PodcastsRank #20966
Artwork for How Not To Suck At Divorce

How Not To Suck At Divorce

RelationshipsPodcastsSociety & CultureEducationSelf-ImprovementENunited-statesDaily or near-daily
4.7 / 5136 ratings
Get real divorce advice your lawyer may be too polite to share. We break down unpopular divorce opinions and practical divorce tips that can save you thousands of dollars in legal fees, reduce stress, and help you avoid costly mistakes. How Not to Suck at Divorce is the divorce podcast for people who want clarity, strategy, and support. Hosted by powerhouse family law attorney Morgan Stogsdill, head of family law at the largest firm in the country, and comedian-turned-marketing-guru Andrea Rappaport, this show helps you avoid the most common (and costly) divorce mistakes while protecting your kids, your finances, and your sanity. Each episode breaks down what actually matters during divorce—custody, co-parenting, negotiations, communication, and decision-making—using real-world examples, practical tools, and a refreshingly honest approach. You’ll learn what to tell your lawyer (and what to tell your friends), how to manage emotions without letting them derail your case, and how to move forward even when the process isn’t over. Whether you’re thinking about divorce, in the middle of it, or trying to rebuild your life after, How Not to Suck at Divorce gives you the information yo
Top 41.9% by pitch volume (Rank #20966 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
Daily or near-daily
Episodes
190
Founded
N/A
Category
Relationships
Number of listeners
Private
Hidden on public pages

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Public snapshot
Audience: 4K–8K / month
Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/how-not-to-suck-at-divorce
Cadence: Active weekly
Reply rate: Under 2%

Latest Episodes

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189. When Your Divorcing Spouse Is Still Trying to Control You ( It’s Hurting Your Case)

Fri Feb 06 2026

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If your ex is still controlling you and you keep reacting, explaining, or trying to keep the peace… you might be actively hurting your legal case without even realizing it. Because here’s the thing: divorce doesn’t cure controlling behavior—it often exposes it. And control doesn’t always look loud. Sometimes it looks “polite.” Sometimes it looks like silence. Sometimes it looks like a thousand tiny moments that make your stomach drop. In this episode of How Not to Suck at Divorce, attorney Morgan Stogsdill and comedian Andrea Rappaport break down what control looks like after separation, why it escalates, and the legal + emotional action steps to shut it down. And yes—there’s also a story involving a tambourine, a fire-lit “happiness class,” and a man casually threatening everyone with a tombstone. (Welcome to the show.) What You’ll Learn in This Episode✅ How control shows up during divorce (even when it’s not obvious)Morgan explains that control can look like: Financial control: “I’ll pay when I feel like it,” monitoring spending, moving goalpostsMicromanaging parenting and second-guessing everything you doWeaponized silence / delayed responses to make you spiralMaking you feel like you need permission for decisions you don’t need permission for“Polite” manipulation disguised as “concern for the kids” Why control often escalates after separationAndrea explains the psychology: when someone loses access and power, they often pull harder—because control is how they regulate their discomfort. The dangerous legal issue most people miss: “splitting”Morgan explains how controlling behavior can drive a wedge between you and your attorney—making you doubt your lawyer, hold back details, or get pulled into the ex’s narrative. That’s not just stressful. It can derail your strategy and cost you serious money. The communication trap that keeps you stuckIf your nervous system is hijacked every time they text you, you’ll default to the old pattern: ReactingOver-explainingTrying to smooth things overTrying to get them to “understand” Which gives them exactly what they want: access. The Tools That Help You Stop the Control1) Tighten the structure (legally + logistically)Morgan explains why vague agreements don’t work with controlling people. Example of vague: “reasonable communication.” Problem: “reasonable” becomes a playground for manipulation. 2) Reduce accessBecause (say it with us): control fades when access fades. That may mean: limiting communicationusing a parenting appnot responding to baitpushing...

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If your ex is still controlling you and you keep reacting, explaining, or trying to keep the peace… you might be actively hurting your legal case without even realizing it. Because here’s the thing: divorce doesn’t cure controlling behavior—it often exposes it. And control doesn’t always look loud. Sometimes it looks “polite.” Sometimes it looks like silence. Sometimes it looks like a thousand tiny moments that make your stomach drop. In this episode of How Not to Suck at Divorce, attorney Morgan Stogsdill and comedian Andrea Rappaport break down what control looks like after separation, why it escalates, and the legal + emotional action steps to shut it down. And yes—there’s also a story involving a tambourine, a fire-lit “happiness class,” and a man casually threatening everyone with a tombstone. (Welcome to the show.) What You’ll Learn in This Episode✅ How control shows up during divorce (even when it’s not obvious)Morgan explains that control can look like: Financial control: “I’ll pay when I feel like it,” monitoring spending, moving goalpostsMicromanaging parenting and second-guessing everything you doWeaponized silence / delayed responses to make you spiralMaking you feel like you need permission for decisions you don’t need permission for“Polite” manipulation disguised as “concern for the kids” Why control often escalates after separationAndrea explains the psychology: when someone loses access and power, they often pull harder—because control is how they regulate their discomfort. The dangerous legal issue most people miss: “splitting”Morgan explains how controlling behavior can drive a wedge between you and your attorney—making you doubt your lawyer, hold back details, or get pulled into the ex’s narrative. That’s not just stressful. It can derail your strategy and cost you serious money. The communication trap that keeps you stuckIf your nervous system is hijacked every time they text you, you’ll default to the old pattern: ReactingOver-explainingTrying to smooth things overTrying to get them to “understand” Which gives them exactly what they want: access. The Tools That Help You Stop the Control1) Tighten the structure (legally + logistically)Morgan explains why vague agreements don’t work with controlling people. Example of vague: “reasonable communication.” Problem: “reasonable” becomes a playground for manipulation. 2) Reduce accessBecause (say it with us): control fades when access fades. That may mean: limiting communicationusing a parenting appnot responding to baitpushing...

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
16
From PodPitch users
Rank
#20966
Top 41.9% by pitch volume (Rank #20966 of 50,000)
Average rating
4.7
From 136 ratings
Reviews
40
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
Daily or near-daily
Active weekly
Episode count
190
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
8.8K

Public Snapshot

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Country
United States
Language
English
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
Daily or near-daily
Latest episode date
Fri Feb 06 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
4K–8K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
Under 2%
Public band
Response time band
Private
Hidden on public pages
Replies received
Private
Hidden on public pages

Public ranges are rounded for privacy. Unlock the full report for exact values.

Presence & Signals

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Social followers
8.8K
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Yes
Guest format
Yes

Social links

No public profiles listed.

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Audience & Growth
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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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4.7 / 5136 ratings
Ratings136
Written reviews40

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Frequently Asked Questions About How Not To Suck At Divorce

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What is How Not To Suck At Divorce about?

Get real divorce advice your lawyer may be too polite to share. We break down unpopular divorce opinions and practical divorce tips that can save you thousands of dollars in legal fees, reduce stress, and help you avoid costly mistakes. How Not to Suck at Divorce is the divorce podcast for people who want clarity, strategy, and support. Hosted by powerhouse family law attorney Morgan Stogsdill, head of family law at the largest firm in the country, and comedian-turned-marketing-guru Andrea Rappaport, this show helps you avoid the most common (and costly) divorce mistakes while protecting your kids, your finances, and your sanity. Each episode breaks down what actually matters during divorce—custody, co-parenting, negotiations, communication, and decision-making—using real-world examples, practical tools, and a refreshingly honest approach. You’ll learn what to tell your lawyer (and what to tell your friends), how to manage emotions without letting them derail your case, and how to move forward even when the process isn’t over. Whether you’re thinking about divorce, in the middle of it, or trying to rebuild your life after, How Not to Suck at Divorce gives you the information yo

How often does How Not To Suck At Divorce publish new episodes?

Daily or near-daily

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