Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Malcolm Gladwell Returns Again
Episode Date: October 9, 2024Malcolm Gladwell (Revenge of the Tipping Point) is a 5x New York Times bestselling author, journalist, and podcaster. Malcolm joins the Armchair Expert to discuss why he thinks people don’t... talk about money enough, what he learned about covid superspreaders, and why he decided to write an antidote to his previous book. Malcolm and Dax talk about how many outsiders a group needs before it changes, how bad actors can hijack systems for their own gain, and how much they love a digression. Malcolm explains the culture of elite sports, his fascination with the city of Miami, and how television can be a transformative revolutionary force. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert.
I'm Dan Shepard and I'm joined by Lily Padman.
Hello.
My boyfriend's here today.
Yeah, you love him and I love him too.
Five time New York Times bestselling author, the Tipping Point, Blank Outliers with the Dog Saw,
David and Goliath, and a new book, which is so tasty,
Revenge of the Tipping Point, Over Stories,
Super Spreaders, and The Rise of Social Engineering.
This is great.
It's so fun.
Because it's the 25th anniversary of The Tipping Point,
and this is kind of the other side
of the coin of the Tipping Point.
Yes.
Oh, what a fun conversation.
We took lots of digressions,
but we also did a good deep dive into the book.
We went through the book.
Yeah.
And we also digressed a lot,
which is the dream.
And it was very fun.
And this answers, this will answer for many people.
In the previous episodes he's been on, I talk a lot about his playful eyes. Yeah. and it was very fun. And this answers, this will answer for many people.
In the previous episodes he's been on,
I talk a lot about his playful eyes.
Yeah.
Oh, exactly.
People can see it now.
You can see it now.
The power of his playful eyes.
Watch us on YouTube and you can see those eyes bounce.
Watch him dance and flirt and captivate and snare.
Please enjoy Malcolm Gladwell.
We are supported by Airbnb.
So as promised, you know,
we've taken so many Airbnb trips together,
you and I, Monica.
They're so fun.
A couple places in Palm Springs
and just had the best time and gotten the entire pod there.
Yeah, it's so nice because then everyone has
their own designated space,
but then there's a group space, people can come in and out.
Communal pool, people have cooking nights.
It's so fun.
Some trips are better in an Airbnb.
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That's Squarespace.com slash DAX to get started today. He's an old children's boy. He's an old children's boy. He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy.
He's an old children's boy. He's an old children's boy. some of you here, because we have like something from Phil Stutz and something from Drew Barrymore.
Yeah, it would be really nice to have a Malcolm artifact.
Yeah, exactly. I'll do my best.
Yeah. Do you draw?
Not well. Well.
But I do draw. You do draw?
I mean, time to time, sure.
Then you probably draw well.
Do you have a sketchbook?
No, I do not on that level.
What I do is I obsessively doodle.
If I'm in a meeting, I'm just doodling the whole time.
You are. And do people think
you're taking notes when you're doodling?
I don't think there's any illusion that I'm taking notes.
Do you draw people or faces ever?
Faces only.
Yeah, same.
I draw cars in profile.
Oh.
Which I've done since I was about six,
but mostly it's faces.
And are they grotesque?
A little.
I'm not good enough to make them look like real faces.
I'm a poor artist, poor drawer.
I disagree.
Monica, thank you so much.
But I do draw a lot.
I have 12 faces I love to draw over and over and over again.
You know, there's this guy with a certain nose
I like to draw, and then there's an alien
who's shaped like a light bulb a little bit,
but he has a rectangular mouth.
And then I just keep drawing them over the years,
and maybe they just change a tiny bit.
Did you ever see the documentary, Crumb?
About our Crumb?
Yeah.
I did not, I heard about it.
Oh, I think you would love it.
I wanna say David Lynch maybe made it or produced it.
Yeah, that makes sense, someone like that.
Yeah, it was very inspiring.
Those two would be of a piece.
Yeah. Yeah, definitely.
We have so much to talk to you about.
We have so much to talk about.
Earlier today we were recording
and Monica said she was prepared to be bored
for a good chunk of this.
As you and I talked about cars.
The car piece, the car piece.
Not the book piece.
And I said, you'll be happy to know,
I actually don't think there's room for any car stuff.
We're not doing the car stuff.
Maybe it'll find its way in hopefully.
I'm sure it will make its way in.
I thought we decided that we'd reached a point
in our careers where we could alienate our audiences.
We did, we had breakfast recently
and we decided that it was time for us
to just completely betray the covenant.
In my case, I would just do end the shows
about track and field.
By the way, who loved your Marion Jones episode
more than me, nobody?
Did you like it?
I'm a track and field nut.
I remember her story, the whole kind of descent.
That era of track and field is nuts.
What part of it's nuts?
I mean, for me, it was that they were rock stars.
That was the first time I ever saw track and field people
be rock stars in my lifetime.
They were rock stars, but drugs invade sports.
There's a 10 year stretch of basketball
that does not resemble any other 10 year stretch
of basketball.
It's because there was just so much cocaine.
Oh really?
And there's a 10 year stretch of track
where everyone's using.
I had a friend of mine who was on the Canadian Olympic track
field team in the early 90s, same era.
And he would describe to me what it
was like at the Olympic Village.
I think he was there in 88 in Seoul.
He was just like, you have to understand
how crazy everyone was.
And like the throwers were all taking massive steroids.
And it dramatically increases your sexual appetite.
Yes.
So he's like, that was the crazy thing.
They're already a fuck fest without that.
They're already.
They're young men and women in their twenties
and they are physically in the 99.9% tail.
And they don't see anyone else.
They're living in a training camp at all times.
It's like they've been in prison.
Out of control.
You know, all the men have got bacne,
like you can't believe.
Sure, sure. Telltale signs. So she's part of that. She know, all the men have got back knee, like you can't believe. Sure, sure, tell, tell signs.
So she's part of that, she had the misfortune.
The weird thing is if you replay her career 10 times,
you just replay it 15 years later, it's totally different.
Meaning how competitive she would be now?
No, she'd still be the same brilliant athlete,
but it's just a pathological era for that sport.
Well, weirdly, there's an overstory, if you wanna talk about your book, there is an overstory, whether it's just a pathological era for that sport. Well, weirdly, there's an overstory, if you want to talk about your book.
There is an overstory.
Whether it's explicit, you start sensing from above somehow, it's like trickling in.
Everyone's doing something.
I think it just ends up infiltrating you.
I've always been sympathetic to Lance Armstrong because if you know anything about cycling,
you know everyone was doing it.
He was just the best at doing it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or the worst.
He got caught.
When everyone is doing it and you do it
because you realize if you don't,
you'll never make it to Europe in cycling in that era.
But it's different if you're the only one.
You made this sort of elective decision
that you're gonna break the norm.
I find it to be a really fun and complex issue.
I kind of work backwards from the reality of it.
There's some argument to be made,
which is like, just legalize it.
Cause it's proven to be impossible
to truly find out who's doing it and who's not.
So if we acknowledge they're not doing a great job
of exposing the people that are and aren't,
then I almost just think you gotta kind of just allow it.
I mean, I just don't know what else the solution is.
And the Lance thing too,
that I think changed my tune on him a little bit.
I want to add, I think what he did in the wake of it, suing people and bringing people down.
That part I despise.
But to see the doc on him and realize he was winning adult triathlons at like 16 years
old and I go, oh no, no, this guy has been a cardiovascular phenom his whole life.
You couldn't give me what he was on and expect me to do anything.
It's like Barry Bonds.
The fact that he is literally using steroids
at the end of his career does not detract from the fact
that he's one of the greatest physical talents
ever to play baseball.
Yes.
And then also when we get into this debate,
which we've had a bunch on here,
it's like, it's really interesting where we draw the line.
Well, Laszak's fine.
You can augment your eyes with science
and you can take propaninol
if you wanna audition
for a symphony orchestra.
There's numerous ways in which we think it's fine
to augment.
Some of these arguments have been a long time ago
and I didn't find it persuasive
and now I totally find it persuasive.
And that is you're absolutely right, it's all arbitrary,
but you have an obligation if you play a sport
to follow the sports rules, no matter how crazy they are.
Can't break the rules. I agree.
There's a great definition by someone,
elite sport is the willing acceptance
of arbitrary constraints.
Ooh, I like that.
That's what it is.
You agree to compete within a particular group,
the event has certain parameters that you can't decide
that the marathon is 24 miles.
Without the confinement, it's not a thing.
It's actually the rules that make it what it is. So it's not a thing. It's not a thing.
It's actually the rules that make it what it is.
So it's like, if the rules say,
you can use this kind of PED, but not this kind of PED,
you are obliged to follow that rule, even if it's crazy.
Yeah, but then you just gotta get somewhat practical
about how's it going?
How's it working out?
Or how much to penalize the people.
That too.
I mean, the fact that she went to prison is insane.
And I understand that she went to prison,
not for her steroid use, but for the line,
but still, what are we talking about?
Why are you even being questioned?
Don't even get me started on who does
and doesn't go to prison.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Now, okay, back to track and field.
So A, did you watch Sprint on Netflix?
Funnily enough, even though I am a massive track and field fan,
I have not watched Sprint.
I feel like I didn't need to watch it
because I know all that, maybe I'm wrong.
Oh, so fun.
I've done that too with things.
I think I already know everything
they're about to tell me.
No, I like to watch things where I legit think
at least 90% of the material would be something
I haven't heard before.
Yes, I loved it because I don't follow it that closely.
And then we both watched it prior to the Olympics.
And I went into the Olympics with like an enthusiasm
for track and field I haven't ever had.
They do such a good job at making you care so much
about those personal stories.
I, at least twice a day, spend time on running message boards.
There's one called Let's Run.
I monitor Let's Run like twice a day.
I'm on that site, what's's twice 730 times a year.
I have ducked out of crucial meetings.
There's something called the Diamond League.
There's like 10 of them every year.
These elite track meets, they're all in Europe
every week through the summer.
2.30 on a Thursday, when the Diamond League's on,
I will just come up with an excuse
in some crucial meeting, sneak off.
I was having some crucial lunch with some guy,
really important business lunch.
And there was a Diamond League race coming up at like 2.30.
And I was like, my stomach's not good,
I gotta go to the bathroom.
I go into the bathroom, take out my computer,
watch 5,000 meters, 13 minutes.
Oh my.
Oh my.
Wait a minute, this is unethical.
Then go back to the lunch.
Wow, I can't believe you're more willing
to basically imply you have diarrhea
than just say.
No, you can't, it was a power lunch,
it was someone way more important than I was.
There's no way you could say,
I'm blowing this off because there's a race
in Lausanne, Switzerland,
which I really need to watch right now.
Yeah, you needed a really alien family member or diarrhea.
I never said diarrhea by the way.
I was.
You left to that conclusion.
No one's thinking ulcer when you say stomach issue.
That takes 13 minutes to resolve.
If you were filling out like the Hazelton admittance form
for addiction, that could qualify.
Like have you ever completely thrown your career goals
in the trash to hide in a bathroom
and do your drug choice?
Well, no, because as I have learned
since I'm now a parent, the number of pastimes
that I thought I was addicted to that it turns out I just give them up.
I haven't watched a single football game
for the last two seasons.
And you were obsessed with it at one point?
I used to watch five, six hours of NFL every Sunday
and Thursday and Monday night.
I haven't watched a single game
since my first kid was born.
Does that seem off brand for him?
Football? Yeah.
Yes, on face value, but then I bet there's like some psychological thing
to it that you like.
Yes.
I just like watching it.
Very simple.
I don't believe it.
Dexter, am I right?
You're suspiciously not into sports.
You're a Michigan guy.
That's outrageous.
It's offensive to the Red Wings, the Tigers,
the Lions and U of M.
But I got into it.
I'm a fair weather fan.
This year when the U of M won it all,
I was like, okay, I'm watching that game,
and then when the Lions were gone.
He's owning it at least.
But what I make up for it in is that
I love sports documentaries.
And I will watch every sports documentary,
even about things I don't give a shit about.
The stakes are so baked in, even the sport,
I could care less who wins the Heisman or this or that.
I get it, you tell me what is the highest mark for this thing.
It's wonderful.
Did you go to University of Michigan?
UCLA.
Oh, UCLA, obviously.
Can I tell you, since you're a Michigander,
I once gave a talk at Michigan, some big student thing.
This is the most shameless act of pandering
you'll ever heard.
So I get up on stage, all the kids are there,
a couple thousand.
I don't say anything.
I'm wearing a jacket and a tie. I take off my tie, I take off on stage, all the kids are there, a couple thousand, I don't say anything. I'm wearing a jacket and a tie.
I take off my tie, I take off my jacket, fold it,
put it on the ground.
I haven't said a word.
I start unbuttoning my shirt, the kids are like,
what is going on here?
The professors are like, what?
Unbutton, unbutton, unbutton.
Break open my shirt, and I am wearing
a University of Michigan t-shirt.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, that's cute.
Shameless pandering, shameless.
Yeah, but it worked, right?
I'm sure it worked.
Of course it worked.
I've done a couple USO tours where I went to Afghanistan
and they give you a kind of heads up.
It's like, listen, here's what works great.
Make fun of the food and the defact.
Make fun of this sergeant's an asshole.
They give you the playbook a little bit.
People love knowing that you see them.
Well, they love a culture
and they want you to be in their culture.
Well, they want a marker that you took the gig seriously enough to find out even a little bit about them. Well, they love a culture, and they want you to be in their culture. Well, they want a marker that you took the gig
seriously enough to find out even a little bit about them.
Yeah, it's like a tiny little act of goodwill.
Okay, I am delighted with your new book.
I love it.
You already know, and I don't even know
how we're friends really,
because it must be a tiny bit awkward
that I'm a super fan of yours,
and also we have a friendship.
So the fact that I am like the number one proselytizer
of your books, it has to be a tiny bit concerning.
And your eyes.
Do you know he talks about your eyes every eighth episode?
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know I do that.
I didn't know there was this subtle
homoerotic element to our-
Oh, always, always.
Yes, I'm not in denial of that at all.
I'm a fair weather friend.
I have homoerotic lust for you.
Did I not say when I saw you today for the first time,
Dax, I always forget how huge you are. It's mutual. I'm a fair weather friend. I have homoerotic lust for you. Did I not say when I saw you today for the first time,
Dax, I always forget how huge you are.
It's mutual.
I gotta tell a behind the scenes story.
I might've even told on a fact check,
cause what a moment.
So our youngest daughter is very Gladwell-esque.
She has very playful eyes,
troublemaker eyes.
And by luck when we had breakfast,
Kristen texts me, hey, you're at Cafe 101, right?
Order me a to go thing, I'm gonna swing by
and grab it with Delta.
So then in walks Kristen and Delta,
and then I said to Delta, look at this man's eyes,
like take a look at the playfulness.
And the two of them had a real eye off.
It was explosive.
I mean, I hope you remember it as well as I do.
Your daughter, she's got like both sides charisma
packed into one tiny little,
who knows what's gonna happen 10 years from now.
I know, mass murderer or like Nobel prize winner.
She's so spunky.
No, just like wattage.
She is, 100% from day one.
But wait a moment,
I wish I had a photo of the four eyes all connected.
Oh wow.
Because I made her give you some looks too
and she rose to the occasion.
She did.
I was like, okay, now you've turned around and you notice this.
Okay, so I love your books.
I don't think I could put them in order.
I find myself quoting shit from it still so often
and spans the whole range,
but it's very, very exciting
that you're readdressing the tipping point
because it's the 25th anniversary.
And I also showed you a text I sent to Kristen.
I said, oh my God, I'm reading Malcolm's new book.
It's a takedown of his own book.
And she said, what?
What a king.
So I loved it right out of the gates.
But I think we should remind people
what the premise of tipping point is.
I think we kind of remember,
but you do a really interesting job in the foreword
of explaining the era in which you wrote that book
25 years ago and what your point of view was at that time
and then how you're 25 years older, you have children,
you don't live in the city.
And so it's kind of the reverse side of the coin
of Tipping Point, maybe.
When I was in my mid-30s, I wrote my first book
called The Tipping Point,
and I was a relatively unknown journalist living in New
York City. I wrote for the New Yorker magazine, just started the New Yorker magazine, and I had
this idea to write about how epidemics were a wonderful metaphor for understanding how ideas
and behaviors spread through society. That you could look at the flu or HIV or whatever and use
what you know about epidemics of disease
to understand why a fashion trend would take off
or why crime would fall in New York City.
So I wrote this book called The Tipping Point
and it was an unexpected success.
You said your first readings were like nobody there
and you're like, okay, this seems.
My first reading was in LA at what's the one on Sunset,
that bookstore, BookSoup.
Okay, that's a great.
And three people came.
How many were on accident?
One of them was the mother of a friend of mine.
My friend didn't even show up.
Okay.
She sent her mom.
She sent a proxy.
I was like, all right, that is what it is.
I enjoyed writing the book, but I guess that's the end of it.
And that was not the end of it.
It just kept on building and building.
I'm really glad you had the moment
where you thought you had a stinger.
I'm all about the fact that most of my life
is very low stakes.
I know people who in their life face decisions
or consequences that have real stakes.
Raising kids is real stakes.
Losing your job is real stakes.
Having your house blown up
because you're living in a war, that's real stakes.
Publishing a book that doesn't do as well as you think
is not real stakes.
So I wasn't troubled by it.
I was like, oh, okay.
I mean, the book is really optimistic,
which we'll get into how it was so optimistic,
but in general, are you an optimistic person?
Did you have delusions of grandeur before it came out?
Do you have any expectations?
No, I don't reflect much on the past
and I almost never try and pick the future.
I know what's gonna happen tomorrow
and I have forgotten what happened yesterday.
That's my perspective on how to live a happy life.
I'm so jealous of those three people.
They get to say that they were really in on the ground floor.
And one guy just needed to use the bathroom
and he's like, fuck, I gotta sit through this
to justify, to now use the bathroom.
He's like, hey!
To check this race out.
I should try and find.
I know who one of them was, the mother of my friend.
The other two, I just don't know. I should try and find them.
That would be a fun episode of Revisionist History.
Yeah!
Because my hunch is they didn't know
what the hell they were stumbling upon.
I think they were just walking down the street.
They needed to cool off, beat the heat.
So I do that book.
The book ends up being quite successful.
Yeah, like many, many years
on the New York Times to sell it.
Turns out, yeah.
Probably one of the most successful books.
With no expectations,
how are you processing that experience?
I guess, are you able to internalize it and experience it,
or is it like a surreal thing that's happening
that you're trying to keep up with and catch up to?
A, I don't really remember.
And B, problem is this, if you go into banking,
you get a job on Wall Street, Goldman Sachs,
you become a trader, one day you get a bonus for $5 million. That's why you went into banking, you get a job on Wall Street, Goldman Sachs, you become a trader,
one day you get a bonus for $5 million.
That's why you went into banking.
Exactly.
To get the bonus.
So it's like, you've invested heavily in the idea,
the expectation you're gonna get a big bonus,
you've thought about it, it's validation for what you do,
the way you measure success in that world
is the size of your bonus, it's all wrapped up.
Having a book that sold lots of copies
was never on my radar.
That's not what I thought writing was about.
And that's exactly why I'm curious
because I think for an actor,
when they end up in a situation
where their movie did really great
and everyone in town's talking about it,
they had some moment of their life fantasizing about that.
They've done some mental modeling for that
and they decided how they would feel on that
and then it either matches or it doesn't.
That's really interesting.
But yeah, I would put you in a category of like some of these academics that are
getting wildly famous from a podcast.
They were nerds in school.
There's no way they fantasized about this outcome.
I don't know that you can model it all that well, but I think some modeling helps.
I think a lot of these people get caught really in a world when they don't know
what the fuck they've never been popular.
Yeah.
My initial reaction, you'll like this Dex,
was that I bought a car.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I knew we'd get there.
Sob 9-5.
Don't laugh like that.
The standard answer, like what's the game show
or it's like you gotta guess the five most popular answers.
For sure number one is 911.
Anyone who makes some money, who's semi-intellectual,
911's the first car, not a Swedish car.
No, because my dad, until he was in his 60s,
he'd only ever had one new car,
it was a Saab that he bought in the late 60s.
Right after he buys it, he gets his job offer in Canada,
so he moved to Canada, and he had to leave it behind
and it broke his heart.
And then he had nothing but used cars
for the next 40 years.
Could that be right?
The next thing I did was buy my dad a new car.
And did you buy him a Saab?
I bought him a Volvo.
Okay.
Swedish still.
Of course.
It's a professor.
When you're a professor, you gotta buy a drive-by.
They're boxing but they're good.
But that was the only outward expression of it.
I just didn't know what to do with this fact.
I bought an apartment, but then I thought it was weird
and so I sold it and I went back to living in a rental walk-up.
Oh really?
This is kind of a two prong question.
Had you ever imagined what it'd be like to be famous
or be on 60 Minutes?
I think no.
No.
Had you ever imagined having a lot of money?
Yes, but my definition of what a lot of money was,
was not actually a lot of money.
So did I think I would make more money than my parents?
Yes, that was a goal.
Cause I saw that they really worried a lot about money. I didn't want to go through that. So did I think I would make more money than my parents? Yes, that was a goal.
Because I saw that they really worried a lot about money.
I didn't want to go through that.
Money is really interesting.
I think money, we're going on many digressions.
As we should.
People think we talk about it too much.
I think we don't talk about it nearly enough.
We don't talk about it in the right way.
I think we fail to acknowledge how central it
is to so many crises, people's state of mind.
The issues your parents have with money haunts you,
just as other issues your parents have,
all these things, they really, really, really, really matter.
And I always find myself in a position,
sometimes when I'm talking to Kate,
for example, my partner,
and we'll be talking about someone we know,
and she'll give a complicated psychological reading
of their position.
And my position is, I just think they're worried about money.
Right, right. And it doesn't sound like that think they're worried about money. Right, right.
And it doesn't sound like that explanation measures up.
And I totally think it does.
My father, he wasn't someone who was anxious, neurotic, insecure.
He was deeply religious and in the best possible sense.
He thought that God walked with him.
He was at the top of his field.
He's a mathematician.
He worried about money.
Money haunted him.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Money is safety.
It's my deepest fear.
But I talk about it on here all the time.
It's so interesting in so many ways,
because yes, it is so powerful.
It is on everyone's mind at all times,
yet you're not supposed to talk about it.
If you talk about it,
you're gonna build resentment in someone else,
or it's gonna result in you envying somebody.
Like it's so loaded.
It's also mythical, it's fake, and it's real.
It's like this very powerful force
that's moving through everyone,
and no one really knows how to talk about it.
It's true that it helps,
and then it's also true that it's not the fantasy.
One of my first powerful childhood memories was,
I became convinced that my family was gonna go bankrupt
when I was like
seven or eight or nine because I would listen to this conversation about money. What I wanted more
than anything else in the world was a subscription to Road and Track magazine. So I saved up my
allowance money for like months. I counted it all up. I think I had like $9 and I thought I had
enough and then I went to actually subscribe and realized that I didn't.
I remember standing in front of my parents in tears
because I had to finally admit to them
that I needed a couple of dollars
so I could afford Road and Track.
And I did not want to be a burden.
Oh, already at that age.
All I wanted was Road and Track.
Yeah, do you know, this is why we're bound.
Cause my first purchase at a similar age
was automobile magazine, which had just come out.
Oh, look at you going automobile over road tracks.
It was so glossy and there were so many more exotics
and it was premium.
The great one is the British one, car magazine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I have every back issue going back to 1990 something.
In my library, look at a huge long row of magazines.
That's cool.
Oh, are you a hoarder at all?
No.
We just referenced your episode.
Oh, on hoarding.
Uh-huh, we talked about it the other day on a fact check.
I love that episode.
So fascinating. Yeah, that's one
of mommy's favorite.
I did it right before COVID.
I remember I went down to Florida
to see the guy who was the expert.
I wish I had the tape of that conversation.
It was fascinating. He devoted his life to see the guy who was the expert. I wish I had the tape of that conversation. It was fascinating.
He devoted his life to finding the humanity
in people who hoard.
I just thought that was so beautiful.
In convincing you that something that appeared on the outset
and had many of the manifestations of a pathology
had at its core something that we ought to value.
In a million years, did not think that there was someone
who could have injected that much empathy
and humanity into that topic.
Yeah, we were just talking about this this morning.
Have you ever heard the episode of Radiolab titled Blame?
No.
Okay, with the exception of all your work,
it is by far, I think both of us, right?
Favorite episode of a podcast of all time.
It's unreal and it does three stories within it,
but one of them being a man who had adopted a girl
and she was a social worker and one of her clients
high on crack and a bunch of other mental things
ends up killing her.
And this man initially just kind of wants some answers
and he develops this incredible relationship
with this guy who murdered his daughter
and would come see him in prison
and he became a father figure to him.
And I hear that story and I think
if anything was ever aspirational,
to be able to do that, that's the superpower
of all superpowers.
That is super.
That I admire and strive for and could never reach.
And there's a few stories within it that are just like that.
We're just mind blowing compassion.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Wait, I'm failing spectacularly at the task
of promoting my new book.
No, no, well I'm gonna do that for you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I keep digressing.
What is it about you two, you guys,
you're just dangling digression invitations in front of me.
Those are our favorites.
Digressions are what we're in it for.
And here's another one.
I love it.
So you do something so meticulous
and we do something that's so jazz improvisational.
So I envy what you do.
Is there any party that's like, fuck these guys.
They sit down and create two hours of content real time.
There's no other bullshit.
Well, I'm not meticulous in real life
because that's the form.
Can I digress again?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
My whole thing is that when it comes
to any kind of creative act, the first thing I want to know
are what the constraints are.
Constraints are what make it interesting.
I am going on Monday to go visit BMW corporate headquarters,
because I met the marketing guy from BMW.
And I said, I want to make audio ads for BMW.
I want to show you how I think it should be done.
Cause I don't like the way cars are advertised on podcasts.
So I made a bunch.
Ah, uh-huh.
I'm going to play them for them.
But the reason I tell the story is,
what's lovely about that is,
I figured they can't be longer than two minutes.
I got to tell a two minute story.
That's the constraint.
In my podcast, the constraint is we got a lot more time,
but there's a formality that people are expecting.
For this podcast, the constraint is,
it's can you play jazz in an improv
for whatever it is, an hour and a half, right?
That's another kind of-
Get ready for the play out.
Maybe an hour's in a day.
I'm checking my watch.
But we ask guests to take their watches off
when they walk in.
Yeah, exactly.
You can't do two great minutes and be done.
What I love is you understand what the constraint here is.
You're not running a sprint.
If you gave me that set of constraints,
I would find that thrilling.
Yeah, yeah.
But just that I don't have that set in my life right now.
Right, okay.
So again, back to tipping point.
In the foreword, you say,
look, I wrote this book in this time
and it was very hopeful.
And maybe also your age is a hopeful age.
Yes.
At that time.
Mid-30s is hopeful.
And so the kernel of the original tipping point is hey if you look at these things as epidemics
and you look at that very little things can nudge this tidal wave and basically we can nudge
things in a very positive direction and it's hopeful in that way. And this book's very much like, in PS,
there are bad actors who are also aware
of how all this works and they are actively also nudging it
in a direction we don't like.
So this is kind of like the antidote
to the first book in some way.
Is that a fair summation?
Yeah, that's why it's called Revenge of the Tipping Point.
Straighten the title, Dax.
You're supposed to say all that shit.
Straighten the title.
No, no, no.
I often do this when I'm writing books.
You know, my book, David and Goliath, is a kind of antidote to Outliers.
My book, Talking to Strangers, is an antidote to Blink.
Blink was all about, let's talk about the power of that first initial impression of
some one or something.
Talking to Strangers was, let's be aware that that first thing that we do is almost
always wrong or misleading. Outliers was, let's talk about how successful people are, the
beneficiaries of a set of extraordinary advantages they may not always be honest about. And David
and Goliath was, sometimes advantages don't look like advantages. I'm always going back and
thinking about, and I realized with the original Tipping Point book,
you write a book and then even without being aware of it,
you end up arguing with yourself about what you wrote,
in that case for years.
I realized I'd been sort of like, did I mean that?
And so much happens, like right after I published
the original Tipping Point, the internet happens.
And then 20 years passed, we go through COVID
and all of a sudden everyone's obsessed with epidemics again.
That's sort of what led me to wanna return to it.
It just struck me that there was more to be said.
Were you ever scared writing this?
Cause I started reading it last night.
I don't normally read the books that the guest writes
because I wanna be able to know
if things are getting too esoteric.
But in your case, it was hard not to.
So I started it last night and I was like,
I hope no bank robbers are reading this
and learning how to do it.
Like you're giving them sort of a handbook
on what to do and how to do it properly.
I was like, oh no, you don't ever think about that.
No.
Okay.
Now that you mention it.
I mean, a lot of this book is about how bad actors
have taken the principles of social engineering
and use them to their own ends.
Yes.
So it's not quite an owner's manual,
but how to be an anarchist manifesto.
They would float around, teach each other, make a pipe bomb.
But I do think there's a couple of times in this book, like the story that frames the
book is a different version of the story of how Purdue takes Oxycontin from an unknown
drug into the most damaging prescription drug in American history.
And there I think it's very useful for us to know how, if you're super evil and very smart,
how you can hijack a system for your own purposes. They hijack the system.
They realize that if you want to corrupt the medical system, you don't have to corrupt every doctor.
You don't even have to corrupt 99% of doctors.
They did that whole thing on the backs of a tiny, tiny fraction of doctors living in
very specific parts of the country.
That's a really important, chilling thing you need to learn about the world.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
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Because it's time to get into it.
Holla at your girl.
That part of it is really mind-blowing. And they had help and it's really interesting because we talk about the guilt of them,
which is warranted, but you have McKinsey, right?
They're the ones that discovered this and you're framing the whole thing through the lens of COVID
a little bit where you introduce this one event at a meeting, one person early on in COVID,
who's a super spreader.
And we learned why people are super spreaders.
You know, their vocal cords emit some of the saliva when they're
dehydrated and all this stuff.
And it turns out that one person ultimately was probably responsible for
like a million cases or 300,000 originally, but really one human being resulted in
3 million infections, which is kind of mind blowing. probably responsible for like a million cases or 300,000 originally, but really one human being resulted
in three million infections, which is kind of mind blowing.
And then these doctors, they broke up at the time
Purdue was spending a fortune having sales representatives
all over the country, talking to virtually 100,000 doctors.
And this bright company, McKinsey was like,
let's really put this in a diagram and see what's happening.
Well, in Dessel 10, the doctors are only prescribing
it once or not at all a year.
And there's 99,000 doctors in that Dessel.
And if we go all the way up to the top,
those doctors, of which there's only 384 of them,
they're prescribing 300 plus.
So fuck all the money that's being spent on four through 10
and let's just put all the money in three, two and one.
And through that, they end up prescribing
millions and millions and millions of tablets.
This is this really important principle.
I had talked about it in the first tipping point,
I called it the law of the few.
The idea that when you have an epidemic,
the work of the epidemic is done by a very small group of people.
But I don't think I took it far enough.
So I return to that idea in this book.
And you're right, I start with the COVID example and I say, our assumption in the middle of
COVID was that every person who was infected had a roughly equal risk of infecting someone
else.
Turns out that's just not even remotely true.
The overwhelming majority of people who were infected with COVID
did not spread the virus very far at all.
The spread comes from a small number of people
who for some reason that we don't entirely understand,
but probably just genetic reason,
produce a huge amount more virus.
When they talk, there's way more particles
coming out of their mouth than anybody else.
And even that, we thought it was coughing and sneezing,
but then these aerosolists who study aerosol
and particle disbursement, they look at it
and they go, oh no, no, no, no.
It's from talking.
It's just talking.
And what happened at this conference?
This person's just got up and fucking lurched to everybody,
hosed down the whole room with this.
Eww, this is so gross.
For an hour and everyone was infected.
So the logic of that says,
if you want to understand how to stop COVID,
we should really have been trying to figure out
who these super spreaders are.
There's not a lot of them.
Make sure they're not out and about when they're infected.
Give them a week long trip somewhere.
It would be cheaper.
They just quarantined all those people
for like three weeks, it would have been done. We treated everyone the same because we
didn't really understand how epidemics work. When you understand how epidemics
work you realize you need to be worried about the one person in a thousand. So
that same logic is used by Purdue in creating the opioid crisis. They
understand that, wait a minute, all along we've been taking our sales budget and
we've been trying to sales budget, and we've
been trying to reach every doctor in America who prescribes painkillers.
Wrong.
Why?
We're wasting our time.
It turns out there's a couple of hundred doctors throughout the country who are prescribing
way more Oxycontin than anybody else.
And more than that, when we send a sales rep to go and see them, and that sales rep takes
them to a ball game and buys them a fancy dinner.
They just respond to that and write even more prescriptions.
It's so scientific, I gotta add.
They have the data, and these companies,
McKinsey and other people, they're so scientific about it.
They basically figure out, okay, you have these doctors,
if you see them 25 times a year,
they're gonna write less and less prescriptions.
Above 25, they're gonna go up and up.
Some of these doctors had 300 Insight rep contacts
within a couple years.
Like they're nonstop.
Every day some drug company rep is showing up at your door
bringing gifts.
And they're attractive.
Probably.
In the book it says.
It's reasonable to assume that they're attractive
and they're going to see, you know,
some guy running a drug mill somewhere on rural Tennessee is getting visited
hundreds of times a year by some sales rep
and is just writing prescriptions by the boatload.
It's a little bit of an acquittal
in a nice way of doctors in general,
because even I, who I think I followed it more closely,
I am an opiate addict.
I was part of this whole thing.
I get it.
I was under the assumption that most doctors
took the marching orders.
You know, there was this huge campaign
that they convinced people that everyone
was under prescribing for pain,
and they had all these pretty complex campaigns.
So I was kind of led to believe,
oh, I think all the doctors loosened up there.
And that's not true.
49% of all the opioids prescribed in that period
were by 1% of doctors.
Yeah.
You're right.
It does redeem your faith a little bit.
I think this is another useful thing that comes out
of thinking about these as epidemics
and realizing that epidemics are propelled
by a tiny fraction of the population.
You realize that we're much too quick to condemn groups
of people and professions.
I was doing a podcast in parallel to the book.
I was talking to a guy who studies homicides on the west side of Chicago, one of the most
dangerous neighborhoods in the country.
There are 50,000 people on the west side of Chicago.
And this guy said, if you want to understand homicide, who's at risk, who's doing the duty
work, you're really talking about 400 people.
Our assumption would be,
if you walk around the West Side of Chicago,
you think, oh, we're gonna need a massive police presence
on every corner and be stopping everyone we can be.
This guy's saying you're misunderstanding.
It's an epidemic.
And then epidemics are characterized by the fact
that they are propelled by small numbers.
And he makes these maps of where homicides fall
in the social network of the West Side of Chicago.
It's 400 people.
Wow.
And they're super spreaders.
And those are effectively the super spreaders
of violence in that neighborhood.
But that liberates you from the idea that,
first of all, his point is,
the neighborhood's not dysfunctional.
Don't go calling the West Side of Chicago a hellhole.
It's not a hellhole.
It is a place where a very small number of people
have managed to kind of infect the community
with this terrible virus.
Yeah, enact mass carnage.
Yeah.
So the first book, your kind of three laws you use
were law of a few, the power of context,
and the stickiness factor.
But this book has three new concepts.
It has the super spreader and it has the overstory.
And I want you to talk about the overstory
because I was telling Monica this morning,
it's like, I read the book, I love the book,
I'm gonna be quoting chapters from the book
for the next decade, I know it.
It has the same deliciousness of the first one.
Every single story is so interesting.
But framing it is hard to do because,
and I think it's what's unique about your writing
and so fun is you're almost like addicted
to starting threads.
Digressions.
I love the digression.
You're just leaving these like,
you create this little path and then you just stop
and then you start a new story and then you stop
and you start a new story and then through the back end
of the book, you're starting to just weave
all these things together. Which makes it a little hard to lay out the book
in any kind of linear fashion.
But these concepts, the overstory, the super spreader,
and what's the?
Group proportions.
Group proportions.
I'm really interested in this question of
how many people does it take
to change the character of a group?
Yes, and I think one of the examples I loved most,
and you've had previous episodes about the power of the token. You had that incredible Sammy Davis. Yes, and I think one of the examples I loved most, and you've had previous episodes
about the power of the token.
You had that incredible Sammy Davis.
Oh God.
Fuckin' what a beautiful episode.
That's one of my favorites.
Poor Sammy Davis.
Heartbreaking.
The audio of that roast is just like, oh.
Tell people if they haven't heard what that was.
Yeah, I did a revisionist history episode
about Sammy Davis Jr. is roasted near the end of his life.
You know, one of those classic Friars Club roasts.
And it's so brutal and it's explicitly racial
and he's required to laugh along.
It's his role.
And you listen to it.
I did the whole episode about essentially trying
to get people to imagine what he must have been feeling
on the inside because his whole life
was all about pretending to laugh
in the face of things that aren't funny.
I think almost even worse as I remember,
and I can't remember who the black leader was,
but he had also hugged Nixon at one point
or did something nice to Nixon.
And then he got painted as an Uncle Tom
and kind of skewered by his folks.
I was like, oh my God, this guy lives in a world
of white people that are willing to make
these horrendous jokes about him.
Yeah.
What do you had to give up?
To be the first one in and it's really predictable what the first one in is
going to have to do.
They don't really have an option.
I've been thinking so much about this question.
You have a group of people and an outsider wants to join the group.
How the outsider is treated is first of all, a function of what the majority is
like, but more importantly, it's a function of how many outsiders are there joining the group.
If you're the first, if you're Sammy Davis Jr. and you're entering a world that is entirely white,
you're going to be treated very differently than if you are Dave Chappelle and you're joining a group
that by the time you join it, there's lots and lots and lots and lots of fucking people.
And legends, Eddie Murphy and Richard Pryor, Bernie Mac.
Those are very, very different scenarios.
And so I wanted to kind of look at that
in a variety of different ways
about how many outsiders does it take
before a group changes?
Before you get treated like a human being,
and not just as a token,
or before you get listened to.
I talk a lot about women on corporate boards.
For years and years and years,
there were no women on corporate boards in America. Under
pressure, corporations would put, you know, nine men on the board. They'd have an
opening. They'd put a woman on. So you have one woman, eight men. What happens when you
only have one woman? Is she heard? Does she make a difference? Do they listen to
her when she says stuff? Do they treat her like a person? The answer is they
don't. It looks like they've changed the composition and created diversity. They
haven't. There aren't enough. Really the composition and created diversity. They haven't.
There aren't enough.
Really quick, the woman you're interviewing
who's saying is heartbreaking.
She's in a room with nine men and someone will enter
and the person shakes the hands of eight of the men
and literally walks by her as if she's not there.
Well, they think that she's the secretary.
Yeah.
Or she'll have a point.
No one will respond.
15 minutes later, a guy makes the exact same point
and everyone's high-fiving the guy. Yeah. I found all these women who had been on
corporate boys and were the first one in. This is one of those great moments when
you're reporting something when everyone starts to say the same thing
independently and you realize, oh this is real. Yeah. So I called up and I said, okay so you were
the first person on named the Fortune of America Company. What was that like?
Terrible. Were you there when they appointed a second woman to the board?
Yes.
What was that like?
Terrible.
Nobody cared.
No one listened to us.
No one treated us properly.
Were you there when they named a third woman to the board?
Yes.
What happens?
Night and day.
Really?
It's like, really?
When you get three out of nine, boom.
Well, she said when you're there by yourself,
you're the token to listen to you.
When there's another person there, you have a friend.
And when there's three of you, you're a block.
You're now start acting the way you really wanna act.
Yeah.
And they can't ignore you.
And they suddenly wake up to the fact
that you're a human being and they have to take you seriously.
And it turns out this phenomenon shows up
in tons and tons and tons of different situations
where when outsiders reach a certain crucial tipping point
in a group, the group changes.
That's fascinating.
And so I just find this so weird and interesting
and accords in a certain way with things
that I've noticed over the course of my life
that I've just never been able to put a finger
on what was going on.
But again, your specialty is counterintuitive.
That's why I like it.
I like going into a book and I think this would be logical
and intuitive and then turns out no.
So also you're telling another story at the same time,
which is these experiments they run
where there's pairs of people,
there's gonna be 15 rounds
and the pairs of people are shown an image of a person
and they have to say what name comes into their head.
Show a picture of Benjamin Franklin
and I go, Steve, you go Mark.
By the 15th round,
the whole group will be saying the same names.
They're that good.
It's weird, but it's true.
You have these guys done hundreds of versions of this.
We have a large group of people.
Eventually we'll all agree on what we want to call this face.
Within 15 rounds of doing this with a group of 30 people.
And then they do this fascinating thing
where they put in antagonists.
So the antagonist is there intentionally
to not play by those rules, right?
So he won't or she won't fall into line.
And when we get to that 16th round,
when we would both naturally say Ben,
he'll throw out Glenn, right?
Is it like two people in a room discussing
or you're just saying?
So what we have is like a computer game.
Yeah, okay.
You got pairs of people.
I get matched with you.
We see a face and I go, Steve, and you say Ben.
And then we go to the next one and it's me
and Dax and I say Steve again Dax says George right keep going and what
eventually happens is we all say Steve so that's a common phenomenon we
understand that I'll keep saying Steve Dax will say Steve because Steve's now
in his head you'll realize oh Steve's in the air okay I'll just do Steve because you're trying to, you'll realize, oh, Steve's in the air. Okay, I'll just do Steve. Yeah.
Because you're trying to match.
You're trying to be.
You're doing your best.
You're trying to figure out what to call this person.
Exactly.
You know the goal is for you both to say the same name.
This is kind of like a jury.
Exactly.
And as human beings, we're hardwired to find agreement
on those kinds of things.
We're social, social, social.
So then the experiment, they do this clever thing,
which is we take somebody else.
Rob comes in.
Rob, Rob comes in.
Rob, Rob comes in and Rob has been coached.
Don't play the game.
You're going to call this person Abdul and you're going to say Abdul every single time.
Yeah.
Right?
It's a white face.
It's not a prototypical Abdul.
You're going to say Abdul.
So Rob just comes in and just says, Abdul, Abdul, Abdul.
And the question is, how many people coming in saying Abdul
do you need before the whole group starts saying Abdul?
Yes.
So only one person says Abdul, nothing happens.
Two, nothing happens.
Three, nothing happens.
But when you get up to between a quarter and a third
saying Abdul, boom, everyone says Abdul.
Every time.
Every time.
It's the same phenomenon.
25% can infect and completely change
this larger group.
That makes no sense.
I still don't know why that works.
So it's this phenomenon of,
it's all to the same thing about how groups
are incredibly volatile.
There's a point at which a group has to stand up and say,
oh, you're real.
I don't know, Abdul doesn't make any sense,
but Abdul's happening now.
They're not going anywhere.
I'm on board for Abdul then.
But it's the same thing with women on the board.
There's a certain point where a bunch of old dudes
who play golf every day and who've been in a white male world
their entire lives never occurred to them
to take women seriously.
There's a point which where they wake up and they say,
oh, there's women on the board.
They're human beings, they're as smart as I am or smarter.
I have to listen to them.
You see this in every single field
that's had a transformation.
I mean, politics, come on.
Politics, come on.
Yeah.
It's really hopeful because A,
we actually have some sense of what diversity
actually is gonna affect any change.
One's not, two's not.
You're wasting your time, have nobody.
If you're gonna bite one woman,
just fucking have all the men stay.
If you really wanna do something,
you gotta go three or you're a joke.
That's encouraging.
I was thinking about this with black quarterbacks in football.
There was a moment when Doug Williams,
who's a black quarterback, wins the Super Bowl
with the Washington Redskins.
Was it the 80s?
I can't remember, or early 90s.
And everyone was like, wow, a black quarterback
won the Super Bowl.
There was this whole kind of wonderment
and the way in which he was described
was weirdly kind of racist.
The thought was white quarterbacks could mentally
understand the offense and run the offense intellectually.
In any black quarterback that slipped through,
they must also be a great runner.
They got some other capacity.
An arm that was just so much stronger.
They couldn't be smart at running the offense.
There had to be another explanation.
But again, you have to understand,
there was a whole stretch of time when I was growing up
when whenever a black guy played quarterback,
the whole conversation was about the fact that,
oh, it's a black guy playing quarterback.
So crazy.
They couldn't get out of their head.
The numbers creep up and creep up and creep up.
And then all of a sudden it just goes away.
It just breaks.
Now the best quarterback in the game,
maybe one of the best quarterbacks of all time,
Patrick Mahomes, no one ever mentions his race.
To the degree that I had to go in my head
and go like, is he mine or what?
I mean, literally, I'm not playing along.
It's actually a mixed race.
No, I didn't know either until he's been hanging out
with Taylor Swift.
That's how I saw it.
That's how he broke through you.
But no one's talking about, thank God.
I love that that's your point of connection
to Patrick Mahomes. That's my way in.
That his teammate is dating.
That's right. Do you think that
relationship is real, by the way?
We've had so many questions about this.
I think it's real.
The current debate I am more interested in
is this document that leaked
that's supposedly is a breakup contract,
is that real or not?
I find that a little bit more.
What do you think?
I think their relationship is real.
They might be breaking up, I don't know,
but I do think it's real.
I think he is the only male that she's been around
in quite a long time who is not threatened by her.
He does not seem threatened.
He is so confident.
He does not care.
He loves how famous she is. Yeah, he loves it. He's a cheerleader. He's so confident. He does not care. He loves how famous she is.
Yeah, he loves it.
He's a cheerleader.
He's coming out on stage in a little top hat.
That's who she needs.
Isn't the greatest version of this story
that the document is real,
but then they fall in love anyway?
Oh, that's the movie.
This is the movie version.
The day they sign.
The PR people get together and say,
for both of your careers, it's enormously huge
if you guys go out for a year now.
And they're totally not into each other,
but they're like, yeah.
Kelsey says, I'm at the end of my career.
I don't know what I'm doing after football.
This is fantastic.
And she's like, I need a relationship.
And then, and the PR guy's like, okay,
so it ends September 28th, 2024.
This is Can't Buy Me Love, the great Patrick Dempsey movie
where he rents the popular girl and then they fall in love.
A new age meet you.
This was a real life version of it.
It would be so fantastic. I know, it would be great.
The reason I don't think it's fake
is I don't buy the motivation
of she needed to be more popular or something.
I don't think she was wanting for more.
There's no universe where he wouldn't fall in love with her.
Yeah, I know.
What's the universe where he wouldn't?
Yeah, what are his better options
than Taylor Swift that he is turning his nose up at her?
The whole thing is preposterous.
Yeah, I think it's just fueled by people
who don't like her, the whole suspicion that it's fake.
Well, people love to speculate on her.
But back to the quarterbacks,
there's also this terrible history
of really, really promising,
great college black quarterbacks
who when they enter the NFL,
they are talked into becoming running
backs or whatever their other skill set was.
They're like, well, you can't be a quarterback here.
You're great, but you need to be a running back or you need to be a receiver.
Crazy.
I tell the story, the woman who is the first American Indian CEO of a Fortune 500 company.
Pepsi?
Yeah, Pepsi.
When she gets appointed CEO, if you go back and you read the news coverage, so this is
20 years ago, it's unbelievable. It's basically she likes to wear a sari and walk barefoot through the...
Meanwhile, she said, I've never worn a sari. Barefoot? Are you kidding me? Maybe in my office
at the end of the day when I take off my heels. And she was singing Wayo by the West Indian performer.
Yeah, that she was supposed to be singing Dayo.
When she writes her memoir, she's like, what is going on?
It's because they couldn't see her as a person.
They could only see her as this exotic Indian
who has come to take over an American landmark institution.
And then compared to today, when first of all,
there's a million Fortune 500 Indian CEOs now,
it doesn't even come up.
You're left to infer from the name whether or not,
oh, maybe they're Indian, I have no idea. Unless you're my dad. He likes to make sure everyone knows
what's going on with the CEOs. As well. He should. The way that every single Jamaican in my life,
if I talk to my mother, first of all, it is impossible for me to talk to my mother without
her bringing up Kamala Harris. Yes. By the way, same. There's never been a Jamaican who, for a
Jamaican to see a Jamaican on the cusp. My mother is like the biggest defender of Kamala.
It is so hilarious.
You know, my dad knew her dad.
Oh really?
Yeah.
I don't know anything about my dad.
They were at the University of West Indies together
and my dad was a professor and Kamala's dad was a student.
Oh wow.
And my mom went to school in the town where he grew up.
And if I'm remembering this correctly,
went to church in Kamala's dad's father's
church.
Whoa.
So many connections.
Of course she's excited.
My point is, my mom and your dad, when you see one of your own of that generation, when
my mom's generation, there were no Jamaicans in positions of authority.
This is huge for her.
It's huge.
I know my parents, same thing, but they have the Indian side of it, right?
So they're like to go from a village in India to your daughter. That is pretty insane. One generation to being already vice president and then potentially the president of the United States.
Well, they're the pot calling the kettle black.
What's hilarious is that to your...
Well, I'm not quite the president.
To your parents, she's Indian.
That's what I'm saying.
To my mom, she's Jamaican.
Exactly. And they're saying the same story.
And to my mom, she's a woman.
I love it all. We'll take it all. My mom, she's Jamaican. Exactly, and they're saying the same story. And to my mom, she's a woman. That's right, that's right.
I love it all, we'll take it all.
My mother has never for a moment
admitted the combo is half Indian.
See that.
That not even occurred to her.
That's so funny.
I think maybe the chapter I was most interested in,
which is again is about the law of the few
or what concentration tips is white flight.
I thought this chapter was so illuminating.
Both of you come from cities that were utterly transformed
in the 1950s and 60s by white flight.
Half of Atlanta moves to the suburbs in the 60s.
And Detroit, same thing, right?
Oh yeah, yeah.
The hollowing out of Wayne County.
You just did the U of M thing to me.
Yeah.
Wait until I make a reference to Gwinnett County next. Gwinnett?
But really good.
Really, really good.
I'll take it.
And that is in Fulton County.
It is, right.
Gwinnett is a little outside.
They're moving to Gwinnett.
It's where all the whites went.
Yeah, exactly.
That's where all they went.
So this happens across America.
As black people move north and also becoming middle class,
want to move into neighborhoods where they previously
had never had a chance to move into.
And there is this mass exodus of white people from hundreds of American cities in the 60s.
And the interesting thing is you don't leave when one black family moves onto your block.
It's the same dynamic we were talking about earlier.
It has to be a certain threshold reached.
Somewhere around, I call this the magic third.
It's the same phenomenon, only the dark side of side that I talked about with the women on boards.
There's a point at which there's enough black people
in your neighborhood that you feel you can't live there
anymore, and that's when you leave.
I talk about this experiment that happened in Palo Alto
in the 50s, where a group of liberals got together and said,
we would like to create a neighborhood that is immune
to white flight, where blacks and whites and Asian people can live in harmony. And the only way we can make this happen is that we
will make sure that no one group ever gets above that tipping point, that threshold.
It's going to be one third white, one third black, one third Asian. If you're a white person,
you want to move out, you got to sell to a white person. If you're a black person,
if you're a black person, you want to move out, you got to sell to a black person.
We're never going to breach those barriers.
You can go there today.
It no longer exists in your form, but it's in this corner of Palo Alto.
It's called Lawrence Lane and it works.
It still has that same...
No, no, no. It's long since people died.
But in the 50s and 60s, where every single other experiment in racial integration in America is a failure,
they're the one place where whites and blacks
are living in harmony.
Wow.
Because they limit their numbers.
It's weird, and it's deeply kind of troubling, too,
because there's a moment I talk about in the book
where a black family wants to move in.
It's really hard for black people
to find housing in those years,
because nobody will let them.
And a white family wants to sell their lot
to a black family, and the whole neighborhood says, no, this is going to break our numbers. And we're worried
if we break our proportions and we have one black family too many, the white people will move out.
So we're not doing it. I don't know how you handle the morality of that.
Yeah, exactly.
I think too of Columbia, you paint this picture of Columbia, which at a time,
I think also in the fifties, they see an increasing number of Jewish an increasing number of Jewish students and it's growing and it's growing
It's growing and what they know because they've just observed it if you see this pattern where the Jewish
Concentration gets too high first of all the Jewish students want to go where the Gentiles go to school
But if it reaches a certain point of critical mass the Gentiles will leave
But the Jewish students will then leave.
So you'll have nothing at the end of it.
This guy that's being interviewed is like,
okay, maybe he's lying,
but seeing other colleges go this route where it's like,
well, then at the end you have nothing,
whether that's true or not.
But I guess what I'm trying to get at is
you want to play within the reality of the world
and you do wanna find some magic ratio
where it's like you are including people
and you're not collapsing something
because you know that it'll collapse.
Well, I would draw a distinction between those two.
So in the case of the neighborhood,
when we're talking about races living together
at a time when the entire country is undergoing
a kind of epidemic of racial prejudice,
that's an incredibly noble, difficult cause.
I don't have much sympathy for elite colleges
who are trying to limit the number of outsiders.
I think if you're an Ivy League school,
you should just let in students who you think
will benefit the most from a fantastic education
and stop worrying about where they're from
or what color their skin is.
My chapter on Harvard, no one loves kicking up at Harvard
more than me, it's my favorite past.
Yeah, you hate elite colleges. It's your than me. It's my favorite pastime. Yeah, you hate all these colleges. I hate your cottage industry.
It is my cottage industry.
I have a lot of fun at their expense in that chapter.
But it's going to get the same thing.
You know it's a good example.
I don't go into the book, but I've
become really fascinated by this.
Women and men coming out of high school, girls and boys
coming out of high school, their performance is now
way out of whack.
Girls do way, way, way, way better than boys.
So if you're an elite school,
the only way you can have 50-50 distribution
of males and females is if you have affirmative action
for boys.
So boys get in with way lower test scores than girls.
It's like 64-36 right now or something nationwide.
So if you look at a school like Brown,
Brown is 50-50.
They're at 50-50
because they have affirmative action for boys. If you go to Tulane, Brown, Brown is 50-50. They're at 50-50 because they have a firm of action for boys.
If you go to Tulane, someone's telling you about Tulane,
Tulane's a school that's like, F it.
We're just going to let in the best students we can.
Tulane's now, I could be wrong, I
think they're approaching 70-30.
Whoa.
It's a girls' school.
Wow.
And there's a point at which the fear, well, I say fear,
in quotation marks, there's a certain point
where boys won't go to Tulane
because they think it's a girls' school.
Oh my God, those are dumb boys.
I wanna go to this school at 90-10.
My options triple.
100%.
Yeah, I'm gonna go into musical theater at that school.
100%.
Okay, but that's interesting
because then does it have an impact on the girls?
Are they like, I don't wanna go to a girls' school.
So I was chatting to a guy doing this podcast.
His daughter was looking at colleges.
I was like, oh, where is she looking?
He goes, well, she went to Tulane.
She really wanted to go to Tulane.
She did the campus tour and she comes back
and she says, daddy, I'm not going there.
And he said to her, why?
It's a fantastic school.
She goes, there are no boys on campus.
She's going to the University of Texas.
Yeah, there you go.
Where there are boys.
It's weird, but it's the same thing
we're talking about here, which is the reality of
this is at a certain point, when the number of a group drops above a certain point or
goes above a certain point, the character of the place changes.
So the quote unquote fear at Tulane is that if the boys go below 30%, the magic third,
if they go below the tipping point, we're going to be a girls' school.
Now that could be a great thing.
I'm not saying it's a bad thing, but it's just a reality.
This is a school that for whatever 100 years
has been a co-ed institution.
Even if there are boys here, it won't feel like a,
and if you're a boy at Tulane,
where males are only 20% of the student population,
you're gonna be treated differently
than you would have if you were in a place
where it was 50-50.
Yeah.
Which could be a nice dose of poetic justice,
but you're not raising your hand.
Let's just pause on that.
It is a hilarious case of poetic justice.
By the way, if I had a boy, I don't have girls,
but if I had a boy.
Yeah, we're set.
Yeah, you guys are fine.
I would say this will be a very useful lesson for you
to experience what women experience
for a couple thousand years.
Go to Tulane, be treated like a token, have people not listen to you, have people walk
by you as if you weren't there.
Dismiss your opinion.
Exactly.
Dismiss your opinion.
You could probably come out a better, stronger person.
Yeah.
Or completely destroyed.
Completely destroyed.
An addict who crawls into a whiskey jug for the rest of their life.
I don't like this plan, man.
You do a very, very artful way of breaking down
how these elite institutions actually end up
creating the exact student body they want
without necessarily triggering
any kind of affirmative action lawsuits,
which is really mind blowing.
I don't think I had the whole scope of what's going on.
But let's talk about the legacy in the sports phenomena
at, let's use Harvard.
I wanna frame it like this first.
If you look at Caltech's Asian student body population
from the 90s until current times,
you're starting in the teens
and you're ending up in the 48%.
And that's a completely meritocratic system. Exactly.
Who tests the most, who had the best grades.
At the exact same time frame at Harvard,
you start with 18% Asian and lo and behold in 2020,
it's 18% Asian.
So how the fuck does that happen?
You have two meritocratic institutions.
One, their percentages of various groups fluctuate
from year to year depending on which ethnic group
is on top at that point.
And I joke in the book that there's
going to be a point when Caltech's all Nigerians.
Yeah, for real.
Nigerians are clearly coming.
They're one generation away.
And by the way, nothing would make me happier
as someone who is 25% Igbo.
Your mom would now have an interest in Caltech.
Well, no, Jamaicans is.
You know, I said this many times,
Jamaicans are Nigerians.
We are transplanted Nigerians.
That's what we are.
So when Nigerians do well, we cheer as well.
Great.
So Joyce Gladwell, if she sees a Nigerian going well,
she's also extremely happy.
Right?
So that's what happens.
If you're just going to be meritocratic,
you're going to rise and fall with whatever
group is studying hardest.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Harvard, there's no fluctuation.
The group proportions of all various ethnic groups are exactly the same today as they were 30 years ago.
How do they do that?
Why is it that white people have been in the majority
at Harvard for as long as Harvard's been around?
So I have a chapter which gives the answer, which
is they understand this same thing we've
been talking about, which is the group proportion game.
They have made sure that the only group that's
above the tipping point is white people.
How do they do that? Well, they do that by using sports. There are three ways to get into
Harvard if you're not very smart. One is if daddy's really rich. That's the
easiest way. There's a number. Let's be fair, maybe mommy's rich. Or mommy's rich.
There's some asshole rich mommies too. Mommy and daddy are rich. That's one way. And there's
actually, this is hilarious, I don't go into it in the book,
but I started calling around to figure out,
because there's a whole community of people
used to work in admissions at Ivy League schools,
there's a number.
How much do you have to give for your kid to be a lock?
Because they have places set aside.
It looks like it's around 20 million.
Whoa, holy shit.
That you ultimately donate to the school?
You give your 20 million, your kid gets it.
Wow.
So that's one way to get it.
Okay, really quick, just one second there.
This is the part I thought you were fair at,
but I'm guessing you're not,
which is at least you're fair in saying like,
okay, so they have this one group,
they're an institution that wants money and likes money.
So here's a group that can give them lots of money.
That's a understandable incentive.
In a way, it's legit.
You can ask the question about why an institution
that has $50 billion in the bank needs more money.
Let's put that aside.
And is an educational institution, ultimately.
So second group that gets in easily is if your parents,
if mommy and daddy went to Harvard.
Legacy.
Legacy.
You get a big break.
OK, I understand that.
They want to keep it in the family.
They tend to give more money.
They have given more money.
They're more involved with the school.
It's a way to keep the cash coming.
Group three though, who get in,
even if you're not that smart, are athletes.
Now this is the thing that's hilarious to me.
I'll refer to the premier state institutions
in both of your home states,
University of Georgia and University of Michigan.
When people think of those schools,
they think, oh, there's tons of athletes.
Those are like sports factories, right?
You've heard that. Oh yeah.
The greatest sports factory in America is Harvard University. those schools, I think, oh, there's tons of athletes. Those are like sports factories, right? You've heard that. Oh yeah.
The greatest sports factory in America
is Harvard University.
Harvard has more varsity sports
than any other institution in the country
and has a greater share of its students
who are recruited athletes
than any other institution in the country.
In fact, it may have more varsity athletes, period,
just raw numbers, than any other institution
in the country.
That's crazy.
The chapter starts with Yale and Harvard playing a female rugby match in the rain that nobody's
at.
Then there's a boating club.
Like it's a bunch of bullshit sports to just cast the nest wider and wider.
Why do they have so many sports?
And also the sports they have, they got basketball and football like everybody else, but then they have all of these
Fakakta rich people sports, country club sports. It's a back door for the rich
white people. I talk about tennis. There is no way to be even remotely good
enough to play D1 varsity tennis unless you're rich. To play junior tennis, it's
at least 50 to 100 grand a year to play junior tennis. Unless you're Serena and Venus.
They are such outliers. I know, but I just have to say it because someone's gonna say it At junior tennis, it's at least 50 to 100 grand a year to play junior tennis. Unless you're Serena in Venus.
They are such outliers.
I know, but I just have to say it
because someone's gonna say it and I'm just saying it.
They are the exception that proves the rule.
Yes.
If you're the greatest tennis player
to ever be on planet Earth, you might break through.
And your father's a genius.
Yes, agree.
And dedicates his entire life.
But anybody else?
Yes, yes.
I'm glad you said that though,
that's normally what I would have said.
Well, I just know we're gonna get a comment if I don't.
If you're number three playing tennis at Georgetown,
you play junior tennis and daddy and mommy spent 50 to 100 grand
on your game throughout high school.
So what you say when you say,
I'm going to give a massive admissions break
to someone who's a good tennis player is,
I'm giving a massive admissions break to someone
who has the money to be a really good tennis player.
So you're just ensuring you have
a healthy supply of rich and when it comes to tennis, let's be honest, tennis and rowing,
it's rich white people and rugby and whatever other. They're doing it out in the open. They
are constantly adding new focaccia white people sports to their list.
And they're winning because you're also paralleling that with UT being sued by a white girl because a black
girl got in with lower grades than her and they're losing that.
Race-based affirmative action is super controversial.
Sports-based white people affirmative action, not controversial.
I don't think this sunk in with people.
The whole varsity blues scandal is all about this.
The reason you pay $500,000 to the soccer coach at Harvard to get you into Harvard is
that the Harvard soccer coach gets to let in kids and no one's looking over his shoulder.
He gets to let in whoever he wants.
He just has like 40 slots.
How many slots are there on the soccer team?
You don't have to be a smart soccer player to be on the Harvard, you have to be a good
soccer player.
And also you don't have to be great because those schools don't win very much.
Yeah, perfect storm.
And there's so many roster positions that what those coaches were doing was just selling
off the marginal spots on the roster.
I think it's out of control.
I have plugged this book so many times.
It's a book called Taking Back the Game by Linda Flanagan.
Oh, I adore Linda Flanagan.
She wrote this book about what was wrong with youth sports.
She has all these suggestions for fixing it.
One of her first ones is, it's time to get rid of all athletic scholarships.
If you want to let an athlete in, fine.
If you want to give them financial aid because they don't have a lot of money, fine.
But stop setting up this separate thing where we somehow pretend.
Because her argument is when you set that up as a goal, it infects the minds of parents
and it starts distorting sports all the way down the line.
There are 11-year-old kids who are playing sports
in a way that's not fun,
that's just feeding into some fantasy their parents have
about getting a free college education down the line.
She's like, why are we ruining sports?
Because we offer this kind of lottery ticket
at the end of the game.
Should you just make everyone's life much easier,
just get rid of it.
It's like the next step beyond what we already don't like,
which is you would hope that these young kids
are playing for the love of the game
and not even love of winning.
Like winning's great.
And then you add, oh, actually it's not even about winning
and it's not about love of the game.
It's about ultimately getting into this elite school.
So you'll be on this trajectory.
It's like, how on earth do you even like it at that point
when the goal of it's so far down the road?
When I think about school sports experience, I want for my daughters is, well, because
I'm a runner, I'm naturally thinking about running.
I want them to be on a huge high school cross country team where they can go for 10 mile
runs with 20 other people and chatter the whole time and then go to meets and have a
blast on the bus and come in 45th and help a team place third and go home happy.
Learn how to be on a team.
There'll be a girl on the team who wins the whole race
by 20 seconds and be proud for her.
And maybe that girl is my daughter.
Maybe that girl is my daughter.
Maybe not.
And it's not the end of the world if it's not.
Okay, the other really, really fun story in the book
that I wanna talk about is a big component
of when you're looking at this contagion effect,
which is small area variation.
This is an incredible concept
I really enjoyed learning about.
And it starts with a doctor in Vermont.
Yeah, in the 60s.
He's given this job by the government
to go into Vermont and measure
how much healthcare each community is getting.
Because they're worried that poor communities
aren't getting enough health care.
So he goes to every town in Vermont,
and he kind of measures how much of a given medical procedure
is being done.
How many tonsillectomies are being done in Waterbury,
and how many are being done in Stowe?
Good job, by the way.
You remembered this.
Yeah.
What he discovers is it's not that the rich areas have
more health care than the poor areas,
or that places with a big hospital,
it's a totally random variation, A.
And B, the differences are enormous.
Yeah, can I read a couple of them?
Like hemorrhoid surgery five times higher in some districts.
Pestorectomy, prostate surgery, appendix removal,
three times more likely in some districts.
Some districts, though, 70% of their kids
have had their tonsils out by the time time they were 15 and 20% have only had
them out in Waterbury,
which is like a neighboring town. Right. So understand, this
is all within Vermont. It's a tiny little state, you can
wander through Vermont and you don't feel like you're going
from the upper east side of Manhattan to the South Bronx. It
doesn't have that feel at all. It looks all the same from the
outside, but he finds these wild differences in how medical care
is practiced.
And this starts what has been this enormous area of interest for medical researchers over
the last 50 years, which is what they have come to call small area variation, which is
for some weird difference where you practice as a doctor.
And when we say where, we mean the hospital or the town, makes a massive difference in how you practice.
That just by virtue of if Dax and I are ophthalmologists,
we're working out of Pasadena,
we're gonna practice and treat our patients
a particular way.
And then if Dax and I were to both decide
we're gonna move to Ann Arbor tomorrow,
we would become Ann Arbor ophthalmologists.
We would change.
You give this example of like people who went to Buffalo
and it completely changed.
It wouldn't be like a conscious thing.
We would just go there
and the vibe of what it means to be a doctor
in Ann Arbor is so different
that we would just become different kinds of doctors.
And this has been documented exhaustively.
It's super weird and super interesting.
Well, we just had this week a professor from Columbia
who wrote a book called Tribal,
which is really, really good.
And it talks about the three components of tribalism.
And one of them is, and there's an operative word in this,
which I really love,
you model and comply with the people
that are nurturing you.
Nurturing to me is the huge word there.
So yeah, if you go to this hospital,
they're the ones paying your paycheck.
They're the ones that you're seeking advice. Like they're nurturing you and you fall into the
line with whatever your source of nourishment is.
But why is a different one town over?
Because the nurturers, for whatever reason, have a different perspective on what it means
to be a good doctor. And it's contagious. They've spread their lesson, their model,
their paradigm to everyone in their orbit. And when you move there, you catch the vibe of that place.
But as a model, I think of this as being useful
well outside of medicine.
My chapter ultimately on knowledge is all about Miami
because I became obsessed with why Miami is so weird.
There's not a more fascinating city in America than Miami.
Yeah, I love the great joke that why do Latin Americans
like Miami so much?
Because it's so close to the United States.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
But back to your tipping point thing too,
that was a town of 300,000 that in the 80s
when Fidel Castro opened up the border overnight,
they got 100,000.
Crazy.
One third of their population changed.
So I try and locate the moment where Miami becomes Miami.
Miami used to be just another struggling, sleepy southern city.
It was Jacksonville.
It was nothing remarkable, special.
And then a bunch of things happen to change it all in the same narrow window.
One is that Cuba opens up.
There's a huge influx of Cuban migrants in the 1980s.
And in the same incredibly short period of time, there's a race riot that sends all kinds
of white people fleeing for the suburbs.
And there's the rise of the cocaine trade, which used to be that the drug trade in Miami
was small-time operators bringing in marijuana from the West Indies.
And then overnight, it becomes cocaine from Colombia.
And that's a whole different ballgame.
Those three shocks to the system all happened within months of each other.
If you think about it, the population just gets turned upside down.
There was a moment in the 80s that the Federal Reserve that held the cash for Miami
had more cash in it than all remaining 11 Federal Reserves combined.
That's insane.
There was such an insane amount of cash in Miami.
There was a recession in car sales.
You couldn't get a Mercedes in Miami.
You couldn't get a Ferrari.
It's crazy.
It was just an explosion of wealth
while the rest of the country
was going the complete opposite direction.
The only thing I don't get into
in telling the story of Miami,
I wish I had in retrospect,
there's all of this really fascinating work
been done by social scientists about Miami Vice.
The way we think about Miami now
is a totally new phenomenon.
Miami was this sleepy, crime-ridden,
forgotten southern town that nobody cared about.
You did not go to Miami Beach if you were a tourist.
You went to Lauderdale or Boca,
or you went to the West Indies.
In the 60s, Miami gets shut down.
The whole idea that that was a tourist destination
is dead through the 70s.
The question is, why does Miami become sexy and cool after it gets turbocharged by drug
money and has a race riot and the cops are really crooked?
The answer is Miami Vice.
There's a fascinating paper I read about someone who makes this argument so convincingly that
Miami Vice is the pivotal moment in Miami's history.
And you can look at the numbers.
The first episode of Miami Vice, it's like Crockett and Tubbs.
They come across some insane instance of corruption
in the Miami police force.
And it's like, it's just all cool.
A normal show would have then launched
into some internal affairs investigation.
It's just like, then they jump in the boat
and they're both dressed in pastels.
By the way, he drives a Ferrari.
He's a 42 foot scarab well-crab.
He's got a $500,000 boat in 80s.
This is talking about when a police officer is driving a Ferrari, he's on the take.
And the whole point is that these are the two coolest police officers you've ever seen.
They are clearly taking drug money and it's fine.
If you look at the tourism numbers after Miami Vice
comes on the air, all of a sudden people are like,
whoa, we want to go to Miami because it's exciting
and dangerous and cool and sexy.
They're going across the Bay of Biscayne
in that go fast boat.
It's like, you know,
yeah, the scarab.
And they're playing Tangerine Dream in the background.
Michael Mann's that height of his powers.
Michael Mann saved Miami.
He should get a little kick back.
If we could make a list of, I'm digressing again,
I'm actually not digressing because I talk about
in my book, two television shows that I think belong
on the list of the 10 most important television shows
in the history of television.
So if we make a list, have I done this before in a show?
No, I wanna hear the list.
I'm obsessed with this.
What are the 10 most important television shows
of all time?
American television shows of all time. I have a chapter on why I think Will and Grace belongs in that list. I'm obsessed with this. What are the 10 most important television shows of all time? American television shows of all time.
I have a chapter on why I think Will and Grace
belongs in that list.
I think that's without question.
I have a whole chapter on a mini series
from the late 70s on an NBC called Holocaust,
which was watched by half of all Americans,
which forever changed the way we think about the Holocaust.
There wasn't a single Holocaust museum before this show.
People didn't even use the word Holocaust capital H.
It didn't exist.
That whole chapter on the Holocaust
and that show just blew my mind.
Everything I learned I did not realize.
So I think those two shows belonged in top 10 of all time.
Miami Vice belongs on the top 10 of all time.
That show is hugely important.
Changes the way we think about an entire city.
And also heartbreaking in a sense that that,
as you so skillfully lay out in the Will and Grace episode,
it can't happen because we had three networks.
So there's tens and tens of millions of people
watching Miami Vice.
It's not a show streaming on Netflix
where maybe there's 800,000 people.
It's like a third of the country's watching Miami Vice.
It's reaching everybody.
Will and Grace is reaching a third of the people.
That's gone and that was a very powerful tool.
The political divide implications
of us not sharing these shows.
That kind of scared me.
They declined the television.
Television got way better in terms of quality,
but it lost its power.
Yeah, the monoculture power is gone.
Would you put sex in the city on that list for-
For Monica?
Sorry.
No, for New York and New York women. Someone pointed that to me that I hadn't realized.
It's so true though.
Once you see it, the phenomenon of groups of young women
walking.
In a line.
In a line.
Yes.
That's real.
Side by side.
It didn't exist before Sex in the City.
No, I live in the village.
You walk around the village,
you'll see three women walking abreast,
down the sidewalk, blocking all traffic.
It is totally from Sex and the City.
Yeah.
And kind of a sexually.
Liberated?
Yeah, group of women.
Empowered.
I'm putting that on the list.
I don't know if it goes on your list.
I think it belongs.
Cosby Show clearly belongs.
Oh yeah.
Not a popular one to put on the list currently,
but still.
It's a weird valence.
Somebody needs to tackle the Bill Cosby thing seriously
as a subject and reckon with the fact that his story
is one of the strangest, creepiest, hard to understand.
He is simultaneously one of the most important
cultural figures of the 20th century in America and.
A monster.
Monster. Yeah.
With self-righteous shaming of other people
all along the way.
Calling Eddie Murphy and saying,
you shouldn't swear in your set.
Fuck you, you're doing that?
You're gonna call me and tell me not to say fuck?
Shaming Lisa Bonet for doing nudity and angel heart
and getting her potentially kicked off the show.
He was so offended by nudity.
But we know why he's doing that in Wretches Back.
On a conscious level, he had to.
He's gotta appear.
I don't think it's that.
I think he's on some level so ashamed of what he's doing.
I agree.
It's the mirrors.
Yeah, that's the way you express your deep shame.
Internally, to him, the world is this depraved, corrupt place,
and he's a part of it.
Some part of him just wants it to be clean.
Who needs the world to be clean and moral and upstanding
more than Bill Cosby? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right? Yeah, that's true.
He's just sitting in his house in Philadelphia.
Currently. Yeah.
He's just sitting there, like, waiting for someone
to come and get him.
Talk to him.
Oh.
That's a good example of you bringing up Cosby
because it's actually tied to, also,
you talk about a very ineffective approach.
There was an attempt to help America
start accepting gay people,
and it was done with this made-for-TV movie swerving off the road in the Pines. about a very ineffective approach. There was an attempt to help America start accepting gay people,
and it was done with this made-for-TV movie
swerving off the road in the pines.
And it actually did the worst case scenario,
which is it only painted this very limited stereotype
of the gay person,
whereas the Cosby Show, right,
is the virtual opposite of that.
Yeah, I have a chapter where I get in deep on TV.
When does TV change our perception?
When is it a transformative revolutionary force?
And when does it prop up the status quo?
And I ran across this woman named Bonnie Dow, who's just a genius,
who's written all this fantastic stuff about TV.
And she has this great riff about that wave of feminist shows in the 70s.
Mary Tyler Moore show, Rhoda, all the way up to Murphy Brown.
Cagney and Lacey. Cagney and Lacey.
Cagney and Lacey.
A lot of people looked at those shows and said this was a sign of the rise of feminism.
And she's like, actually, no.
Because if you look at those shows very carefully, you'll see that they are all portraits of
women whose only path to success was to emulate men.
So they were single, childless, whose measure of success was to achieve in the
workforce exactly as men had. There was no model of a woman who could be a feminist and simultaneously
have a family, for example, which is the dominant question facing many working women in this country
today. So she's like, those shows didn't break the glass ceiling. If anything, if you were a woman
and you looked at those shows, you would say the only way for me to be a success in the world is to be a man.
Yeah.
Is to close off any doors. Be a hard-hitting cop like
Cagney and I see. So then she does the same thing when she looks at the way
Hollywood dealt with gay people in 70s and 80s. And you could see these shows, which on the surface
would be about a family coming to accept their gay son. You look closely and you realize oh no no no that's not what the show's
meant. And I talk about one called Doing Time on Maple Drive, a classic made-for-
TV movie from the 80s which has a young Laurie Laughlin in it. Oh really? Ding ding ding.
And also it's one of Jim Carrey's first roles. Oh really? It's from the 90s. Is it early 90s I think?
It's very young Jim Carrey. it early 90s, I think?
It's very young Jim Carrey.
You're like, oh my God, playing it straight, by the way, playing a kind of troubled alcoholic
son in a rich family.
It's a classic made for TV.
We would watch it on a Tuesday afternoon.
It's ostensibly about a son comes out to his family and the family comes to accept the
son.
You think that's super positive.
That's setting the stage for us all accepting.
But it's not that at all.
She points out that what happens is the son is not seen as normal.
By virtue of being gay, he's seen as carrying a terrible burden that brings grief on his
family.
He's also shown as someone who's incapable of maintaining a relationship.
And thirdly, he's not what the show's about.
The show is all about the suffering that he caused to his straight family and friends. It's their story.
As long as Hollywood's telling stories
in which those three conditions are in play,
we're not making any progress.
And isolation was a key too.
Oh yeah, he's all by himself.
The prevailing gay story,
just like feminists couldn't have a family,
is that the gay person was gonna live a life of isolation.
Is incapable of sustaining any relationships.
Wow.
And the reason Willie Wways is so important,
it seems like it's just another sitcom about beautiful young
people in New York.
It's not.
It breaks those three rules.
Will's gayness is not a burden to anyone.
He has a real relationship with Grace.
And Grace doesn't go around bemoaning
what he's done to her life.
Yeah, what she has to deal with.
She loves him. And he has to deal with. She loves him.
And he has lots of friends.
He has friends.
So it's brilliant because it is a deeply subversive show
that you don't realize it's subversive.
You think it's just another sitcom.
Meantime you have absorbed all these lessons.
Will's just normal.
Yeah, the subtext is this is a normal human being.
He's a normal guy.
One little aspect of his life differs from yours.
It's not watching someone accept,
it's you yourself are accepting.
You start loving the people
as opposed to watching it from afar.
And to the extent you have an issue with Will or Jack,
your issue is not with their gayness.
He's annoying because he's neurotic.
He's not annoying because he likes men.
That shift, because in every other previous,
I quote at one point, guy who wrote a book about
the history of how gay people were treated
in Hollywood movies from the 60s through the 90s.
And he makes a tally like of the, what I'm making this up,
of the 75 gay characters in Hollywood films in that period.
51 were murdered, 21 commit suicide.
That's what happened to gay men.
Virtually the whole lot.
The whole lot.
Died on timely death as a result of their gayness.
You don't realize it until you go back.
You're like, oh, that's right.
And then Will and Grace comes along and nothing.
No one has AIDS.
They go to work in the morning.
They're funny.
You would like them in your life.
Yeah, it's kind of brilliant.
I watched that show casually,
enough to realize it was very funny,
but what was weird is I do this for a living,
consider myself a sort of skilled analyst.
None of the subversiveness of that show
occurred to me at the time.
I missed it all.
I am sure I was affected by it in the best way.
I am sure it changed my perspective
on whether gay people should be allowed to get married.
And this is a big component of the book.
You talk about a lot of these huge title shifts
happen so much faster than we're expected
and absolutely without warning.
Were anyone in the space who would have been good
at predicting when we think marriage equality will happen?
Like you have George Bush in 2006 saying to America,
let me put this to bed,
a union in this country is gonna be a man and woman.
Every religion respects that.
We as a culture respect that. That's it. He comes out to say like, that's enough
of that. It seems like we're decades and decades and decades away at that moment in the fall
of USSR. No one sees that coming. The people within the USSR don't see it coming. We on
the outside don't see it coming. And then in seconds, all of a sudden this thing is
upon us.
Yeah. It's a very sobering and kind of fascinating phenomenon. It's actually lessened a little
bit of my current pessimism about the world
because I just think, look, my pessimism is based on a prediction
and they're always wrong. It's pointless.
Yeah, sit back and see what happens.
Well, Malcolm, I just love you. I have two compartments for you.
I'm a super fan of yours, but I stow that in the house.
And then I'm with you, I ignore all that, and I just proceed as if you're a normal guy.
But I just adore you.
Not just the playful eyes, but the fucking books.
It's you and Krakauer.
For me, if either of you write a book,
I don't have anything to relate.
There's not even a sequel of a movie
I would look forward to that much.
There's nothing that would delight me as much
as when you have a new book or Krakauer has a new book.
Who's yours?
Oh, I have many.
Then you're like, oh.
For years, my favorite writer was Janet Malcolm.
She died a couple years ago.
Every time she came up with something,
I just devoured it instantly and tried to emulate it
and thought she was a genius.
If you're honest about yourself,
you have something you're a fanboy about, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Definitely.
You're just like, it's the purest state.
My eldest daughter is very exuberant
and enthusiastic about the world. And I just realized, that's the natural state. It's the purest state. My eldest daughter is very exuberant and enthusiastic about the world.
And I just realized that's the natural state.
It's all great.
Took her on the subway for the first time yesterday.
Just looking at her, she just thought, this is so rad.
And it is.
She's like, it's dark and there's crazy people.
Some guy was singing, what's that Jason Mraz song,
the famous hit?
Oh, yes.
Some homeless guy comes up and does a really good version of that song.
And she just thought, wait, there's entertainment on the subway.
Like, this is fantastic.
At first, I thought you said you took her to Subway, the sandwich shop.
No, no.
And for a while, it still all made sense, like dark and kind of crazy characters.
The New York City subway.
I see. And then we took her on a bus first time
and I convinced her that the conductor
was gonna start singing Wheels on the Bus at any moment.
She's like, really?
I was like, oh, just hold on, it could happen.
Like that's what they do on buses,
they sing Wheels on the Bus.
I mean, where did this song came from?
Oh, how cute.
Can I tell you my funnest moment like that?
This would have never occurred to me until it happened.
Delta had spent the first six years of her life
with us ordering everything we would get.
Then COVID, so we didn't go anywhere.
And we came out of COVID and I don't know why I needed to go,
but I took her to Target.
She couldn't believe what she was seeing.
She was like, everything that you would want
is in one location and it's just on display
and you walk down the aisles
and you can see all the things we would want
that we would normally order.
It's in 3D in real life.
And I was like, oh my God,
I've never taken her to a department store.
My life was going to Kmart with my grandpa on the weekends.
We got home that night and she said,
how do you work at Target?
I go, well, you just apply.
And I go, and in fact, if you applied to be on the night shift,
you could be there by yourself.
And she was like, oh my God,
that's what I want to do when I grow up.
That's what I want to do.
She wants to be able to be in Target by herself at night
and just take it in.
I get it.
A shopping addict you created, clearly.
Well, all that to say, Malcolm,
I really, really, really love Revenge of the Tipping Point.
I'm sure everyone will read it,
but I encourage everyone to.
It's so tasty and delicious, and you've done it again.
And I adore you.
And not to make you uncomfortable,
but I am so flattered by your friendship.
Oh, feeling is entirely mutual
and we didn't even discuss.
When we get to texting about Norway,
like I'm in Norway and I hit you with an opinion,
you're like, yes, I've said this a thousand times.
Did I tell you our take on Norway?
No. I have the text.
Oh yeah, let's hear it.
Here's the transcript. You should read it.
You come over the top big time, the writer comes out.
Ooh.
Dax opens it up brilliantly.
Although this is a lot of car stuff I gotta get back to.
Ha ha ha ha.
This is Dax.
This is my final conclusion after days of driving
and thinking about it.
It's a waste of time to go back 100 or 200 years
to try and understand these people.
I think the answer lies in the original migration
out of Africa.
These people walked through Greece and Italy
where food was growing off of trees. They went through all the fertile farmland of Germany, got
to this icy place this dark ten months of the year with nothing to eat and they
thought this is absolutely perfect. They hung out with the super friendly and
exuberant Nigerians. They dated gorgeous Ethiopian women. They ate mangoes off the
tree and fresh oranges from their backyard. And they decided, nah, I prefer dried herring.
Ah, oh that's good.
That like made my whole vacation.
I was there like really synthesizing the whole thing
and the fact that you had the exact same take
was so comforting.
That is so good.
All right, well until next time,
you're getting up there with Sedaris
as our most frequent guest.
So let's keep the battle going.
We will.
Keep coming back.
All right, guys, thank you so much.
And also everyone listening to Revisionist History
is my favorite podcast currently.
Bye.
Bye.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Stay tuned to hear Miss Monica correct all the facts
that were wrong.
That's okay though, we all make mistakes.
I'm representing you today.
I know, it's such a cute shirt on you.
Thank you, it is such a cute shirt.
Yeah, we should hire you to do some modeling for the line.
I'm happy to.
Also, I kind of wanted to show people
how you could style merch.
Oh, you wanted to be an example.
You can mix it with beautiful pants
and also cute sweaters.
That's kind of my move.
You know, when I wear a cardigan,
I also wear something with some flair underneath.
Yes.
It's like, oh, that's a very nice cardigan,
but there's some kind of edgy shirt.
Mixed messes.
Yeah, yeah, it's a nice mix.
What time did you rise this morning?
So I had such a bad headache this morning.
Oh no.
From your flies. I'm on my flies, yeah.
My flies are here.
They've arrived.
Big time.
Have you ever thought about putting one,
so I have these fly zappers that sit in the kitchen.
Have you seen, it's like two,
it looks like black light colored lights, tubes,
and they zap the fruit flies and the,
presumably period flies.
Where should I put it in my body?
I think when you're in bed at night,
just get it between your legs and on,
that way it'll attract them all and then zap them.
It might minimize the time of the duration.
That would be great.
I'll try it.
I'll try anything, cause it's not a fun time.
It's not.
And this one hit you hard.
Yeah, and it was affecting my tummy,
as we've talked about, but I've mainly cut out.
Oh, you did?
Well, some of it.
And now I had a really bad headache.
Sometimes I get these really, really intense headaches
when I'm on my period.
Ugh.
So I took in a Leave D.
Okay.
One of our favorite products.
I don't think sponsored.
Not a sponsor.
We do really like it.
We need them as a sponsor.
Yeah, and it's helping.
Well, let's tell people about our longstanding feud
about our favorite medication for a headache.
Okay, let's do it.
You like an ibuprofen.
I do.
You like a Motrin or an Advil.
I don't go Motrin, I've never bought Motrin.
You don't know what it is, right?
Yeah, it's the same as Advil, it's ibuprofen.
Just a different brand.
Okay.
And I like a set of metaphen, I like a Tylenol.
I know, we fight about this all the time.
We always are fighting about it. Would you say what happens when you take a Tylenol. I know, we fight about this all the time. We always are fighting about it. Would you say what happens when you take Tylenol?
Just nothing.
I just don't, yeah.
Is it that you don't know it or you've had an adverse?
I've never had an adverse,
but I've not felt the relief that I feel from an ibuprofen.
Uh-huh.
Because we used to really, not actually fight,
but we would try to put our own views on the other person.
You would try to convince each other
that the other was better.
And then over time, I've noticed that for both of us,
if anyone has like a headache or something,
and we say, did you take anything?
And you say, yeah, I took Advil,
or you say, yeah, I took Tylenol.
We just keep quiet.
We leave it at that.
But I notice there's always like three seconds of like.
Okay, and we're both gonna stay out of it.
And then we choose to move on.
Yeah, well, there's a lot of these fights
that we just eventually got tired of having.
Yeah.
Fatigue is a good. It's a good of these fights that we just eventually got tired of having. Yeah. Fatigue is a good.
It's a good tool.
It is.
Fatigue is an adaptation, not a bug.
Well, I watched a good Frontline.
I sleep on Frontline all the time.
I like forget Frontline's my favorite show
and then I'll be perusing my DVR
and I'll, oh, frontline.
And then I see, what's nice is by the time I check in,
there's usually four or five documentaries
that I've missed so I can select.
So last night, I started watching The Enemy Within,
which is about Germany's.
Could also be about periods.
Absolutely, yeah.
That might be called the enemy downstairs.
Yeah, you're right.
Maybe that's a part two.
Maybe they'll have that.
Maybe they already have that.
Yeah, probably.
But this was about Germany's growing far right.
Oh.
Neo-Nazi-ish.
Current?
Current.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, there's a party there called the AFD, I think,
like alternative something Deutschland.
Scary.
Yeah, and we just had a guest on that was saying
that like extremism's been on the ride
and polarization's been on the rise.
And I was like, yeah, I'm so stuck in America.
I just assumed it was just us, but no.
It's so frightening.
Yeah, I know.
It's so frightening.
You just think, yeah, these horrors of the past,
we know better now.
And then you go like, I don't know,
I don't know if we'll ever know better.
Well, factions will always come up,
but we just have to hope the majority knows better.
Yeah.
But in also democracy is tricky
in that you can elect a non-democratic entity.
You can elect a group that aims to diminish democracy,
which is so interesting.
If you're expressing goal.
I don't think very many people, this isn't a diss,
this is just like, I think reality.
I don't think many people know the deets of democracy really.
Right.
They don't know what they're protecting and not protecting.
Yeah, so and I have an adjacent huge pet peeve.
When you say we're in a democracy in some genius rights,
no, we're not.
We're not in a democracy.
We're in a representative republic.
Oh, I see, sure.
But those people don't realize that is a democracy.
There are different versions of democracy.
There's direct democracy, which would be impossible
where every issue we all vote on, all 300 million of us.
And then there's representative democracy,
which is what we have, a republic.
People think those, that one, I don't know why that one.
Do you ever wonder, like, I guess you're not,
you're not as triggered as me in comments, right?
And I don't even mean ours, but like, if you look at other,
you just don't look at comments, period.
No.
If you see a post you like,
you won't look at any of the comments.
I'm trying to think, no.
There's just a handful that irk me to no end.
Yeah.
I don't know why that one,
I think it's because it has the air of intelligence.
Like, I'm correcting you, we don't live in a democracy,
and the wrong is so, I guess when someone is policing someone-
It's a self-righteous thing a little bit again.
You really, really don't like that.
I don't like that.
You do not like that.
And then I craft a response to try to explain to them that there are multiple
versions of democracy and then I go, what am I doing?
They don't care.
And then why would I do that?
And then I, but I really hate reading that.
Well, that's funny.
Cause I think that, cause self-righteousness
is your big, I wanna say hang up, but yeah, trigger.
Which is only, I think like a millimeter away
from hypocrisy.
They're very similar.
I think they're in this, they're on the same spectrum.
Yes. For sure. Yeah.
And hypocrisy is my trigger.
That's huge for me.
Yeah, I cannot stand it.
When we talk about Cosby,
which weirdly enough we did in the Gladwell episode,
this episode. Yeah, we did.
It shouldn't be the thing that angers me the most.
Obviously what should anger me the most
is these poor victims. What he did, yeah.
And that does anger me.
Yeah.
But it's the him shaming all these other people in public
with his self-righteous morality,
that one to me just, it burns extra hot for me.
I know, which is funny because I think Malcolm had a-
He had a cool-
Generous and cool explanation for that,
that I think is correct.
I do think when people are behaving
in such depraved ways,
they do compartmentalize or rationalize their own self when people are behaving in such depraved ways,
they do compartmentalize or rationalize,
but also I do deeply think maybe want for something better.
Like they know subconsciously.
It's weird.
I'm not on a limb here, but I'm guessing
that is clearly a big,
dark, cancerous secret running in the background
of his life. Exactly.
Exactly.
Even if he thought somehow he was right,
which I bet he didn't, even if he thought he was right,
he knew everyone else didn't think that was right.
Exactly.
And it's like a compulsion, I think,
to keep going forward.
Speaking of, I told you a crazy story yesterday
about my friend.
Oh my god, yes.
Which is a similar thing. My friend, she said I could talk about it.
She did?
Uh-huh.
Okay, great.
My friend who is lovely and beautiful.
Yeah, I want to give unbiased feedback.
Yeah.
She's your friend.
Yeah.
I adore her.
Yeah, you've met her before.
She's got a great big personality. She's a very hard worker. She's ambitious and smart and competent.
She's a very, very loyal friend.
She's a good girl.
She is, she really, really is.
She's very special, but she is single
and has been dating for a long time
and has never found the person, but she's out there.
Like she really puts her-
She's pounding the pavement.
She is, and I really respect it
because she's like, I know what I want.
I want a partner and I'm gonna find one.
Yeah.
And she's been on so many horrible dates
and she met this guy.
Can I add to, she's got a great sense of humor.
Yes.
She's the perfect person for a lot of horrible dates.
In a way.
She handles it all with like grace.
It keeps it moving.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, she handles it all with grace. It keeps it moving. Yeah, exactly.
She's indomitable.
She is, she's never taken out by any of it.
Right, she's not sitting around self-pitying.
Yeah, it's pretty admirable.
But she fell in love with this guy.
They had a long distance, long relationship.
A year, you said?
Yeah, and started off a little casual
and then became more serious and more serious
and visited each other many times.
This person met her family,
was planning on coming for Thanksgiving to her family's.
He came here, he met a bunch of friends.
I was out of town.
Ooh, that's a bummer.
I know, I know.
Cause I wonder if I would have.
Probably not, probably like the sociopath.
We wouldn't know.
I also, when she was first telling us about him,
or not first, but when it was like really getting serious,
she said, I love, you know, she told him she loved him.
And he said, you know, he reciprocated.
She has a group of friends that said,
that were very skeptical.
Yeah.
And because she is a very trusting person.
And so when she told our group of friends this,
I was like, no, it's good.
Like I chose to believe.
Yeah, you chose to believe.
Yeah.
You chose hope.
I did.
And she was just so happy and I really wanted that for her.
Anyway, fast forward lots of things.
He has a wife and three children.
And how was this discovered?
Oh, it's such a story.
But anyway, one of her,
so her friends started doing some sleuthing
and they were really on top of it
and they found the wife's Facebook page.
Oh man.
Yep.
So anyway, it's so.
I wanna own how arbitrary my set of disgust is.
Same, same by the way.
It's so arbitrary.
Like if I hear someone's having an affair,
two people are having an affair,
I'm like, yeah, 50% of relationships have affairs.
I know.
Universally reviled, universally practiced.
We know people who've had them. Esther Perel, we have friends, yeah reviled, universally practiced. We know people who've had them.
Esther Perel, we have friends, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, I was in open relationship,
yet the deception of the unwitting single person
who doesn't know, I don't know why that feels
so extra to me.
Same.
It doesn't make sense, like anyone else,
anyone at home with kids is like,
well, how about the wife and the kids?
Which of course.
Yes, I know.
I'm saying this is a paradox.
I don't know why this is so angering to me.
For me, it's more, the disgust isn't different.
It's the shock is different.
It's how can this person be lying this deeply to two sets?
That's where I'm like, that like lends itself how can this person be lying this deeply to two sets?
That's where I'm like, that like lends itself to more of a pathology,
because you're really having to keep track
of so many lies.
In most affairs, at least one member knows what's going on
and they're complacent or they're like.
What's interesting is I wonder what the percentage is.
Like my assumptions always people are having an affairs
are going like, they meet and they go, I'm married.
And then they fall, you know, whatever happens.
But maybe it's a high percentage of people who are cheating
don't tell the other person they're married
or they have a girlfriend.
I don't know, I'm curious.
Yeah, I'm curious too.
Because I agree.
So there's like this weird,
I'm having this oversized reaction to that aspect of it,
which is interesting.
Obviously it is so cruel to keep something from your wife
and your children, like awful.
But there is something about letting a single person believe that-
They're taking a journey leading somewhere.
Leading to a marriage.
Yeah, which who knows if there's no discovery
where this would have ended up.
Certainly we see docs all the time
where a guy does have multiple wives
and multiple sets of children.
Yes, thank God it ended now.
But yeah, like it feels like what a waste of her time.
It's so unfair.
Yes.
But anyway, she is handling it so well.
And of course, because she's incredible,
first thing she said was like,
how could you do this to your family?
Like that's her reaction.
Yes, yes, yes.
But she also, and like, you know, she said, she was like,
she was like, people have affairs,
there are people in her life who've had them,
who she loves, she's like, that's not,
that's not the thing.
Yeah, she's like, that's not this.
She's like, this is so different.
Yeah, well, I was, have you started that Lacey Peterson
Oh yeah.
three parter?
Yeah.
I'm two thirds of the way through maybe.
Yeah.
But in that, so he killed her for another woman.
And even the people, the episode's entitled,
I'm not a mistress.
So the woman that he was doing that for,
she didn't know he was married.
She didn't know she was a mistress.
That's what makes me think, I wonder if it's more common.
Yeah, it might be.
It probably is.
But also a lot of people really don't think he did it.
Oh really?
Yeah.
Oh.
Yeah, he claims his innocence still.
And he's been in jail for a really long time.
Oh really?
Yes, and Ana and I have had some fights about this
cause she's like, he didn't do it.
Oh wow.
And she watched, so there's a Netflix one
and there's also a Hulu one.
Competing.
And I guess the Hulu one.
Takes a different.
Is much different.
This scares me, I don't like this.
Cause when I watch a doc,
I know.
I like to believe that I was watching the news,
but I need to remember I'm watching a film.
Exactly.
That's been edited and written.
Yeah, someone's point of view.
Have you ever had an experience?
I maybe have said this once before on this,
but have you ever had an experience watching a doc
where you actually, you knew a lot about it
and you knew it was completely misrepresentative?
Oh no.
Because I had a single one that kind of shattered
my whole confidence in documentaries in general.
Which one?
In the way that doing press myself
and reading things wrong kind of was like,
oh, stuff's wrong all the time in the newspaper.
Who killed the electric car?
Oh.
Which was this documentary suggesting
that there was a kind of conspiracy
that GM had this electric car, the EV1,
and that they intentionally killed it
even though people wanted it
and it would have been a best seller
and blah, blah, blah, and petrol chemical,
you know, all this big conspiracy.
And then the smoking gun,
and again, if I was in the audience,
I'd be like, yeah, duh.
The smoking gun is they get this spy footage
of a parking lot of EV1s that they're taking into a crusher
and destroying them.
Okay.
So that very much seems like, oh, clearly
there's a conspiracy, they're trying to destroy the cars.
Well, I worked for GM for 14 years and I drove cars to the crusher. They the cars. Well, I worked for GM for 14 years
and I drove cars to the crusher.
They crush cars.
They crush all their cars.
They have a set of cars that they loan out to people,
to journalists, to do testing for quarter mile times
and track times.
And at the end of that period
that they've had the car out for testing,
they can't really sell it
because they would take on all this liability.
So what if something went wrong in one of the tests,
they sell a car to you and the brakes go out
and you die.
So they're in a situation where they can either try
to create some liability free sale of this car
or they chuck it up to a marketing expense,
they destroy it and they get a full tax credit
for the value of the car.
The very easy decision if you're a corporation.
I know, but I wish they could give it
to people who need cars.
I know, I wish our society wasn't so fucking litigious
that it's such a liability to give people free cars.
They should be able, you should be able to sign away
the liability if someone wants a free car.
Yes, we did give one by the way.
I remember we were on a car show in Wisconsin
and whenever we would have car shows,
we would send tons of these 15 passenger vans
so we could transport all the journalists around.
And it was when a woman in Ohio or somewhere in the Midwest
had like six kids and it was all over the news,
maybe eight.
It wasn't Octomom.
It was one of these really famous cases.
Thanks for clarifying.
And it was decided at that show,
let's give her one of these passenger vans.
And somehow they did give that family,
someone from children's shoots drove that van over
and delivered it to their house.
Yeah, that's-
Anyways, all that to say, if I was watching it,
I'd be like, what could be more incriminating
than they're making these cars disappear?
They're grinding them up so no one can find them.
But I'm like, oh, right, if you know,
side note, the funnest thing in the world
when I was 16, period, was when I had to take a car
to the crusher, because I'd have to take it
from our shop in Troy down to where they crushed them.
And they were gonna get crushed,
so it didn't matter what I did to them.
So Erin and I would take turns
driving these cars to the crusher,
and we would be on the highway in a Corvette going like 70,
and we would force it into first gear with the clutch in,
and then drop the clutch, and then the back wheels
would lock up.
We would drive them down dirt roads and swerve into things.
I mean, we went nuts because it didn't matter.
Your lives matter.
Well, but we made it.
But when you're 16,
if someone gives you a brand new Corvette and says,
you go drive it its last six miles of its life,
do whatever you want, holy smokes.
It's like Grand Theft Auto, before Grand Theft Auto.
I think I understand.
Did you go to get a prostitute and like shoot people?
I killed a couple of people.
By the way, I think I know what that reference means.
Grand Theft Auto, but I haven't played it.
But I think you trash, you steal cars and trash them.
You steal cars and you meet prostitutes
and I do think you kill people.
Oh, okay.
That's all I know.
Sex workers, not against sex workers.
No, I'm in favor of sex workers.
Yeah, dude, they can do whatever.
I don't know if I'm in favor.
I said I'm in favor of sex work.
But I think we're in favor of sex workers.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yes, like whatever people, I can't judge.
No.
Anyway, no, I haven't seen a doc.
I don't think that I was exposed.
This thing ties in.
Like that's what's interesting about this gentleman.
Yeah.
Because go see a sex worker.
I know.
But that's not.
It wasn't, that wasn't why.
He wanted to build another life with somebody.
He got off on this somehow.
Like you, yeah, it's crazy.
Anywho, so that was crazy, but that's like-
Documentaries?
Well, we were talking about Cosby and deception.
Yes, and hypocrisy.
And hypocrisy.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
That's wild out there.
And then I'm a hypocrite, you know?
Well, we all do things-
Then it's the side of myself I hate the most, you know?
Yeah, but are you a hypocrite?
Because I also think you have a lot of compassion
towards people and mistakes.
So I don't think you're a hypocrite.
Well, I don't think I'm super self-righteous.
Right.
I don't think so.
No, definitely.
But like I have, I would say a hypocrite, someone who's got like an expressed set of morals
that they violate.
And that I do, you know, like I think all of us do.
But we all make, but that's to me making mistakes
as opposed to, it's one thing if you make a,
to me hypocrisy is if you have an expressed set of morals,
you do something against that. Yeah. But to me, hypocrisy is if you have an express set of morals,
you do something against that.
But then you're out still parading that moral.
I often think if you realize like, oh, fuck,
this is actually, this is a hard moral to keep,
or like to, it's harder than I thought.
I don't think you parade around like.
Maybe hypocrisy is not the word, contradictions.
Sure, we all do that.
I have some belief yet I do some action
that doesn't really support that.
Or isn't in concert with it.
Like I can, let's just say this,
I can list many things that I am a moral on.
Like my involvement in the environmental crisis
is not great, you know, it's not good.
I eat a ton of cows.
Ethically, I don't feel great about, you know,
like I'm participating in things I know
intellectually are not the best thing
or morally are not the best thing.
And I just plow through it, you know?
And I have to have some priority list
of the things I'm most interested in servicing.
Yeah.
And then other things I just ignore.
Yeah, yeah, we can't do it all.
No.
Unfortunately.
The Good Place.
Speaking of the Good Place,
Kristen's new show comes out tomorrow.
By the time this comes out, it will have already been out.
Yeah.
And hopefully you guys watched it,
because that's great.
I'm hoping for them that it's-
It does well.
I feel like it's gonna be a real enormous show.
I do too.
Yeah.
I do too.
Very exciting.
I did have a question I wanted to ask
that I do think is important.
Okay.
Do you get under the covers in your clothes?
That nighttime?
Or anytime.
Like if you go into your bed right now
to like do work or something,
are you comfortable getting under the covers
in your day clothes?
Not really.
This only happened where like I lay down,
well, I lay down in my clothes all the time
on my bed to do research.
Occasionally I'll lay down to take a nap and I don't, I just have my clothes on, I lay down in my clothes all the time on my bed to do research. Yeah. Occasionally I'll lay down to take a nap,
and I don't, I just have my clothes on, I'm on top,
but then I'll get a little chilly in the nap
and I'll pull it over like just my upper torso.
Okay, so you're not very comfortable.
Over jeans feels a little weird.
How about you?
I guess this is hypocrisy, ding ding ding.
Okay.
I think it's probably gross, but I do it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What is gross?
I like getting close.
I think people are a little,
I think people are overwhelmed with gross.
Yeah.
Like people, anytime we have a guest
that has their feet on the couch,
people are apoplectic about it. And then there's another thing I resist writing,
like I wanna write that it's still a democracy.
Pfft.
Sure, if someone was gonna eat their lunch
off of the couch at some point, potentially problematic,
someone's gonna lay their bare face down on that cushion,
maybe a problem, never gonna happen in the attic.
So I don't really know what everyone's worried about.
Secondly, the germs you're afraid of
are not the right germs.
I've seen a million 2020s on this and evening news is,
you can walk around a subway with your feet,
you're not gonna, the dangers in your life are in your kitchen sink.
Definitely.
They're all in your kitchen sink.
And they're on your countertops where you had chicken
and you had E. coli,
probably your toilet too.
But not nearly as bad as your kitchen.
All this, all the salmonella and all the actual,
Harmful.
Yeah, are mostly foodborne illnesses.
They're not, you're not getting E. col, you know, cholera
from your shoes from the subway.
This is not what's happening.
So it's just also a misplaced.
Now, if you saw a picture of someone's kitchen, freak,
go ahead and freak out.
Cause that's a, that's a minefield of bacteria.
We have this new coffee table that's very nice
and it's longer than our other one.
So in actually was in this episode with Malcolm We have this new coffee table that's very nice and it's longer than our other one.
So it actually was in this episode with Malcolm,
it was the first time I realized like,
oh, I can put my feet up.
Cause I couldn't when we had the shorter one.
Yes.
So I did that in the episode and I thought,
I did think, oh, I wonder if people
are gonna be freaked out by this.
They're gonna be mad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I, I'm gonna keep doing it.
Yeah, and you're not gonna eat a bear sandwich off of there.
I'm not.
Even if we have lunch here,
you'll have a plate or a nice bit of wax paper.
And that's okay, so you got in with your pants on, right?
And so your pants had collected God knows what
out on the planet.
Now that's rubbing off on the bottom of your duvet cover.
So then the next night you're gonna go bare,
you're gonna raw dog it,
and your legs are gonna be exposed to the gene.
You know, it's not like it's your mouth and your nose.
I don't even know what the big deal is.
It's true, because I don't sleep nude.
Right.
Maybe if I slept nude,
I would be a little more germ-aphobic.
Also the odds of the germs penetrating your skin
and getting into your actual system.
I mean, the only real way in the body
is your mouth and your nose.
Well, it could get in my vagina.
That's an orifice.
I know.
That's a good point.
If I slept nude.
If you slept nude.
That's an option.
That's true.
In your anus, let's an option. That's true. In your anus. But I don't.
Let's be honest.
Yeah. Yeah.
Although, it would be hard to get in the anus
because my butt cheeks.
But you could itch your butt
while you were asleep on accident with the sheet.
You could use the sheet to scratch your butt hole.
And then your jeans, you had sat somewhere.
But again, what are the pathogens on a seat?
It's just, it's your food guys.
You watch those, right?
Where they have-
Yes, ew.
Blacklight.
Unfortunately, it's always a woman.
I've never seen a man do this,
but they tell the mom like,
cook chicken in the kitchen.
And we're gonna then, we're gonna blacklight it.
So she's on her best behavior.
It's everywhere.
It's everywhere.
It's on the poles of the cabinets.
It's on the handle of the fridge.
It's on the sink.
Even when you're trying not to.
When she was trying her hardest.
I don't know what to do about that.
So if you're worried about germ,
don't go to your into your kitchen,
but wear your pants in bed, put your shoes on the couch.
It's your butt with your sheath.
Scratchy, scratchy, scratch.
I have way too personal of a thing,
but I know I would tell you,
and I don't know if I would tell America.
The world.
Oh my God, it must be so, wow.
Okay, I'm gonna back up with a story before this.
Okay, is this a brand new thing you're saying?
Oh yeah.
My last colonoscopy, you know, you do the cleanse.
Off to a good start.
My last colonoscopy, you can have either like clear broth.
You can't really eat any food.
So my hack for that was, you may recall this, is olive oil.
Yeah, I want calories still,
and olive oil's so good for you.
So what I was doing when I was hungry all day
is I was drinking little glasses of olive oil.
Oh my God.
During my cleanse, my cleanup before the colonoscopy.
And when I was going, duty, hello, hello.
Olive oil was coming on my butt.
Oily, yeah. It was olive oil was coming on my butt. Yeah, yeah, like straight olive oil.
Like I would wipe and there was crystal clear olive oil
on the toilet paper.
Okay.
It's like the Blockbuster guy.
What?
It's like the Blockbuster guy on Armchair Anonymous
that was leaking from the Wendy's Chili.
Oh yeah, I forgot about that. Oh my God, yes, the Wendy's Chili. Oh yeah, I forgot about that.
Oh my God, yes, the Wendy's Chili.
Oof, oof.
So I tried a new brand of bars yesterday.
Oh yeah.
And they're magic.
Ooh.
Fuck, they're magic.
They're 28 grams of protein and only 150 calories.
Ooh.
That's almost impossible.
Yeah.
A gram of protein's four calories.
So you're at 120.
Huh. Virt virtually 120.
Somehow the remaining 30 makes it taste delicious.
Really?
They're delicious.
Wow.
So I had two of them back to back.
Uh oh.
And this morning during my time alone.
You're an evac.
My evac.
Yeah.
I did a little wipey and it was the same.
Oh, so it was a lot of olive oil.
My first thought from muscle memory was like,
did I drink a few ounces of olive oil yesterday?
Wow.
Did I have an inordinate amount in my coffee?
No, the only thing new in my life were these two bars.
Interesting.
So I think it has some kind of an oil.
I don't know if you remember when they invented,
I think it was called oleol, oleo,
and it was all over the news
and you were gonna be able to eat potato chips
with virtually no calories
because the oil molecule was too big
to be absorbed by your stomach, you know, pass through.
That was during the non-fat craze.
Yes, and people were blowing out toilets all over America.
They needed like a bag of Lays or Doritos or whatever,
and then just blast oil everywhere.
I remember this.
I think maybe these have that,
some kind of oil that can't be absorbed and passed through.
I don't know that that's good.
I know.
And then I looked in the toilet.
Oh God.
And there were some, you know when you see oil and water?
Yeah.
It like falls up into pretty little globs.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm losing everyone, aren't I?
No, it was all like that.
There was some oil, there was some oil.
Wow.
And so now I'm really trying to decide
if that's an acceptable part of these bars.
Maybe?
They're delicious.
Well if it's olive oil, it might be fine.
It's depending, it's gonna be the specific oil.
It wouldn't be olive oil
because they'd be way more caloric.
Oh, right.
It's gotta be an oil that somehow is not.
I'm gonna call, I know the person who created these
and I'm gonna have a talk with them today.
Oh, God.
Are you curious to try these bars
and do this experience?
Well, I was.
I'm not anymore.
You're not anymore.
I don't.
You don't like oil.
I love olive oil, but I'm really not into things
that aren't natural.
Like I really, I don't like protein shakes.
I don't like any of that.
I want it to be a real food.
Yeah, sure. that's fair.
Yeah, but that's a bummer
because I am trying to get more protein
because I'm getting so strong.
I mean, it would be my preference too,
but for me to hit that goal,
I'd have to eat so many chicken breasts in a day.
I just can't, I can't eat that much.
Well, you're eating a lot of protein.
That's where I tip my hat to these bodybuilders
because they are eating, they're eating a lot of protein. That's where I tip my hat to these bodybuilders because they are eating,
they're eating like nine chicken breasts a day
and all that, I can't do it.
I need it, I need it.
But right here, I have a shake right here.
Yeah.
This is 60 grams.
I mean, there's nothing wrong with them.
People love them and they're fine.
And you know, I know you already know this,
it's not like some synthetic molecule they've been created.
Yeah. It's from whey. Yeah, I know. Yeah. I know, I just, there's something, it's not like some synthetic molecule they've been created. Yeah.
It's from whey.
Yeah, I know.
I know, I just, there's something about it that turns
I get it, I agree with that for the most part.
Yeah.
The more food you're eating in its original form,
I think the better you're gonna be off.
Yeah, I think so too.
I didn't think that was as gross as,
okay, honestly, I thought.
I have more details I'm gonna tell you off air.
Okay, great.
That will tip it there.
Okay, because I thought the way you prefaced it,
I thought you were gonna say after the colonoscopy
and you were wiping and it was just pure oil
that you reused it.
Like oiled a pan with the toilet.
Wow, that would be intense.
Yeah.
Ah, that's where your mind went.
Yeah.
You're a gremlin.
Well, you said it was so bad.
Yeah.
Well, I left out some details, but I'll tell you.
Okay.
I look forward to that.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, some facts for Malcolm.
What a, just- First of all.
My God, I just enjoy him so much.
I just love him.
I know.
I love him.
We're so-
He makes me giddy.
Yeah.
I kinda am in love with him.
Yeah, I guess like, you get butterflies.
Yeah, yeah, like he, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
What females do you have that for?
Oh, that's a good question.
I can think of a few people for me.
I'm sure I do.
Like I feel that way about Huey.
Oh wow, yeah.
I feel that way about Malcolm.
I feel that way about Jedidiah Jenkins.
Like when I sit down with him,
I know he's gonna say things to me
in a way that's pretty unique
and gonna be really interesting and refreshing.
And so the novelty and the dopamine of anticipation
of what thing they're gonna say,
to me mirrors falling in love.
It's like that novelty dopamine feeling.
Yeah, interesting.
Polar?
Oh yeah, probably. There we go.
Yes, but it's hard to know if it's crushy
or if it's like, cause I'm also intimidated by her,
but I guess that's all sort of part of it.
Yeah, when you like somebody,
you're half deciding whether they like you or not.
You're evaluating that.
That's part of the juge of it.
Totally. There's stakes to it.
Okay, we found one. Where like, I'm sure anytime she'd call you on the phone, you'd get juge of it. Totally, yeah. There's stakes to it. Okay, we found one.
Where like, I'm sure anytime she'd call you on the phone,
you'd get a race of like-
Excitement.
Endorphins.
Yeah, definitely.
She's never called me.
Okay, well, yeah.
Call me.
Call me.
I kind of have it with Ana.
Yeah.
Like I really, I just enjoy her so much.
Yep. Like I would never have just enjoy her so much.
Like I would never have said it was like crushy or butterfly.
I don't think it's butterfly,
but I am always excited to be around her.
I feel that way about her too.
Yeah, she has a-
She's very infectious.
She's very infectious.
She has this incredible dichotomy
of being very innocent
and childlike and also very tough and streetwise.
Yes.
And she's making both things work
at the same time and it's really fun.
She's strong.
Yeah.
She's very strong and also very flexible.
Yeah, it's hard to be both.
Teach me.
Pretty hard to be both.
I know how to be strong.
I'm working on flexibility. Yeah. I have two children to help me. I'm not so flexible. That's something we could talk about.
Sure, we are at an hour, but go ahead.
Oh, geez.
Time flies.
I know.
Well, I'm gonna table it.
You wanna table it for next time?
Sure.
Okay, so did David Lynch, producer,
direct the R. Crumb documentary?
No, so it was by Terry's wig artist, and did David Lynch, producer, direct the R. Crumb documentary?
No, so it was by Terry Zwigoff.
Zwigoff? Zwigoff.
Zwigoff, okay, Terry Zwigoff.
He directed it, right?
Yes, it said the film is presented by David Lynch,
though he had no actual involvement in making the film.
There we go, I knew there was some connection to him.
Yes.
Well, but Terry Zweighoff,
he then went on to do Ghost World, I think,
and then a ton of narratives.
I think he might've started with that.
Okay, he.
By the way, one of my highest recommend docs of all time.
You recommended it to me, it's incredible.
It's an incredible documentary.
I put it up there with American Movie.
Also, that's my all time favorite documentary
in case anyone's interested.
Harvard does have the most varsity sports teams
of any college in the United States.
Does it say that number?
42 teams.
42 teams.
21 men's sports, 21 women's sports, and one co-ed.
Wow.
Yeah, that was fascinating.
Yeah, what a reveal, huh?
Okay, Seoul was the home of the 1988 Summer Olympics.
He was right about that.
Okay.
I tend to trust him a lot, too much.
I only checked the ones that he was like, maybe,
like he himself said, I think, or maybe.
Right.
Other than that, I just trusted him.
Yeah, we trust him.
He's a trusted brand.
Big time, big time.
Book Soup is the store, I just trusted him. Yeah, we trust him. He's a trusted brand. Big time, big time.
Book Soup is the store, the bookshop on Sunset.
He got that right too.
Went into a Barnes and Nobles on the weekend.
You did?
Yeah, it had been a decade or more.
I know, and you know what's fun is it used to be reviled
because it was like taking out mom and pop book shops.
It's so funny, yeah, at this point.
And now it's like, you should go to Barnes and Noble
and buy real books.
I know, you're right.
Borders was ruining mom and pops and Barnes and Noble.
But I love Barnes and Noble.
You know that's my fantasy date.
You know I like Borders.
I know, that's you being a contrarian.
It's not. Yes, it is. I know, that's you being a contrarian.
It's not.
Yes it is.
I think you like Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf.
No, Barnes and Noble's like Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf.
No, Starbucks.
No.
Yes.
Borders is Starbucks.
No, you're wrong.
And in fact, they had Starbucks in them.
You're wrong.
Starbucks is in Barnes and Noble.
Trust me, I know this.
Anthony and I used to go all the time. They might have been in both Borders and Barnes and Noble. Let's, I know this. Anthony and I used to go all the time.
They might've been in both Borders and Barnes and Noble.
Let's agree on that.
Maybe they took over.
I don't know enough about Borders,
so I can't speak on that,
but I do know about Barnes and Noble,
and I know about Starbuckses are in there,
because this is what I do.
I go, I get a hot chocolate from the Starbucks,
and then I walk around, and I look at books,
and I buy a couple books
and I really probably don't read them.
And that's my thing.
Anthony and I, when we lived over by the Grove,
we'd walk over all the time on like Friday night
and do that and it was so fun.
And you know my dream fantasy date is to-
Would be suitors, take note.
Take note.
Probably go to a movie
because there's to a movie,
because there's normally a movie theater nearby,
Barnes and Noble.
Yeah.
Go to a movie and then dinner.
And then after that, we go to Barnes and Noble
and we get hot chocolate.
Close the date at Barnes and Noble.
Yeah, it's a nighttime thing.
You get hot chocolates and then you walk around,
but you pick out a book for the other person.
Oh.
Isn't that fun?
Yes, did you get that from someone?
I'm sure I did.
Okay.
You have such a specific fantasy that it feels like, yeah.
Cause then there's presence involved,
but there's picking out and receiving thoughtfulness.
You get to know about a person
because it's the book that they like probably.
You would get me the history of Hermes
and I would get you the history
of the internal combustion engine.
Probably.
History of small black Chevy VA.
What book, one book that you would buy
for a person you were also like courting.
Good question.
Now, am I trying to buy a book that I have surmised
they would like and haven't read,
or am I trying to show them something
that's important to me in a worldview way
that I think they would like?
I think it's both.
I think that's all kind of the same thing.
I almost think you're better off doing the latter
because who are you to say what they would like?
Yeah.
I would probably do Under the Banner of Heaven.
Great pick.
Or Catcher in the Rye if they haven't read it.
Also a great pick.
What would be yours?
Bukowski would be too extreme. I think they'd be worried about me.
Okay, then maybe that's third date.
So I wouldn't buy them my favorite book.
That would be, they'd be like,
oh, this guy likes pooping
and being drunk all the time and violence.
Right, okay.
Even like do like all those things.
You do.
I'm gonna hide that.
I mean, I assume everyone's read To Kill a Mockingbird,
so I probably would skip that, but that's like my Catcher in the R things. You do. I'm gonna hide that. I mean, I assume everyone's read To Kill a Mockingbird, so I probably would skip that,
but that's like my catcher in the rye.
It is.
I mean, truly the best book I've read in the last 10 years
is Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow,
the one I read over Christmas that I like could not stop.
You like that more than all four.
I love all fours, but-
And more than Copperhead, Demonhead.
Yes.
Okay. This book had such an impact.
Yeah.
So I would probably do that.
Oh, that's good.
It's a good book, really good book.
Or maybe Visit from the Goon Squad.
What is that?
I've never even heard of that.
Oh, it's so good.
It's by Jennifer Egan.
And she has another book called Candy House
that is more recent,
but Visit From The Goon Squad's probably 15 years old.
And it's all these little stories,
but they intertwine, the people intertwine,
and it's kind of dark, and it's great.
It's a great book.
Did you read What Is The What?
No. That's a great book. Did you read What is the What? No.
That's a great book.
Is it a fiction?
David, no.
Eggers.
David Eggers.
Oh, he also wrote,
what's the other really popular book he wrote, Rob?
A Heartbreaking Work of Sacred Genius.
Yes, yes.
I didn't read that.
I can't remember if I read that one or not,
but What is the What's really a wild book.
It's about the lost boys of Sudan.
Wow.
It's wild.
What is the what means?
God said to them, I can either give you the cow
and from the cow you'll have milk,
you'll have clothes, you'll have meat
or I can give you the answer to what.
Whoa. And their people chose the cow.
Got it.
And so what is the what is, yeah.
Ooh, ooh, I wanna read that.
It's really good. I'm gonna buy it.
It's a beautiful book.
Not the topic I would normally get into.
I love buying books.
Yeah, you love buying them.
Yeah, they're colorful, they're unique.
To me, the promise of a book is so exciting to me
and the adventure that's in there is so exciting.
I love it, but then I just don't make the time anymore.
There's another thing going on, I think,
which is this thing you can carry around is a world.
And you can enter the world, but you carry it places.
It's really interesting.
It's like a safe way to explore other points of view,
to explore places.
I guess that's like, you know, your wanderlust.
Yes, yours is.
There's something in here for me with that.
Yeah, for sure.
Books are cool.
Not a sponsor.
I think they could give Malcolm.
Maybe I would give a Malcolm book.
You know what, I probably would give a Sedaris book.
Oh, another great pick and a good filter.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Oh, you said tens and tens of millions of people,
tens and tens of millions of people watched Miami Vice.
The series finale had 22 million viewers.
Tens and tens.
That's just barely.
That's tens and tens.
Tulane's gender ratio for the class of 2028, 63,
oh my God, 63% of students identified as female,
37% as male.
Okay, so Tulane, I know it's so loud.
Ah, Jesus.
Last episode was my truck,
we let people know how close my truck was.
I know.
And now we're letting everyone know
how close we are to tree trimming.
Unfortunately, this sounds, again,
this sounds much closer than your car did.
So your car thing is becoming less and less impressive.
Yeah.
Okay, speaking of Tulane,
I was looking up the super spreaders,
like what constitutes one in Tulane, Harvard, MIT,
and MassGen.
It said, learn that obesity, age, and COVID infection
correlate with the propensity
to breathe out more respiratory droplets.
It's pretty gross when he gets into the description
of what makes it happen,
because it's really when if you,
because he watched a camera go in
and look at the vocal cords as you speak,
and they come together and separate like so fast.
And if you have sticky saliva, it creates that thing
which then breaks and then creates the droplets.
If you're super well hydrated and it's not sticky,
you're not a super spreader.
So the person at this conference
who infected 3 million people,
they had just flown like 18 hours from China or 20 hours.
So they were dehydrated, they were tight.
And they probably already had some genetic predisposition
for that kind of saliva.
But it's grosser than you want it to be.
It's like sticky.
I wish we, can you check, like, can you check your own?
I don't know if there's a test.
They should add that to 23andMe.
They should, it's a super spreader.
Yeah, okay, higher body mass index and is part of it.
Being a super spreader?
Mm-hmm.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
Okay, yeah, this says,
researchers found that 18% of the human subjects
accounted for 80% of the exhaled particles of the group.
Whoa, 18% were responsible for 80%.
That's so crazy. Okay, the Jason Mraz really, really, really popular song Whoa, 18% were responsible for 80%.
That's so crazy.
Okay, the Jason Mraz really, really, really popular song
is I'm Yours.
How's that go?
I'm yours, I don't wanna sing it.
Come on.
No.
Hum it.
We can play it, actually.
Well, I don't think we can.
I don't think we can do any of it.
So, look it up.
Rob, can you sing it?
Do you know how it goes?
No.
Yes you do.
No I really don't.
Other than the part you just sang.
I know I know it,
cause I know his really popular song.
So I'm frustrated that I can't get it.
Fine, I'll play it.
Okay.
Yeah, okay.
Anyway, that's it.
That was everything?
Yeah.
Malcolm. You're Malcolm. Doesn was everything? Yeah. Malcolm.
You're Malcolm.
Doesn't sound like you're welcome.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, yeah.
You're Malcolm for welcome.
Yeah, sure does.
I just love that he revisits his previous,
he's not afraid to revisit some previous theories.
Right.
That's very admirable.
Oh, ding, ding, ding, hypocrisy, contradiction.
Yes.
Some people are so afraid of changing their mind
because that would make them a hypocrite
as opposed to someone who's just evolving.
Yeah.
And then he could go back too.
Maybe it'll be more hopeful time and he'll focus again.
All right, I love you.
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