The Daily Zeitgeist - TDZ's Top 5 Of 2023: #4 Pop Culture Horniness (8.22.23)
Episode Date: December 22, 2023In episode 1535, Jack and Miles are joined by filmmaker, director, TV Writer, and host of Celebrity Book Club, Chelsea Devantez, to discuss… The Evolution of Movie Sex Scenes, Pop Culture Horniness ...and more! EVERYONE IS BEAUTIFUL AND NO ONE IS HORNY Sontag on fascist art (from 1975) Marvel Movies: This Esteemed Director Says They’re Not Sexy Enough What is the Physical Culture Movement? BODYBUILDING AND NATION-BUILDING Gen Z's Distaste for Sex Scenes Sparks Hollywood Censorship Debate Here's Why Movie And TV Sex Scenes Are Necessary LISTEN: Domingas by Jorge Ben JorSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
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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.
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Listen to the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese on the iHeart on the iheart radio app apple podcast or wherever you
get your podcast presented by capital one founding partner of iheart women's sports hey guys so i've
always wanted to do some sort of like top episodes of the year rundown thingy this year i had a
little extra time before taking off for the holiday. And so kind of threw something together just based on like what the episodes were that
you listened to the most in future years.
I'd like to open it up for voting, get your input.
But for this year, we're just going to be rerunning each of the top five episodes while
we're on holiday break.
And yeah, here is the number four most listened to episode of the year.
It's one of our new format episodes where we started interviewing expert guests and asked them about things we weren't smart enough to speculate on.
So here it is. Hope you enjoy.
Hello, the Internet, and welcome to season 301, one of their daily zeitgeist day production of
iheart radio this is a podcast where we take a deep dive into america's shared consciousness
and it is tuesday august 22nd 2023 you've been waiting for us to get to this day so that we can
tell you that it is of course national pecan tort day there's so many days for pecans, man. The pecan farmers have gotten to the National Day Industrial Complex so hard.
While you're enjoying all those sweet sweets, don't forget it's also National Tooth Fairy Day.
Shout out the Tooth Fairy Union.
National Surgical Oncologist Day.
Fuck cancer.
Shout out to the surgeons, though, that be trying to battle it.
National Bow Day.
International Day of Commemorating the Victims of Acts of... Boy, my my god it's so long acts of violence based on religion or belief oh that's
that's a tall one and what's one more just to make it super fun the last one is national be an angel
day just be an angel yeah hey every day is national beN Angel Day for you, sweetheart. Thanks.
My name is Jack O'Brien, a.k.a.
Don't go chasing Zaslav balls.
Just stay on the picket line until that asshole pays you.
I know that you're gonna have to compete with AI, y'all.
But I think that strokes are so bad. is courtesy of fighter of the night man underscore
on the discord and i'm thrilled to be joined as always by my co-host mr miles gray miles gray aka
and i've traveled 10 000 miles and i'll travel 10 000 more to be the world's most renowned auctioneer.
I will travel 10,000 miles or more.
Shout out to No Glue when I catch up on the discord for combining, you know, the Proclaimers track with that state senator, Colton Moore, who basically wrote his entire Wikipedia article and had to shout out the fact that he's traveled 75,000 miles doing auction.
Oh yeah,
that's right.
Yeah.
While also trying to cover for Donald Trump.
He counts every mile that he travels.
I respect that actually,
that you just never get over it.
Like,
look how far we're going.
I mean,
if you really want to start,
like,
you know,
we can,
we can pull the passports out,
young man,
you know what I mean?
I mean,
businessmen do love to do that shit, too.
Oh, yeah.
Like, at their...
The airport...
Their traveler status.
Dude, the fucking airport.
Any fucking, like, airport bar,
you'll see two dicks in suits being like,
yeah, like, you know,
I just got my million miler status, so, you know...
Diamond status, dude.
Yeah, taking my family down to Bali next week, so...
Yeah.
And I gotta get this trip done.
Well, Miles. Yeah? We are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by a brilliantly talented filmmaker, writer.
She was one of the head writers for The Problem with Jon Stewart and wrote on Girls 5 have a bless this mess.
The Opposition with Jordan Klepper, among many others.
She wrote, directed, and starred in the acclaimed short film Basic, hosts the podcast
Celebrity Book Club. It's Chelsea Devante! Oh, hi. I love that big intro, like shouting my name into
a cave, you know, seeing what echoes back. Into a cave full of the entire internet.
That's right. The whole damn internet is here to welcome you on the Zeitgeist.
I'm feeling very blessed to be back here and continue some very important discussions.
Yes.
Always.
Yeah.
So this is this is our Tuesday episode where we kind of take a look at one specific topic that we think kind of undergirds the whole zeitgeist that is important to understanding the zeitgeist.
Yes, and undergirds are what I use instead of Spanx.
So, very important.
They were the, yeah, pre-date Spanx.
That's right.
What's my secret?
Undergirds.
Yeah.
But yeah, I mean, so we wanted to have you on.
But yeah, I mean, so we wanted to have you on. You had one of our favorite observations in the history of the show when you basically said that you knew Trump was going to win the 2016 election based off of watching The Bachelor. And looking at pop culture tea leaves and like reading what it like, what is actually being said about what's happening to people on the inside?
What what is going on with our shared dreams is one of my favorite subjects.
You are really good at it.
We love to do it on the zeitgeist.
And so we wanted to have you on to do just that.
And we'll get into what specifically uh we're talking or
actually we can do that now i mean yeah we threw out stan culture being the new religion we've
talked about that before but this one subject keeps popping up on social media it popped up
over the weekend after we had selected this subject and that is kind of like the desexualization of pop culture movie movie
sex scenes in particular seem to be like a particular thing that is that people are
objecting to lately and are like why do these exist when i watch an 80s movie why does dan
ackroyd get a blood job from a ghost, for instance?
And that one's actually a really good question.
But anyways, there's all sorts of things.
We've talked about before the idea that like
desexualized, beautiful bodies
is like actually a feature of fascist art.
And so we've puzzled over whether that's what we're seeing here.
But there's lots of,
as this has become more and more
of a mainstream thing
that we're seeing on social media,
there's lots of explanations.
And we thought you were the best person
to have on the show to talk about this.
I'm thrilled to be here to talk about
like very hot, sexy bodies,
not having sex.
No, but I was so fascinated you guys chose this because it's also something I've been thinking about a lot.
Also, just as like a side topic and where I'm coming from, I was, you know, the writers are on strike right now.
But before we were on strike, I was pitching a show and one of the demographics it was going out to, it was going to be like part for millennials, part for Gen Z, sort of this basically like late 20s, early 30s audience
that people seem to think millennials and Gen Z are just like so, so, so different.
So when you're pitching for like that late 20s, early 30s, executives start referencing
studies like the ones we're going to talk about like gen z actually
isn't having sex anymore so like right like can one of these characters just like not have a
partner of any kind they just kind of like live in a hole and they stare at a wall because that's
what we assume gen z is doing and it was so frustrating because every time i looked around
be it from people in my real life,
the youth of the real life,
TikTok, social media, really anything,
I just kept feeling like that is not true at all.
Even in Gen Z reality shows,
like they are getting engaged,
they are getting married,
they're talking about dating,
kind of like the same way you've always had this feeling
of like, you know, I want to be having good sex,
but I'm not. I don't know if that's something particular to me and my friends but like i remember
in my early 20s it was like yeah we would like to be having sex but no one's having sex like sex in
the city like it just feels like a 20s thing and unless of course you know i'm sure some people
were but anyways all to say that like i really think about these studies that are being referenced. Gen Z is like this and da-da-da is like this. And all I keep thinking about is who's doing these studies and maybe Gen Z is just not participating.
You know what? We're actually not going to answer the polls about what we've been fucking lately. We're just not. Because I just don't think they're correct. But I would love to hear what you guys think.
It's like the political polls that are like,
man, these elderly people certainly
over-index. They seem like they're
doing great. And it's like, well,
how did you conduct this? Calling landlines.
Exactly. Exactly.
It's like, oh, I guess we didn't predict the election
correctly off of the hundred landlines.
I mean, how weird
do you have to be
to pick up the phone these days who is answering the phone we're trusting them with our polling
data the people who answer an unknown number i don't trust them we actually asked a bunch of gen
z people's grandparents about their sexual behavior and this is what they told us this is
what they told us yeah i just i think uh so anyways i do but what i do
think is a really interesting discussion with this fascism thing is um and the thing that i've been
feeling is is that i'll say as a millennial to the gen z's is perhaps lacking nuance discourse
nuance which i don't know how i mean how close do you think lack of nuance and understanding nuance is to turning fascist?
Right.
You know, on the nuance to fascist spectrum, I do think we're somewhat close, but I don't think it's fascism. I think it's nuance.
Yeah. Yeah, I think that's probably true.
We have talked before, speaking of David Zaslav, that he's a real Gen Z-er because when he saw Fleabag, he paused it and told everyone that we're either going to turn this trash off for the sex scenes or we're just going to watch it and nobody's allowed to look at me while we watch it.
Don't make eye contact.
So he was very scandalized by sex scenes. I'm sure he didn't want people to look at him as he was just coming egregiously at Fleabag.
Yeah, just jacking off wildly.
Eyes off.
Yeah.
Hands free.
Watch.
Hands free.
Hands up.
Hands up.
Still laughing.
How?
How?
Well, I think that's also another good point, though, of like people like Zaslav and them
are at the top of our TV pop culture right now.
And he is plugged in.
I can just finish your sentence.
Listen, yes, that's exactly what I was going to say.
God, he wants
to look cool so bad. I saw him wearing
three popped collared shirts
the other day. Three. So that's a
jacket, that's a shirt, and then there was another
shirt underneath. And all of them popped
collars. And then the little pockets on the jacket
popped. I said, come on
my dog. But anyways, I'll just say that normally I think we look at pop culture and it can really reflect what you were saying, reflect back on to culture, culture.
But right now I'm feeling that actually only reality TV and social media can accurately do that because people like Zaslav have been making television decisions for a good five years.
And they're not accurately reflecting culture anymore.
Interesting.
All right.
Well, that's what we're going to be talking about
in the second and third act.
Whoops, I thought we were there.
First, we're going to ask you what's something from your...
We need to get to know you better.
Oh, my gosh.
To get to know you.
We do like to ask our guests,
what's something from your search history that's revealing about who you are?
You know what?
I'll do it live.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
I'll go in live.
All right, Bill O'Reilly.
Oh.
Well, we're going to get to it.
But Chloe Bailey patiently responding to swarm sex scene backlash.
That was an article I had read a while ago, but
queued it up for our conversation. Got it. Got it. Got it. What is something you think is overrated?
Okay, here we go. Now stay with me on this. So I was getting very nostalgic for magazines,
us weeklies, people holding it in your hands, someone basically curating your feed for
you and telling you this is what people are paying attention to. So my husband got me a subscription
to us weekly. And I was like, yes, back in the saddle. Here we go. And I know it's like, okay,
print media is dying, blah, blah, blah. But wow. Oh my God. Has this magazine taken such a turn
to the point where even if we don't rate us weekly highly
anymore whatever it is is still too high like in the magazine they are now printing celebrities
own instagram photos wow okay so it's paper Instagram? Yes. Paper Instagram. But like sometimes like out of date.
So it's like over the course of six months, Selena Gomez posted a photo with a fish and
then someone else did.
And now there's just a page in Us Weekly being like, look, sometimes celebrities fish.
And it's like, I already saw that on Instagram.
And you just like put it through your printer.
Like what's happening?
Do we not pay paparazzis anymore?
Do they not have the money for that?
Like, are we not curating like thoughts
throughout the fish photos?
It's just, and then I started going through all of it
and like, they're just like us.
That's, it's just, they're just printing Instagram still.
I couldn't believe it.
I remember it used to be like the paparazzi thing.
It's like, they go to Sprouts or whatever.
Now they're like, oh look, Chrissy Teigen dances in her living room.
It's like, yeah, because she's holding the camera herself.
What are you doing?
Oh, wow.
As soon as I just couldn't believe it was still a magazine.
And then they're like atoning for their crimes.
Like, do you guys remember when two celebrities would be caught wearing the same dress?
Yeah.
And they'd be like, who wore it better?
And they'd be like, one percent for me they'd be like one percent for minasuvari
99 you know minasuvari everyone thinks you look like shit you look like shit in this dress and um
so now they're sort of like they've learned like oh we're not you know we're not supposed to like
pin women against each other and so now they just put a little thing that says twinning.
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but, yeah, yeah. Which twin do you prefer?
Yeah.
And the comedians used to make fun of fashion in the back.
Like the back page used to be sad, pathetic comedians like myself being like, tent dress.
I'd go camping in that.
Something like that.
Yeah, yeah, right.
And now it's people being like, mules are very in.
Pink is in color, is a color that's in this season.
Bright green.
Are you missing out on the trend?
Okay.
Thank you.
I wonder, do we think this happened because budget cuts at Us Weekly or because there's only one magazine now?
And so they don't have to compete with anybody.
So they're just like, I don't fucking care.
I mean, they're in touch.
Let's pretend green is a new thing yeah i you know i was thinking about it i was like okay
are they just sort of getting like is this a thing where most of americans aren't on social
media so this magazine is like still helping people but like no like six out of six out of
ten americans are on instagram you know what i mean And I think the four that aren't don't subscribe to us weekly.
Yeah, yeah.
Like the people I know
who aren't on social media,
they damn sure don't give a fuck
about celebrity culture either.
Yeah, yeah.
They're like on their own shit.
They're like,
no, I operate on a completely
different system than other people.
Exactly.
And this is where it's like,
oh, print media is going out of business.
Well, it's like,
I think they've been told
time of death is in four years and they're just trying to like end their lives early like i don't
know like it's as if they're like no one's looking at this right yeah like i'm not gonna bust my ass
as the factory burns down i'm gonna fucking just kick it and just you know just like we get singed
in the corner yeah exactly we used to every week i mean we used to buy all the tabloids shout out
boyd watch where we would buy like every tabloid, like National Enquirer, Globe, all that shit.
And then all the gossip mags, like people in touch.
And I'm curious now to see, like, I wonder how much the pandemic has changed that coverage, because even then it was still doing like who wore it better.
Yeah.
And other things and just being like they're just like us but it was like the old you know the paparazzi shots out in malibu where somebody wearing big glasses with a starbucks tranked
a cup or whatever yeah she kind of looks sad i bet she's divorced oh yeah the best was like
oh dude this guy in paradise yeah the subtext of every photograph wasn't there one was like
brad pitt touched rate jennifer aniston's stomach they're fucking
pregnant yeah exactly one miles that was an entire yeah that was in every magazine for
10 and a half years for real every day she's pregnant she's pregnant yeah why would you touch
her stomach right after eating if she wasn't they hadn't seen each other for 15 years and they're
like shocking new photos suggest that they're back together.
It's like Angelina Jolie says he's pretty abusive on a plane.
Jennifer Aniston pregnant with twins.
Yeah.
Cut to Jennifer Aniston.
Miss me with that gossip.
But Us Weekly was purchased by American Media Inc.
When was that?
Which is the owner of National Enquirer and all that.
Like the actual bloids.
I mean, then it should get juicier.
I just don't.
I have to say, like, I.
Listen, I subscribe to some gossip newsletters.
And they're so funny.
They're so fun.
The ones that include pictures.
Fucking tight.
If you printed that out, I would buy it for 3.99 i just like it's as if like they brought in a they brought in a bunch
of grandads to run us weekly and they're like i think my wife said there was uh uh recipes
they almost definitely did because like what that was one thing that we noticed about national
inquire and like the actual supermarket tabloids was that they seemed to be made by and for people who were in their 80s.
Like truly, it was just all about like this elderly celebrity might be dying.
Last days for Dolly.
Like that was every other issue was about how Dolly Parton was dying.
But for the most part, it was just old people news.
Yeah. Yeah. And I guess that's
really just the demographic. It's them
and me with a subscription.
Right.
What is something you think is underrated?
Okay. I'm doing
a little like, you know,
mine go together. Like they
match. Wow.
Reddit.
Now, again, you'll be like, yes, Reddit's really popular, Chels.
Like, what are you talking about?
But again, I feel like a bunch of comedians, myself included, have always used Reddit as a punchline.
As like, oh, like the trolls, the subhumans.
You know what I mean?
Like who cares what's like happening on Reddit?
And I have some Google search terms up for my podcast. And I did this Carolyn Calloway, Natalie Beach episode. And
somehow, you know, one of my Google alerts brought me to a Reddit thread. And before clicking it,
I thought like, you're not supposed to do this, Chelsea. Like this is not whatever happens from
here is like not going to go well. And when I got there, I was like,
holy shit, this is some good discourse. This is some really smart, high level discourse.
And I think there's been a shift. Granted, I've not been real checked into Reddit, but like
on TikTok comments and Instagram comments and Twitter, they all kind of like derail the
discourse and it always goes into like, you're ugly fat and should die. Like somehow that always gets there. Like
within the first five minutes, Reddit is for the people who are like, we, we, we want 700
characters. We have something to say, we need a real forum. And I just, I found some really
elevated topics in there. And I was like, I cannot believe i haven't been living here the whole time it's yeah it's definitely all about like what subreddits you go on definitely what the
energy is of people because yeah some places are just total toxic meltdowns constantly like it's
funny even how like sports teams will have different subreddits where like some people
like now that other subreddit is for like the fucking wishy-washy daydreamers who don't actually
know ball we know that shit on this subreddit and for, like, the fucking wishy-washy daydreamers who don't actually know ball.
We know that shit on this subreddit.
And, like, you'll even see, like, people with the same interest, like, no, you guys over there, serious shit over here.
Or, like, if you want a shit post, do that there.
But, yeah, there really is.
But that's what's so cool.
It's like they are creating internal guidelines.
They're kicking people out to the other threads.
I saw this thing where it's like, yeah, we don't. Like don't like i saw this battle of like don't call this girl pick me
don't use pick me energy it's a sexist term but i was in a thread for people to shit talk
other probably women i was in the thread where you're like isn't this woman so fucking stupid
and someone was like you are misusing pick me wow that is toxic and i was like where am i hello professor
yeah i just really yeah i really liked it yeah i think that's a really good point i think that's
a really good underrated because reddit does like is still used as shorthand for like dumb internet
like trolls and incels and like that's definitely not exclusively the case or
even like largely the case i feel like there's usually like if you want to find a way to like
use the internet that doesn't make it feel like it's completely broken and your every page that
you go to is taken over by ads just like put a reddit filter on all your searches just do
like whatever you're looking for and then reddit and it you're going to have a Reddit filter on all your searches. Just do like whatever you're looking for and then Reddit.
And you're going to have a better time on the Internet.
Yeah.
You see how like on Google when people have like questions about like day to day things,
the like when it autofills, Reddit will be like one of the they're like how to change
car battery Reddit.
Yeah.
And then like YouTube, because it gets really interesting i mean i'm i'm
on reddit a lot i you know obviously like you go like the shit i'm interested in i go i check those
subreddits out and it's fantastic there's other ones i just like to watch like there's one about
economics where like a bunch of economists joke it's like you'll never get consensus with like
with two economists in the same room and then like they just like laugh
like all high-minded economy economic shit and i'm like what the fuck i'm like this is kind of
interesting but yeah there's it's there's truly something for everybody there like i was on a
subreddit where people just be like i just found this thing what is this and then people come in
they're like hi i've been a plumber for 30 years this tool is actually used to like stop a drain
or blah blah blah blah blah and people like blah. And people are like, whoa.
Yes.
It was a plunger.
No, it's like this thing that like goes down a drain and like inflates.
It's like when there isn't a stopper in it.
It's like some very specific plumbing tool.
But it just looked like a lightsaber.
So people were like, I don't know.
What the fuck is that?
I just found this shit encrusted lightsaber.
Yeah, I totally agree.
I think the mob mentality of Reddit
has a higher IQ and EQ than TikTok mob mentality.
I think if you went on TikTok,
you're like, yo, with this plunger,
people would be like, you idiot.
You didn't know what this is.
And you would go on Reddit and they'd be like,
we don't talk like that in this one.
Well, yeah, that's why there's like full-onon subreddit it's called like no dumb questions like where
people go and there's not like people are like i'm sorry what is selena gomez and like a kidney
thing i keep reading about please okay this sounds like i should go there because i've got answers
for that one oh yeah there's another one uh yeah out of the loop you'd probably like because that's
another one where people come in with like pop culture questions. And they're like, I'm sorry, who is D44VD, the artist?
I love this. Yeah, I feel I feel sad for myself that I missed out on Reddit for so many years because I just assumed it was like, yeah, you know what I mean? It's a lazy punchline of like these losers. It's like they're pretty smart. They want to type out paragraphs like that.
Just don't venture anywhere where like you may be the topic of conversation.
Subreddit Pacific, to Miles's point, not great place to find out about Donald Trump.
If you're just reading from a Donald Trump Reddit subreddit, not a great place to see crimes solved in real time.
But then again, absolutely nowhere is good at crowdsourcing crime solutions.
Good point.
But listen, specific genre of books.
That's where I'm at.
Get to the book places.
Influencer snark threads, you know, they've got some points in there.
There's also, there's like faux moi which is like
a dumois kind of i don't know have you seen faux moi yeah but you know what i am so so out on
dumois and faux moi because it's like they have made every single person into a paparazzi
and i don't trust half of these paparazzis you know like every time they're like hey guess what
you know toby mcguire um is
suing his wife anon please it's like that could be that honestly could be my grandma right having
read last weekly 10 years ago and it's like guess what i heard like it's like yeah we have i want to
read the juice and know it's real and now it's not because it's just some girl being like saw
chris delia without his mask in a coffee shop. Right, right, right. Boo.
Also, yeah, Victor in the chat brings up going to a shower.
You know about shower oranges?
No, please. This is where motherfuckers,
they go into a hot shower and just
caveman
bite into an orange.
Not necessarily. It's just,
they're just saying that you should eat an orange
in a shower because of the
combination of hot shower
and cold orange. Look who's caping for shower oranges right now.
Miles' take was very sexy and yours was very healthy.
Because the posts I read on shower oranges, I'm more interested by the ones where people are like,
guys, I did it. I just let my animal instincts overcome me. I just thugged it out with
this orange in the shower and it was beautiful.
And then you see people like, would tangerines
work?
Right.
I mean, one of the things I like about the concept of shower
orange is that you can just peel it and
drop it wherever you want because, you
know, shower peels are pretty much
waterproof. But then
what are we doing? Are we leaving them there? A little peppery? Yeah, you pick it up afterwards much waterproof. But then, what are we doing?
Are we leaving them there?
A little pottery?
Yeah, you pick it up afterwards.
Okay, but then it was just the joy of dropping it
and knowing you cleaned it up later.
Yeah, yeah.
I got you.
I think it appeals to really messy people
because it seems like the appeal is you get all messy.
I mean, look, I'm not some very put-together person like that,
but I guess it doesn't appeal to me like,
yeah, get all gross, but the water just washes it away.
You know the thing you hate about the way you want to eat in real life,
which is let the food get all over you?
Like, I don't know, yeah, maybe.
All right, so everybody just wants to just bite into a watermelon
from the outside in, stick your head through it,
and then just like throw the rind everywhere, right?
No?
Yeah.
That's just. All right. Moving on. Pool watermelons, I'm just saying. All right.
Let's take a quick break. And when we come back, we will talk about the desexualization of pop
culture. Is it a thing? What does it mean? We'll be right back.
What does it mean?
We'll be right back.
I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series,
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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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It doesn't get more Mexican than this.
Lucha libre is known globally
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And we're back.
So just a couple things to kick us off.
More and more, we're're seeing these reactions go viral. There was one over the weekend where a woman describes the movie Oppenheimer.
And that her and her husband wanted to see Oppenheimer, but they had heard there was a sex scene.
She looks to be in her, I'd say, late 20s, early 30s.
And it's wild the way she's talking about the sex scene as if it's a thing we can
all agree is traumatic and not something that anybody wants to watch. And they talk about how
they got through it. They did their research. They looked when it was going to happen. And then
they closed their eyes during it and this comes i don't
know what her deal is what her husband's deal is if like you know this is part of a long-running
social media presence where people know like that they have some past trauma as a couple or something
like that so i don't want to like dive too much in and be like, what a weirdo.
She also has a Jesus fish on her wrist,
tattooed on her wrist.
So it could just be religious stuff.
But this does seem to be...
I think the reason it's getting so much traction
is people are seeing this as a take more and more,
where people are like,
finally, someone says it.
Sex scenes are weird. They make me feel gross. I don't want to see them. And it came out a lot
with Oppenheimer in particular. But Chelsea, I just want to open the floor to you on this subject
of a step back from horniness yeah as as media consumers well first i have to say i haven't
been totally drawn to see oppenheimer but after that video now i really want to go like i found
myself being like i have to know what this sex scene is so i don't you know i don't know where
that puts me perspective but now i want to see the movie yeah have movie have you guys seen it? is it a graphic sex scene? I'd have to know
it's not graphic it's actually like really
so
it's graphic if you only have missionary
sex
yeah it's straight
the woman's on top?
I felt like that was the most risky thing
and it's like nudity?
yeah there's like yeah
there's some nudity but I actually think like it feels very strange.
Like Christopher Nolan has traditionally been described
as like being somewhat of a sexless filmmaker.
Like he made a movie about people's,
like going inside people's dreams.
And no one.
No one fucks at all.
Like nobody, like sex doesn't even exist
inside these people's dreams.
Sex doesn't really exist inside most of his movies i would say other than like the joker
character is kind of the most fuckingest character that like he has in like any of his movies in the
sense that like he is like this kind of creep but like at least there is a sexual energy with with the joker but anyways
this seemed like he was responding to that and being like oh yeah i can't do a sex scene and it
just feels it is a weird sex scene the the the first one is really like it feels almost like
self-parody to me i don't know if i went in with a, if I went in being like,
I'm going to hate this
Christopher Nolan sex scene,
but I,
I think he's trying
to fight against the idea
that his movies
are dead sexually.
And he failed.
It sounds like he failed.
I think he did,
but I also,
I think he's popular
at least partially
because his movies
take place
in a sexless universe.
And I think people
want that from their movies, like from their blockbuster movies well it's yeah there's so
many one after that description no two after that description i want to see it even more i just have
to know i have to know it's the only thing that has brought me to this movie but yeah there's so
many threads to connect on this but kind of the the number one thought that comes to my mind is something I talked about with one of my best friends, Ashley, who's also a television writer, which is that maybe the one exception where like a sex scene actually
had to be there to move the story forward but usually sex scenes are like a brief intermission
where like yeah you know what i mean because the moment they've gotten to like kissing we know okay
so we're there story-wise so if you're gonna show the full, like you just kind of sit in it. And so then it really is to be very it's just exists to be a sexy sex scene, which was way more needed in previous generations where like that was the only time you were going to see a sexy, sexy sex scene.
Right. Yeah. I was wearing a trench coat in Times Square.
I was thinking that like some examples of sex scenes that needed to exist and that I think should inspire people to like think more creatively about sex scenes is like Parasite has a really interesting sex scene, not an American film, but it like shows this like really wealthy couple, like kind of having this weird sexual encounter on the couch where they're like fantasizing that they are like part of this lower class that they yeah look down on and suppress i'm like i thought that was like a good that's
a good one yeah that's another good one we're like oh there's like meaning and purpose for this
but i feel like yeah sort of traditionally and and for the most part sex scenes exist simply to be sexy and they they
don't move anything forward and almost all of them have been written and directed by you know
white cis men for a hundred years yeah and so which and which i'm bringing up to say like i
think if our previous canon of sex scenes like had had any sort of other like sexual lens on them that could turn a different
portion of people on i wonder if we'd be having this conversation but because of that people are
sort of looking at this as like oh like you can go back and look at um what was i just watching it
was uh it was a movie where you're like oh it has a lot of sex scenes and you re-watch them and you're like oh all of them rape scenes like and you just don't um it was a it was a movie that had let me look
hold on it was sharon uh sharon stone basic instinct i think it was basic instinct and i'm
just like blinded by the most famous part of that movie and to but i think it is basic instinct but
there are other sex scenes in that movie and they're just all rapes and and but they but they're filmed like sex scenes and so right i
think this sort of like pushback to stuff like that is is built on a hundred years of only one
version of sex being shown on screen yeah i think like just the other thing as we were like thinking about the Nolan and like is whole kind of argument against him has always been
this guy has like no sexual charisma like he just like you can't really picture him having sex
really he's like kind of this beautiful creature who doesn't have any like you can't really picture
him and like the other sex scene that made me identify other than the oppenheimer one the one
that like made me identify with all the Oppenheimer one the one that like
made me identify with all the people who are like please stop was the fucking Top Gun 2 sex scene
where it's like uh-huh yeah it's just so weird it like all of a sudden the movie starts to feel
like it's an ad for a retirement home like not that they're like that old but like the vibe of
it is just like this like it like feels like a like Viagra commercial.
Like totally.
Because it's just like dead and remote and like takes place in heaven or something.
It's really weird.
And, you know, the first Top Gun, the most sexual scene in that movie is abs at the beach playing volleyball and they crush it.
You know what I mean?
And then in the second movie, they did it again.
And I don't know if you noticed, but they had to shoot tom cruise like profile and silhouette
shirtless like it was a very like long lens yeah technically shirtless on the beach but we're
really gonna focus on on miles you know what i mean jeans are super high for no reason this is
just how people wear their jeans now yeah yeah but but they crushed it in that beach scene too
and where it's like no one's no one is i don't feel like yeah i feel like on the most part it's
like we can take sexy abs at the beach but like actual sexual intercourse like i don't even know
like don't film it it does feel like very uncomfortable which yeah i have to say that
when you brought up this topic because personally I feel
like this is when it goes into Gen Z I'm sort of out on all the like Gen Z is not having sex it's
like they were in a pandemic during the years when you learn how to put your mouth on someone else's
face so you know what I mean so like where there's gonna be a lag and like I you know I'm not
believing all of these the so-called data of like they don't believe in sex anymore.
I don't think that's it.
But what I do think is true is that there's been a lot of sexual education, but not that second step into the nuance of sexual education.
So like things feel very cut and dry to the point that in the in the television show Swarm, which Chloe Bailey was in.
I don't know if you guys saw that, but it has a very, very graphic sex scene in the television show Swarm, which Chloe Bailey was in. I don't know if you guys saw that,
but it has a very, very graphic sex scene in the pilot.
And a bunch of people online truly believed they were having sex.
So they wrote into the television show accounts and on TikTok to be like,
why did they make Chloe Bailey have sex?
And seemed to have no understanding of the art of television
yeah pantomime yes like pantomime set you guys they're not it's not happening there's like you
know protect sheer protection cups over their parts but that's where i'm like this is a nuance
understanding mental alacrity how to live in the real world issue and less a like
what is like we don't like sex anymore issue because i there's like a few ways to look because
i think of like erotic thrillers right and it was like the 80s we were you know the the
conservative conservatism of the 80s sort of like helped build up the pressure for like in the mid
80s for these films to start propping up,
like,
you know,
coming up and people like,
Oh,
actually fuck with this.
And by night,
the nineties were so horny and dumb.
We're like,
these are our greatest movies.
And I think like,
there's an uptake for like a few reasons after like,
it's just kind of,
as we were talking about this and just like researching the topic and
everything is like one really interesting thing is you point out is like a lot of those erotic thrillers have
like sex can be dangerous but also these women are crazy and will kill you yeah and i think
part of that is like the aids epidemic was already making people question the quote-unquote dangers
of sex or how sex could lead to like your eventual death. Right. And then there's also like
this sort of evolution of sexual agency where like, again, to your point about these like male
writers and directors, like it almost feels like for them, they're getting out their anxieties over
like an evolving new form of sexual politics coming out and be like, what does that mean for
dudes? Like, are they just going to fucking kill us fucking kill us yeah well yeah and also what what sexually turns them on you know what i mean it's like it's like
one dude's fantasy of like she says no but she means yes i said one dude i met hundreds of
millions of dudes but um who made all the art but it's like had had there been like to take this to the to the porn conversation, like like it is so hard to find porn that that that I personally like.
I know this is TMI, but it's more of like a female thing of like and I'm talking about like I don't like when the house is dirty and I'm not talking about like I like it clean.
It's just like if there's like a super dirty mattress, it's just so distracting.
Like we're like, put a sheet on it you guys like what is it and it's just like the actual ambiance and
the actual atmosphere and it's like stuff like that isn't thought through and i feel like if our
history of sex on tv and film had included other people's perspectives or point of views of what
turned them on yeah Yeah. Yeah.
There wouldn't be such a backlash right now.
I don't mind a backlash against sex scenes that aren't doing anything interesting or like.
Same.
Yeah.
Like, like the Oppenheimer sex scene, like the Top Gun 2 sex scene.
Like, I'm fine with people lashing back against that because it's not doing anything i just don't want people to not feel like they can express that part of the human experience because like there's something bad about inherently
bad about sex scenes as opposed to like there being something that is inherently bad about how
sex scenes and sexual like energy was expressed in film up to this point that's really well said yeah there's i mean like
there's other dimensions too like when you look at it like i'm also like where does capitalism
factor into this too because you know like there was an analysis of like from just like around
2000 like post 9 like right after 9 11 to like 2006 like all these films and like seeing that
sex or nudity like was not like a like a
revenue booster for films at all like it really did nothing like it didn't move the needle at all
and then you think about like you know i guess eyes wide shut it's just like our sort of last
or prestige erotic thriller and that's 2000 and there are a couple you know trickling out after
that but then you have like lord of the
rings and harry potter come out and then the studios are saying like oh man these like broad
fucking movies like we can just start like these are just money printing things and like maybe we
just need to go all in on this shit too so i know there's like a dimension of that but then i also
think of like the taboo element too which is like to your point even chelsea like you know in the
80s and 90s like this was like a date night thing where like you go like i don't know like there's
some sexy shit going on up there and we don't have to feel bad about it because there's no online
porn where we can just kind of like blow the doors open on everything we desire so it fills that sort
of need but then there's also like the taboo or like i remember as like a 10 year old middle
schooler you would talk about these movies not even because they were, I remember as like a 10 year old middle schooler, you would talk about these
movies, not even because they were worked. Like, it's like a good movie. You'd be like,
did you see it? Did your parents let you watch that?
Minute 46 and 30 seconds in on the VHS.
Exactly. And for us, you will know what it looks like if you go to that scene. You're like, what?
And so I feel like for my generation too, like we were like somewhat educating ourselves, you know, this really bizarre way with these films.
But then also I think we like the 90s were so hypersexual.
Like, I feel like it also burned us out to the point where now you're looking for something a little more nuanced rather than like, well, when's the part where they're going to show a topless woman in the movie?
Totally. And also, I think it's sort of that thing we're talking about which is like it's just a call
for better art and also i think there is a call for better porn like consensual porn porn being
like i think there's just a call for like being better because we did get educated and now with
the internet this generation is like the most educated i, I was just thinking about how Harvey Weinstein,
you know, maker of many, many Miramax films,
made Frida Kahlo, which was this, you know,
supposed to be prestige film with Salma Hayek.
And there's this famous story where he's like,
you need to do a full frontal naked lesbian scene
in the Frida Kahlo movie or I'm not going to make it. And Salma thinks to
herself, like, I really think the story about this woman is important. So I guess I'm going to do
this sort of soft core porn scene that makes absolutely no fucking sense. Again, because
people like Harvey Weinstein were in charge. And I feel like it's more of a pushback to that or even
going to swarm where they think like you know the sex scene is kind of
really glorifying the male character and chloe bailey's character isn't it's a very like male
sex scene again and they're sort of like what about her consent why does she have to be used
like this granted i don't think they're understanding it's fake but that sort of nuance
of like this is so silly but it's like they've been taught about consent and
and me too and assault and being better but also not how to still be sexy or how to still like go
forward with it and so it probably does feel like a very like just don't do that type of situation
or that it could be a statement i actually haven't seen swarm but like swarm but like
it could be a statement about like you know every film character
is not meant to be a model of virtue right like sometimes you're showing bad people doing bad
things or like and the like that i feel like that becomes a problem when you're not allowed to do
that without being seen as like approving of the behavior that you're depicting in the movie
right yeah and i feel like i've seen that a lot too which kind of goes again to like the nuance
and art and how like that has sort of that conversation i feel like has gotten so stilted
in places like tiktok whereas in other forums it's still alive right let's uh let's take a
quick break real quick and we'll come back and keep talking about this we'll be right back i'm jess casavetto 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 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 Jemay Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk
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And we're back.
And Miles, I think you were about to ask a question.
Oh, just, yeah.
I mean, like, you know, the other thing is like, we're just kind of the evolution.
I just think of like where I got my sexy imagery as someone born in the 80s, like through, you know, like coming of age and then like late 90s aughts and things like that.
And it feels like at a certain point, like it was like, oh, a Van Damme movie is going to have boobies in it.
Like that was a shorthand in my mind.
Like you were like conditioned to know like certain directors, actors, whatever, like there would be that sort of thing.
And then you but then like a lot of the sex or sexual content just really kind of shifted to like our popular culture.
Like it didn't have to live in these sort of movies.
Like basically what about basic instinct kind of thing?
It's like it's in my music videos it's in the advertisements it's on cable tv at night so it's almost like i
don't know if it's like also again this sort of diversification of where that sort of content
lived to the point that it was like omnisexual like everywhere was sex so that also feels like another point where that i guess the appeal of it
only getting it directly from film begins to wane a bit yeah and also like if you're like okay
check out this van damme sexy scene or i can go to my only fans of a real person who is alive
who's doing my niche fetish and will look into the eyes of the camera and say my name
right yeah what's like you know what i mean so when you go back to a van damme movie you're like
boring stupid move it along like yeah i was just thinking of remember when seth mcfarland did that
oscar song called boobs yeah the movies you can see boobs in and that was 2013 and the response was like
yawn like come on like yeah that's all you're in it for and it's like shitty to treat women that
way and it's like i'm still i'm still here for a song like i still need to get to a place where
like seth mcfarland can sing a song about full frontal dick and he's got 30 movies to reference like i think i've got one you know
harvey kytel yeah yeah i mean so i do still think it's interesting so like the miles you were talking
about like they made did an analysis in the early 2000s and found that like nudity was not something that drove money-making.
And I think rather than just that being always true,
I think that's probably an indicator of changing tastes in filmgoers.
And the whole thesis that I have about movies is,
yes, they're commercial ventures,
but people pay money to go see them
because they are getting to see something
that is happening that they can't really access inside them up on the screen. Right. And so,
like, that's why I think it's interesting that are like early 2000s, like as the country was
becoming like explicitly fascist in the like war on terror. And, you know, that that was a time
when suddenly people were like, yeah, we don't want to see this shit and i agree like it definitely has to do with like that there became
there like suddenly there were better places to get that but i also i don't know like there
it does feel like they're one of these articles from i think think, Slash Film was saying that there's been sort of an internalization of the PG-13 rating overtook everything, you know, like the big example just like an inch of like perfection, just like it.
And that that goes for the superhero. It also goes for like the FBI agent and the background character.
And, you know, like that's just how everybody is supposed to look perfect.
Everybody is supposed to look perfect.
But then our favorite filmmakers, this guy whose movies take place in a world where like the films of Leni Riefenstahl, with like these documentaries
where they would like glorify the human body
and particularly the male body
and like its strength and muscles,
but like completely,
it was all about power dynamics, right?
It was nothing about sex.
And in fact, like sex was like
to be completely removed from the the equation and i feel like
there is like we obviously those movies also had like hitler and it was like and all of the sexual
energy is to be like sublimated to your religious fealty to the furor and like that horny for Hitler only horny for Hitler only and
now it feels like it is done
to sublimate to
like the broader just kind of
ideals of capitalism and like the
fact that there's like an internal
understanding of like yeah why
would they put like Iron
Man fucking in this movie
like it wouldn't make as much money and I root
for this movie because Like, it wouldn't make as much money. And I root for this movie because, like, that's my team is Marvel.
And so, like, and Marvel is winning against DC.
And so, I don't know.
I think it's interesting.
I don't think it is, like, I don't think it's a telltale symptom that, like, America is headed towards some sort of fascism with like a central fascist leader. But I do think it says
something interesting about our relationship to this all-consuming, like capitalistic ideal,
where it's like, yeah, no, we just take the sex out of everything because like that is not
actually making money for the thing that we want to see make money.
And we're all on board with that. Not just David Zaslav. Like we're all on board with that because it doesn't like I can just get my sexual content elsewhere.
I'm going to say I'm going to push back on it. Yeah. Having written in late night comedy
for I can't now I'm trying to do the math. I don't know. But I feel like the like,
are we turning fascist think pieces like make the rounds every three years you know what i mean
and it's like are we are we are we to the point where like it's not even gonna matter because
the term fascist now means something different to everyone it's lost all meaning like we're never
gonna know you know what i mean it's gonna be here and no one will have any understanding on it.
But taking this back to where we started, The Bachelor, I will bring us into my main
basis for this argument, which is that The Bachelor is dying a slow death.
It's definitely slow, but it's just every season it's dying.
It's dying.
a slow death.
It's definitely slow,
but it's just every season it's dying, it's dying, it's dying.
And this last year,
we got reality shows
about dating,
like Love is Blind,
like The Ultimatum,
Queer Love, which is...
MILF Manor.
One of the best shows
I've ever watched.
What'd you say, Miles?
I said MILF Manor.
MILF Manor.
I did watch every episode.
Yes, I did.
And that's actually
a great one to reference
because in The ultimatum
queer love they've got cameras on and you i mean you're watching porn for a second and you're
watching porn of someone you've intimately gotten to know like all their relationship issues and
that show was wildly popular and on tiktok the discourse about queer love stories and like there was an entire storyline
of like you fingered the woman i'm in love with and where's your fingers go when did they start
and how did it happen and is that considered sex and then there's a conversation of like everyone
you know i mean is that penetrative sex or not do we count that as sex what is the consent needed
for finger sex versus other sex anyways and you're like and tiktok is like going nuts and
loving this conversation and everyone is loving that show and i think it's because it was it was showing sex in
the way that we understand and want to see it now which is like real authentic it's not through this
like very singular patriarchal lens even on like love islands they're they live in bikinis they
live in bikinis and they switch partners every other day for 50 episodes every season.
And it's crushing it. Like Love is Blind. You know, they talk about are they having sex? Are they not?
Meanwhile, The Bachelor, which is a very sterile show, which would fit this sort of like fascist thing where it's like overnight suites, like the door closes and like who knows, is dying a death in popularity.
is dying a death in popularity.
And so if we look to reality TV, I would say we are still very much here for sex,
but we're no longer here for it
in the ways that are harmful.
Yeah.
Like it doesn't feel good.
And then if sexiness is to like make you feel sexy,
you don't want to feel bad while you're watching it.
Yeah.
So maybe my ultimate plea is like
that movies do something interesting
with their sex scenes
because that's what people want.
And it's not that people are necessarily fascist.
Yo.
That they just want something interesting
and not like the traditional 80s movie sex scene.
Yeah.
To Chelsea's point,
like, again,
I was raised on the buck wild movie sex scenes.
You know what I mean? And then, you know, the internet kind of was like, I was like, okay buck wild movie sex scenes you know what i mean and then
then you know the internet kind of was like i was like okay i think i know what i like
and to the point to nuance like now i'm like how come they not kissing in this porno i'm like nah
nah i'm off this like y'all need to be making out and shit like i need to like i want to see y'all
be passionate right or even like in bridgerton, I just started watching the second.
So there's like one moment where this one character,
she just says,
she said,
Mr.
Bridgerton.
And they just have like a look at each other.
And I was like,
Oh shit.
Like,
and then it's a shit except like,
there was just a very tense moment and the release was just saying it.
And they shared a look.
And I was even like,
damn,
that was all right.
Like,
yeah,
really? You're just like doing it. was even like, damn, that was all right. Like, yeah, really?
You're just like doing it.
Well,
you know,
like that was hot and I didn't need to just see you coldly simulate
motions.
Right,
right.
Exactly.
Like making the back of the beast with two backs as it were.
And,
and I think,
yeah,
we're,
I think cause we've moved on from just being like,
will they show sex?
They do.
Yes.
And then once everyone all right now
this is i do want to say this is a direct attack on me because that is a direct quote from something
i said earlier before we started rolling so i didn't do the fist pump though like i didn't do
the double fist pump yes um but like yeah that now we're so like you know it's like when you
like you're you get introduced to a new cuisine in the beginning, anything will do.
And then as you formulate taste, you're like, no, actually, I'm like, it's not just about having, you know, steak or whatever or whatever.
You know, you just you begin to actually understand what it is that is appealing to you.
And I think, yeah, I think it's like it's just sort of simultaneous cultural evolution along with the amount of things we've been exposed to that kind of puts us in this different place.
And I think it's the problem with art meeting capitalism right now, especially like we're in the writer's strike and the whole like you go woke, you go broke movement, which is that like people come in and try and quantify it and do the data and the statistics and what's selling when what's not selling.
And actually this is in and that is in blah, blah, blah. But like the thesis is good.
We would love a good movie.
We would love a good movie.
And the moment we get a good movie, they go, oh, do that again.
Do that again.
Or like, you know, network television was dead.
Then Abbott Elementary comes up.
Right.
It was it was good.
Everyone goes, workplace comedies, right?
Workplace comedies.
And you're like, oh, okay. So that's
not, that was not the only thing that
made that show good, you know? And I
just feel like people want really great art and every
time it shows up, they're going to love it. And every time
it's shitty, they're going to hate it. And then people are going
to drain it down into headline
pieces of what could sell more or less
and they're going to miss the point, which is that
if it's good, it sells.
And if it's bad, it does not.
Right.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, Chelsea, such a pleasure having you.
Thank you.
I knew I would learn a lot.
I did learn a lot.
Were you guys horny the whole episode?
I just I just need to know, like, you know, was it a horny episode for you guys?
I was quaking.
I mean, you could see that I was quaking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I feel bad for Justin. He's going to have to cut out all. Yeah. I was an edgel I mean, you could literally see that I was quaking. Yeah. Yeah, I feel bad for Justin.
He's going to have to cut out all this.
Yeah, I was an edgelord the whole time.
Oh, edging.
Shout out to everybody gooning out there.
Yeah, I was all sax music in the background playing the whole time.
Where can people find you, follow you, all that good stuff?
Oh, my gosh.
Please come listen to my podcast.
It's called Celebrity Book Club with Chelsea DeMontesantes but it's so much more you guys we discuss uh female
celebrity memoirs we also do some pop culture stuff i inspired by you guys i did a an entire
bachelor episode talking about politics and where we're at now and uh someone pointed out to me that
in our republican years is when we had our worst bachelors too. It's, you know, the method still,
I am our data scientist on elections.
And so anyways, come listen there.
And I'm on Instagram at Chelsea DeVantes.
And I do like, I post things from books and stuff
and have conversations over there.
Yeah.
Wait, so the thesis is that when the bachelor is bad,
we elect Republicans?
No, no.
It's when we have Republicans in office is also cultural times where we are enjoying
shittier bachelors who break the rules and are only out for themselves and are selfish
pieces of shit.
But they're so entertaining.
So like Pete's the pilots, you know, like if you just look at our Trump bachelors, they're
the worst bachelors of all time
and they're very selfish dudes
oh interesting so maybe that's
due to casting on
the part of the producers of The Bachelor
well yeah and I think thinking of
like where we're at
like Ari you guys remember Ari as a bachelor
they brought him back and he like does the
switcheroo at the end you guys are nodding but you
have no idea what I'm talking about no I remember because anna no anna would regularly play
because what's ari's last name it's like louis it's like a some oh is that one ari gray hair
race car driver oh yeah yeah the race car driver guy yes yes yes i'm savvy i'm savvy yeah colton
who was like in the closet did an entire season as a fully gay man choosing one woman.
He then stalks her. She has to take out a restraining order on him. And then he's like, I've been gay the whole time.
Like, this is where we were at in the Trump years.
Right. Amazing. Hey, did we get our first black bachelor in the Trump era, too?
Right on. Right. Yes, yes we did and that's also
when we got our racial reckoning season yeah where they brought in one black guy to host
the reunion and then guess what he left never has never been heard from again they brought him in
for the racial reckoning then sent him away anyways what was i saying follow me on instagram
get more takes like that is there a work of media
you've been enjoying oh my gosh so much you know what let's just give a shout out to milf manor it
is not what you think it is no it is because it starts and they're like you're gonna be dating
young men and they're like that's tight and then the gate opens and it's all of their sons
yeah okay so it's all of their sons and then. Okay. So it's all of their sons. And then they're like, and you're going to share a room with your son, but you're going to date the other sons of these other ladies here.
And you're like, this is maniacal.
And by the end of the episode, they've all like, they're all just kind of like teaching their sons about like how to put a condom on a banana.
Oh, wow.
It's also one of the worst made reality shows I've ever seen like there's no host no host like
it feels like lord of the flies with like weird incestuous prompts that they have to yes they
send them a text message like read this lab they're like all right i guess we're gonna go
to commercial break now and then we come back we're gonna put on blindfolds we're gonna feel
up our sons we're gonna try and choose which one is my son. Oh, this is definitely him.
Oh, this is my son.
This is my boy.
There are some moments where I'm like, they've destroyed my mind completely, like in ways that I did not.
I did not expect.
And I think I don't know if it's because of the depravity or whoever was behind.
Anyway, it's out there.
This episode has been the greatest ad for trash reality television maybe
ever. Good, good.
This is what I'm about. I guess we should ask
the question like if
Germany had access to trash
television like is the whole
Third Reich avoided maybe?
Will trash television
save us or bring us our next president?
That's right. Miles, where can people find you you is there a work of media you've been enjoying at miles of gray where they got
at symbols find uh jack and i on a basketball podcast miles and jack got mad boosties if you
like trash realities guess what check sophie alexander out on uh 420 day fiance where we
talk about 90 day fiance which is also pretty garbage.
And then, if you like some true crime, you can still catch me on The Good
Thief, talking about the Greek Robin Hood
and all that. I don't have
a piece of media, but
I've been watching the newest
season of How To with John Wilson, and
there were a couple moments
where I've been like, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow.
Anyway, it's always an interesting
show, so maybe check that out. A tweet I've been like, wow, wow, wow, wow, wow. Anyway, it's always an interesting show, so maybe check that out.
Alright. A tweet I've been
enjoying is actually
Ben Rosen at Ben underscore
Rosen tweeted, John Wilson
narrating the Zapruder film.
So you decide to go
for a drive, but not everyone
thinks that's a
good idea.
Wow, dude. the delivery on that.
Wow, both.
And Pat Tobin retweeted an image.
He said, I don't know who made this, but I think about it a lot.
And it's a side-by-side.
The sky in scenic locations is just a blue sky.
The sky at grocery stores.
And it's like this gorgeous, dramatic cloud sunset,
which just totally rang true to me.
I've seen some of the greatest skies of my life doing the most boring, mundane shit in my life.
And then you go on vacation to someplace and it's just blue skies.
So anyway, fuck blue skies is what I'm saying.
Wow.
And shout out to grocery stores.
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 we link off to the information that we talked about in today's
episode as well as a song that we think you might enjoy uh miles what song do you think
people might just you know something nice get us into the the week this is george ben uh j-o-r-g-e-b-e-n
uh and this track is called domingas it's so dope george ben is one of my favorite brazilian artists
i'll never i'll keep saying that every time someone asks me that uh and his singing is
fantastic like the beginning beginning has a really dope
I feel like if I was sampling,
I'd sample that first maybe 20 seconds.
But anyway, Dominguez by
George Band. Alright, we will link
off to that in the footnotes. 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's going to do it for us this morning.
Back this afternoon to tell you what is trending and we will talk to y'all then.
Bye.
Stay horny.
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.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradenti.
And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcast. at your podcasts. 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.
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 Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.