The Hot Cut

Lisa T.

A razor-sharp pop culture podcast where scandal meets satire, celebrity meets conspiracy, and nothing’s too sacred to slice. New episodes drop when the tea’s hot—no schedule, no filter, just the truth behind the tabloids. lisawritesnow.substack.com

  1. Woodstock to Coachella: When Crowds Became the Product (The Hot Cut)

    APR 18

    Woodstock to Coachella: When Crowds Became the Product (The Hot Cut)

    Woodstock is remembered as chaos. Coachella is labeled the sellout. One was freedom. The other is branding. That’s the story. But what if we’ve been reading it backwards? What if Woodstock wasn’t the rebellion…but the prototype? In this episode, we trace the evolution of the crowd—from counterculture to commodity. From half a million people gathering in the mud…to millions performing identity in curated environments designed to be captured, shared, and sold. Because somewhere along the way, something shifted: We stopped just attending events…and started becoming the product inside them. Explore: * How mass gatherings shape behavior at a psychological level * Why rebellion becomes easier to manage once it’s visible * The subtle shift from participation → performance * And how identity itself becomes something we rehearse in public There’s a reason the phrase “the devil moves in crowds” keeps resurfacing. Not as superstition. As pattern recognition. Because once you see it, you can’t unsee it. And the question becomes a little harder to ignore: If rebellion can be packaged…what does that mean for authenticity? Read the full essay here. 🎬 Continue the Series ← Previous Episode: The Myth of The Bad Seed→ Next Episode: The Correspondents’ Cut New here? Start here → Previously on Lisa Writes NowCatch up fast with a curated guide to the full series. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lisawritesnow.substack.com/subscribe

    15 min
  2. The Myth of The Bad Seed (The Hot Cut)

    12/19/2025

    The Myth of The Bad Seed (The Hot Cut)

    The dysfunction is coming from inside the house. When tragedy strikes a family—violence, collapse, a child acting out in ways the culture can’t comprehend—America reaches for its favorite bedtime story: the myth of the “bad seed.” A tale that comforts adults, absolves parents, and erases the emotional physics inside the home. In this episode, we dig into the ancient reflex that makes people blame the child before they ever ask what happened behind closed doors. From the 1954 novel The Bad Seed to Lolita, Rosemary’s Baby, The Omen, and today’s true-crime industrial complex, America has built an entire entertainment empire around the fantasy of the inherently evil child. But the story is older than Hollywood. Much older. Scripture is filled with children punished for their parents’ failures—Cain, Ham, Ishmael, Esau, Absalom—the original “bad seeds” in a culture terrified to look at the adults in the room. And nothing shows this pattern more clearly than the Menendez brothers, whose story Netflix has now sensationalized twice: once as a documentary, and once as a Ryan Murphy dramatization. Two formats, same scapegoat. Shock over context. Spectacle over truth. So what happens when we flip the lens? What if no child is born evil? What if violence is the final symptom of a home collapsing long before the headline? What if the real monster isn’t the child at all—but the myth that keeps us from asking the right questions? This is an episode about trauma, generational denial, and the stories we tell to avoid looking in the mirror. Because once you understand what the “bad seed” myth is really protecting, the entire narrative begins to unravel. The dysfunction was coming from inside the house. It always is. Subscribe now to join the investigation. Paid subscribers get early access. Free subscribers get access one week later. 🎬 Continue the Series ← Previous Episode: The Julia Child Conspiracy→ Next Episode: Kill The Messenger📂 Full Episode Guide: Cold Open Think something got left on the cutting room floor?Add your notes below—we’re still editing in real time. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lisawritesnow.substack.com/subscribe

    15 min
  3. War of the Worlds: The Panic That Wasn’t (The Hot Cut)

    10/31/2025

    War of the Worlds: The Panic That Wasn’t (The Hot Cut)

    In 1938, Orson Welles’ Halloween broadcast supposedly sent America into mass hysteria over a fake Martian invasion. But the truth? Almost nobody panicked. Newspapers invented the frenzy to make radio look dangerous—because radio was stealing their audience and ad revenue. This episode of The Hot Cut peels back the layers of the first modern media psyop: how a harmless radio play became a national myth, how a young Welles went viral before “viral” existed, and how his rise and fall mirrored the very system he exposed. From H. G. Wells to Citizen Kane, from headlines to algorithms, this is the story of how panic became a product—and how empathy became the packaging. Eighty-six years later, we’re still running from shadows cast by the screen. 👉 Listen to the companion radio play featurette, “War of the Worlds: The Alien Psyop,” a reimagined dramatization of the 1938 broadcast. Read the full essay here. The Cut Continues: Get future episodes, deep-dive essays, and access to The Vault. Subscribe now to join the investigation. 🎬 Continue the Series ← Previous Episode: The Mother of All Monsters→ Next Episode: Kill The Messenger📂 Full Episode Guide: Cold Open Think something got left on the cutting room floor?Add your notes below—we’re still editing in real time. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lisawritesnow.substack.com/subscribe

    8 min

About

A razor-sharp pop culture podcast where scandal meets satire, celebrity meets conspiracy, and nothing’s too sacred to slice. New episodes drop when the tea’s hot—no schedule, no filter, just the truth behind the tabloids. lisawritesnow.substack.com