café snake - tung tung tung
Episode Date: May 12, 2026Daphné parle de la dimension « sensonarrative » de Tung Tung Tung Sahur et Mounir couvre les troubles financiers de la compagnie médiatique américaine Daily Wire.Aussi : les conditions de trav...ail dégueulasses des employé-es de Ssense à Montréal, les médias sociaux sont-ils encore « sociaux »? + Recommandations culturelles.Notre Patreon: patreon.com/cafesnakeSsenseSsential Workers, Inside SSENSE, the “fashion prison” of Montreal, Chelsea Rozansky, Lux Magazine, https://lux-magazine.com/article/ssense-bankruptcy/Mais aussi:Is Ssense hurting the cool-clothes ecosystem?, Blackbird Spyplane, https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/is-ssense-hurting-the-cool-clothes-ecosystemHow Ssense Lost Its Cool, Lauren Cochrane, The Walrus, https://thewalrus.ca/inside-the-ssense-fiasco/Parasocial media?Social Media Is Now Parasocial Media, danah boyd, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/epdf/10.1177/20563051261437487Tung Tung Tung Sahur13 ways of looking at tung tung tung sahur, Aidan Walker, How To Do Things With Memes, https://howtodothingswithmemes.substack.com/p/13-ways-of-looking-at-tung-tung-tungThe material life of italian brainrot, Gabriele Seta, Algofolk, https://algofolk.substack.com/p/the-material-life-of-italian-brainrotTung Tung Tung Sahur’s sensonarrative power Or, how Italian Brainrot became Indonesian, Luigi Monteanni, Algofolk, https://algofolk.substack.com/p/tung-tung-tung-sahurs-sensonarrativeAussi:Après moi le déluge, Maire de Laval (ONF)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgqT14PaXGAL’industrie de la télé nous a oubliés, Maire de Laval (ONF), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbBqRNVsGaE&t=1sRecommandations culturellesLe monde d’après, Martin Forgues, https://plumedanslaplaie.vhx.tv/products film disponible jusqu’au 30 juin+ Le Blowback podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yo, it's my name.
I think I'm going to lookie just
to write up my sister at the culture on Twitter.
I'd say, yo, do you?
Do you, is what I'm going to say to have a minute?
Hello, man, it's Daphne.
Oh, but I'm obliged, I'd have a film of a nurse.
And then, I was just a film.
It's like, I don't know this film.
Hello, everyone.
You!
Welcome to Cafe Snake.
Today, there's an episode that is available for all the world.
I'll just you'll remind that one episode on two
is available
uniquely
on complex
on our
Patreon.
Patreon.com
bambh
Caffe Snake
What you
have talked
today today?
Dapalian
Brain Rutt
and in
particular,
the character
Tung Tung Tung
Tui T
Triple Tee
my slime
Yeah,
that's true
you love
Taw Nair
GRO Tung
all right
I'm gonna
I'm gonna
I'm gonna
on the
disheance
of the daily
Wyer
Ancianement
Powerhouse
of the
Medi Conservator
American
who is
there forced
to
licensee of employees and revere
on the model of affairs. Daily Wire is a
company that's a company that
by Ben Shapiro
in the United. So, we'll talk
of the state of the media alternative
of the right American, and how
that it's a little bit of potential.
Potentiate. And without
more tardy, news.
Doodoo.
Just to make all my
life savings on Confield, two score,
two to go. I've been clear
with her. No,
no depends, since I'm
choice at all current.
What's she did?
She had given these
Cadoxieck.
It's Wall Street
that I'm talking
this morning.
The family Abatielo
has announced
the achas
of the chain
Shakers,
cuisine and mixology.
I've already
part of the Cegeep
I'll explain
how I've been
done to
my co.
When you're
eternue
and that you
pete in
in the same
time,
we can
say that
your car
has made
a capture of
a camera.
I wanted
a article
in a
magazine
that I
didn't know
the Lux
magazine
Essential
Workers
Inside Essence
Essence
The Fashion Prison of Montreal by Chelsea Rosenzky.
And I'm going to make, evident,
the link in the notes for that all the
people can go to consult.
It's about the enterprise of Vance
It's specialised in mode of creatar,
streetwear, out-gam.
And the Cartier-Generos are based
at Montreal.
And in the article,
we're more particularly
to the conditions of travel
of the employees of Essence.
And there, just to return
on the enterprise,
in-so, their model
of affairs,
it's really
an approach
technology,
d'abor,
mode,
and it's
that that
has distinguished
essence
at the beginning
2010.
Essens has
been founded
in 2003
by a
family,
in the
three
brothers
of Syri,
Rami,
Firas,
and Basil
Atala.
And there
kind of
a kind of
myth of
tech bro
there
because when
the company
had been
founded,
the CEO
actual Rami
had only
only 15
on.
We said
had already
the
site internet of Essence, it was his
thesis of macketries in
engineering informatic or
something of the genre, when it started to
boomed, essence, well, there were
plenty of puff-piece in New York Times,
in Vogue, in Business of Fashion,
who talked, just, of Rami Atala,
like an espeteer, a
visioner, a whiz. I'm
also that one of the strategies,
at the end of 2000,
the beginning, it was really
to buy, the publicities, or, in
In the case, of the referencement on Google.
The optimization of motor of research.
Yeah, it's so.
Really?
It's the SEO, it's in English.
No, no, it was super aggressive.
It was not just of the optimization.
They were even
actually,
it would have been
centen of million of dollars
in the middle,
like,
the middle,
and when you'd
write the site
internet,
after, it
had redirected directly
on the site of Essence.
And after that,
the enterprise,
also,
it's made
by these soles,
of the sold,
genre,
So, so, sometimes, you have, like,
some of the rabe, but with the percentage really particular,
like, 37.5% of rabbi or these things of the genre.
There had an article, there,
the last, the infoletre of mode independentant,
Blackbird Skyplane,
which inquieted a bit on the impact of these solds,
massive,
who, often viola,
the clause prevue in the contracts
with the creators independent.
So, if, you want,
I, see, I don't know,
a collection of chapo,
to essence, and essence,
then a coup
to make to
sell to
buy to
spend a
15%
of
rabbe,
it's
can't
your own
your own
because you
your own
your own
chappo,
you have
you can
be able to
get to be
not they
get to
get to
get to
this model
that
technological
algorithmic
is not
arrive
a bit
to
apex
and
can't
shoot
I'm
continue the
portrait
because
it's
kind of
important
in the
space of
space of
space
cultural
that
essence
it was occupied,
to be quite
quite branched
avant-garde
we'd
visit a clientele
that was pretty
young,
so we'd
make the
grand mark
to the
little designers
more than you
young and bourgeois
like the
little bit
people,
they're not
their t-chute
$1,200
$100.
No, no,
it's
that, it's
fucking
share,
then there
there was
a
cultural
but there
the Intelligentia
New Yorker
case,
so there was
there was
a magazine
on their
site
where there
there were some articles published by
these journalists,
who were even
the people who
really in view
I think
at Durgot Chuboos
Sahan Nicole Prickett
Again,
there was an article
on the Lux Maxing
who was
signed by the plume
of ruby
Justice Tello
so,
so that,
that is kind of
quite as
in view,
that I'm
that I cite
at Cafe Snake
and I think
that I
had been
2009, I had
a chum,
I had 19
I had a chum of the Englander who had
demenaged at Montreal to live with
me on a visa of
of loisier, the working holiday.
Eventually, he didn't
not French, so he had
many, much,
beaucoup of misery to find a job.
He'd had been a job
in their entrepoo.
And it's a quote
a little with the
proposal of the article.
We're in essence,
these very mevers of essence,
these very mevers
and it's these paye
really, really
inferior to standard
of the market,
of conditions of
dangerous,
these
abuse of power.
All these
conditions of
work are horrible
have been
in part because
that often
Essenz
would emboch
people who
were strictly
anglophone.
And like
these people
had more
of perspective
of employ
in the
Morale
Francophone,
but it
could push
certain
to them to
accept
these conditions
execrable.
In the
article,
we say
that there
are
there are
the
laws that
have been applied recently, and I'm
talking about because I'm talking
often of the office
Quebec, of the language
French.
Malgris that
passed recently,
Essence was granted
a rare exemption.
What's been,
like, the pass-past
for that they
were not constrained
to speak in the
place, it's a great
enterprise, and we
say that's probably
in cause of the
size of an
company,
the fact that
she generated
quite many
the revenue at
the tax,
which makes
in sort that
it's one of the
companies at
Montreal that
can't continue
to continue to
work in
English.
So I think
I've tried
that's not
that we're
going to
apply more
severely than
these reglements,
the way to
get to get
to get to
the old
QLF,
it does a
power
supplementary for
these
companies that
it does
it give
more of
more of
more of
more of
exploit some
the employees
that other
otherman
would be
more difficult
more difficult
of
the
I had talked
before before
because Essent
was in the
hot and it
was placed
under the
protection of
the law
on the
arrangements with
the cranchier
of the
company in
June 25.
You know,
it's really
a business
that has
benefited of the
pandemic,
the boom,
the commerce
in line in
2021,
we were
they evaluated at
$5
million of
the value of
the company.
And there
all recently,
it all
recently, it
really,
it was
the fundator
of Essenz,
the three
Farrer Atala
have
they've reached
to
their
enterprise,
and they
are entered
in a
processus
of restructuration
that
has implicated
the
licenseement
of a
grand
party of
their
personnel.
They do have
still
the
money,
they've
not
they're
not
their
people,
but the
people
are
really
at the
level of
on terms
of
who will
be
so,
who will
be
the
people
the
people
people
people
people
people
of personnel massive.
I've even read
in the article
that the personnel
that was in charge
to make the
maintenance,
the entretion of
the carties
generos
has been
so apparently
that in this
moment, if you
get in the
carties general
of Essence,
in the toilet
there's no
the sand,
there's plenty
of pubble
everywhere.
So the
conditions
of the
employees that
rest in
this moment
at Essens
are just
to degraded.
Anyway, I don't want to encourage Essence.
I never.
And I've already
actually bought it.
Whoa.
Oh, rabbed,
obviously.
I will continue
this movement
until the day
that Montreal will be perfect.
Montreal has a pothole problem.
That's gotten so bad
contractor
Sautekyud has been
feeling them himself
for weeks.
So, the next DG News,
I wanted
the situation
that entoures
in New Poole
in Montreal.
I wanted to say
The entrepreneur,
and a businessman
on the radio
social,
in train to patched
the Nid Poole
he's even
in the central
Ville of
Montreal.
And all the
space of
discourse that's
developed over
it's quite
interesting to
see how it
by the media
to base.
I don't even
not that
I've seen
a video
original of
he covers
a new to
I think it's the
radio
Canada
that's cover
the fact
that he covers
the Nipipal.
It seems
I'm going
on the
on Fee Tickick
Now, he's so he's made on the scene in trying to cover the knit pole, and he said, hey,
I'm a logic of community.
There's a lot of people who have helped in my life, so I want to help in return.
The work that's not for covering, during a long period, but he wants to do patchwork,
and, in the same time, to set, on the same on the social, he has also made, this
week, a stream with the YouTuber Cheyenne, where they've patched the niple,
the clips of the stream have also been immensely viral.
There's even more of the coverage mediatics the week of the week.
So, you know, it's like in the two, three, the last week.
It's like one of the figures
the most
known as
it's been
mediatedized
to get mediatized
from,
the country
profanophone,
the country
web,
in the power
ranking of the
people the
most known in
the main
character
for a month
and then
all that
all that
all that
was sure that
at the
year year
there was
there was a
under the
one of these
publications
the Marais
of Morale
who had said
hey really
thank
Sahad
we appreciate
your
effort, but
let the
professional
to be in
occupies, it's
dangerous,
the assurances,
the si,
and he's just
decided to
get to get
to get to
listen to do,
I'm doing,
then you do
do it's
a go-fone
and he
had to advance
the 10s
of million
of dollars
because it
would be
it cost you
cost you
know, it
would be
talking to
be in the
rate of
on fare
to do you
so, so it's
kind of
interesting,
you say,
if you do
if a person
with a
pick up and
And there's little sack of asphalt, you're capable of
three, four, four, per year,
how many, it would be, like,
like, they're on functionaire, or
how many of it, how many
that's their own, they're in,
they're in front, you know,
it's, it's, it's, rudimentary,
but there's a bit machine that aplaty.
When we say, like, patia a bobo,
you know, it's, it's, it's,
it's not a, a, a time in
profounder that, it's during
the years, no, no, but it's just,
it's, it's, it's just, it's, it's
all the winter, there's new new
nipole that's exposed,
and there's like there are you
need to be in a new
work inattending that
we're doing, we're not
not all right, you know,
but there's new
to put up in a state
dangerous.
What's what I think,
is it perhaps, is
we're not
re-viewed the
materials that we use
for the road?
That's the grand
debate, but I don't
not really not
not too, but now
that's so.
So, like,
he's far back
by the Marese,
he decides to continue,
and there he's
invited to the hotel
of the hotel,
and the
they're in there, he's present there
and finally, he's like
desinvited, and then we'll
not quite quite what's what, she's
like a new journey of anonis,
where she wants to say,
just about her strategy, in response
to the fact that it,
of course, it's really
shots of that,
like, if you have the time
to see it in video,
he's at the start of the
hotel of Ville,
like, with a chemise
black, and he talks
to journalists, like on
point of price,
like, it was, like,
it's Batman,
like, Superman.
But, honestly,
he's like,
he's like,
Well, now the village,
I don't want to continue
to be like to be
back for the citizens.
You know,
there's a little
affair like that
like that feel
comic book, whatever.
But it's just...
But it's just...
Yeah, it's just...
Soraya,
she'll announce
like the injection
of like 100 million
of dollars in
just what's
that said,
because she said
she said at Patrice
Roy at the
base,
is that in this
moment the machinery
function not
and that the
Ville Memorial
does not
the replenish
of the refillage of
the oil like
just with
some of
asphalt and they all
they have a
machinery
they foundry
they don't
there's not
there's not
that we're not
going to be able to
see that's
that's what you're
investing in
the equipment
and it's
you have to
get used to
get a equipment and
she'll
she'll be
a million
it's a
end up
submissioning
to do you
to make
exactly
like what
you
do you
with the
same
with the same
machinery
rudimentaire
but it
there should
there should
there would
certainly
there's like
you respond
certain
exigences
whatever
it's that
that
that's that
that he
that will not function in her favor.
And,
I've made
think it's
reafferated,
because she's
Shorah
because she's
after she
has been in
post in November
last,
she has
kind of
a strategy
of PR
that is a
bit different
of Valerie
Plante,
that Valer
Plante
has really
had really
a good
campaign
initial
for her
first
election,
and it's
like a
sitting
on
the
campaign
initial that
that had
been
very strong
on
the
social
on the
Valer
Plant
was
Zoran
before
Zoran
his
campaign
initial
of
I
There's even a romance graphic that had
out of her.
Soraya, it's like
an angle different
like to be able
on internet,
just in the code
in how she'll
use the social
and also how
she uses certain
influencers
like influencers,
like the
influencer,
like the humorist
Charles Brunet
who has
this kind of
running gag
that he pung
all the ticket,
he film these tickets
when he
he's stationed
mal, and he
did some
yeah,
sarah,
who he repopped
etiquette
she embarked in
these dynamics
So, there just to go to
to see him,
to take the
loges of his show
of the Olympia,
and to puttie
to get a ticket
of the Ville of
Montreal,
of his new mark
of vintment.
The Combe of the
New York also
have looked
to really
embarked there
just at the
base,
even,
to have responded
in the comment
to the video
initial of
Saad,
and that the
commenter
not been,
like,
it's not been
being received
by the
audited
by the
hotel of
Ville.
Okay.
So,
I'm still,
sorry,
that was part
of the
literature
numeric
also.
She has
a
newer
literacy
numeric
and I
have reached
to have
to get
the image
that she
had
during the
campaign
electoral
that she
like,
she was
she was
a real
she has
found a
term
like
engagement
wash
lav
lav of
no
no
but yeah
yeah
yeah
yeah
yeah
but after
in the
fact
is she
she
is really
she
is really
she
is an
person
party
liberal
of the
American
of
an
minister
that
we're
not just image
mediated.
But it's
kind of fascinating
to observe.
I would also
mention a paper
of Dana Boy
of an
researcher American
in communication
who is out of
this week.
It's not a
group paper
it's four pages
for the
people who are
interested.
I'll make
also in the
notes.
It's special
that I'm
on this
time because
that's
actually, you're
out of
his own
movie movie
because
the documentary
the
after me, the
deluge.
And there
there's like
the parac
content of
that,
especially a podcast where you
an podcast where you
an
retent
with two
women,
with Catalina
Briseignio
who is the
director of the
school of
the media
and Karine
Duboa,
who is the
formatrice
of the
public board
and I'm
I'm sure
really to
get it's a
interesting,
I thought that
it's a
good
supplement
to continue
the
conversation
that you
have you
end up
and there
in a
time done in
this interview
Catalina
Brisseneo
just said
I said,
I said
said that
she said
she said that
she said that
she had
had to
read
we'd be
Darnadov.
The radio, we'd have to
listen
D'Avon D'Avon.
I'm not sure
like Henry
Jenkins and
Duna Boyd.
Dan Abud is
Named.
Dan Abode is
someone who,
in his
middle,
joeed of
a recognition,
an reionement.
And then,
his paper
is now
parasocial media.
The media
social are
now of the
media
parasoio.
And they
revere just
on the terms
in fact,
the term
social media,
and it
has kind of
pretty
time before
it's
uniformly
adopted, that
has not
made consensus
all right
and there are
all sorts of
alternatives
that's been
proposed by
the users
the community
of researchers,
like by example
on web
2.0
and that
now, 20
years after
we're adopted
in mass
this term
that,
is we can
still use
media
social
to talk
to talk
to our
ecosystem
media
mediaatic
numeric?
It said
that the
users
are
more inclined
to scrolled
to
scrolled
than what's published
of the content.
What we consume
medically
and is used
that's often
produced
in a fashion
strategic,
that's selected
by the
algorithms,
more and more
of the
aspects of
these media
social that
are professionalized
so is
we can
really
even talk
of media
social?
In 2006,
is there
there's still
in the term
social media?
And there
she, she,
she, she,
she, she,
she,
she,
she, she,
she, she,
she,
they're,
by example,
the aspect of capitalism,
the financialization
of a lot
of plenty of aspects
of our lives,
but who format
these applications.
You know,
there's a cori doctoral,
the writer who
has written
a book on
a concept
that called
Lenshitification
that we can
tradue in
French by
enmerdification.
But like
these products,
because we
want to
always satisfy
the investors,
always boosted
the value
of the actions.
And especially
when we were the point
of rupture,
it was that all
these companies
had had
these immense
value,
but I'd
generate not of
revenue.
Exactly.
It's that
the financialization.
It's really
the aspect
speculation
more than
value of the
product,
Facebook,
Google,
etc.,
so are
end up
the imperative
constant
to generate
more of
profit,
so it's
it's been
it's been
like,
it's starting
to generate
the profit.
That's the
thing,
that's the
thing,
it said,
the
sociality has
pretty the bar,
because the
sociality is
more easily
monetized as
the media.
And even the
media in-so-
it can be
monetized, but
there's like a
kind of point
of rupture.
In a certain
measure, you
can't be
not they
can't be
exponentiallyallyally
and then it
says that in
the world where
we live,
we'd
would have they
would have
they're called
these media
paraso
because it's
really the
relations
paraso
that define
they define
that
the utilization
that we
have seen
the
platform, we're
we're doing
people,
like the
celebrities,
like the
influencers, and
they're
often,
these lines
are very
unidirectional.
So,
there's not
necessarily
of participation
or there's
not necessarily
that, you know,
of socialability
or of
community who
are,
who fabric a
But in
what's more
parasacea
than the
television,
no,
no,
it's exactly,
she's
she's about
the parasyalalty
and she
will her
replace
in a context
where she
it's,
it's not
the media
social
who have
made that,
it's something
that existed
well before,
and that the
media paraso
have created
really the conditions
that we have
more the
fact of the
people who are
the distance
of the fact
they're mediatized
and that
create a climate
of toxicity
rather than
socialability.
Objectified,
I think the
the word
the most just
is dehumanized.
Yeah,
well,
yeah,
but it's so.
Objectified,
in fact,
I think
it's even
not a word
in French,
it's an
Englishism.
You know,
when I
I was talking to NISTification, I think that one of the
good examples of this is the applications of dating.
Today, I saw that because, there, the actions,
the values of these companies are in chute-libres.
You haven't been a interview, as you said,
at the press, with Match Group?
Yeah, yeah, I had had an interview with Match Group
who had announced, like, all sorts of measures
pseudo-revolutionary, you know, for satisfy their actioners.
But, in-the-fons, because Madge Group,
they're they have Tinder, Inge, also, you know, they're
several gross applications.
I've read this week, there's an article that parried in Axis,
Bumble, had killed the swipe.
So, there's no the functionality of swipe
in Bumble, and that, so-d-souac,
we'd say, we'd have relance the application
and that, now, the matchmaking
would depend on LIA.
It's like if it had no more to do something,
I think that, if you saw it, you know,
if you saw that, if you see, you know,
an application of matchmaking
or for encounter the
love,
there's a limit to monetize
the amount of
in the sense of not
only as a
human, you have not
the time
to have 406,000
relations,
and also,
but if the
the relationship
you're not
necessarily
to go out
to see a lot.
I'm not
I'm not
quite with
this paper
that of
Dan Abud.
It's for
that I
want to
I'm
there,
I'm
there,
there the
parassociability
that is
really important
in the
media
social of
today, and that in 20-time, it has incredibly evolved, it's changed. But the model
not you talk, the influencer, that would have a following immense, and who could
cultivarer these relations univoc, as well, as I've already said in Cafesnakes, for me,
it's a model that's assuffle. And personally, I see more as well as, they're just like
of these micro-communities
that jaise
a little
everywhere.
I think that
the real
link of sociability
is not necessarily
made with an
influencer
more than
with, for example,
a community.
A streamer
will,
yes,
entretnire
a relation
parasocial with
his audience,
but there
also the
community of
people who
look at the
streamer
that,
who can
create
these link
between
or simply
a bit like
the
theory that
I mentioned
often
that Benedict
Anderson
to
envisaged
as
making part of a community
imagined
at the stream
as the case
of the journal,
as it's the case
of the television,
as it's the
case of the radio.
So you
will be to
a kind of
of a partonance
in t-imagining
the other
people who,
like you,
like you,
like you,
and it's for
that also
that at the
television,
it's
so important,
by example,
when we
watch the
matches
of the
canadiers,
to check
the match
in so,
but,
but,
to have,
but,
at the interior of Casino of Montreal or at the
center bell, where the match
will be diffused and you see really
plenty of supporters in LIS,
it's a fact part of your
experience media. You have the
need to feel that you're other people
that you check the game and who
who vizes a moment of euphority.
There are really
these spaces concrete
that are dedicated to
in our ecosystems in this moment,
notably the space
of the comments.
And I'm the most
of joycences.
Let's on a video TikTok,
I think it's a part
important of my experience in
line. Not the commenter of
botts or the engagement, like
we say, in a lingot
justly financialized,
where you go approach
an influencer and you
go to see
these statistics of engagement,
but really,
the take of
the real world,
the tech in which I
know,
I'd say,
if I'd have wanted
to write that
but I'd be able
but it's exactly
my experience that
the person
just that's important
for me to read that.
It's a craft.
And when we
talk the live streaming,
well,
There's also the page Reddit that are important.
I think that, yes, we're going to post more.
I'm going to be really not post it so on my page Instagram or on my Facebook.
Because I think the space of the sociability has just
displaced in other places than an babiore public.
It's rended in the comments, it's run to be in the messages private,
the group chat.
But the idea of appertainer to a community that we're depots,
it is still there and it is still central.
I had the impression,
that,
in this take
that, Dana Boyd
was not
quite on-point,
and I thought
that it seemed to
take of a
searcher's
who is not
on the media social,
but who is not on
on the
experience visceral,
you know,
in trying to
watch a video
and check the
comments,
and I think
that's also
one of these
affairs that
to all the
time,
to want
to be the
person who
coin the term,
the term.
There's
a lot of
community of
researcher,
especially in the
world
numeric,
it's a
chasse to
forge a
term,
the concept.
And a
way that the
concept or
the term
that we're
working,
it's sure
that every
that we're
going to have
to referencee.
So yeah,
there's
that's a
question, and
it's a
real, because
it's never
been a
force,
she in
her in
her in his
career,
to forge
these terms.
So,
I wanted
to make
a segment
because it
has been
reported
this
the enterprise
media media
American,
who has been
founded,
by Ben Shapiro,
had licensed
these employees.
This article
has been made
to a cascade
of event
that the
people had
to analyze
the
research
media that
that has
employed
who has already
people who
employ,
like Matt Walsh,
Candace Owens,
Ben Shapiro,
Jordan Peterson,
really a
powerhouse
of the
end of 2010.
And there
we've
really that
there had a
espouse
to turnant
in the
way that the
space
mediatics
conservator exist
in the moment
and he lets
to the
remark that
an enterprise
that was
the evolution
of the media
of the heritage
if we
remount
to 2016,
2017,
the discourse
that they
were saying
CNN
are blasted
it's
it's these
dinosaurs
blah blah
we're
we're new
media
and we're
in full
of croccence
and we
we're in
we control
the pulse
of the
nation
or in
the case of the movement conservator
American.
The statistics YouTube
of the Daily Wire
that have
who have
lost their
subscribers in
15,
the 16
last year.
So,
the newsletter
of writing in
March,
the traffic
the site
was at the
month of
what was the
year of
the year of
so we
really,
so we're
really,
a shute
that's a
video of
YouTube,
but it's
been a
also
the text,
it's like
an eritier
of Brade Bart,
and
there's
There's a lot of articles that's
that's made
emerge, in fact,
the Daily Wire
before to have
an division
video, it's
really some
written by Ben Shapiro
justly
at these clickbait
on Bengasi and
Hillary Clinton,
we're really in
this time.
They've had
due, in the
last year,
cut 13%
of their
employees,
and their
company has
presentment
more 200
employees.
They have three
bureaus,
one at Nashville,
one at
Washington,
then in the
rest of the
United.
You know,
It's a company that has
a huge
emmase
an employer
that's just
part of
the video
YouTube
of Ben Shapiro
when we
were at
the peak
of Daily
Wire
during the
pandemic
it was
it was
to create
a competitor
of Disney
they
have produced
a film
Western
of series
of
animation
for
an
documentary
a
movie
a
blue
yeah
I'm
I'm
never
regarded
so
there
so
who represents the future.
And it was all the air
Biden, because Trump
was like dormant,
and we knew that
there had this immense
swath
of conservatism
in the States
that would have
reintegred to
the end of 6th
January 2021.
And they were
at their apoge
at this moment
Matt Walsh
just went
to start
What is a woman
who had been
a success
viral at the
time,
Julian Peterson
who had
all over
there were
there were
there.
There had
there's
there
there's also
Star
Yeah, it's that, there were Candace Owens,
Johnny Peterson, Matt Walsh,
all these people were,
you know, it's their he list, you know,
and there,
like,
like, Matt Walsh,
because he's,
because he carved,
from the first of all
you know,
that's not intelligent.
Candace Owens is parted
because she was
fashed against Ben Shapiro.
But,
notarne,
across the Gaza,
Palestine,
all that.
Jordan Pitchin is
malade,
he's more in the
public,
we have not
many new
of new new
Peterson,
of this time
so,
so there,
they've been
really,
they've been,
there's been,
like, and what I mean,
it's what I mean, it's
human
American, there's
an espouse
an espouse of
the ideal of
the figure type
of the movement
conservator
American, who
was,
who were,
who was really
in the
years,
as the profile
like academic,
intellectual,
dark web.
It's for that
some of the
figures like
Jordan Peterson,
Ben Shapiro,
just,
who could
probably
with some
with,
like,
a verny,
a bit.
Yeah,
especially Jordan Peterson
who's
who's
full
known for
his lectures.
There's a
year in the
year of
2002 where's
maybe the
guy's
conservative
have been
that's not
we're not
we're able to
be like
we're doing
some people
like it's
kind of
kind of
it's a
cool guy
muskly
fighter
it's that
that will
us
that's
that
that's got
that's
that has
that
has been
that's
it's been
to be
to the
state
to
the
people
the
people
they're
the most
of the
people
like Asmund Gold and Nick Shirley
that they are just in the
pure content reactionaire
without analysis, just in a
clip farming, just like to make a documentaire
on the Somalian at
Minnesota. Okay, it's them
that they've been declanced
the whole vack of repression of ice.
It's really an affair where is in the
first degree of engagement
farming, there's no analysis,
any ideology
really intellectual to present it.
There just pure, like,
It's that
that's not
necessarily
maybe to
the deal
wire,
but there also
the fact
that just
there has
had been a
rupture post
Gaza
where is
that Candace
Owens is
rendered pro
Palestine,
Tokyo Carlson
is in
opposition
with
all the
establishment
republican
these
people
get
these
immons
in some
They're
atter
to
have
a good
part
of
public
because it's
just
just
It's rendered even
it's
diluted
to see
the
people,
you know,
the people
will say,
you know,
people are
from Tel Aviv
it's the
new meme
when you're
of what you're
going to do
the new
new Tel Aviv or
yeah,
spiritually,
Israelian,
it's like
rendered
in the
public culture
it has even
not a
kind of an
epitism
that we
try to
call it
to call it
to do
someone
like
Rima Hassan
it's
it's just
just rendered
like a
kind of
kind of
the
year,
say,
ideological
has been...
It's like
like I'm in
like I'm saying,
like I said,
like,
woke has been
that's like
the right
has gained the
cardage of this
word that,
it's not
to use to
it's not
to use it,
it's a little
the same
thing, it's a
thing we've
talked about
in Cafette
with a
event of figure
like Nick
Fuentes, the
mall of
Charlie Kirk,
you know,
he's what,
Ben Shapiro,
it's what he
says,
he said,
I'll read
the citation
of Ben Shapiro
how he
justifies
all this
debandand
financial
which is kind of
He said,
I mean, I'll say
in English,
while
much of the
rest of the
conservative
movement decided
it was a good
idea to
click whore
by embracing
radical Islam
theorizing about
the evils of
Winston Churchill
and
ex-toiling
the wonders of
Russian
supermarket
and the
mocking of
the widow
of Charlie Kirk
we decided
to not do
those things
and if
if it's
our collapse
financially
but it is
what it is.
He said
in the
that's not ceded
to the pressure
algorithmic
to,
like,
ridiculize
Erica Kirk
or to
embrace the Islam
radical.
And then
all that's
let's say,
let's talk about
Erica Kirk
is vised at
Candace Owens.
Well,
yeah,
Kennes Owen,
who,
one of these
models of
the fact,
it's the
theory of
a plow,
it's a
grand
completist.
Yeah,
but she's
that,
she's that,
she's that,
she,
she repran
the code
of true
crime.
Yeah,
yeah,
and they
they,
they,
they,
to the affairs public, to the politics,
to recies social,
and she creates this
sort of narrative
she'd be able to
any particular
she'd be
very engaging.
And it's like,
you don't know the next
episode,
blah,
you see, she's so,
exactly.
So, she,
she's,
she's,
she's,
she's,
she's,
with,
just,
and then,
and then,
when he says
Embracing Radical
Islam,
he talks to
talk to Kaki
Kawsen,
who's
suddenly been
the defender
the most vocal
of the cause
Palestinian,
those
U.
Yeah,
who did
a tour
mediatic
of redemption,
I think.
The people
say,
they say,
the people,
they're paying
by the Arabis
Saudi,
whatever,
but, you know,
how Tucker
Kautsian
explain his
rational,
he's
that, and
it's really
because it's
a great
detractor
of the
war in
Iran,
that is
made by
the States
Israel,
he said,
me,
in the years
in the
years,
I've defended
the war
in Iraq,
I've
had been
one of my
most
humiliation,
of my
been
among the establishment
who has defended
this war
who has made
his career
at stake on
this war
I'm really
felt like a
cave
so I'm
so I'm
like I'm
repeat this
that's the
story
that's the
story that's
the ecosystem
media
American and
it's sure
that conservative
American
and I
have the impression
what we
see what
we're
really this
second
year of
Trump
that's
like
entomied
as
being a
media
conservative
it's
functioned
more
when you're not
the power
in fact.
It's just
really that
when you
control,
when you control
the leviers
political,
it's been
more complicated
to just
support the
decisions of
the regime.
The
algorithms of
platforms
numeric
are not
constructed
for that
people
get of
content of
every
point
President Trump
is incredible
even if
you're
conservative
even if you
vote
for him
for you
for you
would
gravite.
It's
sure that
you're
going to
at the other
echelon
that's like
clicked on
the video
of the video
of the
video of
the video
to do you
know,
you're not
to realize,
you're not
what's the
problem
but you're
doing that
you can't
that's
your viscerre
and it's
for far
a comparative
but it's not
really
it's not
really a
rapport with the
infrastructure
of the
United
but there
there's a
really
really much
turned
the same
last
that came
the
cube radio of
the
emission of
Elizabeth
Marischal
where
is what we
it's an
line
there is an
auditor
who they're calling, and who
he's a situation
financial, and he says,
I have four
children, I'm a
cotet, I'm
carmoneer,
I'm never my
men, I'm
working on
down, and they
break down.
Hello.
We're going to
Yes,
I'm going to
I'm going to
a cred of
a car
who's just
you're probably
the class
and I'm
the public
civil,
just give
an example
because I just
just the
chives
really
very simple,
the low
looie me
cost $2,000, $2,000
per month. I made
not the time to respirate,
it's a cost $4,000 per
month.
And then you have
four children, you
have two adults,
four children with
your conjoint?
It's 14-0-1, okay?
It's just
it's been
to pray,
there, I'm sorry,
and then
the day I'm disposed
I'm going to spend
every day,
it's 14 hours per
day, I'm sorry,
I'm sorry,
I'm sorry,
my fault,
it's not so my plan.
I know, we're
on the floor
You're correct
You're not
You're quite
You're doing like that
You're doing
You're doing
I'm in a
Yeah, I'm
I'm gonna
I'm gonna
I'm gonna say
You know,
I'm gonna come
Okay
Let's see
It's not
It's not
It's not
It's not
We're
We're
We're
I'm
I think there
There's
There's
I'm
That's
I'm
I'm
I'm a
I'm a
I'm a
Okay
I'm
All right.
Okay.
I get your aunt.
I'm not going to have two vehicles.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay, it's true.
I've done my life.
Okay.
I have two vehicles at 10.
The answer is, that could be,
you could be there to be barrisse.
Yes, but I'm not doing,
I have got to be in charge of that I'm in a little bit of the whole
interest, it's reasonable.
So I've got to be like the situation.
But my situation, I understand my, my situation,
I don't know my, my own ways.
It's been correct.
It's, you know, two years, it was correct.
because my loyoyer could be cut me $1,000
because they're decrees
today.
Today,
you know,
it's a loan
to do you know,
I repeat,
it's minimum
500 per
a month with
four and five
affairs,
it's a $150
dollar,
the lead
is reduced
$12
piace,
it's insensate
while
that I'm
saying,
I'm sorry
I'm sorry,
I'm sorry,
I'm sure,
I'm sure,
I see,
I'm sure,
I think it's,
I can't do
I can't do
Paulyev,
I can find a
debt that Poileve, it's, it re-revolved.
And then, we just to send to
keep in Ukraine,
and again,
while you know,
to say,
to,
look,
in the,
I mean,
I'm just,
it's just,
it's just,
because,
it's,
it's just,
because,
it's just,
but I,
just,
I've never done
enough of time
of the time,
but I've never
been too poor,
and it's
even,
there's just over,
there,
there's six months,
my situation
it's not so bad,
But at every month
I'm sorry
to speak just
to speak to
I'm sorry
to puttie
federal
in the cash
everything
and we're
on the money
there's just
there's just
there's
there's
there's
going to
get to
the reprise
of the
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm a
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
the pro-sindical of
your colleague
I'm
there's
my question
I'm
I've got
I've seen
Newmm
after 202
it's
that I'm
interested
to
the politics
because I was going to say, in 2019, I voted for Trudeau,
but that I regret, but that's all.
Like, as well, we all.
We do, we do, we're doing, we're doing, those who are.
But, d'I., so, Kevin, so you, I understand.
You're pretty on the team of M now,
because I imagine you're estimates that he talks more
for the workers who pay people.
It's a little, that, it's a little bit of that,
it's a little bit of their line.
Really, you know, I just,
you know, I've just listened to,
and I've been intense,
I had a clip on Twitter
And finally I had
realized,
and you know
the guy in
the clip
he's like really
you know,
my loy
justly for
my money,
I'm going to be
two voteur
maybe I'm
maybe I'm
maybe I'm
maybe should
maybe
might be sure
but maybe
that I'm
like I'm
like I'm
and then you're
can't
and we're coming
and we're
and we're
getting to
this for that
I've never
seen the policy
but in 2022
Eric Duem
has politicized
and I vote
for the
conservator,
it's not
no,
no, we'll
go to
get to be in
money,
we're going to
get to
how much,
how he evaluates
in fact,
the solution
to his
measure
financial,
sort of,
what's
what he's
captured
this person,
it's the
record of
the record
and the
thing,
the function
poor, they're
also, they're
too,
I'm just,
I think it's
like a
question,
to come,
have been
to have done
to get
to get
really politicized.
In the pandemic,
where he had
he had a
fear of
he wanted to
be able to
be able to be
he said
he said
to get to
and he did
that he
had a
home of course,
he was
he was made
and then
he was
he had to
have been the
cause he was
that.
It's like,
it's that
that
and I think
there's plenty
of doubt
he's abate
to Joliette
we're
saying, we
call, oh,
yeah,
yeah,
after I'm
the profile
Twitter
of this guy
he has
made
he even the clip on Twitter, he
was fired
and it's like a
dude that Twitter
verified,
it's a power user
of Twitter
that's like,
that's fondy
in alarm at the
TV,
at the radio.
And then I'm,
he has the
verified check
kind of
it's a
12-pice
per month
to verify Twitter.
So,
his own
universe
mediaatic,
it's also
it's that
that's different.
And it's
that also
that's what
is the
United,
is that YouTube
was
that YouTube had
so dominant
in the
20
that the competition
that had
made Twitter
because
Elon has
and there's
there's been
there's
there's
it's not in
that's the
people are in
the power of
market of
the daily
wire,
is that on
the world
he's
the clip
of Tucker
Rouson,
he's
the clip of
Kendos,
and he
can't be
any clips
of Ben Chupu
U.
who's
circuled,
just he's
done on
because he
is pro
Israel and
he continues
to defend
Israel and
to attack
all people
who defan
not people who
being the
people who
can't be
interesting to
remember how
the ideology
evolved
with the
platforms
also.
Tung-Tung-Tung-Tung-Tung-Tung-Tung-Sahour.
I'm going to talk to Tung-Tung-Tung-Sahoo.
That's my first I preferring.
We'll do you want to start the segment by the guy who's like,
Ah, a great-solay, great-tong-tung-lare.
We'll come out, a big, great sun-sleigh.
Hey, she has to detached the great-tong-tong-tong-lare.
Analysed the meme.
Because I've read a text of Aiden Walker,
13 ways of looking at Tung-Tum-Tung-Sour.
And it's published in one of the fulettes.
He's called How to Do Things with Meme, and I found that really interesting,
and this same text that referred to other texts that I read by after.
He talks of an other way to consider the mimetic,
which, often we're like, like,
talking to me and the sense, of the meme, and he's always,
and he talks, he's more of an experience senso-narrative experience.
The content that, you know, that comes activate,
at your
some
the body,
of the
emotions
visceral.
And you know
seem
activated by this
meme
Tung Tung Tune.
No,
but I'm
the content
that's
Tung Tung Tung
So ho.
It's interesting
also because
it's an
of the
person who
is issued
of the
universe
cinematic
of Italian
Brain Rutz
but
has been
the time
one of
the
most popular.
It's the
Biance
the group.
The
more
the more
the
more
known
in the
media
in the
But still, it's a person
that's not
protected by the
rights of
author.
You know,
like all the
gang
finally,
the Italian
Brain Rutt.
How's
how he
had been
prompted,
Tung, Tung,
Tung.
Well, I
know a
little bit
on story,
I want to
talk about
Italian,
he's not
Pantututut
He's
also,
yeah,
yeah,
also,
and Musliman.
He's Musliman.
He's not
protected
by the
rights of
autoers,
so that
now,
in this
he is
converted
in
merchandise.
You know, he's in Fortinney.
Oh, yeah.
Depend, it's
that, but he has transcended the
numeric for
to become a merchandise.
So, so,
port-clay,
card to play,
a job,
little bonoom,
tutu,
all the kit,
like, oh, my God,
I've got to
I get a tutu
to-tug,
oh,
baby, no.
And,
and there was a
text that I
made in the
notes of
Gabriel
Cetta,
which is
the material
life of Italian
BrainRut
who just
talk a bit of this aspect material to these
personalities memmetic that,
who initially were generated by LIA,
who now were materialized,
converted in merchandise,
by the biet of circuit
established,
of fabrication and of distribution
commercial,
in China.
He's asked if we could not
consider Tung Tung Tung Tsaur
as a sign
avant-courer of a new form
of industry cultural,
where there are, like,
some,
the characters a little decentralized.
Libre of
rights.
Libre of
rights who
become hyper
popular and
who are
a pletor
of merchandise
but that
appartient
not a
company
in particular
of a
type of
Disney.
What is
interesting with
the
character of
Tung Tung Tung
Tsau
is his
core
sensorial.
For
on
revener to
an inception
there
is a
good text
there's
Luigi
Monteanii
Muntéani
which
Tung Tung Tung
Saur
Sensso Narrative
Power
or
How Italian
Brainwrit became Indonesian. So, how the Italian brainwrit is
become Indonesian? It's someone who studied at doctorate in
musicology at London, and who
studied, more particularly, just, the metal in
in Indonesia. So, he's a quite, it's a
point-to-point-to-search, is that it's interesting,
his article. He talks to, the power, censor-narrative
of this personage that, who is Tung-Tung-Tung-Saur,
and he has pushed to his circulation massive
to have its reproduction
because even
you often
you're going to
you know,
you know,
this little
sound like
it's a bit
if you
you'll cross the
song or the
person,
in your
in your
in your
in your
in your
in your
if I
cross
if I'm
don't talk
I'm
going to
get to
don't know
if it's
that he
says he says
it's to
he said
it's to
it's
at end
February
2025
on Tiktock
an
utilizer
Indonesian
And that's rapidly
become one of the
characters
the most popular
and traditionally
he is based
on an instrument
of music
Indonesian, the
Kittungan.
It's an
kind of,
you tap this
on Google,
you see,
kind of
tube in
wood,
creu.
That I think
that's an
over-intellectualization.
No,
I'll
I've seen.
I've
knew that the
prompt
for generate
Tung-Tung
was,
generate me a
baseball bat
holding a
baseball bat.
It's not so.
No, it's not that.
It's not so.
Because I, I just, it's really a K-E-N-T-O-N-G-A-N, of Ken-Tungan.
It's like a drum, but it's a bit of wood-de-bue that you frape with a
other bit of wood-to-boa, and it's a-tong-tong.
That's used, just, in Indonesia, you know, in the villages and all, you know,
notamon for, you,
to make
these messages
to make
the message, you,
the Saur
pre-down meal.
The Suh
Okay, the shooer.
Okay,
who...
Yeah.
...seil that's
that the song
Tung-Tum
Tum.
There's something
of rhythmic
there in
something, you know,
an engagement.
He's not
the first time
that there's a
personace of
that have a
power,
sense of narrative,
I think we talk, for example, of the Pokemon.
And I was just a-fone in the Pokemon,
but one of the only Pokemon
which I remember is Jigli-Puff.
Because when I think of him,
I think of his little song,
hypnotizing, like,
Gig-Gely puff.
That's me...
Well, we're also a power
censor narrative.
All of his article is there
to say that we're
to recognize the power
sensorial, the ericis sensorial,
when we analyze the amemetic
and the ecology of the media
media contemporane, because in the folklore algorithmic, numeric,
like the Italian brainwret, it's something that is present,
and it's sometimes a motor of velocity, you know,
for that this personage that, to differentiate, and he
mount in popularity. He talks, so, of a new term.
A new term, forger, which would be the capital, senso-narrative.
So, if we create a personage, and that we want to be that
to be a meme, you know,
perhaps we'd
think,
to you know,
to be able to
give a certain
power,
a certain piece of
narrative.
In some of
some of the
influence,
they have
quite that,
I think,
to those
that I'm in
the middle
of the
beauty on
YouTube,
they have
these expressions
like that
they're
saying,
like,
that is
pretty
expensive.
And, you
have,
they're,
they're,
they're,
they're,
they're all
their little,
they're
their little,
their
their little
their little
their little
their little
way,
really idiosyncratic
to them. And when you
talk their language, when you
do you make part of the community,
you recognize these
expressions that who have
a power
that have a lot of
that makes something
in the core.
Thank you,
Daphne,
for your segment.
I wanted
just say,
thank to all
the people for
the return
on the documentary,
all the
content of the documentary.
I'm there
to be to
talk about to
talk about
to say,
it's a bit
chaotic.
You can go
to my
channel
YouTube.
I'll
I'll prefer a stream on my chain Twitch for debrief.
When?
Eventually.
Eventually, it's not clear.
I'm going to see my story Instagram.
I'll announce the stream of advance.
And he will have the rediff, and we, but, so, yeah, we'll, I want, I'd
not put a other segment of Cafe Slink for my talent long and large there.
For the people who wanted my reflections before they sort, it's on the Patreon.
So, go to go ahead.
You know, so, go ahead.
So, I'll go to do you on Twitch, but shout out to everyone.
And finally, I wanted to do.
a recommendation cultural.
So, there's a auditor of
to Café Sneik
who made
a few years
a few
a few years,
who
launched his
documentary,
the moment
of the
film
is available
at the
location
on the
platform.
I'll
make the
link in
the comments.
It's by
Martin
Forg,
a journalist
essayist,
but also
an
anti-militar,
so that
that's
served in
Afghanistan.
We're
interested
at post
11 September,
meton,
post-intervention
in
military in Afghanistan, what is the state of the
state of the lieu of today? What I think is interesting, is the
perspective of the interior, you know, of a
soldier who has participated in this dialogue, who has
vied in a conversation, who is passed
of a recis super idealist to something, you know,
to totally anti-guer.
And there also an other military
who is interviewed in the
documentary that I've found
really interesting. We say
20 years after the 11th, September, 2001,
so I don't know if the film has been
turned there
already
a few years
because there
we could
say 25
where on
we're in
today.
There's the
complex
militaros
industrial and
that's
necessary to
grow out.
We're
always in
a moment
where we
are maybe
engaged in
a war,
there's
the authoritarism
the
renuvo
imperialism
of the
United.
All recently,
I've
just tried
to
listen to
an podcast
that's
quite
quite quite
quite
quite
quite
you know
if you
know
the
blowback
podcast
that
that comes
in the
recies
of the
war
imperialist
in which
the
United
have been
invested.
They're
their first
season
on the
war in Iraq.
So,
it's not
the war
in Afghanistan,
but I
think there
have
many
there are
many
different
episode that
it's
quite
structurant
and important
to understand
these
years or
to
return
to
understand
to understand
the
state
the
case,
I'm
I'm
to listen
that, and
I see
my
pregnancy
brain,
but in
In this moment, I have enormous
of difficulty
to concentrate.
So I've
a pen
listened to
get a little bit of
getting to capture.
There's like
some interesting,
as far,
the point of view
of the war
in Afghanistan or
in Iraq,
it's the
kind of
rhetoric,
you,
say,
we've got the
war
against the
terrorism.
And I'm
the impression
that today
we've re-invested
can
even the
same
justifications.
There's
like a vision
messianic
of the
United
that comes
there to
liberate
the
terrorists or
whatever,
not-bond, you know,
and it's kind of
when I was
quite young,
2001, I had
11 years,
you know,
you'd have been
even not,
I had not
the capacity for
all the
geopolitical,
so,
so, now,
today, I'm like,
I'm like,
I'm like,
I'm gonna
get, you know,
I'm gonna
get a
after after
on the return,
on Patreon,
the music
of intro and
of A-Z-L-O.
And,
by the way,
you have,
you have,
till 15,
M-E,
you have...
T-T-T-T-T-T-T-T-L-L-E,
the bomb will
You have three
days to
you're going to
send your
take on the
sub-as
on the
media.
They're going
be diffused
this year,
and there's
people who
will be
doing they're
doing they're
doing they
do you
know,
we're going to
our address
Gmail,
so it's
info cafe snake
at gmail.com
thank you
much much
bye,
thank you.
Oh,
meh.
Oh,
me
and
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
Oh
and
