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A History of the Ridiculous

A History of the Ridiculous

A weekly Society, Culture and Philosophy podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
A History of the Ridiculous

A History of the Ridiculous

Episodes
A History of the Ridiculous

A History of the Ridiculous

A weekly Society, Culture and Philosophy podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of A History of the Ridiculous

Mark All
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Sandy Dilley and Stacie Stone come on to discuss the pro-life/pro-choice debate.  This is one of the better episodes this season.Hopefully it’s clear after this episode that the biggest hurdle for the pro-choice movement is the fact that it’s
Harold Shanks and Stacie Stone discuss the Black Lives Matter movement, the reactive All Lives Matter, and the concluding Blue Lives Matter argument.
Stacie Stone returns again to discuss the reactive complaint “not all men” and the Good Guy Syndrome.
It all happens when a man and a woman who love each other very much come to decide they shouldn’t be together anymore and then talk shit about marriage!  Nicki Wright comes on to tell me where I went wrong with everything!
IsoundTaller comes back to discuss the effacement of one’s self and the repression of identity when it comes to labels of mental illnesses.  I don’t want to spoil anything for y’all but we definitely figure out our collective identity crisis on
Katie Hardy and IsoundTaller come on to discuss exclusivity when it comes to talking and joking about mental health, inside and outside of the comedy world.
This episode, comedian Nate Fridson joins me to discuss the relationships between college and success; video games and violence; and gender and dialectical authority.
Katie Hardy and Jen Losey James of Suck It Suicide and Six Feet Over come on to discuss the disqualifying and invalidating ways in which mental health is discussed from outside.These wonderful people do great work and it’s quite clear in how t
Alex Gara’s comes onto the show for the first time to discuss the significance behind addressing your habits as they are instead of repressing them with “good” acts or new habitual routines.  Taking a look at habits as inherently destructive to
Stacie Stone returns to discuss the idea of “the Real Woman”: the morality behind the suggestion, the ethics of comparison, the idealized objectification, and behavioral expectation of women.  The stories get tangential to the argument but stay
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