Maintenance Phase - Goop
Episode Date: September 13, 2022Do we even need to write a description? It's the Goopisode! Support us:Hear bonus episodes on PatreonDonate on PayPalGet Maintenance Phase T-shirts, stickers and moreLinks!How Goop’s Haters Ma...de Gwyneth Paltrow’s Company Worth $250 MillionHow Gwyneth Paltrow took Goop from a homebrewed newsletter to a controversial $250 million wellness powerhouseGwyneth Paltrow Feels Good — and So Can YouIs Gwyneth Paltrow’s GOOP $1.6M In Debt?Goop and Condé Nast Team Up on a Magazine - The New York Times Gwyneth Paltrow didn't want Condé Nast to fact-check Goop articlesA hungry Gwyneth Paltrow fails the food-stamp challenge four days inDear Gwyneth, this is what living on food stamps really looks likeMy $29 Food Stamp Challenge & The RecipesGwyneth Paltrow's Having the Chicest Yard Sale Ever Gwyneth Paltrow says children of celebrities 'almost have to work twice as hard' once they 'unfairly' get their start in Hollywood Gwyneth Paltrow brings aerial yoga, trans talks and cryofacials to Goop health conference We Attended Gwyneth Paltrow's $500-a-Ticket Health SummitAnti-Medication Goop Summit Expert Claims AIDS Treatment Kills and GMOs Cause DepressionInside Goop, Gwyneth Paltrow's Growing EmpireThe history of self-careStill Processing: We Care for Ourselves and Others in Trump’s AmericaThanks to Doctor Dreamchip for our lovely theme song!Support the show
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You hear it?
You're getting there.
There's that microphone.
Hello.
Boop, boop, there we go.
Hello, radio voice.
I gotta go down to Octaves now.
You have a challenging task this morning. You haven't given me anything to work with all my-
I have not told you what we're recording about. All my taglines were like the the podcast that's
a mystery box inside an enigma. Like all I have. Empty. Welcome to Maintenance Phase. The podcast
Welcome to Maintenance Phase, the podcast that tells you two weeks ago that you're recording a secret podcast.
And today you're doing it.
Surprise, I'm the podcast.
In this catchphrase, the podcast is me.
That's just me narrating what's happening right now.
That's not really a tagline.
I'm Aubrey Gordon.
I'm Michael Hobbs.
If you would like to support the show, you can do that at patreon.com slash maintenance
phase where you'll get bonus episodes every month.
And today, Michael Hobbs, we have a surprise topic.
I'm so excited.
Do you have any guesses?
I think this is about a show that you've been wanting to do, but you didn't want to tell
me that you were doing it.
So maybe this is you finally doing a show about salads.
Maybe this is it.
I love that your theory is it's the driest topic I have ever pitched to you.
You're like Mike was on the fence about the salads one.
Maybe all the kids just do it and tell him it's a surprise.
No, Michael, this is one that we have discussed.
Okay.
Michael the Goopasoud is upon us.
Oh, it's finally the Goopasod is upon us. Oh! It's finally the Goopasod!
We're doing goop!
So, where are we starting with
Gwyneth and the Goop Empire?
So, this is maybe the highest volume of research
I've done for an episode in a while.
Pfft!
More words written about Goop than like the history of calories.
That's for fucking sure.
Yeah.
What I wanted to do for this episode is try and take Goop pretty seriously, right?
It's a $430 million company.
It's a God.
It has really significant influence over the wellness industry as a whole.
Mm-hmm.
So we're going to talk a little bit about like, why is that and what draws people to Goop
in a sea of media coverage that really only seems to about like, why is that and what draws people to goop
in a sea of media coverage that really only seems to be like,
can you believe it?
This again?
I also, I love that you're starting with like,
this is not going to be fun.
This is gonna be a work.
Look, we're gonna fucking dunk on goop real hard.
Don't worry.
But also, I wanted to to get us grounded in like,
no, there's stuff here worth exploring.
Part of what made the research on this episode so hard
is that everything was eye rolling.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I wanted to be like, no, no, no, no,
let's like try and take this on its own terms
a little bit more, right?
This is also an episode that both of us
have resisted doing for a long time.
Like, we've been doing the show for two years,
and this is like a pretty obvious episode for us to do.
And one of the reasons neither one of us
wanted to do it earlier was because there's already
so many goop dunkfests.
Yeah, absolutely.
So I'm glad that we're actually taking this seriously
as a phenomenon and not just going from dunk to dunk
on going up.
Even though she deserves it in many ways, but also, like, I mean, this
company is one of the first kind of, like, influencer business models. Really? I mean,
Gwyneth, kind of, like, as a businesswoman, did something like relatively innovative.
Yes, absolutely. Gwyneth Paltrow starts Goop, and that actually unleashes a whole wave
of sort of celebrity, like wellness and lifestyle brands.
Right.
That's where we get the honest company,
Blake Lively launches a lifestyle brand
like all of these sort of Hollywood it girls.
I don't know who any of those people are.
You know who Blake Lively is.
I do not.
You absolutely fucking do.
Michael.
No, I know where she's the one that did haters gonna hate.
Hate, hate, hate, hate. No, I know where she's the one that did haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Taylor Swift and you absolutely know
that that's Taylor's one.
No, I do know that, but I don't know.
I genuinely don't know who Blake Liveley is,
but from context clues, she appears to be a famous person.
So the other thing I wanted to say context wise
for the goop episode is like the Oprah soads,
there is just too much to cover in one episode.
Yeah.
So this is designed as a like mothership episode
that we can then come back if we want to tell
other Goop related stories.
But this is sort of the like, how did it come to be?
And what are a few key things to sort of know about it?
All right.
Be me up.
So we today are going to explore Goop in three acts.
Oh.
Act one, the birth of Goop, the advent of Goop.
When the Paltrow was born in 1972 in Los Angeles
to Blithe, Danor, and Bruce Paltrow.
Blithe, Danor is an actor.
She works on Broadway.
She works on TV.
She works in movies.
She was in a bunch of Woody Allen movies.
Her dad is Bruce Paltrow, he was a TV director and producer,
his biggest sort of project that he's most known for
with St. elsewhere.
Also, fascinatingly, her cousins include Gabby Giffords,
what?
Catherine Munig, who played Shane from the L word.
Oh, really?
And Rebecca Paltrow Newman, whose husband, Adam Newman,
was the founder of WeWork.
That explains why his hair is so lustrous.
That's what I'm gonna ask.
Earlier this year,
Gwyneth Paltrow didn't interview with Haley Bieber,
Justin Bieber's wife and also daughter of Stephen Baldwin,
where Gwyneth Paltrow gave this like wild and terrible quote
about how like nepotism kids have to work twice as hard
to prove themselves.
Oh no.
And I was like, man.
No, that's not it Gwyneth.
That's, we said we weren't gonna roast you Gwyneth,
but you're making it hard.
It's a bad one.
Yeah.
I imagine, look, if you walked onto a set and you've got a job, you know, in part or
full because of who you know or whose kid you are, and you're surrounded by a bunch of
other actors who have been auditioning for years just to get a role, like, absolutely,
they're going to be like, who the fuck are you?
Do you even deserve to be here?
Sure.
So like, I see how she gets there and also, please stop, no.
It's like the economic equivalent of skinny shaming,
I feel like.
Is it mean to say to somebody like Eda Sandwich
when they post a photo of themselves in a bathing suit?
Like, yes, it's mean.
But is there like on a structural level,
oppression against skinny people?
Just objectively, there is not.
I know this is harder for you than most days,
and I'm real sorry about that,
but also on average,
the difficulty level of your days is like a five.
Right, and you're talking to a group of people
who's difficulty level on a given day is like 70.
That's a good way to put that on.
So after graduating from these fancy private schools,
her first films come out in 1991.
She's 19 at the time.
Oh wow.
She's in a movie called Shout, starring John Travolta.
And she's in hook as Wendy.
She's what?
She was Wendy in hook.
Do you want to know who cast her?
Is it Steven Spielberg?
Her godfather, Steven Spielberg.
Oh, life is hard for...
Life is hard.
For nepotism kids.
Life is hard when you write a team
and you get cast in a Steven Spielberg movie
because he's your godfather.
When I get just hours of FaceTime
with like the most acclaimed American director.
Really tough times.
I know, I'm sorry, I don't need to be mean,
but it's so hard not to be mean to win it's ball throw.
It's okay to be, again, it really gets fine to dunk on her.
I'm just looking for nutritious dunking.
Oh, man.
So by 1995, she graduates to some more sort of adult films.
She's in seven, she's in Emma, she's in great expectations.
By 1998, she stars in Shakespeare and love.
She wins an Oscar for that. In 2001, she stars in Shakespeare in love. She wins an Oscar for that.
In 2001, she stars in the Royal Tenenbombs.
That is the same year that she puts on a fatsuit
for shallow hell.
Oh, right.
It was the best of times.
It was the worst of times, Quintet Faltro.
I'll also say, I have always felt weird
about her later wellness turn
because I actually think she's a really good actress.
shallow hell, obviously, is a fucking think she's a really good actress. Shallow how obviously he's a fucking nightmare
to be the whole episode on,
but in general, she's done a really diverse,
interesting array of movies,
and she's good in them.
Yes, and I would say a bunch of the early press coverage
of Goop bears that out.
They talk to a bunch of people who've worked with her,
and they're like, she's good at acting,
and I don't understand why she's doing this. It's like a number of people who've worked with her. And they're like, she's good at acting, and I don't understand why she's doing this.
It's like a number of people say in early coverage.
They're just like, what the fuck is this?
Why?
I started pulling together a timeline of her film and TV work,
and she has credits almost every year
for over 30 years at this point.
Oh, wow.
And as her acting career takes off,
so does her sort of commitment to dieting and wellness
and all of that kind of stuff.
She, in 1999, she does her first master cleanse
and starts talking about it in the press.
Okay.
In 2002, a terrible thing happens,
which is her father passes away of throat cancer.
And she talks about just wanting to make things better for him
and seeing him go through the ringer of, you know,
traditional cancer treatments, right?
It's really hard to watch your loved one go through that.
And she starts looking around and she's like,
there's gotta be something else that I can do for him.
She has this story about her dad
that she was trying out sort of gluten-free,
sugar-free vegan recipes.
She made some muffins.
And she made one for him and she was like,
he took a bite of it and said it tasted like
biting into the New York Times.
And that's like, which is like a genuinely good story.
And she's like, you know, we've come a long way.
And I knew I had my work cut out for me.
And it's like a good little lunch pad, right?
Yeah, that's pretty good.
In 2004, she goes to the premiere of Anchorman
and wears a scrappy exposed shoulder exposed back dress
that shows that she has big marks
from having been in cupping.
Oh, is that the thing?
It's like hot.
Yep, they sort of do these little suction, heat suction cups
tear back.
So that becomes a big little, like, sort of, news wave about her.
So she's already long before the start of Goop wellness stuff
has very much been part of her public image, right?
Also, I mean, I've always had a sort of a complicated relationship with the social
construction of Gwyneth Paltrow because
she doesn't strike me as like an evil person.
Yeah, totally.
I think one of the challenges of talking about
this kind of wellness grip space is that you have
genuine like bad actors like Pete Evans, right?
But then you have people like Gwyneth Paltrow
who I think is genuinely well-meaning.
I don't think she like knows that this stuff is fake.
Yeah. I think she's doing it because she really believes in it.
But also, I do think that her influence on the culture has arguably been quite
maligned. Yeah. She strikes me as someone who is deeply
a genuinely out of touch. Like, that's not just a character she plays on TV,
right? Oh, yeah. That's the wild thing about the gaffs
and part of what sits weirdly with me
about coverage of the gaffs is like,
can you believe she said it?
And I'm like, I can believe that she believes it.
Yeah, oh yeah.
But there are some things I will say,
we will get some stuff for you're like,
oh no, she knows.
Oh yeah.
She knows.
We'll get there, she knows.
Yeah.
Okay, so in 2008,
Gwyneth Paltrow starts a newsletter called Goop.
Michael, do you know why she calls it Goop?
I don't actually, I feel like I should.
Well, so the main thing is that her initials are GP.
Oh, right.
Goop to goop.
Okay.
But she adds the 00 because a branding expert told her,
quote, that all successful internet companies
have double-os in their names.
What?
Which I was like, all right.
So I get you on Google and Facebook.
Amazon, microso, she's right.
Screw.
Yeah.
There's,
so when she launches Goop,
it is just an email newsletter.
That is the start of Goop.
Oh yeah. And at the outset, the press is really puzzled by like why this is happening.
One of the early stories about Goop is from the New York Times and the headline is,
Gwyneth Paltrow's offstage roles, dot, dot, dot, but why?
That's some cold shit.
She also has interests.
So she talks to people about sort of like why she starts the website at the beginning,
and it's really interesting to me because it is so dramatically different than the website
that we have now.
She tells people that she has filmed in a lot of different locations,
and that each time she goes to a different location, she would ask the crew and locals
about like, where do you get the best cup of coffee? What's the meal you can't miss here?
Who gives the best massage in town? Where's the best juice bar? So it's sort of like a
little insider guide to travel in generally pretty fancy locations, right?
This is some like genuine innovation
in that this was a time before Instagram,
and like the institution of like the celebrity
doing their own celebrities, they're just like us,
Stick.
She was pretty early on like forming a relationship,
a direct relationship with her audience, in a way that
is like totally taken for granted now.
Yeah, absolutely.
She's like trying to be this sort of insider travel guide, right?
But the press moves really quickly past any level of even like surface puzzlement and gets
over it really quickly.
So here is a quote from a piece on the late great rack.
It says,
A New York Times column is lamented,
I feel undernourished already.
Joy of cooking editor Beth Wehrhem mused,
does the world really need another banana muffin recipe?
I think someone like Gwyneth Paltrow
would be better at telling people what not to eat.
Oh, that's kind of like mean spirited. A lot of this coverage came out
after her release of the very first newsletter.
Right.
Just like give it a minute.
And then I mean granted, if you gave it a minute,
it would not be better.
Right.
And I mean, we did give it a,
we gave it a decade and it's become what it's become.
So like these people on sub-level were correct.
Maybe it just were comparing it to what Goop is now
and what celebrity culture has become now.
But this just seems so harmless to me.
Yeah, totally.
And I also think people didn't really know how to read that
as cynically as we know how to read that now.
Yeah, yeah.
So 2008, she releases the newsletter.
And in 2009, she creates the first Goop detox.
Man.
That first detox is sort of like a more restrictive version of whole 30.
Okay. It's just a lot of sort of like clean eating shit. It's a seven-day quote-unquote detox,
which I'm like, hey man, if it's seven days where you're restricting what you eat,
congratulations. That's a fucking diet. Yeah, it's just a diet. So there is a writer from GQ
who does the goop detox at the time and talks about it being
absolutely terrible.
Oh yeah.
The person writes about vomiting on the subway platform.
Which I have done, but not on a detox.
So I'm not going to judge.
This person keeps like, you know, a couple of short sentences of notes a day about being on the
goop detox. Day one, feel incredibly strange, if not a little better. Later, someone in the office
says, I look pinker. Day two, feel hungover. The hunger isn't in my stomach, but in my throat.
I am craving KFC. I never crave KFC. I don't even like KFC and yeah, I want it. My tongue feels swollen. I have a headache.
This I am told is part of the natural detoxification process. It blows
Day three the world has lost all its sharp edges
My thoughts are sluggish. I sat through a story meeting and didn't say a single word. I wonder if I'll get fired
sat through a story meeting and didn't say a single word. I wonder if I'll get fired.
And it's just like every time I've been around a person
who's on a wild diet in a workplace,
I'm like, ooh, things seem bad in there.
But it's also, is she selling the detox?
No, she's just coming out in the newsletter.
She's like, here you go, do my detox.
I mean, so this is another thing to know about Goop
is that at this point, it really does seem like
it's her doing this in her house as a passion project.
By 2011, she hires a CEO.
Okay.
His name is Seb Bishop.
He ran red, the big celebrity AIDS charity.
And at that point, we don't get a ton of windows
into Goop's finances, but by 2014,
Goop is $1.6 million in debt, but today it
has bounced back really significantly.
Again, valued at $430 million, right?
So it's hard to get there unintentionally to $430 million and to $82 million in venture
capital funding.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this profit-making part is like not all the way back
to the beginning, but there is one thing that is really
constant and that is the tone and sort of the outlook
of Goop stuff.
So when she releases that original Goop detox in 2009,
she includes this quote about the detox. I just zoomed it to you.
It says, my life is good because I'm not passive about it. Oh, no.
Gwyneth, oh no. Yeah. Make your life good. Invest in what's real. Cook a meal for someone
you love. Pause before reacting. Clean out your space. Read something beautiful. Learn
something new. Don't be lazy. Work out and stick with Read something beautiful. Learn something new.
Don't be lazy. Work out and stick with it. Some of that's fine. Some of it's gross.
It's like 60% fine. 40% not as great. Yeah. That's about the ratio I expect from
Gwyneth. Coop as a project seems really dedicated to confusing privilege for enlightenment.
Yeah, I know. Right? She's like, my life is good because I work at it.
And I'm like, you don't think that the fact
that you have literal millions of dollars
has anything to do with how good your life is?
I wanna know how much money you have
when you check your bank account online
and it's literally just an infinity symbol.
I have friends who are on SSDI
and have known people who are on food stamps
and so on and so forth,
they work at their lives. Their lives are, you know, as good as they can make them.
And there's a fucking ceiling on how good you can make your life when you have such limited resources.
And that feels like one of the more insidious parts of Goop. Now I have this kind of life,
because I've put in this kind of effort,
not because I have these kinds of resources.
The old phrase is that rich people were born on third base and go through life thinking
they hit a triple. Yes, this is exactly what she's expressing here that it's like, yeah,
it's hard work to run to home base. Yeah, it is. I get it. Sure. No one's going to take
that away from you. But also, Most people are running four times that far.
It's funny because I feel like I would be fine with celebrities that just like admitted
all this stuff of like, I'm crazy rich.
Here's the restaurants I go to in Tuscany.
Yeah.
I don't really mind people being rich.
It just like don't ask me to tell you you're a good person for that.
Right, and don't sell other people on the idea that like you too can be a good person
if you can afford all the shit that I have.
I remember there was a series on video gum like 10,000 years ago where they would go through these like what I eat in
day or like various interviews with Gweneth and kind of laugh at her and make fun of her.
And there was there was one interview where she said she was talking about interior decorating and she was talking about how
There was one interview where she said, she was talking about interior decorating and she was talking about how she just like, really clean spaces and clean lines and right angles and minimalistic environments.
And I remember the writer saying like, Gwyneth, everybody likes that.
Like, everybody likes their environment to be clean and nice and to feel comfortable.
Like, that's not unique to you, but it was like she just couldn't see
that like she has wealth and privilege
that allow her to create spaces like this
and basically design a life
that is her going from like clean, comfortable space
to clean, comfortable space.
Totally.
I mean, I noticed this happening to myself.
Genuinely, like I did a podcast recently
where they were like, what are you watching and listening to?
And I was like, I just had this moment of thinking
that I was much more interesting than I am.
You were like stranger things.
I'm the only person watching stranger things.
Guys, have I got a bombshell for you?
A great British bake off.
Okay.
Okay.
There is something that happens when people start
to ask your opinion on mundane things
as if your opinion really matters where you do start to kind of think that you matter
more than you do or that your opinion on this thing is more consequential than just an
opinion on a thing or whatever.
I'll read that.
That interview was the first step in like a process that ends with you launching a perfume
line in like two years.
This is the only place this can go. and a process that ends with you launching a perfume line in two years.
This is the only place this can go.
I've launched my own lines of dust. Loud dust, fat dust, gay dust.
Yeah.
Okay, so that's the sort of beginnings of Goop between then and now are all the scandals we all know.
The Jada, the vaginal steaming, the defective candles.
Oh my God.
I, as part of this episode, I pulled together
a timeline of Goop stuff.
That timeline was 26 pages.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha,
every year, Michael, there were like a minimum
of three big
Goop scandals usually closer to five or six. Yeah, that everyone listening to this episode would probably remember most of them. We could just do a bonus like lightning round
So there are all those scandals we know there are a couple
scandals that we don't really talk about as much in 2018 to separate sources filed public
complaints in the US and UK, alleging false advertising and non-allowable medical claims
against Goop.
In 2017, Goop Peltro launched a Goop magazine.
Okay.
Did you catch wind of any of this?
I had next to no recollection of this.
Anyone launching a magazine is extremely weird to me in a lot of like 10 years. It is a
Condé Nast magazine. It premieres. The first issue is the premiere issue. The second issue is the
final issue. Nice. The thing that ended that partnership was that Condé Nast insisted on fact-checking.
was that Kondayn asked insisted on fact checking. Oh.
Oh.
Well, that's a deal breaker, ladies.
So hang on, I'm going to send you a quote that is outstanding.
I always love these.
Really play in the heads with this one.
She argued that they were interviewing experts and didn't need to check whether what they
were saying was scientifically accurate.
We're never making statements, she said.
At least Lone and Goop's head of content,
added that Goop was just asking questions.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That's a defense people use only when they're doing
something good.
Did the Holocaust really happen?
I'm just asking questions.
It's like a little parachute rip cord that you have.
You're just like, I have just asking questions
and then you just like float away. There's also, so like after this happens,
Gwyneth Paltrow does like a series of interviews and she keeps calling Condon asked, like,
you know, we're just really trying to innovate and Condon asked is just like old school.
That's just who they are. Oh my God. It's also worth noting all of this shit, all of these
little scandals, all of these little firestorms, Gwyneth Paltrow calls them cultural firestorms,
are a feature of Goop.
They are not a bug.
Goop over time has aimed more and more of its marketing
around creating controversy to generate press,
which drives up traffic to their website.
Oh man.
So the New York Times magazine does a piece called
How Goops Haders Made Gwyneth Paltrow's Company
worth $250 million.
So clearly this is from a few years ago.
Essentially what they advance in that piece
is that the wilder and more expensive Goops shit gets,
the more their readers seem to really eat it up.
So in this piece they talk about
Gwyneth Paltrow speaking to Harvard Business School students,
and this is from that section of that piece.
It says, every time there was a negative story
about her or her company,
all that did was bring more people to the site.
Among them, those who had similar kinds of questions
and couldn't find help in mainstream medicine.
At Harvard, Gwyneth Paltrow called these moments cultural firestorms.
I can monetize those eyeballs she told the students.
Goup had learned to do a special kind of dark art
to corral the vitriol of the internet and the ever-present shall we call it
cultural ambivalence about Paltrow herself and turn them into cash.
It's never clickbait, she told a class.
It's a cultural firestorm when it's about a woman's vagina. The room was silent
She then what she then cupped her hands around her mouth and yelled vagina
Vagina vagina as if she were yodeling. I am not gonna do that
No, I don't think that you should and I also don't want to do that
I'm trying to imagine it in my brain what that actually sounds like and I can't get there
I mean, I think it feels very telling to me that she would say to a room full of business students
in a public speaking engagement with a reporter from the Times in the room. We figured out that this
is a way that works to drive up the revenue of our website is to make people kind of hate us,
right? So that same year that Goop was accused of so much false advertising 2018,
it received more criticism than it ever had before
and it's revenue doubled.
Oh God.
Right?
So it's like dark.
And I will say, I feel wary about doing this show
for this exact reason.
Right?
Is it possible to do this at all without being
what we're talking about?
Yeah.
I don't know, but I also know that, you know,
this is such a major force in the industry at this point
that it feels difficult not to talk about it.
Yeah.
As of 2021, last year, the wellness industry
was worth $4.4 trillion, and it's projected
to reach $7 trillion by 2025.
But then, I mean, I guess it's similar to like Madonna
making videos in the 90s that she knew was gonna get banned from MTV,
which the only thing better than being on MTV
is getting banned from MTV because then it leaks over
into all this other media that isn't talking about Madonna.
It's on news pages.
And so I guess what Gwyneth is doing is the same thing
where you get earned media.
Everybody in the country is talking about you
and your name and your website is on their lips.
And then people start going to website and they're like, ooh, a cream.
I can get the cream.
Totally.
And I think the other thing that that particular little quote shifted for me was it shifted
my understanding of the sort of like, Gwyneth Paltrow, I roll industrial complex.
Yeah.
There is a little cottage industry, right?
Anytime Gwyneth Paltrow says or does anything,
you can write about that thing and be like,
get a load of this lady.
And you will get pretty good traffic, right?
So I think it's like a gross realization to go,
oh no, the things that benefit Gwyneth Paltrow's critics
are the same things that benefit Gwyneth Paltrow's critics are the same things that benefit Guineph Paltrow,
and that feels sticky and sticky and gross.
Dude, one of my first jobs in journalism was at MSN,
which was like your home page when you had to check
your hot mail.
And there was like, it wasn't an official rule,
but it was like an informal rule that there had to be
at least one story about Paris Hilton on the home page.
Anything, if it was like, she switched it from Coke
to Diet Coke, it was like, right it up.
We're gonna get a shitload of clicks for it.
Did you have a quota for stories you had to write in the day?
No, because I was editing, it was stories that were already
really good.
I got you got you got you.
I know people though that have to write like three stories a day.
Yeah, they're like such smart journalists
and they're so great, but it's like nobody can produce
three good stories a day.
Like literally it is really impossible.
Part of the reason that there is this kind of
viral industrial complex thing happening is because journalists and writers are so under the gun.
So if you get something that feels like a slam dunk, it is certainly in your self interest to take that story.
And it does bad things in the long term.
It is corrosive in the long term, which leads us to our that story. And it does bad things in the long term. It is corrosive in the long term.
Yeah.
Which leads us to our next act.
Are you ready for our next act?
Oh.
Act two.
Yeah, good to me.
I'm calling act two, the food stamp challenge,
or why we're all so mad.
Okay.
Act two begins with a tweet.
I'm sending you a tweet, Michael.
I was a Gwyneth Paltrow tweet.
I didn't know Gwyneth Paltrow was on Twitter.
She's definitely on Twitter.
Wait, can I go on Gwyneth Paltrow's timeline right now
and see what she's tweeting about?
Sure, go for it.
Oh no, she's peddling NFTs.
Her last tweet is from February 4th.
And it's an NFT.
She's big on Board Ape yacht club.
And then what the fuck?
Oh no.
Buying crypto has often felt exclusionary
in order to democratize, you can participate.
Cash app is now making easy to gift Bitcoin.
I'm giving out 500k worth of Bitcoin for the holidays.
That's from December.
I love, I love to hear what is exclusionary
from the single most exclusionary public figure
that I can think of.
Man, she barely tweets though,
because before that, it's like 2019.
Oh wow, so it's like she left Twitter for two fucking years
and then tweeted like seven times about crypto
and then stopped tweeting.
Okay, so I'm sending you a tweet, Michael.
I'm gonna see if you remember this one.
I do remember this.
So the tweet is from April 9th, 2015.
And it's a photo of a bunch of groceries.
Like lettuce, rice, eggs, normal grocery store groceries.
It says, this is what $29 gets you at the grocery store.
What families on snap, i.e. food stamps,
have to live on for a week.
So this is one of those tweets that's instant pre-cringe
for me.
Yeah, it's like, it's like,
Gwyneth Paltrow or anyone is talking about
like poverty and welfare in America.
It's like, it's not gonna go well.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
The photo that she has includes a dozen eggs,
ahead of Romaine lettuce, an avocado, an onion,
a bunch of green onions, a ear of corn,
a tomato, a head of garlic, a bunch of curly kale,
some cilantro, corn tortillas, seven limes,
okay, yeah.
The Washington Post describes as a baffling number of Limes.
Fair point.
A bag of frozen peas, one chili of some kind, a sweet potato, a bag of black beans, and
a bag of brown rice.
So Gwyneth Paltrow tweets out this picture in 2015.
At that time, the internet just all at once turns into the Christian Bale temper
tantrum on the set of the Dark Knight.
Oh, good, good for you.
We're just like, I fucking hate this.
One of the tweets is, don't worry poor people.
Gwyneth Paltrow is here to show you how to goop your food stamp benefits.
What's so funny about this is that Gwyn, Greenwich Peltier is completely right.
Yeah, right?
Like, she's absolutely correct to highlight this,
but also it's just the worst imaginable messenger.
Right, at this point, she has been a professionally
out of touch, Rich Lady, for seven years.
Yeah.
So people are totally understandably primed
to be like, look at this fucking shit.
She said she was gonna live on $29 for a week.
So that's what this tweet is announcing.
Is she goes, here's what you can get.
And what that's leading up to is she's doing a thing
where she says, I'm gonna live on this $29 of groceries
and my staff is gonna do it too.
And we're all gonna talk about what we eat and make and all that kind of stuff.
She's making other people do it.
That's so mean.
I know how fucking pissed off would you be?
Oh.
Isn't that like a labor rights violation?
Yeah.
Boss can't just like take away your food money.
So the Washington Post wrote a piece
where the headline was,
a hungry guinith paltrow fails the food stamp challenge four days in.
That's the first big story about this.
And then there's like the image that they use is a picture of her at a red carpet
premiere in like a very fancy dress with very fancy jewelry.
Okay.
And the lead is quote, after four long days living like America's
poor, Gwyneth Paltrow broke her much mocked attempt at shopping on a food stamp
budget in search of some chicken and black licorice. Quote, as I suspected, we only made it
through about four days when I personally broke and had some chicken and fresh vegetables.
And in full transparency, half a bag of black
licorice, she wrote on her blog, Goop.
My perspective has forever been altered by how difficult it was to eat wholesome, nutritious
food on that budget, even for just a few days, a challenge that 47 million Americans face
every day, week and year.
Okay.
Here's the thing that is fascinating to me, that is missing from this entire account, this was the point,
was to illustrate that it's not possible to survive on 29 dollars of food stamps.
So, okay.
Gwyneth Paltrow was responding to a request that was originally issued by the New York
Food Bank.
Oh.
They had initially challenged a number of celebrities, sort of ice bucket
challenge style to try and eat for a week on $29. That was the average amount of personal
on snap was receiving at that time. And the point of this exercise was to go, even if
you have a personal chef, even if you have all the resources at your disposal, it is not possible for a human being to subsist
on 29 dollars worth of groceries.
So they issue this challenge and celebrities start doing it
and start challenging each other.
Gwyneth Paltrow, in a particularly cursed moment,
Gwyneth Paltrow is challenged to do this by Mario Batali.
Oh, yeah.
And at the start of the challenge,
she also makes a pretty significant contribution
to the food bank, which is also part of the challenge.
I was like, give to the food bank, right?
So she really is sort of following the assignment,
but she is so deeply the worst messenger
that the internet explodes at Gwyneth Paltrow
and sort of paradoxically
obscures the entire
effort from the food bank, right?
Right. The Guardian did a fantastic piece about
how Gwyneth's groceries stack up to what food stampers if Beans actually do buy and why they buy those things
47 million
Americans were on snap,
and 22% had zero gross income.
So for 22% of snap recipients,
that average $29 is what they have period.
And they, in this piece,
talk to staffers from food banks who talk about like,
yeah, actually, like foods that we think of as being
sort of less nutrient
dense are the foods that you can afford when you're on snap. You're just trying to
straight up make sure you have enough meals for the week, right? And they include this
really fantastic illuminating quote, I think. Though the food stamp challenge shines a light
on the tight food budget of snap recipients, It also opens the door to criticism in terms of what they buy.
Similar to the criticism,
Paltrow has received for her choice of Limes, Kale, and Avocado,
poor Americans are often judged for purchasing unhealthy processed food.
Right.
So again, like, by her participation in this thing,
it is actually ramped up the thing
that they're trying to ramp down.
What's also interesting because if she had done it,
that also sends a really bad message.
Yes, absolutely.
If she's like, up, it's day eight
and I got a buck 23 left, then it's like,
oh well, then what are people on food
today that's always complaining about?
What is even weirder than that is
Gwyneth Paltrow's take home point
that she talks about in her blog.
Oh no, host.
It's worse in context.
It's just weird.
Half of the blog post is about how she's now
matter than ever that women don't receive equal pay.
Wait, what?
Right, that she's like, women are the ones
who have to take care of our kids and we're doing that on less pay and blah, blah, blah.
And I was like, but snap is an income limited program.
You have to have low income to access.
What do you, this is confusing, right?
And it felt like a really weird way
to like turn this into a classically like white lady
class privilege, deeply white feminist argument, right?
Which is like women's equal pay,
rather than being like,
hey, so food stamps are fucking broken from jump.
And like people need to be receiving
at least twice this much.
And we got to remove restrictions from food stamps
for things like medication and tampons and diapers
and other shit that people need.
Yeah, it should just be cash.
There shouldn't be food stamps.
It should just be fucking cash.
Right.
She could have gone in deeper on this issue of like,
what does it mean for people to be on food stamps?
What does it mean for this program to be run this way?
And instead, she takes this weird sharp turn into like,
and that's why we need equal pay.
Yeah, which she's also correct about.
That would be great.
It would be good, but that's not the conclusion
of this particular exercise, ma'am.
It would have been interesting if she had actually
sat down with somebody who lives on food stamps.
Yes, the mental toll that it takes on you is so different
when it's for a longer term.
Yeah, the idea, I lived on 29 bucks for a week, fine.
I, when if Walter has been hungry for her entire adult life,
so she probably could have done this
and just like not fucking eaten for three days,
which is like what half the diet she recommends are, right?
Sure, but her shit is like, you don't eat for three days
but somehow it costs you a thousand dollars.
Yeah, I know.
It's the most expensive way not to eat,
so I'm not sure that she could not eat on a budget.
She would still need like the celery juice, whatever.
And this would get her two celery juices.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
So as I did the research on sort of Goop broadly,
there were some sort of theories about the appeal of Goop.
There was the one that we talked about earlier
that they're sort of like selling a celebrity lifestyle
that's going to be expensive.
It's going to be very woo.
It's going to be exclusive.
That's what people want
in sort of the thinking.
There is another theory that Goop is reaching
and either offering alternatives to or taking advantage of
people who have been failed by medical systems, right?
There's another theory that is sort of that Goop
is selling self-care to women who have been taught
to put themselves on the back burner that they're saying, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no the company's signature event, which is called Ingoop Health. Ingoop Health, okay.
It is a summit. It's an in-person event that they sort of travel around the country slash world.
It's one of the few places where actual goop followers physically show up.
And there's some reporting about who those folks are and why they're in it and all that kind of stuff.
Oh, it's the gathering of the jugalos for like skincare products.
The gathering of the goopalos.
It's the goopalos, yeah.
So the first in-goop health summit happens in LA in 2017.
It is very lavish and it's focused on absolutely everything
you think it's focused on.
Okay.
Tickets cost between $500 and $1,500.
At a later New York summit,
the highest price tier is actually the first one to sell out,
which feels telling.
Yeah, wow.
Summits that happened later had ticket prices
that varied really widely.
So the high end at one point goes up to $4,500 for a ticket.
Jesus Christ.
The other thing to know about the Ingoop Health Summit
is that the crowd is really clear, right?
USA Today sends a reporter who describes the crowd as quote,
predominantly white affluent women dressed in ATHLEASURE,
right?
Is everything you think it's gonna be?
Wait, why the ATHLEASURE though?
ATHLEASURE or Wide Leg Linen pants?
Like, Gauzy and Ethereal, or it might work out,
but I'm not going to.
A whole lot of the press coverage of Ingoop Health
is just listing things that are happening.
They're doing aura photography and sound baths.
And blah, blah, blah.
Like, they just, like every piece is like 100 to 200 words of just like,
here's a list of some stuff.
It just sounds like a huge waste of like more than I spent on my first car.
Would you like to hear a list of some stuff that they have at the Goop Summit?
Please, please.
Oh, here's actually, let me send you a quote from one of them.
So one of the things that the Goop Summit has, in addition to aura photography, J-Degs,
all that kind of stuff, they have a flavored oxygen bar.
I remember that, like mini trend lit.
They were like, they're gonna have bars.
They're gonna have oxygen bars.
We're all gonna be going to oxygen bars.
No, we're not.
No, we're not.
We ought to watch 1500 news stories about it,
but nobody ever actually went to one.
All right, so I sent you that quote. Wait, I'm still on, I'm still on Gwyneth Paltrow's Twitter page.
I have to click away.
It's mesmerizing to me.
It says,
my experience involved waiting 45 minutes in line to breathe in
flavored oxygen for 10 minutes.
Breathing in highly concentrated oxygen is purported to have a number of health
benefits, such as detoxifying blood,
increasing circulation,
strengthening the immune system,
heightening concentration, improving relaxation,
and relieving headaches.
I didn't notice any immediate effects,
but I did enjoy the smell.
I mean, yeah, that kind of just seems fine.
It's like, yeah, it's bullshit, but...
Absolutely.
You know...
Hilariously, they go through in detail...
What is in the food court? Okay. there is a booth for bulletproof coffee. Of course
They have a million kinds of sort of branded samples. They have probiotic drinks
There are fresh fruits and vegetables everywhere
But the things that the attendees really gravitate toward are these sort of branded potions and elixirs
that are making sort of claims about things, right?
Yeah, of course.
Hilariously, one of the things in the food court
is a place called Chloe Ice Cream,
which has a kale cookies and cream flavor.
That sounds grassy.
But then People Magazine also covers it
and they're like, it was good.
And then they include an affiliate link. Which is also like that is a big dividing line
in the press around Goop is like,
who includes affiliate links to a bunch of Goopies?
And it's funny to think back on the time
when it was like, you just had to put kale
and fucking everything.
People thought kale was this like magical phytoman.
Absolutely, kale and bacon were happening at the same time.
Yeah, oh my Jesus God, the bacon days.
They have swag bags as you can imagine
that have like a bunch of like, you know,
a specific brand of a collagen supplement,
a particular kind of fancy hair towel.
Sure.
These nail polishes, this like,
protein bars made by Gwyneth Paltrow's personal trainer.
Oh my God, you know what it is?
Something just clicked in my brain.
Tell me.
It's fucking as seen on TV.
Yeah, it absolutely is.
Remember, as seen on TV,
they would just have these random fucking products
and it's like, are you tired of juicing your lemons
with a lemon juicer and they'd have some dumb thing
that you had to plug in?
It was a fancy lemon juicer, you think?
It was like weird little gadgets and things
that solved extremely minor problems.
Like maybe the towel you use to dry your hair is fine.
Yeah, I mean, the Ingoop Health Summit
is like the internet comes to life
and everything you have imagined about Goop
is actually happening all around you.
It's really what it sounds like to me.
They also have panels. The early summits
are mostly celebrity. Drew Barrymore was their Chelsea handler, Meg Ryan, Laura Lennie,
and Bryce Dallas Howard. Okay. And Bryce Dallas Howard moderated a panel set to address,
quote, the hard problem of consciousness.
Oh my fucking god.
The real problems with the Goop Summit
seem to lie with what is happening on stage.
So like the main, the main thing to end.
The main fucking event, right?
So like most of what is happening is the problem.
There's an LA Times reporter who goes to a goop summit and tweets out like live tweets
what she's seeing.
She goes to a session on gut health that is led by Dr. Michael Gundry.
Okay.
Who gives some truly bananas advice from the stage?
He says, quote, don't eat.
I can't stress that enough.
We have the ability to store fat.
Finally, we've cracked it. The secret to weight loss.
Jonate! Stop it!
He says that for six months a year, he foregoes both breakfast and lunch and just has one
meal a day.
So he's an omad, dude, a one meal a day guy.
Then we move into a panel called The Tools.
In that panel, there are two psychotherapists,
according to People magazine, who quote,
provided on-demand therapy to audience members.
What?
In front of the crowd.
Oh, that's just like carnival shit.
Yeah.
So here is what USA Today has to say about these two
psychotherapists.
We're going to talk about them.
One is someone whose last name is Michael.
It says it's a remarkably raw, honest 30 minutes and closes with a talk about positive entitlement.
60 to 80% of the women in my practice don't feel that basic sense of entitlement that I deserve this says,
Michael's at their prompting the room of women shout,
I'm an animal.
The hour ends with Pauletta opening up
about her struggle with perfectionism.
The doctors quaint our fear the shadow.
It's whatever you wish you weren't, says Michaels,
no matter how much success you have.
I know what you're gonna say about this.
What do you think I'm gonna say about this?
Well, it's like a bunch of people
with like,
not the biggest problems.
Yeah. You have a job that pays well
and you've got a family and all this stuff
and everything's going well,
and yet there's still something missing.
Which honestly, like on an individual level,
I know people that are going through this,
I would never in any way mock this.
Yeah, but also it's like,
Gwyneth Paltrow has a platform and
You can talk about anything at these things and it's like self-help Tony Robbins stuff
Ultimately at the end of the day. I mean, I think here's what I would say
Well, what you're gonna say is smarter than me, but that's what I
Reading the paragraph. No, you're right. You're totally on the right track with how I feel about this absolutely and
You're right. You're totally on the right track with how I feel about this. Absolutely. And also, I think context matters a great deal here, right?
Yeah. In order to understand why this is so troubling, you've got to know where self-care comes from.
So this is all sourced from a fantastic slate piece by Aisha Harris.
Harris uses the slate piece to lay out a broad history of self-care in the 20th century,
which started as a medical concept designed as a way for patients with pretty profound
needs to treat themselves.
Prior to the 60s self-care is talked about as a tactic for elders for people with pretty
profound mental illnesses. We're talking about people with pretty profound mental illnesses, right?
We're talking about people with very specific needs.
Their healthcare providers are talking to them about how they can take care of those deep
needs both for themselves and through their medical treatment, right?
Then it starts to catch on as a way for people in particularly intense interpersonal jobs
to manage their own stress.
So it becomes a big point of concern amongst grief counselors and social workers and EMTs
and therapists and people who have jobs that are emotionally weighty.
But where it really takes off as a concept is when it is picked up by the Black Panthers.
Oh, still processing a great podcast has a great episode about that.
There's also some more detailed history on this
in a book by Alondra Nelson called Body and Soul.
The Black Panther Party established service programs
designed to provide for black communities
where the government and nonprofits didn't.
So here is a quote that I'm gonna send you
from that slate piece by Aisha Harris.
Boop! It says,
those programs were established both to make up for the dire lack of adequate social service
programs after the waning of the war on poverty, as well as to provide a coping mechanism against
the harassment and surveillance that black people suffered at the hands of police and the federal
government. These nationwide clinics recruited nurses, doctors,
and students to test for illness and disease
rampant within the black community,
including lead poisoning and sickle cell anemia,
as well as to provide basic preventive care.
For black people, and especially black women,
this kind of self-care was brought to fill a desperate need.
The survival programs of the Panthers were about just that.
Survival.
So we've got this concept that is used overwhelmingly sort of
medically, right, up to this point.
From here, second wave feminist movements pick up the concept of self
care and sort of go, oh, doctors aren't really looking out for
ladies at this point. So we got to look out for ourselves.
In the 80s and 90s, it really starts to drift into the mainstream and starts to become sort of monetized, right?
That's when we start getting workout videos. That's when people start talking about wellness more broadly
and that's when all of this stuff starts to make money for people and it drifts from being a
practice of people on the margins who've been forced into this practice
to a pretty capitalist venture
that is seen as being more for wealthy people
and frankly for wider people, right?
Right.
So given that history,
to then gather together a room full of very wealthy white women
and tell them, you need to put yourself first.
Many of you might be employers.
We don't need to talk about how you're treating your employees.
All of you are white women.
We don't need to talk about race.
Yeah.
All of you are wealthy.
We don't need to talk about class.
The most important thing in your life needs to be you
and your own piece of mind.
I've always been fascinated by the ways women
are kind of the middle managers
of like the American hierarchy of oppression. Like women do face real oppression, like very
well-documented discrimination. No question. But also because women comprise such a large
percentage of the population, there's also these really important stratifications within
women. Absolutely.
And a lot of this self-care stuff
seems like it wants to highlight the challenges
that women face while also ignoring the challenges
that other people face.
And also, the challenges that white, wealthy women
can impose upon other people.
Yeah, and I think when your primary directive
is to focus on yourself and put yourself first,
and you are a person with substantial power and privilege,
that can lead to some yikes places, right?
And then when other people come to you and say,
hey, I have a need of you,
hey, I need to set this boundary with you.
Hey, this thing that you're doing
isn't really working for me.
You go, uh-uh, my job is to put myself first.
Right.
And this is toxic energy, or this is bad news,
or this is like, I'm not taking it.
It feels both like not necessarily a terrible thing,
but when it is depoliticized this way,
and when there's no caveats and no structure
around that conversation, it lets people just free associate
into like, here's what I think it is to be a toxic person.
That feels really icky and challenging
and straight up counterproductive.
I also feel like it's such a dilemma for like people
like Gwyneth Paltrow because skincare is nice.
Sure, like a lot of these products are nice.
Sure, sure, sure.
On some level, it's like you don't want everything to be
like a fucking lecture about like all the spiritual
problems totally with America.
You're like, man, I just want to go to a conference center
and like drink some probiotic bullshit and like have a smoothie.
Absolutely.
People are allowed to like be into dumb bullshit.
Yes, my, you know my main thing.
I mean, absolutely.
Listen, on almost every Zoom that we have,
you're like, tell me about your eye makeup.
Yeah.
Oh my god, thank you.
This is the palette that I'm using.
Right?
Yeah.
Definitely, definitely.
I am into ridiculous shit.
And definitely, definitely,
people should be able to be into ridiculous shit.
Yeah.
But there is also a point at which that tips
into encouraging other bad behavior.
And I think it's not terrible to ask,
goop and to ask wellness influencers writ large
to put up some fucking bumper lanes, right?
Like if you're bowling, keep folks from tipping into the gutter.
Right, I mean, to me, I feel like this is the entire duality
and also something that we keep coming up against on this show
is that at the most surface layer,
like yeah, it's totally harmless frivolous stuff,
but it never stays at the frivolous stuff.
What happens almost immediately
is it becomes this ideology, right?
It becomes a way of looking at the world, right?
Like, they're doing panels on like
how to achieve the light of consciousness,
right? It's not just this health stuff because you can't sell health stuff by leaving it there.
You have to take everything to the next level up. This is how marketing works, right? This is how
they marketed cigarettes for years. It's not, you know, you don't smoke because it's like a burning stick that you're addicted to.
You smoke because the moral war man symbolizes
all this like rugged individualism
and like masculinity and all this kind of stuff.
What they're essentially doing here
is they're doing a form of marketing
where they're selling you this identity
of someone who's like taking control of your life
and pushing back against the oppression
and you're leaning in or whatever.
Yes.
But what they're really doing is like,
they're telling you all of this stuff
so that they can sell you skincare.
Michael, it's about to get a little darker.
Okay.
Here is a place where Goop did not put up bumper lanes.
And in fact, I think carved out another gutter
in like the middle of the bowling
lane is that they also had a panelist whose name is Dr. Kelly Brogan. Is that a name you're
familiar with? I don't think so. Dr. Brogan has. And so are HIV medications. Oh, fuck off.
That AIDS related deaths are actually probably caused by drug toxicity from AIDS
treatments and not from the virus itself. That's really bad. She also wrote a blog post in 2014, it's since been deleted, saying that sort of these ideas that HIV leads
to AIDS and that cholesterol contributes to heart disease are, quote, memes we hold on to
societally as truths.
Okay.
So she's like, that's not really real.
That's just like a thing that you heard.
So now you believe it, blah, blah, blah blah blah, which is like technically true,
but that also doesn't mean that it's untrue.
Yeah, first of all, I believe all the memes that I see
that I'm running wrong with that.
Mike is a big believer in salt, babe.
The thing to know here is that Dr. Brogon
is not the only anti-vaxx speaker at this conference.
She's the most extreme, but she is far from the only one.
There are sort of repeated reports of like,
anti-vax people talking about anti-vax shit
at in GuPelth summits.
And journalists start asking,
Gwyneth Paltrow, like,
do you believe this shit?
What's going on here?
Why are you giving this a platform?
She tells this to USA Today.
I realize I edit the show,
but is it too late for me to take back the nice stuff
I said about Gwyneth earlier?
Is that possible?
Okay.
She says, women are not lemmings.
Just because we're raising a question
doesn't mean we're expecting somebody to follow our advice.
We believe women are intuitive enough and intelligent enough to hear both sides of a lot of things
and make a decision for themselves
that's resonant for them.
Gwyneth.
Like this is very classic misinformation
and disinformation playbook.
Shit.
You're giving people information,
but like, oh, we don't expect them to act on it.
But like if someone tells you vaccines are harming your children, what do you fucking expect
people to do?
People care about the health of their children.
So it's like, you can't throw bombs into the middle of people's brains like this.
And then we're like, oh, it's not really a bomb.
Literally one of the anti-vax speakers is a pediatrician who's like, I saw too many
patients with these experiences
and then I saw it happen in my own son.
And I'm like, this is a bad influence.
Really irresponsible.
Deeply irresponsible.
And then to say we're just offering people up
with options and women can make up their minds
and we're smart and people don't give us enough credit
for being so smart.
You gotta have a line.
The fuck you go in this line.
Yeah, like the anti-vax stuff is just. The fuck you go in this line.
I mean, like the end of act stuff
is just like, fuck you go in this, this isn't cool.
I mean, I think there is a through line
throughout Goops work that is a deep resistance
to accountability, right?
So that's why it felt so important to me
to do this episode in a way that sort of takes
Goop at face value.
Because when you do that, when you strip away,
eye rolling and all of that kind of stuff,
what you see is a pretty cutthroat business model
that is kind of gross.
Yeah, I think you're right that it's time to just ask questions
about whether, when it is fully aware what she's doing
and whether there's like real cynicism behind this.
Yeah, we're just asking questions. Yeah, we're just asking questions.
Yeah, we're just asking questions of Goop.
We have some questions. Thank you.