El Podcast

El Podcast Media

In El Podcast, anything and everything is up for discussion. Grab a drink and join us in this epic virtual happy hour!

  1. AI Is Replacing Hollywood (E205)

    1d ago

    AI Is Replacing Hollywood (E205)

    A Hollywood veteran with 56 years in the industry explains why AI, streaming, and changing audience habits are disrupting the traditional film business and what comes next for creators. Guest Bio Christian is a veteran cinematographer, camera operator, and filmmaker who has worked in Hollywood for over five decades, from childhood appearances on Little House on the Prairie to a long career in film and television production. Topics Discussed Hollywood job losses and studio vacancies AI-generated filmmaking and virtual production The future of actors, directors, and crew members Streaming's impact on Hollywood economics Offshoring film production and tax incentives YouTube vs traditional entertainment The collapse of Hollywood's middle class AI's impact on creative careers Why 80% of his industry friends are struggling to find work Adapting careers in the AI era The future of content creation Advice for young people considering Hollywood careers Main Points Hollywood is experiencing a severe contraction, with many studios sitting empty and jobs disappearing. AI is compressing entire production teams into workflows that can be handled by a handful of people. Roughly 80% of Christian's friends in the industry are actively looking for work. Traditional filmmaking's hierarchy of specialists is being disrupted by tools like Sora, Runway, Midjourney, and Kling. Streaming weakened the residual-based income model that supported many entertainment workers. Younger audiences increasingly prefer YouTube and creator-driven content over traditional Hollywood productions. AI may create a future where a single creator can produce content once requiring dozens or hundreds of workers. The biggest winners may be established stars who can license their image and likeness. Success in the future will require constant adaptation and learning new technologies. Christian believes many traditional Hollywood jobs may never return. Top 3 Quotes "The business model that was the movie industry is gone." "I would say 80% are looking for gigs." "Directors aren't directors anymore. They're prompters 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 32m
  2. I Thought I Was Studying Literature. I Was Wrong (E204)

    4d ago

    I Thought I Was Studying Literature. I Was Wrong (E204)

    Writer and Columbia English graduate Liza Libes argues that modern English departments and publishing houses have replaced the study of literature with ideology, leaving classic works filtered through political theories rather than literary analysis. Guest Bio Liza Libes is a writer, entrepreneur, and creator of the Substack Pens and Poison, where she explores literature, culture, publishing, higher education, and the political forces shaping the humanities. A Columbia University English graduate, she writes extensively about the decline of literary education and the future of reading and writing. Topics Discussed Columbia University's English department Shakespeare and ideological literary criticism Pronouns, identity politics, and campus culture Marxism in literature curricula Why college turns students toward socialism The role of Karl Marx, Judith Butler, and Edward Said in English departments The decline of the Western literary canon The modern publishing industry's ideological capture Why many contemporary novels fail commercially Self-publishing vs traditional publishing AI, ChatGPT, and the future of writing Favorite books, authors, and poets The value of studying English in the AI age Main Points English departments increasingly teach theory rather than literature. Students are often taught Marxist, post-colonial, gender, and identity theories before engaging deeply with the texts themselves. Literary interpretation has become ideologically constrained. Libes argues students are rewarded for repeating approved interpretations rather than developing their own. Marxist and critical theory dominate many humanities programs. Marx, Judith Butler, and Edward Said occupy a central place in many literature courses. Universities create self-reinforcing ideological systems. Professors train students who later become professors, editors, agents, and publishing gatekeepers. Publishing mirrors academia. The same ideological preferences found in English departments often determine which books get published and promoted. Many award-winning contemporary novels have little cultural impact. Literary prestige increasingly comes from institutional approval rather than broad readership. The publishing industry misunderstands its audience. Publishers focus heavily on narrow demographic trends while ignoring many serious readers. AI is making writing more important, not less important. Strong writing will become a premium skill because it reflects clear thinking and original thought. Reading great literature remains essential. Literature connects readers to enduring human experiences that transcend politics. There is still hope for the English major. The solution is not abandoning literature but reclaiming it from ideological capture. Top 3 Quotes 1. "English departments teach ideology rather than literature." 2. "The only way to become a great writer was to read great literature." 3. "If you can write substantially better than the AI, you will be a rare commodity on the job market." Books Discussed Literature & Fiction A Midsummer Night's Dream Twelfth Night The Merchant of Venice The Taming of the Shrew Metamorphoses Pale Fire Lolita The Unbearable Lightness of Being Anna Karenina The Brothers Karamazov Giovanni's Room Beloved Catch-22 Nonfiction / Theory The Communist Manifesto Das Kapital The Strange Death of Europe Recommended by Liza The World of Yesterday Poets Discussed T. S. Eliot John Keats Samuel Taylor Coleridge Philip Larkin Sylvia Plath William Ernest Henley Podcast Theme in One Sentence A wide-ranging conversation about how ideology transformed literature departments, reshaped publishing, and why reading and writing may become even more valuable in the age of 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 17m
  3. I Left Germany. Here's Why Europe Is Declining (E203)

    Jun 2

    I Left Germany. Here's Why Europe Is Declining (E203)

    A wide-ranging discussion on Germany's economic decline, deindustrialization, housing crisis, migration, taxation, political culture, and why Chris chose to leave Germany for Spain. Guest Bio Chris Consultant is a German macro and systems analyst who writes and speaks about economics, energy policy, demographics, taxation, migration, and the long-term trajectory of Europe. He offers an on-the-ground perspective on Germany's economic and political challenges. Topics Discussed Germany's economic decline and deindustrialization China Shock 2.0 and competition with German industry Energy policy and the loss of cheap Russian energy NATO, military spending, and rearmament Housing affordability and low homeownership rates Germany's high taxes and business climate Immigration and labor market dynamics The rise of the AfD and political polarization Internet, infrastructure, and public services Germany's exit tax and challenges for entrepreneurs Why Chris moved from Germany to Spain The future of Europe and Germany by 2035 Main Points Germany's traditional advantages—engineering, manufacturing, and cheap energy—have eroded significantly. China has become a major competitor in industries once dominated by Germany, especially automobiles and manufacturing. Energy costs and the loss of Russian energy have weakened German industry. Germany's tax burden, regulations, and bureaucracy discourage entrepreneurship and investment. Homeownership rates remain among the lowest in the developed world, partly because of high transaction costs and taxes. Infrastructure problems—from rail delays to slow internet—reflect broader governance challenges. Skilled workers are increasingly leaving Germany while labor shortages persist in key sectors. Chris argues that many government policies create incentives that discourage work, risk-taking, and business creation. Spain offers a better lifestyle and quality of life, although Chris sees many of Europe's structural problems there as well. Unless major reforms occur, Chris believes Europe will continue falling behind the United States and China economically. Top 3 Quotes "Germany had three advantages back in the day: outstanding engineering, manufacturing, and cheap energy. Everything is pretty much obsolete by now." "The best thing you can do now is find a medium-paid job that doesn't stress you out too much and don't try to make much money." "If the majority of people vote for something in a democracy, let it be democratic." Best Soundbite "Europe regulates first. America innovates first." Core Theme Germany's decline is not primarily the result of a single event or politician, but rather the cumulative effect of energy policy, deindustrialization, taxation, bureaucracy, demographic pressures, and incentives that Chris believes discourage growth and innovation. 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 55m
  4. America’s Secret Justice System (E202)

    May 26

    America’s Secret Justice System (E202)

    Former DOJ prosecutor Brendan Ballou explains how forced arbitration quietly created a massive private justice system that increasingly shields corporations from public accountability. Guest Bio: Brendan Ballou is a former federal prosecutor at the U.S. Department of Justice and the author of When Companies Run the Courts. He currently works with the Public Integrity Project, a legal organization focused on corruption and corporate accountability. Topics Discussed: Forced arbitration and America’s “secret justice system” Why the U.S. is less lawsuit-heavy than people think Corporate influence over arbitration systems Supreme Court decisions expanding forced arbitration Why class action lawsuits have collapsed Disney+, Uber, Tesla, and tech company arbitration agreements Arbitration vs public courts NDAs and workplace harassment cases How arbitration affects employees and consumers Arbitration statistics and win rates Mass arbitration strategies against corporations AI and the future of legal systems Why companies benefit most from arbitration Public distrust of the legal system Potential reforms and legislative solutions Main Points: Forced arbitration has expanded from ~2% of private-sector workers in the 1990s to tens of millions of Americans today. Arbitration often prevents workers and consumers from suing companies in public court. Arbitrators are frequently paid by the companies being sued, creating structural incentives favoring corporations. Arbitration agreements often ban class action lawsuits, making small claims practically impossible to pursue individually. Major tech companies aggressively use arbitration agreements to avoid public litigation. NDAs combined with arbitration can keep discrimination and harassment allegations hidden from the public. Public courts are transparent and appealable; arbitration is usually secretive and difficult to appeal. AI may eventually automate parts of arbitration, potentially worsening existing incentive problems. Ballou argues arbitration itself is not the problem — “forced” arbitration is. Reform will likely require public awareness campaigns and state/local legislation. Top 3 Quotes: “There’s a secret justice system that surrounds you that you are a part of in ways that you don’t even understand.” “Arbitration is a little like sex. It’s something that can be great, but everybody’s got to freely choose it.” “The judges of the system have a financial incentive to rule for one of the parties.” Books & Articles Referenced: When Companies Run the Courts Brown v. Board of Education Roe v. Wade Federal Arbitration Act (1925) Disney arbitration case involving Disney+ terms of service Discussion of Meta/Facebook litigation involving mental health claims References to class action litigation against tobacco companies Public Integrity Project initiatives and legal advocacy efforts 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    41 min
  5. The Real Estate Boom Is Over…Here’s What Happens Next (E201)

    May 22

    The Real Estate Boom Is Over…Here’s What Happens Next (E201)

    Real estate investor and Marine veteran Tim Street joins El Podcast to discuss the frozen housing market, rising property taxes, Airbnb investing, real estate commissions, and whether homeowners should sell without an agent to save tens of thousands of dollars. Guest Bio: Tim Street is a real estate investor, former Marine, Airbnb operator, and founder of FoolProofFSBO, a platform that helps homeowners sell their homes without paying traditional real estate commissions. He specializes in For Sale By Owner (FSBO) strategies, real estate investing, Airbnb optimization, and helping sellers avoid costly mistakes during the home selling process. Topics Discussed: • Why 2025 home sales were the lowest since 1995 despite massive population growth • Whether America is in a housing bubble or a housing freeze • Why people really move and why it’s usually not because of interest rates • Florida migration trends and why people are leaving expensive cities like Miami • The real estate commission lawsuit and how it changed the housing market • Why many sellers still end up paying buyer agent commissions anyway • How homeowners can save $20,000–$30,000 selling FSBO • Why most home renovations lose money before selling • The best upgrades and repairs that actually increase ROI • Why professional real estate photography matters more than ever • Airbnb investing, oversupply fears, and luxury vacation rentals • Why ski towns often outperform in the summer • Investing in Panama and international Airbnb opportunities • The reality of building wealth through real estate • Property taxes, inflation, and why many homeowners feel trapped • The “Silver Tsunami” housing theory and whether millions of homes will flood the market • Concerns about inflation, government spending, and the future of the U.S. dollar • Why owning a paid-off home still doesn’t mean you truly own it Main Points: • Tim argues that housing decisions are driven more by life changes than interest rates. • The real estate commission lawsuit changed the rules, but many buyers and sellers still follow the old system. • Selling a house yourself can save massive amounts of money, but it is not the right fit for everyone. • Most expensive home remodels fail to generate a positive return on investment. • Simple repairs, cleanliness, and presentation matter far more than luxury upgrades. • Luxury Airbnb properties are holding up better than budget rentals during the market slowdown. • Rising property taxes are pushing longtime residents out of expensive cities. • Tim believes the biggest economic risks are often the ones nobody sees coming. • Inflation and government spending are major long-term concerns for housing and the broader economy. Top 3 Quotes: “Moving is not something people do because interest rates are great. People move because something really happy or really sad is happening.” “If you spend $100,000 remodeling your kitchen and only increase your home value by $20,000, you didn’t make money — you lost $80,000.” “You never truly own your house if the government can still take it for unpaid property taxes.” Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and entertainment purposes only and should not be considered financial, legal, tax, or investment advice. Please consult qualified professionals before making financial or real estate decisions. 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 2m
  6. Is Western Culture Turning Against Wokeism? (E200)

    May 19

    Is Western Culture Turning Against Wokeism? (E200)

    A wide-ranging conversation with Eric Kaufmann about the origins of woke culture, institutional capture, generational shifts, social media, AI, and the future of progressive politics. Guest Bio Eric Kaufmann is a professor of politics at the University of Buckingham. He is the author of The Third Awokening and several books on identity politics, culture, nationalism, and political polarization. His work focuses on free speech, demographic change, populism, and the evolution of progressive ideology in Western societies. Topics Discussed The “three awokenings” from the 1960s to today Social media and the spread of woke ideology DEI and institutional capture Generational differences between Boomers, Millennials, and Gen Z Free speech and self-censorship on campus Political polarization and dating/social division Feminization of institutions and HR culture The role of universities and elite institutions Government action versus libertarian responses to woke culture AI bias and the future of political discourse Corporate activism and consumer backlash The future of progressive politics in the West Differences between the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. on culture war issues Trans activism and cultural backlash Social contagion and identity politics The decline of trust in elite institutions Main Points Kaufmann argues woke ideology began in the late 1960s and has evolved through three major “awokenings.” He believes peak woke culture occurred around 2020, but many beliefs and policies remain institutionalized. Social media and smartphone culture amplified and mainstreamed ideas that previously stayed mostly on college campuses. Younger generations are more supportive of speech restrictions and progressive identity politics than older generations. DEI policies are described as the institutional form of woke ideology. Kaufmann argues that culture—not economics—is the primary driver behind woke movements. He believes government intervention is necessary to roll back institutionalized progressive activism. The conversation explores how HR departments, universities, and corporations became vehicles for ideological enforcement. AI could either reinforce ideological bias or help restore a more evidence-based culture depending on how it develops. Both Kaufmann and Jesse discuss whether the West may be reaching the end of a 60-year progressive era. Top 3 Quotes “Woke is making sacred of historically marginalized race, gender and sexual identity groups.” — Eric Kaufmann “If you don’t use government, the woke win.” — Eric Kaufmann “Social media didn’t create woke culture, but it poured gasoline on it.” — Jesse summarizing Kaufmann’s argument Books Discussed The Third Awokening — Eric Kaufmann Woke Inc. — Vivek Ramaswamy The Origins of Political Order (referenced conceptually through institutional discussion) Works and ideas from Thomas Sowell Works and ideas from Jonathan Haidt References to Richard Hanania and his work on affirmative action and institutions   🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 7m
  7. How the Economy Became Rigged Against Young People (E199)

    May 17

    How the Economy Became Rigged Against Young People (E199)

    Investment manager Paul Musson argues that modern monetary policy, housing inflation, and financialization have rigged the economy against younger generations and productive capitalism.” Guest Bio: Paul Musson is the founder of Paddington Capital Management and former portfolio manager of the Ivy Funds at Mackenzie Investments. With more than 30 years in the investment industry, he focuses on monetary policy, asset bubbles, financial repression, and the long-term consequences of government intervention in markets. He is the author of Capital Offense: Why Some Benefit at Your Expense. Topics Discussed: Housing affordability crisis in the U.S. and Canada How central banks distorted markets after 2001 and 2008 Why asset inflation benefits older generations at younger generations’ expense Financial repression and hidden inflation AI investment boom vs. the 2000 dot-com bubble Government growth, bureaucracy, and regulation Demographics, pensions, and generational transfers Why the average age of first-time homebuyers keeps rising Gold, Bitcoin, and inflation-resistant assets Media polarization and public distrust The long-term risks of debt-driven economies Why Paul believes most policymakers have good intentions but bad incentives Main Points: Paul argues the financial system is “inadvertently rigged” through policies that inflate asset prices instead of productivity. Housing appreciation largely represents wealth transfer rather than real wealth creation. Central banks pushing rates too low created bubbles in both housing and financial assets. Governments and finance sectors have grown too large relative to the productive economy. Aging populations expose the unsustainability of pension and entitlement systems. AI is real and transformative, but current valuations may still be overheated. Inflation quietly redistributes wealth away from savers and wage earners. Financial repression is likely the future path governments take to manage debt burdens. Productive capitalism requires competition, savings, investment, and stable money. Public anger increasingly comes from people sensing the system no longer rewards productive work fairly. Top 3 Quotes: “The system is inadvertently rigged. It’s not a conspiracy theory. It’s good intentions by good people based on fallacious economic doctrine.” “A house has no business going up in price because it is not a productive asset.” “Socialism works fine until you run out of other people’s money.” Books Discussed: Capital Offense: Why Some Benefit at Your Expense The Intelligent Investor (briefly referenced conceptually through value investing themes) References to ideas associated with Warren Buffett and his famous market analogies Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or legal advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    59 min
  8. Where Foreign Aid Money Really Goes | World Bank Economist Explains (E198)

    May 12

    Where Foreign Aid Money Really Goes | World Bank Economist Explains (E198)

    Former World Bank economist Dr. Emily Brearley says billions in foreign aid have been wasted by corrupt NGOs, bloated bureaucracies, and elites disconnected from the people they claim to help. Guest Bio Dr. Emily Brearley is a former World Bank development economist and author of Aid Inferno. After decades working inside the global development system across Africa, Latin America, and Asia, she now critiques the failures of modern foreign aid, USAID, NGOs, and the World Bank. She is also founder of Solution 42, a consulting organization focused on transparent, locally driven development projects. Topics Discussed Why foreign aid often fails USAID inefficiency and corruption World Bank loans vs grants “Beltway Bandits” and NGO bureaucracy Bill Easterly and development economics John Perkins and Confessions of an Economic Hitman China’s growing influence in Africa and Latin America Gender ideology and development policy NGO corruption and “poverty industry” incentives Why local NGOs outperform international NGOs The collapse of trust in aid institutions Ivanka Trump and women’s development initiatives Why elite universities and “studies” degrees are failing students Career advice for young people in the AI era How the World Bank could actually be reformed Main Points 1. Foreign Aid Often Makes Countries Worse Brearley argues that aid institutions wrongly assume countries are poor simply because they lack money, when deeper institutional and governance problems are usually the real issue. 2. USAID Became a Bureaucratic Industry She claims much aid money never reaches intended recipients because it is absorbed by contractors, consultants, nonprofits, and administrative overhead in Washington D.C. 3. The Incentives Reward Failure Development agencies often receive more funding when projects fail, creating no incentive to admit mistakes or shut down ineffective programs. 4. NGOs Can Exploit Poverty Brearley argues some international NGOs perpetuate poverty narratives because their funding depends on keeping crises alive and emotionally marketable. 5. China Is Winning Through Infrastructure She warns that China is strategically using loans and infrastructure projects to expand influence across Africa and Latin America while Western aid institutions focus on ideology and bureaucracy. 6. Local Organizations Usually Understand Problems Better According to Brearley, local NGOs and local universities are often more competent and accountable than international aid bureaucracies. 7. The Development Industry Became Ideological Brearley criticizes the push for Western gender ideology within aid programs, arguing it alienated conservative countries and distracted from core economic development. 8. Young People Need Practical Skills She advises students to avoid expensive, low-value degrees and instead pursue practical, employable skills in STEM, trades, economics, engineering, or healthcare. Top 3 Quotes “The premise that countries are poor simply because they don’t have enough money is false.” “Nobody in the aid business has an incentive to say: ‘Hey, this isn’t working.’” “We should stop talking about whether USAID was shut down and start talking about what Aid 2.0 should actually look like.” Books & Articles Discussed Books Aid Inferno Confessions of an Economic Hitman Into the Woodchipper Hard Times The Closing of the American Mind The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Articles & Papers “The Cartel of Good Intentions” — Bill Easterly “Mission Creep” — Jessica Einhorn (Foreign Affairs) Brookings Institution external World Bank audits Lancet study on projected deaths after USAID cuts New York Times article: A Year After USAID Death, Fired Workers Find Few Jobs and Much Loss 🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.  Thanks for listening!

    1h 12m
5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

In El Podcast, anything and everything is up for discussion. Grab a drink and join us in this epic virtual happy hour!

You Might Also Like