Stuff You Should Know - The True Story of BlacKkKlansman
Episode Date: February 7, 2019In 2018, director Spike Lee brought the story of Ron Stallworth to the big screen to great effect. Today, Josh and Chuck discuss the true story behind the Oscar nominated film. Learn more about you...r ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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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
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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
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles Bryant.
There's Jerry over there.
You put the three of us together.
It's movie crush.
I mean, Stuff You Should Know.
This does have some stank on it, doesn't it?
Some movie stank.
Uh-huh, I know your game.
It's cool.
I didn't even ask you, have you seen Black Clansman?
I was like, I can't do this episode without having seen it.
So I watched it last night.
Oh, nice.
Yeah. Good, huh?
Yeah, it's pretty good.
Yeah. I like his choice at the end,
like to completely pull a somersault on the viewer.
Oh, sure, with that last bit.
Yeah, like spoiler alert.
Pretty power.
There's an end to the movie.
Yeah, for sure.
We should probably say that out of the gate.
If you haven't seen this yet
and you don't want it to be spoiled,
don't listen to this episode first.
Yes.
But yeah, I guess now that we've said
that we can speak freely, right?
Yes.
So if the entire movie was basically to disarm you
up to the end, then I think it's one of the greatest movies
I've ever seen in my life.
And even if it wasn't,
that wasn't the entire point of the movie.
It was still great in how we pulled it out at the end,
I think.
Yeah, well, this was, I don't know if you remember,
but this is the movie I saw in Perth, Australia.
Oh, yeah.
So that happens at the end, that big sort of gut punch
of realism at the end.
And I stood up and I was like,
like, wonder what they're thinking here in Perth.
They probably think, what just happened?
What's wrong with America?
Yeah, and I'm going,
I might, good to see you.
I'm not American.
I'm Canadian.
Can't you tail bloke?
Oh goodness.
Yeah, it was one of the things where I was like,
I'm kind of slightly embarrassed right now.
Yeah, it was like that.
I enjoyed the movie though.
I thought to see Spike Lee who just,
he's one of my favorite filmmakers in his 60s,
still just bringing the juice like this.
I loved it.
Yeah.
I also loved that it was controversial too,
in that like some people criticized Spike Lee
for like not going far enough
for maybe kind of glossing over
some of the ugly aspects of the story.
Yeah, well, you want to get to that at the end maybe?
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
But we'll give it a pre-mentioned shout out,
which is what we just did.
Right.
So we are talking about the true story
of the film, Black Clansman, Spike Lee's movie
that won the grand prize at the Cannes Film Festival.
It's nominated for Academy Awards.
Yeah, three Oscars I believe for including Best Picture.
Yeah, I think Picture Director and...
Supporting Actor.
For who?
I would guess Adam Driver, I didn't see.
Really?
Yeah, I was surprised because Denzelson
did a wonderful job as well.
He loves that being known as that.
You're right, I can't remember his first name,
but you know Denzelson, he was like,
there were several times when he was talking
and I was like, oh, you are definitely
Denzel Washington's son, man.
Just the way he talked, the sound of his voice,
but also his acting too, he's a good actor.
Yeah, so all right, Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor
for Adam Driver, Best Director and Best Original Music Score.
Oh, nice.
But yeah, he is, I didn't know he was Denzelson
until after the movie.
Yeah, I could see that.
And he was a football player, did you know that?
I didn't, who did he play for?
He played for Morehouse here in Atlanta,
he was a running back and then played an NFL
in the practice squad for the Rams.
And then eventually played a few years in NFL Europe
and the UFL until he hung up his cleats six years ago.
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah.
Playing football in Europe has gotta be a surreal experience.
You know?
Yeah, cause it's a soccer ball.
Everyone's like, what are you doing?
This is all wrong.
All right, so should we weigh back it to the 1970s,
the groovy 70s of Denver, Colorado?
First, we should say his name is John David Washington.
Oh, sure, you were kidding around.
That's Denzelson, yes.
So yeah, let's get in the way back machine
and see, inspect their terrible low quality pot.
So Ron Stallworth is the true to life character's name,
who there was a football player growing
when we were growing up named John Stallworth.
So I'm always wanting to say John Stallworth.
This is not him.
This is a cop named Ron Stallworth.
That's right.
And he had a few designations that are pretty important.
He was the first African-American police officer
to work for the Colorado Springs Police Department,
which he joined as a cadet at the age of 19 in 72.
And then a couple of years later,
on his 21st birthday, on his 21st birthday.
That's what I saw, he had June 18th, I believe.
Nice, was sworn in as a full-on officer of the law.
Right, and I'm not sure if they just swear you in
on your 21st birthday or if it just so happened
that the swearing in ceremony was on his 21st birthday.
But regardless, it was a big deal.
He's the first African-American cop
and then later on detective for Colorado Springs.
So that's a big deal, especially starting out at age 21, too.
That takes a lot of Cajones, as they call it in Colorado.
No, I think they call those Rocky Mountain oysters.
That's right.
That is what they call them, for sure.
So he worked undercover for about 30 years,
long, great careers in undercover detective.
But it was this case, which only came out about four years ago
when he wrote a book about it, about his career,
when he went undercover as a, well, as a Klansman,
but it's a little more complicated than that.
It was a very complicated operation, right?
Yeah, and this wasn't something that like,
I mean, he even says in this NPR interview
that he didn't, it was just a job
at that particular point in time.
And when that particular job ended,
that is the undercover stint,
which was about, what, eight or nine months,
and we moved on to something else,
and it just happened by circumstance.
So he didn't come in there with a bone to pick with the Klans,
aside from probably every bone to pick
that he had with the Klans,
just as a black man in America.
Yeah, and it would probably help
to give a little background on the Klans at the time,
because the Klans was very well known
for being really big and really violent
at over three waves is basically how the Klans history
is divided.
Like the first wave was when they were founded
in the wake of the Civil War.
Then they had a, the second wave came around the 1910s,
like 1950, 15, I mean, that era.
And then they had another big resurgence
during the Civil Rights era in the 50s and 60s.
But in between these waves and after that third wave,
it's not like the Klans just went away.
They kept on going, their profile was lower,
and maybe the public violence or terrorism
that they were engaging in wasn't quite as pronounced,
but they were still there.
And in Colorado in particular,
they had a really long history with the Klans,
where basically the city of Denver
was under the control of the Klans back in the 20s,
just 50 years before Ron Stallworth started working there.
Yeah, he was, when he got hired there,
he got access to files, like secret FBI files.
And he got to go in and dig in and look at the history
of the Klan in Colorado.
And boy, like you ain't kidding,
they were in the house of representatives.
There were senators.
Both senators were Klans members.
The mayor, Benjamin Stapleton,
who the airport was named after until 95.
Yeah, his great-grandson ran for governor
on the GOP ticket this past election
and lost to who is Colorado's
first ever openly gay Jewish governor.
Oh, wow.
Colorado's a weird state.
It is an odd state for sure.
Yeah, a lot of different ideologies
all packed in together.
It's very purple in all sorts of ways.
Yeah, so mayor Benjamin Stapleton was a Klan member.
The governor, Clarence Morley was a Klan member.
The chief of police, which is,
I mean, you don't want anyone in these positions
to be Klan members, but I imagine the chief of police
is one of the more problematic areas
to have a person in that kind of control.
Particularly that one too.
He was picked by the Klan, the Colorado Klan,
and basically foisted on Benjamin Stapleton,
who was even like, wow, this guy's even too much
for my tastes and eventually fired him.
But like the Klan picked the chief of police
of Denver, Colorado back in the 20s.
Oh yeah, and they tried to recall Stapleton at one point.
It didn't work.
And when that effort failed, the Klan burned across
on the top of Table Mountain as a celebration,
a show of public celebration.
Right, so the Klan has deep roots in the old story
in Colorado, or at least they used to.
And they were still very much around
when Ron Stallworth started his investigation,
or started as the first black detective
in Colorado Springs, right?
That's right.
And so he started out, I guess, as kind of plain clothes
and was assigned undercover work pretty quickly
just by being the only African-American officer
in the police force because Stokely Carmichael
came to town once.
That's right, and this is in the film.
We're gonna talk about a few differences
between the movie and the real story.
But he did, in fact, go to a speech in a rally
by famous black panther, Stokely Carmichael,
and he was fully kitted out in his bell bottoms
and his wearing a wire, he picked his afro out,
and he, in fact, did make a point to meet him
just like he did in the film.
And Carmichael did apparently say,
arm yourself and get ready because the revolution is coming.
And I imagine Stallworth had some mixed feelings
about that assignment.
Yeah, I would guess so.
I don't really have any idea of what he personally was like
because the movie mixed things up so much
in like added layers that weren't necessarily there.
So I have no idea what that experience
would have been like for him, you know?
Yeah, one thing we do know is not true
is the character in the film of Patrice
whom he meets at that rally,
a young woman that he falls in love with.
She was made up for the movie.
Spike Lee wanted a love interest, basically,
and to represent sort of the female
black power movement as a whole.
So she was completely made up,
but she was terrific in the film.
Yeah.
Yeah, Laura Harrier,
she's in the new Spider-Man movies too, she's awesome.
Cool, the new Spider-Verse movie?
No, no, no, that's animated.
Oh, okay.
Well, she could have been a voice actor, I guess.
Right, yeah.
No, she's in the one, the new ones with the new kid.
Okay, the new Spidey kid.
The current Spider-Man.
Current Spider-Man, which is great.
Those are good movies.
I haven't seen any of them.
You're not super into that stuff though, are you?
Well, I saw the Infinity War when he was in that, I think.
Yeah.
He's a bit of a smart Alec, frankly.
He is.
He is.
So, okay, he does his research
on the deep roots of the Klan in Colorado.
He goes undercover.
And then, I don't think he was even assigned this thing.
I think he kind of came up with it on his own
by chance, almost.
In October, 1978, he was 25 at this point.
And he was looking through the local paper.
Well, that was part of his assignment
to gather intelligence by reading the paper.
Well, right, but I don't think,
I think this was his idea to go undercover like this.
That's the impression I have too.
He seemed like a self-starter in a lot of ways.
So, he found this ad, a classified ad in the paper
for the Klan, said,
get in touch if you want further information.
He sent a letter posing as a white racist
to a PO box just thinking
that he would just get back some pamphlets or something.
So, he signed his real name,
which is, he didn't really think that one through.
No, he didn't.
And he never really fully explains it,
aside from the best explanation I saw
is that he didn't think anything was gonna come of it.
He thought he'd get, like you said, a couple of pamphlets
and that would be that.
And he just wasn't planning to create
like a large investigation out of making contact
through this ad.
And again, we should probably state this,
it was an ad in the paper for the Klan
in touch with the Klan to get more info about the Klan
and maybe you might wanna join, who knows.
Right.
So, he makes contact with him by sending off a letter.
And if you ask me,
if Spike Lee were directing this episode,
he would put an ad break right here.
That was good.
Who are we to disagree?
All right, we'll be right back.
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]
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,
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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
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Okay, so like we said, Ron Stallworth
is thumbing through the newspaper.
He mails off a letter to get more info about the Klan
and he uses his real name.
And like you said, Chuck, he was expecting
like a pamphlet or something in return.
Like so you want to be a Klan member or something like that.
Right.
Instead, about two weeks later,
he got a call from the number.
So he used everything as far as the undercover operation
would go, he used all of his undercover info
except for his name.
So he got a call on his undercover phone line
from a guy named Ken O'Dell.
And he was pretty surprised to get this call
because again, he was expecting a pamphlet
and instead he had a real live living,
breathing Ku Klux Klansman on the other end of the line
saying, hey, I got your letter about hating black people
and other minorities, let's talk.
Yeah, he was like, why are you interested?
And Stallworth immediately just kind of goes into character.
And I guess that's what you, you know,
when you're undercover, you gotta be a part improv actor
to be able to pull that off.
Well, he also said he drew from his own personal experiences
because he grew up in El Paso
and encountered a lot of racism there.
And I'm sure on the force in Colorado Springs too.
So he drew from his own experience as well.
Yeah, so he basically right out of the gate says,
well, you know, my sister's dating a black man
and every time he puts his hands on her,
on her pure white body, I cringe
and I wanna do something about it.
And Ken O'Dell says, you sound like a great guy.
Why don't you come on down and let's meet
because you are just the kind of kind of dude
we're looking for.
You sound like real clan material.
Yeah, I thought about maybe doing an episode on the clan.
I thought about the two and then I'm like,
do you wanna give him a platform?
Yeah, but then I thought,
or you know, you could just talk about it
and how stupid they are.
All right.
Like when I was a kid, I mean, of course being in Georgia,
that stuff was around.
I never like saw it firsthand, obviously.
Yeah.
But you heard things even,
like growing up in the 70s in Georgia
and I was always so scared of the whole thing
because of the outfits and everything and the fire.
Right.
And I was a good little Baptist boy.
So there was a lot of fear,
but then I got a little older and I was like,
they're just dumb rednecks wearing sheets.
Right.
Sort of demystified it.
It's the moment you become an adult.
Yeah, but I mean, of course,
then I would later learn that they did real horrific things
and took lives and, you know, or a terrorist organization.
Right.
But I think what you're saying
is they made themselves up to be boogeymen.
Yeah, exactly.
And they definitely can be that way,
especially in a young mind or something like that.
But yeah.
So back to the story,
Ron Stallworth is on the phone with this guy
named Ken O'Dell who wants to meet him
to see if he'd like to join the Klan.
And this is a big problem
because I think as we mentioned a couple of times,
Ron Stallworth was African-American.
Yeah, he's like, oh boy, what do I do here?
Right.
So he actually recruited a fellow detective
who he in his book calls Chuck.
That's always ever publicly referred to the guy
as Chuck, wait, was it you, Chuck?
It was not me.
That gentleman is, I guess, either still undercover
or just never wanted his identity out there.
Right.
So he, yeah, he may still live in Colorado Springs.
Who knows?
Maybe he's on a case right now, for all I know.
But so this Chuck guy,
he was recruited by Ron Stallworth
to play Ron Stallworth to the Klan
because Chuck was white.
He was already an undercover narcotics agent.
And apparently he was friendly enough
with Ron Stallworth to say, yes,
I will join this investigation, but let's do it.
Yeah, and here's the thing though.
He was, this wasn't his primary case.
So Chuck is undercover on a lot of different assignments.
So he's not around as much as Stallworth needs him.
So like in the movie, most of this stuff
is done over the phone.
Like he spends a lot of time in this investigation
on the phone speaking to these Klansmen
who think that he's a white man.
And when they needed to meet, he would send Chuck in
who, and we'll get to the voice part in a minute
because that's when I was watching the movie,
I was like, do none of these dummies not realize
that they don't sound anything alike?
Right.
You know, because they've been talking
to him on the phone at length.
Yeah.
But they had their first meeting, they got together
and I believe they met, they met somewhere at first
and then went to a bar after like,
as the second part of that meeting.
Yeah, they met at a, so the movie supposedly portrays
this realistically, this Chuck guy who is portraying
Ron Stallworth to the Klan, they met at a convenience
store and he was told to get in the car
and then they drove to a second location,
which man, that's scary stuff.
And he's also wearing a wire at the time.
Like that's something that the movie kind of gets across,
but especially in like articles about the story,
don't necessarily dive into.
This Chuck cat was like putting himself out there.
Oh sure, as every undercover detective does.
Right.
So I mean, Ron Stallworth is conducting this investigation.
He's the mastermind of, he's leading this whole thing,
but this poor Chuck guy has to go hang out with these,
you know, violent Klan's members or Klan members on,
you know, like fairly frequently from what I understand.
So hats off to him.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
I mean, it was definitely like it required both
of their best efforts to get away with this for that long.
Right.
It was quite the ruse.
So Chuck meets with them, eventually earns their trust
along with the phone work of Stallworth.
And then he actually gets successfully admitted
about two months later and got his little,
I guess you get a little membership card.
He still has it.
He does.
He did not throw it away like in the movie.
He has it framed in fact.
And on the back of the card were six codes of conduct,
one of which said, never discuss any Klan affairs
with any plain clothes officer
on a state, local or national level.
Right.
So there is a lot of comedy in the movie
if you haven't seen it.
I mean, it's a serious thing that they're doing,
but there are a lot of laughs as well.
A lot of laughs and a lot of like movie formula steps
that Spike Lee purposefully follows, you know,
very faithfully to you.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
So there's a big point there that we left out there, Chuck.
So to get that membership card supposedly,
again, as they say in Colorado, the oysters on this guy,
his, he had, so he met, so the fake Ron Stallworth,
Chuck met with the Klan, impressed them enough
between the real Ron Stallworth's phone calls
and Chuck's, whatever Chuck was saying in person.
All this combined made the Colorado Springs Klan members
say, okay, we like you.
We want you to be a member.
Fill out this application and we'll send it off
to the national director of, again, the Klan,
we should say, I don't know if we've ever said this.
The Klan calls itself the organization,
rather than the Klan.
So they, and the guy who ran the thing,
I don't know if he still runs it or not,
but he definitely did at this time during this investigation.
There's a guy named David Duke,
who if you grew up in the 80s or I think even the 90s,
you were probably pretty familiar with David Duke.
I believe he ran for president once, didn't he?
I don't know.
I mean, he was, wouldn't he the governor of Louisiana?
I don't, maybe that's what it is.
Maybe he ran for that, but he was the grand wizard
of the Ku Klux Klan and he was trying to make it
a more political organization,
less of a terrorist organization
and more of a political organization under his guidance,
but it was still the Ku Klux Klan.
Like there was still plenty of times
when he was wearing robes and stuff.
He just never did in public.
So during this time, he was the national director,
the grand wizard of the Klan.
And when Ron Stallworth didn't get his application
pushed through fast enough, he picked up the phone
and called the national headquarters
and ended up talking with David Duke
and saying like, hey, my application is taking a while.
Is there anything you can do about it?
And this kicked off like what Ron Stallworth
would later characterize in a weird way as a friendship
between him, a black undercover detective in Colorado
and David Duke, the grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
Yeah, and by the way, I don't want to get angry emails
from David Duke supporters.
He was a Republican Louisiana state rep.
He was not governor, but-
But I think he ran for some high office.
Oh, he did.
He ran, he was a candidate for the Democratic
presidential primaries in the late 80s
and then the Republican primaries in 92.
He ran as a Democrat and then a,
I could see that solid South kind of thing.
Yeah, and I think he ran for state Senate and lost,
US Senate and lost, US House and lost
and he did run for governor of Louisiana, but he lost.
Gotcha, okay.
And you may be, if you didn't grow up in the 80s,
you may have heard his name more recently
because he fully endorsed Donald Trump's campaign.
And after Donald Trump won, this was his quote on Twitter,
make no mistake, our people have played a huge role
in electing Trump.
So he was using the news again more recently.
Well, he was also in Charlottesville,
if not leading the rally to unite the right,
definitely a big speaker at it, a big part of it.
And Spike Lee uses some of his footage from that rally
to kind of get across that, you know,
the stuff is still going on.
This isn't from the 70s or earlier.
How great was Tofer Grace?
He was wonderful.
He was so good.
And he looks a lot like David Duke of the 70s.
He really does.
Unfortunately for him.
He had the stash and the three piece suits and all that.
Yeah, he did a good job.
But so, yeah, in the movie, Tofer Grace from that 70s show,
always, he will always be from that 70s show.
He plays, what do you want me to say?
Like he had a bit part in Ocean's 11 or something?
I don't see him.
Brad Pitt's character was teaching him
to play poker, I think.
I forgot about that.
You know, that guy.
No, he's that 70 show, of course.
So he plays David Duke in the movie.
And this is, it's really funny.
Like Spike Lee added stuff that just you would think like,
well, yeah, of course it's totally believable.
Like Chuck being Jewish in real life.
Right.
And he actually wasn't.
That's fabricated by the movie.
So you would just not even think twice about that,
but it turns out that's not true.
The stuff that seems the least true
is actually the stuff that actually happened.
And for a very long time,
well, at the very least over the course
of this nine month investigation,
there were multiple phone calls
that were very cordial and friendly.
Where Ron Stallworth would call David Duke
imposing as a white clan member
and pumping for information.
They would talk about, you know, David Duke's family
and like just have no normal conversations
that would inevitably turn back to racism
and the weakening of the white race
at the hands of, you know, the Jewish media
and all the minorities who were taking over.
And so it would inevitably turn disgusting.
But he said later, I think in the book and in interviews
where if you could separate that stuff out,
he was actually a pleasant person to talk to.
And that's where that weird friendship
that he characterized it as kind of developed
from those conversations.
But there is.
Like you couldn't make this stuff up, you know.
Exactly.
But there is at least one video of David Duke
basically admitting that, yes,
this he had conversations with this guy.
He tries to downplay it.
Sure.
But he does basically verify that, yes,
that's true, that really happened.
Well, and Duke's probably like,
I can't remember every phone call I had
with every random racist over the years.
Right.
There were a lot of them.
Even this guy posing as one.
All right, well, let's take another break.
And we're gonna go, we're gonna talk a little bit more
about this weird David Duke relationship
right after this.
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All right, so he's buddying up with David Duke on the phone.
He's fooling everybody.
And he even, like you get the sense
that he does have a little bit of sense of humor,
Stallworth, because at one point,
he even goaded him on the phone a little bit.
And this is in the movie, and it was totally true.
He said, you know, Mr. Duke, have you ever worried
about like a black man posing as a white man
and infiltrating your organization?
And Duke said, no, and he said,
and this is from the NPR interview with Stallworth.
He said, I can tell you're white
because you don't talk like a black man.
He said, you talk like a very smart intellectual white man,
and I can tell by the way you pronounce certain words.
And he said, you know, give me an example.
And he said, black people tend to pronounce the word R,
and I can tell by listening to you that you're not black
because you do not pronounce that word in that manner.
It's science.
Case closed.
Oh boy, he was so easily duped.
I love it.
And then they also did in fact meet in person.
That part is true as well.
Duke came to town and was having lunch.
It was not a big ceremony like in the movie,
but he came to town to have lunch
and the department assigned Stallworth to protect him.
And so he goes there to the restaurant,
introduces himself to protect him.
Duke says, all right, I appreciate you them,
you know, sending someone my way.
And Chuck is undercover there as well.
And he does in fact,
Stallworth posed with David Duke
and gets a Polaroid with him.
So this sounded to me like, what was going on here?
Like, I mean, like you've got this investigation going,
this takes place during this undercover investigation
that Stallworth's conducting.
You have a guy who's already like putting himself out there,
Chuck, as the white Ron Stallworth.
And then the chief says, oh yes, by the way,
you the only African-American police officer
in our entire squad,
you go be David Duke's bodyguard for the day
while he's in town in Colorado Springs.
Like that was just bizarre.
And not only do that,
that very like obvious over act
to slap in the face to David Duke, which was great.
But it could have jeopardized like this whole thing
because you also,
you had the guy portraying Ron Stallworth
in the same room at the same lunch.
It just seemed really strange.
And again, that was one of the things
where when you watch the movie,
you would think like, well, that's just made up.
No, that actually took place
at least according to Ron Stallworth's memoirs.
And that Chuck was in the room,
was asked to take a picture by Ron Stallworth
with David Duke and the grand dragon, I guess,
who must be like the head of the state in Colorado.
And then the last second when he was counting down,
he put his arms around the shoulders of the two clan guys
and then got his hands on the picture.
Apparently all of that was the case,
but he's since lost the picture.
Yeah, and Duke really did try to get it back.
And Stallworth like got to it quicker and said,
basically like, if you try to take this thing,
I will have you arrested for assaulting a police officer.
Don't do it, don't think about it.
Right, so he said he lost it in a move.
He wished he had taken better care of it,
but the idea that it was like, that's just so nuts.
It tells you a lot about the investigation though to me.
Like it makes you say like, okay,
how seriously were they taking this investigation
at the time?
If Stallworth later said, all right,
this is just another job to me.
When I started it, I did the job.
And then when it was done, I moved on to another job.
The fact that he didn't talk about it much until,
I think he spoke about it to the press once in 2006,
a Deseret News article,
and then didn't talk about it again until 2014
when his memoirs came out.
It was just like a thing that they were doing
that other people were doing other stuff too.
And then to have like that part of it,
that the idea that you would jeopardize it in that way,
just makes it seem like they weren't taking it
as that big of an operation
as like the movie would like to believe, I'm not sure.
Well, I think in real life,
it was a information gathering investigation.
Like it was never, we're gonna take down the Klan
in Colorado, it was let's infiltrate
and get as much information and fact-finding as we can.
And in the end, after eight months,
that's kind of what happened.
It was he considers, Stallworth considers it a success
and that they fulfilled their mission.
They did prevent three cross-burning ceremonies
during that eight month span or at nine month span.
And they did identify Klan members who worked at NORAD
who apparently they said they,
I mean, these days they would be fired probably,
but they said they reassigned them
to like Greenland or something.
Right, because they had access to nuclear weapons.
Apparently they had very high level clearance at NORAD.
Which is scary.
It is.
And then they also found plans that they didn't act on.
Like the whole bomb plot in the movie was made up
for dramatic purposes, but they did find links
between for a plan to bomb a gay nightclub
and another plan to steal automatic weapons
from an army base, like an inside job.
So it was valuable work they were doing for sure.
It just wasn't like we're gonna take the Klan down.
Like I don't think it was the department's big job
at the time.
No, certainly not.
And in the memoirs and in the movie too,
the reason that's given for the undercover operation
to end is because it started to become successful.
Ron Stallworth was nominated to lead
the Colorado Springs chapter of the Klan.
Like Ken O'Dell basically said, you should take my job.
Everybody likes you.
You're really good at this.
You're smart.
You should lead the Klan here
and the police chief of Colorado Springs.
So that's it.
Close it down.
Burn all the evidence of this investigation.
He apparently was worried about what a PR nightmare
it would be if it got out that some of his detectives
were in the Colorado Springs Klan.
But at the same time, what strikes me as odd
is that the FBI wasn't like, oh, well, geez,
this guy is like being nominated
to lead the Colorado Springs Klan.
He's talking to David Duke.
Like really this could not be kind of blown up
into a larger investigation or a larger staying
or something like that.
And then secondly, and Ron Stallworth himself addresses this,
there's a very frequently a criticism of,
well, if this was such a big operation
and they found all this stuff,
why wasn't anyone arrested?
Why weren't there any arrests?
And that's what David Duke says.
Right, not just David Duke,
Stallworth says also that in law enforcement
two people questioned that,
like why wasn't anyone arrested?
And he said it was an intel investigation
and that's what they did is they gathered stuff.
But then he very readily points out, like you said,
like the fact that they prevented cross burnings alone
makes it a worthwhile and valuable operation.
I think just some people on the outside are saying,
well, why wasn't more done?
Why didn't more come out of this, you know?
And I'm not quite sure what they're driving at,
but there are, you know,
Stallworth brings that up in an interview I read with him,
like that people do ask that and wonder about that.
Yeah, and Stallworth is very proud of the fact
that with the cross burnings, he was like, no,
I can't remember the quote,
he said something about like no children
in Colorado Springs got to, you know,
no young black kids had to see crosses on fire
during that eight or nine month period.
And he's very proud of that as he should be.
Yeah, for real.
So I mentioned the voice earlier
and the fact that he had a different voice obviously
than Chuck and he said, one time, only one time.
And I think this was in the movie, wasn't it?
Or was it?
It's been a while.
Yeah, it was actually, no, it was, I remember.
Yeah, so one time in the whole investigation,
did someone say like, wait a minute, you sound different.
Chuck had just been at an in-person meeting,
came back and then,
Stallworth wants to follow up on the phone
with Ken O'Dell about something right afterward.
So he had just heard Chuck's voice for whatever,
this whole meeting and was talking to him
and he was like, wait a minute,
you sound different, what's going on?
And he just pulled it off, he coughed
and said he had a sinus infection
and Ken O'Dell was like, oh, well,
here's how you clear that up
and gave him some good sinus medication advice.
Right, yeah, that definitely appeared in the movie.
Like I said.
He did not make this thing up, it's crazy.
No, for real, apparently for a long time,
Stallworth was saying like, yeah,
it was just another job, it was just another operation
and I guess he told some fellow law enforcement friends
or whatever about it and they're like,
dude, this is a movie, you need to write this down,
you need to get this out there.
You, this is a one in a million story.
Yeah, I wonder one reason it didn't go bigger operation wise
was because the sort of hackneyed way they got into it,
like he's the voice, but they're sending a white man.
I can see that.
Like it's, I'm surprised he pulled it off for that long.
Yeah, I could totally see that.
One final thing that did not happen in real life,
but did happen in the movie.
And this is when you usually will change real life
is to get a more satisfying ending,
but Stallworth did not unfortunately reveal
his true identity to David Duke like he does
to hilarious effect in the film, unfortunately.
No.
I was sad to learn that.
He was saying like, yeah, he just,
he didn't really talk about it until the 2000s.
So David Duke didn't know until I guess
the memoirs came out.
Yeah, and you know, well, I guess we should talk about
Spike Lee getting criticized, Boots Riley, director,
who I had on movie crush by the way, he-
I know.
What was his movie?
Sorry to bother you was his film that he made.
No, I mean his pick for movie crush.
His pick was a movie called Mishima,
A Life in Four Chapters.
Okay.
Yeah, it was a great film.
And his like his knowledge on movies was deep.
He turned me on to a lot of cool things.
I thought for a very terrible second you were saying
his pick was his own movie.
No, no.
But he, you know, Boots does not hold back
on what he thinks and while you would think
that he would be like, oh no, I'm gonna be a champion
of Spike Lee and telling the story,
he came out very publicly on Twitter
and very intelligently criticized it.
He didn't just bag on it.
He wrote a big long statement on exactly
what he thought was wrong with it.
Yeah, he basically said, look man,
if you take away all the embellishments
that Spike Lee added to this movie,
what you have is a guy who's probably biggest assignment.
And I'm not sure where he got this,
but he focused on that Stokely Carmichael thing.
And the fact that Ron Stallworth had worked undercover
to infiltrate the Black Power Movement in Colorado Springs.
And that he had worked on that for like three years
and that this Klan thing was just like a nine month thing.
And he also criticized Spike Lee for making it,
making the movie seem like law enforcement
and the Black Power Movement came together
to fight racism and that like that was a larger pointer
that that was historically accurate
or something like that.
It was a really interesting,
it was like a three page essay that he posted on Twitter
that made some good points.
He basically said, from what I can tell,
it looks like Ron Stallworth was working
for COINTELPRO, which was the FBI's,
it was their program to undermine groups,
including Black Power groups,
which we mentioned it in the Black Panther episode we did.
And COINTELPRO definitely deserves its own episode.
And it was ended officially in 1971,
but I think Boots Riley's point was,
it might have been officially ended,
but the work was still going on.
And if this guy was infiltrating Black Power
like groups in Colorado Springs,
he was almost certainly trying to break them up
one way or another,
probably using COINTELP's purposes or practices.
And Ron Stallworth, he had a pretty great quote
in response to it.
He said, I pray for my demented disillusion brother
in response to Boots Riley
and Spike Lee has no comment about it whatsoever.
So who knows, but you make a good point
that he's not just giving blind allegiance to anything.
Sure, well, Spike did comment eventually.
Oh, I didn't see that.
Yeah, he was in an interview
and the first thing he said was like,
hey, I'm a young man of 61 or something like that.
And like, young me might've kind of gotten
into a war of words,
but he's just not into that anymore.
But he did say briefly something about listen,
I'm not gonna come out and say that all cops are racist
and all cops do bad things
because they don't all do bad things.
There's a lot of great cops.
There's also bad cops.
And he kind of just couched it in that and then was like,
but you know, I'm not gonna be really talking
about this anymore.
Right.
Yeah, I hadn't seen that he'd even had that comment.
Yeah.
So it's interesting stuff.
And it's a good movie at the very least.
Oh, for sure.
You know, I think Ron Stallworth's like,
man, they made a movie about my story.
That's pretty awesome.
And at the very least, it's a pretty great movie.
How about that?
Totally.
Totally.
So if you, you got anything else?
I got nothing else.
If you want to know more about Black Clansmen,
you should probably go see that movie.
And I guess we probably should have said at the outset,
this episode is not an ad.
Oh, of course not.
We just like the movie a lot, right?
Yeah, I mean, you could say it's an ad,
but like no one gave us money or asked us to do this.
Sure.
But I am endorsing it.
OK, there you go.
I am endorsing it as well.
It has two thumbs up as it were.
Yeah.
It's Rest in Peace Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel.
Two thumbs.
OK, so if I already said that, how about some listener mail?
Yeah, I'm going to call this ping pong
response from a former pro.
Oh, nice.
Hey, guys, want to commend you on the job you did,
covering a sport that you didn't have an extensive knowledge
of.
I'm a professional table tennis coach and former player.
I started playing in college, thought I was really good
until I was coerced to go to a tournament at Princeton
University about 20 years ago, and I got destroyed.
I didn't like that, so I sought out to coach.
And the rest is history.
You guys clearly did a lot of research
and to highlight the things that most novice players aren't
aware of.
But there were a few things I couldn't help but point out.
Josh, you mentioned the components of the modern racket.
You said the pimpled sign, those are called pips,
are for spinning the ball that the smooth side is
for defensive play, but the opposite is actually true.
Oh, no.
I didn't catch that, because I would have pointed that out.
I thought everyone knew that.
Thank you for that.
You get good spin on that smooth side.
For real?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's grippy.
All right.
He said the smooth side is very tacky, as in sticky.
And that combined with the sponge underneath
allows the ball to sink in just enough
so that the tacky service grips the ball
and generates a lot of spin.
Also, you can really have any combination of rubber
that you want, as long as it's ITTF approved.
Players are not restricted to having one smooth side
and one with pips.
But one side does have to be red and the other black.
Most defensive players use pips on their backhand,
because pips vary the spin that is coming back at you
and it's very hard to read.
Also, Chuck, you mentioned that defensive players
are called chislers.
They're actually called choppers.
As they chop the ball back with varying backspin,
I've never heard the term chislers.
I'm wondering if it is extremely outdated.
Maybe.
I bet you that was the case.
Yeah.
I had old research.
Chislers.
All right.
That's what they call them in the 20s.
He said, if you guys are ever in the Dunnellen, New Jersey
area, stop by.
Where are they right now?
Stop by the Lilly Yip Table Tennis Club,
and I'll gladly hook you guys up with a lesson.
I will gladly humiliate you in person.
And that is Thomas from Philly.
Thanks, Thomas.
Much appreciated.
We like it when we are gently corrected,
because we like to be right.
So thanks for that.
If you want to get in touch with us, let us know.
I don't know.
Something we got wrong about black clansmen.
Let us know.
You can find all of our social links
on StuffYouShouldKnow.com.
And as always, send us an email to stuffpodcast
at HowStuffWorks.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit HowStuffWorks.com.
On the podcast, hey dude, the 90s called David Lacher
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 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, 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.