The Daily Zeitgeist - Infinite Evidence Police Are The Problem, Facebook Unbans Trump('s Campaign Money) 01.30.23
Episode Date: January 30, 2023In episode 1411, Jack and guest co-host Pallavi Gunalan are joined by writer, humorist, and style icon, Dave Schilling, to discuss… The 5 Memphis Police Officers Were Part of Unit Designed Specifica...lly to Stop Violence, Meta Welcomes Back Trump… ‘s Campaign Money and more! The 5 Memphis Police Officers Were Part of Unit Designed to Specifically to Stop Violence Donald Trump prepares for his return to Facebook and Twitter Trump allowed back on Facebook after 2-year suspension Donald Trump’s Truth Social posts bode ill for his return to Facebook Meta just gave Trump the green light to push harmful misinformation and extremism on its platforms Meta is restoring full ad access to Trump — the company's biggest political advertiser Trump's pending return to Facebook is more about cash than speech LISTEN: sipping my tea by Zack FoxSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion,
and this is season four
of Naked Sports.
Up first,
I explore the making
of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark
versus Angel Reese.
Every great player
needs a foil.
I know I'll go down
in history.
People are talking
about women's basketball
just because of
one single game. Clark and Reese have
changed the way we consume women's
sports. Listen to the making of a rivalry
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast
or wherever you get your podcast.
Presented by Capital One, founding
partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pardenti
and I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
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If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation,
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Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Hello, the internet, and welcome to season 273, episode one of Dirt Daily's iGeist,
a production of iHeartRadio. This is a podcast where we take a deep dive into America's shared consciousness.
And it is Monday, January 30th, 2023.
My name's Jack O'Brien, a.k.a. I've got plumper thighs.
Look at these quads and you'll realize I've got plumper thighs.
Working the legs for the daily zeitgeist that is courtesy of
right to post little
hungry eyes Eric
Carmen aka
I think we looked up Eric Carmen he's like
wild problematic at this point
but I don't know
I'll fact check me on that
did you say Eric Cartman
because he's very problematic.
Oh, he's a horrible person.
They made a character about him.
I think he's misunderstood, okay?
I'm sick of this cancel culture.
Fed that kid's parents to him.
But other than that, I feel like he's pretty chill.
Well, we are thrilled to be joined in my second seat
by a hilarious and brilliant stand-up comedian
writer actor improviser biomedical engineer you can catch her on stages across this great land
it's palavi gunali oh my goodness wow how my name yelled with the correct pronunciation
feels so good it feels so great. Feels good on this side, too.
You've got a great name.
Pallavi, it's great to have you.
You are filling in for Miles, who...
Not just at the Daily Bike Guys,
but just in regular life, too.
I've been hired as his stand-in.
His life stand-in?
Yeah.
He just needed a break, you know?
He needed to bonnie bear for a minute
and now yeah i'm killing it we got a brown person it's all the same right the same same height i
don't know are you six two sure yeah miles is miles is tall and i'm always just surprised every
time i see him again for the first time in like a couple weeks i'm like
man you are you are a short man energy he feels like a short person he should be that's not true
it's because he's approachable he's like secure with himself you know so he i don't know he has
you know i don't know he just has the energy of somebody who is not defined by their height
and then when you see him it takes a moment to be like oh you are taller than most people yeah anyways dave i'm not allowing
you to cast aspersions on my comment about miles being a tall a tall gentleman dave's here to start
drama i'm tall too so i think no way i don't believe that at all. I'm 7'2", the same height as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
No, I'm not. Just kidding.
I also have short man energy. That's why I bring it up.
I can feel the camaraderie between me and Miles when we hang out.
Yeah. Well, that third voice you keep hearing is someone we're thrilled to be joined by.
A very talented writer, humorous podcast host, whose work you've seen in the LA Times, Guardian, New Yorker, if you've ever heard of that
periodical publication, New York Magazine. You've read him at all of those places because
you're extremely well-read. Yes, I've been everywhere. I've been everywhere, man.
He's the consummate podcast host podcast guest professional wrestling expert
please welcome the hilarious the fashionable the brilliant dave chilling
this is how we're talking to each other the whole episode we are so far away
i love not being the loudest person on a podcast. That never happens to me.
I was taught to project.
When I went to podcast college, they said, use your outside voice.
Hit the back of the room with extreme prejudice.
It was hard for me to shake that directive from elementary school,
where it's like, use your inside, six inch voices, not six foot voices.
But when you become a professional podcaster, you got to use that six foot voice. Okay. You got to get out
there. That's six foot two voice. Just like miles gray, six, two. Yeah. That's six foot two voice.
Yeah, exactly. The extreme prejudice reaching the back of the podcast room is just all the
slurs that podcasters normally say. That's right. That's how some podcasters hit that back of the room with extreme prejudice.
It's the hard R syndrome.
That's where they keep the minorities, in the back of the room.
All right. Well, Dave, we're going to get to know you a little bit better in a moment.
Pallavi, we might even get to know you a little bit better in a moment. First,
we're going to tell our listeners a couple of the things that we're talking about.
We're recording this on Friday. I don't believe they have released the video of the police murder
in Memphis, but we do have a story about who those police officers were. They were part of a special
task force that was aimed at stopping street
violence, crazily enough. So we're going to talk about these sorts of task forces,
how they get covered, how they come about, and why they aren't ever held to account and hopefully
will be now. I don't know. We'll talk about trump's return to meta they're they're welcoming trump back
on meta and all his campaign money because apparently he was like the biggest spender
of all time on meta in terms of political ads before we get to any of that dave we do like to
ask our guest and you may know this what is something from your search history that is revealing about who you are i recently googled martini glasses specifically nick and nora glasses
because i broke one in the sink and i i'm a big martini drinker and i found a set of four from um
the museum of modern art in new york's website i don't know why the MoMA is selling martini glasses.
They have a whole home goods
store connected to that museum.
Yeah, it's just like an Ikea if you walk far enough.
And I kind of like some of the stuff, and then I feel bad
for liking it. It's kind of fucked up that
they're horning in on
Ikea and Target's whole
thing. I don't think Target's going to start
showing Marc Chagall paintings.
You know what I'm saying? I don't think they're gonna start showing mark chagall paintings you know what i'm saying i don't think they're gonna start getting sculptures from damien hurst at ikea this
is not appropriate let's stay in your lane here dare you the art at ikea is incredible and
magnificent and i could stare at it for hours getting lost there yeah yeah i i understand what you're saying i i get that but i'm talking
about fine art not just you know like a tableau of a bowl of fruit or something or a magic eye
do they have magic eye paintings at ikea what is the art at ikea that that actually is a really
good question it's very generic and it's like i feel like them and like the people who put art
in hotels have to link up you know what i mean like i feel like them and like the people who put art in hotels have to link up. You know what I mean?
Like, I feel like they're on the same wavelength.
A black and white photo of a guitar.
Triangles everywhere.
I'm guessing there's like live, laugh, love stuff too, you know?
Oh, for sure.
Right?
Yeah.
Although that does feel like a little bit outside of Ikea's wheelhouse.
The live, laugh, love.
That's more of a target walmart
right something in that font you know what i mean yes yeah i'm trying to say like would it be okay
i'm looking there's a sander patelsky photograph of a uh pool so like they have like i'm sure they
have like somebody who has good taste like like buying art for them at Ikea.
Yeah, we're just dogging on this person.
You know, basically, the MoMA is Ikea without the meatballs is what I'm here to say.
The art at Ikea is just as good as the art at the MoMA as long as you're not a materialist.
Who cares that they're not originals?
I am always at the moment screaming,
where are the meatballs?
You do do that.
I do that a lot, yeah.
One could say that that Lincoln Berry sauce is artistic.
It is an expression of humanity's greatest achievement,
in my opinion.
Yeah.
Is that true?
I do sometimes wonder that.
When I talk about the Cheesecake Factory menu
being the thing that will be
remembered from american like america's contribution to like civilization they'll just be like
marveling at our ability to put that much food together and like put it put it out and you know
just get it all together i don't think it's about the menu itself i think it's
about attempting to read the menu in a poorly lit room yeah yeah yeah it's the experience it's
performance art that engages the audience it's funny that you say that polyv because the people
that eat a cheesecake factory tend to have very bad eyesight because of their elderly nature.
I don't know if only old people go to Cheesecake Factory,
but I think it's predominantly people who maybe should have some lights on.
Maybe we should crank that dimmer a little bit
so that we can see what we're shoveling in our mouth.
Crank that dimmer.
When you're in Florida, you'll occasionally see people
with little flashlights on their keychains like the the elderly like have little gadgets that i'm not aware of but
we do it with our phones right yeah for sure but they've got little like squeezy flashlights
i want to show up to the cheesecake factory in a full-on fucking like helmet with a flashlight
on it like i'm going big ass yeah like i'm a minor yeah
like yeah i'm gonna go rescue some thai children and also some mozzarella sticks
but i do wonder like will ikea be remembered will that be a thing that people look back on
because it is like the predominant thing from our it will be the predominant, like when they're digging around in the rubble of the US,
mostly what they're going to be finding
is probably Ikea furniture, right?
Yeah, I think that there's a real serious point
to be made here, guys,
that the abundance that we all enjoy today,
all the furniture, all of the food,
all of the things that we have that we take for granted
are going to be not possible in the next 100 years.
So people will look back on the just pure greed and avarice of our society
and be like, how did they do this?
People lived like this?
They got to get an appetizer and a main and then dessert yeah unbelievable
they're gonna be shocked so yeah i think that ikea and cheesecake factory and sizzler and hometown
buffet and costco are all going to be considered like these quirky relics of a different time
i don't know if it's sad or not but it's kind of the way
we view like great gatsby like the the way people are like we're having a gatsby party they'll like
have ikea parties yeah with like three meatballs to be like kylie jenner's great grandchildren
right um i learned this week that ikea is a non-profit did you guys know that
what no that feels like a scheme that feels like a tax dodge exactly i
feel like it is and it's but it's technically a non-profit yeah ikea is technically a religion
like scientology they don't have to pay taxes i heard warren buffett is donating his entire
fortune to ikea ikea he's such a good guy that's so cool he's my favorite like i he's my favorite uh spiritual
leader what is something dave that you think is overrated oh boy okay this is for sure definitely
not no those meatballs uh are slamming as we established i'm gonna stick to movies because
this is oscar season there's a lot of controversy out there about what movies were nominated what
movies weren't nominated.
So something that is under or overrated is what we're starting with, right?
Yes.
Okay.
An overrated movie that I saw this year.
I am going to go with Black Panther, Wakanda Forever. I know I'm going to have to turn in all of my black cards and whatnot for saying this, but I found that movie very boring.
black cards and whatnot for saying this but i found that movie very boring it was long and i i didn't really connect to any of the characters it really missed chadwick boseman uh and so i feel
like i missed him too yeah i think we all did it was i i don't know if i'm spoiling anything but
at the end he's got a kid right he's he's had he had sex once black panther had sex once and he's got a kid, right? He had sex once. Black Panther had sex once.
And he's got a little kid at the end.
Who's going to, I guess, grow up to be Chad McBoseman recreated with artificial intelligence or something.
You know, at some point we're going to get that.
And I got kind of weepy with that.
But, like, for the most part, I was so bored with the little guy with his little wings on his feet and all the water.
At the same time, I love Avatar.
So there's something wrong with me here.
Okay.
But have you considered that he's incredibly hot?
The guy with the wings in the water?
I did consider it.
I took a beat.
I said, okay, let's see.
Do I like this movie?
I'm not sure.
That guy is really hot.
He's still don't like it. maybe if he'd been in a better movie
but i agree he's a he's a handsome sexy guy i'm fine with okay here's here's my the only thing
that i thought was like a little bit strange i feel like it was a little bit predictable and
who the black panther was gonna be and i felt like they had that whole mit girl that character wasn't like fully
developed enough it felt like kind of an add-on but i'm such a superhero head i was like fuck it
let's go you know what i mean like i just go into those movies empty head don't care and i have fun
young dumb and full of calm let's go um yeah go i don't know if everybody
is comfortable with me me sharing this spoiler too but if you haven't seen the movie and you
don't want to know who black pan the new black panther is you maybe skip this okay so here we go
five four three two one okay so the thing about tony's black pan Panther is that it's really weird that Rachel Dolezal ended up being the Black Panther.
Yeah.
But I thought it was a perfect choice.
You know what I mean?
To carry on the work of Chadwick Boseman.
Who better than Rachel Dolezal?
One of the most important Black people
of my generation, certainly.
I do hope that somebody did skip forward and
that joke's only for those
of us who just don't give a fuck.
What's weird is the new Black
Panther does have an OnlyFans.
Yes. Is that real?
Yeah. Oh yeah, she's got one.
Rachel Dolezal, not the new Black Panther.
Also, little wingies
on the feet that you fly
by sort of ice skating around through
the sky on is a fun little thing that i don't know it's just like superman they have superman
flying just through like sheer tyranny of will and alien superpowers and like you know that was
i feel like that's usually how we see it so a fun new little
way for somebody to fly around that allows you to say little wingies on the feet is uh is a win
i think for for the superhero genre i did not see the movie i saw that uh dr strange
movie by the by the director who i really like whose name sam Sam Raimi. Sam Raimi. Yeah.
I've liked a lot of his movies.
I saw that Dr. Strange movie and I was like,
this is the last,
this is the last Marvel movie I ever have to see.
This is,
I'm,
I think I'm out.
I will say the new Black Panther was better than Dr.
Strange.
Yeah.
I'm sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Black Panther had Rachel Dolezal and Doctor Strange didn't.
That's the difference.
That's the big difference.
Although, if Rachel Dolezal is anything, I feel like that should be named Doctor Strange.
You know what I mean?
Am I right?
Over here with that.
Heyo.
Heyo.
What is something you think is underrated, Dave?
Okay.
This is going to be more controversial than saying I didn't like Black Pantherther that much i saw the whale yesterday it's dark our good friend brendan
frazier it's two hours of him going friend of the show people are amazing over and over again
which is now i just do it to annoy my girlfriend. I'm like, hey, Dorothy. People are amazing. People are amazing.
Oh, it's amazing.
People have slagged this movie off a lot.
And I've read a lot of reviews that have been very negative towards the film.
Understandably so.
I think the way that it handles obesity, I don't even know if we should be using the word obesity.
I feel like some people feel that's a trigger or a slur.
But people, bigger people, the way it handles it is not great.
There are scenes where he's like bathing or trying to do various things, takes his shirt off.
And this music plays where it's like the creature from the Black Lagoon just popped out of a bathtub or something.
It's really kind of like a horror movie adjacent
and it's also like um it's deeply deeply not subtle this is one of the most obvious movies
of all time but i was also moved by it i don't want to get too deep into talking about the whale
on this podcast but i did relate to some of the themes of the movie, specifically about
being a parent, about divorce, about guilt in how you're raising your kid and feeling
like you failed yourself or you failed them, feeling shame.
Like, these are all emotions we all kind of go through.
And I connected to the movie.
And I think one of the sad things about the way we talk about films or art in general,
how we talk about films or art in general, how we talk about
creativity is often literal. This is a deeply literal movie, but it also has things to offer
if you engage with it in any kind of way. But I think people look at any film they go to,
especially movies that are prestige films, and they say, if it doesn't conform to exactly what
I think and it doesn't make me feel good, every single second, I'm going to setetic person going to a movie, if I'm not thinking about what the filmmaker is trying to say or hopes to say, then why am I bothering with it?
I might as well just go see Black Panther again.
You know, I want movies to move me in a real way.
And I think there are things to like about The Wh the whale even though it can be very stupid and very
offensive to certain people the fact that it's about a large person and called the whale is
and also not starring someone who is that yeah it's like a fat suit guys i don't know if you
know this but it's a metaphor it metaphor. He's not really a whale.
No, I'm just kidding.
He's not really a whale?
Hold up, dude.
I thought Free Willy was going to be in this.
Yeah.
But it does turn out people are amazing.
People are amazing.
Now that's going to be stuck in my head.
I'm going to make that my alarm.
I will say that I was thinking about this with the
discussion of everything everywhere all at once i loved that movie i thought it was amazing but i
i do think like there was like a lot of criticism from like white people who couldn't relate and
part of what i was thinking about it today was like i mean obviously there are aspects of movies
that you like and aspects you don't like and And I don't know why exactly what you said.
We have to have everything be perfect because people aren't perfect and art isn't perfect.
But there can be like things that make you feel something different.
And also, like, not everything has to be for you.
Like, if something is harmful, I understand criticizing it.
And the whale in those ways is very harmful.
I understand criticizing it and the whale in those ways are is very like harmful but if something isn't harmful and it's you just thought it was like corny or cringe or whatever people were
tweeting about everything everywhere all at once like just leave it let people be cringe that's not
harmful you know what I mean it's hard people people are criticizing that movie now because
like I think it's because it got slotted so much okay it's finally
being accepted like michelle yale being the first so there's gotta be a backlash yeah so there's a
backlash and it tends to be like a racist backlash you know like it's from white people they're like
i can't relate it doesn't look like me um so i think or and then they kind of try to come up
with other reasons other than race but yeah so i think there's that now so
there's like discourse about it and i'm like whatever i enjoyed it and i had fun and i moved
on you know yeah at the at the end of the day i think it's true that people aren't amazing
some people aren't amazing i think yeah there is so much art being created and so much to consume that I think people are looking for an excuse to hate something or not like something.
And then you pair that dynamic of like from the consumer end with the like critical or just like word of mouth critical element of every time you say you like something
it's a risk like it's it's very easy to just be like one of 10 people to be like yeah i don't i
don't really like that because blah blah blah you know so like staking your claim to something i
i actually don't agree with that i don't think it is like a risk i'm not more likely to judge someone harshly for
a recommendation than i am for them saying that they hated something that i loved but i i do feel
like people are just like guarded and they're like i don't want to let i don't want to i don't
want to be vulnerable and say i liked this thing you know i also think like that is very true in terms of social currency, but I also think a lot of takes are actually physically financially monetized.
You know what I mean?
So if you're making controversial statements or if you dislike something, you can legit earn money off of that through social media.
So it's easy to...
People want to have a take and jump in on the discourse
and make money off of it, you know?
Yeah. Yeah, I'd be way more
successful if I said absolutely
ridiculous things all the time.
And when I wake
up in the morning, I have a choice
to make every day, which is
do I want to be a
complete soulless shill
for horrible things, or do I want to just be a normal guy?
And I choose normal guy most of the time.
I'm this close to choosing shill, okay?
I'm so close.
That's what capitalism does to you.
Exactly.
It nails you against a wall.
Makes it seem like the adult responsible thing to do.
I've said it before. I'll say it again okay i am i am a queer brown woman all right i could sell out so easily to
the right you know i would be so good at it it was there would be shock waves there would be
candace owens is so powerful in conservative media because she stands out and she can be that person that someone drags in and says, look, see, she doesn't mind police violence against unarmed citizens.
And she's black.
Yeah.
It's just like black police officers.
They cover up all the things that nobody wants you to see.
That's right.
All right. Let's take a quick break
and we'll be right back
i'm jess casaveto executive producer of the hit netflix documentary series dancing for the devil
the 7m tiktok cult and i'm cleo gray former member of 7m films and shekinah church and we're the host
of the new podcast forgive me Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and LA-based Shekinah Church,
an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers
have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members
and new, chilling firsthand accounts,
the series will illuminate untold
and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me For I Have Followed
will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring
these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradente.
And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions.
Like, how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or, can I negotiate a higher salary
if this is my first real job?
Girl, yes.
Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
Think of us as your work besties
you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer,
we bring in experts who do.
Like resume specialist Morgan Saner. The only difference between the person who doesn't get
the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies. Yeah, I think a lot about that quote,
what is it, like you miss 100% of the shots you never take? Yeah, rejection is scary,
but it's better than you rejecting yourself. Together, we'll share what it really takes to
thrive in the early years of your career.
Without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 of Naked Sports, where we live at the intersection of sports and culture.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry,
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Every great player needs a foil.
I ain't really near them boys.
I just come here to play basketball every single day,
and that's what I focus on.
From college to the pros,
Clark and Reese have changed the way
we consume women's sports.
Angel Reese is a joy to watch.
She is unapologetically black.
I love her.
What exactly ignited this fire?
Why has it been so good for the game?
And can the fanfare surrounding these two supernovas be sustained?
This game is only going to get better because the talent is getting better.
This new season will cover all things sports and culture. Listen to Naked Sports on the Black Effect Podcast Network, And we're back.
And as we're recording this, we still haven't seen, I don't think they've
released the video of the five police officers beating Tyree Nichols to death, but just generally,
like, I don't know, it feels like we're at a moment that everyone is girding themselves for that.
And we're getting some reporting on the context. By the time you
hear this, the video has probably been released. But one of the articles I just wanted to highlight
is about the unit that they were a part of. And we see that we see this a lot like we saw it with the gun trace task force in baltimore these cops were a part of
a unit of 40 officers who were designed to stop violence and the acronym they gave themselves as
a unit for such a benign peacekeeping mission was scorpion street crimes operation to restore
peace in our neighborhoods unit because what
sends a message that you are looking to gain the trust of the community better than like the
antagonist from that aesop's fable the about a fucking you know someone who is trusted for one
character yeah it's a mortal kombat character it's the thing that like
the person in the sub-sphere will trust for one second and they're like what what the fuck did
you expect yeah and i don't know it just we've gotten a lot of really hard to refute evidence
that maybe the police are a bad idea over the past year we're going to keep
getting it and just the way that the mainstream media metabolizes this evidence is the problem
like it or it's a huge part of the problem like they don't stop and look at it often enough the
the cops in the subway shooting like running away from danger
and telling people close by to call 9-1-1 was just echoed by a video where someone fell onto the
subway tracks and a bunch of citizens jumped down to lift them up to safety while a cop stood on the
side and like waved his flashlight at any trains that might have been coming because someone had to do that, but he picked
the cush job in that scenario. He was doing that so casually
too. He was taking breaks and stuff. I was like,
what is happening?
As long as the mainstream media responds to any...
So this Scorpion Task force was a response to murder rates in Memphis going up after the pandemic.
And the way that that rise in crime was covered by the mainstream media was a fucking crime in and of itself.
When you actually go back and look,
people actually did the work to see what was happening,
and they found that a lot of these programs,
these social programs and public schools,
were frozen for a long period of time,
and those are things that are there to keep people
doing things as a community and you know interacting
and doing productive things and when those things all stopped there was a rise in the murder rate
and the mainstream media's analysis of the rise in the murder rate was that the police feelings
were hurt and that's why there was a rise in the murder rate like that is ultimately what their version came down to because like any they also said that it was because they got defunded which
didn't happen like any defunding was ultimately minimal so i don't know i just as we're
experiencing the coming news cycle like i just want to be conscious of the fact that we this is going to start a new
conversation about defunding the police and it's going to be treated as or what what else what else
could we possibly do you know we this is the only thing that we have is creating these like task
forces that are like the troop surges in iraq like where they just
like send people in to be like extra violent and send extra people in and like fund extra fund the
police and it's like i just want everybody to keep in mind like that is not what the data says
that's not what any of the evidence suggests works. And we have like so we're just being fucking bombarded with evidence constantly that that's the case. Like policing, doubling down on policing doesn't fucking work.
It's really sickening that it feels like George Floyd died.
We went through everything that summer trying to like defund the police.
And now they've just taken this narrative and said that we have when we haven't.
And that's why, you know, it's like, it's kind of like the right being like, oh, this is what the world has come to.
And you're like, yeah, this is what capitalism has made the world.
You can't just say it's socialism. You know, you can't just say that it's the opposite
of what it is. Because like the numbers do speak to the fact that funding police actually causes
more violence. It raises like crime rates. When the NYPD was on strike, crime rates fell in other
in other cities. And like, you know, in Massachusetts, I think, there was a police station that was disbanded and crime rates fell. It all points to defunding the police and funding social services as actually stopping violence. cannot fund a cop city in atlanta you cannot fund all of these so-called like training organizations
or military militarize the police and have no repercussions because the reason they're acting
like this the reason that they're able to you know kill black people unarmed people on the street or
even in their homes like with that disabled man that happened like recently he came out with his
hands up and they shot him
as soon as he opened the door yeah the reason that they're acting like this is because they
have guns and they have tanks and they have gangs as described in you know from knock la about the
lapd you know like they have the protection of a system and if you keep funneling money into it
they're never gonna stop
this is this is domestic terrorism that's what this is yeah yeah yeah and i think it's it's
really important to talk about all the times when police officers don't do what they're supposed to
do right the the the subway guy you know where's the bravery where is the where were the the brave police
officers in uvalde they weren't uvalde is a great example yeah that i should have included i mean
i mean they there was a supreme court case that justified that they do not have to prevent crime
or like act when crime is happening that's why that Parkland officer was allowed to run away with no repercussions.
That is not their job. They are protected by law to not do the job that we are using our tax dollars
to pay them to do. Yeah. It comes down to power dynamics, right? When you have the upper hand and you can use that power to commit crimes, you're going to.
And when you don't have power, when you are required to be fully selfless, to be brave, to be a protector, you're not going to do it.
Because you got into the police force not to be brave.
You got into the police force not to be brave you got into the police force to have power and
we have continued in media entertainment to propagate the narrative that police officers
are awesome and isn't it cool to be a cop you know you turn on chips in the 70s and it's like
wow they get to wear sunglasses and ride around on a motorcycle isn't that neat yeah or like start to turn on brooklyn 99 you know and it's like this is the
greatest job yeah but we don't see the heroism that is the hallmark of selflessness is to give
yourself for someone that you don't know a stranger that's what it should be about is protecting people but
it is not about that it is a it is a social club for people with no empathy yeah i i think another
telling thing is like the more you dig into all of these points that we make the more insidious it
gets like the number of you know like cops get to the reason that
there's so many cop shows is because of that um deal that they have where they they you know people
can use top precincts and things to like or you know cop i want to say accessories almost but like
cars things like that in order to film and they can do it for free it's like a deal with media and in the same way that
mainstream media in terms of reporting is on the cop side they just take these police reports and
run with them despite knowing that they have lied over and over again whenever there's video you
know and sometimes when there is video they still lie about it you know so it's like it's insane that
they just get this freebie and this benefit of the doubt.
And I will say that the people who do exhibit that selflessness and that visceral ability to
sacrifice themselves and their lives to protect people are the ones fighting against cops. Like
Roy Wood Jr. just on the Daily Show did an investigation or, you know, a report about
Cop City and the people
who are organizing against Cop City. And they're literally living in the forest. And, you know,
they have, people have, Tortuguita, you know, was killed by, an environmental activist was killed by
cops during the protests and, or, you know, trying to protect and prevent Cop City from being built
in Atlanta. And they're, they're like like literally living all of those people are like literally living in
the forest they've disguised their voices and their faces they at any point could become victims
of the system because we know cops target people who protest against them and that those people
are like actually putting their lives on the line because they don't have you know tanks and guns
and everything and they're literally going up in a fight against those people who do in order to
protect the environment protect the community make sure a black and brown community isn't invaded
by this insane training center or the you know cops aren't further militarized it's it's wild how
how the media paints those people
yes crazy for actually standing up and doing something after years you have these amazing
underdog stories like built in to the reality to the power dynamics of the civilization you
were making media for and you like still bend over backwards to like make stories that like
center the police as the protagonist it's it's fucked and just like it definitely it doesn't
make narrative sense it doesn't make for like good storytelling but there's just a lot of inertia
there there's a lot of like institutional you know know, inertia. And yeah, you get you get the cool.
You get to borrow police cars and drive around and run the siren on your movie or whatever.
Accessories.
I like it.
They love accessories.
The police is a player.
Their little costumes.
They think they're special with their little costumes.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's take a quick break.
We'll be back to talk about some bullshit. Special with their little costumes. Yeah. All right. Let's take a quick break.
We'll be back to talk about some bullshit.
I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series,
Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed. Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and LA-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview dancers, church members, and others whose lives
and careers have been impacted, just like mine. Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former
members and new, chilling firsthand accounts, the series will illuminate untold and extremely
necessary perspectives. Forgive Me For I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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and we're back and i don't i don't know if this is a huge development,
but it feels like it could be.
The more I think about it,
so Meta is welcoming Trump back.
They're going to allow him back on their platform
because he asked his campaign petition, Meta,
to unblock his accounts
and argued that the ban on him that uh happened on j like
after the january 6th attacks has they said dramatically distorted and inhibited the public
discourse which is wild because that's like a perfect description of what his presence on social
media did for like all the years that he was the president essentially and meta just
agreed and we're like oh they asked so we kind of got to let them back on but they also announced
that they have new guardrails in place and according to meta's vice president of global
global affairs if trump keeps posting violating content it will be removed and he will be suspended again
and he's literally doing that but on truth social right yeah he just does it like that's the thing
people are like yo we don't have to imagine what he's going to post he just like created a like
shadow land version of like social media where he has continued to do the exact same thing except now
he is a full believer in the death cult that he is like the godhead of it's it's like really scary
that's like a big like things have not gotten better since he was banned he like the he started doing those speeches with like the big
orchestral like swelling music that like comes from the q anon soundtracks like these like
these like q anon mixtapes that they were selling that are like very popular available on soundcloud
yeah no like literally cds that you can can buy where they just like stole music from different places. But he like at one point, like this music starts swelling up like as he was delivering a speech and it was like QAnon music and his audience was like giving the Q salute. And they're like, yeah, well, you know, we'll we'll we'll put a content warning if he's, you know, like, they're basically saying,
and they also said for borderline posts and for rule breaking content that it deems newsworthy,
the posts will stay up, but Meta may also remove the reshare button for those posts or stop the
posts from being recommended. so he's literally allowed
to violate their own content rules if it's newsworthy which it is by definition because
he is the former president who leads a death cult that like a terrifying percentage of the country
believes in but it's also so funny they're, if he does something newsworthy on our platform, which we are allowing him to do by letting him back on our platform,
we'll allow it to stay up.
Like, bro, just don't make him make news.
Like, what are you doing?
It is both less a guardrail than a sneeze guard
and also a little bit like trying to put guardrails on the titanic as it's sinking like it's just
so yeah i also like i want to have a life where i have such influence that like billion dollar
companies have to make special rules for me you know they have to let me in and make special rules
because that's how hard i've touched them you know yeah it's a perfect storm of disaster because trump is obviously flailing
with this campaign so far it's bizarre that he announced so quickly but i imagine it was for
the purposes of fundraising because that's the number one grift of donald trump's world which
is fundraising and also meta facebook, is not a particularly relevant place
for conversation anymore. And it feels like a death rattle for that platform. And so,
when they look at the numbers, and they say, oh, you know, we're hemorrhaging money.
Nobody cares about the metaverse. This is a complete waste of time you know places like tiktok are
eating our lunch what do we do but bring back donald trump because that ups engagement he's
gonna buy ads across the platform to reach the audience that he still has which is primarily
on places like facebook it worries me like anything that donald trump does worries me
obviously because we lived through his presidency
but at the same time it does feel like one of these like kind of last ditch efforts on both
sides to rescue the relevancy of things that were relevant a decade ago right yeah it's like the end
of the notebook where they hold hands and die together, but it's like the dark version of Facebook.
It's so beautiful.
The true loves of like insurrection and insurrection creator,
you know?
Yeah.
It's,
it's really sad to watch on both sides.
And I at least have some kind of hope that because Facebook is already so
desperately lame that it will continue
to wither away because of this decision i yeah i can totally see the internal argument and like how
how it was framed i also have for a while now had my eye on mark zuckerberg as like the next
big domino to fall in the like formerly center like mainstream media darlings to who like
basically embrace open fascism because he's got all the ingredients like he behaves like a fascist
while still saying the right things for the most part so that that's like one symptom that he's going to ultimately just come out as fascist.
He's been like vilified by the sort of neoliberal mainstream that used to like think he was pretty cool.
So he probably like feels very hurt by that because he was like getting something from that before and then it went away.
for and then it went away and he's also a billionaire and is like you know it's either realized that like having that much money is basically a crime at this point because of like
all the problems that are facing the world or you become a fascist and like embrace one of the many
philosophies that are like available to you that allow you to you know just be be like and it turns out i am the hero of this narrative
i don't i don't know mark zuckerberg is pretty pathetic oh yeah he's he's too much of a weasel
i just think he's too much of a weasel to ever really be popular in those circles i don't think
yeah he has the charisma or the the shamelessness of the truly successful fascists
out there elon musk is a perfect example of a guy who's just like i'm desperate for attention
i don't think mark zuckerberg wants attention i think he eats some sort of white gruel paste
every morning and powers up and then powers down before bed and doesn't really have any sort of understanding of
human nature or what you know people think about him i don't i don't i just think he's like an
alien and so i think he does okay yeah i think he does want attention otherwise why would he leak
that sweet martial arts video that made us all so thirsty you You know what I mean? I feel like he's not doing it the way Elon Musk
is. Elon Musk is like, please love me
under every right
wing person's tweets.
I actually think I'm pretty funny.
Yeah.
Interesting.
But I'll look into it. People are amazing.
He's never once uttered
that. He thinks people are fucking pathetic but i think like
zuckerberg is not looking to come out at a dave chappelle show i think zuckerberg is like i'll
just be like you know like the nerdy nice guy that like people overlook but like i'm like getting
totally ripped i'm working on my tan on this what did he do?
Wind surfing thing.
He's just like, I'm going to be the cool
billionaire that doesn't go through
a divorce.
I think he still wants to be liked.
But not in the same way
that Elon Musk does. Not in the same way,
no. Yeah, he's going to be posting
feed on the racial chats.
That's what he's going to do
yeah i feel like the winklevoss twins would have been more overt with it you know more of that
charisma you were looking for for sure but yeah yeah if the winklevoss twins had won that we would
all be like in prison camps now yeah so anyways i another big indicator like as dave you you mentioned like they trump and his campaign entities have spent
157 million dollars on meta since 2018 like that was between 2018 and like when he was banned so
he he's the number one political ad buyer and there's a reason for that those ads are super fucking targeted and really good at
reaching people and you know you can spread like i think one of the ads that got banned was like him
using nazi like imagery in his ads and they're like whoa that's that's a bridge too far and he's like well i've been i've used it
across a hundred ads like what is what is that like that email interaction like you know when
you like violate a twitter like terms of service or whatever and they're like hey polyby we're
worried about your mental health like are you okay and you're like appeal i'm gonna kill myself
just not now you know but like what
do they do that like does he get an email that's like hey it violates community guidelines that you
said you love nazis and he's like i'm gonna appeal this i did say that and it is on video
but i am gonna appeal this you know like how does that work yeah since when is love not uh part of the terms of service huh
oh that's against the terms of service to love something organized community you know
we just have a little group we get together and we light a pyre and uh we march around for a
little bit what's the problem in in the case of you know using nazi imagery but do doing it while paying facebook the thing
that needs to happen is that like a bunch of people have to call it out in the media to for
them to then be like oh we really hate to do this and then there's probably some like really like
glad handy emails back and forth being like oh guys uh this is probably a
mistake and totally you know well-intentioned but you've been using nazi symbolism in your ads
constantly oh pa it's like you had spinach in your teeth but nazi symbolism in your ad
you know give you 40 days to get back to us on this one it really is
like like up to the advertisers to pull out you know like and those people aren't gonna do it
unless there's outrage with you know like this citizens you know like unless there's outrage
with the people so it's it takes like a it's a whole like tiered thing of like okay we have to
like threaten the advertisers to threaten these social media giants to get you know these just fucking hate speech off off in front of our screens
this is the problem that most people will never see that stuff it's exactly targeted to the people
that it will work the most effectively on yes The algorithm knows you're really going to like this
imagery from Triumph of the Will, so we're going
to feed it to you. So I
will never see it. I'm not on Facebook.
So I'm not
even interacting with people who have seen
it, which means that there is a whole
other ecosystem. There's a whole other
world where this stuff is being pumped
into your brain. And that's the
thing that I find the most
insidious about facebook if mark zuckerberg tomorrow said uh that he thinks that uh jewish
people he's jewish if jewish people were terrible and need to be put into camps that might be better
for the world because then we would be able to say this is bad one of the great things about elon musk is that he
is so terrible at his job which is the figurehead of a company that we can all point to the stupid
stuff that he says we can all look at how right wing and and hateful he really is deep down
you can't do that with mark zuckerberg you can't do that with facebook or meta or whatever
the company is called now because it is it treats itself as completely politically neutral it says
we don't believe in any of the things that are on our platform we take no responsibility for what
is on our platform we have a responsibility to these shareholders we have a responsibility to
make money and so that allows them to whitewash
everything and it can seem banal it can seem non-threatening it can be oh we're not called
facebook anymore now we're called meta and we have this metaverse and actually this company
is really exciting and it's about community it's not about community it's about propaganda
foisted onto people uh paid propaganda which is the worst thing because the people with
the most money have the most access to the megaphone that's scary to me scarier than him
being a right-wing guy is him being just completely focused on money that is true and i but i think
like one of the things well a few different things like the
metrics don't even prove that they're neutral beyond like the the theory of like oh saying
all of this hate speech versus we want to feed and house and educate people that's itself not
neutral you know what i mean like if you look at the two sides of it but in addition to that the metrics show that
like you know the like right-wing posts are being shown to more people and in like a more targeted
way and like people on the left are like don't have their posts like promoted as as well i guess
or even like suppressed sometimes i think they had like a news story on that like within the last
year but oh yeah i mean reality is different from
perception yeah reality is 100 what you're talking about the perception is we're facebook
it's a place for you to post photos of your kitty and so as long as the perception remains neutral
people will not be upset the way that they should be the way that they're upset about twitter
because it is out in the open and it says this is what it's supposed to be. So I want them to be more up front about it. I want
them to be saying these things and being clear about what this platform is for. I mean, it's
the same back to the cops thing, right? It's all about branding and perception.
Yep. All right. Well, Dave, truly a pleasure having you on the show.
Where can people find you,
follow you,
all that good stuff?
Oh boy.
Well, I'm still on Twitter.
I hate to say it,
but I'm still there
because I don't know
what else to do with my life.
I'm at Dave underscore Schilling
for the time being.
You can follow me on Instagram
at DW Schilling
if you want to see pictures of my son,
which is, I guess I should probably start deleting those. I don't want people Instagram at DW Schilling. Uh, if you want to see pictures of my son, uh,
which is,
I guess I should probably start deleting those.
I don't want people following him around.
And,
uh,
I,
I,
you know,
I'm still writing for the LA times.
So if you have style interests,
needs,
curiosity,
please read me in the LA times.
There you go.
And is there a tweet or some other work of media, social media, that you've been enjoying?
Oh, boy. I'll go back to the whale.
And anytime somebody posts a photo of him on the Zoom in the movie teaching his class, I kind of chuckle.
Not because he is playing a larger person, but because of how ridiculous the makeup is and the faces that he makes in this film.
It feels like Dick Tracy sometimes.
So anytime there's a meme with Brendan Fraser and the whale in it, I will laugh.
I don't have one in particular.
I just love the fact that they did this movie, that the makeup is nominated for an Oscar and he looks like a cartoon man.
That's Aaron Offs, right?
That is, yes.
It's sort of kind of a sibling to The Fountain in a way, I think.
If you like The Fountain, you might like this movie.
Way less science fiction in The Whale, sadly. There's no
spaceships or time travel in this one.
But, yeah.
I like a lot
of his movies. I think The Wrestler is probably his
best film, but
he is not a subtle guy.
This is not a subtle movie.
The subtlety of
Requiem for a Dream.
He just gets a big double-ended dildo
and whacks you over the head with it for two hours.
Ass to ass, he says.
Anyway, I just want to depart by saying one more time,
people are amazing.
Pauly, where can people find you, follow you,
and is there a work of media that you've been enjoying?
I'm Paula Vegan Allen everywhere.
And I've been watching.
Okay, so I do have a tweet, but I have been watching a lot of like 90s movies.
Like and a lot of like, you know, like Julia Roberts, Hugh Grant.
I'm going to go back into Brendan Fraser's catalogzier's catalog but i just watched boomerang for
the first time like 90s 80s stuff and uh i enjoyed it i mean sure it's hella homophobic and transphobic
but yeah that's something that i had to turn my brain off for whenever watching anything from
comedians of that time but or those comedians of that time but i enjoyed the
rest of the movie if i you know blacked out that part but one tweet that i do want to talk about
okay so chris d'alia posted on his instagram or something his ugly ass face and then he said catch
chris d'alia in new york on february 18th 2023 and then my friend
mohanad el shiki el sheki m-o-h-a-n-a-d-e-l-s-h-i-e-k-y posted that screenshot and said yeah i hope they
do catch you you know he's on the loose i hate these rapists y'all get them off these streets.
Chris Hansen descends from the ceiling.
Yeah.
From,
from to catch a predator.
You guys remember that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
When he would descend from his,
from the ceiling,
they definitely should have done that.
Just like WWE style.
Yeah.
Just like,
like Batman crashing through opening the Doritos he brought for his child victim and like chris
what's his name like descends slowly from yeah behind him uh i've been enjoying just some
tweets some simple statements that have been tweeted out by celebrities uh yesterday i enjoyed
that sandra bullock tweeted i was so scared when we were making Gravity.
And then Wiz Khalifa...
It's really up there in space.
That made me laugh so much.
I've been watching her movies. I love her.
Yeah.
I do too. She's so good
in The Lost City.
What a star.
Wiz Khalifa just tweeted,
I'm just starting to realize how funny the granddad from The Simpsons is.
Oh, yeah.
I retweeted that.
That's good stuff.
Yeah.
I loved it.
Yeah.
It's been 30 years, but my man finally came around to Abe Simpson.
Big Abe.
Too many Abe haters out there.
Yeah.
Abe's one of the best Simpsons characters of all time. Oh, yeah.
Truly. Some of my favorite.
That gif of him
walking into the ladies and then walking
out. That might be. I use that all
the time. That and Homer backing
into the bushes might be my two favorite
Simpsons gifs. Amazing.
These are my
secret favorites. Those are probably also the two
most popular ones or two most commonly used, but they're used for a reason.
They're both beautiful.
And also Rajat Suresh tweeted, what is a good male acting performance where he is Borat?
Which I just thought was funny.
Did you pick the sequel or did you pick the original?
I mean, I picked the TV show, actually.
Oh, okay.
Interesting.
There you go.
Do people know about that HBO TV show
where he was bored the Ali G show yeah like do people yes that was where it all started yeah I
know I know but like do I feel like that's due for like young people being like yo have you seen
this on TikTok it just becomes a dance trend yeah like the the new seinfeld or friends or the
office i do think that like a lot of people don't know where like i i have been re-watching seinfeld
and have not realized like how many pop culture references come from that show yeah and so i feel
like people are starting or probably there are probably a lot of young people who are like my
wife and have no idea why they're saying you know yeah it. There's a whole legion of people who were like, did you see that Frasier from the show
Frasier was on a show about a bar?
Oh my God.
That's so weird seeing them drink beer.
It makes me happy.
They shouldn't know everything.
Let them know what they know now.
And I'm not one of the people who gets frustrated when they they find out and they're like have you heard of cheers i'm not
like yes you fucking idiot i'm so happy that you're experiencing this you've got all this time
and you're not spending it watching old television shows you mother absolute piece of shit yeah you can find me on twitter
at jack underscore o'brien you can find us on twitter at daily zeitgeist we're at the daily
zeitgeist on instagram we have a facebook fan page and a website dailyzeitgeist.com where we
post our episodes and our footnotes where we link off to the information that we talked about in
today's episode as well as the song that we think you might enjoy. Super producer Justin, what is a song that you think people might enjoy?
So I've just been listening to these short little TikTok songs that, you know, pop up in like a
minute and a half. And this one came across my radar. This is comedian and rapper Zach Fox. He
was on another show I work on, My Mama Told Me.
Sippin' My Tea. Incredible song.
There's like, the jokes per second
are astounding.
It made me laugh like several times.
And the beat is fire.
So this is Zach Fox,
Sippin' My Tea, and you can find that song
in the footnotes.
Alright. Thank you, Justin.
The Daily Zeitgeist is a production of
iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That is going to do it for us this morning,
but we are back this afternoon to tell you what is trending, and we will talk to you all then. Bye!
I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series,
Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories
behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion, and this is Season 4 of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because
of one single game. Clark and Reese have
changed the way we consume women's
sports. Listen to the making of a rivalry.
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Elf Beauty, founding
partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour.
If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think it sort of eases us a little bit. Listen to Let's Talk
Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.