Rob Henderson
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And the show makes references to, you know, how the kid listens to Andrew Tate and how he, you know, there were a couple of times the
he said something about like the 80-20 rule about how 80% of women like 20% of men and so there are a lot of these kind of like red pill manosphere talking points throughout the show basically suggesting heavily that this boy got like you know sucked into this online rabbit hole and then when this girl on Instagram this girl he had a crush on in his class calls him an incel he lashes out gets mad at her and then he stabs her
he said something about like the 80-20 rule about how 80% of women like 20% of men and so there are a lot of these kind of like red pill manosphere talking points throughout the show basically suggesting heavily that this boy got like you know sucked into this online rabbit hole and then when this girl on Instagram this girl he had a crush on in his class calls him an incel he lashes out gets mad at her and then he stabs her
he said something about like the 80-20 rule about how 80% of women like 20% of men and so there are a lot of these kind of like red pill manosphere talking points throughout the show basically suggesting heavily that this boy got like you know sucked into this online rabbit hole and then when this girl on Instagram this girl he had a crush on in his class calls him an incel he lashes out gets mad at her and then he stabs her
and then the boy's arrested, and there's this kind of interesting scene of him. The whole episode, one of the episodes, consists of him speaking with this, I think she's a psychiatrist or something, and they're going back and forth about this. It was interesting as a piece of entertainment. I thought it was beautifully shot, but I don't think... There are a lot of things about this series.
and then the boy's arrested, and there's this kind of interesting scene of him. The whole episode, one of the episodes, consists of him speaking with this, I think she's a psychiatrist or something, and they're going back and forth about this. It was interesting as a piece of entertainment. I thought it was beautifully shot, but I don't think... There are a lot of things about this series.
and then the boy's arrested, and there's this kind of interesting scene of him. The whole episode, one of the episodes, consists of him speaking with this, I think she's a psychiatrist or something, and they're going back and forth about this. It was interesting as a piece of entertainment. I thought it was beautifully shot, but I don't think... There are a lot of things about this series.
It's being treated as a documentary, but it actually doesn't really reflect what happens in real life. you know, like, like, you know, if you look at the statistics for who commits knife crimes, it's not really like white 13 year old working class boys.
It's being treated as a documentary, but it actually doesn't really reflect what happens in real life. you know, like, like, you know, if you look at the statistics for who commits knife crimes, it's not really like white 13 year old working class boys.
It's being treated as a documentary, but it actually doesn't really reflect what happens in real life. you know, like, like, you know, if you look at the statistics for who commits knife crimes, it's not really like white 13 year old working class boys.
If you look at the statistics for who is most interested in watching Andrew Tate, for example, you know, there was this interesting poll going around that they broke down the respondents by race or ethnicity. And it was something like 41% of, so this was in the UK, something like 41% of black males in the UK said they were fans of Andrew Tate.
If you look at the statistics for who is most interested in watching Andrew Tate, for example, you know, there was this interesting poll going around that they broke down the respondents by race or ethnicity. And it was something like 41% of, so this was in the UK, something like 41% of black males in the UK said they were fans of Andrew Tate.
If you look at the statistics for who is most interested in watching Andrew Tate, for example, you know, there was this interesting poll going around that they broke down the respondents by race or ethnicity. And it was something like 41% of, so this was in the UK, something like 41% of black males in the UK said they were fans of Andrew Tate.
And then for, what do they call it, like South Asian or something, Asian men, it was something like 30%. And then for Weiss, it was like by far the lowest. And yet when people talk about his fans, they often say, oh, these white male incels. And then the other thing was, you know, that it was just... Yeah, the whole incel thing. He's 13. The kid looks like he's 11 and a half.
And then for, what do they call it, like South Asian or something, Asian men, it was something like 30%. And then for Weiss, it was like by far the lowest. And yet when people talk about his fans, they often say, oh, these white male incels. And then the other thing was, you know, that it was just... Yeah, the whole incel thing. He's 13. The kid looks like he's 11 and a half.
And then for, what do they call it, like South Asian or something, Asian men, it was something like 30%. And then for Weiss, it was like by far the lowest. And yet when people talk about his fans, they often say, oh, these white male incels. And then the other thing was, you know, that it was just... Yeah, the whole incel thing. He's 13. The kid looks like he's 11 and a half.
His voice hasn't changed. Like, it was just hard for me to fully believe that, you know, some some like prepubescent kid is really feeling so stressed out about, you know, being a virgin or whatever. But William pointed out that actually what's interesting here is that it's not so much that he's upset about not getting laid. It's about being called an incel. And this term has become a slur.
His voice hasn't changed. Like, it was just hard for me to fully believe that, you know, some some like prepubescent kid is really feeling so stressed out about, you know, being a virgin or whatever. But William pointed out that actually what's interesting here is that it's not so much that he's upset about not getting laid. It's about being called an incel. And this term has become a slur.
His voice hasn't changed. Like, it was just hard for me to fully believe that, you know, some some like prepubescent kid is really feeling so stressed out about, you know, being a virgin or whatever. But William pointed out that actually what's interesting here is that it's not so much that he's upset about not getting laid. It's about being called an incel. And this term has become a slur.
And this really embarrassed the kid and so on. But, you know, overall, it was it was fine, but very much sort of it strayed a lot from from reality. And yet it's being received in a lot of the mainstream media as like, oh, it's this iconic series that accurately reflects what's going on with toxic masculinity and so on. Very unrealistic.