The Daily Show: Ears Edition - TDS Time Machine | Jon's 2024 Interviews
Episode Date: January 2, 2025Jon Stewart is joined by FTC Chair Lina Khan, author Salman Rushdie, and ESPN reporter Monica McNutt to discuss some of the biggest topics of 2024, including antitrust suits against Amazon, the fight ...for free speech on college campuses, and how Caitlin Clark's entrance affected the WNBA.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everyone, Desi Lydic here.
The Daily Show is on break for the holidays,
but in the meantime, we put together
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We'll be back in the new year on January 7th
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MUSIC
Lovely to see you.
You run the Federal Trade Commission.
That's right.
The whole shebang. And you are in charge of its
it's protecting Americans from monopolistic government company
practices but also dealing with pricing and things like that
protecting consumers.
That's right, I mean the short of it is we want to make sure
that the American public is not getting bullied or coerced in
the marketplace or tricked.
And so we enforce the nation's antitrust and consumer protection laws.
And how is...
Well, please.
Now, I just want to make it very clear, though.
You are not bullied or tricked into applauding, no?
I don't want to be accused of monopolistic.
How much pressure do these companies exert on the Federal Trade Commission?
In other words, how much do they fight whatever regulation you're trying to put into place
to keep them from becoming monopolies or from these types of business practices?
Well, look, monopolies are not fans of enforcing the anti-monopoly
laws and so that type of pushback is baked in. But we
have a fantastic team. We're a small agency, but we're mighty
and we play to our strengths being entrepreneurial being
strategic right and getting real wins for the American
people. What are the companies so these are separate things
monopolies.
The way I was it was that's only one company but don't we
have oligopolies in this country are their industries
consolidation has made it for instance entertainment
industry is controlled by like 6 companies
is that considered
not a monopoly but but a problem.
Yeah, look we've really focused on how our companies behaving
are they're behaving in ways that suggest they can harm
their customers harm their suppliers harm their workers
and get away with it and that type of too big to care type
approach is really what ends up signaling that a company has
monopoly power because they can start mistreating you,
but they know you're stuck. And what would be the metrics of that like how would you how
would you judge that because I know you've sued Amazon. That's right. And and
that's for those practices.
Does allege that Amazon is a monopoly that they've maintained that monopoly
through illegal practices.
And look, there are a variety of ways that you can show a company is a monopoly and has monopoly power.
One is you can try to figure out what's the exact boundary of the market, what's the market share.
But again, the most direct way is to look at how is the company behaving.
And as we lay out in our complaint, Amazon is now able to get away with harming its customers.
So just to give you a few examples,
over the last few years,
they've littered their search results page with junk ads,
ads that internally executives realize are irrelevant
and unhelpful to consumers, but they can just do it.
And it melts them billions of dollars in money.
They've also been steadily hiking the fees that small businesses have to pay to sell through Amazon
And so now some small businesses have to pay one out of every two dollars to Amazon
It's basically a 50% monopoly tax Wow
And so those are just some of the behaviors that we point to to note that this company has monopoly power
Is there anything in the company's leader that also suggests that like for instance?
If you were to go from being like sort of a nerdy dude who sold books out of a garage
Into let's say a jacked Lex Luthor type
Does that also suggest either monopolistic practices or some
type of injections.
You know we haven't tried to make those arguments in court
but it would be interesting to see how a judge would respond.
I think quite favor.
How many lawyers do like for instance so what are you up
against so you've got government lawyers, I'm
assuming you've got a pretty good cadre of like let's say
you're going after Amazon how many lawyers that.
I mean you know if they have monopoly money they can buy as
many lawyers as they want I mean the FTC is around 1200
employees. But when we're going up against some of the
es monopolistic companies they can out match us out gun us
sometimes one to 10 just if you're looking at lawyers if
you're adding paralegals and support if you're just looking
at lawyers they outnumber you tend to want sometimes they can
yeah, I mean we have lawsuits against a whole bunch of big
companies and just in terms of sheer resources that they can
pour into the litigation. We're pretty out guns, but not
out that right and this is where it comes to play to your
strengths being entrepreneurial.
You know this isn't about just getting a fine this is about
going after Amazon and saying so because this is what the SEC
does the SEC I think is overmatched as a government
agency and you don't have to comment on that but just nod
your head.
I really overmatched so they go after groups and then they
can't really prove it in court so then they're like how about
this you give us a cut of your profit and we'll all be done
here. How do you handle that with Amazon, it's not just
about a fine.
That's right, I think we've seen look over the last couple
of decades. We've seen how businesses can treat fines just as a cost of
doing business right and we need to make sure that we're
actually deterring illegal behavior and so that can mean
naming individual executives. We in our so now you just did
not go there.
Success with this.
We have had success with this, I mean we had a lawsuit against
Martin Shkreli a couple years ago.
But suddenly turned into a pro wrestling match here.
And he went to jail. He was you have to refer things to the
DOJ or do you have to refer things to the DOJ,
or do you have an enforcement arm?
So you're right.
We don't have criminal authority.
But the remedy we were able to get against Martin Shkreli
was to effectively ban him from doing business
in the pharmaceutical industry.
Right.
Now, I imagine that the practice that he
did in the pharmaceutical industry which was taking
a life-saving drug and like jacking the price up by I don't know how many thousands of percent
I mean he did something crazy right how do you keep that as a normal practice in the
pharmaceutical industry I mean there are they colluding as a group to keep prices high why
are we having so much trouble with them and prescription drug prices.
I mean look there are a whole set of reasons why yeah for too
many Americans drugs are unaffordable right, I mean I
hear weekly monthly about American families who are
having to ration life-saving drugs absolutely and shortages
of those drugs shortages of those drugs and there can be
all sort of tricks and monopolistic behavior that is leading to
that just to give you one example.
Inhalers they've been around for decades sure, but they
still cost hundreds of dollars. So our staff took a close look
and we've realized the some of the patents that had been
listed for these inhalers were improper there were bogus and
so we sent hundreds of warning
letters around these patents.
And in the last few weeks, we've seen companies
delist these patents.
And three out of the four major manufacturers
have now said, within a couple of months,
they're going to cap how much Americans pay to just $35.
So is it their game? $35.
Is their game we're going to see how far we can push this
and get away with it and do these different things in the
hopes that we don't run up against an entrepreneurial or
crafty FTC are they waiting you out.
Look it's possible, but that's why you need to think about
tactics that are going to be around deterrence and so one
big area of focus for us is understanding what is the root
cause of these problems right let's understand who is the
mafia boss here rather than just going after the foot
soldiers right.
And I think you probably there's probably a biblical sin
in there that's probably the root cause of the whole thing but I
want to talk about the tech companies because they are the new oligarchs it
would seem they are the companies that and you see this especially in Europe
where they are find considerable amounts of money for monopolistic practices or
Apple just had to pay an enormous fine uh... microsoft has always you know found guilty of certain monopolistic practices when it comes
along
how do you handle enforcement
for these
new
incredibly consolidated
and enormous
oligarchies
so we have a lawsuit against Amazon right we have another
one against facebook. We've got is the one against facebook.
So that was filed before I arrived at the agency but
basically it alleges that facebook when it was watching
the transition from desktop to mobile. It realized it really
couldn't survive in mobile and so it ended up and buying out
instagram and what's app and the lawsuit alleges that those
Acquisitions were anti-competitive that they violated the antitrust laws right that instead of competing organically
Facebook instead bought its way to maintaining its monopoly now
Why why is that considered model this wouldn't they say well, that's a sign of our success
We're so successful. We have extra money and with that extra money
We make bets on certain companies,
and we turn those into successes.
So look, one key tenet of the anti-monopoly laws
is that you can't go out and buy one of your biggest
competitors.
The whole book.
Oh, you're not allowed to do that.
You're not allowed to do that, in fact.
Can I tell you something crazy?
So I had put in an offer for last week tonight.
I had come out. offer for last week tonight.
It's Oliver I offered to him in the blooms is that what British
people use.
Obviously didn't take it.
You have to make the decision then of whether or not they are cornering the market these call cornering the market.
But couldn't you say like Apple Microsoft they are kind of. Working together to corner markets now.
So look we are. Investigating to understand whether some of the investments and partnerships that they're entering into right now in the AI space may in fact be
giving them undue influence or giving them special privileges. If we get any hints that there is actual collusion happening in
the marketplace we take that extraordinarily seriously and won't hesitate to take action. One trend that we're especially
to take action. One trend that we're especially concerned about is the way that algorithms may be facilitating price fixing. And so if you have a whole bunch of competitors in a
market be it hotels be a casinos and they all decide they're going to outsource their
pricing decision to the same algorithm. They may in effect be fixing their prices even
if they're not you know getting back room and making secret
deal if that would be like if the hotel says you can get us
on Expedia or you can get us on guy after you can get us on.
But all those companies are using the same algorithm would
that mean that it flattens those prices and you're not
getting the competitive advantage that you might get
from those 10 to 15 apps that are searching for the cheapest
hotel rooms is that the idea that's right you may
collectively see inflated prices because all of these
companies are using the same algorithm they're inputting the
same data and that algorithm is in effect allowing them to
collectively raise their prices so Americans are having to pay
more and it's not just paying more I mean you can look at a company
like wal-mart where you say OK they came into areas and they
dominated all the competition they didn't buy up the mom and
pop shops but because they had access to cheap labor and
overseas goods and those types of things they could undersell
them and put them all out of business.
And even at that moment they might not raise their prices,
but boy could they
and boy could they exert their influence on supply chains and
boy could they depress wages and make sure that people even
if they're working long hours still have to have social
assistance is that something that you could go after.
Monopolies harm Americans in a whole bunch of ways you're
absolutely right that it's not just higher prices.
It can be lower wages.
It can be suppliers getting muscled out of the market
or seeing their own payments drop.
It can also be shortages.
I mean, we've seen over the last few years,
IV bags.
Baby formula, IV bags.
Adderall.
Adderall. Basic forms. I see the audience has no use for baby formula, but has an interesting predilection.
What do you do in that instance?
So look, we want to understand, are there dominant players here that are using
their muscle to coerce in ways that's contributing to
shortages. We've also seen historically when you
concentrate production that concentrates risk and so a
single disaster a single contamination a single shock
can lead the entire supply to be wiped out. I mean the short of it is don't put all your eggs
in one basket and then you guys are the ones that have to
separate the eggs. It's curious to me that the government
wouldn't have other methods of working with these corporations
to ask them to curb their excesses in exchange for what
they get which is the stability of the American system.
So look we have a whole bunch of policies and laws in place
that are actually designed to ensure markets are more
competitive and not a subject to these without killing
innovation exactly right. That's the balance but 40 years
ago under president Reagan. We've radically veered off course and undertook a much
more hands off approach and now we're living with the
consequences of those to his industry more consolidated
today, I mean my
got would tell me it is more consolidated you have larger
companies that swallow up in in the pursuit of growth swallow
up and consolidate it feels that way to me do you have the metrics that suggest
that that's actually the case.
On the whole yes, I mean you always want to do a market by
market analysis, but if you look at airlines if you look at
telecom if you look at meat packers if you look at you know
huge parts of our economy across the board you've seen
huge waves of mergergers. Less competitive.
So you go from dozens of companies just to a very small number.
And again, that hurts Americans and American communities in all sorts of ways and even
leads to, for example, planes falling apart in the sky.
Wait, what?
I always thought that was all just DEI.
Are you telling me?
This gets us to our final point.
So now they're saying this new algorithm, this new kind of machine learning model called
AI, that's going to transform every aspect of American life
and the American economies.
It's already being consolidated.
Apple has bought 30 AI models.
Microsoft has probably bought, Google has bought.
They all buy AI startups and put them behind their paywall
and they're already having an arms race to see who will be
either the monopoly or this will be in all of God, but I
got to tell you I wanted to have you on a podcast.
An Apple
asked us not to do it
to have you they literally said please don't talk to her.
Having nothing to do with what you do for a living I think
they just.
I didn't think they cared for you is what.
They they wouldn't they didn't they wouldn't let us do even
that dumb thing we just did in the first act on a I
what is that sensitivity why are they so afraid to even
have these conversations out in the public sphere.
I think it just shows one of the dangers of what happens
when you concentrate so much power and so much decision
making in a small number of companies, I mean going back
all the way to the founding there was a recognition that in
the same way that you need the Constitution to create checks and balances in our political sphere
You also needed the antitrust and anti-monopoly laws to safeguard against concentration of economic power
Because you don't want an autocrat of trade in the same way that you don't want a monarch
But then it took them, I mean it wasn't until the Sherman Act in what? 1890 something?
I mean when did they, when did they first decide was at the
beginning of industrialization when they finally decided like
oh we should probably put a halt to this that's right you
initially had some state level laws but the first federal
antitrust law was the 1890 Sherman act and it was
absolutely a response to the industrial revolution a lot of
the power that that had concentrated can we just hold on for one second?
Why can you take the camera real quick?
I want to take a single real quick, if I can.
I don't know which one.
Let me take this one.
I f***ing nailed that Sherman thing, didn't I?
I know.
I know.
I came out of nowhere.
I think I might have learned that in like ninth grade.
Stuck.
Has that been updated since 1890?
So we had some follow-on laws in 1914, another follow-on in the 1950s.
And then since then it's been a bit more sparse.
So for the most part, our lawsuits are still based
on those laws going back a century.
What would you posit, what would you put forth
to control this new AI technology that is looming?
And I'm not talking about censorship.
I'm not talking about government deciding
you can't say that or you can't print that.
I'm talking about in terms of business practices,
these few companies controlling the entire mechanism. Look, the first thing we need to do is be
clear-eyed that there's no AI exemption from the laws on the books. We see sometimes businesses try
to dazzle enforcers by saying, oh, these technologies are so new, they're so different, let's just take
a hands-off approach. And that's basically what ended up happening with Web 2.0 and
now we're reeling from the consequences and so we need to
make sure all of what was the web 2.0 is you know the rise of
social media. You know in the early 2000's. The initial set
of of companies that ended up innovating but ultimately
becoming monopolistic, ultimately adopting business
models that are premised on endlessly surveilling people.
And so.
And hoovering up data and creating algorithms that are clearly harmful, not just to children
but to political discourse.
And it's pretty wild how they're able to do that.
And every now and again they get called in front of Congress. And Mark Zuckerberg, doe-eyed, goes like,
you know, like and subscribe.
You know, I don't know.
But are you optimistic that we will
be able to catch up to this in time
before something truly catastrophic happens through AI?
Well, look, there's no inevitable outcome here.
We are the decision makers.
And so we need to use the policy tools and levers that we have to make sure that these
technologies are proceeding on a trajectory that benefit Americans and we're not subjected
to all of the risks and harms.
Right.
Boy, would you stay forever?
Because it's incredibly impressive what you've done.
Thank you so much.
FTC chair, Lina Khan.
First question, obviously. How are you?
This was obviously a traumatic experience.
How are you feeling?
I'm okay, you know. I mean, surprisingly.
Yes.
But sometimes there are good surprises. This was one. traumatic experience how are you feeling I'm okay, you know, I mean surprisingly yes, but
sometimes there are good surprises this was one and I'm
pretty much recovered.
I have to say and I know this it's it sounds peculiar to say
this because of the traumatic experience that you endured I
love this book. It's it's it's a beautiful
work of introspection.
I feel like I know now how your mind works.
You know, I've read other of your books,
but you really do a wonderful job of taking us through how you think.
Yeah, it's weird how I think.
No!
I mean, I have this kind of free associating mind,
which goes from the moon to a movie to a book
to a piece of mythology to a joke.
I had to read this book with another book next to me
to get just some of the references.
But it allows you, you know, sometimes you
read an author's memoir and there's
a certain self-consciousness to it.
But maybe because this is about a traumatic incident,
I feel like your defenses were down,
and it was very revelatory.
Yeah, I mean, there's a subject.
I mean, what I felt is that it's
it starts off there's a love story which turns into a murder
story
which turns back into a love story. Yes, the love story by
the way is with his wonderful wife Eliza who is really the
hero maybe of the book. Yeah, no, I mean she she did a huge
amount and I wouldn't be here in good shape without her. And plus, she's an amazing writer.
There's that too.
I say with a certain amount of gritted teeth.
Yes.
Is there competition in writerly families?
Not really.
Actually, one of the nice things about this is there isn't.
We're enormously supportive of each other's work.
I thought a really interesting part of the book is, spoiler alert at the end, when you
go back to Chautauqua.
Chautauqua is the famed community in upstate New York where they bring in speakers and
where this unfortunate event happened.
And you go back to revisit the scene of it, but also the jail where they are holding
this person that attacked you.
Yeah, it was a last minute decision. We were actually on
the plane flying up to because I had this desire to go and
revisit the scene of the crime
and show myself that I was standing up where I fell down
right now sort of important to me but on the flight up there I
thought to talk was a really small town,
and if he's in the county jail,
how far is that from the institution?
And it turned out it was like five minutes' drive.
So I thought, well, let's go to the jail.
It blows my...
But you didn't have a desire necessarily
to see this individual.
No, I just wanted to see the jail.
LAUGHTER But I just...
You get that. It's a really boring jail.
It's a little cell block and a wall with some barbed wire.
But I thought, you know, he's in there, I'm out here.
That feels good. You win.
And what happened is a weird thing happened.
My feet started dancing.
You were dancing? No, my feet started dancing. You were dancing my feet with us.
What does that look like it's just just shooting but the body
stayed. Well, I said while I said stop doing that.
I can imagine this gentleman just glancing out the window
for no apparent reason going is that the guy like.
Yeah, he's dancing sick of the cop.
You know you talk a lot about your thoughts about this
gentleman and whether you want to confront him there's
actually a really wonderful
section of it almost like a Socratic litigation that you do
in 4 parts, yeah, I make him up you make him up.
But you don't make him
defense list know that the litigation that you
and the dialogue that you have with him is challenging.
Yeah.
Well, I thought you you know you've got to give the enemy
and even break.
If you're going to have a serious conversation.
Then it's it can't just be me yelling at him telling him
what about person is
which I think.
Yes.
But he wasn't...
It makes you wonder about, you know, you spent since 1989,
this, this fatwa is put upon you,
and it's these fundamentalists,
and these are religious extremists
who have decided they're going to punish you
for whatever their reasoning was.
You write, though, that this gentleman is sort of who have decided they're going to punish you for whatever their reasoning was.
You write though that this gentleman is sort of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of that.
He's 24. He wasn't even born when this thing happened.
And he by his own account had read nothing I'd written.
And yet he was willing to commit murder. I mean, that's stupid. Yes.
But it's...
I wonder if you think of it, does it strike you as a change in fundamentalism?
You know, you say he was radicalized by Iman Utube, that he watched YouTube videos. And do you think this attack had more to do with,
like, John Lennon's attack or with a religious attack?
No, I think in some ways it's a very American attack.
Right.
He spent four years in a basement
playing video games and watching videos.
And it kind of messed with his head.
And also, you know, I mean mean he's born and bred in New Jersey
slow down I
Think I know where this is going
Well, then you know you're ahead of me
But you know we live in an America where people kill each other every five minutes, right?
You know, and I think maybe in his New Jersey brain.
Yes.
That is how we describe it as well, by the way.
He's got that New Jersey brain.
Exactly.
Do you think that there is a shift, you know, we think of fundamentalism as primarily a
religious artifact.
Have the algorithms made fundamentalism
something different from that?
I think maybe they have.
I mean, I'm too old to know, really,
because algorithms don't know what to do with me.
Right.
Give them a chance.
No, I do.
But they don't know what to do.
So I'm not algorithmically influenced.
But people are.
People are all the time.
And yeah, I mean, I think he was...
Something happened in him which made it possible for him to decide to murder a total stranger.
And that has to be brainwashing of some kind right know what what do you want to
call it, but I call it brainwashing.
Yeah as I read the story I started thinking you know we're
so used to this idea that
violence with the cause this idea that these you know there
is something deep inside them that can almost be noble
understandable.
This is not that.
It struck me more as more in common with the school
shootings we see here or the other things,
that you were just this thing he saw.
And you know what's so strange about it is, first of all,
he must have known that he was messing up his own life as
well.
Right.
You know, not just mine.
At 24.
At 24.
And you know
the last thing he did before he got on the bus from Fairview
New Jersey to Chautauqua last thing he did he canceled his
gym membership.
Because he knew that he was really had wait she wasn't.
It wasn't coming back and why should he keep his standing
order going.
So he's got he's going through it and going like, I don't need serious radio anymore.
I don't.
Exactly.
So this, was he suicidal, or was he?
I don't know.
I mean, maybe we'll find out if whenever, if this trial happens,
we might find out more about him.
Do you dread something like that?
Is that something that still visits you?
No.
I mean, I think, you know, if they need me to testify,
I'll go testify.
And I'll be in the courtroom with them.
But my view is he should be scared about being
in the courtroom with me.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Do you wonder sometimes, you know, and this is not to get,
but you and I are both getting older,
and you write a lot in the book about-
Speak for yourself, John.
Settle down.
I was just on jury duty, by the way.
I don't know if you saw that picture of my doppelganger.
But there is mortality.
You write about Martin Amis and Paul Losser,
and people that you've lost even during the writing
of this book lost to esophageal cancer.
You had a cancer scare I did in the middle of
rehabilitation yeah in the middle of all this repair work
suddenly apparently I might have prostate cancer.
I thought that's not fair.
No what you're right he writes he goes to the doctor or you
can tell I mean I I went to doctor and they be
examining your prostate is not fun.
Again speak for yourself.
It depends on if you have a jersey brain.
It's... It depends on if you have a Jersey brain.
Anyway, the first examination, they thought they found a bump on the prostate.
And then I had to have an MRI scan.
An MRI scan, you know, it grades from one to five, and five is really bad.
And I came out as four.
And it said, cancer probable.
And then it turned out that it was not probable, that was had this bump on the had been caused by some other infection
And and a medicine that they had actually given you yeah exactly and just then a second doctor
The first doctors boss also examined by prostate more thoroughly they lined up down the hallway
No, this was very thorough.
And also he was an Indian doctor and he was a fan of mine.
Nothing more uncomfortable than that.
Extra thorough.
Yes.
And he said, no, I think this might be caused by this other infection.
So they had to go back and have another MRI scan.
And it said, one to five, it's one, no cancer.
So I had cancer for two months, and then I didn't.
It's so incredible because you face this, as you write in the book, this 27 seconds.
It was just 27 seconds.
And yet, do you think about, and pardon the question, but do you think
does it matter how you die? As you watched your friends and you thought about your fate
and your brush with mortality and then to have this cancer scare, did it make you think
it mattered how you die?
I prefer not to.
I've got some bad news.
Come for all of us news for all of us, yes, but I don't know
why.
My wife Eliza and I've decided we're planning a 100th birthday
party by 100th birthday has to be a dance party.
Yes, just your feet though not the whole.
I tried to decide who should DJ. I'll pick somebody.
But it strikes me because you,
whether you've wanted this mantle or not, and I'm assuming you don't,
you represent something.
You represent a courage and a freedom of artistic expression,
of the importance of artistic expression, of the importance of artistic expression,
and of the danger that artistic expression often visits upon the people who do it.
It's a noble shield to carry, but not an easy one, I don't imagine.
Not an easy one.
In a way, there's bits of me that would prefer to be well-known for being, you know, a good writer.
Well, I have to tell you, I'm pretty sure that's in there, too.
Is that in there? Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you.
But...
You know, it used to be, when I started out as a writer,
when people would write about my books,
they would mention that they were funny.
And then, after the attack on the satanic verses,
everybody stopped saying I was funny.
Really? Because that book is satirical.
Yeah, and people who read it,
I get two reactions to read it now.
One is, where's the dirty bit?
Because we can't find it.
And the second is, who knew it was funny?
And I say people who read it.
It's funny.
But it's, you know, with that on you,
do you feel there's an idea
that you have to wear that heroism?
I don't know about the heroism,
but I think I have to be part of the fight.
Right.
You know, I I mean there is a
fight about free expression in America to the moment.
And I'm
I feel like I'm in that fight. I have a dog in that fight.
What do you think that how that the nature of fundamentalism
has changed and how
that affects artistic expression like even now when we see all the protests,
you know, up at Columbia University,
some students protest this,
others think that's going too far
and they're threatening people.
And we're crossing all those difficult lines.
You spoke at the Penn banquet, yes?
Yeah, last year.
Last year, which is a consortium of writers
and poets and a lot of people, truly defenders
of free speech.
I just got a text today, they've cancelled.
They've cancelled the prize giving because they have people attacking them for not being
sufficiently anti-Israeli or pro-Palestinian or something.
Right.
I mean everybody's so angry right now that nobody can listen or talk to anybody else.
So people are shouting at each other.
Listen, there was a critic, and this is going to sound like a joke, a critic of Taylor Swift's
new music album, The Torture Post Society.
They had to remove the critic's name from the critique because of death threats.
Because he didn't like the record?
I didn't read it
Because I love
Cool I don't want to hear any negativity
No, but so do I drop but but it's it speaks to in
1989 there was an ayatollah and a fatwa and a
Group of religious muckety mucks who delivered the law from high
above.
And now we're all fundamentalists.
Everybody's an expert.
Everybody's got an opinion.
And hostility.
And hostility.
The level of anger is crazy right now.
Do you think of, you know, you have a dog in the fight in that creative.
How do we, and I think about this a lot, how do we manage that and is that just a function
of the algorithm?
It might be, I think to an extent it is.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know, frankly, I'm glad you asked me because I have the answer to the
world's problems.
It's actually on page if I would.
Exactly.
But you are thoughtful enough and you've been through it
enough that I know you have an opinion.
Yeah, I mean, I just think people have to draw,
stop having such thin skins.
At the moment, we're all very easily offended.
And what's more is we also believe
that being offended is a sufficient reason
for attacking something.
Right.
But actually, everything offends somebody.
Always.
Always.
I mean, occasionally you.
What?
How dare you, sir?
I am offended.
You see?
And then if you go down that road, then we can't talk to each other anymore.
Right.
But haven't groups always had a way of policing language or behavior?
I think I'm trying to think, has my perspective changed on it or has the dynamic changed?
I think what's happened is the temperature has risen.
Right.
I mean, yes, of course, people have always disagreed and people have always said, you
can't say that, you've got to say this.
That's not new.
What's new is the volume and the heat.
And so what do we do about taking down the volume
and taking down the heat?
That's the question.
I mean, and again, not to make you the avatar of this,
but this is coming from a man who, because of threats
from fundamentalists, had to basically
alter your entire life.
Well, it did certainly have an impact.
Yeah.
I mean, what is sad is that I'd actually got my life back really.
I mean, I've been living in New York City for getting on for 25 years.
Right.
Well, you had made a decision, I'm going to come out of this and make myself available.
And for 23 years, it was fine.
Right.
And I mean, I was doing everything that writers do.
Book tours, readings, lectures, you know.
Oh, I know, I'm a writer. Don't stop.
I've been there with the coffee clutches.
Yeah.
And Oprah.
Yeah, well, I haven't been with Oprah.
None of us have.
None of us.
But anyway, so it was a shock when this thing out of a quarter of a century
ago more than that 30 years ago.
Came out of a crowd at me.
It was I really was very surprised.
Do you find yourself now
freed of that fear or is there still that PTSD like what
where's your what does that do to you well Well, I mean, it does nothing good.
But it's now been, what, 20 months or something.
I think I'm pretty much back to myself at this point.
Do you feel like you're in that writing rhythm again?
Has your mind started to dream again?
Let's finish this.
And by the way, let me tell you something.
And we don't have
people on where I don't either you know read it or take a look. It's such a
beautiful and and incredibly interesting and revelatory book. I really thank you
for writing it because you had to endure something awful. But your insight into that experience
is really a remarkable gift to give to other people and I
really do it's got funny bits.
A couple of funny business.
For a writer not for a comic for right.
But it really is thank you fantastic piece of work and I
I thank you for doing it. The book is called knife.
It is available as we speak someone rushed.
It's so nice to see you. Everyone is aware there was a
huge viral moment in sports reporting and you Monica we're
at the center of it concerning an appearance on Stephen a Smith
show and and a young basketball player on the fever.
Who's apparently generating quite a bit of context to tell
us a little bit about that viral. All right so the
conversation John it started about this foul over the
weekend that
Kenny Carter for the Chicago sky foul Caitlin Clark of the Indiana fever and
I'm not going to lie to you, John, if I take you through my day that morning, I
get the call or the text rather than I'm like, are we really leading sports with
this? Are we really leading sports with a foul? A person got knocked over in a
basketball game. In sports. All right. I'm like, fine, let's just do it. So we
have the conversation with colleagues and friends,
Steven A. Smith, Shannon Sharp,
and my larger point in the conversation
was the tenor and the prevailing narrative
that has been created around this season's WNBA play
is that it's the league versus Caitlin Clark,
and that is just absolutely false.
It is unfair to the women that have been there
building this league to this moment
so that Caitlin Clark's popularity
could take it to the next level.
And so, by the end of the next level and so the show John.
This the tone and changed and I just kind of needed to put my
foot down a little bit there was some defensiveness on the
part of the individuals you've covered basketball for many
many years you played basketball and it. You follow
the NBA for many years, you know what you're talking about
the tenor of the conversation as I could tell was they were
saying to you. Now we know what we're talking about. The tenor of the conversation, as I could tell, was they were saying to you, no, we know what we're talking about,
even though we just tuned into this whole thing
last Wednesday.
And there it is, right?
And so, as I have said about this,
it was a little bit of a challenge, right,
to a gentleman that I admire in terms of what they've built.
Because if you haven't been here,
I need three years.
I need you to kind of have jumped in
when Sedona Prince went viral for calling out the NCAA.
I need you to kind of be here as this league
has seen its best viewership year to year.
Now, yes, it has absolutely been taken over the top this year,
but this has been a snowballing effect to get to this moment.
And so, while Katelyn is fantastic,
and I think she's gonna have an incredible career in the WNBA,
there are women that were worthy of coverage prior to her arriving,
and I just will not be silenced
when it comes to that.
Right.
Beautiful saying.
Now, and I'm gonna tell you this.
Tell me.
I have not particularly followed the WNBA on a day to day.
I follow women's basketball sometimes more in college,
I think, and in the old days,
Dawn Staley and those players,
I did follow that.
But I have incredibly strong opinions about it anyway.
OK.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
But what did strike me when I started watching the highlights
is, this is a very physical league.
So many people complain about the NBA now as the league is soft and they don't play
like they did like the next did in the 90's with oak and with
all Mason and all those guys.
And then you see this physical league and now they're saying
hey what's the physical and I guess I'm struggling to
understand is it because
so many new fans are being introduced to this who don't have the context?
Bingo. Nailed it.
You can have a talk show, John.
Let's go. Let's get out of here.
Let's do it.
I nailed it.
Let's do it.
First take.
I'm on first take.
All kidding aside, yes, right?
And listen, again, I am by no means
going to be naive to the popularity of Caitlin Clark.
But there is a contingent that followed her.
And if let's expand it out to bigger other women's college
programs that have been terrific.
South Carolina, LSU, we'll just go with those three.
Stanford, if you will, right?
If you've only watched the college game for however long
and not followed the WNBA, you don't know that not only are
these 144 of the best women basketball players in the world,
most of them in their off season, they're not kicking it.
They're in Europe playing in leagues
that are arguably even more physical.
And so the brand of basketball
just has a level of toughness.
Now, to me, I think the part of this conversation, John,
that has been daunting for me,
is sports is about competing.
It is literally the foundation.
We need to score, we gotta compete.
And in the conversation around how
we navigate the attention on the women's game,
somewhere in there, competition should be watered down
to protect the asset?
Yeah.
No, that's, but you know in your heart,
there is another layer of conversation going on
beneath this that has been introduced onto the stage.
And that is, look, we all know everything that underlines society in many ways goes along race, class, and gender.
And race, class, and gender has entered the conversation.
In a very large way. And I think what is interesting, and I'm hoping that more folks are like,
yo, this basketball is great. I want to learn more about these women.
Race, culture, gender are things that the women of the WNBA
have never shied away from.
Right.
A part of the bubble in 2020, they
impact the election that goes down in Georgia
in terms of standing on their values.
But if we have a conversation about the societal totem
pole, if you will, black women, a large representation
of queer women, these are all things
that sit at intersectional identities that we just opened up
your show talking about valuing these things.
That's exactly right.
And so there are all these isms that
have made the WNBA beautiful for 28 years,
including this season.
And even the WNBA has had to have its arc in terms of growth
and leaning into who they are and who these women are
both on and off the court.
But it is at the base of it.
If we for a second can take all that out,
you really about to tell women how to compete
and you just got here?
Right. What we doing?
But, and what's so amazing about it is,
what I have heard from some of the commentary
are people who just got there saying,
this is so unfair to the sweet white girl
now first of all killing Clark looks like a competitor, she looks like
somebody who's really a competitor. But the on part is I'm always interested
in this idea that sports exists
outside of the fault lines of regular society and isn't a reflection of those
things and a continuation in some respects of those battles.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
That existence is for probably like 20% of men's sports.
And then you gotta deal with race.
And then there's other things that you gotta deal with.
But like we said, women's sports sits right
in the midst of all of that.
We could be not talking about basketball
and we got plenty of women's issues
that we know have our country on fire, right?
Right, right.
And so I think it's a beautiful time and I don't think anybody
that is a part of this league or has covered this league.
Sure we lament kind of keeping this little thing that we love
to protect it from all of the noise right right, but in the
rest. Yeah.
The eyeballs and the visibility and the growth is better for
all involved. I mean frankly John like.
And Clark got me here right, you know to me and not true
well, let me tell you this so I'm going to tell you this the
viral moment maybe brought to some national attention.
I have been loving what you do you are such a good
basketball analyst and announcer I've been following you on the
near days, you know keep some of my favorite moments are the
to you keepers of the battle Keith my partner play by play guy.
I mean you're so knowledgeable, I love basketball, I'm following
the Knicks for a 130 years.
I was in the stands in Madison Square Garden at the very top
of it when they played the Celtics and double overtime
when they won the championship in 72 in that against the Celtic when it
looks like all of us I've loved for a long time.
Your voice your knowledge your passion has cut through it for
me, it's very rare that I turn on the radio or hear a new
voice and go.
Oh that person they can explain this to me and you really do
appreciate your wonderful.
I had you on every day during the playoffs.
Oh wow yeah, I we have is it is there some sense of like
a little bit of like when an indie band hits it big are
there people within the WNBA community who feel like I don't
want this to belong to everybody I wanted to belong to
this band of of sisters that have worked so hard to make it
something.
I have had that moment a few times right because as much as
the conversation has been dictated by the audience, right, we still haven't really sat up
and talked about the actual basketball of it, John.
I don't know how many people just joined the WNBA
understand that the Las Vegas Aces are chasing down a 3P,
which hasn't been done since the formative years
of the league in the Houston Commons.
I don't know how many people know
that the Connecticut Sun just lost their first game
the other day, they were 9-0 to start the season, right?
What names can I help introduce you to?
I mean, if you pick up a Rolling Stone,
Asia Wilson and Brandon Stewart are part of the next issue,
I believe.
And so we've opened the door, but we're still
like looking in instead of walking in, if I may.
Absolutely.
Right?
Absolutely.
And so I think it's a really unique time.
And even with this Olympic team stuff, right?
Kailin Clark, who you had mentioned,
is a tremendous competitor, said herself,
that's the toughest team to make.
Not surprised.
And she's a rookie.
She's just coming out of Iowa.
She can say that, and she can also
feel as if something in her has been
awoken in terms of making that a goal of her own, right?
I would hope, and I know this is not a thing in sports,
we got to remember that 2 things can be
true right she's been great for the league but there were
144 women prior to her and this class right that it got in this
thing up to year 28.
No question and I think one of the difficulties of it is
because it's a small league. I think people realize as small
as the NBA is there's still 2 rounds of a draft and there are
guys that get picked up out of a G League and their space on a team there's a big roster when you're in the WN NBA is there's still 2 rounds of a draft and there are guys that get picked up out of a G League and
there's space on a team there's a big roster when you're in the
WNBA boy there's just not that many teams and you're talking
about a draft.
Even when it's 8 deep 12 the vote some of those people may
not make the team is a women that have been playing the game
for a very long time to that point John like us the
conversation about marketing. Yeah, sure got it makes sense right. But there's also got to
be a realization that these women that have made this thing
they're living they're not necessarily chasing the
financial benefit.
The W a high-spade player is mixed $250,000 right, you know
to mean and so there is no Brittany Gruner ended up in
Russia she was playing overseas and because it doesn't make
that's exactly it so many of these women supplement their income in the league that they play out of love to play at home with their teammates in front of their families
and they go get their real money overseas. That is changing. I do think that this class
and Clark is all a part of it changing. But I think just to slap on, do this because the
money again is disrespectful and unfair to the women that have gotten this league to
this point. As a as a broadcaster in
you know your story in some ways mirrors the story of the WNBA in terms of
having to fight for attention with people who in some respects are not
particularly humble
about their position and slightly defensive about those
who may come at it from a different perspective.
Do you see that reflected in how what you had to go through
and your journey to get to the desk that you're at now and
does that give you hope for the WNBA is future.
I'm first one thrilled about the WNBA is future and yes
right, I didn't go to the WNBA, but I played sports all the way through college.
Shout out to my Georgetown Hoyas, right?
And so that foundation, that base,
that understanding hard work, improvement,
that understanding of competition,
all of those things have helped me to be able
to stand 10 toes down in these various rooms
and these various conversations, right?
It's intimidating.
It is, and in the same breath,
the people that I'm having conversations with,
whether they are well-established television
personalities or former athletes,
they have done the same in their own way, right?
But it is a reminder, because of my background in sport,
shout out to Keeping Young Girls in Sports
for this exact reason, I too can be confident in the work
that I've done to get to this place.
And for me, that has been beautiful.
Who?
It is beautiful.
And it really brings up the interesting question.
Who does have the worst takes.
Final question I am a enormous next. Yes, we know.
And I want desperately to know if what I'm seeing if the love
that I'm feeling I have opened my heart again, you know,
Monica it's been so long and but thank you so much. I've opened up my heart again to a basketball team. I never thought it would happen again
But Monica I have to tell you something tell me I'm afraid to be hurt it's okay and will will the Knicks hurt me
Life is full of that was a hesitation.
I want.
I think they're on the right track all right, but you got
to play the games that's why we go to that. I don't want to
be sad me many more which is always what happens at the
games.
Monica what a delight to meet you and I'm such a fan of
yours and I wish you all the best and continued success.