Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Beth really adjoins us. She's a writer of The Federalist.
How many kids shows do they have over there altogether, Beth.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Well, I don't know it's the total number. I'm not
the one who did a study. It was the Concerned
Women for America, But what they found was that forty
one percent of NETWORKLIX shows are pushing LGBT agenda. And
it's just not the television. Isn't it not children's television anymore?
(00:28):
I mean it's got bright, shiny cartoons, and it's very
cute and the high squeaky voices, but the subject matter
is really not for kids anymore.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Well, this has kind of been the template for quite
some time now, hasn't it. You take programming that will
attract children and you use it as a propaganda piece
to try to indoctrinate them. At very least, you're trying
to convince them that alternative lifestyles are perfectly fine and
perfectly normal. There's nothing unusual about two mommies or two daddies.
(01:00):
But they've gone way past that part. It used to
be kind of just the we're gonna tell everybody it's
okay for women to be with women and men to
be with men, but it's gone way past that now.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
Yeah, and the transagenda as well, it's out there. For example,
there's the television show Ada Twist Scientist. I love that name.
It's so cute at rhymes. It has children planning a
wedding for two men who are getting married. And not
only do the men you know, you may kiss your
(01:32):
husband at the end of the wedding and everybody cheers,
but not only that, but they kiss throughout the entire episode,
like way too many kisses. And you know, I don't
even this is maybe unusual, but my son saved his
kissing until marriage even so, I mean, like, you know,
(01:53):
there are people out there who don't even want to
role model kissing before before marriage, let alone two men
kissing and children. What a dumb promise. Children don't plan weddings.
I know you want to do fantasy, but you know,
we don't do shows about kids getting car loans or
kids sitting for job interviews because those are adult themes
(02:17):
and they're not topics for children. But it neither is
the LGBT agenda. But there it is in front of
your kids.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Well, I noticed in your article too, who the executive
producers of that show you just talked about. Are Barack
and Michelle Obama?
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Yeah, yeah, Well they are in charge of a lot
of the things on Netflix, cartoons and beyond. I mean,
their fingerprints are on a lot of stuff. And if
you're watching Netflix with that in mind, you can just
see it. You go, I wonder if Michelle or if
the Obamas are involved in this one, and almost certainly
(02:58):
it will be. You know. You know, also a lot
of the shows that we know and trust from our
own childhood have been gading lesbian or transd up, like
Strawberry Shortcake now has transberry characters, and there's an episode
you'll see some links in the story that we posted
(03:19):
on the Federalists, and the links are like really upsetting
because Strawberry short But then they have this like a
big adult burly man in a dress and the kids
are cheering him, and he's like, you know, they have
the correct response because they're cheering. And they talked about
being your authentic self and these things that are very
(03:42):
self absorbed, teaching the value that you know you don't
want to teach your kids. You can't let television be
the babysitter because he can't trust even the old familiar
shows anymore like Magic School, Busser, Power Rangers, Babysitters Club.
She wrote, fairly odd parents, they all have gay scenes
(04:03):
in them.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Now, wow, let me ask you this, is this a
Hollywood problem, is this a network problem at Netflix, or
is this kind of an all all of the above problem.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Well, this study only looked at Netflix and found forty
one percent of their programming has this LGBT program p
gramming involved in adjustent children's shows. But we know that, glad.
The you know, the folks that represent gay representation have
(04:37):
a report that they put out that talks about every
year how much representation that they have on television across
the board, and they found in twenty twenty four there
was a four percent increase in extra twenty one characters.
There's like four hundred and sixty eight characters on television
(04:59):
right now who are representing the gay lesbian alliance. So yeah,
it's every where you turn. Parents really need to be
much more vigilant than when we were younger.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Well, thanks for illustrating that for us. I'm sure there's
a lot of folks listening with Netflix subscriptions that are enlightened.
Thanks to you. Beth appreciated Beth brilliant. She's a writer
at the Federalist