Club Random with Bill Maher - Katie Couric | Club Random with Bill Maher
Episode Date: April 14, 2024Bill and Katie Couric on Bill’s Today Show appearance and what Katie said about Bill on a hot mic, what’s in that dropper Bill puts in his soda water, Bill’s gift to his longtime employees, Kati...e’s review of Bill’s new book, why the loudest, meanest voices are the ones that get heard, the astrological sign of Jesus, doing Club Random vs. Real Time, the genius of Andy Warhol’s fame prediction, the complete lack of trust in the media, Mr. Beast trying to cure peoples’ ills, and much, much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey Club Random Fans, guess what I did?
I wrote a damn book.
It's called What This Comedian Said Will Shock You
and it's available for pre-order now where you get your books
or at simonshoester.com.
He ended up sending us something all anti-abortion.
It was 4.30.
I was like, I think we've got to run it.
Lots of fraternization, a polite way of saying, you know, inter-office shopping.
And women had to put up with more.
Yeah.
Not that we've ever done this, but I'm so glad we are.
Thank you.
Oh my God, are you kidding?
What a treat.
Because for 20 years before, okay, I did hide the cameras in the walls.
Before 20 years before I was using this as the podcast, this was just the party house.
And I did this just with, but now I can get you to come and do it with me. Oh my God.
So it's like, it's the best thing in the world,
because this is what I would do midweek.
Like I can take one, you know, two hour break midweek
from my real job at real time to just kick it with somebody
and now I can call you and you actually come.
It's so great.
I think I would have come if it wasn't a podcast.
Exactly. That's the thing about us show people,
we only get together mostly like when we work.
No, I would have come if there wasn't one.
I know, I would too, but don't you think that's true?
Like we're all so busy.
I guess, I guess.
It forces you to like sort of,
I don't know, put it on your calendar.
Yeah, that's true.
You know?
That's true. Anyway, I's true. That's true.
Anyway, I know you have something to plug.
Oh, your big show on HBO, right?
I mean, I have a documentary coming out on HBO.
I do.
That's awesome.
But I don't, I mean, we can talk about that.
I'm just excited.
You know I'm a major fan, Bill.
Oh, finish your thought.
And you know what I thought would be really fun?
I don't know if you'd ever let me,
but I'm sure you wouldn't.
But I think you must have,
you're obviously so smart and funny,
but I also look at the credits,
and I know you have a lot of writers.
I think it would be so fun to do
behind the scenes of real time. Never. Never. First of all, I don't have a lot of writers. I think it would be so fun to do behind the scenes
of real time.
Never.
Never.
First of all, I don't have a lot of writers.
I have way less than all other shows always have had.
Well, I'm not saying that I say.
No, no, I'm just telling you,
I have the most I ever had, which I think is 10,
which is like crazy.
I used to have six.
What is that, by the way?
Oh, I'm roofing your drink.
Oh, didn't tell you what kind of show this was.
Yeah, I'm Bill Cosby and I'm just,
I know that's what it looks like.
Is this Bill after hours?
What's going on here?
No, this is, it's definitely after hours.
It's after appropriateness.
This is Jing, Jing.
I use it and I pour it on dog shit.
It's this stuff, it's, well look, I'm doing an ad for it,
but it replaces like if you drank diet soda.
For a while I was drinking Zevia,
because that's stevia flavored.
So it's better than like aspartame.
Yeah, so it's a sugar substitute or sweetness.
Right, but this is like better, I think, than Zevia,
because I talked to...
Isn't it Stevia?
It is Stevia.
But why is it Zevia?
Well, this guy says there's chemicals in the Zevia soda
that, you know, probably not like one part per trillion
or whatever, but I don't want any chemicals.
He says this is truly organic and chemical free.
And it's, you just put sparkling water
and then you put the Jing in.
Can I make you?
No, I could, I have, but your crew got me
a little Paloma situation.
I thought you were gonna say,
your crew got me a little wasted.
No. No, that's my job.
And by the way, I'm sorry,
I know you probably seem like such a Pollyanna.
You're the nicest people working with you here.
I have very nice people around me.
Same thing as real time.
I don't know how it happens.
Yeah, you're very lucky.
I feel like they all think they have to make up
for the snarky host.
It's like we better be,
Maybe.
We better be extra nice just to even out Bill. No, but that says a lot about you that you have nice people around you.
Thank you.
Also, I thought people who, I mean so many of the people who are on Real Time have been
there longer than 20 years.
Wow.
I announced at one point that anyone who worked on the two shows together, which one went
on and that one on in 1993.
So I guess this is like around 2010,
I said we'd been on real time for a while,
like anyone who's been with me 20 years,
I'm gonna give you a $20,000 vacation.
Thinking, I guess I didn't think ahead,
I didn't think it would be that many people,
and it's been a lot of people.
Really? I'm thinking yes, I feel like every week I I didn't think it would be that many people and it's been a lot of people. Really?
I'm thinking yes, I feel like every week
I'm giving away a fucking vacation like that.
I want to my Bob Barker, I mean it's,
but I'm happy to do it.
But that to me says more than anything
that people just have stayed through three networks,
two coasts, you know, I mean.
It must be such a fun show to work on.
Why would you never want sort of a behind the scenes?
You don't want to let people into sort of how the sausage
is being made or whatever?
How the sausage gets erect.
It's more like our show.
No, yes, that's exactly right. It's funny.
I was given an... I have this book coming out.
I love it, by the way.
Oh, I know you gave me the blurb, I appreciate it.
Yeah, of course.
And I have a TL for you, do you know what a TL is?
TL.
Okay, it's something weird that we did
in my family growing up, it stands for trade last.
I don't know if it came from my mom's family,
my dad's family, but it's when someone says
something nice about you, you pass it on.
The way it works, though, and I'm not gonna make you
do the other part, if I said,
hey, Bill, I got a TL for you, and before I gave you
the TL, you'd have to tell me something nice
someone had said about me.
You don't have to do that.
I'm just gonna give you a pass and think of one,
you owe me a TL.
But your TL is, I was on a Zoom
with the Aspen Institute today,
and I know you're coming to Aspen Ideas,
which is very exciting.
You're gonna be interviewed by Tina Brown,
who is curating the whole festival this year.
Sell this fucking book.
Well, she said, I can't wait to interview Bill Maher.
I was reading his book on the plane.
It is so great.
She said, I couldn't stop laughing.
Oh, thank you.
What a great plug.
Right?
Thank you.
Isn't that nice?
That is a, you're not.
And she's hard to please.
Tina has very exacting taste.
You're not Jewish, are you?
My mother is.
Oh, mine too.
Yeah.
That's right, we have that in common.
Yeah, but you were raised Catholic,
and I was raised Presbyterian.
But I think the Jews call it a mitzvah.
Yes, they do.
Right, isn't that a gift?
Yeah, it's a little. That's a mitzvah.
Yeah. And that was a mitzvah. But I mean, for me to like, choose someone who is nice about you,
I'd need an encyclopedic review of everyone in showbiz.
It's like I am, when people say,
oh boy, you know, if you go out,
the only people that ever come up to you,
the people that like you,
the people that hate you, never say anything.
So they're like, everybody loves you.
And I'm always trying to convince people, no,
I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. when people say, oh boy, if you go out, the only people that ever come up to you, people who like you, the people who hate you,
never say anything.
So they're like, everybody loves you,
and I'm always trying to convince people, no,
I promise you, everybody does not love me.
Lots of people really don't like me,
but I feel like everybody really does love me.
Well, not Sarah Palin.
Yeah, not Sarah Palin, and they're a number,
I think, for the most part,
I'm barely likable, but there's certainly people who don't.
But I think we are witnessing kind of a billessence.
I think you are having a moment, I do.
And I know this is, I mean this is your show, not mine,
but I think it's really cool and I was thinking
about this on the way over, Bill.
Damn, I should've brought that fucking book.
You have it.
Oh, oh good.
I have it.
It's available, when does it come out?
I know it's on the back.
It comes out May 21st, but you can pre-order it.
I don't have my glasses on.
May 21st, but you can pre-order it now.
I forgot the language.
It's really fun.
What This Comedian Said Will Shock You by Bill Maher.
This is not your first book, Bill.
No.
How many books have you written?
It's the first, well, I mean.
You wanna hold your book and fondle it?
No, I mean, I've written two horror books,
which are books that are just, I feel like,
not horror books, I shouldn't call them that,
but like, they were new rules books shouldn't call them that, but like,
they were new rules books. So they were just really the new rules. I didn't really have
to put a lot of work into it. We just reprinted basically what was.
Right.
That's fine. Because new rules is a joke book. They're short, they're punchy, you can read
it on the toilet. This is the editorials. These are, I work like I, I can't, whatever I say won't get canceled for.
I work very hard on this.
How long did it take you to write?
Well I took all the editorials we've done.
I read through every single one of them
and picked out the best ones,
redid them, organized them into chapters so it makes sense.
So it's like an encyclopedic review
of every good fucking thing I've said for 20 years.
It really should be thicker, I know.
But I'm sure a lot of it has evolved through the years,
right, so, because it's very current.
That's one reason I did it.
I wanted to see, have I changed or have things changed?
And what did you discover?
It's mostly things.
The left has gotten crazier, I'm not wrong.
And the right, of course, also gotten crazy,
which is even more alarming.
But there is so much material on the left
because they do do crazy things.
Yeah, did you read, I know you're a fan of Jonathan Hyde,
I know he was on Real Time recently,
and he's written this book, The Anxious Generation.
I'm a big fan of Jonathan Hyde's.
And he wrote a really good piece,
which I'm sure you read in The Atlantic a few years ago,
which is why the last 10 years have been uniquely stupid.
And he really wrote about,
and I started thinking about this too,
just on my way over here,
wondering what we were gonna talk about.
And one of the things that he talks about
is that the voices on social media
do not represent sort of,
I mean this is not a newsflash,
the center of the country
that actually appreciates nuance,
that wants to kind of understand and think about things
in a critical way.
And not hate each other.
But it's, yeah, it's like 11%, I forget the statistics,
and I haven't read the article in a long time,
but on the left and on the right,
it's extreme positions, the loudest voices in the room
and on the platform, and so. And the meanest. in the room and on the platform.
And so it really is very misleading.
Not just the loudest, but the meanest.
There's a certain personality type that gravitates to both fringes.
You know what I mean?
The Stephen Millers on the right and the virtue signaling people on the left
who just wanna catch people at being less pure than they are.
And I also think, yeah.
They're both of a certain, they're both,
they're so much more alike.
They're like the serial killer and the detective.
We're more alike than you think we are.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I also think it's like a tribal thing, you know,
that once, It's totally tribal.
I also think, believe it or not,
not to over-psycho-analyze
it, but I think it's actually illustrative of the loneliness and social isolation people
feel.
And they gravitate to this group think, and they actually think these people are their
friends.
They have actually replaced, social media has replaced their social circle.
That's such a good observation.
That's so true. You're so right. Social media has replaced their social circle. That's such a good observation. That's so true.
You're right.
They, you know that's true because OnlyFans,
do you know what goes on on OnlyFans?
A little, I've been told.
Oh, did I embarrass America's sweetheart?
No.
Oh, it's good.
No, but it's a lot of, like yeah, yeah. Well, my daughter used to threaten me that she would go on
OnlyFans, but she was getting... They would tell you that it's a place where content creators can make people aware of anything.
Pottery, gardening, it's men masturbating is what it is. It's men masturbating and young girls
taking off their clothes and playing with themselves
while a baby cries in the next room.
That's what OnlyFans is.
And I, the New York Times Magazine did a very long
deep dive into it and I'm old, so like, that's what,
that's why, how I know about OnlyFans, you know?
But they have what they're called chatters.
In other words, you're relating, relating.
God, I sound like I'm 100.
See, I'm not a tech person, I have the basics,
but I've never been on a website with anyone like that.
I'm guessing, I've never used the camera website with anyone like that. I'm guessing I've never used the camera
except maybe in a Zoom meeting.
I guess I use it then, but I've never done that.
But okay, so you've connected through the computer.
Again, I sound like I'm 89.
Through the computer with this young lady.
And I thought it was more direct, like an old webcam girl where you're actually talking
to each other like in a Zoom.
It's not.
It's not?
No, it's like you're texting and she's texting back
because that's how the kids talk,
but it's not even her.
It's a chatter.
It's a fat guy in the Philippines.
And the person, the guy who's paying for this,
he must know somewhere in his mind
that this is not really his girlfriend. It's not even her communication. Wait, but so it's somebody? the guy who was paying for this, he must know somewhere in his mind
that this is not really his girlfriend.
That it's not even her communicating.
Oh, so they just use video of the girl
and they have a guy pretending to chat what she would say?
Yes, read the article.
Okay, I have to.
I swear I didn't make that up though.
Yeah, because I thought it was live
and that people were truly interacting.
Maybe there is that too.
I mean, I think it's everything,
but this is how they described it.
Oh, interesting.
And this is only things?
Because some of the girls don't speak English.
Yeah, well that's not surprising, right?
That's not surprising at all,
because we exploit non-English speakers.
Hear, hear, It must end.
Tonight it must end.
But that goes to your point about the loneliness.
I mean, it just blows my mind that guys,
and they spend a fortune on it.
Well, you know now what they're starting to do.
It's funny, because I did a six-hour series four or five years ago for Nat Geo, and one
of them was on tech addiction.
And in San Diego, I went to this whole place that manufactures sex dolls.
And with AI, yeah, I mean, it was crazy.
And I interviewed a man who had two of them.
And I want you to know that you can take them apart
and they're dishwasher-sick.
They would don't, yes, they'd have to be.
Isn't that disgusting?
It is.
Yes, I am.
Anyway, so there were these, and you can pick what color, eyes, breast size.
There was a whole table, Bill, of nipples that you could select.
You can custom order these, basically these sex dolls, and now with AI, they're implanting stuff in there,
and so you can actually carry on a conversation with these.
Oh, it's very, very soon going to get to the point
where, I mean, men are already largely lost
to the female population, especially the young ones,
because they, first of all, they think choking is first base
and anal is second.
Oh, good lord.
Really. They, they, and a lot of this is because of the porn and stuff.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just very rapey and it's so funny.
We have to be super duper, extra, extra politically correct,
like, through all these other venues,
and then it like comes out here,
like in the porn, like the porn.
And you know that-
Why does it need to be incestuous?
Violent. Violent.
Not literally violent, but just very disrespectful.
It's a, and look- I think it is violent.
I think a lot of it is violent.
I don't, that doesn't come on my feed.
No, but I did an interview for my podcast about this,
about the easy access for especially young men
to watch porn starting at like eight, nine, 10 years old,
and how distorting it is.
Oh, I'm sure.
For them in terms of relationships.
And listen, whatever people wanna do,
I don't wanna sound like a prude,
but just the level of misogyny and violence
that they are exposed to at an incredibly young age.
Yeah, I'm telling you, this is why,
if you talk to young girls, they're like,
yeah, guys my age are just impossible.
And for the guys, very often, they,
I've seen documentaries on porn addiction.
Like, how can a girl compete with,
like, when they like the porn better?
Yeah.
When it starts that young, and of course they perfected it.
I mean when I was a kid,
this is what I was jerking off to,
like a picture like this.
Yeah, yeah.
Just a picture like in Life magazine.
Mm-hmm.
Like what I had to work with.
Well hopefully you had a Playboy now and then.
That came a little later,
but at first it was just,
no my father didn't get Playboy.
Yeah, but didn't you hide them under the bed?
I did hide them in the woods.
But I got them because I stole them babysitting.
Oh God, I stole them from this poor guy.
He was like, where's that Playboy?
You were babysitting the kid?
Yeah, what was babysitting?
That's what you do when you're like 14 or something.
That was like one of my I always worked
When I was a kid, I went leaves. I shoveled snow. I mowed lawns like I was a worker bee
I've always been aware lucky. I think you're the same way. Yeah, you're very I've always worked too
Don't we have similar birthday also my birthday January 7th 20th. Oh, okay
That's fine
So we're both Capricorns My husband's birthday is January 7th. 20th. Oh, okay. That's fine.
So we're both.
Capricorns.
I'm on the cusp.
You're on the cusp.
My husband's birthday is January 21st.
Oh.
You're very close to him.
Yes, wow.
And Jesus was one of us, right?
Yes, Jesus was a Capricorn.
Jesus was a Capricorn.
Remember that sounds like a Chris Kristofferson song.
I think it was actually, wasn't it?
No.
Was it an album?
Was there an album?
Jesus was a Capricorn.
I feel like it should have been.
Yeah.
But you know, maybe it was.
Yeah.
I don't know.
At a certain point, disc full, you know that kind of thing.
I know.
You ever go to think of something, you're like,
oh man, I knew that five years ago.
Yeah.
It just hadn't been activated in so long
that it slipped out of, but I remember knowing about it.
I do remember when I did know.
Are you starting, this is weird to make us feel really,
I'm starting to have a little bit of trouble with names.
Are you at all? Like who puts that thing? I of trouble with names. Are you at all?
Like who puts that name?
I always sucked at names.
Really?
Every year you make your New Year's resolutions
and I always say, I'm gonna do the ones from 75
because there have been ones that have been on my list
for 40 years.
Yeah. And that is one of them.
When someone says their name, make a note to remember it.
I've done it, I can do it, and I just forget.
I just forget to do that, and it's just always terrible.
I'm sorry, tell me your name again.
But these are people like I've known.
Yeah, but I've known, and I know well.
Well, what we do all have, all of us.
Overload?
Yeah, well, yes, sometimes, yeah.
But I don't think that's a bad thing.
Stress is life, life is stress.
I mean, you can't get rid of all of it
and you wouldn't want to.
If you were unoccupied, that would be
the worst kind of stress.
I agree. For someone like type A like you, please.
After all you've accomplished and achieved
and where you are, especially, you know,
you work this hard to get where you are, use it.
Now you're at your top of your game,
you're smarter than ever, because we do get smarter.
Yes, we do lose, you know, aging is always
a trade-off system, you know, and we do lose a certain,
I couldn't work for like, you know, 14 hours straight
like I maybe once could, you know, writing or something.
But I think that is made up for with wisdom
and learning your craft better.
But we do lose, I think, a little bit of, and the name for it is aphasia.
When you can't remember a word.
Right.
There's an extreme version of it, I think,
which is really sad.
Right, I think that's what Bruce Willis is.
They use it that, but the common use of the word aphasia
is just something that happens to everybody at every age.
It happened to me when I was young too.
Sometimes you just can't remember a word.
And it's always embarrassing because it's a common word,
and then you have to define it in the sentence.
Which, you know, if we could just find a way
to that big ball in the sky, the sun, yes, the sun.
That's what I, no it's not, but really you forget the words.
And it happened in that day, and I was like,
trying to think of, as I'm like,
fumphering along and vamping...
Or is this on the show?
No, no, no. This is just talking to somebody.
And the word I was searching for was gravitate.
To gravitate towards an opinion or something.
And it just didn't come to me for two seconds,
and then it did. But, you know, is that age, maybe?
But you have a little teeny bit of panic
when you can't remember something like that, right?
A little bit?
I would, what's one reason I love this?
Because I don't have that here.
This is just really who we are.
I'm always on this show saying,
what were we talking about?
And I don't care, because it's real,
and that's what I was going for,
but I would never do it on real time.
It would be inappropriate, and that's not what that show is,
and that's not who I am on that show.
That's another side of me, my main side.
This is my mistress, that's my wife, and my kids.
So which do you enjoy doing more?
Well, I mean, that's like saying,
which kid do you like better?
I mean, they're so different.
Like, I couldn't get away with this kind of thing there.
And I also want the challenge of,
I mean, there's nothing I love more
than writing the things that went into that book,
those editorials at the end.
I spent all week on it with my writers.
But that's kind of my baby.
And it's like a little, you know,
eight minutes from 20 hours of work.
And I want it to be, you know, funny
and also saying something no one's heard before.
And, you know, it's a challenge every week.
I remember I emailed you, because I really, really loved
one of your editorials. And I know in the book,
you say you want people to be like,
yeah, wait, what?
But in this case, I really, you know,
you want to challenge people in their kind of orthodoxy.
But I just watched, this was a few weeks ago,
this must have been maybe six weeks ago,
and I loved what you had written so much, I emailed you.
And I said, it was so great.
Right, it was, I don't even remember.
I should have rewatched it, but.
Yes, I remember getting the email.
I appreciate it, because when you're on TV for 30 years,
people do take you for granted in the sense that,
they just don't, you
know, not everybody can, everybody who's a fan is not going to email you after every
show.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's so nice when you get one against another, you're just full of mitzvahs.
Well, you know, I think that I, I think I have a probably a better understanding than
the average viewer of what goes into those shows. Of course you do.
What goes into your initial interview
when you're talking to whoever's come on.
What goes into doing your panel discussion.
And you know, I think now that media's so ubiquitous,
everybody thinks they're a journalist
and can do interviews.
Right.
And it really does employ a very specific skill set to kind of, to be a really good
listener, to be able to take the conversation where it goes, to make sure that each person
is, that one person isn't dominating the conversation.
It's hard to talk about this without sounding snobby, but I also have a obligation to my
viewers to keep the bond I've always kept and keep it real.
Yeah.
And keeping it real, I have to say there's too many podcasts, and just because you can
make words come out of your mouth doesn't. Doesn't make you an interviewer.
And I know that's gonna say, oh Bill, you know, why can't we all?
Well you can't all.
I can't sing, okay?
I don't pretend I can.
So I just wish about 3.9 million of the podcasts
that are out there, of the four million.
There are like 680,000 or something, is that insane?
No, there's four million.
Is that true?
Yeah, I was just told that fact in a show.
Well, it is gross.
And it was in a show business office.
Really?
Four million?
Four million.
Because it doesn't cost anything.
Yeah.
There's no downside.
What's the downside?
Nobody watches or,
but the thing is like 5,000 people here, 5,000 people there, you know,
it just dilutes the whole audience.
I mean, everyone, we're such a niche society.
I know.
I remember when I was living in New York and you'd pass all the newsstands, this is in
the 90s when there was newsstands and a million magazines, and they would have, speaking of porn,
they'd have like a hundred different,
just in the porn division, shaved Asian jugs.
Big butts.
Big butts.
Subscriber?
Yeah.
Like just such specific,
and I feel like that epitomized for me
where the society was going.
Everybody gets to be famous for 15 minutes,
like Andy Warhol said.
Everybody has their own channel.
And so it's very hard to get communally,
the whole country, when the whole country absorbed
Ed Sullivan or something that was taken in by young, old, everybody in
the family, they had some communal references and now that's almost
like it's very uncool to the young to have any communal references with us dinosaurs.
I know, well I'm right there with you because look, when I started at the Today Show,
it was 1991, if you wanted to know the news that morning, you watched a morning show, one of the three morning shows,
you listened to NPR, your local radio station,
you picked your newspaper off your front step,
right in front of your door.
Yes you did.
And there was this kind of communal feeling
that everybody was getting basically
similar information.
Of course, then there would be niche stuff,
or like if Sports Illustrated,
but even there weren't that many niche or glamour magazine.
Right, I mean, so segments were differentiated that way,
but it was just, it was so different.
And now it's like shattered glass
and all different demos listening to different stuff.
But then segmentation within demographics,
within, you know, I mean, it's just so disparate.
And it's really changed so much.
And I think, you know, yes, it's more democratized
and people who weren't represented
or didn't have an outlet or couldn't, you know,
it was dominated by a certain type of person,
I'm all for that, but it's almost...
It's really impossible, I think,
for us to have common ground.
And I do think it's contributed
to this intense polarization.
And of course, you create your own media.
Like, I read, growing up, Time Magazine,
The Washington Post, because I grew up outside of DC.
I watched the local news.
60 Minutes.
Yeah, 60 Minutes.
Which you were then on.
Yeah, and then I'd watch the evening news. Not that much. We
weren't as a super newsy family. My dad would read the Washington. We were. You were. My
father was in news. My father was a radio newsman. He was? Yes. Where? In New York?
New York. What was he doing? The mutual broadcasting system. Oh, you're kidding. And then WOR.
Oh, wow. And then when he retired from reading the news
at the top of the hour, he was an editor.
Oh, that's, well my dad was a journalist too.
He worked for the Atlanta Constitution.
First he worked for the Macon Telegraph, he's from Georgia.
The Atlanta Constitution, then United Press
before it was UPI.
And then he went into PR,
but that's funny that we have that in common.
We're like the sister from another mother.
I know we are.
There's something weird with the Jewish mother.
Yeah, but it's very hard to get a holistic take
on the news, I mean, I still really focus on traditional media.
I still read the Times.
I read, I try to read The Economist
because I think it's interesting to get the view
from across the pond, if you will.
I don't trust anyone.
You don't trust anyone?
I don't trust anyone that's giving me the full story.
Everyone is giving me their spin on the story,
including the places that used to be,
I thought, fairly neutral.
Like CNN and the New York Times,
I think, used to be a lot more neutral.
And now, what should be on the front,
yes, I mean, you can always slant any story.
Well, and they always were to a certain extent
because they've always been written
from the perspective of the person who was writing,
unless it was just a very who, what, when, where, why story.
I mean, there's no such thing as true objectivity, right?
I remember my father having this,
my earlier just memories of my father
and me talking about something,
maybe I was asking about his profession,
but I couldn't have been more than 10.
And I remember him telling me like what're exactly saying, that everything is,
the bias comes through somehow.
And I remember the examples he used.
He said, if you say he squawked about it,
as opposed to he said, and then he said, Robert Kennedy.
So this must have been before 68 when he was,
so I was definitely under 12.
He said, Robert Kennedy, you know,
if you like him, he's dedicated.
If you hate him, he's ruthless.
And yeah, but it got worse.
Like everything else, it got worse.
It got really, and it got to the point
where each side thinks they have to load their issue
because we can't really be trusted with both sides.
Because the other side is so powerful
and such an existential threat.
They both think the other side is an existential threat.
So we just have to do everything we can.
We can't trust them to make sure they have
the one true and correct opinion.
But don't you think things changed so dramatically, Bill, when Donald Trump arrived on the scene?
Absolutely.
Because, you know, listen, I've covered elections and presidents and I was thinking about it.
You know, there's always been, you know, policy differences, but a basic level of, of course,
people are going to twist or shape facts
to meet their, to match their ideology
or help persuade people that they're right.
But I think when Trump arrived on the scene,
the decorum was gone, sort of this level of basic decency evaporated.
And, you know, just complete falsehoods.
So I think it-
Yes, for me, it was an impossible choice.
Right?
For a place like CNN,
I have total sympathy with them for that.
It was an impossible choice.
Either you pretend that this is just the other side
of normal, left, right, Republican, Democrat,
or you start calling him a liar.
Now, I tried to, I mean, I'm on CNN now.
On Saturday night, they rerun the show.
Yeah, we've been, for the last six months,
we were on after, but now we're on the whole show.
I mean, I think the world needs a great CNN,
so I'll do everything I can to help that organization.
And they still do some great stuff.
They do.
And have some great people,
and I still tune to it when something happens.
Okay, but I said, you tried this.
You tried having people like Jeffrey Lord
and Kayleigh McEnany, and that didn't work because,
well, I mean, then you're basically giving voice
to election deniers, okay.
But to me, the way you deal with Trump is this.
Okay, remember the town hall he had on CNN
about six months ago, and the audience loved it.
The audience loved it.
I mean, you can't, you can hate this.
It was stacked with Trump supporters.
Well, they said Republicans and independents.
That's what they said.
Okay, maybe it was.
How'd they get in?
If they did, that's on CNN.
Yeah, I agree.
I think it is on CNN, and the vetting process was-
Well, then you gotta get a better audience person.
Obviously. Yeah. Obviously.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's like the person who handed the gun to Alec Baldwin.
Yeah.
You know, gotta get good people in all these positions.
I agree.
Okay, so if that was about, whatever,
if it was, here's what happened.
Here's what people saw in America.
They saw Trump killing it, killing it with the crowd.
Then you come to a panel of six people
who all just do nothing but dump on him and call him a liar.
And America goes, oh, didn't you just see that we like him?
And now...
He's not a stand-up comedian.
What?
He's killing it. He's not a stand-up comedian.
No, but popular, popularity doesn't matter.
The people loved him and what he was saying.
And then you cut to a panel of six know-it-alls in Washington who just do nothing but talk
about the negative.
And like, I'm all in on the negative.
No one's been harder on Trump than me.
But I get it and I'm bored with it.
And there's a different way to do this, I think,
which is to-
So, what is it?
It's not to defend Trump,
but to defend the people who still vote for him,
because what they see on the other side,
to them, is even more dangerous.
Because it's very closer to home.
My kid is coming home from school
and he thinks he's a racist.
He's five, what have you been telling him?
You know, my son thinks maybe he's not a boy,
and maybe that's true, that happens,
but you know, those kind of things are what they say,
that's why I'm voting for Trump.
I've got a concern.
A backlash to the pendulum swinging so hard.
A conservative guy once said to me,
what you don't get about Trump is we don't like him either.
Now that's not true for all people.
There are people who just love his dirty draws
and they are dirty.
But lots of people, it's like that.
We don't like him, but he's all that stands
between us and madness.
That's their view.
I would like that view presented. all that stands between us and madness. That's their view.
I would like that view presented, that view.
Don't say, not election deniers,
but just try to understand why even the election denying
thing is not a deal breaker for these people.
And I think they're wrong.
But I don't hate them.
And they're not stupid.
You're saying it's cultural issues
that should be interrogated.
Lots of crazy shit in society that's going on
that makes no sense.
And I talk about it in the opening of the book.
In the book, I know.
You talk about it on the show all the time.
Yes, the one about, I did the whole thing
about Mr. Beast, and Mr. Beast thinks
a disability is something that needs to be cured. Yes, disability is something that needs to be cured.
Yes, it is something that needs to be cured.
Things like that, the homeless, keeping them on the street,
fighting for their right to be on the street
instead of just making sure that they have a place to.
It's crazy, there's crazy shit every day in the news
and it's always that kind of stuff from the left.
And the stuff from the left.
And the stuff from the right, of course, is even more dangerous.
But we're just talking about talking to people, half the country, that I don't want to hate
and I don't hate.
I don't want to hate.
In fact, I want to talk to and I want to get in my audience.
And when I do stand up now, I do have a much more mixed audience.
I don't know if they're full on Trumpers, but some of them. And there should be. It's
half the country. They're not going to self-deport. Right?
So how do you think, you know, this Ronna McDaniel, I'm curious how you felt about NBC?
Perfect question. Exactly. That's the issue right there. Election denier. Not only election denier, a little bit of a meddler, right?
Also, I think she also said that January 6 was sort of...
A festival?
Well, fair dialogue. I can't remember. I should get the right...
Or when her son's fair, they got out of hand.
She kind of, you know, soft-pedaled that whole thing.
Right.
And apparently was very, very difficult to reporters
who were just trying to get information.
I don't know enough about her,
but I know that she did say the election was rigged.
And so NBC is in this position.
So how do you find someone who represents Trump voters
who feel his policy, to your point,
his policies may be better than the others
in some cultural senses, if that's how they feel.
How do you find someone who represents?
With him it's not even policy,
because you can't even talk about policy with Trump,
because he never really has one
He just says whatever is at the top of his head
Yeah, I think the biggest mistake about people make about Trump is anyone ever thinking he planned anything
It's all just whatever at the very moment
Comes to him that will make people nod their head in agreement if he pulls
the statistics and events out of his ass completely.
It's just, he doesn't care.
They fact check it, he doesn't care.
He'll just say whatever it is.
The murder rate is about 40% higher than it was.
It's not, it's 2%.
You know, it just doesn't matter.
And he doesn't care.
He said that thing to Billy Bush that time
when Billy Bush confronted him.
You know, Donald, you keep saying The Apprentice is number one.
It's not even close.
You just say it, Billy.
You just say it.
People believe it.
That's who we're up against.
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So did you say that you started on the Today Show in 1991?
Uh-huh.
Okay, that's odd that my mind is playing tricks on me, because we met then.
Uh-huh.
But I thought it would have been in the 80s, because I did, Brian Gumbel came to my apartment
in West Hollywood in 1985.
I guess they wanted to do some sort of rising star, you know, really, you sat on my little.
That was you?
That was me.
That is so funny.
I sat on my little shitty couch
in my little shitty apartment in West Hollywood.
And in 1985, I had this sitcom, Sarah,
that was just going on the air.
Yeah. You know, they're always looking for fresh meat. Yeah, and that was when Jane Paul that was just going on the air.
They're always looking for fresh meat.
And that was when Jane Pauli was the co-anchor.
Okay, okay.
But then I must have done the Today Show when you were there.
Yeah, I think you did.
I think you usually did.
I think you usually talked to Bryant.
I have to tell you the funniest story, though.
This is really true.
So, and this is all my fault.
I'm sure.
First of all, I am not a morning person.
I'm a comedian all my life.
I got in the bed at four in the morning.
So to do anything in the morning,
I'm just in the most horrible mood.
I just also, I was a lot younger and just,
I mean I was nervous and, but I was in the makeup chair
and you were there and probably said hello
and I probably was like, I just, not, anyway.
I'm looking at, I'm still in the makeup chair, you go
and I see you, you're standing like on the stage
but I could see it, they're doing it on the monitor
because you're probably shooting promos or something.
And I see you go to Brian Gumbel,
I met Bill Maher, he's a real charmer.
I said that?
Yes.
And you were totally right.
I mean, I was completely charmed for you,
but I saw it on the monitor.
Oh, God, that's funny.
Isn't that great?
That is funny, yeah.
But yeah, I probably did, because I was friends with Brian.
Yeah.
You know, he's a guy's guy.
He is a guy's guy.
He is a guy's guy.
You got that right.
He is.
You know, I really, I mean, he was prickly,
but I really, I mean, what a talent.
What a talent. I mean, my God, he trickly, but I really, I mean, what a talent. What a talent.
I mean, my God, he is such a seamless broadcaster.
Right.
Eloquent.
I mean, when that countdown would happen,
five, four, three, two, one,
he would just hit it perfect.
Smooth as silk.
Right?
Silk.
Complicated guy, though, I think.
And great looking, you know, when you, I mean.
Very natty professor.
No, he.
Yeah, he's a really talented guy, incredibly smart.
But yes, I would say.
I think he's mad at me.
Is he?
Well, I used to hear, I think, you know, I never know.
And I love him.
I always love.
Well, reach out to him.
Oh, I will.
You know, it's a good idea. But I mean, nothing. And I could be wrong. always love him. Well, reach out to him. Oh, I will. It's a good idea.
But nothing.
And I could be wrong.
He could be just busy.
But I feel like he used to, you know.
Check in.
Yes, more and write about the show.
And look, I'm not going to lie.
I have lost a percentage of fans,
I would say, in the last 10 years,
five, 10 years, something like that, and gained a, I think, bigger chunk.
I've gained, I've lost some from the far left
and gained a lot more in the middle.
And I'm cool with that.
I don't think Bryant would.
But I don't know.
I'm just saying.
Yeah.
Great, I hope it's not that.
You should reach, why don't you reach out to him?
I'm going to.
He got mad at me because I was doing something.
I've got a great memory, Katie.
On maternity.
Don't go by this.
Maternity leave and he was giving me endless shit
for taking like a month or two off.
I was having my first baby.
Yeah, I could see that.
And he was like, why don't you just drop it in the field
and come back to work right away or something.
I mean, it was really.
But that sounds like he was kidding.
No, he was kidding, but he was giving me a lot.
He was goofing on me, but giving me a lot of shit.
But it was emblematic of sort of an incredibly
sexist attitude.
Look, I mean, Matt Lauer was also in that stable as emblematic of sort of an incredibly sexist attitude.
But yeah.
I mean, Matt Lauer was also in that stable at that time,
was he not?
In that era?
Sorry?
That era?
Yeah, he was.
Of NBC Morning News?
Yeah, he was the news reader.
Well, obviously there was a tradition
of an old boys' network.
Yes.
To go to, I mean. Plus the Moreys and. Yes. I mean, not to.
Plus the mores and, you know, I mean, you know this, Bill,
because you and I are contemporaries.
It was a very different environment.
Very different.
Very different and lots of fraternization,
a polite way of saying, you know, inner office.
And women had to put up with more.
Yeah.
They just did. Yeah. I mean, you know, not or off. And women had to put up with more. Yeah. They just did.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, not to get all fuzzy
and lifetime channel about it,
but people like you and Barbara Walters,
just like women comedians of a certain age,
you have to really tip your hat to them
because it was harder.
Yeah, it was. It was harder. You know?
It was.
It was harder.
There are certain things that made things harder
for certain people.
Obviously, racially, that's our biggest sin in this country
and forever, that was certainly the case
and to a degree today, also sometimes
and also sometimes in reverse today.
So things have changed a lot, but absolutely.
I mean, if you're anywhere near my age,
I am sure that you had to put up with some Roger Ailes type.
Even if it wasn't overt, even if it wasn't like fuck me,
because you were already too successful
when you were young for them to pull that shit on you.
But they still, there's like a thousand cuts people.
Yes, yes.
I don't wanna use the word microaggressions.
But if you think of the true definition,
it was replete with microaggressions
if you wanna think about it.
And they do add up.
Yeah, yeah. I mean, we're all sensitive people. It's amazing. is replete with microaggressives if you want to think about it. And they do add up.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, we're all sensitive people.
It's amazing.
I mean, I've made fun of the term
and people can obviously take it too far.
But when I think about sometimes some little thing
that I will catch myself thinking about two hours later,
I'm like, shut up.
If there's one phrase that I say to myself in my head
more than any other, it's shut up.
Really? Shut the fuck up.
You mean like after the fact?
Like if you're just obsessing on some stupid thing
and then you catch yourself and I just am always going,
shut the fuck up, head.
Stop thinking, and I do.
You know, sometimes it takes a few times.
You have to yell at yourself, but.
So I, you know, I think, yes, you can be micro-aggressed.
Okay.
But, okay, so that was 1991.
And then my other memory of us working together,
also kind of funny.
That's so funny that you heard me say,
met Bill Maher, he's a real charmer.
Met Bill Maher, he's a real charmer.
And it was Sato Voce, also,
which was so funny about it,
is that you were saying it as if you were
pulling off this subterfuge.
Because you, you know.
I guess I should learn that.
I probably didn't realize I was miked at the time.
But again, you were completely right.
You were 100% correct in your assessment
of my charm pre-demeanor.
What did Brian say when I said it? Do you remember?
That I don't remember.
Yeah.
That I don't remember.
I'm amazed I remember that,
but I do remember that clearly.
Okay, so what year did you do the CBS Evening News?
2006 to 2011.
Okay, wow. So I was at the Today Show news? 2006 to 2011.
Okay, wow. So I was at the Today Show for 15 years.
Right.
And then Les Moonves came calling and...
Les Moonves.
Oh my God, yeah.
Let's tell the people who are not show business aficionados and not everyone is,
hey, I don't know everything about the smelting industry.
If the conversation turned to smelting,
I would hope someone would have the courtesy
to explain to me.
Let's Move This was sort of the biggest
swingin' dick in Hollywood.
He was the head of CBS.
But CBS then was bought by Paramount.
Paramount.
So did he have a bigger portfolio than just CBS?
Was he ever the head of?
I don't think so.
He wasn't the head of the studio.
No.
Oh, that was Brad Gray.
Yeah, and then wasn't it Philippe somebody?
I don't know, I can't keep up with all this stuff.
Okay, but anyway, he had a huge job.
Hugely powerful.
Incredibly successful, very powerful.
Had started off as an actor.
A little slick.
Yes, nice looking guy.
But nice looking guy, and very nice.
And well, you know, people make fun of me
when I say people are nice.
Like I told my husband, Barry Diller's really nice.
And he's like, I'm not sure that's the adjective
a lot of people would use to describe Barry Diller.
Les Moonves was so nice to me and a true fan.
Really?
Maybe that's not a great thing to say,
but people have different sides to them.
Yeah.
Okay, so we tried to fuck his.
Well, he could be very charming.
The weirdest thing about Les, well, so anyway,
he was on top of the world.
CBS was number one.
I mean, the guy could do no wrong,
and then of course comes Me Too,
and the most, and actresses sort of saying
he accosted them, assaulted them in his office,
but the worst one was the doctor.
Okay, explain this to me, Bill.
Oh, I was gonna have you explain it to me.
I can't, because he jerked off in the doctor's office after,
I think he tried to come on to this doctor.
And apparently she, somebody I met out here knows her
and she talks pretty freely about it.
And she rebuffed his advances.
And so he jerked off in the exam room.
Okay, what?
First of all, this is not unique.
We see this pattern.
Harvey Weinstein.
Harvey, in the potted plant.
This Bill Clinton, to a degree.
I think Monica Lewinsky, there was some.
I don't think, I think that was a different situation.
Well, what I mean is like finishing your sexual experience with a masturbation.
Or using masturbation as the plan B.
My first choice was to take you to dinner and have you fall in love with me and wanna
fuck me.
But that's when you have some...
Plan B was I rape you.
And Plan C, if that doesn't work, is I jerk off into an object in the room.
Yeah.
So they're...
So I'm just saying this is a pathology, not just of one.
Right.
I mean, men are fucking...
And didn't Louis C.K. do that as well?
Well, I...
I like...
I'm such a fan of...
Louis is certainly in the broad masturbation category,
but I feel like that's different because,
well, he's a comedian.
And he did it in front of a bunch of female comedians,
right?
Yes, he also asked.
I think that was-
And they said okay?
Well, Sarah Silverman wrote a story about it.
You can read it.
She said, I thought it was such a great,
honest thing, as she always is, and she said,
you know, some days I thought it was funny,
and other days I was like, Louie, no, what?
So, that's human nature.
Some days you wanna watch a guy jack off
in a dressing room before a show,
and some days you don't.
I know, I don't know.
Look, the whole thing is so weird to me.
Are you friendly with Louis?
Very much so.
Yeah.
He sort of has made a comeback, right?
Not as much as he should be able to because I do think there should be a, first of all,
there's no consistency on Me Too punishments.
People have done way worse things,
way worse than Louis C. Kaga and got nothing.
So there's that.
But there's also, you know,
how long does the punishment last?
Forever.
Now, can he play anywhere in the world?
Yes, stand up.
Or sell his movies directly?
Yes, but like, he couldn't even do this because it'll start the,
how dare you machine as if he's Kanye
with the Jews or something.
It's ridiculous.
The people making the rules about it are fucking teenagers.
Who's pure enough rules.
So they make no sense.
So, come back, yes,
but he should be fully able to,
a studio should, if he had movies,
you know, he was moving toward more of that in his career,
Woody Allen-esque.
You know, directing in, you know,
maybe minor roles, maybe not always the lead in his movies.
And the last one I saw was quite good, I thought,
but you know, you had had to order it directly.
I mean, that's one way to do it, but it's like, why?
And by the way, why does Woody Allen not get to,
no, maybe he's too old to work anyway, but.
He's 88, he just had a movie come out,
I was just reading about this this afternoon.
That's a French movie.
And yeah, it was sort of a whole piece on,
can you love the art if you don't
respect the artist type thing?
You know, Picasso, Woody Allen.
I respect the artist and the man.
I don't think he committed that crime,
that there was two police investigations
that exonerated him.
I mean, like, what do you have to do in this country?
You know, all these actors who won't work with him anymore,
some of them made movies with him,
and I regret doing that.
What a bunch of pussies, okay?
First of all, it's a very improbable crime
that they're accusing him of.
Plainly, the other party had motivation and
was vindictive. If you saw the documentary about it, it was all from her point of view.
So first of all, I just flat out believe him. I believe a 57-year-old man didn't suddenly
become a child molester in the middle of a
divorce proceeding in a custody battle in a house full of adults in broad daylight.
There were some pretty damning, listen, I don't know.
We don't know, I don't either.
I don't know.
I definitely don't know.
But there was some pretty sketchy and damning things in that documentary
that were separate from just Mia Farrow
and Ronan Farrow and Dylan making the case.
And that was just, that certainly raised some,
I think, legitimate questions.
He had a relationship with a high school student.
Do you remember, I mean, did you watch the documentary?
Yes, yes, I don't remember that.
The high school student and there was a woman.
High school student.
Yeah.
When he was old?
Yeah.
Not soon ye.
No, no, way before that.
And, you know, wanting his girlfriend to dress up Not Sunni. No, no, way before that.
And wanting his girlfriend to dress up in little anklets and Mary Janes and baby doll dresses.
You think he's the only guy who likes that?
Really?
You think he's the first guy who wanted his girlfriend
to dress in anklets and baby doll?
I believe through an issue of Penthouse Magazine,
that's what we grew up on, we find it sexy. and Glitz and Baby Doll. Believe through an issue of Penthouse Magazine.
That's what we grew up on.
We find it sexy.
Peacocks have plumage.
We do things to arouse the opposite sex.
That doesn't make you a pervert.
Yeah, I mean, listen, I'm not, I don't know.
No, I don't either. That's a thing.
We definitely don't know. I just don't know.
My point is that if you don't know
and you have been exonerated by the law,
then you're just, then the powers that be
in the virtue world are just saying, we don't care.
But it just feels right that you're wrong.
So you're-
Elkin Abramowitz is a friend of mine.
And he was his lawyer.
And he has told
me this is not true.
But then you, you know, it's just very hard to figure it out.
Look, we both keep saying, I don't know.
I think your I don't know is like a 50-50, and mine is like a 90-10.
I find it very improbable.
Do I know?
No. Is it know? No.
Is it possible?
Anything's possible.
And what do you make of?
The fact that his brother-in-law,
this is never brought up in the thing,
but Mia Farrow's brother was a convicted child molester.
Did you know that?
Yes.
It's interesting how that one never gets out.
That's what I mean about I don't trust.
I know the person who directed that film, that documentary.
Well it should have been called Mia's story.
I didn't mind them doing it, but don't call it,
what was it called?
Allen versus Farrell.
Which implies a court hearing, and in a court hearing, the defense gets to rise
and make their case.
That didn't happen here.
So that is not a Allen versus Farrow.
That's Mia's story, which is fine.
Do that, be honest about it, call it that.
All right, back to the 80s. Man, do you ever think we'd still be...
How old are you?
68.
Ah, finally someone older than I am.
I always say that.
I'm 67.
I know.
Crazy, right?
Crazy.
But I remember my mother's telling me,
she must have been in her 70s at the time,
and she said, yeah, I loved my 50s and 60s the best,
and I thought, what?
And now I kind of get it.
Yeah.
Because you're just not dumb, like you were.
See, women mature so much faster,
so you don't really have that issue as much.
But men takes forever.
Really, really takes a much longer period of time,
I think, generally.
I think it takes a long time for women
to feel truly confident, though.
Confident, yes.
You know, and I'm such a pleaser
that it took me a long time, and my husband will tell you I'm such a pleaser that it took me a long time.
And my husband will tell you I'm still a pleaser,
and I'm sure I have that characteristic still inside me.
But I don't care as much what people think of me.
And I also think if you don't, if you please everyone,
you are just a fake or so banal
and have no sort of moral compass, you know what I mean?
So I have, as I've aged, stopped caring so much
what people think of me.
I feel the same way, but probably in both our cases,
but much more so in yours,
it's because you already achieved your iconic.
So, like, you can't really do better at 67 than that.
That to me is like the ultimate.
So, like, what could anyone say?
It's like, hey, I already got to the finish line.
I'm already this entity that, you know, was.
I don't really think of it that way.
I don't see myself that way.
Yeah, we don't really burn off
and don't see ourselves that way.
But that is how, you know, I'm telling you,
that's, yeah, I think you know that.
Well, I think I.
You've been around a long time.
You always stayed relevant.
You always stayed on, you know.
I think, I think.
I mean, this will get a lot of people watching.
Really?
Of course, because podcasts are completely guest driven.
Like, you get a certain number who will watch me,
no matter who it is, which I love those people the most.
But then it's just very much, it's not like TV,
where it's the same audience every week.
It's like, it's very driven by who the guest is.
So this will do great because, you know,
and even young people, I think they know who you are.
I think it's funny because I do think I benefited
from the era in which I grew up and worked.
Because a lot of young kids watch me in the morning getting ready for school, right?
While their moms were, or dads were
making breakfast or whatever.
Is that right?
Yeah, because it was a very, yeah.
And it was almost I was weirdly a part of their family
for some families who watched the Today Show.
That kind of show, yes.
You know what I mean?
You're like in their homes, in their intimate moments
at the first part of the day.
And they also, you know, I mean, I feel like it's true
with your show too, but people would say,
I feel like I know you.
And I'd be like, well, you actually kind of do.
You see me?
I say the same thing.
Yeah, you see me in serious situations, funny, sad.
You kind of... And also, we're not really putting on an act of serious situations, funny, sad. You kind of.
And also, we're not really putting on an act of any kind.
No, no.
That's the difference between a comedian and an actor.
Uh-huh.
Sometimes people misrecognize you,
and they're like, oh, you're an actor.
And I'm like, close, but no.
Yeah.
I'm kind of the opposite of an actor.
I was an actor.
I mean, I did acting in the 80s.
That's why these brilliant movie posters are here.
Wait, you had a funny, you had a funny one
where the actor looked like you last week.
Oh yes, that was Body Double.
Yeah, Body Double, Brian De Palma, right?
Yes, Craig Wasson was the actor who,
when I first started, yes, they thought I was him.
Oh, that's funny.
But I think people know you less because you're a comedian
and more when you have conversations with people.
Yeah, you can't help that.
Because I think there are a lot of comedians who,
if that's all they do, I don't feel like I really know them.
You know, if they just did stand up and stand up alone.
But it's because we see you in all these different
situations interacting with people,
and that's what I think develops this
parasocial relationship with viewers, you know?
So, my point is, what I said earlier, Bill,
about like, you know, we didn't have that paradox
of choice when I was working. There was a limited number of outlets.
And I could become well known, where today,
I think there are a lot of anchors on a variety of,
from a variety of places that could walk through an airport
and nobody would know who they are.
You know, just because they don't have that position
in the culture. And it's Just because they don't have that position in the culture.
And it's not because they're not good or not likable, it's just that there's so many of them.
And that's the thing why somebody gets to be iconic,
because trust.
The people that wind up in those jobs
and last in those jobs like you had,
the people are really trusting you.
They're like, yeah, you are in my bedroom
in the kitchen and the kids are around
and I don't want anything stupid to fall out of your mouth.
It's such a tightrope you have to walk between
like not offending either side.
Oh, here's the funny story I was gonna tell you.
So, okay, this must have been 2006,
because when you first went on with CBS Evening News,
before the show was even on, there was an idea,
I don't know if it came from you,
but we got the call, it was very exciting.
You remember this?
Yeah.
You wanted to do a segment on,
like you were having a guest segment,
and basically do what I do at the end of my show
and do a little piece.
So I was very flattered,
and then we went through the process
with the people who were producing it,
and we never did it because it's so funny.
You said to me, like, whatever you think,
we just wanna hear points of view.
Of course, everything I said was too outrageous for them.
And when I turned it on, it was,
oh, what's the name of the guy who did,
when we ate all the McDonald's Oh, oh, oh I know you I know
Morgan Morgan no, not Morgan Freeman Morgan
Would have been so good. Yeah
You're right something in me or something like that. Yeah, right. He ate
McDonald's for a month. Yeah
Like a year maybe Morgan Morgan Sperling. Sperling. Sperling. Yeah.
Morgan Sperling. Morgan Sperling. Yes. Yes. And. Okay. So anyway. And it was a very good
documentary. It was very funny. Yeah. No, it was a good doc. And I think he did some
of the good things. But this thing was just, it was the most, like no one could disagree
with it and therefore it was just like, like no one could disagree with it and therefore,
it was just like, why can't we all be nice?
Kind of thing.
And it was like the most innocuous,
and I was like, oh, they took her idea
and they shit all over it
until it was just absolutely nothing.
And yeah, I tried, I really wanted to do it.
It was too, no, it was thank me.
I, it was 2006, the show had only been on three years.
It was not like some sort of cultural institution.
I was nervous about my future,
and oh, CBS Evening News wants to,
yes, that's a great legitimizer.
So I really wanted to do it.
But, you know, atheism, no.
Pot smoking, no.
Whatever I suggested was like, no,
that's too controversial.
But she said, that's what you wanna do.
You know, it was so interesting.
So I got hired at CBS by the aforementioned Les Moonves.
Oh yeah, Les Moonves.
And he wanted me to mix it up.
He thought this sort of stentorian, like,
good evening,
voice of God thing was dated and just not,
it was dying, right?
And so I came in there and I was like,
what can we do that's interesting
and maybe we'll get some attention?
And I was thinking of like the editorial page in a newspaper.
Wouldn't it be interesting if we did actual
kind of mini op-eds by people?
That's what it was.
Yeah, and so it was called Free Speech.
And.
It wasn't.
And it wasn't.
And part of it is we didn't have the bandwidth.
I think it was overly ambitious.
I wanted to do it like once a week.
You know how the public affairs person for local news
used to back in the day kind of give a little editorial
and they would say editorial on the screen?
I don't know if you remember that,
but they did that in local news in DC.
And somebody, one of the executives said,
oh, let's do it every night. And I knew
that would be a disaster, but I was like, and we didn't have the management or the bandwidth
to really oversee it. And, and then somebody whose son had been killed, I believe in Columbine,
I reached out and said, there might have been a shooting, and I said, do you want to use this opportunity to do, you know,
talk about that?
He ended up sending us something that was all about,
all anti-abortion.
Like, it was so off topic.
And I was like, what do I do? We call this free speech.
And this is going to really like make people crazy.
And I was like, it was 4.30, you know,
the show started at 6.30.
I was like, I think we gotta run it.
And I got so much shit from so many people.
Right.
But I wrote about this in my book.
I said free speech was no more or something.
Yeah.
It's a great moment in learning about, you know,
that tension that we have.
Everybody thinks that they want the truth and they don't.
That's my whole life.
Yeah.
They say it and like, look, I'm the luckiest person ever.
I love my job more than anybody loves their job.
And they've let me do it for a very long time.
But I mean, it is a constant tightrope
to like say what you really believe
and also not lose your job.
Or just alienate so many people.
Like I said, I have lost people.
I mean, sometimes I can tell when I meet them.
Really? Yes, something has changed. And I can tell when I meet them. Really?
Yes, something has changed.
And you can tell because sometimes you would get
the occasional email from somebody
that they like something on your show
and it just stops because it's like,
no, you're not far enough left for me anymore.
You're not completely on the blue team.
And I'm not, and I never was.
I don't want a team.
What do you think you lose,
where do you think you've lost, and what area?
The SuperWoke.
No, but I mean, is there a specific area of-
All of it.
Did you see that dust up on the view with Coleman Hughes?
No. No? I didn't. Do you know who View with Coleman Hughes? No.
No?
I didn't.
Do you know who that is?
Yeah.
He's the actor.
No, no, no.
Coleman Hughes, been on my show many times.
She's 30, African American, I love him,
lots of smart people are on our page.
I think he's brilliant, he's got a new book. Uh-huh.
And it's not this far left view
that racism is as bad as it ever was.
And he's saying what a lot of people think,
me, in my last editorial about identity politics,
racism still exists, of course,
but it's much more about other things.
Class, the diploma divide,
and we're just not where we used to be,
and we shouldn't take it.
And somebody on The View, I didn't see it,
I only heard about it, accused him of being like an Uncle Tom,
which I think is terrible.
Black people are not monolithic, and nobody should be shamed like, oh, and I felt especially
for it because I get that from people too.
Oh, you're a conservative now.
I am not a conservative.
I never was and never will be a conservative.
I haven't moved that much.
I'm telling you, liberalism, I think I still believe in that mostly.
They've moved it to a different place,
including with race and gender.
You know, I mean, I remember Title IX
and how important that was to women.
Like they got their equal say in sports and colleges.
They could, you know, wasn't that title?
Yeah.
Title, was it what it was called?
Yeah, whatever that civil rights bill.
And it changed everything.
Colleges had to have an equal amount devoted
to the women's team as the men's team.
And then they kind of took it all away
by putting penises in the swimming pool.
You know, that kind of stuff.
You know, that's the kind of stuff the person on CNN
would talk about
when they're trying to explain to people, but how can you like Trump?
We don't like Trump.
But this stuff scares us more.
I mean, I saw your thing about identity politics.
And I had an interesting reaction to it because I think I agree to a certain extent that identity
politics, like it shouldn't be the default.
Everything is race, everything is gender, everything is X, Y, or Z.
On the other hand, I felt like you were being so binary about it that, you
know, how can you not overemphasize identity politics, but yet still acknowledge systemic
racism or sexism or things that exist in the culture that need to be addressed,
but it's not all about that.
In other words, are there degrees of this
that can be acknowledged and appreciated
without it automatically going to identity politics?
Does that making sense to you?
Yeah, but I didn't say it couldn't.
No, but I felt like the way you positioned it,
it kind of ignored some of those things,
at least the way I interpreted what you were saying.
Well, I mean, I don't think we have to all the time
if we're having adult conversations,
first come out and go, you know what?
I think racism is bad.
I just trust my audience after 30 years
that they get that about me.
We're already there.
To me, it's like, it's boring.
We're there.
We don't have to constantly assure of things that are,
and again, there was nothing in it that I think, I mean, most of it was about how
it's antiquated identity politics
because we're just so mixed together now.
You know, the idea came from the Beyonce doing the
andrealms, like Jelly Roll, he's this guy who's tattooed
and he's a rapper, but he's a country guy
and we're all mixed together, a fifth of all the marriages now are interracial marriage.
And it's just like, the point of it was more,
and I'll call it that's good for comedy,
those kind of things, the point of it was more like,
even if you wanna do it, it doesn't make sense.
And the bigger point was,
this is a losing issue for the Democrats.
It's, they're losing minority voters.
Right.
Losing them. I know that.
And you know, if you're in a hole, stop digging.
And the, was it the Guardian or the Economist,
somebody who I quoted when they were studying this,
and they said, yeah, I forget the wording,
but the gist of it was,
yeah, when race becomes less important in people's lives,
they vote on other things.
Other things are more important.
We should celebrate that.
That's a lot of progress.
And you can always look like the gooder person
by saying, well, but things are still bad.
Yeah, things always will be somewhat bad, I think.
And I'm just not gonna stop all the time to pause and yes,
but that is what I believe.
I firmly believe that racism exists and still exists.
I mean, obviously lots of things, mostly if you look at it,
it's in the economic sphere.
Lots of things, mostly if you look at it, it's in the economic sphere.
Like the net worth is crazy off.
But I don't know how you remedy that.
I mean, some people-
You're talking about income inequality?
No, no, not what blacks and whites make today.
That's, I mean, it's against the law.
I've been for a long time to pay someone less because.
Right, no, no, no.
But I mean, I'm sure there is a difference
because of course the legacy of our history,
there's gonna be huge disparities in everything.
No, I'm talking about like net worth,
like what you're worth.
Like, you know, the white number is,
I don't know what it is,
but it's $100,000 or something,
and the black is like crazy low.
Like family wealth and net worth.
Of course, slavery and everything else,
Jim Crow and keeping people down,
and just our despicable, horrible history.
That to me is like where the biggest need
for equaling things up.
But I don't know how you do it quickly.
I think it's just something that, unless you believe in reparations, and some people do.
But I'm talking about overall income inequality and even taking race out of it.
The huge chasm between the uber, uber, uber wealthy and people who don't have $400 in an emergency.
It is, it has never been such a stark divide.
And I feel like, to your point, Bill,
that socioeconomic disparities are a lot,
and class resentment is a lot,
and anti-intellectualism and elitism
is what is driving many of these anti-establishment,
which are Trump voters or anti-establishment voters.
So I think that is a huge problem that we have to address.
I mean, globalization and the transition
from an industrial to a technological society.
I mean, and I don't know if you've ever been jealous
of what someone else has or resentful.
It is such a corroding and bitter, almost vile feeling.
eroding and
Bitter almost bile
Feeling and I think that
when people who are really struggling see people who have
Everything and are on top of that looking down on them
It is just a recipe for such anger and resentment and grievance. You would think so.
You would think that the eat the rich people would occasionally actually eat the rich.
You know, they would actually go into somebody, some rich fuck's house,
and drag them out and eat them.
You would think that.
And it just doesn't seem to happen.
And the ostentatiousness that rich people
have no problem indulging themselves in.
I mean, just they really, look on Instagram now.
And it's not necessarily older people.
Just lots of young ballers and crypto assholes
and people like that.
And they just put it out there
because the whole culture loves it.
Because the people who are poor and struggling,
they look at it and they don't go, let's kill them.
They go, let's be them.
I wanna be that.
Yeah.
Yes and no.
I mean, don't you think that there's some who,
people who just feel that is not gonna happen for me.
And.
Yes, of course.
You know, and I'm angry about it.
Yes, that's true.
And I'm angry about my life.
Yes, of course.
And I'm gonna take it out on sort of the coastal elites
and the intelligentsia.
And that's where I think a lot of this support
is deriving from, I don't know.
And again, this is where it would be great
to have somebody on the panel there to say,
we'll take something like the sanctuary cities hypocrisy.
These elite cities said we're the good people,
we're always the good people.
Until they send the immigrants actually to their city,
and then the things that came out of the mouths
of the leaders of New York and Chicago,
and even San Francisco, were pretty astounding.
I mean, you would think it was Trump talking. You know, I, I, I.
Let alone the people.
You're so right, and one of the things I was thinking
when CNN was trying to kind of pivot a little more
to the middle, I thought someone should go down
to the border and talk about the impact
on some of these border towns on the influx of immigrants.
And really kind of explore that.
And you're right, it wasn't until,
and I have a friend in Florida and I said to her,
what did you think of Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott
putting folks on an airplane
and sending them to Nantucket and New York?
Was that like a gross political stunt?
What did you think of that?
She said, I loved it.
I said, why?
She said, because nobody cared.
Nobody paid attention.
It's just fair.
If you're gonna stand her up and say,
we should just take care of all these people
and there's no judgment about anything of it.
Okay, then do it in your city too.
Just don't say it.
It's good for you down there on the border.
So, you know, they just called their bluff
very much the same way the Democrats called
the bluff of the Republicans on the immigration bill.
But you know what?
I'm gonna lose you like in 10 minutes.
And now we're talking, I don't wanna talk about this shit.
I don't know, as you can see, nothing is planned here.
This is not, people say an interview,
this is not an interview.
Who have you really enjoyed having on your podcast?
Every single person pretty much.
Well, look, you got a couple of drinks in me. I can talk to anybody. But you're not drinking, you're drinking club soda. No, I'm drinking very single person, pretty much. Well, look, you got a couple drinks in me.
I can talk to anybody.
But you're not drinking, you're drinking club soda.
No, I'm drinking tequila.
Oh, you are?
Oh, good.
You said you take club soda and you put
that Jing stuff in it.
You didn't mention the tequila.
Jing.
I drink it and I pour it on dog shit.
Yeah, no.
So, what do you drink?
Let's get to the personal side.
Let me do the, what kind of tree are you?
What was that?
If you were a tree, what would you be?
I bet you she said that was Barbara Walters.
And it was like forever.
I think it was Catherine Hepburn.
It became like the go-to.
I know, but I think.
But she probably said it once.
There's a new book about her,
and I think it got misquoted
and Susan Page wrote,
it's coming out around the same time as your book.
Huh?
People just latch on to something to be assholes.
I mean, you know, I was gonna say that
when going back to your producer,
I think problems with that news segment.
Like, you know what?
The people around us, they hold us back.
They do, they just, no, there's some good ones,
but come on, sometimes they just do.
But I have to say.
I think my estimation of that is just that,
like, I mean, you were a star, you were the star of the thing,
but I think it's a woman.
I think they had X percent less sort of,
you know.
I do.
I think I've seen that syndrome.
You mean the people at CBS?
Yeah, we need a strong male producer,
you know, and I just think you just...
I was too different for them.
And you wouldn't, I mean, this segment would have been great
if they let me, I mean, imagine how much better
it would have done if like the first week
was me talking about atheism.
Yeah.
In a respectful way.
Yeah.
It would have been interesting.
They were, it would have been interesting.
It would have been interesting.
I don't know if they weren't ready for it.
I don't know if the CBS viewers, which are very traditional, older, would have.
I mean, that's how, I mean, Les Moonves, his genius, well, I used to call him the vulture
of Black Rock.
You know why? I'll tell you why.
Black Rock was the building that...
Yes, I know that.
I know that, but I don't know the vulture.
Right, I'm telling them.
Okay, because he had all these shows like CSI,
and he was a genius at finding the person
who had a movie career that was good,
but they kind of just were on the down.
And then the vulture of Black Rock would swoop in.
Gary's an ace.
You are now on CSI.
Yeah, it was like.
David Caruso or whatever, yeah.
Yeah, it was good for everybody.
And he would just always do that.
But wow, to fuck your doctor or try to,
at nine in the morning or something,
that's what blew my mind about it,
was the time of day.
Like, I don't know, I mean, I thought I.
If it had been four, okay.
I don't know.
I always thought I was horny, but boy,
some guys are on a different level.
What's going on with your love life, Bill?
I wasn't gonna ask you that.
I'm the interviewer here.
I'm married.
I have a great husband.
I'm very happy.
Can't have friends.
Well, I mean, tell me about your love life.
I do not know that. That was no, no, no, no.
I tried, people, I tried.
My love life does not exist
because all my energy goes to healing America.
I wish it weren't so.
I'm lonely, but it's worth it.
You're willing to sacrifice. I'm lonely, but it's worth it.
But that is- You're willing to sacrifice.
That is, I'm willing to sacrifice.
All right, I'm gonna read my plugs.
I will be at the Arizona Financial Theater.
Oh, good off.
I wanna come see your act.
Oh, that would be awesome.
I would love to come see,
do you perform in New York?
Yes, I'll be there in November.
Oh, great, I'm coming. You live in New York? Yes, I'll be there in November. Oh great, I'm coming.
You live in New York?
Yeah.
And you like it?
I do.
I lived there twice.
I like New York.
You don't like it?
It's my roots, you know, I grew up outside New York,
but it's rough on me.
I don't like the weather, I don't like living in a building,
and I never got along with the girls.
Arizona Financial Theater, Phoenix, Arizona.
It was always like playoff basketball in New York,
like no easy layups, you know what I mean?
May 18th, Borgata Hotel, Casino and Spa,
Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Get that shit out of here!
Hard fouls, like Jordan rules.
May 19th, at the Palace Theatre in Albany, New York.
All right, and your thing, come on. Oh, we have to talk about my company.
The show. Okay.
The Tim McFaith Show. Okay, okay, can I,
I'll do, okay, so I'll do a couple of things.
I have, I executive produced a documentary
that is going to air on HBO on April 16th with some incredible
filmmakers, Mark Levin and Daphne Pinkerson.
And it is a lead up to the 30th anniversary of the bombing of Oklahoma City.
And what it does, it sort of traces domestic terrorism from the early 80s in Arkansas
to Randy Weaver, to Waco,
and how Timothy McVeigh and the role April 19th
played in all this,
and how it led to the Oklahoma City bombing.
I think it's a really important documentary.
Now say it for Gen Z.
Kids, back in the 90s,
Back in 1995, yes, there was the biggest...
Waco was 94.
Yeah, well, Oklahoma City was 95.
Weren't they both April 19th?
April, yes, they were both April 19th.
Okay, that's not a coincidence.
No.
They take that date very seriously.
Very seriously.
That's the beginning of...
Hatred's Day.
Because that's the American Revolution.
That's when Lexington and Concord, kids, that's the start of the American Revolution. That's when Lexington and Concord kids, that's the American Revolution,
and that's how America became a country
when we broke off from Spain.
They don't know, they really don't know.
Anyway, so that,
so that date is one, that's a day I stay home.
Also, the next day is Hitler's birthday. Is that true?
Yeah, just take that couple of days off.
Get short COVID.
Because, yes, Waco and then Oklahoma City the next year.
Yeah, that's a big day for the people with the snake on the flag.
The snake flag things that they have.
Yes. So it's a really that... So it's a really...
I think it's a really great documentary that I helped with.
Bill Clinton is interviewed.
The prosecutor for the Timothy McVeigh case,
who I know, Beth Wilkinson, and...
And it really does sort of chart this movement
and how people can become radicalized.
Timothy McVeigh fought in Iraq.
He had severe mental problems.
He drove around the country listening
to right-wing radio on a loop, nonstop.
And he, a virgin.
Yes.
When you get laid, they don't wanna blow shit up.
I don't wanna like take away the ending.
Spoiler alert to the whole documentary, but it is true.
Nobody ever, Islamic terrorists, same thing.
Like that society with the women covered and so forth.
I mean, nobody ever said, oh, all he did was have sex, sex, sex,
and then he blew this shit up.
You heard it here.
This is the solution to domestic terrorism.
Everyone needs to get laid.
Any kind of terrorism.
Anyway.
But Virgin, Tim McVeigh Virgin.
Yes, but it's really good.
I'm very proud of it.
But can I basically promote a couple other things?
Yes.
So I started a media company, Bill,
and we have about 40 great employees,
and we have a six day a week newsletter called Wake Up Call.
I get it every day.
Oh, you do?
I told you that with the alarm clock on it.
Oh yeah, our motto,
we got rid of the alarm clock a couple years ago,
so you better still.
Really?
And our motto is open it even if you don't read it.
And then I have my podcast, and I'm still working on the script for the script writer still. And our motto is open it even if you don't read it.
And then I have my podcast,
and we work with a lot of purpose-driven brands
to do storytelling about issues they may care about.
I do a lot of cancer advocacy stuff on my platform,
but it's been really fun,
and I'm starting a production company
where I'm working on more documentaries
and some scripted projects.
That's why I thought it would be really fun
to do behind the scenes of real time.
Well, you can do behind the scenes.
You just can't come in my writer's meeting.
Well, that's the fun.
Well, first of all, it's a little like,
what do they call that syndrome
where like Margaret Mead is in the jungle
studying the natives,
and just by the fact that she's there,
you can't really study the natives
because they know you're there.
So they stop doing whatever.
How about if we do hidden cameras like this joint?
Well, that, you know, hidden cameras
always goes over so well in St. Joseph.
People love it when they're filmed without knowing it.
And then aired.
No, no, I mean, we've had this a couple,
this crew and I have been together a long time.
Like I would say.
Okay, so we've had this a few times, long ago.
We tried it a few times.
People are tight and no one.
It just doesn't work.
It just doesn't work.
You're just not getting what we really are.
That's probably a good thing.
But anything else I can do for you?
Ever.
No, I'm excited.
I think I'm gonna be on your show on June 14th.
Oh, we finally got a date?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm really excited.
And yeah, thank you for doing what you do.
Like, I don't always agree with you,
but I always appreciate your perspective. Thank you, and that's what we have to have is just. Yeah, what you do. I don't always agree with you, but I always appreciate your perspective.
Thank you, and that's what we have to have is just-
Yeah, I really do.
I'm like, okay, well, mm-hmm.
The ability to not agree and still like each other.
I mean, with us, it's not that hard,
because the agreements are not that big.
But with people with even bigger agreements,
I'm telling you, that is the theme of,
somewhat I think of the book,
certainly the last chapter is all about
let's not have a civil war, as some people want.
And also my standup, I mean I'm gonna do a special
in the end of the year, and you know,
the theme of that is just,
I'm tired of hating half the country.
I agree.
I don't want to hate half the people.
And when I meet them in person, I don't.
No, I agree.
When we travel the country like comics do and you do,
just don't ask about politics.
We need to just stop talking about it so much.
Yeah.
Because you're not gonna,
nobody convinces anybody of anything.
That's true.
So why?
Like who, I don't think,
I mean, I've often asked people this this I don't know who I talked to recently about the number of people who are
persuadable, I feel like people have picked their sides and
I
Don't know how many states do you think the election is in?
or five right I
Don't I forgot what's the number, how many do we have now?
50?
Yeah.
50, but it's in five, you're saying?
Yeah.
Right, Wisconsin.
If you don't live in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania,
Georgia, Arizona, is that?
Yeah.
I mean, it's like we did a lottery and we went like,
okay, you five states, you figure it out.
Yeah, I don't know about the electoral college
if it's just too outdated.
And I just, you know, I think the popular vote.
It's totally, of course.
You know, but I don't think it's gonna ever change.
Anyway, let's not have a debate.
Don't you ever change.
Okay, bye Bill.
All right. This was so fun.
It was so fun. Thank you for making time.
Of course, of course. It was my pleasure.