that simply will not have the eternal
00:10:13.500
impact, will not have the impact that really matters.
00:10:20.140
It might be a profitable company, but it is not really serving to advance the kingdom.
00:10:30.700
Here's what I'll say in that is that technically everything a believer does, everything a believer
00:10:37.960
does in faith with excellence and for the glory of God can be a seed that is planted here
00:10:45.060
If you have not read Every Good Endeavor by Tim Keller, you need to do that because he
00:10:50.680
talks about this, that whether you're a janitor, whether you are a full-time stay-at-home
00:10:54.440
mom, whether you're an artist, whether you're an accountant, politician, everything you do
00:11:03.220
Everything you do as a believer can blossom in eternity when you do it in faith with excellence
00:11:10.260
But for me, when I'm thinking about the products that I am creating, the actual content or thing
00:11:19.600
that I am putting out into the world, is this something that will blossom in eternity?
00:11:27.820
Is this something that could lead someone closer to the truth, closer to the Lord by the grace
00:11:35.740
And really, it's not just the big things that we can use that as a filter by which we're
00:11:46.700
And the minute-by-minute, small, seemingly menial decisions that we make to either invest in
00:11:58.700
When I think about the time that I waste scrolling or worrying or doing things that simply don't
00:12:07.640
have a good return on my investment, I really want to get better at thinking about the seeds
00:12:15.980
My dad taught me a really good lesson when it comes to money.
00:12:19.380
He said, when it comes to finances, there is a difference between an expense and an investment.
00:12:24.280
An expense is just money that you're spending, but an investment is money that you're investing
00:12:34.720
Sometimes you spend money that's an investment.
00:12:36.640
And how you think about those two things is different.
00:12:45.860
All of these things are finite because we are finite people.
00:12:52.120
So is where you are investing your time, your talent, your energy, is that an investment
00:13:00.680
that you will see a return from, especially in eternity?
00:13:05.840
Or is that just time wasted that is never going to be redeemed?
00:13:14.840
But when I think about how I want to spend my day, the number one thing that I know for
00:13:19.760
sure, every single time will blossom in eternity is the time that I invest in my children.
00:13:29.900
Every diaper changed, every lunch made, every rock, every moment that you spend either directly
00:13:41.560
discipling your children in the Lord or simply sustaining them physically, that is a seed
00:13:50.960
And no matter what stage of life that you're in, no matter what you are doing, everything
00:13:56.620
that is done in faith with excellence and for the glory of God is a seed planted that will
00:14:02.120
And think about that in every product that you put out in every single second that you spent.
00:14:08.460
I know that was kind of stream of consciousness.
00:14:12.020
I'm still kind of organizing my thoughts around that phrase myself, but it's actually helped
00:14:16.100
shift my perspective even just in the last 24 hours as I'm thinking about the alignment
00:14:21.000
of our priorities and all that, you know, my husband and I are trying to do together as
00:14:26.280
a family and also professionally that helps, I think, to limit the things that we actually
00:14:33.040
pursue, which might mean that I'm going to have to put off playing the banjo for a little
00:14:37.180
bit because I really want to learn how to play the banjo, guys.
00:14:41.940
And right now, at this time in my life, I don't think that this is a seed that's going
00:14:48.360
Now, maybe, you never know, maybe I'll get really good at it.
00:14:52.500
If you watch the conversation between Chief Related Bro and me, I talked about wanting
00:14:57.400
That's what I'm talking about, that I want to do like a million things.
00:15:02.720
Also want to open up like a boutique fitness one day.
00:15:08.320
My husband has to remind me of those things, and he's really good at leading us in that
00:15:12.160
But this is a phrase I'm going to try to plaster in my mind to remember to do only that, which
00:15:23.780
And then I promise we'll get to some stories for the day.
00:15:28.180
First sponsor for the day is We Heart Nutrition.
00:15:34.540
I just got some medical tests done to see, like, how is my body doing and came back really
00:15:42.940
There were a couple of things that the doctor had to explain to me that were on my scan.
00:15:46.760
I'll talk more about my Pernuvo scan sometime soon.
00:15:51.460
But I was like I was very pleased, especially having three kids.
00:15:55.400
I'm in my 30s at the clean bill of health that I received back.
00:15:59.320
And I've got to attribute that at least partly to We Heart Nutrition.
00:16:04.300
This is the first supplement that I've taken that I can tell, like, a real tangible difference
00:16:15.500
My iron levels are good for the first time in years.
00:16:18.540
That's because at We Heart Nutrition, they use the most bioavailable ingredients possible.
00:16:24.140
So your body is actually soaking up these nutrients.
00:16:27.540
You don't want to be taking all these pills that don't actually work for your body, that
00:16:35.400
Chief Related Bro just started taking their supplements a month or so ago.
00:16:43.920
They'll tell you which regimen is right for you.
00:16:45.800
Plus, when you use my code Allie, you get 20% off your order.
00:16:58.760
So we'll probably talk about this some more in the coming days, but I just wanted to call
00:17:02.780
out the senators, the Democratic senators that voted against the Protection of Women and Girls
00:17:12.080
So yesterday, the Senate voted to allow the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act
00:17:25.360
So that means they were voting whether or not they were going to allow this to proceed.
00:17:32.680
51 yeas, 45 nays, with all Senate Republicans voting to allow the bill to continue.
00:17:38.460
And 45 Democrats saying, no, we will not allow the bill to continue.
00:17:44.240
So a cloture vote, just for some context, because you're probably thinking, well, Republicans
00:17:48.500
are in the majority in the Senate, how is it possible that they can't push this through?
00:17:52.760
So a cloture vote is a procedure used to end a filibuster, a tactic where debate is prolonged
00:17:59.060
If cloture fails, the debate on the bill continues indefinitely.
00:18:04.160
Senate cloture votes require a super majority in order to pass.
00:18:10.620
And so Republicans needed some Democrats to come over to their side in order to allow
00:18:16.980
The Senate's rejection of the cloture blocks the bill from progressing to the floor, effectively
00:18:21.200
stalling the bill unless further action is taken.
00:18:25.980
They've done this, for example, when it comes to bills that would pass infants who survive
00:18:32.480
or bills that would protect, rather, infants that survive abortion.
00:18:37.400
So the Born Alive Infant Survivors Protection Act.
00:18:42.200
And just as a reminder, that is just a bill that would seek to protect babies who are born
00:18:50.100
That they have a legal right to the medical care that would save their lives.
00:18:55.620
And doctors can be liable to, you know, legal accountability.
00:18:59.560
If they don't save the lives of those babies, they don't have those protections right now.
00:19:04.160
Doctors are not held legally accountable for that.
00:19:06.520
And so Democrats really show their hand when it's not just about a woman's body.
00:19:14.320
And the fact that we still have Christians and people who profess to be conservative as
00:19:24.400
Look, we've got Democrats who literally cannot say, cannot say that women should have their
00:19:33.740
We have Democrats who refuse to protect the most vulnerable girls and women.
00:19:41.660
When Democrats say women's rights, when Democrats say that they are voting for or they are supporting
00:19:50.020
the cause and the side that helps and protects women, they are talking about one thing and one
00:19:58.000
When they say they care about women, when they say vote for women, they're only talking about
00:20:03.740
They're only talking about killing baby girls inside the womb.
00:20:06.200
They don't actually care about the rights and the protection and the safety and the
00:20:09.580
opportunity of girls and women that are currently being taken by boys who are pretending to be
00:20:18.020
There's no such thing as a transgender athlete.
00:20:34.160
And then there are these men who pretend to be girls.
00:20:37.020
And there are girls and women who may pretend to be men, but it's all pretending.
00:20:42.420
And they are mutilating their bodies with very dangerous hormone regimens, with very dangerous
00:20:48.640
procedures to try to force their delusions on the world.
00:20:56.400
You can't actually transition from one gender to the next or one sex to the next.
00:21:02.020
So what we are literally talking about here is boys.
00:21:05.780
And the worst kind of boy that you would want to allow into a girl's bathroom, boys competing
00:21:11.720
against girls and going into their private spaces.
00:21:15.200
I mean, we have told the story over and over again of the girls who have been injured, the
00:21:21.420
girls who have been violated, the girls who have been assaulted.
00:21:32.560
They don't give a flying rip about girls and women.
00:21:36.000
They just want to be able to kill girls inside the womb.
00:21:41.760
So honestly, like there's a lot of complaining right now.
00:21:48.860
And you guys know, if you're honest out there, I can't stand it when I get people saying,
00:22:01.640
I am not at all scared to call out President Trump when I think he's wrong.
00:22:05.340
We have done episodes on why I think he's wrong on IVF, how he's been squishy on abortion.
00:22:15.060
I have a lot of friends, obviously, who are like hardcore in the MAGA world.
00:22:19.220
And there's a lot of people I respect that work for his administration.
00:22:29.340
I'm giving you my honest perspective on Donald Trump.
00:22:32.280
And that is that I disagree with him on some things, but that he is still doing a really
00:22:37.800
And honestly, it becomes very fashionable when Donald Trump is in office among Christians,
00:22:43.300
especially mushy evangelicals to criticize, to criticize him, even though you voted for
00:22:48.100
him, just to show that you're not one of those Trumpers, that you're not one of those
00:22:55.320
So you can go to your liberal mushy friends and be like, oh, maybe you were right about
00:23:06.880
And I get it because I think I kind of used to be like that, too.
00:23:11.120
And I've changed a little bit because I was actually paying attention when Joe Biden was
00:23:16.340
I was actually paying attention to Kamala Harris's campaign, and I know how downright insane
00:23:28.380
That, yeah, like I don't really care honestly anymore about the silly things that Trump says
00:23:34.140
Doesn't mean I'm not willing to disagree with him on substantive policy, but I'm not going
00:23:38.280
to like wring my hands and cry when he talks sternly to Vladimir Zelensky.
00:23:48.100
I'm not going to freak out and be embarrassed by the silly things he says on truth social.
00:23:56.740
But I'm not going to get whipped up by the media outrage and by the conservatives who say
00:24:03.240
that I have to criticize every little thing Trump does in order to be even and honest.
00:24:07.180
No, because at the end of the day, his policies are better.
00:24:12.320
And I'm still praising the Lord that Donald Trump won.
00:24:17.500
But I can't even find eggs at my local grocery store.
00:24:22.580
And with the trade war going on, the economy is a little unpredictable and unstable right now.
00:24:30.580
We've got a lot of questions about what's going on.
00:24:33.560
But I'm not going to spend my time nitpicking Donald Trump because I am still just so freaking
00:24:39.780
grateful that he is in the office, that J.D. Vance is in the office, and not Kamala Harris.
00:24:46.660
You can criticize President Trump where he deserves criticism and be thankful that he won.
00:24:53.760
But for those of you who are looking for me to nitpick every single thing he says and
00:24:59.060
criticize his tone, that he might be a little bit too harsh here, a little bit too harsh there,
00:25:03.280
I'm just not going to because we literally have an entire party who doesn't believe that
00:25:08.240
boys and girls actually exist as fixed categories.
00:25:11.900
Like, we have a party who actually believes that it should be legal and celebratory and
00:25:24.260
We have a party who just voted to block a bill that would simply protect the private,
00:25:30.940
intimate spaces of girls and women and their ability to compete fairly.
00:25:40.960
But at the end of the day, I see things clearly, and I really do trust that this administration
00:25:49.080
And I'm just, I think that we are in an infinitely better position than we would be if Kamala Harris
00:25:57.940
I mean, I don't even think that we can wrap our minds around everything that she would
00:26:04.840
It's not only America that this craziness is happening.
00:26:09.940
This is apparently, I have been reliably informed, this is supposed to be an ad to make me pro-trans.
00:26:15.560
And I'm a little confused about this because look at this bloke that these girls are supposed
00:26:24.240
I mean, 6'2", 250 probably, full-on man, he's invited to play soccer or football, whatever
00:26:53.200
It is, it's supposed, we're supposed to look at that and be like, yes, I hope my daughter
00:27:03.400
I know you have a broken neck, but that's okay.
00:27:07.540
Is that how I'm supposed to feel as a mom of daughters watching that?
00:27:16.500
And I'm going to raise a respectful ruckus about this because women should not be forced
00:27:25.920
The Victoria State government released that in June of 2024.
00:27:31.080
And it just shows the absurdity of what we're talking about.
00:27:35.160
Like, we have a party that says 2 plus 2 equals 5.
00:27:39.000
We have a party that says 2 plus 2 equals 4, and yet gets some other, I would say, secondary
00:27:45.480
and tertiary things wrong because everyone's imperfect.
00:27:49.320
And, or it's not even that, because I think some of the things that the Republican Party
00:27:52.620
gets wrong are, like, actually really big and primary.
00:27:54.760
But everything isn't falling into place perfectly.
00:27:58.240
But I'm still going to be thankful for and glad for the party that can at least see reality
00:28:04.960
when it comes to this very important basic thing.
00:28:07.540
All right, let's get into some more fun stuff in just a second.
00:28:11.880
Let me pause and tell you about our second sponsor first.
00:28:20.640
Chicken, bacon, the ground beef, the steak, the shrimp, all the seafood.
00:28:26.840
It adds variety to our life and also makes sure that we are getting the protein that we need.
00:28:31.740
The best part is we know that all of this meat comes from American farms and ranches.
00:28:36.660
Good Ranchers is set on supporting this industry.
00:28:40.360
That's just not true of most meat manufacturers.
00:28:43.220
When you go to the store, you see some beef that says made in the USA.
00:28:52.000
And that's a really big problem when you're looking for high quality meat.
00:28:55.400
And plus, if you're America first, you don't have to just vote for that every four years.
00:29:01.120
You can vote for that with your dollar every day.
00:29:03.340
That's what I feel like I'm doing by getting all of my meat from Good Ranchers.
00:29:07.380
This is a Christian family-owned company, and they always are offering really good deals right now.
00:29:13.740
They're running their spring into action promotion.
00:29:16.040
So you and your family can support the local ranchers easily.
00:29:19.740
Get it right to your front door if you subscribe to any of their boxes, preferably my custom box,
00:29:26.640
the Allie Beth Stuckey box, and get free bacon, ground beef, seed oil-free chicken nuggets, or salmon in every order for a year.
00:29:35.520
Plus, you get $25 off your order when you use my code Allie.
00:29:56.900
Wow, this is the first time I'm hearing this, actually.
00:30:00.700
I think my whole life, my entire life that I've known who he is, maybe two years, I've said Chalamet.
00:30:16.720
And I first knew him as playing the gay person in Call Me By My Name.
00:30:23.340
And I just assumed he was a homosexual this whole time.
00:30:33.680
So when I heard, like, a year ago, maybe, that he was dating Kylie Jenner, I was like, what?
00:30:39.640
I did not know that Timothee Chalamet swung that way.
00:30:46.820
And, okay, so I have a whole theory about this.
00:30:49.660
I have a whole theory about his evolution from, I don't even want to say the word that's typically used to describe him.
00:30:56.880
But as, like, a feminine-looking, like, gay person that could only play those roles to this, like, very masculine, salt-of-the-earth heartthrob.
00:31:13.560
And what made me think about this was watching his SAG speech from last week.
00:31:21.920
So he is the youngest person to win Best Actor at the SAG Awards for his lead role as Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown.
00:31:38.740
I saw that the little tweet that you posted was very esoteric.
00:31:48.360
I retweeted something that was, it was someone who was saying that he shouldn't have been nominated for the Bob Dylan movie.
00:31:54.540
He should have been nominated for Dune because that performance was just a lot more dynamic.
00:32:00.200
And I haven't seen the Bob Dylan film, but I don't like movies about people's real life.
00:32:12.240
I can't think of one that I watched that is that.
00:32:37.500
And it made me start thinking, why is he everywhere right now?
00:32:46.040
I know the classiest thing would be to downplay the effort that went into this role and how much this means to me.
00:32:54.060
But the truth is, this was five and a half years of my life.
00:32:56.920
I poured everything I had into playing this incomparable artist, Mr. Bob Dylan.
00:33:05.680
But the truth is, I'm really in pursuit of greatness.
00:33:11.160
I know people don't usually talk like that, but I want to be one of the greats.
00:33:17.240
I'm as inspired by Daniel Day-Lewis, Marlon Brando, and Viola Davis as I am by Michael Jordan and Michael Phelps.
00:33:26.040
This doesn't signify that, but it's a little more fuel.
00:33:30.980
Okay, the reason that I love this is because, so I remember I did an episode a few years ago,
00:33:36.380
and certainly I'm not the only person to say this, but about the demonization of excellence.
00:33:41.560
I think I was talking about Tom Brady at the time.
00:33:48.220
And they don't like people who just outright say, yeah, I want to be good at that.
00:33:57.860
Not that he mentioned God there, but I'm just kind of giving an example.
00:34:01.760
And I'm going to be good at it for the sake of being really good at it.
00:34:05.320
And certainly over the past several years, there has been raised this pretense, this facade in Hollywood.
00:34:16.000
It's that they're using their political activism as a vehicle for their narcissism.
00:34:22.960
Or maybe you could say as a facade to cover up their narcissism.
00:34:28.740
But I actually think that vehicle is probably the better word.
00:34:32.080
It is almost kind of like a humble brag, a way to say this is not about me, while simultaneously showing how virtuous they are.
00:34:46.620
All of them want to be, you know, all of them want to make history with the roles that they star in.
00:34:52.580
And I just appreciated how he said, look, I'm working hard because I want to be the best.
00:34:59.540
I'm not saying that this is the best worldview to have.
00:35:02.860
I'm not saying that this is a biblical perspective.
00:35:04.900
Obviously, the biblical perspective is that we make less of ourselves and more of Christ.
00:35:12.340
And I do think that there is something godly and good about being the best that you possibly can and stewarding the talents that you have to the very best of your ability.
00:35:24.260
And so I really liked this speech as soon as I saw it.
00:35:33.920
I'm having a really hard time switching the M and the L.
00:35:38.000
So he began acting at a young age through minor roles, off-Broadway shows.
00:35:44.160
I think his mom is also in the Hollywood world.
00:35:51.240
Wow, he's really not that much younger than me.
00:35:53.060
He had a minor role in Interstellar, but his breakthrough came in 2017 when he starred in Call Me By Your Name.
00:35:58.840
He plays a 17-year-old boy who falls in love with his father's 24-year-old male intern.
00:36:08.460
But he was a part of a lot of different movies after that.
00:36:23.780
He also has been known for his red carpet fashion apparently over the years.
00:36:29.980
Oh, I'm sure we have probably have rated some of these.
00:36:40.660
Okay, we got this 2019 Golden Globe look where he's got this weird harness on.
00:36:50.100
Okay, so we've got this little harness on there.
00:36:53.580
And again, I'll just say he looks like he would star in a movie called Call Me By Your Name.
00:36:59.540
And then he definitely looks like this in 2022.
00:37:07.140
You should never see a man's back like this outside of the beach and the pool.
00:37:13.640
You should never see a man's toes, a man's calves, a man's back unless you are like swimming.
00:37:22.120
Okay, and so he's wearing a halter top and like these silk pants.
00:37:31.780
He looks like the he looks like Nancy from Stranger Things.
00:37:43.420
Okay, so he's wearing this blazer without a shirt right now.
00:37:47.840
And okay, here is my so this is him just a couple years ago.
00:37:55.200
He is seen as this almost masculine heartthrob.
00:37:58.680
If you see the post about him on X, people are fangirling over him.
00:38:04.320
And now they kind of like they see him as almost a like Brad Pitt type figure.
00:38:17.880
My theory is that he has a really good publicist and a team of publicists that are trying very hard to recover his image from his more feminine days from call me by my name and some of his red carpet appearances.
00:38:35.380
And they are trying to they're trying to masculinize him so that he will continue to be up for these more masculine roles.
00:38:46.340
I think it is very hard to recover your image after you have played like the younger gay man in a movie to then be seen and heralded as some kind of onscreen hero in heartthrob.
00:39:01.540
And so I think that so much of what has happened to him over the past year or so that seems like just, you know, natural occurrences are actually a part of an orchestrated PR campaign.
00:39:31.040
If we have the full screen, I think it's full screen eight of Timothy and Kylie.
00:39:38.220
One, that Timothy even like would have a girlfriend and two, that it would be a hottie like Kylie Jenner.
00:39:47.160
I think that this has to be a strategic dating pick to make him seem more masculine.
00:39:53.620
You just like big bro'd Travis Scott as Timothy Chalamet, who Kylie Jenner has two children with.
00:40:03.160
I think that that is not just that they just met each other and fell in love, Brie.
00:40:14.980
So he was rumored to have dated Lily Rose Depp, too, who's like a model.
00:40:25.920
And yeah, there's something to be said for the kind of people that she was dating before.
00:40:30.020
They were very like, I would say, masculine, typically, kinds of people.
00:40:34.960
And he is like total opposite from what I would say her type is based on who she's been with before.
00:40:43.040
So, yeah, I don't know that it's super genuine, to be honest.
00:41:05.280
The ideal is that she would marry the father of her children, that she would have been married to the father of her children before she had children.
00:41:15.300
Completely independent from that, like not from that kind of perspective.
00:41:22.020
I also think the PDA that they show each other is also part of the PR campaign to make him seem more masculine.
00:41:28.420
Yes, we don't have this now, but we can put it up.
00:41:31.840
There's a picture of him turning around when he loses the Oscar.
00:41:37.960
But when he loses for best actor, he turns around.
00:41:50.000
Yeah, it was a cute little moment that I guess someone in the audience captured.
00:42:02.660
Maybe it's a totally natural occurrence, but I think it's working for him.
00:42:07.720
And here is where he got on everyone's radar is like, wait, are you a real person?
00:42:17.440
When he was on ESPN and he started spouting what my husband says is like real football knowledge, a lot of people are very impressed.
00:42:25.840
I'm going Jackson State, eight wins in a row, 11 all-conference players.
00:42:33.540
These teams are two and two in the last four matchups.
00:42:36.940
The Red Hawks defense looks good, but I'm looking at fourth-year Bobcats quarterback Parker Navarro.
00:42:44.700
If he can get going, he'll tilt this in favor of the Bobcats.
00:42:50.540
Scadaboo little three to five yard runs needs to be efficient.
00:42:54.320
I don't think they've won a conference championship outright ever.
00:43:04.620
So he was the only one on college game day to pick Ohio to beat Miami.
00:43:13.380
I mean, at the point that this person tweeted this, Ohio was up 28-3.
00:43:19.680
Also in December, Chalamet went on Theo Vaughn's podcast, whose audience consists primarily of young adult males, very bro podcast.
00:43:29.520
Somebody in the hair and makeup trailer at the end of the day, they would play this podcast, you know, which is how I discovered it.
00:43:33.560
And particularly the episodes with the garbage man and sort of like the real life episodes, the lunch lady, the coroner.
00:43:46.700
These are sort of like worldviews that I wouldn't get otherwise, you know.
00:43:54.380
Also, his wardrobe has shifted in his appearance.
00:43:58.240
Like, again, if you think back to the silk red halter top, backless, like jumpsuit thing that he had going on to now what he seems to be wearing.
00:44:10.240
I don't think he's afraid of wearing kind of like zany stuff, even stuff that may be considered feminine.
00:44:15.720
Like on college game day, he was wearing that pink jacket.
00:44:18.260
But it certainly is more tailored and more masculine.
00:44:20.840
We've got this picture from December where he's wearing this kind of suit, very classic suit.
00:44:31.120
He looks like a complete frat bro, like wearing a rugby shirt.
00:44:36.340
Um, you can see some of what he's wearing in other appearances in, in December.
00:44:46.860
And all I'm saying is that all of this, including the speech, the unabashed pursuit of excellence, the dating the Kylie Jenner, the going on Theo Vaughn's podcast, the going on college game day, the change in here appearance in his appearance.
00:45:07.300
I don't know what exactly it is, or if it's just like, Hey, we need to change things.
00:45:15.920
Is it going to have that much of an impact on our lives?
00:45:24.780
Chief Related Bro and I were kind of spinning this conspiracy and thought earlier.
00:45:29.600
And I just think it's very interesting when you think about Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively, when you think about all of these people, almost nothing happens to them by chance.
00:45:40.420
The thoughts that you are thinking about the people in the public eye are probably not by chance.
00:45:46.060
The public opinion that forms is probably not by chance.
00:45:48.340
There is a very powerful unseen network of publicists that exists behind the scenes to subtly and very significantly change the public's opinion.
00:46:08.620
I just think I used to be in PR for a very short period of time.
00:46:12.320
So I would be on the lookout for what is on the horizon for Mr. Timothy Chalamet.
00:46:20.960
If you don't care about any of that, then you can turn off this episode.
00:46:24.780
But I think it's interesting and fun to talk about.
00:46:27.520
And so we'll get, we'll get into that in just a second.
00:46:35.760
They are free of those seed oils that we talked about at the beginning of the show that are so bad for you, that can inflame your insides, cause cancer, all of that terrible stuff.
00:46:48.360
They have grass-fed and finished beef tallow, which is really good for your skin, contains all kinds of vitamins that are good for you.
00:46:57.020
I love the classic flavor because I love to dip them in homemade guacamole or salsa.
00:47:02.640
It can be a really healthy snack, but your typical tortilla chips that you're getting from the restaurant, they are fried in canola oil, terrible for you.
00:47:14.220
And this is another small business, America-loving company that is great to support.
00:47:22.940
They're way sturdier than the little flimsy chips that you typically get.
00:47:27.240
Like, you know what healthy brand I'm talking about that you get in the grocery store.
00:47:31.800
They break as soon as you put a little tomato on there.
00:47:41.860
Use my code AllieB for a discount on your order.
00:48:06.460
For someone who didn't watch most of the movies, I had a lot of thoughts.
00:48:10.360
I thought that this year's movies, nominated for Best Picture, sounded horrible.
00:48:18.260
And like I said, I didn't watch a lot of them, but Anora, that one Best Picture, also Best
00:48:33.280
Conclave is about like an intersex pope or something or cardinal or something.
00:48:39.760
Amelia Perez is, you know, about, we've talked about this, but Mexican cartel leader who goes
00:48:59.340
So just not a very good group of films, I thought, to begin with.
00:49:15.020
Because I've seen it on Broadway, and I love the soundtrack, and I love Idina Menzel.
00:49:20.040
And I was very skeptical about this, but so many people, including Ben Shapiro, have
00:49:37.940
Honestly, her voice might, do you think it's better than Idina Menzel's?
00:49:52.520
I mean, maybe she could, but could she play Elsa?
00:49:56.620
You know, just because she, I don't know, but her voice is just so powerful.
00:50:11.180
Oh, I was hoping that we had the part where it was just her.
00:50:31.240
Okay, I think that Ariana Grande's voice is amazing.
00:50:35.200
But when you hear them together, don't you just think that Cynthia is so much richer?
00:50:49.240
And there's been so much chatter throughout their whole Wicked tour about how bad they look.
00:50:57.060
Like, that they're just not choosing things that are very flattering for them.
00:51:10.800
That is not anything that you can't blame their mama.
00:51:16.360
They are making choices with their hair and face.
00:51:29.300
So, as you said, Zoe Saldana won her role in Amelia, for her role in Amelia Perez, the Mexican cartel leader who transes himself.
00:51:40.800
Then we've got the pro-Palestine documentary, No Other Land, won Best Documentary.
00:51:47.620
See, that's funny because when I hear No Other Land, I immediately think of the Jews.
00:51:54.460
Like, I immediately think, like, that's their only Jewish state.
00:51:59.280
They have no other Jewish state that is their homeland.
00:52:02.060
Whereas the Muslim world has many other countries that they could flee to.
00:52:09.720
And people were really mad that Gal Gadot, Gadot, is that how you say her last name?
00:52:16.120
She's heard in the IDF, I think, beautiful actress.
00:52:18.420
She's played a lot of different roles, like Wonder Woman.
00:52:20.500
And people were very upset that she presented the award for, not for this, but for anything, right?
00:52:26.700
There was a rumor that she was going to present Best Documentary.
00:52:30.280
And whoever had made that decision probably knew that this Palestine movie was going to win and that it was going to be, like, kind of an awkward moment.
00:52:37.020
And she probably, if that was ever the plan, she probably was like, no, I'm not doing that.
00:52:43.660
There was lots of hatred on X, though, over her just existing at the Oscars.
00:52:54.240
I also just want to, again, recognize and honor the sex worker community.
00:53:06.740
All of the incredible people, the women that I've had the privilege of meeting from that community has been one of the highlights of this incredible, of this entire incredible experience.
00:53:22.340
We are talking about prostitutes who very often have been trafficked into their position.
00:53:28.740
And just because someone says yes to being objectified does not make objectification okay.
00:53:35.660
And even if someone is technically consenting in the moment does not mean that they actually had consent when they were pulled into that industry.
00:53:43.900
And, by the way, if you are saying yes for fear of being abused, for fear of being destitute, then that is not true consent.
00:53:55.660
So, I don't believe in, you know, purely consent-based morality anyway because there is a higher morality that is set by the God who created us.
00:54:02.840
And whether you say yes or no to something, that might be part of the piece of the puzzle that makes something right or wrong.
00:54:08.520
But it's not everything that makes something right or wrong.
00:54:11.720
There's an objective universal morality that exists.
00:54:18.460
It's not moral for the people who are using the prostitutes.
00:54:21.540
It's not moral for the people who are selling their bodies.
00:54:23.900
It's not moral for the people who are pimping out these women.
00:54:32.400
As people who understand that we are all made in the image of God, prostitution, like abortion, like gender transition, that denigrates the body, it should absolutely break our hearts.
00:54:43.500
And it just goes to show again that the Christian worldview, even though it is seen as this kind of like, it is seen as this anti-physical, uber-spiritual religion, it's not.
00:54:55.860
We care about the body so much because it's made in God's image and we are a dwelling place of the Holy Spirit.
00:55:01.380
And the world is the one that continually denigrates and degrades the body, doesn't understand that the body exists for a purpose.
00:55:09.680
The body is sacred and the body is meant to be protected.
00:55:12.280
So this dualistic, Gnostic mentality is just really, really deadly and really gross and simple.
00:55:18.500
And by the way, I just saw this video going around of Andrew Tate from several years ago where he is literally beating this woman named Vivian, beating her with a belt, is making her repeat these horrible mantras, basically saying that he owns her.
00:55:39.480
And it's forcing her into this position that he beats her when she doesn't do what he says.
00:55:46.700
What is being reported is that this woman had been a minor when she first started working for Tate.
00:55:59.580
Andrew Tate is the sex work that Hollywood is promoting.
00:56:04.000
So these liberals simultaneously say, oh, Andrew Tate is so bad.
00:56:12.900
That's the sex work community that you are praising, that you are promoting.
00:56:16.660
So just because right-wingers, so-called, if you can even call Andrew Tate that, promote that, doesn't, I mean, doesn't mean that you can then condemn it and act like you're a Puritan all of the sudden.
00:56:35.560
Now, let's talk about, if we have time, we'll go into, we'll like rate some of these outfits.
00:56:41.140
But I do want to talk about Kieran Culkin's baby speech, which was really sweet.
00:56:45.980
Maybe the only positive part, one of the only positive parts of the Oscars.
00:56:49.560
Let me tell you about our last sponsor and then we'll do that.
00:56:54.380
And this is for you if you are a business owner.
00:56:57.400
So trying to make sure that you are meeting all of your KPIs, making sure that all of your systems are working as they should most efficiently, that takes a lot of time.
00:57:10.480
And that is why so many business owners trust NatSweet.
00:57:14.360
It's a cloud-based business management software that helps organizations run more efficiently.
00:57:19.200
It includes a suite of applications for accounting, inventory management, order processing, and more.
00:57:30.160
It's all right there if they put it in one easy place and make it really simple.
00:57:34.600
Right now, if you go to netsweet.com slash Allie, you can download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning.
00:57:44.340
If you're not understanding AI, you are behind.
00:57:47.500
NetSweet wants to make sure that you are not behind, that you understand what's going on.
00:57:51.180
So download their free guide to AI and machine learning at netsweet.com slash Allie.
00:58:07.560
About a year ago, I was on a stage like this, and I very stupidly publicly said that I won a third kid from her because she said if I won the award, she would give me the kid.
00:58:15.760
It turns out she said that because she didn't think I was going to win.
00:58:22.040
And I turned to her and I said, really, I want four.
00:58:28.720
She said, I will give you four when you win an Oscar.
00:58:39.080
Okay, so I just thought that was really sweet that he unapologetically is saying he wants four kids.
00:58:50.440
And you just don't see a lot of people in Hollywood saying yes, more kids, especially if it's more than two.
00:58:57.460
I mean, really, anywhere you go, even in the South, if you say like, even when I am traveling, when we're traveling with all three of our kids, the looks that we get, it's not always mean looks.
00:59:07.080
It's just like, oh, my goodness, you've got your hands full.
00:59:09.720
I'm not offended by that at all because we do have our hands full.
00:59:12.640
When your kids are young and you got three kids, it looks like a lot of kids.
00:59:15.980
But having more than three kids is seen as like crazy.
00:59:20.220
I remember my first doctor when I had an unwanted C-section with my first and I said, you know, I really don't want a bunch of C-sections because, you know, I don't want that to limit how many kids that we have.
00:59:33.180
And he said, well, I really don't recommend having more than three C-sections, but who has more than three kids nowadays?
00:59:39.500
I was like, right after I had my first, I thought that was such a weird thing to say coming from an OBGYN.
00:59:45.200
But that is like the prevailing attitude of a lot of people, that three maximum number of kids that a sane person should have beyond that.
00:59:53.580
So for him to say on stage, yeah, I want four kids, I just think it's sweet.
01:00:01.940
She like jokingly put a gun to her head, which is like a terrible thing.
01:00:05.800
But I'm sure she was just performing and just thought it was, you know, thought it was funny or whatever.
01:00:14.280
I probably haven't seen him in anything since Father of the Bride.
01:00:19.520
I think he was the younger, the younger brother and Father of the Bride.
01:00:29.980
No, I think just Home Alone and Father of the Bride.
01:00:40.260
And there were people online who were like, oh, he's a liberal.
01:00:45.260
I can't believe right wingers are supporting him.
01:00:50.180
He did go to a pride parade and he went to a Trump protest.
01:00:54.040
But what people on the left don't understand is, and conservatives are really good at this
01:00:58.160
because we have to be good at this because everyone, almost everyone who creates art is liberal.
01:01:03.160
You can like and appreciate what someone said and disagree with all the rest.
01:01:12.200
Because you get in trouble a lot on this show for your support of a certain someone.
01:01:17.200
And, but you try to separate a lot of her art and you don't even like every song that
01:01:29.720
But I feel like people on the left cannot do that.
01:01:33.080
If they find out that, you know, Gal Gadot is from Israel, they can't.
01:01:42.060
If they find out that Chris Pratt goes to a church that said something about biblical marriage
01:01:52.200
Maybe that's what's so confusing about some of the reactions sometimes that I get with
01:02:04.880
I think we should condemn what we need to condemn.
01:02:07.140
And I think it's okay to appreciate, you know, one thing someone said because it's
01:02:15.260
Now, I do think that there may be a difference in saying, okay, I agreed with this one thing.
01:02:19.820
What he said was true, which is basically what we did.
01:02:22.000
And like, I'm not saying you're doing this, but like unconditionally supporting someone
01:02:27.120
who just continues to hoist up really bad values.
01:02:31.020
I do think it's legit for someone to say, you know, they're free to do that.
01:02:34.640
I'm not going to pay them money anymore because they're supporting like pro-abortion
01:02:40.280
So I do think that there is a difference there, a whole discussion and debate to be had about
01:02:48.460
And he's talked before about how much he loves being a dad and how he would do that all
01:02:57.480
He basically feels like he wasn't even a real person before he had kids.
01:03:00.660
And again, I think this is just a very rare perspective to hear from Hollywood.
01:03:06.760
Do we want to go through some outfits really fast, Brie?
01:03:12.500
Let's rate it one through 10, 10 being the best, one being the worst.
01:03:20.780
Okay, this is from the, she's from Amelia Perez, right?
01:03:56.880
I'm trying to really give a correct rating because she's so beautiful and which is kind
01:04:08.740
But I'm not going to say that it's, I think actually this is a very beautiful color on her.
01:04:16.160
I'm going to give it a three because I don't know if it's the worst thing that I've ever seen.
01:04:45.960
I don't think that this is in her color season at all.
01:04:58.820
She does wear a lot of colors that do wash her out.
01:05:08.940
I don't love, like, black and white together like that.
01:05:11.720
That's kind of like Ivanka Trump's dress at the, like, inaugural ball.
01:05:20.580
I'm going to go with the three and a half, four.
01:05:30.500
This is different than what she was wearing on stage.
01:05:51.860
Obviously, the bottom is supposed to be funky and I don't like that.
01:05:57.320
But the top is cute and I actually kind of like the color on her, especially if she went
01:06:02.160
back to her natural hair color and eyebrow color.
01:06:07.640
Her hair's still the weird blonde color, but...
01:07:03.920
Maybe if it's, like, with the theme of Wicked and she's supposed to kind of be, like, Elphaba.
01:07:24.260
Like, okay, we didn't put in some of the best-dressed people, like Selena Gomez.
01:07:27.960
Selena Gomez has looked like 10 million bucks the past two times.
01:07:34.640
I want something that is complimenting your beauty.
01:07:45.680
This, I hate stuff that is distracting and is overwhelming someone's beauty.
01:07:50.920
And this, I know it's probably meant to be, but it's very overwhelming.
01:08:14.200
I think she would look amazing in a red or even a green if you want to go Elphaba.
01:08:24.980
That's not what I think of when I see this dress.
01:08:58.000
I was going to say he just looks like a stick of butter, but.
01:09:05.540
Now, this kind of disrupts my conspiracy that they're trying to make him more masculine,
01:09:20.480
But I feel like he tries to, you know, make statements.
01:09:24.380
I don't think a lot of these people are thinking what makes me most beautiful.
01:09:35.800
But I mean, you know, that's not exactly high praise.
01:09:42.820
I'm a little offended by it, but I guess if we look beyond the color, the tailoring, I
01:09:53.420
I'm like, if a guy is not wearing a dress or a halter top, I'm like, whoa, great nature
01:10:14.780
I, I feel like that's super generous because I say tailoring.
01:10:18.420
I'm not completely confident that you couldn't get this off.
01:10:26.400
Like the bunching at the bottom, it looks like a little wrinkly.
01:10:31.580
Some designers really mad at you for saying that.
01:10:36.640
They were wondering what we were going to say about the outfits.
01:10:40.840
Some of you are going to have loved that episode.
01:10:42.900
I know I will get a message from someone saying, why did you talk about this?
01:10:52.340
Sometimes we talk about so much deep and serious stuff and so much that matters.
01:10:57.520
And sometimes it's just fun to talk about some lighthearted things too, with a lot of serious stuff going on in the world.
01:11:03.220
Tomorrow, we'll be talking about Ukraine and the address from Trump.
01:11:08.540
Thursday, we'll be talking about more politics.