AI transcript
0:00:06 Megan Rapinoe here. This week on A Touch More, Sue and I are in Indianapolis with a very special
0:00:13 live show and a very special guest, Caitlin Clark. We dive into her life on and off the court. And
0:00:18 of course, we play a few games. Need we say more? Check out the latest episode of A Touch More
0:00:28 wherever you get your podcasts and on YouTube. This week on The Gray Area, the president of
0:00:33 Wesleyan College tells me what’s happening on American campuses. The Trump administration is
0:00:38 attacking colleges, universities because they want to take them over, not because they shouldn’t have
0:00:45 had encampments or because not enough conservatives are going into physics. What does the attack on
0:00:51 higher ed mean for America? That’s this week on The Gray Area with me, Sean Elling. New episodes every
0:00:52 Monday, available everywhere.
0:01:02 In 2023, a 54-year-old man named William Woods told police that his identity had been stolen.
0:01:08 But there was a problem. Another man said that he was the real William Woods,
0:01:11 and it was his identity that had been stolen.
0:01:16 There’s no way that two human beings could have the same name, the same date of birth,
0:01:22 the same social security number. So someone clearly was not telling the truth.
0:01:26 Listen to our latest episode on Criminal, wherever you get your podcasts.
0:01:36 Welcome to Raging Moderates. I’m Scott Galloway.
0:01:37 And I’m Jessica Tarlov.
0:01:38 How are you, Jessica?
0:01:40 I’m really good. How are you?
0:01:43 That’s nice. Why are you really good? What’s going on?
0:01:50 Just like everything’s fine, you know? Like had a nice weekend. Did the thing city people do where
0:01:55 they go out to the suburbs and they poke around and they say, oh, would this be a nice life? And then
0:02:04 I get bored in about 20 minutes and retreat back to an urban oasis. And that was kind of it.
0:02:05 Are you considering moving out?
0:02:11 No, we do though. Like, oh, would it be nice to have somewhere to go outside the city? Because
0:02:16 you remember what it was like when the boys were young, though you moved down to Florida. Basically,
0:02:21 you spend all of your time when you live in a city trying to figure out ways to entertain your
0:02:26 children and or get out of the city, which makes you think, why am I paying so much money to be
0:02:30 somewhere that I am actively running away from? So we’re doing that dance.
0:02:34 Yeah. So I’m very good at running other people’s lives. Let me tell you what you’re doing here.
0:02:35 Let’s have it.
0:02:39 So first off, let’s talk about me. So.
0:02:40 I walked right into that one.
0:02:45 There you go. Having two little boys in Manhattan. When they’re babies, they’re fine because they’re
0:02:49 basically like accessories. You hire someone just to keep them alive. I didn’t pay much attention
0:02:54 to them when they were babies. But then when they start getting less awful and recognizing
0:03:01 you and expect, you know, calling you dad, I found having boys in Manhattan, two little kids,
0:03:07 I think they were one and four. Oh, wait. Yeah. One and four. I found it awful. And also the thing
0:03:13 that was hard for us or I found hard was we weren’t making, I mean, we’re making good money. I was just
0:03:18 starting kind of getting some traction as an academic. My partner was working at Goldman and we
0:03:25 were making what felt like a lot of money by most standards and we were broke. And also it was in
0:03:28 the winter. Oh my God. Get them dressed, get them out, get them exercised, get them home, get them
0:03:32 undressed, get them fed. Okay. They’re restless again. Get them dressed, get them out, get them
0:03:37 exercised. And I felt like I always had to have their hand for fear they were going to run into the
0:03:43 street. I found New York with kids and not having the millions of dollars to lubricate it. It just
0:03:48 wasn’t great. Yeah. And the lifestyle arbitrage, I’m a big fan of what’s called the lifestyle
0:03:52 arbitrage. And that is if you have mobility or the ability to mobile, which you may not,
0:03:56 because you have to go into the studio as I think about it with the five, but we’ll talk about Epstein
0:04:01 and they’ll fire you and everything will be mobile again. So anyways, thanks a lot. I’ll handle that
0:04:08 problem. And, uh, we went down to Florida, but I took every dollar I saved, including the 13% swing in
0:04:17 income taxes. We went from $12,000 a month rent for a three bedroom to $4,500. We went from what would
0:04:24 have been $52,000 a year in schooling each for them to 12. And I took all of that money and I was very
0:04:28 disciplined about it and I put it in the market and this is 2010, you know, the story of the markets went
0:04:34 crazy. And the reason why we’re economically secure, a big part of it was this lifestyle arbitrage. So I’m
0:04:39 constantly thinking about how people who are mobile can do a lifestyle arbitrage. And it was moving from
0:04:45 New York to Florida was just an enormous win. It was hard on me from Sunday night to Thursday. I
0:04:51 commuted to New York, which was not easy, but it was an incredibly creative move for the family
0:04:57 economically. So I’m a big fan when you have little kids of finding a way to find a better quality of life
0:05:00 because the reality is you just spend a lot of time at home and you just want to be with your kids and
0:05:05 your family. Anyways, I think you should move. Yeah, it would just be to your point. Unless I
0:05:11 get fired today, I need to go to work. So, you know, the question is we could do something like
0:05:16 that, but then I would be the one missing out on the bulk of their day-to-day lives. But you’re the
0:05:24 woman. And I am full of estrogen and very attached to these little people that I grew and then got out
0:05:31 of me somehow. And so that’s tough to think about. And you’re weighing, you know, what am I giving up
0:05:37 now for what future I’d be handing them, right? To have no student debt, you know, all those kinds of
0:05:45 things. And it’s just really tough. And this phase of life, I’m early 40, is I feel like any time that
0:05:49 you go out with friends or anyone that you meet, everyone is having the same exact conversation,
0:05:54 basically no matter what they’re earning, that they feel like it’s not enough. They don’t know
0:05:58 how to make the right decisions. First off, you’re not in your 40s. You just turned 40, right?
0:06:04 41. I’m here. So in New York, that means you’re in your 30s. If you’re a woman, you got to be in
0:06:09 your 30s. If I had a dating profile, I would be 35 for sure. Yeah, you could pull that off. No problem.
0:06:16 Just a little a little heads up for those of you out in New York. New York is optimized for two people.
0:06:24 It’s optimized for really rich guys in their 40s and 50s and really hot women in their 20s and 30s.
0:06:29 And for everyone else, it’s a soul crushing experience. If you are not in one of those two
0:06:36 demographics, do not move to New York. It is capitalism meets Darwin meets Three’s Company
0:06:42 meets I Dream a Genie. It is so harsh. If you’re a dude without money here, I have a friend who was
0:06:45 thinking of moving to New York. You have no game here if you’re not making millions of dollars as
0:06:50 a dude. The women who come here, and this is a very sexist statement, they’re looking to consume and
0:06:54 have a great time and they want to find a dude who can offer them a great time. And that’s not you
0:06:59 right now because everything in New York to leave your house costs two to $300. To have a good time at
0:07:06 night costs $600 to $1,000 easily. So anyways, as I say, in New York, for men, 60 is the new 30. And
0:07:11 for women, 30 is the new 70. Is that wrong? Is that wrong, Jess?
0:07:16 It’s deeply disturbing. And I think a little bit wrong. I actually, I don’t know. I mean,
0:07:20 I met my husband later in life. I don’t know, later in life. We got together when I was 36.
0:07:26 36. And so, you know, prime, like, my eggs are going bad. What’s the deal here? Right? There
0:07:31 was no time. It was also COVID. So we were just shut in. You’re a TV star, though. You’re a TV star.
0:07:37 My eggs could still go bad, even though I’m on TV. That’s how that works. But I don’t know. I really
0:07:42 liked the dating scene. I thought it was a lot of fun in my 30s, even though I went out with…
0:07:45 Yeah. Fun if you’re Jess Darlow, but I’m not even going to go there. Anyways…
0:07:47 All right. Moving on. What happened with Epstein?
0:07:53 All right. Hold on. It took Epstein to potentially bring down a guy already convicted of sexual abuse.
0:07:59 And this is even the stranger thing that Epstein will be remembered for. He made Rupert Murdoch look
0:08:06 good. Rupert Murdoch. Rupert Murdoch looks like this thoughtful, honest, high-integrity owner of
0:08:11 journalistic institutions. The Wall Street Journal has done some amazing reporting talking about
0:08:16 a series of letters that were sent to Epstein for his 50th birthday, including lewd drawings. And
0:08:22 one of them was reportedly from the president. And the Wall Street Journal has established a reputation
0:08:29 is when they report that Elon Musk is addicted to ketamine, the whole world takes it very seriously,
0:08:35 unlike 98% of media outlets now, including some of the others owned by the same individual.
0:08:40 And the Wall Street Journal has become sort of this arbiter or the nearest thing we have to an
0:08:46 arbiter of truth around some of these sensitive things. And now the president is suing Rupert Murdoch,
0:08:50 Jess, do you think this controversy is finally cracking the MAGA shield?
0:08:55 A little bit. I feel like we don’t want to be boring, right, and do the same thing that we talked
0:09:04 about last week. But it’s still surprising that something seems to have permeated his flawless,
0:09:10 I could shoot anyone in the middle of Fifth Avenue and no one would care facade, right? That’s clearly not
0:09:13 true. There are some limits to it. That doesn’t mean he would lose an election,
0:09:20 right? Or that this isn’t going to blow over. I think ultimately it kind of has to. But we’re now
0:09:27 two weeks running of this being the lead story. And more salacious information keeps coming out.
0:09:34 And you see people in the cabinet and the president almost realizing in real time that they have to do
0:09:46 something to quench the conspiracy theory addled brains of the base. And they have all these buzzwords,
0:09:52 right? Like, Russia collusion, hoax, people that set the base off. Like, if you say Comey or Hillary
0:10:00 Clinton or Brennan, Clapper, et cetera. So they’re just rehashing all of this old, tired news. I feel
0:10:05 like I almost had to check my calendar. Like, what day is it that you have Tulsi Gabbard talking about
0:10:12 2016 election interference? We have a new look at Hillary Clinton’s emails. Did you see that?
0:10:19 Chuck Grassley is out with, you know, we should look at that again. The MLK files are released. So thank
0:10:23 God for that. Look over here. Yeah, because that’s definitely what everybody wanted in all of this.
0:10:30 And you see people that are really struggling with the monster that they created themselves.
0:10:37 It’s just so strange that do you think the MAGA movement cares more about, are they more offended by
0:10:45 the possibility of powerful men raping children or the fact that their conspiracy theory that they’ve
0:10:51 invested so much that it might not be validated or nullified? Do they really care about the crime
0:10:55 or scratching their conspiracy itch? I find this all so weird.
0:11:06 I think some do. I’ve taken to checking out some smaller, very pro-MAGA accounts online. People who,
0:11:13 you know, identify themselves as in solidarity with January Sixers, et cetera. There’s a woman in Texas who
0:11:19 was a Trump delegate, has been obsessed with January Sixers, wanting everyone out, which,
0:11:24 you know, she got her way with the pardons. And she has about 30,000 followers and she’s gone
0:11:31 completely scorched earth. It’s not only about being lied to about the Epstein files or that they were
0:11:38 going to come out. It’s in part that she’s realizing that Donald Trump is exactly who the Democrats said
0:11:42 that he was, right? That he’s just an elitist that doesn’t really care about you and was using you for
0:11:49 your votes. But she keeps harping on this. There are children involved in it. This isn’t your everyday
0:11:54 white collar crime, right? She could deal with a Ponzi scheme. Maybe she could deal with shooting someone in
0:12:02 the middle of Fifth Avenue. But we are treating the abuse of young girls the same as your run-of-the-mill
0:12:07 crime from a fancy businessman. And that’s just unacceptable to her. And she’s certainly not alone in that.
0:12:11 You know, when you look at the replies to it and people that are in those kinds of conversations.
0:12:17 So, yes, I do think that the content of these crimes matters. And you’re totally right about
0:12:24 the Wall Street Journal and the caliber of reporting there. But the real hero, journalistically, of the
0:12:31 Epstein scandal is Julie K. Brown from the Miami Herald. And we don’t talk about local journalists
0:12:36 enough and local journalism and how important it is that it continues to get funded. I mean,
0:12:43 there were times when Julie K. Brown was personally paying to be able to continue her reporting and was
0:12:49 all over the Alex Acosta settlement when that happened. Epstein basically got to, like, you know,
0:12:55 go golfing and go out to dinner or whatever he wanted after he was convicted in Florida. And that’s my
0:13:01 first place that I’m going for any information on this. And you see that there’s such a well of extra
0:13:06 info that we can get out of folks like Julie K. Brown, plus all of this new salacious stuff that’s
0:13:09 coming out in, you know, the New York Times or the Journal.
0:13:14 Well, you know, it’s going to help local journalism is cutting a billion and a half dollars from the
0:13:19 Corporation for Public Broadcasting. I mean, that’s what I was thinking, actually. This is a good
0:13:26 route to that. Yeah. And what’s so interesting is that the Republicans are much more strategic than
0:13:32 the Democrats. The biggest tax cut in history, I believe, is not even a tax cut. It’s neutering the
0:13:39 IRS. They want to fire a layoff about half of the IRS or professionals of the IRS. And who does that
0:13:44 hurt the most? Does that mean 50 percent less audits? No, it means 90 percent less audits among the top
0:13:49 1 percent. Because people in lower and middle income households can get audited because it takes a couple
0:13:54 hours to audit them and figure out if they owe penalties or whatever. But supposedly there’s a tax gap
0:14:01 of 600 billion dollars. What does that mean? There’s 600 billion dollars that is owed and has not been
0:14:06 collected because the tax cuts gone from 400 pages to 4,000. And it’s created such complexity that to
0:14:14 audit somebody with pass-throughs and LLCs and a revocable trust, it takes a team of highly skilled
0:14:19 professionals. And so they’re smart. They basically just said, let’s neuter the IRS. And that’s effectively
0:14:25 a massive tax cut for the top 1 percent. But what’s back to Epstein, what’s interesting here is it took
0:14:30 a conspiracy to create the first kind of bipartisan action of the Trump administration. Representatives
0:14:35 Massey from Kentucky and Kana from California are currently leading the push in Congress to take
0:14:42 an up or down vote on releasing the Epstein files. It represents sort of this rare convergence of populist
0:14:48 right and left. Just as an example, AOC and Lauren Boebert are co-sponsors on the same bill. And on
0:14:56 Friday, Trump unveiled a lawsuit against your parent firm, Dow Jones and Coa News Corp. The suit also names
0:15:02 Rupert Murdoch and Chief Executive Robert Thompson and two journal reporters. The lawsuit alleges that
0:15:07 the journal’s publication of a 2003 letter from Trump to Epstein containing a hand-drawn picture of naked
0:15:14 woman is not authentic. Trump is seeking $10 billion in monetary damages. Polling from Reuters,
0:15:19 Ipsos and Quinnipiac University shows that Americans overall disapprove almost completely of how the Trump
0:15:23 administration has handled the Epstein situation has handled the Epstein situation. The polls came in
0:15:30 at 54 to 17 percent and 63 to 17 percent respectively. Essentially, just 17 percent Americans believe this
0:15:37 was handled correctly. You never get 83 percent to agree with anything. So this story is not dying,
0:15:42 regardless of changing, you know, changing the name back from the Washington commanders to the Redskins or
0:15:47 whatever attempts at weapons of mass distraction here, which I find kind of hilarious what they keep coming up
0:15:53 with. This isn’t going away. Any predictions, Jess, on what you think is going to happen here? Do you think
0:15:58 these files? By the way, has anyone heard from Tulsi Gabbard? Boy, they have her locks away somewhere.
0:16:04 Well, no, there’s the 2016 Russia interference game that she’s playing now, even though she’s literally
0:16:11 on tape sitting down with Joe Rogan talking about Russian interference. They’re playing this game. And
0:16:19 this goes back to what we were saying last week. The modern GOP feeds off of the fact that their most
0:16:26 devout base will not do any legitimate research on anything. So Tulsi Gabbard is up there basically
0:16:36 trying to do a bait and switch and saying that Obama weaponized intel about 2016, that they were lying
0:16:42 about Russian interference when Obama as well on tape saying the Russians did not get into the voting
0:16:47 machines. They didn’t change votes. But we know that there was an influence campaign. And that’s something that has
0:16:54 been ratified by a bipartisan Senate committee as well. Marco Rubio, who has every job in the book, will probably be
0:17:02 asked about that as he was lead on it from the Republican side. It also made me think how strange it feels for there to have
0:17:08 been bipartisan agreement about anything. 2016, you realize how much things have changed, right? That if something like this
0:17:15 happened again, like Russian interference, that wasn’t necessarily the collusion that the Democrats were saying it was, but
0:17:21 certainly interference in the election to try to help Trump win. Like, could you get Republicans to sign on to the fact that that that
0:17:28 had happened? I don’t really know. So that’s what Tulsi is busy with. I’m very curious about what happens with the
0:17:39 Galene Maxwell testimony side of this. So Trump’s DOJ lawyer Todd Blanche has reached out to Maxwell’s team saying, you know, we want to
0:17:48 know what she knows. Also, like, you didn’t think of that before. You have a sex trafficker who worked hand in glove with a woman who
0:17:53 was not only his business partner and his love partner, but is sitting in a prison cell for sex trafficking
0:17:59 herself. And we didn’t think like, oh, we should have a chat with her. And the House Oversight Committee just this
0:18:06 morning approved a subpoena for her. So that may lead to something. But we’ve all got to get then on a Galene
0:18:12 Maxwell pardon watch. I don’t imagine that we’re going to be getting those Epstein files that have been sitting on Pam
0:18:19 Bondi’s desk for several months at this point. You know, they are always very precise in how evasive they’re
0:18:25 being saying, you know, we will release any pertinent grand jury testimony. And a lot of grand jury testimony will
0:18:31 have to stay secret. But they’re going to pick and choose things and they’re going to do rejections. And, you know, some of the
0:18:36 stuff should be redacted to protect victims and also people who didn’t really have anything to do with it. Like there are a lot of
0:18:41 people who hung out with Jeffrey Epstein who certainly weren’t doing it with 13 year old girls and they don’t
0:18:49 deserve to have their reputations mired as a result of that. So I’m a little bit hopeful slash interested in what
0:18:54 the Galene Maxwell angle of this reaps. But generally speaking, I think it’ll be business as usual. What about
0:18:55 you?
0:19:01 Well, the most puncturing questions around trying to get to these conspiracy theories. I remember when I was living
0:19:06 in Delray Beach, there was a Stop the Steal parade and all these people in their trucker hats and their
0:19:14 RAV4s. And I mean, I could not get over. Thousands of people turned up just convinced that 2020 that the
0:19:18 election had been stolen. And a decent question is, well, if it’s so obvious it was stolen, how come there
0:19:23 hasn’t been a single prosecution, folks? No lawyer, no prosecutor can find enough evidence.
0:19:27 60 cases went to court. 60 losses.
0:19:34 That’s right. And meanwhile, Trump is saying that the whole Epstein thing is a big hoax. Well, then why is Jelaine
0:19:40 Maxwell in prison? There’s some issues here, but let’s cut to let’s cut to the chase here. Jessica Tarlow, do you
0:19:41 think Jeffrey Epstein killed himself?
0:19:43 Yeah.
0:19:44 Yeah, you think he killed himself?
0:19:53 I do. I don’t know about whether he, you know, whether it was made possible that he could do it. But yeah, I believe
0:20:00 that he killed himself and I’ve spoken to people in law enforcement on both sides of the aisle who say
0:20:06 that. I do think that’s what happens. But you’re seeing the effects of what happens when you’ve put
0:20:15 people on a steady drip of conspiracies for so long. Like, the Venn diagram of the modern GOP and people
0:20:23 whose brains have been destroyed by hoaxes and conspiracies is not a near perfect circle, but
0:20:28 it’s it’s pretty close. It starts with what you’re talking about with the the big lie from 2020.
0:20:32 Nearly six in 10 Republicans believe that Biden wasn’t a legitimate president and Trump was supposed
0:20:39 to be president. If Trump hadn’t won the QAnon vote, he wouldn’t have won. He won that by 61 points.
0:20:45 You know, Pizzagate again. Right. You know, Hillary Clinton’s running a pedo ring out of
0:20:53 Comet Pizza. You know, all of these things. You know, I understand why someone who had only been
0:21:00 tuning into media and influencers that were peddling this stuff and it had become such a regular part of
0:21:06 their jargon. That’s what always surprises me. And I’m sure that there are things that come easily to
0:21:12 me because of my politics. Right. That I’m online all the time, maybe a little blue pilled on occasion.
0:21:17 And so I know the intricacies of things in a way that a regular person shouldn’t. But when we’re
0:21:23 talking about even the Hunter Biden scandal or whatever you want to call it, sometimes my colleagues,
0:21:27 I’ll say to Jesse Waters, like, I don’t even know what you’re talking about. They’re talking about,
0:21:33 you know, and then the Mexican billionaire and then the huge diamond and then the Bulgarian this and
0:21:39 whatever it’s it’s so much to have to keep in your head. I understand that the rest of the world kind
0:21:45 of falls by the wayside and you become like a scene out of Homeland where you have a board and you have
0:21:51 strings, you know, connecting different people and you’re just completely consumed by this web.
0:21:54 Crazy. Absolutely crazy. All right. Jess.
0:21:59 Oh, wait. Yeah. I’ve talked way too much on this, but I want to say something and I want to hear if you’re
0:22:04 thinking about it a tale. Sure. So all of this matters. And I’ve moved past the idea of like,
0:22:09 you should only talk about Medicaid because I think that if the national consciousness is in a specific
0:22:15 place and it is important and also politically good for your side that you should talk about it.
0:22:21 But Donald Trump’s numbers are just sinking and sinking and sinking. And it keeps coming out like
0:22:28 more of this. He only has a positive rating on border security, like 55 percent think that we’re in a
0:22:33 recession. Sixty four percent of the economy is getting worse. Seventy percent say he’s not focused
0:22:41 on lowering prices. Like there is such a tremendous hole in the GOP narrative right now. And the big,
0:22:45 beautiful bill obviously strikes right through that with the twenty nine percent approval rating.
0:22:51 you see the panic about the Epstein files themselves, but also in terms of what this means
0:22:58 electorally for them. So. Yeah, it hasn’t hasn’t been a good month. OK. OK. You got that in there.
0:23:03 Well, I thought you would be more interested, but, you know, sometimes you miss your shot. You shoot
0:23:08 your shot and you miss. It happens. No, that’s why you’re here. Let’s take a quick break. Stay with us.
0:23:22 Fox Creative. This is advertiser content brought to you by CVS Caremark. The following are real CVS
0:23:29 Caremark customer stories read to you by voice actors. All of my productivity comes from being healthy.
0:23:35 I needed a new glucose monitor right away. There’s eight of us, six kids in our family. We have well
0:23:42 over 50 prescriptions. Behind every single prescription is a story. These might be stories
0:23:49 of struggle, of not being able to manage, access or afford the medications you need. CVS Caremark is
0:23:55 here to rewrite these stories, to transform them into ones of support, care and dignity. Like Rodney’s
0:24:01 story. He received personal support from a CVS Caremark customer care rep when his glucose monitor
0:24:06 needed to be replaced right away. When I knew that the representative was listening, I felt at ease,
0:24:11 like a burden was being lifted. It’s an exhilarating feeling knowing they really care.
0:24:16 Or like Trisha, who was struggling to manage over 50 medications for her family of eight.
0:24:20 CVS Caremark helped to make those medications affordable and accessible.
0:24:26 With a big family like mine and with all the conditions, it’s been extremely affordable for us.
0:24:32 I can’t say enough good things about CVS Caremark. CVS Caremark makes getting people the medication
0:24:38 they need part of every story. Because every member deserves their healthier ever after.
0:24:43 I would never want to switch anywhere else. Interested in more affordable care for your members?
0:24:49 Go to cmk.co slash stories to learn how we help you provide the support and access your members need.
0:24:59 The number one movie in the country is Superman. It might be the number one movie in the world.
0:25:01 Are you being serious right now?
0:25:03 Yeah.
0:25:05 But not everybody is loving it.
0:25:08 Recently, you’ve come under a lot of fire for what some might…
0:25:09 I don’t know. It’s a lot of fire.
0:25:09 It’s a lot.
0:25:14 Kellyanne Conway is mad about it.
0:25:22 The guy who stars as Superman had the audacity to say, instead of fighting for truth, liberty, and great values in America,
0:25:23 he refused to say the last part.
0:25:25 Ben Shapiro is mad about it.
0:25:30 The reality that Hollywood is so far to the left that they cannot take a core piece of Americana
0:25:32 and just say it’s about America?
0:25:35 Even TV Superman Dean Cain is concerned.
0:25:38 Look, don’t try and make it all woke and crazy.
0:25:43 What, if anything, is woke and crazy about the new Superman movie on Today Explained?
0:25:46 We are finally doing Dean Cain Explained.
0:25:47 Come over and join us.
0:25:54 It’s Today Explained.
0:25:56 What’s going on, my boys and in some cases, gals?
0:25:59 Recently, one of you emailed us with this request.
0:26:00 You’ve got mail.
0:26:00 Hello.
0:26:05 I’m an avid listener, and I strongly believe you should cover the story of Curtis Yarvin.
0:26:11 It’s important to explore who he is and how he has influenced the MAGA and the Tech Bros movement.
0:26:21 Curtis Yarvin is a very online far-right philosopher whose ideas include the fascinating, the esoteric, the absurd, the racist, and so on.
0:26:25 Six months into the Trump administration, there’s evidence that he is influencing the MAGA movement,
0:26:27 and even President Trump.
0:26:29 J.D. Vance knows him and likes him.
0:26:32 Elon consulted him about this third-party idea.
0:26:35 Yarvin can take some credit for inspiring Doge.
0:26:45 And, as you’ll hear ahead, one of Trump’s most controversial, doesn’t even begin to cover it, ideas may have come from Yarvin or someone who reads his substack.
0:26:48 I can almost guarantee you that Trump does not.
0:26:49 Everything’s computer.
0:26:51 Today Explained, weekday afternoons.
0:26:55 Welcome back.
0:26:59 The redistricting fight is heating up, and this time Democrats are ready to go on offense.
0:27:08 As Texas Republicans prepare to redraw their map to lock in a House majority, Hakeem Jeffries is leading a push to do the same in blue states like New York and California.
0:27:12 It’s a bold, expensive, and legally risky move, and a sharp turn from the parties.
0:27:13 Oh, God, I’m bored reading this.
0:27:15 David, where’s our producer?
0:27:23 David, on Sunday nights, I don’t need you, like, getting your kombucha sommelier and listening to the Daily.
0:27:26 I need you taking an edible before you write this script and watching South Park.
0:27:30 This shit—we’re not going to talk about redistricting in fucking Texas.
0:27:30 No.
0:27:32 Jess, I’m calling an audible.
0:27:33 Let’s talk about Colbert.
0:27:34 What do you think happened with the Colbert show?
0:27:36 Well, that’s just what we’re supposed to talk about after this.
0:27:37 Oh, is it?
0:27:38 We can switch the order.
0:27:38 Yeah.
0:27:39 David did his job.
0:27:44 I mean, it’s an important thing, right, if they’re going to get four or five new seats in Texas.
0:27:46 And it could be about spineless Democrats.
0:27:47 You love that.
0:27:53 Well, what do you think—do you think that there’s a risk that Democrats redistricting push backfires?
0:27:54 No.
0:27:54 No?
0:27:55 Literally no.
0:27:57 Like, I don’t even want to play that game.
0:27:57 Okay.
0:28:02 Of, like, oh, what would happen, you know, to decorum and the norms?
0:28:06 Like, we do that all the time, and then we get our butts kicked.
0:28:12 Like, you have to fight in the same mud with the Republicans on this.
0:28:16 I think Governor Newsom is absolutely correct, saying, I will do whatever it takes.
0:28:22 If Abbott can add four or five seats, then I’m going to try to add four or five seats here in California.
0:28:26 I saw originally that the New York Dems didn’t have a big appetite for this.
0:28:31 Well, find the hunger and figure out a way to do this.
0:28:37 Apparently now New York, New Jersey, Minnesota, and Washington State, I think, are also considering what they can do.
0:28:40 I had never heard the term dummy-mander, though.
0:28:41 Have you heard it?
0:28:42 I haven’t heard that.
0:28:42 Yeah.
0:28:50 I just—you know, you’ve got to wonder what kind of precedent this sets for future midterms, especially if both parties abandon any pretense of fair—
0:28:51 That’s terrible.
0:28:52 I mean, it really is gone.
0:28:53 Yeah.
0:28:56 There is no more decorum, and the gerrymandering is just gone.
0:28:58 Totally crazy.
0:29:01 It is—I mean, it’s the boring stuff that’s important, though, right?
0:29:06 Because essentially what’s happening with gerrymandering is that the general election no longer matters.
0:29:16 And we have crazies on the left and right winning the election because they all agree to redraw their districts to keep themselves in office, which creates these hard red and hard blue.
0:29:21 And the primary is the general now, and it’s become a race to who’s the craziest.
0:29:25 And we end up with the squad and Ted Cruz.
0:29:28 Do you think this is going to—do you think this is going to go anywhere?
0:29:30 I think so.
0:29:38 The special session in Texas is ongoing, and like I said, the Democrats have vowed to respond in kind.
0:29:46 You know, this would be—usually you have every decade, right, that you look at the census and then you redraw the line.
0:29:51 So if we’re now doing this every five years, what’s to stop it from happening every two years?
0:29:57 And what courts will we have that’ll uphold fair districtling laws?
0:30:04 That remains a question, especially since the Supreme Court has not really been a friend on this topic, to say the least.
0:30:08 But I was at the Smurfs movie last night, and—
0:30:09 That’s a flex.
0:30:10 Thank you.
0:30:10 It is.
0:30:12 Move to Florida and take them to the beach.
0:30:15 Well, we still—I think in Florida they go to the movies too.
0:30:20 But there’s a reason that I bring up the Smurfs movie, which I did not love as much as I expected to.
0:30:21 My toddler did.
0:30:27 But there was this line that I think Papa Smurfs said, don’t mistake kindness for weakness.
0:30:32 And I feel like the Democrats usually mess that up.
0:30:39 And you can mistake kindness for weakness because we care about the norms and we care about doing the right thing.
0:30:41 And I don’t think that we should lose track of that.
0:30:54 But when it translates into weakness and when Mitch McConnell has eaten your lunch for several decades and maybe Senator Thune will be able to do the same thing, you have to learn to change your behaviors.
0:31:04 Or at least until we have enough political control that we can effectuate our own agendas and have the Republicans on the back foot.
0:31:11 Because they have been able to achieve big success, like with this reconciliation bill, with razor-thin margins.
0:31:20 Which, to your point from a few weeks ago, you know, we helped them with having such old representatives that passed away in office.
0:31:24 But I’m smurfed out on the don’t mistake my kindness for weakness.
0:31:26 And I want to see backbone.
0:31:31 And, you know, the approval rating, the Democratic approval rating, down to 19%.
0:31:35 And my colleagues are rubbing it in my face like everybody hates you.
0:31:36 That’s not what the data says, actually.
0:31:39 They hate the fact that Democrats aren’t fighting.
0:31:41 It’s not about the policies.
0:31:43 It’s not about the agenda.
0:31:46 It’s about how you’re actually doing the business of politics.
0:31:51 Yeah, this could be – Newsom’s floated the idea.
0:31:54 California has 52 House seats, 43 held by Democrats.
0:31:58 And Newsom has said his efforts could add another two or three seats.
0:32:01 I really do think people underestimate Governor Newsom.
0:32:07 If I had to bet on anyone right now to be president and people get their hair on fire and California cities do have an issue.
0:32:10 But do not underestimate Governor Newsom.
0:32:12 I think he is very good on his feet.
0:32:15 I think he has actually been aggressive.
0:32:21 I think he’s pissed off people on the left by pivoting a little bit to the middle to become more centrist, which I think is politically very astute.
0:32:25 And obviously has a lot of, you know, attributes.
0:32:27 That he’s very good looking?
0:32:28 Is that what you’re trying to find?
0:32:29 Basically.
0:32:32 By the way, I interviewed Governor Whitmer on Prop G.
0:32:33 Oh, yeah.
0:32:34 How was it?
0:32:35 She’s great.
0:32:40 So what I do is I do these interviews and then I do a no mercy, no malice take on them after.
0:32:44 And we’re going to interview, between the two of us, we’re going to interview every presidential candidate.
0:32:45 I hope so.
0:32:53 And so my take on her is that it’s heartening that such impressive, good people go into public service.
0:32:56 She just reeks of integrity and competence.
0:33:02 She’s just clearly, it would be, it’s very difficult to imagine that she isn’t a good person.
0:33:04 And it’s clear her heart is in the right place.
0:33:06 You know, Michigan balances the budget.
0:33:08 She has really good things to run on.
0:33:12 The quality of life scoring in Michigan is really high relative to affordability.
0:33:15 The economy is not robust, but it’s growing.
0:33:18 They’ve done a good job trying to support manufacturing.
0:33:20 The University of Michigan, they have a great state school system.
0:33:22 So she has a lot to run on.
0:33:23 She’s likable.
0:33:24 She reeks of integrity.
0:33:29 My criticism is that she’s sort of infected with the same kind of rhetorical flourish.
0:33:35 And I had a tough time sometimes getting her to articulate specific policies.
0:33:39 I think we’ve moved from, in my opinion, my advice to Democrats is, okay, you can try to
0:33:41 be Obama, but you’re not.
0:33:42 So stop trying.
0:33:45 And it’s time for specific programs.
0:33:51 She did say that she would consider means testing, Social Security, which I appreciate
0:33:52 because that’s been a third rail for some people.
0:33:57 But it was a lot of like, you know, good, hardworking Americans, terms like affordability,
0:34:01 rather than, okay, let’s talk about specific programs.
0:34:06 I think there’s still going to be a candidate that gets a huge amount of press by coming
0:34:11 out with a specific, bold, aggressive proposals and programs.
0:34:13 I think we’ve moved to that part of the program.
0:34:13 Yeah.
0:34:16 But I did think she was very good.
0:34:19 And I’m curious, you know, if the governor continues to get traction.
0:34:21 I imagine that she will.
0:34:23 She has a successful track record.
0:34:28 I do think that there is going to be a lot of anxiety in the Democratic electorate about
0:34:29 having another female nominee.
0:34:30 Not going to happen.
0:34:34 No one under 5’10 is going to be the Democratic nominee.
0:34:36 It’s going to be a straight white guy over six feet.
0:34:40 And I’m not saying this is the way the world should be, but the way the world is, the Democrats
0:34:40 are going to…
0:34:41 So no Josh Shapiro either?
0:34:42 I think he’s under 5’10.
0:34:45 No Josh Shapiro, no Rahm Emanuel, no woman.
0:34:49 Democrats are so freaked out, they’re going to take no chances, and they’re going to recognize
0:34:50 that America is highly luxest.
0:34:51 I hope that changes.
0:34:55 But I think it’s going to be a straight white guy over six feet.
0:34:57 I just think they’re going to say, we just can’t take any risks around anything.
0:35:00 Are you Andy Beshear-pilled right now?
0:35:04 I think everybody’s desperate to find someone they know, but they don’t know.
0:35:05 So they’ve heard his name, but they don’t really know him.
0:35:07 Everyone’s looking for the Obama, the Clinton.
0:35:09 Like, where did this guy come from?
0:35:10 Right.
0:35:12 We’re all hoping that someone emerges at the moment.
0:35:17 And the Democratic primary, when it’s let it run its course, does mature, you know,
0:35:21 incredibly strong, battle-tested people, but we don’t need to re-litigate that.
0:35:24 Okay, Jess, let’s take a quick break.
0:35:25 Stay with us.
0:35:29 Hi, everyone.
0:35:30 This is Kara Swisher.
0:35:34 This week on my podcast On With Kara Swisher, I caught up with two professional ass-kickers,
0:35:39 writer E. Jean Carroll and attorney Robbie Kaplan, the duo that took Donald Trump to court
0:35:43 for sexual assault and defamation, and won, twice.
0:35:48 Here’s how Carol describes what happened in that Bergdorf-Goodman dressing room in 1996.
0:35:50 He was being very funny.
0:35:52 It was light.
0:35:54 It was funny.
0:35:56 It was joshing.
0:35:57 It was witty.
0:36:02 And then it just turned dark.
0:36:06 This is exactly what Donald Trump did to the country.
0:36:08 We all laughed at him.
0:36:10 We all said he was a clown.
0:36:16 We all said he was absolutely an empty suit and laughed our asses off.
0:36:19 And then, boom, it turned dark.
0:36:20 It was a great conversation.
0:36:21 You’re going to want to hear it.
0:36:25 Just search for On With Kara Swisher wherever you get your podcasts.
0:36:36 Hey, this is Peter Kafka, the host of Channels, a show about media and tech and what happens
0:36:36 when they collide.
0:36:42 And this may be hard to remember, but not very long ago, magazines were a really big deal.
0:36:47 And the most important magazines were owned by Condé Nast, the glitzy publishing empire
0:36:51 that’s the focus of a new book by New York Times reporter Michael Grinbaum.
0:36:56 The way Condé Nast elevated its editors, the way they paid for their mortgages so they could
0:37:03 live in beautiful homes, there was a logic to it, which was that Condé Nast itself became
0:37:05 seen as this kind of enchanted land.
0:37:11 You can hear the rest of our chat on channels wherever you listen to your favorite media podcast.
0:37:18 All right, before we go, first off, I should apologize to our producer.
0:37:21 Here it is, this story that I wanted, Stephen Colbert.
0:37:25 He’s out, Jess, or will be come 2026.
0:37:30 CBS says the Late Show is ending for financial reasons, but the timing is raising eyebrows.
0:37:34 Just days earlier, Colbert mocked his parent company’s $16 million settlement with Trump,
0:37:37 a deal that was meant to grease the wheels for a big merger.
0:37:41 Now, Trump’s cheering the cancellation, and press freedom advocates are sounding the alarm.
0:37:44 What do you think happened here, Jess? What’s your take?
0:37:51 I don’t want to say that it’s boring, but my take is I really do believe it was a financial
0:37:56 decision. You know, we all got outraged at first and said, you know, this is because two
0:38:01 nights before he had gone after the parent company for capitulating to Trump on the $16 million
0:38:04 settlement over 60 minutes, which I do think was a complete capitulation.
0:38:11 But the show costs like $100 million a year and was losing $40 million.
0:38:18 I think advertising had been cut in half, and he’s earning about $15 million a year, which
0:38:24 is a lot. I understand, you know, what it takes to put on a cable news show is dramatically different
0:38:30 than a late night program. But I can’t believe how much it costs to produce that thing.
0:38:32 Weren’t you shocked by $100 million?
0:38:40 So, you know, this is the takeaway of the lesson. And I always try to be pedantic and pretend that I
0:38:46 can articulate a lesson to younger people. I’m very guilty of I think, OK, I can assess the
0:38:49 situation quicker than your average bear and that I know what’s going on in a situation.
0:38:53 It’s stunning Kruger. It’s arrogance. And I’m guilty of it. And with this situation, I thought,
0:38:58 OK, here we go. This is another example of our slow descent into fascism where the president puts
0:39:04 pressure on the FTC or the DOJ not to approve the merger unless they agree, wink, wink, to silence one
0:39:09 of their critics. Stephen Colbert, the show gets canceled. And then I actually did the work. And I’ve
0:39:16 come 180 exactly to where you are. I think this was a financial decision. So late night TV, this isn’t
0:39:21 the end of the Colbert show. This is the end of late night television. Late night television in 2018
0:39:26 was garnering $400 million in advertising. It’s now below 200. Colbert’s show has been cut in half.
0:39:32 In addition, you brought up the most amazing stat. His show’s gone from $120 million to $60 million in
0:39:40 revenue, cost $100 million. The stat that blew my mind, 200 people working on Colbert. So let’s talk
0:39:46 about the numbers. It’s gone from $4 million viewership to $2.4 million. And what’s worse, those numbers are
0:39:51 always somewhat illusory because the key is who’s in the core demographic. The core demo is 18 to
0:39:56 49. That’s who advertisers care about because 18 to 49 is in your mating years. You make stupid
0:40:01 decisions. You buy expensive coffee, watches, clothes, high margin products. Old people are
0:40:05 smart. And so advertisers hate them because they spend nothing but money on pharmaceuticals and
0:40:10 their grandkids. They’re smart. They’re not trying to find mates. So they’re not irrational,
0:40:15 which translates to margin. So advertisers hate them. Only 10%, actually 9% of his viewership,
0:40:21 around 200,000 people were in the core demo. In addition, the show had been sliced and diced.
0:40:24 It’s no longer a monoculture where we tune in for late night and you see the best two minutes of
0:40:31 Colbert on TikTok or on YouTube for which they get pennies on the dollar. So 200 people, let’s do the
0:40:37 math. And I never miss an opportunity to pat ourselves on the back. If you look at the Colbert
0:40:44 show, 60 million in revenues, 200 people, that’s $300,000 per employee, right? In addition,
0:40:50 they have all sorts of overhead costs at theater is expensive. The studios, the makeup, the wardrobe,
0:40:57 the unions, that shit is expensive. Losing 40 million a year. Let’s talk about our universe,
0:41:02 the property universe. And that includes property markets, conversations, office hours, raging
0:41:09 moderates. It’ll do between 15 and $20 million next year. Total of generously 15 people.
0:41:14 We’re doing a million dollars in revenue per employee here. And we’re going 20% a year.
0:41:21 They’re doing $300,000 per employee and it’s declining. And this is, I think, what happened.
0:41:26 And this happens a lot. They have the terms of the acquisition drawn up, but they have to meet
0:41:31 certain terms to close. Basically, Paramount has said, we will deliver to you a company on closing
0:41:37 that’s doing X top line and X in EBITDA. And one of the ways they’re going to get to that EBITDA
0:41:44 guarantee and ensure they close is they’re going to cancel a number of shows or expenditures that
0:41:50 increase the EBITDA. And this is a $40 million increase in EBITDA when they cancel this thing.
0:41:57 And also, when you acquire a company, part of the conditions are closing or that you have to do all
0:42:02 the dirty work before you close. And they look at this thing and it’s weeping or it’s hemorrhaging
0:42:07 $40 million. I mean, it’s losing a million bucks a week, practically. And what Skydance and Ellison
0:42:13 have said to Paramount is, I don’t want my first all hands to be me announcing that I’m canceling the
0:42:20 Colbert show. So you have to do this. You have to do the dirty work and clean this thing up and deliver
0:42:26 to us a company that is profitable and delivers on the numbers that you have said you have presented
0:42:33 to us during diligence. So this is, in my view, I don’t doubt that politics may have tipped it over,
0:42:38 may have made it happen sooner, or that part of the reason of the decline in their advertising,
0:42:43 which has been steeper than Fallon or Jimmy Kimmel, is because he’s increasingly political.
0:42:47 And there are a lot of advertisers who decide they are not going to advertise on a show
0:42:53 that is political. Our CPMs are lower than the other podcasts in the Profit universe because there
0:42:58 is a smaller universe of advertisers. There’s a lot of big advertisers that just say, we don’t advertise
0:43:04 on politics. And when there’s an absence or a smaller number of potential advertisers, your CPMs go down
0:43:10 because there’s fewer people competing for your ad revenue or your ad time. So this was what I think
0:43:16 is being reported. I think this was a financial decision and Skydance saying, you got to handle this
0:43:21 before we close. David Elson doesn’t want to show up and go, hi, my first act is to cancel the Colbert
0:43:27 show. They’re like, get your house in order, deliver to us a clean company. Now, I apologize for ranting,
0:43:32 but I’ve thought a lot about this. This is what’s going to happen moving forward. Stephen Colbert,
0:43:36 and this is kind of what’s happening in the ecosystem. Stephen Colbert makes between 10 and 20 million
0:43:40 a year. In two to three years, he’s still going to be making 10 to 20 million dollars because you know
0:43:41 what he’s going to do, Jess?
0:43:52 100%. 100%. He’s going to take the best dozen or two dozen people from the Colbert show and he’ll
0:43:58 wink, wink to his producer, say, and make sure they’re not union. And for a fraction of the cost
0:44:04 of the means of production, he’ll put out a podcast. Instead of it being a $60 million business, it’ll be
0:44:09 right out of the gates of $20 million business because that guy is remarkably talented and he
0:44:15 has a huge audience. Just add water. All you need is two turntables and a microphone and a producer
0:44:21 like David and a few other people, sound engineers, some people recruiting guests. Maybe he needs a dozen
0:44:27 people and he’ll have no trouble finding 12 amazing people right out of the gates. He’ll have a top 50
0:44:34 podcast, maybe a top 20 podcast, and he’ll make the same amount of money. And those 12 people will be
0:44:37 producing a million and a half or two million dollars. The people who lose here are not Stephen
0:44:43 Colbert. The people who lose here are the 180 people who lost their jobs a few years ago when
0:44:47 the world started moving away from ad-supported television and the means of production no longer
0:44:52 justified the melting ice cube that is their revenues. And he’ll attract a younger audience.
0:44:59 This is what happened with Megyn Kelly, with Tucker Carlson. Conan O’Brien lost his late night TV
0:45:05 show. And by the way, I bet he’s making as much money as he was with 10 to 15 people, not 100 to 200.
0:45:13 This is a shift in the media ecosystem where basically these are becoming TV shows. You watch within
0:45:18 24 months, half of our listens will be on a TV because people will be streaming it off of YouTube.
0:45:25 In sum, what we’re going through is an arbitrage where we’re going from one TV show to another TV show,
0:45:31 but the means of production where it’s a starts as an audio production called a podcast that then
0:45:36 moves to kind of lower production quality, but acceptable minimum viable product production
0:45:41 quality that people then watch on. We’re getting a hundred thousand people watching our YouTube
0:45:46 videos. I bet 40 to 60 percent in the core demographic. We’re getting kind of half the core
0:45:52 demo right now of probably the Colbert show at a fraction of the cost. So this is essentially
0:45:58 an arbitrage around the means of production and essentially podcasts are the new TV show just
0:46:04 reinvented with a much lower cost of production. What does that mean? The talent maintains their
0:46:09 salary. The people behind right behind the camera, like holding it, hold onto their jobs, the top
0:46:15 three or five percent. The 95 percent that were involved in producing a typical TV show are out of
0:46:18 business and shit out of luck. That’s going to be ugly. We’re going to hear a lot of tick tocks
0:46:23 people who are the associate producer on Jimmy Kimmel tonight, like really upset that they can’t
0:46:28 find word. The talent maintains the same amount of money. And you know who also loses is the
0:46:33 shareholders. There’s been very few shareholders of podcast companies that have been able to capture
0:46:40 revenue. Comcast and, you know, Paramount have been able to capture a lot of the value in terms of
0:46:44 EBITDA. All of the margin here is being starched out by the talent because the means of production
0:46:49 are super easy to spin up with a small amount of money. Anyways, that’s my TED talk.
0:46:56 It’s a good one. You should package that up neatly and go and do it and can take this stat with you.
0:47:03 YouTube reports that there are 400 million hours of podcasts watched per month. So people are consuming
0:47:08 us this way. I just the other day was saying to Brian, we were walking around our neighborhood and
0:47:13 someone stopped me, say, oh, my God, I love you so much. Usually you expect that it’s a Fox thing.
0:47:16 Your husband was saying that to you? It must be very early in the marriage.
0:47:17 Yeah, we’re only four years in.
0:47:19 Oh, no, it was a stranger.
0:47:19 A stranger.
0:47:20 It was a stranger.
0:47:23 A strange man that loves raging moderates.
0:47:27 And he clearly watches it, though.
0:47:28 Yeah.
0:47:32 And I’m increasingly running into people that are consuming it that way. I mean,
0:47:34 I’m sure social clips are flying around.
0:47:37 I think we should have a split screen that’s 90 you, 10 me.
0:47:39 No, people love you.
0:47:41 I know, I know. People love my voice. They hear my voice.
0:47:42 I’m telling you.
0:47:43 That’s why you’re a White Lotus star.
0:47:44 Yeah, voice only.
0:47:50 I have a voice for the whole other podcast about how you can survive with vocal fry.
0:47:52 No, thanks for podcasting.
0:47:58 So I tuned in for Jon Stewart last night live to the point about, you know, is there any
0:48:02 appointment TV anymore? And it felt like I was desperate to see what he was going to say
0:48:08 about it. And he said a lot of things that I agreed with. And one of them that stuck out in
0:48:16 particular was that he mentioned that this $8 billion valuation is rooted in the fact that 60
0:48:24 minutes is as fantastic and important and groundbreaking as it is. And late night, that
0:48:28 the late night show matters. And that Stephen Colbert, who he has the highest ratings between
0:48:35 him, Fallon and Kimmel. And there’s a whole other discussion. Greg Gottfeld on Fox was beating
0:48:39 them when he was in that hour. Now he’s at the 10 o’clock hour, still beating them. And
0:48:46 in many less households, you know, 61 million households versus 300 million households. But
0:48:50 I thought that that was a really important point that Stewart was making and say, people are not
0:48:56 interested in buying you without 60 minutes being what it is. And you’re chipping away at
0:49:01 that by doing things like capitulating to Trump. And that is where the creeping authoritarianism
0:49:10 argument has a place in it. There’s also something that I think about a lot, which is like the variety
0:49:18 factor. People want to hear something different. And if you are watching TV at 1130 and you’re either
0:49:25 watching Fallon, Kimmel or Colbert, you’re basically getting the same thing. And that that has contributed
0:49:31 to the downfall of late night. I find all of them to be individually funny. You can throw Seth Meyers
0:49:38 in there as well, that it’s a similar line. You know, nobody likes Trump. Everyone makes similar
0:49:46 jokes. I feel like Fallon tries to be the most apolitical of them, but it creeps into it. And I
0:49:51 think that that’s a really bad thing. And it’s not representative of where the country is either.
0:49:55 You know, a bunch of people who voted the same way as me for their whole lives showed up and
0:50:03 voted for Donald Trump in 2024. And also they’re probably sick of seeing the same joke retooled
0:50:09 in a different way. And I found that increasingly. And I really like Colbert. But anytime that I was sent
0:50:16 a Colbert clip, it was basically the same thing. It was just finding another angle to shit on Trump.
0:50:22 And I’m all for that. But when you look at those operating costs and then you look at the kind of
0:50:27 content and the fact that enormous stars, they would still come on the show, but the success of their
0:50:33 movie or whatever they were, you know, their book, whatever it was, is not dependent on making sure
0:50:39 that you are the number one guest on Colbert that night. It’s what viral clip can happen. Or frankly,
0:50:45 can you get on like with Rogan? Can you go sit down with Amy Poehler? Can you go on with a food
0:50:51 influencer? Can you get, you know, subway takes, hot ones? What, you know, there are all these different
0:50:58 routes to being a big success right now. And the model just is unsustainable. Then coupled with the
0:51:07 fact that many nights sounded the same. And we’re looking for something different on a daily basis these
0:51:12 days. Late night TV is over. It’s, it’s fewer people and older people watching it. Advertisers
0:51:20 don’t like either of those things, but it’s all being reinvented as a TV show. To a certain extent,
0:51:25 it’s Twitter. And that is Elon Musk, to his credit, said, I can give you a reasonable facsimile of the
0:51:32 old Twitter with 20% of the people. And that’s what’s happening here. Trevor Noah, he’s back on
0:51:38 podcasting. Conan O’Brien, all of these folks, Seth Meyers, they’re going to reinvent themselves as a
0:51:45 podcast with 10% of the cost and 30% of the revenue, which is an accretive arbitrage. And that’s what’s,
0:51:51 that’s what’s going on here. Just as we wrap up, Jess, we really need to juice the downloads here.
0:51:54 So you and I are going to go to the U S open and get on the kiss cam.
0:52:01 Oh yeah. What do you, what are your feelings about the Coldplay couple? I feel like people that I know
0:52:07 are on opposite sides of the spectrum, even on what they should have done. A lot of the, well,
0:52:11 if you just acted normal, my friend was like, why didn’t he just act like he was giving her the
0:52:14 Heimlich? That’s natural. Totally natural.
0:52:20 Distinct of all the jokes, Jess, I think it’s, uh, let’s just be serious for a moment. This is a woman
0:52:24 who raised this guy’s kids and thought she’d found the love of her life. And to find out this way that
0:52:30 her husband, in fact, is a Coldplay fan is really devastating. That’s good.
0:52:36 Why is Coldplay so embarrassing to people? Um, doesn’t everyone actually like Coldplay?
0:52:41 I actually do like Coldplay. Coldplay is amazing. But the, the more meta or serious observation is
0:52:48 that shaming is, is a key component of our species. And it’s something that feels terrible. And it’s
0:52:53 part of the reason that young people, uh, are more depressed is that shaming has been scaled and
0:52:59 industrialized with technology online, but shaming plays an important role in society. You are not
0:53:05 supposed to, you know, beat up your friend’s children. You’re not supposed to lie with your
0:53:10 neighbor’s wife and the community shames people for a good reason. It creates a certain level of
0:53:15 guardrails and a certain level of civility and mends or holds together the fabric. Shaming has played an
0:53:21 important part in society. Unfortunately, I think technology has scaled shaming to an entertainment
0:53:28 or to a sport and the algorithms love shaming. And also, I think this is a part of a larger trend.
0:53:33 And that is, I reverse engineer everything to income inequality. And that is the CEOs are now
0:53:40 making 300 times what the ordinary worker is versus 30 times. And I find that the algorithms and society
0:53:45 are much more up for shaming rich white people because they’re fed up with how much money and
0:53:51 disproportionate opportunity have been granted via income inequality. So if this had been two middle
0:53:57 class, uh, non-whites, this just wouldn’t have gone viral. People have had it and are looking for
0:54:03 reasons to shame famous people and especially rich people. And I find the industrialization of shaming
0:54:08 and the economic incentives around this a little, I think in it, what used to be a means of keeping
0:54:16 society more cohesive is tearing it apart now. So anyways, I’m, I find it interesting, but more people know
0:54:21 about these two people right now than they know about, uh, the would be assassin who was murdered
0:54:27 of Trump. So what does that say about our society and also for the rest of their lives, no matter where
0:54:32 they are, no matter what they do, the moment they’re introduced to anybody, the moment before they show
0:54:37 up, come up or leave, that’s what people are going to say about them. Yeah. These people are infamous.
0:54:45 What are your thoughts? I, I largely agree. His daughter posted a Tik TOK of her kind of standing in front
0:54:51 of a fire and the caption was like, you know, working it out when your father’s affair, you know,
0:54:56 goes viral like that. And I can’t even imagine what it’s like to be their families, both of them
0:55:01 married and she was married to the CEO of a, or is married to the CEO of a different company.
0:55:08 I don’t like the shame aspect whatsoever. I think life is complicated and you never know what’s going
0:55:15 on behind closed doors, but the amount of HR, the amount of trainings that I have sat in and had to
0:55:23 go through these ridiculous scenarios and check the right box that I shouldn’t be calling my colleagues,
0:55:28 you know, honey pie, and I shouldn’t touch anyone. And what do you do if someone does, you know,
0:55:37 for her to go out and do that as such rank hypocrisy. And I hate that I expect more of the woman in this
0:55:44 scenario, especially the woman who is the head of HR, but I do. Um, it does always feel nice when there’s
0:55:52 a break from what the algorithm is usually pumping into my veins. And you can see a bunch of very
0:55:58 creative memes. I like the Van Gogh one. I don’t know. Have you seen that where they’re like the
0:56:04 scream? They’ve been turned into the screen. It’s really good. By the way, I, I, it’s very encouraging.
0:56:08 I think all that training at Fox has really paid off. My understanding is that firm has had no trouble
0:56:15 with this type of situation. So it’s good to hear that. What is wrong with you? What’s going on?
0:56:20 What is wrong with me? I don’t know. Let me talk a little bit about this situation. First is
0:56:26 I’ve immunized myself from this type of problem because the first thing I do at an all hands is
0:56:30 I say to everybody, and I’ve run small and medium sized companies. I say, listen, I’m going to share
0:56:34 something with you because I think vulnerability is the key to masculinity. I’ve been in a terrible
0:56:39 accident and my inhibition sensors were severely damaged. And there’s going to be some locker room
0:56:45 talk and some inappropriate touching, but I hope you are patient with me on my journey back. Boom!
0:56:51 That’s how you inoculate yourself from a situation like this. But seriously, folks, let’s talk a little
0:56:56 bit about sex in the workplace because having been on a bunch of public company and private company
0:57:02 boards, this happens all the time. And what you said reminded me of something, our dynamic and our
0:57:06 species. And that is, and I love what you just said, don’t mistake kindness for weakness. I love that.
0:57:11 I think that is really powerful. As a matter of fact, and I’m really going off script here,
0:57:14 when I coach these young men, they eventually, they always say, I would really like a girlfriend.
0:57:19 I’m like, okay, women are attracted to men for three reasons. They need to signal resources.
0:57:23 It’s easy to signal resources when you have a Range Rover and a Panerai, but you don’t necessarily need
0:57:27 to have resources right now. You need to have a plan and you need to have your act together and show
0:57:32 that you’re disciplined, that you can get up, you leave parties early. You’re not that idiot ordering
0:57:36 a bottle of Grey Goose at 3 a.m. And women are attracted to someone who looks like they’re going
0:57:41 to have resources in the future too. Intelligence, easiest way to communicate intelligence, be well
0:57:45 read, thoughtful, listen, and also humor is a fantastic way to show that you’re intelligent.
0:57:50 But the most under leveraged thing is kindness. Women instinctively know they’re going to be
0:57:54 vulnerable during certain periods of their lives, specifically during gestation. And they want
0:57:58 to see a guy who genuinely is good to people without reciprocal expectation or good to people
0:58:05 that can’t do anything for him. I’m like, that’s the most under leveraged lever for men. And it’s
0:58:10 like, well, you can’t force kindness. I do think it’s a practice. I think every day, if you make an
0:58:14 effort to go out of your way to be kind to people, it becomes muscle memory and you start becoming
0:58:20 kinder. But, and I’ll bring this back to this, in a work setting, and people get very uncomfortable
0:58:24 when you talk about this. Anytime you say men are different than women, it’s like, oh, you’re a sexist.
0:58:28 Yeah, I’m a sexist. Men are different than women. I’m holding to that. And it doesn’t mean we can’t
0:58:34 have respect for the 5%. They’re non-binary. Just let me throw out my woke disclaimer. Men, what I have
0:58:37 found, and this is true and there’s evidence here, will mistake, especially in a corporate setting,
0:58:43 will mistake kindness for sexual interest. And women will mistake sexual interest for kindness.
0:58:49 And the general policy I find is most effective at an organization or a corporation is the following.
0:58:56 Below the executive level, 95% of the cohort, our policy has always been, use your common sense.
0:59:01 You do need, if you develop a relationship, disclose it to HR. But you can’t expect young
0:59:06 people to work 60 hours a week and then not assume that in situations where they get to demonstrate
0:59:10 excellence to each other, spend a lot of time together, that they’re not going to fall in love
0:59:14 or fall in lust, have sex, then fall in love and get married. I’ve had eight marriages
0:59:19 at my companies. And it’s always like, literally, it’s always the same thing. I found out they’re
0:59:22 engaged. I’m like, what? They were fucking, I didn’t know that. And I think it’s a wonderful
0:59:28 thing. And 99% of relationships of work are consensual. Young people need to mate. I think
0:59:33 it’s a blessing. I think it’s a mitzvah. Above a certain level, and you need to identify that level
0:59:38 and educate people. Once you hit a certain, quote unquote, the executive washroom, it’s great to be
0:59:43 you. You’re making millions of dollars, probably. You’re powerful. You have a lot of game. Your fly
0:59:52 is up and locked. You cannot date people at the company. The moment we find out a CEO is using the
0:59:57 corporation like Tinder because people are going to be unnaturally nice to you because you have power
1:00:04 over them, you are guilty. I think that’s the way to approach that. So this guy, both of them
1:00:08 as C-level executives, consensual or not, they’re guilty. They immediately get fired. And he was
1:00:13 fired the next day. I don’t know what happened to her. I don’t think we’ve heard. She should be
1:00:16 fired. She will be fired. If she’s a C-level executive, she should have known better, much
1:00:21 less been the head of HR. But I think that’s the right policy. Do most of these companies have
1:00:26 morality clauses also for infidelity? No. Because that’s different. I mean, it’s different if you’re
1:00:31 just like dating without being married to someone else versus that you’re having an affair. Does it
1:00:36 matter? None of my companies. I don’t want to be in a position of being someone’s rabbi or the priest.
1:00:40 They’re consenting adults. But you’re putting other people at risk and the power dynamic gets
1:00:44 strange once one person is an executive and very powerful. And you’re also putting the company at
1:00:51 risk. So I do think there’s a difference between two 25-year-olds out of college who decide to date
1:00:58 and the CEO misinterpreting signals or leveraging his, and it’s almost always the dude, let’s be honest,
1:01:04 leveraging his power to unfortunately sometimes put people in awkward situations or to start a
1:01:09 relationship with someone who is impressed by this person because quite frankly, women are impressed by
1:01:15 power. And then putting the company at risk and creating an uncomfortable power dynamic that may
1:01:20 put the person in a very uncomfortable situation that they don’t know how to get out of. But again,
1:01:23 News Corp, I don’t think that’s happened there. I don’t, I don’t think that’s ever happened at your
1:01:27 organization. Oh my God, that’s good.
1:01:32 You’re really feeling yourself today. I’m glad you said that though about dating within the workplace
1:01:40 because it’s such a loss for just growing up to think that you’re going to go and dedicate
1:01:47 majority of your time to something and that you’re not going to be able to fraternize in that way with
1:01:51 people at all. I mean, you see this with Gen Z is that they don’t do happy hours, for instance,
1:01:56 some of the most fun things that I ever participated in, right? Where everyone gets
1:02:00 together after work and, you know, you have a shared experience that you all work at the same company
1:02:05 and you meet some really great people and it’s about experimentation and trying things. I mean,
1:02:09 that’s an absolutely the safest way possible. But if you tell someone, yeah, you’ve got to be here 60
1:02:15 hours a week. Like also what would happen to doctors? I, all of my friends who are doctors are married to
1:02:21 other doctors because they did residency together, you know, medical school, fellowship, residency,
1:02:25 whatever it is, you’re trapped in, I mean, Grey’s Anatomy, going to be the longest running show.
1:02:27 They have no time to date anyone else.
1:02:33 Well, right. You’re, and then you all sleep in the on-call room and inevitably you end up on top of
1:02:36 each other. That’s just what ends up happening. So.
1:02:38 But in, in related news, I don’t know if you heard this, but Bill O’Reilly,
1:02:42 News Corp had to pay someone $25 million. It was so nice to see you this week, Scott.
1:02:48 Just in unrelated news, in unrelated news. That’s fresh, like 2016 election interference. You’re
1:02:54 the Tulsi Gabbard of this podcast. Little kiss cam on steroids there. All right, Jess. I’m gonna,
1:02:58 I’m gonna stop giving you a hard time here. Really? That’s all for this episode. Thank you for
1:03:04 listening to Raging Moderates. Our producers are the excellent and smart and fantastic scripting.
1:03:08 Amazing writer. David Toledo and Eric Jenicus. Our technical directors,
1:03:11 Drew Burroughs. Going forward, you’ll find Raging Moderates every Wednesday and Friday.
1:03:15 Subscribe to Raging Moderates on its own feed to hear exclusive interviews with sharp political
1:03:20 minds. This week, Jess is speaking to Florida gubernatorial candidate David Jolly. Make sure
1:03:26 to follow us wherever you get your podcasts so you don’t miss an episode. Jess, have a great rest of
1:03:27 the week. You too.

Will Trump ever be able to shake off Jeffery Epstein? Scott and Jessica talk through it, and dissect all the distractions the White House keeps throwing in the way — like Tulsi Gabbard’s surprising (old) claims, and the lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch. 

Plus: the latest on Texas’s sneaky redistricting efforts, what the Coldplay couple can teach us about dating in the workplace, and what Paramount’s cancellation of Colbert means for the future of late night — and media.

Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov

Follow Prof G, @profgalloway.

Follow Raging Moderates, @RagingModeratesPod.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *