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Insane Films

Author: Madge Weinstein

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Videos, video journals, and films from Madge Weinstein and Friends.
80 Episodes
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A casual city-to-city chat takes a sharp turn into politics, airport anxiety, and social-media exaggeration, revealing how everyday conversations can cut through the noise faster than any viral post. Between quick takes on life in Chicago versus Los Angeles and personal honesty about family and priorities, the exchange captures the weirdly intimate rhythm of modern small talk—until real life interrupts with a sudden phone call.
From 2005, when Wanda Wisdom was fat. Madge was always fat. Cheryl Merkowski was behind the camera.
A furious political takedown unpacks how activist language gets flattened into slogans, then repurposed by rival power players to steer outrage in whichever direction is useful. The speaker connects campaign money, identity labels, and algorithm-friendly purity tests into a single cycle of manipulation, arguing that performative politics is replacing analysis—and that without nuance, people become easy targets for the very forces they claim to oppose.
In this fiery monologue, a bombastic leader insists he’s being scapegoated for a global chokepoint crisis, portraying himself as a loyal ally betrayed by the very coalition he expected to rescue him. As he deflects responsibility and names foreign figures as villains, the rant spirals into a chaotic mix of grievance, ego, and geopolitical theater that feels both absurd and unsettlingly plausible.
A sharp little Insane Films aside about the odd ‘Ladies R Us’ energy—sixty seconds of Madge being Madge.
This outrageous riff turns the idea of “taking Cuba” into a wink-wink metaphor for pushing limits—physically, comedically, and maybe emotionally. The speaker swears they can handle something hilariously oversized, complete with poppers jokes and wild bravado, daring the audience to see just how far the bit goes. It’s bold, raunchy, and unapologetically over the top.
With election day close, this clip is a direct call for action in Illinois State Senate District 6: stop assuming a proven incumbent is safe and actually show up. It spotlights a record of concrete wins—especially for LGBTQ institutions and reproductive-care protections—while warning how quickly complacency can hand power to weaker alternatives. The message is urgent, blunt, and laser-focused on one thing: turn quiet appreciation into ballots before it’s too late.
Source image by Faggery
A furious monologue confronts the danger of mass-audience hate rhetoric and the helplessness that follows when conspiracy myths go mainstream. The speaker moves from shock and grief into a raw reckoning with historical trauma, wrestling with how communities are expected to respond when dehumanization resurfaces in modern media. It’s an emotionally charged call to recognize the stakes before rhetoric hardens into real-world harm.
A newly surfaced 2006 Yeast Radio episode feels eerily current, tracing familiar patterns in wartime spin, science denial, and political storytelling that still echo today. The clip doubles as a personal invitation to revisit that moment through fresh ears, with a candid, offbeat charm that blends urgency, humor, and a direct appeal to the audience not to miss what matters.
This biting political parody follows a boastful strongman who frames national decline as personal success, turning corruption, conflict, and grift into a victory lap. With escalating absurdity and dark humor, the video exposes how propaganda can rebrand self-preservation as leadership—and why that performance is so dangerously persuasive.
A sharp political monologue cuts through the outrage cycle and challenges viewers to stop scoring vibes and start stress-testing real-world execution: what can actually be signed, funded, defended, and implemented fast. It reframes modern campaign theater as an attention economy game, then gives a practical filter that instantly separates governing reality from performative branding.
A darkly comic rant spirals from market panic into geopolitical dread, capturing the absurd whiplash of trying to live normally while headlines feel apocalyptic. It’s equal parts gallows humor and raw frustration, turning existential fear into a sharp, chaotic monologue about power, consequences, and everyday people stuck in the blast radius.
A playful skit serves up market panic as the daily special, blending deadpan delivery with improvised sound effects and creator-era frustration into a quick, chaotic bite of humor.
A fired-up political rant argues that voters can’t outsource responsibility to campaign messaging and then act surprised by outcomes, insisting civic duty matters more than candidate marketing spin. The video then pivots into a sharp, funny personal comedown—post-rant gym plans, a Chicago Thai restaurant shoutout, and chaotic food commentary that turns frustration into dark humor and everyday texture.
hey so I have some really fun geeky news if you’re seeing this you’re watching this on insane films calm which has been rather dormant for a while and I also can turn it so subscribe to this feed but you already have if you’re watching like yes but this is gonna be fun cuz I automated it with open costs all I have to d… Watch the video.
I’m sorry to have to share this with you, but I just don’t know what else to do with this information. But when I go to the gym in the morning, there’s this man there in the locker room. And he’s just always drying his hands. Or when he’s not drying his hands with the hand dryer, he’s like blowing the hot air from the … Watch the video.
I have a friend and she’s been selling her possessions on eBay in order to pay her health care insurance premiums and her co-pays because she has the unfortunate predicament of having cancer and being an American at the same time. So this what the Democrats did last night to cave and basically give up on those Obamacar… Watch the video.
Traditional liberal messaging is like trying to fight a machine gun with a strongly worded email. Please stop eroding civil rights. Sincerely, the DNC. Meanwhile, Dark Woke is kicking down the doors with a blowtorch and a meme that says, Eat the rich, seasoned with climate change ash. We’re done pretending bipartisansh… Watch the video.
Hi, it’s Madge, and I found a political pattern so infuriating you may need a glass of water before I show you who is on the list. No, not that list. What I’m about to show you is not a coincidence. It’s not a fluke. It’s not a whoopsie. It’s the same six Democrats caving twice this year and handing the Republicans the… Watch the video.
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