The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO EXCLUSIVE: The Teenage Athlete at the Heart of America's Culture War... Isn't Very Good at Sports
Episode Date: September 19, 2023Politicians don't want transgender people dominating girls' sports. But Ember Zelch just wanted to play softball, and nobody else seemed to mind. She was, after all, the ONLY trans girl officially eve...n PLAYING girls' varsity sports in her ENTIRE state. Pablo travels to Ohio to learn why Ember fought for her right to love sports anyway. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Tore finds out I am Pablo Tore and today we're going to find out what this
sound is.
The only thing that makes sense for what's going on in this country is that demons are influencing
people, allowing their bodies to be possessed to run satanic agendas.
Right after this ad. You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
So Cortez, I want people to understand that I walk into the office proud to host Pablo
Torre finds out because we've built a newsroom.
A newsroom?
Yes.
A newsroom.
Do you understand a newsroom to me has to have
like a piece of print newspapers
and like ink on your fingers and stuff like that?
That's not a newsroom.
There is residue on our fingers, not ink, admittedly.
Go wash your hands.
The point I'm trying to make is that I walk into this newsroom trying to figure out
every day, like what are we supposed to f***ing cover?
And I just want to ask you for the sake of rigor, of journalistic introspection, what
do you think the biggest story Cortez is in sports right now?
Talking.
The biggest story is Deon Sanders, double over time win, obviously.
Prime time.
That's a good impression of an impression.
Of an impression.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
Elvin impression.
Yeah.
And right up there with Deon,
arguably even ahead of Deon,
to me personally since you asked me
is Aaron Rogers telling Pat McAfee
that how he plans to heal his injury
is to listen to dolphins having sex with each other.
And that would help him with that.
I wish that this was something that we had conceived
as like a joke, but no, that's, yeah, that's, that's,
I'm healed.
That is what the New York Dets are counting on,
fully torn ACL, dolphin sex.
Right.
Right, all of these are the stories we might consider.
Sure.
But for me, if you listen to the news right now, okay, actual alleged journalistic outlets,
if you listen to the people running for president, the biggest story in sports, the most urgent
story, most pressing thing they want to talk about that's to do with sports in any way
is not Dion or Mike McDaniel or Aaron Rodgers'
libido.
It's not any of that.
It's this.
The idea that we have biological boys playing in girl sports, it is the women's issue
of our time.
I'd say it's more.
It's no longer just cheating, it's dangerous and it's insane.
Transgenderism is a lie.
You don't get to choose your own gender.
The vast majority of Americans actually agree
with that point that your gender is assigned to a birth.
It's the way that God made you.
If you take out a loan, you pay a back.
You commit a violent crime.
You go to jail.
And if God made you a man, you play sports against men.
Some women are being badly injured by the windab burn that's caused by the band going so
much faster, the wind is blowing.
There are so many more clips like that, but I also want to say right up top here, I get
why some people listening are already just exhausted by this episode and by the fact
that I'm trying to, I'm trying to trojan horse trans athletes into this show.
And I say that because these clips are everywhere, right?
I mean, this is, trans athletes are a front
in this forever culture war that is endless.
And people all the time on Twitter, on cable news,
at home, maybe at your awkward Thanksgiving dinner, people are arguing
complaining about both the merits of the arguments for and against, but also just we all hate each
other because people seem dug in. And they refuse to admit some stuff that, yeah, that seems to be
settled science. I mean, when I, you know, as a long time, like, Levitard should listen to what I think about
when I hear you say all that, is like,
the reaction on that show, anytime Levitard talks about other,
you know, they had a transgender politician on
not that long ago, as Zoe Zepher, very benign what they said
and that the reaction was poisonous and infuriating.
And so I just want to be very open here,
extremely open here, as a quote unquote liberal,
because there is one extremely broadly persuasive argument that all of these anti-trans
talking heads, legislators are making against trans women, against trans girls, of course,
in specific, because the most famous trans woman right now Cortez, especially that's even
put it in sports, the most famous trans female athlete right now is who.
I mean, in sports, there's no doubt Lee Atomis, you know, the famous trans female swimmer
from Penn, very good.
Yes, yes, really good at swimming, which is the problem, right?
The problem is that Lee Atomis, yes, Leot Thomas is a case study.
This cudgel that people are beating this issue
over the head with because the argument goes,
the persuasive argument goes,
look at how all of these trans women,
all of these trans girls have these undeniable,
scientifically validated, physical advantages over,
quote unquote, biological women,
which is what they call them, right?
So these trans girls, categorically, the argument goes, are better and stronger and faster
than biological girls at sports.
And so what does this mean?
It means that your daughters, America's daughters, okay?
They're all losing scholarships and opportunities and trophies to these trans girls who have this
enormous unfair competitive advantage.
And it's the logic, it's the very logic behind
why the U.S. House of Representatives in April
passed a federal bill that mirrors this legislation
that has now been successfully passed by 23 states,
all of which are banning trans girls
from playing girls sports.
23 is a lot.
Yes, about half of the country, right?
And even more states, like Ohio, for instance,
are trying to enact anti-trans bills as we speak.
In June.
In June, Ohio's House of Representatives approved a bill
that would ban trans girls from playing in girls sports
as early as kindergarten.
Kindergarten?
Banning trans girls as young as kindergarten through college.
But there is one part of the story
that I think I want to establish with you.
Because the part that people don't like to talk about
in all of these arguments
is just how many trans people in general
there actually are in America, right?
Because the consistent message here
is that this threat is everywhere.
It's pervasive, it's enormous.
And so one study to that point,
one study found that the average American now believes
that 21% of American adults identify as trans.
21% of American adults are trans people,
is what the average American presumes,
do you know Cortes
with the real percentages?
I mean, given pollinators and stuff, maybe half that 10% something like that?
0.5%.
Okay.
0.5% according to UCLA's Williams Institute.
The actual answer is 0.5% of American adults are trans.
And that's a fraction, a fraction of what percent.
And so I bring this up just to say that
the number of trans kids, the number of trans girls actually playing sports in America.
That number of kids who are allegedly taking away scholarships and opportunities and trophies,
that number is obviously even tinier than that. And so there was one associated press story in 2021
that I cannot stop thinking about because it surveyed two dozen lawmakers that were sponsoring these bills and they found
that in almost every case, in almost every case what the reporting said verbatim, they
could not cite a single trans female athlete in real life, in their own state or region,
whatever they represented, that had caused the problem they were allegedly solving.
That's insane.
So, in one state in particular, I want to focus again on Ohio here.
In Ohio, there was exactly one trans girl playing varsity sports at the time that they tried to pass
these anti-trans bills. And this trans girl was a catcher on her high school softball team, named Ember Zelch.
Now, Leot Thomas, I had heard of Ember Zelch,
I had never, ever heard of.
Had you.
No, but that's a name I'm sure not to forget
because it's an awesome name.
It's actually bad ass.
Yeah, yes, yes.
So the truth behind Ember Zelch,
the name, the person, what's behind there?
That is why I decided to go on a scouting trip
to Northeast Ohio.
Because I wanted to find Ember's Elch,
the trans girl who is too good at softball, right?
So good, in fact, at softball
that the state of Ohio tried to ban her from doing it,
from playing this sport.
And I needed to find out how good Ember's Elch actually is. I've been told that you're amazing at softball.
It all sports, really.
I mean, truly incredible.
I mean, just look at all my trophies around here.
I want to be clear about what is around here, because as much as cable news is telling me
that you're one of the great softball players of all time.
The only thing that's even metal here is the foil that's all over your bed, and I don't
know why there's foil on your bed.
My cats have a bad habit of peeing on my bed, so that foil is to prevent them from peeing on my bed.
So the foil is an anti-cat measure?
Yes.
OK, so I should probably just say very clearly here that before we sat down for our actual interview,
Ember's Elch agreed to show me something.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.A.T.S.T.S.T.A. trophy. Hahaha.
What's this about? There's like a purple snargle.
That's snargle.
Snargle, there's a purple snargle.
What is snargle for people who can't see snargle?
I don't know how to describe snargle.
I, it's almost like an alligator or crocodile,
but purple and...
Dragon, I think more dragon head.
Sorry.
You have a book about bonsai trees.
You have some novels. You have a book about bonsai trees. You have some novels.
You have an animal.
Yes, this is Marble.
He is a Chihuahua gecko.
And he was just asleep.
He is not now.
Sorry, Marble, for dragging you into my...
Would you like to hold this one?
You can hold this one.
I'll try.
He won't really fall off.
Okay, I'll break his You won't really fall off. Okay, I'll break, because of the gold get go thing.
So, Marble, trust me.
Wow.
You feel that?
He's got those toe pads.
It's super, super like soft.
Very soft.
Can Marble like hang from your glasses?
He can.
Ever has glasses, as you pointed out.
Very nerdy, moss green glasses.
I'm getting, as Emma is sitting here
in her computer chair with her get-go wrapped around her glasses,
I'm getting big jock vibes.
Just like huge alpha, like dominant energy from you.
This is not the room of the person I was promised.
I thought that this would be, yeah,
this would be a little different.
The back of your softball card.
What kind of stats are on the back of that, would you say?
And by the way, that sound is Ember's Britsing
the interior of the Gecko Terrarium.
Sorry, forgot about the microphones.
Um, yeah, just giving him some water.
He's not very smart, so I need to spray his entire enclosure.
I think Marvel's smart.
I'm just saying that.
You haven't seen him try and eat.
I have freedom with a spoon.
So what you're telling me is that the person
at the center of Ohio's legislation banning trans girls
from playing sports because they're too dominant.
Spence most of her time feeding a gecko.
I mean, that's probably what should be on the back
of my softball.
Just feeds soup to gecko with spoon.
Just seeds soup to gecko with spoon.
And so I decided to fact check all of this with Ember's mom, Minna Zelch, who is, um,
blunt.
How would you describe Ember's, um, Athletic prowess.
There really isn't much.
How about any home runs?
No, she's never had a home run on her life.
So, um, growing up, I was,
I was a weird kid.
What were you into?
Uh, animals.
And in particular, I really, really like lizards and snakes.
What is really, really liking lizards and snakes in tail?
I think we had possibly 32 animals at the peak.
That's...
Ember, that is so many more fucking animals
than it would have guessed when you said,
I really liked lizards and snakes.
Like the greatest baseball players of all time,
you had 32 animals and had a love of reptiles and snakes.
Yes, and I did shows with them.
I did educational shows as a job.
I started at 10 years old in my best friend's garage
because it was first birthday.
And I would just teach people about these animals.
I'd let them hold them.
So you were having like a reptile show.
Where are the reptiles right now?
Right below us in the basement.
Yes.
Do you want me to go get one?
I can totally go get one for you right now.
Let's do that.
Yeah, I'll be right back.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Holy sh**.
All right.
So these...
So, I wanted to describe for the people who are just listening to this and not watching
on our YouTube channel what you brought me.
Um, yeah, so these are leopard boas.
They are a dwarf species with a color mutation.
So they only top out about six feet.
Five or six feet.
Yeah, well, I mean, if they weren't a dwarf species,
they could get up to 15 feet.
What's the name of this one?
That's crawling at your microphone?
Yeah, that's Violet.
My daughter's name is Violet.
Oh, really?
Yeah, that's Violet. I'm never gonna think of my daughter's name is Violet. Oh, really? Yeah. Yeah, that's Violet.
I'm never gonna think of my daughter's name
in the same way ever.
Yeah.
She is actually really sweet.
If you want, you can hold her.
I don't know about that.
That's fine.
Yeah.
So, and the other one, this one's K-pop.
He's actually shedding right now. Um.
So explain this symbolism here,
because the snakes that you have wrapped around you
as we're talking here, they are not as scary
as I had presumed.
When you said, I'm gonna go get these two
p****n snakes.
Yeah.
Yeah, so that's part of why I love them so much
is because they are misunderstood.
They are, people expect them to be scary
or particularly dangerous.
These things are really only dangerous
to my birds and my cats,
or like an infant, but there's no infants here.
Where are you going?
I think he's trying to adjust the lighting.
What's not?
Do that. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha four different characters, not including the ones that I've helped people make. And then I've been involved with a D&D club at my school.
So total jock energy.
Give me your other nerd credentials.
Other nerd credentials.
I mean, not that I'm in doubt at this point,
on account of the snake handling.
Yes.
I really love mythology.
Yeah, you have a favorite myth. Maybe Icarus just because I relate. The snake handling. I really love mythology.
Yeah, you have a favorite myth.
Maybe Icarus just because I relate.
Have you ever flown too close to the sun?
Well, I guess you could consider just wanting to play sports.
That might have done it, just because all the political stuff that is happening.
They're trying to melt some wings.
Yeah.
Remember, when did you come out as trans?
The first time I came out as trans, it was in fifth grade.
I told a friend of mine at the time,
I think I'm a girl.
I didn't have any other words to explain what I was feeling,
but she told me,
you'll always be boy to me.
And that ended up pushing me in the closet for two more years.
And I came out to my family as trans I ended up pushing me in the closet for two more years.
And I came out to my family as trans halfway through seventh grade.
As a parent, I don't think it's the kind of thing
you ever forget.
She just said, you know, I think I'm transgender.
And I just remember kind of going quiet and be like,
okay, and it like, okay.
And it was extremely difficult.
I know my husband and I both spent many, many times
just kind of looking at each other
with this blank stare of, what do we do?
What happens now?
And yeah, we hugged her, we love you, we said.
And then going to bed at night
and just crying yourself to sleep
because not because you didn't want a trans kid,
but because we knew how much harder it would make her life.
When did it occur to you that you now out
as a trans girl needed to play these games again,
that you needed to play sports?
I wanted to start playing in eighth grade,
and it wasn't an option because I had already started to go through puberty,
and there was policies in place through OHSAA,
which stands for Ohio High School Athletic Association.
Their policies stated that I had to either,
I had to be on hormone therapy for at least a year
and or I had to have a doctor saying
that I didn't have a biological advantage based on sex.
Like a physiological edge.
Yeah, that was the rule.
And what does that mean?
What does it mean to be on hormones for you?
Yeah, it means, well, in my situation,
because it's different for every trans person based on
what they need medically or what their doctor prescribes.
For me, it meant a testosterone suppressant and taking estardial for a year.
And how do you take that?
I take that just via pills.
Um...
And how often do you have to take these pills or be on this regimen?
I have to take them twice a day and it's like a whole like nine pills.
That's a lot of pills.
Yeah, that's not the only thing I'm taking, but like altogether the concoction is nine
pills in the morning, nine pills at night.
The point being that in order to play sports, it's not like you show up one day and say,
hey guys, I'm different now,
then they put you on.
Exactly.
The girls team, which is what a lot of people think.
If you gave Brock Lesnar a sex change and put him in a dress,
he's gonna run through every woman that's ever lived
in the history of women.
That's what a lot of politicians have actually told me
that they're afraid of, and that's what they're trying
to protect, and I'm like, great, that's not happening.
Like that's just not a thing.
There's a commitment and investment of real time.
Yes.
That is, it seems like a hell of a long way if you're doing this as a stunt.
And the important thing to realize is that people don't go on this stuff just so that they're
able to play sports.
They go on this stuff so that they fit their identity, so that they can feel like themselves.
If they get to play sports because of it, that's just an added bonus.
So you've been taking these pills
undergoing hormone therapy for a year,
leading into sophomore year?
Yes.
In order to play sports.
And you have to prove as a consequence
that you don't have the biological physical,
physiological advantage.
Exactly.
How do you prove that?
Great question.
They originally were asking for like muscle mass, how much your muscle indexes, your bone density, all this stuff, and my doctors were just like, I don't know how to do that.
I ended up being the one who was mostly interacting between going back
before, between the doctor and the compliance director at the state going, well,
the doctor doesn't know what you want. What do you want?
The doctors wrote them wrote the OHSAA and were just like, hey,
what, what, what do we do?
A lot of doctors don't know what to do
because there's so few trans kids in sports
and trans people in sports.
She had to submit all the blood work,
showing her testosterone levels,
showing her estrogen levels,
showing her height and her weight,
and how long she'd been at those levels
and all her growth charts.
It was incredibly invasive,
and ultimately it just creates the feeling
of just like they don't view me as a real girl, per se.
But the point being,
taking all of that into consideration,
that this is how badly you wanted to do this. point being, taking all of that into consideration,
that this is how badly you wanted to do this.
This is how badly you wanted to be on this team
playing this game, is that you subjected yourself willingly
to a regiment of rules that is invasive as they were.
You also understood if this is the price that I need to pay
to be on the team that I actually identify with,
that I want to be on, that I deserve to be on,
I will do this.
Yeah.
And so, when you finally got approval,
what was that like?
Do you remember that?
What was that moment?
Yeah, so that would have been sophomore year.
I was in my room totally doing homework.
As one does.
Yes, absolutely.
When they're supposed to be doing.
Not playing with upwards of 30 lizards for this.
No, no, no.
My mom comes into my room and she's crying.
And I ask her what was wrong
and she told me that I had been approved to play.
So, I started crying.
And I showed her the email and we were both just bawling, just tears all down our faces.
And I think it will always be one of the most affirming moments of her life, this feeling
of I can be one of the most affirming moments of her life, you know, this feeling of, I can be one of the girls.
And my brother walks in the room and he goes,
what happened?
Did someone die?
I just look up at him and I say,
the state agrees that I'm a girl through sobs
and just this giant grin.
When you think back on your first, just this giant grin. [♪ INTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
When you think back on your first
foray into playing on the girls team,
is there a lot of drama?
No.
Not at all.
The only drama was from the state.
Your teammates, so a lot of these conversations
are about you're taking spots away was from the state. Your teammates, so like a lot of these conversations
are about you're taking spots away from the real girls.
Yeah.
That's what the news is blaring.
Yeah.
And in reality, what happened in terms of their reaction?
Your teammates' reaction to you joining.
When I came out to my most recent summer team this past summer, everyone got into a circle
and we all went around your name, your grade and a fun fact about you.
And I was like, I am Vizelci. I am upcoming freshman in college, and I am trans.
Half of the facial expressions just like,
okay, I'm gay, I didn't use that as my fun fact.
What are you? They were just like, okay, show off.
It was clearly like, it was weird, and they thought it was weird,
not that I was trans, but that I told them I was trans,
like it was a big deal.
So they were not worried about job security,
but it came to their playing time.
That was not their response.
Not even slightly.
So if the kids on the team didn't,
they almost didn't care,
we're impressed by the fact that you were trans.
Who did not want you to play softball?
Politicians.
It exclusively politicians,
and mostly older male politicians.
What did they do?
male politicians. What did they do? They are doing their damn best to make it illegal for me to play.
There's a nationwide effort to save women's sports.
Conservative lawmakers have introduced bills in 30 states that would prevent transgender
athletes from participating in girl sports.
And the governor of Arkansas just signed a bill into law there.
So actually it was two months after I was approved to play.
Two months after I was in my mom's crying tears of joy because the state of Ohio said that I was a girl I could play with the girls,
the Ohio State House introduced a bill that would make it illegal for me to play.
And that bill, by the way, first introduced in 2021 was named the Save Women's Sports
Act.
The Save Women's Sports Act is a fairness issue for women to be able to achieve their dreams and athletics in our state.
And it's crucial to preserving women's rights and the integrity of women's and girl sports.
Which meant banning trans girls from joining girls' teams specifically.
And that felt how personal to you.
At the time, it didn't feel extremely personal.
It was just like, ah, fear, which made sense.
I was aware that people are afraid of what they don't understand.
Like the same exact thing with my animals.
Like, you don't understand it, so it's scary.
And I get that to some extent.
It's a defense mechanism, it's for safety.
But then I found out that at the time,
I was the only high school trans female athlete in Ohio
that had been approved to play.
The only one.
The population they were concerned about,
the people who they saw as threatening sports
and their girls, yes, was literally just you.
Yes. Do you think that they knew that you were the only one?
Do you think they they knew that you were the only one?
Do you think they know your name?
At the time, they probably didn't even know
I was the only one.
But when I started advocacy work,
I made sure that they knew that was an immediate thing
that I would tell politicians
when I had one-on-one conversations.
I'd be like, so we're very clear,
this is a law directed exclusively at me right now.
Which is a remarkable thing
in terms of the presumed size of this population.
Like the threat is everywhere.
They're coming for your girls, they're coming for their scholarships, they're coming for of this population. Like the threat is everywhere. They're coming for your girls,
they're coming for their scholarships,
they're coming for all this stuff.
And the entire state, again,
it was organized against one trans girl,
which was you.
Yes.
What was it like to go to the state house and speak up and actually challenge authority in person?
It's, I've had to do it multiple times and every time it's not enjoyable. It's not exciting. It's not, oh wow, this is...
Not the movie version, that I would imagine.
It's demeaning and it's horrifically painful to have to look up at people who are in these
big chairs above you and essentially plead to them to not take away your rights.
Thank you for the opportunity to testify in opposition to House Bill 6.
That would ban transgender girls from playing sports.
My name is Ember, and I use she-they pronouns.
Being a trans athlete isn't easy.
People I have never met have suggested that I became trans just to do better in sports.
Why would I become trans in order to have to fight every day for my right just to be perceived as who I am?
I justifying my existence to strangers is not something I enjoy.
Last time I testified against a trans-athlete ban, the committee was not listening. They were actively talking to each other and whispering to each other during my testimony.
I do not care anymore about educating them
because it's clear that they don't care to listen.
It's clear that they don't want to be educated.
They don't want to be knowledgeable.
They just want to have power.
Give me a sense of like the people
on the other side of the issue here.
How would you characterize
what their arguments were? There are some people who do really think that their stance is to protect
girls. There are some people that truly believe that, but I also know that the vast majority
of people if they have done any research realize that that's not what's happening. Realize
that it's mostly just politicians that are trying to incite fear.
Those fears, it was somewhat startling for me
to go through some of the tape of these congressional
hearings in Ohio and to see that it often went
into the realm of, I'll put it generously,
the metaphysical, like this was stuff about
spiritual concerns, religious concerns, concerns about
demons, literally. Yes. That is actually something that someone said. Yeah, I want to play
that video for you. Oh, that's fun. We call him demon dude. Well demon dude, there's a thing
about demon dude that is important because you're not exaggerating. No. The only thing that
makes sense for what's going on in this country is that demons are influencing people, allowing
their bodies to be possessed to run satanic agendas. People that are possessed by demons don't get to make demonic agendas
and demonic doctrines that affect our people
and our children and our laws and our country.
Thank you very much for being with us
and sharing your testimony today.
That's pretty literal.
Yeah.
No, he fully believes that there are demons possessing people.
And so I guess journalistsically I have to ask if you and Brazil are possessed by a demon.
I mean, if I am, I am not aware of it.
That's what a person possessed by a demon would say.
Yeah, yeah. I'm a pretty empathetic demon if possessed by a demon would say. Yeah, yeah.
I'm a pretty empathetic demon if I'm a demon.
I feel like you've established on the record
that you are if anything, a nymph who loves playing games.
Yeah.
What have been some of the justifications
for why these representatives are so impassioned
and so worried about girls like Ember.
So they will flat out lie.
We had a situation just that one of our hearings
a couple of months ago.
Representative Williams.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
So first I've met with the Department of Education.
There's been countless complaints filed in regards to the trans policy.
The department has confirmed that.
So a friend of mine who actually came to the state house with us and ended up testifying
at the athlete ban hearings did a deep dive into the topic when there was one of the representatives said that
there were countless complaints against trans athletes and she found that there were zero.
She had multiple email exchanges with the athletic association and they said no there have been
zero complaints against transgender athletes in this state. And I should also note that we cross
check this here at Pavlauri finds out we looked
into those multiple email exchanges and yeah, the Ohio High School Athletic Association
says in writing that there have been zero filed complaints against any trans students
who have been approved to compete to date.
Their compliance director actually counted.
And so we then reached out to representative Josh Williams
to tape an interview because zero complaints filed
is the opposite of countless complaints filed,
as he said.
And also I wanted to know what he really knew
about the experiences of the trans girls.
He represents in his own state,
but representative Williams declined. And so here's a bit more of what Ember Zelch back up catcher on her high school softball
team tried to tell the government herself in her testimony.
Playing on a girls team has been an incredible experience for me.
I have made so many friends and improved so much despite starting so late.
My teammates treat me just like anyone else in the team.
So do my coaches. My teams are part of my family.
We are all so different and come from different clicks.
But when we are together on the field, we are there for each other no matter what.
Every kid should be lucky enough to have that experience.
But when it comes to saving women's sports, like actually supporting women's sports,
Amber did have something else that she wanted to say.
What was your experience like on the girls' team?
What do the facilities look like? Almost every field was crap for lack of better description.
They were sh**. They were falling apart half the time.
They were flooded, muddy, not up-kept at all.
My teams field is the elementary school field.
Our baseball teams, varsity and junior varsity had two fields, both of them at the high school.
They could simply walk outside for a game or a practice. My team had to get on a bus
to go to our field, not not for a
away game to our home game.
Wait, wait, wait. So you needed to take a bus to the sh**y field.
Yes.
In order to do the most basic thing.
Yes.
And did you ever hear any of these politicians
at the case?
Not much.
Yeah.
But it just sounds like a giant cluster of f***.
That there is just an endless stream.
It sounds like a legislation that,
that you are being dared to fight.
Mm-hmm.
And I wonder if you've considered leaving
for that reason.
Yeah. I am leaving.'ve considered leaving for that reason. Yeah, I am leaving.
I am leaving for college.
I received a $10,000 scholarship that's open for any school in States.
In Ohio.
And I am leaving that.
So you're leaving Ohio finally.
And you're doing it because you feel like you're well-being.
Your fundamental well-being is at risk if you remain.
But what happens to your athletic aspirations here?
You fought for this, and so what happens next for you with softball?
I have really had the amazing opportunity to be able to play in college.
That is something that I'm able to do,
just because of all my incredible abilities
that I, you know, I, I, I, this is a secret.
My parents don't even know.
I actually got a scholarship to this school because of,
because of my athletic prowess that definitely no one's ever seen.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. They're really good scouts.
Yes. They, they, they sent some scouts for this division three school.
And, and they saw that girl on the bench, the one that's keeping the seat warm with the blanket around her because it's cold and she's not keeping warm because she's not playing.
We want her on our team. Yes, that one. but the colorful hair. Yeah. But you, but for real though, you wanna keep playing.
Yes.
Despite all of it, Ember, this sounds crazy to me.
On just some basic level, you sat down here with me
and you told me all of the ways in which this has been
this mythological test of your fortitude.
And you're like, I'm gonna keep at it.
I wanna keep doing this.
Why?
What's the point of being a man?
On the field, I can put away all the bulls**t,
all this legislation, scholarships,
all these thoughts constantly racing around in my head.
All this struggle, I can set that aside on the field.
And I can join this group of people
who understand my desire to just want to be part of a team,
to just want to be in this group, to just be ourselves
and to forget about all the other bullsh** for just an hour
and a half.
That's why it's worth it to me
to keep going through all these tests,
to keep dealing with the ideology
that I am some monster in order to still just be able to be myself
and forget about life for just a little bit.
I should confess here, Ember,
that I'm not very good at sports either.
Really? Well, yes, shocking. I know. For the, that I'm not very good at sports either. Really?
Well, I'm talking about you.
Yes, John Cena.
I know, for the audience, I'm very jacked.
I'm the John Cena of Metal Arc Media.
But what you just said was beautiful
because is why I've always loved sports too.
It's the idea that I'm not trying to be the best.
I'm trying to have a good time with my friends.
And I feel like when I cover sports, the reason I loved one of the reasons I've
loved talking to you is because the big picture of sports is so much more vast
than the elite athletes in the LeBron James as the Olympians.
It's about people who will never play beyond at best, D3 softball, just like being about
this life, seeing the value in it.
And it occurs to me that you are through this whole odyssey.
You're kind of a star.
But you've been a voice, a face for your community, not just your team, but also for trans girls.
And what does it feel like to be a public person
having done interviews, been again, talking to Congress
for something that's not actually about,
you know, your back of the baseball card stats?
I hate it.
I'm not even joking.
I've made a lot of sarcastic jokes throughout this whole thing.
I truly hate it.
I don't want to be the center of focus.
I don't want to have to testify.
It sucks.
I don't want that.
I hate interviews.
I'm an introvert. I would much rather be hanging out with my partner.
I'd much rather be playing a game.
I'd much rather be watching some obscure movie or show.
I'd much rather be doing any of those things.
I'd much rather be reading a book, and I'm dyslexic.
Ha ha ha ha.
It doesn't occur to me too,
that like so much of what you're describing
is fundamentally the desire to blend in,
to not be spot lit.
And that is also another way in which trans athletes
have, trans people in general have been presented is
they want to put everything in your face.
Yeah.
They want to change the things you love ruin them because they can't stop being loud
and proud in front of you.
And you are telling me that you want as many Twitter followers as you have home runs.
Yes.
Hopefully they'll be at least one Twitter follower next year.
That's it.
I'm home.
I want at least one from home, man.
But yeah, I don't want attention.
I don't want any of this.
I don't want to be the weird kid that has a camera
on their face, talking to you is honestly
the best interview I've had, but it's still
f**king sucks. I feel you.
Ember, thank you very much for taking the time to do something that admittedly sucks, but
I think means a lot to a lot of people. I'd say of course, but... So as I sit down in front of my keyboard and reflect on what it is that I found out
today, I am blown away by how obvious it is now that the single most exaggerated campaign issue,
the single most exaggerated fear in American life is the fear of trans girls invading women's
sports.
Something that cable news and politicians cannot stop selling us as this huge pressing
concern. And I do get that there are concerns here. I do get that there are real competitive
advantages to going through male puberty. Like height, for instance, can never be undone. We should be honest about these things.
But I also believe that the biggest advantage there is testosterone, and that can and should
be regulated by rule.
I believe that this is a reasonable policy if done reasonably. But what I am blown away by is just how clear it is that inside that tiny, tiny, tiny,
tiny, tiny population of trans kids, population that statistically you will never even meet.
They are not all leotamas.
They are not.
They're not coming for your scholarships, opportunities, trophies.
They're bench-warmers too.
They're teenagers who just want to be on a team where they belong.
They are embers, else, in so many words.
Just not that good at sports. And just like us, human beings who deserve the right
to be completely mediocre at the thing they love. And that's why today, in the end, what I found out
is so clear to me. And this is a regret that I have,
thinking back on how my interview with Ember went,
hearing about all of the metaphors and symbols
that we discussed.
What I found out is that I really should have been brave enough
to hold that boa constrictor.
This has been Pablo Torre finds out a metal-lark media production.
And I'll talk to you next time. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
you