Ty Watches "The Death and Life of Lamar Odom"

I have found that I enjoy watching the "Untold" docu series on Netflix. I'm a sports fan and I have always found it interesting to get some backstory from people who were there, or even better, from people who lived the experience. It is so much better when the person or people in the story happened to talk about it. You know that they are going to tell you just a little more than someone retelling it from their perspective. And now that Netflix has a whole category dedicated to the "Untold" series, it is so much easier for me to turn one on during the day.

Yesterday I watched "The Death and Life of Lamar Odom". When I was younger I used to watch Odom play basketball and was kind of amazed at how easy he made the game look on my tv screen. He was such a fluid and exceptional athlete on the basketball court. I even remember following him during his two years playing college basketball at Rhode Island. He was great then, parlayed that into being the fourth overall pick in his draft class and had a memorable NBA career.

But he is probably more remembered for what this doc focused on.

He married Khloe Kardashian, won a few titles with the Lakers, had a reality show and then had a very bad week at a brothel in Las Vegas. Everyone, including me, thought he wasn't going to make it out of that coma. For people who may not know, Odom went to a brothel one day, stayed there for a week, and the final day he was there he overdosed on drugs and had to be rushed to the hospital. He would eventually come out of the coma and he is still alive today. But when he was overdosing I guess he said he had twelve strokes and six heart attacks. That is wild. This doc focused on that night and his relationship with Khloe Karhdashian. Sure, they talked about his first fiance, the kids they had, his NBA career, but the crux of everything was the brothel and his and Khloe's relationship. This was where the doc got a little tedious to me. The last 50 or so minutes were all about this stuff. And I get why. This is the salacious details that documentaries like this crave. You want to see the downfall and where they may be today. But I prefer the stuff that leads up to all of that. I loved the first 40 minutes of the doc. This was where they focused on his basketball career. This was where we learned about his childhood. This was where we got to see him play on the fun Clippers teams with Darius Miles and Quentin Richardson. We also got to see his short time on the Heat. But when he was traded to the Lakers, and especially when he met Khloe Kardashian, this was when his life took a massive turn and this was when the documentary became a bit too much for me.

I didn't really know how to feel when I was watching. I'm a Lamar Odom fan, but he did this to himself. I get it, addiction is a disease. It's a problem and it can take over your entire life. People with addiction need real help. But when someone gets this involved, I put the majority of the blame on them. And Odom is a true, true addict. And it's not just drugs with him, he is also a sex addict. But, while watching, I never felt for him. I never wanted to reach out and help him get help. I was just watching him self-destruct, and that felt gross to me. As for Khloe Kardashian, I have never been a fan of the whole Kardashian thing. They're just not my vibe. They're reality tv people with no real skill or use to me. I'm not knocking what they do, they have found their niche and they're capitalizing on it. Good for them. They just aren't my cup of tea. And in watching Khloe retell her side of the story, I felt nothing for her either. It felt hollow. Some of it felt fake to me. I just didn't buy everything. And when the movie ended, I just kind of let it go and moved on with my day. After a lot of documentaries I find myself thinking more and more about them. That didn't happen with this doc. It came and went. I felt nothing. The news, for the most part, wasn't all that new to me and wasn't the news that I like to read or hear about. It was a wild ride, that's for sure, but it just didn't do much for me.

It felt like a bit of a letdown from "Untold", which for the most part, tells interesting and riveting stories. This one just didn't work for me.

Also, Happy Birthday RD. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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It's Time for Us to All Forget About "The Liver King"

I have just recently watched "The Liver King" on Netflix. This is part of their docuseries Untold. I enjoy the whole Untold series. I like the in-depth look they take into the stories they are telling us. I knew nothing of this person, but I saw the picture of him on my screen, watched the preview and decided this was a topic I wanted to learn more about.

Apparently this so-called "Liver King" is some internet influencer. I guess he lives what he calls an "ancestral lifestyle". From what I could gather, this means eating raw meat, living off the land and lifting weights. I'm sure there's more to it than that, but that is what I took from the hour long documentary. Right from the start I despised this "Liver King". He talks like a snake oil salesman mixed with a wannabe motivational speaker and add on a bit of a used car salesman. That is what this dude reminds me of after watching the show. He talks about the land and getting off the phone and being with your family. But, in the very next scene or sentence he is filming something on his phone or telling the viewer a story about how he would spend twenty hours a day learning how to "be on film", and being away from his family. This dude is constantly filming on his phone. He is in a loop of always making content. He has, essentially, forced his family into this world of being content creators. He is always on his phone or one of his family members' phones. He loves being the center of attention. He wants fame. He wants the eyeballs on him at all times. This is not an "ancestral" way of living. He craves the spotlight and he makes no bones about it. He appears on podcasts and does his own content constantly. He also claimed to never take steroids, which is absolute nonsense.

Well, about halfway through all of this, as is with most of the internet famous nowadays, he gets exposed. He, of course, takes steroids. He packages his product in plastic containers. He consults with doctors about how to get steroids. He is not this "ancestral" being that he claims to be. It was almost cathartic for me to see this idiot get taken down a few pegs.

Therein lies my whole problem with the modern world and what accounts to "fame" these days. While this guy got exposed as the liar I knew he was from the jump, Netflix still gave him a platform. He still has "talent" agents. He still gets to tell his side of the story. You don't have to be talented to get famous anymore. All you have to do is spout off at the mouth and say some straight nonsense that some idiots will believe and follow. This guy is a multimillionaire and he fooled people all along the way. He is not "ancestral". He is not pure. He claims to have mental health and self esteem stuff, but that feels like a crutch from this liar and snake. He does crazy shit online and he gathered a following, which I'm sure he still has to this day. We need to stop putting people like this on a pedestal. He is a steroid abuser who lied to millions of people and made more money than most of us could ever dream about having. I dislike this dude very much for a myriad of reasons, but I'm also annoyed by big companies letting him tell a story. He needs to fade into oblivion and give the right people their proper platform.

I'm glad I watched, but I'm angered that even I am writing a piece about this "Liver King" because that still makes him mildly viable. Watch it if you want, but then forget about it immediately. That's my plan. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Ty Watches "Sign Stealer"

I was on the fence about watching the new Netflix doc, "Sign Stealer". I am, as you all know, a super fan of Michigan football. They're the only sports team that I truly love. I care deeply about the outcome of each game. It is a problem, I've been working on it for a long time and have gotten better, but I still care. Some would say too much. So, the idea of a doc that focuses on Michigan's "scandal" from their title winning season seemed like a bad idea. But I read some reviews of it from people that I like, and they said it wasn't all that bad. I am also a big fan of the whole "Untold" series that Netflix does. It is a nice mix of true crime and sports. I like to watch stories about both those things. So, probably against my better wishes, I tuned in to "Sign Stealer" yesterday.

As I sat down to watch I tried to have an open mind. I wanted to hear everyone's side of the story. I wanted to hear from Connor Stalions himself. This is the first time he has spoken about the whole thing since the story broke. But, it was hard for me to tamp down my love for Michigan football while I watched. Look, the whole idea of "Untold" on Netflix is to reveal hard hitting, real life journalistic stuff. The next "Untold" I'm going to watch is about the murder of Steve McNair. I've also seen them take on the Manti Teo catfishing incident, a crime boss buying his son a hockey team, these are real criminal acts.

The whole thing behind "Sign Stealer" is about a low level employee deciphering signals from other teams, a custom that most high level division 1 football teams do. This is not a crime. This is not even fully illegal. It is a gray area, but still, not illegal. The only illegal thing being done, according to the dumbass NCAA bylaws, is advanced in person scouting. What the hell does that even mean? Can low level coaches go to college football games just as a fan? Can they invite friends and family? Can they just be regular fans? I guess not, according to this one rule. I agree that what Stalions did was shady, but he was not the reason that Michigan got better at football. It was nice to see Mike Barrett talk about this on the record. He was there. He put in the work. He made himself a better player and a better leader. So to hear his side of the story was enlightening. Then you have this new person in this that I truly hate, Brohio, talking about how "shady" and "upsetting" this whole situation became for him as a fan and a message board moron. The fact that he calls himself that, that he would lend his "intelligence" on this matter and expect people to take him seriously is the funniest thing to come from this doc. In the end, what I read prior to watching the doc said that if you're a hater or a fan, there is nothing in this that will change your mind. Fans of other schools are going to claim that this lays it all out there and the sanctions should be coming. Michigan fans are going to say it is no big deal, because it is no big deal. For Netflix and "Untold" to take this low level issue and make it akin to true crime docs was unnecessary. But, they need to strike while the iron is hot on this topic, before it fizzles into nothing.

What we watched in "Sign Stealer" will not change the outcome of last season, and the last three years of Michigan football. They are the reigning champs. They've beaten the university of Ohio State fair and square three years in a row. Teams had a chance to beat Michigan after Stalions was let go, and they still couldn't do it. Michigan will keep their trophy, keep their titles and keep all their wins over the past three years. I guess you can watch this doc if you want, but there is nothing in here that will change your mind either way. Go Blue. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

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SeedSing is funded by a group of awesome people. Join them by donating to SeedSing.