99% Invisible - The Power Broker #08: Shiloh Frederick
Episode Date: August 16, 2024This is the eighth official episode, breaking down the 1974 Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Power Broker by our hero Robert Caro. This week, Roman and Elliott sit down with Shiloh Frederick. Born an...d raised in New York City, Shiloh is a writer and influencer who shares her love of the city’s history and architecture on Instagram and TikTok. Last year, she chronicled her rather ambitious plan to read The Power Broker in 30 days, and her viral videos about her endeavor ended up making some real change in the city.On today’s show, Elliott Kalan and Roman Mars will cover the second section of Part 6 (Chapter 33 through Chapter 34), discussing the major story beats and themes.The Power Broker #08: Shiloh FrederickJoin the discussion on Discord and our Subreddit. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to ad-free new episodes and get exclusive access to bonus content.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the 99% Invisible Breakdown of The Power Broker.
I'm Roman Mars.
And I'm Elliott Kalin.
So today we're still in part six, The Lust for Power, covering chapters 33 and 34, pages
703 to 806 in my book.
And later in this episode, our special guest is Shiloh Frederick, born and raised in New
York City.
Shiloh is a writer and influencer who shares her love of the city's history and architecture on Instagram and TikTok. Last year, she chronicled
her rather ambitious plan to read The Power Broker in 30 days and her viral videos about
her endeavor ended up making some real change to some Moses-designed ornamentation in the city.
But before we get to all that, we wanted to announce something very special. On October 7th, Elliot and I are talking with the great
Robert Caro live on stage at the New York Historical Society. It's part of the
Society's special exhibit dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Power Broker
and I am so incredibly excited. I cannot wait to see this exhibit and I
can't wait to talk to Robert Caro live in person.
It's a dream come true.
If it had to happen in front of an audience,
I guess that's even better.
So there are witnesses that can tell me,
yes, that did happen.
You and Roman did get to talk face to face
with Robert Caro.
So be one of those witnesses, be part of that moment.
You can go to nyhistory.org to learn more.
We'll also put the information on 99pi.org
and in the 99pi Discord server.
So on the last blockbuster episode of the Powerbroker Breakdown,
we covered Robert Moses.
He's literally busting blocks. You're not wrong, Roman. He's busting blocks full of people.
Robert Moses had successfully gained control of every ingress and egress
to the Island of Manhattan.
Like if you are in a car and you're trying to get to Manhattan or trying to leave
Manhattan and all future river crossings, you have to pay some toll to Robert Moses.
He controls everything.
Um, Robert Carr took us through Robert Moses's like turning the public authority
into this mutant form that allows him to just have this vast amount of wealth to
just keep him going and keep him making new things without having to rely on the
fickle public or any politician's approval for anything.
He controls so much of the money and Moses nearly succeeds in destroying
Battery Park in downtown Manhattan
with his plans to make it an on-ramp
to this enormous bridge to Brooklyn,
which the bridge eventually doesn't happen.
But it takes the power of the president of the United States
to stop him from doing this.
But he takes this years long revenge,
like decade long revenge of closing New York City's aquarium
in place of Fort Clinton.
And then he spends a decade trying to tear down the historic fort.
Again, it just takes the federal government to stop him.
And finally, this last little bit of Moses turning into the thing he hates by lending
his support to the Tammany candidate, William O'Dwyer.
And in exchange for lending that support, O'Dwyer gives him the post of coordinator of all construction.
He's been the enemy of Tammany for his entire life,
and now he's this eager ally.
He lends his name to support and sort of clean up the image
of the Tammany candidate.
And we again visit a old, retired, unwell,
former politician in the form of Mayor LaGuardia.
And he is talking about how much he regrets giving Moses all of this power.
What LaGuardia is really nervous about is that now nobody could keep Moses in check.
He thought he was the last bulwark stopping Moses from running roughshod all over the
city of New York.
So this episode, we're going to be covering chapters 33 and 34.
We're back to big long chapters again, pages 703 to 806 in my book.
We're continuing in the section called The Lust for Power.
And this is chapter 33, leading out the regiment.
What is going on in chapter 33, Elliot Kaelin?
Elliot Kaelin First, Roman, I I just wanna say you did an amazing job
of condensing the last episode down really little.
And I just wanna say, there should be a podcast
called the 99% Invisible Power Broker Breakdown Breakdown
where it's just those sections at the beginning.
Just the catch-up section.
If you string those together,
you could digest this whole book probably in like,
I don't know, 15, 20 minutes when the series is over.
So keep that in mind for the future, for the Ultra-Bridged Edition. You could digest this whole book probably in like, I don't know, 15, 20 minutes when the series is over. That's right.
So, keep that in mind for the future for the Ultra-Bridged Edition.
But this chapter, let's get into it.
This is a long chapter.
This is a tough chapter.
We're entering probably the hardest part of the book to really get through as a casual reader,
because there's a lot of facts, there's a lot of stuff that Caro is reporting to you
about the operation of Moses's corrupt network and it gets very dense. And I imagine this is
the part where a lot of readers, the power broker, they hit it and they're like,
hmm, I think this is where I'm getting off the train or getting out of the car.
Yeah. Because you're like, you're just over halfway
through the book, and it's like going along.
Like you're like, things are happening,
the chapters are getting short,
you feel like you're accomplishing a lot,
another mayor is dead, you're just like, you're like.
He's just throwing away mayors, grubbers, they're gone.
Forget about them, yeah, shedding them.
He's like moving along, and you're just like, hey man, I'm almost halfway done with this book, this is them. Yeah, shedding them. He's like moving along and you're just like,
hey man, I'm almost halfway done with this book.
This is just gonna just sail from here.
And then Robert Carr is like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I'm gonna take you, talk to you about bank finances
and where the money corruption like starts and ends.
And having read it the third time,
I have found it's where it's information fits into this framework.
But I do find this one a little bit hard. So you, dear reader, if you're also finding this section
a little difficult, you are not alone. It is a little bit slower.
I hope you feel seen. I hope you feel represented. I love this. And this is where, so I like thinking
about this book, not just as a work of reporting, but as a work of literature. And this is the chapter where, where that it feels like it tips much
more into the reporting part of it. This is information that is essential for people to
have on paper somewhere. This is the kind of chapter that someone can use for research
for to understand more about the city, but it is not as literature. It's not as readable
as say Paul, Paul and his brother, you know?
Yeah. I feel like this is a, a, a compendium of page four of the city section of like the
newspaper Robert Carrow would have worked at had he not been working at this book. Like
it's a series of articles about a certain type of corruption with different names that
do not stick quite in my head,
with numbers that do not stick in my head.
But if you are a real city council follower,
a real new, every boss of every sort of ward
in various ways, this would be super meaningful
to you at the time.
And I think it reflects that sort of newspaper reporting.
And this is part of it that ages a little bit
in the 50 years since this thing was published,
but it probably felt really, really just of the moment,
like just like urgent and of the moment
when he was writing it in this way.
This is still living recent history
when he's writing this.
This is within the past 30, 20 years
of when he's writing it,
whereas now it is 70 years ago
because the book is 50 years old.
And so it feels less, although I have to admit,
I like to read kind of current event books
from a long time ago, and then think about how
the people in the book have no idea what's coming.
It's like, you're really obsessed with the Cold War,
everybody, but guess what?
In 10 years, that's not gonna be an issue.
I just got this book on the assassination
of William McKinley written in the year he was assassinated.
Oh, wow.
And it talks about him as like,
clearly the greatest American
that we could ever produce, William McKinley.
You know, like, and it talks, it's so fascinating,
the voice of the moment.
It's so cool.
Anyway, so let's go back to this book.
Where does this start?
So this section is about corruption, right?
And the chapter starts with a quote
from a master corruptor, state senator,
former Tammany boss, George Washington Plunkett,
not a big name these days,
but at one point was one of the bosses of New York politics.
And he's speaking in 1905, and the point was one of the bosses of New York politics. And he's speaking
in 1905, and the quote is about defending the idea of graft and attacking the ingratitude of people
who see a problem with politicians making a few dollars off of building wonderful things for New
York City. They've done all this great stuff for New York City, why is it so wrong that they get
a little taste of it? And that is setting the tone for the whole chapter where Caro is going
to be drawing a direct parallel between the Moses of the 1940s and 1950s and the Tammany men of 40,
50 years earlier that he was disgusted by when he was a young reformer at the turn of
the century.
And this is also one of a series of chapters where Karo is even more leaving kind of the
straight overall chronology of the book.
So we're going to be jumping around in time a little bit.
This is one's more about concepts
than about straightforward timelines.
So we know Moses, he's in the past,
he's used his power with the state government
to compel the city government to do what he wants.
But after World War II, he's got an even bigger lever
to use to push the city.
And that is even more federal financing.
After World War II, America wants to build.
It wants to build houses, it wants to build roads.
Building was effectively paused during the war because everything was going towards defeating the Nazis, a valid goal.
I think we can all agree, a worthy thing to stop building for for a few years.
But now the federal government is like, we're the most powerful country in the world.
We want to build. Let's do it. We're going to spend all this money.
And Moses is so brilliant at drafting laws and so brilliant using the system that he is going to maneuver it so that this money
goes directly through his office between the city and the federal government. And so as Roman
mentioned, Mayor O'Dwyer, he had promised to make Moses the city construction coordinator, a job that
has never existed before in the history of New York or maybe any city, I don't know,
maybe in Paris, what was it, Houseman, maybe that was his role.
I don't think he even had that much power, but yeah, totally.
Oh, this is, and O'Dwyer is like, this is just an administrative role, it's not a policymaking role,
you will have authority to oversee all construction-related departments of the
government temporarily, and you will still be subordinate to elected officials."
And Moses is like, that's great.
But when he writes the law creating the post, he pulls a little of his old magic again.
And in his mind, temporary could mean who knows how long, post-war period, it's always
going to be post-war.
You know, the war's over.
Elected officials, we'll see.
And so he puts a clause into the law saying that the city construction
coordinator has the power to represent the city in its relations with cooperating state
and federal agencies. And this is one of those things that he's just so good at where it's
an innocent appearing provision, but it means that he controls the flow of information between
the city and outside organizations.
And so the federal government is going to hear what Moses wants to tell them.
The city is going to hear what Moses wants to tell them, even if that's not what either
side is actually necessarily saying.
He's monopolizing the flow of information the same way he's monopolizing the flow of
cars into and out of Manhattan.
This guy is all about monopolizing.
It's the ultimate whipsaw position because he can just go, hey, the city said
they want me to build this thing.
And the federal government's like, all right.
And then you can go to the city and go,
the federal government wants to give us money for this thing.
And the CEO go, okay.
And neither side knows that Moses is essentially
presenting his own case as the other, either side's case.
I mean, this is one of those things
that's so interesting to me, how Caro zeros in
on this phrase, represent the city and its relations
with cooperating state and federal agencies.
Because this isn't like a phrase buried
that's nefarious on its surface and buried
and you have to unearth it and find it.
Like, I don't think that even reads bad at all.
Like, it's only how Moses uses it that's bad. And it's just incredible to me that you
would have to write a law like so ironclad to get around someone as devious and power-hungry as
Moses is. Like there's just no way to stop this type of person because that phrase, I would just
go over it again and again and again, represent the city, represent the city, represent the state,
coordinate. You're just like, you're like, represent the city, represent the state, coordinate.
You're just like, this is normal practice
for a person in this type of role.
He just happens to use it to sort of like dash to the ends.
But it's incredible.
It shows you that every law is a tool
and that a tool is as useful as the person holding it.
The same way, and we've been doing so good,
I think, at not bringing in modern day parallels,
but the same way that people are like,
yeah, I guess there's no law in the books
against trying to overthrow the government,
the way that Trump did it, so what are we gonna do?
That's essentially the court being like,
hey, no one ever wrote a law saying you shouldn't do this
because the assumption was just,
of course, this is bad, nobody's gonna do this.
And it's hard, law is always kind of a reactive thing,
unless you're Moses and you are writing these laws
with plans in mind, which is often not the way it happens.
Or that the ultimate remedy for the law
is to be removed from power by the electorate,
which is not an option for Moses.
Yes, that's the ultimate democratic safeguard,
which is if we don't like you, you're out.
Exactly.
Moses is immune to that, which is, ugh, what a,
and as we'll see, everyone just keeps giving him
more ways to do that, more ways to be immune.
He's getting super vaccines
against the democratic process.
Moses, he's not officially involved in the housing authority,
but when O'Dwyer has vacant seats to fill
in the city housing authority board,
Moses is like, you should put these people on it, and they're his people. And in 1948, Moses convinces a Dwyer to appoint
a mayor's slum clearance committee and Moses is put on that and Moses controls urban renewal
in New York for a decade after that. Moses is so good at saying to a Dwyer, hey, you
should put me into this position. And a Dwyer was like, yeah, that sounds good. That's a temporary position. And Moses was like, this is what I do now. And this city construction
coordinator job, Moses holds that job for more than 20 years. This is supposed to be, ideally,
this is a kind of position that ends in what, three years, four years after the shape of the
post-war world has finished. And Kara talks a little bit about how Moses is becoming much more,
what's the word, much more just kind of aware of his power. He's really feeling it. And now he
would get on the phone with Thomas Dewey, the post-war governor of New York, of Dewey Defeats
Truman, incorrect headline fame. Until I started reading about Thomas Dewey, seriously, there's
only two things I knew about him. One, he did not defeat Truman, and the newspaper said he did. And two, my grandmother, in a letter to me when George W. Bush
was president, she wrote to me and she said, I hate George W. Bush more than any other elected official
in my life except Thomas Dewey. He would say anything to get elected. And I was like, this is the
only time I've ever really heard anything about Thomas Dewey. She'd been burning with hatred for Thomas Dewey,
someone I thought of just as a name on a news bear headline. But apparently, Moses would just yell him out of the phone and call him a stupid
son of a bitch. And Dewey would buckle under the next governor, W. Avril Harriman. He loves
Moses' abilities. He tells his staff, hey, get tough on Moses. And Moses is like, all right,
yeah, you can get tough on me. Guess what? You're not invited to any groundbreaking ceremonies.
And the governor's like, oh, hold on a second. hold on a second. Wait, what if we named your big power dam the
Robert Moses power dam? You're great. And he goes, okay, yeah, I am great. You can come back to my
ribbon cutting ceremonies. And Harriman is now playing nice with him. Moses is so in control
of the things that politicians want and need for their reelection campaigns. And so they, they bow to him, even when it's silliness, you know,
it seems like it would be silly to put that much weight on.
I'm not getting credit for this new highway exit that just got opened,
or I'm not getting credit for this housing project that's getting opened,
but that's what they run on. That's they want their names attached to it.
Totally, totally.
And Moses is very good at placing his own people throughout the government.
Again, we covered it.
He wrote the bill that designed the state government and did a lot of work in the city
government later.
So he knows exactly who should be where to kind of have people loyal to him in positions.
He starts putting secretaries for people who are not loyal to him on his payroll so that
he'll get copies of the memos that their bosses are putting out and he'll know ahead of time if they're trying to block his projects.
That seems not cool.
That seems like an illegal thing to do.
And because Moses controls so much of construction in the city and in the state, he can award
jobs to contractors and contractors may want to make nice with him so he can say to a loyal
Moses person, are you retiring from the city government?
Okay, you can now get a big private job at this engineering firm or something like that
that wants to do business with me.
He can really promise to take care of them as long as they are loyal to him.
And if you're not loyal to him, guess what?
You're going to be overseeing the grading of farm roads upstate for the rest of your
career.
You're never getting promoted.
And for years, it's just understood by different governors that Robert Moses decides who is
getting construction contracts in New York City, what highways are going to be built,
where they're going to be built, when they're going to be built.
And part of this is Moses also exploiting that the interstate highway system, which
is being built at this time, is a partnership between the federal and the state governments,
not between federal and city governments. Moses has state power, the city government
does not have state power, and it means that he just has so much massive control. And there's
a line here that just sounds so sinister that I want to read to you from the book.
"'Over the planning and building of arterial highways in and around the city of New York,
arterial highways which would do so much to shape the future of that city. The federal and state governments had a stranglehold. The hands
that implemented that stranglehold were the hands of Robert Moses." There's nothing
positive in that right there.
No, no. Strangling hands are universally bad.
Yes. No one wants strangling hands on their arterial highways or their arteries in general.
So these are all examples of Robert Moses using official power and connections to official power
to get what he wants. Caro's going to take us through a few other levers of power in extreme
detail. Roman, feel free to pull me back when I start getting too detailed.
Yeah, but listen, the point of this is because Tammany's back in power
and because Robert Moses has figured out
all these different ways to exact his power,
he still relies on good old fashioned greed and payoffs.
Like, and this is what Caro is like,
really spends a lot of time and effort to say,
you know, this thing that Robert Moses,
you know, like his reputation at the time,
completely avoided, like he never got accused
of taking money because he didn't take personal money.
But he did the same things that all these Tammany guys did
for decades, just in new ways.
And in fact, in a way he was better at it
because he never really took his off the top.
So there's more money to
spread around. You know what I mean?
Yeah. He's very, I mean, this is an uncomplimentary analogy, but in a way he's like Charles Manson.
Charles Manson did not kill anybody. He sent people to kill other people, but that still
makes him part of a murderer. Even though Robert Moses is not taking graft, he is not just allowing
it, but pushing it. And in that way,
he's just as corrupt as everybody else. He's just, but exactly, because he's not, because
he can point to himself and be like, I got bills to pay, I'm in debt, look at me, I'm
not, I'm not living it up. Look, I can't be corrupt. It means he got away with quite
a bit.
And so as you're saying, Tammany is an office again, we should make it very clear, Carol
goes out of his way to explain this. Tammany Hall is just a name. They're no longer meeting in Tammany Hall, the building.
And the actual building Tammany Hall as of 2023 is a Petco.
So if it's no longer the locus of corrupt power
in New York City.
Or is it? I don't know.
Or maybe, I don't know.
I mean, when I was in New York,
it was the New York Film Academy for quite some time,
but now it's a Petco.
But everyone still just says Tammany Hall, cause it's a great name.
But the Guardia is out of office,
O'Dwyer is in office, Tammany is in office.
This is a city, as Carol says, in which
everything had its price.
And he talks about graft a little bit and the
difference between honest graft and dishonest
graft. And I do want to talk about this,
cause I think it's very interesting.
I think it's interesting too.
So dishonest graft is the kind of thing that
like Boss Tweed did at the 1860s 1870s where it's like
Hey, whenever the city gets billed for anything I get a percentage of it
The comptroller gets a percentage of it. The mayor gets a percentage of it. You know what?
We're just stealing money from the system best line from the city
Whereas by the 20th century you had these bosses like silent Charlie Murphy and George Washington Plunkett, who was quoted earlier, and they had the idea of honest graft, which is you don't get a bribe.
Instead, what you do is you use your power to, say, direct a city contract to a company that
you had a stake in or
you know that some land needs to be owned by the city and you buy it ahead of time and then you sell it to
the city at an inflated price. You're getting paid money, but it is not just the city is getting something in return. It's
getting a service or it's getting a location, but in exchange you are, you're getting a
little bit off the top as opposed to just saying, give me money. Like just give me money
straight.
It's not direct money, but you're, it's a, it's like recognizing that, Hey, I'm a person
of power and influence. I've been in this city a long time. I own a little piece of
this construction company.
What's the big deal?
Hey, why should I not hire the best construction company
in the city according to me?
I wouldn't own a stake in it if I didn't feel that way.
Why should I deny those services to the city?
Just because I might make a little bit of money off of it.
And it's sort of like indirect
and it's just laundered a little bit of money off of it. And it's sort of like indirect and it's just laundered a little bit, honestly.
It's mostly, by the 1920s,
it's mostly being paid through fees.
Well, yeah, this is the second revelation.
It's just like, instead of just a little bit off the top
to people who are a comptroller
or people who are the mayor,
it's like they introduce the concept
of the lawyer on the take.
Yes, where it's like, hey, you're a state legislator,
you're also a lawyer.
As a state legislator, you voted for this project.
You know what?
Just as a private lawyer,
we hired you to do some work for us
and we paid you a fee for it
and it's on the books that way.
And Carol quotes Al Smith,
seeing a law student studying and saying,
there's a young man studying how to take a bribe
and call it a fee.
And it was, if you were too worried about your name showing up
in the books of that company, then you know what? You have them pay the fee to another
legal firm, which then pays it to you, and they take a little cut off of it. It's honest
in that it is more dishonest. Like it's honest in that it is not just stealing straightforward,
but there is more lying involved. And there's so much construction going on. There's so
many opportunities for graft now in this post-World War II world. And there's so much construction going on. There's so many opportunities for
graft now in this post-World War II world. And you remember when Moses was a young man,
he refused to pay it. He was not going to pay the price to get his things through because
he had principles. Now he is happy to pay it and he has so much money to pay it with
because he's got control of so many different state and city public works that, Kara says, from
1945 to 1960, he had roughly $3.5 billion to do whatever with, with minimal oversight.
And from the Tribor authority, he has another $750 million with no oversight.
Those books are closed to the public.
You cannot look at them.
The only people who can is the comptroller can call for an audit, but it would take so
many lawyers to go through those books that they would need an appropriation from the government to do that.
And the government's not going to be like, yeah, yeah, well, we'll give you the money to hire the people to find out that we were taking bribes from the tribal authority.
Sure, sure. Robert Moses, he just has so much money on hand.
At the same time, as we're saying, he has the power of the press saying he's a disinterested civil servant.
He's not interested in money. he's not interested in patronage. This is long after he, of course, was doling out patronage like crazy. His reputation
protects him. And Carroll starts going through specific examples of Moses paying out graft
in the form of fees for insurance premiums, things like that. It gets very dizzying. There's
so many different examples and there's so many different ways to do it that I know reading through it, I start to go into a kind of a trance. And the
most important thing is just to know that Caro's saying, Moses has such a good antenna
for who's in power and who's not, that you can kind of track who's up, who's down in
New York politics by who is getting paid these fees from Triborough authority.
Yeah. And I'm trying to think, is there anything really salient here in one of these examples that points to something?
But basically it's just,
they pull what this sort of back alley dealing
of handing an envelope to somebody
into all these legitimate forms of business.
It's the same principle of just paying off someone,
but just filters through more organizations
and those organizations are legal companies.
I mean, that's really it.
And the other difference is that Carol makes a point of saying it's not explicit quid pro
quos.
It's not I'm giving you this fee in exchange for you doing this one thing for me.
It's more like you're on the team.
I'm going to give you a job as the, he talks about Stanley Rosenman, I think it is.
I forgot what, I think he's
legal counsel to Triborough or something like that. Like you have this job and in exchange,
if the governor looks like he's going to veto one of my projects, you just fly to Albany
and tell him not to, but I'm not going to tell you to do that. You just know you're
on my team. When, when something is in my way, you help remove it. When some, when I
need something, you help do it for me, but it's not Moses calling up people with specific directives necessarily.
It's all very, I mean, again, it's the way that Trump kind of does things, where it's a lot of like, or mobsters, where it's a lot of like,
you got that thing? Okay, great. Here's another thing. Oh, what about that thing? It's a lot of refusing to use details in the exact agreements. And again, Kara makes it very clear that Moses didn't take money,
but he still considers him corrupt. He writes, in terms of money, the terms in which corruption
is usually measured, Robert Moses was not himself corrupt. He was in fact as uninterested in obtaining
payoffs for himself as any public servant who ever lived. In the politicians phrase,
he was money honest. But in terms of power,
Robert Moses was corrupt. Coveting it, he used money to get it. And so he becomes, even if he
is not taking payoffs, he becomes the center of cash corruption in the construction trades and the
building projects of New York. He's like an octopus that's using all of its tentacles to,
I don't know,
throw fish at other octopuses,
but it's not eating any of itself.
It's a great metaphor, it's a great analogy.
Maybe Robert Carroll will use it in the next edition.
That's right.
That's right.
And it all comes from the fact that he has so much money
for this period of time.
He controls like so much liquid money from all this,
you just like toll money that he can just like,
it's not like he has to really lean on anyone
to make them do something.
He just goes, hey bank,
do you want $15 million in your deposit
so you can make more money off of, you know,
like the things that bank do to make money, you know,
like, and he just, he just gives it to them.
It's not a problem.
Like you have to put the money in the bank. Um, the bank makes money off it.
All this sort of stuff is normal things,
but the level of it and the way he kind of uses it to create this system around
himself to get what he wants out of things is just the scale of it is,
is just so impressive.
Yes. And that caros,
but he that he is seeing the whole situation of power in politics in New York so holistically,
and so every single aspect of it.
So like with banks, he knows banks have political power.
Banks are involved with, the people who run banks
are involved with political donations in this city,
and so he can get a banker on his side
by putting things in the bank.
Again, there's nothing illegal about what he's doing.
He talks about dealing with like the unions in the city. Unions have a lot of political power,
and they also already like these projects because they're big projects that employ a lot of people
that have a lot of overtime on them. So it keeps their... The heads of unions are elected by their
members. And so just like any elected official in the city, they need to save their members.
I brought all this to you, and now you're making money." And so he can then
work with the unions to also be on his side because he can promise them certain types
of projects and jobs. And he is effectively becoming, as Carol calls them at one point
in the chapter, the boss of bosses, which is, sounds like it's a mafia term, but it's
also of all these political machine bosses, all these bosses of different types of power in New York, he is now their boss who is, as Carol says, he uses the analogy
of a word boss handing out Christmas baskets to his constituents, you know, so that he
can maintain their vote. Moses handing out baskets of honest graft to his constituents,
which are the behind the scenes power brokers and bosses of the city.
That's right.
And once he gives you that basket, I'm just keep saying basket, it's not literally a basket, but once he hands you that basket, he also has a hold over you
because he can say, remember I did that thing? And Paul Skravane, city council president,
he talks about how Mayor Robert Wagner, who we'll be talking about in great length later,
that he said to him, hey, I'm going to make you the city's liaison for the 1964 World's Fair,
which Moses is
running and he says, well, my experience with Moses taught me, accept nothing from him.
Never let him do a favor for you ever.
If he tries to do one, say no, thank you.
Just don't accept it because he will hold it over you forever and he'll destroy you
with it.
Like, and Scrivain talks about how he would see guys who Moses had done favors for going against Moses and
then Moses saying, get me the file, get me the file that has this thing in it. And he
knew that he could show that to whoever it was and that person would fold. He's just
so he has, it just becomes common knowledge that he has these extensive dossiers about
people with compromising information about what he's done for them and what they've
done in return. And if you don't accept a favor from him, it doesn't mean you're immune,
because everyone's done something embarrassing, and he's got his bloodhounds,
not literal bloodhounds, he's got his, you know, guys who search out compromising information.
And so, Carol says, it's not just greed that Moses is holding over people, although that's a big part of it.
It's also fear. You're also afraid that Moses will make something public that you don't want to
be public. And now I'm free floating in this book. I think we've talked about this before about how
if you're a major public figure and Moses goes after you in the press, maybe you can survive it.
But if you're a city bureaucrat somewhere, this is the first time your name is appearing in the
newspaper and it's appearing with Robert Moses calling you a communist or someone connected to
Robert Moses leaking information
about something in your past that could destroy you.
That's really scary.
So it's a powerful tool.
And Moses' role in all this
and the sort of institutions he creates and shores up
are all legitimate on the surface.
These, the banks, the bonds, like bankers want his bonds.
They're stable, like they give a good return. He's offering something that they want.
But the reason why they're so flushed to invest
is because he's parking the authority's money with them.
And all that stuff kind of works.
And so like when he has kind of dirt on you
for giving you a little bit of this money or whatever
that he could destroy you with,
he's kind of bulletproof because there's no part of this
which is actually illegal.
He, at least as far as I can tell,
I mean, like he really insulates himself
and his discipline to never really wet his beak
and only accrue power from it and not money
is like a real source of his strength. Like he had he just has
this discipline to keep everyone else flush, everyone else happy, all these parts of these
complicated systems working together. But he can always be the sort of pristine, clean center of it
all. Yes, he doesn't show it. It's the thing you see a lot in gangster movies where they're like,
and there's the scene in Goodfellas with the fur coat,
but there's in American gangster,
there's also a fur coat thing.
It's often fur coats where you pull off a job
and the minute you start showing you have money,
it's trouble.
And so that's the scene in Goodfellas where he goes,
take it back, take it back.
He bought a fur coat for his wife and after dinner,
he's going, take it back.
Because if you don't show that you have it,
people aren't going to go looking for you at it.
And the thing that Caro, especially with the banks
that he gets to here too is,
you're talking about those bonds,
those bonds are super attractive to banks.
They pay artificially high yields.
Like the interest rates on them are enormous
that he's paying back to them.
They're incredibly stable, they're tax exempt.
And that's one of the reasons why they return so much
is they're tax exempt.
That's the public authority and these bonds
and all this sort of stuff is able to happen
because we entrust these institutions
to do things in tax-free ways,
to give them a little bit of leg up
because they're working for us.
And that is not a problem as long as they are working for us.
But as soon as they are not,
it's just stealing from different types of people.
Because, yeah, the payback for those bonds is not,
it's not like Robert Moses is then, like,
it's not like he's winning the lottery
and then he's spending, giving that money back to the banks
or his own money.
The money he's paying the banks back with is toll money.
It's toll money, yeah.
And that is money directly from New Yorkers,
from people traveling through New York City.
And the whole point of an authority is that it's built,
the bonds pay for its construction,
the bonds are paid off, the toll goes away.
But because Moses keeps issuing these bonds,
the tolls never go away.
And so New Yorkers are paying these millions
and millions of dollars that the banks
and everyone else are taking advantage of.
They're just paying it dime by dime by dime by dime, which adds up, especially back then, dime bought a lot. I forgot
how much I said a dime could buy you a house. Maybe you could buy a house with a dime. Actually,
this is like the 40s, 50s. So a dime can buy you like maybe just like a motorcycle.
And there's other places that Moses finds power that you wouldn't even expect. He makes a real alliance with Cardinal
Spellman of the Archdiocese of New York, the Catholic Church, because he has political power.
He has massive political power. He deals with the owners of Macy's and Gimbals, the retail giants
in the city, because they're powerful. They control political power. Anyone who has access
to political power, he is eager to work with, to make deals with, to do
favors for.
Um, there's one point where he is planning to
condemn a block of buildings so Macy's can just
build a new building there.
This is not the kind of thing you're supposed to
be able to evict hundreds of, if not thousands of
people for.
And the wrong person in the government hears about
it and says to the mayor, like, if you don't stop
this, I'm going to go to the newspapers and say,
we're evicting all these people. So Macy's can build a new building. You know, this is crazy. the wrong person in the government hears about it and says to the mayor like, if you don't stop this, I'm gonna go to the newspapers
and say we're evicting all these people
so Macy's can build a new building.
This is crazy.
And at this part, it's easy to think,
Moses is kind of working with everybody.
Maybe this is a perfect system.
He's working with politicians, banks, retailers,
the church, the unions.
Maybe this is that perfect system
where everyone gets a little bit of what they want.
But the thing is, the people that leave out are the residents.
The people who, like we were saying, the people who are paying the tolls,
the people who are now paying higher taxes to support these things,
the people in power are getting something from it, and the people who are out of power are not.
But it means that all the powerful forces of the city are very much aligned behind Moses pushing for these projects. They're all going to get something out of it. Now, okay,
there's another center of power in the city. Let's talk about this one. This is the one
that should be stopping all this. It's called, we mentioned it before, the Board of Estimate.
That's right. It's got an intriguing, exciting name, the Board of Estimate.
The borough presidents sit on it and they control, in theory, they control the hiring and public works within their boroughs.
This is the top of a democratic pyramid that goes down through district and county organizations.
And this is the kind of stuff that we talked about back in episode two with Jamal Bowie, where he was saying that even a corrupt democracy is built on delivering things for its constituents.
It needs to get those votes. So even a corrupt machine has to be in some way responsive to
the people. If it gets too non-responsive to the people, it gets voted out of office.
And the reformers, unfortunately, in New York kind of cause themselves some problems later
on because in 1938, they want to curb the big machine politics.
So they take a lot of that borough centered power and they move it to central city agencies.
And this is kind of similar to what is happening with the governor of New York with Al Smith
back then, which is that everyone still blames the borough presidents for not doing the things
they want, but they don't really have the power to do it anymore.
They can't really control it. They're, they are open for, uh, let's just say, uh,
persuasion by someone who has money and plans.
Okay.
But okay, hold on.
They still control the power of the purse over
the board of estimate, right?
The most powerful power of all.
It's right there, I think in the Federalist papers.
Like the power of the purse is the power of war and
peace, it's the power over everything.
Here's the issue when there's
another guy who has his own purse and it's a much bigger purse and he doesn't need any of your power
to spend money out of it, then the power of the purse is not that's it's a little bit like,
I don't remember if I used this metaphor before. It's like if my children were playing the stock
market and I was like, if you don't do your chores, you won't get your allowance. And they'd be like, that's fine, you know, Tesla is up.
I don't need to do my chores to get my allowance.
I don't know that my kids would necessarily invest
in Tesla, it's just the first company that came to mind
that has volume stocks, you know.
And so the Board of Estimate,
it only has the power to say, no, we won't pay for things.
It does not have the money to say,
yes, we will pay for things.
And that's when Moses can step in
and he can say to a borough president,
hey, do you need a project so that people will think that you can accomplish things so they'll vote for you again?
I got a project. He just opens up his coat and they're like stolen watches or all his plans with the budgets attached.
And he's like, I can give you the money, I can give you the plans, but here's the thing.
You got to do it the way I tell you to do it.
And I know you know your borough. You think you know it better than I do.
You maybe know what the people there need better than I do.
I don't care.
I'm not open for suggestions.
You gotta take it the way it is or leave it.
And if they don't take it, I will have the banks,
the unions, the church, the retail giants call you
and tell you, you need to take it.
Why aren't you taking it?
Yeah.
And even the press, and he really does these awful things
where someone pushes back and they're like well
I don't want this elevated highway over my church or my house
Just like how about just a couple blocks this way and he's just like he calls a press conference says like you know that
Moron he just decided he didn't want 23 million dollars of my money to build something
I was gonna spend 2323 million in the Bronx.
Sounds pretty good, right?
People in the Bronx will tell your borough president
that he needs to stop
because now I'm gonna send it somewhere else.
And the borough president is like,
oh, that doesn't look good.
It's so much of Moses' power comes from,
one, people being afraid to let him resign
and having this bluff that no one will call,
and two, being able to say
to people, you need this money, right? You want this money. And so, can you afford not to take it?
Can you afford to say no to this and lose out on these millions of dollars? And it's like,
I mean, every day with Moses, like in Decent Proposal with Robert Redford and Demi Moore,
basically, you know, can you afford not to do this with me? I don't know if you can,
because I'm offering you a million dollars for one night.
Look, if that's fine with you
to not get that million dollars, that's okay.
And it's like he's saying that
to every borough president constantly,
but instead of one night of carnal desire,
it's generations of having a highway
built over your neighborhood, yeah.
Yeah, so this is sort of like how he has taken
this old-fashioned thing of just giving money
to people, holding money as a controlling factor.
And even though Moses can sort of present himself as above the board using the institutions
that are the way that they're supposed to be used, he can kind of exact the same ends
as some kind of mob boss
in the politics of 50 years before.
It's pretty much the same thing.
And this is kind of what this chapter is all about.
And it's really fascinating.
And it just reminds you that Moses is just a sui generis
like figure in the world.
Like the fact that he can stay clean,
he can prop up all these institutions,
he can hold this public perception of him,
have so much control, be such a bully
in so many different ways, and have none of it stick
because he has set up the laws and the institutions
all around him to make him just the most powerful figure.
I mean, the power broker, I guess,
is what you'd maybe call him.
Maybe call him that.
I mean, that's what he finally gets called
at the end of this chapter.
At the end, Carol dubs him the supreme power broker,
and it's like, it feels like when you're watching a movie
and they say the title of the movie in the movie,
and you're like, oh, they got there, they did it.
And so much of this, what makes it's almost like-
I feel like you're the captain of America right now.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's really, we really did get caught up
in some Star Wars today.
Oh, let's say, yeah, it's a great,
I mean, they say welcome to Jurassic Park, that makes sense.
In context, it makes sense. It would make sense he would say welcome to Jurassic Park. That makes sense. In context,
it makes sense. It would make sense he would say welcome to his park that he made for people.
But other movies doesn't quite work. It's almost like if you were looking... So I'm going to try
to be like Caro and be probing. And I think that's Moses' strength too. And I think ultimately when
you get to it, Moses' ultimate strength is that he can see beneath the surface of things to how
they really operate underneath.
He kind of has no,
or at least knows how to do the research to find that out.
Cause Carol says that academics studying the working of the New York City
government at this time, they didn't really see what was actually happening.
They thought the board of estimates still had this held this power and they,
they couldn't see that it was all a facade and Carol says the proof is in the way that Robert Moses
stops showing up for board of estimate meetings when they call him he doesn't
explain his plans before they go up for a vote like if the person in the power
position is the one that is not showing up for meetings like the person who says
hey can you come explain this to me that person is not in power the person who
goes no I'm not going to vote on it anyway that's the person who says, hey, can you come explain this to me? That person is not in power. The person who goes, no, I'm not going to vote on it anyway,
that's the person with power.
And so he has upended basically the whole system of this city in that way.
He is not responsible to the public.
Voters have no ability to affect him because he has this alliance of money,
banks, unions, businesses, political bosses, fear.
He has made essentially his own process that exists slightly outside of the democratic process.
And it seems like that's his, maybe his most amazing genius insight is,
I don't have to corrupt the democratic process the way the Tammany bosses used to.
I can replace it. I can replace it with something different that operates off to the side,
is centralized around me,
and just doesn't need to deal with these people.
And when it does deal with ordinary New Yorkers, treats them as obstacles or inconveniences.
And Robert Carroll would never make this comparison.
I think it's probably outside of his frame of reference. I don't know.
Maybe I'll have to ask him when we talk to him next.
But Moses is feeling very much like Cthulhu at this point, like a kind of lovecrafty and elder god who has his own plans and does not even notice the people that he's crushing beneath his feet as he reaches
out to the cosmos to exert his madness, to far off distant worlds. If this was the end of Moses'
story, he would have reached the apex of untouchable power. You know, and he's, he's taken these things and he has totally, like we're
saying, not subverted the democratic process, but removed himself from it.
He's escaped from it.
And as a result, he is shaping the city physically.
He's reshaping its institutions, how it operates.
Uh, he is again, I hate, I'm going to do it one more time.
This is my last time making a modern day parallel.
I apologize, which is going to be hard when we get to mere MP who is, who is also has a lot of
modern day parallels, but he is kind of doing to New York in a way what Donald Trump seems
to want to do with the United States and making it not a system of elections and checks, but
instead a system that uses raw power to respond to the desires of one person and the plans of one person.
And it's very chilling. It's a very chilling thing.
And it's very scary to think about, even knowing this is many, many, this is decades ago,
but knowing that this potential still lies at the heart of American democracy,
that it's not ironclad. It relies on the people who are operating it to operate it,
at the very least with an acceptance
of the basic premises of democracy.
Because if there's someone who comes in
who does not accept those basic premises,
who thinks that a system where Ivy League graduates
just draw roads straight through maps
and then dig them through neighborhoods
and don't listen to anybody,
if that person has access to the levers of the machine,
then it can get really scary.
And at this point, it makes me glad that like,
Robert Moses, this sounds strange,
but that Robert Moses was so into roads
and so into building things,
as opposed to any number of more terrible things
that he might've been doing.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, and what I think about this,
these, this whole system that he shored up
and sort of exploited to do what he wanted.
You know, when people talk a little bit about like,
I'd be so great if there was just a Moses type
who could get things done,
but get things done the way I want to,
you know, there's a couple reasons why there aren't anymore.
One is the lesson of Robert Moses and people like him built in,
you know, we built in new safety guardrails to stop them.
There's no city construction coordinator in New York, as far as I can tell, these days, yeah.
Exactly. And the second is like, you know, he put himself as the controller of all these levers.
So like, you just imagine him like in the center of this,
like NASA style, pushing buttons, pulling levers,
making everything happen.
He constructed this in a way to work
the way he wanted it to work.
But like all those bureaucracies
and all those things built up actually slowed things down.
Like when somebody wasn't at the center
like him controlling everything,
it actually broke down like a lot.
Like he created the situation to make it so that no one could make things the way
he did, not just because we're stopping the Moses from happening, but because no
one can control it the way he did.
Um, and so, so now all these things have roadblocks.
You have a board of estimates who can say no, but can't say yes.
You have, uh, you know, like you like all the, the dysfunction that it's created
when it isn't working together, like as an orchestra.
It's a bunch of errant notes and squeaks and bad timing.
There's no conductor at the center of it.
And it made everything worse afterward.
Like, I think these systems, you know,
he broke down systems, like, not that, again,
I don't want to go back to, we had this sort of discussion with
Jamal Bowie, was like, I don't really want to go back to the days of turkeys
and patronage exactly, but like he really eliminated the responsiveness of local
government to its constituents.
Like he built and sort of fostered so many sort of like structures that got in the way
of that, that something was lost.
Some kind of way to get stuff done that represents the will of the people and moving something
through in a quick and in a way that made sense.
Even when everyone agrees, it's very, very hard because of these systems.
He broke so many things.
He didn't just build roads that destroyed neighborhoods. Like he broke down systems that never,
I don't think in a way never really recovered
in a lot of ways in New York.
Yeah, and it means that New York
is a difficult city to do things.
And I mean, and that's why people do call for sometimes
for we need a Moses-like figure.
Because if the systems are operating
the way they're supposed to,
you don't need a Moses-like figure.
But he helped kind of, I guess there's this kind of pendulum swing in American government
between centralization and decentralization that kind of goes back and forth and usually
ends up more in the central.
If you look at American history, things usually centralize more than they decentralize because
it's hard to take power away from powerful people once they've got it.
But this is kind of like ultra centralization in one person of this particular.
Also, I don't
want to fall into the trap of thinking that every single thing in New York had to go through Robert
Moses, but every single thing involving construction, transit, transportation, which are major parts of
the city. But it's, I don't think it's not like he's not the curator of cauliflowers anymore. He's
not making sure that the boxing matches, that the tickets are going out to the right people, you know.
But yeah, once if you build something, if you build a system around a person and that person goes away,
the system, it can't hold with a blanket at center and you can't necessarily just pop
somebody else in there and expect them to do the job properly. You know, it's the thing
you see in talk shows, to be honest, in late night talk shows often, where there's a beloved
talk show host and they retire and a new person gets put in and people are like,
the show is not quite the same.
It doesn't quite work the same way.
It's like, yeah, cause the show was built around the host
and if you change it, you have to change the machine
around it and it's a similar thing
with city construction coordinators,
the late night talk show hosts
of the New York political world.
Totally.
And I guess that's my point is that it isn't so much
or isn't just that Robert Moses, you know, destroyed
or led to the fall of New York as in the title
because of his ambitions
and because of the things he wanted to get done.
The method which he got things done broke down systems
that no one could quite put together again
to get things done ever again quite the same way. And it was,
it had, that's another lasting effect of Moses. I don't, I don't know the Roman in the next chapter
we'll see maybe a string of dynamic mares, dynamic, really exciting, really, uh, you know, pioneering
mares will be able to do it. Maybe that's what we'll get in the next chapter. I guess only one
way to find out. We're going gonna cover chapter 34, Moses and the
Mayors after this. So we're back with chapter 34, Moses and the Mayors, and you know, if you want
to get out of the timeline when it comes to this biography. This chapter really gets out of the timeline because he's going to go through these mini biographies and sort of abject lessons for each of the three
mayors that succeed LaGuardia in this section. Yes, it could be called Moses and the mayors
that didn't deserve their own chapters. So it's kind of like mini biographies,
mini histories, these three post LaGuard mayors, and let's dive into them.
And this chapter is divided up into subsections with the mayor's name as the heading of each, and it's the first time we see this in the book.
I think it might be the only time. I'm trying to remember.
And it's very – there's something about this that's kind of jarring, but there's also something kind of exciting about it that like, Carol's like, yeah, I'll structure this book the way I want to.
Like, this is the way it makes sense for this chapter. I don't need to be beholden to just that none of the other chapters had sub-eddings, you
know?
It's actually pretty crazy because when you're editing things, and I edit a lot of stories
for the show for 900% Invisible, that there's often this idea that you need a kind of consistency
across an episode,
maybe a couple of episodes,
and how you do and format things.
And he's just like 800 pages in,
just like, fuck it, subheads with major names.
He just like, he doesn't, I mean, I'm sure he cared.
I'm sure he was super thoughtful about it.
I'm sure like-
I'm sure he and Robert Gottlieb probably had discussions
or arguments about this for weeks, is my guess.
I kind of love the fact that it doesn't,
it isn't a style
used in any other part.
It just shows, it goes to show you that like,
when it comes to most things,
when it comes to editing most things,
to me, like solving the immediate problem of clarity
is like 95% of what you need to do.
And that sort of little bit of just like,
yeah, but what if there aren't subheadings
in other sections and what if this is like,
the audience does not care.
Like they just don't care.
If it's working, it's working.
Um, anyway.
But it also means we don't have to have three full, full chapters.
92, I mean, still long chapters, still 51 page chapter, but it means that
Carol doesn't have to worry about writing like intros and outros for individual
mayors, which is great, like save that energy.
You just used up a lot of energy with that last chapter.
You save it up for more stuff.
So it's a marathon.
It's not a sprint, Robert Caro, we know that.
So we start with O'Dwyer.
So when we last left the chronological timeline,
O'Dwyer had just been elected.
He's the Tammany Democrat.
He's this charismatic Irishman.
He started out as just an immigrant laborer
and worked his way up to being mayor of New York.
How did he do it?
Two ways Roman, hard work and shadowy connections to organized crime.
And they seem to play equal roles in this. And O'Dwyer, you can tell when Caro is kind of like affectionate
towards some of the subjects.
And also when he talked to him in person, you can tell he talked to O'Dwyer.
He went to Mexico City.
And hiding in Mexico City. To talk to O'Dwyer, He went to Mexico City to talk to O'Dwyer.
We'll get into why he's in,
why the mayor of New York lives in Mexico City at the end of his life.
But he's, you can tell that he kind of admires the hardworking immigrant part of
O'Dwyer. And O'Dwyer clearly loves New York. He wants to be a good mayor,
but New York needs massive investments in its basic infrastructure, schools,
subways, hospitals, sewers, airports.
They all suck.
They're all in bad shape.
And it's going to take about one and a half billion dollars.
Again, this is in 1946.
So one and a half billion dollars is a lot of money back then, not like now when it's
not that much money.
And oh, do I ever find, I'm just, I'm joking.
Of course, it's still an astronaut.
Well, you know, every, I just, just as a little bit of an aside, um, you know, that chapter
that I love, that's about the $109 million he has to raise to
do the entire West Side improvement.
And I think about that $109 million to change the face of the entire West Side of the island
of Manhattan is just mind boggling.
Like to me.
Anyway, that's the number that sticks in my head the most because it seems so low for
that much stuff.
Yes, it would be an enormous deal.
I mean, I think it would be like a trillion dollars today
or something, like craziness.
I mean, it would be impossibly expensive at this point.
Yeah, it would be, it's amazing.
It's why it would have been better if a lot of this stuff
in terms of like subway lines had happened then
because they're now so incredibly expensive.
So O'Dwyer needs one and a half billion dollars
for this construction program.
He goes, okay, how much money does the city have?
And they go, uh, none.
Zero.
Actually worse than zero because everything's
running at a deficit, like hundreds of
millions of dollars a year in just paying
awful bills and Moses, like an angel or a devil
on his shoulder, he shows up to answer the mayor's
prayers, a rhyming phrase that Caro does not use,
but I'm introducing, uh, with a plan to fund city construction projects.
He's like, look, hey, all you have to do
is Idlewild Airport, which is now JFK Airport,
Idlewild Airport, it needs a lot of work.
Just turn it over to a public authority
and then raise toll revenues
by increasing the price of the subway fare of 100%
from a nickel to a dime.
And look, you can just put it under my control
and do all this stuff, we'll take care of
it. Look, public housing, we can build that affordably, just get rid of the other guys doing it,
put me in charge, cut down on frills like closet doors and toilet bowl covers, as long as you cut
down on those expensive luxuries, then we can do it. And you know what would give the city extra
borrowing power? Raise the sales tax and the utilities taxes. And he also says, give me the authority to negotiate on behalf of the city with Albany.
I'll get it done.
I'll tell you which projects can be deferred.
Guess what?
Schools, libraries, hospitals, firehouses, we can defer those.
You know what kind of projects we can't defer?
Highways.
We need to build those now.
And his plan, Carol points out, is codifying Moses' personal beliefs about who is worth
taking care of and who is not.
By raising subway fares and utility taxes, you are putting the tax burden on the lower
classes.
By not raising real estate taxes, you are lifting the tax burden on the upper classes.
By building roads, you are creating services for the people who can afford cars.
By not investing in the subway, you are removing services or you are degrading services for people who cannot afford cars by not investing in the subway, you are removing services or you are degrading services
for people who cannot afford cars.
He's effectively asking the city's poor
to subsidize improvements for the city's rich
and upper middle class.
But it's all really to help his stuff.
He goes, if the subway is self-sustaining,
something it's never been before,
and ever since then it's been trying to be
the same way that they always want the post office
to be self-sustaining. And it's like, it's good that to be the same way that they always want the post office to be self-sustaining.
And it's like, it's good that you can mail something and it goes anywhere.
Like, but anyway, it's a public service.
He says if the subway is self-sustaining, then the city's debt borrowing limit basically adds $425 million,
which was going to the subway and now doesn't have to.
And he's like, I could really use $425 million to build some new roads and some new bridges and things like that.
I would really use $425 million to build some new roads and some new bridges and things like that.
I would really like that.
And as a result, the subway system,
it does not become self-sustaining
and it does not get modernized the way it needs to.
And New York has been paying for that shift in priorities
for at least the last three decades.
Certainly the entire time I lived in New York City,
subway closures, shutdowns, slowdowns
were an enormous problem.
And just the fact that it, even when you're waiting on a platform in this New York City subway, it feels like you are inside of an
oven. It feels like you're in the story of, is it what, Rack Shack and the three guys in the Bible
who get thrown in a bull and that is an oven that gets lit on fire. That's what it feels like to be
in the subways in the summer. It's terrible. I mean, this is so galling that not only
of the list of villainous deeds that Robert Moses
was a part of, that the fact that every ounce of it
was paid for by the people with the least amount of money.
It's just, it is the part that makes this
so infuriating, especially, I mean, it just is gross.
I just, it just makes me so mad.
It is the opposite of the way a reasonable society
should work, in my opinion,
that people who have less should receive more help
and the people who have more should give more help.
You know what, call me a communist.
I'm not, you can call me that, I don't care.
But don't really call me that. Robert Moses will get me in trouble for it.
But certainly even if it's sort of just whatever, you know, like there is no, you know, progressivity
or regressivity. Like if it's just equal, like that would be an improvement over the
degree of aggressiveness when it comes to this form of taking money from people, you
know, to have roads to go through Manhattan.
It takes from the people of Manhattan that are just trying to get to work.
It just, it's really, really upsetting how tilted it is towards the people who don't
need it.
So yeah, and understandably liberal reformers, they don't like this plan, even not quite
dead yet.
Mayor LaGuardia and the current city comptroller, they point out, hey, the city has overpaid tax payments to
the state by over half a billion dollars.
Why don't they send that back to us and we'll use it for construction?
And Democratic legislators are like, yeah, we would rather not run for reelection on
a tax increase and a fair increase.
We're not crazy about this plan.
And most of his response, he's got a simple response, he threatens to reveal embarrassing
information about the party leadership, and they whip the party in line, and they
get behind Moses. And the city comptroller can say whatever he wants, he
does not have the influence in Albany, in the state capital, that Moses has. And
O'Dwyer, in the telling of this chapter, seems to be entirely absent in any of
the negotiations between the city and the state.
Moses is the only go-between.
He misrepresents each side's position.
He lies to the public about it.
O'Dwyer, I don't know what he's doing at this point.
I mean, being mayor is a busy job.
There's other stuff.
But he brokers this deal that they're going to raise the fares, they're going to raise
taxes.
Moses, in exchange, he gets all this new money to play with.
He gets control of the airport authority.
He gets even more bond issuing power.
He finally gets to take over the tunnel authority completely. And
the legislature won't let him become chairman of the city housing authority, but they reorganize
it in a way that he still basically has control of it. And the state even, they go, okay,
we'll give you the funds for your Jones Beach Marine Theater that you want to build so badly,
this theater on Jones Beach. And we'll get in the next episode, we'll talk some more
about Moses's use of theaters and misuse of theaters. What did the state get out of this deal?
Governor Dewey, he gets to hold onto the city's surplus tax money, which means he gets to, he can
cut state taxes. He can run on that. What does Mayor Dwyer get? He gets big construction projects
he can point to when he runs for reelection in three years. What does the city get? It gets tax
increases. It gets fare increases. What do the democratic legislators get?
They get kicked out in the next election
because they get blamed for all that.
Yeah.
And Moses gets power.
He gets so much power and O'Dwyer is relying
on him to basically recommend people to staff
these different authorities.
The airport authority committee, O'Dwyer
doesn't even know who Moses picked until Moses
sends them to the mayor's office to be sworn
in and O'Dwyer never speaks to them.
He just swears them in and never talks to them ever again. And Moses gets named chairman
of the mayor's emergency committee on housing. He now holds nine city and state posts and he
has the power to pick the other committee members. So he just has so much power. Like it's all power.
He's a real, I mean, the last chapter said it, he's a supreme power broker. He's got all the power,
he can broker it. And this is when Caro starts, he refers to the hand of Bob, which I think is a very funny phrase
for him to use, but it makes him sound like Bob the evil spirit from Twin Peaks that he has possessed
Mayor OJ Weier and is making him do these terrible things. And now there's a kind of back and forth
here where OJ Weier and Moses, they have a little bit of a petty thing. Moses is so confident,
he starts talking openly about how much power he has over the mayor.
The mayor gets mad.
They have, you know, they, they have a little, at least kind of like petty power
games where they kind of nibble away at each other's stuff in, in petty ways.
And OJ wire is starting to recognize that all these big problems that Moses said
he would address are not actually getting solved, that Moses is like, there's a
housing crisis in the city.
There's all these returning veterans. We need apartments for them. You know what we should do?
Tear down tens of thousands of apartments to build expressways. And OJR is like,
oh, well, that doesn't really seem to be solving the housing problem for
tearing down housing because we needed more housing. Moses had this kind of plan for the
bonds for the airports to modernize the airports, which was that he would sell them to banks
at a very highly inflated interest rate,
just so generous that they have to buy them.
And to pay off those bonds,
he has to raise the rental fees for airlines 600%.
And the airlines are like, we'll just go to Newark.
Like, why, we don't need to pay that,
we'll go somewhere else.
And O'Dwyer gets pissed and he takes Idlewild
and LaGuardia airports away from Moses and gives them to the Port Authority,
which is the lesser of two evils very much, you know. And this is when O'Dwyer, as a final,
Moses, I'm not happy with you, gives the Department of the Interior the okay to take over Fort Clinton,
saving it from being teared down after that decades-long crusade. So there's this back and
forth, Moses tries his resignation threat,
and O'Dwyer says to the messenger who brings it, tell the gentleman who sent this that if he wants
me to accept it, just send it back again. And Moses doesn't, but it's like, O'Dwyer, come on,
you had it! You had the moment! You were so close. You were so close. But he can't fully do it,
because there's a power that Moses still has.
It's the power that we're going to mention so many times that O'Dwyer does not have.
We talked about it at the beginning of this chapter.
He has money.
If O'Dwyer wants to run for reelection, which as we'll see, it turns out to be kind of a
moot point in some ways, he needs to build housing.
He needs to relocate people while housing is built.
He doesn't have the money to do that.
Moses can get the money to do that. And Robert Caro says, I can't say that Robert Moses used his influence with state officials
to force O'Dwyer to get Moses involved in housing, but he does lay out that in 1946,
O'Dwyer brings Moses to a secret meeting with state housing officials, in which the state agrees
to pay the full cost of this big temporary relocation projects that can build new housing.
And the statement announcing those funds says it is accepted on behalf of the city by Robert
Moses and Mayor William O'Dwyer in that order with Robert Moses name first. So it seems,
I mean, the dots are there, we can connect them or not. And Moses plays this game with
the mayor, they place with everybody. If you're doing what I want, the tribal money FOSA gets
turned on. If you don't do what I want, it gets turned off.
And this leads to this plan of Moses that O'Dwyer becomes so excited about
that is perhaps the craziest plan that Robert Moses has for any of his projects.
Now, taking Battery Park and turning it into essentially an on-ramp for a highway
that goes over across the water between
lower Manhattan, Brooklyn.
That's a crazy plan.
That's pretty crazy.
But Roman, can you think of an even crazier place
to build an expressway?
Well, there's a through Midtown Manhattan and
through lower Manhattan.
That's right.
Now Midtown Manhattan and lower Manhattan,
lower Manhattan, those are pretty, pretty
dense areas, lower Manhattan, the buildings
are small as well.
Midtown Manhattan, that's where like say the
Empire State Building is located.
So would you have, you couldn't possibly run an
expressway through the Empire State Building.
Would you?
Well, you know what?
If you draw it nice enough, you kind of can.
And there's, I think we mentioned earlier
episode in the picture section of this book,
there is an artist rendering of this midtown Manhattan Expressway that goes through buildings
and it looks so cool.
But it takes you a couple of minutes to be like, this would be terrible.
It would be terrible for the people in the buildings, the people on the ground, the people
in the cars.
But Moses, he proposes these three expressways that just cut across Manhattan Island.
Upper Manhattan Expressway at 125th Street, Lower Manhattan Expressway across Broome Street,
Mid Manhattan Elevated Expressway across Broome Street, mid Manhattan elevated
expressway that would cross in the mid 30s, it would go through buildings, potentially
through the seventh floor of the Empire State Building. Think about that also. It's going
through the Empire State Building at the seventh floor. That's enormously high in the air.
Imagine if something fell out of a car driving above 30th Street. It's nuts. But Mayor O'Dwyer, he hears about this elevated expressway
and he loves it.
It really captures his imagination.
He's like, we gotta do this.
But Moses, just to get his goat,
because he's mad at him, he goes,
eh, we're gonna build a lower Manhattan expressway first,
just to get him.
And O'Dwyer retaliates by having the Board of Estimate
take a bunch of money from the road budget
and putting it towards schools. So Moses retaliates by saying,
he's not gonna build these parking garages
that the city wants.
The two of them, they're at each other's throats.
It's gonna take some kind of dream miracle project
to get them working back together again.
But how likely is it?
How likely that a dream miracle project,
something that a mayor could really point to
as a lasting legacy,
that that could actually come
around at this period right after World War II when the nations of the world are attempting to
unite. Because this is, Carol is the story, what he calls, Moses' most effective use of the power
of money, which is getting the United Nations headquarters in New York City. Okay, it seems
obvious to me as someone whose
life has centered around New York for most of it,
that the United Nations would be in New York city.
It is the greatest city in the world.
What other options are there?
But in January, 1947, New York is in not amazing shape.
You know, I guess I feel like that's the story of
New York is it's often not an amazing shape.
It's always broke.
Despite being the greatest city in the world.
And O'Dwyer wants the UN in New York so badly
to finally cement its status as the capital of the world.
But other cities want it too.
And they have actual money to spend on it.
Cities that seem like dark horse candidates, perhaps,
but maybe they'll have it.
Philadelphia is ready to pull the trigger
on giving them land and money.
The UN is ready to do it.
And O'Dwyer's like, Moses,
you gotta be the chair of this committee to land this United Nations deal.
And they put together this group of Moses loyalists,
wealthy financiers, a young Nelson Rockefeller,
who we'll talk about in much greater detail later on.
And Moses is like, there's all this land left over
from the 39 World's Fair,
let's stick them over there in Queens.
And the UN is like, excuse me, we want a Manhattan.
This is the United Nations.
We are not going to an outer borough, thank you.
We wanna be in Manhattan.
We want lots of parking.
We want housing for our staff.
Housing for everybody, which is really
for everybody. For everybody.
For thousands of people, yeah.
Because the UN is,
I don't know if you've ever driven by it.
It is enormous.
It's an enormous building.
It's huge.
The fact that it just looks like a Nintendo cartridge
stuck into the ground of Manhattan
doesn't change the fact that it's huge.
And they want all this stuff.
And New York is like, we can't even afford to paint our schools uniformly.
Like, can we build housing for thousands of foreign diplomat workers?
But the mayor wants it so badly.
Unfortunately, December 6, 1947, the mayor gets a phone call.
The UN on Wednesday is going to vote to put the UN
in Philadelphia. That and this is this is like Friday, that same Friday gets another
call. Real estate mogul William Zeckendorf, someone we have never mentioned in this in
the show before after this episode, we'll never mention him again. Don't worry about
it. He says to the mayor, you know, for months, I've been secretly buying up land in Turtle
Bay, this area of New York in the East 40s, and I've got an option on
17 more acres in the area. That's a lot of land. I was going to build apartment complexes,
but you know what? I'm an old rich man. What if I just sell it to the city? And O'Dwyer
is like, oh, if only we have no money. So who's going to step in? There's only one
guy who gets things done. That's right. Robert Moses, it's like a movie trailer.
He has 96 hours to put together the financing and
the legal acquisition and plans for taking this
land and building the United Nations on it.
96 hours.
He's got the weekend, it's a four day weekend.
He's basically got to do all this.
He gets some financing from John D Rockefeller
that Rockefeller's are going to cause him
trouble later, but now they're helping him out.
He puts together all the plans for the acquisitions,
all the details of a major public land project.
He's doing it almost from memory.
You know, he knows what he's doing so much.
And it all has to be done secretly,
so no one can screw it up, because it is so delicate.
And there's a great paragraph about this
that I'm gonna take the time to read,
just because I love the, it it just how much had to be
crammed into this but in 96 hours it was done for every snag that arose Moses
had a knife teams of lawyers prepared to research for days the details of city
surrender of East River bulkheads Moses called in a secretary and dictated on
the spot without reference to a single law book a memorandum setting out the
method a memorandum lawyers later found to be correct down to the last comma.
Legislative permission was needed for the city to close certain streets within the site
and give the UNO the land.
A few phone calls from Moses to Albany secured a guarantee of the permission.
Late Tuesday night, about 12 hours before the headquarters committee convened, Zeckendorf,
who had taken no part in the discussions following his offer and did not know if there's any chance
of it being accepted, was celebrating his birthday
in a private dining room at the Monte Carlo
when Wallace K. Harrison, the distinguished architect
and intimate of the Rockefeller family,
walked in with a block by block map of the site
bulging out of a jacket pocket, sat down at the table,
tried to assume an air of nonchalance,
failed and blurted out,
would you sell it for eight and a half million?
I love that detail so much of like,
he's trying to be smooth as he walks into
a wealthy man's birthday party,
but he just is like, oh, will you sell it for this much?
And they do it, like they get it all done.
And local reformers are like, this is money
the city should be spending on our own residents
and not on the United Nations.
And the UN wants essentially
tax-free land. And the taxes from that real estate would have paid so much money into the city.
Over the next 10 years, Caro or whichever source is using estimates, it costs the city more than
$32 million. But the mayor and the other people in power, they're dazzled by the idea of being
the permanent capital of the world. And I just want to step in. This is not Robert Caro saying
this. This is me saying this.
Do you really believe the United Nations
was going to base itself in Philadelphia?
Like, are you kidding me?
Like, no offense to Philly,
I have friends that live in Philly,
it's a great city, I love going there.
It's got a great modern art museum
with the world's greatest collection
of Marcel Duchamp's work,
which I, one of my favorite artists,
let's be realistic.
Philadelphia, like, come on, seriously.
Are you kidding me?
But it could be San Francisco.
It totally could be.
It could have been San, I could see it in San Francisco.
I could see it, mainly because of Star Trek,
I could maybe see it in San Francisco.
I mean, it's the center of the fucking galaxy
in Star Trek. That's true.
That's true, having the Federation headquarters
there really, it does outclass the UN, that's true.
And I could see the UN being in San Francisco,
and there's something about, like there's certain cities
in the United States that feel like world cities
and others that don't necessarily.
And maybe that's me being unfair,
maybe it's just years of them not getting their chance,
but I feel like the city that is best symbolized by Rocky
is not necessarily the city that the United Nations
is gonna go in, you know?
What is like, this is-
Oh man, we're gonna get letters,
we're gonna get letters. Now I feel like I'm just ragging on Philadelphia, we're going to get letters. We're going to get letters.
Now I feel like I'm just ragging on Philadelphia.
Like, we've got this amazing modern art museum.
You know what it's best known for?
A boxer in a movie ran up the steps while he was exercising.
So, it's hard to believe a world where,
it's hard to believe a world,
I'm going to keep talking while Roman catches his breath,
it's hard to believe a world where New York
doesn't have the United Nations,
because we've lived in it for so long. It's hard to believe a world where New York doesn't have the United Nations
because we've lived in it for so long.
It's been there for almost 80 years now,
but it very easily could not have happened.
And it's this whirlwind 96 hour sprint.
This was a sprint.
This was not a marathon.
This 96 hour sprint to get it done.
And by this point,
Moses can kind of do no wrong with O'Dwyer.
And he has some mentions.
In July, 1946, they are bitter enemies. January, 1947, with O'Dwyer. And he has it mentioned. In July 1946, they are bitter enemies.
January 1947, Moses O'Dwyer's hero.
He will listen to whatever Moses tells him.
He will do pretty much whatever he wants.
Twice a week, they have breakfast together,
these long breakfast meetings,
and the mayor, he'll just sign, usually,
whatever papers Moses brings him.
Moses brings him a document signed, he will sign it,
because Moses pulled off this amazing coup.
Yeah, it's really remarkable. It's just like whenever you do a project with someone,
how you get so close to them, like you can tell that that just really worked. And he just
capitulates to everything Moses wants at that point. It's really something else.
It helps that OJWIRE is overwhelmed by running this city. Like Carol gets, there's something
very touching about this and the next mayor, Im Pelletary that we've been kind of
seeing this parade of Titans throughout the book. There's Robert Moses but of
course there's Al Smith and there's LaGuardia and there's Roosevelt. These
people and it starts to make you think oh back then they just had giants among
them who were able to take hold of a community and and govern it. But at the
time there were plenty
of people who were just kind of scared by it, you know, that this is an overwhelming thing.
And O'Dwyer finds real personal comfort, it seems, in Moses' confidence and his ability.
And so he's relying more and more on him because this is a big thing. And he talks to Caro about
looking out over the sea at night and being like, can you imagine, like, can you believe that I'm
in charge of all this? That it's a frightening thing. And Moses does not have that fear.
Maybe that's his other secret weapon, is he has the lack of fear that comes with arrogance,
that he can do anything.
So in December 1948, O'Dwyer finally points Moses to that Mayor's Committee on Slub Clearance.
Moses has vast control over public housing, the control he couldn't get under LaGuardia,
and he has even more control than he could have had before because Title I of the Federal Housing Act of 1949 finally extends the
power of eminent domain to an area so that the government can condemn private land and turn it
over to a private individual for public housing. And this is the kind of condemnation that Moses
kind of used to use in his state parks in Long Island in the 20s, but that was for public parks.
Now he can wield that power in New York City
and he can use it to broker with the people
who wanna do those private projects to create more housing.
Moses of course endorses O'Dwyer for re-election.
He campaigns alongside him.
He ignores calls that he should run himself.
He's like, I'm flattered, but no.
And Caro admits that O'Dwyer probably did not need
Moses' endorsement, but it doesn't hurt
that he has all these ribbon cuttings, all these things he can point to. The United Nations is
going to be headquartered in New York. That swells you with pride, you know, as a New Yorker. And
Moses kind of helps him by deliberately holding off on doing too many massive relocations of
tenants until after the election. You know, so that's something that can't be at O'Dwyer's feet. There's a section here where Caro introduces a kind of mini-nemesis of
Moses who comes in at the end of O'Dwyer's run, a guy named Jerry Finkelstein.
He's this young guy. He says, I can play O'Dwyer better than anyone else in the
city. I know how to get anything I want from him. Usually because I know that
whoever talks to O'Dwyer last gets what he wants. So he makes a point of just
waiting till everyone else has talked to the mayor,
going in and talking to him.
And there's a funny scene where Finkelstein has been told he's going to be the new chair of the city planning commission.
Moses doesn't like that.
So when he shows up to get sworn in, someone says, hey, your name's not on the rolls.
There's not doing anything. And he goes to O'Dwyer and he's like,
I thought you're going to make me city planning commission chair.
He's like, oh, Bob was saying, you know, maybe it should do something else or do another thing. What else do you want? I'll give you anything else and Finkelstein goes
This is all I want. This is the only job I want and I do I goes then you shall have it and just signs them
In right there so I submit and it feels like satire, but I trust Caro that it's real
I assume it's probably Finkelstein's telling or someone someone else who was in the room
Finkelstein becomes the champion of a concept that has reared its head before and will rear
its head again here now.
The idea of a master plan, a master plan for developing the city.
New York has never had one and the result is dealing with massive problems.
Waste, redundancy, lack of development where development needs doing, overdevelopment where
the resources can't really handle it.
A master plan in theory would smooth all really handle it, a master plan in theory
would smooth all that out and not a master plan in the Moses sense of a master planner
draws lines on a map and says this is where things are going. Finkelstein wants to do
something that involves community leaders talking to business leaders, people getting
together at a table and finding compromises in things. And it's something that,
Caro, he's had a couple of these throughout the book,
these kind of idealists that he paint as if only,
if only they'd had their way.
And this is the next to them.
And I really wonder if it would have worked
the way that Finkelstein wants it to.
And I see a disbelieving look on Roman's face.
Roman, what do you think?
I think it would, I mean, he's clearly,
Finkelstein is much more of a modern day thinker
when it comes to designing cities.
He's not like roll out a map and draw lines across it,
like you said.
The nature of this master plan is one of
talk to a neighborhood, what does it need?
What is it good at?
How do you, you know, like have these neighborhoods
like fulfill their specific character and their needs
and how you patch those together
and make it into a functional city.
It is really a ground up idea.
You know, like when you hear the word master plan,
you might think this is just competing idea
with Moses's idea of a master plan.
It is not, it is really something different.
Like Finkelstein thinks differently.
And it is just, in a way, it's like, spoiler alert,
like this doesn't work out well for Finkelstein.
No, it doesn't happen.
If you're wondering, if you're hoping to get a copy
of the master plan and see how well New York has followed it
since then, it doesn't happen, yeah.
But my sense of like the decades that followed,
you know, like maybe there isn't a grand master plan,
but the thinking behind Finkelstein's master plan
is more the modern thinking of how to run and shape cities.
His thinking seems much more in line
with the kind of Jane Jacobs' death and life
of great American cities, sort of.
A city, a neighborhood is a living unit.
You've gotta see what the life of it is like.
It needs to have a kind of mixed use,
and everyone has to get something out of their life.
It makes it worth living in it.
Yeah.
He's much more of a modern thinker that thinks about these things.
Yeah.
So it's a battle not just of this guy's stepping on my turf, but a battle of ideologies.
For sure.
Yeah.
And the big fight is in 1950, O'Dwyer announces Triborough has done a study.
Guess what?
Their study of the Mid-Manhattan Elev elevated expressway says that the mid Manhattan elevated expressway
is the best way to carry traffic across 30th street.
It's a 160 foot wide road.
It would be seven stories in the air.
You would have to remove all the buildings
on the south side of 30th street, which is insane to me.
Like that's phenomenal.
That's, it's wow.
It is a horrifically terrible idea.
It's right over the heart of Manhattan's business district.
And Carrow has shown us elevated expressways,
they kill neighborhoods.
You know, they, even if,
even if you need them necessarily in a place,
people do not want to live and work in a place
where the sun doesn't reach the street.
Triborough though, will pay most of the money for it.
And trade and civic associations are like,
did Triborough study any other plans?
Like maybe a tunnel might be okay.
And they want the Planning Commission to do its own study.
And the mayor gives the Planning Commission
permission to study it.
But he's like, hey, they could show me plans
for a great tunnel,
but no one's offering me money to build a tunnel.
So it doesn't matter.
But he says, but you can have permission.
The permission is useless.
They have no money to actually do the study.
They have no money to implement a building project.
But just the fact that O'Dwyer gave them
this useless token permission for an unfunded study
angers Moses so much that Moses has
tri-brow killed the project entirely.
You know what?
We're not even gonna do it.
So this, it's maybe the greatest movie ever had
was killing his own terrifying project at, you know,
if it had peak, but it's, it's an,
and O'Dwyer he has to angrily announce,
well, now my expressway is not going to get built
across 30th street.
He was going to go through the Empire State Building
and he gives Finkelstein a tongue lashing.
But the mayor still supports the idea of the master plan.
And it seems like there's some momentum behind it.
There's some movement.
And again, O'Dwyer is starting with, once again,
sour on the fact that Moses is not actually solving the problems he's supposed to solve. It seems
like the UN is behind them. O'Dwyer is preparing for a second term. Perhaps there is a turn
here. Perhaps he might turn away from Moses and embrace the idea of Finkelstein's master
plan. This could be it. This could be the hinge point at which O'Dwyer becomes the hero the city needs. All he has to hope is that his mob connections and the blatant corruption of his
administration don't become public right now. Roman, is that exactly what happens?
That is exactly what happens.
I think a lot of people forget that the 50s was a big time for investigation of organized crime.
Yeah.
And the Senate committee of organized crime.
Yeah.
And the Senate committee on organized crime that Estes Kiefer led, they were doing hearings
all over the place.
They did televised hearings that were the first time that a lot of people really saw
organized crime laid bare as a real, how massive the system was, how much it had stretched
into American life.
And so it is a, it's a bad time to be a mayor who has deep connections to organized crime.
And he hastily resigns as mayor right before,
I think a massive investigation to police corruption.
A friend of his goes to see Harry Truman.
Harry Truman hastily appoints him as an ambassador.
And as Caro says, and on August 31st, 1950,
almost 18 years to the day
after Tammany's most popular mayor fled the country, Tamini's
second most popular mayor crossed the border into
Mexico.
And that is why Robert Caro is, is interviewing
William O.
Dwyer in Mexico City.
Love it so much.
It is such, it's such an amazing turn and we
didn't set it up the way Caro sets it up.
Caro really goes into detail earlier on in the
chapter.
We're talking about O.
Dwyer's early life about his connections to organized crime. So it doesn't feel like it comes the way Carol sets it up. Carol really goes into detail earlier on in the chapter. We just talked about O'Jwyer's early life,
about his connections to organized crime.
So it doesn't feel like it comes out of nowhere the same way.
But Carol's like, there's a reason that when O'Jwyer
was asked to run for mayor, he said, no, I don't want to.
It's because he's so afraid of this stuff coming out.
And so he literally flees.
He flees and flees to Mexico, like the gangsters
in Hollywood movies of the 30s and 40s, you know?
And becomes ambassador to Mexico.
And so the Ojairo era ends as suddenly as it began,
you might say.
That's right.
But that brings us to probably Elliot's favorite character
in the book.
One of them, I have to say, I have a real,
I love this character, I love the way
that Caro talks about it.
Now, Roman, have you ever read the book, Eminent Victorians by Lytton Strachey? I don't know how to pronounce his name, I have a real, I love love of this character. I love the way that that Carol talks about it.
Now, Roman, have you ever read the book,
Eminent Victorians by Lytton Strachey?
I don't know how to pronounce his name,
but it is one of the funniest history books of all time.
It's essentially a burn book.
He's writing, it was written in the 19 teens, 1920s.
He writes about four different eminent Victorians
and it is just a burn book.
He's just writing about how, what hypocrites they were, how much he, you know, just scan. It's like Hollywood
Babylon about Victorian England. And the writing in this section is the closest, I
feel like he comes in this book to that book where it is like, all right, we're
talking about real history here. It is ridiculous. We're going to have some fun
with this. Like this is, and yet at the same, at the same time, he still seems to
have like a sweetness and affection for the man he's writing about. That man,
Vincent Impelletary, perhaps one of the lesser known mayors of New York, which makes sense.
I think Caro's feelings about him are best showed by the fact that the chapter subheading is not
Impelletary, it is Impey, which was his nickname in the newspapers, is Impey, which right off the
bat makes him, you know, it miniaturizes this figure, you know. He sounds like Mr. Mixipitlick from the Superman comics, you know.
That's right. That's right. So let's talk about Impi when we come back.
Okay, Impi, lay it out for me. Tell me about Impi.
I know why you had to put a break there, but I had so much trouble sitting through the break
waiting to talk about MP, because he is, okay.
By law, let's set up why he's in this position.
Why is a guy, everyone calls MP,
suddenly mayor of New York.
By law, when the mayor retires or resigns,
they have to be succeeded by the president
of the city council.
Who is president of the city council in 1950?
And almost totally unknown,
totally undistinguished, Tammany Aparachik.
His highest previous job in the government
was as secretary to a judge named Judge Schmuck,
which like, this one is from like Caro,
I'm gonna have to check the notes.
Like that seems too perfect.
And this man is Vincent Impelletary.
And according to a story that Caro says
Moses attested to him is true, that Moses said he
was apparently at this meeting, the machine bosses needed an Italian from Manhattan to
balance the ticket.
They already had an Irishman from Brooklyn and a Jew from the Bronx on their kind of
a city council list.
They needed an Italian from Manhattan.
They literally looked at a list of city employees and saw what was a name that was so obviously Italian
that anyone looking at the ballot
would know this is an Italian guy.
And they found the name Vincent Impelletary,
which is a very Italian name.
And so this guy, as city council president,
he voted however the mayor tells him to.
He just attends public functions.
Caro says, quote,
"'Aimable but slow-witted.
"'He was a joke among political insiders,, but now he was mayor and the joke was on
the city. And it is, it is the kind of thing.
It's like the movie Dave in a way, you know, like it's this guy who is, has no,
no right to be the mayor of New York is suddenly there.
So he has to win a special election to be the full, get the full term as mayor.
The Democrats are like, we are not nominating you for a full term.
That is, this is not happening. And he runs as the independent anti-T full term as mayor. The Democrats are like, we are not nominating you for a full term, this is not happening.
And he runs as the independent anti-Tamany boss candidate.
He's like, you don't know much about me,
but I am anti-Tamany.
And he says to Moses, if you endorse me,
I will not reappoint Ficklestein
and you will have even more control.
And Moses is like, check please, yes.
And as a result-
Speaking my language.
Yeah, yeah, power in exchange for me.
Yes, thank you. Did you read the book? You know what I do?
And as a result, Impey is the first ever independent candidate to become mayor.
Not a fusion candidate, not a Republican Democrat.
He is an independent candidate running just on his own name,
which again, most people know as Impey because that's what the newspaper calls him.
And there's a section here that I just love.
Caro is, he is scathing about it.
It says, thanks to his PR men and his physical appearance,
his addiction to the blue suit and the boutonniere
combined with his iron gray hair, deeply earnest mean,
and stolidity that during the campaign
was mistaken for dignity,
made him the very model of a modern mayor.
At the approach of a camera, his brow would furrow,
his lips would purse, his jaw would jut,
and his eyes would focus on whatever piece of paper happened to be handy, just as intently as
if he understood the words written on it. Impey had run a great race, but once in possession of
the prize he had won, he proved to have not the slightest idea of what to do with it." And it
talks about him being at board of estimate meetings and a problem coming up and he's like,
gee, I don't know guys, anybody got an idea about this? Anybody got a, I got nothing.
He is, Carol Pansom is just totally naive that he's a very sweet kind of blockhead
who barely pretends he knows what he's doing.
He's unaware of the power that the mayor actually holds.
He's bewildered by the workings of government.
He is just even more than a Dwyer.
He's looking for someone to just kind of take him by the shoulder, point him in the right
direction, lead him by the hand to decisions.
And of course, Robert Moses is happy to be that person.
He has the big brother that every guy who is
totally outclassed by the office of mayor really wants.
So it was bad enough when he was going to a Dwyer's
for breakfast twice a week.
Now he's going up to the MPs, he's going to the
mayor's office nearly every morning. He has a pile up to the MPs, he's going to the mayor's office, nearly every morning,
he has a pile of papers for MP to sign,
MP will sign them, and he has marching orders
for MP for that day.
If there are jobs to fill,
Moses tells him who to fill those jobs with.
He tells him who desperately to not fill those jobs with also.
And the main test is how loyal is this person
to Robert Moses?
Because if they're loyal to him,
they're gonna get this job.
And MP, he always follows Moses' advice.
He follows his tax policies.
And for good measure,
this is maybe the most emasculating moment,
is when Moses provides the mayor with a vacation house
close to his own vacation house
so that he will still have close control of him
even when he's on vacation, even then.
And Ficklestein, he still has a little bit of time
left in his term before he inevitably
does not get reappointed.
He manages to finish work on the master plan for the city, but his department does not
have the money to print copies of the report of the master plan.
And I know this is pre-Xerox, you have to go to a printer, it's printing a lot of copies,
it's gonna take a couple thousand dollars.
Moses, he's like, uh, mayor, don't give him the money to print those copies.
They bury the report.
Uh, Finkelstein has a kind of a nervous breakdown from all the work.
He finds out in the hospital that he has lost his position.
He's not being reappointed and Moses has impian stall, a guy that Moses can control.
And these board of estimate members who had previously supported the plan.
Coincidentally around the time Moses does favors for them in their boroughs,
they switched their votes.
And the, and so the plan is effectively dead. And Robert Caro says, set aside the fact that $325,000 were
spent on this plan and thus waste it because it'll never happen. The bigger cost is this idea of local
control of areas of the city, a plan organized around the needs of local neighborhoods, a plan
that was about finding consensus between people who have a real stake in what's happening in those regions.
That's gone. The outer boroughs, they're going to continue to be developed in this haphazard, kind of irrational way,
and that's the full cost of this master plan not getting off the ground.
And Finkelstein, he takes his place as the latest in the parade of reformers
who have tried to make the city responsive to someone other than Robert
Moses and to Robert Moses then make sure does not achieve their goal.
And puts him in the hospital.
Yeah, puts him in the hospital. It's like really it's a real notch on Moses' gun.
He's just carving on his gun the number of reformers he's set aside and it is it shows you that um
Finkelstein's working hard on this. Like it's a hard job to put together a master plan for a city, to put it in, I don't know,
maybe not the most exact ways, when you care about
the people that are being affected by it, you know,
it's hard, it's very easy to put together a master plan
when you don't really care what happens to the people
who are affected by it.
Which is, for all that Moses is this amazing thinker
and this master builder, the hardest part of the equation
he has decided he's not gonna deal with.
He's not gonna, it's like, I'm gonna build an airplane,
I don't care if it gets off the ground.
Oh, this guy built an amazing airplane.
Look at it, it looks so cool.
Does it fly?
Doesn't matter, he's a great airplane builder.
Or doesn't care about the passengers inside of it.
It's just like.
Well, that's true.
It's an amazing airplane, it crashes 85% of the time.
So who gets hurt?
The passengers, it's fine.
The bonds on the plane, they pay off such high dividends.
We can always build more, it's great.
Yeah, yeah. It's fine. The bonds on the plane, they pay off such high dividends. We can always build more. It's great.
Yeah. It's really something to watch this.
And then it just, you know, Moses has the perfect person in MP.
Just someone who would just do exactly what he says.
It is Palpatine and Jar Jar Binks all over again in the Imperial Senate.
Only this time it's in real life.
In New York City. not in a fictional galaxy.
And Moses at this point, he's at the height of his power.
He's just not showing up to meetings. He doesn't care.
He gets whatever he wants. And Carol goes over numbers here,
and she just talks about how vastly more was spent by the city on roads than everything else.
He says during the O'Dwyer administration, when Moses only had a lot of power,
the city spent like about three million dollars on colleges,
about 1.1 million dollars on libraries, and 80 million dollars on highways. And under Impellatary,
the numbers only go up more. The city spends four million dollars on libraries, 70 million dollars
on hospitals, 137 million dollars on schools, 172 million dollars on highways, which is only,
Caranotes, the city's contribution. It doesn't count federal money going into those highways.
It doesn't count things, I assume, like the taxes that are not going to get paid on that
real estate in the future.
It is just astonishing that highways are the thing that is so much of the city's money
is going into.
And the city builds 88 miles of new highway during this time.
It builds no new subway.
Zero new subway miles.
Zero.
It's just disgraceful.
Zero. Just disgraceful.
Most of the people in the city use at least twice a day. It does not get expanded at all.
The schools are overcrowded. There's 182 schools in the city that are not even fireproofed.
And the public colleges, which New York is often justifiably proud. A lot of people in New York
attend New York City's public colleges. There's a study that points out that there are 46,000 students a year
who are eligible for education there and would take it,
would go to those colleges, but they can't because there simply isn't infrastructure.
There's no room for them in the schools.
So it's just massive swaths of the city being underserved because that money is going to highways.
It's really, it feels like, I just imagine Moses like he's literally like Scrooge McDuck
sitting in a pile of money, just throwing it up in the air
going highways, highways, highways, you know,
and someone comes by with a donor plate and is like,
can I have five more dollars for schools?
He's like, no, you can't have it.
Yeah, I mean, Carol tallies this up
that during MP's administration,
$500 million in state and federal funds
went into the New York highway
and housing construction.
And that was all spent by Moses.
That's where Moses wanted it, that's where he spent it.
It's amazing for him to control that much money.
And he is spending it, he's doling it out to the people
who are on his team, who are doing his favors.
Because remember that last chapter, it's not like he's like, it out to the people who are on his team, who are doing his favors, because remember that last chapter,
it's not like he's like,
I have 500 million dollars
and I'm gonna spend it only in the most efficient,
best way possible.
You know, it is money for his projects
and it's money he can use to accrue more power
and to maintain his power.
Meanwhile, this is the thing
that I always forget about city budgets,
is that when you issue bonds for construction,
you've got to pay interest on them. And so that by 1952, the city is paying $211 million
a year in debt service on the money that it borrowed to build things. Luckily, Triborough
is bringing in all that toll money, right? That should cut that down. No, because Triborough
gets to keep that money. That money doesn't go to the city. The city is paying off the
interest fees, but it's not getting the toll money to pay it.
And since it's spending all that money
just to pay off the interest on things it built,
it can't afford to maintain the things that it built.
And so those roads, once Moses builds them,
he puts almost no interest into maintaining them.
He's just not interested in it, it seems.
And so they're deteriorating.
And Carol says, there was a skewing of expenditures
away from service functions
and toward public works construction
That they are not servicing the things the city has they're instead just building new stuff and the city's population is changing
This is the era that
People talk about when it's the beginning the very beginnings of movement out to the suburbs of the people who have the money to move
To the suburbs. There's more and more low-income residents in the city coming in and they need services. They need them and they're not going to get them. And of course,
all good and also sinister things must come to an end at some point. This 40-month ideal in which
Moses is the shadow mayor behind Impellitari, it has to end at some point. But in that time,
he has placed so many stakes for his projects that they cannot be undone. He's evicted so many people,
their buildings have been destroyed.
And what is a future mayor gonna be like?
We're gonna stop this project
that all these buildings were destroyed for?
No, you could have something to make it worthwhile.
You have something to show for it.
Unsurprisingly, Impey is overwhelmingly defeated
in the next Democratic primary.
I feel like everyone in New York was just biding their time
waiting for the moment when they could vote
for anyone other than him.
And Moses has been so good at hiding his role in the administration that
even though the city is essentially rejecting him, they don't know it. And because his jobs
are unelected, even the voters rejecting his greatest puppet doesn't mean anything to him
except shucks, I guess I'm just going to have 90% power instead of 100% power. And years
later, Moses is talking to Carol and he's like, yeah, Impeyletary was a good
mayor.
He was a good mayor.
I thought he did a really good job.
And Carol goes to visit Impey, who's working at a law firm doing kind of like a do-nothing
job.
He's kind of window dressing.
They have a former mayor at this law firm.
And Impey is going on and on about what a great man Moses is.
They're so close.
They were so close.
And Carol says, when was the last time you saw him?
And he says, well, actually, you know what? I was just going to summarize it, but let me just
read it because it's so, there's something bittersweet about it, you know, this using up of
envy. He goes, he went on for some time reminiscing about how close he and Moses had been. Then,
however, he was asked when he had last seen Moses. And the sincere, friendly face turned sad as he
tried in vain to recall the last time he had seen the big, charming, brilliant man who had once been so friendly to him.
I haven't seen him recently, he said at last. And as much as Impy never should have been
mayor, Kara has painted him as such a childlike figure that it feels so sad in that moment,
such a Charlie Brown moment for a pellitary. So sad.
Moses leaves mayor sad. That should be a slogan. Moses leaves
Mayor sad. He uses up everybody and makes them just miserable in the end. And they're like,
why in the world did I get ensorcelled by this man, except for Envy, who was just,
who's like too dim-witted to like know that he was abused.
No, there's the thing. You get the sense in the chapter, and I wonder if this is the case,
that like, even though he was mayor of New York,
he probably still felt so excited
that someone like Moses wanted to talk to him,
wanted to be close with him and work with him,
that this man who's so dynamic, who's so smart,
who's so amazing at these things is showing him attention.
And it's almost like he doesn't seem to realize
that it's because he's mayor of New York
that Moses is doing this.
It's not like Moses likes him, you know,
or wants to be his friend.
And it's not like Impey doesn't have something
he's giving Moses.
It's just a, it's a, I wonder if he was as naive
as Carol paints him, but there's not a lot of, uh,
biographies of Impey to crack open
to get an alternate take.
Maybe there's one, but I don't know of it, so.
Um, okay, so this last little bit
of, uh, the three mayors chapter
is Robert Wagner, which is, if you'll remember,
is the scene that starts the whole book
is an interaction with Robert Wagner.
Yes, and we should call him Robert F. Wagner,
that's his official name,
because then again, there's an actor named Robert Wagner,
we don't want to get them mixed up, but the-
And he's a junior too, right?
That's true, that's the thing, He's Robert F. Wagner, Jr.
because Robert F. Wagner, Sr. was also a figure in New York politics. He was a state legislator.
And as we'll get into it right now, let's just say, so there's just a little bit about Robert
F. Wagner, Jr. here because he's going to play a bigger role. It's kind of like this end of this
chapter is kind of like teasing us a little bit for the future. But Caro jumps back to those days we remember so well. Young
Robert Moses hanging out with Al Smith, singing along at all hours of the night just as the
piano was played at Al Smith's apartment. And who's there with them? Al Smith's former
roommate, fellow legislator Robert F. Wagner Sr. And who does Robert F. Wagner Sr. bring
with him? His little boy, Robert F. Wagner, Jr. Moses has known this mayor since this mayor was a boy. So, already there's a
power dynamic imbalance right there because it's hard to know somebody as a
child and not always see that child in them. But Robert F. Wagner, Jr., he decides
to go into his dad's business, he goes into politics, and his first race for a
district office, Moses does him a favor. Moses arranges for him to promise
the building of a swimming pool.
And then I guess when he's in office,
Moses builds that pool.
And so he has bolstered him.
And so they have a relationship.
Wagner has, I guess, made the mistake early on
of letting Moses do something for him.
But the relationship sours, because as Wagner rises,
he becomes Manhattan Borough President,
and he supports the master plan. And when Moses says, hey, hire this guy, he goes, I'm gonna hire this other person that I like,
rather than your person. And Wagner, he has a habit, he does not badmouth anybody, he doesn't
like to say a bad thing about anybody, but people around him get the feeling he does not like Robert
Moses. And he runs for mayor, he runs against Moses's preferred candidate,
Impy, the perfect type of mayor, essentially an empty suit,
and he says, I'm going to stand up to Moses after the election. And I wonder if there's a reversal that Moses sees Wagner as someone,
he's known him since he was a boy, but Wagner is also like,
I've known you since my whole life.
Maybe he's not as afraid of him because he remembers back when he was just a guy
singing along with Governor Al Smith
late at night to a piano.
You know?
And so we get to this scene, back to where we started,
as you said in the introduction, Wagner is coming in.
People say to him, don't renew Moses' membership
on the planning commission.
Surely the creators of this government did not intend
for somebody to propose a project in one job
and then approve it in another job.
It seems at the very least anti-democratic
and maybe a little foolish, you know,
for someone to be in charge of,
to be their own boss in that way.
And it leads us to that scene.
Wagner tries to do it subtly.
He just does not include that as one of the posts
that he is signing Mo's in for, but Moses realizes it.
If he thought Moses just wasn't gonna notice till later, he was mistaken. And Moses goes into Wagner, and Wagner's like, I guess we got to get the
paperwork ready. And Moses goes out, fills out the paperwork himself, hands it to him, and he says,
I will resign from all of my posts if you don't sign this. Or at least that's what Moses told
people close to him. Because Carol says, by the point he wanted to ask Moses about this,
Moses had already cut off all contact with him and
Cara talks to Wagner Wagner kind of tiptoes around it and doesn't want to fully admit that he fell for the resignation threat
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we've come full circle. It's that scene again. We're there
Yeah in in editorial circles is known as an e-shape structure
Which is like you tease a little bit of something that happens later on I I mean, this is a very big E, you know, like usually.
It's a huge, it's an enormously, that's true, yeah.
But you tease something in the future,
that's a significant moment,
and then eventually you circle back to it
and you see it again, and then the rest of the book,
you know, the following, I don't know, 500 pages
is the tail end of the E coming up.
It's the tail, this is a lowercase E you're talking about.
Exactly, it's a lowercase E.
Because like an uppercase E would be more like,
you'd make a turn, you turn into dead end, and then you'd have to keep going the rest of the way. This is a lowercase E you're talking about. Exactly, it's a lowercase E. Because like an uppercase E would be more like
you make a turn, you turn into a dead end,
and then you have to keep going the rest of the way.
It's a lowercase E, yeah.
I've never heard about that.
I mean, that's a perfect way to describe it.
That's great.
We are now in, it also means we are in unstable ground
at this point.
We don't know what happens after this scene.
We don't know what happens after this, yeah.
Because we don't know.
This is what we've been prepared for.
It's the man who can stand up to the mayor
and just like hand him a black piece of paper,
fill it out really fast and just say, sign it,
and have him get his way.
After this moment, we're in uncharted territory
when it comes to Moses and his power,
which is a great moment, super exciting.
Kara's so good at stuff.
Anyway, so Wagner's aide, Warren Moscow,
he goes, you should do something dramatic on housing.
And he puts together this big housing development plan
and Moscow thinks he's doing the smart thing.
He makes sure to get Moses' approval.
And Moses is like, yeah, it's a good plan.
Yeah, we should do this.
Moscow then does the dumb thing.
He presents the plan to the board of estimate
rather than letting Moses do it.
And Moses throws a fit and he tells Wagner,
you gotta kill that plan, kill it.
And then once the plan is dead,
Moses submits pretty much the same plan
but with his name on it
and it flies through the approval process. It is Moses at this point, what I
like about it is it's similar. It's more symmetry where he has become the thing that politicians
want to be that he uses against them. He wants to have his name on this thing and that's
important to him.
That's right. That's right. Another thing that happens here is like, even though he's
in shakier territory with Wagner, you Wagner, he's been in power for so long
that anyone qualified to do anything,
anyone whose opinion you would respect to say,
maybe Moses isn't right about this,
is somebody that Moses hired 20 years ago and trained,
and nobody qualified in the city to offer a counter argument.
They all have some association with Moses.
He probably hired them at some point
and trained him to think the way he does.
It like, so he's insulated,
like the new people may come and go,
but by this point, the sort of ecosystem around him
is just kind of versions of Moses men.
You know what I mean?
They're not, he's in a circle,
but they're like, there's some form of progeny
that has grown up in the Moses world.
So, you know, he's really buffeted by all this support.
And so, you know, like Wagner can complain all he wants to
in some ways, but he can turn to no one
who would disagree with Moses about almost anything.
Yes, and these are jobs that require a high level
of education and skill and experience.
So it's not like you could just get someone else to,
you can't clean house.
Who would you find?
And Moscow says that some of Moses' power comes from,
he says, quote,
stem simply from the fact
that his enterprises developed people.
Like you're saying,
they develop people in the Moses way of thinking,
which makes me think about Moses.
I know I've compared Bob Moses in this episode already to Cthulhu and Bob from Twin Peaks.
So I hope this comparison is not-
And an octopus that throws fish.
And an octopus. That one didn't quite work. Yeah, fish throwing octopus.
That one, we could strike that from the record, Your Honor. This is not as sinister a comparison,
but it makes me think about Robert Moses almost as like a Public Works Lorne Michaels.
Yeah.
Like a lot of Lorne Michaels' strength doesn't come from SNL being the most amazing show on TV,
but comes from the fact that it is such an incubator
of talent and those people go out and they spread
that kind of comedy and he's been doing it for 40 years.
And so now it's hard to find people in comedy
who don't at least have some connection
to the SNL world in some way.
Totally, there's a sitcom with Broadway video
on the front of it as a marker.
Yes, yeah.
Just because.
And you're like, wow, yeah.
And it's because Lorne Michaels created all these people
and cultivated this whole development process.
Yeah, and it shows how much you can get through,
yeah, through the cultivation of people,
through staffing power,
through bringing people up through the ranks.
Power is not just about corruption and graft.
It's also about developing and encouraging people
to think the way that you think
and also give them the opportunities
that they feel that loyalty to you
and they agree with you on things.
And Moses really, he's really good at that.
And it's not until 1958 when Wagner
just fully reorganizes the housing authority
that Moses loses his control over it.
That's after 13 years of domination.
And even if he doesn't fully control it still,
he still maintains power over its funding,
its relationship to the state, the slum clearance work,
transportation through it, parks in it.
Like there's just, it, Moses is like, it's like,
I don't know if you've ever had gophers in your yard.
It's just, it's hard to get rid of them.
They just, they don't go away.
There's always more, you know.
You think you fill in one hole, another hole opens up.
This is a real-life problem that I've had to deal with and it's very frustrating. And that's Moses. He's everywhere.
You stop up one thing and there's all these other places that he pops up.
And he doesn't have the automatic power that he had under Impey, but he still
usually gets what he wants. For all of Wagner's, I'm going to stand up to Moses. That standing up to him is for the most part,
kind of nibbling around the edges
and not addressing the core of the power.
And if he doesn't get what he wants,
he's always got the resignation threat.
Just take that out of mothballs
and he starts to use it again.
And he starts to use it a lot.
Will anyone, will no,
I was like, will no one save us
from this turbulent city construction coordinator?
Will nobody do the job of saying, I accept to the resignation?
We're just gonna have to wait to find out is Wagner that man? Is he the one who's finally gonna do it?
We're gonna have to find out in the future because that's the end of this chapter and
this chapter had a lot of, had a lot of tough stuff in it, a lot of dense facts, but we're coming up
on two chapters that are very readable.
The next episode is going to have some chapters, one of which is just super fun and the other
one which is just heartbreaking.
We're about to get into some very heartbreaking stuff that is some of the reason that Carol
really needed to write this book.
And so I feel like this episode,
we're kind of on the top of the,
we've been going up the top of the roller coaster
and it's super exciting as you're going up.
But there's that moment when you're about to go
over the top where you're like,
should I get off of this thing?
Like, I don't know if I can handle this.
And then you start heading down again
and you're like, too late, I'm enjoying it again.
And I'm not gonna say the next chapters
are necessarily enjoyable because because like I said,
some of it is heartbreaking.
But there's some amazing stuff coming up in the book that I just can't wait to talk about
with you.
But that's where we leave it this episode.
Yeah, there's a lot more human tragedy and a lot less about banking and bonds.
That's true.
If you want to hear more about bonds, you're going to have to look out for some other books
because we kind of covered it, I think. Yeah. More about people.
And we'll cover that next time.
But coming up, our conversation with New York City writer and influencer Shiloh Frederick about her experience reading The Power Broker as a native New Yorker and how her viral videos about the book actually made some change.
And now our conversation with Shiloh Frederick.
From when we were first planning this series, the one person I knew I wanted to have on
was Shiloh.
Because around that time, I read an article in the New York Times about an influencer
who was reading The Power Broker and was so disturbed by the passage about the Iron Monkey decorations
in the Harlem Park that she took a little trip, recording as she went.
Today I'm in Riverside Park looking for something, but I hope to God I don't find it.
Or else my next stop will have to be the grave of Robert Moses so I could summon him so we
could fight.
The video went viral on Instagram and TikTok
and to hear the rest of this story,
well, you're gonna have to stick around.
Thank you so much for being on the 99%
visible Powerbroker breakdown.
It's nice to have you.
Thank you, it's fantastic to be here.
So around September, 2023,
you decided to do an extremely foolhardy thing.
What was that?
I decided that I would tackle reading The Power Broker in 30 days, splitting that
up evenly.
That would be around 39 pages per day, which that doesn't sound any, any other
book doesn't sound bad, right?
It sounds very reasonable until you see the size of this book.
Exactly.
And the density of it, you know, like, yeah.
Yeah, the density is what really shocked me
because I went into this thinking,
oh, 39 pages a day, this is gonna be a breeze.
It'll probably be an hour or two of my day.
The very first day I tried reading it,
6 a.m., just to get it out of the way,
the first hour I only had ended up reading seven pages
and I was shocked.
I realized this was gonna be a lot more difficult
than I thought.
Yeah, okay, so tell me about yourself and what you do.
So why did you feel like you needed to read The Power Broker?
So as a job, I know some people don't really consider this
a real job, but.
It's okay.
We're podcasters.
None of us have real jobs.
We've been pioneering the concept of a not real job for a long, long time.
So you're my people.
You understand.
Exactly.
But I create videos and blog posts and now branching out into zines on New York City history, specifically
the buildings and the architecture history. But anything that catches my curiosity, I'll
make content around it and hopefully educate and entertain my audience with it.
The stories that I was attracted to would be the stories of why things are the way they
are.
And when you put that in perspective of the world around you, looking at buildings and
looking at designs and I don't even looking at like the MTA and what keeps things going. So as a
person who is studying New York City history for a living, I
felt that my education of New York wouldn't be complete
without reading The Power Broker because this is a book that you
see on all the must read New York lists. It's
consistently on those lists and I hadn't read it. So I felt that last September would be as good as
time as any to start reading it, September being back to school season. That was, as someone who's been out of college for about seven, eight years, that was a shock.
It was probably more difficult
than any history course I've taken.
So, as a native New Yorker,
before you had read The Power Broker,
were you aware of the impact Robert Moses had on your life?
Not at all.
And now that I'm aware of it,
his name is a name that I think about daily.
It's like a ghost haunting me.
So in what way?
Well, let's see.
So I currently live in a neighborhood called Inwood at the very top of Manhattan.
You probably familiar with it now. Inwood Park is the park that Robert Moses destroyed
to build the Henry Hudson Parkway. And taking walks in that park daily, I see that bridge.
And every time I see it, I just want to shake my fist because it's a very
beautiful view that he's ruined. I just have a big steel, massive steel going across it now.
But that's only one of the things that I see on a daily basis that Robert Moses has affected.
Surprisingly enough, he did not really affect the neighborhood that I grew up in. I grew up in Flatlands, but everything around it he's had an effect on.
But I wonder if that's the case because can you talk to us about the transportation situation
in that part of Brooklyn?
Namely, is there easy subway access to get in and out of that area of Brooklyn?
Now that you mention it, not all. There is not easy subway access in Flatlands.
I grew up having to walk an entire mile
from my home to the nearest subway station,
which is the Flavish Avenue station
for the end of the two and the five line.
Wow.
Flatlands is actually really car-centric.
I grew up taking cars everywhere
because the buses are, I wouldn't say unreliable, but the buses aren't preferred method of transportation.
So you're bringing up a good point.
It's wild to me the idea of growing up in Brooklyn and spending most of your time traveling
in cars.
It feels like it's so – again, Brooklyn is enormous. New York is an enormous city.
But it feels like your life then is being affected by his lack of interest in allowing
the city to expand that subway system, that so much money was hoovered up for roads and
so little was available for mass transit, that even by that neglect is impacting the lives of people around.
It's a powerful person where his positive actions
affect people and his negative action,
by negative actions I mean inaction.
Like his, and by positive action I just mean
he's doing something, not that it's a great thing
that he's doing, but his actions affect people
and his inaction affects people, which is astounding.
It is, it is.
And I can think of people in my life who his actions have had
a more direct detrimental effect on. As my fiance grew up in the Bronx, in the South Bronx,
and his house, his family's home, is right on the corner where the major Deacon Expressway and the cross
Bronx meet.
Oh, wow.
He has been plagued with really severe headaches his entire life.
And his sister, one of his little sisters, has severe asthma.
Not surprising if you look at their house on Google Maps.
Wow, that's amazing.
So you made like an announcement video that you were going to read The Power Broker in 30 days. if you look at their house on Google Maps. Wow, that's amazing.
So you made like an announcement video that you were gonna read the Power Broker in 30 days.
And then somewhere in the middle of the month,
you ran across the decorations at Ten Mile River playground.
This is in the chapter about the West Side Improvement.
One of the sort of innovations that Robert Moses
comes up with to make it all affordable is
by the time it gets into Harlem,
he's not doing all the nice things
that would make a park good.
He's not covering up the tracks, he's, you know, whatever.
But one thing he does do is on one of the comfort stations,
sort of basically outside public restroom.
He, I think it's like, basically the frame is silver
and then there's these monkeys that are decorating it
that are black and they're like shackled
to the sort of other part of the...
They're not playful or enjoyable monkeys.
They're not monkeys that are having a great,
let alone the fact that they're monkeys.
They're monkeys that look like they're having
a terrible time, that they don't wanna be there
and are being kept there against their will.
So there's a number of different layers of terrible,
just kind of offensive messaging going on
in these sculptures, which it's the efficiency
of Robert Moses that he can offend
on so many different levels in one design.
This is a little embarrassing. And when I was reading that section of the book, I don't
know, maybe it's the effect of Robert Carroll's writing and just the buildup to it making But realizing that Robert Moses had done something possibly so deliberate,
something about that broke something in me.
Yeah. Yeah. And so, so, so you decide that you're going to, you know, like, you know,
this book was written 50 years ago.
There's no telling why that those monkeys are still there or not.
So you go out there to go find them.
And I didn't think I would find them.
I thought, Oh, this is going to be a quick trip.
Not even a quick trip.
This will, this will be a trip to Harlem.
Probably be a waste of time, but something in me just wanted to confirm
that it wasn't there and much to, much to the opposite.
It was still there 50 years later.
Anyone got a Ouija board?
Cause I'm about to knuckle up with this ghost.
I didn't necessarily make that video
to be an activist for removing the monkeys,
but I thought that there was a story there
that needed to be told, a little piece of history
that I wanted people to be aware of at least.
So at what point did you learn that the monkeys
have been taken down?
I never thought I'd be happy to see something lose
its decoration, but I am ecstatic to confirm
that Robert Moses' Riverside Park monkeys,
you know, the black ones that were hanging by their wrists
at Ten Mile River playground in Harlem, they're now gone.
Cause at some point the monkeys had been taken down and I don't think it was
really announced that it happened.
So what did you find out?
Uh, I found out, I found out from a few followers that were sending me messages
about this, someone actually sent me an email. They found my email address and they're like, Hey, I work for the parks department and you'd
be happy to know that the monkeys that you talked about in your video are now gone.
And I was, I had to rush here immediately just to confirm what they said and lo and
behold, they were gone.
I didn't expect them to work so quickly and
I certainly didn't expect them to do it out for the back of a random TikTok video. But I later
learned that the Parks Department has been trying to get rid of this for years. It's been on the
chopping block for years. So putting out that video is either really good timing or the last push
they need to get rid of it for good.
Yeah. And what did you think like when that happened? Like, you know, I don't know, how
did it feel?
I still can't believe that the city would work that fast.
It's almost Mosesian.
I was gonna say you think it would take a Robert Moses type figure to work that quickly because that is that fast. So it's almost Mosesian. And it's, I was going to say, you think it would take a Robert Moses type figure
to work that quickly because that is very fast.
That's, that's insanely fast.
Deep down, I don't believe that it was a video that did it.
There's, I'm so skeptical about the way New York City works and at the speed that
it works, that it can't be a video that was put out
a month before that would encourage them to take this,
take these decorations down.
There's no way it would even go that viral.
I don't know about that though,
because as we'll see as we get further in the book,
oftentimes when Moses is stymied,
it's because somebody is able to get the attention
of the media or enough of the media
at just the right moment to get in the way.
And it feels like perhaps this was something
that for 50 years had been on the,
let's take care of this list.
And then your video was the moment where they go,
oh, somebody noticed this.
Now we really have to take care of it.
Like, this is, we should really do this thing
that we've been meaning to do for all this time.
I don't think you should undercut what you did because it's like,
take pride in it, you know, even if you weren't the only thing that led to these being removed.
You know, I think you were definitely a part of it, I would say.
I struggle with taking pride in it because the historian in me is like,
how could you be proud of erasing a piece of history?
Mm-hmm. But I still struggle with
this. But Robert Carroll did extensive research for this. And I haven't, I haven't seen anyone
else talk about the monkeys being racist or any other documentation of that.
I made that video off of the words of one source.
To me as a historian, that's a big note.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're right. I was too quick when I said you should be proud.
You're right. I wasn't thinking about that.
But the source that I'm basing this off of is Robert Frick and Kara.
Probably the greatest researcher of all time.
So if I'm going to take anyone at face value, it should be him.
So that's my only solace in being part of removing this piece of history.
I mean, this is interesting.
So, like, I mean, they're definitely people who have argued,
I think maybe since then, that maybe, you know, like,
I don't know, they're perfectly innocent sculptures
of shackled monkeys up on the grates,
that also Harlem is a really different area,
50 years ago than it was, or even longer than that,
when he did this, it was in the 30s?
30s or, yeah, late 30s, I guess it would have been, right?
And in some way that that context exonerates Moses
from this being sort of ill intent.
I mean, what do you say to that?
I don't know, I don't know what I think about it.
I mean, I have my opinion about it,
but what do you think when somebody says,
well, how could you guess the intent of this man?
It's not like Doug's the only seemingly racist thing
he's done in his career.
That's true.
He was not winning many NAACP awards.
At other parties, he'd be like, you know what?
Let's give him the benefit of the doubt on this one.
Yeah, so exactly. It's hard to give them the benefit of the doubt
because track record isn't so great,
at least when it comes to black people.
Well, I just think this is an intriguing moment
of you sort of engaging with history.
You like presenting it to people,
it like facilitating a change
and a discussion that's interesting.
And it's not like just like, yay,
like let's remove everything discussion.
It's a discussion about thoughtfulness
and like engaging with the environment
and does the environment still work for everybody?
And I just was, I was so sort of inspired
and intrigued by that, that I just,
I love that it came from you reading the Power Broker
like a crazy person in 30 days.
Like we're professionals who've read it three times
and in this way like that.
And I do not recommend reading it in 30 days.
Did you find, what was the feeling like? I feel like it might be helpful for someone who's had this experience to talk to our listeners who might be pushing through the book.
How did it feel at the end of the month having read it so quickly? Were you proud? Were you dazed? Like you didn't know what year it was anymore? How did you fill your hours when you were done?
Dazed is a very good word. I felt dazed for months afterwards, to be honest. I felt like
my head was swimming. I felt like I was seeing the world with brand new eyes afterwards. And I was very insufferable to the people around me.
I would not shut up about the power broker.
I would shut up about Robert Moses.
I'm so grateful for my fiance putting up with me
for all these months.
But I couldn't stop seeing Moses' effects
on everything in New York City.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And it doesn't help that I take a lot
of his major roadways all the time.
I'm always on the FDR, I'm always on the West Side Highway,
not as a driver, but as one being driven around.
So it's very Robert Moses of me.
Yeah, that's the way he intended it to be used,
being driven by someone else.
So, but if you, as a historian, as a person who loves New York, like if you had your Moses-like powers, what would you do to change the city?
Immediate extension of the two five lines. You say like one mile further.
Several miles further, all the way down to maybe
Gerritsen Beach with a snap of the finger immediately.
So that wouldn't do much to change my life.
But still.
It would help all those people.
The future Shilas of the world.
Yeah, it would be greatly impacted.
That's great.
Yeah, no one else walking in the snow and the wind
one mile to the subway station.
That makes a lot of sense.
One of my favorite videos of yours
is where you are sitting on the subway
and you're just thinking about what if Robert Moses
had loved mass transit as much as he had loved
roads and cars.
What a different,
easier city it would be to get around in. And I feel like that of all the historical
what ifs that put the finger on the biggest one for me in terms of Moses, not just like
what if he had built this thing or what if he hadn't built this thing, but what if he
had grown up loving trains the same way he grew up loving the idea of cars?
Just how different, if he was like Walt Disney,
who loved trains all his life,
what would, how different would the city be?
I was so wrapped up in Caro's depiction of Moses
that it never even occurred to me like,
oh yeah, he might've liked trains
if he had given them a chance.
So I really appreciated your putting it so simply.
Yeah, I mean, who doesn't like trains?
Trains are so cool.
I mean, I just, every time I'm in another city
with my kids and the whole family,
like we went to the whole family,
like me and my wife and our six children,
we went to Tokyo recently.
And I'm just like the whole time, I'm just like,
see how you can get around, see how amazing it is, you know, like,
it just feels so good, you know, and it's like cool
and like air conditions and beautiful,
there are clean bathrooms everywhere and just like,
how could you not be inspired by this?
I like, it just blows my mind that like a good functioning
train system is just like, it just, it feels, it's
so much cooler than any other alternative in my opinion.
I just, I don't, I don't even, I just don't get it.
We got to go back in time and make that case to young Robert Moses and maybe, maybe, maybe
things will be different.
Just give him like a little model train, a little train book as a kid.
You just like start them off.
You wouldn't have to go back and like the kill baby Hitler's sort of variety of,
of intervention.
No, no, no, no, just inspire him with a choo choo set.
Just leave train little model trains at his door, like surprise, tooth fairy
presents.
Oh, New York would be so different.
Oh my goodness.
This, this is, this is the sort of sci-fi fantasy book we should write about life.
You could just inspire children to do different things.
Well, Shiloh, thank you so much for all you're doing,
like in terms of just educating the public
and your videos and stuff.
And thanks so much for being on the
99% visible breakdown of the power broker.
It was a real delight to have you.
Thank you.
This was an honor.
I've been a long time listener since I was in college, I think. and on the 99% visible breakdown of the power broker. It was a real delight to have you. Thank you. This was an honor.
I've been a long time listener since I was in college, I think.
So this is amazing.
Thank you so much for doing it.
Thank you so much.
Next month, we're going to cover chapters 35 through 38.
That's pages 807 through 894.
But if you just can't wait that long,
if you just can't wait a month to hear me summarize
something, then why not check out The Flophouse,
my bad movie podcast over on the Maximum Fund Network
where me and my friends Dan and Stuart
will be talking about some bad movie
in probably as much detail as we talk about
the power broker on this show.
We had a great time during our AMA on Discord last week.
Thanks everyone for showing up.
Keep an eye out on the Discord for more details
about our special talk with Robert Caro
at the New York Historical Society
to celebrate 50 years of the Power Broker.
We cannot wait.
Robert Caro, in New York City, we're gonna be there.
I will tell you the absolute truth.
I am missing an Iron Maiden concert for this.
I planned months ago that I was gonna go to this Iron Maiden concert for this. I planned months
ago that I was going to go to this Iron Maiden show. It's not going to happen because I'm
going to be there with Robert Caro and I'm only a tiny bit sad to be missing that concert
because I'm going to be with Robert Caro.
And make sure you get your Power Broker merch. It would be very cool to fill the Historical
Society's event space with a bunch of Power Broker breakdown band t-shirts. I mean, to be, I'm gonna
be wearing a suit. And see, Robert Caro, he's gonna be dressed to the nines too. I don't know,
maybe we should all dress up. I'm not sure. Anyway, all I know is when I'm in New York,
I will be very, very disappointed if I don't see someone in a Power Broker t-shirt.
The 99% Invisible Breakdown of the Power Broker is produced by Isabel Angel, edited by Comiti,
music by Swan Real, mix by Dara Hirsch.
99% Invisible's executive producer is Cathy Tu, our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kurt
Kolstad is the digital director, the rest of the team includes Chris Berube, Jason DeLeon,
Emmett Fitzgerald, Gabriella Gladney, Martín González, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Ley, Lashma Dawn,
Jekyll Maldonado Medina, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, Nina Potuck, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% visible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. The art for this series was created
by Aaron Nestor. We are part of the Stitcher and SiriusXM podcast family, now headquartered
six blocks north in the Pandora building in beautiful
uptown Oakland, California.
You can find the show on all the usual social media sites as well as our own Discord server
where we have fun discussions about the power broker, about architecture, about movies and
music, about not getting credit for the New York Times like we deserve.
It's where I'm hanging out most these days.
You can find a link to that Discord server as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.
Reading the sections about Robert Moses' interaction
with Fiorella LaGuardia,
something inspired me to do a search on their birthdays and their astrology signs.
I'm not even an astrology person.
I don't even really believe in that.
But I discovered that they're both Sagittarius.
For some reason, that makes so much sense to me.
A lot of it has to do with being stubborn,
and I'm doing the negative traits,
but stubborn and reckless and selfish and very self aggrandizing, as well as being big dreamers.
And reading those was like ding ding ding ding ding. They both have those traits.
So no wonder they butted heads so frequently.