Stuff You Should Know - J. Edgar Hoover: Evil G-Man Pt. 1
Episode Date: May 21, 2024It wouldn’t be an overstatement to say that J. Edgar Hoover was perhaps the most powerful American of the 20th century. By the time he established the FBI as America’s police force, presidents wer...e afraid of him. Just exactly how did he get to be so puissant?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
This is Stuff You Should Know, Gee Man edition.
Oh, yeah. G-Man.
That's right.
That's exactly what I meant.
G-Man.
What a crummy person J. Edgar Hoover was.
Yeah.
I got a couple of things to say at the beginning, if I may.
Yes.
About J. Edgar Hoover.
Yeah, let's hear it.
Firstly, if you want to feel old,
just realize that you were alive when J. Edgar Hoover was still running the FBI, like I am.
Okay.
I was like, oh my God, 1972, is that real?
Yeah, that's, yeah.
So it makes me feel old,
but also a testament to his staying power.
No, I think it's more just you being old.
Okay.
Number two, just quickly want to point out that J. Edgar is not related to Herbert Hoover.
Okay.
Hadn't even crossed my mind.
What about the Hoover vacuum clamp?
I don't know about that, but it crossed a lot of people's minds about Herbert because he was, each of them were constantly having to sort of deflect that answer or whatever. Say that answer's not correct.
Are you two twins?
Yeah. And third, just like, it's fascinating to study this guy that I knew, I feel like a little bit about
just from all the various things over the years, but like what an enigma this guy was.
Yeah.
I think because he operated in such secrecy,
it's kind of impossible to know a lot of stuff
about him privately because he held such power
and sway over people as far as like fear of blackmail
and stuff like that.
Yeah.
That it's really interesting to like, you know, you read five different historians and
they may have five different takes on aspects of his, of who he was in his private life
and stuff like that.
Right.
It's really interesting.
Right.
And for those of us who were born into a world where J. Edgar Hoover wasn't running the FBI. Hmm. Lucky you.
We came along at a really different period
in how people looked at him.
Like essentially from his death onward,
he's been looked at as like an American villain.
Before that, basically all the way up to his death
from essentially the day he started at the FBI,
America looked at him as a hero, essentially.
Yeah.
As a competent, nonpartisan, above the boards, not in any way, shape or form corrupt head
of the FBI, a technocrat who believed in applying science and detection over things like hitting
a guy with a rubber hose to get answers out of him. He was a sea change and helped America fight off the
red menace more than once. And like you said, he was like, it was really difficult
to kind of discern like who he was even at the time when he was in the news all
the time. He served eight presidents, four Democrats,
four Republicans, three Green Party,
and he was the head of the FBI for like 48 straight years.
I also saw him described as the most powerful civil servant
America has ever seen.
Oh, easily.
I think by a long shot.
And the reason he was able to serve those eight presidents
without getting fired,
we'll talk a little bit about the fact that part of that
has to do with people were legit sort of afraid
of what this guy had on them,
as in everybody, including presidents.
But a lot of it was because of that popularity.
I mean, I've seen most people say, oh, it was because he had dirt on all the presidents. But a lot of it was because of that popularity. I mean, I've seen most people say, oh, it was
because he had dirt on all the presidents.
And that's part of it for sure.
But I also saw that a lot of it was because he was so popular that firing
J. Edgar Hoover would have been very bad for you politically, because
people loved him so much.
That was part of it.
He also seemed to prove to be too great a temptation for presidents to not use
and ultimately get into cahoots with him.
Yeah.
Even left leaning, uh, progressives.
Yeah.
Even FDR.
That's the guy I was talking about.
Even LBJ.
Yeah.
Even JFK.
Yeah.
So yeah, there's a lot to talk about with this guy.
And a lot of it, like you said, is unsubstantiated because he did the smart
thing and had all of his personal records destroyed upon his death.
He had a very dedicated secretary.
And so we'll, we'll just never know a lot of it, but there is stuff that's so
close to being confirmed that it's like you can
essentially say this is true, then there's other stuff it's like, what? Where are you coming up
with that? That seems totally false. And then in the middle, there's the stuff where it's like,
really? Is it? It's entirely possible it's true, but we just don't know. And it's great for
speculation. Either way, the stuff we do know about
turned him into a reviled figure for sure.
Yeah, absolutely.
And as you'll see during a lot of this,
the guy was also sort of a walking conundrum
in a lot of ways by doing things on one hand
that would seemingly fly in the face of things
he's doing on the other hand.
And that'll all kind of come out as we go. But shout out to Livia who did a bang-up job on
this one. Yeah, agreed. And also to a writer and this Livia got some
information from this this great book a historian named Beverly Gage from Yale
University wrote a book in 2022 called G-Man colon colon, J. Edgar Hoover and the making of an American century.
Yeah.
Pretty great stuff.
Yeah.
So, um, yeah, Beverly Gage is essentially like the definitive source of J. Edgar
Hoover information right now.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a lot of Hoover bios and they all, uh, some of them fly in the
face of each other with what they claim.
It's pretty interesting.
For sure. So let's start at the beginning. Let's start when he was born, back in 1895.
That's right.
That's a long time ago. And one thing to know about J. Edgar Hoover is he was a DC boy born
and bred his entire life. He was born in that city and he died in that city.
Yeah, he was born in Capitol Hill and Seward Square
and came from a long line of family that worked for the government.
His dad in particular, one Dickerson Naylor Hoover,
Great name.
worked for something called the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey,
which was a scientific organization.
And, you know, he had siblings, he had a sister
that died when he was three.
It seems like his father suffered
from some mental illness and depression,
which would ultimately be the cause of his death in 1921.
And we can get into some sort of armchair speculation
on Hoover's mental condition, maybe at the end.
Sure, can't wait.
But when he was a kid, he was pretty shy.
He was known as a mama's boy,
had a very sort of overbearing, doting mother.
He had a stutter.
Apparently the stutter was so bad
that he went about correcting it
by just talking really fast.
And that kind of ran through his life.
I think there were court stenographers,
just stenographers period that couldn't keep up with him
on the job, he was so fast.
Yeah, no, he had that very quick delivery,
if you've ever seen like a newsreel
or any news footage of him speaking
or reading a speech or something.
But yeah, he kind of took that on.
He joined the debate team.
He forced himself to do public speaking engagements and he did not like that kind
of stuff, but he did it anyway, because as we'll see was a master of PR, which
served him quite well.
One of the other things about him is that his mother impressed upon him a moral
uprightness that actually kind of converted into a moral righteousness.
of converted into a moral righteousness where there was a specific way to be an American in J. Edgar Hoover's mind and anybody who ran afoul of that thought otherwise was an
enemy of America and should be treated accordingly.
And unfortunately, there's plenty of people walking around.
That's the definition of a fascist. So he was a total fascist, if you hadn't figured that out by now.
But he had the power to actually make enemies out of the people he considered
un-American, who were still Americans.
They just didn't see America exactly the same way J. Edgar Hoover did.
Yeah, exactly.
His mom's name was Annie,
and Judy Dench played her in the Clint Eastwood movie
that starred Leo DiCaprio.
Did you see it?
I never saw it.
It got pretty bad reviews, so it just didn't draw me in.
But, yeah, Leo played Hoover, Dench played his mom,
and as we'll see, Armie Hammer played his,
well, let's just save that one, I guess.
Okay.
Even though it's no big secret, we'll just save it.
Okay.
His coworker, let's just say that.
Yeah, his close associate.
Yeah.
So, yeah, so he had this view of America
that he carried with him his whole way
and what it meant to be an upright American.
He also was really, really good at organizing. So the way you think of a government bureaucracy today,
where there's tons of files and all sorts of,
people whose job it is to access those files
and they do it to varying degrees of success,
J. Edgar Hoover actually kind of built that,
what's called the administrative state.
You can actually thank him for that.
He not only built the FBI, he made the federal government
this kind of administrative power like it is.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
He learned a lot of that at one of his first jobs
after high school, got a job at the Library of Congress.
And that's where he really got into just sort of
categorizing stuff, collecting information.
He got a Master of Law degree from GW,
from George Washington University in 1917.
And the only reason we mention this is because
it sort of plays into his massive amount of cronyism.
He was a K.A., joined the K.A. fraternity there,
which is a very southern, you know,
it was like a, they celebrate the Confederacy,
it was like a Robert E. Lee thing.
I remember even at Georgia, the K.A.'s were,
and I imagine still are, just very Confederate?
Yeah, that's a great word for it.
They just like Confederate pride, that whole thing.
Those are the KAs.
And as we'll see, a lot of those KAs and people that he knew
ended up getting jobs from him directly.
So lots of cronyism happening.
Yes, for sure.
So also, he became a clerk at World War I, which at the DOJ.
And that kept him out of the draft.
Yeah.
Um, but also was his true first step into his government service.
Library of Congress.
Yeah, that was essentially the beginning, but this was the true beginning
because very quickly, um, he was assigned pretty substantial duties,
including overseeing what was called the general intelligence division.
This was a part of the department of justice.
If those three words, the general intelligence division, don't run a chill down your spine,
you're not listening closely.
It's like something out of Brazil.
Exactly.
Right.
So he was the head of this and this guy at the time, he was, let's see, 24 years old
and he's running the general intelligence division for the DOJ.
And the whole point of the GID was to investigate radicals, leftists, anarchists, communists.
There was a big red scare from 1919 to 1920.
Yeah.
And his whole jam was to apply everything he'd learned
and developed at the Library of Congress
to everything he wanted to do in law enforcement.
And he created massive files on immigrants to America.
And basically it was like, this is an immigrant.
They are loyal or disloyal.
They like communism or like capitalism.
And just amassed all of these files and they eventually turned them into what were known
as the Palmer Raids, where they just went into these people's homes and said, J. Edgar
Hoover and the GID thinks you're disloyal.
Come with us, we're deporting you.
Forget your civil liberties.
Forget the fact that you're a naturalized American citizen now.
Doesn't matter.
Yeah, this was a big deal. Forget your civil liberties. Forget the fact that you're a naturalized American citizen now. Doesn't matter.
Yeah, this was a big deal.
Maybe we can do something on the Palmer raids in full at some point, but just kind of in
a nutshell, the attorney general, A. Mitchell Palmer, his house was bombed.
There was a guy named, an anarchist named Carlo Valdinozzi, who the bomb went off early,
so it kind of blew up the front of his house
along with the bomber himself.
There were other bombs mailed to mayors
and senators and business leaders.
So there was a real sort of anarchist, you know,
mail bombing thing happening.
Yeah, cookbook going on.
But the response was the Palmer raids, which was just a,
a nightmare of an operation. It was really kind of an unconstitutional disaster,
right? Uh, where, like you said,
a lot of these high profile deportations like straight to Russia. Um,
when many of these people are just like,
didn't even know what they were talking about.
I make bagels leave me alone kind of thing, right?
Yeah, I mean, I think his list was 450,000 long.
And like how many real leftist radicals were there?
Exactly, right.
And there were also tons of cases of mistaken identity.
Like it was a catastrophe.
The Palmer raids so ran afoul of civil liberties,
they actually created things like the ACLU and
other civil liberties groups to defend against
stuff like that ever happening again.
But what's miraculous is that the head of all
this, the guy who was in charge of actually
executing the Palmer raids was J. Edgar Hoover.
And he survived politically and went on to
actually step upward from that point on.
Some people were like, you need to keep that guy away from the levers of power. Yeah. survived politically and went on to actually step upward from that point on.
Um, some people were like, you need to keep that guy away from the levers of
power because of what he just did.
And other people were like, I don't like the cut of that guy's jib.
Yeah.
I think the people who liked the cut of his jib, they won out.
I was about to say that's a good cliffhanger, but you made it an even better
cliffhanger with that last line.
So let's come back, A,
and we'll talk about where the FBI comes into play, yeah?
I can add some more lines
if you want me to make it even better.
No, I think you made it just perfect.
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All right. So we promised talk at the FBI initially, and we've said this on other episodes.
It was called the Bureau Investigations at first.
It was formed in 1908, basically to say, hey, U.S. Attorney General, you need some teeth.
Here's your own law enforcement organization.
Became the FBI in 1935 and early on was kind of interested in like corporate
criminals, radicalism, and a real kind of from the beginning, a real crackdown
and obsession with sex work.
Yeah.
The Mann Act.
Right.
Yeah.
Big deal. And it was also very corrupt
and didn't have the best reputation
until Coolidge came along in 1924
and hired a guy named Harlan Fisk Stone
to reform the DOJ
and kind of just clean house
and get the FBI in good standing.
Yeah, which is amazing that they're like, Hoover, why don't you take over?
But that's exactly what they did. They made him acting director of the Bureau of Investigation,
starting in, I think, the same year Harlan Stone came in, 1924, right?
Yeah, and they got rid of that GID, by the way.
They did, but it just went away essentially in name,
not spirit by any measure.
And again, just like at the GID,
J. Edgar Hoover set about applying the principles
of bureaucracy, of organization, and of science too.
He was a true believer in science
to this nascent Bureau of Investigation.
And one of the stunning statistics I ran across that really gets across his, just how much of an impact he had on the FBI when he took it over, over the course of 10 years, I think, up to 1936, they amassed a huge collection
of fingerprints, something like 100,000 fingerprints.
And they had people whose entire job it was
to go look up the fingerprints
and bring them for analysis, right?
10 years later, in 1946, they had 100 million sets
of fingerprints, and there was only 140 million people
who lived in America at the time.
That's crazy, man.
Yeah.
Wow.
He also created like a forensic lab.
He created the FBI Academy.
Like he really, not only kind of brought their reputation
back, but like you said, he organized them in a way
where they operated like a humming machine.
Right. And people respected it. They admired it.
It really fit in with FDR's New Deal thing of like,
hey, your government is big and for a reason.
We can do all sorts of amazing, competent, capable stuff to make the life of the average person greater.
Look at all these fingerprints.
Exactly.
I don't know if it necessarily fit in with the new deal, but one of the other
things that J. Edgar Hoover did was he instituted these policies that when you
put them all together, basically made, it required every FBI agent to be
Ned Flanders essentially.
And he did that because he wanted, he wanted his people to seem above reproach.
Cause at the time, the idea of like, like law enforcement was that if they weren't
incompetent, then they were crooked or maybe they were both.
Like there was not like a lot of public regard for law enforcement.
So he wanted to make sure that his particular agency
separated itself from that, put itself head and shoulders.
You know, like the way that in any movie
the FBI agents come in and just completely take control
of the investigation or the crime scene or whatever?
Oh yeah.
That was essentially, that came from Hoover.
He created this image of the FBI agents
as so uber competent that no one would challenge them
if they did walk into a crime scene and take over.
Yeah, and if you remember seeing a lot of movies
that had FBI agents portrayed as like,
tall, handsome white guys,
it's because FBI agents were largely,
almost roundly tall, handsome white guys.
He hired a lot of his, again with the cronyism, a lot of his alums from GW, a lot of KAs.
He kept the FBI from bringing a class of civil service so he didn't have, you know, he could
basically flout any rules that would have forced him to have like a, to look at any kind of diverse applicant.
So he wanted white men that were good looking.
Again as a PR move, it was, it was a popular thing at the time.
Ironically in the 40s, Ebony Magazine did a feature on like black employees of the FBI
and Hoover even helped
them with this because it was a PR thing, but they were all valets. None of them were
agents because there were no black agents.
Right. Yeah. And like you said, the way he got around that was to accept the FBI from
civil service. And I was like, how did he do that? And how did he get away with that?
And there's something called accepted service. And it's where you don't, you're not, that agency is not
subject to the same laws and requirements as a civil service agency
is. But the reason he was doing is he was saying like some of these laws are
letting people in government who are just really slack keep their jobs and I
can't have that in the FBI. I have to have top-notch crack people who I'm able
to fire if they don't meet our standards. I think that's how he was able to get
the FBI out of civil service classification. Yeah and you mentioned
Ned Flanders. He wanted them to be, like you said, sort of beyond reproach and
morally upright. So he insisted that they not drink alcohol, at least sort of on the job,
like have the martinis at lunch kind of thing.
Apparently he was a big martini guy.
But as the story goes, only after work,
only two martinis, and then later in life,
when he was sort of older and not in the best of health,
his doctor said he can't drink martinis anymore.
And he was like, well, that's not gonna happen. And he said, all right, cut down to one martini
then. And he said, sure. And as legend has it, he had his staff buy larger martini
glasses and then dropped it down to one.
Yeah, that was something I saw. There was a front line episode from years and years ago called the, the file on J.
Edgar Hoover.
And a lot of it seems totally off the rails and unbelievable for good reason.
But some of the stuff that he had the FBI staff do for him was so above and
beyond what any agency staff should be doing for the director.
Um, like they replaced his grass once because he
didn't like the color green.
Resod.
Just all, just stuff like that.
So I totally believe that he had his FBI, like FBI
staff buy bigger martini glasses for his home.
That was totally in line with what, how he
treated the Bureau.
It was his own kingdom and little by little he made it.
So it's not like he came into it and somebody handed him the keys and said,
good luck, go make this agency.
That's so powerful.
It is essentially a fourth branch of government.
Um, he built it little by little bit by bit, dirt by dirt, favor by favor.
Um, and, and it became the, the, it got to the point fairly quickly
where he could do stuff like that
and no one would say anything about it.
Yeah, absolutely.
All right, so let's go to the 1930s.
This was, as Livia called it, we love our golden ages.
And this may have been the golden age of the FBI.
This is when through PR and as we'll see through movies and television and through sort of
the him helping to control the news machine, the FBI were heroes.
They had fans like people love these G men.
And we'll get to that.
Well, you might as well say I think think G-men was supposedly coined by Machine Gun Kelly.
The good one.
Who in 19...
Is either one of them good?
All right.
In 1933, he yelled, don't shoot G-men like government men.
But he sort of formed in the 1930s this image that actually like, you know, there were little
boys and maybe some girls there were little little boys and
maybe some girls but definitely little boys running around the schoolyard like
playing G-Men they wanted to be G-Men. They were they were sort of superstars
because they would bust high-profile bank robbers and he just you know he
jumped in on the Lindbergh baby kidnapping which you know horrified a
nation. He apparently didn't have any legal jurisdiction,
but like you said,
J. Edgar Hoover walks onto the scene
and is like, we're taking over now,
and no one's gonna stand in his way.
No, not at all.
But in doing those kinds of things,
he just built the reputation for the FBI
by leaps and bounds.
One of the things that he did that was so
masterful in taking on the gangsters was to not try
to dissuade the public from glorifying them.
Yeah.
So the gangsters were just amazing folk heroes,
but the FBI was even greater because they're the
ones taking down these amazing folk heroes.
Like the, the gangsters are here, but man, that your average FBI agent is head
and shoulders above them because he's going to get them sooner or later and
probably kill them in a shootout in front of a house or a theater or something like
that.
And so he was able to play off of the public's fascination with gangsters and
use that to kind of parlay FBI, um, the FBI's reputation above it.
Yeah. This is, uh, it was kind of called the public enemy reputation above it. Yeah.
This is kind of called the public enemy era as well, because he would use that term for
people like John Dillinger.
I mean, this guy, Dillinger was robbing banks.
He was a bank robber.
But to call someone a public enemy, it almost elevated them in his own way
to folk hero status, but also like folk villain status,
I guess is a better way to say it.
Sure, yeah, for sure.
Like is a bank robber really a public enemy?
I mean, it's not a great thing to do.
Well, supposedly in 1933, 34,
there was a massive crime wave,
and there were a lot of murders going on.
People were shooting, like gangsters were shooting
each other in the streets over turf, like it was nuts.
So yeah, I mean, yeah, just a straight up bank robber,
probably not, but these guys were doing any and all crime.
They were like criminals of all trades,
from what I could tell.
Okay, public enemies, in other words.
So yeah, but at the same time, yes,
there was a huge publicity thing too.
This public enemy number one, you know?
Yeah, number one was Dillinger.
Right. But there were other public enemies,
number one, but he was the first public enemy,
number one, I think.
Oh, so there was never a two?
He just kept moving the number one mantle around?
Well, he'd just kill off the number one,
and whoever was below them would come up and become number one I guess. I guess that makes sense. So one
of the ways that he shaped public opinion too was directly by working with
journalists, by working with film and TV producers and writers and he actually
created a branch in the FBI called the Crime Records Division which sounds very
innocuous but it turns out that they were the ones who were in charge of generating pro-FBI propaganda and making
sure it got out there in the media.
Yeah, I mean, this is where it gets truly sort of nutso. He had, at one point, sort
of de facto final cut on movies that were being produced.
So crazy. He had approval or denial of casting choices.
Like, literally, he approved Jimmy Stewart, you know, as a...
I can't remember what movie it was even.
Um, in a movie as, like, the lead in the movie,
uh, after, like, interviewing him.
He interviewed Jimmy Stewart, gave him the job,
or, you know, gave him the stamp of approval.
Uh, it apparently didn't like that Jimmy Cagney was portraying gangsters so he
said you can do it as long as you quote get killed in the end and make sure
that you're dead because no gangsters were supposed to live in any of the
movies or TV shows and he even has three writer credits and one acting credit.
I think the writing credits were generally stuff based on cases that he was involved
in so they gave him, he may have insisted on a credit, I don't know, but he does have
one actor credit.
He was a narrator on a film called The Next of Kin.
So he was deep in.
Yeah, oh, he was deep into everything and anything that was going on in American life,
above or below the boards, from what I can tell.
Yeah, or the line.
So the gangster era kind of went away in the mid to late 30s.
I mean, there were plenty of gangsters still, but there was a changeover.
It went from like bank robbing cow murdering bandits
like John Dillinger and started to become organized crime,
the mafia, the mob.
And at that point as it started to kind of branch out
and become, well, as legitimized as the mafia can be
and organized, J. Edgar Hoover stopped paying attention to the gangsters
and instead turned his attention
to political surveillance again instead.
Yeah, I think his whole deal,
I did a little more research into the mafia thing.
The mafia was a problem, but he didn't see the mafia
as a threat to the American way of life as he defined it.
Communism, for sure.
Rabble-rousing civil rights leaders, for sure, as we'll see.
Gay and lesbian community, for sure.
All of that threatened this sort of idyllic, old-fashioned way of American life as he saw
it.
The mafia didn't necessarily, so he was never as
concerned with him as he probably should have been. He was like, let the cops handle that.
So, okay. That totally makes sense and because it's the simplest explanation, it's probably correct.
But there is such a thread of
thought that the, that J. Edgar Hoover was either compromised and the mafia had him in a
compromising position and, or he was friends with,
if not actual mobsters, friends of mobsters.
He was in their world, him personally.
Publicly, he was the head of the FBI and he carried
out all of
the crime fighting and leftist rousting and all that stuff.
But privately, if these, even half of these stories are to be believed, he was a
crook, a total crook with a gambling problem and who was in the pocket of the mafia
because they had dirt on them.
I saw another explanation that said, yes, he actually purposefully ignored the mafia,
not because they had like compromising pictures of him,
but because they were in cahoots with a lot of elected officials
and he didn't want to lose his position going after the mafia
and having them get all of their elected official friends turning on him.
Because he didn't know if he could survive that kind of thing.
That was another explanation I saw.
But whatever, whatever the interpretation is, historically speaking, he ignored the mafia and actually denied for a decade after it was clear there was such a thing as a national syndicate
of mafioso, mafioso, mafioso, yeah, mafioso, mafioso, yeah. He kept denying it, like actively
denying it and apparently moved to kind of thwart some of the federal and congressional
investigations into the existence of the mafia. Like he personally was trying to not,
at least not help if not actively disrupt that.
So there's something weird going on.
Exactly what was behind it though, we'll probably never know.
Yeah. What's interesting is that when I was reading through interviews with
different biographers and you would see too that
were just so diametrically opposed and what they thought.
Yeah.
Like, oh, and they're all very convinced
that they're right.
But it almost seems like some of these biographies
are either written by literal fans of his still,
or then, or people that hated him.
Yeah, like if you start looking into, like,
some of the more salacious charges about him
and, like, why the mafia, mafia like was allowed to just operate.
You mostly have to take the word of old mafia guys who were like there for sure.
Like this guy really was the right-hand man to Meyer Lansky, but can you believe him
when he sits for an interview talking about how Meyer Lansky had pictures that he used
to show his friends for fun of J.
Edgar Hoover, you know, having sex with his partner, you know?
Like, it's, it's, you really kind of have to stop and say,
where's this, where's this, um, source coming from?
And what all, what acts do they have to grind?
So, here's what I say.
This is, this is going so good, and it's going long,
so why don't we take another break, come back and do a little more,
but let's, let's make this a two-parter.
What?
Should we?
You just totally sprung this on me out of the blue.
Let me think about it.
Okay.
We'll think about it over the break and we'll be right back. A new season of Bridgerton is here.
And with it, a new season of Bridgerton the Official Podcast. I'm
your host Gabrielle Collins, and this season, we are bringing fans even deeper into the
ton. Colin Bridgerton has returned from his travels abroad. Is betrothal written in the
stars for the eligible bachelor? Meanwhile, the ton is reverberating with speculation
of who holds Lady Whistledown's pen.
We're discussing it all.
I sit down with Nicola Coughlin, Luke Newton, Shonda Rhimes, and more to offer an exclusive
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Watch season 3 of the Shondaland series on Netflix.
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I'm Elliot Coney and this is Family Therapy. In my best hopes, I guess identify the life that I want
and work towards it.
I never seen a man take care of my mother
the way she needed to be taken care of.
I get the impression that you don't feel
like you've done everything right as a father.
Is that true?
That's true, and I'm not offended by that.
Thank you for going through those things,
and thank you for overcoming them.
Oh, thank God for the limits.
Every time I have one of our sessions,
our sessions be positive.
It just keeps me going.
I feel like my focus is redirected
in a different aspect of my life now.
So, how'd we do today?
We did good.
The Black Effect presents Family Therapy.
Listen now on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
As important as choosing the right destination when traveling
is choosing the right travel partner.
Jean! Jean Fodor. Jean. Well, good. the right destination when traveling is choosing the right travel partner. Gene!
Gene Fodor!
Gene, we'll board it!
Much of the joy you will find on the road comes from the person you share it with.
So you write the books, Gene.
I'm the star of this business.
I understand now.
He's a wise man, Mary is a wise woman.
But be careful and choose your travel partner well, because the worst trips result when two partners have two different agendas.
Get down!
I'm not stupid Gene. Something is going on in its high time you tell me the truth.
Freeze Americano!
Gene! Run!
So travel before it's too late. Your money will return, your time won't, and we're all too quickly approaching that final destination.
Listen to Fodor's Guide to Espionage on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. Okay, Chuck, I've decided that is a fine idea.
So should we chat a little bit?
I think you sort of teased and then I got us off topic about the mafia.
You teased a little bit about going into sort of the beginnings of the surveillance and
working tightly with presidents, right?
Yeah. of the beginnings of the surveillance and working tightly with presidents, right? Yeah, I think I said something like that, but like there was at the end of the gangster
era, he kind of swapped over to from like continuing on with gangsters, which would
make total sense for the FBI to do this, to instead turning his attention back to political
stuff. Yeah.
To disrupting any kind of
political thought that goes
against the American way as envisioned by J. Edgar Hoover.
Yeah. One of the ways he did this was
by allying himself closely with different presidents.
You said at the beginning work for eight different presidents.
I think as it's generally thought that he was, uh, super tight and kind
of close to two of them, uh, two of them didn't like him and, and four just
sort of played ball cause they felt like they had to.
So I can, I can guess Kennedy definitely didn't like him and that was reciprocal.
Who was the other one who didn't like him?
Uh, I think it was Kennedy and Johnson.
I thought Johnson loved the guy.
Well, I know Nixon did.
Yeah, he was personally friends with Nixon.
And I know FDR, I don't know how much he liked him,
but the fact that they ended up, you know,
working closely with one
another is maybe one of the bigger surprises of the episode because they were pretty diametrically
opposed as humans go.
Yeah, but this is kind of like touching on what I was saying before that there were presidents
who saw him and what he could do as too useful to resist.
Exactly.
And FDR was like, he had this vision for America too, and it was much more inclusive and it
cared much more about the average person who didn't necessarily think exactly the same
way as everybody else.
But he also didn't want it disrupted by communists or at the time Nazis either. Yeah. So he
saw it as a useful thing to do like to kind of keep tabs on it and I guess from
from you know this idea of J. Edgar Hoover and presidents working in cahoots
it seems like FDR is the first one that this really begins with. Yeah I think in
1936 in August that year they met together at the White House and they
ginned up a plan for surveillance, kind of the first big surveillance launch of, like
you said, people who they thought might be communists, people who they thought might
be fascists.
A few years later, Roosevelt was like, hey, turns out you're pretty good at this surveillance
thing and keeping secret files.
So why don't you, why don't we resurrect that general intelligence division that was
scuttled and Hoover probably laughed and was like, you know, we've still been doing it
this whole time.
We just didn't have a formal name.
Oh, I don't know if I'll be able to get the gang back together.
But they secretly reformalized, at least, the GID. And Hoover said, all right, I appreciate
that. And you know what I'm going to do for you? I'll just not even at your direction.
I'll just keep an eye on your political enemies. And just if I need to let you know anything,
I'll let you know.
Yeah.
So supposedly that is one of the ways that he kept power. He never blackmailed anybody, but if one of his agents came across some juicy
tidbit, he would, he would send them to, you know, say the senators office and be
like, Senator, we were investigating this other thing and this tidbit about you
came up and we really thought it was the kind of thing you'd want to know.
We're keeping a lid on it. Don't worry about it
We thought you'd want to know and now the senators like oh my god
This guy knows these the FBI knows that I have this I'm on this committee that funds them
I should probably give them whatever they want whenever they ask for it. That's apparently how he operated
It's very passive aggressive strong-arming right? Yeah
He did have a we should should mention though, since we're talking about FDR, he had a, very famously
had a file on Eleanor Roosevelt, which...
A thick one.
...which supposedly had nude pictures of Eleanor Roosevelt that were given to J. Edgar Hoover
by W.C. Fields.
What? That's, he had a tremendous collection of pornography.
Right.
Was well known for it and to J. Edgar Hoover,
he would say, well, I've got to know what's out there
in order to fight this stuff.
Everyone else is like, okay, sure, whatever.
Yeah, exactly.
But he supposedly had a very large connection collection of of nudes of famous people Marilyn Monroe is among
them but apparently Eleanor Roosevelt was one an old WC fields gave it to him
Wow I don't know how he got it I don't either so okay Chuck do you want to do
you want to put part two here and come back and pick up at the beginning
of the Cold War because now J. Edgar Hoover's fighting, you know, Communists but more often
Nazis.
America's entering World War II and America's really cool with the idea of the FBI rooting
out Nazis.
But World War II came to an end, believe it or not, the Nazis went away.
Now they needed a new enemy to investigate.
That's right, the commies.
That seems like a great place to stop.
Yes.
So yeah, we'll see you guys in part two.
And if you want to send us an email in the meantime, send it off to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of igerton is here. And with it, a new season of Bridgerton is here and with it, a new season of Bridgerton, the official podcast.
I'm your host, Gabby Collins.
And this season we are bringing fans even deeper into the ton.
Watch season three of the Shondaland series on Netflix, then fall in love all over again
by listening to Bridgerton, the official podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Subscribe to catch a new episode every Thursday.
The Black Effect presents Family Therapy,
and I'm your host, Elia Connick.
Jay is the woman in this dynamic
who is currently co-parenting two young boys
with her former partner, David.
David, he is the leader.
He just don't want to leave me.
But how do you lead a woman?
How do you lead in a relationship? Like, what's the blue part? David, you just asked leader. He just don't want to leave me. But how do you lead a woman? How do you lead in a relationship?
Like, what's the blue part?
David, you just asked the most important question.
Listen to Family Therapy on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
I'm Dioza.
And I'm Mala.
We are the creators of Locatora Radio,
a radiophonic novella, which is a fancy way of saying a podcast
Welcome to locatora radio season 9 love at first listen
We're older we're wiser and we're podcasting through a new decade of our lives this season
We're falling in love with podcasting all over again and getting to the heart of our stories
We're going places. we've never gone before
and we're bringing you along with us.
With new segments, correspondence,
and a brand new sound.
Season nine is kicking off with an intimate interview
with Grammy award winning singer-songwriter,
Natalia Laforcade.
What's giving you hope right now?
Well, when I see what music does to people,
it gives me a lot of hope.
If you liked Locatora before, you're going to love season 9.
Subscribe to our show and you'll see why Locatora is your prima's favorite podcast.
Listen to Locatora Radio as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network,
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