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True Crime Obsession, Streaming Wars & Why Vacations Aren't Real image

True Crime Obsession, Streaming Wars & Why Vacations Aren't Real

E284 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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39 Plays23 days ago

Serial killers, “vacations” that aren’t vacations, and streaming services that are absolutely out of control—Sibling Happy Hour is back. Bruce Anthony and Jay Aundrea kick things off with classic sibling roasting about working through the holidays, then slide into the real reason so many women love true crime (hint: it’s not because they’re sociopaths 👀). From John Wick and action-movie logic to Hulu folding into Disney+ and Netflix raising prices like it’s a sport, this episode is a funny, chaotic, and painfully relatable breakdown of modern life: safety, comfort shows, ads everywhere, and why we somehow pay MORE than our parents did. Tap in, laugh loud, and tell us in the comments—are you researching… or just nosy? #truecrimecommunity #StreamingWars #popculture #johnwick #vacation #theequalizer #actionmovies #unsolicitedperspectives 

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Chapters:

00:00 Serial Killers, Siblings & Streaming 🧠🍿🔥

00:20 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives: Setting the Tone 🎙️✨🔥

00:45 Sibling Happy Hour Preview: Petty Takes Incoming 🍹😂👀

01:07 Vacation or Nah? One-Take Bruce Is Back 😎✈️🎧

01:19 What Even Is a Vacation Anymore? 🏖️🤨💻

02:18 Mom Clocked You Working on “Vacation” 👀📝😂

03:23 I Don’t Know How to Relax, Period 😬🛋️⚡

04:16 Is Doing Nothing a Good Day or a Crisis? 🧘🏽‍♂️🕰️🤔

05:14 New Year Superstitions & Black-Eyed Pea Debates 🫘🎆😅

06:03 Cultural Traditions, Superstition & Side-Eye 👀🌎✨

07:05 John Wick, Equalizer & Action Movie Logic 💥🎬😂

10:00 When Action Movies Get Ridiculous 🤯🎥💣

14:47 Is Bruce a Homebody Now? 🏠🍷👴🏽

19:54 Women, True Crime & the Sociopath Allegation 🔪📺😱

23:45 The Science Behind True Crime Obsession 📊📚🧩

42:17 Streaming Services Are Getting Out of Control 📺💸🤬

50:13 Too Many Choices, Nothing to Watch 😵‍💫📺🌀

53:04 Pluto TV, Forensic Files & Free-With-Ads Reality 📺🔍😌

56:26 The Bootleg Blu-Ray Plug & Final Goodbye 😂💿✌🏾

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Transcript

Introduction to Unsolicited Perspectives

00:00:00
Speaker
serial killer shows and streaming services. We gonna get into it. Let's get it.
00:00:16
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. I'm your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. Join the conversation and follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to get our video podcasts, YouTube exclusives, and our YouTube membership.
00:00:35
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your

Sibling Happy Hour: Streaming Services and Vacations

00:00:42
Speaker
enemies. On today's episode, it's the Sibling Happy Hour. I'm here with my sis, J. Andrea. We're going to be dilly-dying a little bit. Then we're going talking about why women are sociopaths. And then we're going to be talking about these damn streaming services.
00:00:55
Speaker
But that's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.
00:01:06
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brudda? I can't call it. I can't call it. We are back after a little vacation. yo let me tell you something. That vacation helped me because one take Bruce was back.
00:01:18
Speaker
Listen, ah your idea of a vacation and my idea of a vacation are two different things. Because I noticed while you were here and quote unquote on vacation, you still work.
00:01:36
Speaker
Yeah. A lot. So i think you need to look up the definition of vacation. Uh-huh. Because even though we were on a hiatus for the holiday, I feel like you were still recording, still editing, still working. So I did nothing.
00:01:59
Speaker
That's a vacation. What you did was not that. So i just you just didn't release content. that's not true That's not a vacation. You did release content. Okay, so then you didn't take a vacation. Okay.
00:02:14
Speaker
Okay. So hip mom was funny because I was for the first three days that I was down there. And ladies and gentlemen, I was down there for almost two weeks. The first three days i was down there, ah I was sitting at the little table and and mom came up and she was like, is this what you do all day?
00:02:32
Speaker
i was like, yeah things got to get done. so Yes. When I say vacation, it was a vacation from recording because we did all that recording and then I released stuff. I still didn't release as much content as I originally planned on because I did take, you know, little breaks.
00:02:52
Speaker
Right. So I did do that. But yeah. You got to understand it's the end of the year. So for my main job, this is like my busy season. So yeah yeah it wasn't just I'm working on podcast stuff. I actually had a real job. And I got yeah other little side projects that I do. So it's a vacation on the fact that I could drink while doing the work.
00:03:16
Speaker
Sure. Yeah. Okay. Sure. Here's what I noticed about me on vacation. i don't do it right. I can't calm down. Like, I can't relax. I always feel like I have to be doing something. So I can't just, like, like staycation, like, just sit around and and just chill. Like, I don't. I am always up, popping up, going around the house, doing a little this and that.
00:03:44
Speaker
Like, I don't know how to relax. And even though, even if I go somewhere on vacation, like, I do things. Like, I take tours, things. You know, i go to the museums. I go see the things. I do the touristy stuff. You know, like, I don't just sit on a beach quietly and, like, read a book or something like that. I'll be like, okay. After about 10 minutes, I'm like, all right, what's where we where are we going now?
00:04:09
Speaker
i What are we doing now? So I saw this question. it was on Instagram, Twitter, or something like that. And it was, if you do nothing in a day, do you consider that a good or bad day?
00:04:21
Speaker
And normally, i would consider that a bad day. But I purposely designate days because I know that I need to recharge. yeah I purposely designate days where it's just like, I don't have to do anything that day. And that's my day to not do anything. And I create that mindset in, it's OK for you not to do anything today. Yeah. Typically that's Sunday. But, you know, I mean, ah we we we doing stuff on Sunday. But after that. We're doing it. We're doing a little bit earlier. yeah We're doing little bit earlier. oh
00:04:51
Speaker
But New Year's Day was that for me. I sat around and I said, well, you know, it's the holiday. I don't have to do anything. I can't c clean because we don't want to wash nobody outside the family.
00:05:05
Speaker
That's laundry. Well, I ain't doing no cleaning. I just wash my body. I think you i think you're supposed to clean it You're supposed to like sweep the dust out of the door because it's like sweeping dust.
00:05:17
Speaker
the bad juju out the door or something. It's like, it's a whole bunch of stuff. And child, I did none of it. Our mother calls like, did you eat your black eyed peas? I didn't. Because listen, I ate them last year and I had a good 2025. So I'm just like, I've been eating them every year before. Financially, financially, you about to have a good 2026, 2025 financially. what that Was not great. Was not great. And is it black eyed peas or is it just peas?
00:05:44
Speaker
It's black peas. It's black eyed peas. Well, I eat Hoppin' John's red beans and rice from Popeyes. That's not it. Well, who knows? Because I've heard different things. And I'm tired of these Negro spirituals. I'm tired of them. Okay? It's not just us. as you know It's a Southern thing. No, it's not that either. You know who also has a lot of New Year's traditions? Latinos.
00:06:06
Speaker
Like, you gotta, like, walk around your house with a suitcase because it means you'll travel that year or something like that. And then, like, something about eating grapes. There's, like, a whole book. saw a reel about it, I think. It was, like, all of these

Action Movies: Enjoyment vs. Realism

00:06:20
Speaker
New Year's Day traditions and superstitions in the Latino. I think just people of color are just superstitious. That's what think. Yeah, well, it didn't help them Venezuelans. Anyway, you know what, ladies and gentlemen? don't know how to say that. That is Yeah. So what you just need to designate to to answer or to help you out with what your suggestion is where you can't sit in the last. You need to designate and just say, hey, I've done things this week. Yeah.
00:06:48
Speaker
It's OK for me to sit still. I sat still on New Year's Day and watched three of the John Wick movies. And you know what I found out? OK. I like them. I really like them. Yeah. I haven't seen them, but if you like them and you recommended the Equalizer trilogy and that was amazing, I am going to sit and watch the the John Wickes. Yeah. Our brother was like, they're good. And and if you like, because me and you were sitting around, we fell in love with Jason Statham movies. Like I was yeah on the IMDb, like which new one can I watch? for two When is that coming out? Because I saw you said that. yeah I was like, okay, what's what's up with it? Because beekeeper one, amazing. Ladies and gentlemen, y'all need to watch Jason Statham's beekeeper. Is it kind of hokey?
00:07:38
Speaker
Yeah. Is the premise kind of strange? Okay. But the premise is Jason Statham equalizing. Like, that's his that's right that's the premise for all his movies. He's a regular guy that secretly has military training or was an operative or something, but now he's a civilian living a regular life. Somebody somebody who cared for him is now in trouble or died or something, and he has to go equalize. And that's...
00:08:07
Speaker
That's the premise. I like equalizer movies. Ladies and gentlemen, the equalizer movies are just what we call them from the equalizer. We're one man or a group of people going right or wrong. It's helping the little person against the big people. You will like John Wick.
00:08:22
Speaker
John Wick is crazy, though. You know, John Wick 3, the only thing I'll tell you about that movie is, and when I said it to somebody, they were like, you're absolutely right. John Wick 3 is Warriors remake.
00:08:35
Speaker
Okay. The movie The Warriors is the Warriors remake. for those people out there listening... Warriors come out to play and... Yeah, that movie. Okay. For those people listening and watching that are seeing John Wick 3 and seeing Warriors, when you think about it, you'd you know what, Bruce? You are absolutely right. And I'm like, I know I'm right. Because that's what it is. And I also just love that it's like one person against this like entire organization that is literally like a big bad. Like a huge villain...
00:09:05
Speaker
and And this one person takes on ah everyone. Everyone. It never, rarely ever gets hit. Might get clipped with a bullet. Might get sliced on the arm with a knife. But I'm like, for this to be a big, bad villain organization, they're really bad shots.
00:09:23
Speaker
Because they can never hit this person. They're not running that fast. and Jason Statham isn't Usain Bolt. He's not running that fast. like And it's just like the impossibility of it. But I just love it. I just i just love it. You know how old Jason Statham is? I looked it up the other day. You know how is?
00:09:40
Speaker
I want to say like 51. 58. You're lying. I'm dead serious. 58. And still out there equalizing. And still about to equalize. And again, with the beekeeper too. ah The only thing I'll say is sometimes these movies, a lot of times these movies get absolutely ridiculous. Expendables, right? That's the movie is with Sylvester Stallone and he snatches up all these 80s and 90s action heroes and creates this team and they go fight. And Expendables 3, right?
00:10:11
Speaker
They take on an army, a

Film Endings: Audience Expectations

00:10:13
Speaker
whole army, which, okay, like, it's normally a platoon or or a yeah a group taking on army. The only thing is this army has literal tanks. yeah They are fighting against an army with tanks, okay? Doesn't matter. They are outnumbered 20 to 1, and not one person gets shot on their team. And I was like, I was watching, and I was like, this is ridiculous. And then I thought to myself...
00:10:40
Speaker
Do the creators know this is tongue-in-cheek? Because watching John Wick 1, 2, and 3 on New Year's Day, i was like, I just came up with a spoof movie. I just came up with a spoof movie because I want to know, is it tongue-in-cheek? Do the directors and the creators know this is a spoof, right? This is... yeah this is Like, Die Hard could kind of maybe be true.
00:11:02
Speaker
Yeah, because but because John McClane got beat up. Right. At the end, end he he ain't got no shoes on. His little wife beater is all bloody. He's been through it. Like, he's been through it trying to take on— I mean, he was in air ducts.
00:11:20
Speaker
Like, it wasn't like he just walked in the front door. like Right. John McClane put in—oh, man. Die Hard 3? He was running all over New York.
00:11:32
Speaker
Oh, so it's another Warriors movie. It's another Warriors movie then. Look, let me tell you something. They stole, they took that movie that's iconic. And it out as I was watching the John Wicks, I was like, it's elements of that movie, elements of this movie, elements of that movie. And it's like they take these ideas from other movies and throw it in all together. And they're all kind of repetitive.
00:11:55
Speaker
But they're still good. Because the thing is, like, you know the ending. You know how the movie's going to go. You already know the story arc. It's not a new story, right? Equalizing is not a new story. One person going up against... That's why people like the 300, right? It's a small group up against a vast army. Like, how are they going to win? And they do somehow. Like, everybody, you know that story, right? It's the underdog story. And you want to see it every single time because it's just... It's been around for so long because it's so good.
00:12:24
Speaker
It's David Versailles. That's yeah what it Yeah. You want to see the one guy win and get justice for whoever. You know where that that trope gets ah is not used in a surprising shock at the end? Was that? The The Departed.
00:12:44
Speaker
Yeah. The departed. Leonardo DiCaprio was supposed to bring down ah Jack Nicholson's character and he died. Spoiler alert. He dies abruptly.
00:12:57
Speaker
Towards the end of the movie, you're like, wait a minute, what the? When it looks like he didn't say today, you're like, wait a minute, what the? What happened? And so I liked, but it also pissed me off because I was like, no, I wanted to see him win in the end. So there's a part of me, like when you watch these horror movies and every now and then the bad guy wins in the end. It's like, yeah, I kind of want the bad guy to win in end.
00:13:17
Speaker
But maybe I don't. Kind of like Avengers Infinity infinity War when Thanos won in the end. I was like, oh, this is a perfect ending because I know there's going to be a part two. He's going to get his come up in somehow. yeah ah that ah Ultimately, we want a happy ending.
00:13:32
Speaker
Ultimately, we want a happy ending. And when the ending is not happy, we'd be like, uh-uh. What? What am I supposed to do with this?
00:13:42
Speaker
How do I carry on with the rest of my day? I'm going be thinking about this now. All day. Because i didn't get the satisfying happy ending where the hero wins. that I don't like that. Well, that's funny.
00:13:59
Speaker
That's real funny that you bring that up. Because in the next segment, I'm going to go ahead and dissect why that's not necessarily true. How people don't want happy endings. Well, especially women because they are sociopaths. But before we get into the next segment... what What other quirky things did you pick up on when I was around you for this period of time? Because somebody else said something to me that is like, is Bruce okay? And i was like, I'm just fine. Y'all are just seeing me in my normal everyday element.
00:14:31
Speaker
I be doing stuff. I be working. Yeah. I think what surprised me the most is how much of a homebody you are. Like, I know I'm a homebody. i don't go outside.
00:14:44
Speaker
I go outside, but I don't go outside. Not if I can help it, right? It's got to be like an event or something. But you you be in the house. Like, you in the house. I was like, i was like i' wonder if Bruce wants to do something today or, like, go somewhere. you was like, no, I'm in the house. And I'm like, that's cool. I can get with that.
00:15:00
Speaker
but Well, that's a new thing. Okay. That's me getting older. cause i Yeah, because I feel like you used to be outside. Couldn't sit still. had to be outside. Especially I was down there. yeah mean, prime example is we drive your car down there. I drive all day, move them washer and dryers from from our brother's apartment to you and his new apartment. yeah Went back into his apartment said, all right, man, I'm about to jump in shower. Where are going tonight? was like, what?
00:15:25
Speaker
And I was like, yeah, we got to hit the streets. All this energy, all this, like you always got to be outside. and But this time you were like, nah. I got my drink and my two-step, and I'm good. i am then I'm in the house. this time Last time as well.
00:15:38
Speaker
You don't remember. Last time I was there for New Year's Eve, I was there for a good minute New Year's Eve, too. Yeah. yeah wentt and We didn't do nothing. Yeah. We made trips to go, like, pick up stuff for the New Year's Eve party, but look, I don't be doing too much. I'm tired. My knees hurt. My back hurt. I'm getting older.
00:15:56
Speaker
Yeah. I ain't moving like I used to. Yeah. And it cost $100 to walk out your front door. that's That's another thing, right? Like, I got all these different ventures that are costing. And so it's like, nah, I would rather invest in myself than invest in a bar or a restaurant getting my money. Although we went to a brunch spot and I was like, this is lit.
00:16:19
Speaker
I like this brunch spot. Yes. T's brunch bar. That was a fun place. I'll definitely go back. But Atlanta. Atlanta. yeah Y'all got to do your all-day brunch better because... gotta figure it out. Like, just have some people come to D.C. and see how to do brunch correctly, which is an all-day event.
00:16:41
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, it's an all-day event. And then redesign your city so that it's walkable, Atlanta. Like... Seriously. like

Cultural Differences in Streaming and Brunch

00:16:50
Speaker
In D.C., there will be just a block of bars and restaurants. You can just walk and it a everything is there. and y'all Atlanta is not like that. It'll be like one or two restaurants on the street and then you got to walk 16 blocks to hit the next bar. It's not... now Doesn't Atlanta have pockets though? Atlanta have pockets. I've been to pockets of Atlanta unless the pandemic shut it down. Where there's a bunch of stuff like in one particular area.
00:17:18
Speaker
Yeah, it's got like little neighborhoods, like like little five points or something like that. Like it's got little neighborhoods. You can go to Edgewood and that's pretty walkable. But like, by and large, if you just step into any, like damn near any part of D.C., damn near.
00:17:39
Speaker
Used to be. But, yeah, i haven't haven't been really, really home in a while, like, where I'm walking around the city. But, like, you can find stuff to do on just that block.
00:17:51
Speaker
Mm-hmm. All day. All day. Atlanta is not like that. You have to go to these specific pockets and areas. You can't just drop into Atlanta and think you about to walk around and have fun all day.
00:18:04
Speaker
You're not. For my friends that live in Atlanta, that was like, Bruce, you was in Atlanta and you didn't come see me. There was a specific reason while I was down there. And I know that my sister said I was a homebody. There was a reason why I was down there being a homebody. And the reason why I wasn't venturing out that I didn't go see my usual friends, don't worry. I'm coming back down there sometime within the next couple of months and I'm going to see people. All right. So don't be hitting me in my DM because I'll be real honest.
00:18:34
Speaker
ah New Year's Day, didn't a lot of people get New Year's Day texts. We're going to talk about how petty i was how petty I'm already being on this New Year's in the after hours, which by the way, You get the After Hours uncensored on our YouTube membership or our Patreon page for $5 a month. Or you could buy single episodes for $3, which why would you do that? Why would you buy a single episode for $3 when you can get multiple episodes for $5? But it's Sign up because we be talking about some stuff and our after hours is going to be a little bit more structured. And I'm going to be doing my messy show where I talk about stuff that I cannot talk about on the air. Like one of my messy shows was how I really feel about the Charlie Kirk assassination. You definitely want to hear that. But on that note, Jay, do you have any more diddly daddling you want to do before I get into why women are sociopaths?
00:19:25
Speaker
No, I'm very interested to talk about that. ah ah Okay, we go get into that. next
00:19:40
Speaker
Jay, something I noticed on this trip when I visited you. as soon as but As soon as our mother got there, Y'all sat y'all asses down on the couch and watched serial killer stuff. You were already watching it when I came in because I was the first one to or arrive.
00:19:58
Speaker
Yes. Serial killer stuff. And I've been noticing that a lot of women watch these serial killers murder mysteries and they watch them all day.
00:20:11
Speaker
They watch them in bed before they go to sleep. And that's how I decided that women are sociopaths. Because why yourself why are watching women and people and kids being kidnapped, tortured, dismembered all the time by these serial killers and then just go to bed and just go to I watched a little bit of Stranger Things and Vecca or whoever that main character is, Scary Face, had me waking up in the middle night thinking that he was in the room about to snap my arm off. yeah So I don't understand how women and it's a how I want to say an epidemic.
00:20:51
Speaker
for close of women just watching and listening to podcasts or or audio books of all this stuff and then go to sleep and sleep peacefully. And that means you're sociopath.
00:21:06
Speaker
It doesn't. There is a very good and very simple reason why you watching forensic files keeps you up at night. Me watching forensic files allows me to sleep peacefully. It's because you're safe when you walk around the world.
00:21:24
Speaker
I am doing research. You notice who the victims are? Women and children. I'm doing research. I can sleep comfortably because I know now I can recognize an unsub when I see one. Well, else that's different. An unsub is from Criminal Minds, but okay. Criminal Minds, but who are typically the victims?

True Crime Fascination: Gender Perspectives

00:21:47
Speaker
Women and children are typically the victims. Who are typically the perpetrators?
00:21:52
Speaker
Men. Who are serial killers? Well, there was one. Predominantly men. Yeah, there was one, that white lady, and then Charlize Theron played her in ah in a movie, Monster. I can't remember. Oh, that African-American?
00:22:06
Speaker
Yes. i I guess. That's the reason why I hate the term African-American, y'all, because Charlie Faison is an African-American. Well, we're going to normalize Charlize Theron and not Faison Love, which is what you just I did not say Faison Love. I said Charlie Faison. Whatever. I screwed up her name.
00:22:28
Speaker
But yeah, it's it's research. We're not sociopaths. We're trying to make sure that when we go out into the world, weaker see we can see, can see it coming.
00:22:40
Speaker
Y'all not going catch us off guard. So we doing research. Well, ain't wrong. You ain't wrong because I did a little research on this topic and I put it on the rundown so you already saw that it was coming. But there are several studies and psychological... wouldn't read the rundown, though. I just read the headlines. so Oh, okay.
00:22:59
Speaker
Ladies and gentlemen... The truth comes out. I do all that work to create rundowns. I read it as you're reading it. would oh because in Because then my reactions, I mean, typically I do read the rundown. Sometimes I don't. If I look at the headlines, I'm like, I'm not going to read this. that that Like the am I the jerks or am I the assholes? I never read because I want my honest reaction.
00:23:23
Speaker
Right. OK, I get that. So it just depends on what the topic is. Sometimes I'll read it. Sometimes I won't. Okay. All right. Well, there are several studies and psychological theories that try to explain why so many women are drawn to murder mysteries and true crimes, including watching them at night before sleep.
00:23:39
Speaker
Audience data and surveys show that women make up a clear majority of true crime consumers, often estimated around 70-80% for books, podcasts, and TV. A 2010 study, they've been taught studying this for a long time, yeah True crime book reviews found women were especially interested when stories contained practical information on how victims escaped or how crimes were solved, suggesting a self-protection motive. So, Jay, you are absolutely right. This is research. But yes but my question is...
00:24:16
Speaker
Even in every, I'm researching when I watched John Wick, right? Like, I want to know what's going to happen if some assassins come after me. And you know what I found out?
00:24:27
Speaker
h I am not prepared to defend myself. Because if somebody come at me with a knife, odds are they're going some slices up and I'm going get some cuts. yeah So that's what I found out. Because you're researching something outlandish.
00:24:42
Speaker
Women researching women being killed is not outlandish. now that's That's been happening since the beginning time. Yes, that' that that's reality. And so being able to see, okay, what are they using to solve crimes?
00:24:59
Speaker
Okay, how can I... How can i make a plan for myself so that I can leave evidence behind if I don't make it out of here so they know who did it? Like, how what what do I need to look for? What are some of the tactics that that folks are using now to to get you ah in a position to where you're vulnerable? Like, what are they doing? This is all it's all research for real life.
00:25:28
Speaker
So once again, my sister is right. Many researchers and clinicians argue that women use true crime to learn what to do or not do. Study red flags in relationships and understand how on it I did not read that. you You didn't read it and understand how offenders think, which can create a feeling of being more prepared or less vulnerable ah for some women repeatedly confronting fear. feared situations, kidnapping, stalking, or assault in a controlled way can function like exposure. It gives an adrenaline rush, but from a safe environment and can oddly feel calming and or empowering. Now, I'm not a woman.
00:26:07
Speaker
Never been a woman. ah Love women. Think women are the top of the food chain as far as humans are concerned. Mm-hmm. Y'all know if you are routinely listening and watching this show how much affection I have for women and how I think they are just better than men in almost every way, except for physical strength. That's literally, I think, the only thing that we have over them. I know men in the men's fear are going to attack that I'm beta. I dare you to say it to my face. I'll probably pull out your eye like a John Wick move. but Yeah, yeah. Good luck. He's big, guys, so don't do that. Play where it's safe.
00:26:44
Speaker
But I get the fact that women are watching these things for the calming and empowering. It's the same reason why people do self-defense yeah or ah martial arts. yeah It's just changing the idea of a physical defense to a mental, emotional, psychological defense.
00:27:07
Speaker
Yes, exactly. Like, it is ah it is a type of exposure therapy because... When you become not desensitized, but just, ah yeah, a little bit desensitized to it, right? If you ever find yourself in a situation like that, you're more likely to recall the things that you've seen and what you remember than to panic.
00:27:34
Speaker
You're going to panic on some level, right? Like your whole nervous system, is everything's going to shoot up, your adrenaline, all the things. But you can you'll remember, I've seen this in like 80 episodes um of cold case files. And I don't want...
00:27:51
Speaker
to be a cold case so I know I got to scratch them and get some DNA under my nails and I know I got to do this and that. like Or here's how I can get out because I saw another woman, she got away and this is what she did. like You'll recall that stuff. You'll be more present mentally because you've exposed yourself to it over and over and over again and now you know what to look out for and you um also have a sense of what to do. It's the same with self-defense. Like...
00:28:19
Speaker
You're practicing it over and over and over again until those moves become almost like things you can do unconsciously. Your body will just move on its own. It's the same kind of thing.
00:28:33
Speaker
So my question at the beginning, the reason why i said women are sociopaths, and ladies and gentlemen, like if you've watched the show and know the show, you know i was being tongue-in-cheek with that. Like, I really don't think women are sociopaths. And ah for my sister, she thought that because I can't spell, i put sociopath. And she was like, oh, I guess that's a new thing. Nope, not meant to say sociopath on the rundown. Yeah.
00:28:56
Speaker
yeah But my question was, why are women doing this at nighttime? Because you want to clear your mind for a clear head and be able to reach peacefully. And it's because I'm a male.
00:29:08
Speaker
And I don't identify with the females in life, but it's pretty understandable and pretty easy to explain. Nighttime is often the only uninterrupted me time.
00:29:19
Speaker
Yeah. So long form shows and podcasts fit naturally into a winding down routine despite the dark content. Some women report that focusing on structured, suspenseful narrative actually distracts from intrusive worries about real life, work, money, relationships, making it easier to fall asleep even though the topic is violent.
00:29:41
Speaker
Yeah, you got to understand. I'm off work now. I've eaten. the kitchen's clean and the light is on over the stove, which means nobody can go in there. The kids are in the bed.
00:29:53
Speaker
Now I can enjoy my time. And this is the only time that I have that I can watch First 48. I wish I could watch it at another time. I wish I could watch it when it's light out.
00:30:06
Speaker
Maybe I'll get to see some on the weekend while I'm cleaning. But typically, yeah, you watch it at night. it's not ah It's not an intentional thing like, let me watch it in the dark so I can, you know, scare myself. No, it's the only time I got to watch it So I watch it at night.
00:30:24
Speaker
Yeah. Men out there. If you've ever lived by yourself and actually taken care of your home, because some men out here live a minimalist lifestyle and don't actually take care at their home. They don't clean. I'm speaking in generalities out there because I can tell you that I'm the exception. clean every week. You're very, again, this is another way in which you're meticulous, that you didn't know that you were meticulous until I pointed it out. But yeah, even in your cleaning, very meticulous. Yes. So when you do these things, when you do meal preparation and you got to do the dishes and you got to clean the kitchen after you do the dishes because the meal prep, you know, got grease all over the stove and you got to wipe down that stove and you got to wipe down the wall around the stove because that grease be popping and it's all over the place. When you do these things, you realize how difficult it is to maintain a house.
00:31:16
Speaker
yeah It is difficult. Yeah, it is difficult by yourself. having a job, maintaining a house. Now imagine, now imagine you got kids. Now there are going to be some men out there that will like, help around the house. You do what your wife or partner tells you what to do.
00:31:32
Speaker
yeah How often are you initiating and doing the things? And I'm not just talking about taking out the trash. yeah I have people that are in my life, I'm not going to say specific people that are in relationships, male friends, that For their significant others, they do those things without asking. And you know what they say? Sex life is fantastic. You know why?
00:31:56
Speaker
She got more energy. She got energy. She has energy. She has time. And she likes you. Because you do the thing without me having to tell you to do the thing.
00:32:07
Speaker
And then, first of all, I've already got to tell you two, three times to do the thing. Then you finally start to do the thing. And you ask me at every step. How do this? Where's this? Where's that? Okay, I might as well have just done the thing by myself.
00:32:22
Speaker
So for for you to take the initiative, like we both see them dirty dishes in the sink. And you be like, let me go ahead and get these dishes together. And I didn't say nothing.
00:32:36
Speaker
You're living a good life. And you give her a little bit more that me time so she can watch these murder mysteries. I'm telling you, fellas. I'm telling you. It's not being a simp.
00:32:47
Speaker
It's being a partner. Because the thing is, all I'm asking for is like an hour. go You play your playstation. I'll watch... Cold case files. We got our little tie. No, did listen, that's the brothers. that that That's the men that are married. And it's are talking about? My wife's my best friend. She is my piece. Why? Because they actually helped.
00:33:11
Speaker
Yeah, they actually help. And they they actually like the women that they married. And they didn't just marry them to just have a family, which some people do. Hey, I was even a victim of that one time. Just wanted a family. it was like, let me grab this person. Even though I did love that person. Let me not slight them. But are there potential downsides to this? There are.
00:33:30
Speaker
Mental health professionals also warn that heavy, especially bedtime consumption can worsen anxiety, sleep and paranoia in some people, leading to more fear of being victimized. For people with a history of trauma or assault, intense crime content can be triggering rather than empowering. And experts often recommend monitoring symptoms and cutting back if distress increases. So for women out there to enjoy it, but having trouble sleeping.
00:34:00
Speaker
Yeah, don't do it. At the end the night. As much. Do it on the weekends. I know you're trying to carve out your own personal time. And for my single mothers out there, what did Tupac say? For my single mothers out there, Bruce cares even if nobody else cares. I understand that you don't have a lot of alone time where you could do it.
00:34:21
Speaker
Yeah. And the nighttime has to be it. Maybe don't do it every night. If you're seeing that it's causing you extra distress, just don't do it every night. Yeah. But it doesn't seem like it caused you any distress. You seem like now you sleep like a baby.
00:34:34
Speaker
Well, typically it's like, okay, if a person has any self-awareness at all, you know what your triggers are. You know what your history is and you know what your triggers are. So typically I would say...
00:34:48
Speaker
People, like women who are who are watching true crime and start to feel anxiety and things based on their past, based on their own trauma, will shut it off. Like, it's...
00:35:01
Speaker
where I realized that, okay, this is triggering me now. Let me let me turn on some cartoons or something. like Like that, I think most people, if you have any kind of self-awareness, you'll realize, okay, this thing is is not it. Like there are times where episode different episodes will come on and I will see, you know, what the crime was and be like, this is not one I really want to watch. So I'll skip that episode. Like it'll this that's fine. Like you can do that.
00:35:28
Speaker
Yeah, ah you know how much I love Forensic Files. ah That little theme song when it come on, do-do-do-do, do-do-do. Look, got get me every time. Yeah. But there are, basically, i can watch any episodes where spouses, like, kill each other, not because I ever wanted to kill my spouse, but, like, that's, like, that's common to me. That yeah happens,

Respect for Women: Acknowledging Challenges

00:35:51
Speaker
unfortunately. I can't see nothing with Really, this i don't know the right adjective to use. Really bad stuff happened to the women and children.
00:36:01
Speaker
Like really bad stuff, especially children. Children are the top. I can't see nothing bad happening to children all. That's the reason why i kind of stopped watching Stranger Things.
00:36:14
Speaker
Mm-hmm. Because they were kids. They were fighting this monster. Like, ladies and gentlemen, stopped watching Stranger Things in season three. And I'm just, the series just ended. And I'm not watching those episodes. I'm on Wikipedia and YouTube finding out how the story ended. Yeah, that's the same. So I stopped, I think, season two or season three. You can watch this last season and you you catch up pretty quick. I watched the last season. It's easier because they're teenagers. They're all like tall and bigger like clearly more mature. So it doesn't feel... And there's like more adults involved in the final season, finally. So it it doesn't feel so much as like...
00:37:00
Speaker
vulnerable children being their lives being at risk they they all feel much much stronger as characters and much more mature as characters and honestly i didn't need to watch season three or four is this season five yeah is yeah yeah i didn't need to watch the other ones to catch up with the story i i got it and yeah and it was good Okay, well, I've heard different reviews. What I watched, and yeah I'm taking it almost kind of out of context because I'm not watching other the episodes, looked like Avengers.
00:37:36
Speaker
Looked like one of the final battle scenes was Avengers Assemble. Yeah, I mean, because they all, like, well, they all... have their own strengths and they all fight in their own way whether they have powers or they don't. Some of the some of them use their mind. are detouring. We were talking about murder mysteries and ladies and gentlemen. ADHD. ADHD. There it is. There it is. Let's get back on topic. Anyway, watch it and I think you'll enjoy it. I think you really will.
00:38:07
Speaker
what Do you have any parting shots for women being sociopaths? Yeah, we're not, man. It's research. It's just research. Like, that's that's honestly how I feel about it. And it's and also, i like...
00:38:25
Speaker
these show the The one show I don't like is Unsolved Mysteries, right? Because unless it's like the cool ghost ones, you know? But if it's like actual kidnappings, murder, and they the the show's called Unsolved Mysteries, they don't solve the mystery. And so I like Cold Case Files. I like Forensic Files. I like First 48 because they get that person in the end. Yeah.
00:38:51
Speaker
You know what I'm saying? You like happy endings. like happy endings. It's full circle. I like happy endings. They get that person in the end. They get justice for that person in the end. And you get to see people in law enforcement who are actually in law enforcement to get justice. The system's still broken because you're still only acting after something's happened.
00:39:13
Speaker
There's no preventative action. measures, but like how much they, you see detectives like connecting with the family and with the victim and being like, I want to get justice for this person. They deserve to have justice. This family deserves closure and to see this person behind bars. And then they actually get them through their own like hard work and intelligence. And, and you're like, yeah, now I can go to sleep.
00:39:42
Speaker
Yeah. Because that person is off the street.
00:39:46
Speaker
So, as I said, I have this reverence for women. And what I'm about to say is going to make sense to a lot of white people who have reverence for black Americans or people that immigrated here.
00:40:05
Speaker
The reason why I have such high reverence for women It's because, damn it, I'm glad I'm a man because y'all life is too hard. if Y'all got to watch out for too much and and be responsible for everything. And I don't want that. i am so glad yeah that I identify and was born a A male because life is hard being anything else and life is hard enough just being a black male. I don't want no other added stuff on it like being a black female or being a black male in the LGBTQ plus community. I have high reference for all those people because that struggle.
00:40:50
Speaker
I ain't built for. And it's funny because just in the same way you ask most Black people, would you want to come back as anything else? They would say, no, I will always come back as Black.
00:41:01
Speaker
i will I would always come back as a woman. Even though you're right. Right? It's still like I couldn't imagine being anything else because it gives you a type of just knowledge and a skill set and a strength that you just wouldn't have any other way. So I couldn't imagine not being a Black woman with all that I have to deal with in this country and in the world.
00:41:33
Speaker
Yeah. And that's the truth. Ruth. But up next, speaking of Stranger Things and Forensic Files, we're going to get into these streaming services next.

Streaming Service Mergers and Consumer Impact

00:41:54
Speaker
Jay, look, it's these streaming services starting to get out of hand. Yeah. And you know what I'm noticing is that certain streaming services are taking over the other. Like Netflix yeah buying Warner Brothers, that means that whatever Warner Brothers has, I think it's HBO Plus or Max, so it's changed so many different times. day So it was HBO Max.
00:42:22
Speaker
Then they said, we're just going to have Max. And everybody hated it because the brand is HBO. Right. Well, first it was HBO Go. It was HBO Go first and then Cinemax and HBO merged, I guess. Yes, and it's HBO Max. And then they were like, we're just going to do, it's just the Max.
00:42:39
Speaker
It's just Max. No, the brand is HBO. People know HBO. Why would you take the brand off of the brand. So then they went back, because people hated it so much, back to HBO Max.
00:42:53
Speaker
Well, now soon it's gonna be Netflix. Yeah. why am I bringing all this up? Because Disney has decided to sunset the standalone Hulu app and fully integrate Hulu into Disney Plus.
00:43:07
Speaker
in 2026. Hulu has been a separate platform interface, but that's going to disappear. And all the Hulu content and branding live inside of Disney Plus instead of on their own app, which do you always had like the bundle, the Disney Plus, Hulu, ESPN bundle. yeah But...
00:43:27
Speaker
You kind of needed, for me, I needed to have the separate apps so I knew where to go to watch certain things. But then you would say to yourself, well, Bruce, it's all going to be in one place. Yeah, if that interface is divided properly where I can still yeah easily find everything that I need to find.
00:43:46
Speaker
But what slowly these streaming services have become, because at first... They were a great alternative to getting cable. Yes.
00:43:57
Speaker
Yes. But now with them all gobbling each other up and as they gobble each other up, raising the price, I might as well fucking have cable.
00:44:09
Speaker
Might as well. You just dropped F-bomb in the real show. Yeah, well, I'm allowed one. okay I thought it was the S-word. I thought we could say that. Well, i changed the rules since we got monetized on YouTube. I think we could say one F-word.
00:44:23
Speaker
Okay, cool, cool, cool, cool. Well, here's the thing that's actually funny about that. As Hulu shows started migrating over to the Disney Plus platform, I realized that I've only been watching Disney Plus. I never actually opened the Hulu app anymore.
00:44:41
Speaker
um Because all of the shows and there's even like a like a Hulu icon. So you can go into Disney Plus, click on Hulu and it'll show you all the shows that are like Hulu originals or whatever.
00:44:53
Speaker
And so I realized that I and that's because for some reason the TV in my room hulu glitches. but disney because Probably because they were trying to make you go to the Disney Plus app. Probably. But i realize like I don't think I've opened Hulu in the um like the past year. Because i watch all of it is already on Disney Plus, so I just watch it on Disney Plus.
00:45:18
Speaker
In theory, this all works out, right? Like, okay, let's take all this stuff and put it in one app, and let's take all this stuff and put it in another app. And Netflix is gobbling up HBO and Cinemax and whatever, DC, DC is part of Warner Brothers, so all of that will be on Netflix, and they'll create an interface where it'll be easy to find the Superman movie that i want to watch on Netflix because it'll be under...
00:45:43
Speaker
HBO Max and DC. Like, okay, cool. But that also means that Netflix now has a control on things. And that means whatever they want to raise the price to. And Netflix has been raising the price yes indiscriminately. And they've just been like, look, we're going to, the price of the brick is going up. Like, wait a minute, why? Because.
00:46:02
Speaker
and Everybody has, because suddenly there were ads that, on Disney Plus, and I said, excuse me, ah I believe I'd pay for no ads. And they're like, oh, no, no, no, no.
00:46:16
Speaker
You did. But now, it looks like that one Black Mirror episode. I was just getting ready to say that. But now that's standard. We're now Hulu Plus Plus, and in order to get Plus Plus, you have to pay this price, and that takes away the ads. And I'm like...
00:46:34
Speaker
Just charge me the, just charge it. Because I can't watch ads. I can't. don't mind ads. I don't mind. Look, I hope people can watch ads because, look, let me tell you something. I popped on one of our episodes of the other day, and I was like, this is ridiculous. I need to fix this in the settings. I popped on one of our episodes of the other day, and it was an ad at the beginning, and some of them are real short. yeah This particular ad, it was running, and I was like, yo, this ad is like five minutes long.
00:47:01
Speaker
I need to skip this. And I was like, oh, okay, this is ridiculous. I need to fix it in the settings so that this doesn't happen. But... If people watch it the whole way through, we get a little bit of cheddar cheese from that. yeah So please, ladies gentlemen, in unless you got a ah YouTube premium, watch them damn ads. That's how we get money. yeah And if you ain't going watch the ads, then donate. Help us out. But yeah, no, at look, it's getting to the point where I'm just like, I would rather pay for cable yeah and have that little cable guide scrolling down. Mm-hmm.
00:47:37
Speaker
Or find that I want to watch. Yeah. The only thing is the on-demand has to be on point because yeah the whole reason we switched to streaming and why it took off is because you could watch what you wanted when you wanted it. So that's the only thing about cable is live TV. And you can't watch what you want when you want. So the on-demand feature has to be top tier. It's got to have everything on it.
00:48:04
Speaker
Because if I want to watch something, who knows? If I want to watch Shawshank Redemption, which we did last night, because it's a good movie. It is good. Yeah. I want to just be able to put that on whenever I feel like it.
00:48:17
Speaker
So, I remember HBO, when they first started On Demand, HBO On Demand was fantastic. but But what you're talking about then becomes a problem because every channel has to have their own On Demand on cable. So, you're stuck with... With streaming, but you also still need live TV, which, by the way, means that we're spending more money than our parents ever did for the entire cable package that we got back in the day. In the early 2000s, you could get the HD cable package with the on-demand. I would love to look back at those numbers.
00:48:53
Speaker
And see how much it was costing then, as opposed to how much all these different streaming services are. oh And then you got Netflix. It was just like, you can't share unless you're in the same household anymore. Right. i like Or now you can pay to designate a person in another household. It's like $10.99 a month. So, yeah. On top of. pay.
00:49:16
Speaker
So that somebody, and then like put in the email of that person and they'll send an invite to them to also join you that's how yeah That's how they do it. Well, I guess considering the fact that Netflix used to be $10.99, actually cheaper than that. Oh, I guess that's a good deal. But then you what? You paying $40, $50 for Netflix a month?
00:49:36
Speaker
Yes. That's how much cable used to be. Yes. But ah what are we going to do? We've become a slave. Yeah. To streaming.
00:49:48
Speaker
And if we can't have what we want to watch right now, it's a problem. it's The only problem is, even though we have whatever we want to watch right now, we can't find what we want to watch right now because we spend an hour searching for what we want to watch right now. Too many choices.
00:50:07
Speaker
Too many choices. Yeah. Remember TV just had couple channels and it and it went off? Yeah. they played that national anthem or whatever, America's beautiful, whatever it was. And you went to bed that was it. You went to You might read a book. You know what? We need get back to reading books, but for people out there that don't understand how these mergers are happening, let me just do a quick breakdown of what's been happening over the last couple of years. So time was fully integrated into Paramount plus, right. In 2023 as a Paramount plus with showtime, which, The standalone Showtime app was shut down, but the prices increased on the premiums here.
00:50:48
Speaker
Then you had HBO Max and Discovery Plus. After WarnerMedia and Discovery closed their $45 billion merger, Warner Brothers Discovery combined with HBO Max and Discovery Plus content into a single service called Max in 2023, which Jay said she hated.
00:51:07
Speaker
while still keeping a so ah cheaper standalone Discovery Plus around. Then you had Discovery Plus and Hulu, no, Disney Plus and Hulu, where Disney bought out Comcast remaining steak and folded Hulu, and then Hulu got away this the standalone, and then Disney Plus. But here's the thing.
00:51:27
Speaker
right? Because that HBO Max and Discovery merger when Warner Brothers and Discovery merged and Discovery took over Warner Brothers. Yeah. Nah. Now Netflix owns Netflix owns that. So what was Discovery HBO Max and Discovery Plus is now going to be rolling into Netflix and and don't think that after Netflix spent billions of dollars acquiring all of Warner Brothers and Discovery that they're not going to be like, hmm,
00:51:58
Speaker
we the price of the brick is going up. Yeah. and And how does this affect everybody? Consumers have fewer separate subscriptions subscriptions to manage and more of an all-in-one apps, which is cool.
00:52:11
Speaker
Yeah. But the price of the brick goes up and causes confusion because you're like, yeah, all these mergers happen, but where is my forensic files? Where is going tell you where it is. Pluto. Pluto. Pluto to you. Now, you do have to watch them ads.
00:52:30
Speaker
But it's Forensic Files all day. It's on channel. It's on channel. And I'll be watching it until I get too much of it. It's on in my house. It's on in the limer right now for the dogs.
00:52:45
Speaker
But with the raising prices, mergers have also led to cancellations of shows, write-offs, and removals from libraries as companies cut costs, which means that some series vanish or become harder to find legally despite the larger combined platforms. You know one movie that we can't find? What's that? Meteor Man.
00:53:08
Speaker
Yeah, where is it? You can't find it. Robert Townsend is the director, creator of Meteor Man, a great black superhero movie from the Fantastic. Every black millennial Gen X person has pretty much seen Meteor Man. If you have it, we will take your black card away. yeah And you cannot find it anywhere. Anywhere.
00:53:31
Speaker
Anywhere. Because these mergers take hold, these different companies or ah past companies that had the rights to these ah movies and TV shows don't exist anymore. And then they disappear.
00:53:44
Speaker
Yeah. And then you can't find anymore. Forensic files might go away. No, it can't. Literally, there'll be riots in the street. 70, 80% viewership is women, and it's in the millions. Well, not a forensic file specifically. just so those True crime. You can't get rid of none of our true crime.
00:54:06
Speaker
Because it's going to be some crimes. Yeah, but Netflix will just come out with a documentary that I have y'all in a chokehold for about a week. It really will. Netflix has to do is is enough serial killers in America alone yeah throughout history that you can make a documentary it is every week yeah and still have more left over after 10 years.
00:54:27
Speaker
And a lot of times they just keep revisiting and making new documentaries about the same serial killer. You know many BTK documentaries I've seen? lot. They just keep doing it over and over and over again. Yeah.
00:54:40
Speaker
Oh, I watched one where his daughter was explaining the effect on her because you can always take different angles to all of this stuff there's a Yep. Exactly. So as we get newer content, oh because you're creator...
00:54:54
Speaker
if you're a creator and not just content creator, if you're a writer, director of TV shows, movies, and things like that, you can even create your own app that can be on Roku and Apple TV and even a Fire Stick and do your own shows. You need Brit to be able to do that. But you can, look, if you can find the money oh you can do your own thing out here. Don't mean you're going make money, but you can create, which most artists just want to do anyway. Money is a byproduct of them doing what their passion is. yeah So it's money out here, but it's a lot of people at the top grabbing a hold of that money and a lot of people at the bottom spending more and more for these services. And I don't know how they doing it when we supposed to be, you know, affordability is a big issue and Netflix and now all these people is making things really hard to afford. That's the reason why if you steal it, I'm okay with it.
00:55:54
Speaker
It is what it is. Jay, before we get out of here, what do you want to tell the people out here? Man, look, you know who still exists? The brother that sent them Blu-ray discs in the bar shop or on the street.
00:56:08
Speaker
So you could still watch all the contents you want. Five for 25. Okay? Just find that brother. He typically has locks.
00:56:20
Speaker
He's got some incense burning. But he got them Blu-rays. And he smelled like sandalwood and lavender. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. And he got them Blu-rays. Mm-hmm. His eyes are a little yellow. That's him. A little bit jaundice.
00:56:35
Speaker
That's him. ah On that note, ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, I'll holler.
00:56:51
Speaker
That was a hell of a show. Thank you for rocking with us here on Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Now, before you go, don't forget to follow, subscribe, like, comment, and share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching it to it. Pass it along to your friends. If you enjoy it, that means the people that you rock will will enjoy it also. So share the wealth, share the knowledge, share the noise.
00:57:14
Speaker
And for all those people that say, well, I don't have a YouTube. If you have a Gmail account, you have a YouTube. subscribe to our youtube channel where you can actually watch our video podcast and youtube exclusive content stays the same but the real party is on our patreon page after hours uncensored and talking straight ish after hours uncensored is another show with my sister and once again the key word there is uncensored those are exclusively on our patreon page jump on to our website at unsolicitedperspective.com for all things us. That's where you can get all of our audio, video, our blogs, and even buy our merch. And if you really feel generous and want to help us out, you can donate on our donations page. Donations go strictly to improving our software and hardware so we can keep giving you guys good content that you can share.
00:58:00
Speaker
clearly listened to and that you can clearly see. So any donation would be appreciative. Most importantly, I want to say thank you. Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time.
00:58:14
Speaker
Audi 5000. Peace.