Episode Description
Becky and Taina dig into the rise of the manosphere, toxic masculinity, and the very real pipeline from boyhood insecurity to adult misogyny. What starts as a conversation about a Netflix documentary quickly spirals into a deeper, messier truth: we are watching unhealed men build entire belief systems—and movements—around avoiding their own pain.
They unpack how patriarchy, absent or harmful parenting dynamics, and systemic barriers to mental health support shape the men who go on to harm others at scale. This episode also explores the tension between empathy and accountability, the role of parenting in disrupting these cycles, and why “just get therapy” isn’t as simple (but is still necessary).
Plus: a powerful conversation about fatherhood, chosen family, and what it means to grow up without the support you deserved—and how people find ways to survive anyway.
🧠 Discussed in This Episode:
• The Netflix “manosphere” documentary and why it falls short
• The manosphere pipeline: from young boys to radicalized men
• Why men avoid therapy, and the cultural systems reinforcing that
• How trauma, especially around parents, shapes harmful behavior
• The tension between understanding harm vs. excusing it
• Parenting boys in a misogynistic, algorithm-driven world
• The role of YouTube, gaming culture, and online communities
• Why representation and intersectionality matter at a systemic level
• The myth of the “absent father” narrative and its racist roots
• The lasting impact of the Moynihan Report
• Fatherhood as a role vs. identity—and who gets to opt out
• “Fake dads,” parasocial relationships, and emotional survival
• The feminist critique of parenting structures and gender expectations
• Art, intention vs. impact, and how we interpret meaning
• Film discussion: The Bride and feminist storytelling in cinema
🔗 Resources Mentioned:
• "Why Does Patriarchy Persist?" by Carol Gilligan and Naomi Snider
• The Moynihan Report
• The Manosphere on Netflix