Zoë Schiffer: Right.
Manisha Krishnan: ... which some human design followers believe that your spleen is a better guide than your gut. And so he ended up breaking it off with one of the women that he was dating in Love is Blind because he said, "His spleen was silent."
Zoë Schiffer: I was locked in for the first part of this. And then we got to the spleen thing. What does that mean? Is it literally a gut sense? What are they tapping into?
Manisha Krishnan: Honestly, it is really confusing because they have all of these rules around deconditioning yourself from essentially forces within you that don't jive with who you really are, but the way that you decondition yourself seems to be in some cases very rigid. I saw one person on Reddit posting about how they only eat polenta because that's the only ingredient that will allow them to become their truest self according to human design.
Zoë Schiffer: I do want to know, do you know what I am?
Manisha Krishnan: Yes.
Zoë Schiffer: Because you asked me my birthday yesterday, so I'm on the edge of my seat.
Manisha Krishnan: I did. I plugged it in. And you are a generator, which is an energy type defined with a sacral center characterized by a consistent self-sustaining life force-
Zoë Schiffer: Wow.
Manisha Krishnan: ... that provides stamina and the capacity to do fulfilling work.
Zoë Schiffer: Did WIRED write this?
Manisha Krishnan: I know, I was just thinking that.
Zoë Schiffer: Well, great. I love that for myself. Coming up after the break, we'll dive into the backlash that some people from graphic designers to high-profile entertainers have received after commenting on Charlie Kirk's death. Welcome back to Uncanny Valley. I'm Zoë Schiffer. I'm joined today by senior culture editor Manisha Krishnan. Manisha, the story that keeps on reverberating this week is that of Charlie Kirk's death. Our colleague, Jake Lahut, has been covering how the Trump administration in the general right-wing base has maintained their position that Kirk's death was a result of leftist ideology and maybe even a coordinated attack. Both of these claims have been debunked, but it's done little to change people's minds. And this week, you reported that different artists have been facing professional retaliation for voicing their opinions on Kirk. What did you find in your reporting?
Manisha Krishnan: There's been a bunch of people from different industries that have lost their jobs over posting unsympathetically about Charlie Kirk's death from journalists to video game developers. But one that stuck out in my mind was I interviewed this trans writer who was doing a comic series for DC Comics, and she referred to Charlie Kirk as a Nazi bitch after he died and she was suspended on Bluesky for a week and DC fired her and they've canceled the series. And that really stuck out to me because she has said that Charlie Kirk, he was staunchly anti-trans. I mean, he was anti a lot of things that weren't a straight Christian white male, and he was pretty loud and proud about those views. And so I think it really does stick out to me because it's almost like our people kind of expected to perform grief maybe for someone who espoused hateful views towards the community that they're part of, but it almost feels like this really, really hard line that a lot of corporations have taken. Making someone apologize is one thing, but literally disappearing art, canceling an entire series or South Park deciding not to re-air an episode about Charlie Kirk that he himself loved. He said he really liked it. I just think it goes a little bit beyond just reprimanding people.