Don't Know, Do Care

Ashmita, Prakhar, and Sandy

Curious minds welcome, clueless takes guaranteed! Don't Know, Do Care is a curious mix of comedy, commentary, and casually intense learning. Every episode, one of us brings a topic the others know nothing about and tries to "educate" them, just enough for them to feign interest. Do we learn anything? Absolutely not. Do we care about the topic? Probably not. Are we curious, though? Potentially yes. We're not experts by any stretch of our already stretched imagination, but we're just trying to get a bit smarter, one strange question at a time. Curiosity might have killed a cat, but will it kill us? Only time will tell. Join us on our journey to learn something you didn't know you cared about.

  1. Don't Know Why The Media Loved Mussolini

    1d ago

    Don't Know Why The Media Loved Mussolini

    We like to imagine that the media is at its best when democracy is at its worst. That journalists become fearless, newspapers hold power accountable, and propaganda is easily spotted for what it is. History suggests that's not quite the case. In the first episode of a two-part series, we look at how the global media covered Benito Mussolini's rise to power, and it's far stranger than most people realise. Long before he became synonymous with fascism, dictatorship, and World War II, Mussolini was being described by major newspapers as a moderniser, a visionary, and the man who had restored "order" to Italy. Why were journalists so willing to overlook political violence? Why did so many newspapers celebrate fascism as a practical solution to socialism? And why did business interests seem to matter more than democratic values? Along the way, we explore how Mussolini's background as a journalist helped him understand, and eventually control, the press, creating an environment where censorship often wasn't even necessary because self-censorship did the job just fine. As always, this episode blends comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and quirky insights into one of those seemingly random topics that turns out to have unsettling parallels with the present. It's lighthearted education only because we occasionally make jokes to cope with the fact that history has a worrying habit of repeating itself. Because dictators don't usually rise despite good press. Sometimes, they rise with it. Important links: 1. How Journalists Covered the Rise of Mussolini and Hitler - https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-journalists-covered-rise-mussolini-hitler-180961407/ 2. MUSSOLINI, HOPE OF YOUTH, ITALY'S 'MAN OF TOMORROW - https://www.nytimes.com/1922/11/05/archives/mussolini-hope-of-youth-italys-man-of-tomorrow-hard-work-his-creed.html 3. MUSSOLINI AT WORK - https://www.nytimes.com/1922/11/12/archives/mussolini-at-work.html 4. Mussolini's fascists praised in 220 British newspaper reports - https://roguenation.org/mussolini-fascism-british-press/ 5. The marketing of Mussolini : American magazines and Mussolini, 1922-1935 - https://scholarship.richmond.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=2231&context=masters-theses 6. Italo-Ethiopian War - https://www.britannica.com/event/Italo-Ethiopian-War-1935-1936 7. Marzia Casolari-Hindutva Tie-up with Fascism in 1930s-Economic & Political Weekly - https://www.academia.edu/29191228/Marzia_Casolari_Hindutva_Tie_up_with_Fascism_in_1930s_Economic_and_Political_Weekly 8. RSS's militant structure is modelled on Mussolini's Blackshirts: Italian scholar of Hindutva - https://ullekhnp.com/2023/09/11/rsss-militant-structure-is-modelled-on-mussolinis-blackshirts-marzia-casolari/ Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 25m
  2. You Might Also Like: Morning Brew Daily

    1d ago ·  Bonus

    You Might Also Like: Morning Brew Daily

    Introducing Michaels Stages a Crafty Comeback & Americans Don’t Read Anymore from Morning Brew Daily. Follow the show: Morning Brew Daily #886: SK Hynix is slated to begin public trading on the Nasdaq as a company that has seen its stock pop more than sevenfold in due to the AI memory chip crunch. The NYC Midtown building partial-collapse scare has given pause to investors who thought it was supposed to be a boom-time for the office-to-residential revolution. Stock of the Week: Arts & crafts store Michaels is seeing success under private equity owner Apollo thanks to the demise of its competitors. Dog of the Week: Reading literacy in the US is sadly low. Finally, Claude launches its own version of “Wrapped.”  Get 10% off using MORNINGBREW10 at altrarunning.com/morningbrew  Get tickets for our trivia tournament! https://caveat.nyc/events/the-morning-brew-trivia-tournament-2026-07-30  Grab tickets to our Performance Revue show! https://www.morningbrew.com/events/brew-performance-revue-2026?utm_campaign=performance_revue_2026&utm_source=mbd Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note⁠⁠⁠  Watch Morning Brew Daily Here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.

  3. Don't Know About The World Cup's Smallest Nation

    Jun 29

    Don't Know About The World Cup's Smallest Nation

    In this episode, we travel (metaphorically) to Curaçao, a country so small that many football fans had never even heard of it before the World Cup draw. Most people recognise the name because of the bright blue cocktail liqueur. Almost nobody expected it to become one of the smallest nations ever to play on football's biggest stage. But this isn't just a football story. It's a story about colonialism, migration, identity, and what happens when a country understands its own strengths instead of obsessing over its weaknesses. We explore Curaçao's fascinating history, from its Indigenous roots and Dutch colonial past to its role in the transatlantic slave trade, before diving into how this tiny island quietly built one of the smartest football projects in the world. Add footballing legends like Patrick Kluivert, Guus Hiddink, and Dick Advocaat to the mix, and what looked like an impossible dream slowly started looking inevitable. Of course, we couldn't tell this story without eventually talking about India. With a population nearly 10,000 times larger than Curaçao's, why are we still waiting for our World Cup debut? Is it really about talent or is it about institutions, planning, and the ability to build systems that actually nurture it? As always, this episode blends comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and quirky insights into one of those wonderfully random topics that ends up saying far more about society than sport. It's lighthearted education that starts with an obscure Caribbean island and ends with a much bigger conversation about why some nations consistently punch above their weight while others keep talking about "potential." Because sometimes the biggest lesson in football doesn't come from Brazil, Germany, or Argentina, but instead, it comes from an island smaller than many Indian neighbourhoods. Important links: World Cup 2026: All you need to know about Dick Advocaat's Curacao - the tournament's smallest ever nation - https://www.skysports.com/football/news/12098/13545528/world-cup-2026-curacao-caribbean-nations-historic-first-appearance?utm_source=chatgpt.com Curaçao at the FIFA World Cup: Team profile and history - https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/articles/curacao-team-profile-history?utm_source=chatgpt.com The rapid rise of Curacao in Concacaf - https://www.concacaf.com/news/the-rapid-rise-of-curacao-in-concacaf?utm_source=chatgpt.com Curaçao - https://www.britannica.com/place/Curacao Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 19m
  4. Don't Know Who Banksy Is (Or Do We?)

    Jun 22

    Don't Know Who Banksy Is (Or Do We?)

    Most artists spend their entire careers trying to become famous. Banksy became one of the most famous artists on the planet by making sure nobody knew who he was. And somehow, that strategy worked so well that his anonymity became just as valuable as the art itself.   In this episode, we dive into the strange, contradictory, and deeply fascinating world of Banksy. We look at some of his most iconic works, from Girl with a Balloon and Flower Thrower to the legendary painting that shredded itself moments after being sold at auction, and explore why his art manages to be simultaneously accessible, political, funny, and infuriatingly effective. But the real story begins when Reuters decided to treat the question of Banksy's identity not as art-world gossip, but as a full-blown investigation. What follows is a genuinely bizarre detective story involving witnesses in war-torn Ukraine, old police records from New York, immigration data, aliases, graffiti crews, and the frontman of Massive Attack somehow finding himself in the middle of one of the biggest cultural mysteries of the last three decades.   We unpack why Robin Gunningham has long been considered the leading candidate, how the theory connecting Banksy to Robert Del Naja gained traction, and why Reuters now believes they may have finally pieced together the strongest case yet for Banksy's real identity. At the same time, we wrestle with a question that sits at the heart of the entire story: if anonymity is such a fundamental part of Banksy's art, should anyone be trying to reveal who he is in the first place? As always, this episode combines comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and quirky insights into one of those seemingly random topics that turns out to be about much more than it first appears. It's lighthearted education about art, celebrity, anonymity, journalism, and the strange ways modern society turns rebellion into a luxury product. Important links: 1. IN SEARCH OF BANKSY - https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/global-art-banksy/ 2. Banksy - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banksy 3. Banksy has been unmasked. But just how valuable is anonymity in the art world? - https://edition.cnn.com/2026/03/21/style/banksy-named-anonymity-artists-scli-intl 4. Banksy has been unmasked (again). But does this major Reuters investigation actually tell us something new? - https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2026/mar/18/banksy-identity-revealed-real-name-bristol-born-man-reuters-investigation Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 9m
  5. Don't Know When Japan Ruled (a part of) India

    Jun 15

    Don't Know When Japan Ruled (a part of) India

    When people talk about World War II in India, the conversation usually jumps straight to Subhas Chandra Bose, the INA, and the fight against British colonial rule. What gets left out is the story of the only part of India that was actually occupied by another Axis power during the war: the Andaman & Nicobar Islands. And it is not a pleasant story.   In this episode, we dive into the short but brutal Japanese occupation of the islands between 1942 and 1945. We explore how the Japanese rapidly captured the islands during World War II, why the Andamans were strategically important in the Indian Ocean, and how the occupation quickly descended into forced labour, starvation, torture, executions, and widespread terror. From the Homfreyganj massacre to the exploitation of local women as part of Imperial Japan's infamous "comfort women" system, the episode examines a chapter of Indian history that rarely makes it into mainstream conversations. We also tackle one of the most controversial aspects of the story: Subhas Chandra Bose's relationship with the occupation. Was he deliberately shielded from the truth by his allies, or did he choose to look the other way in pursuit of a larger anti-colonial goal? As always, this episode mixes comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and quirky insights into one of those seemingly random topics that turns out to reveal much bigger truths about empire, war, nationalism, and the uncomfortable moral compromises people make when confronting a greater enemy. Because sometimes history isn't a story of heroes and villains. Important links: 1. Survivors of our hell - https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2001/jun/23/weekend.adrianlevy 2. The capture of the Andaman Islands, March 1942 - https://web.archive.org/web/20210726181150/https://warfare.gq/dutcheastindies/andaman.html 3. Japanese Occupation in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands: Impact on Common Islanders - https://www.ijfmr.com/papers/2024/6/32102.pdf 4. The forgotten story of the Japanese ruling over (a part of) India - https://indianexpress.com/article/research/the-forgotten-story-of-the-japanese-ruling-over-a-part-of-india-8887379/ 5. The 2015 South Korean–Japanese Agreement on 'Comfort Women': A Critical Analysis - https://brill.com/view/journals/icla/22/3/article-p475_004.xml 6. Japanese occupation of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_occupation_of_the_Andaman_and_Nicobar_Islands 7. Rare footage of the Japanese occupation of the Andamans during World War II - https://scroll.in/article/668405/rare-footage-of-the-japanese-occupation-of-the-andamans-during-world-war-ii 8. Netaji and hoisting of tricolour in the Andamans: What really happened in 1943? - https://www.thenewsminute.com/news/netaji-and-hoisting-tricolour-andamans-what-really-happened-1943-94277 Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 21m
  6. Don't Know About 'The Salah Effect'

    Jun 8

    Don't Know About 'The Salah Effect'

    Can a footballer make people less racist? It sounds like the setup to a terrible LinkedIn post, but it's also a real question that researchers from Stanford and other institutions decided to investigate. And somehow, the answer may be yes.   In this episode, we explore the bizarre and fascinating story of The Salah Effect, a term inspired by a 2019 study that examined whether Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah may have reduced Islamophobic attitudes and behaviours among football fans simply by being exceptionally good at football. The real story is about identity, prejudice, tribalism, and a weird little psychological concept called the parasocial contact hypothesis.  We also dive into the famous study itself, which looked at hate crime statistics in Liverpool, analysed millions of tweets, and found some compelling evidence.  As always, this episode mixes comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and quirky insights into something that initially sounds ridiculous but ends up revealing something surprisingly profound about human nature. It's lighthearted education wrapped around one of those wonderfully random topics that somehow touches on psychology, sociology, politics, media, religion, and why football fans will happily structure their entire emotional wellbeing around a man they've never met. Because maybe prejudice isn't always challenged through arguments. Maybe sometimes it gets nutmegged by an Egyptian winger. Important links: Can Exposure to Celebrities Reduce Prejudice? The Effect of Mohamed Salah on Islamophobic Behaviors and Attitudes - https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-political-science-review/article/can-exposure-to-celebrities-reduce-prejudice-the-effect-of-mohamed-salah-on-islamophobic-behaviors-and-attitudes/A1DA34F9F5BCE905850AC8FBAC78BE58 How Mo Salah may have reduced Islamophobia in Liverpool - https://www.weforum.org/stories/2019/06/how-mo-salah-might-have-reduced-islamophobia-in-liverpool/ The Salah effect - https://africasacountry.com/2020/01/the-salah-effect The 'Mohamed Salah Effect' is real – my research shows how he inspires Egyptian youth - https://theconversation.com/the-mohamed-salah-effect-is-real-my-research-shows-how-he-inspires-egyptian-youth-97220 Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 20m
  7. Don't Know Why This Cult Is Orgasmic

    Jun 1

    Don't Know Why This Cult Is Orgasmic

    This week, we dive into a story that starts with wellness, empowerment, mindfulness, and healing and somehow ends with forced labour, coercive sex, cult-like control, and prison sentences. We're talking about OneTaste, the organisation that convinced thousands of people that repeatedly stroking someone's clitoris for exactly fifteen minutes was a revolutionary spiritual practice called Orgasmic Meditation. What began in early-2000s San Francisco as a supposedly progressive movement centred on female pleasure eventually became one of the most bizarre and disturbing cult stories of the modern era.   In this episode, we trace the rise and fall of OneTaste, from its founding by Nicole Daedone and Robert Kandell to its transformation into a multimillion-dollar business built around workshops, communal living, and increasingly invasive control over its members' lives. We look at how trauma survivors were recruited with promises of healing, why the media spent years treating the organisation as a quirky sexual wellness experiment, and how celebrity endorsements and TEDx talks helped legitimise something that, in hindsight, had more red flags than a Soviet military parade. This episode blends comedy commentary, offbeat learning, and deeply uncomfortable reporting into a story about manipulation, charisma, pseudoscience, media failure, and the surprisingly lucrative business of selling enlightenment. Packed with quirky insights, weird historical detours, and the kind of random topics that somehow become darker the more you investigate them, it's lighthearted education only in the sense that we occasionally laugh to stop ourselves from screaming. Important links: 1. OneTaste's website - https://onetaste.us/the-world/om 2. Touchy-feely "researchers" want to build community through the practice of orgasmic meditation — one stroke at a time - https://web.archive.org/web/20090421093822/http://www.sfweekly.com/2007-04-04/news/sex-and-sensuality/ 3. The Pleasure Principle - https://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/15/fashion/15commune.html 4. TEDxSF - Nicole Daedone - Orgasm The Cure for Hunger - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZjRH1FmxfM 5. Inside Gwyneth Paltrow's Exclusive Goop Health Summit with Cameron Diaz, Miranda Kerr and Nicole Richie - https://www.wmagazine.com/story/gwyneth-paltrow-goop-health-summit 6. Onetaste Founder Nicole Daedone Sentenced to Nine Years in Prison for Forced Labor Conspiracy - https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/onetaste-founder-nicole-daedone-sentenced-nine-years-prison-forced-labor-conspiracy 7. My Encounter with the Orgasm Messiah - https://donlattin.substack.com/p/my-encounter-with-the-orgasm-messiah 8. Great Orgasms – Psychic Energy vs. Physical Technique with Ray Vetterlein, Master Practitioner of Extended Orgasm - https://podcasts.personallifemedia.com/podcasts/230-expanded-lovemaking/episodes/3031-great-orgasms-psychic-energy-vs-physical/ 9. Anjuli Ayer: Navigating a Life of Spirituality, Business, and Controversy - https://www.awesomeindia.in/anjuli-ayer/ 10. In 'Orgasmic Meditation' case, did a zealous media strategy backfire? - https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/06/nyregion/onetaste-orgasmic-meditation-publicity.html 11. Recommendation of the week - The Orgasm Cult - https://www.bbc.com/audio/brand/p08xzk5h Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 38m
  8. Don't Know Why HYROX is (not) a Big Deal

    May 25

    Don't Know Why HYROX is (not) a Big Deal

    At some point over the last year, fitness quietly stopped being about six-packs and started becoming a personality. Suddenly everyone's in a run club, waking up at unreasonable hours, posting Strava screenshots like stock market updates, and voluntarily paying money to suffer in public. Which brings us to this episode's main character: HYROX  . We break down what HYROX actually is, where it came from, and why it has exploded globally in such a short span of time. In reality, it's basically a very organised way to discover new forms of exhaustion. But this episode isn't just about the race itself. It's about why people are suddenly obsessed with things like HYROX, run clubs, and endurance challenges in the first place. Because underneath all the fitness branding and motivational captions, there's something much more interesting happening socially. Gyms are no longer enough. People don't just want workouts anymore, they want experiences, goals, communities, identity, and maybe just a slightly more socially acceptable form of collective suffering. We also get into the rise of "Instagrammable fitness," the strange status attached to events like HYROX, and whether these experiences are genuinely fulfilling or just the latest evolution of social validation culture. This episode is classic comedy commentary mixed with offbeat learning, packed with quirky insights about fitness culture, social behaviour, and why humans apparently need organised hardship to feel alive. Because honestly, HYROX may look like a fitness event, but it might actually be a very expensive way for adults to rediscover recess. Don't Know, Do Care is the brainchild of Ashmita, Sandy, and Prakhar, three friends from different backgrounds and interests. Ashmita works in sustainability, Sandy's an entrepreneur (puke) who'd rather not be, and Prakhar works with Sandy and is just trying to make sense of it all.  Three mildly confused friends, one weirdly specific topic each week. We don't know much, but we care just enough to talk about it for up to an hour each week. Don't Know, Do Care is produced by "Ghar Pe Productions", edited by Prakhar and Sandy, critiqued (thoroughly) by Ashmita, and enjoyed mostly by our friends. Thanks for giving us a listen!

    1h 9m

About

Curious minds welcome, clueless takes guaranteed! Don't Know, Do Care is a curious mix of comedy, commentary, and casually intense learning. Every episode, one of us brings a topic the others know nothing about and tries to "educate" them, just enough for them to feign interest. Do we learn anything? Absolutely not. Do we care about the topic? Probably not. Are we curious, though? Potentially yes. We're not experts by any stretch of our already stretched imagination, but we're just trying to get a bit smarter, one strange question at a time. Curiosity might have killed a cat, but will it kill us? Only time will tell. Join us on our journey to learn something you didn't know you cared about.