Behind the Bastards - Part One: From Elliott Rodger to Clavicular: The Story of Incel Evolution

Episode Date: March 10, 2026

Robert explains how we went from incels complaining about women online to the influencer Clavicular with special guest Kat Abughazaleh.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Welcome back to Behind the Bastards, a podcast that has just suffered yet again the indignity of a major technical malfunction. And right at the point, the day after we got approval from Netflix to stream full video episodes worldwide. Minus Korea and Vietnam. I'm so sorry. I have no idea why. Sorry, guys. I can't influence Netflix policy and Vietnam. But at least we're on everywhere now. We're on everywhere now. Except Korea and Vietnam. Except for Korea and Vietnam. Unfortunately, my camera's not working right.
Starting point is 00:00:40 So we had to use the webcam on my laptop, which does not look as good. Which will also not change how 90% of people experience this podcast because it is an audio medium. Why even attach visuals to it? To be fair. To be fair, buddy, I think you look fine. Thanks, Sophie. I think you look great. You know who looks great is our guest.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Cat aboo. Kat, how are you doing? Welcome back. I'm good. And now I go by my full government name, Kat Abugazale. You're right, because you're running for Congress. Because I'm running for Congress. I have to call you something different now. You want to give a little PSA plug for the campaign up top? I would love to. Hi, everyone. I'm Kat. I'm running for Congress in the 9th District of Illinois. That goes from uptown Chicago, up to Evanston, over to Skokie, all the way to Algonquin and Crystal Lake. It is gerrymandered to hell. And I'm trying to represent you. I am one of the top three viable. candidates in this race. Election Day is March 17th. I'm the only one of those three people that has not met with or submitted a position paper to APEC. We are the only campaign in this race funded by small dollar donations. I have a cat named heater. She's orange. And yeah, that's kind of my thing.
Starting point is 00:01:49 Oh, and I covered the far right as a researcher and journalist. You might have heard me here before when my microphone was dog shit. Yes. Now your microphone's better and you're running for Congress. And listeners, cats my friend. And Sophie's my friend. And our friend. Okay. You can, you're also included. I get to, I get to jink on there. Yeah, Robert and I took so many shots of Mallort together at the onion. We did.
Starting point is 00:02:12 Oh, my God. Oh, Malort. I was like, I bet I can do more than you. And I did. It's the only time I've ever even somewhat blacked out besides literally being drugged by someone unconsensually. That was like drinking liquid bandage. It was crazy. It was awful.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Remendishish-Ares at a spicy WD-40. Yeah. That does prove your rightfulness. for the spot that you're seeking is your ability to win the Malort contest. That party was wild. And then you, and then you were like, Sophie, come with me to the other bar. And we drank something good. I don't remember what it was.
Starting point is 00:02:44 It was like something. I don't remember. I just had like five shots of Malort. And then Ben took me and was, and just like his standard intro, it was, I remember. His standard intro to me to people whose names I don't remember. This is Sophie. She's the future. The funniest way to introduce so funny.
Starting point is 00:03:08 It's how I also talk about you. Thank you so much. And then we went up to checks notes, Don Lemon. And he's like, hi, John Lemon. This is Sophie. She's the future. That was so weird. I don't even feel like, let's get a picture together.
Starting point is 00:03:22 I was like, this is all on you, man. Wow. I just really enjoyed, I really enjoyed Robert taking a picture of our young Garrison with Don Lemon. with full flash. I never got to turn it off. Welcome to behind the bastards. The podcast
Starting point is 00:03:40 where we talk about a time. Don Lemon. We run a party with Don Lemon and drink too much forlorn. It really is. And just fucking blinded his ass with my I have one of these huge Chinese phones that look at the
Starting point is 00:03:52 fucking flight on the back of this. This thing's flash goes off like a federal flashbang. Like Bortat guys. Don't have flashbangs this intense. I'm crying a little bit. Normally if I'm crying on this podcast, it's because of something heinous
Starting point is 00:04:08 Robert has told me, but it's really just... Oh, I'll make you cry. Don't worry. We'll all be crying before this is over. Yes. The cat's got the right idea. Anyways, back to the job. Really enjoyed memory lane, though.
Starting point is 00:04:21 I'm glad cats. I'm really glad cats here. So good to be back. This is an I-Heart podcast. Guaranteed Human. I'm Clayton Eckerd. In 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. But here's the thing. Bachelor fans hated him.
Starting point is 00:04:40 If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young.
Starting point is 00:05:01 Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Next Monday, our 2026 IHeart podcast awards are happening live at South by Southwest. It's the biggest night in podcasting. We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry. And the winner is creativity, knowledge, and passion will all be on full display. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:05:29 IHeart Radio. Thank you to all the other nominees. You guys are awesome. Watch live next Monday at 8. P.m. Eastern 5 p.m. Pacific free at veeps.com or the Veeps app. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt, the case of Lucy Lettby, we unpack the story of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the UK in 2023. But what if we didn't get the whole story? I mean, this has been made to fit.
Starting point is 00:05:53 The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapsed. What if the truth was disguised by a story we chose to believe? Oh my God, I think she might be innocent. Listen to Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby. on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, it's Joe Interesting, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast, where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And today I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams.
Starting point is 00:06:22 It can change you in the best way possible. Dance with the change. Dance with the breakdowns. The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves. So I'm like delusionally proud of my chart. Listen to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast. This is going to be a memory lane trip for Kat and me because Kat, you also spent a sizable chunk of the aughts spending way too much time reading about incredibly online right-wing maniacs, right? Yes.
Starting point is 00:07:02 Yes, I did. Yeah. So who are we talking about? Great question. Have you heard of clavicular? Oh, my fucking God. Are we talking about clavicular today? A bit, yes.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Today and tomorrow, we'll talk about him a bit. We're explaining how you get from, you know, May 23rd, 2014, when Elliot Roger goes on his shooting spree and killing spree in Ila Vista, California, which killed six and injured 14 and was like the first big in-cell mass murder event, right? And it's kind of the thing that put incels on the map. I'm going to guess most of the audience. the first time you heard Encel was in the wake of that spree killing, right? Unless you were a very online weirdo prior to May 23rd, 2014, you probably hadn't heard of
Starting point is 00:07:48 these people. But through a series of very unlikely and in some ways confusing events, this subculture that kind of comes onto everybody's radar in the wake of this mass murder has kind of led most recently, and really just the last couple of weeks, to a massive degree of fame. and general internet bemusement over this guy, clavicular. And there's a direct line between, like, the first in-cells and the birth of the in-cell subculture to the look-smacking subculture, which is where this guy... So smashing your jaws with hammers.
Starting point is 00:08:22 Yes, hitting your jaws with hammers, taking methamphetamine to be hot, right? Like, all of that stuff. My first introduction to clavicular was a random TikTok where Logan Paul was talking about how unbelievably handsome this. person is. I did not bother to look it up because I don't care who Logan Paul thinks is handsome, but now we're on behind the bastards talking about it, so it all makes sense. You'll get to see him in a second. I want to describe just like in terms of, thank you so much for this topic, Robert. I'm thrilled and this is the exact fucked up shit that I'm glad we get
Starting point is 00:08:59 to dive into you know, be so well. But the most fascinating thing about in cell culture is how so much of it is like this weird, both hypermasculine and also like homoerererotic subtones of what they think, like, women want. And it's like this, like, chat with, which is in cell, vernacular, by the way, that's like all buff and all this stuff when it's like, I don't know, I like my guy that runs the onion and makes me laugh. Yeah. Well, that's called Jester Maxing.
Starting point is 00:09:25 Oh, that's Jester Maxing. I'm so sorry. Thank you. Thank you. We've got a new term for that, thank God. But he's also just like he's a nice man. Yeah. Women, like, want, in terms of being attracted to men, the vast majority just want you to,
Starting point is 00:09:39 like be a good person that's like not sexist or racist or homophobic or bad or transphobic, make them laugh and like, I don't know, close the dishwasher, which I don't do. So I need to do that for me. It's always funny to be because I too can't love reading in cells, like talk about like what you, like all of the mountains you have to cross to get like a single date where you have to make sure that like your face is no wider than this, but at least this wide. And like your nose like is positioned at this part of your face and your eyes are this far apart. And like, otherwise, no one will ever love you.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Whereas, like, living in the real world, you realize that it's mostly, like, there's no rules. It's just people like each other or don't. Usually because you like someone who's, like, not a dick and who has, does stuff that you find, like, cool and interesting and is fun to be around and relaxing to be around and doesn't scare you all the time by talking about, like, their bone structure and hitting themselves in the face with a hammer? Like, these are the things real people want in relationships.
Starting point is 00:10:41 And when you see, like, the stuff in cells have talked themselves up into believing they need to do, it's just like, you really, it really makes sense, like, why there's been so many killings out of this community, because it's like, oh, yeah, they're just totally detached from reality, right? And that's what we're going to be talking about today, how this group, because what's interesting is not, in cells are crazy. And it's not like, oh, wow, clavicular, you know, the looks maxing subculture has its roots in the in cell subculture. it's how has the end cell subculture been so influential? Because almost everyone I know every day uses words that, like, originally came out of the in-cell community and have now just become like common Gen-Z-Gen Alpha internet slang, right? Like, that's kind of the strangest thing to me about this, is despite how fringe and extreme
Starting point is 00:11:29 and, like, toxic and scary the actual in-cell subculture is, they've also had this like incredible history of like shotgunning terms and concepts into mass consciousness that's both like really surprising and kind of worrying. And so that's that's kind of like what we'll be talking about this week. Awesome. And also in a way that the right really struggles to penetrate pop culture, but in cell culture, hasn't had that issue as much. Yeah. Yeah. It's moved like a fucking knife through butter.
Starting point is 00:12:00 Yeah. It's really been weird. So about a couple of weeks before I sat down to write these episodes on February 6th, 2026th, this Twitter post that those of you with the video podcast will see, I'll read it to everybody else, went viral, reaching about 24.5 million people through Twitter's own unreliable counter, but also spreading in screencap form across every other type of social media. I found it with something like 20,000 upvotes and Reddit, you know, just in one post. Like, this is all over the place. And there's a good chance you've seen, and it's a post from some guy called Chromeheart 600. and he writes, clavicular was mid-gester-gooning
Starting point is 00:12:34 when a group of foids came and spiked his cortisol levels. Is ignoring the foids while munting and monging moids more useful than SMV chad-fishing in the club? And that's just such like, that's an insane series of words. Like, it's completely impenetrable
Starting point is 00:12:48 to people who have not spent way too much time online. But at the same time, it's like, it's kind of enticing. Like, you see this and you're like, well, what the fuck does that mean, right? Like, and so I've seen, again, once this hits, you get a bunch of people online talking and dissecting all of these terms and then remixing them and taking terms like jester gooning and throwing them out in other
Starting point is 00:13:10 circumstances, not necessarily even knowing the original use of any of these words, right? And part of why this post went viral, you know, clavicular was already a very influential streamer and influencer when this post went viral, otherwise it wouldn't have. But it went viral not just because of his actual content. But because the post itself was so seemingly absurd, with so many newogisms, right, that people didn't know, that folks just found themselves compelled to spread it and make fun of it. And by doing that, they kind of helped spread some of these terms around. And when you watch the attached video, because this includes a video of whatever is being described in that post of clavicular, it doesn't make any sense, right? Like, the video does not help you understand what those words say.
Starting point is 00:13:57 Sophie's going to play it for you right now. You'll hear the audio. But I don't know how much help that's going to be. It's just like a guy who looks like a kind of normal young frat dude guy with what looks like a frat party. There's some young women and young men behind him. He's streaming on kick. And then, yeah, so if he's going to hit play and you'll hear what he says. The caption is SMV Chad Fishing in the club question.
Starting point is 00:14:20 S&V is sexual market value. And, yeah, Chad fishing is people are fishing. Someone's fishing for a Chad. They're talking about clivocular. like Latin classes and you're dissecting the words. And if you spent way too much time online or in right wing spaces, you're able to like do like all of the etymology. Yeah. Yeah. You find you nominative, your genitive, your native, accusative, right. But put all in just weird terms, freaks made up to talk about whether or not, you know, having sex on the internet. Yeah. I mean, not included Robert
Starting point is 00:14:50 because he's my Christina Yang, but I have never disliked men more than I haven't since the start of this year. This is going to deeply be distrously. disturbing and play. Oh, yeah. Just you wait. My friend likes your cameraman. Really likes you. What's your name?
Starting point is 00:15:07 Tell us your name. His name is Kirk. Kirk. So I would describe that as a pretty normal guy trying to film in the middle of a frat party, and some girls are making fun of him. I would describe that as jester gooning. Yeah, it's jester gooting, right? They're jester gooting on it.
Starting point is 00:15:27 So they're saying clavicular was trying. trying to attract these sorority girls by doing that when the girls came up and they spiked his cortisol levels. They got him flustered. And they believe that when your cortisol levels get spiked, your testosterone production drops, right? So that's the gist of this, right? And then this later leads to him getting, like, mugged on or kind of made to look sort of shitty
Starting point is 00:15:48 by a much more buff frat-like leader, right? And that's kind of the genesis of this whole nonsense. Like, that's what all of this terminology actually stands for. And what's weird to me about this is just how much of the pieces of this. Because even if you didn't understand a lot of this, you've probably heard, you may have heard the term foids because that's a common in-cell term for women. It means like femoids. It's a way of dehumanizing women, right?
Starting point is 00:16:14 You've heard the term gooning, probably. You may have heard some of these, like, references to cortisol levels or magging. Like, pieces of this have been spreading all over the internet for years. what's weird to me is how widely in cell terminology has broken containment because you don't see this for most other weird internet subcultures, even most extreme violent internet subcultures.
Starting point is 00:16:38 Like when I think back to the time I spent reporting on like 8chan and these online neo-Nazi movements, there's a couple of pieces of use of the term based that's kind of spread out of those communities. But there's not most of the words they use are still kind of nonsense to the average person. Whereas in-cell terms seem to like every couple of years, you get like a new font of them washing into the culture. So why is that happening?
Starting point is 00:17:02 Or a meme. Like the Wojacks. Exactly. And we'll talk about that in a bit. So I want to talk about like why that shit is happening. And it may seem weird to some people that because like clavicular is a traditionally handsome guy, we could say. Right. Like if you just see that dude on the street, you wouldn't be like, oh, that's an in-cell-looking dude.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Right? You'd be like, well, that's just a guy. Right? I wouldn't leave my drink uncovered around him. Of course not. That has nothing to do with it. That's the jester gooning. But half of this guy's videos, content is like videos of him hanging out with Andrew Tate in Florida clubs.
Starting point is 00:17:37 And they're always surrounded by women. That doesn't seem like someone who should have any relation to the in-cell community based on like what in-cells are famous for, which is not hanging out in clubs surrounded by sorority girls, right? So how did this happen? Like, how do we go from a bunch of online weirdos who are, like, so upset at the fact that, like, women don't behave the way they want them to, that they're doing mass killings, to this guy who's, like, famous for being handsome and hitting himself in the face with a hammer, like, going to frat parties and having impenetrable internet dialogue spread about whatever happened there? Sophie, you don't know about bone smashing? I mean, I—I do. I just, like, did everything I could not to look into this person. because I just simply don't care about men, but here we are. Here we are, Sophie.
Starting point is 00:18:26 So how and why that all happened is the story we're going to tell this week. And to tell that story, we've got to go back to 1997 and the place where all great evil begins, Canada. No. That's actually very unfair to Canada. And then it's unfair to the very first in cells because the phrase involuntary celibate originates from a Canadian student named Alana, and she seems to prefer based on the stuff I've read not giving a last name. My understanding is that very young person, obviously, I think she was somewhere on the LGBTQ spectrum.
Starting point is 00:18:59 And because she's a young person kind of living out in a not huge, heavily inhabited part of Canada, she's having a lot of trouble, like finding people, right? Like a fairly, especially in 1997, a fairly normal experience for a ton of people. And so as a result, she finds herself like involuntarily celibate. And in other words, she can't, like, find any people that she has this, like, she feels like in common with that she feels she can be open with about who she is. She doesn't know how to start those conversation.
Starting point is 00:19:30 She's a self-described late bloomer. And she just starts thinking like, well, maybe other people are going through this. And maybe the Internet can be a way for us to kind of bridge some of the gaps between us. I found an article on her with the BBC. And, quote, I thought, maybe there are other late bloomers out there. I noticed people would talk about the lonely virgin and make silly jokes about people who didn't start dating in their teens. She rightly felt like this was messed up and wanted to create a place where she and other people struggling with sex and relationships could commiserate. Since it was 1997, she created a website and named it Alana's involuntary celibate project.
Starting point is 00:20:04 So that's sort of the origin point of all of this stuff. And it's perfectly banal. Like it's perfectly harmless. Alana's not doing anything wrong. She's trying to connect with other young, awkward people who are to. trying to figure out life. She described her form as a friendly place, and it was a place that both men and women frequented, and they would go there and they could talk about being lonely, and they
Starting point is 00:20:25 could wonder aloud, what's like, what am I doing wrong? Why am I not meeting anybody? What do I need to do differently? Once again, men have to take credit for women's work. Right. That is a big part of this story, is how the women get completely edged out of this community and of this, like, concept, and it turns much more toxic as a result. because when it is mixed gender, when it's Alana, you know, and a bunch of, like, when it's a bunch of men and women on this forum, the purpose is not to hate on people for not dating them.
Starting point is 00:20:56 The purpose is to figure out, what do we need to do different in order to change this thing about our lives, right? Which is a reasonable thing to ask. She recalled there was probably a bit of anger, and some women were a bit clueless about how men are unique human individuals, but in general it was a supportive place. So even then, there were some signs that, like, some of these guys seem to be surprised that, like, women have feelings. And she's noticing this, right? And that's kind of weird. But a couple, one couple who meets on the site gets married. And people get better there, including Alana.
Starting point is 00:21:31 And, in fact, she, over time, stops being involuntarily celibate. She finds people. She starts dating. She moves on with her life. And to be entirely fair to her, she is not the origin of the term insolvent. cell. She comes up with the term involuntary celibate, but her preferred abbreviation was INV cell, I-N-V-cell, which was never going to go viral the way N-Cell has. No, it's harder to say. It's harder to say. And an unnamed member of the community suggested In-Cell might flow
Starting point is 00:22:01 better off the tongue. The term originally referred to people of any gender, right? Like, it was not specifically just for angry young men. So again, after a couple years of this, Alana's life changes. She starts meeting people and dating, and she leaves the community. She'd started around the turn of the millennium. The website she'd built and the community on it wound down, but the term in-cell stayed in use. And it kept on being adopted by people who, well, they wanted to have sex, but they weren't having sex, right? Like, that's kind of the whole deal.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Over time, being online stopped being a thing only nerds did and started becoming the norm. As more and more people started communicating via the internet, some of them, like Alana, became aware of the fact that there were a lot of young people who wanted to have sex but weren't, right? That there's still a lot of these lonely virgins out there and that this is actually a sizable community of people online. And some of the folks who have this realization hear cash register sounds in their ears. And this is where enter the pickup artist community, right? Ah, yeah. There's that good, that good far-right men's rights movement prehistory.
Starting point is 00:23:11 Please, I love a good. pickup artists. Oh, yeah. Give me condescension. Women love it. We're going to give you something slightly different. I thought I was going to start by reading you some old pickup artistry stuff. And we both be like, wow, it's fucked up how crazy and bigoted this old pickup artistry book is.
Starting point is 00:23:30 I had the opposite experience. So pickup artists started out well before the internet, right? This is not a thing. I asked a couple of different friends going into this. When do you think pickup artistry got started? as like a social, you know, movement or grift or whatever you want to call it. And everyone guessed like the 90s, basically. Right. Can I guess?
Starting point is 00:23:49 But the, yeah, yeah, yeah, please. Chicago World Fair. Okay, you went back too far. It just feels like it'd be a thing there, you know, or it's like, everyone comes here, I'll show you how to get a woman. Yeah, yeah, introducing the concept of women. Exactly. The Chicago World's Fair next to the light booth.
Starting point is 00:24:08 Pickup artistry does predate the internet, though. You're not that far off, is the concept. crazy thing. The official birth of pickup artistry as a concept was the book How to Pick Up Girls by Eric Weber published in 1968. So this actually doesn't go back. Like that's not that long after the World's Fair. I was pretty off. You don't have to make me feel better, Robert. I think you did the best. You did the best. I'll say that. You're you're the best at this. So today that book is so obscure that Wikipedia, if you like look that title up, they just have a full page for the movie inspired by the book that came out in 1978 and starred Desi Arness.
Starting point is 00:24:48 I'm going to have to read that or watch that fucker at some point. But Weber's book was a bestseller, and you can still find copies, full copies of it for free online, which is how I came across the cover. And look at this thing. Look at this. It's a, the top is How to Pick Up Girls by Eric Weber. And then there's a picture of like 10 young women all kind of posing together. And then underneath the picture is featuring interviews with 20.
Starting point is 00:25:12 25 beautiful girls. Incredible. All of their arms are across. None of them are smiling and they're all traditionally thin. Got it. They all live like they're going to beat the shit out of you. Yeah, they have angry smiles, I'd say. It's a new internet enemy.
Starting point is 00:25:33 Tyrobinis would say they're smizing. Yeah, they're smizing. Now, when I saw this cover, I was like, oh, yeah. I'm going to find a couple of quotes about this. the worst thing any of us has ever read. And that's not what happened. I wasn't really planning to do much more than reference this book because I wanted to focus most on the online community. But right in the intro, something did kind of strike me, right? And this part is pretty gross. Weber opens the book by describing a little tragedy that has happened to most men.
Starting point is 00:26:02 You're walking down the street and you see a beautiful, well, I'm going to say you see a beautiful woman. Weber uses the term girl exclusively because it is 1968. Awesome. You see this person, but you don't actually say anything to them. And then she, like, walks by and you never see them again. And you have this, like, horrified. This is how he describes it. Should I throw myself at her feet and promise her my savings account, my car, even my brand new golf clubs?
Starting point is 00:26:27 Or should I just grab her long golden locks and drag her off into the sunset? So this is written in 1968, right? Sophie. No. No. Please do not grab her by the long golden locks. Also, don't offer me your fucking golf clubs. I don't want your golf clubs.
Starting point is 00:26:44 I don't want your golf clubs. I'll take your savings account. Yeah. Even then. Even then, I got my own. Don't need it. That's super gross. But if you recall up from the title, the premise of this book is that he's interviewed 25 beautiful girls, right?
Starting point is 00:27:00 And he makes it clear. These are, he's interviewed 25 young women who are single. And most of the book is him giving quotes that they give about what they want in like a man. or what they want when someone's like picking them up or like what they find attractive when someone's flirting with them. And so surprisingly, as gross in this very 60s as this is, it's a thousand times more woke
Starting point is 00:27:23 than any modern insult or pickup artist shit. Because the basic premise of Weber's book is that if you want to be attractive to women, you should learn what women want. What women want matters. Women like dating too. And it's fine to ask them out, but you need to understand
Starting point is 00:27:40 what they want from you, otherwise they won't be into you. That is so far advanced from modern pickup artistry and in soul culture. It feels like a different world. And I shouldn't be looking at this 1960 book where we talked about knocking a woman out and be like, wow, this is so much better than like modern PUA stuff. But it does treat women like human beings with actual individual wants. Which isn't true, by the way. We're all we're less.
Starting point is 00:28:07 Yeah. Voids to use the current parlance. And then there's moids for men, too. Don't worry, folks. They've got more than one term. It was DEI and the in cell vernacular. Yeah. They were like, well, we have to include moids here, too.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Yeah. So this is kind of how the pickup artist subculture really gets started. And I do find it interesting that that's sort of the first work on it. But obviously, over time, things get more and more deranged. And in the early 2000s, Neil Strauss goes undercover in the pickup artist community that has popped up in the early 2000s. and kind of come out of the late 90s. And he writes a 2005 bestselling book called The Game. And the game is pickup artistry, right?
Starting point is 00:28:48 And he's talking about all these crazy tactics, right, that guys have invented stuff like negging, you know, basically where you're kind of insulting or mocking a woman to try to make her, like, want to get your affection. Stuff like peacocking, where you're dressing, like, crazily, you know, and wearing, like, ridiculous fedoras with literal peacock feathers. because, like, look, all it matters is you, you know, if you get noticed, right?
Starting point is 00:29:13 And that's so different because Weber is literally quoting women saying stuff like, I like it when a man just, like, talks to me and tells me what he wants. Whereas by the 21st century, these guys are like, no, no, no, you have to, like, you have to activate the back portion of her brain that responds to color in the way of, like, an animal on the serengeti by wearing feathers in the back of your hat. Otherwise, she'll never find love. You won't stand a chance out there. In other words, Webber's 21st century descendants describe women as like enemies in a video game. They're basically mindless automaton that you can hack via the right series of inputs.
Starting point is 00:29:49 And that is the first major shift that we get that makes the in-cell community possible. Is this shift from, well, I'm a gross man and I'll joke about not going to lady out, but fundamentally I want to know what women want. And by the time you hit 2005 or so, women don't want things. Women respond to inputs like a video game, right? That's the big first shift that we have to make before we can get to in-sell. And I think that's an important point. Ew.
Starting point is 00:30:15 Yeah, it's gross. But this is also, you know, a big part of where terms like alpha come from, right? Like early pickup artistry starts reintroducing that concept, which is based on a misunderstanding of how wolves work, right? And that's all of like pickup artistry. It's a bunch of hacks and cognitive tricks and like psychological phenomena that is supposed to work for these kind of elaborate contrived reasons they come up with. So we'll talk about what happens to this first and second generation of pickup artists
Starting point is 00:30:45 and kind of like how that feeds into the in-sell community later. But first, let's feed you to our advertisers. All right. Canadian women are looking for more. More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them. And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast. I'm Jennifer Stewart. And I'm Catherine Clark.
Starting point is 00:31:08 And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women. Entrepreneurs, artists, athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey. So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us. Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHeartRadio or wherever you listen to your podcasts. I'm Clayton Eckerd, and in 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. Unfortunately, it didn't go according to plan. he became the first bachelor to ever have his final rose rejected.
Starting point is 00:31:39 The internet turned on him. If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. But what happened to Clayton after the show made even bigger headlines. It began as a one-night stand and ended in a courtroom, with Clayton at the center of a very strange paternity scandal. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you.
Starting point is 00:32:03 Please search warrant. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped. This season, an epic battle of He Said She Said, and the search for accountability in a sea of lies. Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Next Monday, our 2026 IHeart Podcast Awards are happening live at South by Southwest.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Since the biggest night in podcasting. We'll honor the very best in podcasting. casting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry. And the winner is... Creativity, knowledge, and passion will all be on full display. Thank you so much. IHeartRadio. Thank you to all the other nominees.
Starting point is 00:32:56 You guys are awesome. Watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific free at Veeps. Or the Veeps app. Hey, I'm Jay Shetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. My latest episode is with Hillary Duff, singer, actress, and multi-platinum artist. Hillary opens up about complicated family dynamics, motherhood, and releasing our first record in over 10 years. We talk about what it's taken to grow up in the entertainment industry and stay grounded
Starting point is 00:33:23 through every chapter. It's a raw and honest conversation about identity, evolution, and building a life that truly matters. You desire in family like this picture, and that's not reality a lot of the time is for people. My sister and I don't speak. It's definitely a very painful part of my life. And I hope it's not forever, but it's for right now. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 00:33:59 We're back. I hope it was the Portland Police Bureau again. I was so tickled to see them advertising on our show, Sophie. I was not and got it removed immediately. Anyway, I just wanted their money. Look, they're going to spend it on more tear gas if we don't take it. That's fair. I'm sure those are different budgets.
Starting point is 00:34:22 That's a different P&L. That's a different P&L. Wait, have you ever had ICE advertise on here? No. I know that ICE was doing, like, Spotify advertisements. Washington State Highway Patrol, but not ICE. No, we never got, we never, fortunately, we, you know, and we've never had ICE ads because if we did somebody would,
Starting point is 00:34:41 people would have told me. But we, yeah, and then I would have freaked out and got that removed immediately. But no. Fortunately not. Chamba Casino ads. Those used to be the most common ones I get when I listen to find the bastards. Or like gold ads for literal gold and things like that. But, yeah, they're just like Alex Jones.
Starting point is 00:35:01 Yeah. That's right. Just like Alex Jones. Well, I don't have my own brand of supplements yet. Yet. But, you know what? If you want to send me $50 and just take a fatal dose of. vitamin B12 and caffeine, you know, with a little bit of lead mixed in for good measure,
Starting point is 00:35:15 we'll call it even. We can call that my brain force. I would totally sell like mineral sunscreen. You're just selling, selling five shots of a lord. Yeah, five shots of a lot. It'll power you through anything. Including talking to Don Lemon. Tom Lemon's taking so many strays in this podcast.
Starting point is 00:35:37 Yeah. Sorry, Don. Yeah, like, look, after what he's had to deal with this year, Don Lemon, good, you and me. He's fine. We're fine, Don. Sorry, that shit happened to you. I get it. Yeah, it sucks. Wild. Yeah. The first and second generation of pickup artists make a lot of money. You know, these guys are for a couple of years, very successful and, like, early internet famous. So they've got this kind of brief period of prominence, and it fades rapidly for a couple reasons. The biggest one is that once pickup artistry becomes, like, famous and, like, regular people start to read what these guys are
Starting point is 00:36:11 saying, like what they're talking about and these lectures and clinics that they're giving and, like, what they believe about dating, they make fun of it because it's silly, right? Like, most people who hear about all this shit are like, well, that's ridiculous. Yeah. And when you add that to the fact that none of this stuff works, right? Like, if you're otherwise handsome and you dress up ridiculously and go to the club, sure, like, maybe you'll have good luck. Or, like, if you're really charismatic and also.
Starting point is 00:36:41 So dressing like a crazy person, again, maybe stuff will work out for you. But if you're the kind of person who's paying that guy to tell you how to wear a fedora, it's probably not going to work for you, right? And that's 99% of the guys. This has gotten so much hate for actual fedoras, which still look cool as hell. That's an Indiana Jones hat. It's not the same shit that neckbeards wear. I just want to be clear.
Starting point is 00:37:04 My grandfather used to wear a fedora every single day. He looked cool as hell. He was buried with it. And I don't want them to catch these days. Finally, listen to that folks online. Cat is standing up for the fedora, you know? I'm setting history right. Reaching an arm across the aisle.
Starting point is 00:37:22 Fedoras have always been left discoded. You can't tell me anything different. Yeah, that's fair. That's fair. It's the trilby. It's the damn trilby we got to take down. The boomeret or like the horseshoe we got here. Fucking, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:37 So, again, most of this stuff doesn't work for most of the men who get interested in who are spending money on this. And when you're selling a solution to a problem that doesn't work, people will eventually realize they've been ripped off. You can only convince someone to go to pay $1,000 or $5,000 for so many coaching sessions on how to pick up women and have them, like, not get any dates because you've basically taught them to run around dressed like a maniac cursing at women. That does not work.
Starting point is 00:38:06 They'll realize that you're screwing them, right? That you've lied to them and that none of this stuff is real. And this brings us to the website, PUAHate.com. PUAHate stands for Pickup Artist Hate. It was launched in 2009 by several disaffected members of the pickup artist community. These were not people who had offered coaching classes, but these were people who were paying for them, right? And they'd gotten fed up and realized they'd been taking advantage of. So they start this website, and they announced their new forum.
Starting point is 00:38:36 I found, like, in the Wayback Machine, the very first, like, page. on that website was like a this new forum will be up Sunday or sooner thing with a spatter of blood underneath it, right? Before the forum's active. Like that's the, that's the little header that they, that they put on the internet to like tell people that it's coming, which like at the time, maybe you would have noticed there were a lot of websites that young men and gamers use that would just have random blood spatters on them, you know, in the early 2000s, a lot of forums did shit like this. But given what comes out of PUAHate.com, it's hard not to to see it as like this kind of foreboding message about what was coming later.
Starting point is 00:39:15 Now, per the Wayback Machine, the actual forum launches a couple of days later in late 2009, and the landing page features a common JPEG of a man in a suit flipping the bird, and then a content warning that says adult content and not safe for work, you know, don't view this if you're under 21, and you have the option to enter the forum or leave the website. Those who chose to enter saw an advertisement for the Barry Kirkie Radio Show, which was a, I think now defunct podcast that mocked the seduction community, which is what pickup artist fans had branded themselves. The first actual saved copy of the forum itself I found is from 2011. And at that point, it's toxic, but it's not a guy's going to go on a killing spree toxic, right?
Starting point is 00:40:00 It's like young men on the internet normal toxic. Most of the posts are like people shit talking different pickup artists or linking other articles where people reverex. you know, uncomfortable or embarrassing details from like famous guys like mystery and the pickup artist community. But even at this early stage, you could see some signs that community members were branching out from insulting seduction influencers to trying to puzzle out the mysteries of women. There are threads on hypnotic dating, which I'll have to look into at some point. There's a thread on how and why women test men.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Yeah, great stuff. And there's also a thread counting down the days until Mystery's daughter turns 18, which was, again, it's gross. But like, that was a huge thing on the internet from Mary Kate and Ashley Olson. So it's not new either, right? No, and it's still happening. I'm thinking of like when the cash me outside girl, bad baby, I think is her stage name, turned 18. There was like a countdown to her posting on Onlyfans. And she like made millions and dollars in one day, which was just,
Starting point is 00:41:05 disturbing on so many levels. I never heard of that. Yeah, sorry. Great. It was a bummer. Yeah. Speaking of things that will disappoint you, these ads. Canadian women are looking for more.
Starting point is 00:41:22 More to themselves, their businesses, their elected leaders, and the world are out of them. And that's why we're thrilled to introduce the Honest Talk podcast. I'm Jennifer Stewart. And I'm Catherine Clark. And in this podcast, we interview Canada's most inspiring women. Entrepreneurs, artists. athletes, politicians, and newsmakers, all at different stages of their journey.
Starting point is 00:41:42 So if you're looking to connect, then we hope you'll join us. Listen to the Honest Talk podcast on IHeartRadio or wherever you listen to your podcasts. I'm Clayton Eckerd, and in 2022, I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. Unfortunately, it didn't go according to plan. He became the first Bachelor to ever have his final Rose rejected.
Starting point is 00:42:03 The internet turned on him. If I could press a button and rewind it all I would, But what happened to Clayton after the show made even bigger headlines. It began as a one-night stand and ended in a courtroom with Clayton at the center of a very strange paternity scandal. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you. Please search for it.
Starting point is 00:42:29 This is unlike anything I've ever seen before. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped. This season, an epic. battle of he said she said and the search for accountability in a sea of lies. Excellent. Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Next Monday, our 2026 IHeart Podcast Awards are happening live at South by Southwest. Since the biggest night in podcasting.
Starting point is 00:43:05 We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry. And the winner is creativity, not. and passion will all be on full display. Thank you so much. IHeartRadio. Thank you to all the other nominees. You guys are awesome.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific free at Veeps.com or the Veeps app. Hey, I'm Jay Chetty, host of the On Purpose podcast. My latest episode is with Hilary Duff, singer, actress, and multi-platinum artist. Hillary opens up about complicated family dynamics, motherhood, and releasing our first record in over 10 years. We talk about what it's taken to grow up in the entertainment industry and stay grounded through every chapter. It's a raw and honest conversation about identity, evolution, and building a life that truly matters.
Starting point is 00:43:55 You desire in family like this picture, and that's not reality a lot of the times for people. My sister and I don't speak. It's definitely a very painful part of my life. And I hope it's not forever, but it's for right now. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Chetty on the IHartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And we're back. So in short, in 2011, the pickup artist hate forum is gross and a lot of stuff that's really toxic.
Starting point is 00:44:33 But nothing that's like crazy for the internet and nothing that would have like really stood out. There weren't really extremism researchers trawling the internet in the same way that there have been, you know, for the last 10 years or so back then. but there wasn't much that would have set this community out ahead of the others by that point in time that I'm seeing at least. But over the coming months and years, pickup artist hate evolved into one of the most extreme storehouses for misogynistic content on the internet. And this happens for a couple of reasons. For one, the early 2000s also see the rise of the men's rights movement. This happens alongside pickup artistry. And a lot of early men's rights activists are either former pickup artists or like other people who are kind of.
Starting point is 00:45:15 of dissatisfied with what they actually get out of pickup artistry. The MRA toxic subculture starts with these, it starts with a lot of complaints about on the surface what seem like reasonable issues. Like guys, if they're giving you the elevator pitch for men's rights, will be like, well, you know, single fathers have all of these different legal problems if they're trying to pursue custody, right? And some people will be like, oh, well, maybe they're talking about a real issue. All this stuff is just a comment for hating women and wanting to take away women's rights.
Starting point is 00:45:45 Like if you actually get into what these people are saying, it's not, I want to be treated more fairly by the courts. It's, I don't think women should have checkbooks. And I don't think my wife should have been able to leave me, right? Yes. Fantasies of violence and murder are common with MRA content. And around the same time, so this is bubbling up through the early 2000s into the aughts. And at the same time, the in-cell community has kept evolving, right? After 1997, it's continued to change.
Starting point is 00:46:10 You know, Alana leaves around 2000. and so per an article published in the Journal of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, by the 2000s, in-cells began to inhabit spin-off forums such as Love Shy and In-Sell support. Love Shy, with a more relaxed content moderation policy, began to house the more extreme elements of the growing movement. And Alana had noticed from the start there were some men who didn't seem to realize that women were people. That becomes more common, but now that there's not any moderation on these forums that have descended from hers, no one's pushing back. And over time, the women who might have found themselves drawn in the same way that Alana was to communities like this, we're just looking for a place where they could commiserate on, well, it's kind of hard to find a date.
Starting point is 00:46:55 I don't know how to do this. I would like some advice. They stop showing up because all these places have been colonized by these incredibly toxic angry young men, right? And a bunch of those angry young men, including and a bunch of MRAs, all start finding PUA hate. com, right? And they start posting on there, and they start becoming increasingly radicalized. I don't think we have a great understanding of why, but even though there's a couple of different groups that kind of come into POA hate.com, they all start adopting the term
Starting point is 00:47:27 in-cell for themselves. That becomes extremely popular on the forum. Per the Guardian, it became a place where sexually frustrated men could go to vent and share pseudoscientific theories about women. And that's the other really important thing, right? is that these guys aren't just complaining no one will date me. They're developing an ideology, and they're developing a glossary of terms, all of which will work together to explain their theories for why women don't like them, right?
Starting point is 00:47:55 That's what they start really focusing on. It stops being, how can I do better? How can I change? How can I, like, have more success in love and starts being more about what is it that's fundamentally wrong about how women are hardwired and about how human civilization, is constructed that has made this situation so unfair for me because it's obviously not my fault, right? That becomes the overwhelming drive here.
Starting point is 00:48:21 So they start cutting up all of human society into three groups. There's alphas, right? And the male alphas are chads. And the female equivalent are Stacey's. And these are the beautiful people, right? These are your celebrities. These are your hotties. These are the folks that in-cell terminology, everybody wants to get with.
Starting point is 00:48:38 I don't think I've ever used the word hoddies. before it was really weird. It's the hotties. What do you want me to say? That's that's instill ideology in a nutshell. I just really want you to say certified baddies, please. No, no, none of these people are certified something. I'm running for Congress.
Starting point is 00:48:55 Could you please say certified baddies? Certified baddie. Yeah. Did that work? It was good enough. Close. It was great. You got your alphas up at the top, but that's a tiny percentage of the population.
Starting point is 00:49:08 Sure. Most people are betas. That's normal. people, right? Now, in the, in-cell ideology is very rock-paper scissors. It's very hard line and very rock-paper scissors. So in the, in the, their evolving understanding of the world, alphas get to fuck other alphas, obviously. But also any alpha has the ability to sleep with any beta that they want. And obviously no beta, whatever say no to an alpha. Meanwhile, the third and lowest, and also betas get to partner up with each other, at least, right? So at least they're not lonely.
Starting point is 00:49:38 the third and lowest category and the most oppressed people in society. The most oppressed people in all of human history are the in cells, aka the members of the POA hate community, right? They basically, in the space of a year or two, fashion to cosmology in which they are the victims of history, right? It's so convenient how that works out. It's great. It's way better than taking ownership of your own fuck-ups.
Starting point is 00:50:03 I need to get some of that right now. You know, the fact that like earlier today, when I was trying to clean the house, I realized that I hadn't cleaned all week and I've got like three hours of work ahead of me. That's got to be someone else's fault, right? That's got to have been like written into the stars that my house would be messy.
Starting point is 00:50:19 It's not my fault that my house is messy. I didn't make the mess. The mess exists. As Jordan Peterson would say, make your bed. Uh-huh. What was the last time you made your bed, Robert Evans? I built a bed once. Okay.
Starting point is 00:50:34 That wasn't the question. Kind of counts? It wasn't a good bed. So once you have these categories, once you've come up with, you've decided these are the categories all people fit into, you have to have an explanation for why these categories exist in the first place, right? It kind of begs the question. So the in-cells start posting pictures of themselves and of each other, right? And they start posting pictures of people that they think are chads and alphas to try and suss out the rules behind who is attractive enough to find love. And they come across a real term in mathematics and an art called the golden ratio.
Starting point is 00:51:14 I'm sure most people know what the golden ratio is, right? It's a term that explains this particular set of proportions we see over and over again in like natural objects like snail shells, but also people seem to find this basic visual harmony that is created by the golden ratio pleasant. And so you see evidence of the golden ratio all across human art. In great architecture, in fine art, like the Mona Lisa. The golden ratio is all over the fucking place. a real observed phenomenon, right? And all it means is that, like, for whatever reason,
Starting point is 00:51:44 we find certain kind of proportions more attractive and pleasing to our eyes, right? What in cells take from this is that attractiveness. An attractiveness is directly and 100% correlated with the ability to be loved, right? Being loved has nothing to do with anything but how hot you are, right? And attractiveness is something you're born with or not. It's not something you can develop over time by like being cool. If somebody's not conventionally attractive, they will never find love. You know? And if that's the case, like, then it's not my fault that I'm alone, right?
Starting point is 00:52:22 If I could change how I present myself to the world, if I could change how I introduce myself to people, if I could alter and learn things and like grow as a person. And maybe I will through that process meet people and have friends and companions and find love one day, if that's possible, then the fact that I'm not currently doing it is my fault. And I don't want to accept that. So it's just the fact my nose is not the right size. So I'll never be loved, right? You see how it's so poisonous and fucked up.
Starting point is 00:52:56 And yeah, that's what they take from the fucking golden ratio, right? If your bone structure doesn't fit the golden ratio, you're screwed forever, and that means nothing is my fault. So over the course of the next couple years, let's say crudely from like 2009 to 2013, they work out this categorization system, which is called the PSL scale. And they use it to kind of objectively evaluate attractiveness on a scale of 1 to 10. Now, fucking people have forever been using a 1 to 10 scale to evaluate like how attractive people are. In high school, we were using terms like that. So this isn't new. What's new is that the in cells have come up with.
Starting point is 00:53:34 like a scale that they're pretending has scientific rigor to it. It's objective. It is the only thing that matters. Exactly. As opposed to like this guy you bought weed from in college being like, oh man, that guy's a nine or whatever, right? Yeah. That doesn't work.
Starting point is 00:53:52 It's got to be scientific. So the name for the PSL scale comes from the three forms where in-cell ideology is developing and spreading during this time. There's PUA hate, of course, which helps to spawn slut hate. and I probably don't have to explain what's going on there. And then the last of the sites that helps. It's so interesting that PUA hate is about not being like, it's not like, oh, we hate pickup artists, but slut hate is we hate sluts. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:20 Well, they do hate pickup artists, but if you, yeah, but like not in the same way. Not in the same way. It's very different. And if you hate sluts, we're not friends. Yes. Well, there's slut hate. And then the last one is lookism, right? So it's PSL is PUA hate, slut hate, and lookism.
Starting point is 00:54:35 That's where the name of the scale comes from, right? Oh, interesting. And we'll talk about the concept of lookism, because that's what leads us to looks maxing in a little bit. But the PSL scale comes along with this kind of alongside this. They develop this intricate vocabulary for facial features primarily. And I found a quote from an article in The Viewer by Maya Gilhog and Isabel Lee that gives an overview of this. Quote, different physical traits impact the PSL ratings someone receives. A weak jaw, for example, makes a man.
Starting point is 00:55:03 a two out of ten, while a negative canthal tilt or downward slanted eyes repels universally. Both characteristics, along with many more, are considered unmasculent by the in-cell community. They signify weakness and low SMV or sexual market value, the primary measure of an individual's worth according to an in-cell. And I don't think this gets enough attention. There's some, like, toxic capitalism baked into in-cell ideology, which is the idea that, like, well, everyone has an objective sexual market value. Market value.
Starting point is 00:55:34 Market value. Can I just say I hate the fact that all of these terms are not new to me. No, no, no, no. I hate the fact that I've been so steeped in the far right, uncovering the far right, that I'm like, oh, yeah, this all made. Like, this is not a new language. This is an inherent one. I know.
Starting point is 00:55:52 I'm like, I, unfortunately, you know, so much about the manuscript from the worker that I've done, that I'm just like, oh, God. No one wants to know this stuff. This stuff is so... And this is why you should elect me to Congress because actually, no joke, part of it is so much of this influences the Republican Party now, which is what we're going to get into. But like, this is the basis that when you're taking bad faith arguments and good faith of, like, the male loneliness epidemic.
Starting point is 00:56:20 And it's like, okay, so what are we doing about that? Is it creating third spaces? Is it ensuring that people have their material needs met? Is it making sure that we aren't punishing vulnerability and encouraging, like, a feminist outlook that treats as men and women as equals, including men. Like, men deserve that too. No? Okay.
Starting point is 00:56:38 It's Republican. Are we just going to keep taking rights from women? It's Republican. Yeah. Yeah. Well, again, this is like Nick Fuentes thought now, where it's like the government needs to ensure that every man gets a woman, right? Like, that is where this leads.
Starting point is 00:56:51 And it's not quite the Republican Party platform now, but it will be. It's getting there. They're getting there. So the term for this whole idea of like ranking people and using all these, all these kind of incredibly obscure and nuanced terms for different weird little facial features, that's lookism, right? And it's the name both of an online community and a broader name for this general concept of ranking people's SMV. Now, evolving in cell theory does allow for the possibility of people dating or marrying outside of their sexual market value or their level of attractiveness, right? but in their view, the only men who get to do this are like crazy rich guys, right? Like if you become a billionaire, then it doesn't matter if you're a slubby dude.
Starting point is 00:57:37 You can date, you know, you can date the Stacey's because they want, you know, your money as a rich guy. And that's part of what pisses off the incels is that women have the unfair advantage of being able to date out of their league way more often than men do. Ugly poor men never date out of their league, right? But, but, you know, women get to do it all of the time for reasons that are based. And the reason they believe this, I will say, is based 100% on the fact that they've never talked to women, right? Like, they don't know women who are frustrated because they can't find a date. They don't know women who find it gross when a guy just tries to, like, buy their way into their affection because they don't know any women. They just assume all of the hot girls are engaged in a hypergamy, right?
Starting point is 00:58:20 And like when they see a woman that they're not attracted to, which is very rarely like any woman, I mean, there's the idea that, a lot of, you know, like, to set white dudes, see worth in just the women that they would ever eventually have sex with. And when they in cells, they see women in general. And for most of them, can see an opportunity there because women are so objectified, because, like, we go out and put our makeup on. And, like, the average woman looks a lot more dolled up than the average man. And so, but if you showed them a woman that they're not sexually attracted to, all they do is, say, the most vile shit to them, somehow even more vile than the, rape and death threats so many other women have gotten from incels. It's so fucking disgusting.
Starting point is 00:59:02 It's disgusting and it's also super self-defeating because a lot of these guys are just gross monsters that I don't have any sympathy for. But a lot of them are like teenage boys who aren't destined to fall into something like that forever. And you'll see on these forms was really heartbreaking kind of lurking in them to me would be to see a guy, be like, hey, I actually had a really good experience with a girl in my school today. And I think we might go out a date. And then like a million guys post, that's cope, cope, she hates you. She hates you. She doesn't like you. You fucked it up. Give up now, man. You should just kill yourself, right? Like, that's literally how the community works.
Starting point is 00:59:34 I used to be doing some work looking into brain cells, which was once the in-cell subreddit got banned brain cells. Yep, we'll talk about that. The other one. But one of the mods there, when I was sorting by new, which I would do every day and want to put an ice pick through my brain because of it, one of the mods wrote suicide note. And I reached out to him and I DMed him. And I was like, hey, like, say on. Like, what are you into? Like, let's talk. There's way better stuff in life, I promise. And then he looked at my account and realized I was a woman and then, like, said something very, like, sad.
Starting point is 01:00:12 And then just never stopped replying. And so I DMed the mods of the brain cell community. And they were like, you fucking bitch, you cunt, blah, blah, blah. Like, just completely ignored everything I said. And then two weeks later, they finally realized that he was dead. And they hadn't noticed for two weeks. Oh, my God. Yeah, it's heartbreaking what this does to people in it.
Starting point is 01:00:35 It's horrific. Yeah. Also, sorry, I'm making a hat. I'm hoping I'll finish the hat by the end of the podcast. That's good. But, no, like, that's such a fucking bleak story, cat, cat. Gotcha. And that's what gets me every time about the people, both about these communities,
Starting point is 01:00:52 about the people who like professionally have to analyze them is there's always so much concern from the researchers I've known about when they see like oh I think this person might actually harm themselves yeah and none of that within the community none of it it's kind of a win because that person didn't escape if they kill themselves they haven't gotten out they're still an in-cell right I mean I hope that they they fucking just logged off and was like like I hope that's what happened and but like they never heard back from him and it was like there was also all of this infighting in there being like he was weak for killing himself then or it was good that he killed himself because there's no reason to live while you're an insulling it's so
Starting point is 01:01:30 fucking disgusting and based on that guy's post he couldn't have been older than like 19 yeah it's really dark it's fucking yeah it's sad and it's like this is happening and this is I want to note because we will talk about the dangers algorithms play in all of this this is all pre-alorithmic harm not that there are algorithms in social media in 2013 14 but that's not really affecting the growth of the in-cell subculture at this stage. These people are meeting on forums that don't really, people are finding this organically, right? You're not being slalomed this kind of content for the most part from like an algorithm at
Starting point is 01:02:03 this stage, right? That's not yet a factor. So the fact that the in-cell hate and this belief that like women are hypergamous, right? And sometimes this is like, insoles really hate polyamorous people for the same reason that like, oh, it's a couple of chads hogging all the Stacey's, right? Um, or just like, we could just say polyamorous people just for fun, you know? You could just do that anyway. People have been doing it for forever. But this is all coached.
Starting point is 01:02:32 Again, it has to be, this can't just be, I just don't like this stuff and I'm a dick. There has to be like evolutionary justification for it, right? And so the justification they come up with is, well, women are programmed by evolution to seek the strongest provider for their future children, which all women want to have. Obviously. I know women, I've talked to them. In the meantime, before they have those kids, women don't have souls and thus feel nothing about sleeping around and breaking men's hearts. right? They'll just go for whoever has the most money. They'll try to fuck all the chads while they can.
Starting point is 01:03:01 And then they'll settle for a beta with cash. Isn't it in Scientology where your baby, like the baby's soul is? Yes, it is. Like the Ngrams? Yes, yes it is. Yes. And I won't. I've listened to the L. Ron Hubbard episodes five times. Yeah, I won't say much more than this, but there are some people who believe that when
Starting point is 01:03:20 if like a relative of yours dies, you can adopt a baby and summon that person's soul into the new baby. and raise them as that person. Scientology. It's cool. I miss talking about Scientology. I would so much rather do that than show you the JPEG I'm about to show you. This is commonly passed around in lookism spaces, and it illustrates the phenomenon I'm talking about, right?
Starting point is 01:03:44 On one side, you have two sides of this image. One is like 195, one is 2015, and they show on one side of the image, a bunch of men, and on the other, a bunch of women, right? And they're ranked from like boring and ugly at the bottom to interesting and good looking at the top. And in 1955, all the boring and- You can't be interesting and ugly or boring and good-looking. Right, right.
Starting point is 01:04:04 It never has happened. Never once in life. Danny DeVito simply did not exist. I'm not calling him ugly. The incels would, right? But they're saying in 1955 all of the ugly women and all of the ugly men got together and all of the medium attractiveness men and women got together. the hot men and hot women got together, but everyone had somebody, right? But in 2015, thanks to feminism and the internet, all of like the chicks above the bottom 20% of hotness
Starting point is 01:04:36 are going to the top like two or three percent of men. This is not. And there's no men for the, yes. This is not. It goes back to exactly what I was saying. At the bottom, there are like two different women that aren't going for anyone. They're just at the bottom. And then there are also men at the same exact rank as them on the bottom. bottom. And for some reason, they're like, no. No. No. And like, it's just not true because nobody has ruined a girly pop's life more than a medium ugly man. I'm sorry. So true. Just like, man, I haven't been around the block a few times. I have seen, and these guys will know I'm talking about them because they listen to the show. And they'll take this with pride. I have seen some busted ass dudes with some lovely partners, right? And it's because, yeah, they're not great at, like, doing their hair or dressing up or even showering every day.
Starting point is 01:05:32 But they're really nice and skilled. They're really nice, intellectually, like, interesting, funny gentleman. Hello? They can build a house on their own. And they don't, they're not assholes. They have skills. They have skills. They're funny.
Starting point is 01:05:46 I dated a guy that did so many steroids. Uh-huh. He, uh, I've had about it after like two months of dating. And I was like, oh, yeah, that makes sense. and then we broke up. Yeah. But it didn't do anything for me. I was honestly like it's a little bit, like you seem a little too into how big your arms
Starting point is 01:06:03 are. Like this seems like it's for you. And like in that case, like that's fine. It's like, you know, putting makeup on for yourself. But like this, this idea of what a masculine man is is so fucking crazy. No. Where, yeah. When in reality, we just want you to have skill.
Starting point is 01:06:17 You have to have skills and be secure. There is like, honestly, it is so hot to be able to like text my boyfriend, Ben and be like, hey, do you want to go get a petter here? And you'd be like, yeah, sure. Because, like, it feels good. And, like, you're just taking care of yourself. Hygiene. It's hot.
Starting point is 01:06:30 Hygiene's hot. I would say, the number one thing I have seen is, like, if you want to use the, I hate to you, but to use the term game, the number one, like, example of game that I know is a guy who knows how to cook really well. That's, like, very close to the top of the list. For me, it's, like, just being able to do really good bits, like, bits that aren't punching down, like, constantly. Constant bits, respect, but also, like, you're able to make shishitos with soy sauce?
Starting point is 01:07:00 Yeah. It's over. I just really want a t-shirt that says hygiene is hot. I just really need that. Or at least a pin somebody. Yeah. Yeah, you could cook a souffle and you can, like, fix the insulation in, like, a bad attic. And I'm 100.
Starting point is 01:07:16 Or, like, say, guitar. And I'm 100% sure you wash your hands every time after you use the bathroom. Right. Men clip your nails. Honey. And honestly, guys, I hate to say it. That's not even a hard requirement. The bar for men is low.
Starting point is 01:07:32 The bar for men is so low. It's so low. You need to have this, this, this, and this for women, too. And it's like, I'm like, oh, God, it's so hot when, like, a guy takes out the trash. And, like, you don't have to ask him to do it. He just does it. Oh, my gosh. I have literally had the experience of going out on a double date with a friend and being,
Starting point is 01:07:50 with, like, two friends, right? One male, one female. And pointing to, like, my friend who's the dude and being like, hey man, your shirt's on inside out and him going, hey man, yours is too. Like, the bar is on the floor. I mean, like, women I dated, there are like so many things where it's almost like just living, like being with a really good roommate, you know?
Starting point is 01:08:09 Yeah. Like where it's like, oh, yeah, like you just did the thing. And so when you meet a guy that also just does those things because they're considerate, it's like, wow, that's so hot. Yeah. Yeah. Wow. We could continue off of mogging the insoles.
Starting point is 01:08:25 This is turned into a dating podcast. It has and we have thoughts. So I should say before we go out here that from the jump, lookism and in cell thought is also heavily rooted in eugenics and race science. This is immediately part of what's going on. And it's there from the beginning up to the present day. A major, and it's not always in the way that you'd think, right? This is not just like weird white guy race science. One major and angry subset of in-cells are young men of Asian descent.
Starting point is 01:08:54 And these guys come to convince themselves that Asian men are inherently unattractive based on this PSL system. If you were an Asian man, it's impossible for you to be hot, basically. Which, okay, man. But this has led to a situation, a problem in the U.S. where high sexual market value Asian women only date white men, who are by naturally the highest SMV group. Because again, this is all basically repurpose Nazi race science.
Starting point is 01:09:20 all of these male beauty standards are envisioned with like Casper Van Dean from Starship Troopers as like a tin, right? A blonde, square-jawed Aryan man is like the peak of attractiveness. And there's also the racist aspect of being like, well, she's just going to have black babies with some black man. Like that's something that I get my fucking replies all the time. They're so fucking racist. Oh, yeah. Tons of it. And it's, yeah, it's like that's an important aspect of it too.
Starting point is 01:09:46 This is not just guys like coming up with their own silly scale. they're also repurposing a lot of like old race science bullshit, you know? So what you have kind of by 2013, 2014, right before Elliot Roger does what he's going to do, you've gotten to the point where you've got the in-cell communities come up with the scale and like this set of hard requirements for what it takes to be handsome or lovable, I guess I should say. And because like half of the in-cells accept all this and they decide, okay, well, if there's physical features that make me attractive, I'll just work out, or I'll diet or I'll have dangerous and painful surgery, but there are ways I can change my physical features, and I might then be able to
Starting point is 01:10:29 find love or at least have sex, right? And that's bad, that's pretty toxic. That is the strain of inceldom that does bring us looks maxing and clavicular, but as toxic and stupid as that side is, they're the objectively healthier part of the in-cell community because they believe they can improve their situation. The other half of themselves become, in their words, blackpilled. They basically believe in the principles of lookism, but they deny that at least they specifically have any hope of improving their PSL score. They're inherently ugly men.
Starting point is 01:11:02 Even surgery can't help them. And if you're someone who can't even fix your looks through surgery, you only have two options. You can commit suicide or you can commit suicidal mass murder, which they call going ER as a reference to Elliott Roger, right? Those are your only options. That's the black pill chunk of the community. So that's where we are by like 2014.
Starting point is 01:11:25 Great. Cool. It just took five years. Awesome. Wow. It took five years to go from I don't like mystery to I think I might need to kill a bunch of people because I can't get a date. It takes a lot less time than that now.
Starting point is 01:11:40 Yeah. Takes like a week. I hate it here. Yeah. Kat, you want to give a plug for the campaign at the end here? Oh, right. Yeah. Okay. Running for Congress. Yeah. So I'm ready for Congress because we don't have Democrats to know how to handle the far right. And that's what I've devoted my life to. You can find more about my campaign at catforilinois.com. If you are in the Chicago area,
Starting point is 01:12:03 check what district you're in. I'm Illinois 9. Our election is March 17th. Please consider donating or volunteering. Our Discord server is discord.g.g. slash cat for Illinois. We need all hands on deck. Excellent. All right, everybody. Well, that's part one. Check Kat's campaign out if you're in Illinois, you know, vote for the love of goodness. And we'll be back on Thursday to talk about things that will depress you even more.
Starting point is 01:12:31 And eventually talk about bone smashing. Thank God. Good Lord. Bye. Bye. Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more from Cool Zone Media. Visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Starting point is 01:12:53 Full video episodes of Behind the Bastards are now streaming on Netflix, dropping every Tuesday and Thursday. Hit Remind me on Netflix so you don't miss an episode. For clips in our older episode catalog, continue to subscribe to our YouTube channel, YouTube.com slash at Behind the Bastards. We love about 40% of you, statistically speaking. I'm Clayton Eckerd in 2022. I was the lead of ABC's The Bachelor. But here's the thing. Bachelor fans hated him.
Starting point is 01:13:24 If I could press a button and rewind it all I would. That's when his life took a disturbing turn. A one-night stand would end in a courtroom. The media is here. This case has gone viral. The dating contract. Agree to date me, but I'm also suing you. This is unlike anything I've ever seen before.
Starting point is 01:13:43 I'm Stephanie Young. Listen to Love Trapped on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Next Monday, our 2026 IHeart podcast awards are happening live at South by Southwest. This is the biggest night in podcasting. We'll honor the very best in podcasting from the past year and celebrate the most innovative talent and creators in the industry.
Starting point is 01:14:05 And the winner is... Creativity, knowledge, and passion will all be on full display. Thank you so much, IHeart Radio. Thank you to all the other nominees. You guys are awesome. Watch live next Monday at 8 p.m. Eastern, 5 p.m. Pacific, free at veeps.com or the Veeps app. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby, we unpack the story
Starting point is 01:14:28 of an unimaginable tragedy that gripped the UK in 2023. But what if we didn't get the whole story? The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapsed. What if the truth was disguised by a story we chose to believe? Oh my God, I think she might be innocent. Listen to Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby on the IHeart Radio app. Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Hi, it's Jill Wintersy, host of the Spirit Daughter podcast,
Starting point is 01:14:56 where we talk about astrology, natal charts, and how to step into your most vibrant life. And today I'm talking with my dear friend, Krista Williams. It can change you in the best way possible. Dance with the change. Dance with the breakdowns. The embodiment of Pisces intuition with Capricorn power moves. So I'm like delusionally proud of my chart.
Starting point is 01:15:18 to the Spirit Daughter podcast starting on February 24th on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcast. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.

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