Unwashed and Unruly

Punch Up Productions

One unwashed guy and two unruly gals take an unconventional and semi-tangential dive into global news, politics, culture, tech, and all the things radical leftists should be discussing. No pandering, no whitewashing. We air capitalism’s dirty laundry and scrub the lies out of history. Follow us for more episodes. Visit our website: www.unwashedunruly.com. For questions, complaints, and feedback, email us at contact@unwashedunruly.com.

  1. 4D AGO

    Monopoly Capitalism Is Killing Journalism with Hamilton Nolan

    In this episode, we’re joined by a special guest, Hamilton Nolan, a journalist, author on labor and politics, union organizer, and activist. We talk about how journalism survived the death of print only to be swallowed and spit out by Big Tech, private equity, and monopoly capitalism. We trace the rise and fall of online media, digging into Hamilton’s early days at Gawker. We discuss how corporate greed and tech oligarchs crushed newsrooms, turned mainstream media into compliant mouthpieces, and left independent reporting fighting for air. If you’ve ever wondered why layoffs hit newsrooms every few months, or why your favorite journalists are drifting onto Substack, or why AI summaries answer your questions without sending you to the article, this is why. We delve into how Google’s algorithms and collapsing ad revenue triggered a traffic apocalypse, and how generative AI now threatens to replace the very labor it feeds on. We also talk about why unions are critical for the last remaining scraps of editorial independence and why journalism still matters in an era where "everything is content and nothing is read." Finally, Hamilton shares his take on solutions that might stop the ship from sinking, before the internet finishes eating itself. To learn more about Hamilton Nolan, check out his website How Things Work and his book The Hammer: Power, Inequality, and the Struggle for the Soul of Labor.

    1h 15m
  2. 11/15/2025

    Silicon Reich: Big Tech and Big Brother's Unholy Matrimony

    In this episode, we dig into the origins of the internet as a Cold War surveillance project and trace how Silicon Valley grew up inside the U.S. defense ecosystem. We look at how companies like Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, and Palantir didn’t just partner with the government and state machinery—they were shaped by it. These tech titans provide the cloud systems, predictive algorithms, and data pipelines modern militaries and intelligence agencies depend on. We answer the question: Why are the world’s biggest tech companies American, and why are they so deeply intertwined with the military and intelligence world? Pulling from Yasha Levine’s Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet and Shoshana Zuboff’s The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, we break down how tech giants turned all of us into raw material for trillion-dollar platforms, and how the normalization of constant tracking quietly erased the idea of privacy. From predictive policing and digital profiling to the smart devices that follow us everywhere, we’re living in a system where our clicks, movements, and conversations fuel both corporate profit and government control. The outrage that once met surveillance, from the MIT critics of the 1960s to the Snowden leaks, has faded into passive acceptance. Underneath it all is a bigger question: What does freedom look like in a world built for permanent observation? The tragedy isn’t the technology; it’s how deeply it’s been weaponized for control, inequality, and empire. This episode asks whether a different digital future is still possible, or if we’re already too deep inside the surveillance machine to find a way out.

    1h 18m
5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

One unwashed guy and two unruly gals take an unconventional and semi-tangential dive into global news, politics, culture, tech, and all the things radical leftists should be discussing. No pandering, no whitewashing. We air capitalism’s dirty laundry and scrub the lies out of history. Follow us for more episodes. Visit our website: www.unwashedunruly.com. For questions, complaints, and feedback, email us at contact@unwashedunruly.com.