close
close

“WTF!” Kamala Harris Slammed for ‘Call Her Daddy’ Interview: ‘It’s Her Priority Over Hurricane Helene’

“WTF!” Kamala Harris Slammed for ‘Call Her Daddy’ Interview: ‘It’s Her Priority Over Hurricane Helene’

Vice President Kamala Harris recently recorded an interview for the “Call Her Daddy” podcast hosted by Alex Cooper. When Harris’ campaign confirmed that she had entered the interview process on Tuesday, her decision was subject to massive scrutiny and judgment, mainly for two reasons. First, it avoided mainstream media while generously sharing podcasts; second, America was dealing with Hurricane Helene at the time the Vice President decided to talk to “Call Her Daddy.” Moreover, as the name suggests, the platform is sexually explicit and raunchy in nature.
Harris and her running mate, Tim Walz, have conducted a combined 24 interviews so far, and Harris has not held a formal news conference since she replaced President Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee. Call Her Daddy is the most listened to podcast by women on Spotify, and Kamala Harris will be talking about abortion. Reports show that Donald Trump and J.D. Vance gave a total of 63 interviews during the same period.

“Kamala reportedly recorded an episode of Call Her Daddy – a podcast about women’s sexual relationships – two days ago while recovering from the hurricane and finding bodies left and right. This should be the end of a career” – a disapproving post on X Read.
“This show was Kamala’s priority,” wrote another.
“WTF! As Helene was losing her life, Kamala decided to tune in to the Call Her Daddy podcast to talk about sexual relationships. This should be a CAREER END! She doesn’t care about ordinary Americans,” wrote one.
Cooper started the podcast in 2018 on Barstool Sports, but as the show’s popularity skyrocketed, she was offered a $60 million-a-year deal to join Spotify in 2021, and recently signed a three-year, $125 million deal with SiriusXM. Over time, the sex and dating fest has evolved to address broader social conversations and now a presidential candidate.