A Deep Dive Into The Fresh & Fit Pregnancy Scandal
There are many things that warm my cockles. I love the fresh breeze on a summer day, the smell of sushi being prepped at a high-end sushi bar, and taking trips to Mitsuwa Marketplace or a local H Mart.
However, few things make me happier than seeing misogynists get exposed for being complete frauds. It’s like being able to drink fine tea served with finger sandwiches topped with caviar—exquisite.
As my TikTok followers might already know, I’ve been really digging deep into the Fresh and Fit podcast downfall. And right there with it is Daisy Chen, a former Miss Asia contestant who had a fling with one of them.
In order to understand why Daisy is the hero we all needed, I’m going to explain everything best I can.
FF, as I’ll abbreviate it, is a podcast that labels itself as a self-improvement red pill podcast for men. It stars two idiots, Amrou Fudl (“Myron Gaines”) and Walter Weekes. They have over 1 million subscribers at their highest peak.
In reality, what this podcast does is peddle hate about women. Their business model is very simple:
They invite women on the show, often OF creators. The women sit there and listen to them talk about how all women are gold diggers and how women are bad. If women try to open their mouths, they’re talked over and then told to shut up.
When it’s not OF creators, they tend to invite right-wing men as well as people who have serious hate issues. Past invites include Nick Fuentes, Pearl Davis, and Kevin Samuels—just to name a few.
They talk about fitness, money, and how bad women are. And occasionally, they pepper it with dating advice that encourages men to be abusive toward women. If it’s hypocritical, abusive, or wrong, they promote it.
The two men seem to have a particular hate boner for black women. They both openly say they hate black women and “don’t date Shaniquas.”
The podcast is so incendiary that YouTube permanently demonetized it in 2023. It can also no longer accept donations.
I swear, this site seems to haunt my dreams. I wrote about my experiences on there and now I see it again as the dating pool for FF guys. (Okay, I feel a lot less awful about being traumatized by men.)
Well, Daisy, much like other women who are looking for wealthy partners, went on Seeking. Weeks saw her, liked her, flew her out, and got ready to date her.
At one point, he gave her a $26,000 dollar bracelet from some brand I never heard of before. He also was giving her love-bombing texts, flew her to Barbados to meet his mother, and all that other jazz.
Oh, he also told her that he wanted to continue to sleep with other women while she stayed loyal to him. She agreed to that. A small incident on social media (him being good to her online) got fans talking.
She ended up on the FF podcast, got razzed on, and then went home.
Oh, all of a sudden, he’s pro-choice! From a podcaster who keeps talking about how women need to be accountable, that’s a big leap! Imagine that. It’s almost like he doesn’t walk his talk.
To make matters even wilder, texts got leaked where he said he didn’t want a kid, that he was broke, and that he had to test four other women. She went on the warpath and showed the media everything.
Hence, this video below:
Yep! It’s true. Chen showed all the receipts, including things like the love bombing, his saying he had no money, and all the other good stuff. Of course, the fans of FF ended up hearing about it, too.
Cue Weeks and Gaines going totally batshiat on their podcast.
Maybe it was for their views, or maybe it was just because their brains are as smooth as a cat’s paw pad, but they lost their shit. And look at that, they’re so “logical” and “unemotional” about this.
Meanwhile, Chen was cool as a cucumber. She continued to show receipt after receipt, typically with the poise and aplomb you’d expect from a blue-blooded individual.
At one point, she even agreed to name the baby ‘Aba’ after she decided to go after Weekes legally. This was because Aba from Aba & Preach, a feminist podcast by men, offered to pay for her legal bills if she named the baby after him.
(What was that about women being the emotional ones?)
One of the most common “defenses” that men give Weekes is that Daisy Chen moonlights as an escort. This has, to my knowledge, not been proven true.
Even if it’s true, people are quick to point out the obvious: THAT MEANS WEEKES PAID HER TO BE WITH HIM.
That means that Weekes did everything he advises other men not to do. It also shows that these women like him only because he pays them to. What, pray tell, is “alpha” about that?
Fans were quick to point that out. Many of their more pro-life fans also stopped listening to them. FF seems to be in a downward spiral. I mean, even right-wing, pro-life women’s magazines are dunking on them.
She came forward with an announcement that she would get the abortion. Honestly, that’s a good move because that man shouldn’t reproduce—ever.
Some also mentioned they doubted that she was ever pregnant and admittedly, the timing seemed a bit rushed. This entire thing happened over the course of a couple of months.
With that said, it doesn’t matter if the abortion happened or not. She still wrecked FF, especially Weekes. And, she did something that feminists in my position never could: expose Weekes for the weak, conniving, sniveling little faker he is.
And that’s why Daisy is the hero we all needed.
One of the biggest draws of “red pill” influencers is this idea that they’re fucking women left and right, rolling in money, and being manly men. They sell the idea that you just need their guidance to live your best life.
Not only did Daisy out one of the most notorious men on the podcast as a faker, but she also gave the world a reality check about what it means to be a content creator like Weekes. It’s not a good look.
And you know what? I’d bet my bottom dollar that seeing those private chats probably dissuaded at least one or two men from wanting to look up to those two yokels.
Can we please get a round of applause for Daisy?
ncG1vNJzZmino6i2orrAZ6qumqOprqS3jZympmegZK5usMSep2acmauybrXNraZmrJiaeqe%2BxKyfZpmemXqntdM%3D