You're Wrong About - The Tradwife Rises
Episode Date: May 29, 2024Sarah Archer came by to make an episode from scratch. What's the real history of the American housewife? Where did the tradwife come from, and why? Is she okay? Will we be okay? And who is she ch...urning all that butter for? Sarah Archer's accompanying Substack post https://open.substack.com/pub/saraharcher/p/going-to-businessSarah Archer's bibliographyClips:Mrs. Modern versus Mrs. Drudge from The Middleton Family at the 1939 New York World's Fair (produced by Westinghouse) https://youtu.be/vH2Lpl-UB64?si=vtVFAWhAvkDq-EOEDesign for Dreaming from General Motors 1956 Motorama featuring the Frigidaire “Kitchen of the Future” display https://youtu.be/4_ccAf82RQ8?si=mzVREYgY-d2yWcCl “Total Electric Home,” Westinghouse, 1959 https://youtu.be/IRrMLaiiAGY?si=aoc-7PQfSQIEZW5r The Frankfurt Kitchen at MoMA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6T3EM872x-AArticles Books and Pods:Dolores Hayden, Grand Domestic Revolution: https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262580557/the-grand-domestic-revolution/ Kathleen Belew, Bring the War Home: https://www.hup.harvard.edu/books/9780674286078 “Wife Sentences,” Moira Donegan https://www.bookforum.com/print/3004/lisa-selin-davis-s-confused-history-of-homemakers-25336“Trad Wives,” In Bed with the Right https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/in-bed-with-the-right/id1696774612?i=1000651855063Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show: You Are Good[YWA co-founder] Mike's other show: Maintenance PhaseLinks:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the Show.
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When I was a kid, I thought everybody's dad was constantly getting melanomas cut off.
Welcome to You're Wrong About. I'm Sarah Marshall, and today we are talking about The Trad Wife
with Sarah Archer. Sarah Archer is our home economics correspondent. We had her on a while
ago to talk about Martha Stewart, her rise and fall, and her rise again. And I loved making that
episode and I loved making this episode too. Today we are talking about the tradwife, that social
media figure, sometimes with a nice frilly dress, sometimes doing aesthetic barnyard
chores, maybe sewing by candlelight, talking about how much better it is to take care of
a husband and children than to be hustling for a paycheck. This is the tradwife that
I know from recent social media, and of course, she is just another chapter
in a story that's been going on for many centuries.
If you haven't heard of her,
you have heard of her ancestors.
And I hope you're as ready to dig in as I was today.
That's about it as far as this episode goes.
If you like this one, if you like what we do generally,
we have bonus episodes for you on Patreon and Apple+, including currently our saga about
Britney Spears.
We're talking about her memoir with Eve Lindley, and our concluding section, Chapter 4, will
be out very soon.
And we cannot wait to share it with you.
Let's go talk about some tradwives.
Thank you so much for being here. Thank you for listening. Here's your episode.
Welcome to your wrong about where with me today is the very woman with whom I was supposed to spend a
weekend in Cleveland at the adult figure skating championships before we both got too busy.
Alas, alas.
But next year.
I know it would be so, next year, next year.
But with me today is Sarah Archer and you were talking about, I think the topic that
most fascinates me in the world right now.
So it's going to be a good one.
It's pretty darn fascinating and it seems to be enjoying a surge of interest.
So our episode today, and you asked me how I was right before we started recording and
my answer is that this morning I drank some of the last of the G fuel that I bought in 2020, which is a energy drink formulated especially for gamers.
And I feel like I'm about to have a panic attack, which is the perfect state of mind
in which to do an episode that I am calling the trad wife rises.
Yes.
We're talking about the trad wife.
We're talking about she's coming.
Why I can't go on social
media and start looking at gardening or housekeeping or cleaning type videos without the algorithm
inching toward white supremacy. And so how do we get from here to the scrub daddy?
Well, I can tell you when I first discovered tradwives. Yeah, which was only a few years ago. I was kind
of late to the party on it, which is strange because it was just a few years after I was
researching the mid-century kitchen. So I had been steeped in ephemera and print ads
and industrial shorts and commercials about how this or that appliance will make you more
sexually attractive to your husband or what have you, you know, all the usual claims. And I read a post on Medium by Maya Kossoff
that was about her sort of trad wife rabbit hole. It turns out a college classmate of
hers is Kelly Havens of open flame, long hair fame.
Yes. Kelly Havens is a fixture on a subreddit called,
I think, fundysnark.
You follow her, right?
Or you kind of pop in now and then?
I used to, yeah.
I remember we talked about this a couple of years ago,
because I think that some of the best cultural criticism being
written today and sort of discussions of politics
and feminism and gender in America is being
done by ex-vangelicals a lot of the time because the sort of the view inside the machine is
so fascinating. And I, Kelly Havens was so fascinating to me as sort of someone who you
just encounter on a subreddit about, you know, so many different people kind of making beautiful
aesthetic images about submitting to the patriarchy
because she was doing it in a way that I as a girl who had like envied the Kirsten doll for being
able to wear like a crown of open flames for St. Lucia's day or whatever. Oh, it's like she's living
the Anne of Green Gables life. Absolutely. And that was maybe when I started thinking about it, was this we're all sort of in our own different algorithms.
But I think the last few years, there's
been so much about cottagecore and the aesthetic of like,
you know, there's this Tumblr post I think about once a day
that's like, let's stop glamorizing hustle culture.
Let's start glamorizing being a little mouse who
has nothing to do all day but collect dew drops and slice a strawberry into like a giant ham.
And that's, I think, this weird point of intersection where by wanting to live a simpler
life where you aren't being bombarded by screens all day, you can end up in the, let
me live so simply that I go back to before I had rights
or what I imagined that time was like kind of a thing.
And it's the, this topic crops up in so many areas,
but my kind of question about and baggage for the trad wife,
I think is that the trad wife has emerged
in the past few years.
It feels like for people who don't know,
we're gonna start with a taxonomy of who or what
is the trad wife and why is she rising?
But to me, it feels like this insidious point of potential radicalization to sort of live in a social media world where we are able to present so many aesthetic images of homemaking and wellness that sort of promise it as the answer.
And yet it feels like a piece of bait being put
under a box trap that's gonna get ya.
And my question is, how do we get what we want from this?
Like we know we see something we want in there.
So how do we get the good part?
And what is it that we want?
In looking at the aesthetics,
this is kind of the time period during which cores
have come into full flower.
Right, we used to have only a couple of cores and now we have thousands.
And like the pandemic definitely, I mean, all the cliches are true that the pandemic
basically while we were all being driven mad, people were kind of experimenting with baking
and gardening and being doing things from scratch and sourdough. I managed to actually
kill our sourdough starter finally,
but for a while we had a good robust starter.
That's fantastic.
We also had this feeling of kind of not wanting
to throw anything away and sort of being nervous
about groceries, which I think felt very vintage.
It was this very kind of like depression era,
we're saving every scrap because you never know.
I also started to notice that there was this kind of sort of to paraphrase the title of
an old Caitlin Flanagan article sort of to hell with all that vis-a-vis hustle culture
and a renewed desire to embrace rest as kind of a tool of resistance and to not be exhausted
and not be exploited and people kind of the scales were falling from people's eyes vis-a-vis
hustle culture. And it was also a terrible time in media.
So I think people like you and me and all our friends who write, people were being laid off left and right.
I would have, you know, start writing for a new publication and find out the person was gone and that, you know, it was just this like bloodbath of several years.
And so I think because that was happening in the media sphere, it rattled a group of people that are not accustomed to being rattled in that way.
The thing that distinguishes kitchen design and kitchen aspiration and sort of kitchen
reverie in the middle decades of the 20th century, really starting around World War
I, is that it's all framed around the splendors of the future.
Like sort of looking at the historicism that certain
tradwives try to sort of, they'll do a throwback to what they perceive as Victorian or mid-century.
And the mid-century tradwife kind of pinup style that is one of the genres of the tradwife
milieu is deliberately retro. The futuristic designs of that era were coupled with a very retro grade gender
politic. Like this is the kitchen of tomorrow, it's going to rocket you into space and like
rocketing you into space actually means like helping you save time so you can do more volunteer
work or take up tennis or you know, it doesn't mean like be on the Supreme Court. It means,
you know, continue being at home.
Well, and it's such an interesting moment
for gender politics too, it seems to me,
because we have World War II as a driver
of so many technological advances that are motivated by war,
but then end up in the household.
And we have women leaving the home
in order to work famously,
and then somewhat less famously being told,
all right, it's now your patriotic duty
to go back home and let your husbands have your jobs.
You can't have them anymore.
And so this weird, yeah, this moment of we have come
so far technologically and women have stepped so far
out of the household, not that women weren't working before,
but you know, that this was to say,
we're keeping the technology and we're losing
the gender politics
that we've gained. Well, do you want to do a little bit backward in time review of kitchen
kitchen design and politics? All I think about is kitchen design
because that's what I have to deal with every day, every single day, the work triangle.
One of the things that kind of blew my mind when I was researching this initially is that a standalone kitchen as a room with all your
kitchen-ly things in it, as we know it, as kind of like a designed forward, nice place
to be and kind of do what you need to do in there.
Where people end up at the party.
Exactly. It's a very new idea. It emerges
in the early 1920s at the earliest, but it doesn't really come into sort of full flower
until after the war. Because before that, for the most part, you either had people who
had household stuff and their kitchen probably looked like maybe a modest version of the
kitchen on Downton Abbey.
Nicole Asprey Emily Gilmour's. And their kitchen probably looked like maybe a modest version of the kitchen on Downton Abbey.
Nicole Asprey Emily Gilmour's.
Nicole Asprey Exactly.
You have the sort of the basement workspace, right?
And that's some it's like the broom closet.
It's a workspace in the household.
Or you're on a farm in a tenement in a flat.
And there's maybe two rooms and one of those rooms has a stove and that's it.
So there isn't a kitchen per se, which is actually one of the reasons why a lot of New York City apartments have such odd configurations of like showers and toilets
and kitchenettes and they don't really kind of seem like somebody purpose built it to
begin with because they didn't.
Right. When I was 13, it was my dream to someday be like a New York City downtown artist living
in an apartment with a bathtub in the kitchen.
I just felt that like if you have a bathtub in your kitchen, you are an artist.
You're on your way. Like for sure, people, important people are coming to your gallery
opening. Yeah. It's to not buy your art. Exactly. To admire, but not by your art. And
the way in which modern kitchen design came about was actually sort of an outgrowth of
home economics. And please tell us about the story of home
economics because I feel like that term does not mean what it used to.
Nicole Sade So home economics was really, it used to
be called domestic science. And it was a very serious undertaking for the sort of small
handful of women like Ellen Swallow Richards, who got a PhD
in chemistry, I believe, at the end of the 19th century and was, you know, very concerned
with things like hygiene and sort of, you know, maintaining a healthy home. There's
a huge emphasis in the Victorian era on cleanliness, partially as a response to immigration and
this perception, real or ginnedinned up that cities are dirty and
you know, milk sterilization is really important. And of course it is that will come up later
when we talk about tradwives.
Right.
Weirdly, one of the most pressing issues of our time, despite Louis Pasteur having lived
and died for our sins anyway.
Exactly. I know you'd think that the people would stick with this. But so there's a woman named
Christine Frederick, who studies scientific management and scientific management is it's
sometimes referred to as Taylorism because it was devised by this guy, Frederick Winslow
Taylor, no relation to Christine Frederick. And he worked for these big companies like
Bethlehem Steel and different places. And he would sort of look at, you know, how many
steps from here to there, you know, where are the supplies, vis-a-vis the tools, vis-a-vis
the machinery and factories and say, you know, how can you save steps? How can you save time?
How can you save money?
I have a question.
Oh, yeah.
Is this the dad from Cheaper by the Dozen?
It's connected to the dad.
Okay. The mom and the dad from Cheaper by the Dozen studied Taylorism and used Taylorism like
Christine Frederick to try to sort of apply the lessons of the factory floor to the home
because the home is a factory that makes little Americans, right?
It's important to also mention Margaret Schutlahosky, who I'm probably not pronouncing that because I'm not a native German speaker, but she was one of the first women architects
to qualify in Austria. She designed the Frankfurt kitchen in 1926 and designed a sort of U-shaped
kitchen with wiped clean surfaces that were very hygienic and it was colorful and there
were lots of little drawers and sort of places to store your rice and your flour. And her idea was, despite being an architect herself, she believed that housework
was a profession that deserved a proper setting and like the right tools for the job. So you
have, on the one hand, this very forward thinking design. I mean, the Frankfurt kitchen is fabulous.
Like you'd be delighted to have a Frankfurt kitchen now.
And there's this kind of idea that this is where women belong.
We're going to advance the technology and advance the design, but it hadn't occurred
to anyone that there might be people who don't want to do this full time.
You know, there might be women or wives or moms who don't want to do this full time.
So the kitchen design of that era is then it becomes a kind of vehicle for class
mobility because it hadn't occurred to anybody that it would be sort of like, you know, get
your man to wash all your dishes. It was more like you're an up and coming person. Maybe
you're working at a department store, you have money, you're newlyweds, you want to
entertain because you're kind of climbing up the social ladder and you have appliances and sometimes they would use phrases like Westinghouse famously has this beautiful
ad from the 20s where a group of ladies are sitting around having tea and they're wearing
all these gorgeous, you know, kind of Bohemian clothes and it says, I have an invisible servant
and the invisible servant is the stove. The appliances are appealing to consumers who
probably never had household staff,
but it's kind of enabling them to become a new kind of person. So it's not so much in that early
period, I have an invisible servant and now I can go beyond the Supreme Court. It's more like I can
be a stay at home lady of the house rather than a housewife. Technology is always about what we
dare to imagine. So it's like, you can imagine having an invisible servant,
but not a husband who helps you.
Exactly.
Which I imagine is why, like my kitchen was built
in I think, you know, 1949.
And I love it, but the counters are much too short for me,
as you would imagine.
I'm like six, two.
I would imagine that.
It's a constant struggle.
And it's very small and it's a small house. But I also wonder if kitchens were built like
that for so long, based on the understanding of no one will help you and no one can hear
you scream. Oh yeah. What happens in the post-war era is now there's a big emphasis on anti-communism.
Of course.
But what's super interesting is that the 50s is an era when there's a strong connection
between the aesthetics of office work and all these different spaces. So if you look
at like the kitchen of the future and the kitchen of tomorrow, a lot of them have, the
miracle kitchen has a command center. So you would see women like sitting at a desk
and going through their recipes and there were filing, you know, drawers and the telephone
and sort of the whole. It feels like they're trying to legitimize housework by making it
look more like office work. And it's like, no, no, yeah, housework is the real work.
Your thing is made up. Your thing is invented, but there was this real, it was appealing to a desire.
Yeah.
And it kind of had the effect of making it seem again, like, well, now you're a
professional.
Because keep in mind, in the late 50s, there are people around who remember
shoveling coal into a stove, right?
Like there are people who remember when the kitchen was like you would physically
were dirty, because of the kind of work you were doing in America.
I mean, cause that's still true in other parts of the world.
Because if you remember not having running water, not having electricity,
not having gas, every time somebody wants to take a shower or a bath,
you're like shoveling coal, you know, laundry is like an all day project,
you know, so it really was like a full time,
like you could not live without doing all of this work pretty much all day long, even if you had help. So the idea that
you can, you know, keep food warm and put a wash in and turn the TV on to entertain
the kids, like suddenly you have all of these techniques to help you be your most fabulous
self at home. I have to give a shout out to the scholar Dolores Hayden, who is not a household
name in the way that I personally insist that she would be. She wrote a book in 1981 called
The Domestic Revolution, that's all about the early social reformers, one of whom was
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, who wrote The Yellow Wallpaper, advocating for things like collective
childcare and group housecleaning and sort of women helping each other with all of their Gilman, who wrote the Yellow Wallpaper, advocating for things like collective child care and
group housecleaning and sort of women helping each other with all of their household necessities.
And they critiqued architecture by saying essentially the single-family home cuts women
off from all the shared resources of being able to have, you know, play groups and kind
of all the – this is over a hundred years ago. And boy did nobody listen.
Boy did nobody listen. Like, man.
Right. And that's the other thing that, I mean, I think it's not an accident that
the Tradwife landscape is largely that because essentially all of the selling
Mrs. Consumer was designed for the white middle class woman.
Right. It's not people at the very top because they don't give a shit.
It's not people at the very top because they don't give a shit. It's not people at the very bottom
because they can't afford it.
But the people in the middle,
especially the lower half of the middle
who want to be in the upper half of the middle,
like ooh, new appliances, like new decor,
better neighborhood, lawn.
Well, and not to jump ahead too much,
but I feel like that is,
this is not an original thought of mine.
I've watched some great commentators talking about especially the restock aesthetic where it's watching people
restock their refrigerators, the clean talk thing where you're using so many products,
watching influencers getting a Stanley cup to go with every outfit they have.
I love Stanley cups.
I have three of them.
I think they're great.
I do not drink enough water.
It's one of the only ways to get me to do it. And I like feeling
like a Utah mom, you know, so we all we all like stuff to one extent or another. And none
of us are are invulnerable to this. But you know, showing influencers going to Target
and buying new bedding, like every month or something like that. And this kind of spiral of over consumption
that we've created feels intrinsically related
to the best possible demographic to market
these aspirational trappings of what we are saying,
financial stability and bounty is people
who feel like they're almost there.
Yes.
And I feel like so many people,
and I'm not saying I have a valid alternative for them,
but so many people get into content creation
and figure out they're good at it,
and get some brand deals and do some videos
that do numbers of them cleaning grapes or whatever.
And then they have the ability to buy,
or to at least buy in return or to be sent as a
gift by a brand they're working with like all of this stuff and whether you're paying
for it or not.
I think like there is a basic American hunger that we are taught from birth to like get
the most stuff because if you have the most stuff, then you won't die.
Well, and that's consumer engineering. And the quote, my favorite is goods fall into two
classes, those that we use, such as motor cars or safety razors, and those that we use up such as
toothpaste or soda biscuits. Consumer engineering must see to it that we use up the kind of goods
that we now merely use. Wearing things out does not produce prosperity. Buying things does.
No, I know. It's like this is really kind of like seeing the like the guy with the knife
come into the house.
Yes. Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. They can't go back. I don't know
how it works.
Exactly. He's not trying to get you to buy stuff. It's fine. You'll notice that one
of the ways that you can date a house, especially if you follow like sort of real estate porn accounts, as we all do, is by the colors of the appliances.
And this was actually something that of all people, Alfred P. Sloan of foundation fame.
So Alfred P. Sloan was the CEO of General Motors. And he the thing that he's most known
for other than Sponsor to you by, is the advent
of annual styling, which was to use different colors.
Because Henry Ford famously didn't do this, right?
So it was sort of to use like, now you can get this car in emerald green and next year
you can get it in burgundy.
And so-
Oh, so he invented Stan Lee's really.
Exactly, exactly.
And then appliances started doing it.
Because again, there's this connection
GM Frigidaire that appliances can start to look dated. So if it's pink or blue, then
it's 1970, you're wanting harvest gold.
God damn you, man. We could have done without that.
Yeah. And it works.
It works so well.
And to this day, we're caught in a cycle where the only thing you can do is just kind
of continually buy like white enamel.
So it looks like it hasn't changed since 1920.
Sarah, I am so sick of it.
And I went to an estate sale recently at a house in southwest Portland that had original
appliances from probably 1962 when I could have wept.
Oh my God.
And they probably work.
Yes, I'm sure they did.
Cause the person who lived there, you know,
had I think been using that kitchen
until the day they died pretty recently.
And the number of beautiful appliances
that were made in a time when I think they would have worked
for much longer than what we're building now
that have been ripped out.
Yep. Yeah, it's, it's horrific.
I can't handle it.
All the golden rods, the avocados, the harvest orange.
The avocados, the harvest gold.
I know the burnt sienna, the burnt sienna.
It's fine.
But I think it's it's crucial to just know that this habit that we have isn't an accident.
And it's also not something that people just didn't have as much stuff.
I mean, we have a storage industry now.
And 100 years ago, we didn't.
One of the grand tricks is to get consumers trapped in a phase where we are so busy acquiring
and shedding stuff at the whim of the marketplace that we never get
to develop taste of our own.
That's absolutely true.
That's a bummer.
Yeah, no, definitely.
There are so many examples in print ads from the 1930s all the way, probably through the
90s and even probably after that about how you look and how not bedraggled you'll be for your
husband if you're...
Oh my god.
Yeah, it's just so gross. There's one that's like a woman who's very busty and it's in
the headline is like stacked. And it's like stacked with technology. And there's a man
kind of staring out. It's just it's so gross. So it's kind of like the consumer in a way
is the man. Right. Because he's probably ultimately paying's so gross. So it's kind of like the consumer in a way is the man.
Because he's probably ultimately paying for the dishwasher.
Because he gets to have a better woman. Because he throws in a dishwasher and now she, and
now you have no excuse to not look great because God forbid you use your extra time to read
a book.
Never. Never.
Or you know, or even to just to do nothing. Yeah.
Right.
Like that's my political plank, women being allowed to do nothing, to just fritter away
an afternoon.
Well, and it's not an accident that we feel that way when the modern kitchen was designed
around principles that modernized factories, right?
Like this obsession that Americans have with always getting things done and being productive.
It doesn't come from nowhere. Like we're all, even if we're consciously.
Yeah, right. We didn't invent hustle culture.
Did you listen to the episode of In Bed With The Right?
No.
So In Bed With The Right, which is a wonderful podcast hosted by Adrian Daub and the great
Moira Donigan, who writes for The Guardian and a number of other places.
One of the best writers of our time, I think.
Oh my God. Yeah, like incredible.
And she wrote a really interesting review of a new book about Housewives for Book Forum
that's called Wife Sentences, which I highly recommend.
So essentially, Moira has a grand unified theory of trad wife-dom, which I think is brilliant.
And part of it is that in the era of like
sort of Obama plus or minus five years, kind of the aughts and teens, the long Obama administration,
the long Obama administration was that sort of the rise of what we could could be termed
the girl boss. And she mentions like nasty gal and Audrey Galman and the wing.
I remember the first time I saw the word girl boss,, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl, the girl But what Moira is arguing is that the tradwife movement is a response to Girl Boston. And
here's why. Because essentially, capitalism, there was a phase when everybody was kind
of celebrating hustle culture, like it was cool, and you could be sort of counterculture
and it was
Oh, I was one of them. I was 24. So I was the right age to be duped by that. Yeah.
Right? Hustle hard. Everybody was hustling. and there was, you know, billionaire biographies.
And everybody has soured on that very understandably so. And that as a result of that, feminism
in kind of the era of Hillary Clinton, sort of the ultimate quote unquote girl blast,
got lumped in. Those two things kind of got connected in people's minds. Feminism means, you know, hyper-capitalism or late capitalism, as the kids call it.
And that as a result of that, there's a kind of far-left man that hates both of those things,
and the tradwife is perfectly calibrated to appeal to him.
So it's somebody who hates neoliberalism, and hates hustle culture, and feels put upon
and is sort of likes the idea of a woman accepting an assigned role. And then the irony, of course,
is that the ones who are really good at it make money. But you can't see it, and they
don't talk about it.
Right. And this is, I feel like where we get into act two, because you and I started talking
about this. We have been in a general way for a long time, because I love to talk about kitchen
design with you and home economics and sort of Stepford wives. Yeah, separate wives this whole
area. But we both, as did the rest of America, as far as I can tell, became utterly bewitched
by Nara Smith and her performative cheerio
making.
Oh, yeah, absolutely. Can you tell us about that? So I for the life of me, I'm not totally
sure I think you mentioned the idea that some of this could be fetish content. And I feel
ill equipped to come down on one side or the other of this. I feel like it might be totally
sincere. It might be tongue in cheek. It may be some combination of all the above. You know, I think that like everything is everything
on the internet. And there are some creators who are doing kind of trad wife parody and section
archway that still some people think is sincere. Like Nora Smith deserves her own description
because she kind of got,
by the time this episode comes out,
this will have completely run its course.
But there was a moment when everybody realized
at the same time that what Nara Smith was doing
was very funny.
And I still don't know what her perspective is
or where she's making these videos from,
but art is more than intent.
But the basic template for a Nara Smith video is something like, this morning my toddler
came into my bedroom asking for hot chocolate.
And so I took some cacao fruit and fermented the beans and made chocolate in about four
to six weeks.
And so it's just like, she has a lovely voice.
And so it's this very pleasing sort of whispery.
It's kind of hypnotic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A very, a little bit step fruity.
People have mentioned that a lot too.
Description of the sort of almost like a poetic form
where your small child asks for a snack and you.
That's your prompt.
Invent the wheel.
Yeah.
To make something from scratch that takes hours to days. And it's such a great
way to drive engagement because of course people are going to be like, your baby is starving.
But it's delightful to watch if you're for it. And it's delightfully crazy making to watch
if you're confused about where this is going. No one can not watch it.
It's a perfect illustration of the aphorism that I stumbled into when I first started
freelancing, which is that money is time. Yes. When you're in charge of your own time,
you start to become acutely aware of like, do I actually want to have this meeting? Like,
does this make sense? Is this just like, could this be handled at an email? Yeah. Or just
ignore it. How about we ignore it? That's also fun. And what I think is so
fascinating about looking at somebody like Nara Smith is that it's almost as though she's
taken rejecting technology or using technology like Instagram when it suits, which is every
day.
Yes, you can use technology as long as it's not in the picture, as long as it's only taking
the picture.
It's invisible.
The invisible servant. Yeah. And this is a
super interesting connection to high end kitchens nowadays, which are like in companies like
plain English kitchens, which do like top, top, top of the line, gorgeous kitchen installations.
You don't see a blinking clock or a flashing light anywhere. It's wood, it's painted, it's Farrowind ball, colors, it's
brass, it's marble. It looks like 1910 and you have help. That's what the kitchen looks
like. It doesn't look high tech at all. So there's something going on in the TradWife
universe that is deliberately low tech in a way that seems sort of theatrically homespun,
and kind of like we're taking the long way to do everything, that seems sort of theatrically homespun, right? And kind of like we're taking
the long way to do everything that feels kind of like a financial flex. Because if you have
time to do that stuff, then you're better off than most of us.
Right. Well, and Bella in a farm again, for people who have actual children to bother
spending time with as opposed to watching videos of other people's online like I do
cats. But this was like, this was an interesting moment in the last few months where the, I
assume they're Mormons if they're not, they're Mormon coded. But this couple that has a farm
in Utah, they have 35,000 kids and they got a following for, you know, the mom posting
videos of like making homemade mozzarella and making homemade grilled cheese with this
very Norris Smith.
Well, did you know Moira on,
in bed with the right said that it's the jet blue fortune.
Right.
That the husband is a jet blue heir.
Yeah. And that was what people were shocked by.
There was this moment when people kind of realized like,
oh, these humble homespun Mormons are jet blue heirs,
which like, by the way,
that's the funniest airline to be an heir for.
I'm an Uber heiress. or JetBlue Airs, which like, by the way, that's the funniest airline to be an air for.
I'm an Uber heiress. It's what Mother would call new money.
Boy is it. Oh, man.
I don't know. And this is a moment too, when you realize kind of the average age of the people in
the comments section, which could be 12, where people are like, wait a minute, you're in this
rustic farmhouse making mozzarella, you're pretending to not be millionaires. And people were like, wait a minute, you're in this rustic farmhouse making mozzarella,
you're pretending to not be millionaires. And it's like, only a millionaire who has
eight children could possibly have the time to be making mozzarella for like a couple
of hours in the middle of the day with all of your kids unoccupied because you're probably
homeschooling them.
Mm hmm. Has time. What runs through a lot of this, because I knew you
brought up white supremacy earlier, and I think that it's
important to touch on like that and essential oils and like a
number of other things QAnon.
Yeah, 20 years ago, those first two things wouldn't have gone
together so easily. Now we all know. We all know.
It's a strange world. They're opting out of consumer culture.
So they're opting out of consumer culture. So they're opting
out of the very thing that created the model housewife in the first place.
Huh. Mrs. Modern thinks she can live without her dishwasher, but she can't.
But I think that part of what we're seeing with people like, and I do not mean to impugn
ballerina farm, I do not know ballerina farm personally, but the homeschooling, homesteading,
home-made-ness of all of this is symbolically
and literally probably opting out of public goods,
public life, shared civic experiences
like public schools, grocery stores.
What is so interesting about like the sort of second wave feminist embrace of,
there's a wonderful print ad that's like a women's lib rally in favor of
dishwashers. So they're like, no more Greece.
Like it's all these women and like dressed kind of like rota like sort of,
you know, cheering for because that it did like having those tools made it
easier, not easy, but easier for women to do more things to participate more in public life.
In the past, it feels like women had been kept home long enough to realize that it might be nice to be able to leave.
Right. Well, this is like what I was saying when we were talking on the phone. I was saying, what is it like?
Vaccines, feminism and NATO have all been around too long, because
people are taking them for granted. And that's how we got into this mess. Yeah. So women
who were growing up now who are, let's say, in their 20s, yes, are not really in memory
distance of things like women can't have their own credit cards. You know what I mean? Whereas
I feel like I'm 46. So I'm, I don't remember it, but my mom sure did
because she lived it. She was out of college and working before row and before.
My mom was a college student when women weren't allowed to run marathons. Wow. You know, because
they thought that your uterus would fall out. We're not that far from that in time.
Yeah. We give boomers a lot of shit. very fairly. However, they are also a link to the past
as I've been thinking lately.
And I think we have, yeah, you know,
when I look at my relationship with my mom,
there are so many paradigm shifts
in terms of how culture is now versus how she grew up in it
that is hard for her to grasp,
but it's also hard for me to grasp the world
as she used to know it.
Oh, I know.
Being one generation away from somebody who had a mother who essentially couldn't leave
a marriage.
Yeah, these freedoms are very easy to forget.
Easy to forget and also easy to not see because they're just part of the fact that you can
vote, the fact that you can own property, the fact that you could start your own business
and have your own line of credit and do, you know, all of that stuff is like 100 years ago, none of it, right,
or 110 years ago. If you grow up with that sort of embedded and then you kind of hear
about the evils of feminism, you might think, well, that's, oh, yeah, feminism is terrible
because it's, I can do everything I want as a woman. It's like, well, that's, that's
for a reason.
Right. Well, and getting, I guess, to sort of the central
question of ACT II, I feel like the seductive idea that, you
know, you see people expressing on social media, kind of either
in a playful way or very seriously, is I don't want to
work, I want to stay home, I want to be a stay at home
girlfriend, I want to be a stay at home wife, I want to be a housewife. Like I want to have the freedom
to take care of my children while a man pays the bills. And obviously there are so many counter
arguments to that which we are about to make. But I also feel like, yes, you shouldn't have to work
like people should not have to work as hard as they're working. It's because the solution isn't to, it feels like we're saying, I don't want to submit
to capitalism.
I just want to submit to a man.
And it's like, we need to figure out how to not submit to anybody somehow.
But I unfortunately do not have the great economic mind that could sort that out for
us.
My thoughts on this, not exactly debate, are that this is a quote from, I'm paraphrasing,
but by Lisa Ann Walter who played Chessie in The Parent Trap, everyone's favorite character.
And I guess I remember reading a quote from her about family and career, neither works without
the other. You know, it was that simple. And there's a lot more to it and the execution is extremely difficult. But
if I have kids, I want to, I think, take care of them a significant amount of time,
not all of the time. I would lose my mind. We were not meant to be forced to be around our children
without any breaks. I don't think that seems seems nuts, humans of all, to have extended families.
Also very true.
And communities.
So like, if I have kids, which I don't know if I will,
I mean, I know that if I committed to that,
then that would be something that I would want
to truly commit to, you know, and put my time
and energy into and not do halfway.
But I love what I do and I wouldn't want to give it up either.
And I think this idea that work has to happen in the shape that men and capital
invented in the industrial revolution, that feels like one of the big problems
here. Yeah. Yeah. It's bullshit.
Because you and I both love what we do. And we also love to waste an afternoon.
We do.
Yeah. And that's the interesting thing is like,
does the trad wife exist when there
isn't a camera pointed at her?
Right.
Right. Because if you are making cereal from scratch for your toddler, your toddler doesn't
care. They probably just want the store-bought kind that's more familiar to them and more
consistent texturally.
They want Froot Loops.
Yeah.
As promised. But that's the thing. I mean, I think it gets back a
little bit to what we talked about in our Martha episode, that it's sort of like because
the content is domesticity, domestic life, that can kind of lead you to think that this
is a reflection of how a person is living, but it's really how a person is producing
content. This is entertainment. You know, It's kind of like, I think your point
about when the cameras are off, how trad are they?
I mean, they might be ordering Domino's
when the cameras are off, we don't know.
Maybe we get into a broader question
where we're all performing our lives
for each other to some extent, right?
At least if you're a creator on social media,
which not everybody is, I'm not,
but I sure do watch a lot of it.
And short form video has these various poetic forms
at this point, like the sonnet or the villanelle,
where we all kind of know what structure we're in
and what we're seeing.
It gives you sort of a sense of place.
For example, it is a convention that we all accept
that if someone shows you like,
what a day in their life is like, or get ready with me,
it will open with a camera that is already set up and running,
showing them pretending to wake up. We know that they didn't leave a camera running all night. We
know they're pretending to wake up, but we all just agree to pretend that they really are waking
up because it's a story. So it's like, I don't assume people are taking all of this literally.
I think a lot of people are very savvy about what they watch and a lot of people are fooled by AI portraits of Jesus on Facebook. So it's hard to know
where the mean is in all this.
Who even knows anymore? I know.
But I think the bigger question there is like, what expectations are we creating for ourselves,
whether we know it or not, when we look at our lives and feel like, you know,
the aesthetics of what we're doing are maybe more important than they are, right?
Women are kind of saddled with expectations and ideas, whether they're very traditional
or very modern or very feminist or very churchy or what, about what we should be doing because
it sets a, you know, we're role models for whomever. And women are human and human beings are very different from one another. So there are lots
of people like you, like me, who love what we do, who are fortunate enough to have really
compelling work.
If you need a citation from within academia to support this radical claim, it is one of
the, I think, keystone claims of queer theory, Eve Kossofsky, Seigwix, people are different
from each other. So the Academy knows too, we have no excuse.
Yeah. There are people who want to live at work, there are people who hate work, there
are people who wish they were in a different line of work, but all of us are different.
And some of us are meant to be rocket scientists and lawyers and op-ed columnists for the Times and some are not. And sometimes
I think it would not kill pundits to acknowledge that even those of us who are in this blanket
category of women have wildly different dreams and desires and hopes for our lives, right?
You know, pundits and New York Times opinion columnists on some level must know that it's
their job to make a tiny grain of sand into a giant gross pearl.
Week after week.
Week after week.
My God, the weeks never stop coming.
But right, that we want different things and we want different things at different times.
And you know, when I think about my life, I really like getting to do the show.
I feel like this is an ideal career for me.
I love getting to sit here and talk about my thoughts and feelings.
And that's ideal for me.
And I get to do it from home.
It would be nice to be forced to be around other people more, but I'm working on that.
But that's something that I only know because I have had the extreme grace and good luck and privilege to be able to build this work for myself.
Yeah. And most people can't.
No one would have given this to me.
Right.
You know, no one would have said, why don't you talk about your thoughts and feelings while sitting on your bed a couple times a week? And that'll be what you do. Nobody was asking for that.
We needed it, but nobody would have asked.
Right, and so this idea that like women need to do
either what the workplace as it has always existed
believes they are useful for
or what men believe they are useful for.
And I know that we all know, or most of us know,
the real question is what do we know we're useful for
and what do we know about the way that we want to spend our lives,
which amounts to how we spend our weeks and our days and our hours. And I think that the awareness
deep down in our guts of what feels good to us is there. And getting stuck in a trend, it might be a
way of getting closer, but it might also just be another distraction. Yeah.
Well, we said we were going to get back to raw milk.
Oh, that's right.
Yes.
So have you seen this is the other one that I wanted to ask you about.
I forgot about this, but this is a channel called Gubba Homestead.
Have you seen this?
No, I have somehow not yet seen Gubba Homestead in my 17 hours a day on TikTok.
So I stumble upon this site, this feed. She's on Twitter, she's on Instagram, and YouTube,
and she'll do... Is there a name for this meme where somebody says like, I'm a brunette,
of course I use this kind of hairbrush. I'm a brunette, of course I use.
Oh, yeah.
What is that?
I think of it as we're girls because I think it started off as we're girls. Of course we're gonna exactly. Yeah, it's one of those. So
she does one of those acceptance. I'm a conspiracy theorist. And she in total seriousness looks
at the camera and says, you know, of course, I believe that the sun doesn't cause cancer
and then goes through all of these other claims that are I mean, look, it's fair to say that the sun is not the only thing causing cancer, especially
in a world with so many super fun sites, but trust me, it still gets the job done. When
I was a kid, I thought everybody's dad was constantly getting melanomas cut off.
A lot of them.
Yeah.
So then here's the thing. I cannot tell for the life of me whether this is satire or not,
because then you go on Twitter and she'll say, do you think this is satire? I'm like,
I don't know.
Yeah, it's like, why don't you tell us?
I know just tell us one by the other. She's a flat earther. They're kind of RFK vibes
almost it's kind of like everything's a scam or a conspiracy. Raw milk is better for you.
Pasturization is a scam.
The food system is poisoning us, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And so there are kind of like teeny tiny elements of aspects of these that are kind of true.
Like the food system is not ideal, let's say, agribusiness in the US.
That's certainly fair.
Yes.
Pasturization is good.
Yeah.
Let's also say so. And the dairy things also,
again, this kind of extreme iteration of opting out of consumer protections. Right. Right. Because
like pasteurization, people died from tainted milk a lot. Yeah, like Nixon's brother. Right.
And that's why he became such a flaming liberal. Milk sterilization was
a huge thing in the progressive era. This was like, I mean, life and death before antibiotics.
So I don't know. I think that people are understandably frustrated by how things be and people's faith
in institutions is shaky, understandably so. And that at the
extremes you're getting like the earth is flat, milk is a scam, birds aren't real,
you know, blah, blah, blah.
We're going to cite Wikipedia in its article on Pose law. Pose law is an adage of internet
culture which says that without a clear indicator of the author's intent, any prerotic or sarcastic expression of extreme views can be mistaken by some
readers for a sincere expression of those views, which you know, easy.
But I would also say, and I know many others have said this, that at this
point, if you're making satire that it is impossible to tell whether it's
satire or not, is it satire?
Yeah, I'm not sure that it is impossible to tell whether it's satire or not. Is it satire? Yeah, I'm not sure that it is.
Like shouldn't there be some indicator, you know,
because we're not mind readers.
Like we need some kind of an indication of authorial intent here.
Right. Well, and because the other thing is she's obsessed with,
I think it's lard, like using lard as a skin emollient or something.
Yeah, there's something's going on with like lard and the tradwives. I have not even
gotten into it, but.
Yeah, something is going on with lard. So she's selling it, which makes me think that
it's either she's serious about making money on it at a minimum.
She's a lardpreneur.
She's a lardpreneur. I mean, that's, you know, very 19th century.
I don't know if we've answered any of the pressing questions for America's homemaking
types, but I feel like the concerns that I brought this topic to you with are basically,
why are we so obsessed with hand making cereal at this point in time and why, why has the trad wife risen? And I, I want to know if you think that this is correct.
Because my analysis based on what we've been talking about is that the past few years, as you've talked about at the top of the show, kind of in a response to the girl boss and the realization correctly that that is unfulfilling. I don't want to be a girl boss.
We see now this countervailing trend of the trad wife and this,
I would say to some extent sincere and real and to some extent astroturfed
conservative at a certain point propaganda showing it feels almost like a
classic bait and switch where it's like, come be a trad wife and you can wear pretty dresses and you can build fires in your wood stove and make
mozzarella for your adoring children and live like a mom in a picture book and live in this
live like a mom in a picture book and live in this world that never was. And in reality, it feels like the more freedom you surrender,
the more worldly freedom you surrender, I don't think that you get any back at home.
I think you just... I'm not going out on a limb here to say that having less freedom in the world,
less access to money, less ability to be a wage earner, less
ability to provide for yourself and your children.
I can't see an argument where that is better for you in the long run.
Right?
More specifically, I can't see an argument where it will work out on a large scale as
a social movement for women to decide to just trust the man they married to take care of them the way they deserve.
Or the men they elected.
It has never worked in the past. It's not going to work now. Or them! I like them even less!
Yeah, because that has not gone great. I was reassured that law was settled, and it turns out that it was not. And I think, yeah, that the key
thing is dropping out of public life. And I think that can look like a lot of things.
I think if let's say you're a content creator and your content is sort of you being a rural
ballerina and making cheese and this, that and the other, if you're making a ton of money
and you're savvy about that, and you are active in political action and
you know, all sorts of other things, then as an individual choice, I can kind of see
where that could work. But I think in general, selling people a fantasy.
But then it's the Schlafly thing. It's the Schlafly thing. It's a pyramid scheme.
Exactly. You're selling people what you have, but you only have it because you're selling
it to other people. And as you rightly point out, it never existed, right? It's like people are selling a version
of like 1900 where there's no TB, no cholera, we have antibiotics, we have the internet,
you know, we have like all the other the actual life that you would have led or that your
ancestors led 100 years ago, 120 years ago, the privations and danger and medical horror of, you know,
all of that is sanitized. And it just basically looks as though you're kind of living in
this, you know, kind of almost shaker sort of modernist present day.
We've made too many historical dramas showing people, you know, with all of their limbs.
I think that was we shouldn't have done that.
Exactly. That was another lie about the past. The more you opt out of civic life, the less
power you have. And even if you don't have money, if you're engaged in public discourse,
if you're taking part in things, that's power and that you can't give that up.
Yeah, I guess two questions. First of all, if the tradwives as we know, and as we are
discussing our, you know, people performing tradwifed him on the internet, if the tradwives as we know, and as we are discussing, are, you know, people performing
tradwife-dom on the internet, is the tradwife even a person who exists? You know, or is she always an
illusion? Is she a vanishing horizon, as we like to see in academia? And then also, in terms of,
you know, the power of becoming an influencer and having brand deals and having money, like,
of the forms of power available to normal people in America today, it's a pretty good one. And I'm not going to tell anyone that it's bad for them, because I think that's patronizing. But it also strikes me that you know, what we've been talking about throughout this conversation, and especially, you know, whenever a Stepford wise reference comes up is that some of the true riches that women have had historically and
in the present and future and I think some of our greatest resources are the community
that we share with each other and the ways that we are able to help each other and to
talk to each other and to I think through our our friendships and through the people
we know get a sense of how do we
really feel? How do I feel? How do you feel? Like what do I need? And to confess like that
my life may look great, but like, I'm not happy, you know, or I aesthetically everything's
pleasing but it hurts inside.
Right. And if you're living on an island, metaphorically, where it's just the husband
and kids and you, and you're in the mountains, there's no public schools, there's no teachers, there's no
town square, there's no community, essentially, it's exactly what Dolores Hayden was arguing,
that like the architecture and the lifestyle boxed women in, so that they were alone with
people who were depending on a certain kind of labor that they could perform. And I think if you're cut off from other parents at school, whatever it is, whatever some that
community looks like, you're more vulnerable and you have less power.
Yeah, I don't know what it's like to be like a mom talk influencer. But I imagine that
like if you wake up and you're like, oh my God, what imaginary toddler requests do I have to do a video about today?
Like you're, you are hustling.
Like you are having to think about what kind of content to produce.
The people who make it seem easy,
I think sometimes are working the hardest and you're dealing brand deals.
You've made a full-time job for yourself.
You have to keep expanding if you're in that mindset,
which most Americans are. And you've also created a situation where it may seem
like you have more access than most people to community. But actually,
I think you're in kind of a water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink kind
of a situation because... Yeah, you might have less. Right? Because you have
to perform your identity every day outwardly. And so the connections you make with people because what you do now is a performance that you
have to do for your corporate allies or whoever you're working with, you know, that it becomes
impossible to express the authentic self that you need in order to connect with other people.
And so the loss of community, whether it's because you're
disappearing into the home or disappearing into the performance is one
of the things that feels most dangerous. Yeah, I agree. And I've said this before
in this podcast or you are good I can't keep track but I live across the street
from my best friend and when I tell people that they're get very misty
and I've noticed since high school.
And if I were to have this great love story
and had this amazing spouse that I had married,
then people would like that story too.
Or I'd be like, I live with my spouse.
I love them so much.
They'd be like, yeah, whatever everyone does.
You know, or like a lot of people are married.
It's whatever, it's normal. But to live
very close, like a few steps away from someone who you have another kind of community with,
I think feels so abnormal in American life that that's what gets people excited.
It's an intentional community. Yeah.
It has contributed to my happiness more than any other individual thing I've done in my life in the past few years and certainly more than anything I've bought.
For sure. Well, you know what's interesting? I recently was researching a piece for AD about doomsday design, like sort of design for the end of the world.
Oh, God.
Which has a very robust history, of course, in the Cold War.
Yeah, the monsters are due on Maple Street. The ritual of sort of going to get a go bag or stockpile is the minute you leave the house
and you're headed to Home Depot, you're on a very kind of individualistic mission to
kind of give yourself supplies and tools.
So okay, like you run out of food after a year, maybe then what do you do?
And essentially the lesson of all of this is that the stuff is a red herring.
Like you do need certain supplies if there's a total calamity, right?
But what you really need are friends and neighbors and skills.
Yeah.
Because if something really terrible happens and agriculture falls apart,
you have to start somewhere, right?
You need to know who knows how to do what in your community.
You need to know, you know, who's a natural leader, who's good at planting.
You know, I would like, we're talking like total apocalypse here, right? I was so kind of inspired by
that to think that it's not about buying a thing. It's about investing in these relationships.
Ah, I love that. Yeah. And then if you're like burnt out by our modern existence and
can't motivate to get off the couch and stop watching the comeback to like go socialize with people.
Remember, you will die if you don't make friends.
That is true.
It's the end of the world as you know it
if you don't have friends.
That's a little too scary.
Yeah, but really, you know,
I think thinking of the time that you spend
with the people you love or, you know,
not even the people you love,
because if we lived in a medieval village, we would not love everyone,
but there would be somebody we tolerated because we got along well, you know,
whenever we had to see each other, the person with the good textiles. Yeah.
The person who makes beer, you know,
the person who knows how to shoe your horse.
And we are in too big of a
national and international community for the kind of go along to get along philosophy to make sense on the scale we're at. But in terms of the communities that we choose for ourselves and that we build for ourselves and yeah, we have to think about what resources can we acquire that won't become valueless tomorrow? You know, and that's...
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, that's probably not like the latest greatest tile.
Yeah.
You know, it's probably not the latest greatest fridge.
I...
You can live happily with a fridge that's 10 years old.
But you know what?
Your fridge won't save you.
That's true.
Even if it wants to.
Yeah.
No.
It can't.
Let us close by quoting Moira Donigan's piece and book forum.
Moira writes, Women still perform the majority of household chores, child care and elder care,
the social maintenance that academics call kin keeping, i.e. remembering their mother-in-law's
birthdays, scheduling
and the management of conflicts, resources, and outside help. Men today do slightly more
of this than their fathers did. They do not do nearly as much as their wives do. Women's
domestic labor is relied upon and enjoyed by everyone in their families, but always
goes uncompensated and routinely goes unnoticed. Now, I know the reason that women do more
of this work than men. There's many reasons, but I think part of it clearly,
especially based on the conversation we're having is
this very pervasive historical idea that women's work women's
interests are lesser than men's not because of what they are,
but because women do them because of their adjacency to
women because women are stupid and terrible. And so is everything we do. And for us to succeed at something a man does is insulting to him.
And for a man to have to do something we succeed at is also insulting to him. That's what
I learned from growing up in the world as it's been to this point. And the point I
would like to close on is that women don't do these things because they're the only jobs left to us because we're inferior.
We do it because we're going to survive and because we're building the structures that are keeping everyone's lives going, not just right now, but in the future.
And the apocalypse is not going to look like a road race through a desert.
It's going to look like agriculture.
So get your loom.
And small neighborhoods.
Yep.
Ah, thank you so much for being with us.
It's always because I always have the best time when you come on.
Me too.
Oh, and people should see you in the Martha Stewart documentary.
Oh, that's right.
Yes, I'm on TV.
Where can people watch that? You can see it, I believe it's a CNN documentary. Oh, that's right. Yes, I'm on TV. Where can people watch that?
You can see it, I believe.
It's a CNN documentary, and I think
you can find it now on Hulu.
And I think it might be on HBO Max for reasons
I don't fully understand.
But I gather that this is the case.
So hard to keep track of all the things.
But that was a super fun experience.
And I wore eyeliner, which I never do.
And that was pretty fun.
So tune in.
Yeah take comfort wherever you can it doesn't matter what you enjoy for entertainment as long as you remember that your life is enough as long as it makes you happy no matter how it looks and
for the love of god don't drink raw milk. Please don't drink raw milk. Please embrace pasteurization
That's beautiful
And that was our episode. Thank you so much for listening. Thank you to Sarah Archer for being an amazing guest as always. We also have a link to a sub stack piece that Sarah
wrote to go along with this episode. We hope you enjoy it. Thank you so much for editing
help from Taj Easton. And thank you as always to Carolyn Kendrick for producing.
That's our episode.
We'll see you in two weeks.