There Are No Girls on the Internet - Serial’s Rabia Chaudry made it her mission to free Adnan Syed, despite harassment - Best of TANGOTI
Episode Date: September 23, 2022You might know attorney and justice advocate Rabia Chaudry from the podcast Serial. Or her hit podcast Undisclosed, a true crime podcast that explores people who have been wrongfully convicted of crim...es. Or maybe her other other hit podcast The Hidden Djinn. Rabia’s mission is to exonerate the wrongly convicted. Her work is incredibly important. But , another true crime podcaster is waging a coordinated harassment campaign against her. But this episode isn’t about him. Here’s how she continues to flourish and do her important work in the midst of it. Listen to Rabia’s podcast Undisclosed: https://undisclosed-podcast.com/ Want to write a letter to someone in prison? Here’s how: https://www.sisterhelen.org/writing-to-someone-in-prison/See 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.
Since you're listening to this podcast, there's a good chance you're familiar with the podcast, serial,
a 2014 true crime podcast that covered the murder of Korean American high school student Hay Min Lee,
who was last seen alive on January 13, 1999.
Adnan Syed was convicted of Hay's murder in 1999,
but this week, a Baltimore judge vacated the conviction and ordered his immune.
release. According to Vox, a new investigation in Adnan's conviction found errors in his
original court case, including multiple Brady violations, which means the prosecution refused to
turn over potentially exculpatory evidence to the defense prior to his trial. Today, Adnan is a
free man, and the state now has 30 days to either drop the existing charges against him or schedule
a retrial. Now, this is great news for Adnan, but it's still really really,
said that he has spent so much of his life behind bars, and that Hayes Killer has been out there
all this time and her family and community have never gotten justice. Attorney and advocate
Rabia Shadri is a childhood friend of Adnan's. She's been fighting nonstop for his release
and advocating for the wrongfully convicted. On our own podcast, Undisclosed, she and her team
investigate wrongful convictions and the U.S. criminal justice system by taking a closer look at
evidence that never made it to court. So while most people might remember serial as the big,
flashy podcast that got Adnan's case a ton of attention, it was Rabia who did a lot of the
tireless work that led to his release. And as it so often is for women, especially women of color,
like Rabia, that work was not without a personal cost. For Rabia, part of the personal cost for that
work was having to deal with a terrifying coordinated harassment campaign against her from another
true crime podcaster. Last May, Rabia and I sat down to talk about this harassment campaign,
which, while horrible and terrifying, didn't keep her from that important work, the very same work
that would go on to lead to Annan's release. So let's listen. You're listening to Disinformed,
a mini-series from There Are No Girls on the Internet. I'm Bridget Todd. You might know Attorney
Rabia Shadri from her role in the case of Adnan Saeed. Adnan was convicted of a first
degree murder for the death of Hay Men Lee, a high school student in Baltimore, who was last
seen on January 13, 1999. Lee's family remains convinced of Adnan's guilt, but he maintains his
innocence, and Rabia has been fighting to dishonorate him. She brought his story to investigative
journalist Sarah Koenig, which became the hit True Crime Podcast serial. Rabia hosts her own
true crime podcast called Undisclosed. Rashid or her co-hosts, who are also lawyers, explore wrongful
convictions. Now, even though there's literally hundreds of thousands of podcasts out there, the podcast
community can be kind of small. We see each other at events and conferences. And right now,
Rabia is facing a coordinated harassment campaign from another podcaster. Now, talking about this
kind of online harassment is tricky, and it's so easy to do it irresponsibly. When we talk about
harassment, we're often centering the harasser and their tactics. The experience of the person who has
been harassed, how they're feeling and how it shapes their work and their perspective can often go
overlooked or not mentioned at all. So I don't want to do that. And honestly, the person harassing Rabia
does not need a bigger spotlight. But I do need to tell you the broad strokes of what's going on to make
clear the full weight of how harassment can impact our real lives. I believe Rabia is at the center of a
dangerous coordinated harassment campaign being orchestrated by Mike Boudet, the host of
Sword and Scale, a popular and successful true crime podcast. On his website, Mike sells merchandise
with the slogan Adnan did it, a reference to Rabia's relationship with Adnan. He's encouraged
his followers to show up at her public speaking events. Stuff that is just super scary. Stuff that makes
me concerned for Rabia's actual safety. If you check out the verified Twitter page for Sword and
scale, you can see a little of what I mean.
Mike's podcast is really popular and he has a huge fan base.
And this is another reason why talking about online harassment is kind of tricky.
No one wants to be on the radar of someone who's a harasser.
Other members of the true crime podcast community have talked about being afraid to speak up
because of the behavior they've seen from him.
No one wants to wake up and find a flood of hateful comments directed at you on social media
or a flood of one-star reviews on your podcast.
But this is also how harassment
investors, people don't speak up and they don't call it out for what it is. In doing research for
this episode, an article about what Rabia is going through described her as having a
feud with Mike Boudet. A feud is a difference of opinion. A feud might be tense exchanges on
social media. A feud is not when one person is concerned with their actual safety. That's harassment.
And we need to talk about the way it impacts our work and our lives. I was in law school.
when the best friend of my younger brother was arrested, Nansai, in 1999.
And that has kind of gotten me, you know, it was just one of those things where I witnessed it
up close and personal. I was there in his trial when he was convicted. And I just witnessed the horror
of all of it. And I couldn't believe what I was seeing. And I had no idea what the criminal
justice system was like until what happened with Adnan. And our community also was pretty naive.
So that's what really drew me in and kept me there all these years.
He's still incarcerated, as most people know.
But from his case, my work has stemmed out into doing other wrongful conviction work
for the last six, seven years.
That's been the focus of my work.
Yeah, you know, I read this great quote from your mom.
She says, your time in this world is really limited.
What are you going to do with it?
And something about that, first of all, your mom sounds awesome.
She's a force to be reckoned with, for sure.
Something about that quote that really struck me was this idea that you are doing very important work,
you know, legitimately life-in-death work, you know, working with people who have been incarcerated,
all of that. This is important stuff. And, you know, we only have so much time in a day and so much time on this world
and so much energy that we can expend. And so to see somebody like you going through harassment campaigns,
do you ever feel that these kinds of campaigns are kind of deliberately meant?
to distract you from this important work that you actually have to do?
Yeah, you know, I have been through, I mean, numerous, very intense kind of onslaughts,
like in different times in my life for different reasons,
so different groups who want to attack me for different reasons.
And I think the first time I went through it really, really, it was really terrible.
It was around the time serial came out, actually,
but it wasn't so much related to cereal, it was related to some of the interfaith.
I did. And I spent, I learned my lesson because I spent about three months trying to respond
to everything, not realizing that how trolling works and how harassment works. Then I, when I realized,
first of all, I felt I was sick, I was exhausted. I was physically, I had gotten really sick
over that time just from the strain of it. Then the realization hit me that, you know, what they
want me to do is not to function. They want me to, and they're winning because I'm spending
my time. Like, you know, it's like that whack-a-mole game, right? Like trying to respond to this thing and you
respond to this thing and they come at you with another thing. I'm like, oh, this is brilliant.
They're keeping me wrapped up in this crazy and I'm wasting my time and my health and my sanity
and not doing my work. And so now I always think about it like that, but like if this is preventing
me from doing my work, they're winning. And so 100% it's a distraction, 100% what people who
harassing you online want to do is to make sure you cannot actually function.
Yeah, all the women that I talk to who face, you know, intense harassment, that's something
that they talk about.
That's something that a lot of their situations have in common, that at one point they, you know,
they are trying to respond to everything and really engaged.
And then they realize they're spending all their time focusing on the harassment.
So whatever the thing is, whether it was justice work like you or activist work or writing,
they are spending more time trying to respond to the trolls, which they will never be
able to satisfy because that's sort of the trip of harassment.
they're spending more time on that than they are sort of doing the thing that is their purpose.
And I believe that really is one of the purposes of this kind of harassment.
It's to keep powerful women or, quote, mouthy women or women who, you know, can accomplish something.
It's to keep us from accomplishing whatever it is that we're like meant to be doing on this earth.
Yeah. There's that, there's that aspect of it.
And there's the aspect of they want you to like, they wanted to drag you down to their level.
They're punching up in almost every case.
They're punching up.
They want your attention.
They want relevant.
So your attention gives them relevance.
Otherwise, they are irrelevant, essentially.
That's so true.
It's so true.
And I know in your case, I can't help but wonder if part of the reason why some of the folks
who really have like an obsession with you and your work, part of it is because you're
very successful, you're very effective at what you do.
And that makes them even more angry.
know, it is kind of an attempt to drag you down to their level because you're so successful,
because they know you can be so effective.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
You know, I, most recently in the last couple of years, the attacks have been coming
from this one particular podcaster, and he's actually an incredibly successful podcaster,
which is what's shocking about this particular situation is like, dude, he might be much more
successful in the sense of, I mean, in one metric, which is like, I think he probably makes a lot more money
than what me and my team make doing the work that we do.
But the metric that's important for us is like the value of our work
and the value of our work is,
are we able to help exonerate the people whose cases we're working on?
And basically just be able to cover our costs so we can do it,
so it doesn't cost anything to the defendant
because for most incarcerated people, they can't afford the appeals.
They can't afford the reinvestigation.
We're able to cover those costs.
So by that metric, my work is more, I would say much more,
meaningful. Maybe that's bothersome to some people. But I can't say that I'm the most successful
podcaster in sense of like, we're not minting money over here. You know, we're not. We're not.
Girl, neither am I. Yeah, you know, sometimes I wish the kind of work that you're producing was
valued in that same way. It can be a little bit frustrating. Sometimes I'm like, man, I could be doing
like the kind of true crime podcast that you can just knock out like in an hour or so and just get
online and chat with somebody about some case, but our shows, for every hour that we air,
we're talking about hundreds of hours of prep, of maybe two years lead time, two years
of investigation before we can air a case. So it's very, very intensive. But at the end of the day,
that's what, it's purposeful. And that's what I can do. That's what I do best. I don't do well
what other people do, right? I can't do two crime, prom, comedy, and I can't do other things,
but this is what I do. And so, you know, as long as we're able to, you know, as long as we're able
to cover our costs and provide this really as a service
to the people whose cases we're looking at,
we're gonna continue to do it.
Talking about this in terms of being in the podcast industry,
you know, one of the people who is waging
a targeted harassment campaign against you
is a very popular podcaster, Mike Boudet.
And I think that it's hard for me to watch,
as a podcaster, it's hard for me to watch
the podcast industry and ecosystem still support this.
And, you know, one of the things I saw on your Twitter that I think is so correct is, like, people need to understand that if you listen to, if you, like, when you listen to this podcast, this is what you're supporting.
I think it can be really easy for listeners to say, oh, well, I'm just listening to the show.
I don't know what's going on, you know, I'm not, I'm not, quote, following whatever's happening.
But really, it's been hard to see the silence, I would say, from the podcast industry in terms of watching someone, essentially harass a colleague.
You know, I think of all podcasters that's kind of in the same, you know, the same club in a kind of way.
It's been really hard.
Yeah, you know, there, and you know why, though?
Because, and that you're right.
I mean, so we are, podcasting is a community, podcast content creators.
We are our community.
And then you have your genres that the true crime community is even a smaller subsect of that.
And many of us are close.
We see each other at their different conferences and conventions.
We support each other's work.
We're listeners.
We listen to each other shows.
So what I know for sure, because people have confessed this to me privately, they have said it publicly, they have written about it, is that the same person who I think he's, I just think he's like a disturbed individual, many of them are afraid to really be public because when they have tried to push back publicly on any of his staff, he will come after them.
And he does have a very big show and he has a lot of followers.
and so he can really crush the smaller shows
by flooding them with one-star reviews,
by harassing them into like leaving social media.
And so I've had people reach out and say,
I'm afraid to say anything,
but I just want you to know that, you know, I support you,
but I, this guy scares me.
He's done this to me before.
Like, I mean, it's like so that's why,
but there are some folks who have like in a very public way stepped up
in the last couple of months and been like,
enough is enough, right?
And and they have really,
condemned his behavior. And I appreciate that. But not everybody can afford to, and I completely
understand that. Yeah, that's so tough. And I think you just articulated one of the hallmarks of
online harassment and abuse and coordinated harassment campaigns is that it really has a silencing
effect, not just on the person that is targeted, but anyone who might want to, you know,
stick up for that person, anyone who, you know, might want to challenge what's going on. It's such a
big silencing effect. And I think that we don't talk enough about that as a speech issue,
that the kind of people who, you know, are saying like, oh, gee, well, I don't want to be too
outspoken because I don't want what's happening to her to happen to me. I don't want it to be
me next. I can't afford to have this kind of thing. So, like, they don't speak up or they just
leave social media altogether or they don't say that thing that they actually want to say.
That is one of the hallmarks of online harassment campaigns that we just don't talk about.
And truly, we, with all of the, you know, rigumeral about free speech and cancel
culture, we need to start taking that more seriously as a speech issue because, you know,
if an entire group of, you know, already marginalized content creators feel like they can't speak up
and say what they want to say because they're terrified of this person.
Of one person.
Of one person.
Like, that's, that's, that is not good.
And we need to be talking about, like, perhaps we have, perhaps it's a problem with our,
kind of media and digital media landscape, but also it's a wider.
problem about how much space one person is allowed to take up, how much, how much that one person is
allowed to dictate this entire community. I mean, look, we saw this in as big as way as possible
with the former guy, the former guy who was in the White House. So, yeah, one person can have a lot
of power. They can be very destructive. One person can be a complete wrecking ball. And that's what
this particular person is. He's a wrecking ball. But what's really crazy about the whole thing is that
he's mostly wrecking himself, right? Like, in all of this, as he's scaring. He's scaring
people and stuff. He's getting deep platforms,
he's getting dropped by sponsors, he's getting dropped by
his
his different companies.
And at the end of the day, you know,
the rest of us are still going to be invited and show up to
different spaces that
are relevant to our work.
While he's kind of been ostracized for years, so it's not just,
you know, I'm a target.
I think I'm a big target
for him because I won't
just take it and disappear.
And it's frustrating to him.
But most people just kind of quietly, like, you know, fade into the background.
And so he stops attacking them after a while.
And, you know, for me also, what I realized was like,
what gives people like that fuel is just attention.
And so they're just star for attention.
And I assume purpose and meaning their life.
And I don't have the time to give that to them because I got too much shit going on in my life.
I have too much work that actually has an impact on people's lives that I've got to do.
I don't have time for it.
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According to data from Amnesty International,
women of color are disproportionately targeted
for online harassment and abuse.
And we see this playing out in all kinds of places.
For instance, former President Donald Trump
was known for lashing out at reporters of all stripes.
But its worst,
both vitriolic comments were always reserved
for journalists who also happen to be black women
or women of color,
like White House correspondence Yamish Alcindore,
April Ryan, and Wiesha Jiang.
and that his behavior toward them
made them even bigger targets for abuse,
precisely because they're women of color.
Knowing this, it's not surprising
that even though Mike has had issues
with white male podcasters in the past,
he isn't selling merchandise referencing their work on his website.
And those men aren't being called out
specifically by name in his podcast's official Twitter bio,
like Rabia is.
Rabia is far from the only podcaster who has criticized him,
yet Mike has not threatened to make a daily podcast
blaming those men if he's ever kicked off social media.
But he's threatened to do that to Ravia.
I also think part of it is that you're a woman of color.
You know, the data is very clear that women of, yeah, like women of color, we are disproportionately
targeted.
I think that, you know, we, you said earlier that he has gone after other podcasters,
white men.
He's not making, you know, merchandise based around their work.
There are people, there are certain kinds of people.
We know exactly who they are, that they cannot stand.
a woman of color, like having any kind of backbone.
They want us to be subservient.
They want us to be in our place.
They want to put us in our place.
And, yeah, I think that that's one of the biggest triggers for this guy and for others like
him, is that who the hell does she think she is?
Why isn't she like, you know, getting in her place where she needs to be?
And, you know.
But what do you do?
I mean, like, we've seen this happen on a national stage.
We've seen this happen with incredible black female correspondence and journalists, you know, coming from a presidential administration.
So we've seen this happen in so many different ways.
And I think that's really a big part of why I am a particular target for this person.
I think that's so true.
I think there's something about when a woman of color is outspoken where people look at us and say, who does she think she is?
Doesn't she know that she's supposed to just lie down and take it or immediately, you know, fall all over and self-apologizing?
The fact that you won't do that, I think it just, it triggers something very ugly inside of a certain kind of person.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
When these kinds of harassment campaigns, the kind of thing that you've gone through or happening, so many people and institutions that actually have power do nothing.
And I think that that's another hallmark of this kind of harassment that we see.
Yeah.
You know, social, like, I was, you know, on Twitter, this person's podcast has a verified account.
You know, we know that deplatforming is a very effective way of curbing harassment.
And yet, you know, social media platforms seem to be doing nothing.
You know, we see journalists describe what's happening to you as a, quote, feud,
as if you, as if you two are just sort of having some kind of a sparring match and that this is not a pretty intense and serious coordinated online harassment campaign against you.
you know, what does it like to see so many institutions and people with power really do nothing to curb this when they could?
I mean, it's not surprising. We've seen this so many times, especially with women.
We've seen this in so many different, like, you know, different controversies that have taken place with women getting harassed and making it public.
And, you know, it's, they gaslight you. So it's like, if you, if I'm being attacked and harassed, whether it's in my DMs, it's my emails, it's all coming from,
the same source, however it's happening.
If I call attention to it in order to get some kind of response from these platforms,
then people say, well, why are, that then it becomes a feud.
They frame it like it's a feud, and it's not a feud.
It's me calling attention to his behavior.
And if you don't say anything and just take it, I mean, I guess that's kind of what they want,
just don't take it and take it.
But these platforms, they don't really do anything.
What is effect, what has been more effective is asking people to just report certain posts
and tweets and stuff. Some get removed. Some don't get removed. I mean, free speech, first amendment is
what it is. I guess we have the legal right to be as ugly as you want. I think I hit my,
I kind of hit my limit when there were people, his followers and his mentions, and he's like kind
of encouraging. He's encouraging people to go to like, by speaking events, to like find me in real life.
And then he had people saying things like, hopefully she'll get murdered herself.
hopefully Adnan one more.
Then I was like, this has gone like too far.
And that's when I really, that's when I finally kind of posted.
I said, I have called on Twitter and Facebook to deplatform him.
This is the kind of stuff he's saying and encouraging.
And they won't.
And if something happens to me or my family, then they're, they, you know,
they also need to be held responsible.
Yeah.
I mean, the kind of things that I've seen, you know, people, I'll see people be like,
oh, well, she should just block him if she doesn't like what he has to say.
He's blocked.
I mean, yeah, it's like, exactly, you know, and it's like getting people to understand that this is not just something that is happening, like, quote unquote, on Twitter or on the computer.
I very genuinely sometimes worry for your safety in real life.
And everything that we know about online harassment, even if it starts online, it doesn't stay online.
And very often it's connected to real world violence.
And so I am, I, when I see the kinds of things that he's encouraging his followers to do, I get very, like, concerned for your actual safety.
Yeah.
Yeah, I've had my moments of concern.
I mean, I think he, it just takes one unhinged person to think, I got to do something
about this, you know, especially because the way he particularly frames it is, I mean,
it's such, I mean, like, you see, you've seen this technique unfold, like online with the elections,
right?
So what Trump said was that these people are harming our elections.
What this guy says is this woman is shutting down my podcast.
I mean, he's got an incredibly successful podcast.
I'm not shutting anything down.
he's continuing to produce
and I've gotten messages from people
from men saying
if you
if he ends up losing his podcast because of you
I'm going to come get you
kind of stuff for a podcast right
like so the way he's framing it is to basically target
is to direct people's rage towards me
in case like you know
so they can like take out
take out revenge or something in case like he
you know he stops making a show which he's not gonna
but um
and on
top of which everything that he's lost in terms of sponsors and it's it's been 100% him more after a quick
break another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy not quite on humor me with robert smigel and
friends me and hilarious guests from bob odenkirk to david letterman help make you funnier this
week my guess s nL's mikey day and head writer streeter sidel help an acapella band with their
between songs banter where does your group perform we do some retirement homes those
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.
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Hey, I'm Joe Rodano.
You might know me as that loud guy who yells out,
help on the internet.
Help!
Somebody!
Please!
But there's so much more to me than me.
I'm an actor.
I'm a comedian.
And recently, I've become quite the helper myself.
And on my new podcast,
hope from a hypocrite,
I'll be changing lives.
people in need with my sage advice and thoughtful solutions.
Sike, I'm a comedian.
I'm not qualified to give good advice.
Join me and my comedian friends as we riff, rant,
recommend some of the most legally dubious advice known to man.
If I'm calling you, even if you're on your phone,
let it ring twice.
One ring is too scary.
Oh, cream a chicken suit.
A cream.
Cream a chicken suit.
This is help from a hypocrite.
The worst advice from the best advice from the...
dumbest people you know.
Listen to Help from Hypocrite as part of the Mike Coutura Podcast Network available on the
IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, fam?
It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J. Toledano, and our podcast Point Game is about defying the odds.
Like LeBron heading into the playoffs without Luca and Austin Reed.
And finding ways to win no matter what.
He's the smartest player to ever play the game.
His IQ is at a level that we've never seen before.
And he knows without Luca and Austin Reeves.
I got to manipulate the game.
We get a player's perspective on the challenges of the playoffs.
I think Joker's going to be exhausted this series
because when they don't have Rudy in the lineup,
he has to really guard guys like Nasree.
He has to guard Julius Randall.
And then he has to give us everything he gives us
on the night-to-night basis on offense.
And when IT's friends stop by, like Quentin Richardson,
we dive into some playoff history too.
Steve Nash would get that thing.
That man, hell get the flying.
He running up the court, licking his fingers,
why he got the ball like,
after you go through a training camp
with that Isaiah, you figure it out real quick.
Get your ass up and down the court,
and you're going to get the ball.
So listen to Point Game on the Iheart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Let's get right back into it.
In 2019, after Mike celebrated International Women's Day
by posting a really gross meme
about violence against women on social media,
people in the podcast community spoke up
and wondering,
Sorton Scales Network eventually announced they were parting ways with the show.
Mike vowed to keep the show running without the support of the network,
tweeting,
Anything that was ad-supported is over now because of Aaron Manke from Lour and Rabia from Undisclosed,
who led this boycott against me and my company because they didn't like certain things I said.
But that tweet pretty conveniently leaves out any responsibility for the consequences of his own actions.
Like it's his own actions that have caused it.
And he won't take responsibility for his behavior.
So, yeah, I mean, but there's only so much, you know, I did report that I did report the harassment to law enforcement.
But, you know, we also don't have very strong cyber-stalking laws and stuff in this country.
There's only so much you can do to protect yourself.
And other than that, it's kind of like, okay, try to keep my family safe, you know, got security cameras up, got alarm system, things like that.
But what can I do if, you know, once COVID's lifted and I'm out in the public again,
I always did a lot of traveling and speaking and I have a new book coming out next year
and I'll be probably traveling for that.
And it is what it is.
I can't like hide, right?
Yeah, and it goes back to what we were talking about earlier of this is preventing you
from living your life, from doing your work, from making your living, you know,
especially as kind of public content creators, like that kind of thing,
you do have to have a fair amount of like public stuff, whether it's appearances or
or speaking engagements or conferences or panels or whatever to do that.
And so the way that this is really, like would really make it difficult for you to be able to do that without wondering in the back of your head.
Like, is today the day that some, you know, some listener of his takes matters into his own hands,
it's preventing you from being able to live life the way that you want to live your life.
And I think that that's something that people really forget about this kind of harassment is that it's not just online.
and it's in real life as well.
Oh, it is.
I mean, 100%.
But at the same time, I mean, like, you know,
and I've had to process through this with my own lawyer
and people who are close to me and that I turn to for advice,
that, you know, it's actually not going to happen.
I'm not going to change the way I live my life
other than just taking some general precautions.
I'm going to continue to do the work.
I'm going to continue to travel and speak.
I mean, I speak to a lot of law schools and law.
law firms and universities about this work.
And that's the kind of stuff that helps scale it up.
You know, you get people to support the work.
You get students saying, I want to go to law school now.
And so, yeah, I'm going to continue to do it at the end of the day.
And it is what it is.
I mean, like, there's just, you know, I look, I'm also a religious person.
I'm a person of faith.
And I firmly believe that when your time is written, it's written.
What is supposed to come.
It's supposed to come.
So, you know.
Damn.
Yeah, I mean, like, there's just kind of no avoiding it.
So when it's going to happen, it's going to happen.
But, you know, of course, you don't want it to happen because of something as ridiculous
and stupid as something like this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think something that you said is so touching, knowing that you are going to continue
to inspire so many, it's like you're building this little army of people who are inspired
to follow in your footsteps and following your legacy and continue to create that kind of
justice.
You know, the impact that you will have on so many people is.
so big and your voice can be so big and the idea that this one asshole could stop it is obviously
he couldn't right like you're like the impact that you can have that you have is so much bigger than
anything that this person could ever you know dream up to try to stop it I feel yeah you know I kind
laugh about it sometimes um when he he posts things about a non's case or other aspects of the work and
I'm like I'm an attorney I've been doing this for like 20 odd years I have my I have a team of
needs I work with. I work with the Innocence Project across the country on cases. And this completely
unqualified, you know, white guy, right? Like, this completely unqualified guy thinks that he has the
same, like, skill set or, or even has the same, like, he's so entitled that he feels like his
opinion is equal to my expertise. I mean, like, really? And I think that probably drives me
crazy too. I mean, like, is the fact that I want to be like, listen, go to law school,
spend about 10, 15 years doing innocence work, and then let's talk about this case.
Like, you know, you have a completely unformed opinion. You can't come close to like my,
you know, the work that I do because you don't have the experience. I'm sure he's great at what
he does. I can't do what he does. I will never do what he does. And he can't do what I do as simple as
that. And so it's just like apples and oranges. And I think what it is is he thinks, oh, she's got a true
crime podcast. My podcast is a means to an end. The whole point of the podcast is, I could end the
podcast tomorrow as long as I could find a way to financially support the work of helping people
get back in court, right, who's been incarcerated for 20, 30 years. The podcast is just a way to do that.
That's not the work. The work is the other work that I do outside of the recording studio.
Yeah, that's something I love about your work is that it's not just so many folks, like, and not to,
not to crap on them, but the work begins and ends in the podcast studio.
And you are out there making, like, doing the actual work, making the actual difference.
And I love those, too.
I listen to them all the time.
I love, I love those kinds of shows.
I love all kinds of shows.
I mean, that's, you know, I love investigative stuff.
But this is what I do.
And so, you know, what I think is kind of interesting is, like, his, he's calling on
us followers and other people who attack me to try and stop.
Like, I want to be like, you really want.
want to, you really want to prevent a person from doing the kind of work I'm doing. Like,
that in itself is like almost evil. It's like if I was handing out water bottles at the border
and somebody's like, nope, I'm going to shoot them all out of your hand. Like, you want to
prevent me from doing like work that's going to change people's lives. Like, how, it's really
crappy? Right. And because, yeah, you're doing this, this important justice work. And I think that
all the people who see what's happening, who might otherwise be inspired to follow in your footsteps
and do this kind of work, how many of them are going to see this and be like, oh, well, I don't want to do that?
You know, it's like you're preventing the subred of justice in the world by, by, you know, behaving in this way.
But, you know, look, he can only, he and others can only harass me if I allow myself to, like, feel harassed in some extent.
And it was only in the time when I felt like this is getting kind of dangerous, some of the rhetoric's getting dangerous, that I really felt stress over it.
But then I was like, my due diligence is that I've told my attorney, I've notified the platforms.
I've put everybody else on notice.
Anybody who follows me knows now, right?
So there's hundreds of, if not thousands of people are watching him, watching and documenting everything.
Because he does have a history of like posting things and deleting them as if things disappear from the internet.
And so I've done my due diligence.
That's all I can do.
And now I have to get back to my life.
I also have kids.
I've got a husband.
I've got cats.
I've got elderly parents.
I have a garden.
I had things to take care of.
I don't have time for this.
Absolutely.
I mean, that's a great question.
How do you take care of yourself?
How do you make sure that, you know, the things that matter in your life are nurtured and protected during all of this?
I mean, look, when you're working mom, I can't be like, hey, kids, I'm having a bad day.
You're just going to have to feed yourselves and, you know, drive yourself to school.
There are things that are non-negotiable that you have to take care of every single day.
And in a way, just having that there, like, um, you're just having that there.
Like, it's a good distraction from like this meaningless stuff that's happening online in many instances.
So I feel take it.
I feel like I'm taking care of myself when I get my work done.
When I, you know, I write 1,500 words a day.
When I hit my 1,500 words a day and I've made sure that, you know, my family's got food for today or I know we're getting takeout or I've made the plans and my plants aren't dying and my parents.
You know, as long as I'm checking the boxes of the things that I need to do for the people who are important to me, then that's taking care of myself as well. That is how I take care of myself? That's so important. So how can folks who might be out there listening either support you during this time or support the criminal justice work that you're involved in now?
Well, you know, I just think it's important that, look, we do have free speech in this country, but that means that we allow hate speech.
I mean, the First Amendment is actually created to protect the worst kind of speech possible.
It's not created to protect the speech that everybody loves, right?
So, but we also have to be able to identify and call out hate speech.
So what I would say, just to help create a safer space in any kind of public discourse in the media and social media is to call out hate speech.
This is hate speech. What you're doing and saying is hate speech.
Report hate speech, you know, and then let the platforms decide what they're going to do with it.
That's one way to make a more safer space for all of us online and even in real life.
But in order to support the justice work, I think, you know, the cases that we do on Undisclosed,
we've covered about 25 cases from different parts of the country, just listening to the cases,
reaching out to the defendants, you can find a lot of their information online, writing to them,
leaching out to your local, I mean, my work is pretty focused on innocence work, but criminal
justice reform is needed in a much more brighter way. But certainly you can reach out to your
local innocence chapters to ask how you can support them. But believe me, there's a lot of incarcerated
people behind bars who have not had visitors in years, who have nobody to write them, who have nobody
to call. So in that way, Adnan is incredibly blessed. I mean, he's never not had family support and
friends and people to visit him and love him, but there are so many people who have nobody.
And so just finding organizations that can connect you to those kinds of people,
writing letters once or twice a month, you can change somebody's life like that.
Can you tell us a little bit about the upcoming book?
Oh, yeah.
It's a complete departure from any of the work that I am known for.
It's called Fatty, Fetty Fum Boom, and it's a memoir.
Faddy Faddy Boom was one of my many childhood nicknames because I've always struggled with weight
issues. So the memoir is about food, fat, and family. And I think it'll resonate with a lot of people,
a lot of people who've spent their lives struggling with, who love food and struggle with weight
and have to deal with family. I love food, man. What can I do? I mean, yeah, so, and my family
loves food and they want to feed me, but also they want me to lose weight. It's like never kind of
works out. So, but it was, it was a fun right. It was fun to write it because it was very different
than some of the more serious stuff that I do.
Our voices matter, and we shouldn't have to put up with a digital landscape
that just allows for our voices to be drowned out by harassment.
I know it can be hard to speak up to keep joining the conversation,
to keep using our voices.
But that's exactly what harassers want,
for us to just shut up and go away.
And even as she's facing a flood of threats at harassment,
Robbie is hopes that other women, especially women of color,
won't let this kind of thing stop them.
The only message I would want to leave with, especially to women of color, to people who are marginalized in any way in our society is not to let people push you out of spaces.
Don't ever let it happen.
Just don't let it happen.
Stand your ground.
If you enjoyed this podcast, please help us grow by subscribing.
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 was brought to you by there are no girls on the internet.
It's a production of IHeart Radio and Unboss.
creative. Jonathan Strickland is our executive producer. Tari Harrison is our supervising producer and
engineer. Michael Amato is our contributing 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 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.
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 hiring.
You just understood.
That's how personal it got.
Wow.
Then after that game seven,
Marquis coming 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.
Hi, everyone.
I'm Cheryl Stray, author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things.
I'm excited to share that I have a new podcast called Mind Over Mountain.
In each episode, I interview athletes,
adventurers, and adrenaline seekers
to discuss the inner lands.
that informed and inspired their extraordinary feats.
So we too can better understand how to face our own seemingly insurmountable challenges.
Listen to Mind Over Mountain every Thursday on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, and on my new podcast, How Hard Can It Be?
I call on my Gen X squad from Ohio to Hollywood as we navigate Midlife's most fantastic BS.
Unfiltered conversations from night sweats to futas to scheduling sacks,
Wait, what sex?
Is it just me or does every woman my age want to look at Pinterest instead of having sex sometimes?
They say we can't polish a turd, but we're sure going to try.
So let's get blunt with laughs, tears, or tears of laughter.
Listen to How Hard Can It Be with Diana Maria Riva on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
