What A Day - All Tea All Shade On Tennessee
Episode Date: February 28, 2023The Biden administration has promised new measures to crack down on child labor. It follows a recent investigation by the New York Times, which found that many migrant children are being forced to wor...k in dangerous, labor-intensive jobs.Tennessee’s Republican Governor Bill Lee said he will sign House Bill 9, a measure that would ban public drag performances in the state. The law would be the first in the country specifically targeting drag, and comes amid an onslaught of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation across the U.S..And in headlines: tornadoes and severe winter weather swept across the Southern Plains, the White House ordered federal agencies to delete TikTok from government-issued devices within 30 days, and Michael B. Jordan is the new face of Calvin Klein underwear.Show Notes:Tennessee Equality Project | Campaigns for the week of Feb 27 – https://www.tnep.org/campaigns_for_the_week_of_february_27_2023Trans Formations Project – https://www.transformationsproject.org/What A Day – Drag Queen History Hour – https://crooked.com/podcast/drag-queen-history-hour/What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, February 28th.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Trayvon Anderson.
And this is What A Day, where it's our official opinion that the video of Marjorie Taylor
Greene working out isn't real and therefore it cannot hurt you.
I am upset that she seems to be in better shape than me, but hate builds muscle is what
I've heard.
Hate builds muscle.
Put that on a t-shirt.
On today's show, TikTok is getting the boot from U.S. government devices.
Plus, we've learned that nothing comes between Michael B. Jordan and his Calvins.
But first, migrant children are being forced to work jobs in violation of child labor laws, according to a new investigation by The New York Times.
The Times spoke to more than 100 migrant child workers in 20 states and found children as young as 12 working labor-intensive jobs, sometimes for 12 hours a day.
Many of these children are unaccompanied minors, meaning that they entered the United States alone without a parent or guardian with them. The Times also talked to 60 caseworkers at child welfare agencies, most of whom estimated
that about two-thirds of all migrant children ended up working full-time once in the U.S.
That's a really wild statistic. Two-thirds of all migrant children end up working full-time.
Super absurd and horrible. Josie, you mentioned that these are brutal jobs. Tell us
what kind of jobs are these kids doing? Yeah, it's so many awful things like packing Cheerios
and Lucky Charms boxes with cereal, working in slaughterhouses, sawing wood planks, working as
roofers, scrubbing dishes, harvesting coffee, running milk machines, sewing clothes, watching
hotel sheets, a ton of different things
in different states across the country, all intense and requiring manual labor, and all more
work than any child is supposed to be doing, right? These are kids. Some of these kids have
actually lost their lives on the job too. So according to the Times, at least a dozen underage
workers have been killed while on the job in the last six years, while others have been injured, including losing limbs and breaking their backs. So really serious injuries.
So now is this a new issue or just one that's just getting attention now?
Yeah, it's a good question. It's not a new issue per se, but it is an issue that's gotten a lot
worse in recent years. And that's because the number of unaccompanied minors entering the U.S. has risen.
It's risen to about 130,000, which is a pretty drastic increase.
For context, that's three times what it was just five years ago.
And so who does the New York Times identify as, like,
the party responsible for, you know, overseeing all of this?
That's actually where I have a few questions about the New York Times angle on this.
So they point out that these children are not kids
who have, quote, stolen into the country undetected
and that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
knows these kids are in the country, right?
Which is true.
The department's job is to connect these children
with sponsors and ensure that they aren't being trafficked
or exploited in that process.
But the New York Times seems to say it's the department's fault for not tracking these children long term.
And I'm not clear that's right or that we even want that.
Because it's not actually ideal for the department to track unaccompanied minors for years at a time
or for like really extended amounts of time, right?
Because we know what can happen when that data gets in the wrong hands.
Sometimes their sponsors are undocumented, for example.
It's easy to say we want Biden to keep an eye on all undocumented children in the U.S.,
but what about when another president is in the White House, right?
I mean, we've seen what happens when the anti-immigration presidents enter the White House,
particularly the orange one.
It's really ugly what happens when they have information about undocumented people.
So when you have other presidents who like to harass undocumented people for political points,
like both the front runners for the Republican nomination right now, or have a special affinity
for family separation, like both of the front runners for Republican nomination, like that's
not people that you want having long-term data about undocumented children. So lots of people
think like, oh, of course the government should be tracking kids,
but they don't track all kids, right?
They don't track my kids, for example.
They don't call me to ask if my children are working at General Mills.
The onus is supposed to be on General Mills to ensure that no children are working in their factories.
And so we have to make sure that when we are accounting for who's at fault here, we look to the actual employers and make sure that they're being held accountable.
All right. So how has the Biden administration responded to all of this, if at all?
Yeah. So the Biden administration has said that the Department of Labor will investigate companies more aggressively who are accused of illegally employing children.
Just kind of what we just said, right?
The Labor Department should be going after the companies here.
It has also said that they will create a joint task force
between the Department of Labor
and the Department of Health and Human Services
so that they share information more easily.
We'll see how all this works.
This is a really big problem.
It's a hard problem to crack down on,
but it's been understood for years that the penalties for child labor violations are not high enough.
They're about $15,000 a violation.
If you're a big company, there's really no incentive to crack down on this.
But there's also another problem, right?
These kids work because they need the money, because they live in households that need money, because they are in economically precarious situations, and they need that extra cash. And so the problem is even bigger than just child labor,
just Department of Labor, just the Department of Health and Human Services. This is a broader
problem with our current immigration system, right? Absolutely, absolutely. Thanks for that,
Josie. Now on to our second story for the day. It's an update on one we've been following for a little bit now, and that's the assault on LGBTQ plus identities and culture happening across the country. We're going to law in the state banning public drag performances.
Yesterday, Tennessee Governor Bill Lee confirmed what everyone has expected up to this point,
which is that he will sign the law when it reaches his desk.
Okay, so Tennessee is a mess.
Can you break it down for us?
Like, what's in this bill? This seems bananas, and it also seems like the logical end of the direction we've been heading for so long in this country absolutely the writing has been on the wall as they say right so the
legislation here it bans quote-unquote adult oriented entertainment that is quote-unquote
harmful to minors from public property and places where the performers might be seen by children
the law specifically mentions go-go dancers, exotic dancers, strippers,
as well as male or female impersonators, which is to say drag entertainers.
It would actually classify all of those folks as adult cabaret,
which to be clear, drag is not necessarily adult cabaret.
You know, an adult cabaret performer can get up in drag. Right. But so much of the drag that we love and see out in culture is not of the adult cabaret variety.
Right.
Which they know.
Right.
But they're playing games with us.
And they're just throwing out words.
Absolutely.
Just doing what they can to make it make sense.
But all of this is about restricting all forms of entertainment that
appeals to prurient interest. That's the word that I've been struggling with. But, you know,
they're basically saying, you know, anything sexual or hanky-panky motivated or influenced
is what they're saying. Right. Now, the definition that they'll be using of what,
quote unquote, harmful to minors means is the state's existing obscenity laws.
But there's a bit of disagreement afoot about how it will actually be enforced.
A quick aside here, before House Bill 9 became what it is now, it was Senate Bill 3, which the Tennessee State Senate approved 26 to 6.
All of the chamber's democrats opposed the measure that happened
earlier this year but because it passed it then went to the house where it transitioned ha ha ha
into hb 9 and so the sponsor of the bill when it was in the state senate has previously said that
it would be up to local prosecutors to determine how exactly to apply this new law.
But then you have folks like the bill's sponsor in the House who is suggesting that all drag
performance, right, no matter your thoughts about it, that all drag performance should be considered
inappropriate for minors and therefore all drag performance restricted. Now, under this law,
a first violation would be a misdemeanor, which carries a sentence
of up to 11 months and 29 days in prison and or a fine of up to $2,500. Subsequent violations would
be classified as a felony, punishable by up to six years in prison and a fine of up to $3,000.
To put it in some realer terms, you know, this new law basically means not only no more drag queen story hours,
right, but also, for example, no drag queens at Pride, which if you listen to our special episode
from Pride last year about drag's pivotal role in the foundation of the LGBTQ plus rights movement,
all of this is really a wild idea. And if you're out there and you didn't listen to it, it's fine.
We'll drop a link to it in our show notes so you can catch it. Yeah. It's also just an assault on people's right
to free expression, right? I mean, it just is a violation across the board. To that point,
like what have drag performers in Tennessee been saying? Because this impedes their like
ability to live, you know, their ability to like do their job, basically.
Absolutely. Well, there's one video that
has gone sort of viral that i want to play and it's a speech from drag queen bella duval in case
you didn't get the reference it's like bell of the ball oh i like it i like it i can't believe
tennessee wants to outlaw that they don't like clever wordplay. They don't. Just a little too advanced for them. Truly.
Anyway, so she was hosting a drag brunch late last week, and she did this little speech about all of this.
It's a little long of a clip,
but I'm going to play the whole thing
because of how well she lays out the stakes here.
Take a listen.
If this law passes on April 1st,
public drag will now be criminalized.
I can go to jail for 15 years for appearing outside in drag.
They also seek to classify us as adult cabaret performers.
So that means that we would have to get a stripping license.
If you have one of those, you cannot also have an alcohol license. So our bar
couldn't even serve liquor anymore. This is an attempt to erase drag in Tennessee. This bill
will further harm trans people who are literally just living their fucking lives. I need you to
contact your house representative and tell them this will not stand.
Tell them, urge them to vote no, because if they don't, this will make public pride illegal this year.
Now, if you don't know, we've been having public drag in Tennessee for over 50 years,
and pride began to commemorate the events of Stonewall.
Back in Stonewall, we weren't allowed to doate the events of Stonewall. Back in Stonewall we weren't allowed
to do drag. It was criminalized and so what happened when the cops came in and tried to beat
us down? We picked up them bricks and sent them packing. The original pride was a riot
and if this year we need to remind them that we will fight for our liberation,
we will raise our bricks high again and let them know that we will not go quietly.
I may need your help with legal fees because Mama ain't quitting.
I'll get arrested.
I don't care.
Somebody's got to be first.
We'll sue the state.
But whatever happens, we are queer people. We are very strong. And don't care. Somebody's got to be first. We'll sue the state. But whatever happens,
we are queer people. We are very strong. And we will rise.
It's just so moving. It's both amazing to hear the strength and the activism of people on the
ground. And just a reminder, this shouldn't be them risking being arrested, having to pay a fine,
spending years in prison. Like, it's just crazy.
Yeah.
I get chills every time I listen to that video, that speech, every single time.
And one of the things I want to note that she mentions is that there's a very real possibility that this law is used to further malign trans people who are not drag performers.
Right.
Right. not drag performers, right? Because these bills are often broadly worded, their practical effects
could include not just bans on drag performance, but on any public displays of gender nonconformity
as well. So like, it has a potential to reach and impact so many more than I think a lot of people
are thinking about. And then there's also another bill that passed the Tennessee House recently, HB1, which would ban transition-related care for minors.
Once signed into law, health care providers who are found guilty could be stripped of their license to practice medicine.
The bill would also provide an avenue for patients who received transition-related health care as minors to sue providers within 30 years after the patient turns 18. So, you know, the
Tennessee state legislature is really showing their true colors in more ways than one. As I've
said on the show before, we are living through a targeted attack. During the 2023 legislative
session alone, more than 30 drag bans have reportedly been introduced. The one in Tennessee is just
the first one to pass. And all of this is in addition to the hundreds of other bills that
we've seen introduced in passing that are otherwise trying to erase queer and trans people
and our history. We should all be very clear, right, that none of this is about, quote unquote, protecting children or women,
which is what they would like us to believe. So just stay engaged, folks, and pay attention to
what's going on. With that, we're going to pay some bills, and we'll be back with headlines in a moment. Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
The United Kingdom finally announced an agreement with the European Union over some unfinished Brexit business.
The deal is meant to simplify a very complicated situation over trade between the Republic of Ireland, which is still an EU member, and Northern Ireland, which is a British province.
The EU argued that without border checks, goods could pass through Northern Ireland as a sort of backdoor into Ireland and essentially into the European Union without getting taxed or cleared through customs. And the dispute isn't just over trade. Critics feared the
arrangement would lead to another hard border between the islands north and south, which was
finally demilitarized in 1998 after decades of sectarian violence. Lawmakers in Britain's
parliament are now reviewing the deal before they vote on it. Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had sharp words for critics of his government's move to shrink its
independent election authority. Over the weekend, thousands of people gathered in Mexico City to
protest the overhaul, which was approved by the country's Congress last week. Among other things,
it cuts funding, staffing, and other resources for the National Electoral Institute, or INE, as it is known locally.
Political experts say it helped end one-party rule over 20 years ago, and critics fear the new changes will threaten Mexico's democracy, especially with a presidential election coming up next year.
Lopez Obrador, however, has called the INE corrupt and inefficient and said anyone questioning the move is elitist.
More severe weather is battering the central states.
Hurricane force winds, thunderstorms, and tornadoes were reported across Oklahoma and Kansas,
leaving at least a dozen people hurt in the Sooner state.
Meanwhile, the storms are expected to shift north towards states like Illinois and Indiana.
And Michigan, which hasn't had a chance to thaw out since last week's ice storm,
is bracing for another blast of frigid cold.
As of Monday evening, residents in some parts of the state have gone five days without power.
I can barely survive the two hours of my power going out literally today.
Five days in freezing cold weather, too. It's just unimaginable.
The White House has ordered all federal agencies to delete TikTok
from government-issued devices within the next 30 days. That's according to a report from Reuters
yesterday and comes after more than half of all state governments have implemented similar bans
on the Chinese-owned video sharing app amid concerns about data privacy and cybersecurity.
Also on Monday, Canadian officials announced a similar ban
for all government-issued devices just one week after its own federal watchdog
launched a probe into whether TikTok abides by the country's privacy laws.
Two of the European Union's top policymaking institutions
have also banned the app for its employees' phones and devices.
As long as Cirque du Soleil keeps his TikTok account, I will not riot.
It's great on there.
At Sunday night's Screen Actors Guild Awards,
one film in particular seemed to be winning everything,
everywhere, all at once.
Do you get it?
The cast and crew of the A24 Blockbuster
took home the ceremony's top awards,
and some of them made history.
Michelle Yeoh and Kei Hai Kwan
became the first Asian actors
to win Best Lead Actress and Best Actor
in a Supporting Role respectively
for their performances.
And the film also took home
the ceremony's top prize for Best Ensemble.
I love that award, by the way.
Yes.
Every award show should have Best Ensemble.
Great award.
And if that wasn't enough,
cast member and Hollywood veteran James Hong
earned a standing ovation
after he schooled the youth
in his acceptance speech
following the cast's big win. Hong, who is 94, got his start in showbiz 70 years
ago and described the racist environment he faced as an Asian-American actor.
Back in those days, I have to tell you this, the good earth, the leading role was played by these guys with their eyes taped up like this, and they talk like this.
And the producer said the Asians were not good enough, and they are not box office.
But look at us now, huh?
Mmm, what a great moment.
The film's wins of the top awards for acting, directing, and producing
bode well for its chances at the Oscars,
except for some of the most coveted awards, including Best Picture.
Only one movie, 1995's Apollo 13,
has ever won the three SAG categories and not gone on to win Best Picture.
I would love for everything, everywhere, all at once to win.
If it's a great movie, 10 out of 10, no notes.
I thought it was great.
And I don't remember Apollo 13, so.
Amid all the drama of storm alerts and chemical spills
and general political upheaval,
we deserve something good every once in a while.
The people at Calvin Klein understand this.
And yesterday, they delivered in the form of Michael B. Jordan,
people's 2020 sexiest
man alive as the face of their latest ploy to sell us their cotton underwear this is of course a
podcast so you know i'll do my best to catch you up visually michael b laying down sensually
michael b flexing his big arms and michael kind of, but not really wearing a pair of jeans.
You know, like in mid-undress.
Y'all know what I mean, okay?
Now, in case you've already done your own research on the Google images
and thought if only there was a way to make these much, much larger, you're in luck.
Select images from the Calvin Klein ad campaign,
shot in a tasteful black and white by photographers Mert and Marcus
for the spring and summer collection
will be featured on billboards
in New York and Los Angeles.
And so you can pull over
on the side of La Cienega Boulevard
and just, you know,
gaze at Michael B. Jordan
as the afternoon just drifts away.
Drive over there in the LA rain.
Just look up.
You know, it'd be very peaceful.
Yeah.
A very meditative journey, perhaps.
Totally, totally.
He's come a long way from the wire, it must be said.
He has.
He absolutely has.
And we love a journey.
We love a journey.
We do.
We truly do.
And those are the headlines.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, book a trip for some casual
billboard tourism, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the growing list of awards won by everything,
everywhere, all at once, like me, well, today is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Trevelle Anderson. I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And keep Marjorie Taylor Greene
out of CrossFit.
Listen. Look, it's too much. It's a
lot. Because we already dislike
her politics. And so, like, we're gonna hate
anything else. Let's just
call it like it is. It's true. She's
from my state. There's too much of her in my life.
I can't watch her work out, too. It's true. She's from my state. There's too much of her in my life. I can't watch her work out too. It's too much.
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