
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


There’s a new season of Shiny Happy People out now, and Cult Favorite is on the case with some unsolicited advice. Do: process dad issues. Don’t: crack eggs over your head for tuition money or others’ sport. Season 2 of the series focuses on Teen Mania, an evangelical youth phenomenon spearheaded for thirty-ish years by Ron Luce (himself stylized by way of motorcycles, loud voices, and evangelizing at drive-thrus). Youth culture has always scared grownups, and the latter have always strategized about how to corral the former. Enter Honor Academy, wherein ambitious teens volunteered via a lifetime commitment to serve on the frontlines in an ostensible battle between good and evil. What they came to realize, however, is that serving God and country also involved unpaid labor, telemarketing, crawling through trenches, and carrying a heavy cross in the middle of nowhere sans food/shelter/map. We talk about the rise and fall of the program, its ideological framework, and its relationship to political power. Remember, everybody: social structures always shape our own senses of self! And eggs are best enjoyed as a protein boost rather than as a humiliation device.
Follow us on TikTok and Instagram at @cultfavoritepod.
Production assistance from the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Alabama.
Theme music produced with Udio
By Merinda Simmons and Mike Altman5
1616 ratings
There’s a new season of Shiny Happy People out now, and Cult Favorite is on the case with some unsolicited advice. Do: process dad issues. Don’t: crack eggs over your head for tuition money or others’ sport. Season 2 of the series focuses on Teen Mania, an evangelical youth phenomenon spearheaded for thirty-ish years by Ron Luce (himself stylized by way of motorcycles, loud voices, and evangelizing at drive-thrus). Youth culture has always scared grownups, and the latter have always strategized about how to corral the former. Enter Honor Academy, wherein ambitious teens volunteered via a lifetime commitment to serve on the frontlines in an ostensible battle between good and evil. What they came to realize, however, is that serving God and country also involved unpaid labor, telemarketing, crawling through trenches, and carrying a heavy cross in the middle of nowhere sans food/shelter/map. We talk about the rise and fall of the program, its ideological framework, and its relationship to political power. Remember, everybody: social structures always shape our own senses of self! And eggs are best enjoyed as a protein boost rather than as a humiliation device.
Follow us on TikTok and Instagram at @cultfavoritepod.
Production assistance from the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Alabama.
Theme music produced with Udio

171,947 Listeners

112,904 Listeners

56,561 Listeners

35,574 Listeners

99,119 Listeners

3,317 Listeners

47,715 Listeners

3,256 Listeners

10,006 Listeners

2,211 Listeners

16,749 Listeners

4,091 Listeners

196 Listeners

9,094 Listeners

431 Listeners