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March 15, 2023 35 mins
Jedediah Bila is an American television host and author.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Buck Sexton Show. In this episode, our
friend Jedediah Biela joins. And I really mean our friend
because I've known Jedediah since my earliest days in media.
So that means we're going like twelve thirteen years now,
jededi It's pretty crazy. The Jedediah Biela Live Show is
what she is the host of. You should all check
it out. It is online. And Jedediah, how are you doing.

(00:23):
I'm doing good. I'm doing good. Yeah, we Jededibila Live
is where we wreck modern feminism and the matrix. So
it's a good place to beate. Just so let's jump
right into that. There's people gonna love this because you know,
you and I both come from a world of doing
a lot of sort of news of the day stuff.
I find in these podcasts when we have more time,
I like to ask people just what are they interested in? Right?
Sometimes people want to talk about movies. Someone's want to

(00:44):
talk about, you know, health stuff. I got into a
whole gut health conversation with somebody who is running for Congress.
Just all of a sudden we're talking good health. So
like things you know, you never know feminism is wrecking
women's lives. That is something that I know you have said.
That is something that I know you get into explain more.
I love this, Yeah, I mean, I think it's funny.

(01:06):
There was a video that was trending today, I believe
on Twitter where you see this woman who's hysterical, she's
in tears, she's divorced, she's alone, she has this child.
Now she's talking about what am I going to do?
And it just it always leads me to discussions about feminism.
Feminism is causing women to delay family, to delay motherhood,

(01:27):
to deprioritize being a mom. You know, you see all
these housewives that are demonized all the time. Feminism is
causing women to be hyper promiscuous. So you have all
of these young women out there, you know, I don't
need a man, I don't need a man, my career,
this my career, that sleeping around with this guy, with
that guy. And then you know what, they wake up
and they're thirty years old and they're depressed, farm a dependent, anxious,

(01:49):
all of these things. So we have this whole generation
of women who are parroting talking points about how feminism
is so amazing and at the same time, they're miserable,
absolutely fundamentally miserable. So I dig into a lot why
traditional gender roles matter and are important, and why if
we're going to have a conversation about how men and
women are different, and I think same people everywhere will

(02:10):
acknowledge that men and women are not the same, then
you also have to be willing to acknowledge that when
women lose their femininity and men lose their masculinity, and
then they enter into a relationship where now you have
like a hyper masculine woman and a feminized man, you're
going to have a problem. And it leads to the
breakdown of relationships or relationships never forming. It leads to
the breakdown of the family, It leads to a lot

(02:30):
of confusion about what's going on in that relationship. So
it's a problem, and it's something that's being forced down
women's throats. Like you know, if you're a mom, if
you want to be a mom, if you're a twenty
three year old and you say to yourself, I want
to be a mom, I want to raise a family,
Like I don't want to do with the corporate grind.
I don't want to go that route. You're instantly demonized.
People will say, Oh, she's too dumb, Oh she's been brainwashed.

(02:52):
But if you want to bury your head in a
career as a woman for the next fifteen years and
you have a free oh, I'll freeze my eggs mentality,
you're revered by society. That's problem and people should ask themselves, well,
if there's nothing wrong with it, then why is there
a whole generation of miserable women rising up? So that's
you know, that's what I talk about a lot to
try to wake women up and to also try to
just reinstill in men like you should not be embarrassed

(03:14):
by your masculinity and if anything, you should be on
you know, you should be trying to increase your testosterone
levels and act like a man, like we need men.
Where are all the men? We're all the cowboys, buck,
I don't know, man. It's it's it's a it's a catastrophe.
In my view, there are a lot of problems with
the way that the elites in this country have set

(03:34):
up the system, I think, particularly for women, although increasingly
men are also victims of this because at a younger
and younger age, I think it's guys who are comfortable
with who they are and know who they are, whether
it's their twenties, thirties, forties, whatever their age may be.
They react with I think, all due aggression and pushback

(03:56):
when they're being told, you know, you have to act
in this you know, feminine centric way out I wait,
a beta male way however they want to describe it.
But this is also to me why it seems they're
going after children more and more and trying to suppress masculinity.
First of all, eradicate gender difference as a general as
a general matter, but also to teach young boys don't

(04:17):
act like young boys because something is wrong with that.
Don't be rambunctious, don't want you know, don't go out
there and build tree forts and get dirty and play
in the mud and do different things than girls. You know,
maybe think about putting on a pink two two like
maybe that's who you want to be. And it's coming
from the adults, by the way, if it were coming
from the children, that would be a different discussion. Yeah,

(04:38):
and I and you know what does it do? It
ultimately leads to I mean, you see those guys in
two twos, or guys wearing a skirt or this, that,
and the other thing. Women aren't attracted to those guys
they're they're not, And men aren't attracted to hyper masculine women.
They're just not. So you wind up with men and
women who are less attracted to each other, less likely
to form a union. And I always say that's where

(04:58):
you get into the politics of this, because it's agenda driven.
You know, first and foremost. You know, these three letter
organizations that we all talk about, the World Economic Forum,
the who you know, even down to the FDA, the CDC,
they all benefit from a very weak male population. So
guys are the ones that are on the front lines.
I mean, if you go and you want to steal
somebody's property, you're going to have hopefully a big, strong

(05:20):
man and alpha guy out there that's like, no, you're not.
This is my home, this is my family. That is
the role of a guy. When you weaken guys to
the point. And what we've seen that in the last
two years, you know, triple masked. I mean we've seen
it all unfold. We've seen, in fact, men that we
thought would be on the front lines and would be
able to like protect this country and they just folded
like completely. I mean, it was they highly feminized, terrified

(05:42):
of everything. So you know, I think that those three
letter organization, and if we're going to talk about you
know that we're no longer you know, it's not the
United States of America running the United States of America anymore.
We all know that. We know the World Economic Forum
and the WHO and all these organizations have a vision.
They want to be, you know, in control role of
not just the United States, but they want to be
in control of the world at large and have this

(06:04):
new way of conducting things and these new pandemic treaties
and all of this stuff. And they rely on weak men.
So from a very young age they have to hit
those young boys and teach them to sit back and
shut up. You see that in academia all the time,
where boys are now being told let the girls talk,
you've had your turn, and they're immediately told to be quiet.
You have you know, all through their lives, guys are

(06:25):
being told any kind of masculinity that they exude is toxic.
They should be embarrassed about it. They should you know,
analyze and says, oh, guys are supposed to be crying more,
Guys are supposed to be doing this women kind of
demanding modern women, I say, demanding that men act more
like women. But men aren't women, and that's that's not
attractive to women. So now you have all these guys

(06:47):
that are weak, and you have all these women that
aren't attracted to them. So what's societal decay? I also
remember when I was so when I was in college,
and it's gotten much worse up in the area where
I went to school, based on students that I've spoken
to who graduated in recent years, but there were these
all women's colleges that were we could take class at
their schools, they could take class at our schools. I
went to Amherst, there was Holyoake and Smith nearby, and

(07:10):
there was a culture of a kind of culture of
militant unattractiveness that was always being promulgated. And I mean this,
They're like, as a woman, to an end, to put
any any effort into your appearance was to give into
masculine desire. This is a people who don't If anyone
wants to challenge me on this, there was a whole

(07:31):
thing called sexhibition where where freshmen in college or actually
I think it was all all years, but particularly freshmen
do this. They would post naked photos of themselves on
campus at Smith College, where they didn't look good. By
the way, the whole point is like you know, oh
this is me, and like this is who I am,
and like take me as I am, and all this
sort of stuff. It's bizarre. But the point that they're

(07:51):
always trying to push through is you have to make
no effort. Your appearance does not matter. Anybody who says
it matters is chauvin is page and in disgusting. They're
setting these women up for failure in life because you
know it's true about men too. People will judge your appearance.
Obviously not everyone's supposed to be a you know, a
swimsuit model wherever. That's not the point. The point is

(08:13):
that you have to actually operate in the world as
it is. And I think you see this whole on
a whole range of issues. But but the telling telling
women that your appearance, and this is a part of
the more radical feminist credo, your appearance does not matter
and if you care, you're giving into male desire. You
do not need men. Men are are actually rapacious, men

(08:34):
are to be not to be trusted. This leads down
a pathway of misery. I mean, although the most miserable
women I know, including very attractive women, by the way,
are all leftists across the board without without exception them,
the goal is to actually repel men. So if you
listen to and this is the space that I live in,
you know, three days a week I do my show.
I pretty much live in it every day now. But

(08:55):
if you look at people like Drew A. Fwallow, I
don't know if you know who that is, but she's
this TikTok famous hyper feminist. She's on all the red carpets.
She's you know, I don't know how many followers she
has unticked up, very very influential among young women. That's
who her audience is. And she's essentially telling women you
should you should strive to repel men. So it's not
even just about anymore, Oh, you don't need to take

(09:18):
care of yourself, you know, you don't need to attract
the male gaze. It's you should try to not attract
the male gaze. Again, it's agenda drif him because what
happens then, and they're again they're telling women to do
the exact opposite of what a man would want you know,
they're saying, oh, yeah, I don't shave your armpits, and
you know you should be sloppy, and you know, you

(09:38):
shouldn't really be feminine and all of this stuff, so
guys are less attracted and the same breadth they're telling
guys don't be masculine when what women really want? When
you ask women what they really want, and we cover
video after video of this on my show of Asking Women,
they say, I want to go can provide them to attect.
I want to have the option to work, but I
don't want to have to work. I want a guy

(09:59):
who makes six figures or more. I want a guy
who you know can protect the family if something dangerous happens,
A guy who can defend themselves. What are we talking
about here. We're talking about an alpha guy. We're talking
about a guy who acts like a guy. They're telling you,
in their own words, over and over and over again.
If you ask a guy what they want, most men,
the vast majority of men, unless they've been feminized or brainwash,

(10:21):
are going to say, like, I want a feminine woman.
I want somebody who you know is going to be
a great mom. I want somebody who's going to prioritize
the home. I want somebody who has a softness to her,
which has now been demonized as well. So do you
just see this is deeply, deeply sinister, this agenda because
it's pulling men and women apart, which is exactly what
they I love the sociological research on this, not that

(10:42):
sociology is really science, but you know, the data, the
polling is so interesting and it's so consistent that there
are traits that women look for in men that are
the things that you laid out right. And and then
as that pertains to career, it's not that they want
a specific career, they want a level of achievement in
that career that will then allow So you know, if

(11:03):
you own a car dealership and you know you can
provide the family, fantastic, If you're a neurosurgeon, fantastic. It's
about achievement and excelling and showing that both stability and
stability in the home and drive out there in the world.
And then when they flip it around, they ask about
what are the what are the are their professions that
across all socioeconomic strata for men all a you know,

(11:25):
whether you are a construction worker who just came to America,
you know, five years ago, or you're the CEO of
a fortune five hundred country. You know what they all
say they wanted in a woman the same traits that
you laid out, but also nurse, pediatrician, school teacher, the
professions that which are all you know, real professions, great
jobs of people need, but they all they all deal

(11:45):
with the nurturing and the feminine. And all men recognize that.
As if I have to pick a mate based on profession,
those are the professions that come to mind. Yeah, because
you can work in those professions. And I used to
be a teacher, you know, so we've talked about that
a lot. You can work in the professions and be
in your feminine energy. Media, by the way, is a
very masculine industry. So what you find oftentimes in media

(12:07):
is you have women, and I've been in both worlds,
you have women who go into these high powered media
settings and in order to survive and rub elbows with
very powerful men and some very powerful women and negotiate
these difficult contracts and get on air and exert yourself
in these debates, you do become a bit masculinized. Now
you have to really be conscious of that. Now. I

(12:28):
had an advantage because I was always very shy. I
always lent toward like professions like teaching. In my home
and in my personal life, I'm extremely shy and antisocial.
You know that it's hard to get me out to
a dinner, and when I do go. My business part
of Patrick a David. It's true like Patrick, but David
and I are close and I'll go to his house

(12:49):
and he'll be like, is jet here? Like by nature,
I'm very kind of submissive in my personal life and
always happen. So for me, I was able to balance
those worlds. But it's not easy if you're not wired
that way. And you see women, woman after woman. It's
not like you're saying to these women, don't work. You
want everybody to build a life they want for themselves.
And I'm a big proponent of freedom, but I'm just

(13:10):
saying to women like, hey, listen, you're getting hardened by
these industries. It's a reality. You almost can't help it.
You're getting hardened by how tough and challenging. I'll tell
you something, businesses are. Yeah, as a guy who you know,
I'm married now, yeay, By the way excited. You're married
to thank you. It took me a long time found
the greatest bringing. You're married, You a great guy, have

(13:31):
a kid. Yeah, and you But you and I both
are veterans of the single scene in New York City's
at some level. I mean for you know many years,
you for many years. And the thing that I came
across that was the most common with women who were
objective women in their thirties, who were unmarried, who were
objectively smart, attractive and appealing, but couldn't figure like it

(13:57):
wasn't working, Like why why haven't you know? Women maybe
thirty five, maybe thirty six, and at that stage where
it's like, well is this am I gonna be able
to find a guy to settle down with? And they
start to have that in anxiety some of them. It
starts a little earlier than that. You know what I
came across more than anything else, masculine energy the single
biggest thing for women who they have all this stuff
lined up. They're like, I went to a great school
and I've got a great job and I've got to

(14:19):
but yeah, but like you know, when I try to
hold the door, when I want to pay for dinner,
or when I want to, you know, direct the evening,
you're like, no, no, no, I'm I'm I'm. It's like
somebody has to lead and somebody has to follow when
you're dancing. That's just the way it is, or else
you're stepping on each other's feet. Right. We had that
conversation on air this week and I was with talking
to Destiny. I don't know if you know who he is.

(14:40):
He's a streamer, super liberal, like thinks Hillary Clinton, you know,
is basically you know, the second coming um. And we
had that conversation about anyone like Hillary Clinton. He does UM.
And we were having a conversation where I was talking
about this head of household and it's it's a word
that triggers liberals and I was just simply saying, there

(15:00):
has to be a head of household and he was like, well, no,
it's you know, a partnership and this, And I said, well,
somebody has to pull the trigger on decisions. I'm not
saying that it's it's not a place of disrespect, it's
just a mutual understanding that like, in my view, a
man should be the head of household, and in many
people's views, that's how it functions. It's not something that's forced.
Women aren't subjugated. Women just naturally by virtue of our biology.

(15:22):
Just sit back on some of that stuff and we choose,
if we're smart, a guy that we trust to lead
who by the way, we want that guy because we
know that if tough times hit, that's also going to
be a guy that can solve his way in our
way out of a problem. Can problem solve usually as
financially stable. Usually isn't sitting on the couch next to
us while we watch the Nope, A crying more than
I am. That's a problem. So it's just there's these

(15:43):
trigger words that all of these people hear about, like
male leader. You know these women have The reason that
you were seeing all those women with masculine ie energy
is because they've been trained to behave that way from
a very young age. You know, starting in college that
I don't need a man, you know, the career driven
mentality and again you want to work fine, But I
always say something has to give. All of those women

(16:04):
that are delaying family, if they know they want a family,
they're also you know, knowing that their fertility is shrinking,
and they're knowing that female biology is just what it is.
They're knowing that if they rack up that body count.
We talk about body count all the time, and it's
so crazy because I don't know, if not, I don't know,
the audience of this podcast just either knows a body count.
We've got a lot, so we've got a lot of

(16:25):
former military to whom body count would be a very
different thing, you know what I mean differently Okay, So
essentially promiscuous women and the idea of promises that the
number of people, the number of people they've slept with
is the body count, right, number of people they slept
and they will You'll have twenty three twenty four year
old women being like, oh yeah, I don't know, twenty
twenty two, I lost count, and they're they've bought into

(16:47):
the story of feminism that guys don't care about that,
and you have guys on the panel like I done.
It's not just um and I have to get to
a word from our sponsor one second here, Jededi, But
I just want to want to throw into the mix
that another part of this is the lie that men
and women are the same. Equality in the law is
a totally different thing, and we're all for that, but

(17:09):
that they're the same. It also comes out here because
the psychological impact of intimacy that women especially at that
it is different. I know, we're supposed it affects women
more profoundly. Now there's always going to be exceptions and
people talk, well, what about this person who's a sex worker,
or what about this person in general, which is how

(17:29):
you can only discuss things like this in the generality
of what is true. It is far more negative for
the female psychology because and that makes sense, right, because
they take more risk the possibility of pregnancy, and these
are things that the left totally ignores. I one second,
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ninety eight is the price, all right, Jedediah, So why
do women get so One thing that I noticed with
the ever with these discussions, I noticed this about everything.
By the way, if I say to people the other day,
I just tweeted out, I was like, you know, one
of the great things that I learned a long time

(18:53):
ago was don't have a TV in your bedroom. Whether
you live alone or not, don't have a TV in
your bedrum I'm not anti TV. I got an amazing
TV that actually turns into artwork on the wall. But
it just isn't the right move. If you need to
do something for you to sleep, read a book, it's
better for your brain. It's people get super hostile? Do

(19:14):
people get super hostile? Women get super hostile when you
try to tell them some of these things that you're saying,
And why is that? Well, because they know it's true,
because they know deep down inside it's true. It's interesting
if you watch these panels, which is essentially what I
do for a living now, and you watch women respond
to these questions about body count is one that particularly
gets them heated. If you ask them what their body

(19:34):
count is, a lot of them will shrink in fear
and be like or you know, they'll say if they're
in some type of situation ship which is just like
a casual relationship where they're sleeping together but there's no commitment,
they'll be very like. They'll shrink back a lot of
times because they know that that's not something to be
proud of. And you know, they know that they're being
fed by modern feminism like this is empowering, this is

(19:56):
good for you. You do you you go, girl, you
don't need a man. But they also know it doesn't
feel good. They know they're unhappy. You know how many
women are on anxiety drugs, antidepressants, they're you know, taking
birth control for years and years and years. Their hormones
are out of whack. In fact, it is a lot
of studies that show that women make different decisions about
their mates. They choose different partners whether they're on birth

(20:17):
control or not. So oftentimes you'll have women on birth
control and they're so manipulated by that drug that that
same guy will look different to them when they're done,
and they'll be like, oh, I don't want him. So
it's actually it's actually women who have told me in
the past, like female friends of mine, um, you know,
and I would say, really in the last five or
six years, I've particularly heard from them, they approach it

(20:38):
this way. They go, birth control became this thing, Oh
you have acne, go on birth control, Oh you're having
you have a your your period is a little like
more painful of whatever. Go on. It'll regularly and they
they got you know, starting these girls starting in high
school that the doctors are just putting them out like
like skittles or something like, just get on birth control,
that's right, And then they say so for a lot

(20:58):
of these women, if they're not getting married, they're they're
in their thirties, they've been taking this powerful hormone that
effectively mimics pregnancy in the body and affects the uterine
lining and everything else for over a decade, and you
think that that's that's a good place for women to
women actually said this to me, and I mean I
had never really and I was like, oh my god,
that's you know, I'm sobody. I don't even like taking
any biotics unless I think that I'm going to die,

(21:19):
you know, So I totally, yeah, I'm I'm that way
now because I became very health conscious and you know,
followed down a whole path of wellness and whatnot. But
I took birth control pills for six years and I
didn't take it for sexual reasons. I took it because
it was given to me by doctor. It was like, oh,
you have an a regular cycle, take this and you
think it's something good. And I've been doing you know
a lot of research recently that shows that you know,

(21:41):
you have bustle muscle and bones, don't if you take
birth control in your early twenties, that's a period when
you're as a woman, your muscles and your bones are
supposed to build and grow, and a lot of women
that are on these birth control pills don't have that
proper window, and they wind up coming in for scans
and their bodies are not where they should be at.
But it also changes you. It changes your your This

(22:03):
is your hormones. These chemicals change what you like, what
you don't like, your moods, who you're attracted to, who
you're not so and it's a delay, right. It enables
that promiscuity in women where they're thinking, well, I don't
have consequence to my actions in the same way. So
it incentivizes these women to kind of behave like what
I call like badly behave guys. You know those guys

(22:24):
in high school or college that you were like, oh man,
that guy's just you know, behaving. I've started this to
I actually have gotten into fights with with even not
like big fights, but you know, arguments with members of
my own extended family on this issue. I say that
Samantha Jones and sex in the City is one of
the worst things to happen to women in pop culture.
Not that I'm some huge sex and the City watch
I've I've seen enough of it. I'm not gonna lie

(22:45):
I see you know. You know it's very well written,
it's very clever. But the notion no woman acts like this.
But but creating a character where she is acting in
this way, I think and at some level normalizes in
a lot of young women's minds. Oh, this is what
a a sexy, successful executive in New York does. He's
sex with a guy that she just met, like in
a bathroom. That's pathological. I mean, that's actually like an

(23:09):
addiction level of sexual promiscuity. So women of that age
don't act like that because they're too busy. If they've
lived a life like Samantha, they're too busy crying now
because they've missed out on all of these things that
the window has closed. Right, Those are the women who
are like, I wish I would have had a child,
Why don't I have a husband? What did I do wrong?

(23:31):
They're crying. But what you do have now is you
have a generation of young women that do act like that.
They are hyper promiscuous, they don't care, they're proud of it.
If they're not promiscuous, they're wanting to be. They're crazy.
They're saying, oh, that's what I should be doing. They're
outright rejecting relationships that build any type of emotional investment.

(23:52):
It's a it's a really big problem. And you talk
before about how men and women are different and hook
up culture, and I tell women all the time, like
men are wired differently. Their biology makes them wired differently.
They are able to engage in hook up culture, and
they're much less likely to have trauma and damage trum
it than you are as a woman. That is just real,

(24:12):
because we are wired differently, and just by virtue of
our anatomy. By the way, because it's so like when
you're with a man, he's literally like not to say,
I don't know how else to say it, but he's
inside your body. I mean, this is very intimate. This
is very vulnerable for a woman in a very different
way than that experience is for a man. By virtue
of that alone, women have a different experience than then.

(24:33):
We're just different. So to be like, oh I want
to behave like a man. Oh a guy's doing it,
so I should be doing it too, is absurd. It's
come and again like women don't care about a man's
body count. If if they meet a guy and the
guy says, oh, I slept with you know, thirty women,
but I'm different. Now, that is not going to be
a disqualifier. That is not going to be a disqualifier

(24:54):
for that woman. She's she's gonna be like, well, he's different. Now.
She's gonna want to know is he financially stable. She's
gonna want to know, you know, does he want to
have kids? Does he want to be a provider and
a protector? Can he defend himself. If you flip that
conversation and you have that guy having that conversation will
one and she's like, oh, yeah, I've been with you know,
thirty men, he's gonna be like, I think I have
somewhere to be. Let me pay this bill and let
me get out of the here. I want to ask
you a yeah, we're different, They're definitely different. I want

(25:16):
to ask about the social media rolling all this by
the way, you know, TikTok, Instagram and all that. Come
back to that in a second, But first off, we're
talking about what's going on online. We will be Identity
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(25:40):
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Jededia social media only fans, I've we only got like

(26:44):
ten minutes, so we'll have to have you back to
go into this a lot more. But how much is
that affecting this massive challenge of basically the feminist destruction
of female happiness? I mean the social media component, let's
do that one first. Well, negatively affecting women, and it's
also negatively affecting men because what's happening is that women

(27:05):
are getting a boatload of attention online. I mean, it's
the comparison is like you you have women that will
sit and they'll get like, I don't know how many
swipes in an hour, and they feel like they have
all of these options, right, They're just like, oh, I'm
wanted left and right. It makes them much less likely
to give that guy. Say they meet a guy and
he on a scale from one to ten, he rates
a seven, and they're like, oh, you know, he's cool,
he's nice, he's got a good job. But there's all

(27:26):
these other guys in my phone, so I'm not going
to give him at the time of day driving Lamborghinis
right exactly and in their dms and giving them a
ton of Attention's very easy for women to get attention online.
So and it also you know, hurts the guys because
the guy still get swipes like that. Guys can sit
all day and wait for one swipe in comparison to women,
guys don't have the same unless sure, I thought, you know,

(27:47):
the top, the top, the top. You know, of course
there's some guys getting you know, women floating into their dms,
but your average guy and your average women are having
very very different different experiences online. So you have like
a whole generation of sexless men. They're alone, they're only
they're looking for, you know, somebody to be with. They're
not getting any swipes, and you have a whole generation
of women that are essentially being extremely picky. They're saying,

(28:07):
we want one hundred k. You got to be six
feet and up, you got you got to fit all
of these things. And and they're all dating the same guys.
So you have women that are just willing to share
those guys at the top, and you've got all of
these guys in the middle, who are really good guys.
You know, they're they're hard workers, they're quality men that
are just being ignored, so you know, and you have

(28:28):
them then turning to things like pornography, you have women
hyper sexualizing themselves for that attention. So you see, like
you know, the adoration of the I call it the
Kim Kardashian generation, which is deeply distressing to women. It's
multi tier problems in even I'd be curious if you think,
maybe you know, this is a maybe I'm I'm I'm
a little off here, but my sense in Miami is

(28:49):
even women who are who are again objectively attractive. You know,
I live in Miami, now, I know you're not not
far away. Um, they do these things to themselves that
are as cartoonish because of how it appears on Instagram,
and they almost try to recreate a like the filter
look and the filter proportions in real life by doing

(29:10):
these surgeries, and you know, I mean there's a lot
of stuff that they do, but a lot of facial surgery,
dairy air surgery. I guess we could call it the
farrier the Brazilian butt lift, and you know, maybe on
Instagram it gets a lot of clicks and follows and everything.
But you see these women and I see him, and
they work out of my gym. They film themselves working
out of the gym, so you always know who they

(29:31):
are because they're influencers or they have an only fans
and you look at them, you say, what are you
doing to yourself? Like this doesn't look normal? No, it doesn't.
It's not attractive. I actually tweeted about today I was
watching The Bachelor. I do a lot of The fun
part is I get to watch all these crazy shows
for research and pull it. There's is another show called
sex Life that is absolutely wild. It's just enforcing hyper

(29:54):
feminism with a woman who her divorce has been glamorized
as an opportunity for her to find her self even
though she's left three kids in the process, and it's
just insane stuff. But I was watching a segment from
the Bachelor, and the woman can't even move her face.
It's so frozen from botox and filler that she's crying
and the guy can't even relate to her because she
looks soullless. So you have women distorting themselves. I actually

(30:17):
have a friend of mine in New York who's he's
like a cosmetic dermatologist. He's always trying to get me
to go in there. I don't do any of that stuff.
As you can see in my farhead moves a whole lot.
I'm not into any of that stuff because I'm aware
of the toxic side effects of all of it. So
but he's always like, oh, yeah, come on in. I'm like, no,
I'm good. But he says, you know, I have women
coming in here and they're showing me filtered images of

(30:37):
like Kim Kardashian or whatnot, and they're saying, I want
to look like this, and they want their own face
to look like that. Now it's it's completely twisted. And
by the way, Kim Kardashian, who I have interviewed in person,
doesn't look like the Kim Kardashian you see online. She
kind of looks like a wax figure and kind of
weird in person. It's not natural. You see this all
over the place in Miami in particular, in a way

(30:58):
that's it's far far is what I saw in many,
many years of being in New York City, the aesthetic
down here because there's a lot of it's an influencer culture,
a lot of crypto bros and only fans girls running
around in Miami, and you see these women are doing
things themselves. I don't know if you saw. I mean
Kim Basinger, I thought, you know, remember alex Alec baldwin

(31:18):
first first wife. I believe Kim Basinger was one of
the most beautiful Hollywood actresses in the nineties. You know,
she was a total leading She was in like the
second Waynes World movie with garthmember as like, she's so beautiful.
But that wasn't one of you know, she was in
La Confidential, all these great movies. She's beautiful. That was her.
She was an actress who was beautiful. That was her thing.
If you see what she's done to her face now,

(31:39):
I mean she looks like a person who is going
through an extreme psychological crisis based on just the decision
she'd made about what she's done to herself cosmetically. Madonna.
I mean, look at the surface of Madonna. I mean
completely distorted. I mean they're distorted, right, They're completely, completely
and totally distorted. Yeah, it's horrible. Um, it's horrible. It's happening,

(32:00):
I think, yeah. I mean I'm close to Miami as well.
I think it is happening in these places more. But
on one side effect of that, that's really interesting because
I hear from men a lot of a lot of
guys that listen and they'll say, what it's causing us
to kind of revere our natural women. So these guys
are so tired of seeing all of this on social
media that it's really interesting. They look for that girl

(32:20):
natural girl next door. Now they have like a deep appreciation,
and those of them, by the way, who are narried,
are strongly encouraging their wife don't do this, I mean,
don't try to look younger. Freddy with the audience knows
it's on Instagram and stuff. I mean, like my wife,
for example, you're you're a very natural person. Your husband,
who am I now, also likes the natural look. My
wife is a very natural looking person. She doesn't really

(32:44):
do anything she's beautiful because of that though. That's like people,
That's what I'm saying. I'm really drawn to that. I'm
really drawn to somebody who's like, I'm a healthy, vibrant,
you know, well adjusted person who is appealing. And i
just feel like we're all getting long. Everyone's got all
this fake everything all the time, and it's all boattox

(33:07):
and giant fake this and fake that. Everyone's doing this stuff,
and I'm just gonna be like, what is it. I mean,
it's like this arms race that's been created by social media.
It's it's totally nuts. One second, Jededia because I want
to make sure that the folks in this audience have
the appropriate energy level to get through their day. They
did check out Chalk amazing. You would like them amazing
all natural supplements for my friends at Chalk that help

(33:27):
you balance out things that are making your biochemistry go
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(33:48):
name buck when you make your first purchase on the site.
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not just your first purchase for life. Go to chalk
dot com. That's cchoq dot com. Use my name buck
as the promo. Look, you can cancel the subscription if
you want, but you're gonna love it, and so you
should checkout Chalk dot com. Jededi, we could do this
for three hours, So I'm gonna invite myself. I want
to go on one of these shows. You're one of
these panels that you do. So you tell me, I'll

(34:11):
hop you know, I'll hop in and drive over and
we'll do it. Because we could do this for three hours.
I've only got about a minute or so. Where can
folks go and see the kind of work you're doing, because,
by the way, I love you've worked the biggest places,
the view Fox. You know you've been on these big stages.
Jedediah Unleashed is amazing. You know, I saw it during
COVID and you keep doing it now. So where can

(34:31):
people go to see more of your work? Yeah, people
can check out Jedediabielle Alive. It's everywhere you got your podcasts,
you can go to YouTube, you can go to Spotify, wherever,
wherever you get your pods. We also post full episodes
on Rumble the day after they air. Like I said,
I take on feminism, I take on the matrix, all
the three letter you know, harmful, dangerous organizations that want
to take your freedom. It's a mix of you know,

(34:53):
culture and politics. Obviously follow me on social media as well, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter,
But Jededibille Live is my hubb and I'm definitely gonna
have you want to actually have an idea for a
way to bring you one that's going to be awesome.
I don't know if you're gonna do it well, it
remains to be seen. But I think people need to
see Buck Sexton in a debate with a blue pill
beat a guy that's what I think the world. Oh man,

(35:13):
that'd be fun. That'd be fun. I love Wis on
the floor with Comis. That's what I enjoyed the moment.
There you go, j I ambule everybody, Jedai I Abila
check it out. Jedai, thanks so much. I see you soon.

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