The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 1: ...McConkey...
Episode Date: September 26, 2024We kick things off with Thursday Thunder ahead of tonight's game between the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants on Thursday Night Football. If the Cowboys lose tonight, how loud with the Bill Belichic...k noise get? Also, Amin learns about Ladd McConkey. Then, the mention of Archie Bunker leads the crew down a path as the Shipping Container learns about the plot of All In The Family and the Jeffersons before debating the greatest TV theme songs of all-time. Plus, Paola Ramos is here to discuss her book "Defectors: The Rise of the Latino Far Right." She and Dan dive into the story of Enrique Tarrio, a Miami-Cuban who was leader of The Proud Boys, and how Latinos in America can be swayed into have an anti-immigration stance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is the Dan Lebatore Show with the StuGuts Podcast.
That's right.
It's Thursday Thunder and it's brought to you by DraftKings.
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Tony, what do we got?
Guys, I cooked up a parlay for Thursday Thunder.
We've got the NFL tonight, Thursday Night Football,
Dallas Cowboys, and the G-Men, Amin's favorite team,
the New York Giants, the one jersey that he owns,
Plaxico Burris jersey, from New York Giants.
All right, this is what we got cooked up.
First leg, Devin Singletary, who had a nice game against the Browns,
65 yards rushing against a better defense than what Dallas has.
We're going to have 50 yards, over 50 yards rushing for
Devin Singletary tonight against Dallas.
We saw the big dog run all over them last week 50 yards and over
second leg of the parlay CD lamb the squeaky wheel always gets the grease
Dano 70 yards receiving over for CD lamb tonight and the last one I saved the
best for last because this guy is a budding superstar and I don't know if
Dallas's defense can defend him the way they want Malik neighbors anytime Tuddy tonight Malik neighbors so that's Devin Singletary
over 50 yards C.D. Lamb over 70 yards receiving Malik neighbors anytime Tuddy
and that gives you a beautiful plus 305 tonight for Torosito. It happens quickly in that league where a Tyreek Hill can get erased and the
conversation starts about his neighbors,
the second best receiver in the league because he doesn't appear to be someone
who is stoppable.
But Tony has come in today and he has said something that I believe is never
worthy of being said in week four, he has announced that tonight is a must-win for the Dallas Cowboys. A must-win situation
because then the flames start climbing. Already people are saying this is all Jerry Jones'
fault and he says that's totally fair. It all my fault I'm responsible for everything not a
decision gets made that I don't sign off on and the Belichick talk will be
full-throated by the end of this evening if the Cowboys lose tonight. Dan you're
looking at the Cowboys vs. the Giants a division game on top of that you're
looking at your roster and being like,
all right, we have a team that can contend now,
that's ready now, we paid guys to be ready
to contend for Super Bowl now.
And you look across the way,
and you see the Giants, who are terrible.
And then you look up at the scoreboard,
and you're like, damn, we're both one and two.
And all of a sudden, the screams are gonna be
much, much louder for mccarthy
If you lose to a giants team that has
Daniel jones at quarterback a bunch of guys and malik neighbors
But if this is a must win for these cowboys if they don't win tonight
Then they can beat the steelers next week can be two and three. That's right
And uh you have them beating the number one defense of the league
Okay, you uh the cowboys say that they are all in and you say that the Giants are terrible, but they
should have beaten the commanders if their kicker doesn't get hurt and if neighbors makes
a fourth down catch that he's going to make the rest of his career.
So the Giants, I understand why people underestimate them, but if you have the second best receiver
in the league, those receivers for the Giants have been really limited
the last couple of years.
And you're doing something.
If you play with Daniel Jones in three weeks in,
people are putting you in the sphere
where Justin Jefferson exists.
Because the way, there's not another receiver in the league
that's being talked about this way after three games. From the rookie class absolutely not but when you can like
almost save a career in Daniel Jones with a wide receiver like that it just
goes to show you how good you are that you elevate a guy that is deemed not
good. Lad McConkey with like a word. That can't be a real name. That's a receiver
a white receiver. The last white receiver around.
With a name like that, has to be.
His name is Lad.
L-A-D-D.
And the last name might be a slur.
McConkey?
Jeremy, why are you laughing?
That's something I would call Jeremy.
Shut up, McConkey.
Whoa, you're right.
But when you put a second D on the Lad,
it makes it less bad with two Ds.
B-A-D-D.
There are only three players to have 300 plus area yards
over the last two weeks in the NFL.
They're all rookies.
Marvin Harrison Jr., Roma Dunze, and Malik Nabors.
It's crazy what this rookie wide receiver class is doing,
including, of course, Lad McConkie.
And they told us it would be so.
They told us that this is the best draft class at receiver
we have seen in a long time.
Before I segue into other matters,
I haven't said this in a while.
I don't think I have said this since we were at ESPN.
But I am asking the people who support this show
to support the people who support us
best when I mention that Miller Lite understands what we're trying to do around here and supports
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Can I ask you guys if the segment that we just did
with Pablo Torre is something that the audience
is simply tired of?
Because I do feel like Dan Quixote
tilting against windmills, trying to believe in something
that slowly dies by the day,
which is the idea of local newspapers holding accountable the Eric Adamses of the world
so that it becomes a little bit harder to be corrupt because there's something out there
that is trying to do the right thing
in calling truth to power.
I do feel that I'm beating a dead horse
and worse than that, it's the audio equivalent
of beating a dead horse.
Nobody wants to actually hear what it is
that we're talking about.
They just wanna have fun with sports.
I mean, I care a lot, but that should actually
probably show you the barometer of the audience.
Shut up Jeremy!
Shut up McConkey!
By the way, lad's first name, Andrew.
Not as fun.
Put it on the poll please, does McConkey sound like a slur?
Because I do feel like I can hear Eddie Murphy say that in like Beverly Hills comp just calling
Taggart McConkey instead to insult him.
I don't understand why it sounds like a slur.
You went Eddie Murphy, Beverly Hills Cop,
I went George Jefferson to his neighbor,
the guy from the British guy.
So even older.
Tom Willis.
Tom Willis.
Tom Willis who I believe was married in the Jefferson's
to Lenny Kravitz's mom.
Mom, yes.
No, I was talking about the other guy the the the Bentley the neighbor the UN guy that it was British British guy
Yeah, the neighbor Bentley. I have no idea what you guys are talking about
Does I get it?
Beverly Hills cop was a good reference from 50 years ago
Well, the Jeffersons is even older than that
But I can make an argument for the Jeffersons is one of the top 10 most impactful sitcoms of all time.
It was, in fact, I don't think I have this wrong.
I believe that The Jeffersons was not merely a spin-off
of All in the Family with Archie Bunker,
but that was such an outdated time in television
that I'm pretty sure in All in the Family that
Archie Bunker actually used the N-word on television.
Of course!
Of course!
What are you talking about?
All in the Family was, but the funny thing about All in the Family was when they made
the show, the idea was that Archie Bunker was supposed to be this buffoon that everybody
would laugh at.
Look at this dinosaur of a man, kind of looking at him
like he's Homer Simpson, like this idiot.
And instead, they got mounds of love mail saying,
finally, someone who talks like, oh my god.
I feel so bad that people made that show.
They try to make the most cartoonishly buffoonish idiot,
racist, sexist, everything.
And instead, they got fan mail.
So All in the Family, the kind of plot for it is what?
Because I've never seen the show,
I've also never seen the Jefferson show.
Okay, so All in the Family is about
this working class white family,
Archie Bunker is his wife Edith.
Put it on the poll please, Are we still making Edith's?
Absolutely, not it's an old person. You come out 70 years old. Your name is Edith Who's the youngest Edith? How old is the youngest Edith an 84? I just like they have a 27 year old you know
No, no, no, they study discontinued to eat this right in 1977 put it on the pole. Did they discontinue Edith's in 1977. Put it on the poll, did they discontinue Edith's in 1977?
So, by the way, the son on that show
is the famous Rob Reiner, who is the son of Carl Reiner,
great filmmaker.
So anyways, so it's just kind of like,
a day in the life of working class,
I believe they were in Queens.
One of the side bit characters
was this guy named George Jefferson, who was a dry cleaner, right?
The spin off in the Jefferson's is that
George Jefferson's dry cleaning business
turns into a dry cleaning empire,
becomes rich and hence he moves up to.
Well he's moving on up.
Yes.
Thank you.
To a deluxe apartment in the sky.
All I know is it's kind of like Beverly Hillbillies,
but just different. Yeah, I mean not really, like Beverly Hillbillies, but just different?
Yeah, I mean, not really.
Because Beverly Hillbillies, they found oil
and they became rich, right?
Whereas George Jefferson, it's like,
he built it brick by brick, like my man from Snowfall, right?
So now he's got this chain of dry cleaners.
He lives in this fancy apartment building.
But it's the culture clash of now I'm
around all these white people, because I'm a rich black person who's still very black and I got to deal
with all these white people who are my neighbors and stuff. As the mayor of
New York told us you can start a business there. That's who he was talking about,
George Jefferson. Howdy folks it's Mike Ryan I want to talk to you about the
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Don Lebertard.
To us residents.
Oh wow, it's in there, it's better. You think I haven't been practicing? Stugats. Don Lebatard to us residents
This is the Don Lebatar show with the StuGards Yesterday I did not have this as a detour today Tony
You don't know how much you delighted Amin by asking the questions in his wheelhouse of
1970s television, but then to, like, I wasn't alive
when these things aired, but I am the last generation,
I believe, where we watched things
that were created decades earlier.
So I grew up on Looney Tunes.
Everybody watched Looney Tunes.
Everybody watched Tom and Jerry.
And these cartoons were made sometimes
in the late 50s, early 60s.
But we all had the same reference points
up until like the generation,
I think my little sister, her generation,
they grew up on cable TV,
and so you had this explosion of other options,
and maniacs and all this stuff,
and Powerpuff Girls and all that,
and because you have that,
it's like I'm not watching the same old cartoons
everybody else has watched, and now it's completely fragmented but
I watched mash I watched all in the family I watched what do you call it the
Jeffersons I watched good times not because they were contemporary but
because everybody watched the same shows I watched the honeymooners I watched
leave it to beaver all these shows put it on the pole, please juju at lebatard show Uh is the jefferson's a top 10 sitcom of all time?
Yes or no because I do believe that tony might do to the jefferson's what he did to ricky henderson
Which is it happened before my time therefore it cannot be a top 10 sitcom of all time because it happened
Much before I was born i'd have to think about that. I have to do my top 10.
Jefferson's probably not gonna make it, spoiler alert.
But, because I've never seen it.
But, Tom and Jerry, we can all talk about it now, right?
Man.
Ass.
Man, what?
Tom and Jerry sucks, right?
No, no, Tony!
Right?
Tom and Jerry sucks, right?
Put it on the poll, please.
As a 10 year old kid, I was like, eh.
All right, at LeBittard's show, is Tom and Jerry sucks, right? Put it on the poll, please. As a 10-year-old kid, I was like, ugh. All right, at Levitard Show, is Tom and Jerry ass?
We have a disrespect around here that is not palatable to me,
because Jeremy, in the shadows before, as Chris Cote was,
that was confetti.
Confetti just fell.
Confetti fell.
Confetti fell out of the sky.
For my take, thank you guys.
I appreciate it.
Confetti just fell out of the sky.
That was confetti that was shot off when we joined Peacock.
Like that was weeks ago that that happened
and confetti just fell out of the sky
that was there from before.
But what I was saying is that Jeremy whispered
in the shadows with not a small amount of shame
when Chris Cody was talking about not wanting to see
and not ever having seen any Indiana Jones, he too and not ever having seen any Indiana Jones.
He too said he has not seen any Indiana Jones.
How?
Because it missed my time period.
I grew up and my dad wasn't like a obsessed fan
of Indiana Jones, neither was my mom.
I didn't really watch a lot of action movies
from their era and so in turn I
Just haven't seen it. There's so many movie franchises that I haven't seen that you would be shocked by the Godfather
I've seen the Godfather. I mean, that's like my dad's favorite movie. So in turn I was I was indoctrinated
Your father was like Indiana Jones mafia movies for sure much action, but action movies and sports movies
So I grew up with like every sports movie
Oh my god, I watch the VHS of like rookie of the year. I must have watched
75 times before the age of 10 I'd rather you tell me I don't we didn't grow up watching movies
So I haven't seen any of these movies and then tell me you watch rookie of the year a million times
Little big league are you kidding me and never seen Raiders of the Lost Ark?
Never in my life. What's a less realistic sports movie?
Rookie of the Year or Air Bud?
Come on.
I mean a little big league at 12 year olds
is the manager of the twins.
The throw that he makes when he finds out his arm is strong
from the outfield, in the bleachers,
all the way to the catcher's glove is just,
he doesn't even like crow hop,
he just has his arm like this and is like,
all right, Let me go
Ridiculous throw I mean air buds more realistic
Playing the NBA playing basketball he struck out Barry bonds night nice little jumper
For all the times that I've been you know laughed at or scorned or whatever for not knowing things past a certain point
There's a lot of things that I know past a certain point in a very different sphere, right?
Like Indiana Jones, super locked in.
Any Eddie Murphy movie from the 80s, super locked in.
Back to the Future, super locked in.
There's things that are in my wheelhouse,
it's just Ricky Henderson stealing 130 bags in 1982,
not one of them.
The Jeffersons, not one of them.
Also not one of them.
Say this, I don't know if it's,
I watch the Jeffersons, I don't know if it's a top 10 sitcom,
maybe in terms of impact, yes, but in terms of just,
is it one of the best 10 sitcoms ever made?
I don't know, I do know this, the theme song.
Gasps.
It's probably top three.
The best, if it's top three, it's third,
because you will not beat Sanford and Son,
and you will not beat Hawaii Five-O.
You will not beat either one of those.
I think both of them get beat.
No.
They don't have lyrics.
You're absolutely right.
How do I sing along to?
Ta ta ta ta ta ta.
Ta ta ta ta ta.
Just like that.
Ta ta ta ta ta ta.
Just like that.
Ta ta ta ta ta ta.
If you want instrumentals, let me tell you right now.
Bow no no no no no no no no no no no no no. You're saying, you're saying no no no no, exactly. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
You're saying it.
You're saying no, no, no, no.
Exactly.
No, if you want instrumental only, Magnum P.I. has all those beats.
There you go.
Come on.
To a deluxe apartment in the sky.
Even people haven't seen it.
So wait a second.
They made this theme song.
This is not a song that was originally made for something else.
They made this theme song for is not a song that was originally made for something else they made this theme song for the Jeffersons Tony you're you're just open
the door for me here to talk about one of my favorite things once upon a time
kids television shows had their own theme song they didn't play popular music
oh this song is hot right now play this they didn't play like a little ditty and
then you just get into the show they had had a whole ass song. A whole ass song that was sung and it was relevant, but those are a distant,
a distant, look at this.
You're...
Come on, man.
Come on.
It's not the Jefferson's.
It is better.
Put it on the pole, Juju.
Better television theme song, the Jefferson's or Hawaii Five-O.
And I believe this was by
Jack Lord wasn't this by my personal Lord was this not
Quincy Jones did Quincy Jones not do Sanford and Son yes he
did sample this on us so let's do Sanford and Son here Indiana
scones I don't want Hawaii 5 oh again that is a classic though
it's just so good it is welcome Dan oh it's not better than it's
not well this is this is a good subject matter because you're saying lyrics are better than just the music carrying you away
I didn't know this one's the best this I've heard this one before I just heard it. This one's the best Sanford and Son, right?
Bum bum bum bum. Bum bum bum bum.
Bum bum bum bum.
Come on.
This is gas.
It's nice and friendly.
I like it. It's friendly.
Jefferson's was uplifting, Dan.
I felt uplifted when I
I thought I could live in a deluxe apartment in the sky.
Is this what you're talking about, Willis?
No, that's a different stroke.
This is Sanford and Son.
Sanford and Son was Red Fox as the owner of a junkyard
and his son, well he played Fred Sanford,
and his son was Lionel, was it Lionel?
Yes, Lionel.
Yeah.
We are really getting older and older with this.
You should, with different strokes,
you should just read about it because it's a Greek tragedy, what happened to all of those child actors
where Gary Coleman was the most normal of them.
I believe I won a suey one year
about telling the story of getting up in front of everybody
at a Christmas party at the Suns
and saying I wanted to translate an ancient Sudanese poem.
And then I just simply just recited
the different strokes theme song
But I did without singing I just said the world does not move to the beat of just one
Yeah, I remember this this is good and at the end of it everyone was like, oh my god
That was so moving. I was like none of you guys got the reference really nobody
Except one guy in sales sent me an email the next day said the episode where they go to the bike store
I was like, oh, you got it.
I do have one theme song from more modern television
that I would put in this category.
The Wire.
No.
No, that's the one.
That's the soprano.
That's awesome.
I just wanted to be Tony Soprano here.
I think this is an actual song though.
I don't think that this was.
Yeah, but just that.
I don't think that this was.
Oh, but wait a minute.
Yeah, that.
Wait a minute. What about't the count of a minute.
Wait a minute.
What about Succession?
It's about the vibes.
When you hear the song, it's about the vibes.
And this song was the vibes.
The way Succession used that song was amazing because they used that song 100 different
versions of that song.
And it's one of the most clever things I've seen done musically in television.
It is until you begin to realize it and every scene has the same stings and I'm like, I
got tired of it.
I'll tell you who has a great theme song that was not original music but it was music
so original they picked it because it was free.
Curb your enthusiasm.
All that stuff is royalty free music.
Always Sunny also.
Always Sunny as well.
Same thing.
They use royalty free music, which is pretty genius.
It's genius because they took this royalty free music
and they made it basically theirs.
They don't own it, but like when you hear that music
from either one of those shows, you always think of them.
Always Sunny essentially is all in the family,
but 50 years later, right?
Like they're the worst people in the world and you're supposed to know that but they've ended up actually
replicating real people that exist in modern society. Just like Seinfeld. Seinfeld is the same
thing. Seinfeld's series finale was all about how awful they are and people didn't get the joke.
They're like what? Oh they're going to court? It's like yes because this entire time they've been
awful people and you guys have just been rooting for them. You have to know that when you listen to Succession,
because I didn't even notice this
the first time I watched Succession.
It was only upon rewatching that I noticed that Greg,
Greg the Egg, you have to, you know,
in order to make an omelet, you gotta break a few Gregs.
He always had different music than everyone else.
Any time that he was in a scene. It was court jester music
I didn't even notice it until the second time I watched it
We're gonna talk immigration next if you were bored and bothered by our journalism talk
But let's spice it up with a little Hawaii five. Oh Howdy folks, it's Mike Ryan, now into fall.
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Don Lebertard!
Did you get lost on the way to Home Depot today, Dan?
Like what's going on with the flats?
Get his ass, Mina! Stugots! on the way to Home Depot today, Dan? Like, what's going on with the plants? I've never seen-
Get his ass, Mina.
Stugots.
But do it in song.
You look like you're about to ask me
to check the oil on my car.
Get him.
Or come over and look around
and point things in my house that need to be fixed.
This is the Dan Lebatar Show with the Stugots. If you've been listening for a while, you know that I am somewhat confused by my people.
I live in Miami and Cubans can go hard right politically in ways that confuse me, because
I don't understand how you can be a part of the head of the Proud Boys
and be a white supremacist while you're being Hispanic.
But there's a book here, and it's been written by Paola Ramos, and she's got a number of credentials that aren't.
She descends from journalistic royalty, but her father is also I think the most famous Hispanic
journalist that there is in this country Jorge Ramos but she has her own career
she's made documentaries for vice she's a contributor on MSNBC and Telemundo she
reports on Latino issues and she's building her own legacy in Latin media
she's got a book defectors theors, The Rise of the Latino Far
Right and What It Means for America. Thank you, Paola, for joining us. You're
from Miami and I found this book an interesting read for a number of reasons
because I really don't understand what is happening with Hispanics. So I hope
that you can explain it to me because I don't understand how Hispanics can
become white supremacists. Well, I'll try my best. I'll try my best. I grew up in Miami, you know, and you
mentioned Enrique Tarrio and so part of what actually drove me to write this
book is precisely what you just laid out, no? How can someone like Enrique Tarrio,
who's from Miami, who's a black Cuban, an Afro-Latino, how could
someone like him not just be like pro-Trump,
no, we can sort of make the case
why someone like him would do that,
but then take it a step further
and become the face and the leader of the Pride Boys.
And we can talk about sort of my first impressions of him
whenever you want.
Well, I've got a number of different questions,
but go ahead and start with him
because there seems to be such an overwhelming paranoia here
that doesn't even make sense to me.
And in your book, which is fantastically reported,
you're on the border, basically, with a Latin person
who is delighting in keeping other desperate Latin people
out of the country by just spending nine hours in his car
tracking and hunting these people
who are trying to get to freedom.
Absolutely. So you mentioned, so the person you're mentioning, his name is Anthony Aguero
and very much like someone like Enrique Dario and a lot of other folks that I've, that I've
met, I think they're a reflection, an extremist reflection of what's happening in this country
among a small but growing group of Latinos, no? And that is the fact that increasingly
more and more Latinos are warming up to the idea of mass deportations and building a wall.
And so how do you make sense of that?
Well, I think Trumpism is really convinced about this idea that a segment of Latinos
right now have become so Americanized, no one's so assimilated, that they too can sort
of buy into the nativism and the anti-immigrant rhetoric.
And even if you just look at the numbers, Dan, like what you see is that the Latino community of today
is so vastly different from like my father's generation,
right, you're looking at Latino community
where it is third generation Latinos,
they're the fastest growing segment among us.
You're looking at a community where most of us speak English,
where the majority of voters are US born under the age of 50.
And so what I found in my reporting
is that among that segment there is a small but growing group of people that
even though they feel detached from their immigrant stories, they fear that
sort of mainstream America will always see them as these sort of like
perpetual foreigners. And even if you look at some of the stats, there's sort
of some evidence to understand where people's fear is coming from.
Not even if you just look at the anti-Latino hate crimes in this country.
They have been steadily rising and they particularly spike when sort of mainstream media is extensively
covering things like, you know, there's an invasion at the southern border or the caravans
are coming.
No, or these immigrants son criminales.
And so among some people like Enrique Tario or the
sort of border vigilante that you just mentioned not only do they sort of feel
in the anti-immigrant rhetoric really resonating with them but they're also
driven very aggressively by this push to prove to people like Trump that they too
belong in America and then that turns into forms of extremism.
Talk to me about the Proud Boys existing in Miami and I want to read a passage from your book to the
people after you explain to me what Enrique was doing as the head of the Proud Boys and how proud
he must have been when Donald Trump is saying out loud in a way that is unfathomable to me
telling the proud boys to stand down and stand by
absolutely so
so i'm and they get that deal
in twenty eighteen
and so i kind of meet him at a time when he starts to kind of like feel himself
and feel his power but he wasn't there just yet so my first impression of
india that you who by the way they grew up just a couple of minutes from where i
did in my first impression was that this is a guy that is deeply insecure, you know,
who sort of can hide who he is behind his sort of like macho, tough appeal. He does it really well,
but he's someone that even according to him, he never really knew where he fit in Miami,
you know? In his own words, he was always sort of like too black to be considered a Republican.
He felt like he was too independent and too radical to be considered a Democrat. He always
said this thing that like no one would ever knock on his door to ask for his vote, even among the
sort of Miami-Dade Cuban community, which is typically an exile community that looks more
like me, no? Light skinned, sort of privileged Latinos. As a black Latino, he never really fit
into that. And then come the pride boys.
No, and the pride boys offer someone like Enrique Tario, not just the
sudden sense of belonging, but power.
No.
And then you see the way that Enrique, and I saw it like happening in real time,
how he suddenly evolves from being this like ordinary, you know, Cubano guy in
Miami to then suddenly becoming this guy that is being
praised by Donald Trump, praised by Roger Stone, and he takes that power and runs with
it.
The funny thing, though, the sad thing is that come November 2020, after Enrique Tarrio
tries absolutely everything to ensure that Donald Trump wins and he doesn't win, what's
fascinating is the way that the Proud Boys, you have this guy called
Kyle Chapman, that they instantly try and distance themselves from Enrique TarrĆo and from his
blackness and his brownness. One of the things that Kyle Chapman says when Enrique is sort of
no longer powerful, he says, you know what? The Proud Boys are actually have always been a group
that's based on the white race. And he says in the white race alone and any other race has no place in this group. So that sort of shows you how tenuous that sort of
idea of white power is. One of the things that my mother has said since I was a
child as they came from communism is if you want to find out about a person's
character give them power and the reason she used to say it is because when
communism came to Cuba the neighbors who were given the government power to watch the other neighbors all of a sudden became
Powerful in the ways that you're describing in this book and then abused the power of taking some of their identity that was given
To them by the government. So let me read this from your interview with Enrique Tario
You say why define women as housewives?
You asked him at one point, why not use another word?
And this is something Latin men do all the time.
Quote, because it's like the end goal for us.
We're big on family.
He said, family is a number one priority for us.
He followed up.
You need to step up as a man
and make sure that you provide for everyone
in that household.
As a man, that is your job.
And then you write, I always got the sense
that independent, strong, and outspoken women frightened
and intimidated enrique i imagine that's why he reserved a special kind of vitriol
for them he would frequently disrupt women's march events with his megaphone
he'd make appearances wearing his signature dick costume essentially a
full body outfit that resembled a phallus he would constantly provoke women
including with the use of transphobic slurs.
He called Michelle Obama a tranny
and refused to apologize despite the uproar that followed.
What's happening there?
It's just bravado that's wrapped around
as armor the insecurity?
That's part of it, but imagine down what it was for me.
I'm a lesbian, I'm a queer woman, I'm a Latina.
I try and understand the privilege that comes with these platforms that I have. So I understand the lesbian, I'm a queer woman, I'm a Latina. I try and understand the privilege that comes
with these platforms that I have.
So I understand the power that I have
and I always felt a sense of sort of discomfort
that Enrique was feeling among people like me.
And people like me are everywhere.
We're just people that understand that we too
can sort of change the dynamic in this country.
There was always something
that sort of made him uncomfortable.
But Enrique sort of alludes to what I try and find in this country. There was always something that sort of made him uncomfortable. But Enrique sort
of alludes to what I try and find in this book. And it's the same conversation that I had with
other sort of Latinos in Miami actually that also participated in the January 6th insurrection. And
that is these men that were driven by the anti-immigrant sentiment that we just talked about,
by the sort of fixation with going back to a time when these sort of gender
norms, you know, and these sort of more patriarchal norms were there and they're fixated by that idea.
And then what you just mentioned is when I asked them, well, what was at the heart of what drove
you to storm the Capitol that day? One of the main answers was, well, the United States is being
taken over by communism. And if someone like Joe Biden won, then that means that this country
would turn into communism. And that sort of paranoia, which obviously comes from a real
political trauma that a lot of Latinos hold, that just shows you the way that it's been
just so injected with misinformation that can truly, truly drive someone to do something
as violent as storming the Capitol. No? You talked about in your book about early about
growing up in a Latino bubble and I'm curious if all this you know
conversations that we're having how it sort of impacts the sort of Hispanic
community today and how much we can sort or how rather we can sort of get some
more education and just sort of for people who might still be in that little
bubble and get them to sort of see a more education and just sort of for people who might still be in that little bubble
And get them to sort of see a little bit more of a broader view the way you are explaining these things
Yeah, so just for background like I I was born in Miami
I grew up in Miami and when I say that I grew up in a bubble and I grew up sort of
Believing that to be a sort of Latina and a Cuban American in Miami meant that we all look like me.
The sort of idea of black Cubans was always completely erased
from the conversation.
I was someone that even coming out,
I felt a lot of shame at the beginning.
I think because I was just so sort of trained to believe
that I too had to marry a man, knowing that my Mexican
and Cuban family wanted that for me.
And so I say this because it took me a while to sort of lean into the person that I too had to marry a man, knowing that my Mexican and Cuban family wanted that for me. And so I say this because it took me a while
to sort of lean into the person that I am.
And I think part of what I try and do in this book
is explain, look, the way to understand
the sort of shift among some Latinos
that are finding something appealing in Trumpism
actually has so much less to do with Trump
and with MAGA and with politics. And it has so much more to do with all of the super uncomfortable conversations that
we just like never have as a community.
And by that I mean like, what does it mean to have a lot of sort of like racial baggage
from Latin America?
And like how does that manifest in the United States?
And like what does colorism mean?
How do we even talk about race among Latinos?
Like we kind of don't really know how to talk about that. By that I also mean like, what does it mean to really
think about the weight of colonialism? I know it's like super abstract and super heavy,
but like that really impacted our community for centuries and centuries is like, what
does it mean to also sort of carry that history? And then the last point that I make is, let's
also talk about the like political trauma of something like communism, no? Communism will always
be the sort of antithesis of what it means to be Latino. But that also
justifies other forms of extremism that we just never catch because we're so
used to just sort of hiding under the banner of being anti-communist. And so
let's also talk about that. So that's that's what I'm trying to do. How much
have you explored or explained that Hispanics generally tend to be Democrats,
but Cubans tend to be Republican?
Look, that's always that's always the that's always been the pattern.
I think the way that one can explain it is that to be to be a Cuban American,
to be a Cuban, and I saw with my own family like that in and of itself.
It means that you're so different
from other Latinos, why?
Because even our pathway to citizenship is so much easier
than it is for any other demographic.
The way that Cubans have traditionally been welcomed
in this country has always been with a lot more open arms
than other Latinos.
So I think that just as a starting point,
that we can sort of like hide under that protection
that America has always given us.
I think that explains a lot of things. How did your dad feel about the book?
He, I mean look, my dad is someone that no matter what I do he's always like, oh my god, I'm so proud of you. So I don't know how much, you know, like no matter what he'll always say
that, which I'll take, he's my dad. But no, look, I think what's interesting is that my dad is someone that has been doing this noticiero
ni visiĆ³n for, I don't know, like, more than my, I'm 36. I mean, he's been doing it for 38 years.
And I think his audience has always truly been a Latino community that was really drawn to
immigration, that, you know, you talk to them in Spanish,
and that community is so vastly different
from what it is now, no?
I think the assumptions were always
that that community was more perhaps progressive,
was more democratic leaning,
no, that had more at stake when it comes to immigration.
And so I think he's fascinated, as I am as well,
by this idea of like, we have changed so much,
and we don't even know really how to make sense of that. And who he talks to every day is so different from who I talk
to every single day. And I think that's what's like super interesting for us right now.
Do you have a plausible makes sense explanation for how Hispanics can be against immigration?
And the the only explanation I have is that anti-immigrant sentiment and xenophobia, no one's immune
to that.
Just because we're descendants of immigrants and just because we're Latinos, that in no
way makes us immune to also having, like carrying these anti-immigrant sentiments.
The fear and what we're hearing from someone like Donald Trump that every single day tries
to create this idea that we're invaded, that immigrants are bad people, that immigrants
are out there eating pets and dogs.
I understand why people would be scared if that's what you hear every single day.
I think our job is to ground people in the facts, get people to understand that even
statistically immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than US born natives.
And so I understand where their fear comes, particularly when you have a Republican candidate
that uses that megaphone every single day.
And why is he doing that?
Dan, well, that's exactly how he won the 2016 election.
No, he made build the wall in his central message.
And that's how he won in 2020.
He toned it down.
And now here we are in 2024
where he's trying to make that the centerpiece
of his campaign because he knows that it works.
What was your initial reaction,
immediate visceral reaction to the news
that Donald Trump was talking about putting serial numbers
on immigrants in something that felt a bit holocausty?
It was, I mean, it was that.
It's even surreal that we're, like it is surreal that we're in 2024 immigrants in something that felt a bit holocausty. It was, I mean, it was that.
It's even surreal that we're like,
it is surreal that we're in 2024
and we're literally talking about this.
Now, what's even more surreal is the idea
that over 50% of Americans could actually fathom.
I'm not even talking about being a Republican or Democrat,
but that over 50% of Americans could even fathom
bringing this country back to those dark days.
And so I think part of the problem is,
and when we're talking about these things
and serial numbers and mass deportations
and immigrants in this way,
it's just become this talking point and we hear it on TV,
but people have to be grounded in what this means.
What would it mean to deport over 11 million
undocumented immigrants in this country?
In Donald Trump's own words, like, it can turn bloody.
And more than anything, Dan, and I think this is important,
we're at a point where even Donald Trump
doesn't really know where he's drawing the line, right?
It used to be that he was just targeting
undocumented immigrants, and now what we heard
after his comments about Haitian migrants,
Haitian immigrants are legal immigrants right now.
They are protected under temporary protected status.
And so where is he drawing the line?
If you're a legal immigrant, would you also be deported?
If you are the sort of US born child of immigrant parents,
are you also going to be deported?
So I think that's sort of the scary part of all of this.
Tony, Billy, you hear the Miami in her accent?
That's a lot of Miami.
I do.
I hear the croquetica, I hear the cafecito,
I hear it all. That's my number one stop when I go to the Miami.
You're in La Canaria, right? Let's close out with something lighter here,
even though it's not actually funny, but somehow the way that it was said is universally being
laughed at by almost everybody. They're eating the dogs, the people that came in. They're eating the cats.
They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
I mean, that's all I mean,
but I don't even know where to begin.
I'll just leave it at that.
Okay, very good.
LOL.
That is it.
The name of the book is Defectors,
The Rise of the Latino Far Right
and What It Means for America.
Thank you, Paula.
Thank you guys, I really appreciate it.
Thanks for everything you guys do.
Howdy folks, it's Mike Ryan.
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