Channel Awesome
Rich Men North of Richmond

Date Aired
September 13, 2023
Running Time
21:59
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Todd is heard opening the door offscreen, then walks into frame carrying a suitcase (which he slams on the ground) and sits down at the piano

Todd: Well. I'm back from vacation. Did I miss anything!? [sighs]

Todd plays "Rich Men North of Richmond" on the piano.

OLIVER ANTHONY MUSIC - RICH MEN NORTH OF RICHMOND

A pop song review

Todd: [beat] Man.

Clip of Jason Aldean - "Try That In a Small Town"

Todd (VO): So to recap, I went on break for a month, and boy, that was a great time to get the hell outta town. Because everyone was talking about some [clip of news story about "Try That In a Small Town"] right-wing country song astroturfed to the top of the charts. I figured that whole thing would blow over while I was out, and I wouldn't have to deal with anything like that by the time I got back.

Todd: I was half right.

Clip of Oliver Anthony Music - "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Oliver Anthony Music: I've been sellin' my soul, workin' all day

Todd (VO): Yeah, boy, when that first song went away, it was immediately replaced by a goddamn Viking in a t-shirt who came out of nowhere with a song even more inexplicable than the last.

Todd: It was from some backwoods no-name called Oliver Anthony.

Screenshot of "Rich Men North of Richmond" on the Hot 100 with Oliver's name as...

Todd (VO): Or "Oliver Anthony Music", I guess. [clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"] A guy with almost no social media presence. And who absolutely no one had heard of before this one song went viral through the support of [clip of video about "Rich Men North of Richmond" from...] right-wing influencers like Matt Walsh.

Clips of various news stories about "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Female Host: I'm not surprised he soared to number 1, he has struck a chord.

Laura Ingraham: That should be a wakeup call to these out-of-touch elites in politics.

Now for a lot of you, I realise this video is probably redundant, because this story has been beaten to fucking death in the past couple of weeks. Every major writer in the world of music and politics have been dissecting this guy's work [clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"] like he's some kind of serious thinker. Just keeping up with the news, I've had [various screenshots of articles about Oliver Anthony, all using the same picture of him] this guy's photograph burned into my fucking brain. Please, for the love of God, can we get a second photo of this guy? [image of Oliver taking a selfie with his dog] There we go. Actually, maybe I just don't like this guy's picture in general.

Todd: But, most of those stories were written very early on, on the assumption that this guy was some MAGA hat, QAnon dickweed.

Clip of the Matt Walsh video from earlier

Todd (VO): A fair assumption, since he's being promoted by the worst people in the world.

Todd: Since then, the narrative has gotten a little more complicated.

Clip of interview with Oliver Anthony

Oliver: What makes us strong is our diversity. And we need to learn to harness that and appreciate it, and not use it as a political tool to keep everyone separate from each other, you know.

Todd (VO): So as far as I'm concerned, this is still an ongoing story.

Todd: And even if it wasn't, you know, I have fans. People wanna know my opinions on things. So let me answer the question everyone has been asking me: "Todd, what did you do on vacation?"

Video of people at the beach, with the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation"

Todd (VO): Aw man, it was great. [brief video Todd took at a Jimmy Eat World concert] Kicked back, saw a couple shows. [image of Todd's dog in a casino, text appears "amydog! (has a gambling problem lol)"] Went to Vegas and actually won some money for once.

Todd: But mostly I just wanted to...

Video taken from a car driving down a highway

Todd (VO): ...see old friends and family back home. Way back in, uh... [image of sign for Richmond, VA] Hmm, alright. [video of a street in Richmond] Well, you know, it was good to be back in my home state down South. Nice to breath the warm Southern air [back to the highway video] of humidity and bugs. Yeah, love driving around, seeing the old Kudzu, and... [video shows...] big old Confederate flag. Yep, that'll happen. Fun fact, that particular flag is the first thing that greets you when you drive into [image of Welcome sign for...] Farmville. [brief clip of some playing Farmville captioned "Actual Footage"] Yeah, it's a real place called Farmville.

Todd: And you know who lives in Farmville?

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Oliver: Livin' in the new world

Todd (VO): Yep, you guessed it. Tormund from Game of Thrones over here. A heartwarming...

Todd: ...un-controversial, feel-good story for everybody.

Oliver: We got folks in the streets

Ain't got nothin' to eat

Todd (VO): Alright. To me, the fact that this thoroughly unknown, unsigned musician playing very simple, stripped down, uncommercial music with only the support of right-wingers suddenly debuting at number 1 before I or anyone had even heard of him. This was- this was just very shocking to me. The last person to suddenly blast directly to number 1 with their first hit [clip of "drivers license" by...] was Olivia Rodrigo. And she had [image of the Walt Disney statue captioned "Obey Mouse"] very powerful forces behind her. [back to "Rich Men North of Richmond"] How could this distinctly non-popstar musician do this?

Todd: Well. As a well-informed music charts scholar, I have a very well-reasoned explanation. Fraud.

Clip of 21 Savage ft. J. Cole - "a lot"

J. Cole: How many fakin' they streams

Gettin' they plays from machines

Todd: Fraud!! It's a complete phony!

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): Fake news, it's a conspiracy I tell you! It goes all the way to the top!

Todd: Is that beard even real!?

Todd (VO): [sighs] Now, my saner friends have tried to calm me down, and they said that this being at number 1 makes perfect sense.

Todd: Even though this has never happened before.

Todd (VO): A guy like this hits number 1 with just word-of-mouth and a couple major endorsements.

Todd: And they tell me, "Yeah. You just gotta look at two trends."

Clip of Chris Stapleton - "Starting Over"

Todd (VO): One is the rise of this kinda rootsy Americana country, which has been growing in stature over the last couple years.

Todd: And the other is the rise of conservative spite-buying.

Clip of Aaron Lewis - "Am I the Only One"

Todd (VO): I covered this a little bit myself in the Aaron Lewis episode, but if you notice, no one actually buys music anymore. So a dedicated-enough fanbase can drive a song way up the charts if they are willing to give up real money.

Todd: It's kind of a loophole, but it's above board. It's support from fans, it counts.

Clip of a video about BTS fans...

Todd (VO): The charts have been gamed like this for quite a bit now [...and a new story about The Eras Tour] by stans of K-Pop, Taylor Swift.

Todd: And, more recently, conservatives.

Clip of Bryson Gray ft. Tyson James and Chandler Crump - "Let's Go Brandon"

Todd (VO): I've had to hear multiple songs called "Let's Go Brandon" because of this.

Todd: And yeah, now that I think about it, it does make sense.

Clip of "Try That In a Small Town"

Todd (VO): The song right before "Rich Men North of Richmond" was a conservative rallying point, [clip of live performance from Zach Bryan] the song that replaced it was another rootsy Americana single. That's four country hits at number 1 in a row by the way.

Todd: You wanna keep up with modern music...

Clip of people line dancing

Todd (VO): ...get ready to put on some shit kickers and learn how to line dance, folks. So uh...

Todd: Yeah, I guess I'll take off the tinfoil hat for the time being.

Clip of an Oliver Anthony live performance

Todd (VO): It is reasonable that those twin waves could propel a no-name to number 1.

Todd: I can tell you that in central Virginia, he was already very big.

Video of a car driving down a highway from earlier

Todd (VO): I didn't try to talk to the locals about it, cause I was on vacation, damn it! And even then, I was hearing it everywhere. [video Todd took while parked at a gas station] Coming out of other cars at the gas station.

"Rich Men North of Richmond" is playing out of another car

Oliver: And they don't think you know, but I know that you do

Video of a billboard with an ad parodying Oliver Anthony

Local ads were already parodying him. [clip of a Fox News story about Oliver Anthony] Goosing a song up the charts with digital downloads, that only works for, like, a week or two. And Oliver Anthony is still holding onto the top 10 at the time of this recording. So, however it got there, it's definitely resonating with a reasonably large group of people. By which I mean right-wingers.

Todd: But Anthony himself does not claim to be a conservative.

Clip of Oliver discussing the response to "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): And he seems a little upset that his song has been co-opted by Republican politicians.

Oliver: It's aggravating seeing people on conservative news try to identify with me like I'm one of them.

He claims to be Independent. And when you actually listen to the song...

Todd: ...I-I get where he's coming from, because the song is almost bipartisan.

Todd (VO): Like, I assume you've already heard it. But, uh, if you haven't, here's how it goes.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Oliver: I've been sellin' my soul, workin' all day

Overtime hours for bullshit pay

See, it's just a lament for the working man. Who could argue with that?

Todd: Boss makes a dollar, I make a tiny fraction of a fraction of a dime. Sure, that's pretty universal.

Oliver: These rich men north of Richmond

Lord knows, they all just wanna have total control

Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do

Todd (VO): "Hey, you hate rich people, I hate rich people."

Todd: "Did you watch that last season of White Lotus? Yeah, yeah, you and me are on the same page."

Oliver: Wish politicians would look out for miners

And not just minors on an island somewhere

Todd: What? Oh, oh I get it. [images of...] Miners, minors. Wordplay. [image of MSNBC headline "The Epstein Tapes: Unearthed Recordings From His Private Island"] Yeah, pedophile island, fuck every single one of those rich assholes, they can all go to hell. Epstein didn't kill himself! [back to Todd] He probably killed himself. If he was smart, he killed himself. [image of prison inmates] He was not gonna like gen pop. But yeah, fuck him, fuck his rich buddies, sure.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Oliver: Cause your dollar ain't shit and it's taxed to no end

Todd (VO): So, you know, nothing in there that's specifically divisive yet. But for a lot of people on my side of the aisle, at this point in the song...

Todd: ...the alarm bells were starting to go off.

Oliver: Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do

Todd (VO): Rich men wanna control what you think and what you do? That could mean a lot of things.

Todd: Do you mean politicians? Do you mean Wall Street? Do you mean, uh... the J- Well, you know.

Todd (VO): But, you know, let's not be paranoid. He didn't say that, we'll keep an open mind.

Todd: Keep going Mr. Anthony Music, tell me more about the plight of the common man.

Oliver: Lord, we got folks in the street

Ain't got nothin' to eat

And the obese milkin' welfare

Todd looks confused

Oliver: God, if you're 5'3" and 300 pounds

Taxes ought not to pay for your bags of Fudge Rounds

Todd: YES!! [claps and pumps his fist]

Todd (VO): There it is.

Oliver: And the obese milkin' welfare

There it is, that's what I was waiting for. The sign that I do not have to take this seriously.

Todd: Whoo, that's a relief. Into the garbage this goes! [snaps] Bye!

Oliver: Taxes ought not to pay for your bags of Fudge Rounds

Todd (VO): I think that's where everyone I know checked out and wrote this guy off. In fact, most everyone I know calls it the "Fudge Rounds song". I mean, you can get angry at welfare queens, or you can get angry at hunger and homelessness.

Todd: Not both.

Todd (VO): Poor people eat junk food cause it's cheap. You want food stamps to cover healthier food, that's gonna cost more of your tax money. Or at the very least not less.

Todd: Like, do you think [image of a fat man holding hundred dollar bills] being fat makes them not poor? Do you think you get more [image of a table with sign "FREE MONEY $500 PER POUND"] government assistance for being fat? Do you think the government's looking at hungry homeless people and being like, [image of a man shrugging] "Sorry, we spent all our money on Fudge Rounds for fat people." That's not how this works, that's not how any of this works.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): The only way your argument makes sense is if you think that some people shouldn't get any help. You know.

Todd: Those people. You know what I mean.

Todd (VO): So that's why the song has become as divisive as it is. This is not a universal song. There's only one side of the aisle that talks about which poor people deserve help and which ones don't.

Todd: Like yes, this guy hates the "elites", I hate the elites. But that doesn't necessarily mean anything. [images of Yankees fans...] If I hate the Yankees cause they suck right now, [...and a boy in a Red Sox jersey giving a middle finger] and you hate them because they don't suck enough, we're not actually on common ground.

Todd (VO): So I figured that's all we needed to know and the conversation was over.

Todd: But, in the couple of weeks since this song blew up, Oliver Anthony Music has shown that he's not entirely brain-poisoned.

Clip of Oliver discussing the response to "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): And he seems a little surprised and stung at how this has become a culture war dividing point.

Oliver: But I hate- I do hate how that song is being weaponized. Like, I see- I see the right trying to characterize me as one of their own. And I see the left trying to, um, trying to discredit me.

And there was an article [screenshot of New York Times article "On Their High Horse, Too Many Liberals Disdain Oliver Anthony"] just this week saying "Okay, maybe the Fudge Rounds thing is a bad look. But otherwise he's still got something to say, and we should hear him out."

Todd: Mmm, should we? My first instinct is that he's lying.

Todd (VO): It's a smarter marketing decision to cast a wide net instead of pigeonholing yourself to one side of the aisle. [clip of "Fake Woke" by...] No one wants to be Tom MacDonald for a living, including Tom MacDonald. [back to the Oliver Anthony clip] But the guy wrote the song he wrote. Don't bullshit me about it now.

Todd: But, at the same time... [sighs] I don't know, I go back and forth on this. As a critic, I always feel like a total weenie whenever I dismiss something purely for political reasons.

Clip of Eminem - "Role Model"

Todd (VO): I've certainly listened to and liked songs that did much worse things than be mean to fat people.

Todd: It's not music's job to tell you only the things you agree with. [sighs] Alright, alright.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): You know what, I'm not immune to this guy's appeal. [clip of "Last Night" by...] After a summer dominated by Morgan Wallen's most sellout-y tracks, [back to "Rich Men North of Richmond"] a guy with a guitar and no auto-tune sounds pretty goddamn amazing to me. Like, look at this guy, he's real, he's authentic. He plays one of those old-timey guitars with a metal thing in the middle. He's got a farm, he filmed this video on a cellphone out it the woods. [clip of Marty Brown performing on America's Got Talent] He's probably never heard of an indoor toilet, but he's got a voice full of soul. Howie, you gotta send him to the finals.

Todd: It's probably a put-on, but it's a put-on that works, not gonna front about that.

Clip of an Oliver Anthony live performance

Todd (VO): So I'm trying not to let the Fudge Rounds thing bother me. This is a song about the pain of being broke and being beaten down by the world, not about Fudge Rounds. Trying not to let it bother me.

Oliver (with the Crowd): Got the obese milkin' welfare

Trying, trying.

Oliver (with the Crowd): Taxes ought not to pay

For your bags of Fudge Rounds

Todd: Yeah, I'm not getting there.

Todd (VO): It's not, like, one line. It's most of the second verse in a song that only has two verses. And it's just so ugly. Like, even if I try not to object to the politics, the Fudge Rounds things is still a big giant stake in the heart of the song, cause... Cause it's just bad songwriting.

Todd: It's unfocused, like did you not notice [image of the song on the Hot 100 with "Rich Men" underlined] the name of your own goddamn song!? You know, [arrows point to the underlined text] "Rich Men"? Like, I can't stop you if you wanna get all angry about welfare fatties. But...

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): ...the whole appeal of the song is we're broke cause all the money's being sucked up by the rich people. You know, the people who control the world. [image of a fat woman sitting in a lawn chair] Not your mooch cousin you're angry at for some reason. [back to "Rich Men North of Richmond"] Assuming this is even based on anyone you've ever actually seen with your own eyes and not just imagined.

Todd: Like, the thing just completely unravels after the first verse.

Todd (VO): Even the Jeffrey Epstein reference hits wrong.

Oliver: And not just minors on an island somewhere

Like, there are songs where you get mad about every little thing you saw on the news, but that's not what this song is supposed to be about. The point is this guy's life and this guy's problem. That's the whole appeal of him being some guy in the backwoods uploading cellphone videos from his farm. You know, "I can't pay rent, I'm struggling to get by."

Todd: And the Epstein reference isn't about that, it hits like you're listening to someone who spends too much time online.

Todd (VO): Or here's another thing that comes right after the Fudge Rounds line.

Oliver: Young men are puttin' themselves 6 feet in the ground

Cause all this damn country does is keep kicking them down

Todd: The world's hard to men?

Todd (VO): Like, this is another talking point that you can only get from being on the internet too much. [image talking about suicides being high amongst men] Like, male suicide is this big, buzzy, trendy discourse right now. And you know, I'm a guy, I've got problems, I'm glad we're talking about it, but...

Todd: Like yes, we kill ourselves more, but we're not actually more depressed, we're just better at suicide. We have efficient stats, it's that manly can-do spirit.

Todd (VO): I mean, it's shit like that why the song doesn't hit for me. It's supposed to be a song from a guy in pain, trying to survive in the unfair world. But instead, it's just pandering.

Todd: And I use that term very advisedly. When I say he's pandering to you, I don't mean he's just expressing a point-of-view that you agree with. No, he's literally flattering you.

Oliver: Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do

And they don't think you know, but I know that you do

Todd: See, they think you're stupid, but I know that you're actually really smart. And tall. And have you lost weight?

Oliver: People like me and people like you

Todd (VO): The word "you" changes the entire song for me. You can't be like, "Well maybe you don't agree with him completely, but he's sharing his world through his art. It's his honest perspective, it's his truth."

Todd: No it's not.

Todd (VO): The second he starts talking about "you", it stops being personal and it starts being preachy.

Todd: And if you don't like what he's preaching, then there's just no way of getting around that.

Clip of an Oliver Anthony live performance

Todd (VO): It sounds like a political ad. Especially with the way it's constantly dancing right up to the line without crossing it. [clip of Oliver getting interviewed] When you say that rich men wanna control what you think, what are they trying to make you think? When you say the world's tough on young men, what do you mean exactly?

Todd: Do you mean societal expectations make it hard to seek help? [image of a woman holding hedge trimmers] Or do you mean the Feminazis are coming to cut your dick off? It sounds a lot more like the second one.

Todd (VO): Maybe it isn't, but either way, it's a shitty sentiment. Or if it's not that, then it's frustrating, bad songwriting. These are things you need to clarify in a message song.

Todd: Lines like that make me feel like he's being disingenuous. Like, listen to him try to explain himself.

Clip of Oliver discussing the response to "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Oliver: So I do understand, like, there may be some people who... who misunderstood my words in "Rich Men North of Richmond". It references the inefficiencies of the government. 30 to 40 percent of the food bought with welfare, EBT money is in the classification of, like, snack food and soda. And that's not the fault of those people, welfare only makes up a small percentage of our budget. You know, we can fuel a proxy war in a foreign land, but we can't take care of our own. That's all the song's trying to say.

Todd (VO): Well, if that's what you meant to say, you sure fucked that up, huh? Cause that's not what you said.

Todd: Like, if I tried [images of a man waving...] to say "Hi" to someone and instead I said [...and someone holding up two middle fingers] "Your baby's ugly and I hope you die" then, you know, people are gonna get angry. You can't just be like "Wow, you took that wrong."

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): [sighs] At the same time, I hate calling bad faith. Like, it's a shitty way to have a conversation.

Todd: What if he believes everything he says?

Oliver: Lord, it's a damn shame

Todd (VO): This song, this topic has been picked to death. And the only unique insight I have is that I know his neck of the woods pretty well. [clip from "Locked Out: The Fall of Massive Resistance"] Farmville, it's part of Prince Edward county, Virginia. The county's claim to fame is that [image of a newspaper with headline "Court to Hera Monday Virginia's Defense Of School Segregation"] they were so committed to segregation that they took it all the way to the supreme court. [back to "Locked Out"] It was one of the five cases that collectively became Brown v. Board of Education. And when the county lost and they were told to integrate, they literally shut down the entire public school system instead so that they wouldn't have to. And they kept that up for five years.

Todd: And this ugly history is just [image of "Our Virginia: Past & Present"] part of the state curriculum now, I taught all of this in History class to 5th graders. [image of Virginia counties] Two hours southwest of Richmond, where most of my friends still live. Incidentally, one of the schools I taught at had a poster about [image of...] the ABC's of Good Behavior on the wall. Uh, I forget what A and B were, but C [image of graphic about...] was "Conformity".

Clip of Liberty University lecture

Todd (VO): That entire area is run by the evangelical Falwell dynasty. I haven't lived in Farmville specifically, but I lived close enough to vote in the same elections. [clip of Bob Good speaking at a press conference] And that area has consistently sent deranged freaks to Washington. [screenshot of headline "Congressman Bob Good's Statement To Challenge Electoral College Certification"] Their current rep is a January 6th conspiracy guy.

Todd: Where I'm going with this that I don't think Oliver Anthony is lying specifically about being a centrist or being non-partisan.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): You come from a place like that, and you're sane enough [image about Pride Month meaning "Demon"] to not think the gays are coming to drink your blood. Then uh, yeah, it's pretty easy to imagine yourself an independent free-thinker who's above politics.

Todd: I mean, it's easy when you don't know what your politics actually are.

Oliver: With an old soul

Todd (VO): Assuming this guy's legit and not a fictional character like Larry the Cable Guy or something, then he strikes me as a guy who is not the worst human being who ever lived, but is...

Todd: Dumb. Very dumb.

Clip of interview with Oliver Anthony

Todd (VO): And God, there's just nothing in the world more annoying to be around then a dumb guy who thinks he's got the world figured out. [clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"] I mean, it definitely doesn't help that he's screaming the entire time, I can feel him spraying spit on me.

Oliver: It's a damn shame what the world's gotten to

Todd: [in a Southern accent] I'm an independent free-thinker!

Clip of interview with Oliver Anthony

Todd (VO): I cured my asthma with brain pills cause Joe Rogan told me about it. The rich men north of Richmond don't want you to know about that! [back to normal] That's all that guy sounds to me like.

Todd: And that could be completely wrong.

Clip of Oliver discussing the response to "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): One of the things Mr. Anthony Music says is that it's stupid to try and map a guy's entire soul and way of thinking from one 3 minute song. And that's absolutely true, maybe I pegged him wrong. Maybe he'll continue to surprise me.

Todd: My suspicion though is that we'll never know.

Todd (VO): He's had his taste of the culture war and he doesn't seem to like it. I think he wants to stay mask-on from here on out. Which, I mean, fair enough, I wouldn't wanna be a part of it either. I hate that I'm talking about this right now.

Todd: So I'm not claiming to know who this guy is deep down. But for the 3 minutes he's playing this song, he doesn't sound like a guy I'd wanna listen to or be around.

Clip of "Rich Men North of Richmond"

Todd (VO): And the fact that it's something I almost agree with makes it's swerves into nastiness just that much more jarring and unpleasant. If he'd kept the conversation about how hard it is to stretch a dollar, how no one's helping the little guy, this could be a good song.

Todd: As it is, it's just another artifact of the culture war that I'm tired of and I'm embarrassed for participating in.

Oliver: Cause your dollar ain't shit and it's taxed to no end

Cause of rich men north of Richmond

Todd (VO): God, what a miserable summer music season this was.

Todd: Man, remember "Hot Girl Summer"? Sure didn't have one of those this year, can we bring that back? [gets up and leaves] God damn.

Video for "Rich Men North of Richmond" ends

Todd: And while we're talking about big white guys with goofy facial hair.

Clip of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives

Todd (VO): You know this clown right? Well, Lindsay Ellis has a new video up about the rise, fall, and redemption of one Guy Fieri. The Food Network host who survived being clowned on for years to become oddly wholesome. And you can watch that video exclusively on...

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Todd: But you will get it for a little over 2 dollars and 50 cents a month. And you'd also be directly supporting me, which... You know, I'd appreciate it.

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Todd: Thank you for listening, and goodnight.

Closing Tag Song: The Carter Family - "My Old Virginia Home"

THE END

"Rich Men North of Richmond" is owned by Oliver Anthony Music

This video is owned by me

THANK YOU TO THE LOYAL PATRONS!!