[indistinct chatter]

Aliza Hollister

Weekly episodes where your super cool funny smart host, Aliza Hollister, deep dives into pop culture, conspiracy rabbit holes that she may need your help out of, and historical moments that are kind of wtf. It's great! You'll love it!

Episodes

  1. 4 DAYS AGO

    Episode 9: Toodles to 2025!

    It’s the end of 2025 and somehow, we all survived it. In this year-end episode of [indistinct chatter], Aliza takes you on a month-by-month journey through one of the most chaotic, heartbreaking, historic, absurd, and oddly hopeful years in recent memory. From devastating disasters and global conflicts to pop culture insanity, medical breakthroughs, internet scandals, and Spotify Wrapped revelations, this episode asks the only reasonable question: what the hell just happened? This is not a neat recap. It’s a rambling, honest, occasionally unhinged reflection on a year that felt cursed, miraculous, hilarious, terrifying, and transformative (sometimes all at once). Along the way, Aliza also shares her personal Spotify Wrapped, her philosophy on “embracing the cringe,” and why being a little delusional might actually be the healthiest way forward. IN THIS EPISODE: January from hell: mass tragedies, wildfires, tariffs, and a historic (and controversial) inauguration Medical miracles & buried good news: pig kidney transplants, Ebola eradicated, women’s healthcare breakthroughs A world on edge: wars, assassinations, political violence, ceasefires, and global protests History made: the first American pope, the first millennial saint, and landmark climate rulings Natural disasters that reshaped communities: from tornadoes and floods to blizzards and fires Pop culture chaos: the Coldplay kiss cam scandal, Labubu dolls, Katy Perry in space, and fictional K-pop groups topping real charts Celebrity losses that hit hard and why legacies matter more than headlines Taylor Swift & Travis Kelce’s engagement, Messi magic, Super Bowl LIX tings, and award-season wins Spotify Wrapped breakdown: genres, artists, albums, and why Midwest emo refuses to die Why “embracing the cringe” might be the 2026 mindset we all need ON ALIZA’S SCREEN/ON PAGES/IN HER EARS: Movies & TV: Conclave The Princess Bride When Harry Met Sally A Few Good Men Anora Stranger Things Books: Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen Emma - Jane Austen Mansfield Park - Jane Austen Music, Artists & Albums Mentioned: Royel Otis (Hickey, Pratts & Pain, Sofa Kings) Kings of Leon (Come Around Sundown) Brand New Pup (The Dream Is Over) Le Shiv Role Model Dope Lemon My Chemical Romance - The Black Parade Circa Survive - “Get Out” Kendrick Lamar (Super Bowl Halftime Show) Beyoncé - Cowboy Carter K-Pop Demon Hunters (Netflix) The Bottom Line:2025 was devastating. It was historic. It was ridiculous. And somehow, it still made room for joy, music, growth, and delusion. If nothing else, this episode is proof that staying informed, laughing when you can, and loving what you love (cringe and all) might be the only way forward. New episodes every Tuesday! Follow, subscribe, and come chat about the weird, the wild, and the indistinct chatter.

    48 min
  2. 23/12/2025

    Episode 8: The Great Eggnog Riot of 1826

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza serves up a wild Christmas story: the Great Eggnog Riot of 1826. West Point cadets, fed up with strict military life under Superintendent Sylvanus Thayer, smuggled whiskey onto campus for a Christmas Eve party. What started as innocent eggnog turned into drunken chaos with swords, smashed windows, and a barricaded superintendent.  IN THIS EPISODE: West Point Hell: Life under Sylvanus Thayer in the 1820s = no fun, no alcohol, no Christmas break. Ocean's Eleven, 1826 Style: How cadets orchestrated a weeks-long smuggling operation through Buttermilk Falls, bribing West Point employees to sneak whiskey past guards and stashing bottles across campus like doomsday preppers. Jefferson Davis's Big Night: The future Confederate president plots whiskey heists and somehow escapes punishment despite witness testimony placing him at the scene. Classic politician move. Christmas Eve Goes Project X: What started as a quiet party turned into 70+ drunk cadets with unlimited spiked eggnog. Fiddle music, dancing, Captain Hitchcock getting stuff thrown at him, and the rebellion spreads to multiple barracks. Swords at 2 AM: Multiple cadets running around with real military swords. Superintendent Thayer barricades himself in his room. Windows smashed, furniture destroyed. Full war zone by Christmas morning. The Morning After: 19 cadets court-martialed with hilarious testimony. Jefferson Davis says everyone's mistaken about seeing him there. Confederate Reunion: Jefferson Davis graduates in 1828, becomes CSA President. Several expelled/punished cadets also became Confederate generals. The Legacy: West Point banned alcohol even harder. Thayer cracked down on discipline. Congress questioned if the academy should even exist. The Eggnog Riot became legendary whispered lore for generations of cadets. The Bottom Line: Stressed military teenagers wanted one night of Christmas fun and nearly destroyed West Point over dairy and whiskey. Were they stupid? Absolutely. But they were kids!  At least your family Christmas drama doesn't involve courts-martial and swords. Right? On Aliza’s Screen (these can be Christmas movies if you want): Oceans Eleven Project X Wayne’s World TOPICS MENTIONED: Great Eggnog Riot, West Point Military Academy, Sylvanus Thayer, Jefferson Davis, Confederate States, Christmas 1826, Captain Ethan Allen Hitchcock, William Fitzgerald, Buttermilk Falls, North Barracks, courts-martial, military discipline, Civil War generals, eggnog history, holiday traditions, military history, Christmas riots New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more deep dives into the weird, the wild, and the indistinct chatter!

    15 min
  3. 17/12/2025

    Episode 7: Pullin' A Nancy Drew & Solving Murders

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza stumbles across a story that stopped her mid-scroll: college students at the University of Texas at Arlington just solved a 34-year-old murder. Their class project led to an arrest in a case that had stumped detectives since 1991. But this isn't just about one remarkable group of students... it's about how regular people are revolutionizing cold case investigations. IN THIS EPISODE: The UTA Breakthrough: How 15 criminology students spent 100+ hours reviewing 500+ files from Cynthia Gonzalez's 1991 murder. The suspect? A friend who told police she was "glad" the victim was dead but couldn't be charged for 34 years due to lack of evidence.Michelle McNamara & The Golden State Killer: A true crime writer became obsessed with California's most prolific serial killer. She coined the name "Golden State Killer," worked with online communities, hired researchers, and kept the case alive. Reddit Solves Mysteries: Meet Grateful Doe (Jason Callahan), a hitchhiker killed in 1995 who remained unidentified for 20 years until Redditor Layla Betts started a subreddit. Plus: Linda Pagano's case cracked by sleuthing Redditors digging through cemetery records.The DNA Revolution: Genetic genealogy has solved hundreds of cold cases. It caught the Golden State Killer and is solving more cases from the 1970s. But there are serious privacy concerns! Your third cousin's crime could be solved using YOUR DNA test.Recent DNA Wins: Mary K. Schlais (murdered 1974, solved 2024). Danielle Houchins (1996 Montana case). Melonie White (Vegas Justice League funded testing). Leslie Preer (cleared innocent husband after 23 years). Baby Garnet (newborn found in latrine, mother identified via consumer DNA test).The Warning: Boston Marathon bombing showed what happens when internet sleuths get it wrong. Amateur investigation without oversight destroys lives.What It Means: Fresh eyes see what experienced investigators miss. Students have time professionals don't. Communities bring different skills. Technology advances. These breakthroughs mean everything: answers after decades of nothing.In Aliza's Ears: And That's Why We DrinkThe First DegreeMorbidMurder, Mystery & MakeupMy Favorite MurderSinisterhoodUp and VanishedWine & CrimeThe Bottom Line: You don't need a badge to make a difference. College students, true crime writers, Reddit communities, and people taking ancestry tests for fun are helping solve murders that seemed impossible to crack. Over 600 cold cases solved via genetic genealogy. First-semester students getting arrests. Families finally getting closure after 30, 40, 50 years. But with great power comes great responsibility—work WITH law enforcement, respect victims, focus on truth not fame. The UTA model could revolutionize how we handle cold cases nationwide. TOPICS MENTIONED: UTA cold case program, Cynthia Gonzalez, Janie Perkins, Jessica Roberts, Arlington Police Department, Professor Patricia Eddings, Detective Anthony Stafford, Michelle McNamara, I'll Be Gone in the Dark, Golden State Killer, Joseph James DeAngelo, Paul Holes, Patton Oswalt, Grateful Doe, Jason Callahan, Layla Betts, Linda Pagano, Reddit investigations, Boston Marathon bombing, genetic genealogy, GEDmatch, FamilyTreeDNA, CODIS, Mary K. Schlais, Jon Miller, Danielle Houchins, Paul Hutchinson, Melonie White, Vegas Justice League, Baby Garnet, Leslie Preer, Eugene Gligor, Othram, DNA testing, 23andMe, Ancestry, forensic genealogy, cold cases, citizen investigators, crowdsourced investigation, Uncovered.com, Washington State DNA funding, Colorado DNA retesting, privacy concerns, wrongful convictions, victim advocacy, true crime New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more deep dives into the weird, the wild, and the indistinct chatter!

    34 min
  4. 09/12/2025

    Episode 6: The Satanic Panic of the 80s & 90s

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza dives into the Satanic panic that gripped America in the 1980s and 90s—and yes, it connects to Stranger Things. Remember in season 4 when the whole town wanted to hunt down Eddie for leading a "Satanic cult"? That was based on a very real (and very ridiculous) chapter of American history where Dungeons & Dragons, heavy metal, and daycare centers were all blamed for Satan's alleged takeover of society. IN THIS EPISODE: The McMartin Preschool Trial: How a letter to 200 parents in 1983 spiraled into the longest and most expensive criminal trial in U.S. history. Michelle Remembers: The 1980 book that started it all. A psychiatrist and his patient claimed to recover memories of an 81-day Satanic ritual. It launched an entire industry. The grifter economy: Meet "experts" who made bank scaring people. Plus: how "Cops for Christ" trained law enforcement to see Satanic crime everywhere. Dungeons & Dragons under attack: A grieving mother founded BADD (Bothered About Dungeons & Dragons), claiming the game taught real spells and summoned demons. Schools banned it. Parents burned game books. Heavy metal on trial: Judas Priest sued for subliminal messages. The PMRC's "Filthy Fifteen" list. How Parental Advisory stickers were born from panic. They even tried to ban John Denver! Everything became suspect: Procter & Gamble's logo, Mr. Rogers, and even Tinky Winky. How it ended: The 1992 FBI report finding ZERO evidence of Satanic cults. Elizabeth Loftus proving false memories are real.  Modern parallels: We’ve learned absolutely nothing. Same patterns, different decade, same dangerous consequences. On Aliza's Screen: America's Most WantedMazes and MonstersStranger Things (STILL?)The Bottom Line: The Satanic Panic ruined lives based on zero evidence. People spent years in jail for crimes that never happened. Children were traumatized by aggressive interrogations. Families were destroyed. And we're doing it again. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Question the "experts." Don't destroy someone's life based on your feelings and pattern-seeking brains. Real problems (actual child abuse, actual trafficking) get ignored when we chase fantasies. TOPICS MENTIONED: Satanic Panic, McMartin Preschool, Stranger Things, Dungeons & Dragons, Patricia Pulling, BADD, heavy metal, Judas Priest, PMRC, Tipper Gore, recovered memory therapy, false memories, Elizabeth Loftus, Michelle Remembers, Mike Warnke, Lauren Stratford, QAnon, Pizzagate, moral panic, 1980s, Ray Buckey, Kee MacFarlane, FBI report, Kenneth Lanning, West Memphis Three, conspiracy theories, Eddie Munson, Frank Zappa, John Denver, Led Zeppelin, Prince, Madonna, Cyndi Lauper, Stranger Things, Cornerstone magazine, Oprah, 20/20, Satan, 4chan, Rebecca Brown Yoder, Anton LaVey, Bob Larson, Jack Chick, Geraldo Rivera, Dr. Lawrence Pazder, Michelle Smith, New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more deep dives into the weird, the wild, and the indistinct chatter!

    52 min
  5. 02/12/2025

    Episode 5: Montauk, Stranger Things Have Happened

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza is still recovering from her Thanksgiving sugar hangover (unconditionally toxic relationship alert!) before diving into the conspiracy theory that inspired Stranger Things. Spoiler: the show was almost called Montauk, and the rabbit hole goes DEEP. **Aliza tried to avoid season 5 spoilers, but listen at your own risk! IN THIS EPISODE: What is the Montauk Project? The wild conspiracy theory alleging that the U.S. government conducted secret experiments at Camp Hero on Long Island. Plus: What Camp Hero actually was (hint: not a sleepaway camp for future superheroes). Enter Preston Nichols & Al Bielek: Meet the guys who "recovered repressed memories" of working on the project. Their 1992 book included a disclaimer: "Whether you read this as science fiction or non-fiction..." Yeah. Why people believed: MK-Ultra was REAL (CIA mind control experiments 1953-1973). Operation Paperclip was REAL (recruiting Nazi scientists post-WWII). So if the government admitted to all that... what else might be true? The Duffer Brothers' obsession: How twin brothers from North Carolina discovered the Montauk Project and created a pitch called Montauk set on Long Island.  The lawsuit plot twist: Filmmaker Charlie Kessler sued the Duffers in 2018, claiming they stole his Montauk Project screenplay. The irony? Multiple people had the same idea because the conspiracy is just that compelling. The reality check: No credible evidence exists. All "proof" comes from recovered repressed memories (false memory syndrome is real, folks). Camp Hero is now a public park. Even respected UFO researcher Jacques Vallée called it "highly questionable." What WAS there?  The Montauk Monster: In 2008, a weird hairless creature washed up on Montauk shores. Conspiracy theorists freaked.  Paul Fagan's theory: Researcher thinks maybe the government WAS hiding something—a buried nuclear reactor.  Why it matters: The Montauk Project shaped how we think about the 1980s, childhood, and government secrecy. It inspired Stranger Things, Dark, The X-Files references, and ongoing fascination with Camp Hero.  On My Screen: Stranger Things Season 5 Volume 1  Interstellar  Hunters on Prime American Ultra  Hidden  Jaws  Close Encounters of the Third Kind  X-Files TOPICS: Montauk Project, Stranger Things, Camp Hero, conspiracy theories, Preston Nichols, Al Bielek, Philadelphia Experiment, Duncan Cameron, MK-Ultra, Operation Paperclip, Cold War paranoia, Duffer Brothers, Netflix, psychic experiments, time travel, false memory syndrome, Jacques Vallée, Montauk Monster, government secrecy, modern mythology New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more conspiracy deep dives, Stranger Things connections, and indistinct chatter!

    49 min
  6. 25/11/2025

    Episode 4: A Thanksgiving Episode (Long, Dark, and Twisted)

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza kicks off Episode 4 with gratitude for her listeners, nostalgic Thanksgiving memories (pickle binges and pumpkin pie murder!), & her tradition of crab legs instead of turkey. Then she asks: what's the REAL story behind Thanksgiving? Spoiler: It gets dark fast. IN THIS EPISODE: The Thanksgiving Myth vs. Reality: Why the romanticized story we learned as kids became popular during Manifest Destiny expansion in the 1840s-50s. What actually happened in 1621: Tisquantum (Squanto) was kidnapped, sold into slavery in Spain, rescued by monks, lived in England, & returned home in 1619 to find his entire village dead from disease. Strategic geopolitics, not friendship: Why Ousamequin (Massasoit) helped the struggling colonists & Tisquantum's complicated role. The Pequot War & Mystic Massacre (1637): Just 15 years after the feast, 400-700 Pequots killed. The Treaty of Hartford (1638) outlawed the Pequot name and sold survivors into slavery.  King Philip's War (1675-1678): The bloodiest conflict per capita in US history—more deaths per capita than the Civil War or WWII & The Great Swamp Fight (December 19, 1675). Sarah Josepha Hale's 17-year campaign: Thousands of handwritten letters—all declined. Fun fact: she preferred chicken and oysters. How Lincoln made it official: September 28, 1863—Sarah wrote to Lincoln during the Civil War. He issued a proclamation October 3, 1863 declaring the last Thursday of November as Thanksgiving. FDR's "Franksgiving" disaster (1939): FDR moved Thanksgiving to the second-to-last Thursday for Christmas shopping. 16 states refused the new date. Americans celebrated on TWO different days for two years. Congress finally settled it December 26, 1941—permanently establishing the fourth Thursday of November. How turkey became THE bird: Sarah's 1827 novel Northwood featured roasted turkey "at the head of the table." Practical advantages: turkeys were plentiful, cheap, and could feed more people than chicken. Plus the nationalist angle—making turkey distinctly American cuisine to separate from England. By 1857 turkey was traditional, by 1885 it was "Turkey Day." Today: $1 billion spent on turkeys, 46 million consumed on Thanksgiving Day. Modern traditions: Turkey pardons, Macy's Parade since 1924, football traditions, Turkey Trots, Friendsgiving, volunteering, post-meal naps (tryptophan + sugar = eepy). Indigenous perspectives today: National Day of Mourning—50+ years of Wampanoag gathering at Massasoit's statue in Plymouth each Thanksgiving. November is Native American Heritage Month. The day after Thanksgiving is Native American Heritage Day. The Menu: 1621 meal: crops, fowl (probably ducks/geese, NOT turkey), five deer from Wampanoag, seafood—no potatoes, sweet potatoes, or pie Modern meal: turkey, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, squash, corn, green beans, cranberry sauce, stuffing, pumpkin pie Regional variations: South (mac & cheese, pecan pie), Great Lakes (wild rice stuffing), West Coast (Dungeness crab—Aliza's tradition!) On My Screen: Stranger Things (new season dropping Thanksgiving Eve—will Cole let her binge on Thanksgiving?) Addams Family Values: The NOT Thanksgiving movie that "wokeified" Aliza's Thanksgiving views Thanksgiving, the 2023 Eli Roth film (horror movie for spooky girlies) TOPICS: Thanksgiving history, Manifest Destiny, Wampanoag, Tisquantum, Squanto, Pilgrims, Plymouth Colony, Ousamequin, Massasoit, Pequot War, Mystic Massacre, King Philip's War, Great Swamp Fight, genocide, Indigenous resistance, Sarah Josepha Hale, Abraham Lincoln, Civil War, FDR, Franksgiving, turkey tradition, William Bradford, Alexander Hamilton, turkey pardons, Macy's Parade, National Day of Mourning, Native American Heritage Month, colonial history, American holidays New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more history deep dives, real talk, and indistinct chatter! Happy Thanksgiving! 🦃

    51 min
  7. 18/11/2025

    Episode 3: Infantilization, SLOMW, and the NFL’s Streaming Nightmare

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza Hollister kicks off with some love for The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives (Season 3 supremacy!) and a fiery rant about the NFL's streaming nightmare—because why should watching football cost $900 a season? Then she dives deep into infantilization: what it is, how it shows up everywhere, and why it's way more insidious than you think. IN THIS EPISODE: What is infantilization? Aliza shares her own parent-tracking habits and answers the question: Am I infantilizing my parents? (Spoiler: No, but it's complicated.) Plus: the difference between protective concern and treating someone like they can't manage their own life. Elderspeak & nursing home abuse: How "baby talk" to elderly residents causes resistance to care, increases distress, and strips away dignity. Plus: the movie I Care A Lot and the very real problem of predatory guardianship for profit. The "teen brain" myth: Psychologist Robert Epstein argues adolescence is a social construct, not biology—and why recognizing teen competence doesn't mean removing protections from exploitation. Disability isn't one-size-fits-all: Why assuming incompetence is the problem, not offering help. How autism is treated as a "children's disorder" while autistic adults are erased from public consciousness. Intimate partner violence: How abusers use infantilization to control—positioning themselves as the "responsible adult" while eroding their partner's confidence and creating dependency. Race & infantilization: From enslaved Africans labeled "child races" to Native Americans declared legal "wards"—how infantilization justified theft, violence, and control. Plus: the double trauma of Black children experiencing adultification while Black adults face infantilization. The "girl" debate: Why calling adult women "girls" is technically infantilizing (but context matters). How infantilization is a dimension of workplace sexual harassment—and when it crosses the line. Property law & dignity takings: How infantilization enables land theft. Native Americans and the "ward to guardian" Supreme Court ruling that stole millions of acres. Heirs' property and how Black families lost 90% of their farmland between 1910-1997. Women and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act of 1974—because our grandmothers needed a man's signature to own property just 51 years ago. Resources mentioned: I Care A Lot (2020) – Netflix thriller about predatory guardianship Robert Epstein's The Case Against Adolescence Josephine Wright's 2023 fight against developers in South Carolina On My Screen/In My Ears: The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Season 3: Breaking stereotypes without flipping tables Outer Banks: Topper as the poster child for controlling "care" NFL: But only a fraction of it because justifying $900 for one season of football on spotty streaming services just isn’t going to work TOPICS: infantilization, elderspeak, nursing home abuse, predatory guardianship, teen brain myth, Robert Epstein, disability rights, autism advocacy, intimate partner violence, gaslighting, slavery, Native American history, heirs property, Black land loss, women's rights, Equal Credit Opportunity Act, property law, dignity takings, Ancient Greece, pederasty, feminism New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more history deep dives, pop culture hot takes, and indistinct chatter!

    47 min
  8. 11/11/2025

    Episode 2: Veterans Day, A House of Dynamite, and Sydney Sweeney's Jeans/Genes

    Welcome back to [indistinct chatter]! In this Veterans Day episode, host Aliza opens up about the struggles of podcasting as a beginner – from recording in a blanket fort to battling perfectionism through countless takes. Then she dives into the fascinating history and ongoing significance of November 11th. IN THIS EPISODE: From Armistice Day to Veterans Day: Why November 11th matters, Raymond Weeks' fight to honor ALL veterans (not just WWI), and the bizarre years (1971-1977) when the holiday was moved to October for three-day weekends. Plus: the 2025 "Victory Day" controversy – when President Trump proposed renaming the holiday and veterans pushed back HARD.Aliza shares about her grandfather, a WWII and Korean War veteran who was a POW and received both a Purple Heart and Bronze Star. A reminder that behind every statistic is a real person who sacrificed everything.The harsh reality: 1.2 million veterans rely on SNAP, thousands are homeless, and 20 veterans die by suicide daily. But there's hope – Aliza shares actionable charities making real impact: Homes For Our Troops, K9s for Warriors, Operation Homefront, and more.K9s for WarriorsOperation HomefrontHomes for Our TroopsDisabled American Veterans On My Screen, In My Ears: A House of Dynamite (Netflix): Kathryn Bigelow's stress-inducing nuclear thriller – same story, three perspectives, zero easy answersWicked: For Good preview: Part 2 drops November 21st (and yes, Aliza will cry again)Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle "Great Jeans" controversy: The backlash, the White House response, and Sydney's "nothing burger" statement TOPICS: Veterans Day, Armistice Day, military history, POW stories, veteran support, mental health, PTSD, Kathryn Bigelow, Netflix thrillers, Wicked sequel, Sydney Sweeney controversy New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more history deep dives, pop culture hot takes, and indistinct chatter!

    27 min
  9. Episode 1: The Gunpowder Plot of 1605, Stranger Things, American Horror Story, and Spree

    04/11/2025

    Episode 1: The Gunpowder Plot of 1605, Stranger Things, American Horror Story, and Spree

    Welcome to the first full episode of [indistinct chatter]! Host Aliza shares the real story behind launching this podcast – battling perfectionism, imposter syndrome, and finally embracing the mantra: "perfectionism is the enemy of done." IN THIS EPISODE: Wait, What? - The Gunpowder Plot (1605)On November 4th, 1605, Guy Fawkes was caught with 3,600 pounds of gunpowder beneath British Parliament. But was it a real Catholic conspiracy to assassinate King James I, or did the government orchestrate the entire plot? Aliza breaks down the suspicious evidence: the anonymous warning letter, the mysterious 9-day delay before searching, and the theory that Robert Cecil of Salisbury may have arranged the whole thing to justify cracking down on Catholics. On My Screen, In My Ears: Stranger Things Season 5 official trailer breakdown.: Vecna's back, Will's in danger, and it's releasing in three parts starting November 26thSpree (2020) review: Joe Keery's wild horror-comedy about a rideshare driver's killing spreeAmerican Horror Story Season 13 cast announcement: Major Coven reunion vibes with Sarah Paulson, Jessica Lange, Emma Roberts, Evan Peters, Angela Bassett, Ariana Grande & more! TOPICS: Gunpowder Plot, Guy Fawkes, historical conspiracies, Stranger Things, Netflix, Joe Keery, Spree movie review, American Horror Story, AHS Coven, Ryan Murphy New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe and follow for more deep dives, pop culture commentary, and indistinct chatter!

    19 min

About

Weekly episodes where your super cool funny smart host, Aliza Hollister, deep dives into pop culture, conspiracy rabbit holes that she may need your help out of, and historical moments that are kind of wtf. It's great! You'll love it!