Afleveringen

  • The girlies are back with more things they don't understand. Such as... how do GIANT boats float? What the fuck is a nitrate? Why do we have baby teeth? Was Trisha Paytas right all along? And more

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

  • The girlies dive into the world of American talk shows — the modern circus helmed by formidable “experts.” They track the history of syndicated television, the rise of popular figureheads like Dr. Phil and Judge Judy, and interrogate the philosophical carnival that makes these programs simultaneously appealing and horrifying. Digressions include our favorite Instagram Reels creators, and how one listener’s family was ripped apart via the diet terrorism of Dr. Oz.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan. Research assistance from Penelope Spurr.

    SOURCES:

    Admissible in a Court of Law: dna, paternity, and the talk show

    And God Created Oprah

    “America’s Doctor” Dr Oz fights back against critics

    Bodies Defined and Confined

    Don't Be Funny: Litigation is no laughing matter to your clients

    Electronic Carnival: spectacularizing talk

    Family Experts on Television Talk Shows: Facts, Values, and Half-Truths

    E-mails offer glimpse into launch of Dr. Phil-endorsed diet products

    Life in the Bleep-Cycle: Inventing Id -TV on the Jerry Springer Show

    Nielsen Ratings, 2007

    Nobrow Culture

    Oprah and The Party Crashers

    Televised medical talk shows—what they recommend and the evidence to support their

    The Commercial Logic of Vulture Culture: how corporate media shape talk show culture

    The Commodification of Talk Show Culture

    The People's Law versus Judge Judy Justice: Two Models of Law in American Reality-Based Courtroom TV

    THE TALK SHOW AND THE TERROR OF CONVERSATION

    The time Oprah Winfrey beefed with the Texas cattle industry

    TV talk show therapy as a distinct genre of discourse

    What’s Wrong With Dr. Oz?

    Dr. Oz Shouldn't Be a Senator--or a Doctor.

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  • Redacted takes the third mic to pose some unique, hypothetical questions. Would you save your nephew from years of torturous bullying by striking David Delouise with lightning, just once? Would you believe your son, even if he was tinfoil? These questions are answered, and more.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

  • The girlies break down the establishments that plague our neighborhoods and corporatize our lunch hours: fast casual restaurants. From Cava to Chipotle, have we really elevated fast food or just made it more expensive? Digressions include a petty gripes section, the Olympics of transvestigation, and tens of thousands of rewards points.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan. Research assistance from Penelope Spurr.

    SOURCES:

    10 storylines that defined the decade in fast food

    90 Minutes With The Chipotle Boys

    Calories Often Absent on Third-Party Food Delivery Platforms, Analysis Finds

    Chipotle enhances partnership with top influencers

    Chipotle is constantly searching for the intersection of its brand and culture

    Chipotle is selling 'Chipotle Boy' bowls aimed at vest-wearing finance bros

    Consumer control and customization in online environments

    Fast-casual consumers: Who are they?

    Food of the ‘90s: Fast, Fun, and Environment Friendly

    How Sweetgreen turned itself into a restaurant that’s known for food quality instead of a technology startup that happens to sell food

    Impacts of the 2008 Great Recession on dietary intake: a systematic review and meta-analysis

    In a Burger World, Can Sweetgreen Scale Up?

    Kendrick Lamar kicked Sweetlife Fest founder off stage

    Personalization Psychology: Why We Crave Customization.

    Rise of the Restaurant Robots: Chipotle, Sweetgreen and Others Bet on Automation

    Salad Days Are Gone: I Went to Sweetgreen’s Music Festival

    Server-less Restaurants Might Be the Future of Dining

    Sweetgreen 2022 Impact Report

    Sweetgreen beats ‘sad desk salad’ vibes to soar above fast-food competitors. It can thank fancy foods, high prices—and robots

    Sweetgreen just pulled the plug on the Sweetlife Festival. Here’s what’s likely to replace it.

    Sweetgreen makes boom at LA launch with performances by BANKS and Alvvays

    Sweetgreen Marketing Strategy: Uncovering Key Ingredients Behind Growth

    Sweetgreen stock soars after its IPO, valued at $5.5 billion

    The Controversial Rise Of Fast Casual Bowl Restaurants

    The Origin of the 9-5 Work Schedule and Its Crazy Incompatibility with the Modern World

    The Role of Technology in Fast Casual Restaurants: Ordering Apps and Self-Service Kiosks

    Two Years After Buying Spyce, Sweetgreen Launches Infinite Kitchen Robotic Restaurant

    Unintentional food zoning: A case study of East Harlem, New York

    When McDonald’s was America and America was McDonald’s

    Why a Salad Company Has a Tech Team

    Why fast-casual restaurants became the decade’s most important food trend

    Why is fast casual winning?

  • The girlies do a pop culture recap of the last several weeks. They discuss the Ballerina Farm article that broke the internet, the potential of falling out of a coconut tree during brat summer, and more. Plus, a #NotSponsored segment all about their favorite and least favorite products.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

    Come see us on tour! Find tickets for our Boston and NYC shows at linktr.ee/binchtopia

  • The girlies investigate our modern-day digital panopticon through an exploration on the history of surveillance in the US. From wiretapping to Watergate to hidden AirBnb spyware, Americans have been accustomed to and unsettled by being watched for decades. Digressions include the 2016 vibes and a pig named Heidi Klum.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan. Research assistance from Penelope Spurr.

    NOTE: This episode mentions the role of surveillance in cases of police brutality. We wanted to note that it was recorded before the horrific murder of Sonya Massey by the police — a tragic reminder, as mentioned in the episode, that surveillance alone is rarely enough to provoke justice. Our thoughts are with the Massey family.

    SOURCES:

    19th Century - The Origins of Surveillance

    A Brief History of Surveillance in America

    Airbnb Has a Hidden-Camera Problem

    CAN THE USE OF ‘NANNY CAMS’ BE MORALLY JUSTIFIED?

    Castle Doctrine

    During the COVID-19 Pandemic

    Electronic performance monitoring: a risk factor for workplace stress

    George Holliday, Who Taped Police Beating of Rodney King, Dies at 61

    How citizen journalism has changed since George Holliday’s Rodney King video

    John Locke and the labor theory of value

    Psychological aspects of active surveillance

    Psychology and Surveillance Capitalism: The Risk of Pushing Mental Health Apps

    She Thought She Caught a Man Cheating, So She Posted on TikTok

    Social anxiety disorder: more than just shyness

    Sun on Privacy: 'Get Over It' | WIRED

    Surveillance as Cultural Practice

    Surveillance Culture: Engagement, Exposure, and Ethics in Digital Modernity

    Surveillance of the intimate

    Surveillance under the Patriot Act

    Towards a psychology of surveillance: do ‘watching eyes’ affect behaviour?

    The Employer-Surveillance State

    The Work of Being Watched: Interactive Media and the Exploitation of Self-Disclosure

    There’s no place like home

    They Used Smartphone Cameras to Record Police Brutality—and Change History

    What constant surveillance does to your brain

    ‘What have you caught?' Nannycams and hidden cameras as normalised Watching Me, Watching You

    Where would racial progress in policing be without camera phones?

    Who's watching?: Daily practices of surveillance among contemporary families

    Why we must continue to turn the camera on police

    Us and them - the social impact of 'new surveillance' technologies

  • The girlies discuss two internet figures who fell from grace before finding redemption: Bhad Bhabie and Trisha Paytas. Digressions include the Cody Ko situation and the potential of being coconut-pilled.

    NOTE: This episode was recorded ahead of the announcement that Joe Biden would pull out of the Presidential race and endorse Kamala Harris.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

    Come see us on tour! Find tickets for our SF, LA, Boston, and NYC shows at linktr.ee/binchtopia

  • The girlies discuss the rise of pet culture — how we managed to domesticate animals, why we love them so much, and how a pet-centric world may not be best for either of us. Digressions include a heavily edited intro to save us from placement on an FBI watchlist.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Olivia Burdette. Research assistance from Penelope Spurr.

    Come see us on tour! Find tickets at linktr.ee/binchtopia

    To see the video version of this episode, access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

    SOURCES:

    A new airline for dogs takes flight

    Animals Made Americans Human: Sentient Creatures and the Creation of America’s Moral Sensibility

    A Non-companion Species Manifesto: Humans, Wild Animals, and "The Pain of Anthropomorphism"

    Are we loving our pets to death?

    Ask Smithsonian: When Did People Start Keeping Pets?

    Bulldogs are prone to health problems. New Hampshire could limit their breeding

    Catland

    Critical Pet Studies?

    Dogs and Birds in Plato

    Dogs and their collars in Ancient Mesopotamia

    Earliest evidence for commensal processes of cat domestication

    Elite Cultures

    Fido, Fluffy, and wildlife conservation: the environmental consequences of animal domestication

    From wild animals to domestic pets, an evolutionary view of domestication

    How the Victorians engineered the dog breeds we love today

    Hump stump solved: camels arrived in region much later than biblical reference

    Industry Trends and Stats

    Leona Helmsley and Her Millionaire Dog?

    Looking to improve company culture? Offer pet bereavement

    MEDIEVAL DOG NAMES

    Most Americans can’t afford a $1,000 emergency

    Pawtriats: Our Changing Relationship With Pets Throughout History

    Pet ownership statistics 2024

    Pets: Why do we have them?

    Prehistoric Puppy May Be Earliest Evidence of Pet-Human Bonding

    Prevalence of pet anxiety in the U.S., 2022

    Show dogs and breeding

    Speculations on the Role of Animal Cults in the Economy of Ancient Egypt

    The Benefit of Pets and Animal-Assisted Therapy to the Health of Older Individuals

    The Cost of Cuteness: Health and Welfare Issues Associated with Brachycephalic Dog Breeds

    The Changing Valuation of Dogs

    The Family Pet

    The Histories

    “The Mayor is a dog”: The coming of age of contemporary American pet culture

    The Meaning of American Pet Cemetery Gravestones

    The Taming of the Cat

    The World of Medieval Dogs

    Women, Pets, and Imperialism: the British Pekingese Dog and Nostalgia for Old China

  • The girlies get to the bottom of an age-old question: what type of woman are you? Normal or ugly? Through an exploration of aesthetic categorization trends, they interrogate the history of categorizing our bodies, choosing our colors, and finding new ways to hate ourselves. They also discuss their on-the-ground experiences at a color analysis studio and Kibbe typing themselves at home. Digressions include a dismal recap of The Debate That Makes You Old and decoding some listener’s dreams.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan. Research assistance by Penelope Spurr.

    Come see us on tour! Find tickets at linktr.ee/binchtopia

    To see the video version of this episode, access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

    SOURCES:

    A Color Notation

    A Dive into Chinese Colors

    American’s Can’t Escape Long-Disproven Body Stereotypes

    An Interview with Regina Lee Blaszczyk

    Are You a ‘Spring’ or a ‘Winter’? It Could Cost You $500 to Find Out.

    Aristotle and Alexander of Aphrodisias on Colour

    Color and Consumption

    Color and Psychological Functioning

    Color Me a Season

    Color Symbolism Represented in Buddhist Traditions

    Embodying Normalcy: Anthropometry and the Long Arm of William H. Sheldon's Somatotyping Project

    Empedocles

    First Impressions of Personality Traits from Body Shapes

    Goethe on the Psychology of Color and Emotion

    How this retro beauty theory became the latest TikTok craze

    How to choose the right snacks for your body type

    Perkins Mauve: Ancestor of the Organic Chemical Industry

    Roger and Me

    The Color Revolution

    The Colors That Suit You Are Set for Life — & Here’s How I Found Mine

    The David Kibbe Story

    The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal

    The Industrial Design Reader

    The Kibbe Body Type Test

    The Laws of Contrast of Color

    The Natural History

    The Search for One’s True Colors

    Theories Of Vision And Color Perception Of Empedocles

    What’s Your Body Type?

    What’s Your Kibbe Type?

  • The girlies invite you to a slumber party and answer some of your queries: can I learn to see men as people? How do I go on living (without looking forward to the Next Big Thing)? Who is your crush right now????? Plus, our dream Survivor line-ups.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

  • The girlies talk genius. Is it a magical trait only available to a lucky few? Is it a practiced skill that can be honed by anyone? They use two geniuses from history — Temple Grandin and Leonardo DaVinci — as case studies to talk about what makes up the most ingenious among us.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan. Research assistance from Penelope Spurr.

    To support the podcast on Patreon and access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia) and become a patron today.

    SOURCES:

    A Conversation with Temple Grandin, Humane Animal Scientist

    Against Algebra

    Ahead of His Time: Leonardo Da Vinci’s Contributions to Engineering

    An Interview with Temple Grandin.

    Animal Welfare: A Practical Approach

    BBC: The Woman Who Thinks Like a Cow

    Displaying Autism: The Thinking and Images of Temple Grandin (2010)

    Emergence: Labeled Autistic

    Emmys 2010: Who is Temple Grandin?

    Epochs in Endourology: The da Vinci Robot

    From Bullied to Brilliant: How Temple Grandin embraces autism

    How the Squeeze Machine Came to Be

    Is there a link between Asperger's and genius?

    Leonardo da Vinci: Engineer, Bioengineer, Anatomist, and Artist

    Leonardo Da Vinci’s Invention

    Leonardo da Vinci's last home - Chateau de Clos Lucé

    Leonardo da Vinci may have had ADHD, leading professor says

    Perspectives on Education from a Person on the Autism Spectrum

    Q&A: Temple Grandin on the Autistic Brain

    Qualities of an Animal Scientist: Cow’s Eye View and Autism

    Sources of Inspiration in the Science and Art of Leonardo da Vinci

    Temple Grandin, Translator: Sounding Autism, Seeing Animals, Making a Difference

    “We need all kinds of minds”: Temple Grandin on why neurodivergent thinkers are essential

    What Makes a Genius?

  • The girlies venture back into the depths of Reddit to uncover some shocking relational horrors — a boyfriend who buys breast milk on Facebook marketplace, a husband with a secret Rag, a guy who moans his own name during sex, and more. Digressions include a lengthy preamble about the incoming Baldwinito reality show and how America is poisoning us all.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

  • The girlies welcome the summer months by investigating a most troubling query: why is nobody partying anymore? We used to rave in underground warehouses and dance all night at Studio 54, now we stand in line for hours to be bored at the club clutching a vodka soda. They try to get to the bottom of what went wrong by looking back — from the invention of the gas lamp that made dancing all night a possibility to the disco demolition that brought in a regressive wave against dance music. Plus, the very first Binchtopia listener survey! Digressions include a disturbing trend of BORGtopia and the birth of Binchtopia HQ.

    SOURCES:

    A Glimpse into the Glamorous World of Studio 54

    Disco: Afro-American Vernacular Performance

    Disco Demolition: the night they tried to crush black music

    “Do You Think I’m Disco?”

    How UK Ravers Raged Against the Ban

    I Feel Love: Disco and Its Discontents

    In an isolated world, humans need to dance together more than ever – but we’re running out of places to do it

    New York Literally Invented Nightlife

    Nightlife in the City

    Partying Feels Different Now

    Party Lines: Dance Music and the Making of Modern Britain by Ed Gillett

    Studio 54 opens in New York City | April 26, 1977

    The Death of the Party

    The Story of the Windrush

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan.

    To support the podcast on Patreon and access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

  • The girlies return to form with a chatty episode, catching you up on the horrors that have befallen their personal lives during their consecutive moves. After falling down the stairs (twice!) being bedridden with pain and beyond the hope of D-Mannose, leaving half a house in Los Angeles, and crying in the emergency veterinarian's office and on the plane, finally, they have both landed safely in New York to pod all about it.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan.

    To support the podcast on Patreon and access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

  • The girlies are back with another treat from Colleen Hoover, who bravely asked the question: what if the villain could also suck dick? They review Verity, a crime thriller made up of another pick-me from loser academy, a strange house in the woods, and (did we mention?) PLENTY of blowjobs.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia (http://patreon.com/binchtopia)
    and become a patron today.

  • The girlies pick up the story of marijuana where they left off in the 1960’s, exploring how weed evolved from America’s enemy to capitalism’s sweetheart. They discuss the student protestors who lit up for peace, the drug war collab between Nixon and Reagan, how the cops convinced kids to snitch on their parents, and more! Digressions include an exciting geographical announcement, a two year old who can’t read, and Nancy Reagan off the percs.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan.

    To support the podcast on Patreon and access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

    SOURCES:

    Cannabis Use and its Association with Psychological Disorders - PMC

    DARE snitches: A history of kids who thought they were doing what was right.

    Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall of Marijuana in America

    He's serving 40 years in prison, while legal marijuana makes others rich

    Just Say No - Campaign, Nancy Reagan & Drugs

    Kent State University Archives: Legal Cases Chronology May 5, 1970 - January 4, 1979

    Medicinal Cannabis: History, Pharmacology, And Implications for the Acute Care Setting

    Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana - Medical, Recreational, and Scientific

    The Forbidden Fruit and the Tree of Knowledge: An Inquiry into the Legal History of American Marijuana Prohibition

    HOW HARMFUL IS MARIJUANA? - Marijuana as Medicine?

    The history of Jews and marijuana goes back a lot farther than you think

    The Science behind the DEA's Long War on Marijuana

    The Summer of Love and Protest: Transatlantic Counterculture in the 1960s

    The war on marijuana: The transformation of the war on drugs in the 1990s

    Was Nixon's war on drugs a racially motivated crusade? It's a bit more complicated

    What Ever Happened to 'Just Say No'?

    What marijuana reclassification means for the United States

  • Inspired by the famous 36 questions that lead to love, the girlies created their own list that really gets to the heart of people - what inedible object did you chew on as a child? Which of your ex's parents is your favorite? And other important queries that will undoubtedly bring two people closer.

    This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive episode. To listen to the full episode and access over 50 bonus episodes, mediasodes, and monthly zoom hangs visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

  • In honor of 4/20, the girlies walk you through the hazy history of a most special substance: marijuana. In the first of two episodes, they discuss how weed has been used throughout history to treat medical maladies and help people connect with the spiritual realm. Plus, how the Mexican Revolution brought the exotic “marihuana” to the states, the original dealers who helped the Jazz greats make their grooviest tunes, Reefer Madness, and more. Digressions include a cursory review of the new Taylor Swift album, the confusing world of TikTok Rizz Party, and our dream blunt rotation.

    This episode was produced by Julia Hava and Eliza Mclamb and edited by Allison Hagan.

    To support the podcast on Patreon and access 50+ bonus episodes, mediasodes, zoom hangouts and more, visit patreon.com/binchtopia and become a patron today.

    SOURCES:

    A Brief Global History of the War on Cannabis

    Busted - America's War On Marijuana

    Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall of Marijuana in America

    History of cannabis

    History of cannabis and its preparations in saga, science, and sobriquet

    History of cannabis and the endocannabinoid system

    In Jamaica, Rastas ready for pot decriminalization

    Marijuana - Plant, Use & Effects

    Rastafari gain sacramental rights to marijuana in Antigua and Barbuda, celebrate freedom of worship

    Shiva Is A God Who Likes Marijuana — And So Do Many Of His Followers

    Shiva, Lord of Bhang

    Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana - Medical, Recreational, and Scientific

    The Mysterious History Of 'Marijuana' : Code Switch

  • The girlies tell the stories of two historical events that were doomed from the start: the Donner Party and The Great Emu War. From the cannibalistic Western settlers to the Australians who thought they could gun down 20,000 wild emus, humans vastly underestimated their environment and suffered the consequences. This is a teaser for a Patreon-exclusive bonus episode. To become a Patron and get access to this episode along with 50+ other bonus episodes, go to www.patreon.com/binchtopia

  • Inspired by the culture’s latest cheating scandals, the girlies unpack monogamy as a social norm and explore what happens when we break the rules. They explore theories of mononormativity, investigate the psychological consequences of being cheated on, and try to answer a pressing question: why are we still attempting monogamy if people keep having affairs? Digressions include the NYC earthquake, kindhearted midwesterners, and one listener’s love of Hoop.

    SOURCES:

    Abolish the Family: A Manifesto for Care and Liberation

    Anatomy of Love

    Compulsory Monogamy and Polyamorous Existence

    Forgiveness of Sexual Cheating in Romantic Relationships

    Greater Wealth Inequality, Less Polygyny: Rethinking the Polygyny Threshold Model

    Love Is Not a Permanent State of Enthusiasm: An Interview with Esther Perel

    Once A Cheater, Always A Cheater? Marriage Therapists Weigh In

    Post Infidelity Stress Disorder

    Sex at Dawn

    That’s Revolting! Queer Strategies for Resisting Assimilation

    The Aftershocks of Infidelity: A Review of Infidelity-Based Attachment Trauma

    The Red Queen

    Was That Cheating? Perceptions Vary by Sex, Attachment Anxiety, and Behavior

    What’s Wrong With Infidelity?