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 When Japan Ruled (a part of) India

    4h ago

    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
  2. 4h ago ·  Bonus

    You Might Also Like: No Magic Pill with Blake Mycoskie

    Introducing Treating Mental Illness Like a Physical Injury with Olympian Alexi Pappas from No Magic Pill with Blake Mycoskie. Follow the show: No Magic Pill with Blake Mycoskie After becoming an Olympian in 2016, runner Alexi Pappas was afraid to slow down. Her mother had died by suicide when Alexi was just four years old, and she feared that her own depression would become a death sentence, too. But with the support of friends and family, she found the strength to get help and heal. Alexi’s story is for anyone who wants to feel a little braver, to face the world new each day, and understand that it doesn’t take Olympic strength to change your life. In this conversation you’ll learn: – Why we should treat mental illness like a physical injury – How to tell the difference between pain as warning vs. pain as transformation – The best way to support someone who is suffering – How to embrace the unknown with excitement rather than worry You can learn more about Alexi Pappas and buy her book at https://www.alexipappas.com/. And watch Blake on Alexi’s podcast, Mentor Buffet, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jtbyxv34TMw. Enough Foundation's mission is to spread reminders in every form — bracelets, messages, actions, community — until feeling ENOUGH becomes the cultural default. To learn more, visit weareenough.co.  Produced, Directed, and Cinematography by Wubetu Shimelash / IG: Wubetu Shimelash Disclaimer: No purchase necessary. While supplies last. Visit http://www.weareenough.co/rules for full terms. More information on Blake’s other projects here:  Morning Water  Morning Water is a daily hydration formula that restores energy, balance, and performance with essential electrolytes, minerals, and nutrients in one simple routine.  To learn more, visit morningwater.co and use code NOMAGICPILL for 25% off your first order. SONIA  Sonia is a conversational AI companion designed for emotional support. Through voice and text, it offers guided wellbeing sessions, including meditations, journaling, personalized recommendations, and practical exercises. To learn more, visit www.soniahealth.com and download it on the App Store. MOOVLAB At MOOVLAB, we bring health and wellness to your workday.  MOOVLAB - the answer to sitting is moving.  To learn more, visit www.moovlab.com Follow Blake on Instagram and stay up to date with Lemonada on Facebook and Instagram. For a list of current sponsors and discount codes for this and every other Lemonada show, go to lemonadamedia.com/sponsors. Joining Lemonada Premium is a great way to support our show and get bonus content. Subscribe today at lemonadapremium.com. Subscribe to Spotify Premium to watch ad-free video. Disclaimer: This episode is for informational and entertainment purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical questions or concerns you may have. 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 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
  4. 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
  5. 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
  6. Don't Know If the Shroud of Turin is Indian

    May 18

    Don't Know If the Shroud of Turin is Indian

    This week, we dive headfirst into one of the strangest objects in human history: the Shroud of Turin, a 14-foot piece of linen that is either the burial cloth of Jesus Christ… or the world's most successful medieval scam. For centuries, this faintly creepy cloth has sat at the exact intersection of faith, science, history, and people confidently yelling at each other online. Because printed onto it is the image of a tortured man bearing injuries eerily similar to the Biblical description of the crucifixion. So we trace the bizarre history of the Shroud, from its sudden appearance in 14th-century France and accusations of forgery by medieval bishops, to fires, papal PR gymnastics, carbon dating tests, and increasingly complicated scientific studies that somehow keep making the mystery worse instead of better. And because apparently this story wasn't chaotic enough already, we also get into the recent DNA study that found genetic traces linked to India, sparking exactly the kind of internet discourse you would expect. This episode is classic offbeat learning territory: a weird historical rabbit hole full of contradictory evidence, scientific detective work, Vatican ambiguity, and the kind of mystery that refuses to sit still, all wrapped in comedy commentary and packed with quirky insights. Because at the end of the day, the Shroud of Turin is less a solved mystery and more a centuries-long argument that nobody has managed to conclusively win. Important links: 1. Shroud of Turin - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shroud_of_Turin 2. Shroud of Turin - https://www.britannica.com/topic/Shroud-of-Turin 3. The Shroud of Turin: An Overview of the Archaeological Scientific Studies - https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7248/5/1/8 4. Shroud of Turin, linked by believers to Jesus Christ, has an Indian DNA trace: Study - https://indianexpress.com/article/technology/science/shroud-of-turin-linked-by-believers-to-jesus-christ-has-an-indian-dna-signal-study-10614146/ 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 14m

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.