Logo

    u mIRCin', brah? ft. Oliver Bateman

    enMarch 01, 2022
    What was the main topic of the podcast episode?
    Summarise the key points discussed in the episode?
    Were there any notable quotes or insights from the speakers?
    Which popular books were mentioned in this episode?
    Were there any points particularly controversial or thought-provoking discussed in the episode?
    Were any current events or trending topics addressed in the episode?

    About this Episode

    This was a wide-ranging conversation.

    We talked about mIRC WWE roleplays, the impossibility of creating a genealogy of bodybuilding forums, how trolling evolved from Usenet to Twitter, the implicit similarities between Aimee Terese and Zyzz, why the digital invites body modification, male-to-male transsexuals, and the lasting impact of what the New York Times’ once dubbed “the male fitness internet.”

    Read Oliver’s EXCELLENT reporting here:

    The Unheard History of Bodybuilding Forums

    Steroid Solidarity

    Muscle, Smoke, Mirrors

    The Life of a Jacked Guy in 2019

    How Selfies and Social Media Shaped Modern Bodybuilding

    What Could Have Triggered Elliot Rodger?

    Books referenced:

    Muscle, Smoke, and Mirrors by Randy Roach

    Muscle: Confessions of an Unlikely Bodybuilder by Sam Fussell

    Theme: I Should Have Walked Away by KAAZE 

    Recent Episodes from The Computer Room

    seduction.com ft. Ross Jeffries

    seduction.com ft. Ross Jeffries

    Ross Jeffries, the author of How to Get the Women You Desire into Bed, The Secrets of Speed Seduction Mastery and webmaster of seduction.com and speedseduction.ai, is considered the Godfather of the Red Pill. In his own words, he "doesn’t know shit about relationships, but he can teach you how to get laid."

    Gio and Katherine sit down and talk to him about the first PUA newsgroup, alt.seduction.fast, seduction.com, and how the PUA community evolved and the Manosphere developed into what it is today. 

    Mini-sode: Cartoon Love

    Mini-sode: Cartoon Love

    Episodes with Gio coming THIS WEEK. We talk so much I haven't been able to edit them down to manageable episodes. I promise!!

    I spoke to fictophile/fictosexual Cait Calder about what it’s like to have a fictional crush.

    When I first talked about fictosexuality over at UnHerd, I got a lot of pushback: Why does this need to be labeled? Don’t all women do this?

    To some extent, sure. The success of Twilight and Fifty Shades is illustrative. Before that, Stephen King wrote an entire book about women's tendency to fall in love not only with fictional characters but with fiction itself—Misery. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth both labeling and exploring. I’m not of the school of thought that the exercise of labeling these more fringe expressions of sexuality is excessive or decadent. If I’ve learned anything from being Terminally Online, it’s that most of these things aren’t “fake.” They’re unconventional and our language hasn’t caught up the way even television has impacted people’s emotional landscapes.

    Online dating, objectum sexuality (when you fall in love with an object, like a robot or a rollercoaster), the limerence of writers like Dante Alighieri, fandom, divine devotion, and fictophilia all exist on a spectrum.

    What are the contours of that spectrum, though? “Loneliness” isn’t a good enough answer. I’m still figuring it out.

    The Myth of "Girl Internet"

    The Myth of "Girl Internet"

    Katherine is DONE with Zoomers re-writing Internet history and being smug to her about it. It is NOT a girl's world, ladies -- at least online. Gio has some other ideas. She and Gio discuss WIRED's "Everyone Is A Girl Online," miladys, Biggie Slonk, pregnant Megumins, and the myth of the "Girl Internet." They collectively mispronounce Tiqqun at least a dozen times.  

    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io