
What is the Red Scare podcast?
The podcast has been associated with the dirtbag left and is perhaps best described in The Cut as “a critique of feminism, and capitalism, from deep inside the culture they’ve spawned.” Red Scare is a cultural commentary podcast hosted by bohemian layabouts Anna Khachiyan and Dasha Nekrasova.
What is Redred scare?
Red Scare is a cultural commentary podcast hosted by bohemian layabouts Anna Khachiyan and Dasha Nekrasova. Slavoj Zizek returns to talk about his new book Heaven in Disorder.
How long is an episode of Red Scare?
An episode of Red Scare is typically between 50 and 80 minutes long. The show's theme song is " All the Things She Said ," the 2002 single by Russian pop duo t.A.T.u. Weekly free episodes of the show are available via iTunes and Spotify.
What is the theme song for Red Scare?
Khachiyan has been interviewed by Bret Easton Ellis and Eric Weinstein on their respective podcasts. An episode of Red Scare is typically between 50 and 80 minutes long. The show's theme song is " All the Things She Said ," the 2002 single by Russian pop duo t.A.T.u. Weekly free episodes of the show are available via iTunes and Spotify.

About Red Scare
Red Scare is a cultural commentary podcast started in March 2018. Its hosts are Dasha Nekrasova and Anna Khachiyan.
Recent Episodes
Red Scare is a cultural commentary podcast hosted by bohemian layabouts Anna Khachiyan and Dasha Nekrasova.
Where is Red Scare podcast?
Red Scare bills itself as a cultural commentary podcast hosted by "bohemian layabouts" Dasha Nekrasova and Anna Khachiyan, and is recorded from their homes in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Nekrasova is a Belarus -born actress, who became known as "Sailor Socialism" after an interview with an InfoWars reporter went viral in 2018. She immigrated to Las Vegas, Nevada, with her acrobat parents when she was four. Khachiyan is a Moscow -born writer, art critic and daughter of Armenian mathematician Leonid Khachiyan. She was raised in New Jersey. The two women met over Twitter, and started the podcast in March 2018 after Nekrasova relocated to New York City from Los Angeles.
How many episodes of Red Scare are there in 2021?
As of April 24, 2021, 238 episodes of Red Scare have been released. The show's most frequent guest is photographer Dan Allegretto at seven appearances, followed by Amber A'Lee Frost of Chapo Trap House at six appearances, and writer Patrik Sandberg, at five appearances.
How long is Red Scare?
An episode of Red Scare is typically between 50 and 80 minutes long. The show's theme song is " All the Things She Said ," the 2002 single by Russian pop duo t.A.T.u. Weekly free episodes of the show are available via iTunes and Spotify. Subscribers who contribute at least $5 per month via Patreon gain access to additional weekly premium bonus episodes. As of June 2021, the show has generated over $42,000 per month from over 9,900 subscribers.
How many listeners does Red Scare have?
The show boasts at least 20,000 listeners, a small number compared to other podcasts of the “dirtbag left,” a movement coined by Amber A’Lee Frost, one of the hosts of massively followed leftist podcast “Chapo Trap House.” But what “Red Scare” lacks in size they make up for in devotion. Between Twitter, Reddit and live shows, the duo has created something close to a cult for the politically ironic. Their primary source of income is their Patreon, where they post exclusive, paid content that amounts to about $35,000 a month. The show has crept into the mainstream enough to host the most ostracized of the mainstream, like former Trump adviser Steve Bannon and Hawaiian Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI).
What is alarming about the Red Scare?
What is alarming about “Red Scare” is that they’re not just disengaged nor disaffected — they’re also not voting. Devoted to politics and obsessed with the media, describing Nekrasova and Khachiyan as disengaged would be inaccurate.
Is Red Scare a passivity?
The passivity of “Red Scare” is frustrating for those who are even tangentially interested in politics. Laughing at the situation, throwing in the towel and then making money off of it is the easy way out. But countering the duo — screaming about their faulty logic, whining about their false equivalencies — is exactly what they want. Now they’re laughing at you, too.
