Nobody Should Believe Me - Case Files 11: New Media Journalism and Death Eaters with V Spehar
Episode Date: March 13, 2025We have a very fun guest on NSBM Case Files this week: V Spehar aka Under the Desk News! In this engaging conversation, V and Andrea discuss the whirlwind that has been the beginning of 2025, the impo...rtance of ethical responsibility in media and journalism, and working through the gut-punch of grief. They discuss how their careers pivoted in unexpected, but amazing ways and how their personal experiences inform the way they move through their respective spaces. V shares their strategy for dealing with the current onslaught of news and highlights the importance of community. *** Follow V on all the things: https://linktr.ee/vspehar Order Andrea's new book The Mother Next Door: Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by Proxy https://read.macmillan.com/lp/the-mother-next-door-9781250284273/ View our sponsors. Remember that using our codes helps advertisers know you’re listening and helps us keep making the show! https://www.nobodyshouldbelieveme.com/sponsors/ Follow Andrea on Instagram for behind-the-scenes photos: https://www.instagram.com/andreadunlop/ Buy Andrea's books: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Andrea-Dunlop/author/B005VFWJPI To support the show, go to http://Patreon.com/NobodyShouldBelieveMe or subscribe on Apple Podcasts (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nobody-should-believe-me/id1615637188?ign-itscg=30200S&ign-itsct=larjmedia_podcasts) where you can get all episodes early and ad-free and access exclusive ethical true crime bonus content. For more information and resources on Munchausen by Proxy, please visit http://MunchausenSupport.com The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children’s MBP Practice Guidelines can be downloaded here: https://apsac.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Munchausen-by-Proxy-Clinical-and-Case-Management-Guidance-.pdf Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Well, hello V.
Hi, what's going on?
Oh, man.
You know, 2025 is 2025 and harder than I anticipated.
I don't know if it's harder than you anticipated,
because you probably anticipated a lot more.
I have to say odd number years are tougher for me.
I find like things, even number years for whatever like more joyful.
But like yeah, 2013 sucked for me.
2015 was real bad.
2025 is like a bummer, which means that we could only get better from here, I guess.
You know, now that you mention it, same because like I was married in an even year.
I was born in an even year.
Both my kids were born in even years.
Correct.
You know, and then like 2011 was when my whole family thing come up.
And I have to tell you, this is totally an aside, but I was spelunking through my old
Facebook post trying to find like archival whatever's.
And I found a post from myself on New Year's Eve going into 2011 where I said, I don't
see any reason that 2011 isn't going to be the best year ever.
Sooner be known to you.
I know.
Yeah, so it's an odd year, so we could chalk it up to that.
Okay, I like that.
I like having something to blame.
And also, gentle reminder that presidents are their most powerful on their first day
in office.
And like a used car, they diminish in value as time goes on.
And I think we are now 30 days in and we're starting to see the shock and awe that people
have been dealing with from him over the last 30 days, you know, sort of level out to some
level.
He can't possibly do more than he's already done.
I mean, we're through the cabinet nominations, we're through some of the like top line most cruel possible policies being put forward. The court has slapped down a bunch of stuff.
So I think if politics is worrying you too, or you feel like everything just is going too fast,
also know that we probably are through the fast part.
That is a really good perspective, Vee. And you know, just by way of introduction,
you are my and many people's favorite and
most trusted news source in these trying times.
And you are a journalist, you're a podcaster, you're a TikTok and YouTube and Substack
creator.
You do incredible, thorough, fact check, deep, insightful reporting, and you somehow manage to stay positive.
Which is truly, you've been such a touchstone for me, both as just a listener and a person
who consumes your content, but also as a creator and how to keep a light on in, I will say, an often particularly hopeless feeling corner of this cause
that we talk about on the show.
So I just thank you for all of that.
And I am, as I mentioned, a proud dust bunny.
Yeah.
So can you tell us, how did you come to be under the desk news?
How did this all get started?
Yeah.
So, you know, it started on January 6th, just sort of out of nowhere.
And yes, that January 6th.
I was working in this company, and I was trying to figure out how to send food to unhoused
veterans in Tennessee during the pandemic,
because it was like really difficult
to run them with the VA.
And I'm like watching CNN, you know, above my laptop,
as many people were in the background.
And I had been a caterer in the Capitol before.
I was like a chef, caterer person,
and I'd worked in the Capitol a bunch.
And I was like, I don't think you're supposed to be there.
I think that they, I could like recognize
they were in hallways that we weren't allowed to go in.
So I was like, I don't think that this is normal. And as many of us were in
early pandemic, I was like on with the VA. So from my like hips up, I was wearing a suit.
And from the bottom down, I was wearing like Nike shorts. So I like slid under my desk in this like
half disheveled suit looking thing. And I was like, Mike, Mike Pence,
here's what the 25th amendment is.
And if you invoke it, you can call in the national guard
and kind of end all this.
People thought that was very funny.
I thought nothing of it.
I had been making like cooking TikToks,
teaching people how to apply for PPP loans.
But this was my first like civics TikTok.
And then my friend, Randy was like,
you better get back under that desk
and tell people what's going on now.
So then that kind of turned into like civics 101.
And then that turned into Joe Biden's first 100 days.
And then now, you know, we're what?
Like four years almost to the day, like since,
and it just took off from there,
but it really started with this idea of like,
sort of like funny.
And then it became like the ethos of it became
people are really
looking for good information right now.
They're feeling out of control.
And while we can't give them necessarily good news, we can remind them that they're smarter
than they think and that there are levers to power that we still have to pull.
And so like we're going to be okay kind of thing.
And that's where the early civics education really factored in.
And then, you know, I just started being like,
the thing that the news doesn't do is tell us what happened that day, because it just feels like it's
also, you know, shock and awe. So I was like, I'm just going to tell people, hey, it's Monday night,
and here's what happened just today. And I think in the pandemic time, that was even more important.
And then folks, you know, if they heard a story that they were curious about, because I was doing,
you know, an aggregation of stories from the day, then they could go look more And then folks, if they heard a story that they were curious about, because it was doing
an aggregation of stories from the day,
then they could go look more into it.
But if they weren't interested in that,
it didn't take too much of their day.
Yeah, I love that.
And I think that you turned out to be
the hero we needed in that period and going forward.
Well, and let me tell you, so that's under the desk news.
That's what you know is the everyday.
But the origin of good news only
is even a little bit funnier and kind of based on the same,
like didn't think this was gonna be a thing
and then it became a thing.
So every Thursday we do Banana Shirt Good News Only.
And that came because, okay, this is exposing,
but I'm gonna tell you, I had surgery and I'm okay.
But I had like this little surgery and I was on like a little bit of pain medication, which
made me like a little bit giggly.
And my mom's a nurse, so she was like helping me.
But my wife had to buy me button-up shirts for this particular surgery that I had.
And so I'd have these button-up shirts for recovery.
And she couldn't find any button-up shirts that were soft.
And Target was selling this like silly banana shirt that was like a pajamas shirt.
And so I had that on and I was trying to hide that I had had surgery because I didn't
want anybody to worry about me.
And so I was like, I don't want to talk about negative stuff.
I'm only going to tell them good stories tonight.
My mom was like, I think that's great, sweetheart.
I think you should do that, you know, cause mom. So Banana Shirt Good News Only came out of me being like
kind of high post surgery and like needing something
to feel good about.
Cause I don't know anybody else, anytime I've had to have
surgery, I get like post surgery blues.
I don't know how to explain it.
You just feel like a little down from the medicine or like
it just feel icky when you're, when you're recovering.
And so that's how Banana Shirt Good News Only came.
And then people the next Thursday were like, hey, where's my Banana Shirt?
And then this became like, oh, see, every Thursday people want to see that things are
working.
That's amazing.
Thank you so much for sharing that anecdote.
And I feel like, you know, that really speaks to why what you do works because you are a very reliable, solid news source, but the delivery
is very much our friend V telling us some things in their suit or in their banana shirt.
And I think that that's really something that, you know, especially again, to, you know, talk about the timing of it all, like in that moment when we
needed both information and human connection, it really was,
you know, this this perfect time. I wonder for you, because
this is something that I really enjoyed listening to you talk
about on your wonderful podcast that you do with Sammy Sayed
from Betches Media American Fever Dream.
It is one of my favorite podcasts and I have loved listening to you guys, especially as
you were talking about, you know, going to the Democratic National Convention and sort
of talking about, you know, really this transition that I feel like has really been speeding
up and is it like kind of full velocity right now of this transition that you and I are the same age
and I have been in podcasting only the last couple of years
but have been in and around sort of media,
working in books, working as a publicist,
that we've been watching happen for, I don't know,
the last 20 years and then it suddenly is really accelerating
of legacy media going away or changing shape dramatically,
and new media really coming to the forefront. I've loved hearing your thoughts about this
on the show. And I wanted to ask you, for yourself, being that you started this project
that is now your full-time job, right? and like I have such a similar entry point, right?
I started this as a limited series
that I saw as a passion project that I saw,
you know, and then lo and behold, now it's my full-time job.
And I feel very lucky to have that,
but it was such an unexpected career turn.
And, you know, I was always interested in journalism.
I, you know, went through a strong period
of wanting to be Barbara Walters, you know, when I was growing interested in journalism. I went through a strong period of wanting
to be Barbara Walters when I was growing up
and really thinking that might be something
that I wanted to pursue.
But I did not plan to sort of become a journalist.
And it's taken me a little while to sort of embrace,
just be able to say that, I think.
I mean, you must have gone through kind of a similar sort
of personal journey.
And I wonder like, when did you really make that transition
to like, okay, this is not just something I'm doing
in this lighthearted way, or, you know,
and really like embrace that part of like,
no, I am a journalist, you know,
I deserve to be here as much as anybody.
And you are a journalist, not a, what did NPR call you?
Newsfluencer.
Not a newsfluencer, oh my God.
I mean, I love NPR.
Have the toe bag.
I do too.
Love it, you know.
I same, it was one, that's why I say about that episode,
I felt it was worth criticism because it was such a departure
from what we know from NPR,
and I thought they could take the criticism
and they can't do it for okay now.
Yeah, of course they can, yeah.
And you know, that was a call-in, not a call-in, right?
When did you really sort of realize, oh, OK, no,
like we are doing journalism here.
This has all the bells and whistles.
This is as robust as reporting that you're
going to see in a legacy media news outlet.
So I think this goes back to all the different things
I've been in my life that I never really feel like I'm that thing until somebody tells me I'm not and then like nobody loves me like I love me being challenged.
Like I all of a sudden invoke like all the confidence in the world once I'm challenged.
So like you say you wanted to be Barbara Walters. I wanted to be Monica Lewinsky. Not in the exact same way, but I loved her as like a cultural, political, like
just spectacle. Okay. So like if when we were young, we were the same age, we both watched
that 2020 special, I was obsessed with her red lipstick. It's the first time I was
like really interested in politics at all. That interview had to be somewhat close to
my birthday because I got it for that. So, and that was the thing. And my mom would have
done anything for me to want something feminine. That was, that was big for her. So I got it for that. So, and that was the thing. And my mom would have done anything for me to want something feminine.
That was big for her.
So I got the Club Monica lipstick
and I was just obsessed with the idea of Monica Lewinsky
and such a young person to have such power
over essentially the presidency
and to be like a regular person.
And I thought that that was so interesting.
And I think that stuck with me as like a formative thing
more than anything else.
When it came to this idea that regular people can absolutely break America, you know,
for just, you know, one thing that they do that's a very human thing, let's say, falling
in love with somebody that you shouldn't love or just the way she dealt with it. I've
always like really admired Monica Lewinsky and I've always felt like I'm just a regular
person like even on my social media and everything, they'll be like, well, what are felt like I'm just a regular person. Like even on my social media and everything,
they'll be like, well, what are you?
I'm like, I'm a really good friend.
And that is how I like approach everything that I do.
When folks are like, I feel like you're my friend.
I was like, because I, that's how I am in the world.
I am a really good friend.
Whether that's to the people I've been friends
with my whole life or the drunk girl
I just met in the bathroom.
I am a good friend.
Or to the kids who used to work for me.
I am a good friend.
I make sure, you know, everything's going well.
When it comes to, when did I become a journalist?. I make sure, you know, everything's going well. When it comes to when did I become a journalist?
When I was a cook, you never feel like a chef.
No matter how many big restaurants you work at,
no matter what dish you come up with,
no matter how many awards your restaurant wins,
you never feel like a chef.
Until somebody turns to you
and you're in the heat of service
and they disrespect you.
And then you're like, that's yes, chef.
And then all of a sudden you're chef after that, right?
But you have to have that moment where's yes chef and then all of a sudden you're chef after that, right? But you have to have that moment where you're challenged and then all of a sudden you're not so insecure about being chef anymore
And I had that with journalism when I started when the Pew research came out
Now the whole two years I did under the desk news before it became popular with the mainstream
All I heard from media people were like, oh you're fun to have on as a guest. You have no career
This is sort of a flash in the pan. This is your Monica Lewinsky moment, right? All I heard from media people were like, oh, you're fun to have on as a guest. You have no career.
This is sort of a flash in the pan.
This is your Monica Lewinsky moment, right?
This is your little thing where you're a special person
of the day, but it's not gonna go anywhere
and you won't have any lasting effect.
And then Pew Research published something saying
that one in three Americans get their news on TikTok.
And then all of a sudden,
I became the biggest shit there ever was.
And everybody wanted to know how I did it.
And why do you have millions of followers?
And these people are really important.
And oh my God, this is your full-time job.
So then they tried to buy under the desk.
And I had a meeting where I got called to Miami
and I thought I was just gonna be like,
it was with, I'll just tell you, it was with NBC.
And it was me, this is where I met Sammy actually.
And they were inviting in certain people
to see if there was like anything they could do
to sort of buy new media
because it's not something that they had.
And I didn't realize that.
I thought I was just going down
to help them with their new media.
Cause again, I am a friend first.
And I was like, oh, they must like what I do
and maybe want me to help them a little bit.
That sounds good.
And they wanted to buy under the desk.
And I started crying and I was like,
I'd rather keep it I think.
And they were like, are you here alone? You have no manager, no publicist. I was like, I'd rather keep it, I think. And they were like, are you here alone?
You have no manager, no publicist.
I was like, I just thought I was coming
to like help you as a friend.
Just trying to be your friend, NBC.
Just trying to be your friend.
And they're like, what?
We sent a car, like a black car from your house
to a first-class airline ticket
to this super fancy hotel in Miami
to have a meeting with the chairman of NBC.
And you thought you were coming in as a buddy.
And I'm like, I don't know any different. Like, what do I know? I was like, all right, sounds good. this super fancy hotel in Miami to have a meeting with the chairman of NBC and you thought you were coming in as a buddy.
And I'm like, I don't know any different.
Like, what do I know?
I was like, all right, sounds good.
So that was the first time and then I kept it
and they were like, you're a sweet kid.
Like that's quite lovely and you know what you should
and like good for you and that's okay.
And that's when I felt like a journalist.
I felt like a journalist then
because I had essentially stood up to the people
who would make me and had to bet on myself. Like in that moment, I was like, no, I believe in me
more than I think you believe in me,
even though you're offering me
what should be a journalist's dream, right?
A lot of people work to a certain point
to be able to sell their show to have that sort of stability.
Yeah. Oh, I love that.
And I relate with that so hard because I think,
you know, I went into this process and we had originally sold
the first season of this show as a limited series
and I fell out with that company before it launched
because we got the tiniest legal pushback from my sister
that I told everyone was coming and this whole fight.
And in some of those communications
and then I have a reasonably dedicated carter of people that hate me and you know one thing
they always like to say is oh you're not an expert and you're not of this and you're
not of that and I was like well actually you know I am and there's more than one way to
become an expert and when the top experts in your in the field consider you an expert, that's good enough for me.
And it's sort of like, you realize you're like,
oh, well, none of these things are ever gonna satisfy
any of these people, right?
It's like, no matter what you do,
how many, you know, how much research you do.
You're not a professional critic either.
I mean, where's your credentials, brother?
That's a really good response to that.
You know, and I'm like, well, you know, I've written a book.
I did a keynote for Stanford School of Medicine's
conference.
I mean, where do you draw the line with expert?
And then I think similarly as a journalist,
and unfortunately, some of the pushback
I had on thinking of myself as a journalist,
the call was coming from inside the house
because that was one of my original producers
that I worked with.
By the time I got to the Maya Kowalski case, which I was the only media outlet that was covering that
in any kind of depth and actually reading
through the thousands of pages of court documents
and actually doing the work, I was like, well, yeah,
I do deserve to call myself a journalist.
And I think it did.
It came from those challenges.
And I was like, we need to reframe
what we think of a journalist.
And now that's to say, like, not every TikTok creator,
not every podcaster is doing journalism.
Well, not every Fox News host is a journalist either.
And they're on technically a news program.
Julie Agnew at the New York Times, who I really appreciate,
once said, journalism is not a profession, it's an act.
If you are doing acts of journalism,
you are a journalist.
And that was really validating to me.
And one of the first people to call
me a journalist was Taylor Lorenz,
because in the beginning, when I
started to get any kind of hate
online, I just reached out to her
and she was like, you're a journalist.
You're a journalist.
You're not like a don't be scared.
What what would a journalist do?
That's what you should do.
And I thought that was really
validating because of course, she's somebody I really looked up to too. And Katie
Fang has called me a journalist and I love her and she means a lot to me. But it never
came from any of the accolades or the jobs that I got. It came from eventually, you know,
one day I was chef and one day I was a journalist. And it was that day when I was like some little,
you know, something inside me was like,
I'm not going to let people talk down to me.
Because up till then, it wasn't just
that they didn't think of me as a journalist.
It's that they thought of me as other or less.
And would go out of their way to come up
with terms that were othering, like newsfluencer, news
communicator, tick tocker, hack, fraud, plagiarizer, news aggregator, you name it.
And I was like, OK, if I had a newsletter, though, y'all be shit in your pants for me.
Y'all be going nuts. But because my platform is TikTok, you don't want it to be serious.
And so, you know, we've come a long way from that and we haven't.
I have a fellowship right now at the Harvard School of Media and it's a journalism fellowship
and it's a very prestigious one.
The first day I was at my fellowship,
Stanford was talking to my management
because they wanted me to come and do a talk there
and they were like, we'll be billing V
as a news influencer though.
And my management was like,
V's really super sensitive to that term
and we are not using that term, so no. And they went back and there were two teachers at Stanford
that refused to, no matter how much evidence we gave them, even telling them I was at Harvard
for my journalism fellowship, they were like, no, they're not a journalist. And so I was
like, we'll get fucked in Stanford. I don't know what to tell you. You know what I mean?
So there's still haters out there. There's still haters out there.
There will always be haters out there.
Well, and my perception on that is
that that's coming from a fear of
if these credentials are not exactly the same
as they were for me,
then what does that mean about my work?
And it's very interesting for me interfacing
with some people who are a generation older than me
in the field of child abuse or academics
and have a lot of master's degrees,
a lot of PhDs running around
and me with my little Bachelor of Arts
in creative writing.
I'm actually on the whole,
I'm really encouraged about how open
a lot of those folks are that have dedicated their life to this,
because they recognize the need for new strategies,
new ideas.
And then there are those, thankfully,
fewer people for whom the idea of someone like me
is threatening.
Well, and I think that's certainly
true in academia and politics in many ways, because they're
like, well, if you could just be a journalist, then what does it matter if somebody has a
degree in journalism from the Columbia School?
That used to be the thing that set you apart.
Now I have a relationship with Bob Woodward, obviously a journalist, like probably one
of the titans and icons of this modern generation.
I was at the New York Times Deal Book Summit and we were putting a little group together because they wanted to put like definitively legacy
journalists with a new journalist to see you know how things were different how
they were the same and Bob Woodward and Leslie Stahl were in my group and me and
Ben from Semaphore were in the group as well. Bob Woodward afterwards he was like
I'm just so fascinated by you I'm just so interested in you and I was like that's
really validating thank you and he was like I'd love just so fascinated by you. I'm just so interested in you. And I was like, that's really validating. Thank you. And he was like, I'd love to invite
you to my home to have breakfast and talk. And I'd love to just like stay in touch.
So we like text. And by we, I mean, me and his assistant Claire, who relays it to him
because he doesn't text. But I went to his house for breakfast with his wife and we sat,
we talked about media and he said, what's something that you're facing that you don't
know how to handle? And I was like, at that point, this was two years ago,
I was like, I don't know, am I a journalist, am I not?
And he was like, well, let me ask you this,
when was I a journalist, like in your mind?
Was it when I got hired at the Washington Post?
Was it when I published the Watergate papers?
Was it when I won my first Pulitzer?
Was it when I became the executive director
at the Washington Post?
Was it when I took my first mentor? Was it when I won my second Pulitzer Prize? When did I become
a journalist to you? And I was like, I guess, I don't know. I guess always. I think you
were always. And he's like, OK, because I got fired from the Washington Post twice before
I ended up getting the Watergate gig. And I didn't go to J school. I was in the Navy.
And he's like, I came out of the Navy and was like,
well, I guess I'll use my GI bill to go to school.
And then I dropped out of school.
And then I just liked the idea of creeping around
on the president.
And that's how I got started.
People thought me and Bernstein were like assholes.
They didn't think we were serious.
He's like, the only reason this worked out
and we became icons is because we had a hunch
and it worked out.
That's it.
He's like, but we also had to be a risk taker.
He's like, and I think the world you're in right now, you're taking a risk.
He's like, and I didn't learn to risk take in J school because I didn't go.
I didn't learn to storytell in J school because I didn't go.
He's like, I was in the Navy.
I knew about people.
I knew about stories.
And I knew that I wanted to creep around on the president.
And you know, so that's the origin story of an icon.
And I was a journalist then.
And that really like stuck with me and I really appreciated that story.
That's really beautiful.
And I've heard you tell some version of that before or kind of reference Bob Ward's words
background as an analogous point.
And I appreciate it.
And I think, yeah, like an insatiable desire to creep around on some person or topic is
definitely a really strong entry point into journalism.
You know what I mean?
Why is journalism always seen as this high academic art?
You're creeping on people.
Yeah, it's like you're a weirdo.
And you're creeping around like a weirdo.
You're a lurker.
Some of you spend years.
I'm a gossip.
You're a gossip?
Yeah.
You spend years creeping in people's emails
and court documents and following them
and going through their trash.
It's actually fucking weird.
It's a weird profession.
But they wanna make it feel like,
ooh, no, it's this be all end all.
And it's like, no, man.
And I think if you don't have the weirdo,
you know, a producer that I'm working with
on this upcoming season, Todd Houston,
his take on this is manic curiosity.
And I was like, oh my God, I've done that so much.
And I have to credit him with that. But I was like, oh my god, I've done that so much. And I have to credit him with that.
But I was like, yes.
I was like, if you don't get that feeling when you're
covering something, especially if it is risky, right?
Especially if it is you are going
to have to take some measure of risk to report on it.
It's like, if you don't have that feeling of like, oh,
I want to do all the foyers and I want to read everything
because I want to look for every like piece in the thousand
piece puzzle as we're putting this together. And even though the stuff that I am reporting
on obviously by its nature is extremely grim, and it is difficult, but like, the process
is something that I really enjoy and can get into. And I think to the point of like the
question of what makes you a journalist is, is that you're a weirdo. I think we've nailed it.
That you're a weirdo and you're willing to do a brave act of truth telling or of storytelling
in some way. And that's what I like about it.
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You know what else I'll say and I've talked about this quite often, they'll be like, what was your early
journalism influence?
And I don't have one.
It was my mom, who I consider the original citizen journalist.
She worked the night shift as a nurse, and she used to sit around with her girlfriends
and drink coffee and listen to the police scanner.
And we would like sit down and riveted listen to my mother's notes about what they heard
and what they talked about and the pieces they put together
about things they heard on the police scanner.
And that was citizen journalism at its finest.
My mom also, not a very patient woman
and anything that we ever had to tell her or do,
she was like, don't add to it, don't take away from it,
just give it to me straight.
And if we did something bad, but we could get to her first,
she'd ride or die for us.
So I got used to telling the truth quickly and fairly through the way that I was raised.
And I think that that permeates into my content.
But I'm also a gossip.
I'm a third generation gossip.
And so much of gossip is news.
But people, you know, are like, no, that's how girls talk.
And it's less than. And it's like, no, no, no, you don't understand.
And when my sister was dating different guys, I'd be like, hey, can you find out about this dude?
20 minutes later, they've got his birth certificate
and time he was born and everything
he's ever done in his life.
Women are investigators in general.
Yeah, I mean, here on my show and in my world,
we put some respect on the girls' gays and these
because that is the core of true crime, number one.
And number two, I think those folks are more inclined
to understand where telling stories
and telling stories about people that you know,
we do all original reporting on the show for the most part.
And like a lot of it is, right?
Like people telling us about their personal experiences
and it can very much and very directly on our show,
like functions as a safety mechanism.
The whole kind of ethos of
the show is if we talk about this issue, more people will know kids will be safer. And if we
talk about the specifics, if we name the people we're talking about, that's been the biggest risk I
have taken as a journalist and making this show that other companies did not want to get on board
with. And I understand because they watch their bottom lines
and just like you not wanting to sell the NBC
and want anyone else telling me how to do this job.
And I've been really lucky that I've gotten to keep
the show independent because I was like,
oh, just there's no that early experience
with the original company.
It really made me realize I was like,
okay, there is no other way to do what I'm trying
to do here except independently.
Because people are coming to you because they trust you, right?
Like I'm here because I like you.
Like I don't do interviews and stuff.
I don't usually talk about myself.
Like I'll do them sometimes, but not really.
Not for nearly how many I get asked.
But especially when you're talking about something sensitive, you have to be able to
do it in a soft whisper, right?
And that's not always the way that news goes, right?
So when folks want to talk to me about something too, it's oftentimes we'll just get talking
and they don't even realize that they're newsworthy yet.
I'm telling people so often, people need to know about that, or that's really important.
Or I'm really glad you trusted me with that.
And they're like, really?
And I'm like, this is a yeah, what you've just told me is very important.
And they don't even know it yet that what they're saying is newsworthy.
So I think that's really interesting, too.
Yeah.
And you know, it's funny, V, because first of all, thank you for saying that.
And thank you.
Thank you for doing this interview with me.
This is really such a treat.
And it's a very full circle moment for me, because we originally met when I did an interview
with you that never aired because of all of the reasons that I've talked about.
Because of the original...
Yes, I was with a different podcast network at that time, and they wouldn't air it because
they were too afraid.
I had several interviews with that original network,
not air because the final editor would listen to it
and go, ah, too risky, ah, too,
it's gonna bum your audience out,
ah, it's not in line with the idea of V Interesting,
such a happy show.
And, you know, I had to deal with that.
And that's what it was.
And I have great respect for the women
who own that production company.
I had a very difficult time
with the particular producer
that I had.
I want to make clear, nothing against that network.
Sometimes you have a producer who makes bad decisions for you
or on behalf of you, and then your stuff
doesn't get where it needs to be.
Well, and I'll say, V, I give some grace to, especially
in those early days, I've noticed,
and I've gone on sort of increasingly large podcasts other than my own, including,
you know, including Armchair Expert and stuff like that, where I've talked about all of this stuff.
And it was surprising to me that nobody sort of legal team that these legal teams kind of
relaxed, but I think it was because I'd gone first, and I'd gotten to it to a lot of people.
And then that sort of created a different, you know, a different sort of ecosystem for it to go into.
And it's like a part of being in this game
and the business side is that you have to be comfortable
with like, if you're doing an interview with someone else,
has to go through their legal team and their standards
and what risks they're willing to take.
And you kind of have to always be okay with that.
But tell me first, because so many times,
especially with you and with, in particular,
other ones I can think of, like we interviewed one woman
who we were talking about her brother
being falsely incarcerated, and this is a person
that I'm really, really close friends with,
and she was deeply vulnerable with me,
and then they were like, now we're gonna can it
because we don't wanna get involved in an active case.
I was like, why wouldn't you say that
before this person trusted me to do this story,
and now I have to go back and say,
oh, they cut it for legal reasons.
When I'm bringing you a guest, you should,
if you're gonna cut it or have the power to cut,
you should say, hey, that's not a fit
for what we're doing right now,
because legally we think we might get into some territory
we don't wanna get into.
Then I wouldn't have brought them in,
shared that trauma bond experience,
and then been like, actually, we're gonna silence you
after you trusted me to help you tell your story.
So that's what I don't like about some of the stuff they
do over there.
Not over there.
I mean, over there in the trad media world.
Yeah, yeah, stuff that can happen.
And I mean, again, like that, I had already
been through that experience with my own show.
And I want to talk about, I think, actually,
with legacy media, I think a lot of people's trust in legacy media outlets is very shaken.
And I think one of the things, certainly from my perspective, but I think this is probably
shared by a lot of people that shakes it, is that it is necessarily tied to large commercial
interests.
And it is a really different sort of trustworthiness equation.
If you are talking about, you know, me, who's an independent podcaster,
I'm the person if you want to trust what's going on on my show,
you have to trust one person.
And that's me. If I want to trust what's going on with V-Sphere
and what's going on in your substack, which is excellent.
Everyone should subscribe to it. Thank you. On Under the Desk News, I have to trust you, V-Sphere and what's going on in your substack, which is excellent, everyone should subscribe to it.
Thank you.
On Under the Desk News, I have to trust you vSphere, right?
That's right.
And I don't have to worry about what corporate interests,
what billionaire that owns that outlet,
is leaning on the scales.
And I think we saw this in a really,
in some kind of like shocking ways ways, even with, you know, like Washington Post and, you know, that like really sort of were very
disorienting for me as a person who does, you know, who does have some faith in those outlets
and understands that for the most part, those outlets are doing real journalism with real fact
checking. And then you're just sort of like, wow, this is really like, I think we sort of think of
those places as trustworthy because they're big and robust,
but then actually those things can turn out to be weaknesses.
Well, trust in institutions is down astronomically
and taking the Washington Post example as the example,
because when I worked there, it was great.
I called it like the Disneyland of newspapers
because I was at the LA Times that I had a bad experience,
like start to finish, it was not good at all.
And that was because the billionaire owner over there was involved in the daily operations
already.
So what good there was of the LA Times with like Kevin Merida or Kimbriell Kelly, who
is the DC bureau chief who are amazing, respected, thoughtful, just genius people was already
being destroyed by the billionaire owner by the time I was coming in.
Because I also watched the billionaire owner constantly slap down Kevin's progressive
ideas or constantly slap down stories on, you know, the billionaire's buddies in DC
with Kim Brielle until he eventually, you know, fired everybody over there.
Then when I went to Washington Post, we have a desk that was completely dedicated to covering
Amazon and Jeff Bezos.
And they were deeply critical.
And we used to do TikToks about Amazon's strikes
and different stuff.
And I was like, I remember asking Carmella,
I'm like, don't we get in trouble?
Doesn't he own this?
Cause I had that experience from LA times.
And she's like, no, Bezos doesn't care.
We run completely separate from that.
Yes, this is one of the businesses in his profile,
but largely he doesn't interfere at all.
And my sister worked for Whole Foods
and she had a really good experience
with Bezos buying Whole Foods.
It like, she ended up getting a salary raise,
their insurance got a little better,
her schedule got a little better.
So I was sort of in this place where I was like,
oh, what I know about Jeff Bezos acquiring entities
is that they're part of his overall portfolio,
which is of course always to enrich Amazon,
but he doesn't get involved in the details.
And so I had a lot of respect for that.
And then I left some time past and I don't know what changed in him, but he decided that
he was going to be involved at the Washington Post.
And I don't think that people lost respect in the Washington Post so much as they saw
the Amazonification of the post.
And that's what they don't trust.
All of a sudden he got super nitpicky about the post
and started to destroy them.
And then we see him more and more aligned with the right.
And you're like, oh.
And I think that's what people don't trust.
Yeah.
And given how seismic these changes are
in the media landscape, how can consumers
evaluate what is a trustworthy news source
and what isn't?
And they're sort of like, I guess the question of like,
I think no one news source is going to be
a complete news source, right, in this day and age.
We do not have, you know, the evening news,
like we're never going back to that,
we're not going back to that sort of monoculture.
But how can we evaluate whether a given news source
or creator is trustworthy?
I think it starts with yourself, and I think you have to have a really strong sense of
what is real in your own real life, whether that means reading books and articles, understanding
history and government structure.
You got to have that down before you can get into the next thing.
I also think that propaganda is rampant, the advent of like AI, even though we look at
it and go, that's a silly picture of
Donald Trump with muscles on a tank that we know isn't real. There are people on the right who have
seen it enough that it is built into his persona, even though it's not him exactly. And we did
nothing to fight that because we were like, whatever, that's fake, but it's real to them in
some ways. I think when it comes to finding a good news source,
it is difficult because you're not gonna find
any news source that's independent,
that's big enough to do everything.
And it does come down to looking at a bunch of things
and then using yourself as the filter,
which is harder than it's been in the past
when it comes to news.
And when the media is in chaos,
nobody can make a decision that is rational
because nobody makes rational decisions when we're in chaos.
I think you need to just stick to your,
to frontline services like C-SPAN.
I watch it with my own eyes, right?
Or find folks, I guess like me,
who watch it with their own eyes and tell you,
hey, here's what happened today.
I think the Associated Press and Reuters, of course,
are always gonna be the least biased
when it comes to frontline information.
And then taking all news with a grain of salt and realizing that you can't care about everything.
So I think when it comes to people looking for what they could do with news or activism,
what actually matters to you, what's happening in your local community when you walk out
your door, what's one little thing you could do or that you really, really care about that
you could see your efforts mattering and stick to that because we're not going to be
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match.
Well, V, one thing I really wanted to make sure to ask you about is, because this is
one of my favorite YouTube videos that you did was about the difference between misinformation
and disinformation because we deal with a lot of both on this show. And this is like
the way that you frame this is something I think about constantly. So can you walk us
through this?
Yes. So misinformation is like, I just made a mistake, right? I thought I understood something
and I said it and I was misinformed or I made a mistake
and that information is largely innocently presented and I could come back and tell you,
oh, you know what? I made a mistake there. I'm going to make a correction.
Disinformation is the intentional manipulation and bordering on, we could say, lying to people
about something or taking something and knowingly or by instituting a ton of bias,
twisting it to mean something else. So misinformation,
it happens a lot. Doesn't mean you don't trust that person ever again or they were trying to deceive you, they made a mistake, okay?
Disinformation, which is something that's becoming, I think, increasingly more
popular, is an intentional attempt to deceive you.
And I think those are important things to remember
because sometimes somebody will get something wrong
and they'll be like, well, you're a liar now.
And I'm like, no, no, no, I was misinformed.
We're here to fix it.
I made a mistake and you want those to be rare, of course.
That's why we double check things before we post them.
So we don't accidentally misinform people.
But disinformation is right up there with, you know,
I hate to say propaganda,
because there's propaganda that's good too.
I love propaganda.
I love the propaganda art.
Sometimes it can really just get people to do things
that they're supposed to do too.
But it can get people to do bad stuff.
But disinformation are things that are intended
to cause harm or manipulate people's reality on purpose.
Yeah, and I think for our, sort for what we talk about on this show,
I think about a lot.
And even when I do interviews or in some
of the coverage of the book or something,
there'll be statements where I'm like,
well, that's not quite the correct way
to define much has been by proxy.
Or there'll be some kind of small piece of misinformation
or an old study or something like that.
And that's the sort of benign version of it.
And it still can be a problem, right?
Because a lot of people are potentially getting the wrong idea about something.
But it's very separate and distinct as you know, as you explained, like from something
like Mike Hixenbach's work and the medical kidnapping pieces where I can see the architecture
of how they put this together because I do know so many of the facts in several
of these cases, where I'm like, ah, I've got it.
There is such a deliberate way they put it together.
So I think when you can see the architecture of how
it's put together and what it's trying to accomplish,
to me, that is a signal that that is disinformation.
And we share a sort of unkillable hope
and optimism with those people, I think,
where initially I really went.
And because my whole origin story is really
watching the media get, A, this topic wrong,
but then really watching that cross over
into my actual sister and her case being covered
by the media in this way that was so harmful
and watching them use these horribly exploitative pictures
of her daughter in medical contraptions
like over and over again.
And just thinking like these media outlets
are contributing to the abuse.
They're not just covering-
It's trauma porn.
It's trauma porn.
Exactly, but you know what?
It makes people, if their goal is not to inform you,
it's to create a salacious entertainment experience
so you watch the whole show in all of their ads, right?
Oftentimes, not all media,
but sometimes when we're watching a true crime
television show or something,
the goal isn't to inform you on the facts of the case.
The goal can be to create a salacious experience that oftentimes is driven by increasingly
more graphic, uh, and exploitative photos.
Right.
You know, so there's a lot of coverage of Munchausen by proxy, even if it's sort of
straightforward coverage that is getting the facts right, facts right, that uses these
photos and I think that's a whole problematic thing.
But, you know, and then in the medical kidnapping stories,
they're getting those photos from the parent who,
in my sister's case, is the abuser.
And they're using those photos to co-sign that abuser's
version of reality.
And it's so damaging.
And I think, and because that parent isn't concerned
about exploiting their child, they're
not putting any barriers on the kind of images
that they'll share.
I think originally I went in and it just like,
I just really seems impossibly naive
even though a few years ago.
But I went in and I was like, oh, these outlets,
you know, Mike Hixenbog, Taylor Mifandreski
from, you know, local journalists here
who covered it with him.
They just don't know.
They don't know the truth.
I'll tell them the truth and then
they won't do it. I'll be like, this doctor that you guys are slamming saved my niece's life.
I'm telling you, I'm a family member. I've been around this my whole life and they have ignored
it. They've ignored no matter how much evidence. And it's like, oh, it doesn't matter how many
different ways or which framing I use to point out to them
that they've gotten this wrong.
No, because the goal isn't to get it right.
The goal is to have the best piece of media at the end.
And so they're making decisions based on media,
not based on truth or experience.
Media consumption, right?
Not media accuracy, not doing those other parts of the job.
And yeah, this journalist, Mike Hixenbach, has done a lot of these pieces. So he's very well known to my community. And
you know, I remember Detective Mike Weber, who's my co author in the book, it was just
pointing out like, yeah, he just money, like the answer is just money. The answer is just
this gets clicks. And I was like, surely it can't be that. And I'm just like, okay, sometimes
it really is. Sometimes people's motivations are really that.
I've taken full on podcast down, I've taken whole segments out because another thing with misinformation is truly the fact
that sometimes people just don't remember it right, but they didn't do it on accident.
Your brain does different things, especially when I'm interviewing somebody who's experienced
like a great trauma or something that they don't want to face.
Sometimes they'll say something because they have a habit
of trying to shut down conversation about that thing because it's hurtful to them. And I understand
that firsthand because when in 2015, my brother died and it was under very weird, like, they just
called us and we're like, your brother died. And I was like, okay. And then we didn't know how he
died for nine weeks. And I remember I was in the grocery store with my mom and not the grocery store staples.
See it just happened. I was in the staples with my mom. And this woman was like, Hey,
I heard your son died. How did he die? And she went he was shot. He wasn't shot. But
it was it shut it down. She didn't want to have the conversation. And then the lady was
like, Oh, that's so sad. And she was like, Yep. And then moved on. And I was like, Mom, why are
you telling people stuff? That's not true. She's like, I need them to get out of my face. And so
she wasn't lying. It was just like a survival mechanism. And then when it came out later that
it was an accidental overdose, he had like a potentially fentanyl poisoning. We don't actually
still to this day know it's quite difficult.
But people were like, well, why did you tell me
he died on his motorcycle?
And she's like, I just wanted you to shuffle up
and get out of my face.
Like, and to say, well, we don't know
invokes another round of questions.
And so when people have come on my show
and they've said things like, you know,
the story one particular way,
and then they'll hear it back and they're like,
actually, when I heard it back,
I think I might've misremembered because when I heard myself
say it, I was like, no, it didn't happen like that. It happened like this. And I'm like,
I'll take it out. It cost me money to take it out, but I'll take it out. It was a mistake.
But I think that's, I don't know that this guy or that trad media has the intimate relationship
with their audience and their subjects for their KPI to be authenticity and trust like ours is.
And over like making a program that's
going to be like somehow evergreen and I'm never going to update.
Like I always update it.
Yeah, us too.
And I mean, we try and be because all of what we do really is trauma informed journalism
when we're talking to people about their first person experiences, and it can be extremely
tricky.
And I really relate so much with that that story about your mom, because there was a
long period of time where, and even honestly, sometimes still, you know, where somebody
asks me if I have any siblings. Sometimes I'm just like, no.
You know what, Andrea, can we talk about that? Because we're in this place and I think it's
so important. And it's something when PJ died died there was no book on how to deal with sibling death.
You don't expect that your peer, your contemporary, will die or will betray you
the way that your sister has in many ways or be this person you don't know
anymore or that doesn't exist the person that you knew doesn't exist anymore. And
I struggled so hard with it and that's like one of the first questions people
will ask you right is what's your name of the first questions people will ask you, right?
Is, oh, what's your name?
What do you do for work?
Do you have any siblings?
And I would always say I have a brother and a sister.
And I sometimes I don't anymore.
Sometimes I say, I have a sister and she has a daughter.
And it is this constant thing
where sometimes it feels safer or easier
or I don't have the mental capacity
or the emotional capacity to tell the story.
So it feels safer to tell a little white lie.
Yeah. And I think like that really is like that's this type of lie that we
should be extremely give a lot of people give people a lot of grace.
But it is a form of misinformation.
And that's why I said there's a difference between miss and dis there's a,
you know, misinformation by omission.
If you really needed to know how many siblings I had, I had two, right?
But I don't anymore.
So, you know, how important is this to the overall story?
But when people oftentimes want to get to know
why I experience the world the way that I do,
there is me before my brother died,
which is a very different person
than the person that I am now.
And the person I am now is friends with the person I was before but we feel bad for her and she she doesn't
exist in many ways. When people want to know my process now then yes it is
important for me to say that I had this experience that awakened me in a way
that is so unusual that you couldn't get at J-school. You can't get this with 40
years of the industry. You get this understanding of people and stories and emotions by having your brother die mysteriously. That's how
I got this. And so sometimes that's hard. Yeah. But it's true.
Yeah. I mean, I thank you so much for sharing all of that. And that is, I feel like such
a deep like bonding point between the two of us. And yeah, I mean, I feel the same way
about my younger self
right now.
This is almost we're coming up on 14 years
since this happened.
And I look back on my younger self, and I'm like, love her.
Barely know her anymore.
I love her.
Leave her alone.
Yeah.
Don't tell her.
Don't go back and tell her how it all works out.
Well, and when I got married, you have a chemical and a personal change in you when you experience
something as traumatic as what we have.
And it's hard, there's no guide, right?
I met my wife five years after my brother passed away.
And when we got married, there was a question of whose last name we were going to take.
I was very eager to take her last name, because then me and my maiden name I could let that
girl go. I didn't have to see that name every day and when I married her and I
took her name, well, Vitus is my name, but Spear as the last name, it like I
remember feeling like I got a second chance at life because I wasn't carrying
my maiden name was Carol. I wasn't carrying Carol with me. I didn't
see it all the time. I didn't have to see the name of that girl that I knew that had
a brother and all of the things that happened to her and all of the pain that she carried.
I like she got to rest and I got to be Vita Spear now. And that was really powerful. So
I think for some people, if you're going through that something like changing your
name, moving your apartment, painting the walls of your house, things like that changed so much for me to be able to
have this second chance and now look where we are.
Vitus Carol could not be who Vitus Spear is.
It's a different thing.
You know?
Yeah, I love that.
And you know, you wouldn't think that my entire career becoming about this thing would be how I got distance from it.
But strangely enough, it has been because I think like the more that like it has turned
out to be that I could make what was very triggering something that I could feel some control over.
And I mean, when I look back at sort of this period between when this happened and when
I started talking about it publicly, which really sort of started five years ago, I mean,
there was a time when I couldn't be around kids period, say kids or otherwise, I just
couldn't be around little kids without just losing it.
Like when you lose a sibling in whatever way you lose them
or you just have this huge thing that comes and splits your life into that you did not
ask for and you did not cause, you feel so profoundly helpless that like finding a way
to be of help to other people has just turned out to be like the best thing that
could have ever happened to me, you know?
I do know.
Because when that happens to you, you feel like your grief is so unique that no one in
the world could ever possibly experience it.
You wouldn't wish it on anybody else.
But then there is a certain kind of thing where you start to realize that the grief
that you felt while it was unique to you because it was the most horrible thing that ever happened
in your life is not uncommon. And thereby, there are other people on the road with you. while it was unique to you because it was the most horrible thing that ever happened in your life is not uncommon
and thereby there are other people on the road with you.
You're not alone.
The fact that you're not alone sort of makes you feel
like you can endure it, you can handle it
because there's other people on the road here.
And I remember my friend Ricky said to me,
I'm gonna hold your hand through this.
And I didn't know what that meant at the time,
but I have now said to other people,
I'm gonna hold your hand through this
because it's just like,
you don't know what the fuck you're doing. I'm only just a little bit ahead of you,
but at least I can help you get to the next step in whatever this journey will be.
But it's, it's definitely, it's definitely a weird way to start a career, I would say.
But it's, it's worked out.
It's just where I can't imagine sort of being being anywhere else. And I have to tell you, I had this like really profound moment
because I, you know, before this, I was a novelist.
And that's what I thought I was going to do with my life.
Right. I thought I was going to write my cute little novels
and just like, boop, boop, boop, and you know.
And like I have sort of lived some version of that life,
but then it was interrupted by this other life that I guess I got instead.
And I remember thinking because I worked in book publishing, interrupted by this other life that I guess I got instead.
And I remember thinking, because I worked in book publishing from when I was 22 to my
late 20s, and I really gave me a very front row seat to developing this fantasy of being
a published author and stuff.
And I was a publicist, I got to go on these media things, and I got to go in the town
car and watch these authors.
And everyone's probably going go do something fun,
go to a morning show and take the author
and they'd get their glam and you just look at them
and be like, oh, it's gonna be me someday.
And then a few weeks ago, I was in New York
and I was going to the Tamron Hall show,
which was super fun and got to go with Mike
and got in the town car and did the glam
and the whole thing.
And I just had this moment
where I was like thinking
about my younger self, as I kind of always do
when I'm in New York.
And I was just like, okay, I was like,
tell her she gets there, don't tell her how.
Yeah, that is a profound and exactly that thing.
Cause she won't do it if she knows how, yeah.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, I think we should just sit with that for a second.
And I was I was thinking about other people.
I know that like my friend A.B. became a lawyer because her brother was wrongfully incarcerated.
There's a lot of folks who get into their career because they want to be the justice that wasn't there for them.
Or they say, like, be the friend you didn't have as a kid or the safe adult you didn't have as a kid.
I'm really proud of us for being that.
But you're exactly right.
Tell her she gets there, but don't tell her how.
And you know something, I really wanted
to make sure that we talked about V.
Because I was really thinking about you
when I was down in Texas after the book came out.
Because I, you know, and this has
been a really profound part of this experience that I did
not see coming when I started making this show, is that it has been an opportunity for
me to really talk to so many different types of people and people in different places than
I would normally go and go to these really like rural towns where I do, you know, a lot
of my field reporting and spend time in just
places I wouldn't necessarily normally go and really have this deep and profound moment of
bonding and shared experience with people who have really different life experiences than me
and really different politics than me. And that has been such a gift.
And we have a lot of conservative listeners
of the show.
And when I was in Texas, obviously, that room
was probably more.
And somebody had asked about Mike and I being
kind of an unlikely pair, right? I'm a liberal mom from artsy-fartsy type from Seattle, and Mike is a bachelor cop who's
like, as I would say, less liberal, right?
Pretty conservative.
And doing this work, I am constantly reminded that we do have more in common than we are often led to believe.
And I was like, there are many people who are invested
right now in turning us against each other.
Don't fall for it.
Don't turn on your neighbor, like resist that.
And like, I'm realizing I'm saying that to a group of people
that like doesn't agree with my personal politics.
And I pointed to Sheriff Bill Weyburn
and his family who were there, which was so meaningful to me. And I was like Sheriff Bill Webern and his family who were there,
which was so meaningful to me. And I was like, listen, I found people like the Webern's
who I love and admire and we have so much mutual respect and understanding. And they
don't agree with my politics any more than I agree with theirs. And they had the trust
in me to tell their daughter's story. And like that was so meaningful. And it's like,
I say that while also having very strong feelings about what's happening. Politics is not my beat
on the show, but it is very funny to me when people get on like expecting me to be apolitical.
I'm like, everything is politics, and especially like this, right? We're talking about the
criminal justice system, law enforcement, like these
things could not be more politic.
Now, they do not break on like, where I'm like, I am a very left leaning person.
I don't think the left does a good job with this.
I don't think the right does a good job with it.
I think they both do better or worse with it in different places for different reasons.
So it's not like a, you know, black and white thing, but it's certainly not apolitical.
But nonetheless, it's like I really value this show
as a space to have a mixed audience, I guess.
And I know that you also have a mixed audience.
I have a big mixed audience too.
I think because I'm willing to recognize
that the whole thing is bat shit bananas, right?
And I think people are like,
obviously you feel the way you are, you're batshit bananas, right? And while I, and I think people are like, obviously you feel the way you are,
you're a gay woman, right?
Like you have, you have big feelings about the gays
and other people are like, you know, I like you
and I just don't think about that that much.
What matters to me more is the price of eggs.
And then you'll hear people be like,
well, now the eggs are $12.
Well, they didn't know that when they voted, right?
Like nobody could have known that.
Here's the thing that I think is interesting about politics
is that at the heart of it, many of us face to face,
I live in the most Republican district in all of New York,
which you would think is Long Island, but it's not.
It's Greece, New York.
And we bought the house there.
I didn't know what anybody's politics were
because we bought it in the winter and it was snowing.
So there was no yard signs or anything.
There was no flags.
There was nothing because it's extremely windy and snowy.
So I couldn't have known anything.
So we bought this beautiful house
in this nice neighborhood that I really liked.
And it was affordable, it was clean, had good sidewalks.
Saw a couple of basketball hoops around.
I was like, must be a bunch of kids here.
That's great.
And then come to find out it is the most Republican district
in all of Greece.
And I was so nervous.
And then we came out one day and we've like met the neighbors
and met their dogs.
We know their dogs, we know their kids.
There was a basketball hoop at my house that we inherited. One of the neighbor boys came over on Halloween And then we came out one day and we've like met the neighbors and met their dogs. We know their dogs. We know their kids.
There was a basketball hoop at my house that we inherited.
One of the neighbor boys came over on Halloween and he was like, I've noticed that you don't
use your basketball hoop.
Would you mind giving it to me?
And I was like, sure.
Sure.
Right.
And now he plays with it.
Everything's great.
Everybody's great.
On my street, there is one little trans child that I love.
Okay.
And it is mostly Republican people.
So this election season, it was wild.
And the neighborhood sort of silently agreed
to not put out signs because everybody knows
what work I do and we all know about this kid on the street
and we all care about this kid on the street
because they're our kid from our street, okay?
Because they're our kids.
And so everybody kind of was like, all right, whatever.
Well, a couple people decided they were gonna put up
vote no on prop one, protect girls sports,
which of course we know that that is anti-trans rhetoric.
Put mine on their lawn.
So I fucking go over there.
I'm like, why is the sign facing this,
the house where the kid lives?
And I'm like, why would you do that?
Don't you think it's a lot of it's facing right
at their house and they're like,
they don't even play a sport.
I was like, let me tell you what it's about.
They didn't know. They didn't know.
They didn't know.
And I was like, see, but I could have been pissed, right?
And I could have been crazy and I could have said, oh, those people are assholes.
We're never going to talk to them again.
They didn't know.
Somebody came to their house and said, hey, would you like to put a sign out supporting
women's sports in the high school?
And they were like, of course I do.
They didn't know.
So then we talked about it.
So sometimes I think some of the stuff
that goes on with politics is quite simply
the disinformation and misinformation
that is put in certain ways,
or these really sneaky things that bad people are doing
where they're like, hey, would you like to support
the high school sports?
They don't think much about it.
You sort of just go about your day.
You're not making a big deal about it.
And I think that that divides us more than anything else. That's a great example. And
I think, you know, just to give people an example of like, kind of something that I've seen that
comes from the left that is also sort of can be infected by me, right? It's not just we don't
want to like just say that it's, oh, no, I got a left one coming up too. I would love to hear that.
It's like, you know, like I've seen with this like medical kidnapping beat, right?
Which is that's the big conspiracy theory that we are up against, right?
You know, I've seen like that there are reasons that people on the right are susceptible to it
because it fits into like a parent's rights, which obviously on the extreme is very troubling and problematic.
So even people who are more like geared that way can see
it from that standpoint of like, we're willing to create others. Yeah. And then, and then
like on the left, it really fits into this like, oh, the system disenfranchises parents,
right? So and that's true. This is just not an example of that. And like, sometimes it
really is just people don't know. And I, it of course makes me think, oh, how many of these things am I like also doing that?
Right, where I'm like, oh, something fits into my like,
things I care about.
I can't think about everything like that
every minute of every day.
Some stuff's gonna slip by me.
I'll tell you a story about me personally.
When I was a kid, young, 21,
I got hired at Dolly Parton's theme park in Tennessee. I
Grew up in Connecticut. I knew nothing about anything Okay, and I went down there and there were a lot of Confederate flags everywhere including on the venue
Okay, because if this is then it was
2005 but I worked there 2006 and they had Dolly Parton's Dixieland Stampede and all the stuff and they housed all of entertainment in trailers
so we put an American flag and a Confederate flag
out front the trailer,
because we thought we were doing like a Tennessee thing.
And one of the dancers came over and they were like,
V, what the fuck are you doing?
And I was like, I thought it was like a Southern thing.
I didn't learn about this in Connecticut.
We didn't learn about this,
that it was still like a representative hate thing.
There was no social media.
I didn't know anything.
And they were like, no, it absolutely is a hate symbol. I was like, then why is it on like the venues
and stuff? There's rebel flag everywhere. And they're like, because Tennessee is hateful.
Don't do that. I was like, so then I took it down, right? But I didn't know I made a
mistake. And I tell the story all the time, because it was like, you would never believe
that I would be that stupid. And I was that stupid until I obviously and then I was like,
of course, well, I thought it was just like like I thought I was being part of the culture oh no the
culture is where we are in Pigeon Forge Tennessee in the deep woods in this trailer park is
not maybe super friendly this is maybe not what I think it is but I'll tell you one
about the left when I constantly say I don't think we should give tax breaks to billionaires
I don't trust billionaires that's why I vote for the left and I want to be with a party
that's closer to the working party and closer to the values that I espouse and whatever.
How can I say all that when Nancy fucking Pelosi makes more money in the stock market
than anybody?
So I see it.
I get it.
And I think that those are the tit for tat things that keep us separated.
But we actually agree on.
I agree that billionaires shouldn't get tax breaks.
And I agree that Nancy Pelosi should retire and count deer off her deck or count money
off her deck or whatever she wants to do.
You know what I mean?
She's not my girl.
Throw money at deer at this point.
But they get us all.
Yeah, they get us all worked up with each other.
And it really does come down to like it did on my street going over and be like, hey,
why would you do this?
And they just, you know, they didn't know.
And now, of course, there are people who do know and they do it to be antagonizing.
And I have said that there are some Republicans that have a humiliation kink.
Folks like Marjorie Taylor Greene, who want to get up there and show nude photos of the
president's son because she gets some kind of rise out of it and none of us want to be
like that either, right? I know a lot of conservatives are very embarrassed by her too. So it's like
we got to group up as people and not be like, well, if you ever voted for Trump or if you
identify as conservative simply based on the circumstances that you live in and you're
looking at the things and going, I think this is what would benefit me and my community
best. That doesn't mean that we should be like completely hateful all the time because I bet in
one conversation, like when they pull America, we would agree that gay marriage should be allowed,
right? Only 20% of people in this country think that there shouldn't be gay marriage.
So that means 80% of us think that it should be. So that means that it's up to 80% of us
to tell our legislators to knock it off
with trying to chip away with gay marriage.
Yeah, no, it's really true.
And I think it feels like we live
in this time of just an absolute fever pitch
for conspiracy theories.
Oh, sure.
And one thing that I realize we have become equipped on
in this show is that we are
talking to people, and I am a person, who is in recovery for experiencing gaslighting,
right?
And I mean like real gaslighting.
Someone is systematically making you doubt your version of reality.
Someone has unsettled your ability to believe yourself
and what you're experiencing. And that takes a long time to get over and it's a hard thing
to come out of. And we all in these situations of these cases we cover on the show go through
some version of, oh my God, for some period of time, I was bought into this. I was bought into this thing and it was a lie.
And I'm an idiot. I caused harm. And I think when someone has the courage to come out of
that and not everyone does, it's because like when people are bought in, sometimes they
just go deeper and deeper. And I think it's really important to keep an open door for someone to come out of it anytime.
I can't say it's never too late because obviously there is harm being done, but I just think
it's really important to make it a safe space for people to come forward even if they have
been bought in for some period of time.
We had in this last season someone who'd been friends with The Perpetrator for 10 years
and then listened to the podcast and realized, came out of time. You know, we had in this last season, someone who'd been friends with the perpetrator for 10 years
and then listened to the podcast and realized, you know,
it came out of it.
And we had a really wonderful conversation about it.
Again, not being Polly Ennish about it at all,
but how do we create conditions where
we can come back together being so divisive as it is right now?
I think people need to know that it's
OK to say they were wrong about one thing
without worrying that people won't trust you about anything. It's okay. It's okay. I do it all the time. I just told you I put
a Confederate flag outside my house one time, right? That was an obvious, very embarrassing,
sick, twisted, weird, dumb mistake. But I did it. I was, I didn't know. And then I did know. And now
it's been 20 years, right? So it's been known. But I think, but that doesn't make people never
trust me again, right? I've learned a lot of public lessons.
It makes me trust you more.
The fact that you're able to have the humility to say
and recognize that you were a human being
who made a mistake about something,
that makes me trust you more.
That makes me trust, oh, if we can take in new information
and adjust their belief system accordingly, right?
It's a strength.
And that's the thing is like, there's lots of stuff,
but I think that's people's fear is they think
that their relationship with people are so fragile
and so precious because that's what they've been kind
of told that we're all like walking on eggshells
and like nothing's real and people will turn on you
and you'll be alone forever or you'll be othered, right?
That's like the biggest thing that the right does
and that religion can do is make you feel like
you're either all in or you're all out.
This loyalty pledge, especially that Trump pushes
this idea of a loyalty pledge.
It's like being normalized across all of our relationships.
And the fact is like, you could just say
that you used to think something and now you don't anymore.
It doesn't mean you have to question everything you thought.
Just maybe one thing doesn't work out for you.
Let's just take this as like an obvious example,
because I'm seeing a lot of my you know, right-wing friends
My dad like be like no that was wrong
When Trump was running for president was Elon Musk or along for the ride?
Sure, you know and will people over the last 30 days were like
For those of you say no one voted for Elon
I did cuz he was with Trump the whole time and I knew Elon was going to be working on stuff.
But now Elon is kind of showing that he's an asshole, right?
And he's not actually saving us all this money.
We're able to prove that what he's doing, he's not an auditor, he's not an operator,
he's not a successful businessman.
So now folks like my dad, let's take for example, are like, hey, I'm willing to admit I was
wrong about that Elon guy.
I mean, wow, what a weirdo.
Did you see him with the chainsaw?
What the hell was that?
That's one thing, okay?
One thing at a time.
Now it doesn't mean that every other conservative thing
about him is completely broken or whatever,
but there are certain things that we can do
that we could say, hey, I used to think this,
whatever the case may be, and now I think differently.
I've had it with friends where I have a tendency
to be friends with people who are mean to me.
I don't know why.
I guess that's your kink me.
That's my kink.
I just have friends.
I think I'm just really forgiving
of the human condition in general
that I don't think that much about it.
But when I was dating my wife,
I would be like, this is my best friend.
And she'd be like, are you sure?
They're kind of mean to you.
And I was like, no, that's just how we play.
That's how we play.
Because I had this escalated investment in staying friends with people that I met when I was like, no, that's just how we play. That's how we play, right? Cause I had this escalated investment
in staying friends with people that I met
when I was like 10.
And obviously we're in like different places in our lives.
And like the way you get teased at 10
is maybe not the way you behave as an adult at 40.
And maybe some of us matured more than others,
but I didn't want to give it up, right?
It was just like, oh no, that girl's actually kind of,
maybe she was never my friend.
Maybe she was just in the friend's group
and she doesn't have to be anymore
because we're adults and we all moved on.
And I could have a separate relationship with other people.
I don't have to trash everything I knew
just to eliminate the thing that hurts.
Yeah, I like that.
And it's a really good example of like,
you don't have to wholesale throw everything you believe
in out the window to be,
and it were just to even like draw a limit.
Well, so V, just a couple of last questions.
I'd love just some advice from you.
I know a lot of my listeners love you
and like, how are you, like, are you okay?
Like, how are you coping with all of this?
Because I think most of us are feeling pretty over,
many of us are feeling pretty overwhelmed by the news
and you are facing it for your job,
dealing with it every single day.
Like how do you get through it and how do you kind of like,
what kind of pieces of very hard and earned wisdom
can you pass on to us about dealing with
such an overwhelming news environment?
Couple things.
So again, to bring them up again,
my, I woke them up again,
I woke up one day, went to work, had hot dogs and macaroni and cheese for lunch,
was so excited that they were serving hot dogs,
macaroni and cheese at lunch that I called my mom
who answered the phone and said, your brother's dead.
So I have faced things,
cause she had just found out, right?
So she was in shock.
I have faced things that have come from,
I was at such a high, high to an astronomical low
that I don't think I could be sucker punched by anything ever again having gone through that particular
experience. So for me, one superpower I have, which is how I can help hold people through
this right now is I don't get shocked by a lot. Okay. I don't, nothing will ever reach
that level. So unfortunately for me, I have a superpower that allows me to not get sucker
punched. No matter how bad it is, it will never be as bad as that. So in for me I have a superpower that allows me to not get sucker punched no matter how bad it is it will never be as bad as that.
So in some ways I'm like alright well and I grieve it and I have a problem with it but
I can face it in a way because I have seen death I have seen the end I have seen the
impossible manifest in front of my eyes and had to deal with it and so in some ways when
the impossible happens,
I'm like, oh, it's impossible again.
Hello, you bastard.
What do you got for me today?
And I have like a little bit of resilience towards that.
So I think that helps me with the way that I do the news.
There is this idea of this thing called a death eater.
I don't know if you ever heard of that.
Like back in the day,
they used to like hire somebody to eat death,
which didn't mean literally, it was like a spiritual thing where somebody would be grieving the death of somebody they
loved and they would hire a death eater who would break bread with the person and eat
the bread, the alive person, and eat the bread.
And it was a symbolic moment of them eating the grief and taking it away with them to
relieve that person.
And I think in some ways, I'm a death eater in the way that I can take it, the death or whatever,
and I can take it away and I can internalize it and I can give it back to you as something better.
And so that's how I approach the news, especially when it's bad, especially over the last 30 days.
Let me take it in, let me digest it and let me give it back to him like a baby bird, just nice and gentle and good.
In addition, I know that this country is full of good people.
People are good in this country.
They are far greater than you could ever imagine.
And our politics is far worse than you could ever imagine.
But our people are good people.
Deep at the heart of them, they want to do good things.
They are hardwired for good.
They are misguided, misinformed, disinformed, propagandized.
They've had their nervous system shaken to shit.
So every time I do the news,
I trust that I am talking to good people
who want something good to happen.
And that goes for everybody that I have
three and a half million listeners, right?
And so I put that forward when I'm giving information
and I don't try to like be like,
hey, you should do this to be a good person.
I assume you're a good person
and that you wanna do the right thing
and you wanna hear the straight info.
In addition to that, I recognize that I can only do what I can do and there are times when I just
straight dick around dilly dally and do nothing. I am not a serious person all the time. I think
people think I must be serious all the time. I watch a lot of 90 Day Fiance. I play a lot of
Luigi's Mansion, the dumb little game on the sidekick thing that I have. I go on walks, I have dogs. If I really feel
bad, I go get a tattoo. I paint, I create time for myself. I cook. I hate cook. A lot
of people cook with love. I cook with rage. Okay. And Natalie can tell if it's been a
particularly bad news day. If we're having like gourmet shit, like if my Thomas Keller
stuff is coming out, she's like, oh how bad was it? I'm like
It's Thomas Keller bad. Okay, so then we're having beautiful things. So I do stuff like that for myself
I talk shit with my girlfriends all the time. I call my mom. I talk shit to her about whatever
It doesn't even matter. I talk shit about stuff that happened in high school with my mom just to have something
Controllable to talk about all of that gives you a sense of control and release,
makes it possible for you to go through the day.
You don't gotta be super serious.
And then when something happens that is bad, I believe it.
They have told me that the Supreme Court case that will overturn gay marriage will come this June.
And it will very likely be overturned.
So now that you've heard that, what do we do?
Well, what do we do?
Well, what is special about marriage?
Love and the rights that come with it.
Well, nothing's ever gonna stop me from loving my wife.
I love her endlessly, no one can touch that.
What about the rights inherent to my marriage?
Those are affected.
So I worked with this lawyer, Angela Giampolo,
and we put together this thing called Pride Plans,
and it's nine documents
you do and it recreates the 1,138 rights inherent to marriage.
You just do these nine little papers, you know, and you can do 10 if you want to do
a pet directive and I filed those paperwork and now I have a partnership with my wife
that will always and forever no matter what happens maintain the inherent rights
to marriage.
So now if they overturn gay marriage in June, they didn't overturn my gay marriage.
So I've done something that's tangible that could protect me from this thing that would
be devastating, right?
So when you can do something, do it.
And with certain other stuff, I sit with people, I agree with them, we fight back, we strategize
and we recognize
that it is never over. Like when it comes to the fight for women's reproductive health,
we hold the line on what we still have and we fight for what we lost, right? But we hold the
line on what we still have. So you might be a person out there who's like, I'm just a line holder.
I would love to just be the line holder. Good. We need line holders. I need somebody to go out
there and be brave and fight for what we lost.
Okay, great.
You're in the infantry of reproductive health care.
But everybody gets to do what they want and everybody gets to take breaks when they need.
And I think that is the society that if we could build that together, then we could be
okay.
And we could not just from this administration, but from the next and the one after and the
one after.
It just I would I would like to like government proof
society so that we recognize that we are good people who care about having a good life and we
could do that together. I love that V and I believe that too and you know you said something
in a recent episode of American fever dream where you were talking about this period after
your brother's death where you were just really numb and just kind
of out of your mind and I really went through something similar in the wake of what happened
with my family and then you had this really beautiful description of sort of realizing
that the world was still there and that like, you know, the, I can't remember what you
said, but I'll tell you, I, uh, I was never a nature person. And, um, after PJ died, I,
everything that I knew, wasn't real anymore. I wasn't good at cooking food.
I wasn't good at talking to brides. I wasn't,
I couldn't stand to plan events because I was like,
fuck you for having something to celebrate when my life is terrible. Right.
I just couldn't do it. I just didn't, wasn't the same anymore. And so I was like, I gotta find something else to do
because I have to like, I gotta do something else
because what I'm doing is not working.
And so I signed up for this thing to go forest bathing,
which is the most woo woo crazy thing you can think of.
And I went to this like camp in the backwoods of Virginia
and I sang to the frogs with this lady
and we looked at the leaves and I remember she
taught me how to like she's like just stand here and I was like okay and then once I was standing
I was like and now what and she's like no you just stand here and then you just remember that
things are here like do you hear the river and I didn't and then I did and she's like and do you see
the leaves okay now what about the texture on the leaves now what about the smell of the wood and
you just sort of like allow yourself to become entirely present.
And I was like, wow, this is incredible.
It's all still here.
Because I thought when he died,
you know, all the trees should shrivel up,
the animals should genuflect like they did
in the Lion King.
I didn't think I should have to go to work.
I couldn't, his friends would call me.
I'd be like, shut up, you living bastard.
I don't wanna hear from you people.
Like I hated everything, right? So, but in finding this place, I be like, shut up, you living bastard. I don't want to hear from you people. Like, I hated everything, right?
So, but in finding this place, I was like,
it's all still here.
And then I could kind of be like, okay,
what pieces of myself can I scrape together
that are still here to like rebuild the new me?
And I think that that was really powerful.
I also quit drinking then for a long period of time.
And I think that that's something else
that folks can consider. I think
sometimes we tend to be told all the way to get over something is to
You know eat your feelings or to have a glass of wine or you need to smoke something or you need to take this pill
You need to do that exercise class or you need to buy this whatever the case may be and the fact was when I decided
To just be present is when I did my most
healing and by drinking I was actually complicating how long it was taking me to come out of my grief
and I never had a drinking problem per se but I would have if I had kept on that path. And so I
think for folks out there sometimes when we're struggling, hey it's fun to do drugs that's why
people do them. You know it's fun to have to get That's why people do them. It's fun to get drunk and pass out
and not worry about things.
But you gotta have a day where you say,
I'm going to endure what it means to be present
because I actually don't have to be afraid
of being present.
You'll be okay.
You'll find more peace in it than you do fear.
You just never did it before.
So you'll be okay.
Yeah, and then you do get that gift of resilience
that I think both you and I have experienced.
Well, V, I cannot thank you enough for being here.
This has been such a joy.
It's been such a treat.
I know, what do I owe you?
This was like a therapy session for me.
I'm not, check's in the mail.
Only your friendship and maybe an introduction to your mom
because she sounds amazing.
Maureen is,. She's the best.
She's crazy.
She's got a lot of little advice points.
I feel like she would like this show.
If she was a night shift nurse who listened to the police
scanner, I'm like, Maureen, do I have a show for you?
She absolutely would.
She's got a lot of things like, you
don't know these people's shit.
Anytime I would be worried about what somebody thought of me,
she's like, you don't know these people's shit.
What do you care about?
Or nobody woke up and said they're
going to have fun for me today. Take the party with you. She got a thought of me. She's like, you don't know these people shit, what do you care about? Or nobody woke up and said, they're gonna have fun for me today.
Take the party with you.
She got a lot of them.
Maureen, what an icon.
V, please tell us, where can we find you?
And what do you want people to do the most?
Like if we're gonna get like,
what's the most helpful to you
in maintaining this incredible independent media
project that is you.
So number one, like we addressed earlier in the show,
I have an advertiser supported network
because I want you guys to,
I want to be accessible to as many people as possible.
If you follow me on YouTube,
that's like giving me $100 cash, okay?
And all you gotta do is follow me,
watch the content, enjoy it, learn,
talk to the people in the comments, that's phenomenal. If you've got a little money and you like
reading stuff, you want to get some inspirational notes, we do things, you like watching me
live, sub stack, seven bucks a month, $70 for the year, very affordable or free. If
you get my free one, you still get the lives and you still get, I think we do one newsletter
a week that's free. But if you can't support, that's the best place to support.
Then you could of course find me on your Instagram
and your TikTok and all that kind of stuff like that.
But Substack and YouTube,
that's the way that I pay for everything else that I do.
Amazing, amazing.
Don't Venmo me.
Sometimes people Venmo me.
Don't do that.
I wanna, I appreciate it deeply,
but like use that money to buy the Substack,
because you'll get a much better experience.
And I want you to have something for it.
And I personally subscribe to the Substack.
I love it.
It's one of my, like, you know, I really
trimmed down my news media diet as we were heading
into this year, which turned out to be a good choice.
And that was one that made my list, as well as your podcast,
American Fever
Dream with Sami Sage, which find wherever you listen to podcasts.
Yes, thank you for that.
And with the Substack, we're going to start doing some more stuff.
I get a lot of gift articles and things.
We're going to start putting those in the notes.
I love the Substack.
I think it's the greatest thing ever.
So you'll start seeing more of the breaking news stuff in there and some guest posts pretty
soon because we just tried out Subststax, see how it goes,
but it's going really great.
So I think I'll make it like probably
my main thing pretty soon.
All right, thanks, C.
Thank you.
Nobody Should Believe Me Case Files
is produced and hosted by me, Andrea Dunlop.
Our editor is Greta Stromquist
and our senior producer is Mariah Gossett.
Administrative support from NOLA Carmouche.