99% Invisible - The Power Broker #11: Brennan Lee Mulligan
Episode Date: November 15, 2024This is the eleventh official episode, breaking down the 1974 Pulitzer Prize winning book, The Power Broker by our hero Robert Caro. This week, Roman Mars and Elliott Kalan sit down with Brennan Lee ...Mulligan, a comedian and host with Dropout TV, where he’s the creator of Dimension 20 — a Dungeons & Dragons show that features incredibly complex and campaigns, with improv actors and special effects. And as the Dungeon Master, Brennan leads these stories. Season three of Dimension 20 takes place in a magical New York City, where the main villain is a fictionalized, undead Robert Moses, who shares the real Robert Moses’s passion for building roads and destroying lives through bureaucracy.Elliott and Roman also cover the second section of Part 7 (Chapter 42 through Chapter 46), discussing the major story beats and themes.The Power Broker #11: Brennan Lee MulliganJoin the discussion on Discord and Reddit. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to ad-free new episodes and get exclusive access to bonus content.
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This is the 99% of visible breakdown of the power broker. I'm Roman Mars.
And I'm Elliot Cailin.
So today we're continuing part seven, The Loss of Power, chapters 42 through 46, that's pages 984 through 1081.
And later in this episode, our special guest is Brennan Lee Mulligan.
Brennan is a comedian and host with Dropout TV where he's the creator of Dimension 20.
It's a show that features incredibly complex and fun and dynamic Dungeons and Dragons campaigns
with improv actors and special effects.
And as the dungeon master, Brennan leads these stories.
And I know that might sound completely unrelated to the power broker, but one season of Dimension
20 features a villain that all of you listening would be very familiar with, but in a very
different context.
To my understanding, Mr. Moses is a powerful form of undead.
Robert Moses is a powerful historical figure.
Never elected, but was part of a lot of government boards,
had a lot to do with the building and infrastructure
of New York, specifically a lot with the building
of roads and highways.
Mm-hmm.
Causing interference in the magical world.
So last time on the 99% visible breakdown
of the power broker, Robert Carroll went
into incredible detail about how Robert Moses refused
to include mass transit as part of his transportation plans
and it doomed New York to a future choked with cars
and traffic and really explicit detail
about how awful different railroads were.
It was very vivid.
But we also saw how an assortment of activists
were starting to recognize the serious issues
with how Moses was running his slum clearance programs
and the public housing construction projects.
So that was a little bit of a glimmer.
There were rumors, rumors of rumors.
And so on this episode, we'll be covering chapters 42 to 46,
that's pages 984 to 1081.
And this is a delightful collection of chapters.
Eliot.
These are, especially after the last chapters,
which were so gloomy and doomy, this is going to be
a nice, yeah, this is a nice change of pace
because Robert Moses is on the dissension,
rather than the ascension.
And it's going to happen in ways that are not entirely
satisfying in terms of the scale
and scope of the crimes he's being hoisted on.
The petard he's being hoisted on is not the petard we hoped it would be, but there's
something fun about that and Robert Caro is clearly having fun writing about it and that
really comes through.
And by the end of today's episode, Moses will have been hoisted by his own petard. There's no other way to put it.
There's no other way to put it.
Yeah. It's a petard hoisting.
It's a classic petard hoisting.
And as you were saying, we're gonna pass
the thousand page mark in this episode,
which is very exciting.
That's a lot of pages, and we'll have to take
a moment to pop some champagne.
Really, really reminisce about the pages
that brought us here,
but it's gonna be exciting, it's gonna be exciting.
So we start here with chapter 42, Tavern in the Town,
which chronicles probably one of the lesser crimes
of Robert Moses, but still makes a good story.
So how does it begin?
It makes a great story, and it's also,
I'll just say this before I even start, Roman,
this will be an annoying, unnecessary little tangent.
42, as anyone who's read the Hitchhiker's Guide
to the Galaxy series knows, is the answer
to the question of life, the universe and everything.
And in this chapter, we get finally the answer
to what will it take to really break away
the reputation Moses has as the great guy,
the Parksman, the man who can get things done for the people.
It's in this chapter that what he does is,
seems so incredibly trivial
and yet reverberates through so much.
So it begins talking about how this is gonna be
the Battle of Central Park.
Carol reminds everybody how in 1934,
Robert Moses, he refurbished and renovated Central Park.
He replaced the sheep meadow,
which previously had been full of inbred mutant sheep
that had been there for generations.
He replaces the sheep meadow near Central Park West
and 67th Street with a restaurant, Tavern on the Green.
Regular listeners will know that's where my dad
proposed to my mom before they got married.
Ghostbusters fans will know it as the restaurant
where Rick Moranis is finally overtaken by the terror dog.
And I guess eaten, you know,
in plain view of the diners at the restaurant.
And he cut a road extension into the park
and a parking circle into the park
that serves the restaurant.
And what's funny to me here is that Carrow
is using the sheep as a symbol of the pastoral world that was shunted aside for the restaurant. And what's funny to me here is that Karo is using the sheep as a symbol of the pastoral world that was shunted aside for the restaurant and its parking circle. When, back when Karo was talking about those sheep, previously they were monsters. They were just like, they were implied as disgusting, something you needed to get rid of. But now Karo is kind of having it both ways and he's like, what was once a bucolic sheep meadow? It's like, oh, all right, there's different ways to look at sheep, I guess.
So the year is 1956.
Let's place ourselves in time.
We are now in 1956,
and local families have come to depend
on this little tree shaded Glen
between 67th and 68th streets in the park
as a place for their kids to play.
They're using it the way parks have been intended
by Moses to be used as community spaces for people to play in them. And the the way parks have been intended by Moses to be used, as community
spaces for people to play in them. And the local mothers, they find the space especially
precious. It's somewhere very close to their apartments. Their kids who live in apartments
and have no outdoor space of their own. And these are middle class, upper middle class
kids. These are kids who have resources. These are not slum kids, but they still don't have
outdoor space of their own. They don't have yards. So this is a place they can run around.
The moms can talk.
It is a very important little place in their lives,
a place that carries a lot of meaning and emotion for them.
Until one day on April 9th, 1956.
What happens on that day, Roman?
Well, one of the moms, Roselle Davis,
she sees these surveyors with blueprints looking over
her bucolic Glenn. And when they break for lunch, they accidentally leave the blueprints behind.
And she reads on the title, detailed map of parking lot. And this is the plans to replace
the Glenn with a parking lot to serve Tavern on the Green, which is just like a movie scene.
It's incredible.
Yeah, literally that it's like a parking lot here
because they found these papers.
And this is the kind of thing that if you saw it in a movie,
you'd be like, come on,
but it happens in real life all the time.
I forget what Civil War Battle it was
where they literally found the Confederate plans
wrapped around a cigar.
And they're like, oh, okay,
now we know what's gonna happen, you know?
And this is something that, it's not necessarily important,
but the last few chapters in the last episode
felt very much like data, data, data.
Like I'm giving you hard information
about this urban transportation issue.
And here it feels like Caro has shifted much more
into reporter storyteller mode.
He is telling a story, and this section is very dramatic,
cinematic, in a very fun way.
But that also sort of describes why this fight,
unlike other fights that involve a lot of data,
or a lot of real problems that Moses has caused,
don't gain traction, whereas this one with this nice story
of these nice moms and their upper
middle class life really does take hold in newspapers, which is really the big deal with
this one. Yes, it shows you the importance of a story, as we'll see, like the importance of a
narrative that it is hard to convince people with a lot of numbers, but it is much easier to convince
people when you've got moms and kids versus bulldozers, as we'll see.
And so, Davis, she tells another mom, Augusta Newman,
and Augusta Newman is the wife of Arnold Newman,
who's a well-known photographer.
And I think this is one of the differences
we had kind of talked about in previous episodes
between what happens here, what happened earlier,
is these are people who have access to media.
These are people who have access to professional assistance These are people who have access to professional assistants
or are professionals themselves
in a way that the people of East Tremont,
the people of Harlem just do not have access to.
And so they write up a petition
and they try to get it signed by many of the well-known
artists and writers who live on the block.
Like a name that comes up a lot is the novelist Fanny Hurst,
who I've not read any of her work,
but I've heard the name before.
Carol mentions playwright and screenwriter Samson Raffelson,
and he refers to him as Samuel Raffelson for some reason,
but I don't, unless I'm getting the names mixed up, I don't know if there is a Samuel Raffelson,
but Samson Raffelson is a well-known, you know, is a classic playwright and screenwriter.
So this might be the third error I've ever found in the thousands of pages of Caro's work.
And one of the other errors is just him getting the name of a movie slightly wrong in one of the Lyndon Johnson books.
So I'm not that mad about it. But this is like Ludwig Bemelmans, the author of Madeline, lives here.
Like Pearl Lang the dancer, May Murray, this former silent movie star lives there.
And there are these other names that I'm sure were more well known when the book came out,
but would have to be researched by modern readers. But in the end, they have this petition with just
23 names on it. We've seen petitions with thousands of names get knocked aside. In the Park
Department, they're like, yeah, 23 name petition? I'm ignoring this. We don't want to deal with this.
And the newly installed deputy mayor tries to arrange a meeting and is told off by one of
Moses' secretaries over the phone.
But here's the difference. One of the moms, she signs it. She is not just a person with access
to the newspapers. She is a person who is married to a Herald Tribune reporter. So,
Roman, this time is personal.
That's right. But it's so funny to me how this starts with Moses
being completely disdainful because he has been so used
to this for so long.
23 moms versus like the thousands and thousands
when it came to the one mile section,
we have the 5,000 moms of Manhattan town,
4,000 moms of Lincoln Center, nobody cares.
Preston loves them.
Everything is just going his way at this point.
But just the amount of time and really,
it's the constituency of the people who are upset
that really, really changes things.
Yes, but he's so complacent about it.
And there's a,
Carol sums it up, he's refusing to meet with them.
He sends them a letter that says like,
let's talk about it, but his plan is he'll letter that says, like, let's talk about it.
But his plan is he'll just start tearing up the Glen before they talk about it.
That's just what he does.
And he sends them this letter, and Carol writes,
His letter would not placate the mothers, of course,
but that would no longer matter.
By the time they read his explanation of why it was necessary
to destroy the Glen they were fighting for,
there would no longer be any point in fighting for it.
It wouldn't be there.
This protest would be disposed of
as he had been disposing of protests for 30 years.
And then there's a space in the page and then he writes,
but this protest was different.
And why is it different?
For these reasons we're talking about,
these protesters are educated, they are financially secure,
they are well connected to the media,
there are lawyers in these families,
they can afford to raise the money to fight this legally
or they can do the work themselves.
You know, this is not, these are not people
who are lower class people who live in a neighborhood
that even though it's clean and nice and people love it,
does not have the resources.
And this is also different because it's so clear cut.
Carol makes the point, you can have competing ideas
about whether a road is more important in this space or a neighborhood, a road is more important in this space or a neighborhood,
whether housing is more important in this space
or a neighborhood, what the needs of a city are.
But this is children's play space
versus a parking lot for a restaurant.
Which is, so this is the closest the book gets to
the plot of Break into Electric Boogaloo,
where it's literally a community center for needy kids
versus a shopping mall. Like it's, there's no, it's, where it's literally a community center for needy kids versus a shopping mall.
Like it's, there's no, it's so, it's so clear cut.
And Moses's role is so clear cut in this.
In the housing fights that he does,
he can hide behind the private developers
who are technically responsible for the on the ground stuff,
even though he's calling all those shots.
This is a park issue.
It's in Central Park and everyone knows
Moses is the parks man.
And not only that, this is central park,
which is a special park.
It is literally, as everyone says, the
lungs of the city.
And I think it is hard to argue that the
single greatest decision of the planners of
New York city, it's hard to argue that there
was a greater decision than the one to leave
this space open, then to not grid it out
and to make it into just streets, to leave this
enormous space.
Cause, cause central park is huge.
It's a huge park.
It's not the biggest park in New York city.
I think that's Pelham Bay park, but nobody,
nobody goes up there.
I mean, people do, but it's not the same.
Central park is right in the middle of the action.
And it is really a sacred space.
And I remember months ago, we talked about what a big deal it was
when Moses refurbished the park in the 1930s.
That was one of the things that made him such a heroic figure for the city,
is that he turned Central Park into this beautiful place again,
that people could take a break from living in this crammed-in city.
And it's a park that people spend a lot of time in.
He can't do something there and hide it and keep it secret
the way he could when he rammed the Major Deegan
through the Van Cortland Park marshes.
People see Central Park.
It's in the middle of Manhattan.
It's very open.
And so it's a very public place for him to pick a fight
and especially to pick a fight with mops.
Yeah, yeah.
But he does and he starts doing the thing
that he normally does, which is, you know,
before anyone can sort of like realize it,
he sends his bulldozers to rip it up and, you know,
to make it so that when, that it's a fait accompli
and they can protest all they want to.
But they actually caught on to this.
Like, they see the bulldozers coming.
One of the Central Park West residents, Eleanor Sanger,
looks at her bathroom window.
She sees bulldozers ripping up trees and-
It's such a cinematic scene.
She's just going in the morning
to like brush her teeth or whatever.
And she looks out the window and sees bulldozers.
And it's, I mean, it is, I mentioned Hitchhiker's Guide
already, it's literally opening of Hitchhiker's Guide
to the galaxy is he looks outside
and sees bulldozers are gonna knock his house down.
And so she sees it and what does she do?
She just like calls her friends and they run down there.
You know, like just basically like women and children
and baby carriages and they stand in front of a Bulldozer
and that looks so fun to take photographs of
to put in the newspaper and they know it.
They don't necessarily stand in front of the Bulldozer
because these are women with children in their hands,
but they make themselves visible to the bulldozer
and the bulldozer driver stops his work.
And she is also called Stanley Isaacs.
We mentioned him before, long time civic reformer,
and he helps to get the press there and the press shows up.
Like you're saying, this is moms and kids versus bulldozers.
And this is a good story for the media
that you can take pictures of.
And when Lillian Edelstein was trying to save
her part of East Tremont,
she could barely get reporters to notice.
She would hold rallies with hundreds of people
and reporters were not there.
But now moms with baby carriages
are having a face-off with bulldozers in Central Park.
And reporters from all the newspapers
and the TV stations
and the radio stations rush in.
And soon the story is everywhere.
And something that Caro does not talk about too much here,
I think maybe because he's such a newspaper guy,
is the difference that television probably made with this too.
That television just brings an immediacy to things
that newspapers and radio don't necessarily,
sorry Roman, I hate to say that about radio,
but there's just something about television.
And maybe that's a difference too,
but he doesn't quite get into that.
And the mothers, they set up a rotating guard
from 7 a.m. to dark every day to keep the bulldozers
from starting up.
And the reporters, they love it.
It's got famous names, it's got moms and kids,
it's got trees.
During what happens to be Arbor Day week,
not the best week to be knocking down trees in your park,
it's got a park in danger.
It's got bulldozers.
And this isn't just a local park issue in some neighborhood.
This is the Battle of Central Park.
That's how they frame it.
And Moms versus Moses,
which is another way they frame it.
It's perfect.
The Battle of Central Park colon, Moms versus Moses. Like that's your movie title right there.
It's amazing.
And even now in the 21st century,
what is the most potent thing in any political conversation?
What's the thing that gets brought up is,
what is this gonna do to our kids?
What is it?
You know, I'm a mom and I'm concerned about my kids.
It is the single most probably universal,
like basic fundamental relationship in human
existence is probably mother and child. Sorry dads, I hate to break it to you.
Sorry aunts and uncles and siblings. And it doesn't mean you need a mother, you
know, to be raised great, but it goes back to the animal kingdom and evolution.
You know, that relationship between mothers and children. And so to be able
to tap into that,
Robert Moses can bluster all he wants,
but it's like there's an unbreakable bond
between people and their mothers.
Yeah, yeah.
And this is also one of those things where
because he's the parks guy and it's Central Park,
and he's such a towering figure,
he can kind of stand behind,
the engineers say this for this road, that,
you know, all sorts of stuff.
Like this is the one that he's always held onto where every decision is his.
He gets credit for all of it and therefore he gets all of the blame for this one.
Yes.
That's just totally different than the other stuff, which you can sort of like put these
layers of like engineers say this, the city needs this, the different
rules that are complicated that he wrote the laws for and everything like this.
But this is just a choice.
It's very simple.
It just makes good copy and he's just completely out of his league.
And he's saying the same things he said before, but it's not working.
Even the New York Times comes out against the parking lot, which is a big thing.
They usually support them on things.
And Moses responds, he just sends his park workers
and his parks executive Stuart Constable, aka the
mustache, and I'm not sure.
I don't remember if Caro attributes that
nickname to anyone in particular, or if he, or if
he came up with it or if that's what they called
him, but this is a character we'll see a lot of
in the next chapter as well.
The mustache and they secretly install a fence
in the middle of the night and send the bulldozers in.
Even the NYPD is not notified.
They find out in the middle of the night
when someone reports to a police officer,
hey, it looks like people are building things in the park,
something's going on.
And they have to send police officers in
to hold the moms back in the morning
while trees are knocked down and being chopped into pieces.
And the media in the past has always applauded
Moses's ways of getting things done.
They kind of winked at him for those kind of devious ways.
You know, they talked about it was the like,
oops, sorry method of getting things done.
But now they turn on him.
They got pictures of mothers crying as trees are cut down.
They appear everywhere,
though unfortunately they're not in this book.
Again, the photo section is the one part of this book
that I feel like is such a letdown,
but they do show a photo in the book
of a picture Carol describes of a little boy
holding a toy rifle as a police officer stands guard
at the fence.
And it's just, there's all these photos come in,
embarrassed police officers, anguished mothers,
anti-Moses letters the editor pour in,
and Moses is not destroyed,
but for the first time he's really tarnished.
And Carol writes, Tuesday, April 24th, 1956,
the day that Robert Moses sent his troops
into Central Park was Robert Moses' Black Tuesday.
For on it, he lost his most cherished asset,
his reputation.
The Moses boom had lasted for 30 years.
Now it was over.
And it's not like, I mean, before anyone thinks,
it's not like then Moses is like, all right, never mind. Like he's still, the trees come down. Like he
tears those trees down. Yeah. And he's like, during this period he's also
building some of the major highways and bridges of this time. You know what I mean?
This is like, this is not like a complete diminishment of his power, but right
here he really takes it on the chin. Yes, and the mayor stands behind him because he has the power.
The mayor needs that power.
But something, one thing kind of different happens
before he can start laying down the concrete for this parking lot.
And so remember back in 1934, he tore down the Central Park Casino
and people were like, you shouldn't do that.
And the state court said he can do it every once he has total power over the parks.
Now, 22 years later, it's 1956,
and the state Supreme Court, 22 years later, it's 1956,
and the state Supreme Court, one of the justices actually grants an injunction, halting work,
pending a hearing. And this is the kind of thing they didn't even do before, grant these
injunctions. And Moses is like, I'm going to win this. I can get it done my way. He
refuses to compromise. And that's when Stanley Isaacs, that wily old reformer, he remembers
one thing and discovers two things.
He remembers that one, when Moses tore down the original casino to build the tavern, he
said he made a big stink about how only restaurants with reasonable prices should be in a public
park.
And by 1956, the tavern's prices are not reasonable.
They're charging $4.50 for a hamburger and a beer.
And I mean, that sounds like an amazing deal, but in 1956 it was not.
And Carrow quotes one news story.
He goes, dinner and tip for two came to $23.
There was another $5 at the bar for two drinks each.
It's not a place to go the day before payday.
And again, I'm like, like with the rents we were talking about in previous episodes, I'm salivating over those prices.
And it's just, it is not, this is not a restaurant the average person could just walk into
and buy a hamburger in. And the second and more important thing Isaac discovers is the
sweetheart deal that Moses gave to the restaurant's owner, Arnold Schleifer. Schleifer is supposed to
pay the city 5% of his gross income, which is already ridiculously low rent
for a fancy restaurant in a major city park
in a fantastic location.
But even that percentage he hasn't been paying
because his contract allows him to deduct the cost
of improvements to the restaurant from his taxes.
So Isaac finds that over a four year period,
Schleifer made almost $1.8 million
and he paid the city $9,000 in taxes.
And Moses essentially making this guy rich
at the city's expense.
And Carol makes it clear, the deal is not illegal.
Moses is not getting a kickback.
Although the quid pro quo is that Schleifer has to cater
every banquet Moses likes.
And we talked in that earlier episode about how
Schleifer catered that one banquet in a way
that was just a little too fancy, schmancy,
ethnic for Moses.
And he wrote that great memoir about it.
But this flies in the face of another part of Moses' reputation.
This idea that the guy doesn't cater to favoritism, that he doesn't do sweetheart deals.
He clearly is.
And the press can make a lot of hay about this too.
They can oversimplify the story to make it sound more corrupt than it is.
But whereas in the past, the press's oversimplification has helped Moses, now it's starting to hurt
him.
Yeah.
Well, he's just like, it's like an infection.
Like the mothers and the images of the cute kid with the air rifle and stuff like that,
they sort of make a little cut.
And then all of a sudden this type of thing, which normally wouldn't cause him any problems
whatsoever, there's just enough damage there to infect and sort
of get him off of his normal game when it comes to this stuff.
Yeah, it's just this chipping away, this little bit of chipping away at the reputation that
holds him up.
And I just want to note, it's at this part of the story that we were on page 999 in the book.
We're about to do it, people.
About to tip over into quadruple digits in page numbers.
Not something you see in a lot of books.
So, really love it, you know.
Only the people who loved the Shogun TV series
so much that they're now reading that novel
are gonna feel this thrill this year
of reaching a thousand pages.
But, so what's funny about this still is that you know for decades Moses has just sort of
lived this way and and sort of bulldozed over people metaphorically and literally and he still
doesn't quite get that he's on the losing side of this and so he takes off to Spain.
Yeah he leaves on a 24-day vacation to Spain This is one of those things where I kind of wonder sometimes,
I trust Caro so much, but he'll be like,
Moses was unstoppable, he always worked.
Then he went on a vacation for two weeks in the Bahamas.
Like then he went on two week, 24 day vacation in Spain.
And I'm like, I don't work as hard as Moses
and I don't take 24 day vacations in Spain.
You were just in Spain, Roman, right?
You were not there for almost a month.
I was not there for almost a month,
but I definitely could have been.
That place is great.
Such a great country.
It's wonderful.
I really, I want to go back so badly.
I haven't been in years.
It's so good.
But you're right, he's so confident.
He's like, I don't even need to be here.
Unfortunately, and this will be a problem
in the next chapter too, who does he leave in charge?
The mustache constable who is like Moses
without the tact and the strategizing
and the grace and the wit.
Constable just unnecessarily over stonewalling the press
and that keeps the story alive
and it makes the city angrier.
And Moses is not there to coordinate
the responses of politicians, of park reps,
the media is pouncing on and sensationalizing every little comment
that someone makes to keep the story going.
And the next round of judges in the court battle
upholds the injunction.
And one of them comments how he's happy
with his judge's salary, but even for him,
a steak at the tavern is pretty pricey.
He can't afford deep air regularly.
And it starts getting safer to publicly criticize Moses.
This is a guy that people had to whisper about before,
if they wanted to criticize,
but now it's becoming easier and easier to do that.
And Moses returns to the city after,
it was probably an amazing vacation in Spain.
It was harder to get news from overseas then,
so like, I'm sure he was shielded from some of this.
And he tries to keep his cool,
but he ends up blowing up in the press
the way he always kind of used to when he was mad.
And he goes so far as to attack Fanny Hurst,
this respected elderly novelist,
for making a stink about this children's play area
when she doesn't even have children.
How does she have a stake in this
if she doesn't even have children?
Which reading this, I was like, oh my God,
I didn't think this part was gonna be as relevant
as it is now.
Yeah, it's really loathsome.
Yeah, it's really, and the fact that it felt like it was ripped. It's really loathsome. Yeah, it's really,
the fact that it felt like it was ripped
from today's headlines, this idea of someone saying,
well, if you don't have children,
you don't have a stake in the country.
You're somehow selfish, don't care about the future.
Yeah, it's bonkers.
Unlike in the past, now the media is also giving
the people Moses attacks a chance to reply to his attacks.
And this attack on Fanny Hurst is really seen as too far, you know.
Yeah.
Oh, you know what? I just realized I kept saying next chapter about Constable in the
Mustache, but it's actually the chapter after next chapter.
That's okay.
So my apologies. Later in the episode. And Moses realizes that if this case keeps going
through the court, then there's gonna be a discovery
of other statements he's made,
other sweetheart deals he's made.
He's gonna have to testify about these things.
That would be bad.
He can't be in court testifying about this stuff
because then he's on the record,
he can't play games about it.
So he does what he almost never does.
He does something that is anathema to him.
Roman, what does he do in terms of building this parking lot?
What does he do?
Yeah, well, he gives up.
I mean, yeah, I mean, it's kind of amazing.
Like, you know, he just, yeah, he doesn't go through with it,
which is amazing.
He just backs down.
He does it.
He tries to do as quietly as possible.
He has these delaying motions for the lawsuit.
And then when the media dies down a little,
he kind of agrees to give in
so that it doesn't seem in his eyes as such a big loss.
And he agrees to build a playground
in that spot where the parking lot would have been.
And now, Roman, I did a little on the ground investigating
for this part of the episode.
Well, I was preparing for this episode.
We had our event at the New York Historical Society
where we talked to Robert Caro on stage.
It was amazing.
When people hear the audio from it,
they will hear me noticeably run out of words.
I'm so emotional at the end of it.
Like, I'm so...
When we were...
It was an experience I'll carry with me in my heart
for the rest of my life.
But beforehand, I decided to do a little
Caro-style investigating,
and I walked over to that part of the park,
because it's very close to the Historical Society,
and I wanted to be on the scene.
I said, what would Robert Carra do?
He would go and be in the space.
And I walked around to those playgrounds
that they put in, which are still there,
which are definitely not as nice
as a grove of trees would be.
Like, they're okay.
They're okay playgrounds.
And I went down to Tavern on the Green,
and that parking circle is still there,
where cars can drop people off.
And when you look at it,
it feels like someone came along
and took a bite out of the park
and just left pavement behind.
It really feels like the outside world of the city
has invaded briefly and been pushed back,
but has left an emptiness, a void behind.
And so to imagine that parking lot
in the area where those playgrounds are,
it would have been a very noticeable chunk
taken out of the park.
And it's an enormous park, but walking around,
you're like, yeah, this would have had an effect.
It would have had a real effect on the people
who lived in that neighborhood.
And it feels like something would have been torn out of it.
And for what?
For a parking lot, for a restaurant?
That is like, I looked at the prices on the menu
and I was like, this is an overpriced restaurant. Like the prices have kept kept up with inflation, let's say,
you know, it's still an expensive hamburger. So no, thanks. That's what I say to that parking
lot.
Yeah, it's one of those things where he just he just kind of there was a plan he dug in.
He made it had some, you know, friendly conversations with the proprietor of the restaurant or something like that to make it all make sense
at the time.
But like, I mean, it's kind of amazing
because this is not a thing to,
like not a great hill to die on for him.
You know, like it doesn't make any sense.
It's such a small thing.
And what's notable is that at a certain point,
he perceived that as well.
Because that's the new sort of behavior with him. So you just realize like, there is no reason to
take this much damage for this parking lot. And it's chipped away at his reputation in a number
of ways. And it's such a tiny hill for this to happen on, but Moses, his hope was nobody's
going to notice that I gave in and lost this battle.
But it gets big media attention,
and Kara talks about the effect of that.
He says, the aura of infallibility was gone also.
He's talking about some other stuff that was gone,
but the aura of infallibility was gone also.
If Moses was the man who got things done,
implicit was the assumption that the things
that he got done were things that should be gotten done.
He had always been portrayed as a man who was right.
Now, in a single dramatic
tableau he had been shown to be utterly unmistakably wrong. This idea that he's not a guy who can
always get things done. He's not a guy who is incorruptible. Look at this sweetheart
deal. And he's not infallible. That he is not someone that you don't dare go up against
because you're always going to lose. All these things have been removed from his reputation
by this, again, kind of a trivial thing
that like to give a parking lot to a restaurant,
which of all the things he's done is not,
by far not the worst,
and not something you would even expect him to stick so on.
And you all kind of have to wonder,
maybe if he hadn't gone on that vacation to Spain,
he would have wriggled out of it
in some more face-saving way, I don't know.
Right, right, right.
But what this does is it starts this cycle of fights
in which Robert Moses does not win,
and also where Robert Moses is the bad guy.
And what's really notable is that there begins to be
like a group of newspaper reporters who were not alive or at least sentient
during those time periods where Robert Moses
would destroy a newspaper man's life pretty easily.
And so they start seeing that there's some stories here
and they start acting.
And that's what the next chapter is about.
It's called Late Arrival.
We'll get to that after the break.
So this is chapter 43, Late Arrival, which is like a little rude.
You know?
Ha!
Ha ha ha ha ha!
It's just that Carol's like,
I've been writing about this this whole time.
What about you guys?
But I think he's talking about,
I think he's not talking about the reporters who are the focus so much as the editors maybe.
He really is.
The powers that be that run these newspapers,
finally they start to see that criticizing Moses
and telling these stories that are very compelling
to the news reading public is worth it.
And it takes a lot of work to get them to that point. And the work of a group of reporters that Carol Riegel and I have, to the news reading public is like, you know, it's worth it.
And it takes a lot of work to get them to that point
and the work of a group of reporters that Carol really
has a lot of fun writing about.
I think he feels a real kinship with these characters
and real, and admires them.
He starts the chapter with a incredibly prescient quote
from Robert Moses.
One of these quotes where it's like,
it's super ironic, so he makes use of it a lot.
So 1933 and Robert Moses talking about another New York politician who was having his comeuppance.
He says, the great statesman McKee is a synthetic character which never actually existed on sea or land, puffed up by the press, dot, dot, dot.
And now in the process of deflation, there's a large amount of unfairness to the individual in this process, but in the end, it arrives at the truth.
And it's like, as if 25 or so years earlier, 23 years earlier,
he's writing his own epitaph, you know, which is amazing.
It's very prescient.
It just happens sometimes, you know,
history rhymes or whatever.
So we're introduced to some characters here.
And one of them, one of the main ones here is
this reporter for the World Telegram and Sun.
Again, a newspaper that does not exist anymore.
I always wonder if it's like,
did the Telegram newspaper and the Sun newspaper merge
and then the World newspaper merged with that one?
A lot of these read like magnetic fridge poetry.
You know, there's like World Telegram, Herald, Times, you know, there's, there's like, there's like world telegram, herald times, you know, and then,
and then they just throw them up
and rearrange them over time.
So yeah, I love it, yeah.
And so this reporter, Gene Gleason,
he says to his editors,
I want to investigate Robert Moses,
cause I'm sure that there's other fishy stuff,
that the tavern on the green contract
is not the only fishy thing about Robert Moses.
And normally his editors would say no.
But the Battle of Central Park has inspired them to say,
like, okay, I'll allow it.
His editor says, I'll allow it.
And Gleason wants to start investigating the power
of public authorities.
But unfortunately, no groundwork's been done
on that story before because the records are inaccessible.
You can't get them, there's nowhere to start.
But a little groundwork has already been done
on the Manhattan Town Public Housing Project.
And so Gleason is like, okay, I think there's potential. There's something for me to work off of.
And he starts working with one of the rewrite men at the newspaper.
And I apologize to call him a rewrite man, but they're all, all the reporters pretty much are men at this point.
The, you know, not again, not for fair reasons, not because the men were just doing such a bang up job reporting, you know. And so he works with this rewriter, Fred J. Cook.
And I think what's interesting here is I forget
how a newspaper works in this way,
where there's often this delegation of abilities
between the person who is out doing the investigative work
and the person that you call it into at the office
who does the actual kind of writing of the article.
And they work together so well on this,
but it's just a reminder to me of like,
oh, Robert Carroll could have written a whole book
about how newspapers work,
and it would have been fascinating.
There's just so much I don't know about it.
But they start putting together a series of articles
that don't discover new things so much as they assemble
all the known facts about Manhattan town
in one place for the first time.
And the facts show that Moses' slum clearance program is clearing out functioning neighborhoods
and replacing them with nothing.
You know, just unfinished projects or slums.
And they haven't found the corruption in the program yet, but they do make it clear that
the program is making housing worse.
It is not improving the problem. And most importantly, rather than blaming the city, in quotes, they name
Moses and they put the blame on him. And so in a movie, this would be front page news.
It would crack the case. Suddenly everyone be investigating Moses. Is that what happens,
Roman?
No, that's not what happens at all. It's also one of those things where the story is just so complicated, you know?
Yes.
And it involves lots of different people
and maybe those people, their victimization
isn't as compelling to newspaper readers, you know?
It's just one of those things that doesn't quite
have the traction that these sort of park fights do.
I mean, because the other one that we're gonna talk about
next chapter is another kind of low stakes park fight.
But-
Oh, it's the lowest stakes park fight.
It's incredible, and it's basically over a misunderstanding,
you know, more than anything else.
But yeah, this one doesn't quite stick
because it has the same kind of issues of all this stuff.
But I mean, like, this is a very classic corruption
that they uncover, like developers siphoned off money
and then the story just gets buried.
It's not interesting to people.
They put it on the back pages of the paper
and the editors are still afraid enough of Moses
that they would tell him about it ahead of time
and they provide space in the paper
for him to have a rebuttal
where he attacks the paper's own story.
Right.
And they don't put Moses' name in the headlines.
And something that I think we've only become more familiar with in modern times is often
people just look at the headlines.
Yeah.
They don't read the article.
And the way you, this is something that James Fallows writes about, is that a headline frames
a story in a way that tells the reader what the main information is.
And so the headline can be vastly not unrepresentative of the actual story, but the headline is what's
going to stick with people.
So if Moses' name is not in the headline, people are not going to think it.
But one story leads to another.
And there's this domino effect that Caro talks about where he says,
Investigative reporters quickly become aware of a phenomenon of their profession.
Information so hard to come by when they are preparing
to write their first story in a new field
suddenly becomes plentiful as soon as that first story
has appeared in print.
Every city agency has its malcontents and its idealists
and its malcontent idealists, which is a, I love that.
That is such a great way to say it.
Officials and aides and clerks and secretaries
unhappy with the philosophy
by which it is being run or the payoffs that are being made within it who have been just waiting
for years for the appearance of some forum in which their feelings can be expressed.
And so once these first articles come out, even though they're in the back, Gleason and Cook's
phones start ringing. People are coming out of the woodwork to complain about Moses and suddenly
there are lots of leads for them to continue this investigation and dig deeper.
Of course, everyone is afraid of Moses so it all has to be off the record and a source
in the Comptroller's Office reveals how the developers are milking their housing developments
for millions while leaving tenants without heat.
They're not paying taxes to the city for years and again these stories don't get that much
play.
They're complicated in a lot of ways.
They involve names and numbers.
If other papers mention them,
it's usually just to run Moses' denials.
And the New York Times is still carrying
Moses' water for him.
Like they're still not ready.
They did disagree about the parking lot,
but they're not ready to turn on him completely.
And then in June, 1957,
it comes out that the Manhattan town developers
have siphoned off so much money
that they have none left to pay their taxes or their mortgage or build any of the buildings
they've contracted to build.
And the city will have to foreclose on this development.
This is a city project that was given to developers.
The city will now have to foreclose on and the Times buries this story, but the other
papers don't.
And Gleason gets Mayor Wagner to say
at a press conference that he was conned for five years by these developers and that's a big thing.
Yeah, yeah. I mean and this is like the tone of these newsrooms is changing a lot and the older
reporters who used to criticize some of these upstarts for questioning the powers that be in
the city are now like doing follow-up questions where they ask it.
And it's beginning to become clear that this sort of rich diversity of different newspapers
is helping the situation now.
If the Times isn't going to do it, someone else is going to cover it.
And therefore, this is the whole point of having an active and vibrant press, really.
It's kind of amazing.
Aaron Ross Powell And Gleason and Cook, once again,
they fall prey to the great liberal myth that once you get the information out there,
the system will do its job and people will get mad or they'll change their minds. It'll be great.
They're like, Moses is going to get his comeuppance now. He's going to have his wings
clipped by the mayor. But they don't understand how central Moses has become to the actual invisible machinery of the city. And so Kara says,
the two reporters' expectation was not unreasonable. Ordinarily, the tainting of a city program was
scandal and failure, scandal of immense proportions, failure five years in duration, would result in at
least curtailment of the powers of the mayoral subordinate heading that program, lest the public
outcry turn against the mayor.
Their expectation was just based on a false premise that Robert Moses was really the mayor's
subordinate.
They did not understand that as a matter of practical politics, the mayor could not discipline,
demote or remove Title I's administrator, and so they were surprised at ensuing developments.
And those developments are that a spokesman of Moses' announces that new developers
are coming in to take over Manhattan Town.
They're not going to have foreclosure hearings.
The old developers will have no penalties.
In fact, the two principal stockholders of the mismanaged Manhattan Town, Inc. are going
to be kept on the payroll as consultants.
They're actually going to have their stock bought out from them and they're going to
remain stockholders in the new development.
So these guys who cheated the city out of millions, they're going to keep making money
off of it.
And there's an outcry and the
mayor's like, all right, I'll take action.
I will cut off some of the money those
developers would receive.
They're still going to be rewarded for their
failure.
They're just not getting as much reward.
And Gleeson and Cooke are like, we did all this
work and all we managed to do was get more money
to the bad guys.
And Moses has not really been affected at all.
And Moses has big plans at this point.
He's planning this new vision of Manhattan's West side, Lincoln Center,
which involves raising, not raising like raising up,
but raising is like raising to the ground.
You know, R-A-Z.
Like a razor shaving.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, they probably come from the same group.
I never even thought about that.
Roman, you're so smart.
Come on.
You're as smart as the empire
that bears your name.
They're gonna raise 18 square blocks
and they're replacing them with Lincoln Center,
the Metropolitan Opera, the New York Philharmonic,
the New York Ballet, the High School of Performing Arts,
Juilliard, Fordham University's new campus.
The newspapers are like, they love this plan.
It's gonna displace 7,000 low-income families
and replace their homes with 4,000 luxury apartments, but the newspapers love it.. It's going to displace 7,000 low-income families and replace their homes
with 4,000 luxury apartments, but the newspapers love it.
And Roman, I want to hear you say, but then I have, I have a thing I want
to say about Lincoln Center.
So here's the thing.
It's not better than 7,000 homes for people who can afford it, but
Lincoln Center is pretty great.
It is.
I, I, that was what I was going to say in all disclosure.
I have spent so many memorable hours
and beloved hours of my life at Lincoln Center.
Some of my happiest memories of experiencing culture
and art have taken place there.
It's a place that is, it's inextricably tied in
with my memories of my grandmother,
who I spent many, many hours with there.
And so it's, when I think about her, I think about Lincoln center.
I was in New York for that event and I walked by Lincoln center twice.
And each time I was just flooded with, with these feelings, it's a, it's a
really, it's a magical place, but again, you don't want to kick out 7,000 people.
No, or, or if you do these big plans, you have to take care of them.
And he never did that sort of thing.
Um, but, but like, you know, you see movies in the park there
in the summertime, you know, like,
I've watched people dance to San Francisco's there.
You know, like, it's, and it has all these cultural,
like, as a center of culture,
it's kind of stunning how concentrated it all is
at this like place.
And anyway, it's just one of those ones like,
I mean, Jones Beach didn't have anything
that it was knocking down,
so therefore it's kind of this unalloyed good,
and this one plenty alloyed, I guess.
But Lincoln Center is pretty awesome, I think.
Yes, it's a, I mean, I feel a little about it
like I felt like when I visited Versailles years ago,
where I was like, they could have fed so many people with the
money it took to build this house, but those
people would still be dead now and the house
is still here.
So like, I wouldn't, I'm going to get to
enjoy the house.
Like that's, so it's, and like you're saying,
the people that were displaced should have
been taken care of, should have been accounted
for, maybe should have had a say in the, in
the process, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
But it is, it is hard not to feel as a New
Yorker, like a certain amount of pride in this,
that there's this space where you can,
I mean, if they were all scheduled on the same day,
you could go to the opera, then go to the ballet,
then hear the Philharmonic, then look at the fountain
where they shot that scene and the producers, you know?
Like, I've seen so many things there that were amazing.
It just, but it's hard to know that while you're there,
so many people's homes were taken from them to make it possible. But you could argue, I mean, it's hard to know that while you're there, so many people's homes were taken from them
to make it possible.
You could argue, I mean, it's a little different,
but it's sort of in the same philosophy
that the existence of Central Park,
even though it doesn't knock down homes,
its existence does deny a lot of spaces
where homes could be built to make life
more affordable in Manhattan.
And that's a choice that we make, and I think it's a good choice that is made where homes could be built to make life more affordable in Manhattan.
And that's a choice that we make. And I think it's a good choice that is made
on behalf of the citizens of New York.
But it's one of those things,
it does matter that there was something there ahead of time.
I'm not just being,
I'm not trying to just like abstract this to the point
of having just a philosophical discussion
where people mean nothing.
But there is a cost when it comes to like,
things take place in physical space.
And if you have one thing, you don't have another.
And this is one of those ones where at least the end product
I think was executed in a interesting and valuable,
like that was an interesting valuable thing was made.
I cannot say that about the Cross Bronx Expressway. No, I certainly, I have no loving memories of the Cross Bronx Expressway at all.
You know, whereas Lincoln center is a place that, like I said, I have such a,
I have such a personal relationship with, I can't be impartial about it.
But you're right that I think it gets to, it gets to the heart of what so much of
what Carol is saying, that everything is a choice, everything in governance and
how you run a city is a choice and choosing to keep Central
Park a park means effectively raising the price
of housing for everyone who lives in the city, a
certain amount.
And that was an easy choice to make when the city
was half or not even a quarter built and you still
had farm estates up in what would become, you know,
125th street.
Yeah.
But it's, it is a choice that they make and you're true that you're right that it's a,
there are those choices.
What is not the best way to do it though with Lincoln Center is the things that the papers
didn't dig into in their enthusiasm for the news project.
So how Moses is selling the land involved to developers at discount prices, how he's
paying politically connected landowners like the Kennedys above market purchase prices.
Like seven times as much.
Yes, like a lot more money.
The federal administrator for Title I funds, Albert M. Cole, he thinks this is the moment
to demand Moses answer for his kind of slipshot and misleading way of administering title one projects and he threatens to cut off all of title ones
funds to the city if Moses doesn't change his ways and Moses threatens to
resign and within an hour Mayor Wagner is backing him publicly and the papers
rushed to back up Moses against the federal government just like when
Roosevelt tried to get him fired and Moses calls his powerful friends they
call the White House and Cole has to back down. And Gleason and Cook, they start realizing
Moses is still too powerful for the federal government
to undercut him, let alone the city government,
let alone regular people.
And this aura of incorruptibility,
even though it's not all the way there,
it's still strong enough that people will defend him
against the federal government.
And his infallibility has been disproven
by the Central Park battle.
But there's still this idea
that he is a public servant above politics.
He's not on the take.
He doesn't get involved in petty political battles.
And they realize it's gonna take a lot more work
on behalf of reporters whose editors have invested
a lot of years in the Moses myth to make a real difference.
Moses has had such a relationship
with top publishers, top editors that he can just take it for granted that they are going
to believe in him. And Gleason and Cook find that their sources within city agencies after
that first rush, they're newly paranoid. They don't want to talk about it, but they keep
digging and they're able to start reporting the ties between local politicians
and the slum clearance developers, the developers who get contracts.
And by 1958, they can show that William S. Liebwohl, the director of Moses' Slum Clearance
Committee is a stockholder in the Nassau Management Company, the real estate relocation firm that
we talked about in a previous episode that has been paid millions to do essentially nothing,
to help nobody.
And they start finding more and more links between Moses' people and the companies
being given contracts and local politicians.
But at this point, Roman, you talked about
how other reporters are gonna jump in.
They're still not jumping in yet.
Editors keep removing Moses' names from their articles.
They keep pressuring them, do some other stories.
These aren't too complicated.
And Caro says the stories about corruption in these projects are being put on
page 27. And the stories about how Moses has this great project he's building are on page one.
And by 1959, the leads are really drying up. Moses is starting to get public works named after him,
which is pretty out of the ordinary for a living person. And Gleason and Cook, they're like,
we're going to pin him on Title I, on the Corruption,
but I guess that's dead now,
until they come up with their plan.
And Caro says, to understand what Gleason and Cook did then,
it is necessary to understand Gleason and Cook.
And you're like, I've been reading about these guys.
Are you, now's when you're gonna tell me about them?
And he just gives, he gets into their personalities.
Gleason, he's that classic front page,
his Girl Friday, hard drinking, fast talking reporter,
dedicated to protecting the little guy,
loves the thrill of it, the rush.
And Cook is this unassuming guy,
but he's also a crusading liberal
who wants to protect the little guy.
And Carol mentions how Cook wrote a book
defending Alger Hiss when Alger Hiss was,
what is at his most priish,
a stance that in 1974 seemed better, that it has aged poorly now considering Alger Hiss was at his most priish, a stance that in 1974 seemed better,
that it has aged poorly now, considering Alger Hiss,
I don't wanna reopen it,
but he probably did what he was accused of doing.
It is no longer a just taken for granted,
if you're liberal, you love Alger Hiss
and you wanna defend him.
That's right.
And for anyone listening who doesn't know that name,
either look it up or don't worry about it.
It's the kind of thing that like my grandparents
took as just as took as gospel
that Al Juhis had been railroaded.
And Cook hates that Moses pushes people around
and Carroll quotes him using the phrase,
the power brokers to talk about Moses
and the people around him,
which is I think the first time the phrase
really gets brought up in the mouth of somebody,
maybe this is around the time it's getting born. I actually kind of wondered if this is where Carol
gets the name of the book, like,
because this is all reported, you know,
obviously well before he's writing all this stuff.
And if this is unlocking, I don't know, I don't know.
The power broker is not a phrase
I know besides coming from this book, really.
I mean- I know it from this book, really? I mean-
I know it from this book,
and I know it from the Marvel comic,
Supervillain the Power Broker,
who's the guy who gives people superpowers, yeah.
But it seems to me like it's possible that,
I mean, maybe it's just sort of like common parlance
among people who write about politics and stuff,
that there are power brokers and this and that,
and maybe it's just such super common of a phrase,
but it shows up here and it's very notable to me.
You know, like this is sort of a great moment in the book.
It is the moment in the movie where someone says the title.
He's like some kind of power broker
and the audience goes, oh.
And we've heard it from,
we've heard the phrase used by Caro,
but we haven't heard it used by a character in the story,
you know, which is really great.
But he doesn't make a lot out of it.
He just has it in the quote.
So it's done very subtly.
And so Gleason Cook, the thing that he talks about here also
is that they're competitive.
All these reporters are competitive.
They want the credit.
They want the glory of the big story.
They want to beat the other papers.
But they realize if their editors aren't supporting them,
they're going to have to find a way around that.
And the only way around that is to start colluding
with the ultimate enemy, other reporters at other papers.
And this is what I was hinting at earlier,
is this, I love this so much.
Like this is the whole part.
I mean, this is the best part of this chapter,
which is essentially them coming to the conclusion
that well, if every, if editor is going to bury it here,
I can tip off this other person
and we can begin to sort of trade parts of these stories.
And they actually kind of, I mean, they really do collude.
Like it's not just sort of like kind of allowing it to happen.
Like they meet and decide what's going to happen.
Yeah, they're meeting in bars and saying,
you take this part of the story,
and then after you run that, I'll do this part.
Okay, and then you take this tip and you handle that.
They are, I mean, it's like insider trading
between reporters, but in a way that is,
there's nothing illegal about it, and it helps them.
And Caro, every now and then he'll indulge
in a kind of fanciful metaphor or description.
And he has one here and he just says,
soon like two flamenco dancers, spurring each other to wilder and wilder efforts,
Haddad and Gleason were both helping and striving to outdo each other,
their stories picking up and taking off from each other's and hitting harder and harder.
I love that. I just love that they're comparing them to two flamenco dancers, you know,
challenging each other. And they know that if their editors see a story about Title I corruption
in another paper, they're going to want them to get on. It's like, you know, they are bringing the spice back into
the relationship between their editors and this story by cheating with another paper, you know.
And soon there's this circle of reporters that are trading tips and things to strategizing how
to get this done. And Caro says about these reporters, like you said, Roman earlier,
these are young people. They're mostly in their 20s and 30s. They're young enough that they are still idealistic,
and they're also young enough that the Moses myth
does not matter to them.
They were babies when Jones Beach got built.
They don't remember him as the hero of the working class
and the liberal reformers.
They know him as an old man, this stubborn old dictator
who needs to be toppled, and they're also too young
to remember or have felt
the threat of Moses ending your career
when his bloodhounds go after you.
They are fearlessly young and they're also like
in the way that can help a young person
kind of ignorant of history or the feeling of history
in that what Moses means to them is what Moses is right now
and not what he used to be.
And Cairo, he like, you can't help
but feel that he loves these guys, you know, he's just, these men and women and he glorifies them. And Caro, he like, you can't help but feel that he loves these guys, you know,
he's just, and these men and women,
and he glorifies them and he notes,
oh, they're competitive, they want glory.
That's not all, you know, just sterling heroism, you know,
but he mostly attributes their actions
to their need to see Moses get justice
for pushing people around.
And it's just, again, if you're making a movie
of the power broker, don't do it, it's too big.
But this could be, this could be that movie. Yeah, this is the making a movie of the power broker, don't do it, it's too big, but this could be. This would be the moment.
This could be that movie.
Yeah, this is the real spotlight,
having people spar with each other,
trying to create the best story, meeting secretly,
and it's just great.
This is why the world progresses
when old people step aside and new people come in.
And it's super important to have that in the world.
You know, like it's just like,
it's great that these guys have no memory
or sense of Jones Beach or no fear.
This is exactly what you need in a society.
It's, there's certain standard barriers that hold history
and there's certain people
that do not give fuck about history.
And it's important to have all those people
to make progress.
And I just, I love this stuff.
It makes me very happy.
Yeah, and as we've seen in the book,
like Moses used to be one of these types of people.
And the other thing is that they are living in the world
that Moses' positive work has created.
And so they can take it for granted.
Moses' fight years ago was people should have parks.
This was a new thing.
And now their fight is,
maybe people shouldn't be pushed out of their homes.
Like to make those parks,
Moses had to ride roughshod over people.
But now they live in a world with parks,
and now it's maybe we shouldn't ride roughshod over people.
I love this idea of this team of reporters.
I think it's just hilarious.
And I think the part of me that gets nervous
and nostalgic about this stuff is the fact
that there's enough papers and like morning editions
and late editions and stuff that they can be
in conversation like this in a way
that papers just don't anymore.
They just can't be.
Yeah.
And knowing that whatever they write, someone's going to read it.
Even if it's buried in the back of the newspaper, it's going to get to somebody.
But there's got to be new ways to do that, podcasts or whatever.
So now it's 1959.
Moses is 70 years old.
He is seemingly still at the top of the New York power pyramid.
He is basking in praise all the time.
He's raking in all his investment dollars for his projects.
He is easily reappointed as the state power authority.
He's on his way to building this massive dam at Niagara
that Robert Caro never spends much time on.
It is so massively important and yet he never talks about it
because it has nothing to do with the things
he's really talking about in the same way. And we have to thank him for that. Like you look at this book and you're like, he must talks about it because it has nothing to do with the things he's really talking about in the same way
and we have to thank him for that.
Like you look at this book and you're like,
he must have left it all in, he didn't make any decisions.
No, he did.
He does not go into the story of this dam.
I don't care about it, thank you.
I don't wanna hear about it.
I know it's there, I don't need to,
I'm sure there were a lot of struggles,
I'm sure there was engineering,
amazing feats of engineering that was done. That's right.
Don't care.
Thank you, Robert Carroll for not getting into it.
I mean, I bet you probably in his archives,
at the historical society,
there's probably pages and pages about this dam.
I'm sure there's pages and pages.
I bet you could write a whole book
about what he discovered about that dam.
Yeah, but that's not a book I'm necessarily as interested in
as New York City.
I think there's a feeling of like,
what's relevant to someone who lives in the New York area,
which you could say makes the book
a little provincial in some ways,
but also focuses the book quite a bit.
There's also a different version of this book,
Robert O. Caro spends a lot more time
on Moses' itineraries on his vacations.
I'm glad we don't have that, that's okay.
That's right.
But then in February, so Moses seems like
he's on the top of the heap. In February, one of the reporters, he writes a story
about how Sydney Unger, pretty good name, the man Moses picked to sponsor his
Riverside Amsterdam urban renewal project, is actually a politically
connected slumlord. He is not a developer with a good track record
and he's politically connected. And suddenly, the editors of these papers, they're
afraid they'll miss out on similar scoops like this. And now it's not just that
they are listening to their reporters and saying, okay, you can look at Title I. They
are assigning reporters to Title I projects to investigate them. And the stories are getting
closer and closer to the front page. They're on page seven and they're on page four. And
finally, Moses is being named directly in these stories, directly in the headlines.
And this is a longish
excerpt, but I love it.
So I'm going to read it.
It's got a lot of power packed into it.
In 1953, the women's city club had issued reports
disclosing that Moses had been shifting tenants
in slum clearance sites to other buildings on the
site, like, and then he uses the word for Roma
that I'm not going to use on the podcast, but you
know, it's books from 1974.
The reports had been ignored in 1954, a minority
report, the city planning commission had made similar revelations. That report had been ignored. In 1954, a minority report the City Planning Commission had made similar revelations.
That report had been ignored. But now, in 1959, when J. Clarence Davies Jr., new independent head of the city's real estate bureau,
made the same report, it was headline letters.
City admits shifts from slums to slums. The press of the city awake at last, Fred Cooke exulted, and he was right.
The press had not been awakened by its owners, dot dot dot, or by its top editors, dot dot dot.
It had been awakened by its reporters, not by its famous reporters, but by young unknown staff writers
scheming together to force publishers and editors to do what the young men felt was their duty.
But it was awake. I feel like it's such a, it's like, it's such a powerful thing.
Like they didn't do it now. They didn't do it here, they didn't do it here.
But these guys, they forced it to happen
just through their sheer need for it to happen
in some ways and their strategy.
Yeah, just the sort of ingenuity
and sort of playing these different powerful editors
and newspaper owners against their own insecurities
about being the best paper, having the first story.
They just were so smart about it all.
I love it.
I think it's just hilarious and fun.
And this is the part that I get really, really excited
about.
Yeah, and there's a feeling.
This is not kind of what we think of when we think of
community activism, in a way.
But it's the same basic principles
of people working together for a common goal
and using the tools at their command to make that happen.
And it's really, you know, when it's for a good thing,
it's wonderful.
You know, I can see thinking about it now,
I can see the same techniques being used for a bad thing.
But that's the nature of tools.
And as all these stories are landing,
another great story that cannot be denied,
even though the stakes are so low,
the lowest in probably Robert Moses' career.
This is chapter 44, Mustache and the Bard, it's pages 1026 to 1039.
This one's pretty silly.
This is a silly chapter.
The title is silly and the chapter's silly.
And I wonder, maybe that's the point, that this is, this is a small, seemingly
trivial, not even necessarily
misdeed of Moses, like miscommunication and mismanagement of a subordinate. And it leads to
one of his biggest public relations issues. And I think that's, I wonder if that's that,
that's the theme that Caro is getting to is that like the little things end up being what trip him
up. It's not the big things. It's not the systems that are supposed to keep people in check. It's
these little things, not because they affect the most people, but they affect things that
the people in the media are interested in talking about. And also things that have a,
like an intangible quality. You know, again, you can argue it's too bad you have to lose your house,
but we need this road. It's hard to argue kids don't need to play or that William Shakespeare is
not good, you know, that kind of stuff. It's hard to argue kids don't need to play or that William Shakespeare is not good,
that kind of stuff.
It's hard to argue this stuff.
Shakespeare is a communist.
Yeah, exactly.
And Kara opens with an excerpt
from the 1958 HUAC hearing
where theater producer Joseph Paparovsky,
better known as Joe Papp,
now he's known as Joe Papp everywhere,
who will become one of the towering figures
in New York and American theater.
He's being asked if he's using Shakespeare
to spread communist ideology and the ridiculousness.
In the transcript, the congressman who is asking the question seems to understand how
ridiculous the premise is even as he uses it.
That ridiculousness goes through.
And Carol, when he gets it after the excerpt, he opens it with almost an acknowledgement
that this is an unfair story that's being told, that this is the press and the public
getting outraged about this tyrannical move of Moses's
when it's really a fight that Moses seems to have not
wanted and didn't really have the stomach for
and gave up on, but it still hurt his reputation so badly.
And it seems like comparing that quote from earlier
from Moses, it's unfair, but it gets
out of truth because if ever there was a thing to get Moses on, it's not this one.
And so Moses, he's always been a fan of Shakespeare.
He wrote poetry in college.
You know he loves Shakespeare.
Come on.
And in 1956, Joseph Papp, he's a young theater impresario.
He says to Moses, can I put on free Shakespeare plays in this amphitheater
on the Lower East Side that the Parks Department built,
and that Moses built in part because Al Smith
had told Moses when I was young,
I could not afford tickets to the theater.
I just couldn't afford to go.
And Moses seems to admire Pabst's genuine interest
in providing shows for free.
And besides the stage is empty all the time anyway.
No one does anything with it.
So why not?
And Pabst starts putting on productions there
and they're very respected. The local audiences who cannot afford theater
tickets love them. And this happens throughout history with live theater, but especially
with Shakespeare is that you show them to people who you think are going to be like,
this is too complicated. I don't understand it. And they love it. Like in the old west,
Shakespeare was incredibly popular. Like it's just, it's writing that just gets to,
he's almost Robert Caroweske in his ability
to put words together.
And Pat is like, I wanna expand these shows,
I wanna put them in more parks.
And there's one person standing in his way,
Moses gives permission,
but there's one person who doesn't like it,
Stuart Constable, the mustache,
who we already know is a foe of mothers,
doesn't like moms.
There is a kind of like strain in these chapters
of subordinates to Moses,
who don't have any of his skill whatsoever.
Like they're as pugnacious as he is,
but can't like operate around people,
can't like bully people the same way
and make wrongheaded decisions that, you know,
to his credit in a way,
Robert Moses has great loyalties to his subordinates.
But they just don't deserve it
because they are kind of so boneheaded so much of the time.
Yeah, you see it a lot in organizations where someone at the top has a special quality that
has allowed them to create this position of power.
And then yeah, the people underneath them try to imitate that or have been taught to
work in that ethic and they just don't have it.
You know, they just don't, they can't do it the right way.
And we'll see as we get through it.
Yeah, his loyalty to his subordinates, which would normally be a, a positive thing gets him into so much trouble here.
And this whole chapter has an element of farce about it.
You know, there's, there's, it's, it's written with a kind of like almost the
most winking that Carol gets throughout.
And it's, it's a, it's a fun chapter, but, uh, it's, I have, this is the
chapter I maybe have the most trouble with in some ways.
Oh, really?
Oh, we'll talk about it.
We'll talk about it.
Okay.
Um, partly because there's part that, and we'll talk about it. We'll talk about it. Okay.
Partly because there's part, and we'll get to it later,
but there's times when I'm reading it,
each time I've read it where I'm like,
why is this jamper on the book?
Like, why?
There's nothing about James Jacobs,
but there's all this stuff about Joe Papp and Shakespeare.
But I think it's because this larger point
I think he's getting to.
But Papp proposes putting on plays in Central Park.
And Moses is like, that's okay
if you don't charge admission for them.
And this is a start of Shakespeare in the Park,
which again is for the cultural life of New York
City is one of, by this point in the year 2024,
one of the most beloved things going on in New York.
And I have seen shows in that festival.
I know like friends of mine, I couldn't do this
because I had a job, but friends of mine would
go, they would wait online for hours because all
you need to do is wait online.
You'd wait on for hours.
And like, I remember a friend being like, oh yeah, I was standing next you need to do is wait online. You wait online for hours.
And like, I remember a friend being like,
oh yeah, I was standing next to Mike Myers
waiting for Shakespeare in the Park tickets for four hours.
Like, that's just what you do.
And it's first come first serve.
And it's just a beloved event
to a certain section of New Yorkers.
And it's kind of magical when you are in the park,
how Central Park, even it's a safe park, but now,
but it's still scary to be in a park at night. It's like you like you're in the woods. It's scary and you've been raised on these stories of people being killed in the park
You know
But there's something magical about how when there's a large group of people
Seeing a performance because I used to see the Philharmonic in the park quite a bit, too
It transforms that space and it takes a space that could be threatening and turns into this communal space
That is magical and warm
and what a city does best, you know, which is take the fear of solitude and turn it into
a shared experience with lots of strangers who become your neighbors, you know, they become people
that you know for a moment and have a connection to that otherwise would just be, you know, unknown
names, unknown faces, unknown lives. It's just, there's something very magical about it.
And Moses, to his credit, likes this.
Yeah, no, he thinks it's great.
This is the stuff, he's not a big fan of like,
just wild glens and trees and stuff,
but this is the type of thing that he is into.
Yes, you are using a space.
He does not like unused space.
And so if you can use it and use it for something
that no one else is doing with it, it's he's for it.
And he really appreciates the chutzpah that Joe Papp
has in the way he fund raises for it.
And Moses comes to see him, the book implies as kind
of like a young go getter like himself, who has a
project that's to help people and will go to any
length to do it.
And so by 1959, Moses, they've never met each
other,
but Moses is telling Joe Papp,
I'll handle the fundraising for another season
of Plays in the Park.
I'll take care of it.
I like what you're doing.
Don't worry about money.
And then he leaves town
on a three week vacation of Barbados.
Another one of these long vacations
that this workaholic is taking, you know.
Maybe he's taking more of them at this age, I don't know.
And unfortunately he leaves things
in the hands of the mustache constable who does not
like Shakespeare, doesn't trust Papp.
And it only gets worse when he learns that
Papp refused to name names before HUAC because
constable is, if anything, just a
straightforward anti-communist, you know,
steak and potatoes, New York guy with a big
mustache later on reporters are like, uh,
doesn't this smack of McCarthyism?
And he goes, what's wrong with McCarthy?
And that kind of says everything you need to know
about the mustache, yeah.
And so what the constable,
oh, not the constable, I guess the mustache constable.
Yeah, his name is Constable,
but I keep calling him almost the constable also, yeah.
Decides to do is that, you know,
he doesn't like all these people like using the park
and maybe causing some maintenance issues with, I, you know, he doesn't like all these people like using the park
and maybe causing some maintenance issues with,
I don't know, sitting down on blankets
or something like that.
And so he says that, well, you know,
what you gotta have to do is you need to reimburse
the park department for maintenance,
and therefore that would require charging admission
to Shakespeare in the park,
which is against the sort of like deal
that Pap had made with Robert Moses
about doing Shakespeare in the Park.
And so it puts him in this bind.
He has to, yeah, that he has promised
I will never charge for Shakespeare
and he doesn't want to.
But now he's being told you have to.
And Constable is sure that Moses would be like,
yeah, get this subversive out of the park.
I don't want him in there.
So it was one of those things where it's like,
my boss did the exact opposite,
but I know he really wants me to do this
because it aligns with the values I ascribe to him.
And it's just, it's foolish.
Don't do that people.
Just do it, do what the boss did.
And that's what they want being done right now.
And you would think again,
that Moses would just overrule mustache when he hears about,
but like Roman, if you were saying earlier,
one of these commandments that was ingrained in him
in politics was you always have to support your subordinates.
That's how you get their loyalty.
You make them feel like you have their back all the time.
And in addition to that, if he says Constable is wrong,
then it's almost like saying he's wrong
because he has invested Constable with this power.
So if his whole thing is infallibility,
if the guy he hired is wrong, that means he's a little wrong. And so he had vowed publicly to his subordinates,
I will never overrule you. And that's how I'm going to keep you loyal to me is I'm going to be
loyal to you. So when Moses comes back, he backs up the mustache and refuses to talk to Pap.
And the money he said he'd raise for the Shakespeare festival, that's not happening.
And Moses writes Pap a letter saying, well, for maintenance, it's going to cost between
a hundred thousand and a hundred and fifty
thousand dollars that you're going to have to
reimburse the parks department.
And like, this is 1959.
Like, I mean, that's a lot of money now.
That's an astronomical amount back then.
And Pap is trying to meet with Moses, but
Moses is like, I'm not in charge.
Constable's in charge.
And I wonder if here it's a little bit loyalty
and a little bit him trying to insulate himself
from blame that like, if there's constable between me
and pap, then pap can't get mad at me.
And constable keeps moving the goalpost.
He used to say, he's like, you got to charge a
$1 admission fee.
And pap's like, okay, I'll consider it.
Cause it was, okay, then it's $2 admission fee.
And pap starts to realize this is not about money.
This is about the mustache thinks I'm a
communist and that's what it's about.
This is not a fair fight and I'm gonna have to fight it like a fight. Yeah. And so what does he do?
He uses the same tool the moms use. He goes to the press. What does he do Roman?
Yeah, no, he goes to the media and starts like, you know, he starts to talk about Shakespeare. These are all like
educated people love Shakespeare.
They are now at a point in Moses career where the newspapers are criticizing Moses on a
somewhat regular basis.
And the funny thing here is he really goes for drama.
Like he's gonna kind of do the things that Robert Moses is known for.
It's like this sort of like attack on character, different sort of innuendo, like different
things to sort of like make it feel like
there's a lot of corruption here, that Moses is a kind of
kind of villain here, doesn't like actually,
I don't think it really highlights his role in the beginning of making it all possible.
No, not at all. He really, he makes it into a play, you know,
he's quoting Shakespeare all the time and the reporters love that.
And Moses responds in kind
and he tries to go back to his old playbook similarly.
And he starts these innuendos behind the scenes
about Pap being a Red.
But that used to work.
Times have slightly changed.
This is not a time when it's okay to be a communist,
but Joe McCarthy has been dead for a couple of years.
People kind of look back at that as gross.
They're not like, I love communism.
Everyone should believe what they want. But they're like, that as gross. They're not like, I love communism,
everyone should believe what they want,
but they're like, that was gross.
And they called, and so reporters,
when they hear these rumors, they say,
this is McCarthyism in a disapproving way.
And just as with the first battle of Central Park,
this story is getting simplified.
Moses is the villain, he hates free Shakespeare,
something that is objectively good.
You cannot argue that there is a downside
to putting on free Shakespeare plays in the park.
You can't, it's impossible.
And the thing is that they also do is they start to fact
check his claims about what's going on
in ways that they didn't used to do.
It used to be if Moses said something,
that was the end of it.
You didn't question it, but now they're questioning it.
And once again, public opinion turns against him.
And Carol points out that in the past,
when there had been serious PR crises,
Moses would get sick and be in the hospital.
And the same thing happens here
for reasons that are never fully explained.
My pet theory is that he has a heart attack,
but who knows, you never know, but he goes to the hospital.
And Carol says that photos of Moses leaving the hospital
make him look for the first time, old, like actually old,
like an old weathered man. And then Pap
is like, I'm going to put this, the onus of this on Mayor Wagner, Mayor, overrule these
policies. And of course the mayor is like, I'd love to, I'd love to just say, yeah,
put Shakespeare in the park, but he can't overrule Moses. And it's almost like at this
point the mayor must've felt so annoyed. Moses is punishing the mayor just for considering it.
He refuses to take Wagner's calls.
And Mayor Wagner becomes the subject
of these joking headlines where Mayor Wagner will be like,
I plan to talk to Moses later.
I can't quite get him.
And so there's headlines where it's like,
Mayor searches for Moses.
Where's Moses?
Mayor can't find him.
And if I was Wagner, I'd be so pissed
that I'm not even in a fight with Moses.
I'm in a fight with the mustache,
and I'm looking like a fool
because with a guy who shouldn't even,
I shouldn't have to deal with, you know,
and he can't fire Moses.
And so Wagner has to then support him
and say, Moses, too valuable.
I can't do anything about it.
And the press plays it as Wagner giving in to Moses.
So again, if I'm Wagner, I'm like,
I'm losing a fight with the mustache.
This is ridiculous.
And ultimately, Pap goes to the courts
and a court finds narrowly, kind of for the first time,
that Moses is being capricious with his power
and that he cannot do that with the parks.
This is really stunning because this was a kind of thing
that in the previous court cases,
the law was interpreted in such a way,
written by Moses and interpreted in such a way,
that anything within the park walls,
anything that related to parks whatsoever,
was the complete domain of Robert Moses.
They could-
He was the king of the parks.
They could not, he could tear down any structure
that he wanted, build any other one that he wanted.
I mean, like it was really,
and for something related to like,
ephemeral exhibition of Shakespeare plays,
to think that this is the thing,
that a non-permanent cultural institution,
just like, or even just like cultural,
like, I don't know, occurrence,
is the thing that stops him
when it comes to court interpretation
of what his power is inside of the parks,
is really stunning. It's a interpretation of what his power is inside of the park, is really stunning.
It's a real change in his power.
It's huge, and again, if you're making a movie
about R.R. Moses, this is one of the things you do
because the drama and the narrative is there,
because it's so simple, and it's like,
it's such an ephemeral thing, you're right,
but the story is so clear.
It's such a clear story, and the only thing
that screws up this story dramatically
is Moses probably not really wanting to do it.
Exactly, yeah.
And just as we've been yelling this whole series,
why don't you just accept its resignation?
There's a part of me here that's like, just do it.
Just swallow your loyalty philosophy and just do it
because it's so obviously wrong.
Yeah.
But maybe this is like one of those things,
like if you eliminate the penny,
people begin to like understand
that money has no meaning.
That money is not real.
Yeah.
And it's kind of one of those things like he knows
that he's so propped up in this system
of you just support your guys.
I, you know, the mayor just supports me,
the governor just supports me,
like, you know, they trust me to do it.
And so I think that this is really something
that he can't possibly move on, mostly,
because he knows that the whole structure
that holds him in place is at the base level this thing,
you know, of this idea of like,
I trust your judgment because you are you.
That's what he depends on for the newspapers. That's what he depends on for the newspapers.
That's what he depends on for his relationship in politics
as he remains this bureaucrat inside of this constantly
changing political machinery.
And so I get it.
I get that this is the thing that he can't change on.
It makes sense.
It's like when we talked to AOC, she
was talking about how like so much of politics
is based on if you give your word, can you
keep it?
Yeah.
Do you have the power and the strength to
keep it if you promise something or if you say
you're going to support something or go
against something.
And this is one of those times you're right.
Yeah.
He has to, he has to maintain that, that
power of saying like, no, when I say
something, it happens.
Um, but Carol points out that based on
precedent, Moses could have appealed this court case and I say something, it happens. Um, but Carol points out that based on precedent,
Moses could have appealed this court case and won.
Yeah, for sure.
But instead he says, I'll abide by the decision.
We'll have Shakespeare in the park.
And he tries to arrange the money Pap needs to get
the festival back into the park.
And Pap only has time for one play.
He puts on Julius Caesar.
It's a huge triumph.
Everybody loves it.
I think it's very funny that he probably did it on,
maybe didn't purpose.
That's the story of a, of a potential tyrant being taken down, you know? Yeah. Yeah.
And Carol wonders, he says,
why did Moses give up this fight when previously he had never admitted defeat so
relatively easily? And he says,
one explanation is that Moses could see the damage it was doing to his public
image. But Carol ultimately he's like,
I think that Moses just didn't want to fight this battle in the first place and got dragged into it
because of Constable's dumb choices.
And then he seems to have mired Papp so much
that he let it happen.
And he eventually builds the Delacorte amphitheater
in the park expressly as a permanent home
for Papp's productions.
And so Sid Shapiro, he suspects, and he says to Carol,
that he thinks Moses wanted to lose this one.
That like, if there ever was a battle
that Moses not just was okay with losing,
but didn't wanna win, you know, on the merits, this is it.
And Carrow goes on to talk about Joe Papp.
This fight was one of the best things
that ever happened to Joe Papp.
He's the darling of the liberal elites.
He becomes this institution in the theater world.
He founds the public theater eventually,
down by Astor Place, which is still there.
But for Moses, it's another bloatose reputation.
It's another demonstration of just how much power he has over the mayor, which people
are starting to realize.
And the press turns further against it.
They see that Constable is kind of this mini version of the boss, that this arrogance is
just his boss's arrogance.
And now it's not just the young go-getters who are looking to get Moses.
It's the establishment as well.
And even the Times starts to investigate
Moses' Title I projects.
And the new frame for the media isn't Moses the hero,
who occasionally maybe, I don't know if he's wrapped up
in something, we'll see, but Moses the villain.
Oh, what a tangled web we weave,
which is not Shakespeare.
I should have had a Shakespeare quote.
I don't think it is anyway.
I'll look it up.
I don't think it is.
Well, while you look it up, we'll play some ads and then we'll come back with Chapter
45, Off to the Fair.
This is Chapter 45, Off to the Fair, which is like one of these weird chapters that it sets up the sort of big deal that's about to come, which is there's just something that allows Moses to be kind of dislodged from his like tendrils and everything, because there's this one thing for him to do.
Yes, this is the beginning of it's you know, you hear people say that things change very slowly and then suddenly very fast and that this is the slower part of that change and then the chapter after it which will end this episode with is the fast change. Before we get into it, we do have unfinished business. I just want to say, Oh, what a tangled web. It's Sir Walter Scott. It's not Shakespeare. I apologize.
That's okay. Another great UK author, another towering giant in English language literature.
But okay, we're still in 1959 in off to the fair. It's May 1959 and the New York Citizens Union,
it's another one of these civic reform groups. Moses had been close to it once. They want to
ask Moses some questions about his Title I projects and he answers them in print. He answers them very
haughtily and the newspapers,
they do it normally, run those statements just as straight facts.
They wouldn't have questioned them.
But now they're going to look into them and they point out he hasn't been truthful about
say who actually pursued that Manhattan town development.
Moses leaves out the name of a graft crook and politician Samuel Caspert, who's going
to be a big figure in that corruption scandal.
And even worse when asked if there are written reports about the bidders for the projects
and whether those are available to the public, he gives us indignant response of like, well,
of course they are.
And of course they're open to the public.
Like as if I'm offended, you would even accuse me of hiding those things and the reporters,
they see that and they are nearly orgasmic over this because this is the promise. Oh, like what did he, what he just did is gave us permission
to ask him to look at the title one files.
These have been secret for years
and now we can finally look at them.
This is amazing.
And Caro sees this as like a real tactical blunder.
And he says, why did he make this tactical blunder?
Why did he do this?
Basically giving permission
to have people come investigate him.
And Caro speculates, maybe he knew that legally he could not block them since slum
clearance is a city committee. It's not an authority. You can't treat it like a private
corporation or maybe he'd been so busy with the Messina and Niagara power dams. Again,
these dams that the book barely talks about, which are enormous, enormous projects that
really take up so much of his brain space. We don't hear much about him again, I don't want to,
that he wasn't paying that close attention
to Title I anymore, didn't know how damning the files were.
This is at a point where he's less than six weeks
until the gala opening of the Messina Dam,
Nixon, the vice president's gonna be there,
Queen Elizabeth II is gonna be there,
this is a big deal for him.
He cannot let, I forgot the name of the guy
from Tavern on the Green, but he cannot let him feed, you know, garbage to the vice president and the
Queen of England. He's got to be on top of that. But Carol, he also talks about,
Moses is undeniably at this point for all the power he has always had, for what a
dynamo he is. He's an old man and he is overseeing the Parks Department, the
Long Island Park expansion projects, the expressways, the bridges, those big dams
that again take up a lot more of his life than the book would lead you to believe.
Maybe he's just stretched too thin and maybe he's just trusting his own reputation too much.
Maybe he thinks his subordinates can get in those files and strip anything negative out before people look at them.
And so he delays letting people see them, but he can only do it for so long.
And then finally on May 29, 1959, he has to let these two reporters,
Haddad and Kahn, who he didn't mention in detail before, but they're reporters, he says,
okay, you can come to Triborough, you can look at those files, and they go there. And
they go to see those files. And they are salivating. They're so excited about it.
They're very excited. There's so many files and they find nothing. They really find nothing.
It is such a disappointment for them.
They are, first they have to wait for hours to get in
and finally they go in and they're like, oh boy,
nobody's looked in these files for 35 years
and it is a real Geraldo with Al Capone's Vault situation
where you're just like, what's in this thing?
And you open it and there's, all they've got are brochures,
there's formal memos,
there's nothing about the project sponsors. And the thing, there's in this thing? And you open it and there's, all they've got are brochures, there's formal memos,
there's nothing about the project sponsors.
And the thing, there's a great detail here that I love.
They go to talk to Spargo,
who is one of Moses' right-hand men.
We haven't talked about him a huge amount,
but Spargo is a hugely important part of Moses' operation.
And Spargo is being so disrespectful to them
that while they talk to him in his office,
he just keeps eating soup through the whole meeting.
And I just love this image.
It is hard for me to think of a way
to be more disrespectful to someone
who's come to talk to you than to be eating soup,
because that's a noisy thing to eat.
It's a sloppy thing to eat.
Well, it's like, even if you're eating it cleanly,
you're slurping it.
You know, like it's to just be like, yeah.
The only thing I can think of is if he was eating
just a box of crackers and just spitting out crumbs
at them the entire time, you know,
every time you open his mouth, it's, oh.
And Carrow, he takes a paragraph,
also talk about how shabby the reporters are
and the used car they drive
compared to this kind of neatly put together
Triborough officers.
And so it seems like this is a bust.
These files seem like they were so excited about them
and they're kind of a bust.
Do they give up, Roman?
Do they stop looking through them?
They do not.
They're real reporters. They keep going and they turn kind of a bust. Do they give up Roman? Do they stop looking through them? They do not. They're real reporters.
They keep going and they turn every page as a-
They turn every page in the approved of Carol Manor.
And they end up finding sort of like a smaller project
called Mid-Harlem.
They find this short letter of appreciation
from Louis Pokras, who is an associate
of the mob boss, Frank Costello.
And then it begins to become like, oh, okay.
This is a real thing, because Frank Costello,
nobody knows the name Louis I. Pokras,
which is a great name, you know.
It looks like his name is Pokras, which is a funny name.
But Frank Costello has just recently been the star
of these televised hearings that Senator Estes Kiefauver
did on organized crime.
Everybody knows Frank Costello. It's like Al Capone. If you have Costello's name in some way
connected to this, then it's gold. And they find this handwritten note from Tom Shanahan,
who we mentioned in the past. He runs a big bank that all of Moses's contractors have to park their
money in. And he says in this note, I've been made aware of a delicate situation involving
progress, but the sponsorship gets approved anyway. And this is a story, right?
This is the kind of story they can do something with.
Yeah, because it just has all the characters. It has all these shorthands for people to
understand it without having to understand complex details of like, of math and numbers
and things like that. It just has Costello's name on it. And therefore it's all of a sudden Title I and the mob.
And it takes Moses to disprove that.
You know what I mean?
It's more like it's just set up to tell the story
that everyone knows.
And this is another one of those things for Carol goes.
I don't know if this is exactly fair.
This is like levels and levels and levels down
from actual Moses decision-making.
Yeah, like it's very unlikely. It's possible that he just handed this off to Shanahan like levels and levels and levels down from actual Moses decision making.
Yeah, like it's very unlikely,
it's possible that he just handed this off
to Shanahan to deal with and is not aware
that someone with connection to the mob was doing it.
And they find this other story where they find
that Vincent the Chin Gigante, who had already been,
it was a former attempted hitman,
he was hired as a temporary night watchman.
And this is what, and it damages Moses.
Oh, this other mob associate was hired to work
There and Moses like to be fair to Moses Moses like the man went to jail like he can't get a job now
It's like this is the lowest level job
How like a like a former felon was given a low-level job as a night watchman by a contractor hired by another
Contractor hired by the project sponsor
who Moses didn't necessarily hand pick and it just it's so super unfair but the only funny thing
about it is that of course Vincent the Chin Gigante goes on to be a major mob figure like at that they
didn't know that they couldn't have known this at the time but eventually he is leading the mob in
New York in in many ways and he becomes famous and I remember I remember very well the years when
because I have for decades,
they used to call him the odd father because he would deliberately walk around
in a bathrobe, kind of mumbling to himself in public so that people would think he
was crazy so that the feds wouldn't, wouldn't, uh, charge him with anything.
He did this for like 30 years.
It was amazing.
And I remember when he died, they're like, Oh, the odd father's finally gone.
But this just adds to more.
They don't know that he's going to become the odd father, but it adds to the dirt
and most reputation that like,
even this, which is the tiniest of things,
you can still put in a headline,
mob hitman hired on Moses project.
That's right, that's right.
It's so this sort of stink of underworld stuff,
it really just becomes something
that he just can't get away from.
And now all these really tenacious reporters
who have probably dug up worse dirt,
things that Moses had a hand in directly,
they see an opportunity here
to just go to town on this stuff.
And they start finding it.
They find real stuff.
They find bribes to politicians.
They find sweetheart purchases by the committee
of land owned by local politicians.
They find stories about crooked machine bosses being involved in the housing projects.
And Hat Ed uncovers how important Tom Shanahan, one of the Democratic bosses, is.
And he's the guy who qualifies developers mainly by getting kickbacks from them through his bank.
You know, if they put his money in the bank, then they are qualified to do this,
which means a lot of money for his bank, which means money for him.
And the reporters are continuing that strategy we talked about of sharing information and
doling out so that this paper gets it and then this paper gets it, and they are taking
advantage, they're using the inborn competitiveness of the papers to keep this going.
And so much of this is now a matter of public record that the paper of record, the New York
Times, like they can't ignore it. And they start doing a series of articles, not necessarily investigating, but
synthesizing the information from the other papers articles.
Classic New York Times shit right there.
Yeah. Let's get into this. Let's get into this. This is an ax you've had to grind against
them for a while.
I just have it just like, we've just noticed this thing. It represents like reporting from
a million different sources
and different newspapers already, but anyway.
But now that they're talking about it, it's real.
It's the exact opposite of the joke
about the Times Style section used to be,
well, what are the friends of Times reporters
doing these days?
Like, that's the style, that's what people do.
There was a, oh, I loved it, there was sort of articleized,
I wish I had kept it, I wish I had clipped it,
that was in the Times Style section years ago,
where they were like, a new development among young
Brooklynites, a new styles trend, the pot belly. And it was like, well no, your
friends are getting older. Like that's what they're gaining weight and they're
carrying it in their belly. Like that's what, this is not a style trend, you know.
And they're refusing to stop wearing t-shirts. That was so funny. I gotta
find that in the archives somewhere. Anyway, but now even the Times are on it. Tips are pouring in about Title I stories and the
older reporters. Now they're starting to help the younger reporters. They're
realizing that there's something there. They're late to it, but they're there.
And reporters are starting to notice the names of Moses Associates on the payrolls
of housing project sponsors, of the developers that are doing these projects.
And Caro takes a moment. He humanizes the reporters, he talks about they feel sympathy for the families of these guys
because they know we're about to write exposés of these people.
They talk to a guy who they're going to write an exposé on and they see a picture of his family on his desk
and they're like, yeah, I feel bad about it, but this is the story. I got to run it.
And I think what he's doing here, I think Carol is trying to draw distinction between
Moses's form of reputation destroying yeah, and this kind of more principled form that this is for this is necessary
Even though there's something not great about the the effects rather than Moses which are just for the sheer accumulation of power
Yeah, I think that's right
I mean he he this is a book really about journalism in a lot of ways.
And he's trying to sort of just give a full picture
of why this type of thing is better
than the other type of thing.
And these folks are not out to destroy individuals.
They really are trying to take on a system.
And these are the systems that need to be taken on.
And these are things that Carol obviously cares about deeply
that these systems are challenged.
You could say they're out to destroy one individual,
Robert Moses, but at this point he has become a system.
Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
And stories soon start breaking about George Spargo,
who you may remember earlier eating soup
in front of some reporters,
and just about how he's receiving hundreds of thousands
of dollars in consulting fees, in quotes,
from Moses authorities while also being the director
of this shady bank that we talked about
a couple episodes back.
It's just, he's so close to Moses that you can't help
but put Moses' name, not just in the articles
about corruption, but in the headlines.
Yeah, which is what everyone reads.
Everyone reads the headlines, yeah.
I mean, you can't help but glance at it.
Exactly, you take it in.
It's right there.
Yeah.
And Moses responds with official statements,
but that only serves him to tie him closer to the stories,
you know, and he strikes out at the press in petty ways.
He stops telling them when committee meetings are beheld.
He locks the hallway at Trierboro
where there's a vending machine
that the reporters have been using
to get snacks while they're working.
And the more he attacks the press,
the more he gives them a reason to hit him back.
You know, he is now hurting them in a way
that is making the papers mad at him.
And the Times starts having this divided relationship
with him where it's gonna print these stories
about problems with his projects
and then print his reaction as news
and is still printing editorials saying,
oh, if Moses resigns, it would be irreparable loss.
You don't bench Babe Ruth, you know.
The owners of the Times,
they're still trying to keep their relationship with Moses,
but the editorial staff, they cannot ignore these stories. There's real
news value. And Caro is like, time out, the new media, they're chopping away at the supports of
this Moses reputation. And he uses again that Moses quote from the chapter a little bit ago
about the synthetic character of the statesman that was built up by the press and then deflated
unfairly but truthfully. And he talks about how Al Smith had said, told him popularity is a slender
read to lean on.
And he says, now that read was broken.
But here's the thing, Roman, does Moses still need to be popular to be powerful?
He doesn't because he's already built up this war chest.
Like he controls all this money right now still.
So, so this is a big deal.
So like as the sort of PR, love of the public,
all that can erode because now he has this war chest.
He's already kind of abandoned the need
for public approval a little bit before this.
He's never been quite a villain,
but he just didn't need like people to like cheer him on
for him to do his things.
But he still has this problem of like,
everyone in politics needs jobs in their ward,
and to be reelected, and he still controls that money.
There's still this unshakable logic,
yeah, that real political power comes from money and jobs
and being able to provide those,
and he's the only one who can provide them.
And so the newspapers are like,
certainly now the mayor will fire Robert Moses.
And of course they can't,
because there's just too much money,
there's too many jobs,
there's too much need for the political machine for that.
And also that Mayor Wagner, if he can avoid it,
he's not gonna fire anybody.
He's a guy who wants to be liked.
He doesn't like firing people.
Yeah, and he has this longstanding relationship
with Moses.
I mean, his father knew Moses.
You know, like it's, you know, it's just-
He's known Moses since he was a little boy.
You know, and he says at one point to somebody,
I forget if he says to Kara, somebody says,
you don't fire your father.
You can't fire your father.
Like Moses is a father figure to him in many ways.
But even if Wagner did fire him from his city posts,
Moses would still, he'd have five New York state jobs.
He'd still be the chairman of the tribal authority.
All firing him would do would make an enemy
out of someone who is still massively powerful.
That's right.
And still has access to all this money
that Wagner believes the city needs.
And so he can't risk giving Moses a reason to
throw his power behind one of his opponents.
What if he endorsed someone in the next
election and it wasn't Mayor Wagner?
And the press doesn't know any of this because
they don't have access to the documents that
would show them how the democratic machine
actually works with Robert Moses.
And Carroll also says the press misunderstood
the relationship because of what he calls
the wishes predilection to be father of the thought,
which I think is such a beautiful phrase,
and I don't know if he's quoting it somewhere,
if it's a famous phrase or whatever,
but the idea that I want this to be the case,
so I think it is gonna be the case.
I am gonna think it's that way.
They want Wagner to fire Moses,
so they assume that Wagner will do it and wants to do it.
And every time Wagner stalls, the press takes that to mean
that he will eventually do it,
that he just hasn't done it yet.
It's so fascinating.
But one of the things that's again, a new thing,
a new turn in Moses, who's now 74 years old.
So I'm glad he can learn a few new things.
Yeah, yeah, of course, yeah.
This old dog's got some new tricks in him.
Is he's recognizing that the source of all of his misery
is this Title I stuff.
Like, you know, he knows that this is just
out of control for him.
He knows parks, he knows highways,
and he knows dams apparently,
but I don't know anything about him knowing dams,
but I didn't read about that.
This book certainly wouldn't tell you too much about it.
But he figures it out.
Yeah, but you're right. Like, he was never really that interested in housing as a thing. This book certainly wouldn't tell you too much about it. But he figures it out. Yeah.
But you're right that like, he was never really
that interested in housing as a thing.
He saw it as a source of power and a source of
money, and now that money is starting to dry up,
the power is starting to dry up.
It's becoming more of a hassle.
And the press thinks, Oh, Moses won't let go
of title one housing.
He just holds onto it with his vulture like clause.
But the people around Moses starting to
become convinced that he doesn't really want to do it anymore.
That he would be happy to leave it,
but he can't do it while the press is hounding him
or else it'll look like they won.
And the thing he hates more than anything else
is to look like he's losing.
But wait, what if an exit strategy came along?
That's right.
What if a perfect exit came along?
But what would that be?
What could possibly be an exit
that would allow him to leave this realm of construction
while still saving face and looking like it was his idea?
What could that be?
Well, it's a brand new thing that everyone loves.
The 1964 New York World's Fair is coming,
and they need someone who knows how to get things done
and build things fast and take care of business.
And he decides that if he can focus on that and let go of title one, then
he can sort of save face.
He doesn't have to, you know, be, he's not hounded out.
He has this new shiny new thing that only he can achieve.
And therefore it just gives him a way out, uh, making himself look good.
Yes.
And, and he's got even, even though even more reasons waiting, he needs money.
He has, he's a guy who he has 71 years old. He is still supporting some of his children.
His wife is in such bad health
that she needs round the clock nursing care.
He needs money and he doesn't make a lot of money
from his jobs.
That's part of his whole thing.
He's the guy who doesn't make money from his jobs.
He doesn't care about money.
And the World's Fair presidency, which has offered him,
would pay him a lot of money.
It's a pretty good job.
I forgot about this part, but yeah, that lot of money. It's a pretty good job.
Yeah, I forgot about this part, but yeah, that is a thing.
Like he, it has the sort of veneer of this sort of same,
you know, civic duty, because it sort of bolsters
and boosters the New York area.
These World Fairs are a very big deal,
but this is like, this is a job job.
You know, this is a high pain job.
This is a real job, yeah.
This is essentially a private job.
He is entering the private sector in it in a big way. And it sets into motion this other thing,
which is it's one of those things that whereas he was able way back when when LaGuardia was
trying to get him to be in charge of all of the parks and other aspects like where he was,
he changed the law to like both work in the state and the city
and have these dual appointments,
even though they were in conflict to each other.
This creates a conflict that is sort of untenable.
He can't be ahead of this private corporation
and be the person who would approve those things.
And it sets up a little bit of this unwinding
of his sort of like, this rope of like like that he's built through all these different cords that is uncuttable, you know, because he just has to let go of some of his public stuff if he's going to be in charge of the fair. And he sees it as in some ways a trading up,
it is worth letting go of those things,
which he feels he has expended a lot of the power from
for this new thing, which will bring in new power
and new money, and it's also gonna be more fun, probably.
Like this is a guy, he liked making the Central Park Zoo.
He liked making Jones Beach.
He doesn't love building public housing.
And so it is a way, I think, in his mind
of cutting that Gordian knot.
Yeah, he can unwind these things
by just getting rid of the problem.
And so he takes the thing that was hurting his reputation,
Title I, his city jobs,
and he trades them for this other thing
that he thinks is gonna build it back up.
And so he works out this arrangement with the mayor
that they are first gonna have the legislator,
first they're gonna have a legislature
pass a law exempting officers of the fair
from the city's code of ethics, which should be a red flag right there. But then he starts
resigning from his city jobs. He resigns as the city park commissioner. He resigns from
the city planning commission. He resigns from the committee on slum clearance. He recommends
that his job as the construction coordinator be abolished as it is no longer necessary
now that he's not doing it. And the press is like,
oh, Wagner's trying to push out Moses.
But Moses is doing this all himself.
He leaves in triumph from these jobs.
And there's this 1,044 person dinner
where everyone pays a hundred dollars a plate to be there.
This is in 1959.
And the city's power elite,
they give him a standing ovation.
He is leaving at seemingly the height of his power
to take on this other stuff.
He's getting rid of the things that were hurting his reputation. Not only that, his replacement
at the Parks Department is this guy, Newbold Morris, again, a great name. I love the first
name Newbold, especially because he is a very much not a bold man and he does not have new ideas.
And he is, Carol portrays him as this like well-meaning bumbler who is so eager to do
whatever Robert Moses tells him. And he tells a story about a reporter calling
Morris and Mars says let me call you right back about that and then the reporter calls Moses his private number
Which is busy and then Mars calls him back and tells him what Moses told him to say like he immediately got off phone and called
Moses like Morris and Moses are even similar sounding names
So and Moses still controls the federal and state highway programs in New York.
So what's clear is so the city stuff has all been resigned in order to take this job for the
World's Fair. The federal and state highway program stuff is still that still stuff that he has
control of. But because so much of his power was drawn from having the connections between the two
and then if he was let go of one, he would be in control of another.
It really does just erode one of his, like, the legs of his stool here,
you know what I mean, by having this one.
And, because now, you know, when it comes to state authority,
there is a new person in charge who can take that power away from him.
Yes. What he's got in accomplice,
so that we're gonna meet someone in the next chapter
is a very fun person to talk about
who is going to be a little bit more
than Moses can handle, but this guy has an accomplice
and that accomplice's name is Robert Moses
because as Caro says, only Robert Moses
could lose Robert Moses his power and he did.
Okay, this is chapter 46 and it's just called Nelson.
It's not about the band Nelson.
I'm sorry, everybody.
It stands for Nelson Rockefeller and, uh, oh my God, this is it.
This is it.
Buckle up.
This is the chapter you've been waiting for.
You've, you've sat through hours and hours of us talking, waiting for Moses
to finally get what he was getting.
And this is when he gets it.
It's Nelson.
And so, yeah, the Nelson here, as she says,
Nelson Rockefeller, in 1959, he is the new New York governor.
And Nelson Rockefeller, Caro tells us,
he's a little different from the previous governors
that Moses has dealt with.
He is not quite the same type of politician.
What's the reason for this?
Because Nelson Rockefeller, as you can tell
from his last name,
is enormously rich, like cosmically rich.
Absolutely rich.
And they're basically, you know,
he mentions that the Rockefeller family
has basically been bankrolling the Republican Party.
Basically like, it pays for the Republicans.
So anything that they wanna do, you know,
it's just up to him and his family.
So like, the idea that
Moses controls a lot of money, it's just nonsense to him.
This is a guy, this is a guy like that, his grandfather was the richest man potentially
in the world, you know, when he was alive. This is a guy who, Kara talks about, he has
a ranch in Venezuela that is five times as large as the combined boroughs
of New York City.
Like this guy owns so much,
his brother controls Chase Manhattan Bank.
At the time, Caro says,
probably the most powerful financial institution
in the world.
They have a controlling stake in Con Edison,
where almost everyone gets their power from.
Like they are so rich and they have so many sources
of power in a way that Robert Moses just
can't with his rinky dink bridges, you know, his
authorities, things like that, like just can't do
it.
This family is so powerful that Nelson's brother,
David Rockefeller, his lawyer is former
governor Thomas Dewey.
Like one of the, one of the major governors is
his, it works for him.
You know, it's crazy.
And so Nelson Rockefeller is like, I want to be
governor.
And he basically buys his way into the office. He, like you said, he, if he tells the Republican party, I want to be governor, then it's crazy. And so Nelson Rockefeller was like, I wanna be governor. And he basically buys his way into the office.
Like you said, if he tells the Republican party,
I wanna be governor, then it's gonna happen.
But he also plays politics well.
This is a guy, he's gonna run for president years later.
He's gonna be vice president years later.
He's a real political figure.
And he's good also in a way that other governors
have not been at visualizing the pros and the cons
of big building plans.
He can't think of these big plans,
but he's really good at looking at someone else's plan
for a massive project and seeing what's good
or what's bad about it.
And he was really heavily involved in Rockefeller Center
when it was a new thing, when he was 30 years old,
when his father was building it.
And so as governor, he has these big building plans
that he wants to do.
And so he has that in common with Robert Moses that he has big infrastructure dreams And so he has that in common with Robert Moses,
that he has big infrastructure dreams.
What he also has in common with Robert Moses
is he is incredibly arrogant, he's incredibly stubborn.
And Caro describes it as a serene sense
that because his motives are pure,
his decisions are right.
Like he's wealthy, he's a wealthy man,
he's always been wealthy.
He was born basically with the assumption,
what I want is gonna happen.
And I want it, so it must be the right thing.
I'm gonna get it if I want it.
And Carol says, Rockefeller's arrogance,
it's different from the abrasive,
hard arrogance of Robert Moses.
Robert Moses has this kind of like poking you arrogance,
whereas Nelson Rockefeller's is the easy, gracious arrogance
of someone who does not have to prove himself,
who just takes it for granted, you will listen to me.
And he is ruthless, but he's ruthless
in a way that assumes I will win.
And it's something that Robert Moses has never really
had to face ever in his career.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, what the two share is this love
of cosplaying in a hard hat.
They do, they both love that thing.
Yes, that's true.
And they do love.
Neither of them are engineers or construction contractors, but they like to be around a site. Yes, that's true. And they do love-
Neither of them are engineers or construction contractors, but they like to be around a
site.
Yeah.
And they understand the power of money.
And what's so funny is up until the previous thousand pages, what Caro has really demonstrated
is that these nickels and dimes, what fortune they amass to make Robert Moses able to do what he has done. And then
right at this moment when Nelson Rockefeller enters the scene, all of a sudden there are
nickels and dimes again. And it's like, you don't understand what money is. And it's really something.
If there was ever a guy who was burning thousand dollar bills to light his cigars,
like it's this guy. So yeah, all the change that commuters are throwing in is nothing.
And, and Caro says, survey the whole vast cast of characters on the New York political scene.
And there was only one man who could with impunity confront and defeat Robert Moses,
the man who is now governor. Like this is, this is going to be bad for Moses.
And Caro's like, Moses should see this. He should recognize how tough Rockefeller is going to be bad for Moses. And Carol's like, Moses should see this. He should recognize how tough Rockefeller's going to be.
But the old Moses is no longer interested in kind of understanding who he's up against.
And Moses and Rockefeller have a history.
He's worked with the Rockefeller family.
He's worked with Nelson Rockefeller.
Like Nelson Rockefeller worked with him on getting the UN into New York.
So like they've worked together.
He thinks he has the measure of him.
And, um, Moses is in his 70s,
Rockefeller is 50. And so Moses is like, this young man, I can be fatherly towards him. I can assume
his support because I think he kind of sees him like Wagner, where Wagner is like, I'm a young man,
Moses is an old man, I look up to him, I have to listen to him. And the difference again is that
Wagner is not colossally like globally rich in the way that Rockefeller is.
And so conflict seems inevitable.
They're huge arrogant fish in this New York state sized pond
and there's one early point of conflict.
Rockefeller has this aide who's a former NYU professor,
go NYU, my alma mater, William J. Ronan,
who has sparred with Moses in the past
and recommended abolishing the State Council of Parks
and putting it under the Department of Conservation.
And Moses is like, nope, that's not going to happen. And nothing happens.
And I think Moses takes from that, oh, I can push these people around the same way that I pushed everyone else around.
But Rockefeller starts intruding on the territory that Moses considers his territory, essentially parks and Long Island parks, especially.
And Nelson Rockefeller's brother, Lawrence, his name is spelled L-A-U, like the fancy way of spelling Lawrence,
not L-A-W like the normal people would.
He starts getting involved
in having the state acquire more parkland,
and Moses is like, great, I want more parkland.
But in 1960, Rockefeller wants this massive state
mass transit program put into place,
and transit is Moses' thing,
and he puts Ronan, Moses new nemesis.
He makes him his closest advisor
and has him looking at this program.
And the first big battle that's kind of around these,
these kind of shared interests
that they're gonna squabble over is over Moses age.
Like I said, he's 70 years old at this point.
When Rockefeller becomes governor,
65 is the mandated state retirement age.
Legally, if you work for the state,
you have to retire at 65, unless the governor state retirement age legally. If you work for the state, you have to retire at 65,
unless the governor signs an age extension
and you can sign them for up to two years.
And previous governors, they would sign them
as early as possible.
They'd sign them for two years.
Rockefeller, he'll only give Moses one year extensions
and he always waits as close to Moses's birthday
as possible.
So in the days leading up to Moses's birthday,
which should be a time for, you know, excited celebration, instead he is agonizing over whether the governor is going to sign this
extension and let him keep his jobs. Yeah, yeah. Which really begins to eat at him. I mean, like,
you can tell that where Lisa S. Caro describes it, you know, he is an older man. He's perceived as
an older man. He has these hearing aids. He can't hear as well. You know, they think that maybe this
is one of the reasons why Rockefeller, like, feels like he can do this, you know what I mean? Because
the world is perceiving Moses as older too. Yes, and I have to assume when you're in a meeting with
Moses, he probably comes off as very old. Caro describes him as not really being able to hear
what people are saying, so he just kind of assumes what people will say, which reminds me of a story
about my wife's grandmother
that she refused to wear a hearing aid.
At one point she was eating dinner with their family
and her dad said something about like, how's the food?
And she said, the doctor says it's fine
because she was responding to the question
she thought she was being asked
rather than the question she was actually being asked.
And it feels like Moses is doing that stuff.
And so Rockefeller has this sense,
Moses has agreed to transfer the parks department
to my brother Lawrence. And Moses has this sense that will happen agreed to transfer the Parks Department to my brother Lawrence.
And Moses has this sense,
that will happen way in the future whenever I decide it.
And this comes to a head in 1962,
the first appearance of Spider-Man that year.
Moses' 74th birthday is approaching.
And Rockefeller and Moses,
they're having lunch to kind of smooth over
this disagreement over when Moses will transfer
the parks, the state parks to Lawrence Rockefeller.
And nobody knows exactly what happens in this lunch,
but Moses ends up storming out and Rockefeller goes out
on the sidewalk and is trying to pull him back
into the building.
And Moses shakes himself out of his hands
and gets in his car and he leaves the governor standing
on the sidewalk being like, come on, come on.
Like this is crazy.
And Moses tells Sid Shapiro and he says,
don't tell anybody about this.
But of course Sid Shapiro tells Caro,
because Sid Shapiro loves to talk to Robert Caro.
That Rockefeller said, he kind of holds up in his hand
an extension of Moses's presidency
of the Long Island State Park Commission.
In his other hand, he holds up this kind of transition
of the State Council of Parks chairmanship to Lawrence.
And what Moses feels is this is a quid pro quo.
You're saying you won't extend it
unless I sign this up to Lawrence.
And Moses goes, well, maybe I should just resign
all of my state posts then.
And Rockefeller's like, no, I just want you to resign
the Council of Parks position, that's all I want.
And Moses is like, they're all connected.
And he storms out when Rockefeller says,
don't tell anyone about this conversation.
And Moses is in his arrogance is like,
well, I defeated the governor. He wanted me to hand over this conversation. And Moses is in his arrogance is like, well, I
defeated the governor.
Yeah.
He wanted me to, to hand over this power.
And I said, no, I'll resign everything if you
make me do that.
And he gave in cause I didn't do it.
Ignoring, I guess, the fact that he stormed out
of the building.
Like it's not, he's like, I showed the governor
a thing or two as if the conversation ended.
And he's, I guess, hanging out with a friendly
editor at the daily news.
And he says, Hey, hey, you should arrange for a news reporter at Rockefeller's next press conference to ask if Moses is keeping all of his jobs.
Because that's going to force Rockefeller to say, of course I want to keep Moses, because he doesn't want me to lose those jobs.
And he knows I threaten to resign all of them. So if you ask him, it's going to force him to say, of course I want him publicly.
And back at Reynolds Island, Moses refusing to answer the governor's calls.
He's assuming if the governor is calling me, I've already won.
The winner doesn't call the loser calls.
He wants me back and I'm not going to go.
And Caro says there's every indication that if Moses had just stopped there,
had just let it lie, maybe he would have won.
If it wasn't public, maybe Rockefeller would have backed down
from this transition idea.
He had backed down from it in the past.
So maybe Moses thinks, this is just another one of those
times where someone asked me to do something,
I say I'll resign and they stop and the governor did it
before and it'll happen again.
But Moses, he pushes things too far.
He wants to show Rockefeller how completely in control
of the situation he is. He wants to show Rockefeller how completely in control of the situation he is. He wants to
force Rockefeller to surrender completely. So he writes a letter. Don't do this. This is, don't do
this. He writes a letter saying, I am preparing to resign from all of my state posts. This is what I
am trying to do. And he's like, I know Rockefeller, now he's going to call me again. I'll finally take
his call. He will say, no, no, don't do it.
We don't do it.
We need you.
And it's going to, it's, I'm going to just have defeated him.
It's what I do.
It's what it always works.
It always works all the time.
This is his ultimate weapon.
It has never failed him.
And Carol writes, this time, however,
the ultimate weapon misfired.
After 30 years of issuing that defiant challenge, he had issued it to a man who would take him up on it.
On the day after he received Robert Moses' resignation, Nelson Rockefeller accepted it.
I hope you will continue in the power authority post, Rockefeller said.
As for the others, I note that you are making arrangements to resign from the Long Island State Park Commission.
This is a decision which I accept with regret.
Roman.
Oh my God.
What just happened?
Someone finally took his resignation, took him seriously.
They just like, they faced his ultimatum and said,
you know what?
No, no.
Walker-Feller accepted his resignation for the first time.
He accepted it.
He said, oh no, no, no, we need you.
We can't do that.
He said, oh, that's too bad.
Well, I'm going to be sorry to see you go,
but you know,
don't let the door hit you. This is the first time since he was on the Yale swim team that someone
has accepted his resignation for decades. Governors and mayors have quailed in fear at the idea that
he would ever resign. And now so easily, he just gets a letter back to being like, Oh, I see you've
made those arrangements to resign. I guess you'll do it. Now, neither letter has been released publicly.
So as this whole thing could have been swept on the rug,
but there's rumors of the conflict that have leaked out.
And Moses is like, oh no,
I planted that question at the press conference
where the reporter was gonna ask Rockefeller
if he wanted me to continue in all my posts.
And now Rockefeller is gonna say no,
he resigned and I accepted his resignation.
It's gonna look like Rockefeller pushed me out. It's gonna look like Rockefeller is going to say no he resigned and I accepted his resignation it's going to look like Rockefeller pushed me out it's gonna
look like Rockefeller fired me I can't let that happen oh no I can't let that
happen I got that's a nightmare scenario that everyone's gonna know I lost to him
so he hurriedly releases a public statement saying Nelson Rockefeller asked
me to resign in favor of his brother and I refused and I'm so insulted I'm
resigning all of my state posts and inventing his grievance with the Rockefellers.
And he's like, so that's what I'm gonna do,
I'm gonna resign all of them.
And he says this publicly, Rockefeller thinking,
again, that Rockefeller is gonna be like,
no, no, no, no, no, I can't be looked to have seen
to be pushing you out in favor of my brother, no, no.
Rockefeller graciously publicly accepts
all the resignations.
He's clearly a little mad about the reference to his brother,
but I don't know, I'm not quite sure what Moses
thought the governor was gonna do, to be honest.
But whatever he thought was gonna happen,
it didn't happen, you know?
Moses has managed to checkmate himself out of power,
purely as the way Carol says it,
by sitting in his office worrying about what's gonna happen,
you know, and assuming the worst
and then making the worst happen.
It's really something.
He just never thought that this would happen,
and he had all these sort of things
in place over his whole life that he thought he was sort of protected. And he is not in this
situation at all. And I don't know. It's just like, I mean, I think one of the key parts of this is
that it involves, you know, Nelson's brother, you know what I mean? Like, you know, like if it was
another person, potentially, it would be like he might have bent or changed
his tune to this.
But this family, no one goes against this family.
He must have just been like, no, then just piss off.
You know what I mean?
He's like, I don't need you.
Yeah.
Everyone before him has felt, I need this guy.
I can't afford to let him go.
And this is the first guy who says, I literally can afford to let him go.
Like I literally don't need him.
If money is power, then it's like a, you
know, Superman is going up against God.
You know, like it's just not, it's not enough.
And Moses has now in that instant, mainly
through his own actions, he has lost every
government post he has.
He still is the tribal authority chairman.
He's still president of the world's fair.
He still has this informal role as New York city's representative to the federal government on arterial highways. Very exciting.
But he's lost most of his power. And Roman, you made this comment in the notes here,
hearkening back to very early on when the guy said, ain't I got the power? When Commodore Vanderbilt said that. And you say right here,
he ain't got the power.
It's just gone. He ain't got here, he ain't got the power. He ain't got the power. It's just gone.
He ain't got it.
He ain't got it at all.
And Caro says, so previously, his power
came from popularity and money.
The popularity is long gone.
It didn't matter because the money remained.
Now he's lost most of that.
The state power authority, which he has resigned from,
even though Rockefeller kind of wanted him to stay on it, that was to generate tens of millions of dollars. Yeah from these dams these dams that are
so important that we never talk about like why are we talking about these dams how come nobody
ever nobody talks about these dams ever and now somebody else is going to get the power that comes
with managing that money and in public Moses is like I'm glad to retire you know I just want to
retire this is great but behind the scenes his allies are furiously lobbying
Rockefeller to bring him back and in the past this would have worked yeah but
Rockefeller refuses and Caro says for what might have been the one reason for
Rockefeller to let Moses withdraw his resignation not his parks council
resignation perhaps but his others did not to his surprise and that of political
insiders exist the expected storm of protest had not materialized. Robert Moses had been
fired and hardly anyone had really cared. Like Moses like, well now that this is
public, the public will rise up as one voice to demand that their champion be
back in power. And it just doesn't happen. Even the Times, you know, three years
earlier they had said, you don't bench Babe Ruth,. Even the Times, three years earlier they had said,
you don't bench Babe Ruth.
And now the Times runs an editorial.
It's like, you know, it's too bad.
Moses is great, but no government function can be made so dependent on a single individual
that he becomes the indispensable man.
They're like, yeah, we still love Moses, but you know what?
Maybe it's time for him to go.
And this maybe is my favorite detail in the whole book, possibly.
That's not true, but it's one of my favorites.
Caro says, and you know, there was this young reporter
who was assigned to sit in the Newsday office over the weekend
to compile the statements that were going to come in from public officials
commenting on Moses Ouster, and only one statement from a minor official comes in.
And then the notes, Caro's like, that was me. I was that young reporter.
In the notes, though, it's not in the text. It's not in the text. He doesn't say it. And when I was sitting there, it's in the notes. You got to go to the notes, Caro's like, that was me. I was that young blooper. In the notes though, it's not in the text.
It's not in the text, he doesn't say it.
And when I was sitting there, it's in the,
you gotta go to the notes.
The notes, anyone who finishes this book
with the last line of it,
you haven't read the whole book
because the notes have a lot of great stuff in them.
But I just love that it's like,
even before he has started to write and research this book,
Robert Caro, his professional life has touched
for this moment at the very beginning of his career
with the very end of Robert Moses' career.
And there's such a beautiful symmetry to that,
that at the start of his career as a reporter,
he is having this moment where he is seeing
the downfall of this man whose life will become the study
of seven years, eight years of his own life.
And the thing is most politicians,
they are not making statements.
They will not go on record with public comments
because Moses is not the powerful person
that they need to be on the side of.
Rockefeller is the powerful person.
That's right.
They don't know what tone to take,
you know, when it comes to Moses.
And so they just say nothing,
which is like what Moses should have done.
Yeah, exactly.
And there was this, at Caratop's,
there's this illusion for years,
decades in political
circles that Moses was so popular that you could
not get rid of him.
The voters would punish you so hard for getting
rid of this man.
And now the governor finally has done it and
nothing has happened.
The voters do not care.
They have no, if anything, they're happy to see
it happen if they even think about it.
And it feels like this is still the case in politics that certain people accrue the myth
of indispensability and then they lose power. And it's like, Oh, that guy. Yeah. Okay. And they
probably could have gotten rid of him years ago. And so Moses has, it's almost the worst part of
it for him probably is not just, Oh shit, I accidentally resigned myself out of all of my power for no reason, but also, oh, and nobody even cares about it.
Like I was used to being the axle that this city and the state turned around and now it just doesn't even matter to people. State Council of Parks meeting, the first in the council's 38 year history ever to be held
without Moses presiding over it. They do name three parks after him, which is a big thing.
And people close to Moses say that he is devastated, especially to lose his
Long Island parks roles. That was where he began. That's where he first started accruing his parks
power. But in public, Moses hides it. And the next time he sees Rockefeller in person, they hug
each other, they praise
each other. He recognizes it. This is the power now. He is not the power. For the first
time in decades, Moses has to swallow his pride because he does not have the power.
And he must know in the back of his mind, boy, I really shouldn't have done that. Like,
this is on me.
And they take all that sort of looming character of Moses
just becomes a kind of figurehead.
He isn't like knocked down and then everyone,
you know, like they don't string them up
like Mussolini or anything like that.
They sort of, they transmute them into this other type
of elder statesman to be, you know, revered in this way,
but definitely not to be feared.
No, they defang him.
He goes from being a vital, powerful, dangerous figure
to being kind of like New York's construction grandpa.
You know, like he doesn't matter.
You don't have to have an opinion on him.
He's around.
You can revere him without it really meaning anything,
or you can ignore him.
And it is probably the thing
that it would be most painful for him
to be not just out of power,
but to be unimportant, obscure, unnecessary,
just kind of like easy to not even pay attention to.
And that's unfortunately eventually going to be
his real ultimate fate.
But look, he's still got that World's Fair going on.
There's still that.
There's still a glimmer out there, the World's Fair.
So maybe, maybe, if he manages this World's Fair
just right, if he makes it a roaring success,
maybe he'll be back in power.
Maybe that'll happen.
Maybe he can do it.
This is it, this is his chance.
We'll cover that on the next episode.
We will also finish the book.
We will cover chapters 47 through 50.
I cannot believe that we're through,
almost through the end of this.
This is amazing.
I can't, it's astounding to me.
I look at my copy of the book that has my notes in it
and I look where the bookmark is and I'm like,
there's not, wait a minute, there's so much book
before the bookmark and not a lot afterwards.
It's, what an amazing journey and a wild ride this has been, but we'll say, we'll talk about that more.
I can't believe it. Finishing the book, we are not going to go through the notes in the podcast.
So you'll have to do that yourself. We will end at the last line of the text.
So that sounds good.
Coming up, our conversation with Brennan Lee Mulligan, host of the Dungeons and Dragons show, Dimension 20.
And now our conversation with professional Dungeons & Dragons dungeon master, Brennan Lee Mulligan. His D&D show, Dimension 20 on Dropout TV, has a very large and devoted following,
and pretty much since we started the show,
listeners on our Discord server have been asking us
to have Brennan on as a guest, all because of one reason.
Our big bad, our villain of season one
of The Unsleeping City was none other
than undead Robert Moses.
Oh no, here he comes!
Just when we thought we were through with him.
Finally, with this episode, finally. Robert Caro's gonna have to pop back up Here he comes. Just when we thought we were through with him.
Finally, with this episode, finally.
Robert Caro's gonna have to pop back up
and get that pen out and start writing, baby.
There's new chapters, here we go.
That's right, Brennan created the Unsleeping City
and made the main villain a fictionalized,
magical Robert Moses.
You see Robert raises his hand,
a seam opens in his wrist,
and a rope of blood shoots out of his arm
around the child, and he rips the child out of the mirror
as it skids onto the floor in front of him.
When Brennan develops his stories for Dimension 20,
he pushes the bounds of traditional D&D campaigns.
His first season was called Fantasy High,
which Brennan describes as a
John Hughes movie with swords and magic. But there's something very different about looking
to the power broker for source material. So we talked with Brendan about why he decided
to pick Moses as the inspiration for his big bad D and D antagonist and how one goes about
creating a fantasy version of a very real, very bureaucratic man. But first, a quick primer on Dungeons & Dragons
for those of you who may not be super familiar
with the game.
Dungeons & Dragons is a storytelling game
where one person is the dungeon master
who writes an adventure, and their friends are the players
and they each have one character.
So basically you have a group of heroes,
every hero is being played by one person at the table,
and their job is just to go on the adventure,
role-playing as their hero.
And the Dungeon Master's job is to be everything and everyone else,
all the monsters, all the allies, all the environs.
And basically, you're just going on an adventure,
it's a group storytelling,
you're collaboratively writing this adventure
improvisationally in the moment.
And the game aspect comes in, in moments of stress,
risk and uncertainty.
So you go into combat, do you slay the dragon or
does the dragon devour you?
We're going to roll dice to find out.
Do you crack the code in the massive spellbook or
do you raise your fist to the sky and shake and
say, no, I cannot decipher the codex.
That's a dice roll, right?
So all these moments of dramatic peak
are determined by rolls of the dice,
which creates this really wonderful feeling,
whether you watch D&D shows or you play D&D,
where you are watching a story being told
by people who love telling that story,
and the intoxicating part is not only do you not know
where this is gonna go,
the people telling the story are discovering alongside you
where the story's gonna go.
So we have a Discord server where we talk about the book
and stuff, and you came up very, very early
in discussions of like,
who should we have as potential guests?
Because a lot of people listen to us, enjoy your show.
And the idea of Robert Moses,
the Robert Moses in this book,
morphing into a fantasy villain.
And he is morphed quite a bit.
Like we should explain a little bit of that.
Is kind of genius and it's just sort of fun
to sort of bring the real world into this fantasy world
and play with that.
So let's first talk about who Robert Moses
in Unsleeping City is.
Let's describe him a little bit
because he's a little bit changed.
He's, yeah, I would say that he is a very fantasy villain
version of the historical figure. He is a very fantasy villain version
of the historical figure.
And one very much sort of taken up with presumably
the decades of whatever his public historical life was.
We're now in the year 2019,
after decades of magical shenanigans going on
in the fantasy universe.
I should also mention that in terms of license
with real figures, we did have Stephen Sondheim
as an ally of the player characters,
who wielded two broad swords, one in each hand.
So there is a little bit of creative license
with some of our beloved New York limiters.
He was usually a one-weapon fighter, Stephen Sondheim.
Yeah, in real life, he was a sort of saber or rapier.
He was a one-hand fencer, but we thought it would be fun.
He took a little license, so we gave him two claymores.
But he, Robert Moses, as he's depicted in The Unsleeping City,
is the architect of a thing called the Highway Hex.
And the Highway Hex is, if you guys are familiar at all
with the concept of ley lines,
which are basically magical directional veins
that can intersect and create nodes of power,
and it's sort of based on some real world belief systems.
And the idea behind Robert Moses and the Unsleeping City
is that the Highway highway hex was him creating
a complex arcane rune, a glyph,
of the intersecting highways and expressways
within New York City to repel divination
from the forces of good.
So he's a, basically remains a master builder,
remains someone whose ideology is very rooted in the concrete and building
and the creation of an infrastructure
with this added level of arcane magical threat on top of it,
that all of the traffic in New York
is actually casting this elaborate fiendish spell.
Right.
So this version of Robert Moses,
when Robert Caro's interviewing him,
would point out to Fire Island and say, don't you see there should be a glyph there? spell. Right. So this version of Robert Moses, when Robert Carrow's interviewing him, would
point out to Fire Island and say, don't you see there should be a glyph there? Shouldn't
there be a glyph out there? Like that. But it's still, like you're saying it's still
rooted in the, in the things we know about Robert Moses, about his, his predilection
for slashing roads across everything. But you're giving him, if anything, kind of a
more rational reason. I know, exactly. Yeah.
Right.
We're explaining in retrospect why
he was so obsessed with building all these expressways.
And I get why his road has to take a sudden curve
in through East Tremont if it's because, oh, well,
we're drawing some sort of sigil or some sort of a cult sign.
And it has to be exactly the right way.
It makes more sense than any of the reasons
that we got otherwise.
I'm very curious about your,
so you've read The Power Broker, I believe.
This is not, you're not just existing off
of the urban legends of Robert Moses.
What is it?
It strikes me as such an interesting book
to use as a foundation text for a fantasy story
because it is so grounded in, in many ways,
the real kind of minutia and data of urban construction,
traffic flow, things like that.
What is it about it that planted this into your mind
that like, yeah, I could use this for a D&D campaign?
It's a great question.
And there's a lot, I mean, especially growing up,
so I have an odd biography, right?
I went to school a little bit early.
I started attending college at SUNY Ulster when I was 14
for philosophy and humanities and was used to,
I remember as a teenager reading Howard Zinn,
which is a very similar book in terms of like,
oh my God, this is 80 pages on like,
and these many bushels of barley were being exported
and they were tabulating kind of the economies
of this portion of time.
And then it will move to a page where you'll read a chapter
that makes you burst into tears, right?
Where the human cost of all of this data
is rendered very plainly. And to be honest with
you, a lot of the Unsleeping City that first season was rooted in and very much dedicated
to in sort of honoring my father. So I'm a New Yorker. My father's lived in New York my entire
life. And we would walk around during my childhood and he had this incredible, his name's Joe Mulligan,
he had this encyclopedic knowledge of New York history and we'd anywhere we'd go to museums or
going up to the cloisters or going downtown. He took me to five points when I was a little kid
before Gangs of New York came out and you know he we laugh about it now because he would point
somewhere and be like and this is where Bill Poole, you know, or this is where William, you know, like came out and this is what happened. And I would be pointing
at a Dunkin Donuts, right? Like this is the, this is the site of ultimate significance.
And he prior even to reading anything about Moses, you're right. Like urban legend is
a good way to put it. My father father as a New Yorker spoke about Robert Moses
with this idea of like,
this is someone who forever altered the city
and explaining the heights of bridges
and the discrimination of keeping various groups
out from these,
these people will have luxury and plenty
and these people will not.
And in terms of like what drew me to this document and this extremely kind of like, if we're being
honest, the, the crimes, the social ills of this
guy are so fascinating in that the greatest harm
is done through these things that require a kind
of pointed attention to understand
what's happening, right? Like these, you know, like it's not salacious. It's not this thing
where it's like the big harms are done by manipulating authorities and manipulating
money and manipulating power. And I think it was looking at a setting set in a magical New York, uh, and specifically dealing with the idea of how do you fight somebody who's not even
interacting with you, they are in control of the environment and your con,
your conception of freedom or your conception of what individual action can
be is totally put up against this guy.
Like you're saying from, from source material that is very, very like
rooted in infrastructure administration bureaucracy. So you know, you want to have this big fantasy
showdown and it felt like the right way to do that was with a guy with this massive history of
extremely dense action that was taken at this level that most individuals don't know how to oppose.
It's something that ties into the episode we were talking about today. We talked about how
the reporters who were trying to make it clear what Moses was doing were having trouble communicating
it to the public because it was so complicated and it was not salacious. And what they finally
got traction with was, well, they hired an ex mob guy as a night watchman.
So the mob's involved. And it seems like it would be a big challenge in creating that kind of traditional fantasy adventure climax
when you are dealing with somebody who himself is not a conniving villain so much as the...
I guess he is pretty conniving, but who's not so much a cackling evil villain so much as...
I guess he kind of does that too.
You know what, nevermind.
Nevermind, makes more sense than I thought.
I'll say, there's a lot of meat on the bone.
You know, he really did give us a lot to work with for sure.
I mean, I was actually thinking of,
rather than the incongruities of the text
and then your storytelling built on top of it,
is some of the congruities,
which is like the idea of Robert Moses
being able to write these laws
over the course of the first couple of decades of his life that give him power for the remaining
decades almost seems like a wizard. It almost seems like a magic spell that he has done to
create and accumulate and build and build and build the same way that you you know you
Level up and build in D&D like it has that quality of a wizard, you know
in a way, well, there's a you could you could look at the power broker as kind of a a
Real world version of all the things that happen with Soran before the Lord of the Rings
that all the things that happened in the past where
he amasses this power because of secret knowledge and because of the Rings, that all the things that happened in the past, where he amasses this
power because of secret knowledge and because of the artifacts of that power, and then has this
period of dominance, and then has his downfall more because of his own overreaching than because
of anything else. I mean, you have to assume that Sauron would not talk himself into resigning because
he's worried Nelson Rockefeller is going to make him look foolish at a press conference.
But you know, it could have happened that way too.
It could have happened that way.
As the wizard Gandalf, I call a press conference.
The Dark Lord.
I totally agree.
And I think that there's a part of depicting Moses in this,
in the Unsleeping City, which was showing,
especially because of who our heroes were.
So like the heroes of our party are people,
Lou Wilson's character, Kingston Brown,
is a nurse in Harlem who is a fixture of his community
and knows everybody in the city
and has tapped into those communities and working people.
We have Ali Beards, his character is Pete Conlin,
who's like a dream sorcerer,
who's like a part-time drug dealer
in the art scene in Bushwick.
So you have these sort of New Yorker staples
that are all from different walks of life.
And the idea of you're making this point with
this group of characters that become our heroes
in this story, they're all magical New Yorkers
of the power of not only community, but the
power of diverse community, the power of, of,
um, you know, what's the word I'm looking for?
I'm looking for multi multiculturalism or like that,
that idea of a big pluralistic society.
Right.
And the idea of there being, and there definitely are
forces at work against that.
And there are definitely depictions in the season and elsewhere of that kind of
no nothing nativist where it's meeting a cultural force
with an opposing cultural force and saying like,
okay, you want a pluralistic multicultural society.
We don't, we want, you know, homogenous
and this one type of sort of nativist ideal.
But that's one way to oppose that.
The other way to oppose that is to sidestep culture
in totality
and go, hey, you can believe what you want.
I'll shape the city without any worry about what,
in these chapters that you guys are talking about,
the funny thing is how long protests had been trivial to him
where it's like, if you know how to get around this,
if you know how to actually move power around,
if people are paying your tolls, if people are giving you this power and energy outside
of their belief system, just cause they're
driving on your road, how much of their buy-in
do you really need on that cultural level?
Right?
And that's so sinister to me, that idea of
manipulating, like you're saying, it's a
wizardly thing.
It's manipulating a system of power where you're like,
I don't need to interface with you.
I don't need to be in conversation with you.
I have mastered a secret language,
whether that's law or finance, or in this case,
the bonds being issued to the authority.
Like you memorize this, again, like lingua arcana,
and all of a sudden, it doesn't matter.
You have sidestepped that entire frame of reference
up to a point, of course, but that's what's so interesting
about that metaphor to me of the city authority as wizard,
as someone whose power does not reflect interaction
with large groups of people, but rather with systems
that people are supporting unbeknownst to them.
Yeah, yeah.
It's interesting, so the story is that to gain his power,
he sort of sells his soul to different factions,
to kind of, to hell and to the fairy.
And then he builds the highway hacks
as a way to kind of insulate him.
Because then at that point, they all come in after him,
and he's trying to keep them out.
That action of being surrounded by highways
just disrupts their ability to go get him.
So he's basically remaking the city in
this selfish way just to protect,
he'll put the misery on everyone else to circle
this city and circle this city forever
just so he can't be gotten at by demons
who are, I guess, worse than him in some way.
Which is, again, it's a nice way to embody this,
like put a story on this very sinister thing
to remake something without any sort of input
from anyone else, just destroy a place just to make yourself safe is diabolical.
And the fact that everyone knows in the setting, they're like, oh yeah, like big celestial
or fae or infernal forces can't come to the city.
Like everyone knows the ramifications, but it's a discovery in the midst of the season that that is because of this highway hex
and it's to protect one individual.
And you go like, so you're saying the entire shape
of my cosmology, like how I understand the magical world
to work is not some massive, it's not like that's been here,
like maybe that's why they built the city here.
No, it's one guy's actions that reshaped everything.
And I think the moment, obviously again,
we have a very fantastical villain in our Robert Moses,
who, you know, he's way over the top.
But as far as villain goes,
does attempt a lot of like persuasion and flattery.
Really tries to get Ali Beardsley's character,
tries to make Pete Conlin into a Moses man.
You got fucked kid, I'm sorry.
What do you mean?
Well, did you sign up for this Vox Fantasma job?
Did you weigh the health benefits?
Did you get a choice in the matter?
No.
No.
Does it suck to be the Vox Fantasma?
What do you think? You're homeless, you got a bunch of problems matter? No. No. Does it suck to be the Fox Pentasma?
What do you think?
You're homeless?
You got a bunch of problems?
That's just New York.
I think there's one confrontation
towards the end of the season where I was like,
if there's anything that feels like a statement
towards the historical Moses that feels really pointed,
there's a confrontation between him and Kingston Brown
at the Temple of Dender at the Met.
I hate to say Mr. Moses, but they're all free-thinking adults
who can make their own choices.
Ha!
As is every person in this city.
See, he says, do you think people make choices?
I do.
No. People think people make choices? I do. No, people think they make choices.
They think they're gonna steer right or steer left,
but they didn't build the roads.
The big choices already got made for them a long time ago.
And that to me is like the heart of his sinister philosophy
in the Unsleeping City.
And the thing that as someone who,
you know, I, I come to this as a philosophy major,
as someone who studied philosophy, you know, the
impact that he had on this country, forget just New
York, but the country broadly is so profound and
America, I think has a cultural love for the idea
of individual freedom and the idea that like
freedom is a substance that lives in the
individual and your ability to be a heroic
cowboy figure who does whatever the hell you
like, no one's going to tell me what to do.
Very rooted in the American thing.
The rug is totally pulled out from under
that philosophy.
If you have to reckon with the fact
that life is multiple choice,
that you are not born on a blank page,
you were born into the context
that has often been shaped by very powerful people.
I want to point out for anyone who's listening,
who is not a New Yorker,
when you mentioned the Temple of Dender,
I want people to know that that's a real Egyptian temple
that's in the Metropolitan Museum, not a fantasy, like, magic temple they're going to. And it makes me think
about how there are viewers of the show who did not know that Robert Moses was a real person
when they started watching it. And did that, is that a surprise to you? That there, you see,
like, on Reddit, people are like, just found out Robert Moses is real. I thought he was just a
character in the story.
Does that make you feel like you have more
of a responsibility to present it to,
or you should have presented more authentically
than as a magical monster man, you know?
You know, like me and the guy who puts the facts
on the Snapple caps, we get together,
we get together and kind of commiserate.
The other responsibility of it,
that comes to that power, yeah.
It comes with that power.
Yes, I think that there's a very pointed feeling
of anytime you're doing anything connected
to like historicity or historical,
I think a lot of the players in that season
who had not lived in New York also felt like,
oh, how do I honor this very real place?
And we had, you know, Stephen Sondheim is mentioned there.
We mentioned in the second season,
there's like a fight at Ellis Island
where people are like jumping into photographs
from Ellis Island of like different waves
of immigration in the city.
You're trying to like honor these things,
not only in a fantasy show, but in an improvised fantasy show
where, you know, it's show, but in an improvised fantasy show where,
you know, it's like, well, our first priority is to make sure that our story
reflects our values and is compelling and interesting and funny.
And I think like people finding out that Robert Moses is real through this.
I can only hope that it shuttles them on to the power broker and to reading the
history. Please don't take the headline from an improvised D&D show.
Please, please, please feel free to dig deeper.
Uh, there's a lot more information, and there's a lot,
and obviously, a lot of our information
was very much taking the character
as a point of inspiration,
and then doing this big arch villain version of him.
Um, you know, in the second season,
they spring a creature out of this dragon's cave
underneath Central Park,
and literally the Tammany tiger jumps out,
who is a giant,
who is a giant blind tiger with like cuffs
and a top hat with a shamrock on it.
And you go like, it's like, you know,
but I would hope that people would not see that
and then go, oh, Tammany Hall,
that's where that tiger is, right?
Like, yeah.
Colson Whitehead wrote about this,
that when he was growing up,
the Underground Railroad was an actual railroad,
like in his mind, like he could not escape that image.
It's one of those things,
it's kind of funny how you get information like this.
And I think it's awesome that people learn
about Robert Moses through your show.
You know, like, because, I mean,
there's definitely a lot more to dig into,
but it's just the great, like,
you take this sort of gestalt of this big book
and kind of go, well, these are the things
that speak to me about this, this idea of,
you know, choice taken away from you
and places being shaped for misguided and selfish
reasons.
It is a way to describe the world as it is.
It's also part of the irony of history that Robert Carroll feels the need to write this
massive book, this incredibly researched book in order to tear down the myth of Robert Moses.
And now 50 years later, there's people who are like,
that was a real guy, huh?
Like that's like, Robert Moses was so omnipresent
in New York that Robert Caro had to marshal so much argument
to show that he was not doing good work.
And now it's so around the opposite
where people just are like, oh yeah,
that's that villain on that fantasy show, you know?
I mean, that's a fascinating thing, is the idea of Robert Caro, who, people just are like, oh yeah, that's got a bad rap. Like, no, like that book just decimated that guy.
It did. It moiterized him. He, the, I mean, Robert Carr is the, is the definitive last word on
Robert Moses legacy. And to the degree that if people are unaware of Moses and become aware of
him, there is a degree of like the, the, probably the first thing you hear is some apocryphal bogeyman style story
that sort of reflects or echoes something from the book. Uh,
or at least that's been my experience with people finding out about him as
they're like, oh yeah, that's the guy.
And like the first thing they'll tell you is one of the excoriating, uh,
pieces of evidence from the book, right? Rather,
rather than that's the man that built America, you know,
Jones beach, Robert Moses?
Jones Beach?
Yeah.
So this is sort of the end of our series.
We're in the fall of Robert Moses, the fall from power.
Was it the loss of power?
The loss of power.
Yeah, I mean, so you have to wait till the evening
to know how good the day has been.
And we're getting into the evening.
Like the sun is sinking down.
We have one more real summarizing episode left.
And what's so fascinating about his fall
is that through some sort of machinations
of wanting to control the world's fair,
and therefore giving up some of his city posts,
and then for the peak resigning as a bluff to his state posts.
And then finally, for the first time in decades,
after doing that over and over again,
Nelson Rockefeller, like, takes him up on it
and he actually, you know, gets forced out of his state posts.
And it's a pretty, like a whimper,
ignominious end to his reign.
That is not how your Robert Moses beats his end.
So, and in a way, it's satisfying
because you see the beats of it.
And so as a story, it's really fun to watch,
you know, this resignation tactic finally not work,
but it doesn't have the kind of like,
sort of oomph that you kind of want.
So describe how they, the fight and, you know, how they ended Robert Moses.
The big villainous scheme.
So it's very, I mean, this is, this is as animated and, and over the top as you can
get Robert Moses and his army of vampires, his, his army of vampire financiers, uh,
concoct a ritual, the New York Stock Exchange,
which our heroes are unable to stop, on New Year's Eve,
and a disembodied Sauron-esque Robert Moses
retreats to the ball dropping Times Square,
where as the ball drops, there's a lot of magic
having to do with the Golden Door,
Amalazerus, the New Colossus,
and the idea that in order to like basically extend
his sphere of influence from New York
to the rest of the country,
Robert Moses is going to summon the American dream.
He's going to summon the embodied version
of the American dream.
And the danger of bringing a dream into the real
world is that the second a dream becomes real, it becomes one thing.
When you call a little wish or a figment into the waking world, it can become a spell, a moment, a flash, a joke, a little bit of joy.
There are dreams that are so large and important
that they represent a threat to the cosmos
if they are brought into the waking world.
And while a dream is a dream, it can be anything.
And there's a lot of fairy logic to that,
but what I think it means more pointedly
for Robert Moses as the master of concrete and steel
and the idea of concretizing something
is the idea that the American dream
is at its strongest or best when it is interpretable
and where it means something different
to everyone who wants to pursue it.
And by bringing it into the real world
and putting it under his control,
he will forever kill every other version of it.
You see the tendrils of Robert's spell
and the infection set in.
The dream warps, convulses,
has its last moment where it could be anything,
and begins to take a solid, stationary form.
A tall, clean-cut, square-jawed,
blonde-haired, blue-eyed man
square-jawed, blonde-haired, blue-eyed man appears hovering in the air above you.
It surveys what it can see of the city,
the sidewalks, the subways, the buildings, the billboards,
and then a resonant voice goes,
this place is filthy.
So that poetry aside, all the good guys
jump in a big tornado in Times Square
and on a bunch of floating, this is where we move
from the poetic into the insane and literal.
They jump into a bunch of floating, this is where we move from the poetic into the insane and literal, they jump into a bunch
of floating concrete sidewalk platforms,
fight the American dream, defeat the spell
that Robert Moses is casting and sunder him
and break his stranglehold on the unsleeping city
forevermore and send the American dream back
through the golden door into the land of dreams.
You glow with the power of the Chosen One,
and the frozen flame flies back into the golden door.
Pfft!
Robert screams, no!
And that's the final battle.
And it is a lot, I will say it is a lot more final
than the accepting of a resignation.
That's for sure, right?
So if you end the book, reading the book,
and you're like, I really wanted something,
I really wanted a good punch to the nose
of Robert Moses here.
You can read the 51st chapter,
which would be the Unsleeping City.
Exactly, drop City. Exactly.
Dropout.tv, and I will say this,
we have a lot more spells.
There's also a tiny little fairy mobster
called Don Confetti, and he talks like this.
So where's that, Robert Caro?
Where's that in the book, I ask you?
Oh, So good.
So when you presented Robert Moses to your dream team,
who are your players, did they know who Robert Moses was?
Or did you know, like, did you know their level of familiarity
with the character in the real world?
Um, I did not.
I did, the crew knew, obviously,
the people that I'd been working with, you know, developing
the storyline knew.
But yeah, I believe that a couple of them did actually know that Robert Moses was a
real historical figure.
And did that change the way that different people interacted with him?
You know, because you're all telling the story together, and you have a master plan and a
guide, not an un-Moses-like master plan for how they're going to navigate this space,
this story that you're telling, but they do have input.
And did you notice that different characters
interacted with the villain Moses differently?
If they were more familiar with New York
and what he did and that sort of thing?
I just wonder if there was any sort of breakdown of pattern.
I think what's interesting is the awareness came out
in the midst of the season.
So it was not like a difference between cast members
in that some immediately clocked him and some didn't.
It was more that as the season was shooting,
and it was clear that this was a real historical figure,
that pointedness, I think, developed more.
To the point where, you know,
I think that final confrontation, I think, developed more. To the point where, you know,
I think that final confrontation at the Met,
there's a really great part of it
where Lou's character, Kingston,
has basically heard enough
that there's a sort of silence or gravitas to that scene
where knowing how, just again,
the sort of horrifying power that this man
wielded and his utter remorselessness for the most marginalized communities that
were impacted over and over and over again for decades.
I think that there was a degree of gravitas that is added by that.
And there's this weird delineation, I think,
in storytelling, especially fantasy storytelling,
where villains either are misunderstood
and they have a point and they're three-dimensional
or they're like muahaha, like maleficent,
I am arch-evil.
And I weirdly think that you get some of both those worlds
in an instance where there's nothing more three-dimensional
than a real human being, but it almost makes it worse.
It may, you know, like the idea that someone had a complex
inner life and had emotional wrinkles and depth
to themselves and was this heartless for this long
wielding this much power is astonishing.
And I think that the, so the PCs, as they were
clocking that, I actually think it gave them a
measure of resolve, even as the villain was not
a total cartoon, right?
Yeah.
I'm just going to like add a little annotation
here that PCs in this context is player
characters, uh, right?
So. Yes. A PC is a player character. Yes. a little annotation here that PCs in this context is player characters, right?
So, I'm just saying.
Yes, a PC is a player character, yes.
So that means that that's part of the group
of this collective storytelling game enterprise
that you're telling me.
For folks turning it, and I'm sure, and again,
if you're listening to 99% Invisible breaking down
the power broker, I'm sure you've played tons of D&D.
I'm sure that that is.
I mean, it's a decent crossover.
There's probably plenty who don't,
who are just like into history stuff.
We were debating this of how much to describe
what D&D is because obviously there's like,
there's different sections of the world
who know different things for sure.
But for example, when I was talking to my kids,
I have twin 17 year olds who are very into D&D and I mentioned that I was talking to my kids, I have twin 17-year-olds who are very into D&D,
and I mentioned that I was going to talk to you,
and I said, are you familiar with Brendan Lee Mulligan's
work?
And they were like, he's only the greatest DM in the world,
probably of all time.
You know, like, you know.
Oh, man.
That's so sweet.
That's very kind.
And so, yeah, so like like they're the people who know both
because I talk about the Power Broker endlessly
and they watched Unsleeping City as it came out,
like I was aware of it, you know.
Wow, wow, wow, that's incredible.
So when you're devising something as complex
as Unsleeping City, and you have some designs
where you want to lead them,
but they have their own agency to a certain degree.
How do you balance that
when you're telling something that's complex?
Like the idea of the highway hacks
and the American dream and stuff,
it's just complex ideas.
At least they seem to me to be that way.
How do you do that?
I feel, Roman, that I'm being set up for an analogy
where this very much mirrors Robert Moses.
And I just want to tell you that I see the trap.
I see that you're laying it out here, okay?
I'm onto you, man.
That was very smart of you.
That's why you're a good DM.
That's why you can see the game behind his DMing
in the interview.
I see the game, man.
No, but you're very right.
There is a fascinating, well, I think that the,
in the language that Robert Moses uses a lot to talk about,
you know, when he's talking about like Long Island
and he's talking about like,
what are the kinds of people we want to attract, right?
Like, that's the language he uses,
but there is a darkness and a cynicism
when you understand that individual freedom written over massive
populations and a powerful incentive structure
is fate.
Free will over the aggregate becomes fate when
you incentivize strongly enough.
And that's really sad.
And it challenges a lot of our deeply held ideas about the power
of individual freedom. And so you answer your question on a DMing level, sadly, it's the same,
it's the same necromancy. It's the same magic where you go, you are kind of building these
tracks. You're building this thing where you go, okay, you can do
whatever you want, but I know what you want. So if I build, it's like, it's, it's, it's
sort of, there's, there's, when people are seeking a stimulus, you know, um, it's like,
it would be, this is such a, this is, I don't mean this as a, as a disparagement of players,
but to use a metaphor that there's like,
you have cheese at the end of the maze.
You don't have to seal off the maze.
You don't have to trap anyone in the maze
if you know that they're looking for the cheese, right?
There's, there's this element of when you're building
adventures and you're building even these complex ideas
in there, you make something very personal. You make something where it's like,
well, this person has this villainous ideology,
and that ideology has resulted in concrete harm
to a loved one, or it's resulted in something
that is very visceral and felt to my character.
And the best way, honestly,
to create these story structures
is in collaboration with your players,
which doesn't mean that you're pre-writing
what the story is going to be.
But there's this beautiful, when I talk to like novice
dungeon masters about how to construct adventures
and flow sheets and sequences of events
that your friends will feel compelled to improvise through.
It's always the idea of the motivation and heart of your players as they're embodying these characters
has force and inertia to it. It's like water flowing downhill.
You can irrigate a hillside to know where the water is going to go.
And it's not a reflection on the water
doing what you told it to,
it's a reflection on you understand
that these people are pursuing their aims rationally.
And if they're pursuing their aims rationally,
you can create the structures that direct those aims.
Brennan, you're not gonna like this,
but talking about knowing what people want
and using that as leverage to get them to do
what you want them to,
sounds like power brokering, to be honest.
No, man, no.
Sounds like you're doing a lot of power brokering.
Yeah.
Come on, man, don't do this to me, dude.
You can't do this to me.
It's almost like DM stands for dungeon Moses.
Hold on a second.
No!
Suddenly I've just, my disguise fades away, curses!
And I fly out the window.
It was him the whole time.
It was him the whole time.
It's very, yeah, it's a very, I don't know,
it's genuinely a joy and a privilege
to be able to write these kinds of stories.
And I think too, like, in our first season,
Robert Moses was such like a fun, compelling villain
for the historicity and how much like history mattered
and was important.
And I think too in the second season that we did as well,
urban fantasy is so interesting in that
you're often depicting both at the same time,
you're depicting the heightened fantastical reality
as well as the, uh, what is actually the mundane reality
on the ground, you know, like our second season,
we had sort of a large company called Gladiator
that was trying to open a campus in Queens.
And there was like, this was around, you know,
this idea of like a big conglomerate shipping,
you know, e-commerce company.
And it was summoning this extra-dimensional being
called null.
And that season was very much about kind of the
emptiness and urban isolation of hyper-consumerist
capitalism, right?
And so you're depicting these things where there's
this haunting entity in the dream world that's coming
out of it. It's like a faceless, colorless silhouette,
very Lovecraftian.
But then also you're looking at like an apartment complex with no one living in
it because all of the apartments have been purchased as basically asset class
investments, you know, like, which I think there's some crazy percentage of apartments
on central park that are vacant
for like more than 80% of the year, right?
And so it's a bizarre, it's a fun thing
in crafting these stories, especially in any kind
of setting like the Unsleeping City that's so contingent
on the real world and is very much depicting that,
where you're like, here's the metaphor
and here's the reality and here's both of them hand in hand.
You know what I mean?
Like it's not just the analogy.
The analogy is like here with this other component
that is real.
It's a joy.
It's a real privilege to be able to tell
these kind of stories.
And speaking of New York, we'll be coming
to Madison Square Garden in January, which is nuts.
What?
We, the Dimension 20 is going to be performing January 24th at Madison Square Garden.
We sold out the garden.
So it's a-
Congratulations.
That's awesome.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Which is a very, as again, like having grown up in New York, it's a very-
Yeah, it's amazing.
Yeah.
Love it. It's Yeah. It's nuts.
It's nuts.
Well, I mean, thank you so much for being on the
9% Invisible Breakdown of the Power Broker.
It's been a real pleasure and it was really,
it's just fun.
I hope people like who are interested in D&D
or even if you're not, just like check out the season,
watch it unfold.
It's a really fun take on the underlying concepts
and values of the book.
It's just great.
You add it to the canon.
And thank you for using your medium
to spread the word of Robert Moses and the Power Broker
to those who were previously not aware of it,
but are pretty interested in digging into lore.
So I think they're gonna enjoy the Power Broker
when they finally get to it, yeah.
I'll say, if you love lore,
Robert Caro's The Power Broker is chock full of lore,
my friends. Chock full of lore.
Uh, that's how we make a difference.
We start referring to history as lore.
Um, we're gonna get a bunch of people.
Uh, it's truly a pleasure and an honor
to be on the podcast today,
and I really hope that anyone who is coming here from Dimension 20
digs into not only the rest of the Power Broker,
but the rest of 99% Invisible.
All the things that I talked about that matter to me,
it's, I feel very much like,
if I can do anything as a comedian and storyteller
to direct people towards these things.
Learning about Robert Moses as the villainous,
arcane architect of the highway hex
is hopefully step one on people digging into
not only the history of Robert Moses in New York,
but the people wherever you live,
the city that you're in,
and who is shaping the environs of your life,
and is there a way to get active
in resisting whatever
highway hex is being implemented in your town right now?
Nice, well said.
Next month, and I cannot believe what I am saying right now, we are going to be finishing
the book. Forget page numbers, just read it till the end. Read the book
till there's nothing left in it to read anymore. We're there, people. It's the
homestretch. And if you can't wait till next month to hear my voice summarizing
something, why not turn to the Flophouse podcast where we never reach the end.
There's always more bad movies to talk about. It's an unending torment. We've got
a bunch of 99PI Power Broker merch for you to congratulate yourselves on making
it this far.
There are t-shirts, there are bags, there are bookmarks, and something that we've been
waiting to tell you about.
We have a 99PI Power Broker challenge coin.
It's a commemorative coin.
It's totally Power Broker themed.
A prize to get yourself to show to anyone and everyone that you've finished the Power
Broker.
Because you'll no longer have the Power Broker book as this totem that you're lugging around.
And you'll now have this coin to commemorate
that you are a true Power Broker nerd.
The coins will be in the store soon.
If they're not there already by the time this episode comes
out, just head to 99pi.org slash store to get one.
The 99% Invisible Breakdown of the Power Broker
is produced by Isabel Angel, edited by Comiti,
music by Swan Real, edited by Comiti,
music by Swan Rial, mixed by Dara Hirsch.
99% Invisible's executive producer is Cathy Tu, our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kurt
Colston is the digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Berube, Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Gabriella
Gladney, Artin Gonzalez, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Ley, Lashma Dawn, Jacob Maldonado-Medina,
Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, Nina
Pautuck, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% of his below-goat was created by Stefan Lawrence.
The art for this series was created by Aaron Nestor.
We are part of the Stitcher and SiriusXM podcast family.
Now headquartered six blocks north in the Pandora building in beautiful Uptown, Oakland,
California.
You can find the show on all the usual social media sites as well as our own Discord server
where we have fun discussions about the power broker, about architecture, about bad movies
that seem somewhat inspired by the power broker, and all that kind of good stuff.
It's where I'm hanging out most of the time.
You can find a link to that as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.
The banality of evil.
That is so goddamn boring.
Yeah, he got all the good points.
Of course the most evil guy is the guy
that built the highways.
So dull.
Yeah, he's real bad.