The Problem With Jon Stewart - Three Jons and a Tommy: Pod Save America Talks Media, Messaging, and Midterms
Episode Date: September 15, 2022One Jon is nice—but have you ever heard a podcast with three of them? (Plus, a Tommy for good measure.) The Pod Save America guys are here to discuss midterm elections, the problem with pol...ling, and whether we should look to journalism to save us. They also take a stroll down memory lane to the Obama White House, reminiscing about the good old days of government website crashes and that time a gaping hole opened in the bottom of the ocean. As of this week, we’re back to new episodes weekly! Don’t miss the Season 2 premiere of our TV show, coming October 7 on Apple TV+. CREDITSHosted by: Jon StewartFeaturing, in order of appearance:Jon Lovett, Jon Favreau, Tommy VietorExecutive Produced by Jon Stewart, Brinda Adhikari, James Dixon, Chris McShane, and Richard Plepler.Lead Producer: Sophie EricksonProducers: Zach Goldbaum, Caity Gray, and Robby SlowikAssoc. Producer: Andrea BetanzosSound Engineer & Editor: Miguel CarrascalSenior Digital Producer: Frederika MorganDigital Coordinator: Norma HernandezSupervising Producer: Lorrie BaranekHead Writer: Kris AcimovicElements: Kenneth Hull, Daniella PhilipsonTalent: Brittany Mehmedovic, Marjorie McCurry, Lukas Thimm Research: Susan Helvenston, Andy Crystal, and Cassie MurdochTheme Music by: Gary Clark Jr.The Problem with Jon Stewart podcast is an Apple TV+ podcast, produced by Busboy Productions.https://apple.co/-JonStewart
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay.
Should I collapse?
You tell me when, Zach.
Bam!
Hey, welcome back.
We're at the, this is the podcast, it's the problem.
My name is John Stewart.
We're back on Apple TV plus season two on October 7th.
And so we're excited today.
We are joined by the SNL film troupe.
Please don't destroy, but in the future.
This is them 15 years older from the set
of a public access porn set.
What are we doing here?
15 years older, eat shit.
20 years older.
These are, it's the founders of Crooked Media,
the hosts of Pod Save America, John Favreau, John Lovett,
Tommy Vitor, John and John were actually speech writers.
Robama Tommy was, he might have been
the commander of the US forces.
No, it was, he was national security spokesperson,
but still important.
They were in the room where it happens.
And we're going to talk to them today about fixing America.
Here's what I like about you guys.
You're doing Pod Save America together,
but then you have your solo projects.
That's right.
It's what keeps it fresh for you, I would assume.
Yeah, Lovett's our Beyonce.
We still spend too much time together.
Now, how did you come together?
So Tommy and I met in the Obama Senate office in 2005,
and then I hired John Lovett to join
the White House speech writing staff.
I really tricked him.
He worked for Hillary Clinton in the 2008 campaign,
and then after Obama won, I hired Lovett.
That's how we all met.
And you hired me despite the fact that a person
who is still involved in politics at a high level
tried to ding me, tried to keep me from getting the job.
Name names.
Tried to clear the deal.
Trying to make some news.
Talk to me.
I'm not going to say.
She said Lovett was a lot, which was correct.
I am a lot.
You're talking about Hillary.
Yeah, I'm talking about Hillary Clinton.
Hillary Clinton tried to ding me.
Hillary Clinton said, John Lovett is a lot.
I like the situation here because right now
it looks like John Favreau and Tommy Vitor
are your chaperones.
Yes.
You appear to be, listen, a kid with maybe
some attention issues, and you're sitting in between them
on your way to camp.
Nailed it.
That's how I'm viewing the setup.
Nailed it.
Me sitting in between them started out as something
I just would write in my diary.
God.
You're a lot.
I'm a lot.
I like to make them uncomfortable.
You and all of us, as a matter of fact.
Let me say this.
Job well done, sir.
When you're coming from, this is somewhat interesting to me,
in 2008, so you're coming from the Clinton campaign.
The Obama campaign has defeated you.
How quickly can you turn off the ill feelings?
How quickly does that dissipate?
And how did it manifest?
The bad blood between Hillary Clinton
and Barack Obama themselves was far less
than the bad blood at the staff level.
I hated the Clinton campaign more than I ever hated
John McCain and Sarah Palin in the general election,
mostly because we won handily in the primary was so long.
So what was the cause of the antipathy?
Was it purely we want this so badly
because we believe so much in the agenda
we're gonna bring to the American public?
How much of it is sort of jets, giants,
we're on this team, you're on that team
and how much of it is we're being outsmarted?
I mean, I think from the, from the Obama side,
I think it was, we very much believed our message
that he represented change
and she represented politics as usual
and what was wrong with Washington.
And so we got ourselves probably more spun up
than we should have that the Clintons
were sort of an era of politics
that the Democratic party in the country needed to move past.
And then the reverse of that is, we're so bad.
Why is our policy agenda basically indistinguishable?
Like we're basically making the same case.
Except for opposing the war in Iraq.
Well, that was obviously something
that left a real mark on people at the time.
But we were for the healthcare mandate.
Right, yeah, that's true.
So how about that?
Also people, do you think people remember that?
We were just petty.
Do you guys wanna announce the breakup of your show now?
Oh, you can't tear this apart, you can't tear this apart.
The things we fight about in private,
you have no access to.
The real thing, the real shit, you're nowhere near it.
You can't get close to it.
Let me tell you something.
That brings up an unbelievably good point, John.
And obviously you did it accidentally.
I wanna bring this up because what I want people
to understand is the conversations
behind the scenes of political campaigns
and in Washington are so profoundly different
from the conversations that are had in public
and the messaging that goes on in public.
And I wanna ask you guys as people
who are expert in crafting those messages
and also individuals who are present in those rooms,
whereas John just mentioned,
the shit they talk about, you can't even believe.
How do we close that gap and why does that gap exist?
Why are politicians so low to give public insight
into the real conversation that's going on?
I mean, one of the reasons we started this podcast
is to close that distance
and to sort of kind of have the conversations out loud
that people have on campaigns in private
and just because we don't care
if people think of us as much anymore
now that we're out of politics.
But I do think that you ask the reason
why people aren't sort of more honest
or just talk how like they do in private.
I think the media environment is such that
if you get taken out of context,
you say something that gets blown up on cable
or on Twitter and then suddenly you lose control
of the message, right?
A campaign, a political operation
is designed to keep control of the message
that you're trying to relay to the American people
about why you should get elected.
And if you lose control of that message
because you said something and got taken out of context
or caused a big thing on Twitter, then you're down.
And that's just tough.
One example of this, John, is like,
I think candidates get in trouble
when they talk about the electorate
and the American people sort of as sociologists
or they step back and talk about politics
in that kind of way.
Like when Barack Obama said, sometimes,
you have communities that have been hauled out
by NAFTA and trade deals, et cetera,
and they cling to their guns in religion, dot, dot, dot.
And he was sort of just like stepping back
and trying to assess why these communities
feel the way they do, honestly, in a way
to try to empathize with them
and sort of be in their shoes
and understand where certain conservatives
were coming from, that's something
that followed us around for another eight years.
It seems like, though, it'd be very hard,
and maybe this is campaign discipline,
for candidates to create an environment
where you couldn't be taken out of context.
I mean, the environment of modern media
is to launder information, to take things out of context,
to weaponize it, but wouldn't it be better
and easier for candidates to try not to outsmart something
they have no control over?
Yeah, I think that's true.
And I think a lot of candidates,
especially candidates that don't feel comfortable
with the message they're driving,
they don't trust what their instincts tell them to say
or what their actual views are,
so they feel like they have to be very, very careful.
Their first thought is not what do I think,
but what should I say, how should I sound?
They become boring, they become rote.
But at the same time, the other side of that coin is,
a lot of what a candidate does
is travel around saying the same thing
over and over and over again.
And I think a lot of times,
especially those of us that pay attention really closely,
we kind of have a contradictory demand,
which is we want them to be authentic,
we want them to be honest,
but we want them to do that
while repeating themselves over and over and over again.
So we're kind of demanding,
we're demanding a performance of authenticity
from these candidates,
even as we also understand their job,
is to say a lot of the same thing
to new audiences every single day.
I do think you're right though,
that the candidates and politicians
who are most appealing,
who end up being most appealing and inspiring
and exciting to people are the ones
who just sort of say what's on their mind.
It's always a spectrum, right?
Look at Trump.
Look, it wasn't honest, but he said it was on his mind.
Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, right?
Like there's-
Beto Rourke in 2019, especially on the Kevin.
But then of course it didn't work for him in 2020,
because it was too on his mind.
But like, yeah, so I think it's a spectrum, obviously,
but I think in the midterms right now,
John Fetterman, right, is a candidate
who a lot of voters find appealing.
And the reason they find him appealing,
and I was talking to some voters in Pittsburgh about this,
they're like, look, he makes mistakes.
He's weird sometimes, but I trust him.
I don't know why, I just trust him
because he's just saying what he believes.
And I like that.
And I was like, yeah, more politicians should do that.
Politically, probably a mistake to have a stroke.
John's a lot.
John love it, he's a lot.
No, pluck that one for sure.
Yes, I'll give you guys an example.
At the end of every Daily Show season, right,
we would invite all the press people,
those who ran the press offices of Congress people,
whether they be reps or senators,
to come and sit and have a conversation
with myself and our booker.
And the conversation was always on their end,
how can my boss, congressman, congresswoman, senator,
have a successful Daily Show appearance?
Because they all look to media appearances
as kind of a gold standard of setting a message
and maybe creating a little hype.
And I would say, okay, so here's what I would do.
They could come on the show and say what they think.
And then what I'll do is I'll say what I think
about what they said, and then we'll kind of go from there.
And the press people would all sit back and go,
so the strategy is authenticity.
And I'd go, no, it's not a strategy.
It's leadership and what you believe.
Say what you believe.
And so often we'd have people on the show
who would write books like liberals, skull fuck nuns.
And then they would come on and I would say,
I read your book in here,
you say liberal skull fuck nuns.
And they would go, we're not that far apart as a nation.
And you were part of that sort of consultant
media industrial complex.
Has that so overtaken the way that people get elected
that we've kind of ignored governance?
It certainly has overtaken everything else
in the context of a campaign.
I think when governing, at least-
But does the campaign ever end, I guess is my point.
No. And so within that.
The campaign never ends.
That's my-
When we were in the White House with Obama at least,
he was a president who tried to make sure
that he was governing, doing the right things,
making the right decisions.
That's not to say that political considerations
never entered his mind.
Of course they did.
He ran for reelection, politics is always there.
But I think when he faced a conundrum of like,
should I do the political thing
or should I just sit here and govern?
Like when the Affordable Care Act almost failed
and his advisors were like,
you should not try to pass it.
You should pull the bill
because otherwise you're not gonna get reelected.
And he's like, I don't care if I get reelected.
I came here to do hard things.
I'm gonna pass the Affordable Care Act.
If I'm unpopular because of it, so be it, right?
So I think like that was a-
But look, the press also covers politics
only through the political lens
and not through the governing lens at all at this point,
which is tough.
Yeah, I mean, look, there are gonna be some politicians
who are authentically boring
and the process of governing
can be authentically boring at times, right?
So it's hard to make it exciting and get it covered.
But I do think it is a problem
that we live in a political dynamic
and it's not just the United States, it's everywhere,
where the price of entry is potentially getting destroyed
having your entire background looked into
and just having your family turned upside down.
I mean, look at it.
There's the Prime Minister of Finland,
Sana Marin, this young woman, she's like 35.
She was dancing with her friends
and having a couple of drinks,
like doing nothing wrong, not doing drugs,
not doing anything.
And the press destroyed her.
Let me push back on that.
An expression of joy from a Scandinavian country.
No, no, no, my friend.
Question that. Not during the ubernacht.
No, there will be no Scandinavian joy.
That is a rule we all must follow.
I mean, but you hear about people who run for office
who spend their, like who in college are like,
can you please take down that photo of me on Facebook
and shit like that,
because it's sort of seen as the only way
to survive the process.
And if that's the system,
then those are the boring politicians
we're going to get from that system.
The people who are like so careful
throughout their whole lives.
Or that they're not worried
about what might happen to them.
So Tommy though brings up a good point
because he said, or Trump.
Now that guy hasn't scrubbed his social media.
Like he'd have to do it every 11 minutes.
You know, he's a guy who goes out there and says,
I mean, he's an antibiotic resistant candidate.
And maybe that's what you need.
I mean, he had sex with an adult movie star
while his wife was pregnant,
paid her $130,000 as hush money
and still married and his lawyer's
the one who ends up going to jail.
You know, is there,
Chappelle used to have a very funny bit
where he'd be like Democrats, man.
It's like Republicans can do whatever they want.
Democrats can't even sniff hair.
Like is there, are you,
are Democrats in some respects policing their own
in a manner that's presumptive?
Like look at what happened to Al Franken.
You know, you have a situation where
in the midst of this movement,
Al Franken has to be removed from the Senate
for something that there's people in the Senate right now
that have done far worse, that's known about.
And there are no repercussions from voters or anyone else.
I think you can sort of step back from,
I think that the pattern there is a bigger one.
And it's, we talk about it so much.
It's hard to always go back to it as the answer,
but we have two different media environments.
One of the questions we get all the time from people
is like, why are Republicans so good at messaging
and why are Democrats so good at messaging?
Why do Democrats come after their own and Republicans don't?
How do Democrats get tagged
with defund the police and Republicans don't?
How can Trump do all these different things
and these Democrats can't get away with anything?
And you step back and it's like,
it's not because Republicans are brilliant.
It's not because they have better,
they're so sophisticated about messaging compared to us.
They have a giant propaganda apparatus
that A, covers Democrats in a way
that pulls up the things that are the most divisive,
that are the worst for Democrats politically,
and B, inoculates Republicans
against some of their worst excesses.
Look, you have Lindsey Graham going out there
proposing a national abortion ban.
Incredibly political, politically stupid.
Even Mitch McConnell trying to get out of talking about it
doesn't get the hype on Fox News
that you would expect for something
that would be really popular with their base,
why they recognize that it's not advantageous for them.
So not only do they tar Democrats over and over again
in a way that spills over into the mainstream political
punditry, they also kind of provide a little,
a big bubble for their right-wing crowd
that's much more insulated from the stories
that would hurt their own side
or make them skeptical of the rest.
But I would go one step further here
because I think Donald Trump's superpower
is shamelessness.
Like he doesn't feel shame.
And I think that's now what the whole Republican party
has realized as well,
is that like if you can't publicly shame them,
then you can't hurt them.
And also they sort of let go of all their principles as well.
So like Democrats have all these principles
that they're trying to uphold.
And so then when they fall short of those principles,
then people call them out for hypocrisy
or say that you have to step down or whatever, right?
Republicans don't have those in the first place,
they just did away with them.
So therefore like, if you call them out for something,
they're like, yeah, well, I don't care.
I'm not gonna be shamed.
I do have this propaganda apparatus
that's gonna protect me.
But also you can say whatever you want about me
and it's fine, it's not gonna bug me.
I'm not gonna step down, I'm not gonna apologize.
Once the political consequences fell away
in part because of the machine that they've built,
the next guardrail was supposed to be shame.
And they realized that they could blow right through
that one too.
But shame has always been an artifice in politics.
Everybody always points to the moment
when in McCarthy hearings,
undersecretary of defense at last sir,
have you no decency, no shame?
And everybody's like, water shed moment
as though like McCarthy just disappeared into a cloud
at that moment and floated away on the vapors of shame.
We've always been a country that overestimates
the power of the conscience and mythologized it.
And it's not real.
And don't the Republicans win
because they understand what currency
their base operates under.
They all operate on the same monetary standard,
whereas Democrats are a by necessity
stitched together coalition of a variety of interests.
And that's always gonna be harder
to clearly message and wrangle.
It's not like the Democrats don't have any press.
I mean, how many times can you hear the words,
the big lie before you just wanna like tear your hair out?
It's not like they're helpless.
A, the Republicans, their media works towards a goal.
Here's a great example.
Sean Hannity was talking about Jen Saki.
Her ascendance to,
and I don't even know what network she's working on now,
CNN or MSNBC.
MSNBC, yeah.
This is evidence of the incredible incestuous relationship
between Democrats and the media machine.
Sean Hannity was with Donald Trump talking strategy.
He's in all the text.
Like they have created a set of rules
that everyone else feels they have to abide
that they know that their own audience won't hold them to.
I remember I visited Obama's White House twice in eight years.
He called me down to yell at me twice.
What'd you do?
We'll get into that later.
Okay, good.
But it was on the log line.
The right-wing media went crazy,
attacking it as secret meetings,
showing the incestuous relationship
between the left-wing media and left-wing policy.
But what the right has done
is they've built parallel institutions.
What they've said is the college system
doesn't work for our politics,
the think tank system doesn't work for our politics,
and the media system doesn't work for our politics.
So we're going to build identical parallel institutes
that purely feed a very specific goal.
The left has just a hodgepodge of all of those things,
but they are not all pulling in the same direction
or rowing in the same direction.
No, you're right, because just to use the Gen example,
when word leaked that Gen was leaving the White House for NBC,
the freak out among journalists and liberals online too,
we're like, oh, is this bad?
Is she to do this?
This isn't right, blah, blah, blah, like,
that never happens on the right.
That shit never happens because, right,
they've made up their own rules and their own institutions,
and you're right, we don't have that on the left.
Yeah, the right has behaved for 40 years
like a government in exile,
that they're exiled from these institutions,
so they build their own.
They're exiled from the media, so they build their own.
They're exiled from the court system,
so they built their own.
That made them hungry, that made them unified,
and now all of a sudden, they're not really an exile,
are they?
They have a huge influence over what we talk about
in the media.
They control the courts, they won the White House,
this sort of right-wing, semi-fascistic movement
has all this power,
and they're kind of like the dog
that cut the car a little bit, right?
Because they still want to behave,
like their whole movement is built on grievance,
about losing, about not having power,
about the way they're being manipulated,
about the way they're being mistreated,
and they've kind of kept that up,
even as they're kind of gained more and more
of a foothold in all these different areas of life.
So when people talk about the left,
I never see it as unified,
and I never see it as equivalent to what the right has,
like when the right will say NPR, the left wing,
and if you listen to NPR,
it's steeped in maybe a liberal ethos,
but it doesn't seem particularly activist.
If you turn on AM radio,
it is disciplined, relentless, and brutal,
in a very different way.
I think that's exactly right.
I mean, look, this has been a concerted strategy
since really, I think Nixon,
where I'm sure at an earlier point in time,
the liberal was pretty overwhelmingly liberal,
as a bunch of men from Harvard and Yale,
covering the White House,
and sort of leading all these institutions,
and they probably had a beef at one point.
I think that beef went out the window a long time ago,
but they have trained many generations of journalists
to be scared of one thing above all else,
which is to be called liberal.
And so it's very easy to get in their heads,
even the best ones by accusing the mainstream media
of liberal bias, but I totally agree with you.
The New York Times editorial page is incredibly liberal.
The New York Times reporters, who I've worked with,
are all over the map politically,
and will kick the shit out of everyone.
And I just find it fundamentally a wrong,
an inaccurate comparison.
That said, like if you look at the institutions on the right,
whether it's Rush Limbaugh, Fox News, Breitbart,
all these other sort of modern media entities
that have been created by billionaires,
who fund them to be political weapons
in service of their tax cuts, usually.
That's right, and it's a far different position,
and you see it now as certain things then get defined
as liberal, certain things get defined as conservative.
Ukraine is liberal, Russia is conservative,
and you're like, I don't understand
how any of this gets defined in that manner.
Look, if you're trying to have balance,
and the way you're gonna have balance
is you're gonna have one person
all the way on one side of the seesaw,
just one Rush Limbaugh, may he rest in peace,
all the way over to one side,
and then you have four people sitting
about a foot to the right, right?
They'll balance out, but there's no one
representing the progressive point of view.
There's no one actually advocating from the left.
That's exactly right, and we're such a,
if you look at generally the most industrialized world,
we govern in an incredibly right-wing manner.
We don't have the types of healthcare
or educational systems that they would tar as socialism,
but you would just view as a democracy
with a robust social safety net.
It's not the state-owning industry.
It's just making sure that people have healthcare,
childcare, and education.
But if you're to propose that in this country,
you're the squad.
You're to the left of Bernie Sanders.
You're a madman.
Look what happened when they tried to forgive $10,000
worth of student loans.
I mean, people were just like, okay, Hugo Chavez,
like when you look at conservatives in other countries,
in this country, they'd be considered
like gay nator supporters.
And the media's fecklessness in being able
to fight back on it stands out to me.
Yeah, well, they're also just part of an industry right now
that is having some, you know, business model challenges
and they're trying to get an audience and they-
Are you referring to anyone in particular?
And they think that to get a broad audience,
you need to present yourself as fair and balanced.
And all, you know, and it's just-
But what is that?
Why doesn't anybody do news about governance?
Why is all the news based in this idea
that there's a right and a left
and not a corruption or integrity or a clarity and a noise?
Why are they using the polarities
that are defined politically
and not the polarities that are defined in efficacy?
I mean, I think, look, when I worked
in the White House press office for four years,
I mean, they were really brilliant journalists
who would cover whatever wonky policy thing
we were doing that day in great depth.
And I think did amazing coverage
that was substantive and thoughtful, right?
I think what happens though is the shit
that we get on cable news and the stuff
that we're all addicted to because we're political junkies
is more the campaign trail, horse-racy,
politicalization of the media.
Whereas, you know, the education reporter
that's been on the beat for 30 years
that's digging into, you know, whatever initiative
that part of education is doing
is probably just not getting booked on daytime cable.
Yeah, it is an audience issue in that
our brains have been broken by the internet as well.
First, they were broken by cable
and they were broken by the internet.
And so-
But why are journalistic professionals
just allowing the audience to dictate?
Like polling is a part of that.
That drives me fucking crazy.
Yeah.
Here was a great one that I saw.
It was the Afghanistan pullout, you know,
chaos with Afghanistan pullout
and how it will affect the midterms.
And you're like, there's guys jumping off
of fucking wheel wells on a C-130
as it's flying out of Kabul.
And you're wondering about what it's gonna do
to a gerrymandered district in Illinois.
Like, are you that insane and that removed from humanity?
And have we lost our minds?
Yeah, I actually have to go like even one step further
from starting from sort of left versus right.
It's more who are we and who are we speaking to, right?
Who are we?
We're observers of this system.
But who are we talking to?
And I think in part because I think a lot of the like
core audience, whatever the medium for political journalism
are junkies, people who keep up with a lot of it.
And in part because I think it's just over decades,
it's become a kind of way of speaking a language
of political coverage,
which is it's experts describing things to observers
who aren't necessarily voters or participants,
but are experts in all knowledgeable themselves.
And so rather than telling people what's going on
in the world to inform a person watching or reading
or listening as if what they're trying to do
is inform a potential voter who may not have
all the information, it is presumed that their person
they're speaking to already has perfect information
and actually just needs to know
what the dummies are gonna think.
Like, I'm sitting at home, I know everything.
I have my binoculars, I'm watching the American
political system like it's a cheetah on the prairie.
And I just need to know what the animals out there,
the people that aren't in the know are gonna do.
And I think when it treats people like that,
like kind of observers as opposed to participants,
that feeds on itself.
Because then the viewers view themselves
as observers and not participants.
They start to be as cynical as what they're watching
and then wanting that back
and it becomes a kind of feedback loop.
And I think we're kind of dealing with that
because I think one reason these networks
or this is what rates, this is what people want,
they want polling,
they want somebody at the board telling them
how it's gonna play.
They don't want the hard stuff, the policy stuff, right?
Like there's an audience demand issue.
Isn't though the question that they view it as,
and I've heard people talk about this,
one is dessert and one is spinach
and nobody wants spinach and like,
it's not that it's fucking spinach,
it's that one matters and one doesn't.
Here's what struck me and I'll use this as an example.
And maybe you guys can help me break it down.
We just had a fight for what was called the PACT Act,
which was a burn pit legislation for veterans, right?
So I was fortunate enough to have been so steeped
in the knowledge of how that bill got made,
how it got changed, how it got pushed
and how it got passed,
that when I had to go on a media blitz,
when we were about to lose it,
I got to experience firsthand the disconnect
between the media machine and its mechanics
and the reality of what something was on the ground.
And it was stunningly disassociated,
not very interested.
It didn't view where the information
that it was getting was coming from.
It didn't view what people's points of view were.
It didn't push back.
It was passive, boilerplate and oftentimes wrong.
And surprisingly, it was like an information laundering machine.
Yahoo News UK would print something that was wrong.
And then everyone else that wrote an article about it
would just use that piece of information unsighted.
So falsehood became canon in the span
of like a four hour cycle.
And how do we get the media to recognize its own blindness?
Yeah, I think part of it is we're talking about the media
as if it's like one institution
and not this incredibly splintered.
There's like a million different sources now
and now there's the internet
and now there's just people tweeting about shit.
But like, look, we covered that fight
that you were involved in.
And to get to your level of knowledge,
it was so difficult to sort through it all
because everyone who covered that,
all they wanted to do is just say,
okay, well, here's Pat Toomey's explanation
and here's John Stewart's explanation.
And it didn't matter that Pat Toomey was fucking lying.
Like some of them might have fact-checked it
but they still felt the need to present.
Okay, here's an issue and the most important thing
that I need to do with this issue
is to present both sides and both arguments.
I might even fact-check one argument
but I at least have to present the wrong argument
even if I know that it's incorrect
because that's the other side of the debate.
And I'm here to present the political debate
and not talk about the issue.
But this one was you couldn't have something
that was more objectively clear.
I know.
You had the two bills that you could hold up
next to each other and do it.
But I have to say, nobody did it.
And I would say on there,
don't take my liberal piece of shit word for it.
Look on the two websites, check it for yourselves
and none of them did it.
And I thought that was stunning.
And also listen, this is an instructive example I think
because there was a very clear cut and dry moral element
to what you were talking about.
We sent these guys to war.
We put them in a situation where they inhaled fumes
that will kill them.
We should pay for their fucking healthcare and benefits.
Like any human being can see that moral element
and can see the right and wrong there.
We've created a journalistic construct
where you're kind of not allowed to opine on that
and weigh in on that.
You end up having to deal with John said earlier,
which is lead with whatever Ted Cruz said at the airport
because that's the freshest piece of sound on the topic.
And I think stepping back,
like every journalist I knew and worked with,
they are good people who wake up in the morning
and they're like trying to do their job as best they can
that day, but they all get sometimes trapped in a system
that is just idiotic.
Well, it's because of what you said earlier.
If you're involved and the Democrats are involved now,
and so if you're a journalist and you're reporting
on the story and you point out that Pat Toomey's lying
and just completely making it up,
then you're in bed with John Stewart and the Democrats.
So maybe you're not a fair reporter.
Maybe you're too liberal.
Think about the 2012 campaign
when Mitt Romney was debating Barack Obama.
And Mitt Romney said,
you did not call Benghazi an act of terror on that day.
And Kennedy Crowley, the moderator of the debate
said, actually, governor, you're wrong, he did.
That was seemed as, that was like the end of her career,
that she was treated like she had broken
like every rule that exists in DC, every unwritten rule.
But that's a failure up.
So isn't the lesson of Roger Ailes and Fox News
that if you are, as you guys said, trapped in a system,
you're a good person with good moral compass,
trying to do good journalism.
If you're trapped in a system that is corrupting
that instinct, isn't the lesson not to allow yourself
to be subservient to that, but to fix it.
But to take it, I mean, Roger Ailes basically said,
I'm gonna create something so that whatever happened
Richard Nixon can never happen again.
And he built that.
And aren't we suffering because there's a lack of courage,
not from journalists, but from the higher ups
at these news networks to create something
that can, misinformation must be battled relentlessly.
And it's like I keep seeing with the big lie,
everybody keeps saying, Trump and his big lie.
But what I haven't seen is a real dissection,
a relentless one of what the lie even is.
What is he lying about?
Like they'll just say it's a lie,
as he says, the falsely stolen.
Okay, but what is he talking about?
And if you listen to that phone call
that he had with Raffensperger,
Raffensperger does a better job debunking the lies
of this election than I've seen
from almost any media outlet.
I think there's a couple of challenges in there.
One of them is, even if you have a mainstream
political press that is doing a better job
of debunking what's coming out of the right,
you're still following-
Not just out of the right, I wanna make that true.
Or wherever they may come from.
That's right.
Even if you have that,
it doesn't change the underlying problem,
which is you have this right wing megaphone
with its satellite institutions
that's kind of shaping the political debate
and inoculating Republican candidates
and you don't have the equivalent on the left.
I would say, it's to me less about what do we do
as viewers or watchers or listeners or readers
to kind of put pressure on the mainstream institutions?
Because I think the working the refs,
I'm glad people are doing it.
They're going into the Twitter minds every day
and tweeting at journalists
that they don't like the headlines.
Keep doing it.
I don't hate them.
You can put on your hard hat, punch in,
tweet at Maggie Haberman, whatever you fucking want.
I don't care.
Great, have a good time.
We need to stop waiting for them to be the solution.
They are never gonna be the answer.
There needs to be-
We used to be those people.
We were on-
We're still those people-
This morning.
But it's like-
I'll tweet at the AP about them
calling them election skeptics.
But I've just given up now
because I'm like, they are not gonna do the job
we want them to do.
And you're right.
Yes, it should come from the top
and we are suffering because of it
and it's not coming from the top.
But the people at the top of these organizations
are trying to build an audience
and trying to maintain a profitable business
and they're not seeing this as a public good
even if they're telling themselves
they see it as a public good.
Isn't there an opportunity to have both?
Yeah, I think so.
First of all, news should,
I do think there's a sense of public good
that has to come from it.
But second of all,
don't you think there is financial opportunity?
The one thing that I saw in that sort of
five to six day period between
when our bill got shot down
and when it got back up again
was that there is a battle plan
that you can employ against misinformation
that is relentless, effective
and surprising to those that are
pervading that misinformation.
You can defeat it,
but it is, it's a tall, it's a tall task.
I do think there's gonna be learned there too
because yes, there are ways in which
things are misreported.
Yes, there are ways in which
misleading answers are elevated just to show both sides.
But the story of what happened with the burn pits bill
is the story of despite all those headwinds,
despite all those issues,
Republicans felt the pressure.
They knew they had fucked up
and they still felt like
there are ways in which our system is completely broken.
But there are moments where you see,
wait, hold on a second,
ordinary politics still works.
That was just politics, right?
There was an issue.
They realized they were on the losing side.
They couldn't talk their way out of it.
They had to reverse course
and the right side won and a good bill passed, right?
That happened despite all of the concerns you have
with how the press reported on the story.
I also think that, fortunately,
the veterans had a spokesperson in you
who you showed plenty of outrage during that period,
but you're funny.
You also employed mockery.
You made fun of the Republicans.
That kind of shit breaks through as well.
And I don't think our side does that nearly enough.
We said we weren't gonna suck out to them.
Well, I'm saying like, I'll go back to us.
But obviously...
We try to not take ourselves too seriously here
because I think if you want to get an audience, right?
And one way to get an audience is to entertain them.
The news now is entertaining them
in a very bad, destructive sort of way.
But I think you can be less self-serious, funny,
bring people in with more entertainment.
And I do think that's a strategy
that we don't employ enough on the left, I think.
Right.
But I think Tommy brought something up
that I thought was really interesting.
What he said was that bill was a moral good.
But there are so many moral goods.
One of the reasons that I get involved
with some of these things is it feels like
the lowest rung on the ladder that healthcare should be for...
No one should go bankrupt when they get cancer.
Everybody's working too fucking hard
in this country to have something
that they have no control over derailed,
not just their dreams, but their family's dreams
and maybe generations of their family's dreams.
It's all a moral good.
But what we don't see enough from the media,
in my mind, is that sense of mission,
that sense of that editorial authority,
that Upton Sinclair muckrake the fuck out of this,
that old Ida B. Wells, that idea that we exist
to break the system, including ours,
our media industrial complex,
to create a better system that more serves.
And as we watch this midterms thing,
like, I don't know about you guys,
but you must be pulling your hair out at the nonsense
that's just pervasive in the coverage of these polls
and these candidates and what it means.
And let's bring on our cadre of pundits
to spout the boilerplate thing
and let's just rinse and repeat this entire cycle.
And if we don't break out of that,
like, even the idea of, I was watching somebody said,
the public polling says this, but the internal polling,
like the idea even that a campaign has information,
like we poll it and it's internal,
but we don't share that and the public poll,
you're like, how the fuck does, it's just a methodology.
How do you have an internal one
and then one that's shared with the public?
What does that even mean?
I mean, the internal one is just kind of like
something you're spending a lot of money on
to help guide strategy decisions.
And that can be, you know, big picture,
like, should we be in favor of this issue?
Yes or no, but it can also be like,
are we doing well in the downstate Illinois
Peoria media market?
No, okay, let's increase our ad buy there.
I mean, look, to your broader point,
like I don't want to bum anyone out here,
but I think the three of us, you,
we're fucking space aliens in this country, right?
We are four people who are obsessed with politics.
We read the news constantly, we're on Twitter, right?
Like we are not representative of the vast majority
of voters in this country.
Those voters don't have an opinion on Jake Tapper
criticizing MSNBC lawyers or whatever stupid issue
was like getting fought about that day.
They're like maybe see something on Facebook
or they maybe see something on TikTok and Instagram.
And I think to the, to the,
there's some great journalists doing great work,
but I do think that all these business models
and structures are kind of getting broken apart
on their own because people are getting
information on their phones.
It's all getting to you a different way.
And I think that's the thing we're actually
a little bit excited about is the opportunity
to fundamentally rethink like, okay,
how do you reach this younger progressive audience
that feels like the mainstream media
is letting them down fairly or unfairly, right?
That could be because Trump demagogue them for years
and the Republican party did for a long time.
And because of high profile mistakes.
I mean, the Iraq war was a bit of an oopsie daisy, right?
That I think everyone is recovering for.
But, you know, that's the thing we're thinking about.
It's like, okay, how do we reach people where we,
where they are with information they actually want
in a way that's digestible that gets them the things
they kind of, they need to know
that isn't just horse race bullshit.
Do we nail that every day?
Absolutely not.
That's the goal.
Right, and that sounds like, you know,
the people who are obsessed with this
should be the ones who develop that.
And maybe the only question I would ask you is,
what would you think of removing out of that,
what they want or what you think would appeal
to certain demographics?
Because that always puts me in the head of,
I remember when, maybe it was 2020,
they were like, 2020 is doing 2020 downtown.
And 2020 downtown was gonna relate to the young people.
And it was basically just John Kinyone's
rather than being in the studio,
like stood outside in a leather jacket.
And so it was like that one debate on CNN
I saw with all the Democratic candidates
when they all wore turtlenecks.
Where everybody was like,
the young MTV people want to see the turtlenecks.
2020 for me is Barbara Walters and Hugh Downs
on Friday nights when I was in high school
because I had exactly zero friends
that weren't Barbara Walters and Hugh Downs.
Yeah.
God, not just feel terrible.
Don't feel terrible.
I think the question is,
how do you reach different audiences, different demographics?
Where are they getting their news
and information from currently?
But then the content that you deliver just has to be you.
You can't be like trying to shape it
based on what you think they want.
You just have to figure out where they are
and how they're receiving their information on news,
which is, you know, many different places now.
I get a note from my in-laws once a month,
being like, why do you say fuck so much on the podcast?
Yeah, our friends listen to that.
We find that embarrassing.
And they're right.
It is embarrassing.
I'm a 42-year-old man.
I should say fuck this.
Tommy, can I ask you a question?
How do they pass you that note?
Is that like, when they see you,
do they just tuck a little something into the shirt pocket?
It's a letter in the mail.
I'm happy to.
Do they?
All right.
They've done like three times.
Please stop saying the F word.
Her, my wife's grandmother listened.
But I mean, we try to create a,
look, we were talking about the early aughts today
and how like the only things we had to look forward to
were the Daily Show and Dave Chappelle
because everything else was pretty bleak in the world.
And I think what made that show work
was you were funny and you were yourself.
And so we tried to create a show
where it is not stilted talking points,
newscaster language and accents, right?
It's like people talking as they would talk.
We try to, to the greatest extent possible,
completely shrink the space between how we talk about
politics when we're just hanging out
and how we do it in front of a microphone.
And like that, I think is what we think is the path forward
is not fake balance.
It's over bias.
Yeah.
How, how, because everything is bias
because that's the whole point of anytime you say
our top story tonight, you're displaying bias
however you want to portray it.
But how do you maintain, you know,
there were a lot of times on the Daily Show
where I felt like, okay, it's Wednesday
and I don't really care that deeply about anything today,
but I still have to fill this time.
And I probably should do it in a similarly
energetic manner as to convince people
that I care about this show
as much as I cared about yesterday's show.
And that discrepancy wore on me to some extent
because you felt at some point,
I don't want to manufacture outrage
because then I'm selling them a falsehood
and you want to have people feel the reality
of your emotions and have you guys been able
to maintain that or is there difficulty sometimes
that you feel like, boy, we're just,
I understand today we're going to do a politics
like material that we're putting out
that doesn't have the same fire.
How do you in some ways temper that?
I think that like I'm a liberal.
So I believe deeply in all the issues that we talk about
and I'm outraged just as much as anyone else,
but I don't think, look,
this is going to be a very, very long fight
to save democracy here.
I know 2016 didn't end in 2020, 2018, 2020 didn't end it.
And I think that you can't sustain a movement
based on moral outrage and righteous anger alone.
Like there has to be some joy and some fun
and some entertainment.
You have to not take it seriously.
So sometimes when there are big important issues
or devastating news or politics is driving us crazy,
like we'll talk about why it's what's right
and what's wrong and what we believe,
but then we'll joke around a bunch
because you just can't, you can't live like that all the time
and you can't keep it.
You can't take everything to an 11 all the time.
Look what it did to me, look what it did to me.
Look at you guys, we're the same age, look at me.
This is terrible.
I think you look great.
I think you've shot on yourself a couple of times
and I gotta tell you something.
You're not gonna fight for you.
Who's gonna fight for you?
All right.
John, let me tell you something.
I'm friends with Barbara Walters and Hugh Downs
and they do nothing but speak highly of you.
That's cool.
That's nice, that's nice.
We've kind of lost touch since one or both of them died.
I'm still in touch.
They send me a note every month and they tell me
the same thing, stop saying fuck.
It's the same thing that they're saying to Tommy there.
How did democracy end up being a liberal ideal
and not a part of the fight?
We live in a country where the conservatives
for the longest time were, as you remember,
either fighting communism or spreading democracy
and now they take great pains in trying to explain,
A, we're actually not a democracy
and B, that the election we just had wasn't real.
So how did we find ourselves in that moment?
I do think, you know, we talked about everything
that everything the press does in some way bias.
You come to a story, how you think about it,
what you think is important is a bias.
I do think this idea of refs has been a really important
kind of internal notion as to how people think
about what they're talking about politics,
that they're referring a game between Republicans
and Democrats, but then something happened,
which is look, there's always been cheating in this game,
right?
It's only people that break the rules,
push a little too hard.
Maybe part of the game is being as honest,
but some people are dishonest.
Whatever the rules are,
there's only people that are bending the rules.
But more and more, the Republicans on the field
have been breaking the rules
and they've discovered that they could get away with it,
that there wasn't any shame
and there actually weren't a lot of political consequences
because of the way they were running their team,
like when Belichick was cheating, right?
Shut the fuck up.
That's not, that's just the same joke.
I know one sports thing.
I know one sports thing.
I throw up.
I know one sports thing.
Unnecessary roughness.
But the point I'm making, the point I'm making is,
Lost to Miami.
The point I'm making is at some point,
a referee, reffing a game between one team
that's cheating all the time
and one team that's not, has to decide,
am I just calling a game
or am I now having to be an advocate for the game itself?
Do I have to become,
even though I'm not a partisan between these two teams,
do I have to become a partisan for the rules?
Do I have to become a partisan for democracy,
for the basic way in which we're supposed to conduct
our politics?
And I think for a lot of people who cover politics,
that's the most terrifying thing.
The most terrifying thing is realizing that,
actually, I'm no longer refereeing a contest
between two sides.
I'm on the inside of a democracy
and there's people coming for it from without.
But I think if you're wondering why there is a constituency
in an audience for politicians who do not believe
in democracy and wanna break the rules
and just wanna hold power,
I think it's because faith in institutions
has declined to a point where so many people
in this country so deeply believe
that politics and the political system
isn't working for them and improving their lives,
that since they can't seem to elect anyone
who's going to fix those institutions and make them work,
they are willing to take a chance on demagogues
who are just willing to tear them down.
I just wanna...
And that's a pretty scary scenario.
Look, I just think I'm gonna challenge
the premise of the question,
which is that they were for democracy.
Because I think if you look at the anti-communist
agenda in the 50s,
it was about preserving American hegemony
by installing right-wing death squads
in Latin American countries, right?
Overthrowing democratically elected leaders in Iran.
In the 2000s, the freedom agenda was invading Iraq.
The Democrats had their hand though
in a lot of undemocratic actions.
We fucked up big time in a lot of those.
Absolutely.
But then if you look at the Republican sort of thought
leaders now, like the Claremont Institute and those others,
they're the people who like to reply to you on Twitter
and say, actually, we're a republic, not a democracy.
They are more about a rule by the elites
to keep the unwashed masses like ourselves
from taking control or majoritarian rule.
And I think that is the kind of strain
in this group of Republicans with like,
this Leo Straussian, right?
They're this deep roots in this stuff
that is unnerving and is kind of authoritarian.
And appealing to a lot of people.
And they view Donald Trump as a vessel,
an imperfect vessel for this.
How many times have you heard Democrats
want more executive action as well?
Like everybody seems to be okay with an authoritarian
that they believe they trust and can go in that way.
But maybe to middle John's point,
and I'm gonna go to middle John,
that maybe though in terms of turning it back around
to the media, the flawed assumption from the beginning
is that they were referees in any game.
And that by participating in it as though it were that,
that's what set them on the wrong path,
that the media never should have been a referee.
They should have been an immune system
that was focused more on not refereeing Democrats
and Republicans, but representing the people's needs
in terms of better governance.
And if that were the focus,
maybe we would find ourselves in a different moment.
Middle John?
Yeah.
I mean, look.
I'm side John.
You're side John.
Yeah, look.
Oh, you've always been our side John.
He's my side John.
You're my side John.
I've gotten lost in my own analogy
because it was sports related.
So I don't know if you want the press in the stands.
It's some kind of a box,
maybe a box with the little hot dogs sometimes.
We can get out of the sports analogy,
but that idea that.
Yes, I mean, I think they should be,
I think that like, you know,
there's an ideal of them being antagonistic.
I think that thinking of them,
that us thinking of reporters as refs sort of implies
that there are these two sides that are fighting each other.
And actually it's one, you know,
there are people in power and there are people without power
and they should be holding power to account.
I think that's all true.
I do, you know, I think Donald Trump accelerated a process
and you know, there's all these like historians
and they look into this and it actually turns out
that there's a lot of power that political leaders have
in signaling to the people who follow them
or vote for them, what's important and what's not.
And there was a process that was happening kind of all
around us all the time where democracy itself
was just not being held up as an important value, right?
That was happening more and more and more.
Donald Trump obviously put that, you know,
to 88 miles an hour and now it has taken hold.
And so it was this sort of vicious circle, right?
Like why does the Republican base no longer value democracy?
Well, that's what they're hearing
from the people they're voting for.
Why are the people they're voting for saying that?
Well, they're following the base
and it is this vicious circle.
I would say though that it's not
that they don't value democracy,
is that Donald Trump has redefined democracy.
So the definition of democracy is now any vote
that Donald Trump wins.
And authoritarianism, look at the way that he's twisted it now
that the FBI is a secret police working on behalf
of a fascist government.
It's not that they are not promoting democratic values,
is that they've redefined the entire premise
to be an unjust persecution is one
that occurs against Donald Trump.
A democratic vote is one that goes for Donald Trump.
They're just redefining it.
I think that like, you know,
it's always this sort of fine line between,
are the people that are kind of embracing this,
are they being cynical or are they being naive?
And I think the answer is both, right?
When they hear Donald Trump say this stuff,
there's on some level of understanding
that I know what he's saying is only we can win elections,
right?
I understand that that's what he's saying,
and I'm part, I'm on the team.
I don't know about that.
I'm on the team.
I think there's a sincere belief
and every time you listen to them, it's this,
we the people, they are steeping themselves
in the spirit of 1776,
they believe they are the true defenders
of American democracy,
and I don't think they're cynical at all.
I think they just deserve better
than someone like Donald fucking Trump.
I agree with that.
I think they have so bought into his critique
of the political system, the establishment,
the media, everything else is corrupt.
Everything is corrupt and then every new development
only makes them realize how corrupt it is.
So the FBI is just as corrupt as we thought it was
because now they're going after Donald Trump
and Donald Trump is the only man
who can stand a fort, all of these corrupt institutions
and actually fight for them.
I think you can't tell the difference.
I think at this point, it is no longer possible
to tell the difference between someone who believes that
and there are plenty of people who do
and people understand that it's in their interest
to take that position.
I think there's plenty of both.
I mean, the problem is Trump and a lot of Republicans
are selling all of us or all of their listeners
on an apocalyptic vision where if they don't win,
Democrats are going to destroy America.
They're going to make your kid be transgender.
They're going to teach them that white people
are all evil, et cetera, et cetera.
And you get to a very scary place
where the means justify the ends of basically every action,
whether it's a coup.
They're certainly though, not the only party
that's selling an apocalyptic vision.
I mean, the Democrats are basically saying
if they win, we are a fascist country.
And I'm worried about that.
Cause I am genuinely in my heart concerned
about the future of our democracy
if we get Donald Trump in office again.
But I also don't want to get the sort of two polls
as far as part as possible,
where we end up with some sort of violent clash again
like we saw in January six.
It's something that's going to the shit up.
It's hard not to sound, here's the problem.
When one party does head
in this sort of fascistic direction,
which it absolutely is,
you can't help but sound hyperbolic when you describe it.
Because there was this moment, right?
When Biden said, oh, he thinks the MAGA movement
is semi-fascistic or semi-fascist,
he faced all this blowback.
How could you say that?
How can you see that?
When's the right time to call something fascist?
When it's gained so much power, you can't stop it.
When's the point in which you're allowed to use the word?
The next day, the next day after Biden said that,
Trump's Trump truths,
I should be reinstalled as president immediately.
Like what the fuck do you think that is?
But you know what's my favorite moment of all of that
was everybody got so flustered.
He said semi-fascistic
and he was standing in front of two Marines
and Twitter is undefeated, not 20 minutes later,
a clip comes out of Donald Trump
standing in front of two Marines going,
the Democrats are fascists
and you're just like, nothing matters.
It just doesn't fucking matter.
But that also helps Trump and that brand of politics.
They don't, he doesn't necessarily need you
to believe what he's saying.
He just needs you to think that everyone's bullshit,
that everyone's lying.
Because then if you're cynical about politics in general
and not just about Trump, but the other side as well
and you don't participate, he can hold power, right?
And so like the whole like LOL, nothing matters,
everything's bullshit, everyone's lying to you,
I'm lying to you, but so are they.
That just like feeds into the authoritarian impulse
because Donald Trump knows
that that's gonna disengage people.
Now, as guys that have been in Washington for so long,
do you know folks who worked within that orbit,
that real Trump orbit?
And I'm not necessarily talking about
like the Dan Scavinos or guys like that,
but do you know people who again,
the difference between public polling and internal polling,
who pull you aside and go,
yeah, here's the shit that's going down
and it's, here's the real cut.
Here's, it is cynical or it is actually evil
or there is a plan afoot
or the QAnon stuff really is now the fuel of this.
You know, what do you hear from those
who employed in that orbit?
I'll say, I used to have a really good in,
but Lindsey Graham and I lost touch after we broke up.
Jesus Christ.
Understood.
I'll be honest, I don't know anyone that worked.
John's a lot.
John's a lot.
I cannot believe you planted a lot.
Middle John's a lot.
You planted a lot.
You incepted him with this a lot thing.
You said it.
I didn't say it.
You said it.
Are you done?
How long are we gonna go?
I don't know anyone.
I don't know if, do you guys know anyone
who worked for Trump or in the MAGA orbit?
I don't.
I had some friends who worked for John McCain
on that campaign, literally someone who like
had my job on that side.
He was trying to destroy me every day.
Completely great human being like could talk to him,
but no one I know went into MAGA world.
Me neither.
And I was just thinking about Tim Miller,
our friend of ours who is a former Republican
who just wrote a book, Why We Did It,
about all the different categories of Trump people
and people who went to work for Trump.
Cause he said there's different motivations
for a lot of different types of people.
So some are true believers, some are complete cynics.
Some are just trying to hang on to their jobs.
Some just want to make money.
Yeah, he's great.
It's a great book.
So I think there's different motivations
for a lot of these people, unfortunately.
Do you want to know why Obama called me down?
Yeah, yeah.
What happened?
So Kathleen Sebelius,
it was right in the beginning of the Obamacare.
And we had Kathleen Sebelius,
who was the secretary of Unbelieveable Health
and Human Services at that time.
And the Obamacare website had just been put out.
Flawless.
And we had Kathleen Sebelius on.
And so what I did at the very top of the show
is with her at the top of the interviews,
I had my computer with me and I said,
all right, here's your computer, here's my computer.
I'm going to download every movie that's ever been made
in the history of mankind on Lime Wire.
And you're going to try and log us
into the Obamacare website.
And let's see who gets there first.
Oh, that's tough.
That's tough because the website was a mess.
I mean, it didn't work at all.
It was actually, and it was shocking.
They really didn't test it at all.
It was a horrible blunder.
Just to give you, I'm sure you heard a year full of this,
but the reason that website rollout pissed him off so much
was because he was like, hey guys,
we're running up against decades of Reaganism
where people are told government is the problem.
You got to shrink it to the size.
You can fit it in a bathtub and drown it
because government is evil.
We're trying to sell people on government being competent
and being able to help people in their lives.
And then that's fucked up a website.
But you know what, like was in hindsight,
was the coverage, it was a massive fuck up.
It should have been covered.
We should have gotten destroyed for it.
Is it good to say something good about our media
and our politics that one of the only things people remember
about the ACA was the website not working for a few months
given now that like 20 million people have healthcare?
No.
I mean, you know what I mean?
So that's the problem people like Democrats have.
Look, I'm not saying we shouldn't have fucked with them.
You guys shouldn't have destroyed us for it.
But when you try to do good things,
you try to help people get shot at.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
That's, that's, boy, that's, you know.
Oh, look, is it, all we tried to do
was get people healthcare.
Was the website not good enough?
It was a disaster.
It was a disaster.
I'm not defending it.
I'm not defending it.
It was a disaster, but beyond that was the idea
that not only was it maybe a disaster,
but the whole, the premise of the program was,
let's just do a fire hose of customers
to private insurance companies.
Like there was a lot that was there
to be talked about philosophically and otherwise.
But the point you just made about competence,
like that's not a minor point.
It's a huge point.
I know.
There was a rollout that eventually was fixed.
I don't want to suggest that when you put out
your signature policy and it's there
to help a lot of people and it's trying to convince them
that the government can be more involved
in something about their life and it doesn't work,
that isn't actually a, hey, come on guys, cut it out.
Like, that's a-
I'm saying the opposite.
I'm saying the opposite.
We invaded Iraq and then we got on a boat
and said mission accomplished
and it wasn't.
And then you can say like, well, was it not really
but didn't we liberate millions of people?
Like that's seminal to what that was.
And he ripped the shit out of me in his office
a few weeks later for like five minutes.
And then we got to have this conversation
that you guys and I are having in that little room
where we ate the most delicious salad
I've ever eaten in my life.
Then the Libyans caught Muammar Gaddafi
and like executed him on live TV.
Yeah, that was awful, man.
Before we get to dessert and I just remember
that we kept talking and I remember thinking,
you know, if you have to go.
Did you get dessert?
Do you have dessert during lunch?
I'm not, dessert during lunch is tough.
You got a nap after.
Not when you're sitting in that room.
When you're sitting in that room
and he's telling you about the Navy chefs,
you want that lemon pound cake.
Okay.
And he used to yell at you about healthcare.gov.
And this was the second thing he did wrong.
What he said was he didn't want me to make people cynical.
And I said, cynicism is the last thing
that's in my mind when I'm doing this show.
And then we got into, I think,
a pretty robust discussion about the very things
that we've all been talking about here today.
He has a lot of thoughts on them, yeah.
He did, do you miss those days in the White House?
I mean, the good ones, you know what I mean?
I don't miss the like, as you can tell,
like there's a foxhole mentality you have when you're there,
where it's just like,
you're just shoveling shit every single day.
And you know that you're going to work
trying your fucking hardest to like do well
and to like help people and you're fucking up,
you're making mistakes, you've healthcare.gov happens.
And so you do become more defensive,
you become tired, you're exhausted, you're angry,
you know, it's tough, it wears on you after a while,
it really does.
You know, BP poked a hole in the bottom of the ocean.
I remember.
Yeah, as if unleashing hell itself from beneath the ground.
And it's like, why hasn't Barack Obama
plugged the deepest hole yet?
I know.
He's the president, god damn it.
There's a hole in the ocean.
That's the thing that I think you learn.
It's incredibly humbling, is the most powerful man
in the world is in charge of a lot less
than you thought he might be.
And every day you're dealing with something.
Boy, is that right there,
I think is a really profound and important statement
that I do think we mythologize the office
and in some ways our own country.
And maybe that's from the Marshall Plan
or whatever we thought we were doing in other areas.
But I do think we've mythologized our ability
to control all these different contingencies around us.
And it is humbling and I appreciate it.
But you know what's so interesting to me is like,
it's still, I can feel it on you guys, like it still hurts.
You still feel that feeling of like being in a foxhole
and under attack by the forces of unfairness.
And I feel like you guys still really feel that.
Well, I was gonna ask you because now that you've been
involved in this legislative battle,
like how did that change sort of your view of politics
and activism and government now that you like,
that's probably like the furthest involved
you've been in government.
So what it taught me was this country is held together
by a thin line of hundreds of legislative aides
who are brilliant, incredibly tenacious and hardworking.
And they are part of a system that seeks
to chew them up and spit them out.
They oftentimes work for politicians
who don't have the faintest understanding
of the intricacies of what they do.
But they are by and large non-ideological
and they are there first and they leave last
and they are paid the least.
And they hold this country together with a competence
that cannot be overstated.
The second thing that I learned is shame doesn't work
unless they feel that it will be unrelenting
and they can't escape its glare.
Generally, the place is designed to deflect.
If you wanna get something done,
it's gotta be hurricane preparedness
and you have to seal up every window and every vent
and every door, it's your fighting zombies.
And if there's any way that they get in the house, you lose.
And so it really is, it's a wildly unrelenting game
and that if to do the moral thing requires
that every cause have a celebrity spokesperson,
we're fucked.
Yeah, big time.
But boy, you don't come out of there feeling
like this system has any connection
to the needs of the people that it purports to serve.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's about right.
That's, I mean, you got it.
All right.
But they also have Taco Tuesday at the capital.
If you go to the capital down in the capital,
it's Taco Tuesday.
So that's a boon.
That's a nice part, the Taco Tuesday of it all.
Well, end on this.
What was your favorite place to go
during your time in Washington?
Million Al's close now?
I literally think I've been gone from DC so long.
My favorite gay bar has been canceled.
I actually believe that that's true.
Yeah.
So I can't even say that place.
Boy, what an interesting conversation.
I thank you guys so much for taking the time.
John, John, Tommy, Crooked Media, Pod Save America.
They're solo projects.
They're going to be touring with Dave Matthews,
apparently.
We got to tell people, people have to sign up
as we head into the midterms for Vote Save America.
If you've heard this and you want to know what you can do,
you should go to votesaveamerica.com
and sign up to be a volunteer.
Well done.
Guys, thanks so much.
Thanks, John.
All right, guys, that's our show.
Check out the problem with John Stewart.
It's going to be on Apple TV Plus starting on October 7th.
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