There Are No Girls on the Internet - Introducing: Disinformed
Episode Date: January 19, 2021On the heels of the insurrection at the Capitol, There Are No Girls on the Internet introduces Disinformed, a new series chronicling how the spread of dangerous disinformation got us here and the unde...rrepresented organizers, researchers, and culture-creators trying to stop it. Subscribe on iHeartRadio, Apple podcasts, Spotify or whenever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
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 IHeart 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,
IHeart's twice as large as the next two combined. Learn how podcasting can help your business.
Call 844-844-I-Hart. 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,
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 Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
What's up, fam? It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J. Toledano.
It's our favorite time of the year on our podcast point game, the playoffs.
We're digging into the biggest surprises.
of the season. And I'm looking back on some of my greatest playoff moments.
If we didn't talk ever again, I was finally. You just understood. That's how personal it got.
Wow. Then after that game seven, Mark keep coming to. He's like, you know, I love you, dog. You know, it's all love.
This was just playoffs. This was just basketball. So listen to Point Game on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're listening to Disinformed, a mini-series from There Are No Girls on the Internet. I'm Bridget Todd.
On January 6th, I watched in horror as white supremacist Trump supporters attacked the Capitol.
I also live in D.C., so they were attacking my city, my hometown, my community.
But for me, this story doesn't start on January 6, 2021.
I want to take y'all back to 2016.
After running a campaign full of lies, distortions, and conspiracy theories, Trump had just been elected to be our next president.
The mood in D.C., where I've lived for most of my adult life, was pretty somber.
In the days before Trump's inauguration, my friends and I would sit around together,
raging and screaming and lamenting, and sometimes just sitting in complete silence over drinks.
I can't believe this means Trump will actually be living in our city.
We'd say over and over again, an utter disbelief.
One day I was supposed to be meeting up with a friend, and she was late, which was not at all like her.
When she finally arrived, I could not believe what had prevented her from being on time.
She was killing time before meeting me, browsing in a store, when a man with a gun came in
a nearby pizza place and she couldn't leave. Someone said it had something to do with child trafficking
in the internet, she explained. Last weekend, as people were dining inside here, a 28-year-old
man turned up armed with an assault rifle to, as he put it, self-investigate what police have
called a fictitious online conspiracy theory. So the violent attacks at the Capitol weren't the
first time conspiracy theories run amok online had unleashed chaos and terror on my
city. This was PizzaGate, a completely untrue conspiracy theory that Democratic leaders, including
Hillary Clinton and John Podesta, were secretly pedophiles who trafficked children for sex. Code word
pizza. And this whole vast network was supposedly housed in the basement of Comet Pingpong,
a local DC pizza restaurant. This conspiracy spread, grew, and mutated on Reddit and 4chan
until a man traveled from North Carolina to D.C. to investigate the restaurant himself with a gun.
And this was really the first time I saw how dangerous conspiracy theories, unchecked false
stories, and media manipulation can be online, and that even though they may start online,
they could end in real-world dangerous situations, like the attack we saw in the Capitol
earlier this month.
Now, disinformation, misinformation, online harassment, and conspiracy theories are obviously
nothing new.
But in many ways, I saw Trump and his supporters weaponize them for political gain and welcome
them into our institutions in ways I had never seen before.
It's pretty easy to see the ways that disinformation is political,
especially when our president invites his supporters to have a wild time at the Capitol
in support of the lie that he won the election.
But it's also personal because it relies on people not being able to trust one another.
And this is something I know a little bit about.
I lost my best friend to conspiracy theories and misinformation.
I met Joe, not his real name, in college in North Carolina when I was 19.
Back then we were just two friends who really cared about politics.
I was a strident young lefty who would tell anyone who would listen about it.
I was fresh from a small town on a college campus for the first time,
and I felt like I was being welcomed into the marketplace of ideas.
Whatever that means.
Whatever, I was 19.
Joe and I connected over spirited conversations about our still-forming ideologies,
and we stayed close friends after I graduated college and moved to D.C.
But in 2016, our once-spirited debates took a new turn.
Rather than talking about policies or positions,
Joe was talking about things that were truly out there.
Hillary Clinton is using a body double
and probably only has a few weeks to live.
He once texted me out of the blue
at the height of the 2016 election.
Our mutual friends would start group chats
about the things he was posting to Facebook.
He cannot be serious with this stuff, I remember texting.
And I remember the last straw.
I was attending the Democratic National Convention in Philly
and my phone dinged.
How can you vote for Hillary Clinton
even after she had Seth Riched killed.
Seth Rich was a Democratic National Committee staffer in D.C.
I didn't know him, but our circles were close enough that his death really hit home.
Seth was shot and killed on July 10, 2016, in the Bloomingdale neighborhood of D.C.
His killers were never found.
The most likely explanation seems to be a mugging gone bad.
But according to the right-wing conspiracy theory machine, Hillary Clinton had Seth Rich killed
in retaliation for leaking DNC emails to WikiLeaks.
Now, even though there's no evidence has ever happened, it didn't stop the right-wing media
from irresponsibly amplifying these baseless claims.
In a Washington Post op-ed this week, Rich's parents called the story baseless and pleaded with
people to stop using our beloved Seth's memory and legacy for their own political goals.
Yesterday, the story was taken down from the Fox News website.
Fueled by bogus Fox News reports from Sean Hannity,
conspiracy theories hounded Seth's grieving parents and anyone who supported it.
them publicly. When this family should have been able to grieve his murder in peace, they were instead
being attacked by a right-wing disinformation campaign. The entire thing was so disgusting and dangerous,
and here was my friend, believing it, spreading it. I think up until then I had been able to tell
myself that Joe was kind of half-kitting with these ideas. There's no way he actually believed
this garbage. I thought that people who believed conspiracy theories were Fox News-obsessed
Simpletons who were too stupid to realize the ways they had been misled.
Joe was educated. We went to the same college. He had a great white collar job and made good money.
He voted for Obama. He was into cool music and knew about art and film.
Back then, I didn't really realize that any of us could be taken my disinformation campaigns.
I didn't know how powerful it is, or how it spreads, or what you could do if you're watching
someone you love be taken in by it. Or how to keep from spreading it yourself. Eventually, Joe and I
lost touch. I just didn't know how to have him in my life. But I wish I had known what to do or say,
to help him offboard from a steady diet of conspiracy theories. And I wish Joe had known how
disinformation disproportionately harms people from underrepresented backgrounds like me,
because it traffics in the worst biases about our identities and who we are,
exploiting and inflaming tensions, fears, and fractures. And I wish we had all known the impact
that social media platforms would have, spreading disinformation and driving our country further apart.
Some people saw it coming and spoke up, but very few people with power did anything at all to curb its threat.
I wish I had known a lot of things back then, and that's part of the reason why I'm making this podcast.
Today my work involves training everyday people to curb the spread of disinformation online
and pressuring tech leaders to take action to keep dangerous disinformation, misinformation,
misinformation, and violent rhetoric off their platforms.
And I believe that's a big reason why we're here, still reeling from a violent attack on the Capitol by white supremac.
as Trump supporters, who believed the repeated false claim that Trump won the election and that it
was being unfairly stolen from him. Disinformation is a racial justice and gender justice issue.
Women, communities of color, and other people from underrepresented backgrounds and identities
are the ones who are hit hardest by its impact. But they're also the organizers, academics,
and culture creators who have been speaking up against the threat disinformation poses for years,
even while the people who had the power to make a difference didn't seem to listen. And
Now, they're the same ones fighting back against the harm disinformation spreads and working
to inoculate the entire internet against it.
On Disinformed, we'll hear their stories about how disinformation online got us here and what we can
all do to join the fight to stop it.
New episodes drop every Tuesday.
Got a story about an interesting thing in tech or just want to say hi?
We'd love to hear from you at hello at tangoity.com.
Disinformed is brought to you by there are no girls on the internet.
It's a production of IHeartRadio and Unbossed Creative.
Jonathan Strickland is our executive producer.
Tari Harrison is our supervising producer and engineer.
Mike Amato is our producer.
I'm your host, Bridget Todd.
For more great podcasts, check out the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel 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.
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 Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
What's up, fam?
It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J. Toledano.
It's our favorite time of the year on our podcast point game, the playoffs.
We're digging into the biggest surprises of the season.
And I'm looking back on some of my greatest playoff moments.
If we didn't talk ever again, I would.
You just understood.
That's how personal it got.
Wow.
Then after that game seven, Marquis come in to you, he's like, you know I love you, dog.
You know, it's all love.
This was just playoffs.
This was just basketball.
So listen to Point Game on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, everyone.
It's Ryder Strong and Wilfredel from PodMeets World.
And now the Pod Meets Twirled podcast.
We're two men who were completely clueless to reality TV and we're gearing up for the season finale of Survivor.
I know we annoyed a lot of our listeners by our severe lack of survivor knowledge.
That is the point of the show.
I'm just going to remind you.
Again, we are experts.
Listen to PodMeets Tworl on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
