Pod Save America - "Sex Demons and Karaoke with Dan and Alyssa."
Episode Date: July 30, 2020Alyssa Mastromonaco joins Dan to talk about Trump's promotion of more conspiracy theories, jealousy of Dr. Anthony Fauci, inability to help himself politically, and failure to confront Vladimir Putin,... even when American lives are at risk. Then, they take your most pressing questions on the VP selection process, the 2020 election, and whether karaoke is actually fun.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pod Save America.
I'm Dan Pfeiffer.
And I'm Alyssa Mastromonaco.
Alyssa is filling in for Jon Favreau, who, as many of you probably know,
in perfect Thursday podcast form, Jon and Emily Favreau had their baby immediately after Tommy
and I finished recording the Thursday pod. Charlie Favreau is happy, healthy, and adorable,
and Jon is obviously taking a little time to adjust to his new life as a dad.
Alyssa, thanks for filling in.
I'm squatting.
I'm never leaving.
You're always welcome.
That is my rule of life.
Thanks.
Later in the pod, Alyssa and I are going to take some of your most pressing questions
about the upcoming VP announcement and so much more.
But first, we're going to talk about why Trump is having a self-involved meltdown
as the country surpasses 150,000 COVID deaths as we bid a fond farewell to the bright but brief new tone era in American politics.
Before we get to that, some housekeeping notes. Alyssa, I don't know if you had a chance to
listen to Pod Save the World this week, but Tommy and Ben did a little, they kind of stepped on our
that's the ticket corner. I did listen. And you know,
we were so good. They had to get up in our jam. I understand. I understand. Look, we appreciate
all VP talk. So Tommy and Ben got a little pissed at the way pundits were talking about Susan Rice's
VP prospects. So they made the case for why she would be a great pick. Then they discussed how
Trump's donors turned ambassadors are acting crazy on their semesters abroad and Ben interviewed Israeli news anchor Yonit Levy about the ongoing anti-Netanyahu
protests.
Alyssa, did you know that we are officially less than 100 days away from the election?
I did.
Did you know that because you were looking at the calendar or because everyone with any
association with Crooked Media has been tweeting about it incessantly since Sunday?
Check and check.
Yes. Do you think 100 days is a long time or a short time in our quarantine life?
So I've been quarantined upstate for 131 days. So it's a month less than that,
but still hard to say. I feel like a lot can happen. A lot has happened since I got up here.
A lot can happen before election day. Yes, time has no meaning.
But-
Has no meaning.
We're obviously up against a lot in this election
between voter suppression, the pandemic,
completely crazy president.
But right now we're in the middle
of the every last vote week of action
to fight back and make sure
that every last vote is counted.
We're gonna need every single one to win this election.
Over this week, we'll be asking you to volunteer,
donate what you can,
and specifically request your ballot by mail. Earlier this week was a totally real and not made up holiday called
National Vote by Mail Day. If you head to votesaveamerica.com slash everylastvote, you can
request your ballot now and get it done early. While you're there, you can sign up to call or
text young voters in swing states and tell them to do the same. This election will come down to
everylastvote and we can't afford to lose a single one. Head to votesaveamerica.com slash every last vote
for everything you can do to help. I also want to flag something that
our friend and the author of the new book, She Proclaims, Jennifer Palmieri, texted me yesterday
because I think this was her submitting for the mailbag. But because she's a friend,
and this is very important, we're going to move it to the very important housekeeping section.
She sent me a tweet from Democratic lawyer and our friend Mark Elias that according to the
Civic Center, voter registration rates in April and May of 2020 have plummeted in relation to
the rates in the same months in 2016. The declines in voter registration rates have been as significant
as 75% in some states. This is obviously a result in some ways of the pandemic, but it is very distressing.
Please go check if you're registered and help your friends and your family register at
votesaveamerica.com.
Our adopt-a-state program also has some voter registration calls to action, so you can help
get voters registered in six key battleground states.
This is obviously some very concerning news, but it's something that we have time to do
something about.
So go to votesaveamerica.com and figure out how to do that. All right, Alyssa, that was exhausting.
And it's a reminder that Jon Favreau's job every week is much harder than mine,
but we will persevere. All right. As we discussed last week, Donald Trump's much lauded
third new tone era came to an unsurprising close less than 10 days after he revived his coronavirus briefings. And as the United States surpassed 150,000 coronavirus deaths
on Wednesday, on Monday, the president and Donald Trump Jr. both retweeted a video where a doctor
promoted a completely disproven conspiracy theory that people do not need to wear masks because
hydroxychloroquine cures coronavirus. The doctor featured in this video has some pretty extreme
views beyond her thoughts on COVID. For example, and this is real, she has said that gynecological problems
are caused by people having sex with demons in their dreams and that alien DNA is being used in
medical treatments. That is a real thing. At his Tuesday briefing, a CNN reporter challenged Trump
on his decision to retweet this video. This is how I responded. The woman that you said was a great doctor in that video that you retweeted last night said
that masks don't work and there is a cure for COVID-19, both of which health experts say is
not true. She's also made videos saying that doctors make medicine using DNA from aliens
and that they're trying to create a vaccine to make you immune from becoming religious.
Maybe it's a sign, maybe it's not, but I can tell you this.
She was on air along with many other doctors.
They were big fans of hydroxychloroquine,
and I thought she was very impressive in the sense that from where she came,
I don't know which country she comes from,
but she said that she's had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients,
and I thought her voice was an important voice, but I know nothing about her.
It might be hard to tell since this is an audio medium, but that was Trump walking out
of the briefing immediately after being pressed on the topic.
Alyssa, what is your reaction to our president spreading conspiracy theories from doctors
who are concerned about demon sex?
I had to watch the clip twice to understand how the demon sperm gives you fibroids and
cysts during dream demon sex.
I mean, think about that for just a minute.
Just a minute.
I'm a smart person, you know?
And I was like, how does that happen?
Now imagine the president of the United States
doesn't take the beat that I just took
before retweeting something so utterly fucking insane.
But my favorite is after he did it multiple times,
he says, I know nothing about her. I know nothing about her. utterly fucking insane. But my favorite is after he did it multiple times,
he says,
I know nothing about her.
I know nothing about her.
Like,
like he doesn't understand the string of words he puts together in sentences are just,
they're,
they're more disturbing than the demon sex.
I mean,
it like we are laughing.
And as we point out all the time around here,
it's not funny because,
because we're laughing. It's sometimes easier crying, or at least preferable to crying.
I can do both.
I mean, it is embarrassing how irresponsible and stupid he is.
When Tommy was on last week, he and I talked about the return of these briefings and how
Trump got up there and told people at the briefing that kids could not catch coronavirus, which is why he was pushing
to irresponsibly reopen schools. Now, that is a piece of very dangerous misinformation.
There is very limited research on this. There are some studies that show the exact opposite.
The fact is, we don't know. And when the President of the United States stands before
the nation and passes along false information, they could get people killed. And that's what this is doing.
Many more people will see this video because the president tweeted it, because of all the traffic
it got on social media platforms. It will not see the fact checks for it, will not see even the
president not really walking away from it, but sort of distancing himself as he slowly on national
television realized the shame
of his own stupidity, and will believe that they don't have to wear a mask, right? You are doing
something deeply dangerous. And frankly, it still just points out what an absolute moron Trump is,
because as we have discussed before, the best way for him to get reelected is to get the virus
under control. The best way to get the virus under control is to convince every single person in America to wear a mask. Yet he spends
his time convincing people not to wear masks, therefore making the coronavirus worse, therefore
making it less likely he gets reelected. I mean, it is just another reminder that Trump is painfully
stupid and America is massively suffering for this. Yeah. I mean, yes.
We are.
Like, I mean, think about it.
The man can't get a convention because he literally,
if he had just told people to wear a mask, had just like admitted that this virus was bad
and that we were all going to have to work together to combat it.
I mean, it was like the jaws of life to get him to admit
that he couldn't go to Jacksonville,
which is like one of the top five states.
Florida is one of the top five states that's spiking, that has ICU beds, like ICU beds
are over capacity.
And he just, despite the fact that life and science and doctors tell him A is happening,
he continues to track to Z.
Yeah, it's, I mean, it really, it's mind boggling. You know, we mentioned that this video got 20
million views on Facebook and elsewhere and took a very long, and eventually was taken down by all
of the major social media platforms, but way later than it should have been. Judd Legum,
who writes the newsletter Popular Information, pointed out that this video was originally a
Breitbart video and Breitbart is
considered a news partner by Facebook. Facebook has previously identified the promoter of this
video as a trusted news partner, meaning that they feel like that information can and should be
spread across Facebook to their audience, I guess. I don't know what you call people who read
Facebook, except for probably misinformed. But A, why do you think this video got so much traffic
even before Donald Trump and his idiot son got involved?
And why do you think that the social platforms
are still so bad at dealing with misinformation?
I mean, I think that it got so many views
for like voyeurism, right?
It's like a fucking accident.
You can't look away.
You're like, what is this?
Let me just check.
And I mean,
I only watched the first three minutes because I was afraid I was going to get demon sperm.
And so I'm like, well, backing away from this one. But, you know, I think that it's all the
things that he retweets are so fantastical. They're so extraordinarily dumb. It's like,
you almost can't believe the president's still doing this.
Let's see what he got up to today.
And so, you know, even before he retweeted it,
I think that it's just, people are just like,
why do people read the Inquirer still, you know?
I mean, I guess that's the big question, right?
Is this people who are reading this
because they're watching this and consuming it
because it is completely absurd
and they're just sort of wallowing in the absurdity, as you say, much like the Inquirer, right? Or watching this and consuming it because it is completely absurd.
And they're just sort of wallowing in the absurdity, as you say, much like The Enquirer, right? Where it's like, you know, Ben Affleck's alien baby sort of story, right?
Or are there people who are watching this because they trust Breitbart?
They are not savvy enough news consumers to be concerned or skeptical of
videos they see on Facebook? Are they people who are looking for a good news about this terrible
situation we're in, right? Where it's like, everything seems so bleak. While work is being
done on vaccine, it's obviously not coming anytime soon. Things are getting worse, not better in large
parts of the country, much like Trump, right? Trump retweeted this video because he
wants to convince people there is a quick fix. Right. I think the people who are watching it,
who aren't laughing at it, will watch anything that they think is telling them what they want.
Like somehow, like people are so, there is a pocket of people who are so resistant to wearing
a mask because they think they're like being owned
by the libs and they'll watch anything or look like for any glimmer of hope or like information
in quotes that they don't have to wear a mask that someone is telling them what they want to hear i
think that's a lot of it that they're like see also we can't be racist because she's a black lady. So fuck you.
Yeah, I guess there's that.
I mean, it is like, like part of this is obviously Trump.
I mean, once again, it goes to just how simple minded he is, which is he went way out on a limb on hydroxychloroquine.
He was proven wrong over and over again. And if he was capable of shame, would have been embarrassed about this.
He was proven wrong over and over again.
And if he was capable of shame, would have been embarrassed about this.
So every time he sees someone, anyone, right?
Real, fake, demon sperm believer, otherwise, who agrees with him, he will retweet them without any scrutiny, right?
And he has gotten himself in trouble so many times since he got in this race for just retweeting
random people, right?
He's done conspiracy theorists. He's done Nazis. He's retweeted people who are QAnon and have
promoted Pizzagate over and over again. He makes this mistake. And he is incapable of
learning from it, right? He once again has spent another day and many more news cycles
demonstrating to the country why he is doing a terrible job of
managing the biggest issue people care about, the greatest crisis, I think, in American history in
nearly a century. And he just, like, the thing he needs to do to fix his political problems is just
do his job. And he is utterly incapable of doing his job because he has never been interested in
the actual job of president. And that's sort of being laid bare by all of this.
Can't you just imagine the conversations where they're like,
A, you could do your job.
He's like, what's option B?
Like, he will do anything.
And the funny thing is, like, when you think about what it would have taken to
really attack this COVID crisis, it's not super complicated. Like you didn't have to be the
brightest bulb to be like, America, wear a mask, don't touch each other, stay home when you can,
and like stay six feet apart. Don't lick each other. It's like it's not that hard.
And it's like, you know, sometimes I was thinking, you know, for the past couple of years that like the world, the cosmos, karma was giving the American people a break because our president was so stupid.
They knew we couldn't answer the call if something truly terrible were to happen.
And then they're like, we've had movies about this.
There have been Law and Order episodes about coronavirus.
Let's give him something that he can handle.
And he was like, try again.
Yeah, he's incapable of doing the bare minimum that would be required to at least improve the
situation, right? There's lots of hard logistical challenges about dealing with shortages in PPE.
And there's obviously a massive problem with testing backlogs, particularly in my state of
California, where people are waiting seven to 10 days to get a test, which basically makes them useless. You know, like I
had a friend with a child in preschool, and one of the parents of the kids in his class tested
positive for coronavirus. So they shut the school down until the kid could get a test. And it took
seven days for that kid to get a test back. So none of those kids could go to school for those
seven days, right? And every time that happens, the school's going to like, those are hard problems, but it's also notable that Trump is
not trying to solve them. Right. Like not even a little, like not even making an effort.
Like it is, you know, it's funny what you said about, uh, you know, you can do your job. And
he said, well, that's, that is always funny. But you know, it's like the scene in the departed
that we talked about sometimes where, uh, Mark Wahlberg says, I'm the guy doing my job.
And then Trump would just raise his hand and say, I'm the other guy.
Like with no shame.
With no like proudly.
Right.
He's like, I got this far without doing an ounce of fucking work.
So you do you.
Fuck. Okay. If that was not all at this briefing the other day, in addition to trying
to defend his conspiracy tweets, Trump also used his briefing to engage in some public wallowing,
not over the health and economic crisis the country is undergoing, but over his own popularity. Let's take a listen at what he had to say. Why don't I have a high approval rating with
respect and the administration with respect to the virus? We should have a very high because
what we've done in terms of we're just reading off about the masks and the gowns and the ventilators
and numbers that nobody's seen and the testing at 55 million tests.
We tested more than anybody in the world. I have a graph that I'd love to show you.
Perhaps you've seen it, where we're up here and the rest of the world is down at a level
that's just a tiny fraction of what we've done in terms of testing.
So it sort of is curious. A man works for us, with us very closely, Dr. Fauci and Dr. Birx,
also highly thought of. Andx, also highly thought of.
And yet they're highly thought of, but nobody likes me.
It can only be my personality.
That's all.
Alyssa, according to YouTube, you are officially a campaign expert.
Do you think it's a good idea to make yourself the victim in the week that the 150,000th
American dies of coronavirus?
No, no, it's not. It's not a good idea.
Do you consider that a leading question? I think it's a question my cat could have answered
because he's fairly alert and attuned to what's happening in the world. I mean, buddy, can you
even imagine if Barack Obama had gone out and been like, meh, it's almost the election and we have a
hurricane, meh. I mean, like, we would have been like, yoh, it's almost the election and we have a hurricane. Meh.
I mean, like, like, like we would have, we would have been like, yo, you should stay
inside for the day.
You should, you should just like take it down.
Trump can't.
It's like, it's the narcissism, right?
It's the most pathological form of his narcissism that he literally, and we know that instead
of sitting around with the very experts he's jealous of and saying, how do we kill this virus?
He sits alone in the Oval Office and draws like doodles of like Dr. Fauci with devil horns because he's like, I can't believe no one likes me.
Why doesn't anyone like me?
He is literally Gargamel from the Smurfs. He sits in his tree and he's like, I can't believe it when like,
there are like actual problems that he's like not equipped to handle. So he focuses on why
nobody likes him. But like, nobody likes him because like a lot of people are dying and it's
kind of his fault. You know, the core of the argument that a lot of us have been arguing that Democrats
should make against Trump for a long time is that it's always about Trump, that his
mantra is Trump first, America last.
And this is the perfect example of it, which is given everything that's happening in this
country, the massive amounts of tragedy happening, right?
And it's not just it's coronavirus, It's millions of people without jobs. We learned today that the gross domestic product dropped by more than 30% in the second quarter. To give you an example, the worst quarter of the Great Recession was a drop of, I think, 8.5%.
and concern, he immediately focuses on his own poll numbers relative to his own advisors.
Not even his own poll numbers relative to Joe Biden's, right? Which at least you could argue would be about an election where he could pretend to think that substantive policy issues
in the direction of the country were at stake. He is concerned that a doctor who works for him
is more popular than him, is more trusted than him.
And that level of narcissism is simply incompatible with being president of the United States. It just does not work. And I mean, it's just truly stunning that he will continually do this, right? And
as we get closer to election, as his political position gets worse, he is spiraling more out of control.
Do you know, as you're watching this, Alyssa, do you think there's anything Trump could even possibly do to fix his political problems?
Legally? No.
I mean, either.
No, I mean.
We'll get to some extra legal options in a minute.
No, I mean, like, here's the funny thing, too.
We'll get to some extra legal options in a minute.
No, I mean, like, here's the funny thing, too.
You know that when they were trying to spoon feed him this economic data this morning that he was like, what do you mean?
We're winning.
Not as bad as the depression.
And they were like, they didn't collect that data back then.
So you can't really make that comparison.
There's, you know, the thing is, because 100 days is still a lot of time for all intents and purposes. And because everybody's memory is so
short, if he started crushing the pandemic, he could probably make up some ground, you know?
I mean, it's like, it wouldn't be people, this is the problem, not problem. I think it's just,
it's truth. People want him to succeed because they don't want people to keep getting sick. And so I think that if he actually could put at least the American people on par
with his political ambition, that he, I do think that he could help himself. I don't think that he
could, you know, get himself necessarily over the finish line, I hope. But I think if he actually
like hunkered down, sat down, fucking read a couple books, maybe talked to some scientists that he would
actually listen to, he could make up ground if he actually came out with a national strategy to
crush the coronavirus. I mean, I am not saying Trump cannot win, because you were right. I would
never say that. As you know, I tend to wallow in the
dark side of things often when it particularly comes to political elections. Other than that,
I'm a totally sunny person. Totally. But post-Kyla, I've been a sunnier person, I think,
if not on the podcast, in my general life. But because 100 days is, as you said, a long time,
Trump could get lucky, right? Things could get better. The American people could listen to Trump less. Governors could listen to Trump less. And the coronavirus could get better.
The economy could improve. And that would certainly help Trump. And Trump only needs to get
to within three and a half to four and a half points of Biden in the polls, the national polls,
to have a chance to have a very close,
narrow electoral college victory.
Having said that, right, and then we have, I would say, massive amounts of uncertainty
about, and we'll talk about some of this when we get to the mailbag, but massive amounts
of uncertainty about the counting of how an election is going to take place in the pandemic.
Are we going to have enough poll workers to have enough polling places?
Are mail ballots going to be counted?
We have a postal system that is classing before our eyes at the same time that we are depending on said postal
service to deliver ballots on time. Like lots of big questions here. I don't think that there's
anything that Trump himself can do to improve his political position. Like he cannot change.
This is who he is. Like the circumstances around Trump can change because of the actions of other or just
the world changing. But he himself has proven time and again that he is just an absolutely
miserable politician. He is too self-absorbed to do everything. And the thing that is so particular
about this, whether he wins or loses is not going to depend mostly on whether he gets the right
slogan, he comes up with a cool nickname for Joe Biden, he comes up with a good message. What it's ultimately going to depend on is him doing
his job. And that is the one thing he is incapable of doing. He simply does not have the temperament,
the intellectual capacity, the curiosity, the empathy to be President of the United States
at this moment. You can fake it somewhat in times of peace and prosperity, but this is when real
shit is happening. People care and you have to do your job if people are going to judge you on that.
And he cannot do his job. He simply cannot. He could not go two weeks. He cannot go two weeks
with being serious about this. I mean, honestly, the other thing you would say is in addition to
doing his job, the thing he could really do is shut up.
Stop talking.
Don't go to briefings.
Don't do interviews.
Stop tweeting crazy shit.
Just disappear into the background and let people do the work, right?
Don't be jealous of Dr. Fauci.
Put him out every single day, right?
Have a forward-facing, confidence-inspiring spokesperson for this.
But he can't do it because, as Tommy
talked about last week, Trump always thinks that more Trump is the solution when it's almost always
the problem. Right. All right. As if all of this was not enough, Trump also, disregarding the
advice I just gave to shut the F up, did an interview with Axios' Jonathan Swan on Tuesday.
The full episode won't air until next week, but Axios released a
pretty astonishing clip on Wednesday morning. Last month, the New York Times published a
groundbreaking investigative article that asserted that Russian government entities were paying
bounties for members of the Taliban to kill American troops in Afghanistan. The Trump
administration did basically diddly squat about it. Trump and his staff have since tried to deflect
blame, claiming the president was not briefed on the intelligence, contradicting multiple government officials who have said
it was absolutely included in the presidential daily briefing, which maybe he reads, maybe he
doesn't. But since he doesn't read anything, he probably won't. In the last month, the story has
faded from headlines, but Swan asked Trump about it on Tuesday and whether the president had raised
the issue with Vladimir Putin when they spoke on July 23rd. Here are some highlights of that
exchange. It's been widely reported that the U.S. has intelligence
indicating that Russia paid bounties
or offered to pay bounties to Taliban fighters
to kill American soldiers.
You had a phone call with Vladimir Putin on July 23rd.
Did you bring up this issue?
No, that was a phone call to discuss other things.
And frankly, that's an issue that many people said
was fake news.
It never reached my desk.
You know why?
Because they didn't think it was intelligence.
They didn't think it was real.
It was in your written brief.
They didn't think it was worthy of it.
I wouldn't mind if it reached my desk.
I would have done something about it.
It never reached my desk because.
Do you read your written brief?
I do.
I read a lot.
You know, I read a lot.
They like to say I don't read. I read a lot.
Former, John Nicholson,
former head of forces in Afghanistan said,
and this is when he was working for you,
that Russia is supplying weapons to the Taliban.
Isn't that enough to challenge Putin over the killings of U.S. soldiers?
Well, we supplied weapons
when they were fighting Russia too.
You know, when we were,
when they were fighting with the Taliban
in Afghanistan.
It's a different era.
Well, it's a different, I'm just saying, yes.
But does that affect you?
No, no, I'm just saying we did that too.
Alyssa, I mean, that answer is obviously deeply absurd and I think, frankly, quite offensive to a lot of people that he did not bring it up.
He's obviously lied about it.
I think, you know, impressively, I think Jonathan Swan pushed him on the point that it was in his briefing book, which Trump is basically admitting.
You can bring this horse to water, but you can't make him drink, right? It's not there. It may have
been in the briefing book, but he certainly did not read it. So maybe he's telling the truth about
that, but that sort of speaks to a bigger problem. And I think it's good that this came up in this
interview because it hasn't come up in a number of the other interviews Trump has done recently. It did not come up in his much lauded Fox News Sunday grilling from Chris Wallace. Do you think this is an issue Democrats should continue to push?
even do the bare minimum to even, like, he approaches his job with less curiosity than,
like, I can't even come up with what less than. He has no curiosity whatsoever. When he talks about Russia, it's like he's Jan Brady saying, Marsha, Marsha, Marsha. He's so stupid. I mean,
he's just so stupid. And I think that it's important that people keep making the point to maybe people who don't follow this news every day,
that he's literally just like opening the door. He's like, Putin, here you go. Don't care. Look,
as long as we're good, I don't care what you do to everybody who's on the ground. And he,
he has talked to Putin eight times since this intelligence was in the report he did or did not
read and never raised it. Like that's fucking wild. Like it's really wild. Not even to be like,
hey, stop doing that until after November. But he like doesn't even, he's not even like slick
enough to do that. Yeah. I mean, it ties into, I think it should be brought up.
And I have some, it matters how you do it because people who are voting on Trump's ties
to Russia and what happened in the 2016 election and elsewhere, we have those voters.
They decided they were against Trump a long time ago when Crooked Media and Change Research did polls of swing states earlier this year and last year.
The Russia attack always tested relatively weak because, like I said, the people who
care about it have already moved.
But there's a way to do this specific version that is different from Trump is Putin's buddy,
Trump is Putin's lapdog, a lot of sort of the language you hear on Twitter, and more about Trump being incompetent and too afraid to do his job. Because I think
one of the things that's important to remember about messaging is that you do not want to
reinforce the notion that Trump is a strongman, because his persona as a strongman is what helped
pull some voters into his category in 2016. It doesn't mean we should not talk about his authoritarian impulses.
We should not talk about the secret militias that Trump is dispatching to Portland and
other cities.
But we need to do it in the context of the larger weakness in which he is operating,
the larger incompetence of it, right?
It's not that he is a strongman.
It's that he is incompetent and therefore is resorting to these extra legal tactics.
And I think that's the way to talk about this a lot,
is not just to do Russia, Russia, Russia,
but to put it in the context of him being an incompetent and weak president.
He's too afraid to bring this up to Putin,
to undermine that notion of social justice.
Yeah, I agree with that.
We got all prepared for this pod.
I did some work last night getting ready for it.
And then, of course, Trump had quite a morning on Twitter
where he did lots of things,
including promoting a pizza place called Patio Pizza because he saw the owner on, I think, CNBC this morning.
And much like the hydroxychloroquine video, Trump promoted pizza that he has never eaten because the person said something nice about him, which think about that for a second.
But he did have do something that was particularly concerning to a lot of people.
Trump tweeted, and I quote with universal mail in voting, not absentee voting, which is good.
2020 will be the most inaccurate and fraudulent election in history. It will be a great
embarrassment to the USA delay the election until people can properly, securely and safely vote.
Question mark, question mark, question mark.
All right.
First, we do a little fact checking here.
Mail-in voting and absentee voting are the same thing.
And that voter fraud is extremely rare.
But people, we've gotten a lot of questions on Twitter and elsewhere about Trump's ability
to delay the election.
To be clear, he absolutely cannot do this.
The date of the election is set by Congress.
And according to historians, there has never been a successful attempt to move election day. If you want to do
a deep dive into all the legal reasons that Trump can't do this and how the dates of election get
set, Vox is a great explainer on it, as they often do. Melissa, are you concerned Trump's
going to delay the election? No, no, no. I'm concerned he's going to keep talking about it,
but he, no, he can't move the election. Fuck him.
Yeah, he's like, there's many, many things he is going to do to try to steal this election.
We've talked about them.
We will continue to talk about them throughout this because people need to stay vigilant.
But this is an attempt to distract from, one, the embarrassment over him retweeting that video.
I think the sad news this morning that
Godfather's pizza CEO and former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain died of
coronavirus, potentially having contracted it at Trump's mask-free rally in Oklahoma last month.
So I think that we need to treat this with the absurdity as evidence that Trump is stupid,
not as evidence that he is going to steal the election this way,
right? He has other ways to steal the election that we're going to fight really hard against.
Election Day is November 3rd. Between a global pandemic and voter suppression efforts,
it's critical to help every American register to vote and ensure that every last vote counts,
which includes encouraging as many Americans as possible to request to vote by mail.
VoteSaveAmerica.com is a one-stop shop for voter registration and engagement and has created an
amazing hub that compiles the tools you need to request your vote by mail ballot early,
to volunteer to call voters, or to be a poll worker and much more.
Please visit VoteSaveAmerica.com right now to get involved with
every last vote. All right, you ready to do this mailbag? Let's hit the mailbag. Okay,
the first question, Alyssa, is for you. It's from Jim Saylor via community. Dear Alyssa,
thank you for your fantastic three-part series looking at the vice presidential search.
I loved your anecdotes, and as someone who grew up in Rhinebeck, I also loved hearing your story. You mentioned during the pod
that you were disappointed that Vice President Biden announced he would pick a woman without
actually selecting one. I'm wondering if you have seen some benefit to this process. I have watched
a good number of excellent potential candidates getting national attention in a way they never
would have without this public attention. I also noted from your pod that several candidates,
including Senator Kerry, who were in consideration for the vice presidential nomination, went on to run for
president themselves. I wonder if we might consider this as a great opportunity for
publicizing a number of qualified women. Definitely. Absolutely. I think that it is
great that people across the country know about what an amazing leader Karen Bass is. They know
about Kamala Harris. You know, they, of course, they probably knew more about Kamala and Elizabeth Warren, but people like Governor Whitmer and, yeah, all the ladies. I think it's great. And I hope that they all use this platform to do good things in their districts and states.
the impact of making that declaration at the beginning of the process, which is,
let's say he had not done that, right? Even like, like as you and I talked about on That's the Ticket, you know, our belief is that Joe Biden sincerely decided the right thing to do for a
whole host of reasons was that he was going to pick a woman, right? And then he made the decision
to announce that fact in advance. But had he not made that declaration at the beginning,
the shortlist discussion right now would include
a whole bunch of men, right? You could be like, would Bernie Sanders be on the ticket? Would
Cory Booker be on the ticket? What about Pete Buttigieg? All kinds of different people have
said it's been, we probably would not be having a conversation about Karen Bass or Val Demings or
Keisha Lance Bottoms if it was not a list that was all women.
So I think that that has been one of the upsides of that situation.
All right.
Sarah Puto Pluns via community.
Okay.
But like for real, when is Biden going to announce his VP pick?
I know we'll never find out who until the day of, but I'm dying to know a ballpark estimate.
He said next week, right?
Yeah. He said the first week of August is when this is likely to happen.
Now, here's my question to parse words. Is it that he will make the decision the first week,
or he will announce the decision the first week? I don't know. I can't remember.
Yeah. We don't know. We don't know. I think that question was left vague.
He has talked about the beginning of August being the timeline in multiple contexts over
the last few months.
He's talked about being at the point to make a decision at that time.
He's talked about having a decision at that time.
There's been some discussion of whether that was when all of the vetting stuff would be
done and he would be in a
position to interview the last few people. We just don't know. But if you look at the calendar
convention starts August 17th, and the FPP must speak there and have her name put into nomination
there. So we're running out of time. And historically, this pick has normally happened
seven to 10 days before the convention in many cases.
So I think we are, Sarah, I think we're getting close to this.
Also, with the amount of leaks happening, like the sooner the better, my friends.
Yeah, I mean, you never know, as we talked about on That's the Ticket, the three-part Patsy America miniseries about the VP selection featuring the two of us, that you never know what's a real leak and what's a fake leak,
right?
Like there are stories that, you know, there's this terrible, terrible offensive story that
was on CNNBC last night about some Biden allies who were pushing against Kamala Harris, you
know, very obviously sexist description of her as being, quote unquote, too ambitious for the job of vice president, as if that ambition was a negative.
You know, it's one that a lot of people very rightly got upset about.
In fact, the, you know, Joe Biden's campaign manager actually put out a tweet to try to knock down the idea that that's something that criticism that Biden was considering.
But that's a bunch of random donors saying it, right?
Right. There was a story about Karen Bass and Kamala Harris that was being pushed, I think, by a lot
of anti-Kamala Harris people in California that was, you know, that's all people who are not in
the room making decisions. So it's like, what's an actual leak and what is people who don't know
anything just talking is one of the great sort of parlor games of the VP process.
Right. Which if you want to learn more about, parlor games of the VP process. Right.
Which if you want to learn more about, check out.
That's the ticket.
Exactly.
In the Pots of America feed.
Exactly.
Anywhere you get your podcasts or something.
All right.
More VP questions.
This is one we got a lot from a lot of different people, but here it is from Ali Sait, also
via community.
Last night, Politico reported that Kamala was the
VP and included a quote from the Biden campaign. Does this mean that Kamala is the VP? How is
there a quote from Biden about Kamala being the VP if not? Leaks?
Well, as we talked about on That's the Ticket, the night before John Kerry announced that John
Edwards was his vice presidential pick, the New York Post ran
Dick Gephardt was the pick on the cover of the newspaper. So we have no idea how or why these
things happen. A lot of times we know that there may be four or five finalists that the campaign
is working on, and they have sort of like packages ready to go depending on who it's going to be.
So, you know, I think that's how it happens,
but I don't feel like we should really read anything into it.
Do you?
Yeah, like other forms in which this question came in was,
you know, did the Biden campaign give this to Politico
on an embargo and Politico messed it up
and therefore quickly deleted the tweet?
No, as you point out,
all of these media outlets are
going to be first and one of the first ones out of the gate when the news comes. So they have
pre-prepared all of their social media assets for it. They have written shells of stories with
biographical information about all of these people so that they can move very quickly.
And every once in a while, someone hits the wrong button and it goes live. This happens
with election results a
lot where the AP will accidentally send across the wire something that says Donald Trump was
reelected or Barack Obama was reelected and all that. It's a glitch. So don't worry. I wouldn't
read too much into that. No. But I would say if that's actually the quote they have in the hopper
to use in case it's her, I might just refresh the quote a little bit. Could use a little finessing.
Yeah. I don't think it's the Biden. I hope it's a dummy quote. I might just refresh the quote a little bit. Could use a little finessing. Yeah, I don't think it's the Biden.
I think, I hope it's a dummy quote.
I don't know why they-
Me too.
Normally you just put in like Latin for dummy copy.
Right.
Yeah.
So I don't know why.
That part was weird.
So I can't really speak to that.
Maybe the conspiracy theorists are right.
And Biden has picked Kamala Harris
and he told Politico and no one else.
And someone with an itchy Twitter finger at Politico put it out by accident. Who
knows? You can't rule anything out these days. All right. Someone named Rexcat via Twitter.
You never talked about incumbents switching VPs. Do you think there's any chance of that happening with Pence. Never say never. I have been of the mind for a long time
that I thought, A, Trump would ditch Pence, and B, it would be the right thing for Trump to do.
In fact, I may even have written something to that effect that is just sitting in draft form
on my computer somewhere. What are you waiting for?
Well, Alyssa, I got a lot of things on my plate these days, and I really write a lot of things that get to be about 45% done, and then they just sit on my computer.
I'm that way with friendship bracelets.
I think now we are getting so close to a Republican convention that it seems less
likely he will ditch Pence, but Pence adds nothing to Trump. Not anymore. He has no value. He is a waste of space. In 2016,
he served as a validator for some evangelical and conservative voters because Pence was seen
as one of them. And it was sort of buttressing this idea that Trump would get into office and then act like a moderate Manhattan billionaire and not like an even stupider version
of Paul Ryan, which is what he ended up governing as. But if you were Trump and you think about
things in terms of TV, because you were once briefly on a very bad show with mediocre ratings,
and it's not unusual when shows get bad ratings to try to bring a new character into the mix.
I'm sure you remember this, Alyssa, because we are of the same generation when Leonardo
DiCaprio briefly joined the cast of Growing Pains.
Of Growing Pains.
Yep.
Right?
He's the homeless kid that Mike Seaver found.
Yes.
Or Mr. Seaver, one of the Seavers
found, and he came to live with them. You could see Trump seeing this role that he needs a new
narrative, a new excitement, to add something new to the mix. There would be some political logic
of picking Nikki Haley or Tim Scott or something that would create some permission for some set of voters who are skeptical of Trump
as a misogynist or skeptical of Trump as a racist. I don't know what a difference it would make,
but right now, Mike Pence is adding nothing. The other advantage to ditching Pence would be that
you could blame Pence. Pence is in charge of the coronavirus task force. I don't know why
he hasn't thrown him under the bus earlier. Like that's been a very strange dynamic that I guess Trump views any,
just like he views any person being accused of racism as an attack on him or
any man anywhere in America being accused of sexual harassment or sexual
assault as a reflection on him.
He views any criticism of the coronavirus response as a criticism of him when
he could have easily just thrown Mike Pence under the bus.
And well, but I mean, think about it. If anyone had asked Mike Pence to throw out a first pitch,
Mike Pence would be fired. Yeah, that's good. Luckily, he's the least dynamic person on the
planet. So no one even fucking talks about him. But I mean, you have to assume that since March,
since Biden said he'd be picking a woman, that Mike Pence has kept a close eye on Nikki Haley
in her tweets. Oh, Nikki Haley is insufferable for this job. Yes, she is. She very much wants
it. That is why she is continually tweeting absolutely absurd things because that is the fastest way to Trump's heart.
Do you mean like, what a hero, he wore a mask?
Fuck you.
Yes, congratulations on doing the bare fucking minimum
three months too late.
All right, Sheila Mahatra,
I hope I said that correctly, via community,
vote by mail.
Is it better to vote by mail or in person?
Is there any risk of my mail ballot not being counted, even if I send it in on time?
Alyssa, what do you think?
Well, I wonder the same question.
And I think that in the era of COVID, I think I'm going to try and vote by mail.
But we saw the Tony DeCoppo special on CBS
that it takes longer than we would assume sometimes
for the mail to get to where it's supposed to go.
So I would say they're equal
as long as you vote a couple days early,
mail your ballot in a couple days early.
Yeah, I would mail your ballot in.
If you decide to vote by mail,
I would mail it in on the first day you can do it. Right?
Yes. In the Florida primary, 18,500 Floridians ballots were not counted because they are many
of them arrived by mail after the deadline. The postal service is swamped anyway. There's huge,
obviously, because people are going, they're doing more ordering, things aren't going,
people aren't going to stores, doing things in person. The post office is being underfunded.
It's being, the post office is being managed by a Trump lackey who is totally unqualified
for the job and doing very dangerous and stupid and potentially illegal things.
And so if you feel like the safest way for you to vote is vote by mail, you should vote
by mail.
If you live in a state that offers easily accessible early voting,
they can be safe. We do need people to vote early because we want to get as many people to vote
early to reduce the pressure on the postal service and to reduce the amount of people who
have to vote on election day. Basically, the, basically, the goal is to get at bank as many
votes as possible, not for political reasons, although that is obviously helpful, but to reduce
the dangers for people on election day, because we know we are going to have fewer poll workers
than we need. And Crooked Media is working to help encourage people to become poll workers. And
we'll talk more about that as time goes on. But I don't want to tell people to do one or the other. But I would just say,
if you choose to vote by mail, get it in as soon as possible. Do not trust the postal service to
get it there on time. Because mail ballots get tossed out way more than you would think because
of things getting there too late from the mail and because of, in many cases, very arduous and unfair and
discriminatory signature match laws. In Nevada, in this primary, 6,700 ballots were rejected because
officials couldn't verify voter signatures, and that's been very problematic. Two people I would
encourage you to pay attention to and follow to learn more about all these issues is, of course,
Stacey Abrams, our friend over there at Fair Fight,
who has obviously experienced firsthand the worst elements of Republican voter suppression,
and Mark Elias, the Democratic election attorney who does a lot of writing at something called Democracy Docket.
I would follow him on Twitter because he has been raising a lot of the warning flags about what could happen
and with some real important actionable information about what you can do about it.
Alyssa, this question comes from Ken Thompson via Facebook. Do you think Biden should be doing more interviews right now to counter the sheer amount of time Trump is on the
air or is having the focus totally on the shit show that is the Trump administration beneficial
to the Biden campaign? I don't know. What do you think? local stuff, doing stuff that speaks specifically to audiences of target voters. That could be
local TV. That could be things that have large audiences of young podcast listeners to pick one
thing out of a hat, or Black voters, Latino voters. There's a way to do smart, targeted
communications that does not depend on trying to win the national news cycle with Trump.
Playing that game, and I think to the Biden campaign's great credit, they have not played that game. They have been pretty
disciplined about how they've used their candidate, picking big moments and not trying to match Trump
blow for blow. But as time goes on, that's going to continue to become more of an imperative,
not just for persuading people, but informing them about voter registration deadlines for what
we talked about earlier, how to vote by mail, all of those things. There's a communications element to
organizing, and that's going to require some targeted communications. It's very smart.
All right. You want to take some fun questions? Yeah, let's take fun questions.
Okay. Sophie via Twitter. I always love hearing about what you are reading and writing. So what
are some of the good books, novels especially, you reading let's also do tv shows Alyssa what have you been watching
and reading you'd recommend to people um so I'm going to be really honest I have not been reading
that much lately because it makes me fall asleep sorry um but I don't want to lie to the pod save
America fans so um watching okay I a documentary that was really enjoyable called Every Little
Step about a chorus line.
And it's on Amazon Prime.
And I loved it because it's like, you know, you're feeling like down in the dumps and
everything seems like a dumpster fire.
And like, sometimes you just keep persevering and it pays off.
So I watched that.
It's kind of it.
And I watch Law & Order all the time, which everybody knows.
SVU mostly.
Where are you on criminal intent?
So I have to be honest.
I should do this.
Can you rank the Law & Orders for me?
Yeah.
So interesting.
It kind of goes like there's Elvis and Fat Elvis, you know? So
I would say I like early Law & Order, number one. I like later SVU, number two. I'm really
excited to see the Elliott Stabler spinoff. One of my favorite things to do is scream at
the television when DK and I are watching when I spy
someone who like was a baby baby actor back then and now they're famous I'll be like oh my god
that's Huck from Scandal um and then it's Criminal Intent I don't know why those just creep me out
more do you hate Vincent D'Onofrio I don't hate Vincent D'Onofrio I thought he was very funny
in um The Breakup, one of my favorite Jennifer
Aniston movies. Is that the one with Vince Vaughn that's pretty dark? Yeah. Yeah. That takes place
in Chicago. I wrote about it in a whole chapter of my book. I remember. But no, I think that's,
I just, I think that my theme for the past couple of months has been that I need shows that show
justice because we're not
getting any in America. So I really leave that to Mariska Hargitay. Should Mariska Hargitay be on
the VP shortlist? The VP was on SVU with Mariska Hargitay. Oh, I forgot about that. Yes. And also,
I just really love that they forecast everything. Like if anyone wanted to know how coronavirus spreads,
you should watch like season 17 of SVU.
Okay.
What are you watching?
What are you reading?
What are we watching in our house?
Here's what we're watching in our house.
This is my, I don't even think,
I think this show is good enough
that you can't call it a guilty pleasure,
but we, Hallie and I love love yellowstone that's a good show
yeah i know what yellowstone is all right i don't know i mean kevin costner story about a
montana ranch it is uh it's great we very excited in the middle of season three right now
we also we're watching i may destroy you on HBO, which is amazing. And obviously we are midway through Below Deck Med.
And I'm very concerned about what's going to about how you film future seasons of Below Deck in a coronavirus era.
So because Below Deck, if you like Below Deck, it never ends.
It's like Below Deck happens, then Below Deck sailing out, then Below Deck Med and then Below Deck comes back.
Oh, do you mean like TLC?
Like 90 Day Fiance, is that what you're going to say?
90 Day Fiance the other way, 90 Day Fiance happily ever after, 90 Day Fiance beyond the 90 days.
And then Pillow Talk, which is where old couples talk at the camera while other people, like while the season's
unfolding, I laugh my ass off. I can't believe how uptight I got that they kicked off Tim and
Veronica. I love them. And then in terms of what I'm reading, I have recently, people ask the
questions, I answer them, what do you want me to do? I just read a book called The Burning, which is a book about politics in India, which makes it sound more serious than it is. It's a very interesting and fun is not the right word, but it's just a very well-written book from a first-time novelist.
It's just a very well-written book from a first-time novelist.
Then I read a book called Weather by Jenny Ophel, which is very short, sort of amazingly written book about people dealing with the existential threat of climate change, which
also is less dark than it seems, I promise you.
It's just really, really well done.
And now I'm reading, now you're going to make fun of me, but I'm doing this primarily to
keep up with Tommy and Ben and the world
those is an Apple bombs book,
the twilight of democracy,
which is about sort of the lure of authoritarianism.
And is I was,
I felt like this was a book I have to read.
Like I,
I should do it.
It's the right thing to do.
Like I should be serious and learn things,
but it's actually,
it's a much more sort of engaging read than I imagined.
It's,
it's actually quite good.
Yeah. You know, I really, I imagined. It's actually quite good. Yeah.
You know, I really, I started The Fountainhead a while ago.
Who are you, Paul Ryan?
Just kidding.
The what?
You should have just said, we should always just say that we're reading Infinite Jest,
right?
Isn't that what you're supposed to say?
Well, no, what I was going to say is as soon as it arrives, I will read She Proclaims by
our friend Jen Palmieri, but mail up here is
very, very slow. They said it'll be here in seven to 10 days. Well, that's another warning about
your mail ballot, people. Yeah, exactly. Good point. I'm not going to torture you with this
question because I know you won't hate it, but don't worry. Christopher Brown via Twitter says,
what does Ben Simmons' new three-point shot mean for the 76ers bubble championship chances?
And then here's the note from Jordan Waller, our producer extraordinaire. Dan, you got so many
basketball questions. And I mentioned the so many basketball questions just because it feels like a
huge missed opportunity that I have somehow not figured out how to have some sort of basketball
podcast, YouTube show.. Like where is it?
Where is it?
It's a failure.
It's a failure.
Laziness.
It's lazy.
I'm not a good,
I'm not a good self-starter.
Do I have to,
do I have to write a memo?
Probably.
I am.
I will say this to Christopher Brown.
I am reserving judgment on Ben Simmons is three point shot until he
shoots minimum four or three pointers a game.
When the season starts,
I think the Sixers first game is Saturday. So. All right. This is from Ross Bennett via Community.
With many late nights working in the White House, what was the food situation like?
Is the cafeteria always open? Are delivery drivers coming and going?
In the White House.
In the White House, yes.
You know that you and I often had our meals together.
But never late at night because it's a food desert.
It's a food desert.
There's no food near the White House, really, that stays open.
And the cafeteria, which is called the Navy Mess, closes at 8 p.m.
Is that right?
Do I remember that right?
I think that's right.
8 p.m.
And if we were there that late, chances are we were not eating
the Pfeiffer special, which was chicken, brown rice and broccoli. If we were there late, that's
a true story. Pfeiffer's laughing because it's a true story. It was called the Pfeiffer special.
And I know because the Navy mess reported to me. Well, that's in part because I organized a
campaign among my staff to suggest brown rice on the suggestion cards, which is how we got brown
rice at the mess, which is why I got the special name after me, which when you combine this with
the Ann Applebaum thing makes me seem like an even bigger loser than I actually am.
Right. Because the truth is though, if we were there eating dinner, what were we having?
Chicken fingers.
Chicken fingers. And sometimes a grilled cheese.
Yeah. Sometimes. I would never eat a grilled – I would always eat the chicken fingers every single time
I had the opportunity at the White House.
And I was the dick that would order a Caesar salad with chicken but would ask for the chicken
to be hot because that's how I like it.
And I walked down to the Navy mess once and they were like, is that hot chicken ready
for the Caesar salad?
And I was like, I'm right here.
It's very possible things have changed in DC since we left.
But when we were there, as you point out,
there's no food around the White House at night
because it's all business.
It's like public service land, right?
Yeah, but it's a bit like the restaurants close.
The restaurants aren't open for dinner
because most restaurants aren't open for dinner
because they close when people go home
because people don't live around the White House per se.
And getting in and out of the White House is a pain in the ass and takes time.
And so like to go outside, get your food and bring it back was annoying.
So it's just like be hungry and then go home and eat what's in your fridge was the often
choice when we work late.
So that's a long answer to that question.
But I bet it was enjoyable.
Okay.
This one comes from your friend, Monica Lewwinsky via twitter monica monica loves us
yeah alice please describe in detail the birthday cake you were going to make me
were it not for covet also if you two were to do a karaoke duet what would it be okay so first
monica knows her cake was going to be a yellow cake with custard filling and
strawberries.
It was going to be buttercream on the outside with hot pink and yellow roses, which I have
taught myself how to make with green leaves and pink sprinkles.
That was going to be her birthday cake because we both love buttercream roses.
And I've known this for a while.
So I taught myself how to make them so that I could celebrate her birthday properly, which
was like last week. But when did she get the cake?
Do we have to wait for Trump to solve coronavirus or to get this cake?
She gets the cake after her 47th year around the sun.
Okay. Do you want to get to the karaoke part of this?
Yes, yes, yes. What do you say? What's your, what would you do at? What would you do?
Can I admit something here?
You've never done karaoke.
One time I got almost dragged into it,
but I've spent my entire life,
my entire adult life avoiding doing karaoke.
And can I tell you why?
Tell me.
Well, because when I was in high school.
Oh boy.
You had to take a, some sort of music class.
And I didn't like not, I,
I am to music what Donald Trump is to being president. Like it just doesn't work. Like,
like if you said to me, Dan, in order to get reelected, you have to play the flute. I would just not get reelected. Like that's how it would be. And so the, so I took chorus cause that seemed better than some sort of band related activity.
And midway through the semester, my, the choral teacher, uh, asked me if I'd be willing to
lip sync.
You're okay.
I know.
How horrible is that?
Seventh grade.
No, it's eighth grade.
I know.
I was in high school.
I was like, I was like 16 and I was like, as long And I was like, as long as I get my pass grade,
I will lip sync the F out of the song. That's what I will do. And so I did. But that was traumatic.
And that's why I don't do karaoke. That is my answer. This is what makes us amazing. Because
I was in eighth grade. Mr. LeSwan, our chorus teacher, he had been in Attack of the Killer
Tomatoes. I can't believe you just doxed your chorus teacher.
I did because we were singing Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For by U2.
And he straight up was like, I appreciate your enthusiasm, but maybe you should lip sync.
But see, you, I am to singing as Donald Trump is to self-awareness.
I was like, I'm going to do it Trump is to self-awareness. I was like, don't, I'm great.
I'm going to do it.
Fuck him.
I'm great.
So anyway, I sing all the time and I've done karaoke several times.
So are you saying that you have no karaoke song?
I don't.
I don't.
I have assiduously avoided it my whole life.
Okay.
Well, if you-
And here's the thing.
If you, like, this is how seriously I take it is like,
especially when I was like younger and we,
like you would go out a lot more,
a lot more people at karaoke birthday parties.
Like if you drink a little bit less,
like a little slower than everyone else,
you can position yourselves that you never end up seeing karaoke.
Cause by the time it gets around to people think you should do it,
they've gotten too drunk to remember and you don't have to do it.
And then there'll be a bunch of people who are friends of ours who listen to this,
who are going to be like, you know, I did go to a lot of karaoke birthday parties or
karaoke bars with Dan and I have never seen him sing that somehow I've avoided it all these years.
Okay. So if it was like my 50th birthday and my only birthday present that I wanted in the
whole world was that you sang karaoke with me, we would sing Losing My Religion
as a shout out to Dylan and Brenda 90210.
I'm just going to pretend like you did not say that
and that I have no obligation
in an unsaid number of years
until said birthday party was going to come.
By the time we turn 50,
I feel confident we may be able to fly again.
I'll come to you.
Okay.
All right.
Put that in the books.
All right.
I think that's a good place for us to end because we have now devolved into even more
absurdity than usual when we do these podcasts together.
Alyssa, thank you for joining us on short notice to fill in for Jon Favreau
and our best to Jon and Emily and Charlie and Leo, of course,
who's adjusting to a new occupant at his home.
We're so happy for them and they're going to be great parents.
Thank you, everyone.
And we will see you next week.
Bye, everyone.
Thank you, everyone.
And we will see you next week.
Bye, everyone. thanks to Tanya Sominator, Katie Long, Roman Pappadimitriou, Caroline Reston, and Elisa Gutierrez for production support
and to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Narmal Konian, Yale Freed, and Milo Kim
who film and upload these episodes
as videos every week.