Culture Penn Jillette: Why My Hero of 2023 Is Taylor Swift - "Her songs became my ideas.... I wanted my Taylor pure; I wanted her singing about my life."

Daily Beast article. Archive.

Penn Jillette. Published Dec. 30, 2023 8:00PM EST

A young friend recently gave me a Taylor Swift album to listen to and after playing it on repeat I soon found that the pop star had captivated me like Joni Mitchell.
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Whenever someone is talking about their favorite music, I estimate their age, and then when they became sexually active. After that I do a little arithmetic–simple addition. If the music they’re raving about seems like it was released plus or minus two years of the first time they had an orgasm in the presence of another person, I don’t trust their taste. They aren’t talking about music—they are talking about sex.

Music does many complicated things, and it fulfills many needs and performs many functions. A lot of those are sex and romance, and, sex and romance are the same thing.

I’m not just talking about what song was (I’m wicked old) on the turntable when you were first getting down. I’m talking about (yeah, that old) what was on the turntable when you thought about it a couple years before and after.

If I start talking about “Maggie May”, tell me to shut up because that was July 1971, and that wasn’t plus or minus years, that was right on the nose, so to speak. But if I’m talking about Bach, Miles Davis, Blondie, Eminem or Chainsmokers, I might have something to say.

During that sexual window where musical taste doesn’t count, The Beatles were shoved down my throat and I bought it hook, lines, and middle eight. I thought they were great. The Get Back documentary really made the embarrassing point that The Beatles didn’t bother with lyrics, but I listened so much that I invested in their empty lyrics with my whole life. Those words mattered to me and still do. Writing stuff that can be projected on is a wonderful skill, not simple at all. The Beatles made some of the best music ever for people having shared orgasms plus or minus two years. And it still fulfills that function well.

Speaking of orgasms, let’s talk about my children. I get so creeped out when friends of mine brag that their children listen to Zep or The Who. I think for the sex thing, they should have their own music. My children mostly have control over what’s played in the car. I like that. And 21 Pilots and Imagine Dragons seem as good as The Beatles for their purposes.

Bob Dylan is outside the sex window for me. I started listening before my sex window and I’m likely to be listening to Bob on my deathbed and if I die in a car crash, it’s likely Bob will be singing on the sound system. Bob isn’t like the Beatles. Dylan is like Shakespeare, he writes about love and sex, but ... there’s more there and it’s timeless. So what about this Taylor Swift? We develop our associations in music, not just from sex, but also from familiarity.

Now that I’m old enough to have had sex with a turntable in my youth (take that any way you want), I don’t listen to anything, not even Mingus, Miles, Sun Ra and all the other jazz I listened to daily as many times as I listened to The White Album. But I decided to get familiar with something that’s popular right now.

If I want to compare with The Beatles I needed someone who was comparable in hype to then in 2023. I asked a young friend who is a Swifty to give me an album that I could wear out the groove on (metaphorically). She suggested Folklore, so I pulled it up and dug in.

I tried to listen to Folklore the way I listened to The White Album or Blonde on Blonde, (two of the records I’ve listened to over a thousand times. There has likely not been a day since 1968 that I have not listened to Dylan and probably not a week without some Blonde on Blonde.)

First, I listened carefully to Folklore. I carefully read the lyrics as Taylor sang. I listened while assigning what events in MY life she’s singing about. I asked personal questions about problems I’m trying to work out and looked for the answers in her songs. I sang along (sorry, Taylor). I put it on in the background while I worked. I played it while driving. I played it in bed. I just played it and then played it again and again. I did NOT try to find out what inspired her songs for real, who Taylor was having, or not having sex with when she wrote each song. I know when Dylan was writing about Suze, Sara, John Lennon and Allen Ginsberg, but I learned that much later. I wanted my Taylor pure; I wanted her singing about my life.

At first, I was impatient. When I appeared on a show called Sabrina, the Teenage Witch my friend, Nell Scovell, the writer of that show, tried to give my character, Drell (essentially Satan), only lines that she had heard me say IRL. So, I was quoting a character quoting me, “The problems of teenagers are SO interesting.” That happened to also be my first reaction to Folklore. Lots of teenage sex problems, but you know, Bob Dylan mostly writes songs about fucking. So you can’t fault Taylor for that.

Then it started to happen. Snippets of Taylor would sneak into my conversations and, more importantly, into my thoughts. I was thinking while using her words. Her songs became my ideas. Wow, she’s good. Wow.

And I listened and listened and listened. Even before I listened to Folklore as much as The White Album, Taylor was there. I need less familiarity to feel it. She creams Cream and Zep. She’s not Miles, Stravinsky, or Zappa, but that’s a different category—she’s writing pop, and she’s writing it well. Really well—Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen well.

That’s more than enough to make her a hero for 2023. This year has been full of assholes—I’m surely not going to pick a politician as a hero. Taylor is brilliant, wonderful, hardworking and as far as I know is doing nothing to continue wars and kill people and it doesn’t seem she wants to be a dictator and destroy our democracy. Those are all pluses for me.

Is she writing Bob Dylan, Shakespeare well? Ask me again in 50 years, and I’ll give you an opinion. For now it was so nice to listen to real pop music and be able to have it become part of me, even this many years after I fell in love to “Maggie May”.

“In my defense, I have none ...” I’ve listened to Ms Swift enough now that this brilliant line from “The 1” seems to sum up so many things in my personal life. It might be better even than, “All you did was wreck my bed and in the morning kick me in the head.”
 
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What the hell did she do that is so special? I haven't even heard of her all year.
She had a movie come out that I think was basically like a recording of a concert of hers. So this year a ton of marketing was likely done to push her as a big thing for girls to see.

It's similar to how Barbie was pushed incredibly heavily along with all the Kenergy stuff. Was partially organic, but also pushed hard by marketing departments to make sure the movies were a success. Or in Swift's case also aid in her general career.

Swift also had a thing about saying she was taken advantage of because she sold her older music and wasn't just given it back for free or a lower price than she wanted, so instead had to re-record. Which meant a bunch of albums for all the fans to repurchase and more marketing done to push women to buy that shit.
 
Penn and his wife treated their children massively differently from day 1, treating their boy like the sun rose and set on him and the girl was a forgotten afterthought for years. They had to get some serious reproductive help to have Moxie (a cervical cerclage among other things and she is made with a donor egg). Having Zolten was a bit easier.

When the kids were walking they realized their insane house with a sex dungeon wasn't kid friendly, so they built an additional house on their property to house the children (and each child's African nanny). Even though they custom built the house, they made the room for their older child, Moxie, smaller than Zolten's, and "joked" that it was because "Moxie already spent her part getting here."

Penn obviously has some really fucked up stereotypes about men and women and is known for having parties and entertainment consisting of hot young dancers (who may or may not be prostitutes). The house for adults, which the kids could play in sometimes if they were lucky, had tables covered in pinup girls. It's obvious Penn thinks women are basically just sex objects, and that if they can do magic tricks or some other thing he's interested in while being hot, so much the better...but he doesn't talk to women in a normal, human way. Kids notice. He's been fucking around on his wife since before they were married and spent a good bit of her pregnancies having sex with other women. She tolerates it because she was starstruck by him and likes the money.

Then Moxie trooned out. And guess what?

You can't find a single photo or quote or any acknowledgement of Zolten's existence ever since his sister trooned. Zolten disappeared from public view entirely. Prior to the sister troonout he was in all the family photos, now none.

And Penn has abandoned all his libertarianism and is now going full woke, just loving any pop culture garbage. It's almost like he's trying to apologize for some kind of previous conduct, or like the powers that be know something about him that is keeping him on a tighter leash, lest it be revealed.

Something really weird is going on at that house. I repeat once more, after reading this article about how the first thing this man thinks about when you tell him music you like is when you lost your virginity, that statistically around half of young FTMs have a history of childhood sexual abuse.
 
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Then it started to happen. Snippets of Taylor would sneak into my conversations and, more importantly, into my thoughts. I was thinking while using her words. Her songs became my ideas.
Penn Jillette just described the process of one of those "no inner voice of their own" NPCs receiving their updated talking points in real time from the NPCs point of view. Fascinating.
 
Taylor Swift is only as popular as she is because she has created a cult of personality around herself. This cult of personality is predicated on her being as mediocre and self-insertable as possible, and therefore being seen as non-threatening and "relatable" as possible. But she, like many modern pop stars, has no problem sicking her psychotic stans on anyone and everyone who might accidentally step on her toes, and then turning around and playing the "woe is me, I'm such a victim, plz protect me uwu," act.

Penn, being the weak-willed, pussy-faggot snake that he is, is probably just trying to curry favor with the cult, which is very widespread. Though, apparently he's also a gross old man, so I guess him having a creepy fixation on boring woman-child music isn't too surprising.
 
I remember when I didn’t think Penn Jillette was a gigantic faggot. Those were the days, simpler times, a bygone era.
The only great thing he's done lately is reprise his role as the commercial announcer for MST3K. It gave me a warm feeling to hear him again in that context.

Dude has a trooned-out kid. I think that buck broke him.
 
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It's a shame that Penn turned into such a retarded faggot, but what do you expect these days? Never meet your heroes, kids. Not that Penn was ever a hero of mine, but the fact that digging deeper into the famous people you like will almost always disappoint you still stands.
 
Penn isn't a lolbert anymore, he sold out and admitted being a Biden voter.
He was always kind of an asshole. His band is (was?) called "The No God Band". He's one of them-there Evangelical Atheists; the kind of smug assholes that knows that there's no Invisible Sky Daddy, and will gladly act like he's so much better than you if you're a believer.
 
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