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Slow Burn

Decoder Ring | What the Cuck?!

Slow Burn

Slate Audio

Politics, Society & Culture, History, News, Documentary

4.625.2K Ratings

🗓️ 8 October 2025

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Earlier this year, a tweet went out from the official account of the Democratic Party, tagging the Trump advisor Stephen Miller. It was an image of what appeared to be a simple hotel room chair. But for those in the know, it was much more than that: It was a “cuck chair,” an online meme straight out of a popular genre of hardcore pornography in which a man watches his partner have sex with another man.

How did we get to a place where the Democrats could flame a political opponent with an image out of cucking porn and have millions of people immediately understand it? In this episode we trace the complicated and intricate history of the cuck. It’s a history that includes everything from Jacobean dramas to World War II pilots to, yes, pornography, as well as a host of deeply American prejudices that have become a lot less submerged over the last 10 years. And we also situate the cuck within a larger context, one in which porn is the elephant in the room of American culture. It’s a potent force, shaping and reflecting our very wants and desires and it is constantly seeping into mainstream culture—and yet we don’t analyze, critique, or even talk about it very much because, well, it’s porn.

In this NSFW episode, you’ll hear from: Slate staff writer Luke Winkie who wrote about the tweet that kicked this episode off; Samantha Cole, one of co-founders of 404 Media and the author of How Sex Changed the Internet and the Internet Changed Sex; Jennifer Panek, professor of English at the University of Ottawa; sex therapist and clinical psychologist Dr. David S. Ley; Dr. Justin Lehmiller, social psychologist, senior research fellow at the Kinsey Institute, and podcast host; Mireille Miller-Young, associate professor of feminist studies at UC Santa Barbara and the author of A Taste for Brown Sugar: Black Women in Pornography, and New York Magazine tech columnist John Herrman

This episode was written by Willa Paskin. It was edited by Josh Levin and produced by Katie Shepherd, Willa Paskin, Max Freedman, and Evan Chung, Decoder Ring’s supervising producer. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director, and we had help from Sophie Summergrad.

We’d also like to thank Gabriel Roth, Talia Lavin, Tatum Hunter, Rebecca Fasman, Jessica Stoya, Aiden Starr, Perrin Swanmoore, Sophie Gilbert, and Kevin Heffernan, who was a fount of knowledge. 

If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, email us at DecoderRing@slate.com or leave a message on our hotline at (347) 460-7281.

Get more of Decoder Ring with Slate Plus! Join for exclusive bonus episodes of Decoder Ring and ad-free listening on all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe from the Decoder Ring show page on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Or, visit slate.com/decoderplus for access wherever you listen.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Before we begin, I want to give you a major heads-up.

0:04.0

This episode contains adult content, and I don't just mean some racy language.

0:10.3

I mean, it is actually about adult and X-rated content.

0:15.8

Please listen accordingly.

0:31.4

This past May, my colleague Luke Winky, a staff writer at Slate, was doing some work when he opened up the site formerly known as Twitter.

0:37.9

I'm sitting in my living room, and I see a post from the official Twitter accounts of the Democrats.

0:43.7

This account, which has 2.4 million followers, is run by the Democratic Party of the United States.

0:44.6

Not like the Democratic Party of Maine or California, not a specific congressman, just like

0:49.0

the Democrats.

0:50.4

The post contained no text other than tagging Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff and longtime Trump advisor.

0:57.8

And the body of this post is just a photo of what appears to be kind of like a dingy, two-star hotel room.

1:07.6

Picture a mid-tier business hotel.

1:10.4

beige walls, thin brown carpet, a hanging-framed

1:13.7

landscape. The most important is what's in the foreground. The core of the photo is this chair.

1:21.0

It's got sort of like a brown and white weave pattern to it. It's like if you have no other

1:27.0

context, this just looks like a chair at the double tree or something.

1:31.4

Truly, it's an unremarkable chair.

1:34.3

It's the kind of thing you could scroll right past on Twitter.

1:37.8

And if you thought anything about it at all, it might be, wow.

1:41.7

People on social media really share the most banal things.

1:45.8

Luke did not scroll right past this chair. He stopped short. Like if scrolling had tires,

1:52.0

his squealed. Because Luke knew this seemingly unremarkable hotel chair being tweeted by the

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