As soon as I get that trilogy update tomorrow the first thing I'm doing is immediately going to that one part where Phoenix would at this point think to himself "Sherlock Holmes II baby!" To see whether or not they change the name to Herlock Sholmes

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As soon as I get that trilogy update tomorrow the first thing I'm doing is immediately going to that one part where Phoenix would at this point think to himself "Sherlock Holmes II baby!" To see whether or not they change the name to Herlock Sholmes
Found a youtube comment on coolcarguys new video that explains why the spanish latam translation took so long
I finished BiBr today and now I don't know what to listen to on long drives
I have such delights for you and your ears, anonymous! Just counting other podcasts by people on Binary Break (not counting the tabletop games, video games, art, video, etc.), we've got:
Actual Plays!
Annie of Kat Payne and Olliemon (RIP) fame is on Jemjammer
Jake of Jordie Battle and Swiftmon fame is on Pokemon World Tour United
Riley is the Riley from Riley Hopkins and Their Amazing Friends
Interviews!
Christina of Sophie Battle and Heirmon fame hosts Home for Wayward OCs
Pop Culture Stuff!
Tanner of Billy Harlan and Butlermon fame hosts Not if I Reboot You First
Annie hosts I Will Fight You
Recap Series!
Christina AND Tanner host the Glee podcast to end them all, Loser Like Me
Jake absolutely comes in clutch here with THREE outstanding options. He hosts The Morphin' Grid, Kingdom Smarts, and Pokemon World Tour
Ohhh So Cracker Barrel Was A Museum For Conservatives
This is gonna' sting a little...
Part 3...
Blue Jew Trash Talk | Poor White Trash
I can only hope this post is a clear, thoughtful, and historically grounded article about the term “poor white trash”—its origins, its cultural meaning, and why it remains one of the most enduring class‑based slurs in American history. I’ll treat the topic seriously and respectfully without using the term to describe any group of people.
The History and Meaning of the Term “Poor White Trash”
The phrase often referred to as “poor white trash” is one of the oldest and most charged class‑based insults in the United States. While it targets white people, it is rooted in the same systems of hierarchy, exploitation, and social control that shaped America’s racial order. Understanding the term requires looking at how race and class have been intertwined since the earliest days of the country.
1. Origins in the Antebellum South
The term emerged in the early 1800s, particularly in the slaveholding South. It was used by wealthy white landowners to describe white people who were:
landless
poor
uneducated
living on the margins of society
The insult served a purpose: it reinforced a racial hierarchy and a class hierarchy at the same time.
Why wealthy whites used it
Plantation elites needed a way to distinguish themselves from poorer whites. By labeling them as “trash,” they:
justified economic inequality
reinforced the idea that poverty was a personal failing
maintained social distance between classes
It was a tool of class policing, not just name‑calling.
2. A Term Built on Racial Logic
Even though the insult targeted white people, it was deeply tied to the racial system of slavery.
Enslavers promoted the idea that even the poorest white person was “above” any Black person. But at the same time, elites feared that poor whites might sympathize with enslaved people or rebel against the plantation system.
So the term served a dual purpose:
Elevate whiteness as a racial category
Punish poor whites who didn’t fit the ideal of white respectability
It was a way to keep poor whites loyal to the racial order while still keeping them socially inferior.
3. How the Term Spread and Evolved
After the Civil War, the phrase continued to be used to describe rural, working‑class white communities—especially in:
Appalachia
the Deep South
parts of the Midwest
It became associated with stereotypes about:
poverty
lack of education
“backwoods” culture
criminality
social dysfunction
These stereotypes were reinforced by:
newspapers
early sociology
literature
Hollywood films
reality television
The term became a shorthand for class contempt, often used by both white and Black communities, though for different reasons.
4. Why the Term Is Harmful
Even though it targets white people, the phrase is harmful because it:
A. Dehumanizes people based on class
It reduces individuals to stereotypes about poverty and “low status.”
B. Reinforces the idea that poverty is a moral failure
This ignores the structural causes of poverty—lack of jobs, generational disadvantage, and regional economic decline.
C. Perpetuates a false narrative of “white privilege” as universal
While whiteness does confer advantages in many systems, poor white communities often face:
high unemployment
poor health outcomes
underfunded schools
addiction crises
limited mobility
The slur erases these realities.
D. Fuels division between marginalized groups
Historically, elites used the term to keep poor whites and Black communities from forming alliances. That dynamic still echoes today.
5. Why the Term Still Exists Today
The phrase persists because it taps into long‑standing American anxieties about:
class
respectability
rural identity
cultural difference
It also persists because class‑based insults are still socially acceptable in ways that racial slurs are not. Many people use the term casually without understanding its history.
6. Reclaiming, Rejecting, or Reframing?
Some people in rural or working‑class white communities have attempted to reclaim the term as a badge of pride—similar to how other marginalized groups have reclaimed slurs. But many reject it entirely, seeing it as a tool of shame and division.
Either way, the term forces a conversation about class, identity, and who gets to define “respectability” in America.
Conclusion
The phrase commonly known as “poor white trash” is more than an insult. It is a window into the complex relationship between race and class in American history. Born out of the plantation system, used to divide communities, and still present in modern culture, the term reveals how deeply class prejudice is woven into the American story.
Understanding its origins helps us understand not only the past, but the ways class and race continue to shape our society today
“I mean look at her, she looks like P.W.T.
Pure white trash!”
Hello Hyrule!!
We're back again with the echoes of Jake & Josh (of the wonderful "Hey Jake & Josh" podcast family!) for a retrospective roundtable on "The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom"! At least, I *think* that's what the game was called... it's been so long, I can't remember the name...!
As always, be sure to check these fellas out! They're some of the best in the biz!!
You can listen to Hello Hyrule pretty much anywhere, but we'll read your Apple Podcasts reviews on the show!
Video Games Podcast · Updated Biweekly · Hello Hyrule is the Premier Legend of Zelda Travelogue Podcast! Listeners will join hosts Petra and