Feminist author (or pseudo-feminist author, if you go that way) Camille Paglia has a new book coming out called Free Women, Free Men. It’s a compilation of her writings, essays, columns and more from her forty-year career. To promote the book, Paglia sat down with NY Magazine for what seems like an in-depth interview, although NY Mag didn’t provide many quotes for the subjects that interested me the most. Like, I wanted Paglia’s hot-takes on pop culture figures, but NY Mag just breezed through most of those subjects, offering a listicle of Paglia’s current likes and dislikes. I’ve never really been a big Paglia fan, but I like reading her stuff because she makes me examine my own sense of feminism and the world. I have to say though… I found her less compelling after reading this, mostly because of her hot-take of Donald Trump and his supporters. You can read the full piece here. Some highlights:

What she approves of: Football, Bernie Sanders, Katharine Hepburn, Rihanna, the Real Housewives franchise, taramasalata. The only TV she watches are Turner Classic Movies and the Real Housewives. She has no interest in Facebook, Twitter, or the Kardashians.

What she scorns: Michel Foucault, Doris Day, Lena Dunham, Elena Ferrante, college students who are always whining about date rape.

Here are some things of which Camille Paglia used to approve, but has since exiled from her esteem: Bill Clinton, Madonna. She continues to believe in both the ’60s and rock and roll.

She & her ex-partner share custody of a 14-year-old son: “I wouldn’t have known how to raise a girl. I mean, the idea that I would have to — pink nail polish, all that, oh my god. I don’t know what I would have done.”

She was unsurprised by Trump’s victory: “I felt the Trump victory coming for a long time,” she told me. Writing last spring, she’d called Trump “raw, crude and uninformed” but also “smart, intuitive and a quick study”; she praised his “bumptious exuberance and slashing humor” (and took some pleasure in watching him fluster the GOP). Speaking two weeks into his administration, she sounded altogether less troubled by the president than any other self-declared feminist I’d encountered since Inauguration Day: “He is supported by half the country, hello! And also, this ethically indefensible excuse that all Trump voters are racist, sexist, misogynistic, and all that — American democracy cannot proceed like this, with this reviling half the country.”

She’s hated Meryl Streep for years too: “I have been on an anti–Meryl Streep campaign for about 30 years,” she said. When Trump called the actress “overrated” in a January tweet, “I wanted to leap into print and take that line but I couldn’t, because Trump said it.”

She loathes Hillary Clinton: “I like Hillary because she’s kind of a bitch,” Paglia said in a 1993 interview, but her assessment has since evolved. She now calls Clinton “a walking neurosis.” During the primaries, Paglia preferred Bernie Sanders — “an authentic leftist,” who brought her back to the 1960s. “That is what real leftists were like. They’re not post-structuralists with their snide, cool, elitist jargon.” In the general election, as a resident of Pennsylvania, she voted for Jill Stein.

She liked the Women’s March. “I think it’s important that women rediscover solidarity with themselves. It really wasn’t about feminism. It’s really not about Trump. It’s not about any of that. It was all of a sudden, Oh, wow, to be with all the women.”

But she hated the pink p-ssy hats: “I was horrified, horrified by the pink p-ssy hats,” she said; the pink p-ssy hats were “a major embarrassment to contemporary feminism. I want dignity and authority for women. My code is Amazonism. I want weapons.”