The spurned singer, clad in a tank top emblazoned with the word “RETIRED” in case viewers forgot what she had come on the show to complain about, told Bailey that the remaining Pussycat Dolls had snubbed her after she came out as an anti-vaxxer and supporter of current U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s 2024 presidential campaign. “I was a liability,” Sutta, who identifies as “vaccine-injured,” explained. “People are screaming at me, ‘You’re MAGA, you’re MAGA.’ Yeah, I am. I triple down on it because I’m so sick of people telling you who I should be. Do I love what Trump is doing? Absolutely not. I do not believe in war. But we didn’t have a chance for the injured community to get help without him.”
To her probable delight, Kennedy has used his first year in office to slash scientific research budgets, promote discredited ideas on vaccinations, and wax poetic about raw milk with Kid Rock under the banner of his “Make America Healthy Again” movement. Meanwhile, Sutta—who claims that the COVID-19 vaccine left her “on the brink of death” and once called Kennedy “too good to be president”—has found time to spread vaccine misinformation herself in-between shilling for the Melania movie and advertising T-shirts that identify the wearer as a “conspiracy theorist loon.” The singer is the Creative Director of React19.org, an organization that purports to offer support for individuals “suffering from long-term Covid-19 vaccine adverse effects.” “These are psy-ops, y’all,” Sutta said, ostensibly referring to the vaccinating powers that be. “They are messing with you. It is not real.”
The Maverick Approach conversation turned to Alex Jones before landing on the episode’s titular reptiles. “Recently, I actually saw a reptilian sober. I saw his eyes fully do it, so I know they’re among us,” Sutta mentioned, only to describe a snake she encountered in her pool that she believed to be a reincarnation of her deceased ex-boyfriend. “I truly believe the music business is run by reptilians,” she concluded. “You know what’s funny?” Bailey responded soberly, “I’ve heard that story at least three other times.” This isn’t new territory for the Maverick Approach podcast. When Bailey isn’t courting pop-band expats to his 142,000 YouTube subscribers, he’s covering such topics as mind control, time travel, and the “Chuck E. Cheese Theory.”