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Trumpâs takeover of the manosphere left liberals pining for their own Joe Rogan. But the hosts of Chapo, still stung by Bernieâs defeats, would rather let the party establishment burn. âIâm not giving any campaign advice here,â says Will Menaker, âother than to believe different things.â
about the nicest thing anyone on Chapo Trap House had to say about Kamala Harris in the aftermath of Donald Trumpâs electoral victory was when cohost Amber AâLee Frost lamented, âWe could have had President Xanax MILF. That would have been way more fun.â The democratic socialist podcasters werenât blind to the âtruly evilâ things coming in Trumpâs second term, but they werenât surprised that he won, as cohost Will Menaker put it. Harrisâs refusal to engage seriously with protests against Israelâs military campaign in Gaza, her alliance with the family of Dick Cheney, and her inability to articulate a vision for the country were all part of why none of the Chapo hosts I recently spoke withâFrost, Menaker, and Felix Biedermanâvoted for a presidential candidate in 2024. âWhoever wins,â Menaker said on a pre-election episode, âwe lose.â
They werenât always so fatalistic. Menaker started the show in early 2016 with Biederman and fellow âWeird Twitterâ poster Matt Christman. After that yearâs election, they added Frost and Justin Cass, who goes by Virgil Texas, as cohosts. By then, subscribers were sending more than $20,000 a month on Patreon, according to data collected by Graphtreon. Their live shows started selling out, and in 2018 they published a best-selling book. Their irreverent humor, edging into hyperbolic surrealism, and hyperliterate delivery brought listeners in, but their message kept them coming back. They were sardonic, not cynical. They spoke to a socialist impulse that had been largely repressed in mainstream media since the Cold War.
Chapo rode the wave of a resurgent electoral left in the wake of Bernie Sandersâs first campaign, becoming the flagship media project of his movement. By March 2020, the podcast was the highest-grossing podcast on Patreon and was bringing in $174,000 a month on the site. And their mission sharpened as Sanders prepared to run again. They urged listeners to travel to early primary states to canvas for Sanders. Many in the more than 700-strong audience at their Iowa show on the night of the caucuses had crossed state lines. âWhatâs scary is that weâre not just tossing out catharsis and jokes into the void,â Biederman told them. âThis is part of something real.â
Even then, they knew Sanders was up against a powerful Democratic Party machine. âGovernment and big business are coming after our movement, and theyâre coming strong, but they wonât win, because we are the biggest and most honest podcast in America!â Menaker shouted to the crowd in Iowa City, mixing facetiousness with a measure of truth and genuine optimism. âOther than Joe Rogan,â corrected Frost. âLooks like Jon Lovettâs just another screenwriter now,â said Biederman, calling out one of the cohosts of Pod Save America, the rival show started by former Barack Obama aides that speaks to the Democratic establishment.
Super Tuesday 2020, when Joe Biden locked up the Democratic nomination, marked a turn for Chapo. âI felt like that was the chance for the left in this country to assert themselves politically through the electoral system, and it didnât work,â Menaker, who is 41, tells me. âIt revealed the actual purpose of the Democratic Party, which is to prevent something like that from happening.â After that March, their Patreon earnings flatlined, not dropping precipitously, but never again rising with the same speed. The locus of the showâs mission had spun out. âDuring the Bernie years, it was easy to evangelize to the audience,â Frost tells me. âWithout that, the second I realize someone is listening, itâs a little more difficult.â
In the Biden years, Chapoâs hosts would confront scandal and tragedy. Theyâd search for new opportunities in the gloaming of political hope. But the âdirtbag leftâ community theyâd brought together would never entirely dissipate. Though they didnât have a candidate or a movement to call their own, the show continued to serve a political purpose. âIt offers a vocabulary for young dudes that would feel alienated and would maybe fall into the alt-right. It allows them an analysis of the world that doesnât come down to shitting on women or people of color or people poorer than they are,â says Jason Grote, a screenwriter who has collaborated with the hosts. âItâs about solidarity.â
That wasnât enough for some liberals after Trump coasted to reelection victory on a series of endorsements from podcasts appealing to young men, most prominent among them Joe Roganâs. âPeople all over are being like, âWhereâs the liberal or the progressive-left thing that speaks to these, kind of, rude young men?ââ steamed Chapoâs producer Chris Wade on their first episode after the 2024 election. âIâve spent 20,000 hours editing it.â Pundits began pining for a Rogan type who could, presumably, sway a young, male electorate into voting Democratic. Menaker tells me that the Democratsâ problem was their message, not its medium. âJoe Rogan was the Joe Rogan of the left back when he endorsed Bernie Sanders,â he points out.
âIâm not giving any campaign advice here,â Menaker adds, âother than to believe different things,â Menaker says.
David Weigel, a Semafor political reporter and frequent guest on the show, doesnât see Chapo breaking through to Roganâs audience. âThe appeal from right-wing podcasts has been, âYou need to improve yourself, you need to become an alpha, you need to stop eating seed oils.â There are a lot of young people who think thatâunlike Bernie, who said, âI want to fight for somebody I donât knowââthey just want to fight for themselves,â he says. âThe Chapo offer is, âYou can want a better world, you can want socialism, and that will lead to a better life.â Theyâre offering something that very successful right-wing media is offering a quicker alternative to, and the quicker alternative is attractive, in part, because Donald Trump wins elections and Bernie Sanders hasnât.â
Chapo was never going to blindly fall in line behind whoever the Democratic Party anointed in 2024. Their politics arenât premised on party loyalty like those of, say, Pod Save America, which unsurprisingly was the first stop for the Harris brain trust in discussing their loss. âTo the extent that [leftist streamer Hasan Piker] or Joe Rogan have an audience, or a platform, or a large audience that trusts them, itâs because they donât have the politics of Pod Save America,â Menaker said on that postelection Chapo episode. Biederman, who once appeared on a show hosted by Lovett, articulated the core of Chapoâs critique of the centrist-left podcast in 2018. âAll these people have ever done is subscribe to the news and work at a comms department for 30 years and then tell you how to argue with your racist uncle,â he said. âThese Obama freaks, they donât give a shit. They will hang out anyone to dry. They donât believe in anything.â
The Chapo hosts identified the same problem in their postmortems of Harrisâs campaign. âThey come up with all these excuses about messaging, the story we tell, the political atmosphere, the political biosphere, and all this hokum to cover the fact that they donât believe in anything,â said Menaker in one. âLeft unsaid in all this about why she didnât do the shows that appeal to young people, or young men in particular, that Trump did and did so well on, is that if she was going to any nontraditional media forum in which the subject of politics is discussed, and they have an audience thatâs politically engaged, she would have had to face questions that she simply cannot answer.â
In May 2020, weeks after Sanders dropped out of the Democratic primary and New York issued a shelter in place order, Chapo too found itself short of answers. âLook, I have to get out of town or Iâm going to lose my mind,â Frost texted their group chat. âYouâre welcome to come if you want.â So Christman, Menaker, Biederman, and Frost piled into a van and left New York for an Airbnb in the Catskills. âWe had invested a lot of our creative energy, our personal time and effort, into making Bernie the Democratic nominee. It didnât work out. We hit the limits of what our podcast and its effect on the world could possibly be,â Menaker says. âWe needed to commune with nature.â
That weekend in the woods was the first time theyâd been together since the defeat. âNot to say that we had it any worse than anyone with a real job, but losing like that and then, like, âGo sit inside for fucking monthsââthat really sucked,â Biederman tells me. âBut we didnât talk about any of that when we were there. It just relieved a lot of pressure.â They did acid and watched Scott Adkinsâs nonsensical thriller Avengement. âIt was a moment to escape thinking about the future,â says Frost, but also, âit was kind of important. Even Felix, the total homebody, he came out. Itâs important to maintain your relationships.â
Only one cohost didnât join them. Cass had been invited, but wasnât interested. He withdrew after Sandersâs loss, no longer regularly appearing on the show. âIt was very obvious that was a breaking point for him,â says David Eisenberg, a longtime friend. âHe was a pain in the ass to work with,â says Frost. âI saw our connection to him starting to fray, but Bernie and the mission kept that from completely falling apart. After it was gone, it did. We were staying together for the kids.â
Before the podcast, Cass had been a career extra, appearing in shows like Gossip Girl and Girls, but Chapoâs success seemed to reorient his ambitions toward the political. âHe wanted very different things out of his life and career than we did,â says Biederman. âHe wanted to be an actual pundit.â The first episode of Bad Faith, a podcast Cass hosted with former Sanders press secretary Briahna Joy Gray, aired in September 2020. âHe started another podcast without really telling us,â says Frost. Months later, in May 2021, Chapo sent subscribers a statement announcing that Cass was no longer a cohost. âThis separation is mutual and amicable,â it read. âWe all wish him the absolute best.â
On June 9, 2021, a Twitter user posted a thread claiming they had had a âtraumatizingâ online relationship with Cass when they were a teenager. âI believed that we were in a long distance, adult relationship as he requested things of that nature from me,â they wrote. âI donât want to give explicit details of what happened over [FaceTime], but I think you get the idea and it was traumatizing.â They added, âIt made me feel so disgusting that someone who is lauded as a champion of my political beliefs did this to me.â
Frost didnât immediately credit the accusations. âThis was an anonymous person on the internet, which is the exact demographic of people who make shit up about us,â she tells me. Nevertheless, she asked Cass about it. âI was like, âHey, are you a piece of shit?â He was just like, âWell, yes, but nothing criminal,ââ she recalls. âThatâs vague.â Eisenberg says that when he asked, Cass denied the accusations.
At the end of that June, Gray put out a statement. âAlthough we have discussed his obligation to address this accusation, he has not provided me with any additional insight into the facts of the underlying claim. Not knowing more, I want to avoid weighing in irresponsibly,â she wrote. âMy understanding is that Virgil plans to make a statement shortly.â Cass never made a statement, never appeared on either podcast again, and did not respond to multiple requests for comment, including a detailed list of questions sent to an email he has used in recent months. He still appears on Bad Faithâs cover art, but attempts to reach him through Gray and other former associates went unanswered.
None of the Chapos who would talk about their former cohost could say what heâd been up to since the split, but they indicated that heâs still receiving subscriber money. âWe all want to have a Chapo pension for anyone who, no matter what conditions we part under, helped build the show,â says Frost. Wade confirms that Cass receives money, albeit a smaller share than that of the current hosts; he describes the arrangement as âsomewhere between pension and contractual obligation.â
Eisenberg, one of Cassâs best friends, eventually cut him off. In late 2021, he was considering Cass to be one of the groomsmen at his wedding. âI had to tell him, âI canât rely on you. I have to let you go from the group.â He didnât put up much resistance, if any.â
âHe was kind of like a tumbleweed,â says Eisenberg. âHe ran away from his problems.â
as one cohost fell away, another struck out in a new direction. In June 2020, Frost took a Xanax and boarded a socially distanced flight to Los Angeles. She started a Hollywood production company called ColdFeet. âI run head first into things,â she explains. âFor better or worse, sometimes for worse, I never get cold feet.â Unlike Chapo, where everything is evenly distributed, Frost is sole CEO, though she brought on the rest as owners and lured them West. âI was the pioneer,â she says. âThen I sent back word that itâs bright and sunny here in California.â
In 2016, Menaker talked about expanding Chapo into a site with videos and blogs, but ColdFeet was more than a pivot to video. âImagine if they actually produced a feature-length film,â says Catherine Liu, a professor of film and media studies at UC Irvine who has known Frost since 2014. âHollywood is very milquetoast, anodyne, liberal. Democratic Party politics could be produced by bots. Is there space for some kind of spontaneous media experience of left spectacle and entertainment and laughs? Yes. Itâs all we have now. We have so little political power.â
It wasnât long before Christman had an Amber in each ear preaching the virtues of California. He got to know Amber Rollo while swimming in the Rockaways that first pandemic summer. She was a comedian, native to the Golden State, living in a Bushwick loft with no AC, no heater, and no stove. Rollo, who wasnât a podcast listener, recalls Christman wanting to take âa step back from bigger politics and trying to focus more on his small community.â As winter approached, she and Christman loaded up her 1990 Chevy conversion van with a broken odometer and took off for California.
When the couple later decided to get married, Menaker, an online minister of the Universal Life Church, came out to officiate the wedding at Little Secret, a Hollywood DIY venue where Rollo hosted shows featuring former presidential candidate Marianne Williamson and Amazon union organizer Chris Smalls. At karaoke afterward, the bride and groom sang the B-52âs âLove Shack.â Chapo producer Chris Wade and his wife, Molly Mary OâBrien, who sang Tenacious Dâs âFuck Her Gently,â looked around and decided to move. David Weigel attended, but didnât sing. Biederman didnât sing eitherââI like [karaoke] in the Yakuza series of games,â he says, ânot in real lifeââbut he too succumbed to the Hollywood drift. Menaker, the son of New Yorker and New York Times editors, was the only one to stay loyal to the city. âGo Yankees,â he says.
With mentors like The Big Short director Adam McKay, Uncut Gems codirector Benny Safdie, and Oscar-winning screenwriter Josh Olson, Chapo was quickly entrenched in projects. Jason Grote, who had been a writer on Mad Men, helped Christman and Menaker adapt their podcast series about George H.W. Bush for TV. âIâm a drama writer, so the pitch was coming off as a little bit more prestige TV and a little bit less Chapo,â he recalls. âSafdie advised us to just write it as a pilot.â They wrote an episode where a young H.W. is tricked into dosing John F. Kennedy with acid. âIf you play it as drama, people are more resistant to it,â Grote says. âWhereas if you crank up the absurdityâŠâ
In September 2023, with Rollo in a Santa Monica hospital, preparing to give birth, Christman collapsed. By the time Rollo waddled into his hospital room across town, he was unconscious. âHe had a stroke. We donât know if heâll ever be able to do anything more than this,â a doctor told her. âThat was terrifying. Iâm about to pop and theyâre telling me that the love of my life, the father of my future child, might never do anything,â she says. âThat evening, he mumbled, âI love you.â That put the fight in me.â
Frost and Biederman rushed to the hospital. Menaker and his girlfriend, former Elle editor Katherine Krueger, flew from New York almost as soon as they heard. âThe first time I saw him after the stroke, he referenced a really stupid thing that I hardly even remembered,â Biederman says. âIt confirmed to me heâs still in there. His cognition is absolutely fucking there, itâs just his ability to relate that cognition to the world, heâs going to have to rebuild that. For a guy like him, thatâs incredibly fucking tragic.â Before Chapo, Christman was an unemployed Twitter poster in Ohio. Podcasting helped him find a voice. âI used to compare himâand seriouslyâto Cicero,â says Daniel Bessner, a frequent guest on the show and cohost of the podcast American Prestige. âHeâs an orator, fundamentally.â
While Rollo prepared to give birth, Wade and OâBrien mustered friends. âMe and my wife have that element of producer brain,â Wade says. OâBrien made a spreadsheet to make sure there was always someone with Christman. Biederman helped Christman with stretches he learned from Muay Thai, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, and his motherâs work as a yoga instructor. Frost painted the nursery and installed handicap bars in his home. âAll of us are leftists who strongly believe in community. This was an experience to put that to work,â Rollo says. âI hope the way our community has come together has ripple effects.â After more than a month in the hospital, Christman moved to a rehabilitation facility. Father and daughter learned to walk on the same schedule. âHeâs still miles ahead of her on talking,â Rollo says, though he hasnât fully recovered.
Another crisis rocked Hollywood before Christmanâs stroke. After Netflix announced itâd lost nearly a million subscribers, streamers stopped stockpiling content. âWeâd been writing pilots, which became worth bupkis,â says Frost. âSo we were like, fine, weâll do other things.â Theyâve since been producing a series of short films, are writing a comic book, and invested in Eephus, a feature-length baseball comedy that played at Cannes and the New York Film Festival. Frost attended the festivals with her now boyfriend, Nate Fisher, who cowrote and acts in the film. She partied at David Lynchâs annual Silencio pop-up nightclub at Cannes, but didnât spot the late director. She assumed he was âin a secret vestibule, two-sided-mirror wall, where heâs observing the goings on and eating a wholesome helping of cherry pie with black coffee.â
Christman has been easing back into work. âHe does want to get back to saying something,â says Rollo. âAt the beginning, and still now, I was mostly focused on helping him find joy again.â Frost has been helping write his contribution to the comic and Wade self-published a book adapted from Christmanâs scripts for a series on the Spanish Civil War. They sold close to 18,000 copies. Heâs started sitting in on the podcast again, and, with Rolloâs help, heâs writing poems for a new segment called Strokes of Genius. âWriting poetry is a great release. A Catharsis,â he tweeted recently, thanking Rollo. âWith a stroke I never been so lucky because I with you.â
In late October, the Chapo Trap House logo appeared on a billboard above the Olive Garden in Times Square. The podcastâs subscribers hadnât grown substantially since 2020, but they remained one of the biggest projects on Patreon, taking in approximately $180,000 a month as of December. Patreon asked if they wanted in on some advertising space they were purchasing. âThere was trepidation at first,â says Frost. âBut we like the idea of tourists seeing it and going, âWhat the fuck is that?ââ
There hasnât been a noticeable bump in subscriptions from the billboard. âYou canât expect exponential growth forever,â Menaker says. âI wouldnât be satisfied if it was shrinking or we were losing money, but, for me, the feeling of doing the show comes first.â Perhaps the only thing that could revive their growth would be another movement like Sandersâs. âThe man and the message matched, broadly speaking, the things that we would like to see in an American government,â Menaker says. âThere arenât any other opportunities for that. What are we gonna do? Start casting another candidate to support? If one comes along, Iâll let you know.â
Not long after the billboard went up, Biederman moved back to New York, tired of drifting through life in Southern California. He ridicules the idea of podcasters fixing politics. âLiberals in the Democratic Party are always fighting the last war. Maybe it would have made sense to have spent the last seven years building a parallel media infrastructure that had these things to prepare for the Biden presidency, in advance of having a chief executive who is constitutionally incapable of communicating,â he says. âBut now, I donât know how anyone can look at the past 40 years of the conservative movement and go, âOh, itâs Joe Rogan.â No, itâs actual institutional strength that does not have a left-liberal equivalent.â
Biederman doesnât see anyone building anything like that on the left. âBernie is still individually popular, but itâs hard to have him as the center of gravity for this movement when heâs spent the past four years telling everyone how great Biden is. The same is true for AOC,â he says. âIf anyone is going to recapture that feeling, itâs going to have to be someone whoâs a little more courageous than that.â Frost is particularly dubious about Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezâs commitment to democratic socialism. âWithout the movement, sheâs pretty untethered,â Frost says. âI donât think sheâs particularly focused or serious-minded about politics so much as the left-liberal commitment to forming a little righteous block, which doesnât resonate with people as much as results. It tends to resonate with people without real problems.â
At least one former guest levels elements of that criticism at Chapo. âWeâre increasingly careening into a world where social democracy probably isnât going to happen and probably wouldnât fix things, so maybe people need to become more interested in the further radical, revolutionary ideas throughout the history of communismâŠand they were a soc. dem. show,â says comedian Jake Flores. âTheyâre never going to be attached to a project like Bernie again. If youâre in a position like Chapo, you get more doomery from here on out, or you just become vague.â
The closest thing to a hopeful comment in Chapoâs postelection episode came from Wade. âIâm thinking back to that post-2016 moment, where everything was very scary, mostly because it was so new and uncharted. One of the scarier parts of now is that we know how this goes and it is charted and that chart is terrifying. But also just thinking about that concept of contingencyâŠand how that post-2016 moment led to a big flourishing of alternative ways to think about and do politics,â he said. âIt is still, as it always is, time to look to your friends, look to the people around you that need help and that you can build community and build capacity with, in whatever way makes sense to you, and wait for those moments of contingency.â
The hosts retain their capacity to be astonished by the leftâs ability to unexpectedly rise. âOne of the most heartening things Iâve seen in my time doing this show came years after a very disheartening defeat for Bernie,â says Biederman. âFor the first time in my lifetime, seeing tens of thousands of Americans turning out for PalestineâŠit was probably the most amazing display Iâve seen.â Frost distills that to an ethic. âDespair is a kind of egotism. Itâs a belief in your ability to predict the future,â she says. âI didnât see Bernie coming. Itâs important to remember the world can still surprise you. I hope another weird, good opportunity presents itself for a socialist future.â
This article really makes the âjust get a jobâ as a solution to dangerous meaninglessness in men from Will and Amber even more tasteless in retrospect
Thatâs always been a lib cop-out in my mind. âDo something fulfilling!â. Wow yeah uhh I live in a commodified atomized capitalist hell scape whatâs fulfilling and can keep me alive? Not much.
Yeah, itâs so out of touch. Chronic underemployment and for the particularly unlucky, NEETdom isnât a choice. It is violence inflicted on the younger generation.
People fucking WOULD do what makes them happy if they could. Itâs like those gurus that just say âitâs your mindset bro, you have a scarcity mindset when you should have an abundance mindset!â
Bro, excuse me for being realistic.
I dont really listen to the podcast anymore, just check in on it for a bit once in a blue moon, but I thought what they were saying was more like âthe government should create a civil labor bureau to employ young men to give them purposeâ?
Amber.