Tuesday, December 2nd, 2025 Today, it’s election day in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District; Democrats have launched an investigation into Kash Patel’s travel; after denying the second boat strike on September 2nd killing two survivors - the White House now admits it; the White House has also released some fake MRI results for Donald; the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the disqualification of Alina Habba; Trump issues two pardons - one to a drug lord and another to a fraudster; and Allison and Dana read your Good News.
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2025
Today, it’s election day in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District; Democrats have launched an investigation into Kash Patel’s travel; after denying the second boat strike on September 2nd killing two survivors - the White House now admits it; the White House has also released some fake MRI results for Donald; the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the disqualification of Alina Habba; Trump issues two pardons - one to a drug lord and another to a fraudster; and Allison and Dana read your Good News.
Thank You, IQBAR
Text DAILYBEANS to 64000 to get 20% off all IQBAR products, plus FREE shipping. Message and data rates may apply.
Thank You, Fast Growing Trees
Get 15% off your first purchase. FastGrowingTrees.com/dailybeans
Guest: Tarpley Hitt
Barbieland | Book by Tarpley Hitt | Official Publisher Page | Simon & Schuster
The Drift
Tarpley - Bluesky, @tarpleyhitt -Twitter
EVENTS:
Dec 3rd - Barbieland | McNally Jackson Books NY
An Evening with Tarpley Hitt author of Barbie Land: The Unauthorized History | Ferguson Library - Jan 13th 2026
Subscribe to MSW Media’s YouTube Channel - YouTube
Stories
White House confirms second Sept. 2 strike on alleged drug boat | NBC News
Democrats begin congressional probe of Kash Patel's use of FBI Gulfstream jet | CBS News
Rising This Week: The next domino to fall?| Adam Klasfeld | All Rise News
Trump Frees Fraudster Just Days Into Seven-Year Prison Sentence | The New York Times
Honduras election: presidential candidates locked in 'technical tie', official says | BBC
Good Trouble
Meet the neo-Nazi targeting kids online, teaching them to hate and to prepare to kill | NewsChannel5 Investigates
bsky.app/profile/philinvestigates.com/post/3m5ui3d4ap22e
"If anyone wants to respond to neo-Nazi Jon Minadeo targeting children, see the posts below. You too can report “goyimtv.st” and “gtvflyers.st” for hate speech, livestreaming video of children w/o consent, urging kids to buy guns and to prepare to kill non-white people"
-Phil Williams
Report goyimtv.st and gtvflyers.st to their domain registrar nic.st/.
abuse@nic.st and any chat apps where this guy is spreading his hate.
Read more about Jon Minadeo and his “Goyim Defense League” at George Washington University’s website:
Goyim Defense League (GDL) | Program on Extremism | The George Washington University
They are on the ropes, don’t let up!
Today is the day to elect Aftyn Behn Aftyn for Congress Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District
→No Contract, No Coffee
→AACN Dept. of Education Proposed Limitation of Student Loan Access for Nursing
→Red, Wine and Blue active North Carolina Community Trouble Nation
→Mutual Aid Relief Fund, Mutual Aid Hub, GiveDirectly.org/snap
→Group Directory - The Visibility Brigade: Resistance is Possible
→Vote Yes 836 - Oklahoma is gathering signatures
→How to Organize a Bearing Witness Standout
→Indiana teacher snitch portal - Eyes on Education
→Find Your Representative | house.gov, Contacting U.S. Senators
Join Dana and The Daily Beans and support on Giving Tuesday
Giving Tuesday - Support the work of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ civil rights organization - The Daily Beans
From The Good News
Giving Tuesday - Support the work of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ+ civil rights organization - The Daily Beans
Pattie Gonia (@pattiegonia) • Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DRr0GA9DPsl/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
→Please submit your own Good Trouble and/or Good News.
Our Donation Links
National Security Counselors - Donate, MSW Media, Blue Wave CA Victory Fund | ActBlue, WhistleblowerAid.org/beans
Federal workers - email AG at fedoath@pm.me and let me know what you’re going to do, or just vent. I’m always here to listen.
Find Upcoming Actions 50501 Movement, No Kings.org, Indivisible.org
Dr. Allison Gill - Substack, BlueSky , TikTok, IG, Twitter
Dana Goldberg - The 2025 Out100, BlueSky, Twitter, IG, facebook, danagoldberg.com
More from MSW Media - Shows - MSW Media, Cleanup On Aisle 45 pod, The Breakdown | Substack
Reminder - you can see the pod pics if you become a Patron. The good news pics are at the bottom of the show notes of each Patreon episode! That’s just one of the perks of subscribing! patreon.com/muellershewrote
MSW Media. Hello and welcome to the Daily beans for Tuesday, December 2, 2025. Today, it's Election Day in Tennessee's 7th congressional district. Democrats have launched an investigation into Kash Patel's travel. After denying the second boat strike on September 2, killing two survivors, the White House is now admitting it. The White House has also released some fake MRI results for Donald Trump. The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the disqualification of parking lot lawyer Alina Haba. And Trump has issued two pardons. Well, one pardon and one commutation. One to a drug lord and another to a fraudster. I'm Alison Gill.
And I'm Dana Goldberg.
Happy Election Day, my friend. Yes.
Happy election Day. And, oh, my God. Tennessee 7. If you're, like we said, if you're anywhere near the district, anyone in the district, you know, anyone in the district, if, you're in the district, just go out and vote, please. It would be incredible to flip this 22 point swing from Trump winning in the last election. Let's show them, really, how pissed everybody is.
Yeah. Wow. It would be incredible. And we'll bring you the results, maybe not tomorrow, but maybe the next day. Or we'll have late breaking results tomorrow that we try to try to shoehorn into the episode. You know how we do, like, break ins like we did on Tuesday night when Democrats won everything within 20 minutes of polls closing. So we'll see what happens. And, boy. Yeah, get out and vote. Also today, I'm going to be talking with, Tarpley hit. She's written a book called Barbieland, the Unauthorized History. There's so much in here I didn't know. And her book comes out today. It's gonna make a great holiday gift for Barbie, fans in your life. And we're gonna speak to her.
White House says president had MRI on heart and abdomen as part of routine screening
And, we also have a couple of other things going on with the president's quote, unquote, health. Yeah.
Donald Trump's Dr. Allison actually says the president had an MRI imaging okay. On his heart and abdomen in October as part of a preventative screening for men his age, quote, unquote. That's according to a memo from the physician released by the White House on Monday. And we know we can't tr. Physician. in my opinion, that is saying the doctor, you know, that the president is the most healthy they've ever seen anyone. Now, Sean Barbarella, great name, by the way. Even if he's not a good guy, I don't know, he might be said in the statement that Trump's physical exam included advanced imaging that is standard for an executive physical in Trump's age group. Now, Barbarella concluded that the cardiovascular and abdominal imaging, and I quote, was perfectly normal. How is that possible when you have admitted you have a circulation issue making your cankles swell up? Where do you think that blood comes from?
Yeah, and I'm sorry, but an MRI is not standard. No. For an executive physical.
No, it is not.
Now, Trump said on Sunday that he has no idea what part of the body got the mri. It was just an mri. He said what part of the body? He said it wasn't the brain because I took a cognitive test and I aced it. So so called preventive cardiac and abdominal MRIs. Again, not part of a routine screening. But I don't know. I hope his butthole explodes. I can't with this because, if he says it wasn't for his brain, then that has to have been for his brain. But this doctor is saying it was for his abdomen and heart and that it was totally normal and part of a routine physical. Whatever.
White House confirms second strike on alleged drug boat from Venezuela in September
All right, everybody, we got a lot of news to get to. Let's hit the hot notes. Hot, notes. All right, Dana. First up from NBC. The White House confirmed Monday that the U.S. did launch a second strike on an alleged drug boat from Venezuela in early September and that it was ordered by Admiral Frank M. Bradley, who at the time headed the Joint Special Operations Command. The follow up strike killed the survivors of an initial US Strike on the vessel, which the Trump administration has said originated from Venezuela. Some lawmakers and legal experts say that the second attack is a war crime. Quote, with respect to the strikes in question. On September 2, Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes. That's what White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt said in a statement during Monday's briefing. She went on to say Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated. This is off the coast of Venezuela. Do you know how many places there are to go between there and the United States? Like, what makes, frankly, and for the whole this, like all we. That's not how we do it in interdiction. We stop the boat, we board the boat, we arrest the people, we prosecute the people. If they have drugs. Now, on Sunday, President Trump told reporters that Hegseth did not order the second strike. He didn't. He said he didn't do it. He said he didn't do it. That's what Trump said, who also said he didn't know if the second strike even happened. The president said he wouldn't have wanted it. Pete said he didn't want them. That's what he said. Asked again if there was no second strike, he said, I don't know. I'm going to find out about it. But Pete said he didn't order the death of those two men. But asked Monday what law the US Military relied on to justify the second strike, Levitt said the strike conducted on September 2, was conducted in self defense to protect Americans in vital United States interests. The strike was conducted in international waters and in accordance with the law of armed conflict. Now, Levitt's comments come amid widespread criticism and bipartisan investigations in the House and the Senate into the second boat strike. The leader of the Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Roger Wicker, that's whose name I was trying to think of on Beans Talk yesterday. He's a Republican from Mississippi. And ranking member Jack Reed, Democrat from Rhode island, said in a statement Friday they're going to be conducting vigorous oversight. Similarly, leaders of the House Armed Services Committee, Mike Rogers, Republican from Alabama, and ranking member Adam Smith, Democrat from Washington, said they are taking seriously the reports on follow on strikes on boats alleged to be ferrying narcotics in the southcom region and are taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question. Of course, Hagseth received backlash on social media after he posted on his personal Twitter account what appeared to be an AI generated image of the children's book character Franklin the turtle with the title Franklin targets narco terrorists.
Oh my God.
M it M shows Franklin, a turtle, standing on the edge of a helicopter, aiming machine guns at. At boats. Actually, I think it's, like one of those grenade, like shoulder short guided missile rocket launchers aimed at boats allegedly carrying drugs. So he posted that he's admitted to all of it and that and the White House is admitting to it after having denied it. And they told the Washington Post that the story about the second strike to kill the two men was absolutely fake news. But now they're saying, yeah, we did it, but we're allowed to do it.
God, why are they all such a fucking joke? I just. Unbelievable. All right, this one's from cbs, everyone speaking.
House Judiciary Committee Democrats ask FBI Director Kash Patel for travel records
Speaking of fucking jokes, FBI Director Kash Patel's travel to watch his girlfriend sing at a Pennsylvania sporting event. Well, that's now being investigated by the top Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee. Citing a series of recent media reports, the committee Democrats alleged Patel has used the FBI's Gulf Stream passenger jet for a series of recent flights for a, ah, date night in Tennessee and an outing with friends in Texas. The panel's Democrats have asked Patel to respond with travel records, passenger information and any communication with passengers about recent flights. Rep. Jamie Raskin, the Maryland Democrat who is the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee and another committee member, that's Democrat Rep. Sydney Kamleger Dove of California, wrote to the FBI to ask about Patel's October 25th flight to Pennsylvania. And I quote, you flew there because your girlfriend was performing at a wrestling match on the campus of Pennsylvania State University. That's what they wrote in a letter. These are the Democrats. After attending her performance, you used government's jet to fly with her home to Nashville the following day. Your date night had no apparent connections to your official duties. The inquiry also questioned a trip to Texas that was first reported by the Wall Street Journal says later that weekend you took the FBI jet to San Angelo, Texas for four days where Republican Party mega donor Bubba Salisbury hosted you at Boondoggle Ranch. I cannot make this shit up, people. I mean, I guess I could, but it would never be that, that good. By the way, that's a scenic hunting resort that touts itself as the ideal place to end, I quote, waste money or time on unnecessary or questionable projects. That's what Raskin and Kamlogardove wrote. The FBI, of course, did not respond to requests for comment. The Judiciary Committee Democrats said Patel's travel on the flights was revealed by public flight logs on social media post by Patel's girlfriend. The Democrats letter seeks Patel's travel records from the FBI by December 15th. But as minority party members of the panel, Raskin and K and Lager Dove do not have the congressional subpoena power to require the records be handed over. They may only request them. We got to win the House back, everyone. I mean, it's so fucking important. We've got to win subpoena power back.
Yeah, they'll still probably not hand anything over, but at least then we can refer them for, you know, ignoring a subpoena.
Absolutely.
But we will be referring them to Pamela Bondi.
Trump has installed loyalists in Top prosecutor positions who couldn't be confirmed
So anyway, next up from Adam Klassfeld at All Rise News, the collapse of the Donald Trump ordered prosecutions of James Comey and Letitia James shouldn't be viewed in isolation. That's because the dismissals represent the natural endpoint of a once unprecedented phenomenon. The disqualification of a Trump loyalist lawyer unlawfully transformed into an ersatz U.S. attorney. No other president before Trump insisted upon installing loyalists in Top prosecutor positions who couldn't be confirmed by the Senate or approved by judges in the district. Not even Trump tried that gambit during his first term. But now it's a routine feature of Trump 2.0. The trend began with Trump's one time civil lawyer, Alina Habba, who was a first acting U.S. attorney, toppled from her perch in the District of New Jersey, then failed. Nevada Attorney General candidate Segal Chatta was disqualified from her top federal prosecutor perch, followed by the Central District of California, Bill Asale. Halligan's downfall was more dramatic because she took the Comey and James cases down with her. On Thursday, it will be the Northern District of New York's John Sarcon's time. And, there's going to be a hearing examining the legit legitimacy of his appointment. That's the guy who, like all these other people, was appointed as the Deputy Assistant U.S. attorney or Deputy U.S. attorney and then promoted themselves to be the interim U.S. attorneys.
Yeah.
A former Trump campaign lawyer, Sarcon fits in Halligan's mold. An inexperienced loyalist who never previously served as a prosecutor before picking up a separate criminal investigation into the New York Attorney General, whom his boss hates. If it were possible, Sarcon's grand jury probe stands on even more shaky ground. He's investigating whether James violated a criminal civil rights law by bringing a pair of successful lawsuits against Trump's business empire and the National Rifle Association. James sued to quash Sarcon's subpoena on multiple grounds. But the only argument before the court this week is whether Sarcon is illegitimately serving in his position. Every defendant who has made this argument during Trump's second term has prevailed. A record that currently stands at four nothing. And, Dana. Today, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Alina Habba's disqualification by a lower court. So this is the first time an appeals court, the second level, has ruled that she would. And it was unanimous with a GW appointee, a Bush, a Daddy Bush appointee, and an Obama appointee ruling unanimously that she is not fit.
She ain't fit.
President Trump pardons New York private equity executive David Gentile
All right. Speaking of not fit. See, these transitions are fantastic today. This is from the Times. President Trump has set free a private equity executive who had served less than two weeks of his seven year sentence for his role in what prosecutors described as. You ready for this? A $1.6 billion scheme that defrauded thousands of victims. David Gentile, he's 59, a one time resident of Nassau County, New York, had reported to prison on November 14, and he was released on Wednesday. That's According to the Bureau of Prison's records and a White House official who was not authorized to discuss the matter, Mr. Gentile and a co defendant, that's Jeffrey Snyder, they were convicted in August of 2024 of, securities and wire fraud charges and they were sentenced in May. Unlike, a pardon, the commutation granted Mr. Gentile will not necessarily erase the penalties that could be associated with his conviction.
Okay, I wonder if it's genteel or gentile. Either way.
Genteel. I know. Either way, I don't know. We'll, we'll flip back and forth. In court filings, Prosecutors said that Mr. Gentile actually, I like that better. And Mr. Snyder, over several years use private equity funds controlled by Mr. Gentile's company, GPB Capital. I've heard that before. To defraud 10,000 investors by misrepresenting the performance of the funds and the source of money used to make monthly distribution payments. In a related story from the Guardian, Trump said he will grant a pardon to JUAN Orlando Hernandez, that is the former president of Honduras, who is serving a 45 year prison sentence in the US on drug trafficking and weapons charges. Let me just repeat that for those of you that don't understand. We are bombing boats in the Caribbean because supposedly they are trafficking drugs into our country. But the president is now pardoning Juan Orlando Hernandez who has been charged, serving a 45 year prison sentence for drug trafficking and weapons charges in the United States. Can't square that circle. You can't. In March of last year, Hernandez was convicted in U. S. Courts of accepting millions of dollars in bribes to protect U. S. Bound cocaine shipments belonging to traffickers he once publicly claimed to combat. Now, speaking during closing arguments at the trial, Assistant U.S. attorney Jacob Gutwilleg said Hernandez had, and I quote, paved a cocaine superhighway to the United States. And Alison, what is a lot of cocaine laced with.
Donald, Trump's junior's nose?
Yes. Also fentanyl. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Trump's announcement. Tell her what she's won, Bob. Trump's announcement to pardon Hernandez comes even as the Republican leader casts himself as being tough on combating drug problems. Trump's administration designated multiple drug cartels as, and I quote, foreign terrorist organizations and use claims of war on drugs to justify deadly airstrikes of vessels across the Caribbean and Pacific. Just what we covered earlier in the show. These strikes have prompted the United nations and other humanitarian organizations to condemn the operations as extrajudicial executions. Caroline Levitt said Monday, with a cross around her neck the people of Honduras have highlighted to Trump how the former President Hernandez was set up. He was set up. This was a clear Biden over a prosecution. No, it wasn't. But this prosecution began when, during the first Trump administration. President Hernandez's brother, Tony Hernandez was indicted in 2018 and convicted in 2019. And key ally Giovanni Fuentes Ramirez was indicted in 2020. Guess who was lead prosecutor on both of those cases? Allison Emil Bovey.
Of course he was. Yeah, of course he was. But it's a Biden auto pen over prosecution.
My God, it's Biden's fault.
Yeah. to. To go after six guys in, in the Caribbean and then to kill two survivors and then do that. Murder over 80 more people.
Yeah, for.
For the terror, for the, the armed with, you know, drugs that are considered weapons to, you know, the imminent threat to the United States. But we're going to let the guy who paved a cocaine superhighway to the United States go free.
Unbelievable. okay.
All right. I wonder if Junior was like, dad, that's my connection. Can you please let me probably.
If you have any good news send it to us via email
By the way, early results in the Honduras general election show that the two leading presidential candidates are locked in a technical tie with the Trump backed guy slightly ahead. So I bet they cheated there, too. All right, we're gonna hit pause on the news because we're gonna do the good news. The listener submitted good news after we talked to Ms. Hitt, who wrote the Barbieland book. But we need some good news in our lives. So if you have any good news, send it to us dailybeanspod.com click on contact and we'll pick up with the news again tomorrow during the Daily Beans. But that's all we have for you today, everybody. Stick around. We'll be right back after these messages.
We'll be right back.
IQ Bar is our exclusive snack and hydration sponsor. And right now, IQ Bar is offering exclusive deal
This episode is brought to you by IQ Bar, our exclusive snack and hydration sponsor. IQ Bar is the better for you. Plant protein based snack made with brain boosting nutrients to refuel, nourish and satisfy hunger without the sugar crash. And right now, IQ Bar is offering you an exclusive deal. 20% off all IQ Bar products. Plus you get free shipping. Just text daily beans to 64,000. Finding convenient snacks and drinks that are also healthy has always been a challenge. But IQ Bar has solved it all with ease. The ultimate sampler pack gives you the perfect way to explore all their products at once. With nine IQ Bars, eight IQ Mix sticks and four IQ Joe sticks. Everything IQ Bar makes is crafted with clean ingredients, completely free of gluten dairy, soy GMOs, no artificial sweeteners. It's all amazing. They pack in nutrients like magnesium, lion's mane, and adaptogens. Designed to keep you both physically and mentally fit throughout the day, the IQ Bar protein bars are an easy swap for a sugary snack. They have more fiber and fewer carbs than the alternatives. IQ Mix hydration sticks give you electrolytes without the sugar while supporting focus and mood. And Iqjo delivers 200 milligrams of smooth natural caffeine in an instant coffee form. And it's available in four rich flavors that easily outshine brewed coffee. And the variety of flavors is impressive. Mint chocolate chip bars, blueberry pomegranate mixes, toasted hazelnut coffee. Those are just a few of my favorites. And they have seasonal options, too, adding surprises along the way. Supported by over 20,000 five star reviews, Iqbar, continues to grow because it works. It's awesome. They're delicious. And for me, I love starting my mornings with IQ Joe. Leaning on IQ Mix or an IQ Bar to power through busy afternoon. It's an easy upgrade to my daily routine. And I love easy. And right now, IQ Bar is offering our special podcast listeners 20% off all IQ Bar products, including that sampler pack. Plus you get free shipping. And so to get your 20% off, text daily beans to 64,000. That's daily beans all one word to 64,000. Text daily beans to 64,000. Message and data rates may apply. See terms for details.
Tarpley Hit's new book about Barbie comes out December 2nd
Hey, everybody. Welcome back. I am really excited today. I'm going to be talking to somebody who's written an incredible book called Barbieland the Unauthorized History. It comes out December 2nd. She's a journalist in New York. She's an editor and contributor to Drift magazine, and she's reported previously for the Daily Beast and the reboot of. Please welcome Tarpley Hit. Hi, Tarpley. How are you? I'm great.
How are you?
I am good. So I chewed through this. You have to know. I didn't know, nor was I aware. Now, I had seen the Barbie movie, but I hadn't been aware of the history of all of the different really interesting characters that were responsible for Barbie. What prompted you to write the book in the first place?
You know, I mean, it's just this one toy that will never go away. I remember having a conversation with a friend's father a few years ago, and he was going to the toy store and trying to look for a toy for his grandkid. That was something that he would have played with when he was a kid. And he was like, I couldn't find anything. It's just like the Slinky, the rubber ball and Barbie. And so, I mean, she's just like this hydra. She keeps coming back. You cut off her head, she comes back even stronger. And so that was kind of on the brain. I grew up at this moment where Barbie was still omnipresent but not particularly popular. You know, there was a study that was done when I was a kid of middle, schoolers who were asked about various cultural products and their feelings about them. And all of them had sort of warm feelings towards most, you know, generic toys, but towards Barbie. They had this like extreme unadulterated rage, you know, kind of cartoon rage because they're children. But they were like, oh yeah, Barbies are for destroying. We break them, we burn them, we, you know, tattoo them. So I've maybe because of that, I never had a super strong emotional connection with Barbie, even though she was everywhere. And so when the movie came out, it was sort of this, you know, cognitive dissonance of like there's this massive phenomenon happening. And I mean, it can't really be understated just how massive it was. People were worried that the movie theaters were going to go out of business. And this movie single handedly brings big people back. And so I was like, what is it about this doll that in so many respects seems like kind of passe, that somehow keeps reinventing itself for each new generation of kids? And then I started reading up on some of the history and I mean, it's just a parade of hilarious characters, right?
Oligarchs, autocrats, Nazis, like, let's talk a little bit about some of these characters that you've uncovered. Because there was so much I didn't know that, just you couldn't. Like if you tried to pitch this in a writer's room, they would laugh you out of the room. They're like, no, that just. That can't be real.
Ruth Handler denies for 30 years that Barbie was based on German doll
Well, first of all, talk about the Handlers, right? Ruth and Elliot, who saw a doll in Europe named Lily and kind of based Barbie on that, right?
Yeah. So there's a lot of questions around how exactly Ruth Handler first encountered this doll. And I tried to get to, you know, the bottom of it, or if not the bottom of it, then at least a working theory. But Barbie was like very explicitly modeled on, some might say copied from this German doll that was basically like the Mickey Mouse of Germany. It was, you know, the Vanna White even. It was it was really a advertising gimmick for a tabloid. The equivalent, the German equivalent of like the New York Post or the Daily Mail sort of right leaning, highly sensationalized tabloid run by Axel Springer. And so how Ruth exactly came across this, she denied for 30 years that Barbie had been based on this doll. It only comes out in the mid-80s that there's any connection to build Lilly, which is the German doll. And she doesn't really address it concretely until her memoir in 1994. And even then she sort of is a little bit, it's a little bit vague. She says she stumbles across this doll while on a vacation in Lucerne. Almost every billed Lily collector or Barbie collector that I've spoken to doesn't totally believe that just because of the popularity of this dol. This doll was everywhere in Germany and across Europe and she actually was the star of her own giant movie in 1958. And there was a national competition to find the star of this. Who would play this doll, who would bring this doll to life. so it strikes a lot of people as kind of unlikely that Ruth just happened to find this doll on a trip to Switzerland, right.
This obscure thing that nobody had ever heard of. And you know, when it was actually wildly popular and came to being as you talk about in your book, it began as a literal blank spot on a page that they had to fill and they drew this bild. Lilly, Right?
Yeah.
B I L D. Right. And this was a right wing pro Nazi newspaper, I think, if memory serves. And kind of. Or at least the person who was, the person who put the paper out was somehow associated with that. But definitely right wing.
Yeah, definitely right wing. I wouldn't say pro Nazi because it was basically, you know, illegal to be Pro Nazi in 1952 in Germany. But, but he definitely had some, you.
Know, it was like the Daily Mail of Germany.
Indirect tie. Exactly, exactly.
So. And that just blew me away.
Axel Springer was basically the Rupert Murdoch of post war Germany
So you mentioned Axel Springer. Let's talk about who that is.
So Axel Springer was basically the Rupert Murdoch of post war Germany. he grew up in a publisher's family in Germany and he wanted to create a media empire which was actually quite easy to do after the war because most of the competition had sort of been bombed out. He had some family money though the funding exactly of his paper is a little opaque. The nation at one point in the 80s said he got 7 million bucks from the CIA, which Springer totally denies. But he creates this media empire. He has several magazines, several outlets, but the most popular one and the most popular daily newspaper in Germany in the 50s and 60s and still has a very wide readership today was Build Zeitung, the daily Mail of Germany. and his innovation was he understood really early on that TV was going to be this, a serious threat to print media. and he wanted a paper that could compete with TV that would be really picture heavy. I mean, Build Zeitung means picture newspaper. And so this was kind of a passion project for him. He laid it out himself. And like you said, when the first issue goes to print, he notices that there's a blank. And so he immediately commissions, some kind of cartoon. And they want it to be some sort of sexy lady. And so the comic at one of his other papers, Reinhard Botin, draws this sketch, which later becomes so popular that they keep it on as a daily series, which then becomes the doll, the lily.
M. That's just, what a weird history. but it gets even weirder.
And one more thing I'll just say about Axel Springer. He was a, you know, avowed anti communist who's, you know, conservative in M in many ways. And he only became more conservative as the 60s went on. But so he sort of used Bill Lilly as kind of an icon of his pro German unification, anti communist political agenda.
Yeah.
M. It's so fascinating that Barbie, who is a political hot potato and has been for decades, is born of politics. I just think.
Exactly.
Really interesting. Now you've got these other players in this. You have a guy named Lewis Marx who, I think is referred to as like the Henry Ford of the toy industry. And so that guy was brought on board.
Yes. I mean, Louis Marks is a hilarious character. He is basically the first toy titan in the United States. The toy industry in the US kind of developed on the later side because so many of their toys were imported from Germany. so there were, you know, mom and pops and handcraftsmen, but no real like Mattel or Hasbro toy.
Right.
No big toy. And so it's only around World War I that the US toy industry starts to organize itself because there's embargoes on German imports. And Louis Marx sort of matures in the midst of that. And his real innovation is realizing that you can just take an old toy and update it a little bit and spin it as something new and then make it for less than the original. So his first big hit, he literally buys the toys from his old boss, makes the exact same toys, completely knocks them off and says, you know, oh, these are brand new and they Make. They become a huge craze. They make like a million dollars. He's a millionaire by 26. So he sort of builds this empire, and he's notorious for kind of knocking off rival products, selling them for less. And, you know, he. And it worked really well for him.
So that makes him perfect for. For Barbie.
Exactly, exactly. So, so he. When Barbie hits the scene, he's kind of furious. You know, he had been on the COVID of Time magazine a few years earlier as the toy king. And here's this, you know, new startup company sort of edging in on his turf. And so he goes to the original. The German toy makers, the former Nazis, who, had worked with Axel Springer to manufacture this doll and licenses the German doll from them and tries to bring that to the States to compete with Barbie, which obviously Mattel is not thrilled about.
And, you know, read about what happens.
Yeah.
Find out what happens next.
Spoiler alert. we know what ended up happening there.
Mamie and Kenneth Clark did the Dahl Tests on black children
Now, you. You mentioned a study when you were young in the 90s. but there was also a study done by Mamie and Kenneth Clark. They were partners. They were academics. The first black woman and black man to receive psychology doctorates from Columbia. And they actually did a study, too, called the Dahl Tests. And can you talk about that and how it impacted how it was involved in the marketing and creation of Barbie?
Yeah. So the Dahl Tests were a series of studies that Mamie and Kenneth Clark performed in the late 40s and early 50s that were basically blockbusters in academic psychology. The studies themselves varied. There were about a half dozen of them, but in many of them, they had a series of dolls. Some were. And they were identical, except for some were black and some were white. And Mamie had focused her master's and Ph.D. on when racial consciousness evolved in black children and how they came to conceive of their race as they were growing up. And she would show school children, some of them, as young as three years old, these dolls, and ask them basic questions like, which doll is the nice doll? Which, doll is the clean doll? Which doll do you want? And, I mean, the initial result that she got and which replicated across many of the studies that they found, was that these black children had internalized at this extremely young age that the black doll was somehow worse, which was obviously extremely disturbing. And so they publish these studies, and it seems to. It becomes this sort of. I mean, it's one. An astounding finding. But also, Mamie had worked with this ACLU lawyer while she was working her way through her master's program, who knew Thurgood Marshall. And Thurgood Marshall was at that time litigating some of the cases that would go on to be merged into Brown v. Board. And he was looking for expert witnesses that could testify to the fact that segregation had a measurable impact on black children. And so he brings on the Clarks to testify in court. And here was this study that seemed to show in miniature exactly the thesis that he was litigating. And they get profiled in Ebony, the White House asks them to write, a treatise on racial prejudice, and it becomes this big thing. It takes a while for the toy industry to actually pay attention to that, even though dolls were literally at the center of both these studies and cited in the Brown v. Board opinion from the Supreme Court. Because there had been a lot of attempts to make black dolls, and a lot of black doll makers had put black dolls on the market. but the bigger corporations, which had already become quite concentrated by the 50s, to the extent that they had black dolls, they were sort of more. They were not really advertised. They were sort of pushed to the side and often discontinued after one or two years. but Mattel, to their credit, was sort of the first of the big toy companies to bring black dolls to market. And they did advertise them, not, you know, as aggressively as some of their other toys, but they did. And yet this does not happen for Barbie. Barbie. You don't see a Black Barbie until 1980.
Right.
Ernest Dictor developed focus group techniques to study consumer desires
And there was a, Mad Men kind of character in all of this, too. Can you talk about that?
Ernest Dictor. Hilarious. One of my favorite, characters to read about while reporting this. He is this former psychologist who decides he, you know, has his practice on Sigmund Freud's old Street. And he studied with a lot of Freud's proteges. And his big innovation was, let's take Freudian concepts, this idea of the unconscious and secret desires to the marketplace, and we'll plumb, you know, the psyches of the American public and find out what they really want. And so he developed all these sort of idiosyncratic techniques for trying to figure out what your true desire was. Some of them were like, you know, psychodramas and theatrical productions that people would participate in. Some of them, you know, were these sort of questionnaires that had these probing questions. But he sort of pioneered and popularized the focus group. And he would bring people into this living room where they would talk about specific products and be observed through, you know, a two way mirror and, you know, like so many people in this book, for some reason he basically thought that everyone's, desire for any given consumer product was tied up in sex. so he did a study for Ivory Soap and he concluded that bathing was the rare occasion where the puritanical American male got to caress himself. And holding a cigarette in your mouth was like, sucking on a world gigantic breast. That is his words, not, not mine. So he, you know, has a very particular mind. He's the sex sells guy.
And he's why Barbie has such big boobs.
Exactly. Well, those she inherited. She comes to my nose, honestly.
But, but to market a doll to children that is a full grown woman I think is pretty fascinating in all of these interesting ways. That this guy was like, no, yeah, we can. That's why, that's why Ruth brought him on. Right. To make those determinations.
Yeah.
I mean, Ruth wanted a doll that was, you know, that looked like an adult woman. She wanted a doll that had breasts. And that was a sort of a hard sell. I mean, originally, when Barbie launches at the Toy Fair 1959, there's not that much interest. a lot of people think parents are not going to buy this porny doll. And so there's Some people have said that Mattel made an effort to sort of desexualize Barbie in the transition from Build Lily to Barbie, that they were sort of softening the edges. If you look at the dolls side by side, there's not a ton of differences. I mean there's some significant differences in their construction, in the way their hair is attached and so on, but they look basically identical. Although, you know, certain collectors who have a sort of encyclopedic knowledge of dolls of different iterations would fry me for saying that. But to the layman's eye, they're pretty identical. So the degree to which Mattel actually desexualized Barbie is, you know, I'll leave that to readers, to decide. But they bring on Ernest Dichter sort of to ask how do we sell this sort of sexy doll to parents? And he does a study. And his takeaway was basically that if you frame it right, her sex appeal is not a problem. Because society in the 50s and now being what they were, there's a material benefit to being an attractive woman. And if you tell your tell American parents that this doll is what will train their child into how to be an attractive woman, to how to groom themselves and so on, then they will find that to be a valuable, quality in the toy.
Yeah. And then, you know, and that kind of, sort of, I think, sparks some of the feminism. Feminist problems with the doll as time goes on. And, it sort of ebbs and flows. And then we get Greta Gerwig, who's like, no, no, no, listen. And it's just a, really fascinating ride. And you mentioned collectors. And when I read about Billy Boy, who is a, I guess, Andy Warhol muse, but that guy had like 11,000 dolls and he hung out at Studio 54 and he ended up working for Mattel.
Yeah, he is amazing. I mean, definitely a controversial figure both in the doll collector community in the Barbie extended universe, but just a hilarious individual. One of the many hilarious individuals in Barbie's backstory. but so, yeah, he is. How to describe him? His biography? I'll say he's taken some liberties with his biography. So in some papers he says, oh, I was born in 1960. In some he says, o, I was found drifting in a woven basket, down the Nile river and taken in by a cowboy and a, fortune teller from Staten island or something like that. And so the years in which he's born are constantly shifting. The places in which he's born are constantly shifting. What we do know is that in his, teens, he runs away from home and travels the country in this. I think it was a Thunderbird. I forget. Collects all these Barbies en route and winds up in, the Village in New York City and becomes sort of a club kid. Studio 54. Warhol Muse, but also an avid collector of Barbies. And he is sort of a key figure in situating Barbie in a kind of. In an adult context, in a higher art context, in a fashion context. So in 1986, he restages this landmark art exhibit. Basically, in 1945 in Paris, all these fashion houses teamed up and they wanted to restore Paris to sort of a capital of glamour and fashion. But there was still not very much material to make beautiful clothes with. So they staged this touring exhibit where they made Dior gowns and, Hermes gowns, but they staged them on dolls because that was the amount of fabric that they had on hand. and so this becomes sort of this famous thing. It's called, the Theater of Fashion. And Billy Boy restages it with barbies in the 80s, and that sort of generates some attention. He has Mattel's permission to do that. And he comes on, he writes the first book about Barbie aimed at a mainstream audience. And then he actually collaborates with Mattel on, several Barbies of his own. Then of course, there are so many relationships with Mattel that soured in legal conflicts.
Lots of souring and legal conflicts. And you get into that a lot in the books, especially with the Handlers. And, Jill Barad, who started out as a model and worked there, but then ended up leaving. Probably not on the best terms, but just,
Two other things that really stood out to me in this book were the Barbie Liberation Organization
Two other things that really stood out to me in this book that I really wanted to ask you about was the Barbie Liberation Organization. This is in the 90s. And they did sort of this art piece, Project Mayhem stunt with Barbies and, like, GI Joes. Can you talk about that? Because I had never heard of this. And I was like, 18, 19, 20 in those years. And I thought I might have heard of something like that, but this is the first I've heard of it.
Oh, yeah, okay. So one of Jill Broad, who is the CEO of Mattel, or at that time, she was running the Barbie department, but she later became CEO. She. One of the big releases in 1992 is this Barbie that can speak. and so she's, you know, she says a variety of sentences, you know, like, let's go to the mall, or I'd love to see a movie. But this generates a lot of flack because one of the sentences she says is, math class is tough, you know. And this becomes like, there's a Simpsons episode, I don't know if you remember Malibu Stacey, sort of based on this episode. But this becomes this, you know, sort of m. Mini scandal. A bunch of female academics are rightly pretty pissed off and are like, we're actually totally good at math. And so this guy, this college student and prankster who's sort of, you know, in the ad busters type of anti corporate guerrilla art scene, sees this and comes up with this idea to steal. Well, it's not stealing. He calls it shop giving. But so he goes into a, you know, say a toy store, and he buys a couple Barbies. At GI Joe, he bought this one, like, farting doll called Seymour Butts. And they all have these sort of digital chips in their chest cavities that have these recorded sentences on them, takes them back to his workshop, solders them off, swaps the chips, and then puts them back in the box so that they're perfectly unopened looking and brings them back to the store and slips them back onto the shelves. And so then people who buy them will get a Barbie and it will say, death to the enemy.
Or.
so all these Barbies are saying GI Joe lines or Seymour Butts lines, you know, farting up a storm.
And then Barbie saying, dead men tell no lies. GI Joe saying, let's plan our dream wedding.
Yeah, exactly.
Math is tough.
And so he recruits a lot of people to help him do this. They're all over the country. They do, like, you know, several hundred dolls, Several hundred of these doll surgeries. And then Christmas rolls around, and kids start getting presents where their GI Joe is saying, let's go to the mall. And so then they release the Barbie Liberation Organization, which obviously referenced to the plo, puts out a statement claiming responsibility for the stunt. And it's shot like a hostage video. The one talking Barbie is sort of like above in front of camo or whatever, and saying, we're the Barbie Liberation Organization. And now the media reacts, I mean, as the media does with. With just total hysteria. Somebody in the press calls it, like, terrorist acts against children. Meanwhile, all of this had been funded with an art grant from New York State.
So.
This is the kind of good trouble I get behind. I don't know. I don't know why. Of course, the media is like, oh, my gosh, this is terrorism. But that reading about that, was amazing. And then finally, there's so much in here. Everybody, you have to get this book. It's really incredible. They be great for holiday gifts, by the way, with a Barbie.
Hear, hear.
But the story about. I didn't know this, but Mattel sued RCA Records over, you know, I'm a Barbie Girl. Remember that song by Aqua?
Alex Kaczynski is a Reagan appointee on the 9th Circuit
And, I had no idea about this, but there's this character who was a judge on the 9th Circuit named Alex Kaczynski. And I had no idea about this, but it's. It's so much more than just the straightforward lawsuit.
Yes. I mean, Alex Kaczynski is really one of the great legal characters, in the American judicial system. So he is a Reagan appointee who is, like, conservative in an idiosyncratic way. I would say he leans more. I mean, he's got maybe gotten more conservative over time, but he leans more libertarian. And, you know, like, for example, he has a strong feeling about the death penalty, which is that he thinks it's horrible and that if it's going to be done, it should be, you know, we should bring back firing squads and guillotines so that the legal system can't hide behind these sort of sanitized ways of putting people to death. And, you know, there's a lot of opinions that people who fall on sort of the more progressive side of the political spectrum, like, like myself, and I assume many listeners of this podcast would disagree with his opinions. But he's also someone who, you know, people say Scalia was a good writer and a funny writer, and I don't find that to always be the case. Alex Kaczynski is a very funny writer. in one of his opinions where he's deciding a case about this Las Vegas theater owner who tried to establish a sort of monopoly over the Vegas theater market, he covertly slipped the names of more than 200 movies into his opinion. So if you read it, it's kind of stilted. And it's because he's like, it was an impossible m. Mission. It was a mission impossible. In the heat of, this guy is clueless, you know. Anyway, he becomes the judge of this Aqua case, and he becomes sort of a recurring character in Mattel's prolific legal career history.
Right. And I'm not. Do you want to give away the line, in the. I don't. I don't know. Maybe we should just, It's. It's such a good line that he said when his panel sided against Barbie. I don't know if we want to leave it for the readers to find themselves, but it's, you know, you talk about him being a pretty funny writer. That line just. Just stood out. I laughed for, like a good five minutes when I read what he wrote to the. To the Barbie people.
Since he has. I'll. I'll say, since the line is, I think, one of his more famous. And he has so many good ones. He. In the Aqua case, when he, you know, puts out his opinion on appeal, he writes, the parties are advised to chill.
Yeah.
and I'll just say that Mattel did not chill.
No, no, they did not. No, they didn't. And you can read up on what happens after that. And like, this just incredible in depth history of Barbie. It's just. It's so very fascinating. I'm so glad that you wrote this, and took the time to do it.
Thank you.
To do all this research because there was just so much that I learned. It's called Barbieland the Unauthorized History. It comes out December 2nd. You know me, I like everyone to go to their local independent bookstore and order copies. Order like 10 copies and put them out in your little free libraries around town and give them as holiday gifts. But it's, so well done. I really appreciate all the work that you poured into this book because I know it was a lot. I could tell by you know by reading it, the amount of research that went into it. So I really appreciate it.
Thank you. I really appreciate that.
You're like, yeah, that was a lot of work. so tell everyone where they can find and follow you and, get information about future stuff that's coming out and pieces that you're working on.
Oh, yeah. I mean, you can follow me on Twitter, which I'm still on, as well as bluesky. on Twitter, I'm tarpleyhit. And on bluesky, I'm also Tarpleyhit. And, you can subscribe to the Drift magazine, which is a great magazine. And, if any of you are in New York, I'll be speaking at McNally Jackson Seaport on December 3rd with two of my drift colleagues. So that should be fun.
Very cool. Well, thank you so much for joining us today. Appreciate your time again, everybody.
Fast growing trees makes the yard in your head come to life
The book is called Barbieland the Unauthorized History. Go grab your copy now. And, I appreciate you joining us today. Tarpley hit. Thank you so much.
Thank you, everybody.
Stick around. We'll be right back with the good news. Hey, everybody. If you're planting now or just plotting for later, fast growing trees makes the yard in your head come to life. They ship high quality plants to your door and they're America's largest online nursery. It's so convenient. They have more than 1600 options they've been delivering since 2005, so they know what they're doing. And, you can scroll and find anything you need, from fruit trees and privacy trees to flowering shrubs and bushes and more. Ordering is easy. You buy online and your plants arrive in just a couple of days, which also makes them a smart and easy gift for the holidays. Their alive and thrive guarantee means your order shows up healthy and ready to settle in. And every plant is grown here in the US and cared for by experts before it ships. So when the box lands on your porch, you are already halfway to your dream yard. For my project, I had my guacamole garden. I got a Meyer lemon tree and a lime tree and then two avocado trees. The original quote I received from the landscaper sent me straight to fastgrowingtrees.com and I did it myself. And I saved around 90% of the cost. No messy trunk, no dirt in my trunk, no wasted Saturday. No being limited by an in store selection. Instead, I unboxed strong and amazing, well rooted plants with clear instructions too. And I spoke with a fast growing trees plant expert about the spacing and watering. They were the ones who told me that I needed a second avocado tree buddy for my first avocado tree because they grow better together. So they have everything you need to know and planting took an afternoon and I already have an incredible little guacamole garden up and running. It's delicious and amazing.
Use code DailyBeans to save 15% on fast growing trees
So this season, they have the best deals for your yard, including up to half off tons of plants and other deals and listeners to our show. You get 15% off your next purchase when using the code DAILYBEANS at, checkout. Checkout that is 15% off your next purchase at fast growingtrees.com using the code dailybeans at checkout. Now is the perfect time to plant. Use code DailyBeans to save today. The offer is valid for a limited time. Terms and conditions may apply. Check out the link in the show notes to support the Daily Beans.
Send us your Good News submissions. We could all use the little microdose of hope
Everybody, welcome back. It's time for the Good News.
Everyone.
M. And if you have any good News submissions, anything good that's happened to you, big or small, recent or in the distant past, we want to hear from you. We want to share in your good news. We could all use the little microdose of hope and happiness. Send it to us. You can also give a shout out to someone that you love, like a spouse or a kid or a family member or yourself, because you love yourself and we like to hear about the amazing things you're doing. maybe a shout out to a government program that's helped you or a loved one so we can get it all on the record for posterity. How amazing and incredible government programs are. if you have a Republican government program that's helped you out, feel free to send it in. But I can't really think of any. except maybe emtala from the 80s. So if you've gone to the emergency room and were treated despite not having insurance, hey, there you go. We also would like your good trouble ideas, so send those to us. And all you got to do to get your submission read on the air is pay your pod pet tariff, which means attach a photo of your pet. If you want us to guess the breeds in your shelter pup, we can try. We're not very good at it, but we like to try anyway. If you don't have a pet, send an adoptable pet in your area. If you don't have an adoptable pet in your area, send a bird watching photo which can be an actual bird or you and your family and friends flipping the bird to Trump buildings. If you don't have that, just grab a random photo of an animal. On the Internet, we accept all animals and then of course, humans. You have baby pictures, awkward family photos, pictures of rallies, maybe some overpass protest signs you've seen, like, show us photos of what you're making and creating. You growing something in a garden? You got some great botanical photos. Anything at all, seriously, any picture will work. Send it to us dailybeanspod.com and click on contact.
The Daily Beans is giving Tuesday to support the Human Rights Campaign
First up today is our good trouble. And our good trouble comes from our good friend Phil Williams, the nosiest bitch in Nashville. this is an excerpt from a News Channel 5 report. John Minadeo courts children in video chat apps, berating children of color, encouraging white kids to arm themselves for race war. John Minadeo is a neo Nazi on a mission. A mission to meet America's children in online video chats and convince them to hate. News Channel 5 investigates reviewed hours of online videos that reveal how when Minadeo encounters children of color, he tries to persuade them to hate themselves, often brandishing an assault weapon and warning them to expect to be treated violently. We're gonna have a link to Phil Williams story in the show notes. And Phil Williams Blue sky post about this is also gonna be linked there. And he said if anyone wants to respond to neo Nazi John Minadeo targeting children, see the posts below. You too can report. it's GoyemTV ST and GTV Flyers ST. These are two websites. You can report them for hate speech, live streaming video of children without consent and urging kids to buy guns and to prepare to kill non white people. So we'll have all that information to report these websites in the show notes. And you can read more about John Menadeo and his Goyim Defense League at George Washington University's website. We'll include a link to that as well. So thanks, Phil Williams, for your dogged reporting on this neo Nazi trying to recruit children and scare the out of kids on the Internet. That's, that's our good trouble today. And I appreciate all the work that Phil Williams does.
Absolutely. And for those of you that know, and I think you probably do, because we're sort of that community today is giving Tuesday, if you're listening to this on Tuesday morning. And so find an organization that makes you happy if you can do that. And if you're in a place where you want to donate, there's a lot of places that can be vetted. I'm just going to give a shout out to one of the organizations that I work with so much over the year, often they take about 20, 20 or so of my weekends a year from you. But it's the Human Rights Campaign. And what we've done is we have created a special link for the Daily Beans listeners that if you click on it, it'll be in the show notes. any donation that you can make is going to help the Human Rights Campaign for the over this next year. They have so much work planned with their foundational work, their nonprofit stuff. They're going to get boots on the ground, get people out to vote, get our stories out there. They're doing so m much so that we are just combating as much misinformation about the LGBTQ community as we can. So we have a little moment to show them how much the Daily Beans supports them and what a splash we can make. So if for giving Tuesday, you want to join me in supporting the Human Rights Campaign, there'll be a link in the show notes. And it's just for us. So I appreciate you all very much. That's it.
Awesome. Yeah. Don't they also do incredible work tracking which corporations and businesses have robust diversity, equity and inclusion programs?
Oh, yes, they do. It's called the Equality Index. And they send this out out to organizations. And it's amazing, even with this anti DEI bullshit and the fear mongering from the administration, how many organizations and corporations have not backed down and have continued to support nonprofit work and LGBTQ organizations like the Human Rights Campaign, like Lambda Legal, a lot of them. So if you do want to know who those companies are, it's called the Corporate Equality Index. You can go in on, search them to see where you want to put your money the rest of the year. They have so many tools on their website that you can look at to really vet these things. So that's amazing. it's an opportunity. And for those of you that can't give, you are doing so much anyway, so just know that you've done something good today for Giving Tuesday. It doesn't have to be monetary. It doesn't.
Nope. Nope. Thank you so much, Dana. Appreciate you and appreciate the hrc.
Anonymous says if you're on the fence about sending cards, please send them
All right, first of all, we've got a submission from Anonymous here. There's no pronouns given, and it says, I love, love the picture I'm already in love with. It says, hi, beanie babes. I want to share my Christmas cards this year before I send them out. Sneak peek. I paint all of my cards.
Wow.
Because I like to make everything more complicated than it needs to be. These are watercolor and I Want to say if you're on the fence about sending cards this year, please send them. Any old card is fine. Everyone likes getting mail that's not a bill or an advertisement. And it's a nice way to tell people you're thinking of them. look at these beautiful cardinals that she painted. They're gorgeous. Amazing, fantastic. Thank you for that submission.
Yeah. This is awesome. Wow.
Patagonia is hiking the whole hundred miles in full drag
All right, this is from another Anonymous person pronoun, she and her. Hello, everyone. This is a shout out to Patty Gonia. Oh, my God, I'm so glad you brought this up. I was going to ask if we could do this in our good. In our good trouble too. Oh, my God. Anonymous, whoever you are, thank you. This is a shout out to Patagonia now, who's having a fundraiser for eight outdoor nonprofits. If you don't know who Patagonia is, and this is just a break from the submission, Patagonia is a drag queen that helped hang that trans flag in El Capitan with sj. SJ got fired because SJ was, a park worker, a federal worker. Patagonia helped. And this, I'm telling you, Patagonia, if you don't follow them on social media, you're missing out. Anyway, Anonymous, we shall continue. she's going to walk a hundred miles, starting in Point Reyes National Seashore and ending up in San Francisco. Now, what you don't have in this is she's doing it in drag. The entire hundred miles in drag. Okay, so Anonymous says my daughter had the good fortune to see Patagonia while out hiking yesterday, and our local news posted her video. I feel pretty happy knowing that she's somewhere around here walking and making good trouble. Oh, my God. We're gonna have a link in the show notes. So this can also be part of your Tuesday giving or anytime before. So Patagonia is hiking, and then their last show is in San Francisco on Saturday night. I think it's sold out, but until then, I think they're on mile 23 today and they're hiking all the way to San Francisco for their next show. And so we'll have a link to this in the show notes too, but if you don't follow Pattygonia P A T T I E G O N I A Patty Gonia on Instagram. You should do it immediately, if not soon.
Yeah. And look at these incredible photos. Oh, amazing, amazing, amazing. And she's. And they're. You're right, they're. They're hiking the whole hundred miles in drag in full drag.
It's amazing. Incredible. Incredible. Also, Patagonia, put up a video making fun of Pete Kegseth because Patty's very strong and I, I, I'm not saying this verbatim, but Patagonia was basically like Pete Kegseth. This is how you do a real pull up and I'm doing it with my balls tucked inside me.
Yeah. Yep. I love that. And look, there's a POD pet photo too. There's a kid sleeping in the sun. Thank you so much. Anonymous. really appreciate that.
13 women marched in San Francisco on November 23 to lament lost justice for women
All right, next up from Ann Pronoun. She and her on November 23, in a small neighborhood in San Francisco, 13 determined women and one man of all ages, including four octogenarians and one person using a walking assist device, took to the streets with heartfelt signs describing the way as women are being specifically harmed by the present autocratic Washington, D.C. regime. It was the first lament walk for lost justice for women in the country. Silent, ceremonial, sober, the Walkers proceeded down two busy streets, standing occasionally to face oncoming traffic and pedestrians to declare their empathy with women. Women are the poorest of the poor and suffer the most from the use of food and health as political cudgels to send women back to the home pregnant and once more pushed into a role of serving patriarchal men. The sign carried by the final walker said we are not going back. Described and viewed here, including news coverage by ABC TV, Channel 7. We're going to have a link in the show notes to that walk and thank you for sending that. There's, a couple of great flyers here. Women's fundamental Rights threatened by Wannabe King and Court Jesters. And Anne, thank you for sending that and shedding some light on this great protest.
Yeah, this is awesome. I am loving the good news today.
Elliot returned to Portland, Oregon after visiting husband battling leukemia
All right, this is from Elliot. Pronouns, they Them. Yikes. First time I said or wrote that out loud. Aw, Elliot, welcome to your authentic life. Says hey.
Hey.
Hi DG and ag. I hope you can give a shout out to the nurses at UCSD. I've just returned to Portland, Oregon after visiting my husband of 26 years who is down there battling a tough one. And it looks like the big circle will exact another good man. And especially heartfelt thanks to Sabrina, a nurse man. A nurse there who has made PR hubs so happy and fulfilled. And I swear I can't even think how great a person in spirit she is. And all of them are to be so loving and real. I mean real people who care. I miss him, but he's in the Best career there. And though I would love to be with him 24 7, I cannot right now. But knowing that people as stellar as she are near him makes me kind of okay with all the leukemia BS. P.S. we hate this disease. Sucks monkey balls. For my pod pet tags, please see first, Sunny, who had his pic snapped on a lark. There happened to be a photographer at the local pet store and we thought, hey, let's see what we can get. Sonny frustrated the photographer squirming and just being an all out dick the whole time. But then the very last photo, he took this, which looks like he posed for a passport photo. He was such a good boy, but just to me. I don't know why. And then our little we don't know insert dog breed Gretel named so because she stamped her foot at us like the youngest Von Trapp did in the Sound of Music. She was. She recently passed, and I just hope she's happy in doggy heaven. Actually, when she was here, she taught me so many things. She elevated laziness to an art. I would bring her a treat, and it said a few inches from her face, she would extend her tongue without lifting her head and convey the treat into her mouth. Barely chew it and gulp it, down and fall back to sleep. She inspired me. Anyway, I love you both. I also love Mr. Fugal saying, although I cannot miss a day, I feel like I haven't showered unless I get my beans. Thank you and love from the Pacific Northwest.
Oh, look at these puppers.
They're very sweet.
When you got a min pin and a dachshund, maybe?
Sure looks like it. And look how old that baby was.
Yeah, Doxy. Oh, Sweet M. Sweet honeys. I love seeing your dogs. Yeah, that first photo looks like a painting. I gotta say, thank you so much for that, Elliot.
Anonymous asks what are your favorite LGBTQ organizations for donations on Giving Tuesday
All right, next up from Anonymous, what are your favorite LGBTQ organizations for donations? I know about the Trevor project and Sage. Are there others? Don't need this on the air. Couldn't figure out how else to ask. Listen to you all the time. Love the show. Pick for tax. 2020. Pick of the litter. Where I got my puppy. She's in there somewhere. The second Pick is older, 20 years ago. Agility pick of mine. My insert breed name here. Puffin, who love to jump and run with maximum joy.
Look at these little babies.
Wow.
I love that this came up on the air. I know you said didn't need to be, but like we said, it's giving Tuesday. We've got the Trevor Project. Sage, I Mentioned the Human Rights Campaign. You've got Lambda Legal. God, there's so many. got the Child Rescue.
We're gonna be at Sigbee this weekend.
Yep. next Monday, Allison's gonna join me for a gala in New York for sigb. It's the Stonewall Inn Initiative. Gives back. It raises. Uses money for safe spaces for LGBTQ people to be in places that are normally not safe spaces, like sporting arenas. You, got people like the Crypto arena coming on and getting trained and making a promise to protect the LGBTQ community within their walls. It's a pretty extraordinary organization as well. If you go to my website, which is danagoldberg.com, there's a nonprofit page. And, I can say all of these are vetted. There's about seven of them on there. You're welcome to click on those and research. Research, the organizations and donate there as well. These are all the. A lot of. I shouldn't say all the, just about a handful of the non profits I've worked with, but they're seven of the ones I really. I really do enjoy.
Awesome. Oh, my goodness. Look at this. I think it's a bull terrier.
It looks like the target. Yep, yep.
Bull terrier. Oh, so cute. Puffin. Oh, thank you for that. And man, Giving Tuesday. I. I should have known. I should have known that our. Our listeners would be all about it and just incredible and. And. And so giving.
And I just got word, which is super fun. The HRC made a special page, and they made a $10,000 goal. So we even have a gold break if we want to with the Daily Beans listeners for Giving Tuesday, if you want to participate in the giving for the Human Rights Campaign, and, you know, I do a ton of work with them. We have the link in the show notes. It is specifically targeted to the Daily Beans, so they're gonna know exactly where these donations come from, and we'll be able to see if we can break that $10,000 goal with all of the people listening.
I bet we can do it. I bet if everybody clicks on that link in the show notes and gives to the Human Rights Campaign, I bet we can reach 10,000. I bet we can do it in a day.
I think we can do it too. I really do. you all always talk about how much you appreciate the work. I do. And so if any of you want to join me in that fight for Giving Tuesday, let's do it. Let's show the Human Rights Campaign how much the Daily Beans one supports them, but how much power we have, which would be awesome. And like I said, if now's not a good time to donate, totally understand. But for those of you that can and you're like, where do I want to put my money? This is where you put it.
Wonderful. I hope everybody has an incredible Giving Tuesday and good luck. Break a leg to the Democrat in the 7th district of Tennessee tonight, Afton Ben and thank you all so much for your good news submissions. Please send them to us if you have good news or good trouble. Dailybeanspod.com and click on Contact. We'll be back in your ears tomorrow. And everybody, thanks for watching the first episode ever of the Beans Talk video podcast. You can watch it over at the MSW Media Media YouTube channel. We'll see you there. Until then, please take care of yourselves, take care of each other, take care of the planet, take care of your mental health and take care of your family.
The Daily Beans is written and executive produced by Allison Gill
I've been ag. I'm a DG and I'm Sabines the Daily Beans is written and executive produced by Allison Gill with additional research and reporting by Dana Goldberg. Sound design and editing is by Desiree McFarlane with art and web design by Joelle Reader with Moxie Design Studios. Music for the Daily Beans is written and performed by they Might Be Giants and the show is a proud member of the MSW Media Media Network, a collection of creator owned podcasts dedicated to news, politics and justice. For more information Please visit msw media.com msw media.