Matt Bernstein
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Whereas after they divorced, not only were they separated, but they both had to work, which I just think is so sad.
And like, one of my favorite things about this podcast is taking these figures who become enormous and evil and bigger than themselves.
And just like looking at stuff like this, because, you know, it's like, you know, like we're all human.
Like I, I fucking hate it.
I just forever feel like that girl in Mean Girls with the cake who's like crying, being like, why can't we all love each other?
And then they're like, she doesn't even go here.
But anyway, in 2007, as a 17 year old high school student, Candace Owens received a barrage of racist voicemails from three white male classmates, including one of whom was the son of Danelle Malloy, the man who would go on to become the Democratic governor of Connecticut.
And this is just kind of wild to me because it's obviously horrible that she received this like racist hate crime.
But also one of the one of the people who committed that hate crime being the son of a Democratic politician.
I have to wonder if that's part of where this like resentment towards like the left stems from, you know.
Candace's family sued the local board of education over the incident saying that they didn't protect her.
And she won thirty seven thousand five hundred dollars from that lawsuit.
She majored in journalism at University of Rhode Island, but dropped out after junior year because of what she says was a problem with a student loan, which I'm sure there was a technical issue.
But I think, you know, the bottom line is like she couldn't afford tuition.
That's also just something that like happens to a lot of people in this country now more than ever.
Tuition is fucking insane.
And it's sad that she becomes one of these people who ends up essentially pulling up the ladder behind her.
After dropping out of school, Candace Owens gets an internship at Vogue.
She's like in New York City working an internship at Vogue.
Did you know this, Taylor?