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The Disorg

The Disorg

Author: The Disorg

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We unpack big ideas from documentaries and the tangents they lead us down.
12 Episodes
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What starts as trolling on the internet doesn’t always stay on the internet.We watched The Antisocial Network: Memes to Mayhem, a documentary about how a weird corner of the internet (4chan) went from anime jokes and chaotic message boards to shaping real-world movements like Anonymous, Gamergate, and more.We talk about how anonymity changes people online, why trolling culture keeps escalating, and how meme-driven communities ended up influencing protests, politics, and events far beyond their original forums.→ Next time, we're watching "Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer" on Netflix!Timestamps!00:00 – Intro00:54 – Synopsis04:50 – Documentary review54:11 – Tangents01:57:12 – Green room
Imagine growing up in a community where one man controls what you wear, who you marry, and what God supposedly wants from you.We watched Keep Sweet: Pray and Obey, the documentary about the rise of Warren Jeffs and the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints. A story about power disguised as faith — and the women and children who paid the price.We got into how authority gets weaponized, why people stay in high-control groups, whether religion is really the problem, and what it takes to walk away from everything you’ve ever known.This episode deals with mature subject matter, including discussions of trauma and abuse. Viewer/listener discretion is advised.→ Next episode: The Antisocial Network: Memes to Mayhem (on Netflix)Timestamps!00:00 - Intro02:00 - Synopsis02:43 - Documentary review38:04 - Tangents1:48:00 - Green room
We watched HBO's Low Country: The Murdaugh Dynasty and Netflix's Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal. These are documentaries about a South Carolina family that spent a century building power in the justice system, until murder and corruption brought it all crashing down. We get into how they maintained control for so long, what finally exposed them, whether the system enabled this, and how family legacy can become a trap. It's shocking, infuriating, and way more layered than true crime usually gets.→ Next time, we're watching Keep Sweet: Pray and ObeyTimestamps:00:00 - Intro00:58 - Synopsis13:50 - Documentary review1:54:20 - Tangents2:31:03 - Green room
This week we watched A Trip to Infinity, a Netflix documentary where physicists and mathematicians explain infinity until you start questioning everything.We get into what infinity actually means, why it's so hard to explain, whether thinking about this stuff makes life feel meaningless, and how science education often fumbles topics like this.It’s confusing, interesting, and way deeper than we expected.→ Next time, we're watching "Low Country: The Murdaugh Dynasty" on HBOTimestamps!00:00 - Intro02:50 - Synopsis03:58 - Documentary review52:00 - Tangents01:49:12 - Green room
Most people think movies are made on set. Turns out, they’re actually made in the edit.We watched The Cutting Edge: The Magic of Movie Editing, a documentary about the people who decide what you see, what you don’t, and how every scene ends up feeling the way it does. Editors don’t just clean things up; they basically rewrite the movie after it’s been shot.We got into how editing shapes story, performance, pacing, and even emotion, why some movies feel magical and others feel weirdly flat, and how filmmakers, actors, and editors all see the same footage in totally different ways.→ Next episode: A Trip to InfinityTimestamps!00:00 - Intro02:28 - Synopsis01:06:56 - Tangent 101:34:35 - Tangent 201:45:26 - Tangent 301:55:05 - Tangent 4(We skipped The Green Room this time!)
Brandy Melville sold "one size fits all" clothing to teenage girls. But underneath the service, there's some wild stuff going on: wait till you learn about the CEO's white supremacist views, their business model built entirely on exclusion, and how they convinced Gen Z (the most socially conscious generation yet) to become loyal customers anyway.We break down the documentary Brandy Hellville and the Cult of Fast Fashion including how the brand weaponized exclusivity, whether fast fashion depends on modern slavery, and what consumers can actually do if they want out of the cycle.Next time, we're watching 'The Cutting Edge: The Magic of Movie Editing', a documentary about the art of editing film.Timestamps!00:00 Intro01:38 Synopsis04:20 Documentary review01:11:45 Tangents01:50:16 Green room
Everyone thinks God of War (2018) was destined to be a masterpiece. But at the time, it was a huge gamble.We watched Raising Kratos, the documentary about how Santa Monica Studio tried to reboot a beloved franchise, change its entire tone, reinvent Kratos as an actual character, and show it all off live at E3 with a demo that could’ve face-planted in front of the whole industry. Five years of “are we geniuses or idiots?” energy.We got into how games get made, what devs give up to ship something this ambitious, why creative teams crumble and regroup, and also… what ever happened to E3?→ Next episode: Brandy Hellville & The Cult of Fast FashionTimestamps!00:00 - Intro01:39 - Synopsis02:30 - Documentary review46:17 - Tangents01:33:15 - Green room
How Boeing Crashed

How Boeing Crashed

2025-11-1201:43:58

Boeing had one job: build planes that don’t fall out of the sky.We watched Downfall: The Case Against Boeing (on Netflix), a documentary about how one of the world’s most trusted companies messed up badly. Two crashes, hundreds of lives lost, and a bunch of execs pretending everything was fine.We got into what went wrong, how greed took over, and why the system basically set Boeing up to fail. Also… why are their whistleblowers suddenly dying?→ Next episode we’ll review Raising Kratos (God of War documentary), can't wait to discuss that one with y'all. It’s free on YouTube if you want to watch it!Timestamps!00:00 - Intro 01:25 - Synopsis03:02 - Discussion starts10:35 - Tangent 1 & 2: Fiduciary responsibility & why Boeing and Mcdonnell-Douglas merged25:00 - Tangent 3: The Teflon & Dupont lawsuits54:28 - Tangent 4: Why are the whistleblowers dying?1:24:00 - Green Room starts (off-topic discussions)
We finally found a documentary we don’t recommend watching.The Mark of the Bell Witch tells the story of a haunting in 1817 Tennessee, but somewhere between folklore and filmmaking, it loses the plot. We talked about why humans are drawn to ghost stories, what makes folklore powerful, and how this documentary missed the mark (pun intended).We also got into what the filmmakers could’ve done differently: from tone to pacing to credibility, and why throwing more money at films isn’t always productive.→ On the next episode, we’ll be discussing “Downfall: The Case Against Boeing” which you can watch on Netflix.Timestamps!00:00 - Intro 02:25 - Synopsis03:28 - Discussion starts38:48 - Tangent 1: What makes a good scary film?49:53 - Tangent 2: Southern Gothic vibes and its origin1:09:18 - Tangent 3: Why are some movies so bad they’re good?1:19:17 - Tangent 4: The biggest reasons this documentary didn't work1:31:00 - Green Room starts (off-topic discussions)
Aliens, cover-ups, and government secrets... or just a fun collective act of storytelling?We watched two long-form UFO video essays by YouTuber LEMMiNO: The Unknowns: Mystifying UFO Cases and Extraordinary Until Proven Otherwise. Together, they explore decades of sightings, official investigations, and the line between credible evidence and mass delusion.We talked about misinformation, conspiracy thinking, and why UFOs have fascinated people since 1947. How do you tell what’s real when everything online feels designed to mislead? And what does the UFO story say about how we search for truth in the internet age?→ Next episode: The Mark of the Bell Witch, an indie doc about a 19th-century hauntingTimestamps!00:00 - Intro 1:50 - Synopsis02:52 - Discussion starts32:01 - Tangent 1: The world after The Manhattan Project45:01 - Tangent 2: The meteor in Portugal47:45 - Tangent 3: Pentagon report summary from 202349:57 - Tangent 4: Escapism59:47 - Tangent 5: The amorphous mental model of a UFO1:08:35 - Green Room starts (off-topic discussions)
Three babies. Three different families. One secret experiment.We watched Three Identical Strangers (streaming on Netflix and Prime Video) and talked about nature vs nurture, the ethics of social science, and how far researchers will go to get answers. We dug into class, identity, parenting, and what happens when someone else decides the path your life will take.If you’ve ever wondered how much of who you are comes from your genes and how much comes from your upbringing… you’ll probably like this documentary.→ Next episode we’ll be discussing 2 UFO video essays by @LEMMiNO on YouTube. One’s called “The Unknowns: Mystifying UFO Cases” and the other is called “Extraordinary Until Proven Otherwise”.Timestamps!00:00 - Intro 01:51 - Doc synopsis02:57 - Discussion starts27:24 - Tangent 1: Ethics vs Morals44:48 - Tangent 2: Why did they hide the psychiatric issues in the doc? Why didn’t they talk about Bobby’s run-in with the law?1:07:27 - Tangent 3: Is Drake and Leonardo Dicaprio’s preference for younger women a genetic thing?1:12:57 - Tangent 4: What matters more, nature or nurture?1:30:28 - Green Room starts (off-topic discussions)
Jiro Ono is the GOAT of sushi chefs. But of course he is; he’s been making it every day since he was 9. We watched Jiro Dreams of Sushi (streaming on Netflix) and talked about what drives someone to chase mastery for decades. We got into obsession, parenting, Japanese culture, and how this quiet little sushi counter became a global symbol of craftsmanship. We also talked about bigger stuff like capitalism, collectivism vs individualism, and what it means to build a life around your art…including the sacrifices you need to make. Or do you? If you’ve ever been drawn to people who care a little too much about their work... you’ll probably like this documentary. → Next episode’s documentary: ‘Three Identical Strangers’ (and what matters more: genetics or environment) Timestamps! (00:00) - Intro (01:10) - Discussion starts(01:59) - Discussion actually starts(30:00) - Tangent 1: Japanese people’s unspoken love(35:42) - Tangent 2: Japan’s “evaporated people” and its unique flavor of capitalism(1:02:19) - Discussion returns(1:05:51) - Pics of Chris as a kid in Japan(1:06:20) - Discussion strikes back(1:17:30) - Tangent 3: Achieving greatness in Japan vs US(1:23:30) - Oh right, we should probably explain how this podcast works(1:24:25) - The Green Room starts (off-topic discussions)(1:24:58) - Grant likes keyboards(1:30:30) - Katie’s forehead vein(1:32:48) - We compliment each other(1:36:24) - Chris likes cameras(1:40:38) - Mo likes Conan O’Brien(1:43:54) - Why nearsightedness is increasing(1:55:15) - Are you still watching?
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