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A demon is easy to spot. The real horror is the smile you’re taught to trust. We crack open Grady Hendrix’s My Best Friend’s Exorcism to explore how an ’80s possession tale exposes the quieter monsters—purity panic, class snobbery, and adults who would rather protect reputation than protect a child. Peter and Elizabeth trade laughs and gut-punches as we revisit roller rinks, mixtapes, and that white-van “exorcist,” then follow the story into its darkest rooms where belief looks like denial and help arrives as spectacle.
Our conversation maps the book’s layered stakes: friendship versus performative faith, social sabotage disguised as concern, and the way institutions label girls as hysterical while ignoring harm in plain sight. We walk through the novel’s most searing turns—tapeworm diets as body-policing metaphor, forged love notes as a weapon against loneliness, and the slow rot of a house that mirrors parental neglect. Along the way, we ask who gets believed, who gets blamed, and why the most powerful exorcism in the book isn’t conducted with Latin but with loyalty.
Hendrix’s humor keeps the dread breathable, and we unpack how the comedy sharpens the critique rather than defanging it. The ending resists neat justice, and we sit with that discomfort: survival without vindication, truth without applause. For fans of horror with heart, social commentary, and ’80s nostalgia that actually interrogates the decade, this episode offers a thoughtful, unflinching guide.
Hit play, then tell us: was the demon the biggest villain, or did the adults win that title? If the show sparks something, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a quick review—your notes help more readers find the conversation.
Support the show
By Elizabeth Hahn and Peter WhetzelSend a text
A demon is easy to spot. The real horror is the smile you’re taught to trust. We crack open Grady Hendrix’s My Best Friend’s Exorcism to explore how an ’80s possession tale exposes the quieter monsters—purity panic, class snobbery, and adults who would rather protect reputation than protect a child. Peter and Elizabeth trade laughs and gut-punches as we revisit roller rinks, mixtapes, and that white-van “exorcist,” then follow the story into its darkest rooms where belief looks like denial and help arrives as spectacle.
Our conversation maps the book’s layered stakes: friendship versus performative faith, social sabotage disguised as concern, and the way institutions label girls as hysterical while ignoring harm in plain sight. We walk through the novel’s most searing turns—tapeworm diets as body-policing metaphor, forged love notes as a weapon against loneliness, and the slow rot of a house that mirrors parental neglect. Along the way, we ask who gets believed, who gets blamed, and why the most powerful exorcism in the book isn’t conducted with Latin but with loyalty.
Hendrix’s humor keeps the dread breathable, and we unpack how the comedy sharpens the critique rather than defanging it. The ending resists neat justice, and we sit with that discomfort: survival without vindication, truth without applause. For fans of horror with heart, social commentary, and ’80s nostalgia that actually interrogates the decade, this episode offers a thoughtful, unflinching guide.
Hit play, then tell us: was the demon the biggest villain, or did the adults win that title? If the show sparks something, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a quick review—your notes help more readers find the conversation.
Support the show