Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Rerelease: Monica Lewinsky
Episode Date: January 1, 2025On today's episode, we revisit Monica Lewinsky's episode from October 17th, 2019. Monica Lewinsky is an American anti-bullying ambassador to the Diana Award’s Anti-Bullying Programme, ...on the advisory board of Project rockit, founding board member of The Childhood Resilience Foundation and contributing editor to Vanity Fair. She sits down with the armchair expert to discuss overcoming trauma, cyber bullying and her experience being publicly labeled as a negative archetype. Monica talks about being an upstander and Dax is impressed by Monica’s resilience. The two discuss chasing and breaking patterns, public shame and the ways in which they both seek safety.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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Maybe you should do hello, hello, hello.
Hello.
Hi everyone.
Hello.
I'm here, this is Monica, Monica Padman.
And I'm here with Dax Shepard and Wobby Wob Hollis.
I had to say our last names
because this is about to get quite confusing.
Yeah.
We're doing-
It wasn't confusing enough this year,
so we thought let's at the very end get even.
Let's get really confused.
Let's add another layer of confusion.
Yes. Let's get really confused. Let's add another layer of confusion. Yes, we wanted to do a little of our favorites this week.
You just heard, a couple days ago, you heard Laurel O'Bow.
Mom.
Triple L, Dax's mom, that episode.
And my pick for the week is Monica Lewinsky.
That's why that's confusing.
Okay, because of Monica and Monica?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
That's why I had to say last names.
Okay, that's why that's confusing. Okay, because of Monica and Monica? Yeah. Oh, okay.
That's why I had to say last names.
Okay, that makes sense.
And why did you pick Monica?
Well, I was looking through all our old episodes,
I forgot, we've done a few.
850.
Yeah, we've done a few.
And most of them, I was looking, I was like,
oh yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah.
And when I saw Monica Lewinsky's name come up,
I thought, oh my gosh, I totally forgot we got to do that.
How amazing of an opportunity.
And then she was just so special and so sweet
and so strong and wonderful.
And the way she looks back on everything,
I think is really profound and probably applicable
to the way a lot of people are moving through the world
right now.
And she's just really the best.
Did you have any anxiety?
So my anxiety was, cause this just happened.
So we had a guest on and I went and listened
to their first episode and they were,
he was on right out the gates.
And so I was like, I wanted to listen to it
so I didn't repeat all the same questions.
And I was like, oh boy, I was much worse at this.
Yeah, I did think, oh, that was really early,
I don't know how it's gonna hold up.
But she, I just think she's worth a listen
if you haven't heard it or a re-listen if you have.
Yeah, but these have-
Go easy on us if it's bad.
These have become a little bit like past movies
I've been in where it's just like, I'm terrified to listen.
I'm not sure if I suck and it brings all that up.
I get it.
But she's a special lady.
So please enjoy Monica Lewinsky.
He's an armchair expert.
He's an armchair expert.
He's an armchair expert.
Welcome, welcome, welcome, Monica.
Don't be threatened.
Welcome to the show.
I'm Monica Lewinsky.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer.
I'm a singer and a singer. I'm a singer and a singer. I'm a singer and a singer. I'm a singer and a singer. I'm a singer and a singer. Welcome, welcome, welcome, Monica.
Don't be threatened.
We have another Monica today.
Two Monies.
Oh, it's going to get really complicated.
This is now the third, well, second Monica guest, but third Monica in the AE, I don't
even know her call letter, Sphere.
Yes.
Yes.
Monica Lewinsky is an American activist. She's a television
personality and she is also an anti-bullying ambassador to the Diana Award Anti-Bullying
Program and on the advisory board of Project Rocket. And of course, she is here specifically
because October is National Bullying Prevention Month. And so she is making the rounds to
spread the word on that, which is a wonderful thing to bring attention to. And so she is making the rounds to spread the word on that,
which is a wonderful thing to bring attention to.
And this is just an incredibly wonderful interview
with tons of honesty and vulnerability.
Yeah, emotional openness.
And I admire her a ton.
Me too.
For sharing her experience and her story
in hopes that other people can feel good.
It's incredibly brave.
But this is just really one of the more beautiful conversations we've had and we thank her
a ton for coming in.
So please enjoy Monica Lewinsky.
When you're like just asked benign questions, I feel like I would at this point, if I were
you would be just always looking for the little bit
of leadingness of it.
Like do you feel generally, like do you have your guard up
on some level when you're just conversing?
Like someone's probably going to try to lead you somewhere.
I think it totally depends.
So if I feel comfortable in a situation,
like right now I feel comfortable. So I came in, I felt comfortable in a situation, like right now, I feel comfortable.
So I came in, I felt comfortable with Monica,
and by the way, am I like the first Monica, Monica?
Yeah.
No, Monica Potter.
We've had Monica Potter.
I was thinking I was-
Not in the attic though, we did a live show with her.
So in the attic first, Monica.
Okay.
I've become good at reading people,
which I think most people who end up,
as public people, end up having to be.
Yes.
Also add like trauma survivors get good spidey senses
so that they're not wounded again.
Although, you know, this is sort of non-sequitur,
but someone said to me,
I saw this shaman in New York who was amazing
a few weeks ago,
and she said something to me about how
people who have survived trauma, they
can't be okay unless everyone else is okay in the room.
Oh, okay.
And feel safe.
That's how they feel safe is that everyone else feels okay.
And I was like, oh, that's a hundred percent me.
Meaning like if they're uncomfortable with your trauma, you feel the need to put them
at ease about it before you can be at ease at it?
No, I think it's just a layer.
It's just kind of a layer of how people operate
in the world.
So not even necessarily people being comfortable
with my trauma,
but I don't feel safe unless everyone else feels comfortable.
I got you.
Right?
So rather, so some people might come into a situation
and think, okay, how do I need to feel safe in this?
Like, here's what I need. Do, do, do, do, do.
For me, it would be, I need everyone else to feel okay
in order for me to feel safe in a situation.
Because for you, is fear really contagious?
Like, let's say there's four of us right now.
You know, we're talking and you notice Rob is over there
like, and he's shaking and he's like,
he's got me in this wet.
Are you going to take that on or are you gonna go,
oh, just he's going through something, God knows what.
I totally take it on.
Like I went on a job interview once
where the person who was interviewing me
was more nervous than I was.
And so all their nervous ticks started coming out.
And initially I was reading it as sort of,
this person kept scowling and I was like,
oh fuck, I'm saying the wrong thing.
I'm never going to get this job.
Do, do, do.
And then eventually I realized, oh, these are nervous ticks.
You know, so I thought, okay, so now I've got to make this person feel comfortable.
Yes.
Which is exhausting.
Trauma in general is exhausting.
Yeah.
So I keep rediscovering all the time.
It's like, I'm never assuming
that the person's thing is their issue, right?
It's gotta be all about me,
because the whole world is about me
and I'm at the center of the universe.
But I must-
You're in the solipsistic club?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Got a jacket.
So 90 plus percent of us walking around
are solely thinking of ourselves
and we're responding to our own thoughts and fears. and the other person isn't really even in the equation
other than that they've set off this dominoes of fears in that person.
It takes a very healthy, confident person to feel that way.
I just aspire to have that feeling all the time.
We can just take people's behavior for what it is, their behavior.
But I think we, I don't know if this will make sense, but so I had to do a
lot of work over the years around my relationship to material things, like hoarding.
I'm not real hoarder, capital H, but sort of, I like to joke, I had clutter from my
decluttering books.
I mean, it was just, you know, and I worked over the years with somebody who actually
has a background in psychology
and it's been an amazing process to sort of see
as things have changed for me,
things I'm ready to let go of.
But I had this one experience
where I was helping friends of mine move
because they were remodeling.
And it was like, why do you have this case
of unopened, you know, ball jars for jam that you're gonna pay more money storing
than you could just buy it again, you know?
But I'd say, no, no, no, no, we have to keep those
and broken things and all those things.
And so I had this experience where I was able to,
I could see because I had no attachment,
I had no energy towards these things,
how easy it was for me to think about letting go of them
or categorizing them.
Yeah, for lack of a better word,
be objective about the whole thing.
And so, and I think as opposed to my own shit,
which I had a story about everything
and had to tell that story,
and I think that kind of reflects in a way
what you're saying about just those two
very different positions.
Yes, your material stuff,
both Monica's could maybe bond on this.
Monica has shared with me that when life is feeling
particularly chaotic or out of her control,
a very simple act she can take control of
is finding something she likes, paying for it,
taking it home.
Am I explaining that correctly?
Yeah, I can in that moment have the thing I want
when there are other things in the world
that I want that I can't have.
Sure.
So it's just a quick way to get some control.
It lasts for like an hour and then it goes away.
But you know.
Then you get the, do you do the return thing?
Cause then you get a whole different set of chemicals
of the return of like, oh, it's like losing weight.
I just lost five pounds.
Exactly.
I actually don't do that because I'm late.
I'm like too lazy to go back to the store.
So then I'll return them for you.
Okay, great, great.
This is a good solution.
You have to wonder if some brilliant economists
could actually put a number on what part of the economy
is just servicing this cycle for people.
No, it's true.
Like, I'm going and returning and all that.
So an example would be, I had every single article
that I read for my master's thesis.
Like, I kept everything.
Even if I didn't cite it in my paper, I still had it.
And that was really connected to sort of all the anxiety
I had around people thinking I was stupid, you know?
And so it was the safety or all these books that I bought
when I was in graduate school that I never fucking read.
You know, and it was like, increased on the thing.
But look, look, I'm smart, I'm smart, I'm not a dumb bimbo.
And eventually in the last few years, eventually, I'm smart, I'm smart, I'm not a dumb bimbo. And eventually in the last few years,
eventually I was sort of in a place where I was like,
oh, I actually don't really need these anymore.
Which is fascinating.
So I think I had read in one of those decluttering books
about that we keep things because we're afraid
we're not gonna be provided for in the future.
And so that was really interesting to me too.
But I agree that the shopping high or the-
The control aspect of it.
Yeah, I don't think I've thought of it that way,
but that would 100% be me.
I feel like a twin to you after telling that part
of your story because I have somewhere in our garage,
huge milk crates of every single story I wrote in college,
like every essay I wrote and all the research
and everything is similarly, cause I have a big hang up about I'm not dumb
and everyone thinks I'm dumb.
Okay, you're not dumb.
The other day though, I said, it's not rational.
So Einstein could come out of the ground,
he could ascend and tap me on the shoulder and go,
you're the only person that's ever been as smart as me
on planet Earth.
I still need everyone's approval.
You can't bring logic to bear on a fear of being dumb or any of our fears really.
I mean, I guess there is some cognitive behavioral therapy
steps you could take, but just in general,
your fears aren't rational to begin with.
I think there's an element of healing and shifting
that kind of happens and then maybe you're ready
to have somebody help you try to alleviate that fear.
I agree that I don't think just because you have a fear
and somebody sits down and says to you,
oh, you really shouldn't have that fear anymore
that that's gonna now, that's bait.
But I also think too that there are a lot of fears
that come from how I describe it.
I don't know that my trauma psychiatrist would agree,
but I mean, I sort of think with trauma,
it's like we kind of each create our own file folders.
We make our decision on how we store like traumas, right?
So you and I could have the same traumatic experiences,
but we might file them in different folders
in different ways, right?
I think you see this with siblings a ton.
Yeah, exactly.
And so I think sometimes what happens too
is that we'll sort of see that top fear.
We may not even recognize in ourselves
that actually it's connected to all these other fears
that have happened.
And so it may seem illogical to someone else,
but it's really not to us because it's
based on these other experiences we've had too.
But it's like geology.
It's just another layer on top of another layer on top.
Before you get down to the foul ingredient. Yeah, there's so many other things in between there, right? So
You grew up here roughly right Brentwood ish. I was born in San Francisco
Mm-hmm, and then I was raised here in actually Beverly Hills
Okay, so and then my parents divorced and my dad moved to Brentwood.
Oh, okay, what age were you when they divorced?
I was 14.
I don't know that there's an ideal time.
I would say though that I am grateful
to have gone through it at three
because I didn't like, I didn't long for my dad
or ponder for him.
I was like, I don't know, he wasn't here
and still not here.
You know, like it didn't really bother me.
But I would imagine at 14
when your life is the most turbulent,
you have new hormones, your people are dating,
people are getting attention for things,
maybe not an ideal time for disruption.
It was more painful in some ways for me
because I think I lived with an illusion
of how I wanted my family to be.
I mean, I was, I mean, by all kind of markers,
I had a great upbringing and wonderful parents,
and I have an amazing younger brother,
and never worried about a roof over my head
or food on the table.
So very privileged that way.
But I also think that my parents are two wonderful people
who were not a great match.
And that was pretty-
Pretty evident. Pretty hard to be around, but I think also pretty self-evident.
Even now when people meet them, they're kind of like, how were your parents married?
But they both bring great things.
Your mother was an author or is an author and your father was or is an oncologist?
Yeah.
So actually she was an urban planner before she had kids and then she became kind of lead
parent. And my dad is still a practicing radiation oncologist.
In his story, there's a lot of talk lately
about inheriting trauma,
which is starting to get more and more compelling.
The first time I was here, I was like,
oh, what are you talking about?
But now it's getting more compelling, but-
Oh yeah.
I don't think it's irrelevant that your father
is first generation of a family that fled Nazi Germany as Jews
and then went to where El Salvador,
somewhere in South America.
Well done.
Okay, and then came here.
So he came here at 14.
Right, so he had to have inherited from his parents
a very realistic fear, to your point of not having enough
in the future, that you might not have enough in the future.
And even worse, you might be having to escape some place in the future.
Right.
Once that's a part of your worldview, I don't know how you shake that.
Mm hmm.
I think too, probably the way it also really shaped me was the kind of Germanic background.
And I think that kind of German Jew identity, it's like you're German before you're Jewish.
Right.
You know, so where other cultures, your Jewish identity,
you may lead with that.
There's this, I'm probably gonna botch it up,
which you can fact check later on.
You're allowed to make mistakes here,
just to let you know.
I'll do them, I was like really authoritatively
saying something, you'd be like, she's wrong.
Mistakes are encouraged.
Yeah.
It's a saying of the tallest poppy gets cut off first,
some version of that.
And so that was, I was kind of raised with one parent who that was there, you know, don't make waves
Mm-hmm, you know sort of blend in high don't try to be special and then I had another parent who came from
Russian background, but my grandmother was Russian but raised in China
And then my mom was actually raised in Tokyo and my aunt was born there.
So I have this very eclectic family background.
And I think from my mom's side,
it was very much about trying to find your specialness.
Adventure and discovery.
Yes. And so, and she lost her dad at a very early age.
So she was 15.
So both my parents had these big life changes
at 14 and 15.
My dad moving from his home country of El Salvador, where he was born to German parents,
and my mom losing her dad when they were living in Tokyo.
It was kind of always these conflicting messages, which really played into my self-worth and
self-esteem that was low.
Have you, from a young age, been what we would just label generically as a romantic?
Are you good at whipping up fantasies and living in a fantasy?
Yes.
In the last few years, it's just started to become really clear to me around a lot more
brokenness that I had from much younger years, which makes sense as to why I sort of already
liked a boy in kindergarten.
Right, right, yes, yes.
That's something I feel like we have in common
is that I was very early on, very active in my pretend,
my imagination, the roles I was playing,
and obviously to escape things that I was not enjoying
and prematurely very interested in girls,
lost my virginity at 12 in seventh grade,
you know, like always very sexual, always into falling in love. prematurely very interested in girls, lost my virginity at 12 in seventh grade,
always very sexual, always into falling in love.
For a seventh grader, I was listening to psychedelic furs
over and over again and all the new wave music
and I just wanted to be run over by a steamroller with love.
No, I mean, I think very much for me,
it's been, especially the last few years,
has felt a bit like memento where I've just gone,
well, why would I have made those choices at that point?
That makes no sense for a 14-year-old to do that.
So there must've been something before that.
And then it's kind of like, okay,
but I was also doing that at this age,
and this age, and this age, and why,
why when I was 13 did I have a boyfriend
that I broke up with because I thought it wasn't real
because we didn't fight?
You know what I mean? But it's also, I think, I don't know if, this is your experience at all, boyfriend that I broke up with because I thought it wasn't real because we didn't fight.
But it's also I think I don't know if this is your experience at all and I don't know if you have trauma in your background
No, we have some schedule
Monica's trauma Monica was someone trying to hide her identity desperately in a mostly white community of Duluth, Georgia. Yeah, I mean, there was hard stuff.
I guess I don't know.
I've never thought of it in the terms of trauma before,
but there's always hard stuff.
Everyone has hard stuff, I think.
But I think having to actively try to downplay
who you are from the get-go is very stressful and traumatic, I do, personally.
But I'll let you decide if it's in there.
I'll get back to you.
So this notion like, oh, this isn't real,
we're not even fighting.
Is that either modeled on your parents' relationship
which you're observing or are you watching movies
by which that's the high watermark of being in love?
Like where does the notion even come from?
Good question.
Probably both, I think both.
There are a lot of behaviors that I engage in
which drive me crazy.
And even when I think they like,
oh, I've therapy this out, I'm not gonna do this again,
I'm more mature.
And then you catch yourself and you're like,
wow, here we are again.
I'm doing this thing that I thought I would never fucking do
and I'm doing it, yay me.
But I think the other part of it that comes with that,
which is interesting,
and I don't know if you've experienced this,
which is there's sort of that side of you,
which is sort of stays with it,
or is tenacious, or doesn't give up,
which can drive you crazy in certain situations.
It's also the thing that saves you.
It's also the thing that's part of your resilience.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And so that, you know, you keep showing up,
you get out of bed, all of those things.
And so I think that's where it's one of the things in this last stint
with the therapist I've been with for the last five years
that she's really gotten me to see if sort of trying to recognize,
you know, all these things that I would beat myself up with,
that there can be this side which has helped me survive. And so I need to hold both of them. And
as much as I may disdain some aspect of one thing, I have to respect the other too.
I totally agree. I think all your character defects are the opposite side of a coin of some
virtue you have. And I'm just always trying to minimize the downside of these attributes and kind of bolster the good sides of it.
Fantasizing and creating fantasies,
I think for me it's a way to regulate your emotions
because you're not comfortable
in whatever emotion you're having currently.
And so when you engage that gear to go into Peter Pan land,
it's a way to correct your own biochemistry in your brain.
And so it's like a very useful survival thing to do, I think.
I think underneath everything with some sort of fantasy is actually hope.
There's this strange alchemic combination of emotions one has when you have to survive
something painful, whether that's just a breakup or world public humiliation,
which is sort of the, you need a little bit of denial,
you've got to have a little bit of resilience,
but then there's also the pain that you're feeling.
So I do think that sometimes what can happen
is that it is a self-preservation mode
that some part of you recognizes,
I actually can't contain this much pain in this moment.
I have to chop it up into little pieces.
Or disassociate or do something.
Yeah, exactly.
And I also, I wanna make one statement
because often I'll say this way too late.
So generally this would have been a great preamble,
which is you and I will talk about things today
and we will talk about our shortcomings and our failures
and we will attempt to explain how they came about,
which is in no way to excuse anything
that you or I have done that's regrettable.
So I just wanna be very clear to anyone that's listening
that we're on a path of this is how we got from A to C,
this is in my no means saying we have no culpability
in arriving at C. Absolutely. But I just wanted to say that. No, no, no, no means saying we have no culpability in arriving at sea.
So, absolutely.
But I just wanted to say that.
No, no, no, no.
I'm glad you did.
I think that's really important.
I think what becomes challenging for us in sort of public conversations is that you'll
have people using the same language for two different reasons.
100%.
And so I think you could have somebody who might come out
and say whatever they're admitting to,
and they're really trying to help people understand.
And it's a part of a process of owning their culpability,
but you can also have other people.
Bullshit excuse.
Yeah, exactly.
A hundred percent.
Sort of like PR people.
Yeah.
And I think we're living in times where,
whether they realize it or not, people feel that,
they sense that, they don't quite know how to identify it,
but I do think we see that a lot.
Yeah, and in fact, did you happen to catch this episode
of This American Life entitled Spine?
Oh, I have the name of it right here.
I know the show, but I haven't heard this episode.
Okay, so the creator of-
It's called Get a Spine.
Get a Spine. Oh, I thought you said spy.
I love a good spy book.
We thoroughly recommend everyone listen to it.
It's called Get a Spine
and the show creator and runner of Community-
Dan Harmon.
Dan Harmon, who was later fired from his position,
not for these allegations, but he was fired.
He gives an apology to a woman he sexually harassed
for like three years.
On his podcast, it's like nine minutes long,
and it's seven minutes long.
It's incredible in a myriad of ways.
And it is one to be distinguished
as the right way to own your stuff.
So anyways, when we think about times
where it seems like bullshit
and sometimes where it's like a true amends
and a true inventory of your behavior,
I think we can tell.
I like to think we can tell.
I think so too.
I've had this interesting journey and I think,
no shit, right?
But I think also too, as a woman,
it's been very interesting to kind of observe.
I think that there have been times where I felt,
gosh, I still feel regret, right?
I mean, I will feel regret every day
for the rest of my life.
I engage in behavior which hurt a lot of people.
So not only my family, other people's families,
like chaos for the country.
So there's so much there.
And then there's also, there are times where
I've also felt,
do I have to keep saying I'm sorry because I'm a woman?
You know, that it's sort of, that men are kind of left
as sort of, they say sorry once, they're like,
oh no, I said sorry, I'm done, I don't need to process that,
I don't need to think about that more, so.
I have made many apologies in my day, and by the way,
I'm making those amends because you're saying like you still feel regret.
I, the aim for me has been to not walk around with regret.
When I'm giving you my amends,
I want to offer you an opportunity to tell me
what I can do to make it better.
And if I can, I will do that.
And if I can't, I just couldn't do it.
Which is not to say that I'll not continue
for the rest of my life to acknowledge that that was bad,
but I am putting regret and shame away from my life because I can't't do it. Which is not to say that I'll not continue for the rest of my life to acknowledge that that was bad, but I am putting regret and shame away from my life.
Because I can't live with it.
It's too cancerous in me to walk around
always feeling shame and regret.
So I think we need a path towards absorption
or whatever you actually get in church when they meet.
Not just, I admitted it and you're absolved.
It's over now.
So part of me thinks you should not be walking around
feeling shame and regret over something
that you've apologized for, processed,
and did all this stuff 20 odd years ago,
or almost 30 years ago.
No, no, 20.
20, okay.
It was 20 last year.
Okay, 20 last year.
I get real confused because I always think
that the 80s were 20 years ago and they were not.
I know, that's true. They were 40 years ago.
But you know what I think is helpful is I think people
came to know you at a certain age in a certain situation
and I would imagine people never stopped to go,
oh, I wonder who the person was before that.
So I do want to quickly just say who the person
you were before that.
So you grew up in Beverly Hills
and dad did relocate to Brentwood
and you went to a couple different high schools.
You went to like a prep school.
Yeah, so I bounced around a lot.
I went to a Rodeo for kindergarten.
Then I went to John Thomas Dye in Bel Air for a few years.
Then to Hawthorne, then to Beverly, then to Bel Air Prep,
which I always laugh
as quintessential LA because it was in West Hollywood.
Like only in LA, right?
Bel Air Prep, fancy, pinky up.
And then it became some other name and now it's closed.
And then-
I have to admit, when I read Bel Air Prep,
I thought you were up in Bel Air,
next to the hotel. Exactly, right.
That's the whole point.
It's like, oh look, I went to Bel Air prep.
Take me fancy college.
But you also went to Beverly Hills High, right?
Exactly.
For how many years, three years?
Three years, yeah.
Okay, and this is basically at the time
of Beverly Hills 90210.
Exactly, I mean it was a very,
I always joke that I kind of never fit in in LA
because like I'm a brunette and my boobs are real.
So it's like, yeah.
There was an aesthetic that was prized in the school.
Oh, sure. And I, yeah, let's, let's not forget I was chubby.
So like I always struggled with my weight.
And so particularly, you know, it's so interesting.
I had thought for a really long time that I had gained all this weight.
So I struggled with my weight when I was in grade school, but then I sort of got a
handle on it. And my freshman year, when my parents separated,
I put on 50 pounds.
And I'd always, for years, thought it was connected
to my parents getting divorced.
But one of the things that I sort of came to understand
in the last several years, we didn't have language for it,
but I had actually had an unwanted sexual experience
when I was 14.
So which was right for the summer,
right before my parents had separated.
And were you taking the approach,
I've heard this, where people who have been
sexually assaulted want to never be sexually assaulted again,
so they try to make themselves invisible to men
who would want to do that.
Could you even be conscious of that?
I think the psyche is so complex and so fucking clever, right?
It is so clever.
So I think that there is this element
that may have been possible, but on some very deep level,
but I was still interested in boys.
Right. It could be true.
You can have goals, you can have wants,
and you can be taking actions
that are in complete opposition to that.
And there's no logic.
There are moments in the day you feel strong
and there are moments in the day you feel weak
and you're making different plans and those different times
and it can all add up to making zero sense
but all be happening at once.
And I think it was hard to unpack too
because it was the person stopped when I said stop
and it's just like the consent wasn't a thing then
and I have liked this person
but there were all sorts of things
that were inappropriate about it
including like a really big age difference.
And so for many years, I sort of, I was like, well, I was 19 when I lost my virginity and
did it a bit, but technically I wasn't, you know?
And so I had always chalked up my, you know, a lot of the struggles I had in high school
to my parents' divorce being contentious.
But I think it probably had a lot more to do with this incident that
happened that I didn't even know how to classify it.
And I think I made it all okay because that was the easiest thing to do.
And again, there's really no benefit to even isolating it.
So one thing could have caused it to reach critical mass.
Either situation could have caused critical mass.
And I had struggled with my weight before.
But can I ask you this?
Because as a parent of two daughters,
I question this a lot because parents in LA
are hyper aware of not triggering eating disorders.
Now.
Now, today.
Now, yeah.
And I do ask myself, it's very well intentioned
and I think they're in general doing the right thing,
but at the same time, I'm wondering how much of that was self imposed by what you were seeing around you in your social circle,
in your peer group and in school and how much of it do you believe was maybe imprinted on you from mom and dad?
I think it was 50-50.
50-50, okay.
There were a number of different factors. So one was I developed early. So I don't know why we don't have tests now for young girls and boys to sort of know
chemically when they're going into puberty why we wait because it's like it starts before
But we sort of don't consider it until their physical you totally fact-check this because I have no idea
What I'm saying is right right talking out of my ass
This is my own theory like that the chemical, you know
The chemical change must start earlier
than necessarily the physical change,
but we don't deem it puberty
until we see the physical change.
I had whatever the predisposition for my weight issues,
you know, genetically,
but then there was also I hit puberty earlier.
So I was constantly comparing my body
to other girls' bodies who had this incredible metabolism
or who didn't have boobs yet or whatever that was and so
I think there were kind of those issues, but I also I read, you know teen
17 magazine, you know, I was always read exactly always, you know reading I think I went on my first diet at
Maybe 11 or 12. Yeah
Yeah, it's so heartbreaking.
It is.
It's heartbreaking because it's like,
why can't we just have that message of we're OK?
We're OK however we are.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert.
If you dare. I don't know if you guys saw Anderson Cooper did this documentary a few years ago called
Being 13.
And he had access to all these 13 year olds phones or social behavior.
And the one thing that stuck with me was that kids were taking on average 150 pictures
For one that they would post. Oh wow and that just broke my fucking heart
Yeah, like what's the negative self-talk in the hundred forty nine that they didn't choose?
Yeah, and that's like, you know, so I mean, I think we see this kind of, it's a strange thing
now where we've got parents who are so much more aware, right?
Aware of kind of not body shaming their kids, aware of trying to teach them nutrition in
ways that are healthier.
And at the same time, we have all sorts of other social aspects which are creating those
problems that are making them even worse.
It's multifaceted at the very least.
Now you and I share something that's very rare.
I don't know that I've interviewed anyone
that we both have associate degrees
from Santa Monica College.
Uh-huh, okay.
So, but you ended up transferring
or after you graduated you went to Lewis and Clark
in Portland. Right, in Portland.
What I loved about Portland was I think
that was where I feel like I found myself as a person.
So I don't know if it was a combination of kind of now
I'm not living at home, I'm in another city slash state.
And it's a very different environment there.
I got a lot from nature in Portland, people are real,
there were sort of galleries being open late.
So I felt like I found a lot more of myself there.
Yeah, and you majored in psychology.
Correct.
And can I give you my anecdotal stereotype
and you can correct me if I'm wrong?
Okay.
I found most of the folks in psychology
were people who just desperately needed some therapy.
They were like really needed to figure out
what was going on in their mind.
Yeah.
I just observed that it seemed like many people that were drawn to that major were like, you know
Yes, probably
Can say in a non-pejorative way exactly just very interested in their life for all my friends, you know
Actually, it was probably more in in graduate school
So my graduate degree was in social psych.
And I think I saw maybe because I was older and now had had all these crazy life experiences.
But I saw more experiences in graduate school where I was both learning and self analyzing,
you know, of just understanding.
It's like, oh, a threatened identity.
Oh, okay, I experienced that or, you know, power differentials and power differentials and so many different kinds of biases
and understanding things.
I'm sure there was some part of me
that was interested in psychology because I was fucked up.
You needed some healing and hopefully you would figure out
some of that.
It sounds interestingly to me,
just from what you've told me about your childhood
and whatnot, that you are both confident and insecure.
Is that? A thousand percent.
Right.
I was always lucky.
I mean, I think I went through some periods
when I was much younger that I didn't have friends
or I was bullied a little bit,
but by and large, I've always been good at friendship.
Right.
I've had friends,
but I think particularly where men were concerned,
I was very insecure, yeah.
Was there a mental trick you did
where it was like you were insecure yet you were
somehow outgoing towards men or were you afraid to even approach men?
I think it was probably a strange combination of moments where I would feel
old,
but then my insecurities would regulate how I responded to reactions or to
things that happened. Did you, you had boyfriends in college, I assume?
Up in Oregon?
Yeah, but yes, but.
You can also just go, I don't understand why you want to know
what my boyfriend's in.
No, no.
No, it's just complicated.
I think part of me, the self-conscious part of me is like,
wow, I kind of sound like a big loser in this podcast.
No, oh my God, no.
Not at all. Like dating's already hard, but. Well, I kind of sound like a big loser in this podcast. No, oh my God, no. Not at all.
Dating's already hard, but.
Well, I can just say personally,
I had this body dysmorphic view of my whole being,
and yet I was so outwardly confident,
and I would talk to any girl, and I would get them laughing.
You know, I did all these things
that are really counterintuitive to how I felt.
Right.
But then my trick was like, oh no, you're not going to ever get anyone with this, so
you got to lead with this personality.
Like, you're going to snag somebody, you got to get out there.
You got to have a bullhorn of charisma or you're not.
Now mind you, I wasn't accurate on either assessment of how attractive my personality
was or how unattractive my physical was, but it was a weird paradox of feelings versus my behavior.
Yes.
That was how I was and kind of goes back to that,
you know, don't stand out, be special.
So I think that was kind of always.
The dichotomy of your parents kind of.
Always impacting my behavior that way.
But I had experiences where the popular boy
would like me in high school,
but then I also had experiences where the popular boy would like me in high school But then I also had experiences where somebody basically worse than standing me up
Kind of left me standing outside a theater because he saw his friend and walked away with his friend and didn't come back
and I was in a heavier phase and and his mom had later said oh well
He was embarrassed to be seen with you,
which is just like this cheese.
And just laid it out there.
Yeah, I'm like, I'm a teenager.
So I mean, it's just, so that's, you know,
but that's kind of that fertile ground
for when several years later, I think,
when I was in DC and getting this kind of attention
from somebody who I'm not that girl,
that I'm not the homecoming queen,
I'm not the girl that the guy likes, I. I'm not the girl that the guy likes.
I'm the friend of the girl that the guy likes.
Like that's me.
Yeah, he's the ultimate prom king of the world.
And so I think it was,
there were a lot of reactions,
behaviors I engaged in because there was a part of me
that was like, oh, this is what that girl is supposed to do.
Because a lot of times when you're not that person,
especially when you're younger and your brain's not fully developed and haven't had life experiences, you want
to be that person.
Right?
Sure.
Well, again, you have like, you have a broader romantic narrative you're spinning.
And then for that narrative to work, the characters within the narrative have to act a certain
way to hold up the story.
Right.
If you do have self-esteem issues, it's not like people walk around with self-esteem issues
and think, oh, I'm so happy I have these deficiencies, right? Like you basically,
on some level, you're kind of always looking for something to plug that feeling to assuage it.
So when you got this internship, did you have any interest in politics?
Or were you like, oh, this is just an amazing adventure,
who wouldn't go take this?
Right, well, I was a psychology major.
And it was a combination of a number of things
that I ended up in the internship.
One was we had family friend
whose grandson had done it the year before.
I'd never even heard about it.
So he said, oh, I'll be happy to give you a recommendation.
I worked a whole bunch when I was in high school
and college and one of the jobs I had
was selling men's neckties.
And I had a customer who had worked on the Clinton campaign
who then was now hired.
And so he also was somebody who recommended me.
And then I wrote an essay about how as a psychology major,
you study the mind of the individual,
and the White House is the mind of the country.
And so I think that that also had an element.
So I really wasn't interested in politics,
aside from the kind of cursory level,
like, oh, an election is happening.
But there's a monkey thing that happens, right?
Like a primate thing, which is that we are aware of status
at all times.
And that is the pinnacle of status. Like that building is the most status laden piece of
real estate in America.
It is. I'm very affected by like the aesthetics of my environment. And so one of the things
that I didn't expect to happen was to fall in love with the environment there. It's beautiful. There's just this, it's like smells of eucalyptus.
Oh really?
And there's just a, I'm very woo woo and spiritual
and there's, I didn't know how to identify it at the time
but there's a very special energy there.
I mean, it makes sense.
Sure, some of the finest people to ever live
have passed through there.
Right, and decisions have been made
that have effected
millions and millions of people over hundreds of years.
Yeah.
But I'm always looking at it from the outside.
Here's what I, the cynical side of my brain
is always like this.
I, all growing up, I looked at Playboy.
I loved my grandpa's Playboys.
I hid them in my luggage.
My mom would find them.
She never shamed me, thank God.
Playboy Mansion was it.
That's Shangri-La.
And I desperately wanted to be there.
I got invited at some point.
And as I was pulling up, I'm like, wow, look at this place.
It's amazing, the yard's incredible.
And then I was walking up and I was like,
I don't think that door knob seems to be broken.
And then I went inside and I was like,
oh, these phones are from 79 and they don't work
and no one's washed them.
And oh, half the switches don't work.
It was this big shattering of my illusion.
The place was in general disrepair
and it was kind of grody in there.
And I was like, oh, damn it.
And so the cynical part of my brain is like,
if I get in the White House,
am I gonna start noticing?
And like, oh, and they're not really.
But I'm relieved to hear that no, it is a bit of an Eden.
Right, yes.
Yeah, I mean, even the fact that it smells like eucalyptus,
I can promise you that the mansion did not smell like
eucalyptus.
Not gonna happen, but it smelled like that.
No, it smelled like just despair,
if I can give a emotional smile.
I mean, I think there were a lot of dynamics
that were going on there that surprised me.
It was very interesting for me
once I then chipped off to the Pentagon Pentagon and one of the things I came to realize was how the
commodity of information was so different between these two parts of the
government and at the White House it was if I knew something and you didn't that
was that was sort of made me more powerful. Exactly. But at the Pentagon if I
know something and you don't our boss might be up Schitt's Creek.
Oh, so it's a completely different culture.
Yeah, very, very different culture and information was valued in different ways.
Was it hard to register that you were there at the White House?
I mean, you basically like teleported into someone else's life in a weird way.
It was, I mean, and really it was supposed to be a pit stop on the way to graduate school. So I wanted to get a PhD in forensic psychology and work for the FBI.
But I have to imagine there had to be a period that was totally Alice in Wonderland or something.
I think what was interesting for me too is that my first trip to DC had been with my aunt.
And I remember we had passed by the old executive office building.
And I remember thinking, oh my gosh, it's so beautiful.
Can you imagine going to work every day there?
Right.
And then Shazam.
Oh, that's a great logistical question.
So I imagine it's a pain in the ass
to get in and out of the White House.
Is it cumbersome to go to work there?
Do you have to like allot an extra 45 minutes to get in?
So as an intern, it's a pain
because you have a temporary pass.
So every time you come in and out,
like you have to show your ID
and you get the temporary pink eye intern pass.
Once I became an employee and I had a permanent pass,
so I had a blue pass, which was,
that's like exactly,
that's the sort of the all access backstage pass.
So I think that's kind of the, talk about status.
That's the ultimate status symbol in DC.
And if you have that, then you just literally,
you park somewhere on the grounds of the White House.
And then-
Oh, I didn't have a parking spot.
Now either my mom dropped me off.
Okay, that's so you.
I looked at home.
So your mom relocated to DC because you were going there?
No, so my mom's side of the family,
my grandma was the matriarch and we sort of,
everybody has to live in the same place.
Okay, right.
That's just sort of how it is.
And so my aunt and her family moved to the East Coast.
So then my mom and my brother moved.
And of course then my grandma moved.
And then we all had, my grandma lived in the Watergate.
My mom lived in the Watergate.
My aunt was living in the country,
but she had a pied-a-terre there.
So it was sort of, we just ended that.
That's happened in New York.
It just happens everywhere.
Which is kind of, that's how we are.
Okay, so you were with mom.
Yeah. Okay.
I guess that's a layer I had not comprehended
to any of this. Yeah.
So I read A Vast Conspiracy, is that what it's called?
Was that Jeffrey Tubin's book?
Yes, it was a book all about the scandal.
Right.
Prior to that, I think I just had a very cursory
understanding of what all happened,
other than having been alive and lived it real time.
I'm a big lefty Democrat.
I loved Clinton.
I was one of those people going like, this is insane.
You can impeach someone over sexual stuff.
So I was so entrenched
in that camp, I think that's probably where my thinking
stopped on all of it.
I also very much real time thought that what was happening
to you was horrendous.
Thank you.
Yes, and so you know, I was probably predisposed
because I was a liberal Democrat to be on the side
of you guys, right?
Yet I am, I like to think objective enough,
if I put myself in the mindset of being on the right
and already hating this guy
and think he's done all this other shady shit,
so I can recognize why people were mad about it,
I can recognize why they feel betrayed by that
and that a leader shouldn't do that,
and all those things, I can totally recognize that.
But I guess what I was unaware of
and what at least this book suggests is
there was a conspiracy.
There was a conspiracy to get him guilty of perjury.
You have this woman, Linda Tripp.
It's almost crazy to me that you actually know her
and that all really happened to you.
Like I have heard those tapes,
but sitting here with you as a human being,
it's hard for me to even comprehend that.
I mean, talk about sort of like being exposed
to your home tours.
Have your phone calls recorded without your permission.
It's just like, oh no, I couldn't have said that.
See a transcript, it's like, then you hear yourself,
wow, I fucking said that about somebody
I would get in front of a bus for and I'm a catty bitch.
And it just, it is seriously, I mean, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
I, at that time, even at, I don't know,
how old were you at the time?
So I was 22 when the relationship started
and 24 when the investigation started.
Who among us can identify with having a friend
that you confide in?
Right.
Everyone needs that.
It is essential for our well-being.
You have your public life and what we'll talk about on this podcast, and then you have your
very personal stuff where you need to air out all the embarrassing stuff, the shameful
stuff.
Front stage, back stage.
Yes.
So we all have had best friends, and anyone can imagine that our best friend, in fact,
wasn't a best friend, and that our best friend was intending to write a book
about us, and that our best friend was recording us
and leading us, and by all definitions, entrapping us.
I like to think everyone could identify that
as just a really horrendous act from one person.
That again, I bet if I was benevolent enough,
I bet she has her own host of things she's overcoming.
It's interesting that in these investigations,
you will basically, it's cool to commit a crime
in order to expose another crime.
And in fact, there's no crime really with what you guys did,
but if we can get you to lie about it,
now we have an actual crime.
So you're taking one thing that starts as not illegal,
having an affair, sure, shameful, all those things are true,
maybe there's moral imperatives, but legally, not an issue.
No one's going to jail for an affair, extramarital affair.
Now, recording someone in Maryland
without their permission is a crime.
Entrapment is a crime.
There are all these crimes that basically got committed,
and I still don't understand legally why
she could commit a crime,
and then the
Justice Department goes to her and says well
We're not gonna prosecute you for doing this illegal thing as long as we can now get all those transcripts and now we can use those
transcripts to
But that's a whole justice system in general. I mean, there's it there. I think that's that's a real issue
I have the hypocrisy of the system. So I mean stepping outside of whatever happened to me. Yes
It's just how can we say this behavior is wrong
and should be punished,
but that same behavior should not be punished
if you're gonna help us get someone else.
The fact that the interrogator is allowed to blatantly lie.
I just talked to your friend Mike, he said you stabbed her.
How the fuck is that legal?
Exactly, or plea bargains.
I mean, it's just a whole.
Now you're like, okay, well, this person's saying
I committed the murder,
so now I have to do something just a whole... Yes. Now you're like, okay, well, this person's saying I committed the murder, so now I have
to do something to get out of this.
I've now got to choose a bad option to get out of this.
So, yeah, it's crazy to me that things can work that way.
I participated in this docu-series that came out last year.
On E&E?
Yeah.
Yeah, I watched an episode of it today and it was really, really good.
Thanks.
It was really hard to do, so...
I can imagine.
I'm just kind of referencing that because they think that there was a very broad scope
of people from that timeframe who were interviewed. And that the goal of the series was to really
map out all of these different perspectives and narratives that were unfolding real time
for us there that we didn't have the perspective to see back, to see kind of all the places
where stories were, people's narratives were being braided together that we didn't have the perspective to see back, to see kind of all the places where stories
where people's narratives were being braided together
that we didn't realize or those things.
But I don't know that everyone is aware of the fact,
contextually, that there was a Paula Jones case going.
Right, right, it starts with a sexual harassment case.
Paula Jones against Bill Clinton.
Right.
And the goal was to get to
subpoena people to get them in there so that they could then ask questions that
would potentially put him in a position to lie about other stuff I believe so
and I think that there were a number of different motives that were going on for
various people I think who were operating on that side some exactly as
you just said some who were kind of looking at a bigger picture of how do we basically set a perjury trap.
And for almost everybody, I mean,
many of us think I would never lie under oath,
but we also live in this country
where we have these puritanical views about sex
and almost, you know,
asking someone about their sex life under oath
is almost always a perjury trap.
You know what I mean?
It's like Jerry Seinfeld made this great joke about
during that time where he said,
everybody lies about sex.
If people didn't lie about sex, no one would have sex.
Yeah.
Yeah.
100%.
I think sometimes people don't remember,
I didn't choose to step forward to talk about this.
So I in fact got into trouble
because I signed a false affidavit.
So trying to deny that.
There was a layer where people didn't understand the level of detail that came out.
That was also not my choice to share that.
I had to share that legally.
I was legally asked and in fact had to give even more detail because of certain ways that
other people chose to testify.
Because everyone's trying to nail down what sexual relations means.
So they then feel justified in hearing every single detail of every single thing that ever
happened.
Is that my understanding?
The reality is that there was not truth told no matter what the definition of sexual relations
was. Right, right.
So that whole thing of like,
oh, does this count as a, you know,
does it or doesn't it, it doesn't matter,
given everything else that happened?
Yes.
I've said before, I never understood why or how this
became about oral sex because that wasn't just what happened.
I don't want to get into a lot of the details.
I think that was a big part of shame
that I ended up having to carry for a long time
as a young woman being labeled as somebody
who was engaged in this servicing relationship.
It wasn't mutual.
There's so many things happening to you at once.
One of them is like the legal issues.
One of them is an impeachment trial.
And then one of them I would imagine on an emotional level
is to your point, you didn't meet someone in an alley
Hook up and bow you were in a emotional relationship with someone for a while that is now being reduced to this
Right is now being examined through a lens that and nobody I mean like, you know
Maybe when you're first start dating someone you're like, oh, we've done it this many times
or you know, it's such a strange way to
done it this many times or you know it's such a strange way to not only as oneself to try to analyze something or unpack it but even more bizarre to have other people talking
about something which is normally so private.
Oh my god I just can't.
Even as someone who is very vocally out loud about my sexuality and stuff and I would say
kind of hyper sexual I still don't want someone to account for everything,
every move I made.
Or to take it from you, that's your agency.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, and that's part of consent
in a very different way as sort of, you know,
what we choose to share about ourselves
and what we choose to keep private
and with whom we share those aspects of ourselves.
Now, the one thing that I'm deeply interested in
about the ride you were on,
I just can't imagine the highs and lows just hourly
and daily and the stress on your body and the cortisol
and the adrenaline and all those things.
As much as like you were trying to prevent
the worst thing from happening,
was there any relief in it finally just being like,
fuck it, great, it's all over, I'm the devil, it's over.
I don't have to, like when you have a secret
and you're trying to keep a secret,
it's very stressful.
No.
This was not a secret that I ever,
yes, I may have confided in some of my friends,
but this was not something I ever would have
talked about publicly.
Of course not.
I don't think anyone in the world thinks,
the many accusations that have been leveled at you,
I don't think I've ever at least heard someone suggest
that you were trying to become famous or get attention.
Oh, they have?
Oh yeah.
Oh really?
Oh yeah, trying to get attention, wanna make money.
I think what's interesting is I think that entire situation
Triggered something that no one's really gonna talk about which is you know, I don't know what the data was that year
But let's say it was probably 50% of all people in marriages are being cheated on one way or another
So you become the face for anyone right who has had a spouse stray
for anyone who has had a spouse stray. And you now become an embodiment of that hurt and pain
and betrayal and all that stuff.
Yeah, I mean, I call myself a social canvas.
I think the thing is, is that this story triggered
so many archetypes for us.
I think it was not just one narrative.
I think there were a lot.
So there was privileged upbringing, my weight,
I was torn apart from my looks.
So I mean, the slut shaming,
so whether the affair, the fallen woman,
so I mean, they're just,
we were kind of living in times, I think,
where objectivity was just not really present.
I mean, just, I think along the lines,
it's interesting to me, people will point out to me now, well, how could people have thought you were dumb?
You had an internship in the White House.
Right, right.
Well, they did.
I was called a stupid bimbo.
I mean, I have like serious trauma from when I was in grad school, I couldn't get up and
present in front of a class.
You know, you were asking me initially about how I judge people when people ask me a question.
When I was in grad school, I was so, it's such imposter syndrome that anytime somebody asked me a question, I thought that they
were actually trying to trick me or to see, did I know the answer? You know, I was afraid to get
help writing an essay because I thought it would expose me that I should have known something.
Yes. You know, so, you know, this was also, it was a really challenging situation, which I don't
think we'd even be able to have nowadays.
First of all, the cycle is so much shorter, right?
So this idea of there kind of being a year long story,
but also because of legal reasons, I couldn't speak publicly.
So I was very one dimensional for people.
I was so young, there was nothing else to hang an identity for me on.
What had I been before I worked in the White House?
A student.
A college student.
You know what I mean?
Again, not to excuse my poor choices, but there were also a lot of people who were invested
in making sure that the president didn't lose his job.
And that meant that there were narratives that had to be spun.
That there were stories and a lot be spun, you know, that there were stories.
And a lot of those people didn't know me.
And then there were a lot of people who knew me well,
who had no problem engaging in that kind of behavior.
So you lived the Scarlet Letter, you know,
a prophetical book about how we need to deal with issues
of judgment and shaming and all that stuff.
And it was a heightened book to make a point.
And then what your real life experience was
way beyond what that book did.
So overnight, obviously you're on TV all the time.
You're, as I've heard you say before, maybe on John Oliver,
even if you want to escape and watch a tonight show,
you're gonna then see jokes about yourself endlessly.
There was really no escape at all from that.
I wonder during that period,
is your family the core, the only place you can go
and feel remotely like yourself?
Yeah, I mean, my family was all I had.
So I couldn't talk to most of my friends
until after they had testified. So I mean, I don't So I couldn't talk to most of my friends until after they had testified.
So I mean, I don't think I would have survived without my family, although we weren't, I
wasn't allowed to talk to my brother.
You weren't?
No, for a long time. So.
What was the reasoning behind that?
To protect him legally.
Okay. So that he wouldn't be called in to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He was a sophomore in college.
He was.
Yeah. Yeah. And that was rough for him, I assume. Yeah. Yeah. And he was a sophomore in college. He was. Yeah.
Yeah. And that was rough for him, I assume.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we talked earlier when you just got in here, it was like, there's your own guilt.
And then there's the guilt of having affected the other people in your life who you love
so much and kind of gotten them sucked into the whole thing.
Right.
I mean, it's one of the reasons I'm so unbelievably grateful for all the changes
that have happened in the last few years is that it's people stop my, doctors stop my
dad in the hall and say something positive or someone will have said something positive
to Mike at work and, you know, that alongside kind of whatever history might be told in
a class, teachers show my Ted talk. So I mean, it's just unbelievably meaningful for me.
And I've got a niece and nephew whom I adore
and they also have my last name.
Right, one of the most profound things I heard you say was,
I think it was on John Oliver, he said,
at any point did you decide to change your name? And your response was, did Bill Clinton
have to change his name?
That, because when he asked that question,
I was like, yeah, go by whatever fucking schlongschlonger.
Yeah, that's exactly the name I would have chosen.
Monica Schlongschlonger?
Monica Schlongschlonger, yeah.
But I was on that train of thought.
Your answer exposed to me how my first line of thinking Yeah. Exactly. But I was on that train of thought. Right.
Your answer exposed to me how my first line of thinking
will be one that was pretty much raised in a patriarchy
that that's what I don't even consider that.
Like, of course Bill Clinton didn't have to change his name.
But also too, I think there's, you know,
there were other layers of it,
like more logistical complications,
like particularly at the time, if I had gone
to the courthouse and tried to sign legal papers changing my name, that would have ended
up in the press.
So then I would have been like Prince, you know, Sally Smith, formerly known as Monica
Lewinsky, you know, or so then what?
Where would I go?
And people would, I didn't even understand how that works.
So I run into somebody I went to grade school with
and I say, well, I don't go by that name anymore.
But it shows a ton of resolve.
I really think the easier way out
would have been to attempt that.
Yeah, and I think the story was so big
and it was such a huge change in my life.
And my new normal was, there was such a massive chasm
between what my old normal and my new normal were
that I think that there just wasn't room for that.
I just had to kind of keep trying to move forward
and keep trying to get back onto a developmental path
that my therapist at the time, that was always her goal,
was sort of, how do we get you back
on a developmental path of a 25 year old?
Right.
You know, so what does that look like?
And, you know, how am I going to support myself
and, you know, and find purpose and meaning in the world
and try to find a relationship, which I think was,
you know, also something that I tried at the time.
And I now look back on that period and I'm like,
of course I couldn't have been in a serious relationship.
Like I dated people, I was involved, I fell in love.
I cared about people.
But, and I actually think it was hard for some people
who got to know me and cared about me to sort of reconcile
the person they got to know
with how the rest of the world saw me.
You know, so that was also hard.
And at younger ages and maybe careers not fully developed,
to step into all that, it's just, I wouldn't have.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
It's not as if what you were being shamed for in public was having had an extramarital
affair.
You were being called a slut, which you were not.
No.
Well, sometimes.
Yeah.
And by the way, what is a slut?
And also that.
Totally agree.
It's fine to have tons of sex with people.
No one should be called a slut.
Correct.
But you were being called a slut. Because no one should be called.
Well, because I mean, it was pejorative.
So whatever, you know, slut and tart and bimbo and horror.
And stupid, you're being called stupid
and you're being body shamed.
They deployed all of the weaponry that is against women.
It's really just horrendously massaging.
Deconstructed, dehumanized.
Yes, no one is talking about a man's weight.
In general, they're not doing that.
They're not calling men swats.
You know, I think, correct, all of the women in the story
experience that in different ways.
I think that we, as a society, we look at women
in the public eye in a very different way than we do men.
Yes.
Now, when you go through all of that,
I think the odds of you coming through on the other sides
and being someone who could be in an interview
or someone that has continued to be,
pursue business, get a graduate degree,
almost impossible to really imagine.
I can't imagine, like the fact that you have survived
all this is just incredibly admirable.
I think it's so rare.
I doubt many of us have the strength
to go through what you did.
I know it sounds kind of cliched,
but I really do think none of us knows
how strong we are until we're tested.
I do think that.
I mean, I'm grateful I've been able to survive.
There have been many, many moments
where I didn't think I could make it through.
And it could be the strangest, you know,
I think of it as that it's a small moment of grace
that, you know, makes you go right instead of left. The phone rings, somebody who doesn't even know
you're in pain and you don't not even, wouldn't even necessarily say, but that connection.
Yes. What were you doing at that time to comfort yourself?
Oh, during the investigation, eating for sure.
And then all the press that followed,
because it didn't go away in two seconds either.
No.
Right.
It stayed for years, right?
It was years of jokes.
Well, I think it wasn't officially over.
Started January of 98.
It wasn't quote unquote officially over
until he was acquitted.
He was impeached by the House, but then acquitted by the Senate.
And that was, I think, February of 1999.
So it was a little over a year there, but it was something that stayed in kind of part
of the, I don't know, would you say political zeitgeist?
Kind of the, well, kind of the zeitgeist in general.
Yeah.
The cultural zeitgeist.
Yeah. And so, you know, and then when I went to graduate school,
I had really mistakenly and naively thought,
oh, I'm going to move to England and I'm going to LSE
and I'm now going to be a graduate student
and I'm leaving, you know, political Monica Lewinsky
back in the States.
And I actually was having to take on another identity.
I wasn't getting rid of an identity.
And ultimately, I think for me, you know,
it was like I came out of graduate school and then, and then it was actually almost
the darkest period, even darker. There was an adrenaline that coursed through the entire
year of 98. But it was when I came out of graduate school and I couldn't get a job and
I couldn't, and purpose and support myself. That's really when it was a darker time for me.
Right, like you're gonna have no future.
Right, and that was when I came into my anger,
but at the same time, I see now,
I'm not sure I would choose it again,
but I see now what that period did benefit me
was I ended up having the time to do the deep self-healing, the kind of
involution.
Right.
And there was a lot of spiritual work.
You could have maybe just kept on running if it had you found employment immediately.
Right.
I think ultimately, the really big lesson for me, many lessons, but one of them was
around not running away from my past, that it was
about integrating my past.
Like I'm very fond of saying, I don't believe in sort of moving on, I believe in moving
forward.
And that there to me, there's a real distinction between those two, that there's like an element
of moving on feels like, oh, you're supposed to, you know, put whatever happened to you
in the past and, and almost with a layer of shame cut off kind of from whatever that behavior was.
You know, and it's one of the things
I really admire about you and how you've talked
about your life experiences, Dax,
is like, is that you are so comfortable
or seemingly so comfortable with all of the decisions
you made based on the pain you were in
and your ability to transcend that shame,
I think has helped a lot of people.
Well, thank you so much.
And I only got that from the 12 step program I work.
Without that, I don't know what I would do.
Because yeah, it's living with shame.
And this is ultimately what I want to talk to you about.
This is what I want to finish with.
You've worked a bunch with cyberbullying.
There couldn't be someone who,
I don't know how you'd quantify it,
but if you're not at number one,
you're tied for number one
for the biggest public shaming of all time.
I mean, it's just really-
I think on the internet too,
like in the nascent days of the internet,
just that experience of,
a lot of people have experienced that now.
I think there's, you know,
the statistics are like one in 10 or something.
I think as a culture, a society, a country,
we've got to evolve past the way we voraciously devour
other people, that we get so much pleasure
out of exposing people's quote unacceptable behavior,
of course, by their own definition
of what's acceptable and not acceptable.
But this feeding frenzy that we all enjoy,
the pretending as if, I mean, I suppose there's some,
and you have a master's in psychology,
maybe you could help me.
I assume there's some kind of catharsis
in watching someone else go up in flames
for something that you yourself have done.
I think there's so many different things
that are at play in our online world.
There's the online disinhibition effect.
So where people, because they're hiding behind a screen or behind anonymity, find it easier
to take on different personas.
We saw that the beginning of that with Remember Second Life.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
So I mean, that was really, that was kind of the beginning, I think, of this idea of, you know, an avatars of sort of, okay, let me both be this person, but also be someone else, be some different
curated version of who I want to be.
For sure.
Right?
Some projected versions.
The advertisement for me.
Right.
Exactly.
And which in and of itself has a layer of shame connected to it, right?
Because there's that idea of whoever I am,
really am, is not good enough.
For sure.
Yeah.
So I think that's at play.
I think we have people constantly,
I mean, just the chasm between our real lives
and curated selves online is very challenging.
And I think that's where there's so much
mental health issues coming in.
I had this young boy say to me last week, which was he'd written in an essay, and I've
just been turning it over in my mind ever since I read it, where he was talking about
actually with physical violence that when you don't have an adult to say to you, everything's
going to be okay, you're alone in your pain and your experience.
And you may lash out at someone else doing the exact same thing for the very reason
so that you're not alone.
Oh, sure, sure.
And which was amazing to me.
Like I had never really thought about it from that way.
I mean, I believe, okay, hurt people hurt people,
you know, and all those things.
And misery loves company, it truly does.
I certainly don't wanna excuse any kind of online harassment
or bullying behavior, but that in some ways
it's a coping mechanism for some people.
Yes.
You know, and that's where we kind of have to step back.
There is no three-prong easy solution.
This is like the human condition.
But what has really happened in your and my lifetime is that what happened to you, there
were only four news outlets that people watched.
There was X amount of newspapers in the country. So you took up so much space
that the person who made a weird comment
on their trip to Africa,
they would have never been put in the paper to get shamed.
So for a long period,
most people weren't getting the kind of firsthand
public shaming right.
There wasn't really an outlet for it.
Correct.
But now there is an outlet for almost anyone
to get publicly shamed,
because there's infinite number of web addresses basically,
and there's social media,
and there's a trillion news networks,
so now many, many people can be publicly shamed.
And I think the business model is different.
With so many more outlets,
there are more people in this industry who are looking to
make an income.
Sure, sure, sure.
And make money.
They can't ignore data.
That's clickbait, right?
So, I mean, that's the whole thing is around the idea of the model of money that gets made
from these things and that shame and public humiliation are these currencies in our society.
Yes, they're very tasty for people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I do think there's, I have a friend who has this really interesting theory around because
we now don't stay in the same village, you know, from where we were born and know the
same people for our entire lives, that well-known people have kind of become the local, that
was sort of the local gossip that we would do.
So these are the familiar people that we now, instead of staying in our village, we take them with us wherever we go.
Yes, the purpose gossip provided was,
when we lived in hundred member groups,
they were very egalitarian because one man getting power,
if he started abusing that power as the chief,
three other men could overthrow him.
At any time in our early days,
that chief didn't have a police force.
It didn't have a military.
So at all times,
that person could be overthrown pretty easily.
And the mechanism by which everyone would evaluate
whether that person should be overthrown was gossip.
That's exactly how you build an alliance
to make sure someone's not being tyrannical.
But then you get apparatuses like military, state police, and now we're not going to just
gossip our way into a new president.
It doesn't really work that way anymore, you know?
But it is hardwired into us.
No one should feel guilty that they enjoy gossip.
We're designed to gossip so we can regulate these little groups.
I think it's helpful to first recognize like, oh yeah, I'm inclined to gossip the same way
I'm inclined to eat 44 Snickers bars.
I'm hardwired to load up on sugar when that fruit's in season.
And I just have to know that about my body so that I can take some actions.
I think I understand what you're saying.
I just do think that we can evolve away from gossip.
Oh, me too. I think the goal should be 100% can evolve away from gossip. Oh, me too.
I think the goal should be 100% to evolve away from it.
Because I think we can see in many, many ways
that it's ultimately destructive.
And it's no longer servicing the purpose that it was.
And if you step back and you like take a completely different view
and think about it energetically, it's like words have a consequence.
They have a consequence whether you are hearing them or not.
That sense of it, I mean, we have energy fields
where we're affected by what people think about us,
what they say about us.
I mean, that for me, I think a big part of my healing
was I spent many years having to heal my field.
So to sort of having gone overnight from being known
by a very small group of people
relative to the rest of the world and then all of a sudden have all this negative intention and energy coming at me.
You know, that's an effect.
Yes. Someone who has a deep desire to eat cake should not feel like a failure in shame themselves.
They were designed to eat cake.
Right.
That's the point I'm making.
I'm not even judgmental of someone,
the desire to gossip.
I think it's ingrained in us.
But I think we should have as an objective
and a goal to transcend that.
There's probably a technical term for this,
which I can't remember or don't know.
But I think that probably one of the most important ways
forward is around trying to,
rather than trying to penalize a lot of the negative behavior,
which I think can be helpful, is also at the same time,
trying to bring in more of the positive, right?
So trying to drown that out in some ways.
So educating people on how to be an upstander online,
like how important that is.
So talk about upstanders,
because they do this at my daughter's school,
and I think it's the coolest thing.
Oh yeah, no, it's amazing.
To be an upstander means to sort of intervene in a situation.
And you can intervene while you're seeing something, like while you're seeing a bullying situation unfold or an online harassment unfurl.
You can intervene that way, but you can also intervene after the fact, too.
That's a really important part of being an upstander, which is just recognizing,
reaching out to the person who's been the target
of that behavior,
basically allowing somebody to know
that someone witnessed what happened,
to whether that is a supportive emoji,
or it's saying to someone, I saw what happened,
or saying, do you wanna come sit with me,
or wanna go to the movies,
some way of, if it's somebody you know,
if it's a stranger, just a positive comment,
you know, that there are all these ways
that we can actually interrupt the cycles
that are happening in the bullying cycle
that are important for people to remember.
Also reporting, so with online situations,
reporting any bullying or online harassment that you see,
is also, these are all ways of kind of being a good digital citizen.
And they have a huge impact, particularly, I think, you know, from the work that I do,
the worst kinds of things that happen are when people are suffering in silence alone.
And the faster somebody knows that they're not invisible, right?
There's this irony of this kind of behavior that you are a target of something
and yet you actually feel really invisible.
So the more I think that you can encourage people
to sort of step up and engage in these sorts of behaviors,
we're starting to shift the balance
of the other kind of behavior that's happening,
which we should address
in how we're dealing with these issues too.
Yeah, I also wish like when I was younger,
it had been explained to me that the power of this group
is much, much greater than the power of the bully.
Cause when I was a kid, now mind you, I have been a bully.
I would never have thought that about myself,
but as I've gotten older and I play back the frequency
with which I was in fights and stuff,
there has to be several kids that think I'm a bully.
And I'm very regretful of that and sorry for that.
Also recognize I was in a household
where someone was kicking my mom's ass
and my brother was five years old and married
and he was kicking my ass.
And then I went to this playground
where I could have power and I enjoyed that.
I liked that.
And there are some who talk about people who engage,
especially younger people who engage in bullying behavior.
Some people look at models that are saying
it actually is their kids trying
different power structures on, basically.
There's so many different things.
I think one of the things that we have trouble with
around this topic is that, like usual,
we're always trying to simplify things.
Yes, yes, good and evil.
Right, exactly.
And people engage in bullying behavior for myriad reasons.
And people become targets for myriad reasons.
And there are myriad ways to handle different situations.
There's no one correct way for every single person who's either a bully or a target.
I have witnessed and I have experienced the enormous shifts that can happen when people
step into compassion.
Yes, and it's most hard when it's with someone
whose behavior you just personally hate to begin with.
But when I was a kid, and there were certainly many times
I was bullied, and more than that,
I observed lots of bullying.
And for us in the herd watching it,
it was like if I said something,
I'd be the next target of that bully.
I'm assuming I feel alone in the next target of that bully.
I'm assuming I feel alone in the fact that I don't like
what's happening to this kid.
I'm assuming the rest of the people in this crowd
are enjoying this and they like this.
So if I stand up, I'm now gonna be the victim of the bully,
I'll be the next victim.
If I feel like if I had been educated that,
no, no, 99% of you don't want this.
You don't want a tyrannical leader on the playground.
And collectively, the power of a group is so powerful
to all of us humans.
If we get excluded from our group,
we change our behavior, in general, I think.
I agree.
I think it's really important to point out
that intervening directly is not always right
for every person in every situation.
Just like it's not always right,
maybe right in some circumstances,
but to say to somebody, you have to stand up to a bully.
Like it's just, again, it's sort of that nuanced scenario.
Because there are people who are equipped to do that
socially and emotionally, and there are people who aren't.
And some people can be endangered
by doing those sorts of things,
which is why I think with upstanding behavior,
it's really important for people to recognize
you don't have to be the person who stands up to the bully.
You can still be effective.
I mean, that's for me.
For me, my focus is the target's experience.
How do we get that person from feeling shame
and alone and sadness to feeling more okay, fastest?
And that doesn't matter if you're by 15, 50,
social media, it's really come to kind of map
our underlying cultural beliefs.
So I mean, it's a lot of people,
I think there was like this thing I read recently,
60 or 70% of people think the internet is,
and online harassment is kind of responsible
for this corrosion of civility. or 70% of people think the internet is an online harassment is kind of responsible for
this corrosion of civility.
It's hard because the truth is we have to look at ourselves.
I mean, I look at social media a lot and a lot of behavior just kind of like road rage,
which I have.
So I mean, it's just sort of that I behave in the car in ways that I would not behave
outside the car.
Right, totally.
And but I think that that happens online.
We see that sort of not regulated behavior, you know, and so much of it is because we
have lost sight of the fact we don't have those, you know, I'm sitting in a room with
both of you, I can read your facial expressions, I can feel your emotions, you know, and there
are always, I believe there are always so many different languages going on,
many of which we don't even know we're using.
And communicating ways that we're communicating.
And so when it's online, you don't have those same cues.
Right.
You can't see the hurt that you've just caused.
And so people tend to devolve into the worst versions of themselves, but there are ways
to not do that. You know, I'm always most interested in tackling problems
where the river starts, not as it feeds into the ocean.
So, you know, I think there is a much bigger global question
is why are there so many people sitting in their rooms
on a computer that have no control in their life
and feel like they need to overpower someone else
to get a sense of control.
Like, you know, what is the societal bigger problem
that we're not addressing in children
that they would even, you know, land them there?
Right.
And that's a pretty hard one to tackle.
Yeah.
I mean, I think a big thread of that is connection.
There's kind of this vicious cycle that's happened
with online behavior around, you
know, we sort of do that thing of we compare our insides to other people's outsides.
I'm on Instagram privately, Twitter publicly, and constantly, constantly feeling like everyone
else is happier, thinner, wealthier, more in love, all of those things.
Eating better meals.
Right, exactly.
Doing better Instagram.
Right.
Let's not forget that, right?
Like, you know, the meta.
We also find connection there.
Young people, I think it's over 40%, find connection, more connection from social media,
but then they also feel disconnected in ways too.
Yeah, lonelier than ever.
Right.
I think what happens is it's kind of this, it's this weird thing where at the same time
that we're thirsty for more connection,
the ways we're finding connection
are also trying to tell us that we're less than.
So it becomes, it's a very complicated
back and forth struggle.
Well, and we've had experts on here
that have explained that oxytocin is not released
unless you're looking at the person's face.
Like all these chemical things
that are associated with connection
actually can't exist on a virtual connection.
They're just, they're not happening.
And so they're ultimately feeling lonely,
even though they're distracted enough to not feel lonely.
But they're also getting dopamine hits
when the like, times come in and things,
likes come in and stuff.
So it is a weird balance of-
Yeah, I mean, I think it's great
that we're seeing some of the social media companies
finally start to address some of these issues
Yeah, I have a big fear that
Social media is gonna end up like the cable networks that if we don't find a way to actually
Coexist in these social spaces with you know, very different polarized viewpoints
We will splinter off and then we'll end up siloed in the same way of Fox
News and all the other stations.
And so, you know, I think we're being given an opportunity.
I'm not saying it is great and I know how challenging it is for people who are targets
of these things, but we are being given an opportunity online to try to find ways to
bridge the divide of perspective.
Yeah.
The thing I most admire about you and I'm so impressed by is that you have taken one
of, again, the most horrific scarlet letterings of all time.
And I have to imagine part of you has felt very fearful of ever even talking about it
in fear of breathing oxygen into something that you just want to be over with in your life.
But I think your willingness to do it in your bravery
isn't for me and it's not for any of those people
that was arguing, but it's for all these people
who have gone through this and are seeing
that it didn't break somebody.
I can't imagine a stronger example
of someone persevering than you.
It's incredible the fact that you still pursued
your education and that you started a business
and that you started a philanthropic endeavor.
I mean, all these things, it's rare to see someone
not be broken by that.
And I think it's just-
Oh, I'm broken.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Let's be really clear, I'm still very broken. Okay, well, functionally broken. Oh, okay, okay, okay. Let's be really clear. I'm still very broken. Okay.
Well, functionally broken.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Not shattered to pieces.
Not shattered to pieces.
And I just think the power of you being honest about your story is so valuable.
I hope you can take on some of the credit you deserve.
I hope you're proud of yourself.
I think I feel gratitude more than pride.
Maybe that's down the road.
But I was just talking to my mom this morning just about,
I think every once in a while,
I kind of shocked into remembering what my life was like
before things started to change a few years ago.
And I never could have imagined giving a purpose to my past
in the way that I have or using that pain
in service of hoping that other people feel less alone.
Yes.
You know, I think that's really what it's about.
You probably know this, it's a privilege.
It's a privilege to have a life where you're able
to help other people feel less alone
because of the experiences you're sharing.
Yeah, you must have people reach out to you all the time
and share with you how you've helped them, I hope.
I mean, that's kind of, you know, that's,
look, we'd like to shit all over social media,
but that's also kind of one of the beauties
of social media too, is that we do get to hear from people,
we do get to connect in ways that we wouldn't otherwise.
You can find your tribe in a way you can ever could.
Absolutely, sure.
I mean, there's so, I mean, and think about,
there are a lot of political movements.
The Women's March wouldn't have been able to happen
that fast, you know, hashtag me 2.0, you know.
I mean, Toronto Berks started it 10 years ago,
but it, you know, social media changed that
into something different.
It became something, became a louder voice
and coalesced faster because of it.
So.
Well, like all things, it's not binary.
It's not good or bad.
Everything, right?
But of course that's the world we live in.
Yes.
Lacks nuance and context.
And the inclination is to like get rid of something
or embrace it and shut the fuck up about it.
But really, no, there's like a whole process where we can refine things.
And I also think that there are, you know, hopefully the platforms will come to places
where they'll be instituting mechanisms to help sort of alleviate those kinds of scenarios too.
Yeah, it's really hard to imagine, but all of this, as you pointed out earlier, is driven by economic models.
So everyone feels insignificant.
We live in a country of 300 million people.
You feel like you're insignificant,
but if you click on the shitty article,
and if you watch the video-
We control the algorithm.
We need to be in charge of that algorithm.
It's hard to imagine, but we will steer the ship.
Yeah, did you see Jaron, I always get his last name wrong, Jaron Lanier?
No.
He gave a really interesting TED Talk last year and he's been involved in the internet
and he made this argument.
We sort of went right when we should have gone left at the point of should the internet
have been subscription-based ad based. And so, you know, I mean, you can also see that there are, of course,
in there the financial hierarchy issues if it were to have been subscription based.
But I think that, you know, a lot of where we are is because we have,
without realizing it, made these agreements of our clicking, our data,
that these are the new commodities.
He argues that it's not too late to turn back and I think we should really be looking and
exercising all options.
Yeah, there's a lot of different people right now in the different political races that
are suggesting or pointing out that no, no, this is kind of a public utility and we probably
should be treating it as and we probably should be
treating it as such and it should be available to everyone. It should be democratized and
we shouldn't rely on Nabisco to bring it to us. We should just pony up as a society probably
and have the version we want. Right. I kind of see the validity of that argument. So what's
next for you? So it's October is bullying prevention month. So every year for the last two years, and we will be doing this year, BBDO New York
and I have done a campaign for bullying prevention month, which we launch usually in the first
few days of October.
Okay.
So.
Well, I'm really delighted that we became Twitter friends, I think, is for how it started.
And again, I've been a long time admirer of you and happy to see you still thriving in the way you are.
And it's incredibly impressive and I'm in awe of it.
So I'm glad I got to talk to you.
Yeah.
All right.
Cool.
And now my favorite part of the show,
the fact check with my soulmate, Monica Padman.
Monica, Monica, I think I want your number.
Monica, la la da da da da, Monica.
Oh my God.
You had a lot of energy for that one.
I exploded because we're coming hot off of a taco order.
You know what I'm realizing?
What?
That song was not about me, was it?
No, it was about you guys. Yeah, because this is the Monica's episode
Yeah, it is. This was a great episode. You loved it. Yeah
I I feel very grateful that she trusted us to share her story. Me too. Me too
I've always always liked her. Yeah, and we've gotten to know her
Yes, we've gotten to know her through this process and she's so lovely.
She really is a sweet, sweet human being.
Yeah. Yeah.
I like her a lot.
Me too. Me too.
And strong.
Yeah. Yeah.
Fucking resilient.
Never in my wildest dreams as a child
watching that whole thing unfold did I think,
oh, maybe one day she'll sit on a couch across from me
and we can really connect about this.
Talk about it, I know.
Yeah.
I know.
It's a wild, wild world.
I wonder what the percentages of people who then
felt a lot of judgment, if they still do.
Yeah, I wonder too.
So much has changed since then.
Yeah.
Well, I think so much of the reaction was embroiled
in whatever people's fears are.
Of course.
So like if you were a partner and you had a big fear
that your husband would run around on you,
it's so interesting too about cheating, right?
People always get mad at the other person.
I mean, they probably get mad at both people.
But it's interesting, like, I've never understood,
well, no, I do understand.
In high school, my girlfriend cheated on me
and I went to the guy's house and tried to fight him.
Yeah, and I lost my vision as I was trying to punch him
through the car window and I missed completely.
Then his dad intervened, it was a whole circus.
Wow.
Anywho, I do remember blaming the person,
but it is ironic,
because you're not in a relationship with the other person.
I know, it's so complicated.
But anyways, I do think that she may have,
for some percentage of the population,
represented their biggest fear.
Definitely.
That some young, attractive woman
would lead their husband
astray.
It is true.
It's often, not always of course,
but it's often the man who cheats on his wife.
And yeah, the woman who had an affair with him
is the one that generally gets the blame.
The other woman.
The other woman.
I try not to say that because it's so cliche.
But even that has connotations.
Exactly.
And like that person gets ostracized and that person,
and often the husband and wife end up reconciling.
So the husband ends up really not feeling the weight
of anything and that other person ends up feeling everything.
And that to me is extremely unfair.
Well, yeah, the husband or the wife, in whatever case,
whoever, everyone cheats.
So I think it's pretty-
Well, that's true.
I think it's pretty, I think the numbers are even.
You think?
Esther Perel suggests that yes.
That they're even?
Yeah, because who are they fucking?
Single people.
Well, no, you've got a stagnant,
same percentage of women are married as men,
because they're marrying each other.
The statistics are the same.
Well, no, men are cheating more than women,
I would say, probably.
I don't think so.
Really?
No, I think just as many married women
are having affairs as married men.
Rob, add it to the list.
Add it to the list.
I think that's true.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
You know, AstroSez is something that's been universally
reviled and universally practiced.
Totally.
Yeah, I don't think it's a male female thing.
I think historically, there's men
where the vast majority of positions of power were men.
So you're aware of all of the men's famous indiscretions,
but maybe if there were way more famous, powerful women,
you'd be aware of those indiscretions.
Maybe. I, I...
Maybe you're right though, because there are, I'm sure there are, like what is cheating.
So sure, I bet men are going to massage parlors a lot more than women to get relieved.
I don't think women maybe are shopping for orgasms as readily as married men.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, I'm just, look at stereotypical married couples.
I would say stereotypically, don't get mad at me everyone,
the man wants more sex than the woman, often, not always.
But I think-
But often.
Well, here's what I think it is.
I think both people, well, I think the woman wants
the same amount of sex, but with a different person. We all want novelty. That I think it is. I think both people, well, I think the woman wants the same amount of sex, but with a different person.
We all want novelty. That's what it is. Everyone's desiring novelty. And I don't think it's male or female. Like we want novelty.
Now are men acting on it more?
Conventionally, traditionally, were they out in the world where they could,
they had
unobserved time that they could probably cheat? Like Like was the system, did it cater more to that?
Probably.
If you're a woman at home raising kids,
I don't know who you're meeting.
But I do think, I just think, I think people have affairs.
Yeah, they do.
I think men and women both have affairs.
Yeah, they do.
But at any rate, you're right.
Whoever cheated can be forgiven and reincorporated
in their life and the other person, the other woman,
the other man is always occupies that.
There's no redemption for them.
It doesn't feel equal.
It doesn't feel fair, no.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was enormously unfair.
That's obvious.
Like he was, you know, kept his job,
kept his position in the world.
But by the way, I want to be clear.
I don't think that he should have,
no, he's done, he's alleged to have done other things
that I have no defense of,
but let's just say this was an extramarital affair.
I don't think the solution would be
he should have been shamed the way she was.
No, I think she should have been shamed the way she was. No, I don't either.
I think she should have gotten the treatment he did.
I agree.
I don't think either party needs to be sent to Siberia.
I agree.
But I think the part of this conversation
that doesn't get talked about very much,
which she touched on a little bit,
which is she was like part of what was so awful
is this public presentation that it was a servicing
relationship and she was like, it was a mutual relationship.
And I don't think that part gets talked about where it's
like, she's in a relationship with the person she,
on top of this public thing, there's, I'm sure a private
heartbreak.
Of course.
Yeah.
She's not allowed to feel.
Right.
And that is not fair.
Right, yeah.
I agree.
Anyway.
Whole thing is a bummer.
Yeah, it is.
And a lot of people go like,
oh, you guys feel so bad for two people who cheated.
I know.
But I do.
I do.
I feel bad when people make mistakes.
I know.
And I've made a ton of mistakes.
I continue to make mistakes, I'll make more.
And I don't think I'm anyone that's not making mistakes.
I've just met people who are better
at hiding their mistakes.
Yeah.
Okay, yeah, so she was trying to find the verbiage
for this quote.
She said the tallest poppy gets cut off first,
but it's called tall poppy syndrome.
Oh, tall poppy syndrome.
Yes.
I'm a tall poppy.
You are a tall poppy.
Ha.
It describes aspects of a culture
where people of high status are resented, attacked,
cut down, strung up, or criticized
because they've been classified as superior to their peers.
Yeah.
We have the weirdest, I think about it all the time.
You know, I saw someone's Twitter handle was like,
abolish billionaires or something.
And I was like, it is the weirdest thing
that we all want this thing.
We want, in this country,
we want to become wealthy and successful.
And yet we, and I did, resent people who have done that.
And for many justified reasons and many unjustified reasons,
it's just this very weird thing.
It's like we defend the system so passionately,
and yet we're resentful of the people that have done that.
It's all complicated.
Yes, I think we love, I mean, a lot of people have said this,
but like, yeah, we'd love to see people rise
and we'd love to see them fall too.
I think, because again, like you just said,
everyone makes mistakes and so it feels relatable,
but also I think if you're not at that level,
you feel like, oh, it's actually not that good up there.
Like there's something about it that feels comforting
to you that you're not there,
because maybe when you get to that level,
it's like all shady and bad.
It requires some kind of amoralness.
Yeah.
I think it's more, why is that person there and not me?
I deserve that, they don't.
So when they are found guilty of some indiscretion,
it confirms that they didn't deserve it.
I know, I think that's a negative outlook on it,
which it could very well be true,
but I think it's a deeper psychological thing happening.
Which is very interesting, we have an entire system
and then no one really likes the outcome of the system.
Yeah.
But I went down, of course, because now I'm on the other side of it and I got really defensive
when I saw this person.
I'm not a billionaire.
On Twitter attacking that.
Here I'm someone who has given millions of dollars to the government, millions of dollars
to education, to all these services, to building bridges. So my contribution to the whole system
that we're fighting for, be it Medicare or any other thing,
requires people to generate a bunch of money
so that they can give a bunch of it to the government.
So it's a weird proposition to be resentful at the people
who are giving a tremendous amount of money to this system
that you wanna see more services of.
So when I see like abolish billionaires,
it's like, well, how about abolish the some things
you don't like about billionaires?
But if someone is some human being figures out how to make a mousetrap, Apple, and it
generates a trillion dollars and half of that goes to this system.
Why is that antithetical to what you want?
Currently our system, some of the richest people pay no taxes.
Well, that's a big issue, right.
So that's what they're saying.
I'm just saying let's be specific about it.
But I'm saying when someone creates the iPhone
and it sells several hundred million
and then that puts a half trillion dollars
into the fund that builds roads and educates kids,
be careful that that's what you wanna get rid of,
is some source of profound wealth
that does get redistributed.
Now you could say, I wanna see the distribution
of billionaires be at 70%, that's fine,
but just the very notion of abolish billionaires
is just a little weird when what we need
is money for all these services.
Right, but I wonder if this is like,
is this like lunch four times a week with your boss?
Like have you seen just abolish billionaires period
and then nothing more?
This is one woman who was mad at me that I said,
preach to Alan for saying be kind to everyone.
Okay, right, again, so one person is saying that.
Oh, I'm only talking to that person.
But I think there's a good amount of people.
I mean, the argument side of the argument I've heard has not been
abolish billionaires.
It's been they need to pay for.
They need to pay a high percentage.
Yeah, because they don't need that much money. Yeah.
OK, well, you said you don't know what the number is,
but probably 50 percent of people were getting cheated on that year,
that year being 1998, but there's no staff for that.
There's not, no.
I mean, they're campy.
It's a wild guess.
Exactly.
They're just campy.
They're campy.
No.
Cyber bullying, she said one in 10.
According to cyber bullying statistics
from the ISA Foundation,
over half of adolescents and teens have been bullied online and about the same number have engaged in cyber bullying. More than one in three
young people have experienced cyber threats online. Over 25% of adolescents and teens
have been bullied repeatedly through cell phones or the internet. Well over half of
young people do not tell their parents when cyber bullying occurs.
Mmm. Boy, I had a weird feeling watching Joker.
I really want you to watch it.
Uh-huh, I do.
So we can really unpack it.
Yeah.
But one weird, I always have these weird thoughts
that are like super contrary to what I traditionally think.
Uh-huh.
And one of them was, so this is set in the 70s.
Okay.
In New York.
And he is, you know, he's like any one of these shooters
or any number of people we now know
we have a ton of in this society.
And I was looking at life in the 70s on that bus,
you know, he's riding a bus around and stuff,
and he just, there's nothing to distract him
from his kind of mania.
And I was thinking, like, conventionally, I think,
I hate video games, what a waste of time.
Well, let's just get rid of video games, right?
But I was like, oh, there are a bunch of people
who are angst-ridden about this system that excludes them.
And I was like, are these things maybe make our world safer?
Like, if you can give some angst-ridden somebody
a joystick and blow people away for four hours
on a video game, does that keep them from acting or does that satiate or is that
an outlet for their frustration is this device that constantly keeps you engaged
which I think of as negative sometimes is this positive is the most terrible
things stem from boredom is maybe no no I totally don't think so okay well one
because there's been only a rise in these types of behaviors and especially
these mass shootings and stuff since well definitely mass shootings yeah but
the murder rate is precipitously down it's been falling since yeah 70s yeah
but I'm not talking like gang related. That's what that stuff is
And it's guy a guy finds out his girlfriend fucked another dude and he drives over and shoots him and her I mean
Just murder overall is down
Yeah, all these types of
unconventional
shootings and
Depression rates are up. I mean all these things are everything's on worse since the
and depression rates are up. I mean, all these things are, everything's gotten worse
since the invention of the phones and video games
and all of those things.
So no, I don't think it distracts.
You don't think it's an outlet for people?
Because there was a very conventional argument
against pornography that it would lead to more rape and stuff.
And then there were many people who had studies
that said, no, porn is an outlet
and they actually will jerk off watching the porn
and then it kind of, their likelihood of going out
and being a predator goes down
because they have an outlet for it.
So I'm not planting a flag in either side of that debate
but I guess what occurred to me is you could make
an argument that this stuff satiates people's angst.
But I don't think you can make the argument.
Oh, you can't.
Because all this stuff has gotten worse
angst wise if you're talking about people who feel
Entitled and act out because of it all that stuff's gotten way worse. Yeah. Yeah and
Depression just has gotten way worse. Mm-hmm. Yeah and
Isolation. Yeah, so
Okay, so we talked about gossip a little bit. There's an interesting MPR article about gossip.
So, gossip can help solidify personal relationships and encourage cooperation.
Children engage in this form of gossip by age five.
One provocative view comes from anthropologist Robin Dunbar,
who argues that gossip is the human analog
of social grooming, which is widely practiced
by our primate cousins.
Through gossip, we can create and maintain social bonds
more efficiently, allowing us to form groups
of larger sizes.
These suggestions about the benefits of gossip
for cooperation correspond to a special subset of gossip,
what's recently been called pro-social gossip. Pro-social gossip involves sharing negative
judgments about a third party, but where the shared information could protect the recipient
from antisocial behavior or exploitation. Thus, gossiping about who cheats at cards or who's likely
to shirk at a responsibility would qualify as pro-social gossip. Researchers Jan Engelman, Esther Herman,
and Michael Tomasello of the Max Plank, Plank?
Of the Max.
That word requires a different voice.
Plank.
Plank.
I can't, is it plank?
It wouldn't be plank.
P-L-A-N-C-K. Plank. Plank. Plank. I don't say, is it plank? It wouldn't be plank. P-L-A-N-C-K.
Plank.
Plank. Plank.
I don't know.
That's the wrong guy, but yeah, that sounds.
Institute.
Plank. Institute.
Plank. Plank.
Have plank.
For evolutionary anthropology,
studied prosocial gossip in both three and five year olds.
To create an opportunity for such gossip,
they had the children play a game.
Children who participated in the study first played with two puppets, one of which
was more generous than the other.
A second child then came in to play the game with just one of the two puppets, and the
researchers observed whether the first child gossiped about the puppets, offering a social
evaluation that could help the second child decide which puppet to choose.
For example, if a child said, you should play with the green puppet
because the yellow puppet is stingy
and doesn't share enough tokens,
that would be classified as pro-social gossip.
The researchers found that most children
in both age groups offered some sort of guidance
about which puppet to choose.
But the three-year-olds very rarely offered
an evaluation to go along with it.
For instance, they might recommend one puppet
over the other, but they wouldn't go on to explain
that it was because that puppet was generous
or because the other puppet cheated.
The five-year-olds, by contrast,
offered such evaluations about half the time.
They went beyond a mere recommendation
to a social judgment, to the kind of claim
that might make or break an individual's reputation.
So that's why they got the three to five number.
Yeah. Yeah.
And the one I think I brought up right was the explanation
I heard was like, keep it a meritocracy.
Yes. Yeah.
Which seems beneficial too.
Yeah, there's some positives.
Look, I think for me, it's very easy to answer.
There's some gossip I feel hung over from
and there's some I don't.
Yeah, exactly.
It's really that.
Like, yeah, if I'm warning somebody,
like don't tell so and so a secret,
they're not good at keeping secrets,
I feel totally fine about that.
I'm saying something negative about the person,
but whatever.
But if I'm just like pointing out someone's shirt
was stupid, I feel shitty.
I know why.
Yeah, I think for me, it's about purpose.
Like what is the purpose of talking about this?
Is the purpose of talking about it to dissect it to understand more
To well it is to connect a lot to right because if you and I meet a whatever some stranger and we're interacting and then afterwards
I go did you realize that guy said herpes a lot and you go yes
I like I noticed that there's like some bonding between us that we both observe this thing.
We're not crazy in our thoughts
or isolated in our thoughts.
We're like confirmed that we're on the right path.
I think that's what a lot of gossip is,
but generally that kind of gossip is the kind I don't love.
I mean, that example is so benign,
but like the shirt is bad is that.
Yes, it's the same.
Totally to make someone lower.
It is or it's the connection thing.
Like, did you notice like his shirt was all wrinkled up?
Like why is his shirt so wrinkly?
Is he not on an iron?
God, do you think he doesn't have any money?
Cause he doesn't.
Oh guys.
I even iron his clothes.
He's a dirt bag.
He smells bad too.
They are seeking connection, but I-
Don't wanna connect on that level.
But by the way, a lot of times
when people initiate some gossip with me
about one of those things,
I think for the most part,
I generally don't think about those things.
I don't care about those things.
Right, that's the answer.
So when they try to connect with me,
they don't get a connection out of it.
I agree with that now in my adult life,
but I think I probably spent many, many, many conversations
just pretending like I noticed that
so I could feel inside.
Right.
Yeah, and so-
Well, I do it to you all the time.
No, you don't.
Yeah, well, we're watching TV and I'm like,
God, have you noticed how big this guy's tongue is?
I know, but I don't think you do that.
I mean, you do do that about tongues. I don't think you do that. I mean, you do do that about tongues.
I don't think you talk poorly about people for no reason.
For sport.
Yeah.
For entertainment.
No.
No.
Well, I love you.
That's all, I love you.
That's all.
I'll gossip with you about things that could save you, okay?
Okay.
And if we notice someone says herpes indiscriminately.
Then we can talk about it. Yes. You know if we notice someone says herpes indiscriminately.
You know, you can talk about it.
Yes.
You know, so many times he said herpes.
But then we'd be like, sure, he said herpes a lot.
And then there's-
Should we offer him a screening?
A follow-up conversation of like,
oh my God, he's so confident to be doing that.
And why is he so confident?
Like wondering why is that to me is fine.
That's just exploring, but like just being like, ew.
He had flakes in his eyebrows.
Yeah, ew.
That's what people say about me sometimes.
That's what you're worried about.
No one says that.
No one says that.
All right.
I love you.
And I love Dmonika Lewinsky.
Me too.
I don't know that I've met Dmonika,
I didn't like a lot.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Even though we found out you hate this,
but the name
The name means alone and also advice giver both of those things that I think apply to myself you disagree I just agree talk about it on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by joining
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