Stuff You Should Know - John Lennon and the FBI
Episode Date: December 3, 2020Did you know that Richard Nixon had a FBI case file open on Beatle John Lennon? Well he did! Why? Listen in to find out. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee om...nystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryan out there.
Jerry's here, special guest Jerry.
This is Stuff You Should Know.
The super subversive edition.
Yeah.
Which is, I mean, it's subversive,
but not coming from who you'd expect.
In this case, the subversive people, Chuck,
are two of the crookedest worst Americans
to ever take a breath of life in the United States.
Yes, Hoover and Nixon, right?
Yes, Herbert Hoover and Charles J. Nixon.
No.
No, no, not those two.
Was it J. Edgar Hoover and Richard Nixon?
Richard Milhouse, I think is the name.
That's right, Milhouse.
That's right.
So you picked this one, right?
Yeah.
And I think we got help from our buddy, was it?
Oh, it was a Grabster article, right?
This is a Grabster.
So why did you choose this one, Chuck?
I'm just a Beatles nut.
I'm reading a massive Beatles book
and just, I'm always thinking about the Beatles.
So this isn't something I knew a ton about.
So now I know more.
What are you thinking about the Beatles right now?
I think they could write a song.
Like they could, like they're really good
at writing songs, you mean?
I think so.
I know you're not a Beatles guy,
but they're regarded as good songwriters.
Sure, I'm willing to concede that at least.
I'm a grown person.
I can concede when I'm wrong or when I've been bested.
I think we differ on Yoko Ono though.
So that'll be, you know, that's where the tables are turned.
Okay.
Because you like her singing, isn't that right?
I appreciate it.
I don't know, like is a pretty strong word,
but I definitely appreciate it.
There's some songs like, have you ever heard I Love You Earth?
Sure.
That's a pretty sweet song.
I like her singing on that,
but have you ever heard her cover of Katy Perry's fireworks?
No, I bet that's something.
She did it at maybe MoMA or the mat or something like that.
And she just stand in there wailing.
She's not singing words or anything like that,
just wailing and it was her cover of Katy Perry's firework.
And it's pretty great to see.
I'm sure if you look it up on YouTube,
but I appreciate a lot of her stuff.
How about that?
I appreciate her as a human.
And it's always fun to look back at performances,
live performances with Lynn
and when she would do a full like four or five songs
in the row in the middle of like Madison Square Garden
concert and you could kind of see his backing band
just kind of like, oh boy, I can't believe we're doing this.
Can't believe she's really doing this.
Right, right.
And she's actually pretty strongly implicated
in this whole thing.
We're talking about John Lennon being pursued
and surveilled and basically harassed by the FBI
in 1972 actually, 1971, 72, I believe,
for a very specific reason.
And it was at a time when John Lennon and Yoko Ono
had just got married.
They got married like two, two, three years before
and we're a very famous couple.
The Grabster argues that they may have been
like the first genuine celebrity activist couple
who actually used their celebrity
as a way to help influence or help causes,
that kind of thing.
And by the time 1971, 72 rolled around,
Richard Milhouse Nixon was actually running
for reelection again and he decided that he didn't like
people like John Lennon running around
conceivably swaying the vote,
particularly among newly minted voters
in the 18 to 21 year old block.
Yeah, I mean, he and Yoko had been contributors
to causes, working class causes.
It's sort of the notion that Lennon was always known
as the working class hero, but of all the Beatles,
he grew up more solidly middle class
than any of the rest of them.
And not to say that that was a false persona,
but he definitely sort of jumped
and sort of leaned into that, as Noel Brown would say,
as far as his persona.
And I think a lot of people that don't dig deep
kind of think that John Lennon grew up
with a very hard scrap of life there in Liverpool,
which is not the case, but as a result of that,
he championed the working man,
he and Yoko contributed to causes.
He became, along with Yoko, very much pacifist activists.
And if you're a pacifist activist in the early 70s,
you're not gonna be a big fan of Richard Nixon
and he's not gonna be a big fan of you
because he was not shy about war.
No, he really wasn't.
He'd even campaigned, I think in 68,
on ending the Vietnam War
and then actually went the exact opposite direction
with that.
There was a lot, if you were a pacifist,
there was a lot to be upset about in the 60s
and early 70s because of Vietnam alone, you know?
Yeah, for sure.
One of the ways I think they got the most press
that when people think about John and Yoko's activism
is the bed ends that they had, that is B-E-D-I-N-S.
And that is, if you don't know what those are,
that's when you lay around in bed
and you invite the press to come to your room
and talk to you while you lay around in bed
and while you're laying around in bed.
And it looked kind of ridiculous to a lot of people,
especially people on the right,
but John Lennon's whole kind of point,
and he was very tongue-in-cheek,
kind of had a great sense of humor,
but I think it all sort of stemmed from that,
which is like, hey, I gotta do a stay in bed
and not go and start wars,
and this is a pretty ridiculous way
to drive that point home.
Yeah, yeah, like rather than having to go out
and oppose violence, you could oppose violence
just by laying around in bed and doing nothing,
letting your hair grow, I think, is what they were saying.
Sure.
Which is pretty awesome.
And the thing is, is it's John Lennon and Yoko Ono,
and they're sitting around in bed with the press
in their hotel room,
and like that in and of itself is getting pressed.
And then if you say, well, what is all this about?
And you read a little further into the article,
I don't know, maybe it kind of gets you
in just the right way,
and all of a sudden you start thinking that way too.
And to the people who were running
the whole military-industrial complex,
that, I mean, that's a threat.
Even if it's just a threat of the threat of saying like,
just don't, you don't even have to oppose war,
just don't do anything,
and that opposes war in and of itself.
And that was like kind of the way things were at the time.
Like there was a lot of people in power
who were really opposed to that kind of thinking,
who were opposed to people who were opposed to Vietnam
or war in general or violence of any kind.
There was a big opposition to that,
and the people who were running the show
in the United States were chief among those people.
Like we said, Nixon as president,
and they're running for reelection.
And then J. Edgar Hoover,
who was not shy at all about doing whatever he needed to
to quiet dissent.
Like he would generate dossiers on elected officials,
especially ones who were more liberal
to basically keep them in line
by threatening them with blackmail
or even the threat of blackmail, you know?
There were plenty of hippies who got their heads cracked in.
There were people who were surveilled.
We did an episode on the Black Panthers,
if you remember, we talked about Cointel Pro,
the whole program to basically undermine
and smear the Black Panthers in the public's mind.
Like J. Edgar Hoover was a vicious, terrible human being.
And he ran the FBI for decades
and was still running the FBI
when they started to target John Lennon.
Yeah, so to set the stage here
of kind of how this all worked out was
John Lennon had, he was able to enter,
the whole thing kind of boils down to
whether or not he would be allowed to live in the U.S.
or whether or not if he was eventually allowed
to live in the U.S. if they could legally deport him.
So he was able to enter the U.S. on a work visa in 71.
And concurrent with this,
Yoko Ono had a custody battle going on.
She had a daughter from her previous marriage
in the early 70s and she wasn't gonna leave at all.
She was legally there.
They did try and deport her.
They didn't know that she had a green card already,
which was sort of the first foible in this thing.
But they knew that they had a lot of leverage over Lennon
because if they deported him,
he would be without his wife who was gonna stay there.
So they had this leverage.
Lennon loved living in New York City.
That's where he wanted to make his permanent home.
That was so much so that that was also leverage
that they had too.
Yeah, absolutely.
And so Nixon's up for reelection in 72.
He would go on to win in a big, big way against McGovern.
But they were, it's about to call them an organization.
They were an administration that was very paranoid.
They would obviously with Watergate,
they showed that they were willing to do anything
to ensure their victory.
And that included being really worried
about people like John Lennon.
I don't think he was at the top of their list
of things to worry about,
but he was on their list
thanks to Strom Thurmond of all people.
Yeah, so Strom Thurmond,
the horrible segregationist senator
from what, South Carolina, right?
He actually kicked this whole thing off
because I guess he noticed that John Lennon was,
you know, he was a left-leaning rock star activist.
He seems to have been one of the first people
to notice the activism that was developing
among John Lennon and Yoko Ono,
and to perceive it as a threat to the establishment
because all those recently enfranchised 18, 19,
and 20-year-old voters who hadn't had the right to vote
until the 26th Amendment had been passed.
I don't remember exactly when it was passed,
but it was between 68 and 72
because 72 was the first election.
Those younger kids were gonna be able to vote in,
and he apparently saw Lennon as among a group of people
who could speak to those kids and sway them to the left
and potentially unseat Richard Nixon,
which it would turn out is just a total laugh
because Nixon beat McGovern in a landslide.
But at the time, they didn't know this,
and Richard Nixon wasn't going to take any chances.
So the note from Strom Thurmond
was very well-received in the Nixon administration.
Yeah, I think what I wanna know is who told Strom Thurmond.
That's what I wanna know, too.
Because I doubt. That's the biggest mystery here.
Yeah, I doubt if Strom Thurmond was too hip to any of this,
but somebody probably got in his ear,
and he sent a note that specifically said
they try and get him deported
as a, quote, a strategic countermeasure.
Right.
And that's really kind of what got the ball rolling.
We should also mention this other guy, John.
I don't know if it's Wiener or Wiener in this case.
It's pronounced Wiener slave.
Oh, it is?
No, do you remember, there was a 30 Rock episode
where there's like a HR mediator,
and he's like this very soft, rosy, cheeked,
very calm, mild-mannered man.
And Liz Lemon says, well, Mr. Wiener Slav.
And he goes, no, it's pronounced Wiener slave.
I miss that show.
It's like, that was like a really good moment.
They had such great fun with dumb jokes like that.
And blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, right.
No, that was Arrested Development.
Oh, that's right.
That was Arrested Development.
They kind of had the same DNA though.
Yeah, for sure.
So Wiener Slav was a writer, or is a writer,
and historian still, and he is why we know so much of this.
He was writing a lot about John Lennon,
writing a lot about the Beatles.
He decided to file Freedom of Information Act requests
to get a lot of these documents uncovered over the years,
and eventually was successful in a big dump in 1997,
and then another smaller one in 2006.
And if it had not been for his tenacity,
I don't know if anyone else would have picked up this mantle,
because in the end, it's not the most interesting story
in the world.
That's true.
I say that in a whisper.
It's not like some huge like, oh my god, revelations.
It's sort of one of those things that's like just another example
of the small things that authoritarians do in this country
under, you know, in the back rooms
and in the whispered rooms of the White House.
Well, you know, I think like that's really true,
and that's a really good point is that,
like if you just look at it on his face,
like, you know, the FBI followed around John Lennon
and kept tabs on him, and like if you read the files,
it's really pedestrian boring stuff.
You might miss like the real story here,
and the real story here is that a sitting president
directed the FBI to get dirt
that he could use against a political rival,
an activist rock star, to help get him deported
or to figure out what leverage he could use against him
so that that sitting president could get reelected.
That's the real story here, and that the FBI acted
as, you know, this basically a Gestapo type agency
on behalf of Nixon.
That's the real story that I think kind of gets covered up
by John Lennon and Yoko Ono's celebrity
and the FBI kind of wackily following him around.
Yeah, it is funny, because if you look at some of the files
and some of the reports, like they would go to his concerts
and undercover agents would go to the concerts
and report things like, you know, for his encore,
he's saying, give peace a chance,
and we all know about that song.
Right.
They would take notes on song lyrics and stuff like that,
so it's all just kind of silly, but yeah,
I definitely agree that it's just an example
of the links that Nixon would go to to be a dirty thief.
Yes.
Well, Chuck, I think we should demonstrate the links
that we'll go to to bring everyone a message break.
What do you think?
By just shutting up for two minutes?
Yep.
Oh.
Oh.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all
of our friends to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s,
called on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so, my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Oh, just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say, bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Okay, so the whole thing started, eventually,
and it wasn't clear what was gonna happen,
but the real thing that kicked all of John Lennon's
big problems off was that he was arrested in 1968
in London for possession of narcotics.
I'm making air quotes, you can't see,
because he was busted with some pot,
I think maybe some hash and like rolling paraphernalia.
Is this some really BS beef that they got him on in London?
There was some true believer, zealous anti-drug cop
named Detective Sergeant Norman Pilcher,
who was later jailed, actually,
for committing perjury as a police officer,
but he was alleged to have planted the evidence
that may or may not be true,
but it was like a wrap that Lennon shouldn't have had on him
or Yoko shouldn't have had on her,
that they just wanted a high-profile bust.
And that happened in 1968,
and it turned out that that would follow Lennon
for years to come and really kind of be the fulcrum
that the US government had on him
to try to keep him from staying in the US.
Yeah, I mean, he wasn't even doing heroin
at this point, I don't think.
No. So they should have waited
if they wanted a real case.
Well, it makes you wonder,
like I remember hearing in our,
I think our Black Panther episode that the FBI
was not above like addicting activists and dissidents
but with heroin, like turning them on to heroin
and then getting them addicted
and then just, you know,
taking them out of the game like that.
Yeah, I think Lennon never shot heroin, that was his jam.
Okay. So early 71, like I said,
he was able to enter on a tourist visa.
And then when Nixon and his cronies get going
on the deportation, the whole thing was based
on the fact that he had overstayed his visa.
But along with that, it was very valuable to them
that he had a drug conviction under his belt at that point.
Yeah. So they were surveilling him.
They were surveilling other artists around the country too,
who they thought were subversive and sending messages.
Lennon, speaking of getting busted for pot,
Lennon very famously wrote a song called John Sinclair
in support and did a tribute or not tribute,
but a concert and I don't know if they were raising money
or just awareness. Both.
Okay. For John Sinclair, who was a poet,
he was the manager of the MC5, great, great rock band.
And he offered to undercover cops a couple of joints
and went and he had already had a couple
of minor pot offenses, but he went to prison
for 10 years for this and a big refrain
in that song, John Sinclair, which is a cool song
and very rootsy and bluesy, not like very Lennon at all,
is 10 for two, 10 for two is what they keep saying,
10 years for two joints.
Yeah, that he sold to an undercover cop, right?
Yeah, but it worked.
He actually was sprung from prison
shortly after this concert.
Yeah, like two days after and some people say,
I think that indicates he was already going to be sprung,
that the Michigan Supreme Court knew this was a,
this is a trumped up charge, but other people say,
no, the concert surely had some impact.
But Sinclair is a, so the point about Sinclair
and John Lennon is John Lennon performed the song.
He was the headliner at this concert in Ann Arbor.
And he had been coordinating with other people
in John Sinclair's orbit that were prominent figures
in the New Left.
And at this time in the early 70s, the 60s had ended,
it had become clear that flower power hadn't worked,
the evil people were still in charge.
So what was next?
Maybe nonviolent coordination and resistance
wasn't the way to go.
Now, Lennon and Yoko were dedicated pacifists.
They didn't want anything to do with violence.
They didn't condone violence.
They didn't like violence in any way, shape, or form.
But there were elements in the New Left
who weren't necessarily convinced
that that wasn't the only way to change the course
of the United States and get rid of people
like Nixon and his cronies.
And so if you're watching this from the outside,
like your J. Edgar Hoover and Richard Nixon,
you're watching the people on the New Left
and you don't know which way they're gonna break,
violent, nonviolent, who knows?
But you're treating all of them with suspicion.
And all of a sudden, John Lennon,
one of the most recognizable and popular people on the planet,
is suddenly hanging out with some of these New Left cats
that you don't know which way they're gonna go,
violent or nonviolent.
And that really drew the attention of the FBI to John Lennon.
It wasn't necessarily he and Yoko and their pacifist stuff.
Some people think that it was his involvement
with genuine bona fide New Left activists
like Johnson Clare or like Bobby Seale,
like Johnson Clare founded the White Panther Party,
which they had a 10 point platform,
like the Black Panthers platform
and the first platform in the White Panther platform
is that it's fully in support
of the Black Panthers 10 point platform.
So he's hanging out with a bunch of people
that had proven themselves as died in the wool foes
of the Nixon administration.
That definitely caught the FBI's attention.
Yeah, and they had big plans.
They got together and I think their first meeting
was at the Alamooki township.
That's how I'm gonna pronounce it.
The Scaramucci township.
In New Jersey and initially called themselves
the Alamooki tribe, but wisely changed their name
to the election year strategy information center.
And their plan was in 1972 is to host this
and Lennon gave them money,
he gave them like 75 grand to kind of get going
and said, here, let's do a bunch of concerts
with the help of John Lennon all across the country in 1972.
We can have different artists performing,
different speakers, like pounding home the anti-war message.
And then as these concerts roll closer and closer
to the election, it'll culminate in a big protest
at the RNC in Miami.
This is all very legal stuff.
It wasn't, they weren't staging riots or anything.
These were just concerts, awareness,
trying to keep Nixon from winning.
And Nixon got worried.
And he knew that, like you said,
the influence that someone like John Lennon could have
was like, he didn't have anyone on his side.
There was no Scott Bayo at the time,
wooing the youngsters.
Bob, blah, blah?
To the right.
Oh, he was Bob, blah, blah, wouldn't he?
That's funny.
So this is all going on.
And this is kind of what ramps up the pressure
to get Lennon out of there.
This custody battle's going on, they know about that.
And so their first step was to instruct immigration
and naturalization to try and say,
hey, you've overstayed your visa,
you got to get out of here.
And Lennon knew this was coming.
This is no secret.
He had gone on TV shows talking about being followed
by the FBI having his phone tapped,
which we still aren't sure if that really happened.
I think it says officially that there was no legal
phone tapping in the FBI documents,
but that throwing that word legal in there
just kind of makes you think like, well,
were there any illegal ones
that you're not going to tell us about?
Yeah, I read an interview.
So this is like the depths of my depravity.
I didn't even listen to the interview.
I read a fresh air interview with John Wiener,
or Weiner about this.
And he said that in the FBI responded
and said they found no evidence
of illegal wiretapping by the FBI.
Or no, legal wiretapping by the FBI.
So Wiener's like, okay, does that mean
they were doing illegal wiretapping?
Or does it mean that they didn't look very hard
for evidence?
It doesn't mean that they weren't tapping his phone
is what he's saying.
Right, at least made Lennon paranoid enough.
Like he wasn't just not, he wasn't not sweating this.
He was, this made him very paranoid and with good reason,
but he took to going next door at the Dakota building.
So he would let Lennon use his phone in his apartment
to make phone calls.
And I guess, you know, assist with the calls
at the same time a little bit.
And then the FBI said, you know what could really help
is if we could bust them currently for narcotics
in the United States.
If we have an active charge, drug charge against them
and Hoover sent it out himself, he said,
quote for info on a bureau, NYC PD, Narcotics Division
is aware of the subject's recent use of narcotics,
which is like every day and are attempting
to obtain enough info to arrest both subject
and wife Yoko based on PD investigation.
Yeah, and by this time I'm thinking he was using heroin,
I think that's what they were referencing
is his recent use.
Oh, really?
I didn't think that started till later.
I thought it was the early seventies.
I thought it happened during his lost weekend,
but I may be wrong on that.
I'm not that far along on the book.
I'm gonna air toward you then
because I'm just surmising here.
I'm not the one who has a big old book of Beatles history.
So I don't know, they never actually busted him, right?
This was all just like they were planning on doing this,
but they never needed to.
I don't think he was arrested in the United States, was he?
Yeah, I didn't know.
I didn't get that impression,
but it seemed like everything was kind of barreling toward
that and even like you were saying the FBI was like,
we've let the NYPD know to go do this.
So, and if you take a step back, like this is some heat,
this is some pressure that they're putting on John and Yoko.
They're basically saying we're gonna split you guys up
by deporting John,
because we know that Yoko is not going to leave the country
because of this custody battle she can't afford to.
So she has to stay here.
So if we threaten deportation to John Lennon,
it might actually keep him in line.
And the FBI used the word neutralized
that they were seeking to neutralize Lennon.
And I guess some people who don't dig very deeply
into the story are like,
they were gonna assassinate John Lennon.
And John Wiener Weiner has pointed out like,
that's not at all what they meant.
They meant like basically making him ineffective,
like taking him out of the game, basically one way or another,
but not killing him, just convincing him through putting
this undue, unfair, undemocratic pressure on him
to drop his activities with the new left.
Yeah, and they, and by the way,
I think he probably was using heroin in the late sixties
and had it on again, off again, but either way.
So that makes sense because I did see that guys
like Jerry Rubin and I think Renny Davis,
a couple of like the Chicago seven,
like they didn't even like hang out with them
because he was doing too many drugs.
And I'm guessing that it wasn't like he was smoking
so much pot, we can't even talk with them anymore.
Like I think he was shooting dope and they weren't.
Yeah, well, he never shot it.
He always smoked it.
Or smoking dope.
But he and, I think he and Yoko were doing heroin
actually before the Beatles broke up at the end.
Okay.
When they were sort of estranged with the Beatles,
not John and Yoko, but at any rate,
like I said, these investigations are going on
and they're going to his concerts
and they're not even sending back information
that really means much.
They're even saying some of these informants
like, you know what, they're not even really down with it.
Like the new left isn't even down with them
because they think they're just quote self aggrandizing
rock stars or there's little chance
they'll accomplish anything
because they spend all their time doing drugs.
They're kind of sending the message like,
you really don't need to worry so much about John Lennon.
He's not much of a threat.
Kind of one of the funny things about this investigation
was when, and Lennon was one of the most famous people
in the world, one of the most recognizable faces
in the world on planet earth along with Yoko Ono.
And the FBI, it passes around a sheet
with Lennon's picture on it so they can recognize him.
But it was the wrong photo.
It was of a different human being.
It wasn't even John Lennon.
Yeah, it was a street busker from the West Village
named David Peel.
So funny.
Who had a record that I guess John Lennon
helped produce or something.
And he looked vaguely like John Lennon,
but that was the picture that the FBI
passed around in the cops of the wrong guy.
They also, the FBI also put out an all points bulletin
searching for John Lennon and said that
he's at the St. Regis at 150 Bank Street.
St. Regis landscape supply?
That's right.
I guess that's what they meant
because the St. Regis Hotel is on Central Park.
And John Lennon was indeed living on Bank Street at the time,
but he was at 105 Bank Street.
So that all points bulletin was all kinds of wrong.
But this is the level of like coppery
that the FBI was conducting, trying to get John Lennon.
All right, well, let's take a break
and we'll come back and talk a little bit
about Lennon's official defense right after this.
Oh.
Oh.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it.
And now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and nonstop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikulur and to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born,
it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking.
You might not smoke,
but you're gonna get second-hand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe
has been trying to tell me to stop running
and pay attention.
Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in
and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet
and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good.
There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are gonna change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, so John Lennon is not gonna take this line down.
He was paranoid.
He was going on like the Mike Douglas show
and talking about the FBI coming after him.
The first thing he did was probably
what any really, really rich person would do
is he hires a top-rate bulldog attorney
to try and defend this or at least delay this.
And this guy's name was Leon Wilds.
And he really did delay this.
He was sort of a master at filing these motions
and getting it extended and extended.
And Lennon was able to stay in the country
longer and longer and longer.
But he was also kind of instrumental
in kind of letting Lennon know
that this was a real situation that he was involved in.
Right, the thing is if you are a immigration prosecutor
for the federal government of the United States,
you know that there is not a ton of resources
allocated to your division, right?
Or traditionally there hasn't been.
And so, customarily, the Justice Department has,
or I guess INS has left it up to each prosecutor
to determine how hard they wanna prosecute the case.
And so, if you are a upstanding person
who's never posed any sort of threat
to the United States and maybe you own a business
or you're a productive member of society,
there is a chance that the INS is gonna look the other way
and not actually deport you even if you are here illegally.
You have overstayed your visa
or you came to the country illegally, who knows?
And that's actually where the DREAMER program
came from, DACA.
It basically said like these particular immigrants
were brought here as children and they pose no threat.
Most of them are going to college or college bound
or they're in the military,
so we're going to not deport them.
And what Lennon's lawyer told him was like,
all of this is true and yet they're putting the heat on you
like I have never seen.
This is clearly coming down from on high.
Like they want to get you out of the United States
and it's not just this prosecutor.
Yeah, and the other thing that happens
when it comes to a case like this is they have to weigh,
or they can be decided basically on the value
that an immigrant might bring to the U.S.
by being an American or living in the United States.
And so it's kind of funny to look back now
and think that there had to be a case made
that John Lennon brings any kind of value,
but they did and there was a series of letters written
by Bob Dylan and Joan Baez and Joyce Carol Oates,
Leonard Bernstein, John Updike,
just a series of very famous artists
kind of arguing in favor of John Lennon
being allowed to live here.
It was sort of a flood of public outcry,
like what little was known back then at least.
Like you can't just,
there's tremendous value to letting John Lennon
stay in this country.
Right, and don't forget John Cage wrote a letter too.
And I'm sure it was kind of like, well,
do you want me to write a letter for you, John?
He's like, yeah, sure,
I'm sure that would help a lot, John Cage,
because I'm sure no one in the Nixon administration
has ever heard of you.
Yeah, probably so.
So the one kind of the upshot,
I'm just going full on using this word now,
the upshot of that letter writing campaign was
not even just so much to demonstrate the value
of John Lennon remaining in the United States.
It was, if you kick him out,
like there's going to be a public outcry
and you're going to be held to account
and asked to explain why you guys kicked him out.
So it did have a bit of that combined with his attorney's
tenacity, it kept John Lennon in the country.
He was actually never deported,
even though he lived for I think two or three years
with a, you have 60 days to leave the country order.
And his lawyer kept getting it extended
and extended and extended.
But for three years,
that was the threat that he was living under.
And again, if he was deported,
he would leave without his wife
who had to stay in the country for her own custody battle.
So that was a lot of strain on him actually.
And the worst part about this whole thing
is not that the FBI did this
and that the Nixon administration,
Singletal Mounder,
that it all came down to Strom Thurmond
writing this memo to kick things off.
It was that it worked.
Like they sought to neutralize John Lennon
in his political activism and he stopped.
He actually did.
He gave in in August of 1972
by announcing that he was not gonna take part
in that series of concerts that was gonna culminate
at the Republican National Convention
or engaged in any kind of activist activities any longer.
He was just gonna go back to being a musician again.
Yeah. And by this point, Hoover was dead.
L Patrick Gray was the acting director of the FBI.
And in that same month that August
before the election in November,
the FBI's New York office reported to Gray
that he's no longer gonna be involved with these concerts.
He's no longer with the new left.
We don't really need to worry about him anymore.
We're gonna basically settle this case
and close this case after Nixon wins the election.
And like we said earlier a couple of times by landslide.
So this is all sort of for not anyway.
Gerald Ford ended up overturning
Lennon's deportation order in 1975 that was already filed.
And in 76 he got his green card
and lived in New York very famously in the Dakota
for the last four years of his life
before he was murdered in the street,
which I think we should do an episode on that
at some point, maybe in a couple of years
once this one is well in the rear view mirror.
You bet.
That'd be a good one. I agree.
So if John Lennon, apparently before he died,
he gave a couple of interviews and he said of this time
like that it nearly ruined him as an artist.
Like you said, he wasn't just not sweating it.
Like he sweated it every day.
It was a big Harry problem in his life all the time
and a source of great stress.
So in addition to the stress, it stole his focus.
Like it made him think about that
and like how much he hated the Nixon administration
and how terrible the FBI was for how they were harassing him
and possibly tapping his phone.
And it just took his mind from his art.
And he later said that it almost ruined him as an artist
because the work he was producing at the time
was journalism, not poetry, as he put it,
which is a very sad effect,
but it's a really real world effect.
When you've got something just looming
in the front of your mind that you can't get out of your mind,
especially if it's dealing with badness,
that has a terrible effect on you.
And your life in general,
it can produce an entire bad period of your life, you know?
Yeah, he was like, I had to let Yoko sing a lot.
I have something I have to say, I don't wanna forget it.
In one of the FBI notes at that Johnson-Claire concert,
the FBI informant reported that the song Johnson-Claire
was not up to Glennon's usual standards
and you get this, Yoko can't even remain on key.
That was an FBI informant.
Yeah, he had a good ear,
but I like the song,
it doesn't like belong up there with his greatest songs,
but it was very clear,
it was sort of in the tradition of protest songs.
It's got this acoustic slide dobro guitar
and it fits in with the great folk songs of all time,
I think, but not necessarily
one of the great Glennon or Beatles songs.
Is it as good as John Henry was a steel driving man?
I think it's better, I like it better.
Really?
Yeah, and like we mentioned earlier,
the reason we know all this was because of Wiener's reporting
and he eventually got those documents released
and in his circle, there was a big hubbub,
like what's gonna be in there?
What secrets will be revealed?
And really not much,
what was revealed was embarrassment for the FBI,
embarrassment that they released a picture
that wasn't even John Lennon,
embarrassment that they had a very unethical
and perhaps even illegal motivation
behind trying to get this person deported.
And it was just egg on the face
and that's why they tried to keep it under wraps
for so many years,
hoping that it would not get out,
not because there were some big revealing documents,
but they were just like,
can we just sort of act like this didn't happen?
Yeah, so we'll classify everything
as a national security risk.
And they did, and actually that last trove of documents,
the little handful that trickled out in 2006,
was a MI5, kind of a British Secret Service file
on Lennon that the US said that that last bit of document
contained a file from a foreign government
that had trusted the US to keep it
and that it could result in economic,
diplomatic and military action if they were to release it.
Like the UK was just gonna bomb the US
for releasing their document or their file on John Lennon.
That's why the FBI held onto it until 2006
and then they lost a court case.
So like if there was a hero of the story,
it's John Weiner or John Weiner.
I don't know how he says his name and I'm sorry either way,
because he was the one that really stood up,
not just for John Lennon,
but for the First Amendment, you know?
And people's ability to be politically active
without the threat of being intimidated.
So good for him.
Totally.
You got anything else about this?
Got nothing else.
I have an article that direct everybody to
is on pop matters, John Lennon colon,
revolutionary man as political artist.
And it's about all this sorry history,
but also just a pretty good critical evaluation of him
as an activist.
And it's just a really good, interesting article.
So check it out.
And since I said, check it out, everybody.
It's time for a listener mail.
This is in reference of our haunted real estate.
I guess that was a short stuff, right?
Had to be.
Yeah, yeah, it was.
Like please tell me we didn't do 45 minutes on that.
We could have.
Hey guys, been a listener for years
and finally have a good reason to write you.
I was listening to the episode on whether you're supposed
to disclose whether our house is haunted or not.
And it hit close to home.
Two years ago we bought our first house
and I made a point to run a report
to see if anyone died in the house.
The previous owner had just died within the year,
but it didn't say where.
I wasn't really worried about someone
actually dying in the house.
I was really just trying to get a big discount.
However, the agent said he did no, so no big discount.
Cut to two years later,
I found out from neighbors and research
that the previous owner did not die.
However, he was a creep
who actually had multiple abuse charges.
In fact, I found an article stating
that he had a woman tied up in our basement.
Man.
Who he tortured until she was luckily able to escape
for weeks.
That's like almost worse than just a regular person dying.
Is somebody dying of natural causes?
It's a million times worse.
Well, no, I was about to say worse than a murder.
I guess they're on par.
Yeah, well, let's debate that at length.
I don't want to rank awful crimes.
Right.
But I think that might creep me out just as much.
Let's just say that.
Sure.
The police searched the house and found oodles of weapons.
The charges were eventually dropped.
Apparently he had money.
And he redid the entire basement, which is beyond creepy.
I don't know if this qualifies as info
that should have been provided to us at purchase,
but it sure seems like it, huh?
Yeah.
That is from Andy.
Andy I.
Oh, okay.
Well, thanks a lot, Andy.
Is there a heart over the eye?
No, but it's typed.
Is it?
It could be Andy McDowell.
I think she spelled her name like that.
I can see something like this happening to Andy McDowell.
Sure.
I love Andy McDowell.
Well, whether it's from Andy McDowell or not,
we appreciate the email.
Thank you.
And yes, I agree.
I think the realtor should have disclosed that if you ask me.
Totally.
If you want to let us know about some way a realtor wronged you
or anybody did, we want to hear
about it.
You can send us an email to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show,
Hey Dude, bring you back to the days of slipdresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart Podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy, teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.