Chapo Trap House is a collective of writers, artists, and satirists that began as a political comedy podcast in March 2016. Their biweekly show has been covered everywhere from The New Yorker and The Guardian to VICE and Paste magazine, which calls its creators “the vulgar, brilliant demigods of the new progressive left.” Chapo is a mix of absurdist comedy and freewheeling commentary, skewering political and media figures and reviewing bad movies and books. Originally a trio of internet pals, Will Menaker, Felix Biederman, and Matt Christman, the show has expanded its roster to writers Brendan James, Amber A’Lee Frost, and Virgil Texas. They live in Brooklyn, New York.
“I haven't had my worldview exploded by a political work like this
since reading Millie’s Book in 1992.”
*Patton Oswalt*
"In my day it didn’t take fifteen goddamn people to write a book,
nevertheless this was an exceptional, funny and entertaining read.
Howard Zinn on acid or some bullshit like that."
*Tim Heidecker*
"The raucous Dirtbag hilarity of the Chapo crew sometimes masks the
fact that they reliably provide some of the most incisive,
sophisticated and thought-provoking political analysis found on any
platform. Their book is as intellectually serious and analytically
original as it is irreverent and funny, and it deserves substantial
discussion and all of the gushing and angry reactions it will
inevitably provoke." –Glenn Greenwald, New York Times bestselling
author of No Place to Hide
“This is next level. This is an advancement of political/social
satire and debate. Garrote sharp, acerbic, smart, inventive and
truly laugh out loud funny, The Chapo Guide to Revolution feels
like it was written by the offspring of the shotgun marriage of The
Onion, Howard Zinn, Dorothy Parker, Bill Hicks, Noam Chomsky, and
Jonathan Swift. If they all got together and f*cked and had one
baby, I mean. I LOVED this book.” –David Cross
"Chapo Trap House is a lot like The Three Stooges: three or four or
maybe five sloppy numbskulls who can't fix a water leak, who
quickly resort to violent name calling at any opportunity, engaging
every obstacle with counterproductive praxis - and yet seem to get
more accomplished in pie-ing the faces of one-percenters and
couch-fascists than any of the Very Important Thinkers currently
sucking air out of the atmosphere." –James Adomian,
comedian
"Lovers of the podcast will revel in righteous takedowns and
scathing portraits of galling political self-interest, while
newcomers to the brand and veterans alike will enjoy the frank and
funny introduction to the contemptible political players, online
feuds, Marxist themes, and partisan blood-letting that are the
grist of the Chapo podcast, and which have made it a site of
catharsis for an entire doomed generation."—Briahna Joy Gray,
Senior Politics Editor at The Intercept
"Finally a book that explains why I shouldn’t like Matt Yglesias.
And so many others. All the monsters we encounter online, have been
laid out and torn asunder in spectacular fashion. This book is like
those fleeting moments of the Chapo Trap House podcast that have
clarity."—Dave Anthony, Coauthor of The United States of
Absurdity
“The Guide is a weirder, smarter, and deliciously meaner version of
The Daily Show’s 2004 America (The Book): A Citizen’s Guide to
Democracy Inaction… if you love Chapo – and if you don’t, you
should – then by your own logic, you must love The Guide as
well.”—Paste
“Rather than being simply flip and nihilistic, features of the
book, in particular its attention to climate change, carry a kind
of raw, plangent earnestness. The result is a clear inheritor of a
venerable tradition of American satire, reminiscent of Ambrose
Bierce, H.L. Mencken, and Dorothy Parker, and something
distinctively new—and very funny.”
*Bookforum*
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