Pod Save America - "Putting the Mess in Messaging."
Episode Date: March 15, 2022President Biden reboots his midterm agenda and message in order to fend off a red wave in November, Democratic strategist Addisu Demissie joins to talk about a DNC proposal to potentially de-throne Io...wa and change the presidential nominating process, and Jon, Jon, and Tommy try to break up some of the tough news with a few fun mailbag questions about Pete Davidson, Elon Musk, and Tom Brady.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America.
I'm Jon Favreau.
I'm Jon Lovett.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
We're all doing different elections.
Yeah, interesting.
On today's show, President Biden reboots his midterm agenda and message in order to fend off a red wave in November.
Communism?
Let's be careful when we talk about red waves.
Okay, okay.
Democratic strategist Adisu Demisi joins to talk about a DNC proposal to potentially dethrone Iowa and change the presidential nominating process.
And we try to break up some of the tough news with a few fun mailbag questions about Pete Davidson, Elon Musk, and Tom Brady.
In that order.
How about that?
How about that for a lineup?
But first, we are very excited to announce Stuck with Damon Young, a Spotify original podcast from Gimlet and Crooked Media.
Stuck with Damon Young, a Spotify original podcast from Gimlet and Crooked Media.
This is a show where award-winning author Damon Young explores the uncomfortable, hideous, and hilarious absurdity of being black in America.
He's joined by some of the brightest minds and bold voices of the black community, including Nicole Hannah-Jones, Sam Irby, Jason Reynolds, and more.
The trailer is live right now, and the first episode drops on March 22nd.
Listen to Stuck with Damon young for free only on spotify so exciting it's been in the works for so long damien is so smart and so funny i read
his book several years ago and it's brutally honest and hilarious and great and the show is
going to be incredible so excited for the show great show great great show also check out the
latest episode of america dissected this week dr abdul. Abdul El-Sayed talks to Dr. Adil Rishi, lead author of a position paper from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Get ready, love it. About daylight savings time.
Yeah, yeah.
As well as the long-term health consequences that can come with it.
I interviewed this doctor about this very topic
and while it is true
that he came on
Love It or Leave It
after what I believe
was like a 20 hour shift
in the hospital
I still gave it to him
pretty hard
and honestly
I don't know
I don't know
I think he's right
what are you fucking
Joe Rogan
yeah I am
I am
I am
I'm sorry
I'm Joe Rogan
who took keeps
you gave it to him
pretty hard
it was an interview
about sleeping
yeah it was
and he was exhausted
and an hour on your clock you know yeah here's the thing here's the thing I'll tell you here's the thing to him pretty hard it was an interview about sleeping yeah it was and he was exhausted and
an hour on your clock you know yeah here's the thing here's the thing i'll tell you here's the
thing there is a very good argument against the time switch his case for why it should be standard
time versus daylight saving time is spurious at best because it depends on what state you're in
all i'm saying is it's more nuanced than than than than these uh than big pharma would have
you believe he gives it uh gives it to his guests hard
and gives it to us straight, huh?
That's what we're getting here.
Dear Diary.
Oh, by the way.
I like the extra hour of daylight right now.
I'm just going to turn it off.
Pete Davidson.
Turn it off.
Pete Davidson.
We're not at Pete Davidson yet.
Pete Davidson, Elon Musk.
We have a whole show to get to.
Tom Brady.
Wait, no.
I'm playing a new game.
It's called Fuck, Kill, Kill.
Oh, my God. Should we get to the news what do you guys think uh let's get to the news president biden you know he's in the white house president biden's fucking putin over here
we're about to get incursion into the show we have a tone shift here that we need to
master it president biden's biggest challenge right now is dealing with Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine,
but he's also trying to fend off
a bunch of wannabe autocrats here at home.
He just spoke about the war and the midterms
at the House Democratic retreat in Philadelphia,
which led to a pair of big picture stories
in the Washington Post and the New York Times
about a new message and a new confidence among Democrats.
How about that, guys?
Won't last.
Yeah, okay.
Well, the Post story says, quote, Biden's record on Ukraine has offered what Democrats hope is a
chance to resurrect the pitch he made to voters as a candidate, that he represents an antidote
to the chaos of the Trump administration and is capable of restoring the United States leadership
on the world stage. And the Times says, quote, Biden's advisors acknowledge that the crisis in
Ukraine presents a chance for a reset, perhaps the president's best opportunity to restore his standing before November.
On the other hand, the economic fallout from sanctions against Russia and now lockdowns in
China because of Omicron finally hitting that country could lead to supply chain issues and
double digit inflation that lasts at least through the rest of the year. Here's Joe Biden laying out
the stakes in his speech to Democrats last week.
This off-year election, in my view, may be the most important off-year election in modern history.
Because we know what happens.
We know the fundamental change that shifts if we lose the House and Senate.
The only thing I'll have then is a veto pen.
What do you guys think?
Is Biden's handling of Ukraine a chance for a midterm reset or will this crisis just make everything more difficult? Love it.
I don't know what a midterm reset is.
It's something the Democrats spin reporters on just to say things are better now.
Well, you know, it's interesting. It's like, look, now that now that there are tanks rolling through Eastern Europe, it really makes a case for the Biden leader. I actually think what I think is true is Biden's handling of the crisis in Ukraine, the rallying of allies, the leadership and the gravitas,
the sense that he and his team have his arms around this highlights what I think has been a little bit lost in the last year or so,
which is this is a president that came to office in a period of incredible crisis and peril,
years of chaos and incompetence under Trump, a pandemic, a country that was reeling. And I think
it puts him back in that place as a person who was chosen because he understood how to lead in
a moment of peril.
Yeah, I do go to bed every night thinking, thank God Joe Biden is president right now
and not Donald Trump as we're dealing with a madman with nuclear weapons. We have one over
there. We don't need one here as well. Tommy, what do you think?
I think you both are painting an accurate picture and one that is sort of understood
by an informed voter. I do think that when you're trying to sell maybe a less engaged, less informed
voter on there being less chaos in the world as they're watching a massive war in Europe spiral
out of control, that's going to be a tough sell. I felt like we dealt with a little bit of this
when we were at the White House, whether it was during the Arab Spring or the Fukushima
nuclear meltdown or the BP oil crisis. You can have a process in place and be doing the right
things and the outcome can still be god awful. And that's kind of what people are going to see
on the nightly news. And really the chaos piece of the Trump era was the tweets and just being a
shithead all the time publicly. And he's kind of disappeared off the world stage. And so that
element is gone now. And so, you know, I think the challenge for Biden is going to be maybe this will be the reset they need. Who knows? Maybe now he's a wartime president. But I think the truth about being president is your power is far more limited than people think. And they just want you to fix everything, even if it's not within your power to fix. And I'm worried that really what people are going to see at the end of the day is high gas prices and inflation and scary stuff in the
world. And I'm not sure that that cuts to the benefit of the incumbent most times. Oh, I agree.
Yeah. I mean, my comment was, I really do thank God every night I go to bed that he's president
and not Trump. That's my personal thing. I want to be wrong. But I know, I think, first of all,
it's a very small approval bump right now. I don't even know if you could call it that.
If you look at the 538, it's going up a little bit.
But I think it might be due to two things.
One, a sort of a rally around the flag effect that happens at the beginning of a conflict like this.
We have no idea where this conflict is going to go, so let's not even try to predict it.
And also improving pandemic conditions right now, case levels, hospitalizations, ICU especially are like as low as they were even before Delta in that wonderful spring of 2021.
But ultimately, double digit inflation, global instability and the trend of a president's party losing seats in a midterm election anyway is an incredibly challenging mix.
Incredibly challenging. And I think the big question is, to your point, Tommy,
if you're the Democratic Party
and you're dealt this hand,
and you're Joe Biden
and you're dealt this hand,
your job is to make the election
a choice and not a referendum.
Yeah.
It's all you can do.
That's, that's, yeah,
that's, we should get to it,
but that's what I sort of,
when there's this,
that Nancy Pelosi's big pitch
is Democrats deliver. I know I want to get to that i know we should that well that you're already at
it with i know okay go ahead go ahead well it's like that i can't think of a worse pitch to be
honest you want to make it a referendum about whether or not democrats deliver like the
democratic message whatever the democratic message may be whatever the phrase you want to use to describe
what you're doing the second half of your sentence has should be something along the lines of
rick scott said he wants to raise taxes on the american people by a trillion dollars for
basically everyone under a hundred thousand dollars and then this other fucking goofball
ron johnson wants to take away your health care wants to repeal obamacare we got one of them
saying they want to raise your taxes and the other one saying they want to take away your health care, wants to repeal Obamacare. We got one of them saying they want to raise your taxes and the other one saying they want to take away your health care.
It's not like we're making it up. The head of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee,
one of the most important leaders in the Republican Party, put out his plan for the
Republicans. And it is sunsetting Medicare. It is sunsetting Social Security. It is raising
taxes by one trillion dollars. That, to me, is the Democratic message. That's it.
trillion. That to me is the Democratic message. That's it. I mean, I do think we should unpack for our listeners about why Democrats deliver is not really going to work. Because look,
I think there is, we've been there in the White House as well. There's this feeling in the White
House. There's this feeling among Democrats in Congress. And there's this feeling among,
I think, Democratic partisans who pay a lot of attention to political news that Joe Biden has
done all these wonderful things. There's the American Rescue Plan. There's, you think, Democratic partisans who pay a lot of attention to political news, that Joe Biden has done all these wonderful things. There's the American Rescue Plan.
There's, you know, and we've done all these things. And he's not getting credit for any of it.
And, you know, there's the reporters are picking out the highest gas station prices,
you know, problem. And if the mainstream media is helping the Republicans with message,
because all they do is say that things are bad and blah, blah, blah. And things are actually
much better than they are. And there's this tremendous
frustration that Joe Biden is not getting more credit for the fact that the economy overall,
aside from inflation, is doing pretty well. What do we think about that?
I think there is not to be snarky. I think that there is a way to kind of put those things
together, which is sort of what I was getting at at the beginning. And like if what's happening in Ukraine offers any kind of like narrative change, it kind of puts Biden back at the beginning of the administration, kind of taking being a leader at a moment of crisis.
Like there's a president that came in, came into office while the country was in crisis, both at home and around the world.
They took these incredibly important steps to pass a rescue plan, to pass an infrastructure plan. They did it in the face of Republican deception and
intransigence and wacko extremism. And they got those things done. We are not out of the woods.
Things are still difficult. Things are still hard. What are your choices? Do you want to go with the
people that want to go back to how Trump governed? Do you want to go back to the kind of craziness
and the corporate welfare and all of that? Or do you want to keep making progress through this difficult time?
Something like that.
Doesn't that remind you of our 2010 message?
I don't think I remember back that far anymore.
Democrats Deliver is so funny.
It's like we have such a tarnished brand and we're like, let's make it 50% of the slogan.
Democrats Deliver, high gas prices.
Just so you know, we're not.
Enron Delivers.
Just so you know, we're not like freelancing here and being snarky about it the the times pointed out that pelosi and the house
democrats go to president biden and are like oh we really want democrats to be the message
and unbeknownst to them biden and his advisors or his advisors had tested the message as one of many
messages that they tested and democrats deliver was literally at the bottom of the list it was
the least popular message that they tested tell Tell a story about what you've done,
but also what you want to do and who is standing in the way. But I don't think a lot of voters
are going to be like, look, yeah, this war is scary. Inflation is terrible. But I got that
stimmy two years ago. So I'm feeling good about these guys. Like, well, whatever you've done for
me lately, it's a very Janet Jackson electorate here. I mean, the other thing that Democrats can control aside from their message, hopefully, is the policies they enact. The Times
reports that Democrats, quote, are considering a handful of executive orders that would please
their base on matters including the cancellation of some student loan debt and are determined to
enact legislation lowering the cost of prescription drugs. What do you guys think? Is that enough?
What else should Democrats be doing or at least pushing for?
So did you know that this show
also goes out on Thursdays?
And there's this guy, Dan,
who's really smart.
Oh, what does Dan have to say?
He interviewed this person,
Elizabeth Warren.
This is like a genius senator
from Massachusetts.
And she made a case for student loan debt
that I thought was so compelling
that 40% of people
who were paying off student loans
didn't actually get a college degree.
So they're paying off their college debt with a high school level uh salary which is clearly unfair also that
it would be it would do more to close the racial wealth gap than almost any other policy you could
afford so i think absolutely it's a no-brainer especially i've always assumed that biden was
waiting on um student debt relief to get build back Better done because he figured Joe Manchin would freak out
about the cost of it.
And now, you know, that's not an issue.
It seems like from what Ron Klain said to us
on that Thursday pod that you mentioned,
that Thursday Pod Save America.
That got mentioned this morning on NPR.
Did it really?
Oh, wow.
That interview got likes.
And I think some people on Twitter
were confused about this too,
just from Ron's answer to this.
The extension of the pause on student loan debt repayment goes until May.
I think then when it's done, when this pause is done, that's when it seems like they will make a decision on executive action debt relief.
Because no one's paying right now anyway.
Right.
executive action debt relief.
Right. Because no one's paying right now anyway.
Right.
And it sounded like from Ron's tone that either they're leaning towards doing it or that Ron
wants them to do it.
I couldn't quite tell, but from the tone I got that that's what they're going for.
Yes.
I mean, sort of, I said it's like they're a little bit at this point now kind of standing
over the country with a wax candle kind of like gonna drop a little
wax on the this is more of a love it or leave it joke is it is this are we um it's like it's like
no no walk season one episode one of billions yeah it's a little bit like uh okay you know
what i mean a little bit like um it's a little snm vibe now you know what i mean are you gonna
cancel the debt or not well look i think sometimes i think democrats um have a policy discussion over
here i'm just gonna keep going come back on that one i'm gonna keep going uh Democrats have a policy discussion over here. I'm just going to keep going. Come back from that one.
I'm going to wear a place today.
They have a policy discussion over here, and then they have like a where it's our slogan, our bumper sticker over here.
And I actually think when you think when they come up with the policy that they're pushing forward, they should think about it in terms of a message.
Right. As well as in terms of the policies they pursue.
So you lower the cost of it's all about costs.
Right. Biden did this in the state of the union, I I think quite well. It's all about lowering costs for people. It's lowering the cost
of healthcare, both prescription drugs and healthcare premiums, which they would do with
some of the healthcare subsidies that were in the bill that, which shall not be named the-
It's called the Democrats Deliver Bill.
Yeah, it's called the Democrats Deliver Bill. Education, student debt, and then energy,
both gas rebates, which some Democrats have
been talking about, and long-term clean energy transition.
I think Biden, the state of the union, said that his clean energy investments would reduce
the average family energy bill by $500, right?
And then you say the real popular part, and we're paying for it all by getting rid of
huge tax cuts for the 1%, big corporations, and oil companies.
Yeah.
And you say that over and over.
Healthcare, education, energy, taxing the rich, oil companies.
You just do it over and over and over again.
And then you actually push for it.
And some stuff you can do executive action.
Some stuff, it seems like Joe Manchin is amenable to.
I know.
I know this was controversial at the time, but I wonder if you could get a $12 federal
minimum wage floor from this Congress.
Didn't they all just feel like 15 was too high when we made a run at it then?
I wonder if you could lower that down and still say, okay, we delivered on 12.
Well, you'd have to get 10 Republicans on that.
I thought we could do it through reconciliation.
I think you need the Republicans.
Hey, hey, hey.
I do think that like Romney.
It's a brainstorm.
We're spitballing here.
I think you're right that that is,
that is a very important message in terms of your proactive agenda. The other agenda,
the other, you know, the counterpoint is the extremity of the Republican party. And luckily they're helping us out there. One, you know, a lot of these candidates that are emerging
are just insane people. You know, the, the, the person running for Senate in Arizona
stormed off the set of 60 minutes, Australia, Australia a couple days ago, which begs the question, why are you doing 60 Minutes in Australia?
Nar.
Right.
So we can get into some of their positions.
You know, Biden, I think, could very credibly argue that Roe versus Wade is on the way to being overturned.
Idaho today passed a Texas-style bill that would outlaw abortion after six weeks, which for all practical reasons makes it impossible to get access to abortion care in many states.
And I think he can argue that keeping the Senate is the only way to balance out the courts in the long term.
So there's an extremity of the Republican Party piece of this that could be compelling to, you know, the, the,
uh, Katonji Brown Jackson nomination is in some polls, it looks like has excited, uh, voters of
color and made them more likely to turn out, made young people more likely to turn out. So there's
some enthusiasm there too. Yeah. I was actually pleasantly surprised that, uh, according to like,
I think morning consult, the latest shows that like democrats are slightly more enthused about voting in the midterm than republicans i'm skeptical of
that to be honest but it's there yeah uh here's a real gem from the washington post about uh what
happened at last week's democratic house retreat in philadelphia uh in terms of message now that
we're into the message conversation uh quote a sitcom showrunner and a best-selling fiction
writer encouraged them to tell stories rather than give voters the usual laundry list of reasons Democrats should remain in the majority.
Three marketing executives.
Shame it was Louis C.K. and J.K. Rowling.
Three marketing executives, including one from Pepsi.
Pepsi urged them to craft their messages like sharp advertisements.
And leaders echoed a new slogan unveiled by the National Party. They can what sitcom i don't know it's just i mean was it loving now
now that advice should you tell stories instead of a laundry list yeah of course
did they need a sitcom showrunner and uh i want to know the best-selling fiction writer
probably depends on the sitcom friends yeah if you know who if you know who get me the information
if you're hearing this and you're in los ang Angeles and you know what showrunner went to the retreat, tell me.
Everybody loves Raymond.
But again, I do think the most, telling a story is important.
Love it.
I think you laid out one story that works.
I also just think it's constantly a choice.
Like, they want to raise your taxes to take away your health care.
And we are fighting to do all these things.
Some of them they'll be able to do before the midterm.
Some of them give us a bigger majority and we'll do them.
It'd be funny if it was like the new message is like,
Democrats deliver and we're going to fuck up those assholes at Coke.
How did that get in there?
What the hell?
When I was working on the Edwards campaign,
this was 2004 before
all the really bad stuff happened and someone uh forced us to bring in some like what madison
avenue like ad campaign guru like it's all the types and it was the guys who did the absolute
vodka campaign was just led to endless jokes about like absolute edwards that there was just you know it's
all the same advice it's all the same like silly who's the guy who did the don't think like an
elephant uh what's his name george lake off remember remember when barack obama told me to
take that meeting i think obama that with him too and he kept referring to it as a mem remember
there was a meme this was in the senate office this is when he was all the rage and then right
then it became like you
know don't refer to your opponent by name and then you can't don't ever use their attack in
your sentence it looks like completely incomprehensible rhetoric just absolutely
incomprehensible i think the important thing the important takeaway here from this whatever this
was which was great is that the message does have to flow from the policy you can't just
slogan your way and your identity, your values, the story you
tell, the policies you're pursuing, the fights that you're going to take on and what your opponents
stand for. All of that comes together for a message. It's not like, again, we said this on
Thursday, it's not like there's some secret bumper sticker out there. The magic, the right combination
of words that's going to unlock the majority for us. And, and also like whatever the slope, yes,
that, and that's right. I remember in 2006,
remember there was this moment
where it was
America can do better,
together we can do better.
Remember all those slogans?
We can do better, yeah.
And maybe those were...
Make it in America.
Maybe those were of value,
maybe not,
but like...
HBO show.
About denim.
Incredible.
Win the future.
That was one that we used.
We had some bad ones.
But I do think that like, I think sometimes you can get wrapped around the axle had some bad ones but i do think that like
i think sometimes you can get wrapped around the axle and like what i i do think that like
people do respect the fact that this country has been through a really hard time and i think
starting from that is like a really like start with those emotions i always think so like
democrats deliver is so anodyne it starts it starts from such a kind of what yeah like like
this is a it's
basically like we're pissed we've been working hard and we've done a good job why won't you
believe us that's what that message is like start from where people are like the country has been
through a trauma the country like we we talk about it all the time but like it's easy to lose that
it may not always appear in the polls it may be hard to suss out but like don't lose like don't
lose the forest for the trees like this is a country that has been through a very, very hard time and is shaken and a little bit confused and
anxious and angry. And like, you have to meet people there. And a lot of people feel forgotten
and not seen by their government. They do. And, and it's not that they don't, you know, it's not
that they buy all the bullshit that the Republicans are selling, but they feel like you know i i want i want to see more progress and i at least want to know if i
can't see progress that the people that i elected are fighting like hell to make that progress and
they're fighting for me and they're not fighting for the assholes who are running oil companies
and super rich and all the other that's what they're looking and that's hard when uh you're
controlling all branches of government and you can't get everything done right and you end up
having to explain of course kirsten cinema joe mansion for two years like we've been doing um
question i think this happened when i was out for a while remember when frank luntz wanted a media
company to send him to ukraine to do focus groups there was i did see that he like tweeted that uh
he's like send send me i'll do a focus group like how do you feel about vladimir putin invading your country what do you think you're
gonna get out of that focus group anything how did crooked whiff on that one did we didn't want to
that's next season next season in the wilderness okay oh man yeah i will say that one one i didn't
know about that it was yeah it was a tweet it was an interesting tweet um one good piece of news
here is and sean patrick maloney who's the chair of the d triple c was saying this in some of the pieces about the retreat
that we've gotten good news on the maps on redistricting and that and that now there's
not after all the worries we had about gerrymandering and obviously gerrymandering
still bad but uh basically democrats decided we're if you're going to do it we're going to
do it in the states that we control and And it's good. Republicans also decided to protect more of their incumbents than to draw the maps in a way that
could win in the short term. Something I've said for a long time, because if you draw,
if you gerrymander too hard, you get, you get to kind of make some thin Republican districts.
You can lose some of those incumbents.
So the path is that the gerrymandering has not given Republicans the advantage we thought they
would get in the House and in the Senate. There are still a bunch of Senate primaries where the potential Republican nominee is
very far to the right and extreme, more so than usual.
And so you might have some extremist Republican Senate candidates that aren't their strongest.
You have a House map that's more fair than we thought it would be.
So, you know, the playing field could be a little more even.
But again, double digit inflation.
And yeah, it's
yeah, the good and bad news is, if we lose, it'll be fair and square. The but it does,
it does argue for just remembering that one other piece of what our message can be about the
Republicans is don't forget, a lot of these wackos think the vaccine was conspiracy to have Bill
Gates chip you like a dog. You know, like that's sort of just getting that in there a little bit,
too. Yeah, that's, that's interesting. It out there that that take from them anyway is that memedos who we've worked
to i saw a video of him i think drunk at a high school wrestling tournament i don't know what
his campaign's a journey his campaign is a journey that primary is wild the ohio primary yeah i mean
it's again we all dislike jd vance you don't have to convince me, but losing to Josh Mandel.
It's tough.
Josh Mandel is a tough nominee.
One of the worst human beings.
Yeah, maybe it'll be neither of them.
That's what the polls are looking like.
Okay, when we come back, Tommy and I will talk with former Cory Booker campaign manager Adisu Demissi about the potential change to the Democratic nomination calendar.
Last week, there was a heated discussion during the Democratic National Committee's winter meeting about a leaked proposal to change the presidential nomination process by potentially adding a fifth
state to the early nominating window, favoring primaries over caucuses
and requiring states to reapply for their early state status, which could end up removing Iowa
and or New Hampshire from the top spots. Joining us to talk about this is the former campaign
manager for Cory Booker's presidential campaign, the current executive director of More Than a
Vote, and someone who got his start in politics as an Iowa field organizer for John Kerry's 2004 campaign,
our pal, Adisu Demetri.
What's up, man?
Very nice introduction.
I'm good. How are you guys doing?
You know.
Good.
I'm a four-time Iowa caucus veteran, actually.
Wow. You got Tommy beat. I thought Tommy was the Iowa guy here.
Mine's all branding. This is perfect, Adisa, because both of us, I think,
are coming into this conversation with a fondness for some of our experiences in Iowa, right? We've seen how the caucuses can be good, we can see how the process can be bad. Some of this conversation
we're having about like a bunch of DNC members in a smoke-filled room making decisions about a fifth state versus fourth.
It could probably sound a little esoteric for people like, how does this matter?
You ran Cory Booker's 2020 presidential campaign.
You've run a whole bunch of campaigns, but that was your recent presidential experience.
How did the schedule of how the primary and caucus process was structured impact the way you planned and executed that race?
I mean, really, it's everything. It's the rules. You know, it's like a basketball court is so many
feet wide, a football field is a hundred yards long. Like this is the rules of the game. It
dictates the every decision you make. And so, you know, for us, and I think for most candidates who aren't universally known, the early states are where the playing field potentially, at least in theory, gets leveled a little bit, right?
It's your chance to compete on a relatively equal footing with candidates that may have more money or may have more name recognition or whatever it may be. So for us in 2019 to 2020, we invested, I would say, 80% of our time in the four early states.
The other 20% was split basically between Super Tuesday states and fundraising, maybe 75-25,
something along those lines. But we thought our path to victory, honestly, was very similar to what Barack Obama did in 2008, 2007, 2008, which was use the early states as a springboard to
get better known, to raise money and ultimately make it super Tuesday when we knew that was
going to be the deciding date for a plurality of delegates. So it was everything. It is what
dictated our entire strategy from day one. Yeah. And what do you think is the drawback to having this particular schedule of states, these early states, particularly Iowa and New Hampshire going first?
Look, I hesitate because like Tommy said, I have love for the early states in general. I think what Iowa caucus goers, New Hampshire primary voters have
going for them is that they're professional voters, like in a way that is, they respect
the process. And I'm not suggesting that the other 48 states don't, but from years, decades
of experience, like they take the responsibility very seriously. And so, but I think what they
aren't is diverse and certainly racially diverse.
And also in many ways, not representative of the Democratic Party and where it is and
where it's going.
And so that said, I'm sure we're going to get into this.
Like they have things going for them.
The biggest is that they are small.
And I do think that really matters a lot in this process.
Having small states, at least part of the early mix, and all four of our early states
are relatively small. South Carolina is the biggest and it's not huge. It allows you to
not just level the playing field, but actually do a little bit of retail politics in a way that
wouldn't exist if my home state of California or Illinois, which is actually the most sort of
representative and diverse state in the union, if one of those went first, it would be an air war. The campaign would ultimately end up being about raising money
and spending it on TV, mail, digital, and what have you. And so there's positives and negatives.
And anybody who says this is an easy decision, I respect the folks who are ultimately in the
DNC have to make it. It's not easy. It's not slam dunk. What states go first,
whether Iowa and New Hampshire are part of that or not.
I mean, there's the problem that both Iowa and New Hampshire aren't as diverse as other states.
Iowa has the additional challenge of being a caucus over a primary.
Can you sort of talk about the challenges of a caucus versus a primary?
Yeah. Caucus organizing, like I said, I've done it four times.
It is much more difficult from an organizing perspective. Ultimately,
it helps, you know, in theory, it helps the party and the Democratic Party in that state organize
internally for their state looking forward to their races, you know, in the general election.
But caucuses are party organizing affairs run by the party. And that requires a lot of resources and a lot of time, as we saw in 2020 and 2016, can go sometimes horribly wrong. And so in 2017, we did this,
I'm sorry. Yeah, 2017, we did this coming out of the 2016 caucuses. A lot of states actually
switched from caucuses to primaries as part of the last go around of this process we're about
to go through here. And I think most of them liked it because state-run primaries,
ultimately run by the government where more people can participate,
are easier on the state parties that otherwise are going to have to kill themselves
to pull off a caucus.
And ultimately, sometimes it's too much for a state party organization to pull off.
Yeah, sort of thinking about sort of good and bad parts about Iowa.
I mean, diversity of the state is something you mentioned that is not fixable, right? Like John
said, caucuses, they're, they're at a set time. They take a long time that can make it difficult,
if not impossible for the elderly, the disabled working people to attend. I think you can,
you can begin to address that challenge by creation of like a virtual caucus or other,
you know, means to sort of amend the format, but not totally get away from it. The other problem
with Iowa, though, is it's not a competitive state. And so you do all this organizing for a
year in the primary and it doesn't help you in the general. And, you know, that's something that
might shift over time. But to your point, these two, like this point about them being professional
voters and taking the process serious is real.
It also incentivizes actual face-to-face conversations, not just with the candidates, but between voters themselves.
You have community meetings, literally, where people are arguing and talking in a constructive way.
There also are rules at a caucus, at least in Iowa, that incentivize positive campaigning because you don't want to piss off the other guy's supporters because you want to be their second choice. And that forces candidates to do retail politics and take hard
questions. So, you know, to your point about these are professional voters, you need a small state.
Do you think that like some of the good parts about these early states are replicable if you
just kind of found the right location? Yeah, I do over time because, you know,
location? Yeah, I do over time because it's only been 50 years that Iowa, I think it was 1972,
that Iowa came into play here and sort of came to prominence in 1976 when it catapulted Carter to the presidency. But that's 50 years of experience, which it's going to take 50 years
to replicate, but doesn't mean that you can't find it somewhere else. But the one thing I feel most strongly about is the small state, big state
thing. I think we would do ourselves a huge disservice if we just pick the states that were
the most representatively diverse in terms of racial or ethnic or economic or whatever it might
be, diversity, but ultimately we're huge. And I guarantee you,
if that happened, what would happen is a lot of candidates would end up in California, New York,
raising money so they could spend it on television as opposed to in those states campaigning on the
ground. It's just the nature of the beast right now. So I do think it's replicable. I think
it will not be the same if Iowa and New Hampshire or either one of them does not stay early.
Meaning it will be I think it might be qualitatively worse the first time because you've lost that experience just like with anything else.
But does that is that a reason alone to keep it as is? I think the answer to that is probably no.
No, no. I mean, the other thing is like the goal of the primary process here is to nominate the strongest possible general election candidate.
And I do worry about caucuses in particular.
And again, I have very fond memories of the Iowa caucuses because it's how Barack Obama won the presidency.
But the more I think back on it, like the people who pretend to participate in caucuses are the most hardcore activists.
And in a general election, you're going to have to face all of the voters.
And so in the primary, you hope that the candidate who ultimately becomes the nominee has had to face a lot of different voters and not just the voters who are most committed to politics, who tend to be much more liberal than other voters and i think we saw that in 2020 when obviously biden didn't do so well in iowa and uh but then did quite well in
south carolina which was a primary and a very diverse primary at that do you see how he's erasing
his 2004 john kerry experience there i just want to make sure you caught that as well because it's
kind of exactly four jk before iowa that we had after i remember
i remember it well yeah uh yeah we you you you're a two-time iowa caucus winner you should you should
be beating your chest about that i'm a two-time yeah exactly no i look i think i think you're
right i think though that the one thing that I think has changed even since we were there
in 2003 now, not even two decades ago, is politics is more nationalized now. And it is,
I think in theory, you're correct, but in practice, your Iowa caucus goer or your South Carolina
primary voter or your Super Tuesday primary voter are probably getting
some of their political information from the same sources, which was not true in 2003, right? It's,
you know, it's Pod Save America. No, I'm not trying to get serious, but it's true.
It's like, how many pods? It's Rachel Maddow. It's New York Times. Like, you know, obviously,
that's not true of every, you know, primary voter across the country, what have you.
But primaries are, it's something I think I got wrong in 2019 and running Booker's race is that I was running a strategy, I think, much more tailored to a 2004, 2008 media environment. goer or primary voter or whatever in New Hampshire is ultimately kind of similar in a lot of ways to
your primary voter in other places, then it matters less. The retail matters less and actually the
state matters less. And so I'm toying with this. I haven't come to a conclusion about this myself,
but it is not the same as it was, certainly not in 1972. And I would say even in 2008 when
Barack Obama was president. And that means that we should,
you know, at least be looking at everything and putting it all on the table as the DNC does every
four years. And the reason you're saying that is because of the unfortunate collapse of local media,
right? That like people like, you know, someone in Manchester, New Hampshire isn't going to the
union leader for their news about what happened on the campaign trail that way. Thank God.
Yeah, they're watching Ari Melber or Rachel Mad maddow ari melber also a john kerry field organizer i know sat next to me
in our field look how far everyone's come wow you got some stories i bet well i sure did i remember
hearing that from you i remember hearing that from a bunch of like the field organizers i'd meet and
like go to iowa because i went like five or six times. Do you think that that shift was a Trump thing? And like everyone being like an electability, you know, like Nate Silver downloading 538 poll
average, you know, like just little ball of anxiety about losing again? Or is this sort of
like a John, I think the environment thing, I think it's a media thing. I think it is.
Again, especially among Democratic primary voters. I think it's Twitter. I think it's Facebook. I think it's,
I think it is that the way that we consume information now and political
information in particular is we, we,
we have self segregated in some ways into bubbles and particularly folks who
are primary voters, Republican primary voters are the same, right? If you're,
if you're, you know, Steve Bannon's podcast or whatever crazy lunatic shit
they're listening to this week, like is probably where you're trying, you're competing to get on
that if you're in the Republican primary more than you're trying to compete for the union leader.
And similarly on the Democratic side, I think we have segregated ourselves into media bubbles. I
think it's bad for politics. I think it's also something that if I'm sitting at
the DNC, I'm not sure. The question you have to ask is, do I want to play into that or do I want
to push against the tide? Are things going to go further down this way or are we actually going to
the pendulum going to swing back? I don't know the answer to that, but I think
it's an important analysis point here, which is that retail politics is not the same.
And the nationalization of politics is a real phenomenon that has accelerated in the last decade.
So Kevin Sheeky, who ran Mike Bloomberg's campaign, floated an idea that the closest state in the last general election becomes the first primary in the next presidential election and then so on.
So the first five would be Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, wisconsin pennsylvania north carolina what do you think about that
i mean no i don't think i mean i'm like it's a it's a it's a cute idea it's a cute idea
um but no i don't think i mean that's i think some of that is living in the past right like
yeah would you have said that ari Arizona was going to be the closest?
Was Georgia or Michigan actually the closest state when all is said and done?
It's so funny because Pfeiffer was the one who brought this up to me.
And I said Michigan too.
And then I went and looked.
And by the end, even though there was all that.
It might have been Wisconsin.
Wisconsin was in this list.
But Michigan ended up being like three points.
And North Carolina was only a point.
Even though there was just Trump thinking he won Michigan.
Dude, on November 7th when they called it, I think I was like drunk for a week.
But I think it's a little bit of living in the past.
I mean, look, things change very quickly.
This is also a reason I think counterpoint to your Iowa point, Tommy, which is like,
who knows where Iowa is going to be a decade, 12 years from now, right? If someone had said, this is where Arizona is going to be a decade ago,
you would have maybe chuckled at them or Georgia was going to be a blue state or Virginia, you
know, back before Barack Obama, like things change pretty quickly. And so I think, I think we have to
have diversity of every kind in the early States. I think it needs to be geographic. I think it needs to be racial. I think it needs to be rural urban, which is not a small thing.
Democrats are losing in rural areas. And if we force our candidates early to compete for rural
votes, I think that'll help them in the general election. Regional, right, which we do a good job
of right now. But this is why it's a puzzle that's like like not as easy as like, just, just a formula or just as
easy as picking, you know, the States that are most racially or otherwise diverse.
Yeah. It's not easy. And look, one of the biggest challenges to previous efforts at reform is,
is political inertia. As you know, very well, like you, you're Cory Booker, you're Barack Obama,
you go into Iowa, you try to get the endorsement from the such and such muckety muck. The first
thing you're committing to is, you know, keeping Iowa and New Hampshire's primacy in the process, right? You end up feeling
like you owe them or at least, you know, candidates or elected officials in these states tell you,
you owe them. Do you think that Biden, because he did so poorly in Iowa and New Hampshire,
could be uniquely positioned to actually make these
changes because he doesn't really own those states or anything?
Yes, but I don't think that, I mean, you have, ultimately, this is a decision that's going to
be made by DNC members, 450 people who have, who are elected by their states to, you know,
it's not like Congress, right? They have their, and sure, they'll listen to the president of the United States, but like,
they're going to listen to their home state interests first. Right. And they're, and you
know, if one of their states has somebody who might run for president in 2028, like that's
going to come into play probably more than what, you know, the white house says, et cetera. So
the answer to your question is, is yeah, but there are so many provincial interests at play, I think with this, that it's going to be,
I mean, this is a DNC decision and it's important for people to know and to remember out there,
this is literally why the DNC exists. Like everybody talks about the big, bad DNC and
controls the message and the policy. No, the DNC exists to create the rules for nominating
president and vice president of the United States, article one, section one of the policy. No, the DNC exists to create the rules for nominating president
and vice president of the United States. Article one, section one of the charter. So
this is why people get elected to the DNC is to do this. They're going to take it seriously and
take their power seriously, I think, too. To do that and rig the primary.
And to turn off two-factor education. I mean, but that, so my last question on this from that is, how difficult do you think this will be to get done?
Do you think it will get done?
Like, I mean, this was a leaked proposal.
You know, the Jamie Harrison, the DNC chair during the winter meeting sort of says, okay, I know there's rumors.
I'm going to address it, but it's early stages.
Like, do you think this gets done by 2024 or 2028?
I mean, if Biden, you know, runs again, then it's not going to be as big of a deal in 2024.
I think it will definitely get done.
I think it happens, it being we will revisit the process and create a new primary calendar.
It happens every four or eight years.
We did it in 2017.
We got rid of several caucuses for primaries.
I believe it was in 2007 when we added, or before the 2008 primaries
when we added South Carolina. So this is not a new thing. It happens all the time. It will get done
this summer probably. And to your point, if and when President Biden runs for reelection, it will
be a moot point probably for 2024. But we'll all be talking about this in 2026 and 2027 again.
But I definitely think it will get done. Again, it's why the party exists, the DNC exists, and
the RBC, the whole body is going to go through their process and figure it out, I would guess,
by the August meeting. All right. Poor Jamie Harris. I mean, just think for a second,
new DNC chair trying to host
a thoughtful meeting
about this discussion
and someone leaks a working draft
staff level proposal
to the Des Moines Register.
That's just the beginning of it.
It's just the beginning of it.
Of all places, yeah.
Perfect.
It will be messy,
but that's Democratic Party politics
and that's okay.
It's part of the deal.
And at least with us, we keep these messages internal and quiet.
That's the good thing.
Oh, boy.
Adisu Tamisi, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Come back again soon.
This was fun, man.
Yeah, please.
Anytime, man.
Good to see y'all.
All right, before we go, we put a call out on social media for a few fun questions to break up some of the heavier news we've been covering lately.
And boy, did you deliver.
At Van Weezer just replied with a picture of Pete Davidson and a moon superimposed
on the head of what appears to be Ariana Grande's body.
Two of many questions that come to mind here. One, what guys think of the news that davidson is among six passengers who
will be on the next launch of jeff bezos's space travel venture blue origin and two in case that
wasn't enough what do you think about the alleged uh leaked text between davidson and kanye west
in which he tells the rapper to grow the fuck up after Kanye's public feud with him over Kim Kardashian.
Got a lot in there, huh?
They released a reason why he's a passenger on the Blue Origin.
Yeah, I read the stories and I could not detect.
So it's just like, hey, we're chasing clouds.
Someone wanted to go to space who's been in the news a lot.
It's Pete Davidson's world and we're all just living in it.
That's, of course, Pete Davidson gets to go to space.
Why the fuck not?
That Dutch rich kid got to go.
He's just as deserving.
I don't even know about it.
Remember that Dutch kid?
Maybe Danish?
Sure.
Don't come at me with the comments.
I don't know if he's Dutch or Danish,
and I'll never know.
I think that they're the same.
And then he got to go with this woman,
this incredible test pilot
who fought through misogyny and sexism for decades.
And he's like,
my dad bought me a ticket.
Terrible accent.
I'm in a weird place today, and it's fine.
On the Pete Davidson front,
here's the thing.
I saw these leaked texts,
and all I can think is
everyone involved in this is so full of fucking shit.
It seems like it was Pete Davidson's friend
that leaked the text.
But what are we doing here?
Don't leak any texts.
Oh, I thought Pete did it.
I am anti-leaking.
But the idea that like, what's so funny about the text is like Pete Davidson is like, come on, Kanye.
I'm just a guy trying to like support my girlfriend and his family.
And you're like, it's like Pete Davidson, you're on SNL.
You seem to have a pretty cool life.
There are 3.5 billion women on earth.
seem to have a pretty cool life. There are 3.5 billion women on earth. And you're like, the one I want puts me in a position of being with a woman who has kids with a famous guy who's in some kind
of a mental health episode that requires me reaching out to him to create a detente. Why do
you want your life to be so complicated? Buyer beware is what you're saying. That's a weird,
weird, weird situation that I don't, I don't fully believe. Have you guys watched the Kanye three-part documentary on Netflix?
I'm an hour into the first episode.
So it is...
I'm very excited to continue.
It's very much...
No.
I've got to finish.
I just finished the Tinder swindler.
I'm going to do this one next.
I enjoyed that.
It's very much in that category of documentaries
where it's kind of like Michael Jordan is the EP
on The Last Dance kind of vibe.
It's kind of his close friends,
sort of a collaborator over many years.
It's amazing and worth watching
because it's like the classic casino arc, right?
Starts, challenges first, act two two is a blast and the third episode is
so sad and depressing as hell but it's worth watching just to remember like that kanye actually
made some of the most amazing music of that era was a producer on more tracks than you ever realized
that he actually didn't get the respect he deserved in hip-hop community as a rapper for a
very long time and then clearly when his mother died,
that seems to have been a triggering point
for a lot of the really hard times lately.
So it's like, look,
I don't like him as a person.
Those early albums were incredible.
A good window into sort of
what he's been through.
Here's one.
Does anyone have any thoughts
on Elon Musk's tweet
in which he challenged Vladimir Putin to single combat?
I mean, hey, what?
Nerd.
Putin would probably kick his ass.
He's like a taekwondo expert.
Man, he wants attention all the time.
He loves attention.
You know, when Ben Carson ran for president,
I thought to myself,
I guess being a brain surgeon is easy.
When Elon Musk tweets, it makes me think, oh, inventing and transforming the electric car industry must have been simpler than it seemed from the outside.
Because there is no one who seems dumber when compared to the actual output of his companies than Elon Musk.
Yeah. to the actual output of his companies than Elon Musk. Yeah, you know, Dave Weigel at The Washington Post pointed this out in a tweet.
On March 4th, Elon Musk tweeted, hold strong Ukraine with six Ukrainian flags.
And then 10 days later, he tweeted like this meme, which says, I support the current thing,
which is sort of like the sort of angry incel face man with a Ukrainian flag. And then kind of like the LGBT flag, you know, sort of like the sort of angry incel-faced man with a Ukrainian flag, and then
kind of like the LGBT flag.
Sort of like the idea being that...
Mocking performative support for Ukraine.
Right, what he's trying to do. He realized that he was
doing something cringy in Normcore
because it happens to be correct,
and he had to signal to his weird
fanboys, like, don't worry, I know
that anything normal is bad. But he also
was like positioning his satellites over ukraine to help them get internet access so which is a good thing which
is a good thing he talked to zelensky i believe he's been engaged in this but then he also has
to mock the people who care it's very frustrating very online and he likes yeah too online too
online too much too much uh too much attention he's he's a genius at many things he's just when
you're a genius at some things,
doesn't mean you spout off about everything.
Right.
But yeah, by all means, engage him in one-on-one combat
because Vladimir Putin will certainly fight fair
and not slap you in the face with polonium
or some other fucking...
Now we're getting into what the actual combat would look like.
Well, he kills, he murders his opponents.
I don't think you'd have to worry about polonium
in a hand-to-hand fight. Well, you never know. I don't know how he have to worry about polonium in a hand-to-hand fight.
You never know. I don't know how he's going to kill the guy.
Next question.
Putin. Tommy, do you have thoughts on
Tom Brady un-retiring?
It was so good
it made me want to kiss my son on the mouth.
He was retired for less than six weeks.
It was February 1st he told us he was retiring.
Such a drama queen.
I'm now performing just for Elijah who's in town so i can just get last out of elijah obviously i don't i don't
really have thoughts i don't know it's weird football is his whole i mean it's your whole
identity i was gonna well it's it's your whole identity if you're like for for many nfl players
but i think for tom brady especially like there is that's it there is nothing outside of football
football is every you know it's like – and he's 44 years old.
So you're like – and he's, you know.
Listen, I'm 41 and I currently can't go jogging because I have an injured butt muscle.
So that – get out of here, love it.
So that's embarrassing.
So like there is this annoying like sort of paternalistic sort of sentiment.
Horseplay got out of hand.
Jesus Christ. i hate this episode
this is annoying really let us know if you do too
you see this annoying paternalistic thing on social media or elsewhere that's like i just
want him to resign and be happy make sure you don't get the cte time it's like you don't know
why he loves playing you don't know what drives this guy if he got cte how would anyone even fucking know like i i loved
tom tom prady cut everything there for me for a decade and a half of my life and gave me a lot
of joy so you shut up um he should do whatever he wants leave that in but know that i know it's
wrong i just don't get why you retire why retire and unretire yeah i i i think he spent five minutes at his nft business and realized it was a fucking nightmare
i understand him staying more than i understand him announcing it in the first place in the first
place that's what i'd say about that love it thoughts on elden ring i almost regret this
question the second that it came out of my mouth but go ahead it's a great game and i think people
are gonna have a lot of fun playing it what do you do in it? What do you do?
Help me understand gaming.
I have a 20-year gap in my gaming experience.
Same with me.
15-year.
Here's the thing.
So in the PlayStation 2, they added a second set of triggers,
and that really alienated a lot of people, and we lost them forever.
Use controllers today with these kids.
There's too many buttons on the controllers. Use all five fingers.
Use ten fingers.
How about that for old sounding?
I really think when they added those second triggers,
it really threw a lot of people off.
Elden Ring is great.
It seems an impossible triumph,
an open world Soulsborne game,
and I love it.
I can't wait to get back into it.
I'm doing a strength build,
but I saw Jason Concepcion's magic build on the internet,
and it made me very excited to do a strength build, but I saw Jason Concepcion's kind of magic build on the internet, and it made me very excited
to do a magic build as well.
These are incredibly difficult
games. What are we building? You build a character.
You can have a strength build, a dexterity
build, which is more of a trick weapon.
Can you make the character look like you? You can,
although it's a very, very... Even
the way in which you have to design a face
is extremely complicated in order to understand.
This is exhausting.
It's harder than Zelda Adventures of Link.
Sure, but Breath of the Wild I do think is inspiring.
Breath of the Wild has been a very influential game, and I do think it influenced Elden Ring in a very good way.
Okay.
Question from Hannah DeGroot.
What is your personal favorite miniseries in the scammer genre?
Dropout for me.
Dropout is great i am i i'm very excited
for we crash which is coming soon but right now i am very into the dropout it's it's really well
done liz merriweather is love liz merriweather absolutely friend of the show incredible
incredible series and amanda seafree is great like the the cast is great everyone's great so you want to talk about inventing i know
that i constantly dig my own grave by talking about how i'm watching just super basic lame
shit and i you know it is what it is but i've been watching inventing anna and i will say
it's such a frustrating show because this underlying story is actually pretty interesting but they made it like four episodes too long and I love Anna Klumsky since like way back my girl
my girl days but like she's she's so funny in Veep like she's one of the funniest characters
in Veep and they make her character this journalist like so annoying and they try to
they dramatize the process of like the journalism for this story and it's not the fucking pentagon papers
you're you're like figuring out like why this scammer scammed people and it just it's i watched
we watched an episode i was just emily i think kept going i could i was not a fan i couldn't do
it and then i then i started watching the dropout and i was like this is this is what i was loving
the dropout uh you mentioned veep because someone like, have we been watching funnier shows? Because obviously these are some dark times.
I rewatched, Emily started it from season one.
I jumped in at season six and I rewatched season six and seven of Veep.
I think it's the greatest comedy of all time on television.
I really do.
You told me that.
So I started watching season six and some of the funniest, hardest jokes ever delivered
are from that show.
I was in tears laughing at that again.
I will always remember we were on a bus between two cities.
I don't remember what the cities were during a tour,
but both of you,
both of you had edibles.
And then you were laughing through Veep.
Like the,
like I've never,
like two old men,
like there was something so old about it.
Like when you see old men really laughing at their programs,
it was, they were, you guys were inconsolable.
It was unreal.
We were in a bus.
You had a great time. It was so funny.
It was at the end of the night.
We were going back to the hotel.
It was 5 o'clock somewhere.
It was fine.
So funny.
What other good scammer shows are there?
Is that like a...
Oh, there's Tinder Swindler.
I mean, I know that's not like a...
Here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
I get it.
I'd fall for the Tinder Swindler.
I'd be in.
You had the Rolls Royce.
You went on the date.
You went on the jet.
Next thing you know, his bodyguard's getting beat up.
Yeah.
What do you need?
It seemed real.
There's a point in the conversation in all these types of narratives inventing anna all of them where this person says to you uh i can't get international uh transfers to work or my
my credit card got hacked red flag loan me sixteen thousand dollars at which point you say
no that's right yeah you have to say no all right well that's all the time we have for today
um it was a trenchant political analysis that's all the time we have for today. It was a fantastic-
Trenchant political analysis.
Trenchant political analysis.
That's what you come here for.
At least Adisu offered us some-
Yeah, he was smart.
Some insights.
Thank God for that guy.
Anyway, we'll talk to you on Thursday with Dan.
There were good nuggets even in the parts that were just us.
The Thursday episode of this show is actually really good.
And also, if you add this plus Thursday, real good stuff.
Huh?
This plus Thursday divided by two?
Now that's a podcast.
Dan says enough smart stuff for five of us.
Yeah.
Usually I just listen to Dan and then add a couple jokes.
Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production.
The executive producer is Michael Martinez.
Our senior producer is Andy Gardner Bernstein.
Our producer is Haley Muse, and Olivia Martinez is our associate producer. It's producer is Andy Gardner Bernstein. Our producer is Haley
Mews and Olivia Martinez is our associate producer. It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Kyle
Seglin is our sound engineer. Thanks to Tanya Somanator, Sandy Gerard, Hallie Kiefer, and Justine
Howe for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Phoebe Bradford, Milo Kim,
and Amelia Montuth. Our episodes are uploaded as videos at youtube.com slash crookedmedia.