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Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Creative Complaint

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TitreDateDurée
"I'm icked out by virtue" ft. Greta Rainbow21 Nov 202500:27:47

Writer and editor Greta Rainbow joins host Dani Loftus for a tour through the icks that shape her taste: from airplane armrest invasions to cagey creatives, hidden gluten, weak PDA, celebrity beverage empires, and a deeply cursed Homeland Security tweet.

They dig into gossip as community protection, transparency in the creative economy, why the literary world runs on shame, and how momentum truly works (“like a 15-year-old boy”). Plus: dating icks, tech icks, virtue icks, environmental icks, and Greta’s Ick of the Week.

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00:00 — Welcome to Creative Complaint

00:55 — “Sir, Turn Off Your Phone”

04:50 — Complaining as High Art

05:30 — The Gospel of Gossip as Public Service

10:00 — Lack of $$$ Transparency

11:30 — Shame, Sales, and the Literary Hunger Games

12:40 — Momentum Is a 15-Year-Old Boy

15:00 — Earnest America vs. Irony-Pilled New York

16:00 — Best Friends After Two Hangs? Immediate Red Flag

17:00 — The Affection Olympics

18:45 — Bad vs. Good PDA

19:15 — Hidden Gluten, Hidden Rage

20:20 — New Yorkers, Please Learn to Recycle

21:50 — Emma Chamberlain Should Start a Publishing House, Actually

24:15 — Rejection as a Luxury Commodity

27:20 — Fascism: Final Boss Ick

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Our music, Stamford Brook Style, is by Adrian Michna.

“The best ideas are formless” ft. Nick Susi09 Jan 202600:25:29

Strategy executive and self-described capital H hater Nick Susi joins host Dani Loftus to explore the art of dispassionate curiosity and the illusions that dominate creative industries. Nick unpacks why distance creates clarity, how the internet tricks us into thinking we need to know everything about Dubai chocolate, and why so many talented people write essays about world-building instead of actually building worlds. They discuss the false war between TikTok green screen strategists and academic researchers, the size-weight illusion that makes everyone think they can juggle, and why trust hasn't collapsed at all—it's just transferred to random strangers on the internet.

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Nick's website

Dani's newsletter

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01:58 — Dispassionate curiosity aka observing without getting wound up

04:50 — Why rage bait proves we care about too many things

07:41 — Would Tolkien have written LOTR or just had a Substack?

09:43 — The size-weight illusion and why everyone online thinks they can juggle

12:01 — The false war between TikTok strategists and academic researchers

16:06 — The best ideas are formless and travel like mind viruses

17:34 — Dating ick: people who can't communicate their desires

19:41 — Intrinsic vs extrinsic motivation in Japan vs America

21:14 — Technology ick: bragging about being terminally online

22:41 — Using social media like a shotgun instead of a sniper rifle

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Our music, Stamford Brook Style, is by Adrian Michna.

Celebrity lookalikes and phone jails ft. Sydney Battle17 Dec 202500:26:00

Actor, comedian, and writer Sydney Battle joins host Dani Loftus to discuss the icks that drive her creative life. Sydney opens up about navigating rejection in Hollywood, where celebrities now take tiny parts that once went to rising actors.

They explore tactful complaining versus toxic positivity, the relatability trap that makes celebrities build airport pillow forts and why people need to just say "excuse me."

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Sydney's Instagram

Dani's newsletter

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00:59 — Don't tell people who they look like (unless it's the hottest person alive)

06:09 — "Honesty without tact is just cruelty"

06:47 — Toxic positivity and the 16-page audition complaint

08:31 — When celebrities get the part you auditioned for

09:20 — Separating career opportunities from talent to stay sane

10:52 — When your happy side quest becomes your main career

12:19 — Post-strike scarcity: celebrities taking two-scene parts

14:34 — Dating ick: low effort and people who don't value you correctly

17:28 — Celebrities need to stop trying to be relatable

18:51 — Jessica Chastain's valid complaint vs. Kristen Bell's airport fort

24:46 — Just say "excuse me"

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Our music, Stamford Brook Style, is by Adrian Michna.

No trophies in heaven ft. Sophia Benoit04 Dec 202500:26:25

Writer and comedian Sophia Benoit joins Dani Loftus to discuss the art of complaining as a form of connection. They touch on texture-based food aversions, surveillance culture, and people who take jokes too literally online. Also, we learn what a "rat room" is.

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Sophia's podcast

Sophia's website

Dani's newsletter

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00:00 — What is this podcast

00:54 — How Sophia doesn't like talking about herself (despite writing a memoir)

02:20 — Sophia's approach to complaining and how it got her all her jobs

04:11 — European-style complaining as connection, not misery

05:29 — Biggest industry ick: pretending writing is hard work

07:41 — When your dentist wants to discuss your sex writing career

08:00 — How writing about relationships affects personal expectations

12:27 — Is messiness a personality trait or a diagnosis?

14:15 — Being seen as negative online when you're actually positive

15:00 — The wealthy patron system vs. needing hundreds of thousands of followers

17:42 — The guy in Ohio who thinks you're the worst person alive

18:16 — "Can they eat you?" Sophia's grandfather's motto for anxiety

18:41 — Good morning texts...ick

19:47 — Cottage cheese and other aversions

21:11 — American individualism and pretending cities are that different

22:39 — Surveillance culture

24:38 — People taking jokes too literally online and explaining things back

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Our music, Stamford Brook Style, is by Adrian Michna.

The meme illuminati ft. Catty Berragan10 Feb 202600:32:44

Pathetic founder Cathal (Catty) Berragan joins host Dani Loftus to complain about actors from The Office appearing in adverts, people using ChatGPT to write wedding captions, and New York's queue-obsessed viral bakery culture. They explore the "barbell theory" of dining (Michelin star or complete dive, nothing in between), why lying has become a business strategy in tech, and how technology has rigged the dating game against short kings. Catty breaks down the shift from meme aggregation to original content creation, why the flattening of criticism through social media is damaging to artists, and how our cognitive abilities are deteriorating when we outsource thinking to AI.

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01:32 — Career built on not liking things and finding shortcuts through media

03:13 — British self-deprecation vs. American hustle culture: "I'm lazy"

07:34 — Flattening of criticism: from gatekeeping critics to shareable memes

10:02 — How meme culture has changed: from Step Brothers quotes to hyper-niche feeds

14:06 — Industry ick: it's liars all the way up in tech and business

17:52 — Trump and Musk: so truthful about being awful it becomes refreshing

18:56 — Dating ick: technology in dating, the rigged game for short kings

22:20 — Food ick: the "wilderness restaurants" built for everybody, not anybody

23:43 — Geographic ick: New York's viral bakery lines while Polish bakeries sit empty

28:17 — Technology ick: ChatGPT wedding captions ("It's not just X, it's Y")

30:02 — How AI usage is making the act of thinking strenuous

31:03 — Ick of the week: flat white served in a latte cup

"I’m a piggy rolling around in the mud like everyone else" ft. Taylor Lorenz31 Jan 202600:23:47

Tech journalist and User Magazine founder Taylor Lorenz joins host Dani Loftus to complain about the people who fetishize being offline, sanctimonious VCs funding slop gambling apps, and Amy Schumer. They explore why every new technology triggers moral panic (remember when landlines caused divorce?), the young conservative grifter playbook getting Koch Foundation funding, and why the internet was actually liberatory before the right seized power on it. Taylor breaks down why touchscreens in washing machines are surveillance capitalism, the difference between productive complaining and men complaining about uppity women, and why the left needs to get educated on tech policy before it's too late.

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User Magazine

Dani's newsletter

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01:32 — People who fetishize being offline: "I waste time the old-fashioned way"

03:39 — Moral panic through history: landlines caused 9/10 divorces

04:07 — Productive complaining: targeting systems and powerful people

06:01 — The young conservative grifter playbook and Koch Foundation money

09:15 — Break up big tech, pass data privacy reform, or shut up about your personal brand

11:31 — Dating ick: people who never ask questions

12:18 — Food ick: dairy is disgusting and the industry is evil

17:17 — Technology ick: touchscreens in cars, washing machines, and vacuum cleaners

19:39 — Ick of the week: VCs being sanctimonious while funding slop

22:49 — Why the left is less technologically literate than the right

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Our music, Stamford Brook Style, is by Adrian Michna.

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