There Are No Girls on the Internet - Tylenol Autism Claims are Harming Women While Wellness Grifters Profit

Episode Date: October 1, 2025

Wellness influencers are perfecting the art of turning pseudoscience into profit. Whether they're selling supplements, offering classes, or just chasing engagement, an army of wellness grifters has we...aponized mistrust of institutions and Big Pharma, peddling false health claims that trick people into treatments and practices that are ineffective at best, and in some cases outright dangerous.  Last week the Trump administration claimed without evidence that Tylenol during pregnancy causes autism. The science is clear that it isn't true, but that didn’t matter. Doctors pushed back, but the damage was already done—because wellness influencers pounced. They didn’t just spread the fear, they profited off it. And suddenly, one of the only safe pain relievers for pregnant women became the latest weapon in a war over women’s health. Once again, Trump and RFK Jr are playing disingenuous, dangerous political games with women's health and wellbeing. This isn’t just about Tylenol. It’s about how wellness influencers turn misinformation into a business model—and how their influence helped shape a dangerous narrative straight out of the White House. Mallory DeMille, content creator and correspondent on the podcast Conspirituality, has been pushing back against these dangerous grifters with hilarious videos and posts that make fun of their most ridiculous claims. Do yourself a favor and follow her on Reels, Threads, and TikTok at @this.is.mallory and on YouTube at @MalloryDeMille. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:02:35 I'm Bridget Todd, and this is There Are No Girls on the Internet. When the Trump administration claimed that Tylenol during pregnancy could cause autism, the science really didn't matter. Doctors pushed back, but the damage was already done. And wellness influencers had already pounced. They didn't just spread fear, they profited off of it. And suddenly, one of the only safe pain relievers to take during pregnancy became just the latest weapon in a war over reproductive health.
Starting point is 00:03:09 Now, this is not just about Tylenol. It's about how wellness influencers turn a misinformation into an online business model and how their influence helps shape a dangerous narrative coming right out of the White House. It's something Mallory DeMille has seen a lot of. Mallory makes content about the health and wellness industry. She's a correspondent on one of my favorite podcasts, Conspiratuality. I'm Mallory DeMille, and I guess the title I would use is content creator, create content on Instagram and TikTok that talks about influencer culture, specifically in the wellness space.
Starting point is 00:03:46 Nobody skewers the wellness influencer grift quite like you. You're such a good social media follow. Thank you so much for saying that. So how did this come to be something that you pay attention to? Why are our kind of wellness influencers on social media? Why is that your beat? Yeah, I think the short answer probably is that I used to follow. wellness influencers and granted this was you know almost a decade ago I was in my
Starting point is 00:04:13 mid to later 20s and I was following a number of wellness influencers after I completed business school I went to college for fitness and health promotion thought it one day I would you know combine those passions and open my own gym didn't come to fruition but have always been pretty interested in health and wellness myself had a background in teaching fitness and was definitely following a number of wellness influencers for a few years there and realized at one point that following them had nudged me in a direction of having like a pretty terrible relationship with food and fitness and my body that was like not really
Starting point is 00:04:49 there before. And so luckily, you know, unlearned and unpacked that many of books and documentaries and resources and following other folks online. And I was mostly just really upset that as someone with the background in marketing, I got swindled by really clever marketing. And I guess I'm in a place right now where I always come back to creating content that I wish there was more of when I was following those influencers. I do think that there is a misconception that people who call out wellness chrifters and these influencers don't care about fitness or don't care about health. Your pathway through this was caring quite a bit about health and fitness. And I still do. I think, you know, I think that these wellness influencers that I cover in a lot of ways,
Starting point is 00:05:36 and like not in other ways. We actually have more in common than I think they realize. I love working out. I love going to the gym. I cook most of my own meals. I defuse essential oils. I just don't think they cure cancer. And I have often described myself as like an evidence-based wellness girly as opposed to a
Starting point is 00:05:54 wellness girly, lowercase wellness, as opposed to uppercase wellness. Oh, we are in the same sort of then diagram because I love a lot of woo-woo stuff that, But I have a sense, you know, if I had cancer, I would not turn to homeopathic cures or remedies, right? I would do what my doctor said to do. But I think what you just said is so interesting of you can like essential oils. Just don't think that they're going to cure cancer and then don't make money telling people that they maybe can. Totally. And I always like to make very clear to, like, I am someone in a fairly like privileged position in a lot of ways, one of being that I have never experienced.
Starting point is 00:06:36 or had to navigate a diagnosis or a chronic illness. And I don't know how like that path may have changed, you know, where I find myself right now. I do see in my own work, like a lot of the folks who are really keen to take advice and buy products from these wellness influencers are in a space like that. And so I do think that, you know, there is a space where I think we're all like a little bit as susceptible to something like that if we're like in a vulnerable enough or like desperate enough place. But yeah, my approach to wellness right now is very skeptical, incredibly skeptical. And it makes me a bit sad seeing all this like anti-wellness stuff because I'm like, wellness is great. And I love aspects of wellness. And there's all these influencers that I think are ruining it for everyone.
Starting point is 00:07:22 Oh, that's such a good point. And, you know, I'm bra on the same Instagram. I'm sure that your Instagram algorithm might look like mine. So often, I think that the people, oftentimes women who are representing wellness. It's a particular kind of woman, right? Conventionally attractive, very fit, thin. Is there something where what they're actually selling is not just the idea of being healthy and well. It's an entire lifestyle and identity that comes along with it, that if you just buy this supplement or just do this thing that they're doing, your life can look like my life, which comes off as very idealized. Yeah, I think like the lifestyle marketing aspect, is beyond wellness influencers.
Starting point is 00:08:07 I know it's fairly popular in multi-level marketing, advertising as well from influencers about like, look at this lavish lifestyle that I have. And then the reality is that they're kind of, unfortunately, living paycheck to paycheck in that business model. I also really love the motto or the phrase of your body is not your business card. And so this idea of, you know, not using your body to market particular supplements or like anything, really,
Starting point is 00:08:31 because there's a huge component of, like, genetics, and you don't actually know what someone's lifestyle is like. They could be actually very sick, and you don't know that. And so I think it goes back to that whole piece of, like, social media being a highlight reel. And unfortunately, a lot of social media right now is just direct advertising. And anything that might impact someone's bottom line, they're probably not going to share that. Why should you care what wellness influencers are hawking on social media?
Starting point is 00:08:59 This vast network of health and wellness, personalities is increasingly stewing people toward extremist ways of thinking, and they're making a fortune doing it, all while putting people's real health at risk. Why do you think what's happening in this sort of wellness, content creator, influencer space, why is it important to be paying attention to? Yeah, I would say, like, we are carrying around these influencers in our pocket all day, and there's so much, can I swear on this podcast? Can I say there's so much shit online? Absolutely. Okay. There's so much, you can keep that in.
Starting point is 00:09:36 There's so much shit online these days that I think this is so important to pay attention to from just like a media literacy perspective of, you know, gone, I think are the days of when I first downloaded Instagram in 2013 where we were sharing square photos with really terrible filters just like about our life. I think a lot of these social platforms are propped up by like I have a financial. funnel now. And so just knowing that you're carrying that around in your hand and in your pocket or in your purse all day. And I also think it's important to pay attention to. Like I mentioned before, I think anyone is susceptible to these things. And I think with specifically with wellness influencers, quite different than someone who is, for example, I don't know, like an interior designer influencer, your influence to buy a particular, I don't know, like blanket or couch or like wall art or something like that. That doesn't really impact you beyond. like a financial aspect really. But when it comes to wellness influencers,
Starting point is 00:10:34 there's the financial component, of course. But there's also like they are playing with your health and your body and your perception of your health. And I think that makes the wellness space, the crossover with wellness and influencer culture, like quite remarkably different. Oh my gosh. I'm glad that you said this because I do think there's this attitude
Starting point is 00:10:54 that none of this stuff really matters, that these health decisions and health choices that folks are making, that they're being kind of prompted to make through these influencers they don't even know, that it's the same kind of decision as buy this couch or don't buy this couch. These decisions can be life or death. Just look at Ananda Lewis.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Ananda Lewis on MTV was one of my idols growing up. She got to talk to young people about news and real issues on MTV, and I basically just wanted her job. She's probably one of the reasons why I host this very podcast. Years later, Ananda's mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Her mom went through mammogram after mammogram, and those screenings do involve some radiation. And yet her mother still developed breast cancer. So Ananda came to believe that the mammograms themselves caused her mom's cancer.
Starting point is 00:11:47 So when Ananda's own doctors recommended regular mammograms, she refused. And by the time Ananda's own breast cancer was discovered, it was far more advanced than if she had just had the mammograms. And the irony is that once she was diagnosed, she ended up undergoing pet scans and other procedures that exposed her to even more radiation than the mammograms would have. Ananda followed a lot of wellness claims, like that your body can heal itself through things like cold plunges and diet alone. When her doctors recommended a mastectomy to treat her breast cancer, Ananda once again went against their advice. Choosing instead to pursue alternative healing and ridding her body of toxins. She told People magazine, my plan was to get excessive toxins
Starting point is 00:12:32 out of my body. I felt like my body is intelligent. I know that to be true. Our bodies are brilliantly made. Ananda died of breast cancer earlier this year, and she left behind a very young child. Before she died, she made a video reflecting on those choices, saying that she regretted not listening to medical science and warned others not to follow her path. In her own words, she said, I decided to keep my tumor and try to work it out of my body a different way. Looking back on that, I go, you know what? Maybe I should have. I don't know if you're familiar with the MTV Vijay Ananda Lewis, who passed away recently of breast cancer. I was very moved by her story.
Starting point is 00:13:14 And one of the things that she said was that she regretted not listening to medical science and following the guidance of the actual trained health professionals. Instead, she really thought, oh, I can cure things on my own through diet, through homeopathic remedies. and I think that there's this attitude that I'm just, this is just a personality branding thing. I do my own thing and part of that is not listening to doctors when in reality it is life or death because she passed away from cancer, which would have been treatable had she listened to her doctor. And she really was open about regretting that fact,
Starting point is 00:13:53 regretting the fact that she listened to people who maybe didn't actually have her real life and her real health at the forefront of their minds. Absolutely. And I often get asked, like, so what? Like, so what? Somebody wants to buy supplements? Like, why do you care so much?
Starting point is 00:14:09 And my response is usually, I think that the best case scenario is that someone just wastes their money. The worst case scenario is that something actually impacts their health in a really negative way or they're influenced by following particular people online to forego evidence-based treatment when it's really needed. And unfortunately, like you just mentioned, this one particular story, there are more and more stories like this coming out now and like making it to the headlines. And it's so unfortunate and I don't want to see any more of these stories, but I think we will.
Starting point is 00:14:44 And all we can do is like just amplify them and show them that like this is actually the real harm of what's happening here. How did we get to a place where folks are more comfortable taking medical advice from some influencer on Instagram rather than an actual medical professional? I think there's probably a few different things from my own observations and like my own brain here. But I think first and foremost, there is like a fairly, I think, warranted distrust or like a complicated relationship with conventional medicine or like Western medical doctors. In a lot of the work that I do in observing the wellness space, there are predominantly women sharing stories about how they were dismissed by their doctors. Their symptoms were not taken seriously. and it was that that prompted them to seek out alternatives. And so I do think there are gaps in medicine, for sure.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Like I don't think anyone who is critical of the wellness space would deny that. I just think that these wellness influencers, they will tell you that they're filling those gaps, but my view is that they're actually exploiting them. And so I think that's one piece of it. And I think another piece of it is if you are navigating something and you go to your doctor And they're talking to you based on evidence and statistics and probability. And there's no one cure or like one piece that will fix everything. That makes you feel a particular way.
Starting point is 00:16:12 But then you go online and there's an influencer that is speaking in absolutes where like medical profession, very regulated, can't speak like that. Wellness base unregulated can speak like that. And so if an influencer is telling you that they like for surezies, you know, have this cure that will help you, you're probably more inclined to go with them. I also think, too, and I hear this a lot from, you know, again, predominantly women. They're like, well, you only get 15 minutes with your doctor, which I don't know about you, but that's true for me. Like, I only get 15 minutes with my doctor. But they frame this as a negative. That's also if you have access to a doctor in the first place. But these, you know, alternative practitioners or influencers
Starting point is 00:16:55 will give you much more time, and they will claim it's because they care about you more, and they will help you, they will offer to you what will help you like for sure. And I think that goes back to what you were talking about earlier, of especially if you're vulnerable or you're going through something or you're navigating a health challenge or trying to navigate a health challenge on behalf of a loved one, you are in such a susceptible position. I very recently was caring for my dad before his death.
Starting point is 00:17:25 and it was this issue where he had several chronic health issues, and he was, like, long-term hospitalized for many months. And the doctor, twice a day, the doctors would do their rounds and come in to the ICU room and, like, talk to me about what was going on. And they, what I, first of all, what I wanted, if those doctors had spent two hours with me, that would not have been enough time. What I wanted was doctors to come in, hold my hand, and say, we have figured it out.
Starting point is 00:17:53 It turns out it was this one easy, thing and he's 100% going to be okay. But I never got that. What I got was 15 minutes of very good, you know, no shade to the doctors. They were great. But 15 minutes of being like, oh, well, you know, we asked this problem and that problem and this problem and jargon and words and me having to be like, stop, back up. What does this mean? And it was an incredibly frustrating experience. And in that moment of vulnerability, had an influencer online said, I hear you, I see you. The answer is. The answer is, is this miracle cure and your dad is going to be fine, I would have absolutely been susceptible to that. That experience has really showed me how these influencers are so good at targeting
Starting point is 00:18:36 the very real vulnerabilities that really do exist in us. Vulnerabilities and also specifically like right now with Tylenol being in the news, but I also had a project earlier this year in January with the fires in L.A. Wellness influencers are incredibly skills at leveraging tragedy or crises, whether that's like a personal tragedy. So like you just said, when you're personally like very vulnerable, you or a loved one are navigating something or perhaps a community tragedy. So the city that you live in is on fire. And in that experience, like that's, at that time, I was watching, observing wellness influencers just ready to pitch you their supplements and detoxes for like if you live in L.A. and you are, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:24 breathing in this air, you need to detox, and here's a discount code for 25% off. And so I think they are very good at leveraging those feelings around things. And I also think for listeners, and maybe you have seen the show as well, the apple cider vinegar on Netflix that came out this winter, I think that experience that you just described of, you know, this hypothetical alternative practitioner or influencer coming in versus an experience with the doctor, I think that's The show did an incredible job depicting those differences. For anyone who is familiar with the show, it's based on the true story of Bell Gibson. But I think they did a really good job, even like, you know, the scenes with the doctor.
Starting point is 00:20:06 There is like this blue kind of like filter over top of it. I thought they did a really good job. Very institutional, very cold. Yes. Yeah. That very like quick, timely turn around. That's just the reality. I think that a lot of people have.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Let's take 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 Jim Gaffigan to 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.
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Starting point is 00:25:03 and we're back. Let's talk about what RFK Jr. called his big autism announcement last week. When the Trump administration announced that taking Tylenol during pregnancy causes autism, as soon as the administration went public with this claim, wellness chrifters were already on it, hawking supposed Tylenol alternatives and supplements online. So you mentioned Tylenol and the Trump administration, as we know, is saying, oh, we've unveiled the cause of autism, and it's Tylenol, taking Tylenol while pregnant. Something that you really were on is how these grifters were so on it. People already had their supplement.
Starting point is 00:25:46 It's like, oh, if you're not taking Tylenol anymore because you're not, you don't want your kid to be autistic. Good on you, Mama Bear. Take my supplement. How are they on it so fast? It's practiced. Like, it's, I think it's like rinse and repeat every single time. There is something that feels similar to this, where there is a headline that stokes fear and they have something to sell you. So you're right.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Like within a day, I saw influencers selling various supplements, some that are involved in multi-level marketing companies, whether that's like alternatives to Tylenol that they just so happen to have a discount code for, which makes me believe it. It's so convenient. There's always a financial incentive, it seems. or, you know, using a bit of mental gymnastics to somehow promote their supplements that maybe aren't alternatives necessarily, but you still need them in this case. Like, it's so quick. And I wasn't even surprised at this point. I was just honestly just waiting for it. For so long, these influencers have been saying you can't trust the FDA, you can't trust the government. But then they turn around and say, oh, the government just pointed out this link to Tylenol and autism. I take that to the bank, buy my supplement if you're going to avoid Tylenol.
Starting point is 00:27:06 What's going on there? Does that seem like a switchup at all? I've seen it before. I mean, I think with the Tylenol thing, too, I've seen a lot of these influencers be like, well, the study was from Harvard. And I'm like, I have a hard time believing that you would take on, you know, belief with every other study that has come out of Harvard. And so why is it this particular one that you're so passionately defending? I also find it really interesting, you know, a few years ago in observing these wellness influencers, they had this motto of, I don't co-parent with the government.
Starting point is 00:27:42 And they even had like a bunch of merch made. And just. I've seen it in person. Yeah. The mama bears. I don't co-parent with the government. And now I just, it kind of seems like they're really keen to co-parent with the government. And I'm like, where is that merch going?
Starting point is 00:27:59 Like, what are we doing here? So, yeah, I think that, like, their switchup is pretty predictable. A number of years ago, I was tracking influencers who were selling a frequency medicine device through, again, a multi-level marketing company. And one of their pieces of marketing in promoting that opportunity and that device was that it was FDA cleared, which is obviously different than FDA approved. But they were using that as a proof point. of why you should buy it. But then on their own socials, like within the same day sometimes,
Starting point is 00:28:35 they would turn around and make a video talking about how you can't trust the FDA, vaccines, masks, all this kind of stuff. And it's like, but just a second, you just used the FDA to promote this thing you're trying to sell. So I think it will always be confusing and self-serving. Yeah, the FDA is good when it benefits me and my marketing. It's bad when it doesn't. That's literally always what it is. And about that Harvard study, I wanted to bring in our producer, Mike, because Mike is a scientist. Yeah, you know, I'm not a medical doctor, but as a scientist, I did want to weigh in about the quality of that piece of alleged evidence from Harvard that the administration and Maha people keep pointing to support these dubious claims about Tylenol and autism. For one thing, it was not a new study out of Harvard.
Starting point is 00:29:23 It was a review paper, which would be fine. There's nothing wrong with review papers, except this one has been criticized for, leaving out important studies. The senior author, Dr. Andrea Baccarelli, who is Dean of Faculty at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, has previously been paid to testify in support of an association of Tylenol with autism. And so the review has been criticized both for its methodology and for having that conflict of interest. But even if we set those concerns aside, the paper itself does not claim that Tylenol causes autism. I think this is an important point for this piece of evidence that is supposed to be
Starting point is 00:30:04 supporting that because it doesn't say that. It goes out of its way to not say that. It reports finding an association, which is very different from a causal connections. You know, our listeners are a pretty savvy folk, and so I'm guessing they've heard the phrase correlation doesn't equal causation. And I think that caution very much applies here. There are many, many reasons that an association might exist if it does other than a causal connection. And this isn't just my opinion. I've seen a lot of takes over the past week from important, respected public health officials saying similar things. Tom Frieden, the former director of the CDC, published a long post on LinkedIn, reiterating that Tylenol is safe.
Starting point is 00:30:49 The balance of evidence suggests pretty clearly that it is. Dr. Zeyn-Lew, professor at the Yale School of Public Health, gave an interview in which he reiterated. that there is no proven causal relationship between Tylenol and autism. And so the balance of evidence is pretty clear here, and it's really unfortunate that because the author of that one review paper is from Harvard, it's giving the Maha crowd license to run with the Harvard name and make their unsupported claims seem weightier than they are, even though they're claiming things that the study itself does not say. And it's also unfortunate that that same researcher has taken payment for his testimony, because that raises questions, I think, about the independence of the research and potential conflict of interest.
Starting point is 00:31:37 Did he really need the money that badly, you know? I don't know, but the whole thing fits awfully neatly into this same pseudoscience grifter model that we've been talking about. Sometimes it feels like the grift goes all the way up. And again, I'm not a medical doctor, and this isn't my area of expertise, but as a researcher and a consumer of science, I wanted to offer that perspective. And just make sure that all of our listeners know that the vast majority of people who are medical doctors and who do specialize in this topic agree that Tylenol is safe. And it goes back to what Mallory was just saying about how association with an institution like Harvard or a study or something like that, it's good when it benefits me, but other times, oh, you can't trust those institutions. They don't know what they're talking about. You're going to trust the government?
Starting point is 00:32:30 Totally. And I also think, too, like a part of this now playing into like the social media and the technology part. Like we're living in an age where your belief systems are broadcast online for everyone to see. And oftentimes these influencers have thousands, tens, hundreds of thousands, up to a million followers. and I just, all I think about sometimes is like how hard would it be for you to admit that you were wrong or that you changed your mind when you have all of these folks following you and paying you in a lot of ways probably. And it reminds me of something that I read in a book called How to Talk to a Science Denier by Lee McIntyre, which I recommend. I love it and I always recommend it. But he talks about this idea of asking someone about any particular belief that they have. would make you change your mind.
Starting point is 00:33:20 Because if the answer is nothing, first of all, you're about to have a very unproductive conversation. But like, second of all, what does that say to you about your belief system? But if nothing could change your mind, that sounds pretty close-minded and just not, I mean, like, I see things through like evidence and science and really support that and other people don't. And I understand that. But I just think in terms of like having a conversation with someone, especially me and my comment section, like just getting a gauge for like good faith conversations.
Starting point is 00:33:55 I always like to start with something like that because if the answer is nothing, then I don't really know what we're doing here. You know? When you post your content on social media about the wellness space, what kind of comments are you getting? You know, it's funny. I've been creating content for a few years now and my following has grown. I actually got a lot more pushback and hate when I had an incredible. small following, like less than 5,000 followers than I do now. Sometimes I'll have videos end up on the wrong side of the algorithm and that will elicit what I think are a lot of like bought comments
Starting point is 00:34:32 because they're all the same. They hate my bangs. They hate my nose ring. I have tattoos. I have pronouns. I look vaccinated. It's predictable. It's all the same stuff and it's nothing that I don't already know about myself. I know I have bangs. Yeah. I, I, I got them trimmed. I know that. I know I have my nose ring. I paid for that. And so it is one of those things where I think the algorithm is driving alive now.
Starting point is 00:34:58 I also know because I have my followers send me videos that I cannot see, that I have been preemptively blocked by a lot of influencers who I've never heard of before. And so I think there was probably some sort of Mallory memo that went around, continues to go around at some point. Yeah. How does that make you feel? pretty like not not terrible to be honest i was going to say you're like the like omar from the wire but for the wellness space of like watch out for mallory if she gets you you're she's going to
Starting point is 00:35:26 blow your content up and point out all the ways that it's a grift i also like have rarely had folks who i have included in my videos have a what i would describe as a productive conversation like i'm not going to make a video unless it's like pretty i feel pretty good at about it. And there's not a lot of wiggle room for, you know, them to be like, actually, like, I will collect content and feel really good about something before I publish it to the internet. And so oftentimes, if those folks come across my content, I think they just block me. I don't think that they engage in conversation or try to very often. I have gotten a lot of, you know, very empty legal threats where they're like, that's defamation. And I'm like, I don't think
Starting point is 00:36:11 so. When the Trump administration announced that Tylenol during pregnancy was supposedly linked to autism, pregnant women pushed back hard. Because here's the thing, right now, Tylenol is pretty much the only safe option for pain relief during pregnancy. It's what doctors recommend. So, of course, women started speaking up. They were saying, look, I'm going to keep following the advice of my doctor and I'm going to take Tylenol for pain if I need it. But here is where the social media outrage machine kicks in.
Starting point is 00:36:40 That very reasonable measured pushback suddenly gets spun into something kind of. of Wild. Online, it morphed into this completely fabricated story that pregnant liberal women hate Trump and RFK Jr. so much, they're filming themselves overdosing on Tylenol in mass just to spite him and winding up in the hospital. Now, that's not really what's happening, obviously, but this is how misinformation spreads. Take a kernel of truth, twist it, blow it up, and suddenly it becomes a viral culture war talking point. Do you see outrage marketing or or outrage culture and weaponizing and exploiting outrage online as part of this. Because sometimes I'll see wellness influencers saying things and doing things.
Starting point is 00:37:22 And I think you are saying this because you want to get people riled up because you know that it's going to have a positive impact on your engagement. Is this something that you see it all while looking at this kind of content? Yes, absolutely. All the time. I mean, I have another thing that I can talk about, but because Tylenol is so topical right now, you may have seen there's a number of conservative content creators who are outraged by this Tylenol of TikTok trend where apparently pregnant liberal women are
Starting point is 00:37:49 guzzling Tylenol on TikTok as some sort of gotcha to Trump and RFK Jr. The cut reported, and this is my own observation as well, that it's not, that's not actually happening. There's a handful of, you know, women who are trolling on TikTok. It's the same, I don't know, like four to five TikToks that these conservative content creators are clipping. I think, and they're taking it. a single Tylenol on camera. And I just think that if this TikTok trend was actually happening,
Starting point is 00:38:18 where pregnant liberal women were taking Tylenol by the fistfuls, that they would be including those videos instead. And I just haven't seen them. And so you want to talk about driving engagement and outrage. I think that's a perfect example. I have seen 10fold more videos in response to this alleged trend than I have actual videos that would be a part of this trend. Yeah. Not only would you like see more of those women guzzling handfuls of fellow, but they would be showing up in emergency rooms with like liver failure. Yeah. Well, there is a particular woman. She is the founder and executive director of American frontline nurses. She is alleging that she received a phone call about, oh, these overdoses are happening and people are in hospitals. I have not seen any
Starting point is 00:39:00 reporting on this. And I think that if it was inspired by a TikTok trend, unfortunately, like harms from TikTok trends, fatalities from TikTok trends has been reported on before. Unfortunately, that's something that has happened. And so, you know, if this does get reported on, I will eat my words, but for now I haven't seen anything. And I do think, in my personal opinion at this point, I do think it is to drive engagement and that outrage. Aside from Thailand, although, like I think another really good example, beyond outrage, I think algorithms really favor content that is extreme. And so even in videos that I stitch, there are certain videos that I come across where I'm like, it doesn't even matter what I say or what I do, this video is going to take off because what this influencer has
Starting point is 00:39:46 portrayed or said is so extreme. And I think I've covered parasite cleanses before. And I think that's a really good example of these folks who have these cleanses to sell you. They can't just say, take my cleanse and you'll feel better. They have to say, you're filled with worms. Everyone is. It's the root of all disease and doctors are lying and the government is suppressing it. And so you need to buy my tincture and detox three to four times a year. And also here's a hundred photos of people's poop with like alleged parasites in them. Meanwhile, medical professionals are coming out and saying actually like those aren't parasites. It's undigested food matter maybe undetermined matter or also maybe the lining of your own intestines.
Starting point is 00:40:32 but they're like, nope, it's worms and the government's lying to us. And that's the extreme claim that they use to push their supplements because you can't really sell stuff being like, I made this thing in my back shed and I think it'll make you feel better. I also think there's just no comparison. Like the people who are saying it's worms are definitely selling the more compelling story. For sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:58 I can sort of understand why, oh, my poop looks like that because I have undigestion. food matter in it maybe, and not because I'm actually full of secret worms the government is lying to me about. I can understand why a certain kind of person is always going to go with the more compelling story. Yeah, especially when they have something to sell. And they're like, I had no idea I had this many worms in me. And like, you probably do too. And here's my discount code. Like there was one woman who was, I think, financially attied to a particular product that on its own website does not describe itself as a parasite cleanse. But on social media, she would describe but that way. And she claimed that in, I think it was 60 days, that she shit out like 800
Starting point is 00:41:39 worms. And I'm like, first of all, who is counting? Second of all, how did you count the worms? Absurd. Like, who is believed, but people are believing it. And so I think there's that, like, the conspiracy element is compelling. And the, you, you don't know this about your body, but I'm telling you because I have privileged knowledge. Like, that's really compelling too. Also, I think a little bit of like the truth is in the middle here. Like, oh my God, she's saying I have 800 worms. That's probably extreme. But like maybe I have 200.
Starting point is 00:42:11 That's still bad. Totally. Yeah. And like also there's a weave of truth in a lot of these wellness things. So like parasites and worms exist for sure. I don't think anyone is denying that they don't. But it's this idea that everyone has them. It doesn't matter where you've traveled to.
Starting point is 00:42:31 and you're being lied to by the medical system. But you can trust me, a random woman on TikTok, who has a cleanse to sell you. And I do think that part of this is, I guess, a reaction to feeling out of control. You know, if I, I almost wonder if this is why RFK, when he first got into office, you know, his big thing was I'm going to eventually,
Starting point is 00:42:54 I'm going to a countdown to when I unveil the cause of autism, I feel like it's exploiting parents who have concerns about their kid, right? And I wonder if those parents feel out of control. And so by telling them like, oh, here's the thing. Here is the thing that you need to avoid that will 100% make it so that you don't have to worry that your kid might have autism. People are going to jump on that. I feel like it's oftentimes the causes of health issues are systemic or institutional or we don't know a ton about them or they have no easy fix. and that people can just fill that space with bunk because of it.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Totally, yeah. I think, well, in terms of like the autism announcement, I know, so I'm a correspondent for the Conspiratuality Podcast, and after the election, the American election, because I'm Canadian, and so I see all this like very like just watch observing from the side. But after the American election in November, we did an episode called Maha Mamas. I was just listening to that. Yes. And so it was very much so you're right.
Starting point is 00:43:58 Like I think very strategic. Like there are these mothers who are concerned. They are, you know, looking to RFK Jr. They like what he stands for. They may have not voted for Trump otherwise. But as soon as they, you know, partnered together or RFK Jr. was endorsed that pushed these women to, you know, maybe vote in that way. And I think it's a lot easier to digest saying I'm voting for making America healthy again than I'm voting for.
Starting point is 00:44:26 like the convicted felon. So I think that that was these like very real, I think, concerns that mothers have and questions and, you know, these things that they feel very deeply and are very valid. I think that that was leveraged in a very strategic way. And in terms of the out of control feeling, I mean, I only started really observing this space during the pandemic. But, you know, as someone with a fitness background, I used to be a fitness instructor. These things were never talked about in these spaces. It was just science. Like fitness and health is a science. And so that's how we spoke about these things. And it wasn't until the pandemic where I saw a number of my fitness peers sharing conspiratorial content. And I was like, what is, you know, happening here? And just
Starting point is 00:45:17 seeing a lot of folks really fall into conspiratorial thinking, I think as a result of feeling out of control and it's nice to have or nice to feel like you have knowledge and you know what's happening for sure and you know what is causing what even if that's not substantiated it makes you feel better and like in more control yeah i i noticed the same thing i mean do you think it was the the feeling of lack of control and fear and not knowing what was going on that we all experienced during the pandemic do you think that was what was driving this change i think a lot of of it. Like in my own observations, I'm like, they're so, and again, only started tracking for my own content during the pandemic. And so I can't really compare it to pre-pandemic. But like, it does
Starting point is 00:46:05 seem, even just as someone who digests news and is like on the internet every day, like, it does seem so much more amplified than it ever was. And I think that there are folks even, you know, that I work with. And they're like, oh, I don't need a parasite cleanse. And I'm like, you're not someone who strikes me as someone who would think that you'd do. And I think that we're just in a place now where we don't really know what to believe. There's so much online. And the way that these algorithms get you when, so like I also like fitness, I enjoy yoga, I enjoy weightlifting, and trying to use the internet to get information about these two, which should be like fairly commonplace interests, it's like the algorithm says, oh, you're into weightlifting,
Starting point is 00:46:48 huh? You're trying to eat more protein, huh? Well, certainly seed oil is got to get those out of the mix, huh, right? Certainly, you don't want to be vaccinating your family, right? The way that when you just have this one interest that whatever algorithm has decided, oh, well, then you probably feel X about seed oils, X about vaccines, the way it sort of done as a digital package deal, I think, is really insidious. Totally. There's this phrase called crank magnetism, and it's this idea that science deniers or conspiracy theorists often don't believe one wrong thing. They believe many wrong things. And so if you are already in the anti-vaccine camp, you are more likely to believe that sunscreen is actually causing cancer and not the sun. And you are now also more likely to
Starting point is 00:47:36 like homeschool your children. And you are more likely. And like just it becomes like you said, a package deal where it's like you kind of believe this one thing. And it's usually not just that one thing. And especially when you're following influencers, like if you follow a particular like homesteading influencer because you have an interest in that. You are now all the sudden fed, you know, antivacs or you should be using tallow instead of sunscreen stuff. More after a quick break. Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guide, not quite. Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends, me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk, to David Letterman, help make you funnier. This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and headwriter, Streeter Seidel,
Starting point is 00:48:27 help an a cappella band with their between songs banter. There's that worst singer in the group? The worst? Yeah. Me. Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard, you only got in because your parents made a huge donation. The group.
Starting point is 00:48:44 The yard birds, right? That's the name. The Harvard yard, but they're open to change. Do you have a name suggestion? We're open. Since you guys are middle aged. One erection. Listen to you.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Humor me. I need some jokes to make me seem funny. 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. So whatever your customers listen to, they'll hear your message. Plus, only IHeart can extend your message to audiences across broadcast radio.
Starting point is 00:49:29 Think podcasting can help your business. Think IHeart. Streaming, radio, and podcasting. Call 844-844-I-Hart to get started. That's 844-844-I-Hart. What's up, fam? It's Isaiah Thomas. And I'm C.J. Toledano, and our podcast Point Game is about defying the odds.
Starting point is 00:49:45 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 out of last. that we've never seen before. And he knows. Without Luca and Austin Reeves, I got to manipulate the game.
Starting point is 00:50:01 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 Nas Reid. He has to guard Julius Randall. And then he has to give us
Starting point is 00:50:15 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 Nass would get that that man, hell get to flyin.
Starting point is 00:50:26 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,
Starting point is 00:50:36 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. You can have opinions. You can have, like a strong stance, and then there's your body, having its own program.
Starting point is 00:50:53 I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans. We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of turbulence and transformation. There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our relationships. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change. We have to be. We have to be. be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes. Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, I'm Jared Adano. You might know me as that loud guy who yells out, help on the internet. Help!
Starting point is 00:51:45 Somebody! But there's so much more to me than that. 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, helping people in need with my sage advice and thoughtful solutions. Sike, I'm a comedian.
Starting point is 00:52:05 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 of chicken suit. Hey, cream. Cream a chicken suit.
Starting point is 00:52:25 This is help from a hypocrite. the worst advice from the dumbest people you know. Listen to Help from Hypocrite as part of the Mike Coultera podcast network available on the IFAR radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Let's get right back into it. Women are the primary health decision makers for their families, and people like RFK Jr. know it. That's why targeting women, especially moms with health misinformation,
Starting point is 00:52:56 is so powerful. Enter the mama bears. The moms who say that they are the only thing standing between their kids, and industries full of corruption. It seems to me that sort of the connecting threat on some of this is, as you alluded to earlier, not just women, but moms. Maha moms, they call themselves mama bears. How has moms and motherhood, how has that kind of been the Maha secret weapon? Oh, I mean, like, when I did the Conspiruality episode, it was really just an observation of, like,
Starting point is 00:53:30 how folks who were already in the Maha sphere were calling on mothers to be engaged and be interested and vote a particular way. And so, you know, they would never say it was strategic, but it certainly was. Like in the episode I referenced R of K Jr's website and how he sold merch that referenced like Mamas, Maha Mamas. But there was no like dad equivalent. Like dad's got T-shirts about, I don't know, I forget now, but like, how. not eating seed oils. Make steak and tallow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Make tallow grade. I forget, but it was probably something really ridiculous like that. And I'm like, oh, it seems really intentional from a merch perspective anyway, which maybe some might see as, you know, not significant enough, but I certainly do because merch now, you can see it as like identity. You wear it around. This is who you are. And if you're wearing merch that says, Maha Mamas, that is who you're identifying as.
Starting point is 00:54:26 And I think so it was absolutely strategic, I think, on their purpose. part to pull on mothers. And Kaly means even how to tweet. I referenced this in the episode where he calls on mothers. And a woman responds to him and says, well, I'm not a mother. Like, what did you mean by this? And he's like, oh, nothing. Like, it's like, no, I think it was actually something. It's just it would be harder to digest if you actually called it what it was. Yeah. And I think you're so spot on that for a lot of these people, I can't remember the, that might have been the influencer. There's an influencer that you that you hear from in that episode where she talks about how, oh, generally, I'm in the middle of the road politically. And you might even say that I lean more toward Democrats. But I am happy that Trump is in the White House because I am, I want to make America healthy again. I am 100% on board for that. I do think that a lot of these moms might have a harder time getting behind somebody like Donald Trump, but then would say like, oh, well, I didn't vote for all the Trumpy stuff. I voted for the health stuff with the RFK. Is that a lot of. what's going on? I mean, that's my observation for sure. And I certainly think, again, in my
Starting point is 00:55:34 observation, there seems as time passes to be a really big difference between uppercase make America healthy again and lowercase make America healthy. Like it's a movement, not necessarily this, like more of like a conceptual idea of like there are, my understanding is, you know, there are folks who are always trying to make America healthy. But it's this very particular political motivated movement. And I will say, thank God I listen to the Conspiruality Podcast because, obviously, there's nothing about this administration that I am for, but I caught myself saying the thing that some of those influencers say, which is, well, I don't agree with the administration, but, you know, there are some things that RFK is trying to do that I am aligned with. And I
Starting point is 00:56:20 said that about the idea of removing or banning food dyes. Then I listened to the conspiraturality. podcast about it. Come to find out this motherfucker. It wasn't even a ban. It was a, how did they put it? It was a voluntary understanding that these companies were going to remove some dyes with no kind of enforcement mechanisms. And I'm saying, I literally from my mouth was like, well, this administration can't do anything right, but at least they're trying to ban these food dies. It was never even a ban. I cannot believe how effective it was at getting into even the consciousness of somebody like me who can't stand any of this administration that, oh, well, there are some good things they're doing, but when you actually look at what they're done, it's actually a lot of smoke and mirrors.
Starting point is 00:57:05 Totally. Yeah. And like, I'm far from an expert on any of that, but the creators that I follow who are experts are calling it just a mirror distraction from issues that really matter and a distraction so that you look away from various cuts in funding that are happening in the same administration. And the ways that our health is being sort of given over to charlatans and private companies that might have friendly and cozy relationships with the administration. They made a really good point. I swear I'll stop like plus plusing the Conspiruality Podcast. No, shout out of spirituality.
Starting point is 00:57:39 Yeah, it is one of my favorite podcasts. Like, everyone should be listening to it. And I almost never recommend other podcasts on this show. Because if you gave you open the door to that, the whole podcast episode would be my recs. But if there was one show that I would suggest, focus. listen to to understand this, it would be conspirituality. And the ways that like people who own private testing companies, so, you know, I, it's, so it's not me going to my doctor or going to an actual clinic and getting testing done, having that testing being covered by insurance and all of that.
Starting point is 00:58:08 It's no, spend $500 out of pocket for this private company that runs tests that will tell you the same thing, wink, wink, it won't, that my buddy owns. All of that, I mean, I just never realized how much all of this is just the same old crony politics being repackaged as something that is good for us. And I think that speaks to the very real gaps in like the American medical system. And oftentimes I think with those companies that you're talking about that Conspiratuality often talks about is it's not just these tests that you pay out of pocket for. It's also the supplements that they recommend after that their own company owns often. Yeah. I mean, I guess my big question of this is we are people. who are health conscious, we care about our health, we care about fitness and wellness, I use
Starting point is 00:58:56 guasha, I drink mushroom coffee, all kinds of weird little things that I'm sure I'm wasting my money on. I do and it makes me feel warm puzzies and that's that. Are there ways to be interested in these things and into these things without it leading into a more dangerous, sometimes extremist pipeline? Like, is there a way to be interested in these sort of alternative health practices, but be sane and safe about it, especially online. Yeah, I mean, I think there's probably a lot of folks out there who have tips on this. But, like, my own, like, opinion is just to, like, constantly be checking in with yourself. There are people online who are acting in various nefarious ways to get you to believe something.
Starting point is 00:59:41 Like I said before, you know, with certain other niches of influencers, they do not need you to change your entire belief system in order to influence you to buy something. But the wellness space is encroaching more and more on that where they're not just selling you brands. They're selling you belief systems. And so checking in with yourself, I think it's totally okay to participate in things that, you know, like the mushroom coffee, not totally my thing, but if you like it, then why wouldn't you just do it? That's fine, I think. But where did you hear it?
Starting point is 01:00:15 Who did you hear it from? What are your motivations around continuing a particular practice? Is there a pipeline that exists around this particular practice that could have you going further down into something? I know Derek Barris, who is one of the co-hosts of the Conspiratory Podcast, he recently worked with The New York Times on a video that talks about a funnel that is happening that they've identified where it takes someone from being health conscious, following these particular influencers all the way down to rejecting medicine and holding this
Starting point is 01:00:47 conspiracy theory that the health care system is like knowingly harming people to keep them sick and make money. And I think that this, you know, video really depicts that well around like, you can have these like scrunchy. I think that's a phrase that's online where it's like kind of crunchy. These, you know, lifestyles and these practices and just. checking in with yourself around like how you might be falling down a particular pipeline or funnel. 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.
Starting point is 01:01:30 There are no girls on the internet was created by me, Bridget Todd. It's a production of IHeart Radio 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, rate and review us on Apple Podcasts. For more podcasts from IHeartRadio, check out the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 01:02:06 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.
Starting point is 01:02:36 I'm Joey Dardano. And on my new podcast, Hope from a Hypocrite, I'll be changing lives, helping people in need with 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 and recommend some of the most legally dubious advice known to me. This is Help from a Hypocrite, the worst advice from the dumbest people you know. Listen to Help from a Hypocrite Wednesdays on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The story I've told myself can then shape my behavior, and that can lead me to sabotage the possibility of connection.
Starting point is 01:03:15 This Mental Health Awareness Month, tune into the podcast deeply well with Debbie Brown if you've been searching for a soft place to land while doing the work to become whole. This podcast is for you to hear more. Listen to deeply well with Debbie Brown from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Hey, it's Edwin Castro, also known as Castro 1021. And I'm Conky, his best friend and business manager. And we've got a new show called The 1021 Podcast. I'm taking you behind the scenes on how I became one of Twitch's most popular streamers.
Starting point is 01:03:54 We also love sports. And with the World Cup right around the corner, we'll be breaking down the biggest storylines ahead of the big tournament here in the USA. Listen to the 1021 podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Why are we all so obsessed with romance? On the Radio 831 podcast, join us,
Starting point is 01:04:19 Sanjana Basker and Tyler McCall, as we unpack all the trending tropes, fuzzy adaptations, book talk drama, and celebrity love stories with hot takes and sharp guests. Each episode digs into what these stories reveal about desire, fantasy, identity, and how we love now. Listen to the Radio 831 podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.

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