There Are No Girls on the Internet - Elon Musk declares 'cis' a slur; Poll workers targeted by Trump+Giuliani exonerated; RFK Jr. and Joe Rogan say stupid things; Illinois bans book bans; Grammys are for humans; Zuckerburg vs. Musk cage match - NEWS ROUNDUP
Episode Date: June 23, 2023There’s a heavy musk of Elon in this episode. He tries to redefine the word ‘cis’ to be a slur and says it will be considered harassment on his janky platform that encourages deadnaming; he insp...ires the CEO of Reddit to follow his lead and alienate his own users by charging for API access; and he challenges Mark Zuckerburg to an ill-advised cage match that seems like it might actually happen. RFK Jr. went on Joe Rogan’s podcast to rehash some tired old medical misinformation from 2020, then Rogan’s listeners got big mad when an actual scientist wasn’t interested in debating their nonsense. But it’s not all gloom and doom! In happier news, the two Georgia poll workers whose lives were upended by Trump and Giuliani’s baseless lies about them were finally officially exonerated. Illinois gets behind the librarians to ban book bans, and the Recording Academy takes a stand by insisting that only humans can win Grammys - not AI. Did you follow the Oceangate tragedy? Listen to an ad free bonus episode breaking down online discourse, conspiracy theories and right wing grievance mongering around Oceangate: https://www.patreon.com/posts/oceangate-85029090 Listen to Bridget’s episode about Ruby and Shay Freeman on Internet Hate Machine: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/part-one-why-trump-targeted-two-black-election-workers/id1648497305?i=1000590820764 Erin Reed’s piece on the history of the word cis https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/cisgender-is-no-more-a-slur-than Anna Merlan’s Vice piece on RFK on Rogan: https://www.vice.com/en/article/k7zz9z/spotify-rogan-rfk-vaccine-misinformation-policySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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There are no girls on the internet as a production of IHeart Radio and Unbossed Creative.
I'm Bridget Todd, and this is there are no girls on the internet.
I'm here with my producer, Mike.
Thanks for being here, Mike.
Hey, Bridget.
Thanks for having me.
And here's what you may have missed this week on the internet.
But first, I have to do a little bit of a, I don't know, PSA announcement.
This is a situation I'm calling Cameo Cinderella.
So five years ago, somebody from the platform Cameo,
which is a platform that you can have public figures or famous people
give you like birthday shoutouts,
about five years ago, somebody from Cameo got in touch with me, and they said, hey, you should be on cameo.
This was like a real ego boost for me. I was like, oh, my God, do you think that people would really want to, like, pay me to give them like a video greeting?
I signed up. I became a member of the platform. Literally five years go by, no one requests a goddamn thing. Whatever. I was humbled.
But last week, I got my first ever cameo request. But because I had never used the platform, it had just been dormant for five years,
I didn't really know how it worked.
I didn't know that the requests expired.
So I was not able to fill my first ever cameo request.
I feel terrible about it.
So it was from somebody named Jason,
and they were requesting a cameo pep talk from me.
It sounds like Jason is writing a children's book that sounds really amazing.
Jason, if you are listening, or if you know somebody named Jason and you think,
you know, this is the person, email me.
I am so sorry that I did not fulfill your cameo request.
It was my first ever in five years' time.
Email me.
You do not have to pay.
I would love to send you a video pep talk.
Hit me up at hello at tangoity.com.
I'm so sorry I missed you.
So, yeah, I just wanted to say that.
Jason, if you're listening, I'm sorry.
Yeah, I hope Jason is out there.
I hope you hear from Jason.
Me too.
So let's get into the news.
So first, there's one story that just makes me so happy,
even though it was obvious to anybody paying attention,
but it's what makes me happy.
And that is Ruby and Shia.
Shea Freeman have been cleared of all wrongdoing officially.
Now, this is really obvious to anybody who's been paying attention to this story, but it's still a good thing.
If you don't remember, Ruby and Shea Freeman are the black mother-daughter duo who are poll workers in Georgia,
who Trump and Rudy Giuliani baselessly accused of tampering with votes in the Georgia presidential election in 2020
that Trump lost fair and square.
They have been officially cleared of all wrongdoing.
An investigative report released this week by the Georgia Elections Board of the 2020 election,
found that all of the claims that they had mishandled votes,
that they were moving votes,
all of that stuff that Trump made up,
was all found to be false and unsubstantiated.
The report also found that fake social media accounts
and impersonation played a role,
which is something that we talk about a lot on this podcast.
As part of the probe,
the Georgia Election Board investigators interviewed a social media user
who admitted that they created a fake account
and confirmed that the content that was posted on this account was fake.
Vondi, the attorney representing the women,
said in a statement,
following the release of the report that this serves as further evidence that Ms. Freeman and Ms. Moss,
while doing their patriotic duty and serving their community, were simply collateral damage
and a coordinated effort to undermine the results of the 2020 presidential election.
We talked about this story, kind of in-depth on the podcast.
The women testified at the January 6th Commission about how terrifying the harassment and violence
that they faced got for them after Trump and Giuliani basically just lied about them.
And their testimony really broke me because I think it put a human face on things like conspiracy theories and disinformation.
This was just like a mother and daughter who wanted to serve their community.
The daughter had been working as a poll worker for a while because she really cared for the elders in her community and wanted to help those elders vote.
These are people who are really, really motivated by their civic duties and that motivation was turned against them.
And so, you know, if folks have not heard their testimony, I definitely recommend checking out the episode that we did on them.
But it is heartbreaking because it really puts a face on what ordinary citizens have to deal with when the president uses his office to target them, lie about them, and smeared them.
You know, right-wing blogs published their pictures and their names and saying they were moving suitcases full of ballots from polling places.
They weren't.
Giuliani got real racist with it, saying that he had a video of the women passing a USB drive to each other,
quote, as if they were vials of heroin or crack, even though they were just passing a piece of candy to each other.
At one point, an angry mob of Trump supporters descended on their grandmother's home and tried to strong arm their way into her house to make a citizen's arrest.
I can't even imagine how terrifying that must have been. Eventually, she had to just pack up and leave
her home that she had lived in for 20 years for her own safety. So this was a very real, very terrifying
harassment campaign that an elderly black woman and her daughter went through just because they wanted
to serve their communities and Trump and his cronies were looking for a scapegoat to pin their
election loss on. I was also really pleased that they both got a presidential medal from Biden,
along with 10 others, who made exemplary contributions to our democracy surrounding January 6th.
We did a whole episode on Ruby and Shea on my Cool Zone podcast, Internet Hate Machine.
So definitely check it out.
We'll link it in the comments.
But I think it's really important to point out that what those women went through was a racist, sexist, disinformation campaign that really weaponized and relied on their identities as black women to work.
You know, I think that when Trump and Giuliani just saw a video of two black women working in the polls in Georgia, he knew that he could capitalize off of their base and society at large is distrust of black women.
And so I think that that is why that particular smear campaign stuck so well for them, because I think they knew, like, oh, we had a video of two black women, you know, working the polls in Georgia, we can just put it on them.
So I'm really pleased that what was obvious now is part of the public record that these women were just collateral damage in a racist, sexist smear campaign for simply trying to serve their communities.
And I'm every new update about them that I hear, I'm just rooting for them.
I hope that they sue the pants off of everybody and get everybody's money,
but nothing can make right what they went through.
These women are heroes, but they should not have to be heroes.
They should not have to face Donald Trump, a sitting president,
for simply wanting to exist and do their jobs and serve their community.
So I'm really deeply rooting for these women.
This news makes me really happy,
but they should never have had to go through this in the first place.
Yeah, it's nice to see the exoneration.
I guess it's like years later, right?
Like three years later, hopefully they get some peace at this point.
And yeah, I wonder if they're going to be suing people.
You know, maybe they should get in contact with Eugene Carroll's lawyers.
Part of me hopes that this is the last time we talk about them on the show
because they're able to just like step out of the public spotlight
that they never saw it and just like return to normal lives.
But yeah, part of me wonders if maybe we will hear more from them.
You know, they suffered a lot for no reason.
Maybe they'll sue people.
They probably should.
They certainly seems like they could.
I think they were where they had an active lawsuit against the Gateway Pundit,
one of the right-wing blogs that first put their name and picture into the right-wing blogosphere.
And it's funny that you bring up E. Jean Carroll.
Something that I think about quite a bit is that E.
Eijin Carroll won her defamation lawsuit against Trump.
The very next day he went on CNN and continued to defame her,
she said that she might actually sue him again.
And obviously, the same as with Ruby and Shea,
I am rooting for Eugene Carroll.
But here's the thing.
She should be able to rest.
Just like you said, she shouldn't have to be constantly gearing up for
lawsuit after lawsuit after lawsuit just to get some peace.
And so I'm rooting for these women.
I believe that these women should get what they deserve for what Trump and these assholes put them through,
but they should not have to continually fight these battles against this person who continues to lie about them.
So I'm with you.
I'm wishing them some peace, but always rooting for them.
And I want them to take these assholes for everything their work because they deserve it.
Yeah, absolutely.
They deserve it.
They deserve everything they can get.
And then also in terms of the bigger picture, one of the things we talked about at the beginning of this season is
how it's starting to look like litigation and defamation lawsuits might be an important strategy
in trying to rein in online disinformation in this time when it seems like a lot of platforms
are actually going in the opposite direction of making it easier for people to just lie online
and spread harmful misinformation and target people for coordinated attacks.
as people are surveying the landscape of what is actually an effective way to try to rein it in.
It does seem like these lawsuits might be an important piece of that.
Yeah, I think we're going to see more and more of that.
I think the episode we started the season with Nita Jankwitz's Swing Fox News for Defamation.
I'm curious to see what the future looks like for people who lie for profit.
I hope it's not a good one because I don't think that serves anybody.
Speaking of people who profit off of lies and harassment,
let's talk about Elon Musk.
I should say this episode we're going to mention Elon Musk a few times.
I feel like y'all heard me say now, like,
oh, I'm not going to talk about Elon Musk.
I'm not going to bring him off.
I'm just going to, like, ignore him.
But then I talk about him every news roundup
because he just stays in the news.
So trigger warning, this is a Musk-heavy episode.
And maybe they should actually be a new round-up segment.
What's Elon done now?
Well, now Elon Musk has declared the word,
Cis and cisgender will now be considered slurs on Twitter that can be punishable with suspension.
Let's get into it.
So Elon Musk has essentially invented two new slurs, cis and cisgender.
So the word cis or cisgender is not some big, scary word.
It simply describes someone who identifies their gender as the same as their birth sex.
So how did this whole thing on Twitter start?
Well, it started when James Essies, an Irish right-wing social media personality who writes articles
about things like the threat of wokeness and trans inclusion,
while he complained that people were calling him
Sissy on Twitter, writing
yesterday after posting a tweet saying that I reject the word Siss
and I don't wish to be called it.
I received a slew of messages from trans activists
calling me Sissy and telling me that I am Siss whether I like it or not.
Just imagine if the roles were reversed.
So Musk replied saying,
Repeated targeted harassment against any account
will cause the harassing account to receive at minimum temporary suspensions.
The word cisgender are considered slurs on this platform.
Now, so this goes back to what we were talking about last week,
how so much of Elon Musk's whole thing,
not just his personal identity,
but how he makes business and strategy decisions,
is grounded in transphobia.
To put this in context with that Glad report that we talked about last week,
finding that Twitter is by far the least hospitable social media platform
for LGBTQ folks,
and that Twitter had actually,
rolled back policies that did the bare minimum
of keeping transphobia off the platform
while other social media platforms like Facebook or TikTok
try to do some things.
Twitter was like, now we're going in the opposite direction,
we're going to do less.
LGBTQ users are reporting being threatened and harassed on Twitter
and Musk is not just allowing it,
but amplifying it and encouraging it.
So this gets down into the question of whether or not
cis is a slur. No.
End of sentence, it is not.
The history behind the word cis is actually like
kind of techy and pretty cool
especially like if you're a word nerd, if you're interested in the origins of words.
According to History.org, the term has a long and contested history prior to its wider cultural adoption.
The OED officially cites a 1994 post to a Usenet news group, Alt That Transgendered,
by user Dana Leland-Defasi as the term's origin.
First established in 1980, Usenet was a precursor to the World Wide Web.
It's a distributed discussion system where users posted messages to topic-specific news groups.
Given its long history, Usenet is the origin point for a variety of terminology, providing
the first use case for over 400 OED entries.
Nevertheless, other origin narratives persist.
Some sources, for many years Wikipedia among them, credit a Dutch transgender man named
Carl Bausch as creating the term in 1995, a narrative he himself supports.
Yet, examples of the cis trans dichotomy in reference to gender nonconformity go back even
further, beginning as early as 1914 in German sexological literature.
This is really interesting.
I know we were talking a bit off mic before we got started,
but I actually had never heard of Usenet,
and you were like, oh, you don't know about it.
This is something that you were familiar with, right?
Yeah, it was a little bit before my time.
I wish I was cool enough to have been using it,
but it's an important piece of, like, internet lore.
I think all of the founding creators of the internet,
they were using it to connect with each,
other and collaborate and share software and share ideas and I think a lot of the ideas that we had in the early days of the internet about it like being a force for democratization and equality and freedom and openness I think a lot of those ideas really were incubated on usnet which you know was then eventually uh supplant
by services like America Online.
And then the World Wide Web, I think, was a more similar sort of open,
I don't even know what the World Wide Web is.
Is it a protocol?
Is it whatever?
But yeah, Usenet was just a critical, important place for early founders and creators
of what we now think of as the Internet, where it all happened.
More after a quick break.
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Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying,
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting through the noise,
breaking down the plays, the controversies,
and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves,
their locker room stories, their reactions,
the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs,
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From viral moments to historic games,
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we break it down,
give you context and ask the questions
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Sports Slice brings you closer to the action
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Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app,
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Let's get right back into it.
I love that the etymology of the word in this instance is, like, techy.
Like, I think identity and techiness, like, it doesn't surprise me that this is where some of,
where folks think that this may be where some of these terms originated and, like, where
their use came from.
Aaron Reed also has a really fascinating breakdown about the use of the word cis in medicine
and science, going back to the 19th century.
We'll put it in the show notes.
It's fascinating.
So, of all the moral panics, I find the,
the ones around language and gender to be the most tiresome. You know, it's just like this panic
around extremists getting bent out of shape from phrases like pregnant people. Extremists make it
sound like it's some big, scary, nefarious plot when the reality is so much more boring, right?
Sometimes you need to be able to refer to a group of people at the population level using precise
language. And that's really all it is. Like, the fact that they've been able to turn this into,
a attack on them, as opposed to just like a humdrum, you know,
particularity of language needs is beyond me.
Like, it really just shows how they will use anything to weaponize and turn it into
it and attack on them.
And extremists have been attacking terms like cis and also straight and even white for
years to paint it as a pejorative meant to shame.
I think there is this idea where, like, the only groups who have kind of
special, quote unquote, special words meant to define them are like the other, right?
Like the dominant group is like, we're the dominant group, we're the, quote, normal ones.
Other people, they get words attached to them to describe who they are, not us.
And so I think there's this idea that if a word is being used to describe them, whether it's cis or straight or white, even if it's just a humdrum word, that is actually a personal attack on them.
Yeah, that's right.
And I think that's all correct and not to minimize the importance of words and language, right?
Because we know that words and language and labels are very powerful.
But yeah, there's like this hostility to labels like cis or white that apply to the majority group.
Like you just said, you know, they're comfortable with words that refer to members of a minority.
group and in fact reinforce their otherness and their minority status.
But to then have a word like white or cis that refers to to them is like deeply threatening
because I think it implies that they are not the default.
They are not normal.
They are not the standard.
And like, yeah, the word cis, it does imply that trans people exist.
And I think a lot of these folks like Elon Musk would argue that, in fact, they don't.
You know, I don't know exactly how that works in their brain.
But, like, they seem to believe that, like, trans people aren't real, right?
You know, there was that law.
I think it was in, I can't remember which state it was, but, like, an anti, one of these laws that denied gender affirming care to,
trans kids was struck down by a judge somewhere in like the deep south i want to i'm not sure which
i can't remember which state it was and the judge like explicitly said in their ruling that you know
gender identity exists it's a real thing like despite all the the vitriol and the huffing and
puffing of these transphobes like elon musk gender identity is real they they can pretend and perhaps
wish that it weren't but but it is
Yeah, that happened in Arkansas, and it kind of made me kind of cautiously optimistic that at a certain point, it doesn't matter if these extremists like it or get it or not. It's not their business, right? Like, gender exists. It's a thing that can shape people's lives. It's the thing that can determine what kind of medical care you need and what kind of care that you need to show up as your best self and your healthiest self. Even if transphobes and extremists don't like it, that is not their business. So that Arkansas ruling,
made me like cautiously optimistic that we can get to a place that's like, yeah, you don't have to
like it. It's not your business. It's a real thing. And we need to make sure that people can get
care that aligns with the care that they need. And it's really none of your business what that care
is. Like if you don't like it, fucking deal with it. Yeah, absolutely. I think Elon Musk has like a
real problem with that, right? Like he spent $44 billion to buy Twitter so that he could be the
guy who gets to decide what discourse is allowed and what discourse isn't hidden behind, you know,
his, I don't know, veneer of being a free speech champion, which he has revealed over and over
again to just be a complete joke, right?
Like, he's not in favor of free speech.
He's in favor of the speech that he likes.
And speech that he doesn't like, he wants to keep off of the platform, right?
We've seen that a whole bunch of times.
And now he's gone a step further to think that because he owns Twitter, he can not only decide which speech is allowed and which speech isn't, but he can, like, invent new meanings for words.
And he can't, right?
Like, cis is not a slur.
It's just a descriptive term to describe a phenomenon that exists in the natural world.
Well, as awful as all of this is, and it is awful, at least it can be the final nail in the coffin of the idea that Elon Musk is a,
free speech absolutist, as he has often hilariously claimed. He explicitly said when he bought
Twitter, he was using it as a platform to try to police and restrict the language of trans people
and people that support them. And it's, I think, part of a larger attempt to erase and eradicate
transness and clearness from public and civic life. And so, yeah, I think that's what he's doing.
At least we've, like, dropped the conversation about how he's going to turn Twitter into a free speech
Utopia, at least, I mean, I haven't even seen anybody really say that, even any of his defenders
say that because it's so obviously not true that you can't even continue to say it because
it's like, well, look at all these examples of the ways that he hasn't done that.
Yeah, that's a good observation.
I haven't heard anybody say that in a long time because it's like obviously not true.
It's not a free speech utopia.
It's like an anti-trans hellscape.
An anti-trans hellscape.
Speaking of Hellscape, let's talk about the mess over at Reddit.
So the Reddit blackout continues as thousands of subreddits remain private.
Long-time volunteer moderators who have always been the backbone of Reddit and the communities that it hosts have locked many popular subreddits in protest of a company's surprise decision to start charging third-party apps and individuals for access to the platform's API.
We've talked about this in an earlier news roundup, but previously API access has been free, which enabled the development of many third-party apps that made Reddit easier to use, easier to moderate, and more accessible for Internet users with disabilities.
But all of that ended earlier this month
when Reddit shut down free access
and started charging pretty steep fees
for any app that used the API.
In response, many major third-party app developers
said they would have to shut down their apps
because they just simply could not afford the fees.
Many of these apps were created by small indie developers
who simply wanted to contribute to a better internet with Reddit,
not because they were particularly profitable.
So this moved by Reddit to consolidate and centralized power
against the wishes of the army of volunteers
who make the site an invaluable
and fun resource, I think, really represents, like, a dark trend on the internet. I think it follows
a similar move by Twitter shortly after Musk took over. Yep, this is the second time we're talking
about them. I'm sorry. But by shutting down free API access, Reddit and Twitter are actively
making their platforms less friendly to their users. People use third-party tools because those
tools are useful. They didn't just start using them for fun. They used them for a reason. And now
those tools are gone. So users have fewer options and reduced functionality for
interacting with those platforms. And so I mean, I don't know if this is like a boring story or not,
but I really see it as a battle for the soul and the future of the internet. One of the things
that came up when we were talking about this, I think the week before last, was that how many
people type when they have a question or they need some information, they'll type the question
into Google and then they'll add Reddit because they want to get like real good information
curated by a human. And I was just like, oh, isn't that interesting? But then I thought
about it more. And I was like, well, why is that? And I think it's because we have just accepted
that so much of our internet infrastructure is scams and ads and annoying posts. Like the
experience of using the internet in 2023 is actually like an experience of wading through this
mindfield of scams and advertisements. And so the reason why people need to add Reddit to their
Google search queries is because it was the only way to quickly get to information that was
hand-picked and looked at by a human and not some kind of a SEO bot scam, right?
Like, I don't know.
And so it's what's interesting to me that, like, I think that this Reddit thing is really
a conversation about what the internet is for, who it is for, is it for humans who need
accurate information, or is it for bots and scammers and advertisers and SEO hacks or
something else.
And so I think when we're thinking about this Reddit protest, I think it really, like, so goes
Reddit, so goes the internet. And I do think it's interesting that these Reddit moderators are not
taking this lying down. If there's anything I know about Reddit, they are a vocal and passionate
group of people. So you're seeing all of these kind of like roundabout protests where they were
forced to, when they went, they took their subreddit's private and then they were kind of forced by
Reddit to open them up. And so now they're finding all of these cheeky ways to continue that
protest, like a women's fashion subreddit that's pretty big that I follow. They are now only posting
fashion from like the 1700s as a way to sort of get around it. I think one of the large
photo subreddits is now only posting pictures of John Oliver. So there's all these little ways
of like sticking it to Reddit suits in forms of protest that I think have been really interesting.
But it is not surprising to me that users are protesting this decision by Reddit top brass
because it's not good, right? It's not good because I think it makes the user experience worse. But also,
shutting down free API access also shuts out researchers. Researchers at universities,
think tanks, government agencies, and other organizations have really relied for years on access
to the back end of Twitter and Reddit to be able to do research about what's going on on those
platforms. That includes keeping tabs on things like disinformation trends, conspiracy theories,
timely monitoring of new disinformation spreading online, analysis of the networks behind
disinformation and harassment campaigns, as well as studies on political discourse, health issues,
and a whole bunch of topics, right?
Like how people are having discourse on the Internet
tells us so much about what's happening with us in the real world,
what's happening to our government,
what's happening in politics,
what's happening in our civic world.
And not allowing people who research and track and monitor trends
in those arenas really puts us all at risk.
Yeah, it's actually personal for me
because I have used both Twitter and Reddit's APIs
in my own research in the past.
and it's it's such a valuable resource for researchers to be able to look into what is going on on the internet.
And like you mentioned, there are some really like high-stakes things like monitoring disinformation trends.
It's been used in violent conflicts to alert people to when there's like some sort of attack happening so that people can get out of that space.
But there's also this huge number of studies that have been done about things that are like,
somewhat lower stakes, but also valuable. For example, I was involved in a study a while ago that was
looking at the subreddit quit vaping. And it was a subreddit of people who were trying to quit
vaping. And so the researcher wanted to look at like what were people saying? Were they
exchanging accurate information? Were they, was there like misinformation happening there?
And, you know, they found that for the most part, people were exchanging accurate information
and social support. And it was great. And so it was just like a nice.
little study that contributed to scientific understanding of how people give each other's social
support for health behavior change online. So like not super high stakes, but valuable information.
And also a really accessible way for young researchers and like grad students to do interesting,
meaningful research without having a lot of funds. You know, often grad students get paid very little.
they can often have little access to resources.
And so using these APIs was a valuable way that they could do valuable research despite not having a lot of access to funds.
And so now that these platforms are charging for access to these APIs, it's going to make it much harder, if not impossible, for a lot of that research to happen.
And so the army of grad students out there who really fuel a lot of the research,
that happens in this country and just across academia and across science,
they are going to find other ways to do research in other areas.
And so our visibility into what's happening on the internet is going to be that much darker.
Yeah.
Think about the grad students, people.
No, you're right.
And I think, like, it comes down to a conversation that I keep returning to that I had with
Paris Marx about who it is that is designing the future of the Internet,
for all of us, right? And like really look, really drilling down deep into who these people are and the
internet and digital future that they want and that they're fighting for. And who benefits from that?
More after a quick break.
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friends. Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
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Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying,
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise.
Breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down,
give you context, and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to SportsSlic on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slic Life 12 and the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Let's get right back into it.
I saw this really interesting thing online about this series of, I would say, like, not great interviews that Reddit CEO Steve Huffman gave to first The Verge and then NBC, where he was like really praising Elon Musk and basically saying that the way that Elon Musk is running Twitter,
is like how he wants to run Reddit.
He's setting a good example of how he wants to run Reddit.
We know that the way that Elon Musk has been running Twitter
has been rampant layoffs, being pretty disrespectful to both users and staff.
If that is what you see as a role model for how you run a company
that is a big part of how the internet functions and internet discourse,
is? I think that we're all in trouble.
Ben Collins at NBC called it CEO contagion.
which I never heard before and I thought was great,
where executives have effectively rebranded hostility to customers
and cruel worker exploitation as being like Elon.
And apparently this phenomenon is everywhere in tech company boardrooms right now,
whether they're making it explicit like the Reddit CEO Steve Huffman is in these interviews,
or if they're just like keeping their cards close to their chest,
saying like, yeah, like we should start running our company the way that Elon Musk is.
And I think you really have to call into question who these men are
who have been given such outsized impact over the future of the internet.
Because the future of the internet really matters.
It matters for all of us.
I have made this point so many times.
What happens online deeply affects what happens in real life.
That then diagram is a circle.
And so when we give people like Steve Huffman and Elon Musk
an outsized role in shaping the future of the internet,
we are giving them a role in shaping the future of so much.
And so it's really something that we really got to keep an eye on.
You know, this Reddit story, at first I thought it was kind of a niche story,
but I keep returning to it because I really deeply do think it is a battle for the future of the internet,
and we should all be paying attention.
Completely agree.
I think that is exactly the right framing.
Like, who is the internet for?
Is it for these, like, rich CEO trolls, like Elon Musk who just purchased this platform with money?
is it for the millions of Redditors who have been contributing content,
moderating content, building community, maintaining community for decades, right?
Like they, the Redditors built Reddit, right?
Like Steve Huffman did not.
It's maddening.
And like you say, it's dangerous because they, yeah, in those interviews,
Steve Huffman was, you know, praising Elon Musk and all.
these, you know, actions of disrespect.
And I think disrespect is the perfect word to characterize this attitude towards users,
towards workers.
And if that's where he's coming from, what kind of product is going to grow out of that?
Not a good one.
Not a good internet that serves the needs of the population and, you know,
makes people feel safe and valued and want to show up.
So you mentioned internet trolls earlier,
and we kind of have to talk about RFK Jr. on Joe Rogan.
I don't really want to, but let's just dip into it anyway.
So anti-Vax conspiracy theorist and presidential candidate, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.,
did a three-and-a-half hour stint on Joe Rogan's Spotify original podcast last week,
and the results were not great.
first of all, as a podcaster, three and a half hours?
Are you kidding me?
I've ever heard of a fucking editor?
I hope our listeners don't expect the three and a half hour episode because that's just
like not happening.
I don't, part of me is like amazed and impressed by it, but part of me is like, that's just
like so much time.
Like don't they have other things they need to do?
Maybe not.
I guess not.
I guess this is what they do.
Ugh.
I mean, I feel uncomfortable when I put out an episode that goes over.
over an hour. I'm like, ooh, are they getting into Rogan territory? But yeah, three hours.
That is a marathon. So on the show, RFK talked about the usual conspiracy theories about vaccines,
5G, Wi-Fi, and illnesses that have been debunked long ago. I honestly don't want to list them all
here, but if you want to know, if you want to know what specific conspiracy theories these people
trafficked in, Anna Merlin has a great breakdown in advice, which will link in the show notes,
she called the episode, quote,
an orgy of unchecked vaccine misinformation,
some conspiracy mongering about 5G technology and Wi-Fi,
and of course, Rogan once again praising Ivermetrin
and an effective faux COVID treatment.
So I love the phrase,
an orgy of unchecked misinformation.
That's exactly what it is.
Honestly, this stuff is just so boring.
When I was going to, you know,
write my outline for this bit of the show,
I was like, we were just talking about
like rehashing stuff that we have like
has been done to death.
The whole thing just feels very 2021.
Like I was like, we're getting into vaccine misinformation again.
We're talking about Iva Metron again.
Like, didn't we do this?
It just feels very like early pandemic 2021.
Merlin asked Spotify if they were going to take the episode down
to align with their COVID misinformation policy.
They basically kind of danced around it.
Again, you can read their response on the vice piece.
You know, folks might remember that there was a whole conversation
about Joe Rogan and misinformation
when Neil Young and others
removed their content from Spotify
to protest him continuing
to traffic in misinformation.
Yeah, it just feels like we're here again.
I feel like this is like a real groundhog day
of a story where it's like, oh, he's doing it again.
Oh, they're asking Spotify again, and they're like
giving PR nothing speak and doing nothing.
So basically here's where it gets kind of interesting.
When an actual doctor, Peter Holtz,
a vaccine scientist at Baylor
College of Medicine took to Twitter to rebut RFK's claims about vaccines,
Joe Rogan replied by inviting the doctor to come on the podcast and debate RFK.
The doctor declined and he said, I'll come on for like a one-on-one conversation or an
interview, but I'm not doing a debate.
Then of course, Elon Musk, I'm sorry, this is the third time we've mentioned him,
had to get his two cents in, had to butt in because Joe Rogan, RFCK, Elon Musk.
They're all like, like, we need a word for that group of people.
Like, you know what I mean.
Like, we don't have a good word for them.
We need a word for them.
But because his buddy, Joe Rogan, was getting into it.
Elon Musk, of course, he had to get his two cents in.
And he said that this doctor was just afraid of open debate because he knew that he would lose.
So rather unfortunately, this doctor said that the whole thing ended with two people
showing up outside of his house urging him to debate Joe Rogan.
Which like, this is like I can't wrap my head around this.
Can you imagine not one, but two people getting into their car, like taking off work,
whatever they got to do, getting a babysitter, getting in their car, searching this guy's address,
driving to his house, standing outside of his house, making a nuisance of themselves in the name
of defending the honor of Joe Rogan.
Like, I can't even wrap my head around the kind of person who does this.
We do need a name for these people.
Maybe our listeners can suggest one.
Either they could like connect with you on social or, you know, write in on email.
Hello at tangoity.com.
I'd love to hear some ideas.
I feel like some form of jock should be in the name because there's like a very like internet jock or like social media jock or something.
I don't know these.
I'm not good at coming up with names, but like the whole, this whole thing feels very like sportsy, you know.
the idea that this doctor is afraid to debate because he knows that he'll lose.
Like, this guy is a, he's a doctor, he's a scientist, right?
He's trained to use science to learn the truth about viruses and how they impact the human
body.
He's not trained in getting on the mic and having like a debate on a podcast.
That is a completely different skill set.
And it also has, you know, winning a debate like that has very little to do with the actual truth of the thing, right?
It's like we live in two different worlds from these people where some of us are interested in what is the truth about the world and the COVID virus and how it affects our bodies and things we can do to protect our bodies from being harmed by it.
And other people live in a world where it's all just made up talking points where there is no truth.
And scoring points and winning the debate and getting clicks is the only thing that matters.
And I don't know how we like talk with them.
I mean, it's a grift.
This doctor should not, I mean, he was absolutely right to decline the invitation to debate Joe Rogan and R.
You know, if RFK's vaccine misinformation felt very 2021, the whole like, debate me, bro, thing feels
like very 2010.
It's just so tired and boring.
If anybody ever challenges you to a public debate in 2023, you should decline on principle
alone.
And I really like this tweet from The Guardian's Hamilton Nolan about this.
He said, I know you did a PhD and wrote a book on this very complex topic, but if you don't
debate my horse on stage at the county fair, why should I believe you?
my horse can clomp his hoof once for yes and twice for no.
And doesn't that really illustrate it?
I mean, I think, like, in a lot of ways, we are in this era that is kind of beyond facts and
beyond credentials.
And there is no point in debating somebody who you cannot find a shared understanding
of the facts, right?
Like, it's not going to be a worthy enterprise.
It is not going to be something that is going to be – because it's going to serve anybody
or make anybody smarter by watching –
two people, one of whom is a credentialed scientist in this, and the other is Joe fucking Rogan,
who is completely making up his own facts. And any kind of like institutional fact that you have
is just going to be discounted because like, oh, it came from the mainstream media. Oh,
but it came from Big Pharma or whatever. Like, this doctor is a vaccine specialist. He went to
school. He has credentials. It's one thing to do a sit-down interview about vaccines, you know,
on the show. It's quite another to be debating some.
like RFK is an attorney.
This guy is a doctor.
And since when is a debate on a podcast hosted by a former news radio series regular,
the way that medical facts are established, you know?
This is one of those things that like, when I was watching the discourse unfold,
it was getting me so angry that I was like, I can't even like pay attention to this.
I saw somebody on Twitter say, oh, well, real easy to get on your high horse and hide behind your credentials.
And literally, people go to school and contribute to academia and research and get credentials because they want to have expertise on stuff.
That is literally how it works.
Just attacking somebody because they happen to be an expert just really goes to show how we're in this space where to a lot of people, facts don't matter, reality doesn't matter, expertise doesn't matter.
And in fact, is to be suspect of.
And that the only thing that matters is talking points and one-upsmanship and clicks.
engagement. And that is why people like RFK, people like Elon Musk, people like Joe Rogan, do it.
It is a grift. It makes them money. It makes this poor doctor, you know, have people show up at
his house in the middle of the night, which is already unacceptable. This is why they do it.
I don't actually think they are serious. I think they do it because they know it is a grift.
And that there was a certain type of person who was always going to be like, wow, they're really
going against the grain. They're really thinking for themselves. And they're always going
to give that more engagement. It is just a grift. It really is. And the fact that they're still
talking about ivermectin, that like horse medicine that they, for some reason, thought was a COVID
antidote, that really gives lie to the whole thing, right? Like, if they just had vaccine skepticism,
I don't think it's justified in 2023, but like, okay, you have some skepticism about this or that,
fine. But the fact that they're still talking about this Ivermectin as a COVID cure, when there's
zero evidence for it, it's been thoroughly debunked to the extent that you can debunk something
that never had any evidence in the first place is just proof of how disingenuous they are
and how insincere they are about any curiosity about this, right? Like the most cursory
internet search of like, okay, what is the evidence that supports Ivermectin would turn up the fact
that there is nothing. There is no evidence to support that. It's just a complete fabrication.
And yet they still continue to repeat it. If they were sincerely interested in these questions,
they would find some answers. And the answers are easy to find. But they're just not interested in that.
They're interested in the theater.
Yeah, that's one of the things that really gets me about this story is that it's things that I feel like have been pretty well settled.
You know, this is not, that is not a cure for COVID.
You should not, like, Ivo Metron is not a cure for COVID.
And then he also went back to the idea that vaccines cause autism, which thank you, Jenny McCarsney, for, you know, really getting that into the ecosystem.
But I think continuing to return to these thoroughly debunked.
conspiracy theories about health is something that really gets me. And also, there's something
about RFK, and I'm maybe to Joe Rogan to a lesser extent, but I think to people on the left
who should know better, I think is kind of attractive. And so I think one of the reasons why I find
this whole thing so upsetting is that I have seen folks on the left who should know better
parenting this, amplifying this, saying things like, oh, he makes some compelling points.
but it's like, no, he's making points that have been thoroughly debunked if you just did a Google search.
It's not compelling points.
And so I'm concerned that the same way that people allowed Trump to spew nonsense and conspiracy theories,
and rather than calling them out, they said, like, oh, well, he is asking some questions or, like,
he is saying what people think or any number of things excusing things that he would say,
I worry that we have learned nothing and we're going to be doing the exact same thing in this upcoming presidential election as well.
More after a quick break.
Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guy,
not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day
and head writer Streeter Seidel
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends
on the I-Heart Radio app.
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Run a business and not thinking about podcasting, think again.
More Americans listen to podcasts than ads supported streaming music from Spotify and Pandora.
And as the number one podcaster, IHearts twice as large as the next two combined.
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Think podcasting can help your business.
Think IHeart.
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Call 844-844-I-HHHHHR.
Heart to get started. That's 844-844-I-heart. Last night, a blown call changed a game. This morning,
the internet lost its mind. Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you
exactly what happened. That's where Sports Slice comes in. I'm Timbo. Every episode, we're cutting
through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the
headlines. We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories,
their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear. The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments,
that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games,
from buzzer beaters to controversial calls,
we break it down, give you context,
and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
SportsSlice brings you closer to the action
with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to SportsSlice on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Sliced Life 12
in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Let's get right back into it.
Let's talk about the Grammys
where they've determined that the Grammys are for humans only.
Kind of.
The Recording Academy, which is the organization behind the Grammy Awards,
outlined brand new rules ahead of next year's competition,
one that states outright that only human creators
are eligible for the music industry's highest honors.
It's a little bit tricky, but basically,
songs generated by AI can still be nominated,
but there has to be proof that a human meaningfully contributed to the song, too.
So if there's an AI voice singing a song or AI instrumentation, they might consider it.
This is what Harvey Mason Jr., the CEO of the Recording Academy, told Grammy.com.
But in songwriting-based categories, it has to have been written mostly by a human.
I do have some questions about what things like mostly or, you know, a human meaningfully contributing to a song really means.
Like, it seems like there's some room to be defined there.
But ultimately, I think it's probably a good thing that the Recording Academy
is putting some guardrails in place
to deal with what I imagine
will probably become an inevitability
in music and songwriting
that more and more human artists
are going to be collaborating with AI.
Yeah, I think they should be commended
for attempting to get in front of this
and for prioritizing humans.
But man, I think we are all headed
towards a lot of questions
about what does it mean for a human
to have meaningfully created something
versus that human using AI as a tool to create something.
I guess the nature of what it means to create something
is going to be something,
a topic that we all have to start talking about.
And I suspect there's going to be very thorny answers.
We're actually doing an episode about AI and the creative arts.
We're going to be talking to a screenwriter
and a creative about the WGA strike
and how AI plays into all of it.
I do think that when you look at what screenwriters
are asking for when it comes to AI,
they want to ensure that AI is only going to be used
to supplement a human's creative writing process
and not be generating the entire thing.
And so I do think that it is commendable
that the Grammys are drawing a line in the sand
and saying, no, this is how a human needs to be
involved in the process if AI is involved. But I do think, like you said, like, it is a question
of what this is going to look like. Like, I don't know. I don't want to see an all-robot Grammys.
When I watch the Grammys, I want to see Gloria Estefan and Celine Dion. I don't want to see a bunch of
robots, so we'll see. Yeah, if you think about great music over the past, you know, like forever,
it's always been something new, something transformational, somebody who either crosses genres or
invent something entirely new. And AI can't do that, right? Like AI puts out patterns based on what it's learned from what it's already seen. So I think on the one hand, there's always going to be a place for human creativity to come up with new things that are transformational and change. And it's just a big open question, how AI is going to show up in music. But it seems pretty likely that,
It's definitely going to be there in some form.
This reminds me so much of the very first interview we ever did on this podcast with Claire Evans,
who is so cool.
She's one of my idols.
She wrote the book, Broadband, about how women contributed to computers from the very beginning.
And she's in the pop group yacht.
And one of the things that she talked about is how in the 80s when DJs and musicians were using things like drum machines and sampling to come up with the genre that would then be called hip-hop,
there was a time where some DJs were afraid that drum machines and samplers were going to replace them,
and that it was the musicians who learned how to combine their human talents with that technology to make a whole new genre.
Those were the ones who really thrived and did something cool.
And so I don't want to make it seem like I'm, you know, an AI doom and gloomer.
I think that there are going to be use cases in the creative arts where AI can probably be a useful supplement.
to a human in a studio or to a human who is writing something or to a human who is making some sort of music.
But I worry that in a society where we are so interested in exploiting and mining and taking for capital,
I worry that it will, something that probably does have a use case for creativity and creating an
entirely new, cool thing that does need a human knowing how to use this technology to do.
I worry that we're just going to rely on exactly what you just described, right?
Just like, how can we just recycle something that already exists to make more crap that is derivative?
And I really worry that that's what the use case is going to be.
How can we make cheaper and cheaper art?
How can we, you know, continue to put the squeeze on the humans that make that art
in favor of making worse and more derivative art that costs us less money while continuing to generate capital?
So I think it's kind of a TBD, how it looks down the road, what the future of this technology looks like for creative work.
But I do think it is important to be putting some early guardrails in place now.
And so I guess it seems like that's what the Recording Academy is trying to do.
Yeah, guardrails and also a statement of values, right, that it is human creativity that the Academy wants to celebrate.
So speaking of Celebrate, I have a little bit of good news.
Illinois became the first state in the United States to ban book bans in public libraries.
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed a bill to ban public libraries from banning books
the first such legislation in the country. He said book bans are about censorship,
marginalizing people, marginalizing ideas, and marginalizing facts. Regimes ban books, not democracies.
This is what he said at a signing ceremony at a Chicago public library.
We refuse to let a vitriolic strain of white nationalism,
through our country to determine whose histories are told, not in Illinois, which kudos to him.
This new legislation takes place on January 1st, and it says that public libraries must adopt
the American Library Library Association's Library Bill of Rights or their own statement
prohibiting book banning to be eligible for any state money. The Association's Library
of Bill of Rights states that reading materials should not be prescribed or removed because
of partisan or doctrinal disapproval or excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those
contributing to their creation. And so it kind of goes back to what I was saying earlier about the
Arkansas thing. This might be cautiously optimistic. And I'm kind of, I want to choose my words
carefully here, but I do wonder slash hope if this is a signal that the extremists who are trying
to use marginalized people as a wedge issue are losing, and they know they are losing, because
people don't want this in a democracy. People don't want books banned from public libraries
books about marginalized people. People want books about marginalized people. People are buying those books.
They're flying off the shells as we talked about in one of our earlier newscasts. People don't want this.
And I'm cautiously optimistic that this is a sign that the extremists who are pushing this,
this very small but vocal number of extremists, know that they are losing and know that the rest of the public is not on their side.
Yeah, I hope you're right in that optimism. Because it does seem like the extremists,
is the right word here, right? The people pushing for these book bans are not middle of the road
Republicans who are trying to win elections. They are extremists with an extreme agenda,
whether it's anti-gay, anti-trans, anti-sex, just straight out to lunch. It's extreme extremists.
And for years, I think relatively moderate politicians on the right were more than happy to pander to these extremists to get their votes.
And I am also cautiously optimistic that the bill is coming due and it's catching up to them about issues like these book bans.
I think abortion is another issue where they are realizing that by,
catering to these extreme extremists who are so out of step with what the general population wants,
it's a losing recipe electorally.
And I hope that continues.
A point that I make all the time as somebody who thinks about and studies disinformation is that
the reason why I know these extremists are losing and aware that they are aware that they're losing is that they lie.
If they had positions that were popular that people agreed with and liked, they would not have to lie.
So when extremists, like the people who run the organization, Moms for Liberty, who, by the way, just used a Hitler quote in their flyer recently, so like pretty, like saying the loud part loud, when they lie about the kind of books and the content of these books, when extremists lie and say that Target is selling, you know, chess binders for toddlers or tuck friendly swimsuits for.
toddlers or shirts for children that have Satan on them, which they're doing no such thing,
when anti-abortion extremists lie about their positions on abortion and they say, oh, this is
just leaving it up to the states. We're not actually banning abortion or, oh, like, this is actually
quite moderate. That's all lies. When they lie, it is because they know their positions are not
popular. If they were popular, if people agreed with them, they wouldn't have to lie to get people
on board. And so I think it really, I'm cautiously optimistic that people are waking up.
They're saying, oh, these people, the things that they're positioning as, you know, just them
moderately asking questions about society or trying to protect kids or whatever lie they're telling,
I think that people are waking up to the fact that that is BS and that that doesn't move people,
right? I think that we also for too long have had a media climate that is too afraid to talk about
these issues for what they are. We saw the whole thing with the critical race theory panic where the
mainstream media was all too happy to do the dirty work of extremists for them by lending credence
to the ideas that, yeah, kindergartners are being taught critical race theory, this high-minded,
collegiate-level idea when they weren't. They were way too happy to make it seem like, oh,
these are just parents concerned about things like bathroom bills and, you know, protecting girls in sports.
And now I think that all of that stuff is coming home to Roos.
And I hope that people remember this come election time that I don't think that your average American is moved by this.
I don't think that your average American walks around on their day-to-day being really outraged about what Target is selling or what books about LGBTQ people or black people are in their libraries.
I really don't.
And so I'm cautiously optimistic that come November,
we will see that come to fruition.
So one last thing, we've got to quickly talk about this Zuckerberg, Elon Musk.
What is this the fourth time you've brought him up?
I'm so sorry.
It's a Musk heavy episode.
This cage match that they're talking about.
So Elon Musk recently tweeted that he would be up for a cage fight
with Facebook meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Zuckerberg shot back with an image of Musk's tweet.
with the caption, send me your locations.
What sounds like these two heads of major tech companies
intend to have some kind of a cage-match physical fight.
And all I have to say about this
is that this is what happens when men run tech companies.
And that's all I have to say about that.
I do have one more thing I want to talk about.
I'm sure folks by now have seen the Ocean Gate tragedy
where a billionaire and his kid and other folks went down to check out the ruins of the Titanic and did not make it,
there have been so many conspiracy theories around how folks are talking about this tragedy
and a really interesting question mark online discourse.
So I want to talk about this, but this story is everywhere.
So I'm going to save it for the Patreon.
So if you want to hear my thoughts about the Ocean Gate tragedy,
what conspiracy theories are sort of taking?
root because some of them are quite interesting.
What conspiracy theories are taking root about how folks are talking about this and
the online discourse around this tragedy and how folks are talking about it.
Check out our Patreon.
You can check it out at patreon.com slash tangoity.
I would love to have that conversation with you there.
Mike, thank you so much for being here as always.
Thanks for having me, Bridget.
It was a pleasure.
And thanks so much for listening.
Again, you can check out our Patreon for more ad-free content and to support the show,
and I'll see you soon.
Got a story about an interesting thing in tech or just want to say,
Hi. You can reach us at hello at tangoody.com. You can also find transcripts for today's
episode at tangoody.com. There are no girls on the internet was created by me, Bridget Todd.
It's a production of IHeartRadio and unbossed creative. Jonathan Strickland is our executive
producer. Tari Harrison is our producer and sound engineer. Michael Amato is our contributing producer.
I'm your host, Bridget Todd. If you want to help us grow, write and review us on Apple Podcasts.
For more podcasts from IHeartRadio, check out the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel, help an
a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
And nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where SportsSlice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
And every episode, we're cutting through the noise,
breaking down the biggest moments in sports and giving you the real story behind the headline.
And we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions in the moment, and the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Listen to Sports Slice on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slic Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Life is full of hurdles.
So how do you keep going?
On Hurtle with Emily Abadi, we're talking with the most inspiring women in sports and wellness
from professional athletes, coaches, and Olympic champions about the challenges that shape them
and the mindset that keeps them moving forward.
At our level, at this scale, being able to fail in front of the entire world.
Like, I can do anything.
I can do anything.
Listen to Hurtle with Emily Abadi on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast.
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart women's sports.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
