Abstract

The Chapo Trap House podcast, part mockery and part serious analysis, has taken aim at Beltway punditry and technocratic liberalism. It's rude, but in rudeness there is occasional catharsis. For its fans, the podcast serves as an important corrective to liberal satire that reaches larger audiences. A new book co-written by the podcast's hosts redoubles the group's commitment to an explicit anticapitalist position, and it reignites a debate over the podcast's exact position within the broader democratic socialist left.

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