99% Invisible - The Power Broker #05: Brandy Zadrozny
Episode Date: May 18, 2024This is the fourth official episode, breaking down the 1974 Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Power Broker by our hero Robert Caro. This week, Roman and Elliott also sit down with Brandy Zadrozny, a s...enior reporter for NBC News who covers misinformation, conspiracy theories, and the internet. Brandy recently finished The Power Broker, and she’s got a great perspective on what the book says about the press and its relationship to power, what has changed in journalism, and what has remained the same.On today’s show, Elliott Kalan and Roman Mars will cover the last section of Part 4 of the book (Chapters 21 through Chapter 24), discussing the major story beats and themes.The Power Broker #5: Brandy ZadroznyJoin the discussion on Discord and our Subreddit
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This is the 99% Invisible Breakdown of The Power Broker.
I'm Roman Mars.
And I'm Elliot Cailin.
Today we're covering part four of the end of the section called The Use of Power.
That's chapters 21 through 24, and in my book those are pages 402 to 495.
Later on, our guest for this episode will be Brandi Zdrosny.
She's a senior reporter for NBC News who covers misinformation, conspiracy theories, and the internet. She recently finished The Power Broker and she's
got a great perspective on what the book says about the press and its relationship to power,
what has changed in journalism, and what remains the same.
So when we last left The Power Broker, the Depression is dawning, Robert Moses keeps
opening state park projects
and to great public acclaim, he's just a hero. Moses gets Governor Lehman and Mayor LaGuardia
to give him total control over anything remotely park related in New York City and passes a new
law where a state person and a city person can do all this stuff at once. He immediately refurbishes
New York City's major parks. He's unveiled this massive plan for building expressways and bridges
through and around the cities that people don't have to go through Manhattan
to get to places on either side anymore.
And the Triborough Bridge Authority has begun to actually start building
the Triborough Bridge, which will become the centerpiece
and provide all the funding for his empire as well.
But there's a little bit going on here where his pettiness is starting
to seep out to people who are his staunchest allies. So, you know, he destroys the Central Park
Casino just because it was Jimmy Walker's playground and he just, out of spite, he just
wants to level it instead of turning it into something equally good or better, you know?
And so, so that's where we are. So he's still like in that phase where he's getting a lot done.
Most people are on his side, but that is about to take a turn right now with Chapter 21,
The Candidate.
And so, Elliot, I love this opening line.
Could you read the opening line to The Candidate?
Oh, it's wonderful.
The Candidate begins, Leslie.
There had been a day in 1934 on which the cheering had stopped. It was the day Robert Moses started running for governor. It's like,
oh boy, that's not a good sign. He's used to everyone loving him and he's like,
great, I'm gonna run for public office. And it is almost as if he decides to do
everything he possibly can to undo every good thing about his reputation during
this very brief run for governor.
It's amazing.
And this pettiness that you were talking about,
it's starting to seep out.
It's almost like it starts gushing at this point.
The faucet gets stuck open
and he'll fix that leaky pettiness faucet,
but it takes him a little bit of time.
And it's just amazing.
So Carol points out that in later years,
Moses would tell people after he knew
that he had lost the governorship.
Spoiler alert, he does not become governor. I'll just tell you right now. He'll tell people later.
I did it reluctantly. I was just trying to hold the party together.
But the people around him tell Caro that he was hungry for it.
And he gets offered the nomination by our old friend Truby Davison, the wealthy young state legislature who,
years earlier, Moses had tricked him into sponsoring his state parks bill
that made him the most powerful man in New York state.
And there's a little bit here about how
Davidson was working for the old guard of the state GOP,
and those are the rich barons.
They want someone who will stand for them
against the New Deal and against Mayor LaGuardia
and that kind of stuff.
And they also, they want a governor
who's finally gonna take all these public power sources like Niagara and turn them over to private companies that just by an amazing
coincidence, many of the old guard GOP members own stock in. This is just regular government stuff.
It's fine, you know? And Carol goes a little bit into the interior fighting between in the GOP that
Moses old enemy W. Kingsland Macy was fighting with the
old guard about who was going to be the nominee. And it makes it sound like there's like eight
people who run the city and state government and they're always butting heads. And that's
kind of what it's like. Like if you, when you read about even federal politics, it's
the same names over and over again. This is a big country. It's amazing. There's so few
people. And there's one sentence here that it's not super important, but I just
want to read it because it's maybe my favorite sentence in the, in the book,
just for how, for how much I have to assume deliberate satire, uh,
Caro gets into this one sentence.
So he is relating a quote that Truby Davison as an older man, years later,
is telling him about how Kingsland Macy wanted judge Seabury to be the
nominee for governor and Seabury to be the nominee
for governor and Seabury is not even a Republican and he's a reformer anyway.
Well, that was all we had to hear.
Truby Davison would growl three decades later, sitting with one gouty leg propped on a footstool
in the 30-foot high study of his mansion on Peacock Point, topping off with cherry as
jubilee a light lunch served by a white-coated butler and staring out across the Davison
compound's half-mile- mile long terrorist croquet court.
That's just, it's one sentence just describing
his house when Carol, I assume went to talk to
him and there's so much succession just
crammed into that one sentence.
I love it so much.
It's just, it's just amazing.
And a good way of getting across, these are
the people who are backing Moses at this point.
Yeah.
And these are the people where he built his
reputation fighting these very same people, and these are the people where he built his reputation
fighting these very same people,
in fact, the exact same people.
The exact same people who he was like,
they're the power and I'm for the people.
These are the same people who are now like,
hey, why don't you be our candidate for governor?
Because they've started to realize something
about Robert Moses,
that when he was hostile to them earlier,
it wasn't because he was this like radical liberal,
but because he was a man who knew he had power because Al Smith was backing him.
And when he lost that backing, he started becoming more accommodating.
And the old guard realizes this guy also hates Roosevelt.
He also thinks the lower classes need to stay in their place and the upper
classes need to get special stuff.
But, and this is the greatest gift in the history of state politics, you would
think he is a reactionary conservative who the voting public believes is a
radical liberal.
Exactly.
He spent all these years building himself up as his liberal force, but in
reality he's not.
And they're like, this is amazing.
And Moses accepts the nomination and the press is fully taken in.
And they say, this is a surprising turn of events.
The liberal enemy of the old guard is now their candidate, huh?
It should have worked beautifully.
There's only one big problem.
I mean, there's two big problems.
It's a New Deal year.
You know, the Depression is still going on.
But the big problem is that Robert Moses is maybe the worst political campaigner in American history.
He's so bad at it.
And this is old style campaigning where the campaign is only five weeks long. So you don't have this
long buildup where you can outspend your opponent like we have now, thankfully.
Thankfully, we've gotten to the point where only rich people can run because
you need so much money to do it. I'm so glad we're away from this time when
the campaign was only five weeks and then you just made a decision. So, and he
spends all those five weeks antagonizing everybody, starting with his own supporters.
And Kara talks about how he goes to speak
to an audience of young Republicans
who are enthusiastic about him.
And it somehow turns into a shouting match
between Moses and his base,
where they're calling each other names.
And he's running against his boss, Governor Layman.
So the people he considers colleagues,
they're mostly Democrats, they're loyal to the governor,
they will not support him, but he expects their support anyway, and he gets mad when they don't do it. And Kara talks about how Henry
Moskowitz, he goes, I'm supporting Governor Layman, and Moses never talks to him again and doesn't even attend his funeral,
which is pretty big.
The press, they used to love Moses. We know that, right? The press always talking about how great Moses is.
He's in the paper more often than Albert Einstein. He's in the paper more often than J. Edgar Hoover. The press, they used to love Moses. We know that, right? The press always talking about how great Moses is.
He's in the paper more often than Albert Einstein.
He's in the paper more often than J. Edgar Hoover.
They love him.
But literally after the first question
in the first press conference he gives as a candidate,
the question is whether he is a protege of the old guard.
Moses gives them an angry speech about,
you're not doing your job right.
You need to ask the right questions.
You need to say the right things.
And it's like a Brewster's Millions type shoot the moon strategy where it's like, oh, if
I have no votes, maybe I'll instantly become governor. It's, it's just astounding. Moses,
he does everything wrong. He announces to the press, LaGuardia is going to give me his
endorsement. I'm calling a press conference, but he didn't bother to check with LaGuardia
first and LaGuardia is pissed off and he says out of the campaign, Moses, he won't
campaign for ethnic votes, which you have to do in the New York area.
One of the great things about New York city, especially is there's people from
every part of the world there and they want you to go to their street fairs and
eat their local foods.
And they, he refuses to do that.
He won't even go outside of large cities.
His entire public appearance strategy is 12 formal speeches.
And, uh, Caro quotes, uh, Paul Wendles, who was the New York city corporation
council, which is one of those.
It's a job that I don't know exactly how it fits into the New York city hierarchy,
but it's very, it's powerful and influential.
He's a lawyer who does stuff for the city.
Uh, he says to Caro, every time he opened his mouth, he lost 10,000 votes
and votes that should have been his.
He should get the Jewish vote.
I mean, layman is Jewish also, but Moses, maybe they'll split the Jewish vote. They're both
Jewish, but Moses, he says publicly, I'm not Jewish. He hasn't been, but he hasn't been
circumcised and Caro has a footnote about the rabbinical aspects of this, whether it,
whether those things are necessary to be considered Jewish or not, which is a, which is one of
the, which is, which is the most Jewish moment in the book, in this very New York book is, is that, that little footnote. But he refuses to be considered
Jewish or called Jewish. And this is at a time when New York Jews find it especially important
to reaffirm their being Jewish. This is the 1930s. This is maybe the most dangerous time for Jews in
the world in centuries. And so for Moses to be denying that they take that as a personal affront.
And so Moses is like the only one route to becoming governor, because I am so unliked
and so unlikable, I have to destroy the public image of governor Herbert H. Lehman, who at this
point is famous for both being a New Deal liberal and for his impeccable principles. He is famous
for his honesty. He's famous for how much he hews to the rules.
And Moses launches just attack after attack that are clearly false. Like, Laman is well
known as a reformer. And Moses is like, this Tammany puppet, he's stupid, he's weak. He's
bowing down to the Tammany bosses because he's afraid they're going to beat him up.
Like, literally, he's physically afraid that they're going to beat him up. Like literally he's physically afraid that they're going to beat him up. It's, it is, it's bonkers. And after the campaign, Carol's like, later on, Moses say, layman layman was a distinguished governor, a fine character.
Like Moses knows this is not true. And layman does the smart thing, which is he just ignores Moses and he campaigns everywhere and campaigns on his own record. And it's like, this is how we want politics to work to a certain extent, which is that the guy who has a good record and his putting his all into it is doing well.
And the guy who is a big liar, who is just mean, is doing poorly.
And he makes a lot of these baseless attacks.
One example that he gives, this carries one of the examples I want to highlight.
He says, he accused layman of being responsible for corruption in the court of claims,
an accusation which ignored the fact that the court was not under the governor's control
and which was not strengthened by the fact that to document the courts and confidence,
Moses accused of drunkenness a judge who actually had been dead for more than a year.
So like Moses just throwing out wild things. He accuses layman of being in bed with the
utility companies, which is exactly what Moses is doing at this point. And finally, Moses goes a step too far and he calls
layman a liar, which shocks people.
Yeah.
It's hard to overstate how strong Carol makes the
reaction to this charge or describes it where
that's when he starts losing support.
Other Republicans say he's unfit for office and
that there's a radio station service that says we
will not run Moses speeches unless the party
takes out libel insurance that covers every time he speaks.
And it all, I hate to look at the past
with rose-colored glasses because there was a lot
of bad stuff going on and the political system
was far from fully equitable or good or non-corrupt,
but this whole section, it's just so hard to read it now
and not be like, well, things have really changed, huh?
Yeah.
And what's interesting here to me is that
even though Moses was a sort of lifelong Republican,
except for the time when he changed his party affiliation.
Briefly when he thought it would help him become governor.
Exactly.
Than the earlier time.
When Al Smith was running for president.
You know, it's interesting
because he has surrounded himself
with Democrats.
He's always worked with Democrats up to this point.
In fact, his mentor and big brother in all this
is Al Smith.
It's only recently in LaGuardia that he has worked
with a Republican pretty much at all.
And everyone turns their back on him. I mean, they don't try to be mean about it,
but they're just like, listen, I, you know,
I'm a Democrat.
Yeah.
Even when he goes to Al Smith, he goes to Al Smith,
he will ask for support and Al Smith says,
I play this game like a regular.
Yeah.
And Moses is stung by it.
And, and Carol describes how someone tells him
about Moses recalling this 30 years later,
and it's still clearly hurting him.
But you're right.
He's surrounded by,
he's always called himself an independent Republican,
but he has been a fixture in democratic administrations
and working with democratic officials.
And it is foolish of him,
this guy who understands the political mechanism so well,
to expect that they like him so much personally,
that they will turn their back on this party
and also to be honest, in this case, principles
that they've stood by for all this time.
Yeah.
And I wonder if this, I hadn't thought about this
until just now, Roman, you've led me to this realization
that one of the themes throughout the first parts
of the book is Robert Moses finding sources of power
that other people had discounted earlier and not noticed because they were outside of Moses finding sources of power that other people had discounted earlier
and not noticed because they were outside of the official source of power. And I wonder if here is
one of those cases where he makes that gamble. He says the Democratic party is more powerful
in this region than the Republican party. I'm going to be able to go in there and turn that
into my source of power then. And that gamble doesn't pay off this time. He's not able to do it. Yeah. I don't know.
I also think that he, like you said,
that is his superpower is like turning sort of ignored
and positions that are not thought of as very powerful
into powerful positions.
Whereas running for governor is like good old fashioned
normal stuff.
Like he's not gonna reinvent anything here.
He's not going to find some law that he can write
to make this better for him or easier for him.
He has to do all the things.
This stuff has been worked out, you know?
He's not gonna get around it.
And his unwillingness to play ball
in the way that everyone else does
to create a successful campaign is just, you know,
he's just naive.
Like he's never walked a path that other people
have walked ahead of him.
He's only sort of forged his own way
through all these like new ways of looking
at the government and the world and municipal structures.
And this tried and true way, he's just bad at it.
There's something about, and maybe it's one of the,
one of the, maybe it's from the beautiful things
about electoral politics is that it can really humble
people who are used to not being humble
because suddenly they need the people who
they don't care about to give them their approval.
They need the approval of the people that previously
they saw as beneath them.
And I mean, that's, it goes back to the, in some ways, to the original founding of the
country where it was like, you know, this king's used to telling us what to do.
Well, what if we chose the king and he had to pay attention to us once every four years?
You know, it's a real guardrail of docracy that Moses is coming up against.
Moses to his credit, he does not hold a grudge
against Al Smith.
This is before Moses opens the Central Park Zoo,
which is basically his love present to Al Smith.
So that's the one relationship that he'll never let go of.
It's pretty interesting that this is happening simultaneously
to that chapter that we read earlier about that ceremony
and giving him the key and all that sort of stuff
that meant so much to Al Smith.
It does, however, make me think that him missing that ceremony and giving him the key and all that sort of stuff that meant so much to Al Smith. It does, however, make me think
that him missing that ceremony,
there might be something a little bit more to that,
because he wasn't there for that.
And he says it's because he's sick.
Yeah, maybe it was, maybe he couldn't handle it,
or maybe he just wasn't ready, or it's possible.
I do wonder that.
But as you said, these guardrails of democracy, well, like,
so, like, Robert Moses just goes head first into a guardrail of democracy, and he just, he ends up
with the smallest percentage of the vote of any major party candidate in the history of New York
State up until that point. Up until that point. Since then, some enterprising candidates have
beaten that record and gotten less,
but yeah, Moses, he ends up with 35% of the vote,
which in a two-party competition is pretty abysmal.
And the GOP, they lose both houses of the legislature
for the first time in 21 years.
He even loses in the,
usually the solidly Republican upstate districts,
those go for layman. And Moses of course takes no responsibility.
He's like, it was 1934.
The new deal candidate was always going to win.
I couldn't do it.
But the political insiders are like, yeah, but election could have been closer.
And it's interesting that either Moses doesn't care or forgets or doesn't
think about it, that when you have an election year, the person at the head of
the ticket, part of their job is to draw support
for the people lower down on the ticket.
So even if he had run better, even if he had lost,
perhaps his party would have kept control
of part of the legislature
or just wouldn't have lost so many seats.
But Moses also, I'm sure doesn't care.
Like he doesn't care about how the rest of the party is.
I mean, he doesn't care about the party.
It's not like from this point on,
he's really involved in GOP politics. Like, as soon as he loses, he drops them, you know?
Yeah, and this is a moment where, you know,
Lehman, to his credit, you know, like,
it would be, I think, politically reasonable
to get rid of Moses at this moment,
because, you know, he just was, you know,
in a competition for the same job
and called him a liar and all these nasty things.
Offended most of the state.
Just made most of the state not like him.
But to his credit, Leeman doesn't do it.
He keeps him on.
Yeah, he says, this guy's great at his job,
he's doing work nobody else can do,
just because he called me a liar
doesn't mean I should fire him
It is one of those moments where someone does the principled thing and does ostensibly the right thing
But in the long run you're like, oh man, you know
Like this would have missed opportunity
I know this would have been the moment the silver lining is that if he had fired Moses then there's no way Robert
Carow ever would have written this a wonderful book that we're enjoying so much
because the story of the man who was briefly the most powerful person
in New York as Parks Commissioner is not as, let's say, not as much of a book as the guy
who did it for years and years.
And Carroll goes into, he does a little bit of analysis here where he's saying, why did
Moses do such a bad job with this?
Like this guy who is usually so good at using the press,
who is so good at presenting himself
and at positioning himself on the right side of issues.
And what Caro says is his theory is that part of it
is because Moses was kind of lucky
to always have a popular issue before now.
He was tied to park building.
People didn't have to like him as a person.
They just had to like the fact that he was for parks.
But in a political campaign, he can't say,
I'm the parks guy, parks, I mean, he could have. If he was a better campaigner, he could
have said, I'm the Parks guy. But his actual character had to come out and people did not
like it. And Caro says, why couldn't he charm the voters the way he charmed the powerful
people who support he needed, the people in the GOP party or as we'll see later in newspapers.
And Caro theorizes that most, this is where he gets a little psychoanalytical in a way
that I'm not, I'm not sure I fully buy into,
but he says that Moses is so arrogant and so entitled
that he literally is incapable of pretending
to care about what other people think
and that he actually derives pleasure
from being able to express the contempt
that he holds other people in.
And so he needs to display his superiority
and he needs to destroy anyone who opposes him.
And that's Caro's like, I can't think of another reason why Moses went antagonize the press.
He was so good at manipulating, but now he felt like he needed to show he was better and smarter
and he can't just defeat his enemies. He has to destroy them. And what do you think? I'm not sure
if it's that or if it's that just Moses is just really good at fawning over people who he feels
he needs something from. And as much as he knows he needs the voters, he thinks of them as a mass.
And he thinks of individual voters as nobodies.
And he doesn't feel the need to fawn over them because individually they're powerless.
That's my theory.
What do you think?
I mean, I think it could be both of those things.
I think that he—
Got to pick one.
Got to pick one, Roman.
All right.
I'll let you forge the middle path.
That's fine.
Yeah. Okay, all right, I'll let you forge the middle path. That's fine, yeah. Well, I think it's also just that, you know,
Robert Moses is really great at creating the conditions
where he is doing everything for the first time,
all of his whip sawing and his sort of lying
and then, you know, steak driving and all this stuff.
It just is about, he is the best because there's no one,
there's no precedent for him, you know,
like, and this just is not an unprecedented job
to be a politician in this way.
And he is finding that he cannot, like,
bend his character to do any of these things.
Like, it just is anathema to his existence.
And he's never had to because he's always done things his own way.
And this is just like, I just think he's incapable of it.
And when you're in the confidence of someone and they say something mean, you feel very
warm to them sometimes because you're like, oh, they're being mean to that person and
they like me, you know, like, I think he You know, like, I think he plays on that in a small room
or with just a group of people,
small group of people that he shares, you know,
kinship with, but the bigger and bigger that room is,
then you're just like shouting at people
and it is not fun at all, you know,
to watch someone just be mean to someone
in a large room.
And I think that he, I think he just sort of traffics
in a kind of gossip and chumminess and you know,
like, and being nice to you and mean to you
in like unpredictable ways so that his sort of abuses
and control over you is strengthened by that.
And you just can't do that in a broad scale to people,
like to a mass of people.
I guess it goes to show too that like,
there's certain types of people whose personalities
react to other personalities.
And Moses, for some reason in public and on a large scale
had the kind of personality that nobody reacted well to,
that it just didn't mesh with anybody.
Not at all.
Like except for when he could put up a ceremony,
like somewhat, but that's it.
Like, he kind of knew the details of how to make people have a good time when he was opening
something or doing something grand. But when he spoke, it was, you know, pretty uninspiring.
You know, like, it's really fascinating. That's not what his strength was. And so at this point,
you know, he's kind of at his lowest
that we've seen him since, you know, his initial ascendancy.
This is the lowest he's been since he was a 30 year old guy
who could not get a job in government.
He is now, he has, I mean, he has two amazing jobs,
but he actually has like 11 amazing jobs,
but he is, but people don't like him.
The shine is off the star, the bloom is off the rose,
you know, the halo's hanging by a thread. I don't know how many different messed up metaphors. Unfortunately
for us, unfortunately for him, a strange savior is about to enter the scene as we roll into
chapter 22 as Moses' oldest foe is about to become his inadvertent support beam. I couldn't come up with the right metaphor for that either.
We'll do that one with chapter 22, order number one 29 after this break.
This next chapter is chapter 22.
It's called order Number 129.
And this is when Robert Moses is at his lowest.
His old foe, Franklin Roosevelt, who's now the President of the United States, he decides
that he's going to take his revenge on him.
And this is such a misfire.
It's so colossal of a mistake. It's a Moses running for governor level of
misfire from the president of the United States. And it has the exact opposite effect of what
the president is hoping. Technically, this revenge happens, it starts before the gubernatorial
campaign. In February of 1934, we have this scene where Kara scribes where LaGuardia is
crying to Paul Wendell's New York City Corporation counsel. Again, don't know what the job is, but he's around a lot in this book.
He realizes that the guy he picked as his federal money guy, the city's interface between its needs
and the federal government's largesse is Robert Moses, the one guy the president hates most in
the world and other than Hitler, I guess. And so there's a quote that I love here. I'm gonna try it.
I wanna do it in an accent, but I know I can't do justice,
where Wendell says to Taro,
I got in the car and no sooner did I sit down
than he cut loose.
Jesus Christ, of all the people in the city of New York,
I had to pick the one man who Roosevelt won't stand for.
And he won't give me any more money
unless I get rid of him.
Jesus Christ, I had to pick the one that he hated.
Jesus Christ.
He was shaking his fist in the air and shouting,
Jesus Christ, Jesus Christ. Seven million people in the city and I had to pick the one that he hated. Jesus Christ. He was shaking his fist in the air and shouting Jesus Christ Jesus Christ seven million people in the city and I had to pick the one Roosevelt can't stand and I just I love that
it's so amazing my favorite movie of all time is the taking of Palom 1 2 3 and
LaGuardia sounds like the mayor in that movie at that moment. It's just like oh
What it like just over overcome with with his with his troubles?
And so this is the case interior Interior Secretary Harold Ickes has made
it clear to LaGuardia that until Moses is fired from the Triborough Authority Board, the Public
Works Administration, which Harold Ickes oversees in the Interior Secretariat ship, in the Department
of the Interior, it will give no money to New York City. No money until Moses is fired. And LaGuardia
is like, I can't legally fire Moses from Triborough. I can't legally do it. But maybe I can get him to resign by threatening to fire him as the parks commissioner, which
I can do.
And Moses, of course, he knows there's only one tool that gets what you want, which is
a bigger resignation threat.
So he goes, yeah, I'll resign from Triborough.
I'll also resign from the park jobs.
And then I'll tell everyone publicly that you made me resign because the federal government
told you to. And Wendell tells LaGuardia, if that happens, everyone will
see you as weak. If publicly you're seen as bowing to federal pressure and LaGuardia
tries to stall and Roosevelt's losing his patience. And as soon as the governor's race
is over, Roosevelt is like, nobody likes this guy anymore. Let's do it. And they turn off
the PWA money faucet until the day when Moses
is cut loose. And Caro, it's worth looking up on page 429, Caro goes through this ridiculously
melodramatic description of the whole thing as a stage play and which parts everyone's
playing and it is this metaphor that goes way too far, but it's so, I love it. It goes
beautifully too far. So it's too long to read here, but go open up your hymnals to page
429
and take a look at it. And the Guardia is in a bind. He needs this money to improve the city.
He has big plans for the city. He wants to do the things that Moses is trying to get done,
but he can't be seen as giving into Roosevelt. And then on December 26th, 1934, a date which
will live on in bureaucracy, Ichius issues PWA administrative order number 129, the very order
that gives this chapter its title, drafted in Par drafted in Parker Roosevelt stating the PWA will give no money to an independent
entity that has a project entirely in one city. If the governing board of that entity
has anyone on it who also holds public office in that city. And it's so specifically worded.
It's so clearly describing most of the situation, but it happens to affect another guy too,
Tenement House Commissioner Langdon W. Post.
And Nicky's is like,
confidentially don't worry about him.
It doesn't matter.
We don't care about him.
And Post is on a,
he's actually on a cruise at that moment.
So he doesn't even know any of this is happening.
They should have written in that, you know,
like in addition to give no money to an independent entity
that has a project entirely in one city,
if that governing board has an entity as anyone who hold
public office in that city and your name rhymes with Paubert Poses, you know?
LaGuardia's like, my hands are tied.
Sorry.
You and Sharbert shows this have to leave the government.
I apologize.
And LaGuardia does a foolish thing here, which is in order to show Moses he has to give
and he shows the order to Moses.
And Moses like, huh, interesting, interesting.
Press, can I leak something to you?
And he goes, I'm revealing this purely
because the public deserves transparency.
And the press are unaware that Roosevelt
and Moses have hated each other for years.
This feud is common knowledge among the political types,
but it's not public knowledge. And so the press portrays it as the president
is trying to force a public servant out of his job,
purely because while he was running for governor,
he criticized the New Deal.
This is political partisan payback of the worst type.
And suddenly, Ickes is being asked about
whether Roosevelt knew about the order,
and LaGuardia is on a train to DC
and doesn't know that Moses leaked it.
And as soon as he gets off the train, he's mobbed by reporters.
And I really love, there's something about how old world this all is where if you are
traveling, you do not know what is happening outside of the container that you are in.
So if you're on a cruise ship, you don't know. If you're on a train, you don't know. Whereas
now, you know, the scene would be like his aides, Blackberry suddenly buzzes, not Blackberry,
his cell phone, they don't use Blackberry anymore, but his cell phone suddenly buzzes and he go,
uh, sir, we'll have to take a look at this.
And then by the time they are getting off the train,
he's got a statement prepared.
Instead, he is just totally taken by surprise.
He has no idea what's been happening
because he's on a train.
I love that.
And I like the image of a flustered LaGuardia
is like an image I kind of love conjuring in my mind,
because you can totally imagine,
it's just his sweaty face, you know, just like.
He already looks like he just rolled out of bed.
So even more now, he's like,
I have to imagine him as a guy who runs his fingers
through his hair a lot when he's like stressed out
and thinking and makes it all poof out and,
yeah, I love it.
And he's just like, what the fuck
has this guy done to me now?
Yeah.
Oh, Jesus Christ, Jesus Christ.
You know, like, you have to imagine every press report,
because back then they would kind of clean up a politician's answers to make them look better.
That every press report, they're just blacking out the words Jesus Christ in the transcript, you know.
But editorials are written about this. They're attacking LaGuardia. They're attacking Ickes.
Suddenly, dozens of business and civic organizations are issuing resolutions in support of Moses.
He's a hero again.
Suddenly he's a hero.
And there's this long list of different organizations,
different local civic and business groups
that are going out of their way to issue public resolutions
in support of Moses.
And everyone's trying to stonewall,
LaGuardia's like, this problem doesn't exist,
but Moses keeps the fight in the press.
Every week he's announcing how little money they have left on hand to complete building
the Triborough Bridge because the federal government's not giving them any. And Roosevelt
finally admits to reporters that he was aware of Order 129 and then 147 different civic
organizations then meet and they basically make a show of re-accepting Moses as a member
of the civic reform community
because they want to support the principle of independent local government. This principle of
balance of powers and local control of things that is so fundamental to the founding blah blah blah
and etc etc and Moses is now the symbol of that and by 1935 it's a national issue and people are
like the New Deal funds are being used for political purposes this is not okay and Republicans want And the process is now the symbol of that. And by 1935, it's a national issue, and people are like,
the New Deal funds are being used for political purposes.
This is not okay.
And Republicans want to investigate it.
LaGuardia finally comes with a solution.
It's, you know, months later,
as after he has been going,
oh, Jesus Christ, you know, to anybody who'll listen.
He sends a letter to the government saying,
I will abide by the order,
but it would cause so much trouble
to apply it retroactively
because I cannot lose Langdon Post from the tenement housing position. I can't do it. He's just too important. You know, this guy who was on vacation when all this was going down. He's just, I'm sorry, it's too much to ask.
Oh, and PS, this would also apply to Robert Moses in addition, but Langdon Post is really why I'm doing this. And
Al Smith, who's been kind of biding his time waiting for the right moment to step in, this is when he does step in. He says, now's the time to put my finger
on the scale. And he gives a speech talking about how necessary it is that Moses stay
at the Triborough authority so his big Rhodes plan can go through. And that's presented
by Caro as the final kind of feather on the scale. That's the straw that breaks the camel's
back. I'm trying to get more metaphors into this. And so Roosevelt, he has Ickes write
a letter to LaGuardia accepting this non-retroactive reading, but they predate the letter to one day
before Smith's speech so that it won't look like it was because of the speech that they did it.
And the press immediately sees through it and they're like, Moses beats Ickes. They did it.
And Ickes, who at this point has just been doing what the president has been telling him to do.
He doesn't have a personal stake in this. He's very hurt by it, but he still kind of gives props
to Moses for handling the fight in such a powerful way.
And the most important thing of all is with this action,
Moses now has his halo back.
Now he is no longer the mean guy who calls people a liar,
running to support the old guard.
He is again, the defender of the people
that the bigger guy is trying to crush. And this is the halo that stays on him halo that stays on him pretty much the rest of the time. Yeah, it's pretty amazing
like this is this is this is a real like
If you come at the king you best not miss it's kind of a scenario and they really missed and it really
Resurrected him in every way possible
It's like the bullet missed the king, bounced off the wall, hit a bottle of super medicine
that then tipped into the king's mouth
and made him stronger.
Like that's how badly they missed, yeah.
And so much so that they eventually share a stage,
you know, when the opening of the Trier Bridge happens.
And this is one of my favorite things is like,
Moses can't accept that he just won this like completely.
Like this is like, he won this so thoroughly.
It's almost embarrassing.
It's embarrassing to Roosevelt.
But the pettiness continues
because when the Triborough Bridge opens,
the ceremony happens.
And you know, he's smart enough to know
that he has to invite Roosevelt.
Cause otherwise, I mean, this is a big federal project.
But he only allows him,
cause he puts together the ceremony,
he only allows Roosevelt five minutes to speak.
Like the president of the United States of America.
Exactly.
And this is happening in 1936.
So the president is also running for reelection that year.
Like this is a bit like,
the president's gonna wanna talk for more than five minutes.
Yeah, yeah.
And so LaGuardia tells him,
he's gotta talk more than five minutes. And Moses yeah. And so LaGuardia tells him, he's gotta talk more than five minutes.
And Moses says, okay, he can talk for six minutes.
It's so ridiculously petty.
And I was looking over this again,
I was thinking back to our talk with AOC last episode,
go back and let's do it if you didn't hear it,
where she was talking about how like, this happens.
This is how decisions get made often is,
I don't like that guy, I'm not gonna do this.
Or, ugh, I just cannot, I have to poke this guy. And so he goes, all right, I'll give him one more
minute to talk. And also Ickes is invited as a general spectator and he is really mad that he
isn't going to get to speak. And finally he does. And Roosevelt and Ickes, they give their speeches
that do not mention Moses and Moses in his speech does not mention the president, but he indulges
and this is classic Moses.
I think it's the perfect way to end this chapter and the duo of the candidate chapter in this
one, because it's Moses falling back in his bad habits again.
As far as his speech, he has this incredibly oblique insult towards Roosevelt, this veiled
insult that is based around knowing an anecdote from the life of Samuel Johnson.
And it flies completely into the radar because nobody knows what he's talking about.
And Carol has to take time to explain
what this insult is and what it means.
It's like Moses cannot help being like,
I know I won, I'm going to try to be gracious in public,
but secretly I'm going to insult him in this way
that nobody but me will understand.
Like it's almost if he's like every,
the first letter of every sentence of my speech,
if you add it up, it says Roosevelt sucks
or something like that.
Like no one will know, but me. And it's, it's just so incredible. There's such
children, there's such petty children and they're,
they have the lives of millions in their hands. So, I mean,
I love it looking back on it, reading a book, but I have to admit,
but knowing that this is still how the world operates. I'm like, Oh, it's so,
it's so frustrating.
It is a little painful,
although I'm always having this sort of pang
of wanting to see the downfall of Robert Moses
before it actually happens, you know what I mean?
So like when you get these petty squabbles,
I'm mainly on FDR side in these things.
Sure, yeah, at this point.
And it just is just, oh, it's just rough.
It's just rough to witness it.
It's the same thing.
I mean, it's not as bad as this.
The worst version of this for me is,
I read a lot about Abraham Lincoln.
I read a lot of Abraham Lincoln books
because I think he's the greatest person who ever lived.
We don't have to talk about that.
This is a Robert Moses podcast.
But every time I'm reading a biography of him
and it's getting closer and closer to him
going to Ford's Theater, I'm always like, don't go.
Yeah, I know. Don't do it.
And then his bodyguard leaves to get a drink
in the middle of the show.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
And it's, you know it's gonna happen.
I mean, it's what happens in it
when you watch a movie over again too,
you know it's gonna happen,
but you're hoping it doesn't happen.
And, but that's part of the thrill of history, I guess,
is knowing that it could have gone differently,
but it's too late now.
It's not gonna go differently ever again.
But because of these petty magnations of FDR,
Moses is sort of back on top and doing what
he's doing. He is back in the saddle, which is the title of chapter 23, in the saddle.
And it starts with this description of LaGuardia being just hilariously omnipresent in New York
City. You're just everywhere that something is happening. LaGuardia is there just having fun, showing off,
trying to make everyone love him.
It's hilarious.
Carol makes it sound like there are 17 LaGuardia
is running around the city at any given point.
It's like he's over there.
He's personally inspecting the treatment of people
in public housing.
There he is over there.
He's at the Bronx terminal market.
There's been stories of artichoke racketeering.
So he's personally banning artichokes from the Bronx terminal market. Uh-oh,
firefighters are trapped under a collapsed wall. He's going to go whisper encouragement to them
while they're being saved. He's everywhere. And the same time he's slashing non-essential
jobs in city budget. He's pushing back on local corruption. He's bullying the city into submission,
but he's also bullying his staff. He loves to yell at his staff. He loves to fire his staff.
This is not entirely all positive, but yeah, he's just, it just presents him as I
have to imagine him zooming around like cartoon character, just puffs of smoke
appearing where he used to be as he like runs off and the person who can always
stand up to him is Moses and they fight.
They shout Moses is deliberately rude to him.
He calls him by Italian slurs, both behind his back and in front of his back.
He's always threatening to resign to the point where I love this so much.
This is makes me love LaGuardia is he has a pad printed up with forms on it
that say I, Robert Moses do hereby resign as blank, effective blank.
And the next time Moses resigns, he hands him the pad and Moses
gets really mad about it.
And it totally wins.
Like he, he blunts that as a thing. And, and, and Robert Moses really mad about it. And it totally wins.
Like he blunts that as a thing
and Robert Moses doesn't do it to him anymore.
They have figured out this way of like complimentary abuse
that somehow fosters this kind of mutual respect
that just kind of works for them.
It's amazing, but it just, it does.
Yeah, but it means they're constantly
butting heads against each other.
Even though in the grand scheme of things, they agree on the major goals, means they're constantly butting heads against each other, even though in the grand scheme
of things, they agree on the major goals, but
they're always butting heads.
And there are a couple of fights that Kara goes
into, my favorite of them, but I find it very sad
is in 1936, Moses, he wants the land that's currently
being held by the terminal for a ferry that goes
between Astoria and Manhattan.
And you're like, Oh, I'd like to go take that
ferry.
You can't, it's not there anymore.
Don't, don't even try.
I'll tell you why it's not there.
The guard is like, you should wait.
The commuters are not ready to lose it.
It's a five cent ferry trip,
which is more pleasant and cheaper
than riding on what's gonna be a 50 cent toll road.
And Caro, he paints it as the kind of
like endearing antiquated piece of old New York,
this old rusty old ferry that modern New York
is doing its best to just throw away as fast as
possible. And Moses is impatient. So literally as soon as the ferry leaves the dock one day,
he just sends his workers in and they start smashing up the dock and smashing up the ferry
terminal building and even tearing up the road leading to the ferry terminal building.
And LaGuardia has to send the police to arrest the parks workers who are doing this. And then a
week later, Moses, he just gets the land and he tears
down the fairy house completely.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
I mean, like he calls the police on his own parks guy and, and it's just sort of
like, it's like they're playing a game of chess and there's all these people, you
know, caught in the middle of it where, policeman has to arrest a worker who's just being told,
don't stop for anybody because this jerk Robert Moses tells him not to stop for anybody and the
cops come and it's just a nightmare. And then they have to like, there's like a boat out
that has nowhere to go because- Yeah, it has to find another place to dock
because he tore the dock up. He just doesn't care.
There's people on that boat.
They can't live on it.
It's crazy how much he doesn't think about individuals.
And it's just sort of stunning.
I'm sort of like, this is like real villainy.
Yeah, well, he knows that his goals,
and this will become clear more and more
in this section of the book as we're talking,
this overall episode, that his goals he believes are the best and only useful goals.
And so anything that has to be done to get those goals as quickly and as effectively
as possible, he'll do it.
There's in 1937, so the next year, LaGuardia's got to call the police out on him again because
LaGuardia's like, we've got to move 2,000 of the laborers the federal workers were working for you
We got to reassign them from your projects to other projects and he goes, okay
We'll reassign the playground supervisors and he fires 2,000 playground supervisors and he locks shut over 140 playgrounds and removes
the playground equipment so they can't be reopened and
Moms with kids start protesting because they went to their playground
They found that the police have chained it shut and there's no equipment.
And he's got to call out the police again to try to get him to stop closing these playgrounds.
And every time this happens, Moses is able to spin it so that they blame the city or
they blame LaGuardia rather than Moses.
And Caro starts to theorize that Moses got away with this partly because LaGuardia respected
people who would stand up to him and fight him and partly because they both wanted the same thing ultimately.
LaGuardia wants New York to be a beautiful city.
He wants it to be a new functioning gleaming city and he loves engineering.
He's hugely in awe of large scale construction.
He's like a child.
He likes to wear a construction hat or a hard hat and go to a construction site and go,
wow, look at those big machines.
Wow, look at that.
And at one point LaGuardia calls Moses the greatest engineer in the world. And Moses even is not technically an engineer.
He doesn't have an engineering degree.
He doesn't know how to draw up plans, but he has the staff that can draw up plans.
And he's the only person who has it.
So the third part of it, I don't remember how many, I haven't counted the final
leg in this school of how many, however many legs is that they need this federal money to do it.
And most, the only guy who can get that federal money because he can create the plans.
He has the people who can create the plans to get it.
Yeah. He has shovel-ready projects that allow them to pass through the PWA system,
and he can keep getting money and money and money. He's just like always ready, always on the ball.
He also like when it comes to these types of arguments
and the rough tactics which they use against each other,
Moses sort of lacks compunction.
Like I think they fight over these things
and LaGuardia wants a lot of the same things Moses wants.
But the reason why Moses wins in each of these moments
is because he does not care about these people,
and LaGuardia actually does.
And it's just infuriating to watch.
I mean, it just makes me so mad to read about it.
It's a little bit like the story of Solomon
and the two mothers and the baby.
If Solomon had said,
we're gonna have to cut this baby in half,
and the one mother said, okay, go ahead, do it.
And Solomon said, I had my guts.
Yeah, you take the baby.
You stood up and you wouldn't compromise.
You take this baby.
Like it feels unjust.
It feels like things go the wrong way.
And when Moses just bullies his way into getting stuff done.
But that happens in in politics still that
there's a certain respect for the ability to not care
in that you're unstoppable.
You won't let anyone stand in your way.
And it's the person who cares too much
who is more easily held hostage
because if things go bad, they'll be upset.
But the other side of things go bad, they don't care.
It doesn't matter to them.
They don't care at all.
And I think the other part that keeps Moses sort of buttressed in these fights is he has
such a tight relationship with the press.
So like none of this would leak out.
Like him not caring, him being the person that moved the park workers and fired them
so that the parks would be shut down, you know, none of that leaks out because he just has cultivated this relationship with
the press that is almost, there's just no light between them.
He's very good at wooing the press.
He takes publishers and editors and reporters.
At this point, there's 13 daily newspapers in New York City, which is astonishing to
me.
It's just incredible.
And he takes the publishers and the editors and reporters on banquets. He'll take them on yacht trips.
He'll throw parties for them at Jones Beach. And there's a chapter much later in the book where it kind of gives you a
firsthand look at the luxury lifestyle that lavishes in the RM chapter. I'm so looking forward to that one. It's amazing.
But he's also personal friends with some of the most powerful newspaper owners in the city.
He's friends with Ogden Mills-Reed of the Herald Tribune.
You may remember Ogden Mills-Reed as the guy that Moses was gonna con money out of when he was a Yale student.
That's right.
Reid never found out about that, so he's still his friend.
But most importantly, he's friends with the Sulzberger's, the owners of the New York Times.
At the time, as is now, it's the most influential paper in the country.
And two-thirds of the Times stock is owned by Ithagene Ox-Sulzberger, such an amazing name.
And she loves public parks.
She loves parks.
And she worships Moses too, as the guy who can make parks.
And she doesn't always agree with him.
She's the one that Carol quotes as saying that engineers
are straight line crazy,
which becomes the name of the David Hare play
about Robert Moses.
So she wants parks that are grass.
She doesn't want concrete facilities. And she thinks Moses is doing the wrong way. But even if he's doing the wrong way,
he's still building parks. A concrete park is better than no park. And so that's what she cares
about. And there's a part where she disagrees with Moses and he sends her an insulting letter.
And the New York Times prints her apology, her public apology for disagreeing with him.
And the reporters at the Times, they're never told by her,
you have to support Robert Moses,
but they know how to keep the boss happy.
Like when you work for someone,
you know how to keep them happy, you know what they want,
and you know what things they're gonna like.
And so when Moses says something,
the Times, but also the other papers,
but especially the Times, takes it as truth.
He's the guy who's telling the truth,
and his side is the one that deserves reporting.
So LaGuardia can't fire him.
The most powerful newspaper at a time when newspapers
were so much more powerful than they are now,
it's the way most people still got their information
about the world around them.
It'll give him hell if he fires Moses.
And so at this point, at a certain point,
LaGuardia is like not even bringing up complaints to Moses
and he learns that he's got to argue with Moses in private,
but then let Moses have his way
and then pretend in public that there was no disagreement
between the two of them because Moses is just untouchable
because of this relationship to the press.
And he's also untouchable because he holds this sort of
like role getting money from the federal government.
He holds this role in the city and he also has this role
in the state government.
And this is the reason why there was a law
that made that illegal because it is a very easy way
to make someone more powerful than the mayor.
Yes, which is exactly what happens
because Moses has access to the federal money.
He's not using city money to build his projects usually.
So he doesn't need the city's approval.
And it doesn't matter what the voters
of the city necessarily think
because he's not listening to them.
And if the mayor says, hey, you shouldn't do that.
The people in the city aren't gonna like it.
He can say to the people in the state government,
make some trouble for LaGuardia.
I don't want things to go easy for him
while he's making it difficult for me.
Or he can approve his own projects
when it needs state approval.
And it's as if my children had outside money coming in and also then had a relationship
with my parents where I'd be like, it's time to go to bed.
You got to go to bed right now.
And they're like, huh, interesting.
Well, why don't I call up grandpa and have him get mad at you?
Why don't I have grandpa yell at you over the phone?
And I'm like, well, then you're not going to get your allowance. And they're like, that's cool, because the
federal government is giving me a billion dollars. So I don't need this allowance money. I think
I'm going to stay up until midnight tonight. But you have school tomorrow. Do I? Do I have
to call grandpa again? Like that's, that's the situation. And so yeah, ostensibly, the guy who
works for the mayor is more powerful than the mayor and, and is running things. And so, yeah, ostensibly, the guy who works for the mayor is more powerful than the mayor and is running things. And so, Carol makes the point, and he goes into a lot of detail about it,
but we can kind of like skim, is that more money is being spent in the city than ever before
to rebuild the city, but it's not the city's money. And so, Moses has so much say in rebuilding the
city, more say than the mayor does, more say than the voters does, all because he's constructed this power organization that is beholden to no one, no one elected figure who is supposed
to have oversight over him.
Yeah, yeah.
And this actually just gets worse because pretty soon he's going to get all that toll
money too to do the same thing.
But right now, he is just balancing all these different forces that he has his tentacles in,
and he can just lean on one,
get money from another, circumvent another,
and he just is this amazing operator,
just taking advantage of the gaps
between these different organizations
and how they cannot work together.
Exactly, and the things that he saw as impossible
to do before, like trading political favors to get support,
he's now totally fine with doing.
And whereas before he used to be the no pay,
he'd tell people, go to hell if you want patronage.
Now he's like, does your kid need a summer job
as a lifeguard?
Well, give me your vote.
He's got that job.
He's very happy to do that. And at this point, Moses, as we mentioned before, he has more in common
with the Republicans in the state legislature than LaGuardia, who is ostensibly the Republican
mayor. LaGuardia is the original rhino. He's basically a New Deal liberal who just happens
to be Republican. And he just has so much power. And the ultimate point of this that
Caro is trying to make throughout the book is
that in theory,
the purpose of a democracy is so that the people have ultimate control and
ultimate say over how they are governed and how their municipalities exist,
what's built and what's not built and things like that.
And Moses has hacked the system in a way that takes him completely out of that
accountability control.
And is that the way that a city government or a state government or a federal government should be operating? No, sir. No, sir. Not at all. And yet.
That's the way it is. The cracks are there. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. This is really it. He has just,
his knowledge of all these different systems, it just allows him to exploit and, you know,
wheedle his way through and strong arm in some places,
acquiesce in others when it's appropriate.
He just is thinking around these people
in ways that is just like the system wasn't built
to stop a Moses.
He just has this ability to work around it. And he really does
it because of the halo effect of the parks and then the halo effect of the integrity
of local governance, I guess.
And that's one of the things that's so ironic about it is it's like, we've got to support
Moses because supporting Moses means supporting the independence of the New York City government. And then it it's like if there's one guy who is doing an end run around the New York City government
It is Robert Moses. Yeah, it is. He is such a so many times. I feel like throughout the book in the public's eye
he's the champion of the exact thing that he is not doing or the exact danger that he has and
Just astounding. He's like it's like they put a card counter in charge of the casino and he's like,
yeah, yeah, I'm just making sure nobody's counting
cards around here while he's just keeping track
of everything.
And it's astonishing.
And he's gonna make greater and greater use of that
as we go into the next chapter.
Yes, the next chapter is driving.
We'll get to that after this break.
So we're up to chapter 24. It's called driving.
Uh, it's another chapter called driving.
Um, so one of the things that I'm always impressed
by about this book is the structure of it.
It's a long book and it's structured in a way that is not
straightforward chronology,
which can be confusing sometimes, but is
often thematically illuminating and Karo is
returning to themes and finding new layers to
them or new meanings to the same words.
And it just, it's a book that exists on a
literary level, in addition to existing on a
historical non-fiction level.
And so this is one of the driving chapters.
Changing is a chapter title he likes to use.
Driving's a chapter title he likes to use. For some reason, the curator of Cauliflower's, this is a of the driving chapters. Changing is a chapter title he likes to use. Driving's a chapter title he likes to use.
For some reason, the curator of Cauliflower's,
this is a one-time title chapter.
I want to use that one twice for sure.
Yeah.
The last line of the book should have been,
truly, the curator had now been Cauliflowered.
Or like, the Cauliflower's are curating him.
He's a really drive-it-home, but missed opportunity.
You know, it's a big book.
You can't hit them all.
But this is, you'd think most on top of the world, right?
But no, he's still got to rush.
He's always got to rush
because the position he's put himself in is that
if he's dependent on one thing at the moment,
before, as you're saying, the Triborough bridges up
really bringing in a lot of money,
he's dependent on that federal money.
And the federal government is not ultra reliable
because whenever the economy looks like it's getting a little better, the conservatives in
Congress want to cut that federal money that's being poured out.
Every time the economy gets better, things get worse for Moses.
He's in a very real sense, his success is, has an inverse relationship to the
economic health of the entire United States of America.
So he's got to work fast.
He can't let anyone get in his way.
And he's, you know, because he's written his own laws that give him power, he's got to work fast. He can't let anyone get in his way. And because he's written his own laws that give him power, he's not beholden to some laws.
In other ones, he ignores them.
He's very big on submitting plans to be examined on the day that the construction starts or when things are almost finished.
He starts employing what he calls his bloodhounds, who are digging up compromising personal information on reluctant officials
that he can use to pressure them.
It's just out and out blackmail.
And if a civil servant resists him and there's no blackmail material, he can use the press
to smear them to make them seem like a hack who's getting in the way.
And that didn't work against Governor Layman because Governor Layman is famous.
Everybody knows who he is.
But if you're the deputy comptroller and the papers start talking about what a bad dude you are, what a troublemaker you are, there's no one knows
anything about you.
You're going to have to, you resign because of that pressure.
And the first level of this is just like, oh, these are just namby pamby
bureaucrats who can't get anything done.
And I get things done.
And if we had to wait for, you know, this like board of estimate to do
something, we'll, we'll never get anything done.
And that gets him pretty far.
But then when that doesn't work, it gets pretty ugly.
And he's a very, very early kind of McCarthyist when it comes to labeling people as communists.
Yep.
Carol writes, he says, if Robert Moses was a pioneer in the fields of parks and highways,
he was also pioneer in McCarthyism 20 years before McCarthy.
This is the 1930s.
And he always already saying, this guy doesn't agree with with me he's probably a red, this guy's probably
a radical, this guy's a socialist and he already doesn't like the idea of a
classless society so it's not like he's it's like he is using his own beliefs as
a weapon in a mercenary way and Carr tells the story of LaGuardia's law
secretary Paul J. Kern who was kind of building the kind of relationship with LaGuardia that Moses had
with Al Smith and Kern likes Moses.
But when he tries to keep Moses from
circumventing civil service hiring
regulations, the kind of laws that Moses
was the champion of in his younger days.
Moses is like, uh, no.
And he's like LaGuardia, Kern is, is
saying bad things about you.
This is really terrible.
Like he's just lying to him about him.
And then Kern says, I'm going to start a system where workers are rewarded for
reporting violations in the workplace.
And Moses goes to the press and says, a Soviet style secret police.
Well, well, I guess Kern, the communist is causing this.
And LaGuardia as a new deal Republican is so afraid of being accused of being
communist, he just fires Kern.
Guardia as a New Deal Republican is so afraid of being accused of being communist, he just fires Kern.
And Carrow notes that until Moses stopped as Parks Commissioner in 1960, no civil service
commissioner ever interfered with his hiring practices again.
It was just clear.
He's so good at bullying people.
And the only way, maybe if you're powerful enough, you can push back on him.
If you stand up to him, maybe he'll back down a little bit, respect your strength.
But otherwise, he'll just run all over you. He's supposed to have a there's a
weekly luncheon of all the commissioners on the mayor's
administration. And Moses hates going to it. He sees a waste of
time. So he always sends a potted plant in his place to
sit at the lunches. And the commissioner is so mad at him,
but they're afraid of doing anything about it. And Moses
would he'd say to the other commissioners, you should
designate one of your people as like an official liaison to my department. And then he would
cultivate that worker and basically make them his mole in the other commission. So he's
just so good at, as you were saying before, out-thinking people. He's good at bullying
them. And he's just, he's got all those techniques that we've come to know and love so well.
Stake driving, when you start a project before you have permission, by the time they're answering
questions about it, it's too late, it's already started.
Whipsawing, you go to the city and you go,
oh, the federal government said I would get this money,
so why don't you give me a little bit?
And then he goes to the federal government and says,
oh, the city is gonna give me this money,
so why don't you give me the rest of it?
He doesn't have the money,
but he's telling both sides that he has it.
Wedge driving, you go, can I have a little bit of money?
Okay, that's all it's gonna take.
And then a year later, I'm gonna need more money,
you have to give it to me now.
And deception, he just lies about things.
If he's told, don't do something, he starts doing it.
He wants to build a Marine Park in Brooklyn.
He goes, I need $6 million.
That's the whole cost.
And then when that's spent, he goes,
I need another $6 million.
You're gonna let that last $6 million go to waste?
Because you didn't check that what I was telling you
was true?
All right, if you wanna tell the people of the city that you got tricked by Moses
again, like it's such, you know, trickster rabbit type stuff.
My favorite one is when he wants to build a stadium on Randall's Island and he goes
to the board of the city, the board of estimate goes, the WPA is going to pay for it.
I don't need any money from the city.
Well, I need $250,000, but that's all the money that the entire Triborough project is
going to cost the city. And then he comes back and he goes, I need $250,000, but that's all the money that the entire Triborough project is going to cost the city."
And then he comes back and he goes, I need $8 million.
And he goes, I didn't mean the land for the approach roads to the bridge.
You were foolish when I said the whole project.
You thought I meant everything in the project.
And if they push back on him, he is abusive.
He is verbally abusive in the way he was to crowds.
And the crowds wouldn't take it, but these individuals will in these smaller rooms,
even though ostensibly they have more power than he does,
but really he has more power than they do.
He's the power broker.
Yeah, yeah.
And this is just like becomes his source of power
is that he does not care about people.
He will destroy them.
He will destroy, you know, like these sort of
somewhat nameless bureaucrats inside these organizations,
these somewhat more named commissioners. And, but he really does not care about the humans
inside of a city at all.
There's an enormous strength in being able to rewrite
the rules to your liking,
but also in having the freedom to ignore the rules.
Like every now and then there,
it feels like someone comes along
and people are like, this guy is playing chess on a whole nother level. Like he's out thinking
everybody. And their secret is just that they're being bad. Just refusing to play by the rules of
the game. You can win Monopoly if you're allowed to rob the other players and, you know, and like
just throw free hotels onto your properties. Like that's, you know, if you don't play by the rules,
it's a lot easier to win the game.
And that's what he does.
That's right.
And he's also built up his sort of like portfolio
of accomplishments in these places like Long Island,
where there are fewer people to get angry.
You know, like, you know, these places like mostly
that land was empty land.
It was owned by someone.
Maybe there's the occasional farmer that he destroys
without any regard.
Just the occasional small farmer,
the occasional wealthy baron he has to accommodate slightly.
Yeah, but now he's building all this stuff
in densely populated New York City,
where these things have a big effect on what's
going to happen in these people's lives.
And it's just causing a bit of complication.
And he's like, he's like a startup or something.
Like he needs to go at that same rate of increase.
Um, he, he's just sort of like required to go at
like maybe it's just some kind of personal ambition,
like where he notices the rules are changing and the easy land where he can grow has now
been exploited to the extent that it can be.
And he has to keep, now he has to work in like in these neighborhoods that are more
complicated and where you cannot just lay down Jones Beach because nothing is there.
It's like now there's lots of stuff there.
Yeah, the secret to his success was finding unused land
and taking advantage of it.
And Carol makes a big, talks a lot about this here
that you can't do that in New York City.
You can't, it's a city.
And he compares building on Long Island
to painting on a blank canvas.
And he compares building in New York City
to painting in a mural that already exists.
And he has this very beautiful section
about kind of describing the mural and the,
the, the, I'll read you just a little bit of that because,
because a mural whose brushstrokes were tiny and intricate and often when one
looked closely, quite wonderful, lending to the vast urban panorama,
subtle shadings and delicate tints and an endless variety.
So that if it was crowded and confused and ugly,
it was also full of life and very human. So much so in fact,
that while the painting as a whole might lack beauty, order, balance,
perspective, a unifying principle and an overall effect to commensurate with its size, it nonetheless
possessed many charming little touches and an overall vitality, a brio that made it unique
and should not be lost."
I think that's so beautiful, the idea of New York as this really messy piece of work
and the closer you get to it, the more you see the beautiful details in it and the things you don't want to lose.
But all Moses can see is the full canvas and he's like, well, let's put a road
here. Sport just puts a huge thing of paint over people's homes, lives,
neighborhoods. And you, you comparing it to a startup is such a good parallel
because often a startup will,
their whole point is they're doing a new
thing that hasn't been done before.
And maybe they have to move fast or maybe they have to kind of overreach because
nobody's done this thing before.
And it feels like so many of those companies, when they get big, they are
like, well, the only way to grow now is to take over something that already exists
or to take its customer base and then monetize that.
And they stop being their customers and start being their product for larger
companies.
And it feels like Moses is doing pretty much that.
He's like, the thing that I did here, I have to do it bigger.
And I did it in theory.
I built these parks for people to come and enjoy.
Now I have a place that's full of people and I'm going to build roads for the people who
live outside of this community for their convenience to a great extent and not for the people who live outside of this community, for their convenience to a great extent, and not for the people who are in it.
The people who ostensibly are my customers,
they are now my, if not a product, exactly an obstacle.
Well, you had a really great parallel
and I really messed it up.
I really got made it,
I've really found out how to overcomplicate that,
much like a beautiful mural
that maybe in the aggregate is messy,
but there's lots of little points that are still beautiful.
And Kara talks about how in Long Island, you can open up land to public development by
running a road there. But in a city, if you open up land that hasn't been fully developed,
before the city is prepared to provide the services that a city provides to a neighborhood,
then it's going to lead to a mess. And Caro bounces a little bit. He says that Moses' drive, his drive to get things
done, the very driving that is the title of this chapter, and his ability to cut through red tape
and to force things are not necessarily bad, and they're not necessarily unneeded, that a city needs
to build big things. It needs to get them done. It needs to have someone whose ability to get them done is,
if not unquestioned, at least is very high level. It needs someone who's able to make
these things. But it needs to include humanity into those decisions. It needs to include
an understanding of the smaller groups of people. And Moses either cannot think on that
smaller granular scale or just doesn't care.
Like the scale of a single neighborhood
means nothing to a guy who is now used to building
only enormous things.
And he'd go to that neighborhood and say,
what do you need?
What's the best thing about this?
But he doesn't want to do that.
Like he doesn't care.
And he's also so focused on the idea of active recreation
because he is an active guy.
He likes to swim, you know, he likes to do things.
That the idea of peaceful conservation,
a place for someone to sit
or a place for someone to be in the shade of a tree,
someone who's not just driving a car or something,
that's uninteresting to him.
He's not interested in preserving things.
He's interested in building things.
There's a certain level at most his character
where he can't point to a forest that he's preserved
and be like, look at that.
Isn't that an achievement?
Because it's not.
To him, he's like, I didn't do that.
I guess God built that.
I wanna build something.
I'm gonna put a stadium there.
I'm gonna put a band shell.
I'm gonna put something I could put my name on.
He's really interested in building big things.
And when you have this mural of intricate brushstrokes,
like little things matter. Like each of those brushstrokes, like little things matter,
like each of those brushstrokes matter,
and like a tiny park that's only two acres
matters a lot to the people right near there,
and it just does not matter to Moses.
Like when Caro talks about a kind of planning genius
that he witnessed where he holds his hand out
and gets a rolled up map and he rolls it out
and he starts drawing on it.
He sees big things really, really well,
but he's very, very blind to small things.
And I think it's because there's something wrong
with his soul.
You know?
I mean, I'm gonna be a little bit nicer to him.
I'm gonna play devil's advocate again.
I'm gonna say that it's a sort of like, I think it's called what hedonic adaptation
or something where the standard that was new and exciting before becomes normal to you
now.
And I think as he's, as he's been working on these larger and larger scale things, he
has, he just doesn't connect with that stuff.
That's normal to him.
It's normal to him to build a road that displaces thousands of people or to tear up buildings
and not care about the people who are there because he's just gotten so used to it.
There are all these choices that need to be made when it comes to a project and especially
a public work.
Who is it serving?
How is it serving them?
What needs need to be met?
What needs can't be met?
If the nature of driving is different,
if it's not about leisure anymore,
if it's about going from point A to point B,
why should the best scenery be preserved
for people in cars instead of people on foot?
And what kind of park does a neighborhood need
rather than what kind of park
does Robert Moses feel like building?
And all that stuff needs to be discussed,
but Moses is not interested in discussing things.
And where he used to like kind of spar
with his staff a little bit and let them challenge him slightly when it came to be discussed, but most is not interested in discussing things. And where he used to like kind of spar with his staff a little bit and let them
challenge him slightly when it came to ideas and he would push them to do their
best. Now he just doesn't care about other people's opinions.
And he surrounded himself by yes, man, who whatever RM says,
that's what it's going to be. And Caro draw, he continues this,
I think in a very nice and a very subtle way, he continues this, uh, metaphor of, or analogy, I don't know, I'm not an English professor. Uh, this, I think in a very nice and a very subtle way, he continues this metaphor of or analogy, I don't know, I'm not an English professor, this whatever it is of Moses as
an artist by saying how Moses has cut himself off from new information and new ideas. His
understanding of himself as the master builder stands between him and the world and he could
overcome this obstacle maybe if he was giving the work he was doing
the kind of deep sustained thought that he used to.
When he was spending hours tromping through Long Island,
tromping around the city, thinking of ideas,
looking at real life and thinking about how to fix it
instead of just looking at maps.
And he can't do that anymore.
He doesn't have the time.
He's taken on so much work.
He's overloaded.
He is doing all the New York city parks.
He's doing the Long Island parks.
He's building the state parkways.
He's building his dam work like in Niagara.
He's added so much work that,
Carol mentions this, but he doesn't go into detail,
that he nearly has a nervous breakdown by the end of 1934,
that he's so overworked.
And he cannot give his attention to each of these projects.
And so they're starting to become banal.
Instead of making individual decisions,
he has a standardized form that just gets reused. And that like a great artist who loses
connection with the reality, with the real world, and only knows art, his work
starts to become a repetition or a comment on itself rather than something
that really relates to the lives and needs and emotions of people. And it's
something that happens to anyone who's in a sort of creative field.
And Moses is very much working in a creative way.
It happens to anyone who only knows their own bubble
and doesn't really ever get out of it
and see the outside world.
And you see a lot in the way that like movie makers
at a certain point start making movies
that feel more like they're about other movies
than they are. Standup comedians will start doing jokes about ordinary life.
And then if they get famous enough, all their routines become about being a famous person
and what it's like to be famous. Or, uh, it was pointed out to me once that, uh,
if you read Stephen King's books in order, the characters go from being kind of like
blue collar ordinary people to being like writers and then college professors, like this,
which at one point,
to a certain point makes sense.
You lose touch with that part of your history.
And so you're no longer inspired by it.
But it means that, I'm not saying this about Stephen King.
He still comes out with great work,
but that Robert Moses' work is less
and less connected to reality and more
and more just connected to his pre-conceived notions
about what a park is.
Yeah, that's right.
Like it hasn't evolved much at all. connected to his pre-conceived notions about what a park is. Yeah, that's right.
Like it hasn't evolved much at all.
Like he had some good ideas in the beginning
and he had the canvas to make it.
He had the ingenuity to make it all happen.
And now that's not available,
but his ideas have not modified or changed at all.
Like the city has changed a lot, but he hasn't changed.
And therefore it's just like,
he's not interested in solving these problems.
He's not interested in the details.
He's not interested in providing gaiety
to people who arrive at these parks
like he did when Jones Beach was being designed.
It just is like, he has the most power he's ever had
to get things done.
And his disconnect with the job he's doing
is so much greater that it makes more of this
just messy, thoughtless, even cruel decisions
are being made.
Yeah, and we'll see in later chapters,
we'll see how he's really destroying people's lives
through his construction of work.
But there are even little things that Carol mentions here.
He mentions how he uses the same design
for parks in the city that he would use for parks
in Long Island where people are gonna drive to the parks
rather than small parks and playgrounds.
So he has steps where in the city,
if you're a parent with a baby, Carol says mothers because this book was written 50 years ago, but I would say parents. Now,
if you're pushing your baby in a baby carriage or a stroller, you got to deal with all these steps
because in a Long Island park, you drive your kid there in a car and you just take them out and
carry them around or they walk. But in the city, you need to be pushing a carriage. And it means
that these, it's just a small instance of these parks are not being designed for the people who are actually using them because Moses is just repeating the same things he's been doing over and over again, much like a, you hear a lot with chefs, I guess, when they open a restaurant and they're like, oh, it's just the same slate of dishes they've been doing for years. Where's the new ideas? And part of that is also, you can do more whimsical stuff outside of a city than you can in a
city.
And Carol talks about how the early Central Park playgrounds, when Moses was redoing Central
Park, were much more whimsical, but it meant you had all these kind of hidden spaces for
animals or perverts to do what they wanted to do with the space, which was not great,
which was not what needed to be done.
And Carol's style throughout this section is a little repetitive, but I think in a way
that's purposeful, where he is giving you slight variations on kind of similar ideas
about Moses's limitations here, almost as if he is also laying down brushstroke after
brushstroke layers of paint to kind of build up this argument in your mind until by the
end of the chapter, you're fully understand what he's talking about, you know, rather
than just stating it and then moving on.
He's really hammering it home.
And the thing that he starts to hammer home here, which we'll talk about in even more depth next episode,
is that Moses is not just uninterested in individual neighborhoods and how individuals react.
He's particularly personally uninterested in a certain type of person.
And that person is, for lack of a better word, poor. And that type of person person is for lack of a better word, poor.
And that type of person is for lack of a better
word, black or Puerto Rican.
He's making the point that there are all these
opportunities to build these small parks in slum
areas, in areas where people don't have money or
in areas where there is a majority non-white
population and the black population of the city
has grown very quickly.
In 1900, it's 60,000 people. In 1940, right after the period we're talking about now, it's 458,000
people. And that part of the city's population, those residents, are shut out of much of the
mainstream of economic and recreational life. They do not have the things that the rest of the city
is taking for granted now that Moses is sprinkling parks and playgrounds all over the place.
And these are people who feel unwelcome in the parts of the city that now have parks
and playgrounds.
They need places to play.
I want to talk about this more next chapter because Carol brings it up in more detail.
But Moses is not interested in providing those services to them, in providing their children
with places to play.
And this means that the kids in those areas are forced to play in the streets,
play in places that are not safe for them, that are dirty or dangerous,
but it sends the message to that large part of the city's population
that the city does not care about them.
And the reformers who are now kind of turning on Moses slightly,
a little bit at a time, they see that Moses has effectively
barred poor black New Yorkers from his parks
through their lack of public
transportation going to them.
And now he won't even provide little parks in
their neighborhoods for them.
He's just not interested in doing it.
And Moses push backs a little bit and he says,
well, they can always go to Randall's Island
or Riverside Park.
And he also says, eh, the smallest a park
should be is three acres.
It's not really financial sense to make a park
that's smaller than three acres.
And the reformers are like, uh, but you could
make one that's smaller than three acres. Yeah, we could do that, uh, but you could make one that's smaller than three acres.
It would be nice.
You could do it.
It's possible.
And also that because Moses doesn't want bus
service to Reynolds Island where he has these
facilities, he says that black New Yorkers can go to.
It means that to get there from Harlem or the
South Bronx, where much of New York's black
population is centered, you have to walk anywhere
from three quarters of a mile to two miles.
And it's, it's an, it's, that's an insane idea to say that, yeah, they've got park
facilities.
They just have to walk two miles to get to them in one of the most crowded cities
in the United States of America.
Cause it's not like it's a pleasant walk for all that time.
I mean, to be honest, I like walking through cities.
So it would be, I mean, in some ways it's a pleasant walk, but they're not
walking through the best areas probably.
You don't do it daily after school.
You don't walk two miles to get to a park.
Yeah. Or we're on a weekend when you've been working all week
and your children wanna go play, it's hard to get up
and you have to bring, I mean, if you've gone any,
you've gone plays with children, Roman,
you gotta bring food with you,
you gotta bring stuff for them to do.
It's like the storming of Normandy, yeah, it sucks.
Yeah, it's the worst.
Bringing children anywhere.
And the press will, they'll print the letters
to the editor of these reformers about this stuff, but they'll also print Moses' rebuttals
and they won't put their editorial support, the idea of slum parks, of need it. Yeah.
And you were getting at this point now where Moses had the support of a lot of reformers
because he was preserving all this woodland around the city. And they were like, he's
doing it. Yeah. And now they're watching as he is cutting down that woodland.
Like he's chopping it down to replace it with ball fields
and things like that.
And they're only starting to realize again,
it's like that,
and this happens throughout the book
and it is very frustrating.
And I don't know if it's how it happened in real life
or it's the way Caro organized it.
But the reformers are always like, wait a minute,
he did this thing.
Maybe he's not so great.
So like he tore down the casino.
That wasn't so great.
Now he's cutting down these forests.
Wait a minute.
That's not so great.
Later we'll see him attack a genuinely historically important building.
Yeah.
And, uh, for no real reason.
And they're like, wait a minute, that's not so great.
And Carol says here that no one was putting the pieces together that this is
an overall overarching ideology for Moses Moses because they're kind of,
they're still enthralled to his image,
but also they're only really paying attention to their local parks.
They don't see that the same thing is happening all over.
And they probably have the same blind spots that he has. I mean,
they're probably not aware of people that are different from them.
And they, you know, they see the good parts of them of him and they don't have to experience the bad parts of
him because he's not running a road through their house.
He's not putting up parks in their neighborhoods.
They just probably just don't really connect with the suffering that he's causing even
at this point.
But they will.
Not yet.
But look, he put roads through the other neighborhoods and I said nothing because it wasn't my neighborhood.
And then he tore down a park in this other neighborhood and I didn't say anything.
I really should have had the details for this thing before I said it.
Anyway, eventually it came for me.
That's the end.
Eventually it came for my neighborhood, which does happen, which starts to happen.
And as we'll see, that's when the turning point doesn't come until years later when
he does start doing things in middle-class neighborhoods that have kind of a louder,
more powerful voice.
But they also,
this is also one of their flaws is they have the classic
flaw of all liberals.
All liberals have this flaw.
I have it, Roman, I don't know you super well,
but I'm sure you have it too.
I probably do.
This belief that if I just sat down and discussed this
with him and just explained to him why this was not
gonna work, he would say,
oh yeah, you're right. I will, I was wrong to do that. We will do it the other way. Let's come to
a compromise. Whenever anyone's like, we need a national conversation on this, as if a conversation
has ever made anything better. It almost never does. But they're like, if we can just discuss
this with him, if we can just get in there and talk to him about it,
we're sure we could show him the truth.
And that's how Caro leads into the end of the chapter, which is chilling, he says.
But Moses no longer had to discuss. He had long had great dreams for the city,
and now he had learned how to make dreams come true.
He had learned the technique of stake driving and of whipsawing.
He had learned how to mislead and conceal and deceive, how to lie to men and bully them, how to ruin their reputations.
And he used all these methods to bring the dream to reality.
And then there's a little space, indent, indent, indent.
Or was it all for the dream?
And that's how he ends that chapter.
That's how chapter 24 driving ends
and is where this section ends.
Was it for the dream or are there darker desires?
Well, the next part, part five is entitled the love of power
So that's a little spoiler. I think that tells you what it's about
We'll cover the love of power on the next episode. That's only two chapters
It's pages 499 to 606 chapters 25 and 26
You may be wondering how only two chapters can be a longer section of the book than the one we covered in this episode
One of them is a very long chapter
It's only two chapters, but it feels like a Robert Moses type thing to be like,
it's only two chapters.
By the way, one of those chapters is 75 pages long.
I didn't tell you that, but they're very good chapters.
I'm very excited about the next episode.
Coming up, our conversation with investigative journalist, Brandi Zdrosny.
Brandi Zdrosny. Our Power Broker Book Club guest for this week is Brandi Zdrosny.
I am a reporter for NBC News.
I cover misinformation, disinformation, extremism, the internet, platforms, politics, people.
It sort of runs the gambit.
Brandi mostly works on longer investigative pieces where her research background as a
reference librarian comes in handy. One of her recent stories is about how a far-right
sheriff's group is urging local law enforcement agencies to investigate baseless claims of voter
fraud. She also hosted this great podcast called Tiffany Dover is Dead about a nurse in Tennessee
who passed out on live
television after receiving the COVID vaccine in December of 2020 and then became the center of
an anti-vax conspiracy. It's really compelling stuff and infuriating and compelling at the same
time. Somehow Brandi also found time to read The Power Broker. What struck me about this book from the beginning was I knew who Robert Carrow was. I had never read
his books, but I know a little bit about his story. And so the very first thing is just,
it's kind of, he's realizing a dream for so many of us. You know, like the idea of turning every page is a real luxury.
And so, you know, he, I think he started this series because he was a reporter on Long Island, right?
He was doing a story on some piece of infrastructure and then he thought,
wow, that's really strange.
You know, how did this guy amass all this power?
And we have a million questions like that when doing any story, right?
But you never really get the time to keep going.
You're sort of onto the next story or onto the next beat of that story and no one has the time
to turn every page. So the fact that he said, I'm going to and did the thing for however many years,
it took him to do that. It's just, it's so aspirational. And then when you get in it
from the very beginning, you're like, he's gonna do this thing. Like there is nothing left.
And it's just great.
You're saying you would love to come to your editor
and say, I have this story, it's amazing.
And they say, how long is it gonna take me
to work on the story?
And you say, seven years.
And for them to say, yes, go for it.
And then you go and talk to your spouse and you say,
okay, we're gonna sell the house
and we're gonna get real poor for a time period.
For a long time.
And then it's going to pay off because a bunch
of nerds are going to talk about it 50 years later.
Well, my, my conversation with my editor is always
like, how many words do you think this is going
to be Brandi?
And I'm like, 10,000.
She's like, try five.
And then, you know, you get into a place where
you're like, ha ha, I snuck six. And that's like, try five. And then you get into a place where you're like,
ha ha, I snuck six and that's like a big win.
I can't even imagine being able to do that.
And also the details that I think are so interesting
about these stories are often cut by my editor,
who's like, eh, superfluous, boring.
And it's like, but that's what the fun thing is,
that's really interesting. Yeah.
And interesting doesn't always make it into the final cut.
I mean, a lot of what Robert Caro is doing,
and I don't know if he just intuited this
or this is the writer he is,
he is about building a gestalt through lots of information
so that you, like, it sort of fills in your foundation.
And then when he's making his really bold case,
which is like changing the mind of a bunch of people
who think this man is a saint
for decades of his professional existence.
Well, narratives are really strong and people don't read.
I mean, I say that, you know, with a heavy sigh,
because I will write some, you know,
revelatory piece on someone that really pulls the mask
off who they are.
And then the next day they're sitting in front of
a house judiciary committee and I'm like,
don't you know who this is?
I told you.
So I can only imagine someone with sort of the heft
and reputation that Moses had just that not getting through
until this thing happened.
Mm-hmm. So when you investigate things, I mean, I suppose like a lot of, since you cover stuff
sort of in the modern era of misinformation and lots of online things, your archive is the world
of the internet and then talking to people and stuff like this. How did it strike you when you picture Robert Caro
in these basements on Randall's Island and things like this?
Does this make you feel envious?
Do you like, or does it make you just admire it?
What is your take on it?
So I was actually thinking about this last night
as I was trying to remind myself of what happened
in the chapters that y'all are going to discuss. And I just started looking through the New
York Times time machine because they have all their archives up. And so I was looking
at like, you know, in the 30s, like what were the letters to the editor and all this stuff.
And I was just thinking, I was literally thinking, oh, he must have been like in a library for
this. Or like he must have been in the stacks. That's so interesting.
And I also thought, because I did a pretty clean sweep in a couple hours before bed.
And that's really great that we have the opportunity to do that.
But so much is lost because we think everything is online.
Like there are a lot of things that if you just walk down to the courthouse, I was doing
a story on Trump in 2016 and walked down to the New the courthouse, I was doing a story on Trump in 2016
and walked down to the New York courthouse, the New York City courthouse, and got a large
portion of his divorce records, which we weren't supposed to get. But because it was a real person,
you know, and there were real papers, we got a bunch of things. And I remember for that story,
specifically a friend at a different outlet wanted to go down to the courthouse,
but they wouldn't let her leave her desk.
And it was like, oh, you can still get so much
by using those sort of old school reporting techniques
and going to the place and trying to get the things.
Yeah, I think that's really true.
That's so much fun to think about.
And that's what I love.
I mean, just the excitement of that hunt
is like so enjoyable, especially when
it takes place in a physical location when you're opening up files and stuff like that.
Like I just love archive research so much.
Yeah.
The scariest part of a story is not having one.
And once you have a story that you're like, this is a story that I'm working on, and you
can just dig and dig and dig and dig and dig. Like that's all the fun stuff,
that needing a story and then actually writing the story,
that's what terrifies me.
The rest is the best part.
That's what Kara told us.
Kara told us basically that if he could get away
with just doing all the research and not writing the book,
he'd be very happy.
If he could just do the research all the time.
Yeah, I had an editor who refused to let me talk to him about my work when I'd be like,
oh my gosh, he's like, nope, because once you say it, once you communicate it, then
you won't get it out.
You won't write the thing.
And they were right.
So this episode, we talk about a lot how Moses has great success using the press
to get what he wants.
And the one thing, the mainly thing that he does
is he just puts out kind of press releases
or he has lots of familiarity with a lot of press people.
And his story becomes the story.
I'm just, I'm curious about this.
Like when you're, you talk or you report on sort of like
how a mainstream media outlet, you know,
like reports a thing, how a citizen journalist
in quotes reports a thing, you know,
what does it strike you about like that time period
and how information is spread
and how the press is used in these ways?
I think it still works that way for the most part.
I mean, when you go to a website or when you open the paper,
you're mostly reading commodity news.
You're mostly reading the kind of news
that like you get anywhere because a thing has happened.
You know, there is a unveiling, there is a crime,
there is a, you know, so like,
and the police have told the police beat reporter
about that crime.
Like you get into this rhythm as a reporter
where you're like, this is my beat,
these are the sources for my beat
and here is how I report that out day to day. And especially if you're in a paper, if you're like, this is my beat. This is, these are the sources for my beat. And here's how I report that out day to day.
And especially if you're in a paper, if you're
broadcasting where you have to have something
every single day, like you have to fill that space.
Then you rely on these people that you know are
good for factual stories that people like and
your editors like.
And so like, I don't think that that has
changed much.
There are still.
And so I don't think that that has changed much. There are still bazillions of publicists
who make their living on getting a story to a reporter
who takes that press release and writes it up
and makes it a story.
So that's not very different at all.
What's funny about this book and what is leading,
I think, to your question is that it feels very today, all of it,
the way that he manipulates the press with these events,
with, you know, leaking to them, with, you know,
befriending them and bringing them to nice events,
like that, with the way the New York Times operates,
like all of this feels very of the moment.
And it's like, he used it to such great effect.
I mean, like, you know, Moses in this moment
has just spectacularly lost running for governor.
Like, just is completely on his ass.
And FDR concocts this order 129
to do this sort of final blow and take him out.
And Moses leaks that to the press,
and it totally revives his career,
which sets up the entire rest of the book.
I mean, it really is like his resurrection
that makes him stronger than ever.
And that comes about because the press
just take Moses's side of this at face value.
Moses seems to discover that like,
yeah, that newspapers need material.
They need things to print.
And so if he can provide that in the form of press releases or leaked documents, or
we're opening a park, we're opening a pool, then they're not going to say, uh,
let's double check this before we actually put it in the newspaper.
You know?
Well, A, we love a leak.
Like that is like, we love a leak, we love a whistleblower.
And that's just human nature, right?
Because that makes a good story.
Like, oh, this is secret.
This is secret information that I'm giving you, that nobody knows about.
That is what we live for.
And so that makes sense.
I think the other part of it is sort of human nature.
And I try to think about this all the time, about my
just human biases and narrative and the way that when sources approach me, because my sources
are not all good guys. Like I have sources who are literal white supremacists, right? Who are like
not people that I'd want to have tea with, but who have given me information that is true and helps me explain this world
that we live in right now.
But the point of that is that when someone comes to you with a narrative, it might be
like, when my child comes to me and says, my other child hit me, then now I'm investigating
my child hit me.
And that's the narrative that has been started.
So like, Roosevelt hit me. Okay.'s like the narrative that has been started, right? So like Roosevelt hit me.
Okay.
That is what I understand the facts to be.
And so I might go as they did to Roosevelt's team and say, why did you do this?
Right.
But then they're on the defensive and I've already set up that narrative.
That is the narrative that I've established.
And that is very, very powerful.
It's hard to come back from that, which is why, you know, again, like he's
so good on offense and less so on defense.
So I've been checking out your work and I love your podcast.
Tiffany Dover is dead.
A lot of the time it makes me really angry because I have this just complete
disdain for conspiracy theorists.
And then I started thinking about this book, the power broker.
And if you take like a 30,000 foot view of this, you just squint really hard, it kind
of has the vague shape of a conspiracy theory.
Like instead of, you know, infrastructure being done by committee and through goodwill
and trying to make the world a better place, you know, this is 1300 pages of Robert Caro,
you know, convincing you that there's this man behind it all, Robert Moses, and this
man has evil intent and he did bad things.
And this feels like it's conspiracy theory and it kind of blew my mind.
So I've been thinking about what makes the difference between an investigative piece
that reveals something that, you know, sinister intent by a small group of people versus conspiracy
theories that are completely out the airlock and completely crazy and just trying to reconcile that and,
and how you reconcile that in your work.
Well, no, I, I, I've been thinking about that.
Like the deep state is real and it is Robert Moses.
He is, he is the man who by his great machinations and money and power is,
is literally like choosing who, what children get sunlight and what
children don't. Who gets access to the water and who doesn't? It's stuff that rings very true in
conspiracy land and conspiracy theories are great because conspiracies are real and conspiracies
happen,
especially at the local government.
But what's interesting about this is that the truth is
that real conspiracies operate like this
in sort of banal ways, in paper pushing,
in behind the scenes meetings,
in, you know, through the New York Times and, and it's like, it, it
takes however many pages, several hundred over a thousand something, I listen to the
audio book, 60s plus hours of pages to explain in fact how this conspiracy worked because
it's, it's boring, you know, it's not like one secret meeting at a CDC in Georgia, which determined that everybody's going to get autism.
Well, and also that the the ends are banal. The ends are, I don't want poor people to be able to
take the bus to these communities on Long Island. And so I'm going to I'm going to do everything I
can to block that, as opposed to the fun conspiracies where helicopters are going to round us up and and
send us you know, and make us slaves to its transdimensional reptiles and things like that. Those are the fun conspiracies.
And this feels like the real conspiracies are harder maybe to get
people to see because they're not as exciting, you know?
Yeah, ones that are rooted in things like institutional racism and like, you know,
rich people not liking poor people and not thinking they are deserving of the
same things. And like it's stuff like that.
It's like, that's the real thing.
You want something to be mad about, go be mad about that.
Not your fake Guantanamo Bay stuff.
It does strike me that these conspiracies
of Robert Moses and the Moses men are all that hidden.
And they're not really about a conspiracy
of action and deed.
They're kind of a conspiracy of shared values.
They all agree on a thing.
They tacitly or explicitly express those things
and create the world that they see fit.
But it's not like they're secretly doing a whole lot.
You know what I mean?
Because when Robert Caro goes and talks to him
and talks about the bridges,
and when you investigate it today,
and you go, how did you know that Robert Moses
really did make the bridges shorter?
And he was like, his assistant told me,
that's what he said.
You know, like, it just is like, you know, it's just like.
Yeah, I mean, how easy would it have been
for a reporter to go into some of the communities
that were being raised to build these new expressways or to, you know, clear these slums and go
talk to those people? Like, that was a story in plain sight. That was, you know, thousands
and thousands of people being displaced, communities being destroyed over and over and over again.
So like, why weren't those stories bigger than the man Robert Moses? Why didn't those stories get more play?
It's because I would venture to say
those people were not cared about in the same way.
They were not valorized.
They weren't important in the same way
that Robert Moses was.
And the reporters were more like Robert Moses
than they were like the people that were.
Yeah, they were all the same people.
They hung out at lunch.
I mean, the owner of the New York Times
loved him so very, very much. Like. I've been trying to think a lot about corollaries,
and just selfishly, maybe because I'm living aspirationally through Robert Harris' work,
but I'm like, who is the Robert Moses of our time? Who is the person who is doing the things that
we should be looking at right now that we're all missing? I haven't thought about it, but listeners can please contact me.
That's kind of one of those things where if we knew about it, it wouldn't necessarily be the same
thing because he was so good at presenting a different version of himself than was actually
taking action. You need some kind of amazing whistleblower leaker
that can meet you in a parking garage somewhere, I guess,
and give you the information.
Although, that's something I like so much about the book
is that Robert Caro is consistently not dramatizing
his own investigation or his own research.
There's not a lot of like,
and then I did something that was really exciting.
At most he'll say, as he does in this episode, well, when I talked to this guy in his house,
he told me this, you know, or I went to this guy's office and this is what he said. There's a,
there's not a, he's not creating the suspense around himself during the story.
No, I wasn't even aware and maybe because I missed it, but while I was listening,
I wasn't even aware that he had spoken, actually spoken with Moses,
that he had gotten like the Moses interview.
And at the end I was sort of like, wait, what?
This, oh, okay.
Which is a bold and the best choice.
It's a very old school choice.
I mean, it's like, it's like, it's not the current
sort of fashion for sure.
Like if I would, if I were to do this story,
it would be all about how amazing it was
that I did this story.
Like I did this for seven years.
You know, like that would be the opening line.
Can you believe what I did?
Exactly.
Yeah, you know, I appreciated it
as I appreciate something old that I read. I see it, but at
the same time, you see those little, he does it in his own way. There is a quiet bragging
that goes on here where he's talking about like forming of Long Island and like even
at the beginning where he's like, and then like, okay, you know all the roads.
Like I, like you've done it.
I get it.
So it's different.
And I sort of like the, the narrator.
I like knowing a little bit about the narrator who's leading me something
through something.
I appreciate the modernization of that a little bit.
I do think, I think what it, what it felt like to me, and I think this is true,
regardless of like the little flair that he would insert about himself as the
author.
Um, I, I, it shows to me, it's another sort of brick in the house that shows me
that, um, he cares about story, about the factual tale
of this person more than anything.
I think he also, what I also love about Caro is,
and I think this is the next thing I wanna talk to him about
when I talk to him, was this,
what made him so empathic in regards to the people that,
you know, he really feels the destruction of Moses.
Like he's going into it with that in mind.
And I find that very fascinating.
And I wonder, you know, when you think about your work,
you know, what tunes you into wanting to tell the story of who the victim is in a certain story and and where your sensitivities lie and where you who you are fighting for fighting to tell the story of.
I think robert caro has a real like he old school liberal like you know just like.
He, old school liberal, like, you know, just like he wants to take care of these people.
Like he wants to make sure that their story is told.
There's just something noble and interesting about that
that I like, but he doesn't really go out and say it,
but I can just feel it.
This is gonna seem disjointed, but I swear I have a point.
Please.
So I will often say that I fall in love with every person that I interview, and I will go point. Um, so I will often say that I fall in love
with every person that I interview and I will
go to an interview and even, you know, I'm
using little quotations, bad guys,
conspiracy theorists, um, you know, just not
always the nicest people, but every time I talk
to someone, I feel like I'm nodding along with
them like, Oh, that makes sense why you would
be doing this thing.
Most people, I think, are sincere in their wants, you know, and in their beliefs, like
Moses probably was, where he thought he was doing what was ultimately best for the city.
And so, like, I think people are typically sincere, and I believe them each time we talk and then
you know I believe sort of everyone and then I will go home and I will say I've talked to everyone
I need to, I have all the documents I need to, and now I'm going to write this story.
And then you know after the story is written and is published, although none of the facts in it
surprise anyone, the people that I speak to will call me back and say,
I'm not so happy with the way that this came out. I felt like you really understood where I was
coming from and my point of view, but then you were too kind to this other group.
And so I will joke that at the end of a story, if everybody's a little mad at me then I've probably done a good job. But I do feel there is, you know, a certain group or a certain type of source that you do feel
like I am the only way this person is going to get this story out. Nobody seems to care about,
you know, about this group of people, about, kids and their mothers who are being fed misinformation
or being scammed in this way. And so you feel an affinity for people whose voices aren't being
heard. And there's so much power in the press. We have so much power to elevate certain voices.
And those are always a choice.
It's always a choice who we choose to elevate and how we tell this narrative.
And there's a lot of responsibility that comes with that.
And I got that very much that feeling from Carol as well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I also kind of have that issue when I interview people, I, I'm bored.
I mean, I don't know if I,
I don't talk to quite the extremists you do,
but like, you know, like, so it's,
I don't know what that situation is like, but I do.
You talk to a lot of people
with extreme views about architecture.
Exactly.
So, but I'm always like, yeah, okay.
And then I have to go back and assess it.
Like, when you take all that stuff in
and then you recalibrate to form this narrative,
you know, how do you adjust that?
Like, how do you pull yourself back from the emotional sort of like seduction of their
passion and turn the dials to make it into what you're presenting as the truth?
I mean, it's probably some sort of like emotional disability or something, but I don't know
if it's a good thing, but like I
remember what's in front of my face or like I emotionally connect with what's in front of
my face right at that moment. And then when I leave, even like walking in my car, I'm like,
wait a minute, that guy was full of money. That's not true. Or like, I don't believe that. Why was
I nodding along? Sometimes I'll actually have like a post-it if I'm doing like a phone interview that says, stop nodding along or like stop smiling. Because I do, you want
to connect. So much of this is about connection. But ultimately the responsibility when you
get home is to say, what is real? What is the truth? And how can I accurately reflect
that in a piece of writing or a video
or whatever it is that we're doing.
I wonder if you see that in the book also,
I feel like I see it a little bit where you can tell
when sometimes when Carol is talking about Moses
or kind of implying the times that he saw Moses,
that he does find him very impressive
and that he is falling under the spell a little bit.
And maybe it's only the knowledge of the people
that he's met whose lives were affected by him
that pulls him back from that. He talked to us about
having the same experience that you had where Moses is showing him, you know, through the
windows, Long Island, he's saying, don't you believe there should be a road right there?
And he's like, uh-huh, uh-huh. And then he walks, he's leaving. He's like, wait a minute,
that's not a good place for a road. Like, and I wonder if it is only that, that ability
to hold onto that compassion for the people he's talked to, who he does Believe have been wronged that helps him to pull back
Do you ever feel like that where it's you kind of have to make the choice of who who is worth?
Maintaining that that sympathy towards in your writing
Yeah, and and usually those the ones that deserve that that remains right past the car
I'd like you get home and they're like, oh, I still feel this way
But you know people are intoxicating.
People with power are incredibly intoxicating.
And so you get drawn up in that orbit.
And I appreciated the building of him
only if it was that much further for him to fall.
But I appreciated all the physical descriptions of him
swimming across the ocean.
And I'm like, his booming voice, I'm like, his like booming voice.
I'm like, this is a guy.
Like he has got it.
Like I did.
And so I imagine when you're in his presence, you would feel that way too.
Again, I feel that way all the time.
I'm a girl from Florida, Georgia.
Like I went to a state school.
Two different states in one place.
Yeah.
I know.
It's amazing.
You'll.
I went to a state school. Two different states in one place, yeah.
I know.
It's amazing, you'll.
But like, I'm not a New York City elite
despite what the folks who read my work sometimes
would have you believe.
So I'm constantly impressed by people and things.
I went to visit this very fancy lawyer once
and he invited me into his office
across from Lincoln Center.
And you went in and the whole building was floor to ceiling marble and gold. And I was
just like, this is so fancy. And I said that, he's like, don't say that. Oh, okay, I will
not. So I try to like temper some of my bumpkin tendencies, but generally like I am impressed
by so much.
And I do think, thank God that we have that time so much to go home and recalibrate and
say, wait a minute, like you do not have to be in this person's spell.
I think the thing is, is that there are folks in my profession who never get that moment or never take that
moment to say, pause, like, who am I serving with my journalism?
You know, am I writing about the right thing?
Am I writing this the right way?
Am I questioning power or am I helping prop it up?
Yeah.
So you cover a conspiracy theory and a lot of that is to illuminate this world that is
happening to people like me who don't buy into those conspiracy theories.
But I get a sense of some of your work that you are trying to present the world as it
is or as you report it to those believers to just kind of maybe move them off of their comfortable spot a little
bit.
And what are the methods to change people's minds when it comes to sort of, you know,
moving them off things that they really believe in their soul?
I don't know how to change people's minds. I think I know how to write and report for
people who may wander or may dip a toe into a specific conspiracy theory, which everybody
believes is a conspiracy theory. My favorite conversation at parties, which I don't go to
very much anymore, is to ask what conspiracy theory do you believe in? And everybody, I have
yet, I think, to meet one person who doesn't believe something that is probably not true.
Lots of people believe that your cell phone is giving you ear cancer. Lots of people believe
the Kennedy assassination, probably the most people. I've met some very reasonable people
whose children play with my children
who believe that we did not land on the moon.
So, I mean, there are,
I just think that there's a lot of folks out there.
How you change someone's mind
if they already believe something,
I think that's almost impossible.
What I do think works, and this is only anecdotal, so maybe there'll be some
research on it somewhere, but I don't know of it, but is reporting on the people behind a
conspiracy theory. So either the people who are profiting from that conspiracy theory,
the people who have created the conspiracy theory.
So you get an idea of, if I just tell people
that vaccines aren't causing autism,
they can't believe that.
If I report on research that shows
vaccines don't cause autism, they don't believe that.
But if I report on a man named Del Bigtree
who lives in Austin, Texas,
and he makes an exorbitant amount of money
off of this anti-vax rhetoric, spreading this lie.
And here's what he buys with that, right?
Here's the house that he lives in with his wife.
And here are the stories about this person who, you know,
goes and travels all over the country to weaken vaccine laws.
And here is him wearing a star of David,
trying to liken himself to Jews during the
Holocaust. Like here are all the things that can make you look at this man and say, I don't
believe him. So that's something that I've found that I think is seems to be impactful.
It's almost like you are you are vaccinating someone against that conspiracy theory with
another conspiracy that is kind of a dead conspiracy. You know, it's not as damaging. You're like, there isn't some big conspiracy by the medical organization,
the medical, whoever they are to lie to you.
It's a conspiracy by this guy and other people who are making money off of these lies.
You know, maybe that's effective because people are like, now I have a new thing to not like.
You know, I don't know.
It's not a conspiracy. It's a plan.
You know, like it's a... That's right. I mean, that's sort of like, it's thing to not like, you know, I don't know. It's not a conspiracy, it's a plan, you know, like it's a.
That's right, I mean, that's sort of like,
it's a kind of like Occam's razor approach to like,
why do you have to have these Byzantine turns
and you know, like of who profits and who does this
and why do this and when the simplest motive
of a single man getting rich off of line,
it's a pretty good one to believe,
and a pretty, you know, that's a foundational text
in our history as humans, you know?
So.
Yeah, really easy story to find as a journalist.
Yeah.
The single dude getting rich off of a bunch of people
who believe a lie.
Yeah, that is interesting.
And when I think about what, you know,
Caro is doing here to change people's minds about this man,
I think I'm trying to think of like where his interests lie
and where what the best story is or whatever it is.
It's like a lot of people who I know, you know,
think about this book as the tale of urbanism and how cities are made.
I really do think Caro, I mean, there's a reason
why it's called the power broker and not the city builder,
you know, or something like that.
Like, I think he's really fascinated
by the same kind of personal story
and using that personal story of a person
who has this sort of rapacious like desire for power.
And he kind of uses that to unseat him as this holy saint of the builder of things versus
necessarily, you know, like he definitely talks about the merits and the lack of merits
of the things that he built.
But the foundation running through it is kind of that same foundation that you that you
talk about when you talk about your anti-vax guy.
It's like Moses didn't get rich,
but Moses got rich with power
and he's making a statement that this very base need
of this man is the driving force for all of this stuff.
And he definitely talks about all the things that he built.
But it seems like there's a parallel in that,
in a way of constructing a story to change people's minds
around the idea of the man and not just refuting it
idea by idea.
I think that's kind of fascinating.
I think it's similar.
I totally believe that people only care
about stories about people.
Like, it's, I don't, everything else is just sort of boring.
All a Hey Martha story is a, oh my gosh,
this guy did this thing, can you believe it?
Or, you know, you need a character.
And without it, I think it's very, very difficult, which is why I sort of
give the journalists at the time a little bit of a break, because it was hard to tell the story of
Robert Moses at the time, right? Like how does an investigative journal, like what documents can
prop up an idea of like this guy has too much power is like power hungry or power mad.
And that's what's driving it. Like that's a very hard story to tell. You need like 1200 pages.
And so it's just really difficult. Yeah. And you have to imagine, I wonder if,
as someone who's a working journalist, if you see it this way too, that Carol has the benefit of
talking to these people
many years after the events have happened.
And so there's no longer the same danger necessarily.
And he did have trouble getting close to Moses Circle
for a while, but people don't need to worry
quite as much about their livelihoods being ruined,
their name being dragged through the press.
And some of them might even be eager to now tell the things
that they did back then in the shadows to get the credit for them or to share them.
Does that do you ever feel like when you're interviewing people, do you ever wish like, I wish I could talk to you in the future when you'll phrase I've never said before but we say
often you want to be first or last and
either your first was Corey and it's a scoop and it's exclusive and and
that's how you make it or
You're you know with a pack of other reporters often
Trying to all tell the same story,
reaching out to the same sources.
And even if it is exclusive, you're right.
Like in the moment, people are very hesitant to talk to you,
especially in this moment, right,
where people distrust the press,
the mainstream media is, you know,
a dirty word for 50% of the population.
It's really, really hard to do this job. I will
say in the podcast that I did, it was an utter failure. I was trying to reach this person
who did not want to talk to media, and she didn't. I couldn't talk to her. And not until
a year after our podcast ended, did she reach back out to me? And she said, now I'm ready to talk.
And that happens all the time.
People who I'm working with on a story will,
I do this thing with my subjects,
because some of them are vulnerable,
conspiracy theorists or people who've been wrapped up
in something like that.
And so I'll do this thing where I read them like a Miranda writes,
and I say, this is the story that I've got now.
And let's talk about the worst thing that might happen
to you if I publish this story, right?
Like, what are some things that you're afraid of?
And sometimes at the end of this long talk,
which can say, maybe jobs won't want to hire me,
maybe my wife will get mad at me,
maybe the police will come and want to arrest me,
there are lots of things that might come from this,
do you still want to go?
And several people have told me, actually, nevermind.
Like I've had whole stories ready to go
and people say I changed my mind.
And then, but sometimes like with, for example,
I did this story about this man who was at January 6
at the Capitol on January 6.
And he told me his whole story and what brought him there. And he said, no.
And then a year later, he said, you know what?
I'm ready now.
And so we went ahead and published.
And that's, you know, that's their story.
That's their right.
But I think that, like you said, with time,
if you had the time to just get people to know you,
cause I'm sure that if I say, I'm sure that Caro,
I'm sure there were examples where
Caro went to someone or maybe you can ask about him for me, but where he went to someone
and they said no. And then he just kept on reporting and kept on reporting. And then
they came back to him and said, actually, I'll talk to you or he kept at it and, you
know, kept on their doorstep. And they said, okay, come on in or whatever it is. But yeah,
time is such a luxury. I can't imagine what you could do with it.
Yeah, he really was able to go back multiple times
to try people.
And I mean, the ultimate version of that,
as anyone has read the Lynda Johnson books knows,
is he goes, well, I guess I'm gonna have to live
in the neighborhood that these people live in
for three years and just let them know me as a neighbor
before I can even talk to them,
ask them any questions as a reporter.
I saw the documentary and I was just like,
this is insane.
It's pretty amazing.
And one of the things I love about the different volumes
of the LBJ books is by the time, you know,
the second LBJ book comes out,
the first one has already been out.
And so he's talking to them and they'll reference the fact
that they read the first book.
And surprisingly, it makes them more likely
to talk to him, I think.
I don't know why, but it just seems to.
And it's incredibly fascinating.
But that is true.
When you, like when I'll publish a story
that's like sort of a beat story,
and then re-reach out, that just happened to me actually,
and then reach out again and say,
I just wanted to let you know I published this story.
It makes people understand that you care about the story,
even if they don't necessarily agree with where you're coming at from
or everything that you've written,
it gives them a chance to see that you're invested
and it matters in a way that you're not a fly-by-night reporter
parachuting into somewhere and going to mess up the story that you care.
And then, you know, everybody wants to tell their story.
Everybody wants to talk and talk about their point of view
and their lives, especially, you know,
as you get a little older,
you probably want these things down for the record.
So when you report on things, you report on, you know,
extremists and people who, you know,
who come back at you,
or maybe not the people you actually report on,
but their allies in some way.
What is that like to be under threat
from people who do not like what you say in your stories?
I have a very thin skin.
I am very sensitive. I cry all the time. The Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee, just a couple weeks ago, I did this story on the weaponization of social media, this like bullshit subcommittee led by Jim Jordan. And I, I'm allowed to say bullshit. I'm sorry. It's okay. This is a free wheeling podcast.
You know, it's, it's in the book.
If it's a word, if the word is used in the book, we can use it on the podcast.
So I think we're okay.
Um, so I reported on this committee and Jim Jordan's, um, flack reached out to
me and was just, I rate and, um, how could you, you know, you're a joke.
And so that they did this like 13, 14 something,
this like huge tweet thread about me and how awful I am.
And it will not surprise you to learn
that lots of people got very angry at me about that.
So generally it feels bad
and that's sort of one of the nicest things responses
that I've had.
I've had Tucker Carlson segments on about me, about how I'm the quote face
of the fascist left and things of that.
It's very weird and nonsensical and not based in fact.
So I can't explain it any further than that, but it does, it breeds a lot of hatred and
animosity and you know, I am much like Robert Caro, just a simple person.
No, but like I'm a normal person. I have kids. I have a husband who doesn't go on the internet
and like doesn't understand what I do, which is great. I highly recommend doing that.
But it's hard. It's really sad. I think it's really important to have a life outside of, you know, this kind of
reporting.
So when I close my laptop and I'm with my children or with my neighbors on my street
who think I'm great, that it doesn't feel like I live in this world where, um,
bullshit artists and people who make money lying about other people, like where
they can get to me.
I mean, there's a story that Robert Caro tells
of doing his archive research.
And this is about the time where it's starting to get out
that he's gonna write a very critical book of Robert Moses.
For a long time, people don't really know
what his take is gonna be,
but Robert Moses cottons onto it and they figures it out.
And so these people who are allied with Moses,
take away the light bulbs in the basement archives
so that he can't do his work
and so he just brings a light bulb instead.
And I am so anti-confrontational that I'd be like,
okay, that's it, I'm gonna be out
because someone's gonna beat me up in the dark.
So what makes you keep going into this fray when there's so much nastiness
coming back at you for people who disagree with you.
Okay.
You say that, but like, I don't ever send things back in restaurants.
Like I, I hate to complain.
I don't want anyone to think I'm like a mean person.
If I, you know, say I'm allergic to shellfish now I might die.
Please take it back.
I'll just
sit there quietly and deal with it later when I get home and eat a PB&J. I'll just eat a PB&J
and then I'll be like, I'll just take it, it was delicious, I'm just not hungry anymore, thank you.
But there's something, I think a lot about judge a man by his enemies.
And so there is something when someone's trying to, when you have a story that's shining a light
on vulnerable people or people who are being harmed or people that just don't have a chance
to tell their story and there are people with power trying to get you to stop that,
that is very electric in this way that I feel a lot like, how dare you?
And it is energizing and it is a spiritual sort of,
it's just a, it's a beautiful, beautiful thing.
And even if you don't think that you like to be antagonistic,
there is that moment where I really like it.
And I get a little like, I get a little high
when I'm about to call someone who doesn't want to talk to me and
this is the moment when they're gonna.
There's something very, very fun about that, right?
You know if they're taking the light bulbs away from you, you're doing something right.
That's great.
Thank you so much for making sure that I knew that my work has been appreciated and I'm
on the right track and you know, time to keep going.
The worst thing is if you're just ignored, right?
If nobody cares about what you're doing, then that probably shows that you don't have a
very good story.
Brandi, before you were a reporter, you were a reference librarian, correct?
True, true fact.
And I come from a line of librarians.
My mom's a reference librarian, my mom's a reference librarian my grandmother's librarian
My wife's a librarian and she went to the same school you went to to get her MLS
And so I really wanted to ask you we've heard from the investigative reporter side of you about Robert Carroll's methods
But what about from the reference librarian side of you how he goes about finding information what he does
How do you feel about that as a librarian as a reference librarian? Oh
My god, it makes me teary a little bit. Like, Caro is the person who we all sort of dream about
coming down into the dusty stacks, like with this big idea, and you become, as a reference librarian,
you become a partner, right, in that search. It's not just, I'm looking for this exact book.
It doesn't work like that, right?
You say, I'm looking for all of these things.
And then, they really do research librarians,
they research on their own and they bring you,
maybe you'll like this, maybe this will help.
And it becomes this sort of partnership.
So I absolutely love that.
And I thought a lot about it when we were talking earlier about
you know going down into the dusty stacks or whatever it is, and I spent so much time
looking, pouring over, you know, special collections at NYPL and and doing that work and there's something just so
visceral and
important and romantic
about flipping through these pages
and looking through these old boxes
and the moments where you find a letter
that's been sitting in a filing cabinet
for whatever, 40 years, and that moment of,
aha, that we don't get so much in this world.
And librarians are such an important part of that process.
So very going through all of these things
and imagining sort of the librarians along the way,
I have thought about that often.
It's something I wonder,
my mother, when she gets a question from somebody
to research, she really goes all out
and she gets very excited about it
and then tells me about all the things she found.
And there's often a point where she is more interested
in it at a certain point than the person who asked her the question in the beginning. Like
she's got the information they were looking for, but she has all this more information
that she wants to give them and they don't really need it. And I wonder if, yeah, maybe
Robert Caro is the dream client because he comes in and the librarians will say, and
we found this. And he would be like, yeah, yeah, bring me everything. Anything that I
can look at, I would look at.
I know my mother yearns for people
to come like that to the library.
I know, he did a talk at,
I think the New York Historical Society or something.
And I was like, oh, I wanna talk to the librarians
at the New York Historical Society and I want that story.
Yeah, I'm sure it was kind of a magical time.
So one of the reasons why we got in touch
and we wanted to talk to you is when you tweeted this thing
that I'd love to interrogate,
which is I just finished reading The Power Broker
and the central theme is that men are huge babies.
Can you unpack that for me?
What were you thinking about when you wrote that?
So I was thinking about, you know, every single time
Robert Moses threatened to resign,
I imagined myself leaving my body and going back in time
and somehow being in the bodies of these men
and just being like, cool, Yes. Pick locks, friend.
Yeah.
Like out the door.
You're, he's not anything.
He's just, he's not, I mean, he is, but like, he's actually not, right?
Like the world would be fine without you.
This office would be fine without you.
The swim team was fine without you and we will survive, get to going.
And, you know, I know it got more complicated as he amassed more power
and more responsibilities and job titles later on,
but even then, I think it's almost like quitting a job,
you feel like, oh, I could never do it,
this is what I do forever, and then you quit,
and you're like, oh, I could just do that the whole time.
But yeah, I couldn't believe that he was able
to offer his resignation so many times
and that nobody took him up on it.
Just, oh, it just irked me so much.
It drives me crazy.
What a big baby.
I mean, I've been around men like this
and I'm sorry, it's always men,
but who do this sort of thing.
And I'm just like, get away, like grow up.
Anyway, so yeah, that was the, that was.
I think that's my experience of like when,
when my passions are like lit up the most in the book,
is every one of those resignations,
cause you just wish you could go back in time,
and just like take over the body of Fiorello LaGuardia and say,
These are like mayors. You're the mayor. You're the governor. You run a city. Like, come on,
find it.
Well, and especially in this episode too, it always strikes me that Moses is a huge
baby, but also that Roosevelt has so much going on with him, and he's still like, gotta get rid of Moses.
I cannot, I just can't miss this opportunity
to take him out, and it's like,
you should be on a higher level at this point.
You're the president of the United States.
Like, why do you care?
Trying to fix the depression, like.
Yeah, the depression is going on,
it looks like there's gonna be a war in Europe.
Like, you could forget about this guy you used to not like
who's in charge of the parks in the New York area.
Like, it's, but he can't do it.
He's just can't look good.
Never underestimate people's ability to be petty.
It's amazing.
Well, this is great.
It's been so much fun talking with you, Brandi.
I really appreciate you coming on
and being part of the book club.
Oh my God. It's my absolute pleasure.
I will be with y'all for remaining episodes.
And thank you so much.
Thank you for joining us.
On this month's episode of the 99% Invisible Breakdown
of the Power Broker, next month,
we'll be back with part five, The Love of Power,
recovering chapters 25 and 26 next month.
That's pages 499 through 606 in my book.
And hey, look, if you're tired of learning things
and just wanna hear a bunch of nonsense,
why not check out my other podcast, The Flophouse?
I promise you will learn nothing.
And if you wanna read about an ancient Greek hero
having adventures, why not try my new Hercules
comic book series from Dynamite, even less related
to what we're talking about today than The Flophouse is.
There's a lot of great discussion going on in our Discord to join in.
The link is on our website or go to discord.gg slash nine nine P I.
And if for some reason you're just joining us for these power broker breakdowns and not
listening to the regular show, 99% invisible, I really urge you to check it out.
One of our producers, Lash Madon went to India and found this amazing story called Towers of Silence that I just want everyone in the world to check it out. One of our producers, Lash Madan, went to India and filed this amazing story called Towers of Silence
that I just want everyone in the world to check out.
So if you don't listen to all the different
99% Invisible episodes already,
take some time and listen to one or two of them now,
and I think you'll like it.
The 99% Invisible breakdown of The Power Broker
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music by Swan Rial, mixed
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99% Invisible's executive producer is Cathy Tu, our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kirk
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Sometimes when I interview people and they're Southern, my Southern accent comes out, you know,
just to, you know, like build some affinity.
Do you ever do that?
Okay.
Do I have a Southern accent?
Yes, I do.
Have I maybe whipped it out a little sooner than,
um, it would have naturally come.
Potentially, possibly, perhaps.
Would I do it again?
Absolutely.
And I bet when Robert Caro is going to Texas
to get a Lyndon Johnson story,
it's gonna take three years because there's no,
his accent is unheightable.
There's no mistaking that accent
for exactly where he's from.
I know, although we would find it endearing.
It would be like, that would be a thing, right?
That like you're sort of known for,
that we would enjoy, bless his heart.
Yeah, exactly, bless his heart indeed.