Episode 25

full
Published on:

18th Mar 2026

Would you Take "The Substance?" Our Culture Is Obsessed With Beauty and We Have Thoughts.

How far would you go to stay young, stay desired, or stay relevant?

It's time to unpack three culture-shifting stories that hit hard: The Substance and the Obsession with Youth, Tell Me Lies and the psychology of toxic relationships, and Netflix’s Unlocked and the uncomfortable truth about prison reform and rehabilitation.

From beauty standards and aging anxiety to narcissistic manipulation and recidivism rates, this conversation pulls apart what we fix on the outside versus what we ignore on the inside. If you have ever wondered how much is too much when it comes to self-improvement, validation, or second chances, this one will stick with you.

What You’ll Learn:

  1. Why the pressure to look younger can become a form of self-destruction
  2. How toxic relationships thrive on secrets, codependency, and fear of exposure
  3. The real reason repeat offenders return to prison, and what institutionalization does to identity
  4. Why changing your body is easier than changing your personality
  5. How accountability, community, and structure may reduce reoffender rates

Episode Highlights:

  1. 03:12 – Why The Substance feels so extreme and so accurate about the beauty industry
  2. 08:21 – The seven-day rule that turns youth into a survival game
  3. 14:02 – “Just a little bit more” and the never-ending chase for perfection
  4. 26:12 – Inside Tell Me Lies and the psychology of narcissistic manipulation
  5. 30:48 – Why no one calls out Steven and what fear has to do with it
  6. 37:45 – The prison experiment in Unlocked and the six-week open-door model
  7. 41:22 – Does punishment actually reduce recidivism or make it worse?
  8. 44:03 – The inmate-led men’s group focused on fatherhood, sobriety, and reintegration

Tools, Frameworks, or Strategies Mentioned:

  1. The seven-day alternation model in The Substance as a metaphor for aging and self-worth
  2. Radical self-acceptance versus cosmetic enhancement culture
  3. Toxic relationship dynamics: lies by omission, emotional leverage, and peer accountability
  4. The six-week open-door prison experiment in Unlocked
  5. Inmate-led accountability groups focused on fatherhood, sobriety, and community reintegration

Closing Insight:

When is enough actually enough?

Whether it is chasing youth, defending your ego in a toxic relationship, or locking people away without teaching them how to function in society, the pattern is the same. We try to fix the surface and ignore the root.

If you are going to pick a problem, make sure it is the right one.

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About the Podcast

Pissy But Pretty
Retired party girls turned semi-responsible women. How past poor decisions do not have to define you. Learning how to use humor to get over trauma.
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