A Bit Fruity with Matt Bernstein - What Is the Point Of Bill Maher?
Episode Date: October 17, 2025Bill Maher is, allegedly, the last sane voice on the left. But he doesn’t believe in the rights of transgender people, or of Palestinians. He thinks college campuses are hotbeds of liberal indoctrin...arian that have gotten “out of control.” Come to think of it, he hasn’t really advocated for any left-wing position in recent memory. An advocate for breaking out of echo chambers, Bill speaks almost exclusively to right-wing activists, and never to the minorities he bashes. He claims to know what Democrats should do if they want to win, but hates the ones who are actually winning. Three decades into his TV career and lost in the delusions that often come with a nine-digit net worth, Bill Maher has never been so useless. Listen to bonus episodes on Patreon! Thanks to today’s sponsors! Get smarter about yours (and others!) news media consumption with Ground News at https://www.ground.news/fruity Get 15% off a cuter, more sustainable way to clean at https://www.blueland.com/fruity Get an exclusive 60% on Incogni! https://incogni.com/fruity Listen to Francesca on The Bituation Room. Follow Francesca on Twitter. Listen to Will on I Hate Bill Maher. Find me on Instagram. Find A Bit Fruity on Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And you wonder why the left catches more jokes for me?
They changed, not me, okay?
I mean, they left me.
I didn't leave them.
I mean, I'm the same.
It's not me who changed.
I feel I'm the same guy.
What a thing to say that, like, you've not changed.
My God, if in 20 years I defend my career by saying I've not changed, fucking put me out of my misery.
Kill me.
Hi, I'm an American centrist.
I was socially ahead of the curve until one time I was asked to challenge my own preexisting beliefs on something.
Now I spend my days shaking my fist at people younger than me, making fun of minorities and smoking a lot of weed.
That was kind of my impersonation of Bill Maher. Do you guys think that was accurate?
Yeah.
You know, at the end you could give it like a pithy little smirk.
Also lately he does a like, he'll be like,
the left and he like snaps his mouth shut like a turtle and shoots his face at the camera.
I'm obsessed with his tics. Like I know his tics even. Last month, I was home with my liberal
identifying Democrat voting extended family when one of them said to me, I love Bill Maher. He
tells it like it is. Over the last three decades, comedian and political talk show host Bill
Marr has established himself as what he calls an old school liberal. He's also established himself
as the sane representative voice of the American left, someone who's bravely willing to criticize
not just Republicans and conservatives, but also his own side. He's not woke, he's pragmatic,
he's not emotional, he is logical. He knows how to make Democrats win, chiefly, by abandoning trans people
or Palestinians or whatever variable group of minorities
who personally doesn't care about at any given time,
if only those gender-confused,
loony leftists would listen to him.
This is a very theatrical performance.
I like it.
In those three decades of telling us what's best for us,
he's amassed a reported net worth of $140 million,
and climbing,
with Newsweek reporting that his current salary at HBO
earns him $10 million a year.
I'm being snarky. I know.
But I think Bill Maher is in some ways more parasitic to the American political media ecosystem
than even some openly far-right figures like Candice Owens and Ben Shapiro,
both of whom Bill has gleefully collaborated with, by the way,
when you tune into those people's shows,
they're not really lying to you about where they fall on the political spectrum.
Whereas with Bill Maher, he clings to this identity as the last,
sane voice on the left, even when he's saying the exact same things about queer people or, quote,
liberal indoctrination on campuses, as Charlie Kirk did.
Colleges is completely out of control. Elite universities where the kids are raised to be these
anarchist America-hating anti-Semites. And so in that way, he's creating a path for entirely
other groups of people who think of themselves as liberal or progressive.
people like the one in my extended family to adopt far-right bigoted beliefs without necessarily
realizing they're abandoning what they think are their progressive principles. So that's kind of
what I want to talk about today. And to do that, I am so excited. I have two people here,
and I initially reached out to Francesca Fiorentini of the Progressive Comedy Podcast, The Bituation
Room. Francesca, welcome to the show. Thank you so much for having me.
And I was like, I've seen, you know, you critique Bill Maher in ways that I thought were really thoughtful.
And I said that you're his foremost critic.
And you responded and you said, I am not his foremost critic, which is how I learned that there is currently in existence a podcast that has been running for over a year called I Hate Bill Maher, whose host, Will Weldon, is on a very last minute notice also here.
Will, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me.
It is, you know, just hearing like, you know, I found out this other guy, he had a podcast dedicated to this.
It's been running for well over a year.
I had never heard of it before.
That is, what a great summation of like all my entire body of work of somebody being like, you know, there's this other guy.
Nobody's ever heard of him before, but he's here now.
Will, I just want to ask before we get started, like, I started going through your body of work.
How did you conceive of this idea of making this very in-depth podcast for now that's been running for, I think, 18 months about Bill Maher?
To start, everything else I've ever done has, I would say, by most fair measures, been a failure.
So I was like, well, this can't fail any worse than anything else I've ever done.
So like, why not?
I've just been at home for a while.
I'm essentially like a house husband.
And like I had all this time.
I'm like, how much money does it?
I was like, I've got the stuff lying around to do a podcast that sounds bad.
I'll do five episodes.
If I gain any sort of traction, I'll just keep doing it.
And it's just like I hate him is why I do it.
That's actually the short answer.
That's what I should have led with.
I hate him. The idea of like, you know, say going back in time and not doing harm to someone, but maybe erasing their career from existence, you know?
What I'm hearing is you're trying to cancel him.
He should literally be canceled because his show has no value to anyone. Like it shouldn't be like a canceled from like, oh, I'm canceled.
An executive should be like, the show's over. Go home.
No, you want to unknowle Bill Maher. We want to culturally annul him. And I think that is very reasonable.
And I understand there are worse people that have existed throughout history, but it's the kind of thing where there'll be just one person who gets under your skin.
Like what you're saying about like Candace Owens, I understand Candace Owens is like worse.
But for a long time, I was like, but if I could erase anybody's media career, it would be Jonathan Che.
Like I understand he's not the worst, but he's the one who bothers me personally more than anyone else.
And I think he's a good comparison because he's someone else who is kind of spiraling now that he's discovered his lifelong political project and political beliefs have failed.
Like they have delivered us to this moment in time.
And he's just coping with it a lot better than Bill Maher does.
But did that answer the question?
I don't really remember.
I mean, Will and I are comedians.
And also like I don't call myself a political comedy comedian, but I do talk about politics on stage.
And I think that something I've spoken with Will about extensively is the amount of like air in the like political comedy space that someone like Marr still takes up.
And for people who are quite a bit younger or people coming up, it's like it is really insane that this show being as bad as it is, I mean, on every level, on literally every level, that Bill Maher being such a bad comedian is still getting $10 million a year.
year to do this show. I really, you know, I'm too old to be able to sincerely embracing things like,
well, as someone who is like neurodivergent, like I struggle with the idea of saying like, well,
maybe it is like just the way my brain works. But for whatever reason, I'm obsessed with rules and
order. I want fundamentally things to make sense. And the big thing about him is it's like,
this doesn't make sense. It's like not right. It's not right that a guy who has been wrong over and over and
over who lies doesn't know he's either stupid or intentionally a dishonest he's a creep like a nasty
sick creep all of that stuff and like he's still here and in my brain i can't i can't wrap my
head around the fact that that can happen like there must be consequences for being bad at what you
my whole life i've been taught like if you do a bad job at something there will be consequences
and then you look at a guy like that and it's an extension of anyone
who reaches a certain level of like prominence and power where it's just like it's not okay
that this continues to happen. God, will you act like you just moved to L.A.? The worst people
in media and I think in Hollywood often are the ones that rise to the top. And Bill Maher
occupies a very particular nexus of both media and comedy. But I digress. Well, I do think you
answered the question.
I think I feel like I answered a few questions, most of which we're not asked, but
shall we, as we do on this podcast, get into the chronology of Bill Maher's career?
I have a teeny bit of early life stuff here because I know we want to get into like what
Bill Maher is up to now, but we have to establish first who he was and how he established
himself as someone with credibility, sort of in comedy, in progressive politics, and any of this.
So Bill Mar grows up in New Jersey.
Shout out New Jersey.
Me too.
Love that for us.
He was raised Catholic, but when he was 13, his father sort of ushered them away from the religion due to his disagreement with the church's stance on abortion.
And I think this is one of those early childhood things that shapes Bill Maher's belief system.
Bill Maher goes to Cornell University in the 70s where he says,
Selling Pot helped him get through college and start doing.
comedy. And his love of pot is another thing that will help shape his belief system and, you know,
supposed progressivism. Throughout the 70s and 80s, Bill Marr does stand-up comedy in New York City.
He takes on small roles in TV and film, makes appearances on David Letterman and Johnny Carson,
and eventually lands his own show politically incorrect, which was a late-night political talk show,
first on Comedy Central, then on ABC in 1993.
Very important about him growing up is everybody hated him in school.
He had no friends.
He talks about how he was bullied via being ostracized, which like, you know.
Well, I mean, like, I don't know.
I always hear about these figures who become like so, just so mean.
Right.
Like, I think what I want to really identify about Bill Mars politics early on is
that he's really mean.
And a lot of the people that he's mean to, like queer people, like we were also badly bullied
in school.
We also, most of us had no friends.
And so, you know, at some point, you have to take that upon yourself.
The other thing, too, is his mother is Jewish.
He didn't know until his late teens.
And he talks a lot about how impressed he is with his dad for marrying the Jewish woman he
was actually in love with instead of the woman. Everybody probably wanted him to marry, which I
understand. It's like, that would have been pre-Vatican too. So Catholics weren't like wild about the Jewish
people. Now he talks all the time about how also the most painful thing that's ever happened to him
was when his high school girlfriend broke up with him. To date. To date. To date. In 70 years,
the most painful thing that ever happened to him was his high school girlfriend, breaking up with him.
That followed by the second most painful thing, which is a teenage autistic person on Tumblr using neo pronouns.
See, I've got jokes too. I get the comedians on my podcast and now we're all making jokes.
Keith Olberman has a story about how in college Bill Maher had his own comedy magazine.
There was the Cornell Comedy Magazine.
And then there was the one Bill Ma wrote and published himself because the implication is they wouldn't let him write for the other one.
He's just like a guy who was always on the outside growing up.
But he also always thought he was, he clearly always thought he was smarter than everybody
else.
I think I sent you the clips, but like he talks about how like he never liked kids.
He never liked kids.
He never wanted to make kids laugh.
He didn't like kids stuff.
He wanted to make the adults laugh.
He also started off trying to be an actor like before he got politically.
He did stuff.
I think for Leno, he like covered an election and that led to politically incorrect.
But prior to that, like, he was on a sitcom.
with Gina Davis called Sarah.
He was the star of the film Pizza Man,
which was written and directed by the, I think,
original writer of Pretty Woman.
We're going to do the opposite of Pretty Woman.
Pizza Man.
Like, he comes out of the like,
the like makeover scene looking worse.
It cannot be sad enough.
Like, if I had a dollar for every time
one of these people who ends up being just like,
and I mean, this is where we're going, right?
Like right-wing provocateurs,
which is,
Certainly not what Bill Maher would call himself today, but it is basically what he is.
If I had a dollar for every time one of those people started out wanting to be an actor,
listener, please let me know in the comments if you want that to be its own episode.
I was talking with Caroline Kwan about making an episode about that specifically.
It's so many people.
It's just about their rejection from, you know, progressive artistic spaces and they're like wanting to exact revenge on those types of people.
I mean, Ronald Reagan.
Sure, Shapiro. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I want to talk about a couple of the beliefs that Bill Marr really espouses at the beginning of his career that solidify him as just this like raw, real liberal.
One of his hallmark beliefs is that he will criticize religion, some religions.
Bill Maher has called religion a, quote, neurological disorder. In 2008, famously, he releases a documentary.
called Religilists, which to this day is one of the highest grossing documentaries in the United States.
Jesus.
Well, it's not a heavy hitter list.
People don't go to those in the theater very much.
But, you know, like I want to say like Bill Maher, I was watching, you know, old Bill Maher preparing for this.
I was watching a lot of Bill Maher.
Every time I make this podcast, I just fucking destroy my YouTube recommended algorithm.
Oh, no, I'm sorry.
now. Bill Maher, you know, he was like spitting some facts early on about how, you know, like churches
receive public services, but don't pay taxes, like stuff like that that as a very young person,
like made a lot of sense to me. He would like poke and prod at theology in general and like the
idea that like maybe God's not real. And as a kid, I grew up, you know, going to a conservative
synagogue. Like those were things that like, I was like, oh, that, that makes sense to me. And also,
when he's like, I don't like religion. He means
the Abrahamic religions. Like, I've never
heard him talk about, you know,
like Buddhism or Hinduism
or, but ranking them, he
dislikes Islam the most than Christianity.
And he like very rarely
criticizes Judaism.
And that, when he does,
it tends to be like a lot more lighthearted.
Which is weird because like, he doesn't
know anything about it. Like,
there are episodes where he'll be like, Shabbat.
What's that? It's like, you don't know what Shabbat
is. His religious stuff is hard.
to parse because there are times where it feels like just a shield to dislike, I mean, not just
Muslims, but just brown people generally, but also like, especially during the Bush years,
he also hates Christianity. Like he, Christianity, he really does. He's like, it's wrecking the country.
His thing is Muslims are trying to kill us. Christians are wrecking America. Those are sort of his
two stances on religion during the Bush years. Right. And one of those is true. And the others is absolutely
not. I mean, what's interesting about Bill Maher, you know, being so loudly and proudly secular and
anti-religion, like, it is at a time when the Christian right is rising in this country full on,
full force. And I think being a product maybe of like the Reagan years as like a young Gen X,
I feel like that does something to you. And it matters that you're speaking out about it because
of all the power that the right is gaining. And so it is wild because it's like the right and the
Christian right hasn't lost power since he first started calling it out. I think the only thing that's
happened is people who keep calling it out maybe are tired of their material about the same shit because
nothing tangibly changes. Anyway, we can talk about that a little bit later, but just to give him
a little bit of props for like, it is important to track the rise of that. They are hate mongers.
They are ruining the country. They are religious zealots. But it's almost like you're not in their
Crosshair is my guy. It's people that you later in life don't even see as your ally.
Bill Maher also, he does something that a lot of people I've noticed who leave religion and
especially leave like religious cults do, which is they conflate their belief that
organized religion is bad or predatory or any number of things with a rejection of any strong
belief in anything in general. It's like it's all bad.
I think this is really pronounced is Megan Phelps Roper, who was, she grew up in the Westboro Baptist Church.
Like that was her family.
And then she grew up and she left the Westboro Baptist Church and she wrote a book about it.
And I think she follows me on Twitter, but probably won't after hearing this.
But Megan Phelps Roper, do you guys remember that podcast series that J.K. Rowling did with the free press, the witch trials of J.K. Rowling?
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
The premise of that podcast series was that J.K. Rowling is being tried at the stake by the, you know, woke, cultish gender ideologues, aka like trans people wanting human rights.
That was hosted by Megan Phelps Roper, who basically talked about trans people and their allies as if it were a religion not unlike the Westboro Baptist Church.
I think I've spoken about this on my podcast before, but like there was one time a couple years ago where I went on a date with someone who came out of a really extreme Christian childhood, who after a couple of dates, I was like, I don't think I can do this because he similarly, towards me and my own political beliefs, he was like, well, you believe strongly in something. That reminds me of my childhood and those religious people who believed strongly in something. Any strong belief is bad. And so, you know, he was.
just pushing back on everything I said about anything, which didn't make for the most pleasant dinners.
I find Bill Maher does this. Similar to Megan Phelps Roper, he does it with trans people. He does
it, I think, with the left generally where he talks about, especially now the left as if it's like
a cult or a religion. I do think that that was the whole problem with, you know, being anti-religion
in the Bush years and saying that Islam is exactly like Christianity and all and on and on and on, is that
he is having these arguments theoretically in his mind.
It is all in a petri dish.
It is all in a vacuum.
It's not actually based in,
oh my God,
we've invaded two Muslim majority countries with our military,
effectively for,
you know,
Dick Cheney's stock portfolio.
Like,
it was completely devoid of everything.
It was just like,
I'm going to flatten it all.
And Muslims are just as bad
and have just as much power.
And it's like, no, they don't, man.
Like, terrorism is bad.
It's also an,
act of desperation. It's also put in a broader scheme of history and colonialism. And I also think that,
you know, you get a lot of, you know, in activist movements, they're undercovers, right? There are
people who work with the FBI and whatnot. And some of them and their origin story is that they
went to an activist meeting, right? And they got upset because of how committed people were.
You know, they felt like they were, you know, radical.
They were organizing for a campaign for a group of people.
They were serious.
And that, I think for really weak-willed cowards, that is terrifying to them.
And I would put Bill Maher in that category of like FBI informant vibe.
That's what he has.
Yeah.
I think he's driven a lot by resentment about being like left behind.
There was a long time where he was like hip.
And I think the fact that people's views have evolved and his weren't caused his to regress, as opposed to him just staying in time, he was like, well, they're crazy.
So I have to act in opposition to that.
And then people started criticizing him.
And because he is the pettiest, most vengeful person in entertainment, he like got even worse about everything to the point where now he'll be like, I'm a liberal.
And it's like, well, when was the last time you advocated for a liberal thing?
You can't find it anymore. He doesn't do it. There's no, there's no economic policy behind what he believes. Like, it's all crazy to him. Everything they want to do is crazy and they just need to be reasonable. But he can't, he has no examples of what he's talking about. There is something to be said about a standup comedy as an art form, which is having an angle, right? You can't just get up there and, you know, not have an interesting thing to say. You want to have a certain angle. It's got to be funny, right? And it is, obviously, we see it's very easy to like punch down.
we were in the middle of the rise of, you know, sort of like, you know, edge lord humor as an
edge lord president, you know, rules us. But I think it's also, Bill Maher is a product of not
actually being funny or talented, but knowing that you just have to have an anti-something angle.
He is a professional contrarian. I wouldn't say that all stand-ups are contrarians professionally,
but there has to be something a little contrarian in your setup or in your joke to make it funny.
That's where the humor lies. But if you're,
wear that with everything. So I think to Will's point, it's like he like, he like knee-jerk reacts
to the times. He doesn't go with it. He's react, knee-jerk reacting because he thinks that's what
humor is. That's what comedy is. And it's not. Part of my job, a big part of my job,
is understanding where other people are at with their politics. And a huge part of that is
understanding where they're getting their information. I think this entire episode is evidence of us
trying to understand that. For example, New York City's mayoral debate just happened, and there is
pretty broad agreement that Zoran kind of steamrolled Andrew Cuomo. That is, of course, not how every
news source is going to report it, especially those with an ideological bent that demonizes
Zoran Mamdani, who famously threatens the power of billionaires. This is where,
Ground News comes in. Ground News is a website and an app that aggregates articles from all different
publications about a single story and organizes them into left, right, and center biases, and gives
you so many other transparency tools that make it easier to understand the information diets of
not just you, but your extended family, your Facebook uncle. So I wanted to see how right-leaning
news outlets were covering the New York City mayoral debate. And here,
some articles that ground news aggregated for me.
Cuomo strikes at Mamdani while Sliwa goes on the attack in fiery debate over New York City's mayor
race. Huh, it's not totally what I saw.
What I don't have an experience, I make up for an integrity, and what you don't have an
integrity, you could never make up for an experience.
From the New York Post, Zeran Mamdani dodges attacks and can't say how he'll pay for socialist
proposals in heated New York City mayoral debate.
Zeran Mamdani, to be clear, has said many times over.
and over again how he'd pay for his proposals like free and fast buses, which is taxing billionaires
and corporations appropriately. Here's another one. Zeran Mamdani's artist wife skips New York City
mayoral debate to teach ceramics class in trendy Brooklyn Bistro. Okay. You know, to me, these
run the gamut from misleading to downright ridiculous, but this is a really important tool for me to
understand where, frankly, a lot of people, for better and for worse, are getting their
information. If you would like to subscribe to Ground News, you can head over to Ground.
Dot News slash Fruity for 40% off a vantage plan that is Ground.
Dot News slash Fruity. Get smarter about not only the way you take in information,
but the way that you understand how other people are receiving their news.
Thank you so much to Ground News for sponsoring this episode. And now let's get back to
the show. Another one of Bill Mars more, you know, modern iterations of his brand that he's really
taken to, I think in an effort to uphold this like liberal cool guy thing is just that he likes to smoke
weed. He, like, it's the premise of his podcast is that he smokes weed on the podcast. I don't
really have a lot to say about this. I don't smoke weed. It makes me paranoid. Well, weed, I grew
up, you know, smoking a lot of weed in high school. And it made me a much more, I mean, it was like,
that's your gateway to Marley. Marley, you know, you start talking about social justice through that.
You got the posters in your dorm room and then 9-11 happens and you live in New York and then you
get involved in the anti-war movement. The point is, for me, weed made me an empath. Weed made me a hippie.
Weed made me very connected. And I only in like the last 10 years have I realized that like, oh, you know,
the Rogan, the Elon's, like, people who smoke weed don't actually become empathetic.
Like, I have a very upsetting amount of empathy when I'm high. It's like, it's like too much.
And I need to calm down. But a lot of people don't. A lot of people are like, you know,
fuck yeah. They're just chilling and happy. They don't think twice about anything. And so I think it's
also, but it's also so lame to be like, smoking weed makes me cool. He's like, what is he?
He brings out fucking bubblers.
I don't know what that is.
I don't know what a bubbler is.
I don't think he does.
You don't think he, what?
You don't think he smokes weed?
He just smokes joints.
Okay.
He'll be like, anybody who eats unhealthy food deserves to die.
And then he will pump his lungs full of carcinogens and be like, I will never die.
I'm the healthiest guy in the world.
But also, he can't roll his own joints.
He had to get Bella Thorne to roll a joint for him on the most disturbing episode of Club Random there is.
But he can't, though.
He has never rolled a joint.
joint on the show. They're always pre-rolls, which if weed's going to be that big a part of your
identity, you have to be able to roll a joint. This is the most podcast my podcast has ever been.
Like we're talking about another person's ability to roll or not roll joints. Like this is,
this is why I got into the medium, guys. I will say it's like there is a long period of time
where he would talk about weed in the context of people go to jail for this. And that's wrong.
Like there was a period of time where he was concerned about mass incarceration. A lot of
of the issues he was good on for so many things like when he would talk about gay marriage he would be the most homophobic ally you could
yes he'd be like oh gay guys they love putting things in their butts you're gay ass sex like that are
constantly making jokes about people being gay having sex in the ass but then he'd have a democrat on and he would go
look it makes sense that republicans aren't in favor of gay marriage they hate gay people you say you
support gay people, how can you also not support gay marriage? So it's like on the bigger issues and on
the bigger scheme, he would be like the only person on television who would sit someone down on an
interview that theoretically should be friendly and be like, this makes no sense, justify this.
But once like once gay marriage was not, well, it's in contention again, but like once a lot of
those huge broad issues were quote unquote settled, he didn't move on. He now is just,
just like, well, we're good. We did it. And now I'm going to be even worse. Yeah. And we're going to,
we're going to get back to his whole thing that he repeats constantly, which is, I haven't changed.
They have. And it's like, well, part of being progressive is that you should be able to change.
Yeah. Progress denotes a certain motion forward, I feel like. That's what progress means as a word.
Right. And like with so many people who become what Bill Maher has become, they got to a point politically and socially in the world where they felt like they had all of their needs covered. And things were exactly as, you know, they were to make Bill Maher comfortable. And so the work was done. It was the same thing with we, I did a whole episode about the conservative gay writer Andrew Sullivan who talked about how trans people are destroying the gay movement. And it's like, he was like, well, we had everything. And then the trans people ruined it. And it's like, well, you had everything. And the trans people are the
reason that you had it.
Like, yeah.
You know who loves Andrew Sullivan?
Bill Marr.
A guy named Bill Mar.
He's on, he's been on real time like 47.
The angriest I get is an episode with either Andrew Sullivan or David from.
Those are the two episodes where I'm like, I don't know that this is listenable because I am like really getting mad in a way.
I'm getting mad the way conservatives get mad when they try to do comedy.
Speaking of those, you know, militant trans activists who got people like Andrew Sullivan and even I would say Bill Mar,
the rights that they so cherish today.
Rest in peace, Miss Major, who is a black trans activist from the Stonewall era.
She was at the Stonewall the first night.
She said the cops were raiding the gay bars like they always do, and we just were sick
of it.
And we, I think she said something to the effect of like, and we kicked their shit.
I was very fortunate to meet her last year, and she just passed away a few days ago.
rest in power miss major i want to keep going with the chronology in 2003 bill mar launches real time
with bill mar a political talk show which has now aired 700 episodes and when i saw that i just have
to say props to him because i just recently passed 50 episodes of a bit fruity and some days i
I feel like my brain is in a blender.
So credit where credits do, Bill.
I just want to say, I am happy sitting here with two other people who put actual work into their podcast, whose podcast requires a little bit of effort beyond like, oh, we're going to talk about this.
You mean more effort than Bill Maher?
He puts no effort into his show, at least over the last, especially since COVID.
There are interviews where people are like, what's your average work week like?
He's like, oh, it's crazy.
I work so much.
Oh, my God.
You know, I write the editorial at the end of the show.
So, you know, I'll write a draft on Monday.
Tuesday, I write a draft.
Wednesday, I write a draft.
Thursday, I write a draft.
Then Friday we shoot.
It's like, hold on.
You're saying you do a ton of work writing a draft,
one drafted day of a six-minute piece that I now know his writers also write for him.
Right, right.
This episode, as I say time and time again,
is researched, written, filmed, edited, and produced by a one.
Matt Bernstein, if you'd like to support it, you can do so.
The Patreon will be in the episode description.
Over more than two decades, Bill Maher has cultivated this brand, like I said, of a quote-unquote,
old school liberal.
I think there's a big difference between woke, and I know that word triggers a lot of people
because it had a great beginning as a meeting, but it, you know, words migrate.
and it went to something else.
I think there's a big difference between an old school liberal and a woke person.
And after watching a lot of Bill Maher and, like I said, ruining my YouTube algorithm forever,
I have divided the next part of our episode into a few different beliefs that Bill Maher has made core to his identity on the show, especially in recent years.
But the first one I want to talk about has one that has really run the entire span of his career, which is
Islamophobia, which is not an actual belief. It's a form of bigotry. But I do think it is the most
significant pillar in his career. It's also the most striking because to be an Islamophob for
decades and decades in the public eye just is a testament to how okay American society is with
open Islamophobia, how anti-Arab and anti-Muslim racism.
are the last bastions of acceptable bigotry.
Totally.
And I think the last time someone really challenged him on his Islamophobia was in 2014,
when Ben Affleck, of all fucking people, absolutely schooled him.
You're saying that Islamophobia is not a real thing.
That if you're critical of something...
Well, it's not a real thing when we do it.
Right.
It really isn't.
I'm not denying that certain people are bigoted against Muslims as people.
Right.
And that's a problem.
Big of you.
But the...
But why are you so hostile about this?
It's gross, it's racist.
It's not, but it's so nuts.
It's like saying those statements, shifty Jew.
You're not listening to what we are saying.
You guys are saying, if you want to be liberals,
believe in liberal principles, like freedom of speech.
Like, you know, we are endowed by our forefathers with an elizabeth,
all men are created evil.
No.
We have to be able to criticize bad ideas.
Of course we do.
No liberal doesn't want you to criticize bad ideas.
But Islam at this moment is the mother load of bad ideas.
Jesus.
So we have, we have.
Or how about the more than a billion people who aren't fanatical,
who don't punch women, who just want to go to the store.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
Stereotyping.
Wait, wait a second.
You take away to say that.
We've killed more Muslims and they've killed us by an awful lot.
We've invaded more Muslims.
I am not true.
I'm not for these things.
Yet somehow we're exempted for these things because they're not really reflection of what we believe in.
We did by accident.
That's why we invaded it.
We're not.
ISIS couldn't fill a double-A ballpark in Charleston, West Virginia,
and you were making a career out of what ISIS,
And I really feel, and you guys tell me if I'm wrong, but I feel like if it weren't Islamophobia and if it were like nowadays, I feel like his career would have been ended by something like that.
That was so resoundingly such a strikeout that it's still shocking to me.
He keeps getting back up and writing the drafts of the drafts of the drafts.
One of his big things with Islamophobia, I mean, it's very, it is of course very centered around him, especially post 9-11.
I do think his biggest issue with 9-11 is it led to his firing.
Like, I think if you got him fucked up enough, he would admit that and be like, I lost my job because of the Muslims.
Can you explain that, though?
Politically incorrect was canceled because right afterwards, he said he's like, look, they weren't cowards.
They weren't cowards.
The guys who stayed on the plane weren't cowards.
That doesn't take cowardice.
It takes bravery to follow through on something like that.
We are cowards because we launch cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.
We have been the cowards, lobbying cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.
That's cowardly.
That is a terrible.
Stay in the airplane when it hits the building.
Say what you want about it, not cowardly.
And like as soon as he started getting heat for it, he walked it back.
And he's like, I didn't mean it the way it came out.
I didn't mean it the way it came out.
And it also reminds us of the moment that we're in right now where if you don't mourn
Charlie Kirk in all of his bigoted ways, then you're a terrorist or you're awful.
And, you know, the censorship regime after 9-11 was insane.
I remember liking Bill Marr as a young anti-war activist for sure and something like that.
Like none of us were going around saying that kind of stuff.
But the show is called politically incorrect.
He wasn't wrong.
It was ridiculous.
People were getting canceled left and right for saying similar pretty lightweight things that had nothing to do with the moral judgment of what happened.
So it's funny because, yeah, he was based about it.
And I'm sure he's mad.
Or he had to swing so hard in the other direction.
and be like, oh, hey, guess what will never get you canceled?
It's being Islamophobic.
I think it's entirely driven around fear is mostly how it started.
Like, he talked all the time about how they wanted to kill us.
It reminds me of like, I remember when like, people would be like, ISIS wants to destroy America.
And it's like, ISIS is not, ISIS is on the other side of the world fighting a regional conflict.
Like, why is this about you?
A thing he loved to say before he, somebody pulled him aside and was like, Saddam Hussein is a secular dictator is he'd be like, you know,
the average man in Iraq would rather Saddam still be in power than see his sister walk down the street in a miniskirt.
But his concern for women under repressive regimes never extended any further than using them as a cudgel against a religious belief system he's fundamentally opposed to.
But that that's so liberalism. Let's just stop down because that is liberalism.
Because after 9-11 and during the Afghanistan war and Iraq wars, the liberals were able to get on board with Bush's,
plan because they were like, oh, we're freeing the women, right? And in a very also Islamophobic way or
I mean, not fetishization, but like paternalism, right? So that was the paternalism that the liberals,
and I would put Bill Maher in there, justified, even though he was against it, but he's ultimately
making the same argument that liberals who were for it and voted for it were also making.
I will also say by season three of his show, he is not opposed to the Iraq War.
He's at that point going.
He's like, look, I think it's bad that they lied to us to get us into it.
But now can't we say maybe it'll be a good thing?
He'll be like, can't we see there's hope?
Can we be like maybe in 20 years?
Why can't liberals look to the future?
And the guests on the show will be like, people are dying like by the thousands.
Like, it's chaos.
You mentioned the thing with Ben Affleck.
The most important thing about that conversation is the next week.
he was saying the exact same things as he was saying during the episode with Ben Affleck.
He has never internalized a thing a guest has said to him.
Hang on, Will.
I am sure he has internalized things that right-wingers have said to him.
You're 100% correct.
He has believed everything Barry Weiss has ever said to him is now a core tenet of his belief system.
But Francesco, what you were saying reminds me so much of the conversations we've been having
over the last two years a lot on this podcast about pinkwashing.
And this idea that like any amount of.
death committed onto Palestine with United States dollars via Israel is justified because at the end
of the day, we'll be able to bring pride, gay pride to Gaza, and we can plant a rainbow flag in the rubble
as if it's this like humanistic murder that we're doing. And Bill Maher does a lot of that
early on in 2010 on his show, he had this Muslim Dior sketch where he had women walk out in
like a fashion show style, but covered in traditional Muslim clothing and would say things,
you know, basically just demeaning them, but through the lens of like American liberalism
of like basically, if only you could take that off and be free.
Also that year, he had a segment where he complained to his fellow panelists about the rise,
in the baby name Muhammad in the UK.
The most popular name in the United Kingdom, Great Britain,
this was in the news this week, for babies this year was Muhammad.
Am I a racist to feel I'm alarmed by that because I am?
And it's not because of the race, it's because of the religion.
I don't have to apologize, do I, for not wanting the Western world to be taken over by Islam.
And he basically would just, and this is something, another through line of his career,
where he, not even softly, he just peddles great replacement theory.
He's like very concerned that like Muslims will take over the West.
Sharia law.
He compares Zane Malik of One Direction to the Boston Marathon Bomber.
Zane Malik can just go ahead and quit one direction for all I care.
Just tell me two things, Zane.
Which one in the band were you?
And where were you during the Boston Marathon?
Oh.
Oh my gosh.
God. Yeah. What? Oh my God. Will, you didn't know about that? I found something you didn't know about.
There's so much. There is so much. There is so much. Like I said, it's just, it's so, it's so mean.
And Ben Affleck points this out in 2014. I mean, Bill Maher just treats all of the American and Western atrocities in majority Muslim countries as like an aborition of our ideology and of our core, you know, politics in the West.
where and it's something that has to be done or else look imagine what they could do to us yes he is reacting
to the fact that the country is turning on the iraq war like the country is actually humanizing
muslims around the world i mean 2009 Barack Obama goes to cairo and gives a speech it's a really
momentous moment where people are starting to really humanize him and it's like he has to fly in the
face of that either because he truly is a bigot in his heart of hearts but i also think once again
he's a contrarian. He's a piece of shit contrarian. And he cannot read the room again,
which is a little ironic because as a comic, you should read the room. You should know what is hitting.
Well, as you said, he's a horrible comedian. He's the worst comedian.
He's still throughout the, the 2023 genocide on Gaza, like he's doing the classic pink washing.
Like he carries it through his career where he says after Chapel Rhone advocated for Palestinians,
Chaparon who's a lesbian. Bill Maher did a whole segment about he-h-haha, you'd be thrown straight off a roof
if you were in Gaza, which is why we must continue to bomb them. And you know, what's interesting to me,
though, is I was watching all of these segments throughout his career, but especially the ones
early on, like in that clip with Ben Affleck, where he's insisting, I'm not discriminating against
or, God forbid, dehumanizing Muslims, but we see now, I mean, you could see it then, but like,
we see the extent to which the post-9-11 dehumanization of Muslims and of Arab people more broadly
allowed him to, just two weeks ago, so casually laugh about dead Palestinian children with Van Jones.
Iran and Qatar have come up with a disinformation campaign that they are running through TikTok and Instagram
that is massive.
If you are a young person, you open up your phone and all you see is dead Gaza baby,
Dead guy's a baby, dead guy's a baby, dead guy's a baby.
That's basically.
Van Jones rightfully fucking raked over the coals for this one.
It's also funny because Van Jones is like claiming in this clip that the reason young people are pro-Palestine is because of a paid social media campaign by Iran.
And then right after he went on Bill Maher, it was revealed that Van Jones himself is a mentor in a paid Zionist journalism.
program. Yes, of course he is. Yeah. I mean. But like this is how dehumanization works, right? Like you're
just arguing, well, like, you know, in the case of Bill Maher, he's like, well, no, I just want
women to have their freedom. But all of it was just about dehumanizing brown people so that
when they are being genocided, your brain doesn't register it as like human life being destroyed.
Yeah. I mean, dead baby after dead baby ever.
dead baby. The joke is then he says, Diddy, that gets the laugh. But the setup that we're supposed
to ignore is dead Palestinian baby over and over again, as if, and again, Vans implying that this is
fake. I think it's sad to, you know, that he didn't know his mom was Jewish or that he was Jewish
to later in life because I actually think Zionism is such a perfect, like Cinderella story for a guy
like Bill Mar. It is all the surface liberal issues, like you're saying, like, okay, we support
gay marriage. We think you should, you know, smoke weed and listen to music and we're not, you know,
religious zealots, but we fundamentally hate Arabs and Muslims. And that is like the core
tenant of a lot of what Zionism has maybe always was, has certainly become that cruelty. It just
squares so much with who he is.
You talk about dehumanization.
I found him to be a fundamentally anti-human person.
You know, he'll do a joke in the monologue where he'll be like, oh, in a rock, you know,
they found three, three severed heads.
Three guys were murdered by insurgents.
They had their heads cut off.
They found them by the side of the road.
Don't these guys know trash pickup is on Wednesdays?
And the crowd will be like, oh, and then he'll get mad at the crowd.
And it's like, oh, you're so lacking in any sort of.
empathy for human life that you can't understand that like a crowd is going to hear that and the crowd
is going to go oh my god those those poor people were horrifically murdered and he's literally saying
they're going oh my god it's a joke calm down and it's like yeah but like those were real people he died
and the craziest example right after charlie kirk was killed so he had been shapiro on and that was
ben shapiro's was this is the fault of the left he had it on tim alberta who was like everybody's too
crazy. Bill Mar was like the people who are celebrating it and on the right, the people who are calling for
blood. I don't like any of you. He's so brave. They talk about this for like 20 minutes. Ben Shapiro was
like, I watched this kid grow up. I've known him since he was a kid. I watched him grow up and to see
that happen to him. And like, it's very like somber and emotional and angry. And then Bill Marr's like,
okay, uh, now here's a segue. Uh, this crazy thing happened. And then he segues to like a wacky
comedy bit and he's doing the jokes and it's cutting to ben chapiro being like like laughing and i'm like
what the fuck is this like you were just talking about how horrified you were by the murder of this guy
you watch grow up and now you're like cackling at this horrific comedy bit you're guffawing
it's like robocop like his show has become like robocop where you watch it and you go well
none of this means anything and it's the same thing he'll have some intense interview with
somebody and they'll come back and you'll be like, okay, our next story, somebody fucked a cow in Iowa.
Oh, I wonder if it stained the leather. And you're like, what the fuck, man? I'm going insane from
watching this because I no longer believe in like tone or meaning or like anything has value.
I have to be honest. The thing that I kind of like about Bill Maher, I've written packets for
Bill Maher. I'm sure a lot of maybe Will, do you ever write a packet for both? We talked about this.
I wrote a really good writing packet for Bill Maher. Wait, what does that mean? What is a packet in this
context. You submitted to become a right to get hired as a writer. Oh, you guys applied? Oh,
yeah. Oh my God. Wait, maybe this podcast is his own version of like a grievance thing about you not getting
hired by Bill Maher. We're just mad. We're just pissed. Well, they don't hire female writers. So I'm not,
not that, you know, not that burned by it. But it was interesting to tap into your inner Bill Maher is like,
trying to write in his voice is just like, what if you were, you know, an unrepentant dip shit? And you just
wrote, you know, offending everybody. And there is something kind of fun about not holding anything
precious, right? And I would liken it a little bit to, I think Bill Burr, although the post-Read
comedy festival, I think he's sort of jumped the shark here. But he also, he doesn't really
hold anything precious. He'll make fun of a lot of different people. But he definitely has a
sense of power. Like he's always talked about like billionaires and whatnot. And I think Bill Maher
has no sense of where the power lies. And that's why a lot of.
of it isn't actually funny. And I think this is what centrism also does is like you pretend like you
are morally superior because you're above the conversation. I also, before we move on to his next
big belief, I think his relationship with Ben Shapiro is so interesting. They collaborate a lot
on each other's shows. And I don't think it's interesting necessarily because it's bridging any
sort of meaningful political divide. I think that you can see very clearly when they work together that
they basically just agree, which is very funny as Bill Amar presenting it as reaching across the aisle
when I'm like, you guys are just holding hand. You know, I keep saying, this is all very simple.
Stop attacking Israel. Stop attacking Israel. And then we won't be having these fights about when should
we have a ceasefire, which is always the day after Israel attacked.
Right. That's right. And the amount of care that Israel is taking by going house to house and street to street in the Gaza Strip to avoid civilian casualties only to be told they're committing a genocide is just, it is sickening. It's always been that. It has. It's always been that. You know, Bill Maher's whole thing being like religion is stupid and people who guide their belief system through religion have a neurological disorder. Ben Shapiro is like America's foremost Jewish theocrat.
Like he says, like he isn't, he's an Orthodox Jew whose politics are guided by his religion.
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And now let's get back to the show.
Bill Maher's next big belief that I gathered after watching a lot of episodes of real time with Bill Mar
is this idea that we need to break out of our echo chambers.
this is one that is why are you laughing because he's such a fucking liar like i know i know
he's lying okay let me address the listener i believe in talking to all different sorts of people
part of my job is to try to engage people who disagree with me that's actually a big part of my job
and i tried to do so meaningfully it's hard to argue against people like bill mar who or
or even like, you know, like these big YouTube content farms like Jubilee, which I talk about all the time,
whose whole thing is like, we need to get out of our echo chambers. We have to talk about that critically,
though, in these contexts, because what does it mean for Bill Maher to get out of his echo chamber?
And how does he go about doing that? Well, let's look. In recent years, I would say, I would say,
the two biggest gripes that Bill Maher has with what he calls the left is that they are two,
hung up, A, on campus activism for Palestine, and B, trans people.
I mean, people say to me all the time, you make fun of the left more than you used to.
Yeah, because they're dumber than they used to be. And the right has gotten dumber too.
You know, if I had to find a reason why I thought I was right about doing this, it happened
after October 7th. I mean, people demonstrating for Hamas.
For Hamas?
It's like rooting for the planes on 9-11.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's a joke, for fuck sake.
I mean...
You might want to tell it to the college kids these days
because these morons are out there protesting for Hamas.
Protesting for this terrorist organization, Hamas?
That's just crazy to me.
I mean, it's like if they were around on 9-11,
they'd be rooting for the planes.
Yeah.
For Hamas?
It's like rooting for the planes on 9-11.
I say that's like rooting for the planes on 9-A.
I know you to agree with it if you just gave in a minute.
I know it's kind of shocking at first.
I'm going to read you a list of right-wing media personalities that Bill Maher has had on his podcast, Club Random, over the last couple years.
Here we go.
Pierce Morgan, Dave Rubin, Kid Rock, Greg Gutfeld, Russell Brand, Dr. Phil, R.FK Jr., Jordan,
Peterson, Riley Gaines, Bivik Ramoswamy, Candice Owens, Roseanne Barr, Jillian Michaels, Whitney Cummings, Dana White, Jerry Seinfeld,
not technically a Republican, but a extremely vocal and moneyed Zionist, Ben Shapiro, Matt Gage,
Charlie Kirk, Tony Hinchcliff, Tim Poole. Bill Maher has had zero transgender guests on Club Random.
In fact, in the 20-plus years of real-time with Bill Maher, do you know how many trans guests, how many trans guests,
Bill Mar has had.
Yes, because I have the outline open.
Oh, fuck.
I didn't look at it, but I want to say, I want to say none.
One.
One.
Give him a little credit.
He had an interview with Janet Mock in 2015.
Here we go.
Similarly, when it comes to the pro-Palestine movement, pro-Palestinian student activists,
he has had zero Palestinian guests on his podcast.
He has had zero pro-Palestine student activists on his podcast, despite having, oh, so much to say about them.
Do you know how many Palestinian guests he has had in the 20 years of doing real time?
Now I looked ahead, Will.
I also have the outline open.
God, fuck you guys.
One, the answer is one.
The answer is one.
He had Rula Gibral in 2015.
He has not had any Palestinians on any of his platforms since the 2023 genocide began.
And I just think it's really interesting that the guy who is so frequently telling us to get out of our echo chambers,
it's like he imagines himself as the furthest left someone can be.
And then he only talks to right wingers.
And that's his version of getting out of his echo chamber, even though the majority of the time he's been speaking with these right wingers is spent agreeing with them.
He likes to find common ground is a big thing.
Like his podcast is a great way to like launder your reputation.
Because like you mentioned Matt Gates.
The Matt Gates episode is insane.
If you watch that episode, you'd be like, what a normal guy.
That's one of the weirdest guys alive, Matt Gates.
He's a pedophile.
So obviously the other thing with Bill Maher is he loves to have men on who have sexual misconduct allegations against them.
And then he loves to hand them, wave them away.
So with Matt Gates, he was like, if you were actually guilty, you'd be in jail right now.
It's like, oh, yeah, powerful people famously always go to jail for that kind of thing.
And he also doesn't know things.
So he has Terrence Howard on, who is essentially, who believes he's invented a new math.
Terrence Howard comes on and he's like, I never hit my wife.
And it's like, well, Terrence Howard admitted in court that he hit one of his partners.
He goes, oh, you know, one of them filed a restraining order against me and got it, even though there was no evidence that I'd ever been physical with her.
She showed up to court with a black eye that she said he gave her.
Army Hammer he had on. My thing is, I swear, if Harvey Weinstein gets out of jail, he will be on
Club Random two weeks later and Bill Maher will be like, I believe something happened in the hotel
room. But like, I also believe women believe in like getting justice for not getting work however
they can. Look, I'm not here to like defame and I'm, I will say allegedly. I know what you're
going to talk about. You know Bill Maher has skeletons in his closet. You know, just based on his
public behavior with women.
Like, you know their shit that we don't know.
You know the Me Too movement missed him.
Like that bullet missed Trump.
Like, it, like, just, he is still afraid.
Like, I think there are people who are just still afraid that, like, oh, man, I will get
called out for the times that I've been non-consensual or, like, something that happened.
And there's a bigger conversation here, but I do think that that Bill Maher taps into
a fear. He taps into a fear that men have that I think even during the Me Too movement, even men who were like good, good men had, which is like, where does this stop? Where does this end? Did I do something bad? What's going to happen to me? You can get canceled just like that off an allegation, even though that actually wasn't happening and didn't happen. But the same thing with like the trans ideology. Well, where does it stop? Well, I don't know. Isn't this all too sudden? Isn't this too much?
And he appeals to that, like, just this reactionary part of people that want to quell social movements and their demands out of fear that maybe they will have to be held accountable for their behavior and or have a little bit of empathy and understanding of people who are not them.
Yes, 100%. And bringing it back to this, like, echo chamber thing. I mean, so much of, I think, Bill Mark,
politics are driven by a lack of curiosity about anything he doesn't already know. Like you said
earlier, I mean, he can never, he can not only never be wrong about anything, but he can't,
like, learn anything new. Yes, yes. He, he can only regress further into conservatism and, like,
the comfort of, I'm already right about everything and anyone who thinks something new, anyone who
who identifies in a way that I don't understand anyone who's transgender.
It's like they just must be wrong because they're outside the scope of what makes me feel comfortable.
And with this echo chamber thing too, I mean, people, people like in my extended family will talk about Bill Maher the way that they talk about Joe Rogan, which by the way, I think Bill Maher is very upset that he didn't sort of become Joe Rogan.
And I think his, I think his like shitty club random podcast is his failed attempt at becoming Joe Rogan.
Oh, he was on, he's been on Rogan three times and his like, jealousy is like very apparent.
It's like seven hours of video I've watched of the two of them talking.
It's the worst thing I've ever been through.
I'm so sorry.
It's like getting dumped by your high school girlfriend.
You can't imagine the pain of it.
How do you come down from that?
Well, like after you watch that, like two of the worst people having the worst conversation possible.
I already had brain worms. It's whatever. It's like, it's like, you know, it's like when somebody gets stage four lung cancer and they're like, what am I going to quit smoking? Like, you know, I feel like I'm just in that place now.
Perfect. People I know, like, they'll talk about Bill Maher and Joe Rogan in the same way. And they'll say this thing always, which is they'll talk to anybody. When has Joe Rogan had a trans person on? When has Joe Rogan had a Palestinian or pro-Palestinian?
and student activist on.
They talk about these things endlessly.
Or an abominate a prison abolitionist.
Talk to somebody.
Talk to the be.
And the other thing about it is it's good TV.
You cannot make the argument that putting people on your show to vocally make a case
for abolishing prisons or for freeing Palestine or for, you know, allowing people to
live in the bodies they want to live in, that that's not good TV.
And you got a booker.
You've got, you've got access to the best, you know, folks.
You can fly people out.
You could get someone to make a good case.
But you're afraid of someone making a good case.
It's why Fox News will occasionally have someone on that they've like prepped to be like,
you know, this is a feminist and she's, you know, a boarding live on television.
They'll get a caricature.
They're good caricature because they know it's safe because it's much better as a boogeyman in your head
than you're too afraid to expose your audience to these ideas.
But, friend, I mean, they also won't have these conversations.
because those are people whose political positions actually challenge power.
Yes.
And, you know, we're talking at the beginning about, well, why does Bill Maher continue to have this career?
When he's not funny, he doesn't have coherent politics.
The politics that he insists are right and that would allow the Democratic Party to win, for example, ignoring trans people and ignoring Palestine, are the politics that the Democratic Party has abided by in the last several election cycles and it is losing catastrophically.
Fuck that. They can't even defend abortion rights. I mean, you know what I'm saying?
He is bad at everything he claims to be a voice for. And yet he still has this career. Well, that's because he sucks up to power. Just like Barry Weiss, who was just put in as the head of CBS News, these are people who fundamentally at the end of the day will not challenge power. They will not challenge the head of HBO, the head of Paramount. And that's why they keep their careers. And in the case of Bill Maher, he has a legacy audience who will tune into any slop he feeds them.
And that's why he's not going to have those guests on that actually challenge power.
And he is going to continue to pretend that having an amicable conversation with Riley Gaines,
wherein he makes fun of Leah Thomas's genitals for an hour, is what it means to get outside of your echo chamber.
It really is important to understand.
It's not just Bill Maher.
There's so many centrists who do the exact same thing.
I mean, I've been on Pierce Morgan's show many times. They don't have me on anymore because I've asked to be paid and I also destroyed their last panel. But, you know, Pierce Morgan consistently compares himself openly to Bill Maher. I'm like Bill Ma. I believe in gay marriage. But you've got to answer for the trans people first. And he's obsessed with trans women in sports. And I think this is very much deliberate. And so it is the disservice and to Will's goal of.
obliterating the career of this man.
It is true because he takes up not just comedic space, but also political space as seemingly
liberal, seemingly on the left, and seemingly having these discussions when, in fact,
it's just two very well-off privileged people agreeing with one another.
The next big Bilmar belief that I have here and that I was actually just starting to get to
was what he thinks the Democrats need to do to win forever, as he says.
which is abandon wokeism, which is, I just wrote C, trans people.
Bill Maher is very much an advocate for the very pervasive idea within the Democratic Party
that throwing trans people or Palestinians or really any variable minority under the bus
is a viable solution to winning.
Just a few months ago, he outlined his plan for healing the political divide in America
in a segment which he called,
Let's Make a Deal,
and which I called the Centrist Manifesto.
It's kind of late in the fourth quarter for America
and we're behind by three touchdowns.
Let's make one last stab
at a grand bargain between the two sides
that hate each other so much.
You stop saying fetuses are the same as babies
and we'll stop saying trans women
are the same as biological women.
You stop saying alternative facts
and we'll stop saying my truth.
You stop saying thoughts and prayers.
and we'll stop with the land acknowledgment.
And there's a lot of stuff like that on the left.
And when conservatives see it, they say,
I'm sorry, we're just not going to go along
with reinventing society, often pointlessly,
even if we have to cancel democracy to do it.
That's what they're saying.
They see gender is only a construct
and sex is assigned at birth,
and they say, we're not doing that.
Transing kids by self-diagnosis
with no age limit, no parental notification,
and no acknowledgement of social contagion, not doing it.
Asylum now covers any reason for anyone to come to America?
Not doing it.
Homelessness is a lifestyle.
Natural immunity doesn't count anymore.
Whiteness is toxic.
We're not doing it.
It was essentially like a regurgitation of all of these falsehoods,
misinformation, if not total disinformation about trans kids.
And it was essentially saying, you know, we'll throw away trans kids.
again, he keeps saying, like, we'll stop doing this as if he's a representative of the left.
We'll throw away trans kids as long as you stop doing authoritarianism.
I feel like that's called the Kamala Harris campaign, babe.
Like, exactly.
Also, it's like, well, why don't we just keep doing authoritarianism and then we'll just throw trans people away ourselves?
Like, why do we even need to make that deal?
We're going to negotiate with the authoritarian.
Stop beating me up and I'll give you five.
Like I could just beat the shit out of you and then take your whole wallet.
Like I don't need to, I don't need to honor your pathetic.
That's the thing too.
It's pathetic.
This kind of pathetic bargaining.
It's like, who are you to make these negotiations?
And also like, why would they take, like, why?
Why would they take that deal?
They're winning, man.
This reminds me actually a lot when I was watching it of the conversation that Ezra Klein just had with Tanaasi Coats, which they talk about like, what are our roles as.
as journalists, as writers, as podcasters, as political strategists, you know, like, which of those
lanes you choose to occupy? And it's very clear over and over again that Bill Maher thinks of himself
as an entertainer on television, but also as like a de facto political strategist for the Democratic
Party. And he's saying, here are the minorities that we should throw under the bus in the next
campaign that will guarantee our win for the rest of time. I also happen to, you know, of course,
personally don't care at all about those minorities. So I'm not throwing them away as a compromise.
I'm throwing them away because I don't care about trans people. To be clear, that's me speaking as
Bill Maher. And it's interesting to me, though, because Ezra Klein makes a similar argument where he's like,
we should run pro-life Democrats in red states. And we should basically throw women in red states under the
bus. And that's his strategic calculation of how Democrats should win. And the thing is, though,
those sacrifices of minorities, even if you're saying I'm a political strategist and that's my strategy,
that is what Democrats have been doing. And it has lost us every single election. It drives me crazy.
It is a losing one. You're absolutely what we were saying before. Why would people want Diet Coke?
They can have the real thing. Why do people want Diet Republicans? They can have the real thing.
And also the most important piece in the last 20 years. And I think Trump has really proved this.
and I think Bernie Sanders has proven.
I think AOC proves this is someone who's genuine and authentic and believes in something.
So when you soft pedal your morals or you throw some of your base to the wolves, people can see that.
And they're like, oh, you're a pushover.
How are you going to fight for me?
You say you're going to throw all of these other people under the bus.
Well, I don't know.
I'm a union member.
How do I know you're not going to throw union members under the bus in the future?
I don't because you've sold so many other people down the river.
These people are deeply lost because they're stuck in a hot box of their own fucking pseudo-intellectual farts.
And Ezra Klein is there.
Stephen A. Smith is another one.
And I will just add because I worked with them for many, many years.
But TYT and Jank Yugar at the Young Turks is another one.
He is someone who will consistently, and he did this when Charlie Kirk was alive,
goes into spaces with right-wingers and tells them that the left has lost their minds and that he agrees with them that the left has lost their minds.
and they're too extreme.
And all we need to do is come together.
And he was doing an entire tour before Trump took office about a year ago after he won,
doing this exact same thing.
I mean, he's even, Jank Yugar has done this to me personally going on Jillian Michael's show
and saying that I stood with trans athletes too much to a point on a Pierce Morgan appearance
and that that made me look crazy and it made me look stupid.
The point is that there are a lot of people who do this and they purport themselves to be progressive.
and liberals, and they get on shows, they get platforms, precisely because, to Matt, your point,
they will not take on the powerful and they will break bread with the right in this grand
collusion to really, like, kill people. I mean, we're not, this is, these are people's fucking
lives. Like, you can't play with trans kids. They are being, they're dying, they're being killed,
right? Like, it is dangerous what is happening. And there are way too many centrist motherfuckers who,
who want to play games like this.
And they're all very successful.
It's also like, like they talk about, oh, I'm reasonable.
I want to exist in reality.
And then you go, okay, well, the reality is, is that when like pre-pubescent kids, there's essentially no difference in athletic performance.
No, there is no difference.
And then after puberty, it's like, well, if like high school sports, it's like, well, most kids play high school sports for something to do.
Like, it's this thing, too, this idea of like, every.
Everybody's trying to, what, make the WNBA?
It's like, no, most people just want something to do.
They just want to play this game with their friends.
It's how they find community.
And then once you get into the high level sports, it's like, none of these people will have the
conversation of like, look at Leah Thomas's numbers the season before she started transitioning,
the season where she was still swimming with men, where she had started transitioning
and then the season after when she was swimming with women.
Like, you can see the effects of what transitioning did to her performance.
They can't ever have this conversation.
And the other thing they're wrong about in 20.
2022 was the year the Republicans went all in on running on anti-trans.
And that was the year when Democrats were actually like defending trans people publicly.
And the Republicans lost that election.
They only won Congress because the New York Democratic Party could not be worse at their job.
So like, you could just point to previous elections and go, well, what about this?
But they won't.
And they won't ever have anyone on who challenges them.
If that show has researchers, I mean, I'd be in a mental hospital.
if I was, like, I'd have to be in a psych ward if I was a researcher on real time. Because I'd be like,
do, am I real? Am I a ghost? Am I actually giving him these notes? Or am I, do I live in an
alternative reality where I'm actually in a box right now and I'm imagining all of this?
I will say, though, I think that like you're even giving the transports gripe too much credit.
Because for Bill Maher, just like for all of these self-identifying authentically conservatives,
it never is actually about transports, which is an issue that every single American
knows, if not deep down, that it just does not affect them in daily life, doesn't affect them
in any life, not a widespread issue at all.
Bilmar also goes on to talk about, well, it's actually about being able to access gender
affirming care and to be able to transition.
And just like all of those right-wingers, he will go on and on about, we're transing the
three-year-olds, and we've got to compromise.
We can't keep transing the three-year-olds.
he has never held to account about what he means when he says things like that, which obviously, like, what does he mean when he says things like that? Because like the way that you think about it is like, oh, we're, you know, he loves that you always use the most dramatic language. We're chopping at three or what. That's not happening. He'll question the science of trans medicine and then he'll go, it's a social contagion. And you go, well, trans medicine has a basis behind it. Social contagions aren't real. That's not a accredited theory. That's like not something actual like social scientists.
Believe then. But just like you said, he, he lies. He just lies constantly. He said recently with one of the
Potsave America guys, Democrats will lose every election without shift on trans issues. I agree, actually.
I also agree. I think they should shift in the other direction, though, where they should actually
stand up for trans people, which is actually a great point that I want to clarify here. Because I was
reading Bill Mars Reddit, which is full of a subreddit, which is full of Bill Marr's.
fans, which is a really interesting group of people that actually...
They are turning. They're turning on him rapidly.
Yes. Yeah, every club random, they're like, Tim Poole, another, can we just get Brian Cranston again?
Like they're so mad at his guests. He's been booking.
But like, I read this one comment that was upvoted a bit and it was like, Bill Maher's not anti-trans.
He's just, quote, he's critical of the extent to which Democrats have made this a central issue.
Dear listener, I need you to know. I need you to know that no matter what you've heard from Fox News or Bill Maher or anyone else, Democrats, just like Francesca said, have sold trans people down the river. Democrats, look at Kamala Harris's campaign. The one time Kamala Harris spoke about trans people was when she was asked about, will she protect gender affirming care in an interview? And she said she would leave it up to the states.
That is the extent to which Kamala Harris made trans kids and trans people broadly a part of her campaign messaging.
Democrats have done the opposite of make this a central issue, which I think in the face of the amount of discrimination that trans people are facing is a bad thing.
I think they should stand up for trans kids.
But Bill Maher doesn't think that like Bill Maher treats Democrats throwing trans kids under the bus as a compromise for Bill.
Amar, it's not a compromise because Bill Amar authentically does not care about trans people.
Exactly.
All of this just reminds me a lot of like when I talk to centrists who speak on behalf of progressives
and say like, this is what we have to do if we progressives want to win.
We all want the same thing.
We just disagree on how to get there.
And I'm like, well, Bill, I don't know if we want the same thing.
I definitely don't.
I don't want your clinky glasses in your creepy little basement and all the.
you know, the pedophiles that you have on your show. I definitely don't want the same world that
Bill Maher wants. But I think that's exactly this like bad strategy is really important to
understand because I think Bill Maher plays a role that a lot of centrist like to play. And I
would, I even include, you know, I mentioned Jank. I think there are many others. I think
Ezra Klein does this too, which is I'm going to interpret politics for you, broader audience and
broader liberals by actually representing the arguments of the right. It's the right that has made
trans athletes unissue. It's not the left. But when you have figures like Mar and others and other
centrist, like basically taking hookline and sinker, the issues that the right has claimed
the left only cares about, that is when it becomes a problem because then you're looking to
someone like Ezra Klein for your sort of political bellwether and he's telling you you've made
abortion too much of an issue, ergo walk away from it and it's scaring the red state. And he's supposed
to be your sort of like, again, your political analyst. And so then you say it's okay to walk away
from these issues. And we don't have to imagine. Obviously it's happening to trans people,
but it's happening to immigrants right now. What happens when an entire political party
walks away from the immigrant community in the United States,
we're seeing it.
They get rounded up by ice.
People are being disappeared.
Kamala Harris could not be bothered to go visit Springfields
with the Haitian immigrants who are being demonized
as they're eating their cats or eating the dogs.
It's not funny.
It was funny for like a moment.
And then there's like neo-Nazis in the streets.
People are fearing for their lives.
And it's like, yeah, man, when you sleep on immigrant rights,
when you sleep on a real pathway to citizenship,
when you sleep on amnesty for fucking 30 years, this you get rolled.
And so, like, okay, is it okay to sell out moms and dads who are hardworking immigrant workers?
Is that, is that cool for you?
Because that's what's happening now.
Are we going to win now?
Are we going to win now?
I mean, if you ask Schumer, we will win now because all we need to do is let it get really,
really bad, do nothing, and people are going to vote Democrat.
That was such a great tangent.
And to that end, too, they're like, well, if we just abandon trans people, if we just
abandon immigrants, remember, Kamala promised to be harder on the border than Trump. If we just
sell out Palestinians, if we just sell out whoever the hell is next, we can win. And I'm like,
well, also, what is, what are we winning? Yeah, what's left? They're like, well, we just have to
abandon everyone to get power. And I'm like, well, what's the point of, I don't, I don't get it.
And embrace the billionaires. Are you going to get to the Zoron part? Because I cannot wait.
Yes, yes, Zoran, who, Zoran Mamdani, if you, this is a real if you're living under a rock, but I always like to make sure everyone listening is on the same page, is the frontrunner for mayor right now here in New York City. He defeated Andrew Cuomo in the primary. Andrew Cuomo is humiliating himself by running again. And now they are rematching on November 4th. Can't wait. Get out to vote if you live in New York City. But Zoran Mamdani is a self-identified Democrat.
socialist. He is pro-Palestine. He is vocally pro-trans, among all sorts of other things.
And he is galvanizing people globally, beyond New York City, beyond New York, beyond the United
States globally. The amount of people in my messages saying, oh, I'm from like the Netherlands
and we're getting, you know, TV segments about Zoran. And he is, you know, running as a Democrat
and galvanizing people in a way that no Democrat has been able to since AOC kind of and before that
Bernie. And what did Bill Maher say about Zoran? Bill Maher said that he is, quote, a walking
advertisement for the Republican Party. Do you think the mayor, that one person, if he is a Democratic
socialist, do you think that he would have the power and influence to be able to, like,
usher in socialism? He definitely has the power and influence to elect J.D. Vance or whoever
is the Republican candidate next time. It is a walking commercial for the Republican Party.
it's just so funny to me that Bill Maher thinks that because it's like he's an advertisement
for the Republican Party to you specifically, Bill Maher, because Zoran is an actual progressive
who believes in progressive ideals that you don't believe in. And he's winning. He's winning.
You're just becoming a Republican. That's it. If you've been following any Democratic consultants,
apparently winning is actually bad now, that Zoron winning is bad.
And we like to win, but do not like this.
And this is what I mean about taking up this space, this sort of like intellectual space
to interpret how the other side sees your movement.
And so to an untrained, you know, viewer of Bill Maher or whatever, they don't know anything
about Zoran, but they say that he's a perfect advertisement for the Republicans.
That scares liberals.
That's designed to scare you to walk away from.
somebody who is quite literally single-handedly been the only bright spot in the year 2025.
Like, I don't care if your kid was born this fucking year, it's been grim, all right?
It's Zoran Mamdani.
That's the only thing that has been positive.
And it's like, oh, no, we cannot vote our hopes.
We must always vote our fears because our hopes will eventually lose.
That's why we've got to go with the winner, Hillary Clinton.
and the winner, Kamala Harris, and all these winners,
because we can't have anyone like Bernie Sanders or Zoranam Dani or AOZ.
I think it was like an episode of Chapo years ago where they were talking about,
there was some interview with a Democratic consultant who was like,
you know, we're like nervous to put out these big policy plans
because then the Republicans can attack them.
And one of the hosts of the show just like Lawson was like, well, hey, you know what?
You should not even run anybody because then you,
really can't lose. Like if you just don't run a candidate, then you don't have a candidate,
they can attack. And you're guaranteed to not give them the opportunity to attack you. You hear this
stuff. And it's like, why would anyone vote for this party? Who sits around being like, I just want to
vote for the biggest loser I can think of? This is America. We don't like stuff like being like,
we're afraid of getting attacked, but don't run a harsh primary because then if you draw blood,
then the Republicans have. It's like, if you're so, you're so.
pathetic that you can't win if someone runs against you, why would I ever walk around my neighborhood
knocking on doors being like, hey, vote for this person. They're the most fragile human being
you've ever met in your life. They will walk away from anything they believe and trust me.
I want to take the Bill Amar model, but do it in the other direction where I frame myself as the
most conservative you can be. Oh, I love that. And then I get like a big time show.
And I'm like, let's bridge the divide.
And then I like only talk to like communists.
And I'm going to pretend that like that's the entire political spectrum and like reorient American politics.
First of all, unironically, Matt, I want that show.
And that show would crush.
Ezra Klein should be the conservative edge of that show.
Like Bill Maher should be that fine, we'll have Bill Maher on.
And that would be so beautiful to watch.
Yeah.
But that show is not getting.
funded by HBO, I'll tell you that much. No, it's not. And that's why it doesn't exist. I am going to
change my camera battery real quick and pee. I have to pee really bad. I'm just going to get up
because I feel like a loser sitting here alone. I want to give a quick shout out to our friends
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incogny.com slash fruity. That is incogny.com slash fruity. And now, let's get back to it.
All right. The last big Bill Marr belief that he repeats ad nauseum is, I haven't changed. The left has.
When people say, you know, you never used to make fun of the left as much because they didn't give me the material.
And now they're so ridiculous on so many things that as a comedian, of course,
I'm going to go where the material is.
And you wonder why the left catches more jokes for me?
They changed, not me.
Okay?
I mean, they left me.
I didn't leave them.
I mean, I'm the same.
That's what I'm always saying.
It's like the left went to places that we all know are goofy.
It's not me who changed.
I feel I'm the same guy.
Instead of locking up the toothpaste,
how about we lock up the shoplift?
You know, not, Bill, you're a Republican.
That doesn't make me Republican, you assholes.
I mean, that is probably my biggest beef with the left, and you know,
I do not couch my criticisms of them.
And that's why I have such a hard time out here,
because there's such purists out here,
and they will not countenance any diversion from the one true opinion,
as they see it.
So I am insufficiently liberal for them.
So many people these days are like, Bill, why are you so hard on the left these days?
I'm like, I'm just as hard on the right.
It's just that the left didn't use to do these things that make me go, fuck off.
The far left thinks I am.
I put out a book and a stand-up special in the last six months, both to make the point.
And in great detail, you've changed, not me.
Trust me, the liberals have a lot to answer for, and I call them out on all of it, which.
which again is why they don't like me.
And I don't give a fuck.
You talk a lot.
You know what?
I wonder if you give a fuck because you talk about it a lot.
I do.
You advertise how much it affects you by talking about it.
In every single clip that I watched of Bill Maher and getting ready to film this episode,
I was like, this is the one that had me like jaw on the floor.
I was like, why am I enjoying watching Bill Maher get dog walked by pedophile Matt Gates?
who's wearing that like thin pullover white,
the guys who wear like hoodies,
but they're made of like t-shirt material in its long sleeve
and it doesn't look like he's a shirt on underneath.
And then like Capri like cords or something that are way too,
he looks nuts in the episode.
It's really a race to the bottom with this episode in general.
But Will,
you actually were the one who created a number of the collages of Bill Maher in this episode.
and also you've just chronicled so much of this man.
And so when it comes to the like, I've not changed the left has, I want to first defer to you.
He's definitely changed.
He, Bill Maher has changed a lot because there is a period of time.
He used to care about things like mass incarceration.
Like this is the way he could be a bridge because, you know, it's like if somebody's from the Heritage Foundation, they're the scum of the earth.
If somebody is from the Cato Institute, they're probably bad until you start talking about like decriminalization and like jail.
And then the Cato Institute is actually a valuable ally of people on the left.
I've seen labor activists talk about like labor activism has to be a broad tent because there are you work with people that you would disagree with on a lot.
But the thing you probably agree with each other about is that you should work less and be paid more for it.
So like those people are your natural allies in that space.
So Bill Maher could have on libertarians.
Like he would have on Boots Riley on politically incorrect.
And Boots Riley would be like a communist.
And Bill Maher would go at him for being a communist.
But he would have communists on his show.
He shortened the spectrum ideologically of people he'd have on much more on the left than the right.
But he could be a bridge and have people on who would fight about everything else they talked about.
But then he would bring up, you know, there are too many people in prison on stupid, trumped-up drug charges.
And he would have people who previously had been screaming.
at each other go, 100%, I agree. And that is an example of a valuable conversation that could
happen. If you just looked at the right-wing people Adam Friedland had on his show, you'd be like,
this is the most right-wing man in the world. But he has on weirdos, politicians, like he genuinely
has a broad spectrum of people on. Bilmar really is locked in. There is the center, and then the right.
And because of that, he never, ever has a real conversation. Josh Rogan was on, I think,
from the post and Rogan, Josh Rogan just pushed back on the Trump dinner and Bill Maher like
had a hissy fit over it. The Trump dinner being that we didn't even get to this, but
there's so much. In line with all sorts of other things Bill Maher has been up to lately,
he recently got dinner with Trump and then made a segment of real time about it where he was
basically like, hey, for everything people say about Trump, he was nice to me. Yep. And he listened.
Just for starters, he laughs.
I'd never seen him laugh in public.
I've had so many conversations with prominent people who are much less connected.
People who don't look you in the eye.
People who don't really listen because they just want to get to their next thing.
People whose response to things you say just doesn't track like, what?
None of that with him.
And he mostly steered the conversation to, what do you think about this?
he's a great host
and I'm like well why do you think he was so nice to you
Bill Maher
because Bill Maher's like
I printed up a list of insults he said about me
and had him sign them
first good sign before I left for the Capitol
I had my staff collect and print out
this list of almost 60 different
insulting epithets that the president
has said about me
things like stupid
dummy low life dummy
sleaze bag sick sad stone cold crazy
really a dumb guy fired like a dog his show is dead
60 I brought this to the white house because I wanted him to sign it
which he did
and he said that like he's like can you believe Trump was such a good sport he did that
and it's like wait if somebody came to my house and was like here's a list of all the times
you owned me publicly will you sign it I'd be like yeah of course
because that's the most pathetic thing I could imagine being like
Will you sign this list of insults, master?
Like, and he thinks what he did was cool.
He can't handle criticism.
He can't be disagreed with his crowd.
If his crowd doesn't laugh at one of his jokes,
there are multiple clips of him this season,
literally sticking his tongue out like a child at his own live audience
because they're not laughing at one of his jokes.
They barked in off the Santa Monica Pier, by the way.
That's not true anymore.
It is very difficult to get tickets to real time because the audience is very,
very small because he doesn't want a crowd that will disagree with it.
He's talked about it.
He's like, my crowd is great now.
They never disagree with me.
Like that's, he's become a shell of himself.
And what he used to be fully formed was, it's like, it's like, oh, that huge pile of dog
shit is a shell of what it used to be.
So it's like starting bad and just getting worse.
But it's the kind of change nobody ever recognizes.
Nobody's ever like, I've changed, but like, I'm way, way worse than I used to be.
Like people only go like, I've changed. I'm a better person now. They never go like, I've changed. I drink three bottles of Jack instead of two every night. I mean, and he has changed and not for the good. I mean, I would say that, you know, if you're being generous, you could say he just has not been open minded to new information, new people and new perspectives. That's being very generous. But I think you're right, Will, that actually he has changed. He has become more narrow-minded. He has become more conservative, whether that's,
a product of him understanding trans people exist and also want human rights and health care,
or just the fact that he is ultimately a conservative.
I think he's a testament to the fact that the old democratic liberalism is dying,
that not looking at the wealth inequality, like, that's for the birds,
that not talking about Palestinians, look at the way that Newsom and Buttigieg and Booker
have proven themselves to be total duds when it comes to answer.
answering his simple questions about Netanyahu and Palestinian human rights.
Like, we are done with them.
We are turning the page on them.
So he is clawing at relevance and he's got to go to the right to get his bread buttered
somewhere.
What a thing to say that like you've not changed.
My God, if in 20 years I defend my career by saying I've not changed, fucking put me out of my misery, kill me.
He's abandoned having beliefs too.
Like he doesn't have a core.
he doesn't have any ideology anymore it's like and he's also a coward we were talking about all the
trans stuff i forgot to say he will say i believe it is inherent i believe trans people are real and
there is something inherent but then he'll be like the democrats have to stop saying crazy things like
a man can be pregnant and it's like well if a man can't be pregnant then you fundamentally do
not believe in the reality of trans people but he's i can't accept where he's at as a person so he says
the thing you would say if you believed a thing, like the intro line to believing it,
and then everything else he says about it are the words of a man who does not believe in the thing.
Yeah, I just made an episode about Deborah Messing.
And a lot of this reminds me of her where people will spew the most bigoted, vile,
right-wing, reactionary conservative beliefs, but still find sort of a mixed-up way to, like,
identify as fundamentally progressive.
because in the case of Bill Maher and the case of Deborah Messing,
they don't like what it says about them if they abandon the label of like liberal.
And I think also, you know, these are people who live in Hollywood.
And it means something to be liberal socially or to or to pretend to be liberal or progressive or humanist.
I also think when it comes to like, I have not changed.
He'll say things like nobody was talking about this gender stuff five years ago.
Well, I'm like, as a gay man, I think about how there was a certain point in the 2000s where you could make the exact same argument about gay marriage.
And it's not that five years prior to that gay people didn't exist and gay people didn't want to get married.
It was just that it wasn't a mainstream conversation, especially among people as privileged as Bill Maher, privileged enough not to think about those things.
And so I just think it is such a ridiculous argument to say, well, well, I'm.
I've not changed.
Did they have?
Well, it's like, yeah, but it's good that these conversations have come to the forefront.
And, like, it's such a hallmark of, of like a straight, white, rich guy.
Totally.
To be like, I'm hearing this for the first time.
It has never existed before.
Yeah.
You know, fuck you.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Sorry.
This also happens with celebrity a lot.
You know, there is a certain point where when, like, a comedian's only bit or only jokes are about,
the food at room service in the hotel they're staying in, you realize they're like a little bit
too insular. Like there's a little bit, like maybe they need to live a little or, you know,
walk a different way to work or actually walk to work or drive themselves, whatever it is.
But like he is a celebrity. He is wealthy. And everything that he's also experiencing is the
experience of, you know, you see comedians like Chappelle becoming more insular and more disconnected.
and speaking to fewer and fewer people.
It is a product of money that, yeah, you've changed.
You can only relate to people who are as privileged and as removed from real problems as you are.
So, like, this is, that's the other, that's the other thing to note here.
Like, you're fucking out of touch.
The last question I wrote here, which I think I've kind of answered in my own way,
is like, why not just be a conservative?
which like Bill Maher is conservative, but he's still resisting the label.
He's still speaking for like the American left, which he's so, I think obviously not a part of.
He's too proud.
It is strictly pride.
And not a pride in like, I'm too good for that.
But pride in the fact that he's always said he's a liberal.
And this whole time he's been like, I haven't changed they have.
By saying he's a conservative, he would be admitting he's wrong.
And he can't do that.
I think it is that simple.
He just is too stubborn to admit what everyone around him can see.
Also, I think he lives in Brentwood, but I'm not 100%.
Oh, thank God.
You corrected me on the Los Angeles geography.
He is not a conservative because it's a lane.
It's a much more lucrative and interesting lane to pretend to be a liberal, pretend to represent
the left and then agree with the right than it is to just.
just be another right-wing influencer. It's the why I left the left, juz, it's that the clicks.
Like, when you leave the left because they were so mean to me in blankety-blank way, people want to,
like, they rush over. We don't have enough why I left the right. But again, it's, it's this,
like, the fallacy of the intolerant left, the fallacy of they went too far. Meanwhile, we are
truly living in authoritarianism. People are having their visas revoked. The FBI,
is visiting activists right now are doxing people are I mean not doxing they're going to their homes
because they're the fucking FBI like you have to suspend so much disbelief you have to live in and
like again complete separate reality and I do think Bill Maher does that and he helps just like
so many Democrats think he helps a lot of other people live there too which actually gets at the
very last I promise the actual last question I have
have on here, which is, and I think I might make this the title of the episode, but we'll see,
what is the point of Bill Maher? To me, and bringing it right back to the top, the way I've
observed this in my own sort of like centrist, liberal identifying extended family, is that
he gives people who maybe don't like the style in which Trump is a conservative, or they
don't like the style of, like, I think so much of it comes down to like how Republicans
express themselves. I think he gives permission for like Democrats and liberals in the U.S.
who don't identify with that vision of conservatism to hold the same beliefs while still
thinking of themselves as like sophisticated coastal people.
He exists to put political debate in a very narrow terms to keep power safe, to pretend like
we're living in a free speech democracy, to pretend like we're having on.
honest conversations when we actually are not and to never, ever, ever touch the powerful,
whether they be in media, whether they be in politics.
He is a perfect foil if you're going to actually not live in a democracy that pretends to be
one.
I think he is a devil from hell sent to kill me specifically.
And he hasn't done it yet.
Keep fighting, Will.
I think that is ultimately the point of him.
Francesca and Will, thank you so much for joining me and talking about this.
Oh, I've been, this has been like gnawing at me.
And I feel like I can now relinquish myself of Bill Maher.
But you know who can't?
Will Weldon, thanks for coming to the show.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, I'm like the, I'm the Christ of Bill Maher, where it's like, I take your Bill
Mar unto me and you are now free.
Will, where can people find more of?
view and God willing, if they want to keep going down this path.
Well, I have a podcast called I Hate Comar. It's all on there. The main stuff is almost all
real time. And there's a Patreon you can subscribe to. I've talked about stuff from politically
incorrect. They are very funny. Will makes it very funny, even though it sounds like a slog. It is not
because it's Will and he's great.
Feels like a slog.
Francesco, where can people find you?
You can find me on YouTube.com.
I have the BITUATIONI-F-I-O.
I have the Bituation Room podcast there, live Tuesdays, 1 p.m. Pacific, 4 p.m. Eastern.
Also doing some deep dives.
So, yeah, get at that.
And thank you so much for having me.
Thank you, the listener, so much for making it this far.
The amount of DMs that I have received over the two plus years of doing this podcast
from people who are like, can you please do a Bill Amar episode?
because he keeps basically turning my liberal parents into right-wingers,
and I don't know what to do.
I hope that maybe we've made something that you can send to them,
and if not, I hope that at least we have entertained you for a couple of hours.
I love you so much.
Thank you for being here.
And until next time, stay fruity.
