The Idiot and the Coach: Postmodernism Killed Innocence; Ted Lasso Brought It Back episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 11, 2026 · 32 MIN

The Idiot and the Coach: Postmodernism Killed Innocence; Ted Lasso Brought It Back

from Metamodernism Uncensored · host Sean Dempsey

What if the problem with our age is not that we are too naïve, but that we are no longer innocent enough to be saved?This episode puts Dostoevsky’s The Idiot and the AppleTV comedy Ted Lasso into philosophical combat, asking why one holy fool is destroyed by the world while the other somehow redeems it. Prince Myshkin enters a diseased Russian society armed with radical goodness, only to be humiliated, manipulated, and spiritually crushed. Ted Lasso enters a world just as cynical, sarcastic, wounded, and self-protective, but instead of being devoured by it, he slowly infects it with decency. The contrast becomes a diagnosis of culture itself: modernism feared goodness could not survive corruption, postmodernism laughed at goodness as childish delusion, and metamodernism dares to ask whether sincerity might be revolutionary again.After fifty years of irony, deconstruction, therapy-speak, and fashionable despair, Ted Lasso feels almost scandalous because he refuses the central commandment of our age: thou shalt not be earnest. He is not stupid. He is not untouched by pain. His optimism survives divorce, panic attacks, loneliness, and failure, which makes it stronger than cynicism rather than weaker. This episode argues that the innocent fool may be returning as a cultural necessity, not because the world is pure, but because it is so obviously poisoned. Maybe the next rebellion will not be rage, irony, or ideological warfare. Maybe it will be the terrifying, unfashionable act of believing in people again.

What if the problem with our age is not that we are too naïve, but that we are no longer innocent enough to be saved?This episode puts Dostoevsky’s The Idiot and the AppleTV comedy Ted Lasso into philosophical combat, asking why one holy fool is destroyed by the world while the other somehow redeems it. Prince Myshkin enters a diseased Russian society armed with radical goodness, only to be humiliated, manipulated, and spiritually crushed. Ted Lasso enters a world just as cynical, sarcastic, wounded, and self-protective, but instead of being devoured by it, he slowly infects it with decency. The contrast becomes a diagnosis of culture itself: modernism feared goodness could not survive corruption, postmodernism laughed at goodness as childish delusion, and metamodernism dares to ask whether sincerity might be revolutionary again.After fifty years of irony, deconstruction, therapy-speak, and fashionable despair, Ted Lasso feels almost scandalous because he refuses the central commandment of our age: thou shalt not be earnest. He is not stupid. He is not untouched by pain. His optimism survives divorce, panic attacks, loneliness, and failure, which makes it stronger than cynicism rather than weaker. This episode argues that the innocent fool may be returning as a cultural necessity, not because the world is pure, but because it is so obviously poisoned. Maybe the next rebellion will not be rage, irony, or ideological warfare. Maybe it will be the terrifying, unfashionable act of believing in people again.

NOW PLAYING

The Idiot and the Coach: Postmodernism Killed Innocence; Ted Lasso Brought It Back

0:00 32:26

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Untethered with Lindsay Tuttle NP Lindsay Tuttle NP Lindsay Tuttle is the creator and founder of Lindsay Tuttle NP, a thriving practice helping women heal their health and lives through freeing themselves and becoming unstuck. Lindsay has close to 20 years experience working in health and wellness, and through her own journey resolving chronic illness, realized she could help others do the same.Lindsay started this podcast to be able to bring together practitioners, healers, free thinkers and the like to come together in a place to uplift one another and have radical and uncensored conversations, pulling back the veil when it comes to health and truly thriving. The goal is that you leave listening feeling refreshed, empowered, inspired, you become untethered and experience expanded freedom in your life. Woman's Day Uncensored Woman's Day Recorded inside the Woman's Day offices each week, 'Woman's Day Uncensored' goes beyond the pages to uncover even more gossip from the team that put the magazine together. Uncensored Crypto Decentralized Publishing The greatest technological transformation since the advent of the Internet is here. The blockchain promises to disrupt everything from how we work, vote, earn, and invest, to how we communicate, and play. Yet, most people are unaware of the transformation taking place on a global scale. The Uncensored Crypto podcast changes that, delivering straight talk about Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, Web3, the blockchain,  DeFi, NFTs and more. Host Michael Hearne interviews the disruptors at the forefront of the crypto revolution who are shaping our economic, financial, and political future. You’ll hear them chat openly about their successes, failures and wealth building strategies. With their help, you can harness the power of crypto and the blockchain to change your life and help transform the world. China Unscripted Chris Chappell From the team that brought you the satirical TV news show China Uncensored comes a...well...less scripted look at China. Chris Chappell and his team are off the teleprompter and on the mic to interview China experts, or discuss the issues of the day. And frankly, anything else they feel like discussing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Metamodernism Uncensored?

This episode is 32 minutes long.

When was this Metamodernism Uncensored episode published?

This episode was published on June 11, 2026.

What is this episode about?

What if the problem with our age is not that we are too naïve, but that we are no longer innocent enough to be saved?This episode puts Dostoevsky’s The Idiot and the AppleTV comedy Ted Lasso into philosophical combat, asking why one holy fool is...

Can I download this Metamodernism Uncensored episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!