Talc Dirty to Me
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
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概要
Did you know the company that made your childhood baby powder kept selling the asbestos-contaminated version overseas after pulling it here? …We looked into it.
Welcome to Valid Source? The podcast where we investigate the internet myths, viral claims, and trending gossip you've been thinking about but haven't had time to research. We're not experts. We're just two friends willing to do the extra digging.
This episode: Harley brings the Call Her Daddy / Miley Cyrus / Hannah Montana drama, and then we go full doomsday on the things the companies knew were poisoning us and sold anyway. Nonstick pans and their forever chemicals, asbestos that wasn't fully banned in the US until 2024 (well a type of it and yes, 2024), lead paint marketed directly to children via a cartoon mascot, smart home devices listening hard enough that Alexa pipes up when Ashley whispers, the Disney Plus free-trial arbitration case that you genuinely need to hear, Johnson & Johnson's talc rebrand, and Scotch Guard chemicals now found in the bloodstream of basically every human on Earth, newborns included. Because of course they are. We end on the only takeaway available: change your pans.
Valid Source? verdict on household toxins: they knew, they kept selling, and are part of your DNA now.
Heads up: This one is rough. Grab a cup of tea or coffee before you hit play, we're talking decades of corporate cover-ups, things in your house right now that probably shouldn't be, and a body count's worth of "they knew." Not crisis-level heavy, just genuinely bleak in a "wait, what" kind of way.
linktr.ee/validsourcepod | validsourcepod@gmail.com | (720) 593-1668
Opinions expressed are solely those of the hosts and do not reflect any affiliated companies, employers, or sponsors. Valid Source? is for entertainment and informational purposes only, nothing here constitutes professional legal, medical, or financial advice, and should not be acted on as such. We actively welcome listener feedback, corrections, and differing perspectives. We reserve the right to change our minds, that's kind of the whole point.