SmartLess - "David Remnick"
Episode Date: October 11, 2021Why is David Remnick always so cold? He’s surrounded by drafts. Editor of The New Yorker and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer David Remnick joins us this week to discuss penne pasta, drunk twe...eting, feeding the recycling bin, and Leonard Cohen. Theres some other good stuff in their two also, its’See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Sean, hey, you're feeling kind of sleepy. I am. You're feeling a little bit drowsy. I am. And you're
listening to my voice. Oh, this is crazy. And when I say three, two, one, you're under my control,
Sean. Okay, I don't believe this would work, but let's try it. I hate tuna sandwiches. Say I hate
tuna sandwiches. I hate tuna sandwiches. You didn't say three, two, one. Oh, did I not say three,
two, one? God, I make a terrible hypnotist. Welcome to smart list. Smart. Smart. Well, you just
recently moved out of your house. Yeah, I did. Yeah. So listener, so we'll, we'll have moved out
of his house, but he still has a recording booth there in the house because he does make a grip
on voiceover work. And so he's asked this new owner if he can come in and use his audio studio.
That is hilarious. Wait, so it's different families living there right now, but you're
in there with them? Yeah, I just met the new owners as I came up and they let me and they
agreed to for the next week, let me continue to use the, what I call my booth is technically
their booth. You're joking, right? But you're watching people living in your kitchen as of
last week was your kitchen, your living room, everything. I just met them in, in what is now
their kitchen. I don't know how do you deal with that? Well, luckily I'm very cut off emotionally.
So I don't, you know, I don't let that, but it was very strange. Like they open the door,
come on in, into a house. I built this house, as you know. Well, a crane, a crane did, a container
crane did. Oh yeah, don't get Kimmel started on me building this. You know, Sean, his house is one
of those kind of new fancy modern, we're just going to stack a bunch of glass boxes on each other.
Oh yeah, no, I saw it. It's like a Costco. Prefab. I went shopping in there. It's a beautiful house.
It was on the cover of Dwell Mag. I don't need to sell it anymore. I already sold it. Yeah,
you did. But it's any of your, any of your personal things still there that they're rummaging through
or just, just in this, it's like I'm in the Vatican, you know, like I'm just, I've got this little
oasis here, this little temple inside their house. And I did, I will admit this, I came up here and
they were like, you can use, you know, they're, by the way, these people are so nice and so,
so sweet. And they said, yeah, feel free to use it the next week. Don't all good. And then I get
in here and their dancers and the kids are like, I really got to take a leak. Like I wonder if
they'll know if I just pop around the corner and I did, I popped around like tiptoeing around in
what one week ago was my house. That's so crazy. Tiptoeing in to take a leak. It was very, it's
very odd, but I will say the kindness, it reaffirmed my faith in humanity. These people are very
sweet to let me continue to do this. That's nice. So I'm very nervous. I know that you have
heard me introduce guests before by saying today's guest is going to really class us up, but today
it has never been more true. I have been an admirer of this man for as long as I have been
smart enough to admire smart people, which is sadly only the second half of my life.
This man is one, among other wards, the Pulitzer Prize and the George Polk. Okay.
He, he started his career in journalism at the Washington Post in 1982. He covered
Metro sports style. Then in 1988, he became their Moscow correspondent. I'm not smart enough.
This is in 1992. He became a staff writer at the New Yorker and a short six years later was named
editor, a position he remains in to this day. You got it. You can only one of five people to
hold that title in the magazine's 100 year history. He's one of our smartest and most cultured
thinkers that we have today. And I have zero idea why I said yes to the big swing that took
when I asked him to join us. Friends, please welcome Mr. David Remnick. David? Oh my gosh,
David Remnick. No way. Oh, there he is. Look at this. Wow. Wait, David, you look so young to be
only one of five editors in the history of the New Yorker. Is that true? I'm not the only one.
No, no, no. Some die off and some retire. Yeah, but I'm just saying like five, but that's
25 years or something. It's kind of incredible. We've been around for 90, what is it, 95 years
or something. And the first two, Harold Ross went for 25 years or so and William Shawn for 30 odd
years, 35 years or something. David, how long have you been editor? 23 years. Wow. Geez,
that's what I'm saying. Older than any pair of khakis that any of you have. Sure.
You can put some mileage on khakis because they really don't fade in any sort of substantial way.
So I'm going to get right into the New Yorker and in my own subscription and my battle with my
subscription with the New Yorker for many years, which is the shame I would feel when I'd be like,
well, first of all, the victory I would feel when I'd read an entire issue. And then the
shame I go away and I get behind and then they pile up and then I have on my counter,
you know, sort of north of 40 and I'd be like, I'm going to get, okay, I got to get to that.
Now I got to get to that. And then I would ultimately have to put them in the recycling
and I think I never got to all 10 of these. Throwing away all that knowledge. This is our
editorial, this is our highest editorial aspiration, number one, to make you feel really bad.
Terrible. Always. And number two, to feed the recycling. So I feed the recycling and keep the
subscription, which is now, now here's how I figured it out. Now I'm on a digital. Yeah,
there you go. Yeah. So I'm now on the digital slick, very slick, but I have the New Yorker is one
of the, of course, I mean, but you guys should talk. I think Netflix rolls over too. I don't
notice like myself getting a bill in the mail from Netflix. So, you know, yeah, yeah. Well,
we're all on the same deal. Sure. Now, David, there's, there's no way that you can read every
issue cover to cover. Yeah, I don't have to make a TV show or, or anything else. This is,
this is what I do. In fact, no kidding around. That's the great pleasure is to read the stuff.
And I read it multiple times. And in addition to the thing you get in the mail or, or the,
what's known as the issue, the weekly issue, we also publish a whole bunch of things every day
online on New Yorker.com. So it's, the reading is increased. Yeah. So David, when you, when you
started, so you started as a journalist, I imagine, what, what was your trajectory? You, you had a,
you had an illustrious, uh, academic career. Well, I, since, since it was denied to me playing
second base for the Yankees or being a supermodel, that's what I wanted to do. Same. I, I, I, one of
those, I don't know about you guys, but once in a while you meet somebody who ended up doing exactly
what they wanted to do since they were a kid. And I went in high school, we had a,
a, a high school newspaper and I went to a place called Pascac Valley in the mascot. And it's a
terrible word to use. Now mascot is the Indians and the newspaper was called, wait for it,
the smoke signal. And no one was interested in this newspaper except for me. And I used to write,
I don't know, two thirds of it using fake names and so on and do it on my kitchen table in the
days when you, you know, printed these things out and cut them in columns and pasted it. And I
knew I wanted to do this. I loved, I loved the idea of going out into the world and in a sense
hiding behind a notebook. In other words, engaging with the world, but having a kind of purpose
and come back with your, your material and, and make something of it. That, that seemed like an
exciting thing to do. And nobody, nobody that my parents knew did such a thing, considered such a
thing. It wasn't, my parents thought that was, this was insane, insane. Was the draw to that more
a, just a simple dry reporting of the facts of news or were you confident enough, interested
enough at that age to, to weave in some opinion, some, to sort of editorialize. I wasn't that
sophisticated. I was a kid and, and, but it gave me the, you know, I grew up in a really boring
town, kind of Springsteen North, that kind of really dull. And it was with no ocean and,
in close to New York, but, but a million miles away. So everything that was exciting was across
the river. The world seemed to be across the river. And so how do you get to that? And I didn't come
from an incredibly sophisticated or intellectual family. I came from a family though that had,
you were meant to aspire. Yeah. Right. What did your parents do, David? My father was a,
had a very small dental practice and, and to be, you know, perfectly glum about it. My,
my mother was six. She had MS. And eventually my father lost his dental practice because he had
Parkinson's. You don't want a Parkinsonian dentist unless you want Buster Keaton as your dentist.
You can get a deal. You can get a really good deal. I can, I can show you the paper.
And so it was a, it was a difficult situation. Yeah. And they wanted me to do something
incredibly secure, be a lawyer or a doctor. That, that was the range of it.
Was that the attraction to reading though, the sort of that escapism, getting into a book?
Yeah. Or all of it, radio, TV, radio in those days when I was a kid and I'm older than you guys was.
You don't look at David. Look at you. Look how hydrated.
And so I would listen to these, obviously rock and roll was in the air, but also there were weird
radio stations like Pacific or radio stations and you would kind of, the counterculture would
come in by listening to it at two o'clock in the morning as a adolescent, you know, couldn't sleep.
So it was excitement, but it was over there. And somehow the idea that journalism would get you
over there. Get you over there. And, but would there kind of to what Jason was saying about
the reading, do you suspect that there was, whether you were writing or you were editing the school
paper, was there, was there a part of you maybe now, have you ever thought about the idea that you
were recreating by observing other lives and actually by, you know, putting together this
newspaper, you were creating a life or a world that was different from the world you were existing
at the moment. I think that's right on the money. That's right on the money. And I also didn't,
it was not given to me to have the self-confidence or to live in a world where people were artists.
My parents knew people who sold things or fixed things or ran a store or something like that.
The idea that somebody would be an artist was preposterous and laughable and just otherworldly.
So a journalist seemed like a middle ground. Do you know what I mean? You could make a living
at, there was a job that you could occupy, you could work at a newspaper or something like that.
Right. And a proximity to the artist, but also another foot firmly in sort of establishment.
Yeah. I knew from a very young age in some intuitive way that I would have to make some sort
of living to, quite frankly, to support them much less myself. Right. And that's what ended
up being the case. You know, Duddy Kravitz, the apprenticeship at Duddy Kravitz. I know it all
too well. It's so good in that great line of like, a man is nothing unless he owns land,
like that thing, like you have to do something, you have to own land, you have to do. Well,
I just had to make sure that they somehow got to the end of their lives. You know, we don't
hate to turn all terribly serious on you, but we live in a political system where if you are weak
or sick or left behind, you're in deep trouble. Whether it's about health insurance or it's
about a minimum amount of income or whatever. And I could see that coming like a freight train.
Yeah. You started it. So this is where I want to go. And we can lighten it up as we go through it.
If we want to. But we're going to go darker. I want to use your brain for a second here.
So I mean, I know that there's no solid answer for this, but I would love your
perspective on, in your gut, do you think that we are now currently in a period
nationally that is temporary, you know, an anomaly that will make for interesting
retrospection? Or do you think that we are in potentially the first chapter of what may be
an endless story about two tribes without a happy ending potentially? I mean, if we're going to,
let's ruin everybody's mood right away. Let's just kill it. Let's just. Yeah, it's a good idea.
Yeah. Well, because then it's only up from there. Exactly. It's kind of a rhythmic thing. Yeah.
It's never going to get more glum than this listener. What we've just gone through this
year and a half is a rehearsal, a rehearsal, the pandemic is a rehearsal, not just for other
pandemics, but for really for climate change. And if we don't get our shit together politically,
environmentally, we are going to face something that there's no vaccine for. Right. There's no
vaccine for that's number one. Number two, we're living in a period where we're playing very fast
and loose with the greatest gift we've had. This is a country that had the great gift,
despite all its problems and slavery and so much more of a period of enlightenment,
philosophers who gave us something called liberal democratic society. Yeah. And we are in the process
of willy-nilly seeing it being thrown out the window by the, I think we can go into that if
you want at some point, or we can talk about the cartoons in the New Yorker. Well, no, no, no,
I don't want to talk about it. And, and, and, and, and I think that we're in a moment also of
racial reckoning that's long and coming or it's happened every so often, but now it's at its next
stage. That's extremely serious. So that's just three big things. And isn't it interesting though,
because I always whenever I hear, you know, I'm, I'm a news junkie just as much as the other person
until I realize I can't do anything about any of it except vote. And that's what really is. Yeah,
I don't think that's true. It's like, yeah, oh my God, it's so frustrating. Sure, we can go out and
protest. We can do these things, but we don't, all we have the power to do is vote. Otherwise,
we're just filled with anger all day long. I think you also have the power to
make art. Yeah. To, to protest. For sure. To be funny in ways that are provocative. Thank you. I
have no illusion that the New Yorker, which has a, you know, a circulation of a million, three,
and then maybe four or five million people read it. I have no illusion that this is going to,
you know, be a conversion experience throughout the United States must lessen, you know,
red America. I'm not deluded, but each person, each in their own way can play some kind of
role. That's what, that's what the whole thing is about anyway in large measure. And if you give
into resignation or give up the game each in your own way, then, then maybe we didn't deserve it in
the first place. And now back to the show. So, you know, somebody in the New Yorker who I really
enjoy who plays around with a lot of the themes that we talk about, but in a really delightful
way is Andy Borowitz and the Borowitz report. Can you talk a little bit, did he predate your
becoming editor of the New Yorker? You know, so Andy, you know, Andy's career. Did he create the
Fresh Prince of Bel Air? So my understanding is he met, he was at the Harvard Lampoon. Right. And I
think he either met Bud Yorken or Norman Lee or somebody like that through that high office.
And he wrote a treatment for or some kernel of what became the Fresh Prince of Bel Air eventually.
And, you know, which by the way, I think pays better than freelance writing and creating a TV
show in the nineties. Yeah. Yeah. Lots of episodes. We're not throwing a benefit for Andy any time
soon. Well, I would never ask him, but what is it? You have to go over a hundred episodes and then
it's just the time anymore. Nobody cares. So and I think Andy, you know, is able, like the onion and
like a lot of our best comedians are able to see the absolute absurdity in political life. And he
does it through this headline form. And he's pretty hilarious. Yeah. He's hilarious. I find it
it's so delightful. And I find it to be so, we kind of brought him, he had his own gig online and
we kind of brought him into the New Yorker. He was always at the around the New Yorker. He was
doing things for the New Yorker, but the constancy was brought from his, I guess, what used to be
called a blog and and then brought on. Right. So, so, so now that we're still on the New Yorker,
the other thing I want to ask you, because this is really important, and I want to ask you,
David, first, and then I'm going to go around to the fellas. And you have to be honest. And I
know that you have a lot of, you're going to have a lot of favorites. It's kind of like asking,
well, who's your favorite child? Favorite New Yorker cartoon of all time. What, what is it?
Describe it, please. Oh, ask those guys first and I'll think. Okay. Okay. Sean or Jason. Okay,
I got it. I got it. Oh, wait, wait, sorry. Yeah, Sean and Jason. All right. So you're on eyes again.
And it's completely self-involved and it involves a gift. So I think one of the great comic geniuses
in the country of any kind is Ross Chast. You guys know Ross Chast and
she has this kind of wobbly line and her humor comes out of, you know, Brooklyn neurotic,
old parents who are school teachers. And when I turned 40, which I love to admit it was some time
ago, I was feeling pretty, I don't know how you guys turned 40. Yes, right? Yeah. Yeah. It's not
the best day of your life. I currently play 38. Yeah. What was the question? Jack Benny.
And I contrived some reason to stay home from work that day. And yet this thing came in the,
in, you know, was delivered to the house, a big framed thing. And it was Ross Chast
had delivered or the office had delivered or gotten me this strip that Ross had done about
her childhood and her obsession with Charles Adams, who was one of the great New Yorker cartoonists.
And so that, that strip hangs in my apartment. And so I have to give that pride of place.
Yeah. Yeah. She, she, she has very distinctive, a very distinctive style, Ross Chast.
She sure does. Yeah. Very, very cool. Very funny. Sean, do you have one? No, I don't read.
The New Yorker cartoons? Jason, hang on, hang on. We're still doing this. One sentence at a time.
Jason, do you have one? I'm embarrassed to say that I just read the articles and not even as often
as I would like to. I do not spend time with the cartoons. Well, get to it. I was teeing myself up.
I was teeing myself. Okay, go ahead. Good. Keep in mind the title of the, of this show is called
Smartlers. Go ahead. Right. My favorite New Yorker cartoon, of which I have two framed versions,
because two people knew I loved it so much, they gave it to me as gifts is the, the, the, the image
is a piece of penne. Do you know what I'm getting at? It's a piece of penne pasta and he's on the
phone. He's picked up the phone and he's saying, Fusilli, you crazy bastard. How the hell are you?
It looks better than it sounds. It's incredible. It's Charles Barsotti is the, is the cartoonist.
I remember it well. I remember it well. It's incredible. To me, it's the funniest joke of all
time. Well, you know the process, how they do this. I mean, maybe it's, I guess it's the individual
version of a writer's room is that these guys, and then it's no thank God, it's no longer all guys.
It's much more diverse in all ways in, in, in recent years, which is the achievement in many
ways of Emma Allen, the cartoon editor for the past several years is, you know, the artists are at
home all by their lonesome and they do what's called roughs, you know, kind of a rough version of
the drawing and they just do ideas and ideas and ideas and then they send them in, you know,
six a week, 10 a week, however many. And the cartoon editor goes through the huge stack and
then one day a week even has a meeting and the people come in like into a, you know, an emergency
room or something. And one after another comes to see Emma and they talk it through and she
whittles down the stack to about, I don't know, 50 or 60. And then she and I go through it and we
pick 20. It's pretty brutal. It's very tough. That's tough. Have you ever had to disqualify one
that you were, that you regret that you're like, Oh, it was so, is whenever stuck out to you that
you thought because it's too filthy or something or something or whatever. Well, sometimes people
make the same joke that we had five years ago. So our fact checkers, and we have a, you know,
a small army of wonderful fact checkers, not only check the articles and for, you know,
really drill down on the facts, but they also check cartoons, one to make sure we haven't
made this joke before, two that it's accurate. Yeah, imagine that accuracy and in joke writing
in humor. And if it's inaccurate, you obviously you work with the artist and do they want to
do that? Do they want to say that the, you know, the Empire State Building is only 100 feet tall
or whatever. But so you want to get there. And, but they're like, I don't know, I've kind of come
to think of cartoons as like little hand grenades, either they, either they blow up or they don't.
Well, but there's also, there's also the cultural hand grenade of it that you find yourself caught
in between the potential perceived pressure on one side to have the, the satire be based in
sort of wokeness, which, which, you know, one could make an argument that, that the left leaning
base of the New Yorker would demand versus the pressure from the other side saying, well,
you guys are getting too far over here. You don't even want us to read the magazine anymore.
Like it doesn't come in cartoons all that often. I think that you see that more in political argument.
Yeah. And I think it's, it's less left, right, as it is liberal, left, you know, radical as
well. Gotcha. At least in these precincts, that's, that's where you see the, see the attention.
I don't mean just the New Yorker. I just mean overall. Yeah. No, that's where the real battle
is now. So to what degree do you guys respond to? Are you aware of social media and response?
Because now the response is so immediate and so often filled with vitriol. Yeah. To what degree
does that drive or steer what you guys do or how aware of it? How much of that? It's a dilemma.
Yeah. It's a dilemma because on the one hand, I've made two really good decisions in my life.
For me, one was to marry my wife, who I'm married to for 30 years and there seems to be no end in
sight except for the, you know, mortality. And then the other one is, she's on after this.
We're going to ask her the same question. She disagrees, by the way. You should tune in.
We're going to rebuttal. And then she will have a rebuttal. And the second thing was not to
sign up for Twitter because people in, I don't know about you, but people in jobs like mine,
whether they're running the New York Times or the Atlantic or the Washington Post or small
mag, whatever it is, they do one of two things. Either they quickly become unbelievably boring
and say, we had a really good piece about this, then we had a really good, it becomes promotional,
and then nobody gives a damn. Or somebody tweets at them something that pisses them off.
And at two o'clock in the morning, after having a couple of beers or whatever,
their pleasure is they decide to become honest. And that's a disaster. That's a disaster.
And I've seen that happen too. So of course I look at Twitter in the same way that Jimmy
Stewart looked at his neighbor in rear window. I lurk because it's interesting. And if there is,
that's Jason's move. I've heard that. Do you have a circulation growing? Do you notice
like over everything print and social? So here's what's happened to our business.
The magazine business and the New Yorkers business used to be predominantly
by a huge majority advertising. And then something happened in the world. And it's
related to what we're just talking about. Google and Facebook in particular took up
all the advertising in the world, like 75% of it. So if you look at an issue of the New Yorker from
1967, it's fat with ads for products that some of most don't even exist anymore. It was fat with
ads. If you look at the print magazine now, it's far less. So you would look at that and say,
well, how the hell do they exist? We exist because we made a bet. And the bet was in the old days,
what you paid to subscribe was a trivial amount of money. The bet was, and thank God it worked out,
is we basically said to the reader, you need to pay a more reasonable price.
How about as much as a small cup of coffee at Starbucks once a week? So $150 a year.
Right. And our readers, thank God, love the New Yorker enough so that they did this and so that
we're doing okay. I mean, it ain't Facebook. It's not Google. Do you still do a lot of blow-ins on
the... Yeah, but most, you do that, but most people are subscribing, obviously, digitally.
What are blow-ins? Sorry, it's in the magazine business. David and I know.
Sorry, yeah. Little cards, the things that fall out of the print magazine. It's not what you think.
Just a little... David, I mean, you would never say this, but I'll say it. I mean,
you're at the top of the mountain. Where do you see yourself going with a job? I mean,
would you just stay there till you die? I mean, you couldn't... What could be better than being
the editor of the New Yorker? Jesus Christ, baby. Well, I mean, I just...
You're asking me about death? Don't make him face his mortality this morning.
No, but what do you want to do after this? What could be better than this?
What? You know... And I'm speaking about the smartless podcast.
That's right.
Being the editor of the New Yorker is the top of the mountain. A,
how's the view? And B, what could you ever do after this? What would you want to do after this?
Well, unusual for most editors, I came to this through writing. In other words,
I was a writer at the New Yorker after being at the Washington Post for five, six years.
The editor was Tina Brown. One fine day, she quit to go off to do another magazine,
talk magazine. Talking about fireworks. Anyway, we won't get into that.
And I really got and do get along exceptionally well with Tina. I think she's an exceptional
talent and person. And I became editor in 1998. And I remember the conversation I had with my
wife. She said, well, if it doesn't work out after a couple of years, you just quit and go back to
writing. So it wasn't a couple of years. But at some point, if I still have... I don't have
scrambled eggs for a brain, I'll write again. And I'm 62 years old. I shouldn't stay there forever.
The great editor of the New Yorker in the 60s, 70s and into the 80s was William Shawn.
But he kept at it until he was almost 80. And I'm not sure that's a brilliant idea.
I'd love to see you take over for Charlie Rose. I used to love... That's why I first started
falling in love with you. Just watching those great conversations you guys used to have.
And I miss his show. And I'd love to see somebody like you take over for that.
I'd like to see you take over for Jason on spotless.
David, David, I was going to say, so you win... Not only were you a writer,
you're a writer with a considerable acclaim. And I forget to tell your book that you wrote,
that you won the Bullets or Four, was it... Lenin's Tomb.
Lenin's Tomb. It was about the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Right. Lenin's Tomb. And then you become an editor at the New Yorker. It's a gear shift,
of course. It is. It's a massive gear shift to go... It's kind of like going from actor
to director, which Jason knows all too well. You're staying within the same discipline,
if you will, but you're looking at it from a different perspective.
Well, it's other people. It's other people. In other words, a writer...
What I want to create for writers at the New Yorker is a kind of paradise. In other words,
that they know they're making a living, but equally important that they have the freedom
to explore the things that they want to explore and have the time to do it where that's appropriate.
And that's not the case at a newspaper. At a newspaper, you're assigned very often to X or...
And I was. And I was perfectly happy at it for 10 years. And my last assignment was Heaven on
Earth, meaning Moscow. But I want at the New Yorker people never, ever, ever to be working on
something that bores them or they're not interested in. What were those last days like in Moscow,
as it fell with Gorbachev and then going into Yeltsin and all that stuff? What was that like?
Just sort of as an observant, not even just from a news standpoint, just sort of watching
that whole shift. You know, I've never been a war correspondent. And war correspondence,
when you ask them that, you know you're never getting a full answer because there's so much
tragedy and horror and fear and peril involved. They never can... Unless they're writing their
fullest book and from their fullest soul, they never get a full picture. I can answer your
question because really, it was a revolution in which... I mean, there were people who died in
certain incidents in Georgia and Azerbaijan and certain areas. But you know, even the coup that
ended the whole thing in August of 1991, three people were killed. I mean, which is a tragedy for
them and their families and everybody they know. But how often does that happen? It was, to answer
your question, thrilling. My wife and I lived in a tiny, crappy apartment and we worked from
nine in the morning. She for the New York Times, me for the Washington Post from nine in the morning
till two in the morning every day for four years and never regretted a second of it. And even on
the rare moments when we went out of the country and we're on kind of relative vacation, we missed
it and couldn't wait to get back. How drunk was everybody? Well, here's the thing. So I'm a Jew,
you might possibly guess this. And so I found myself, you know, at these occasions, pouring the
vodka into the potted plants half the time, because I can't keep up. I can't do it. I can't do it.
And we will be right back. All right, back to the show.
Wait, back to the New Yorker. Do you have a favorite interview of all the time that you've
ever done? Well, I mean, they've ranged from Howard Stern to Alexander Gosolzhenitsyn to
... I occasionally get a chance still to write pieces. And I've been on a streak of writing about
older musicians. And right before the election in 2016, a friend of mine was friends in California
with Leonard Cohn, who I really admired. And he said, do you want to meet Leonard? And I flew
out to LA. We met. We talked for five hours. He's the most unbelievably eloquent, prolific, charming
man. Great Canadian. A great Montrealer, yes. Great Montrealer. And so I asked to interview him.
And you know, usually these profiles, and you've been through this process, usually these profiles,
when they're not just junket things, you're spending a lot of time with them. You're going to this,
you're seeing that. By this time, Leonard was in his 80s, and he was frankly dying. He had a number of
illnesses, and he knew what was up. And so all this piece involved, which ended up being, I don't
know, 10,000 words, which is long, was sitting there for two days and asking him questions for five,
six hours each time, including a moment on the second day when he was furious with me and my
friend, because we screwed up the time and we were late or whatever happened. And he accused us of
torturing a dying man, which is not what you want to hear from Leonard Cohn. You really don't.
Doesn't yield a lot of open answers. No, I felt terrible. But I just found him to be a person of
really profound depth and wit and learning. And I don't know how he managed with all the women,
because he was easily the most charming person I ever met, ever, ever. Well, how do you do it?
Yeah. Well, yeah, David, you're just getting to know me, but I suspect that there's going to be a
200,000 word. I'm feeling it. Yeah. David, what is the dumbest thing that you enjoy doing
every day or every week? Or is it a crappy reality show? Is it? I watch more TV than I'm really
willing to admit right here. And you still get time to read and everything like that? I mean,
yeah, it's to my advantage that I don't sleep very well. What's your guilty pleasure that people
would be surprised to hear about? I just watched one of these, you know, there's all these Nordic
thrillers and some of them are really good, right? Some of them are really good. There's also some
that are incredibly boring. I mean, so this one, this one was set in Iceland. I don't even remember.
And it wasn't even in Reykjavik. It was so boring. It was like a bad town of the fjord or whatever.
I know the one you're talking about. I couldn't follow a thing. And yet I, I, I, it was just
having to watch it because it was like, I don't. But that's still you watching something highbrow.
I'm talking about. That wasn't the stupid ass thing that you did. No, no, this is highbrow to him.
It's highbrow to him. Sorry, David. Keep going. No, I, I'll tell you. And, you know, I also,
for my sins, we do a podcast called the New Yorker radio hour. And which I find enormously fun.
But I have such a hard time sleeping late at night. What I do is I find the most boring podcast I
possibly can. And that's it. 10 minutes. You're welcome. Please say it's us. Please say it's us.
Please say it's us. No, it's not. I promise you. Could you make a commitment today to write a hit
piece on Sean and Jason? Can you just like a real, I want one of these real hit pieces that just
takes them apart. Take them down, take them right down, right down to the studs. I want to ask you
guys something. You guys have all had reporters come to you. When, when a reporter approaches you,
is it like when a mountain lion approaches you on a walk through the hills of LA or how much
trepidation is it? I have to tell you, I figure it took me years and years to figure this out.
But a lot of times journalists will, whether it's on camera or print or whatever, they'll ask
you a question they know is a little racier that you don't want to go there. You don't want to answer.
And I finally learned this tactic they do. They'll ask you a question and then they'll,
they'll wait and they'll let you fill the awkward space. It's the oldest trick in the book, right?
That's Howard. That's Howard. I told Howard that Howard Stern does the very thing. The first
time I did Howard Stern, I go in there and I go, I figured out Howard, what you do is he, he,
it's a rope-a-dope, right? So he brings up stupid thing. You get into dumb conversations about
whatever it is. Right. It's like a analysis. Right. And then what he does is then he says,
and yeah, of course, somebody will bring it up and he'll say, and yeah, and you had an awkward
thing with the police. Right. And you go, and there's a positive. He goes, and he says, go ahead.
And suggesting that you had brought it up. He's changed. He's changed. I agree. But, but, but,
but what I learned from, what I learned was then just to have a staring contest. Now I don't answer
until they keep going. Yeah. Did you win? I just, I'm just completely quiet. Must be a great piece
that resulted from that. Yeah. Absolutely. It's about a page. Like Zen Boon. It's got 20 words.
You know what's annoying that reporters do? And it's generally not print reporters because they're,
they're much more engaging in it. And they're looking for actual answers. But, but oftentimes
you'll go, you'll do something. They'll say, they'll go, oh, so Lego movie. And there's no question.
And I, and I started to get to the point where I just go, what, there's no question here. They'll
go, or they'll go, that was fun. Yeah. Oh, the bestest in sports. And I experienced, I covered
the, first of all, I want you to know, I was the Washington federal's correspondent for the
Washington Post. So it was the USFL. Oh my God. And I was the second string boxing correspondent.
Second string. But the, the, the, my favorite thing is, you know, you're in a locker room,
which has kind of receded. Now it's much more formal and it's press conference. So you,
but you just go in a locker room and the guys, you know, with the radio mics would just go,
LeBron, that's shot. And then they'd extend, everybody would extend their arms with the
microphone. But LeBron knew what to do. Yeah. Right. Yeah. And I was such an idiot that I would
think I have to ask a really good question. And so I, I was covering the bullets as they were named
now. They're now the wizards because bullets was not good with the murder rate in Washington at
that time. That's true. What happened to that? And the best player on that team was Jeff Ruland,
who, by the way, was not so good, but that's, that's what we had. And I said, you know, Ralph
Samson is coming into the league. And how do you think Ralph Samson is going to be? Is he going
to be a great NBA center? This was week two of the season, 82 games. He would not speak to me
for the rest of the year. So good questions can, can, can screw you up. What's your sports
passion now? Is it basketball? Basketball. I'm with, I'm with the Nets. The Nets. Yeah. The Nets are
a great team, you know, in this new world of what's it called player empowerment, you know,
in which everybody seeks, you know, the superstars all seek each other in this kind of new way of
doing business. Well, the players decide where the dynasty is going to be. Well, and the agent,
you know, we just ran a profile of, of Rich Paul, who's a LeBron's agent, and he's the pioneer in,
in this. Yeah. Ask me what I'm thinking of right now. How about cupcakes, maybe, or just a bag of,
fresh bag of cookies. Dr. Brown soda with a little cupcake. Sean, as soon as we're done,
Sean is like, I know Sean, here's Sean's schedule for today. He's going to watch last night's hockey
playoffs. Either he goes in the kitchen and he makes a tuna salad sandwich on white bread
with chips, with plain chips on the side. Okay. So either does that. That's not a Jewish meal show.
Or he orders food and he'll get in the car himself because he doesn't like other people
grabbing his food and he'll go pick up. He won't do delivery. This is true. And he'll go and he'll
get in the car sometimes and he drives close to where I live and I go, where are you going? It's
like, you know, seven o'clock at night. He's like, I'm going to pick up dinner. I'm like, you know,
they have postmates. He's like, no, no, no, no. And then you get, and then five o'clock is bowling
late. Can we go back to the part where you watch repeat hockey games? That's sarcasm. That is really, that is just
desperation. Sean still thinks there's four quarters in a hockey game. Sean doesn't. I do, in fact,
but Sean does not. I watch him. He pounces us out, you know. I couldn't, I just can't do it.
Play by play, chalkboard play by play. David, we could hang out with you all day because you just,
you make us feel better about ourselves. And I didn't get to half of my pre-written questions.
I was so proud of the way I wrote them. What's your toughest one, Jason?
They're all political and boring, but I just, I love you, your brain, your kindness,
and all of that stuff. And I'd love to have you come back, please. This was really fun.
David, for you, I pray that you never find yourself like in a social situation where Jason is stuck
to you and he's hammering you with, and at first you're thinking, I'm talking to Jason Bateman.
He's great from Ozark and stuff. And four minutes in, you're like, I will sever my own limbs off
to get out of this fucking guy. Who doesn't think? Ozark's scared that shit out. Oh my God.
I pray for you, David. We're doing the last season now. It's a musical, so it'll be young.
Is it? It's really fun. It's a best time you watch.
What a departure. We just made news right there.
I think that's a great turn. There's a lot of fun bits. You can't live on plot alone.
No. David, it was a pleasure meeting you. David, thank you so, so much. What a pleasure.
Great to see you. Thank you, David, very much. Thanks, David. Bye, buddy. All right, man. Take
care. Bye, buddy. Take care. Bye, bye. Oh, you know, I really, I really, I have so,
I have so many questions for him. I feel like he could really solve a lot of,
a lot of our issues. Why, why isn't somebody like that in charge?
He's a smarty pass. Because he is in charge over there at the magazine.
Because it's the most thankless thing to do now.
Hey, but you know, we don't have to go on and on about this, but you know that thing about
that when I said, it feels like there's nothing else we can do but vote. You know what I mean?
Like that. He's like, no, there's more. There's tons of you to do. I just don't know that people
know what to do or where to go or how to help. People just don't know and they want to. I mean,
you know, he said art. I think he means graffiti. Yeah. Got a tag stuff.
Yeah, just get in a tag. Let's start a tag crew. The three of us.
You just have to turn your hat sideways a little bit, right?
Dude, let me get my visor on. Yeah.
I feel like it's all about penetrating those. Excuse me, excuse me, sir.
It's about trying to get to the people that don't listen to facts or don't have access.
I mean, I don't know. Yeah, I don't know.
I think he's right though. It is like by people continuing to write, it is art. I mean,
that seems to be the way that it always happens and through education. The most chilling thing he
said to me was he said that at the end of it all, and if it doesn't work, then maybe we didn't deserve
it. I know. I was like, oh, wow. Christ. And you know what? He's kind of right. Maybe we don't.
And it's like we'll be dead by then. Well, yeah, it's like the idea that like,
okay, well, you don't think that anybody deserves to. Well, you don't think that people should
be taken care of and you don't be. And then ultimately that's going to be you that's not
taken care of. Do you feel like this new family and you're in your old house is taking care of you?
I got to see. I don't know. I don't know if I can call them family yet,
but I do know that there's a lot of love down there. Oh boy. What about what about if you leave
that your little sound booth right now, open up the door, you're going downstairs to say goodbye
and everything. And they're all what if they'd like just got out of the shower and they all
do the towel on or someone's on the couch is farting, watching TV. Like you don't want that
to be the last vision of your house. People just, you know, almost literally peeing on the furniture.
I mean, what are you going to sneak out of there? You know, listen, this, this is a nice,
these are nice people. So what, what are you, what is the scene you're describing you're talking
about? I just don't, why would you want your last image to be somebody else nesting in your place?
Are you going to be all right with that? Not exactly. Well, it's not what I wanted, man. This
is the situation I'm in. Well, Sean and I are doing it on a laptop. You don't need to be in your
sound booth. This is where all my stuff is, dude. Guess what? You unplug the laptop. It is made to
be portable. Here's the other thing, because I have to do, I have a lot of other voice commitments.
So then I'm just, again, schlepping everything. Plug a mic into your laptop. And now I got to
go back and forth between here and where I'm currently living. I'm googling words that begin
with bye. Are you? Oh my God, you're the worst. That's all you think about when we do our little
post trap up. Are you going to win the bye competition? I know. You know what? You're banned
for a week. Yeah, you're out. You're out. You can't call bye. You cannot call bye for a week,
because you've just squalled up by yourself. Oh my God, I'll cry. Yeah, that's like using
a computer for a crossword puzzle. Yeah. What are you doing? Yeah, you can't, too.
Bye. What's the best one you came up with there, Sean? Which one are you excited about?
Read them out, you dick. Bye, Laws, but that was B-Y-E. I used that one. Are you doing? Are we allowed
to recycle? That's a question. No, you're not. And you know what else you're not allowed to do is
fucking chew gum on a podcast. What are you doing? Sorry, I just put it back in when David-
I know, I saw that. Oh, God, that was funny. Do you want to know what kind of gum I chew?
No. Okay, then nobody will know. Great. Where'd it go? You just denied our listener
from hearing what kind of gum I chew. Well, you know, if you chew it too hard, you might
accidentally bite your cheek. Did I do it?
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