Whitney Cummings went full honesty mode on Joe Rogan: “I was as liberal as it gets, blue hair, rescue pitbulls, the whole thing. But the hypocrisy finally broke me.”
She saw “diversity” become diversity of everything except thought. “My body, my choice”… until it wasn’t. Climate alarmism while living on the coast. The contradictions piled up, and as a comic wired to spot bullshit, she couldn’t ignore them anymore.
When any side stops tolerating questions and starts enforcing agreement, it stops being about truth and starts becoming a tribe. That shift affects culture, comedy, and all of us.
I respect anyone brave enough to walk away from the script when it no longer makes sense. Whitney’s story feels like a lot of people’s quiet journey these days.
What’s one hypocrisy or contradiction that made you start questioning your old beliefs?
Having been lucky enough to see this live 5 times.
I can clarify that it’s as close to a religious experience as I’ll ever get.
Bono’s quote about god walking through the room is spot on.
IT’S LIKE GOD ENTERS THE BUILDING
Bono: “We can be in the middle of the worst gig in our lives, but when we go into that song, everything changes. The audience is on its feet, singing along with every word. It’s like God suddenly walks through the room.”
📽️ “Where The Streets Have No Name” from The Joshua Tree Tour 2017 (opening night, Vancouver, Canada)
Hello, Moon. It’s great to be back.
Here’s a taste of what the Artemis II astronauts photographed during their flight around the Moon. Check out more photos from the mission: https://t.co/rzM1P0QbOl
On this Good Friday, here’s Easter Lily EP. A much more reflective set of songs emerging from a more personal, private place that some may retreat to in such times – exploring themes of friendship, loss, hope, and ultimately, renewal. Easter Lily EP arrives six weeks after Days of Ash EP, which marked the beginning of Lent on Ash Wednesday Easter Lily EP available now. https://t.co/OB3mVe69vu
Christopher Nolan never explained the ending of Interstellar (2014). When asked if Cooper’s reunion with his daughter was real or symbolic, he said, “It’s not about what you see, it’s about what you feel.” The emotion mattered more than the answer.