Call Her Daddy - Monica Lewinsky: An Intern vs. The President
Episode Date: February 26, 2025Join Alex in the studio for an interview with Monica Lewinsky. Monica reflects on how her life turned upside down after a clear abuse of power from the President. She discusses navigating double stand...ards, slut shaming, and how she has finally reclaimed her narrative.
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Daddy gang picture this
You just got one of the most prestigious internships in the country and you feel like your career is about to take off
You're so excited to be working alongside your boss who is without a doubt the most important person and everyone
Loves and admires this man
One day he starts to show you attention
he even begins to flirt with you
and one thing leads to another
and you guys end up in a full blown secret relationship.
For a while, everything's great.
He's giving you gifts, he's making you feel special
and you confide in your coworker telling her
everything about the relationship.
But then one day, you're at
the mall and the FBI surrounds you. They know about you and your boss's
relationship because your coworker secretly recorded your conversations and
turned them over to the FBI. They tell you if you don't cooperate, you will go to jail.
Suddenly, every explicit detail of you and your married boss's relationship is released to the public.
Next thing you know, your face is on the cover of every newspaper and every news channel is talking about you. They call you a slut and a whore. They criticize your body and they
embarrass you every single day for decades to come. You're not allowed to
talk to your friends about it. You can barely leave your house. Your name and
reputation are completely ruined and your life crumbles before your eyes.
Daddy Gang, this is a true story. This is Monica Lewinsky's story.
When Monica Lewinsky was 22 years old,
she was an intern at the White House
and she ended up in a two year relationship with her boss,
the president of the United States, Bill Clinton.
Their relationship was exposed to the public after Linda Tripp, a woman Monica trusted
as a close friend, secretly recorded their phone calls and handed them over to the FBI.
After that moment, Monica's life was changed forever. She became the sole focus of a massive investigation
that resulted in Bill Clinton's impeachment
and her very public downfall.
Despite, and I wanna emphasize this,
despite the 27 year age gap
and a clear abuse of power from the president,
Monica was the one who was ripped apart in the media.
Her name became synonymous with blowjobs and she was relentlessly slut shamed, body shamed, and publicly humiliated for years.
Daddy Gang, unfortunately, as women, we are way too familiar with the double standards
of how men get treated in this world
versus how women get treated.
While Bill Clinton still gets to embrace
and enjoy his life in the public eye,
Monica has spent years working through
the lasting effects of this trauma.
So now it is Monica's turn to reclaim her name
and share her side of the story.
What is up, daddy gang?
It is your founding father, Alex Cooper with Call Her Daddy.
Monica Lewinsky, welcome to Call Her Daddy.
Thank you, thanks Alex.
I am so happy we're finally meeting.
It's been a long time coming.
I've been looking forward to this conversation
for a very, very long time.
I think there's so much that we're gonna talk about today
that a lot of the women that listen to my show
will be able to resonate with and also learn from.
So thank you for taking the time.
How are you doing?
I'm good, I'm a little nervous.
I still get nervous with these kinds of things,
but in general, I'm good.
I'm excited.
It's a very busy, as you know, launching a podcast.
It's a lot more than I ever could have imagined.
That's what I was gonna say.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
You are launching this podcast, obviously.
First, you survived being the face of a global scandal
when you were 24 years old.
Now you're launching this podcast
called Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky.
And basically you're discussing what it means
to take back your name.
Why did you wanna do this now?
Well, it felt, it kind of felt for me
like it was the next step for my own reclaiming
and my own experiences of having lost my narrative almost my life at 24 and what that journey or process has been like to come back that in many ways that's in the bones of the show.
I think this idea of losing something and getting it back.
Let's talk about it. Your life completely changed once the news broke
of your relationship with President Clinton.
Can you take me to the day the world finds out about this,
you find out that the world knows where were you
and how did you find out?
So just to reel it back a few days,
I found out about the investigation several days before
the rest of the world did.
There was a sting operation that happened at a shopping mall.
And then I was up in, there was a Ritz-Carlton attached to the shopping mall and I was in
the hotel room really realizing that what felt like my life was over, certainly
my life was going to change and that I was threatened with jail and essentially told
if I didn't cooperate and wear a wire that this train starting to barrel down the tracks.
I really felt like the 21st, January 21st, opening the door, I was living in the Watergate
apartment complex with my mom.
So I remember opening the door.
These were in the days where people would get
a newspaper delivered. And in DC, it was always several, like the Post and the New York Times.
And I remember seeing my name above the fold in the investigation and, um, looking down the hall and seeing the
exact same newspaper outside everybody else's door.
And it was, um, it was shocking.
It was terrifying.
And, um, I didn't, I didn't actually know how to process anything.
And, and really it was a moment where life as I knew it was over.
One, my heart just breaks for you because I'm thinking about myself when I was 24. And I'm thinking about all the women that are watching when you're 24 years old, like
your frontal lobe is still not fully developed.
A hundred percent.
You are in a situation that like, how would you know how to respond that you're saying
they're coming to you and saying if you don't wear this wire, you're going to go to jail? Like, were you able to confide in at least like your mom? Like, did you have to hold all of this by yourself in that moment?
hotel room, they wouldn't let me call anybody at first. So and I had a pager.
So my mom kept paging me.
And eventually, I said, I was like, look,
if you don't let me call my mom, she's
going to really start to worry.
So they finally, they all huddled.
There were a whole bunch of them.
And they were in this connecting room to the hotel.
The room I was in, the connecting hotel room had a whole bunch of other FBI agents in it
and lawyers from the independent counsel's office.
And so they finally said, okay, you can call your mom.
And these are in the days of, you know, a handheld phone. So I'm holding
the phone and the agent had his finger over the hang up button. And so it was this, you know,
you just begin to understand subtly, maybe not so subtle, but the kind of nonverbal ways that you're starting to
understand how much trouble you're in.
When I had to go to the bathroom, they went in because there was a phone in the bathroom,
they took the receiver out of the wall.
But eventually I was allowed to go ask for my mom because there was a point where they
all came in the room.
This had been a few hours.
And I had kind of refused to cooperate still at that point.
And they had really, they sort of sent in the heavy.
And at that point, it was the kind of the pressure tactics. And so I basically said,
I can't make a decision unless I talk to my mom. So they let me finally let me call my mom. And
then she came down from New York. And was so I was waiting for her to come down.
And then she called my dad, who was at a medical conference
and with his best friend, who was a malpractice attorney,
which is how I ended up with a malpractice attorney
as my first attorney.
There's a level of like, we can't fathom what,
as a young woman, you were feeling
and that pretty terrifying experience of all
these people telling you what you needed to do. You don't have a chance to think for yourself.
I couldn't call a lawyer. I had asked to call a lawyer from moment one because I think we all,
you know, we all know from TV and the movies, right? Like when it happens in TV and the movies,
usually a man comes and flashes their badge. You're like, I'm not talking to you without my lawyer.
And they said, well, that's fine, but you won't be able to get as much information and
help yourself as much.
And then I was actively discouraged from getting a lawyer.
And I mean, I remember very distinctly the moment of it sinking in about what it would mean
for this to come out and impact my family.
So I had a younger brother in college, my dad's upstanding doctor in the community,
my mom has her own world too, and my stepmom.
And so that and the kind of shame and knowing that I had
felt very responsible in that point too,
because I knew I had talked about things
that it was expected I would not have talked about them.
The media attention, there's paparazzi outside at all times.
What were you doing every day?
Were you going stir crazy?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, it was, I was, well, first I
was obsessed with the case.
I think too, just to paint a little bit of a landscape
of what the media life you know, what the media
life was like, because we have a sense of how things are today with the, um, how, how
we can get inundated with a story online with social media. Now there are eight bajillion
outlets, but what it meant back then was this story was actually, instead of a story having
legs for a week, which is
considered a long time in today's world. I mean, it was a year. It was a year of coverage
in the first 10 days of the investigation. The Washington Post alone had published 127
articles. So that's like 12 articles a day on just this story. So it was, and that
was one news outlet and this was global. Can you explain initially once this all broke,
how right off the bat was the media portraying you? Oh, I think for five seconds, it was sympathetic.
And maybe after about a week, once the White House, mentally unstable, a bimbo, both the pursuer in this and also
not attractive enough to be pursued.
And really there was a creation of a version of me that I didn't recognize and my friends and family didn't recognize.
And that's what happens when you have a power imbalance in a story where media is so integral to it unfolding. I can't imagine the feeling of like for a second
being like, well, that's, yeah, I guess that's what hap,
oh my God, we, that's not me.
How are they, why are they calling me a whore?
Why are they calling me a slugger?
How am I the pursuer?
Like, what, can you explain how your,
the name calling and the slut shaming
slowly started to chip away at the way you felt about yourself.
Yeah. Well, I think I can't say this for, you know, for everybody who gets involved in a relationship with someone who's,
I'm trying to think of the right way to say it, but it's like,
I think not everybody who has an affair feels this way, but I think a lot of people,
especially young women who get involved in affairs, it already starts with a lack of
self-esteem and self-worth. So I already had issues. It was this, it's kind of your worst
nightmare of like All the worst things
that you think about yourself and say to yourself, you then start to have reflected and amplified
by the whole world. And so it was, if it hadn't been for my family, continuing to remind me
of my true self. And then eventually when I was able to have my friends come in,
I don't think I would have been able to make it through. I think there were really sort of
two parts of me. There was both this more damaged younger part of me who was soaking up all the negativity and it was like a tsunami
and just making a bad situation worse.
And then there was a, you know, maybe a future version
of me or a higher self or whatever who was angry,
who started to get angry.
So it was, there were times that I was angry or frustrated.
I was so humiliated.
Once you got out of this isolation, essentially,
I guess we could call it, right?
How did people in your life treat you?
And did you see a difference in the way that like
men versus women treated you?
Like, was there a difference?
I think what was interesting that I started to see
in the public arena was that it very sadly,
it was a lot of women who said worse things about me
than the men.
The men told a lot of jokes, right?
So the late night hosts.
I think when Jay Leno retired, some media, boop-de-boop,
whatever organization, had done a study
and listed the top 10 targets, his top 10 targets of his late night show.
And I was on that list. And so, and I was the only person who wasn't a public figure
in this, you know, these are, so it was, I think the men told the jokes, the women sort of eviscerated me. And look, also let's recognize that
while there were so many ways that
I think Bill's behavior was more reprehensible than mine,
I did make mistakes.
So I think we see it very differently now. And even through that lens, I still make mistakes. So I think we see it very differently now.
And even through that lens, I still made mistakes.
I still did things that were wrong.
I think I've recognized, and I think a lot of women
can experience too, especially with media now,
it's like, which we'll get to about the double standard,
because yes, you made the mistake,
but I feel like there's also a conversation online
of just like, but the person within the marriage
is the one that truly has the right
and is supposed to be the loyal one.
And I find that we are always crucifying the other woman.
And then there's a level of complexity
of there is a power imbalance of you are 22
and this man is 49.
So there's so much complexity of it makes me sad for you
that women tearing you down, I get it with an affair.
I think it's a trigger point for a lot of women.
The way that they could identify
whether they had been cheated on by their husbands.
You know what I mean?
Everyone's coming at it from the angle
that they can personally relate to
or their fears or their insecurities. But the outbreak essentially from all these women towards you, in my opinion, like it's
devastating because now I think hopefully like do you feel a difference when women talk to you about
it today versus back then? Absolutely. Well, I mean, it was, I think that it really was the younger generation,
when I wrote my first-person essay for Vanity Fair in 2014, it was, you know, your generation
and the younger generations that really insisted on reevaluating this story because you were all
coming to it with just the facts, not having gone through the brainwashing
or lived through that media lens
and bringing different perspectives
that happened throughout generations, right?
From generations.
And so it was really interesting to have this front row seat
to observe in the very beginning of the article coming out,
it was sort of the same
voices saying the same thing.
Oh, you know, go away.
You had your 15 minutes.
And then it was the younger generation, the younger journalists, the younger women journalists
who were starting to say, hold up, you know, all the things that you just said about the
power differentials on both from age and within the resources, resources
of both money and power and kind of people who work for you who are able to disseminate information.
I had to hire lawyers. I'd never done any of those things.
The White House basically left you out to dry after the president made a public statement
claiming he never
had sexual relations with you. How did you feel having to watch that and hear him say
that?
You know, in the moment, I was split because I felt so guilty. I felt so guilty for everything. I felt like this having become public was my fault.
Why?
Because I had confided in Linda. And so if I had not confided in her, I felt as if this wouldn't have become public. And so there was an enormous amount of guilt.
I didn't want him to lose his job.
So there was a part of me that felt good, deny it.
This is what you should do, you know, that sort of a thing.
And then there was a part of me that was so humiliated
and to kind of have the most powerful man in the world saying that,
you know, basically your damaged goods, like is not something you want as a 51-year-old woman
and not something you want as a 24-year-. The White House like you referenced earlier tried to frame you as this like unstable stalker,
but what the evidence then went on to reveal
was the president called you often, gave you gifts.
How did you, at the end of the day,
during all this reconcile what people were saying
about your relationship and then what you knew to be
true and what you lived with this person.
It was, well, it was gaslighting, you know, so I, you know, I think that was what I experienced
on a pretty large scale.
And it was, uh, it was devastating, you know, it was devastating
at the time. And I think what, you know, what we see now in today's world and as, as a grown woman,
I hate to break it to any 24 year olds listening to this, because I know from 21 to 20, like 25, you think you know everything.
You're like, I'm a fucking adult now. I know everything. I'm so sorry to tell you. You
will look back on this time. I feel like, oh, little 20 year old me.
Little girl. Yeah, no. So I thought it was something it wasn't.
And my feelings were real. and painful to have people talking about this in a way that was untrue.
In the midst of all this, we're talking about how you're reading things online
about yourself, you're watching the news, they're calling you a whore and they're
slut-shaming you and they're calling you unstable and mentally unstable and
you're seeing all of this. Did you ever have a moment during all of this where you
started to doubt yourself and you started to feel like you were going a little crazy?
Oh, 100%. I think that there were, you know, right, that's the whole the whole goal of gaslighting,
right. So I mean, I don't think the White House's intention was
to gaslight me, I think the intention was to stay in power
and to get out of legal jeopardy. But that's, you know, I think
that is the core of being gaslit is you do start to doubt
yourself.
I also think what I want to get into talking about too is like as a young person when you're
going through something traumatic, your understanding of it in the moment is that and then you're
also somewhat in fight or flight and you're like trying to digest it in any capacity you
can and then as time goes on, you're able to,
with time in a beautiful way,
start to actually look at it a little bit more objectively
as time goes on because you're farther away from it.
So I can imagine the way that you felt about it
in the moment, you now have different perspectives
and that's okay.
And I think there's a lot of shame of people
who go through these traumatic moments in their life
where people are like,
well, how did you feel in that exact moment?
You're like, I don't know, I need to process it.
I need time to think.
And I can imagine people asking you questions,
paparazzi being outside, it's like,
being up on a stand, it's like you knew the truth
but you also had to protect your mental sanity
of like, I need time to heal and to digest
the fact that I thought I was
in this relationship, now it's out to the world.
What is happening?
Right.
It gets a lot.
Yeah.
What was your rock bottom moment in all of this?
Oh my gosh, there were many.
It's interesting.
In the moment, the rock bottom moment was probably, it was several months into the investigation.
And I guess whatever the layering of whatever had come out in the news that day, whatever
it was, it was just too much. And I had remembered thinking, okay, I was able to, the first two weeks of the investigation,
I didn't have a therapist, I couldn't go on medication.
And eventually I was able to get a therapist who had to be a forensic psychologist who
was amazing, Dr. Susan.
I'm still grateful to her today. And I remember thinking, okay, I'm going to call her,
and if she answers, then I'm staying. And if she doesn't, I'm out. So I think for me,
that was rock bottom. And that again, just kind of the maelstrom of media and 24-hour news and the internet, the
report coming out was the first time that you missed history being made if you didn't
have access to the internet.
Google had just launched.
Web traffic doubled overnight.
Those are the kinds of things that we just can't even fathom now.
This was all pre-social media, but all the news outlets had like WWW representation
and comment sections and things like that. So that was a moment where I think, I don't know, sorry,
I'm babbling a bit, but- No, you're doing great.
I don't know if you ever had anything like this when you were growing up, but I had a
couple of different moments in grade school where it was like, I did something embarrassing
and that feeling of like, I don't wanna go to school, the whole class knows,
the whole grade knows, everybody's gonna this and that.
And so that's one level of what we experience.
Or if I'm at a dinner party and I knock over,
I don't drink anymore,
but if I knocked over a glass of red wine
on the white tablecloth, you're mortified
in front of this group and you're able to draw
a mental perimeter around that.
And what I experienced and now why I care so much about anti-bullying with young people,
because I understand what this is online and with social media, there is no border.
And you literally, it literally feels like the entire world is laughing at you.
And it is devastating.
I appreciate you explaining it like that because I never thought about it.
Like when you're in that restaurant and you spill the wine, you go home that night and
you envision those exact faces at that table.
And you're like, Oh my God, I hope they forget this.
I hope that like, but you have a visual. Right. And what you're describing, if anything, yeah,
you have like the most real, horrific lived experience
of what now so many kids are living online,
which is this like unseen beast out there
that is talking about you, that is taunting you,
that is speaking about you and they've never met you.
They don't know you. They don't know your character.
They're just taking what they've seen.
Glimpses online. Like, didn't they even just like use your passport photo when they...
Oh my God, my work passport photo. Jesus, it was the worst.
But it's all manipulated. Right, like who wants their passport photo?
But it's all, but that's so media of to train someone
to believe something about yourself.
In those rock bottom moments that you just shared with me,
like having the weight of truly the world on you,
of people talking about you and you were contemplating,
is it easier to just not be here?
What kept you going?
not be here, what kept you going?
I call them moments of grace. And so I think if you have that moment of grace
and the, I don't know that beauty is the right word,
but beauty of having one moment of grace
is that somewhere lodged in the back of your mind
will always be that experience of having had
that grace. You get through the moment and things get better. It doesn't always just
continue better and better for the rest of your life. But once you've, you know, and
that's, it's especially why I worry so much about young people because they haven't had
enough life experience to like now at 51 when something bad happens and feels devastating. I have a whole folder of times
that I've had fucked up thing happen. I'm devastated, da da da, whatever it is. And then
it got better. And now I panic even less and less, which is amazing. I'm so grateful for that.
So yeah, don't let young people listening, don't let anybody tell you it is not great to get older
because your fifties are fucking amazing. Yeah. You have a long time to get there, girl, but
it's amazing to feel so comfortable with yourself. Right. And to know what to expect, know how you
react, know what upsets expect, know how you react,
know what upsets you, know what you can get through,
like your threshold, you start to learn more and more.
I think you, I think really,
and maybe women of older generations
weren't able to do this, but at least how I feel is,
I know the operating manual to me, you know?
And that is one of the most empowering
things I think anybody can have, but especially a woman. It is so heartbreaking because you weren't
the only one that participated in this relationship, and yet you were the one who objectively took the hardest hit. Yeah. Did you ever enter the anger stage
where you were like, fuck this.
Yeah, it took me a really long time.
And like I was not until 2010.
So this 1998 to 2010, there were,
I would have moments of being angry, but it,
I didn't realize how much I had lost until I came out of graduate school and I couldn't
get a job.
And that, and also I think at the point where I was because I was in my early thirties. So now all of my friends have
gotten married. Most of them have kids. Some of them are even like going on to their second marriages,
you know, second and third kids. And I'm still, I have nothing, you know, or that feeling of nothing.
of nothing. And it very much was,
that was the point when I realized
how much had been taken from me.
To also be fair, and I think that's like a very normal
answer that anyone who has experienced a form of trauma
would be like, there's the,
I'm not gonna say like dissociating,
but in some capacity, you have to dissociate to keep moving.
And then one day, it just kind of hits you of your reality
because you've gone through enough
to get yourself back on your feet.
And like you said, you graduate and then you're like,
okay, I'm gonna go get a job, this is normal.
And then it's like, no, you can't get a job.
When you say that though, Monica, like, what do you mean?
Like people were literally turning you down
in job interviews?
Oh yeah, I mean, it was everything from,
I wasn't even allowed to go interview certain places.
Like a place would say, no, we don't,
you can't even come interview, even though I was qualified to, because it was
2007 when I was job hunting. I was, and then Hillary was running in 2008. So there was this
high likelihood that she would become president or, you know, or could get the nomination. So I
think at that point she was expected to get the nomination, but of course Barack
Obama did.
So at this period of time when I am job hunting, people were saying, well, could you get a
letter of indemnification?
I can never say this.
I had Bell's palsy a few years ago.
So sometimes- Indemnification?
Yeah.
So sometimes some words are still a little hard for me, But ask me if I could get a letter of indemnification
if they hired me, because they relied on grants.
And so they were worried that they
would lose all their funding.
So there were a couple places that were interested to hire me
but would be like, well, you'd be interacting with the media.
So I mean, it's just, you know.
Was there ever a point that you, not that you should,
but was there ever a point that you or anyone in your family
thought of changing your name or your last name at all?
Yeah, I mean, I think that there were definitely a period of time that I contemplated it, except
given the world we lived in, I couldn't even see a reality of that. Right? Like, how is
that really going to work? Right? I'm going to walk down the street in LA where I was
raised and run into someone and they'll say, Monica, and I'll, you know, Oh, my name is really going to work, right? I'm going to walk down the street in LA where I was raised
and run into someone and they'll say Monica and I'll, you know, Oh, my name is Rebecca
now. I mean, like it just, I didn't even know how that would, how that would work. Or people
had suggested to me, well, you could put a different name on your CV. And I thought about
that. But then, you know, when you play that forward, you just, so what I'm going to walk
into it, a job interview, the
person in their head is like, that girl looks a lot like Monica Lewinsky. And, you know,
and they're looking at me and I'm looking at them. And, you know, it's just, and then you're also
starting out, you know, it's sort of like part of why I have an online dated is that, that whole
thing of if you, if you, you know, don't want to use your name, you're starting something out with a lie.
So that doesn't totally feel right to me either. But really more than just the practicality,
I think as time went on, I also came to feel very strongly that I didn't want to change my name. Why should I have to change my name? You know,
I bet nobody has asked Bill if he needed, you know, did he ever think about changing his? Okay,
I get, I get because he was most famous person in the world at a moment, like and president,
etc. But just even the idea would never cross someone's mind to a man, you know, and also too, I'm, you know,
I regret a lot of different decisions I've made both prior to 98, post-98, like I'm a human being,
but I'm not ashamed of who I am. And so I think that that was a really important, important thing.
And I hope you know know in me asking that,
I don't think you should change your name,
but hearing what you went through,
I understand there may be people around you
being like, Monica, to get a job,
maybe change last name.
I interviewed Amanda Knox at one point, right?
And it's like, there is this horrible reality
that you have to, which we're gonna get to eventually,
of you have to decide how we're going to get to eventually, of like,
you have to decide how you're going to live your life and you can't just keep letting
other people dictate it, even though it's pretty fucking hard because you're saying,
I'm walking in places and no one will hire me. And it's like, in the grand scheme, how
are you not getting a fucking job? You know what I mean? Yeah. Like you're a qualified-
Well, and I was so lucky that I came from an upper middle class family that could help support me
because I couldn't earn an income. But you really, you know, when you're sitting inside
a scandal like this, you really come to understand why a lot of times women make the choices they do
because those are the only fucking options they have is to maybe pose nude in a magazine
because you will get money and you can pay rent and put food on the table, you know,
and so it's, it is, you really come to understand choices people make and how hard it can be.
I often think about that we don't examine and judge people
by the things they don't do or the things they turn down.
You know, so.
So true.
I mean.
Yeah.
To add color for my audience,
I just wanna like read this.
You were 22 years old.
He was 49.
You were an intern.
He was the president of the United States.
There is a clear power imbalance
that they never focused on in the media
when all this was coming out.
How aware were you of this power imbalance?
I don't think that was something we talked about,
you know, very much back then in the same way
that we didn't have words like slut shaming
and fat shaming, you know.
I think the, this story became, it felt very bifurcated. It was like most Democrats,
whether they believed him or not, were supportive. Most Republicans, whether they were opposed. And it's, that wasn't something that we talked about a lot. And I think that it was really
in the wake of MeToo 2.0, that we really started to look at power imbalances under the umbrella of
abuse of power. Yeah. In 2014, you said the relationship was consensual. In 2018, you said you were just reevaluating how power dynamics impact consent.
Now today, where do you stand? In 2014, you said the relationship was consensual.
In 2018, you said you were just re-evaluating how power dynamics impact consent.
Now today, where do you stand? I, you know, it's really still,
I kind of landed in the place that I landed in 2018,
which was this sense of,
I'm very clear this was not sexual assault
and therefore there's a level of consensuality
that was there and at the same time,
because of the power dynamics and the power differential,
I never should have fucking been in that position. And so that's where you just can't even, I think
that you can't even understand what you're walking into. And that's where it's the responsibility of
the person with more power. And that power can be age, it can be their job, it can be their financial resources,
there could be myriad reasons that they have that,
the tilt towards the power that way.
No, and I appreciate you saying that because
the reality is when you're,
even when I'm going back and reading these headlines,
it's like the chaos of like, that people believed,
even the people writing it,
that like you were this person,
call me like, he's the president of the United fucking States.
Like they're secret service.
Like you can't just-
You're sneaking through the halls
and you're like going after him.
Like it's so obvious.
It doesn't work that way.
You know what I mean?
And it's so, that again, Monica,
and why I appreciate you talking with me about this
is I see it every day still in media,
in different corners of social media even,
where a woman is being pinned as something.
And when you are a woman that's had any form
of what you're discussing and what I'm discussing
of the slut shaming or the judgment or the double standard.
It's so obvious as a woman where I'm like,
there's just no fucking, like, hold on, hold on.
He's the president and she's, and I think in a gorgeous way,
I hope that we're making some progress.
I think we have.
I think, I don't, so I don't know that it would be as different as people think it would be we have language, you know?
That we now have knowing clature for these kinds of things
that allow for more nuanced conversations.
That's a good point.
When you look back, once the news broke
and how everything was handled by media
and the White House,
how do you think it should have been handled?
Have you thought about that? Oh my gosh. I think that he should have said, I'm now thinking this through. I don't think
I've answered this question before, but good question. I haven't been asked that before.
before. But good question. I haven't been asked that before. So I think that the right way to handle a situation like that would have been to probably say it was nobody's
business and to resign or to find a way of staying in office that was not lying and not throwing a young person
who was just starting out in the world under the bus.
And at the same time, I'm hearing myself say that and it's like, okay, but we're also talking
about the most powerful office in the world.
So I don't wanna be naive either.
You know?
But I love that answer,
cause you're being honest.
You're like, as a human being,
if we take a step back that I agree with you,
that is exactly how it should have been handled.
It's the least they could have done for you, right?
And not even for you, just for like, for anybody, right? It was
the truth, right? But then we're talking about the White House.
And I think this is where it gets complicated. Because like, at
what cost? Are you just kind of thrown to the wolves to protect
something larger? I don't know. I know we both don't have the answer.
I think it's okay.
Complicated, you know, it's really complicated because you're, you are
talking about issues and situations where so many people are impacted, you know?
So I, I don't, you know, and maybe this is a reflection of my generation or my age,
but I don't, I don't know where the, but I don't know where the right balance
is. Because there was damage no matter what. I think there was so much collateral damage
for women of my generation to watch a young woman to be pilloried on the world stage, to be torn apart, you know, from my sexuality,
from my mistakes, from my everything.
What you're saying though is, I hear what you're saying.
It's like, this was such a large statement to the world
about the way, and I get what you're saying,
at the time there wasn't this language,
but the double standard,
here's the fucking example right here.
Right what we're talking about.
Look what came from all of this for you
and for them the other party.
It's just, it's not-
The consequences were just nowhere.
You know, I lost my future.
So, I mean, that was that that really was I was lucky enough to hold on to
a strand of my true self. Yeah. But I lost my future. And so I'm so grateful for how my life has changed in the last 10 years. But that certainly was not a given.
You made many public apologies. Have you ever received one in return?
I have had a handful of people who were involved at the time
that I've run into in different ways
who have acknowledged that they wish
they had made different choices.
None of the people who were, you know,
sort of the above the fold names involved
in the investigation.
And I'm really grateful that I'm at a place
where I don't need it anymore.
Was there ever a time where you felt like you did?
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
Oh, sure.
Well, I think that's, you know, and that this is sort of something I don't, I don't know
that I fully unpacked it yet for myself.
You know, I think a lot of times with the writing I do, it's like I have an idea for
something and I sort of plant the seed and just let it, I'm like, okay, some version of me, it's figuring it's
like figuring itself out to worm it its way out onto a page.
But I think that a lot of that has to do with this, the intersection of as my life changed, as people saw me more and more as my true self,
as I was able to have more agency,
that those things became less important
because I was been able to,
even though I will always be defined in some way
by my history, I am also defined by my present.
And that's, it's important.
It's beautiful because I can imagine like the way
that you're talking about being isolated and being trapped
and not being able to speak to people for eight months
and the emotional trauma that can do to a human being.
Like you said, you weren't prepared for any of this
and it hit you in the face and you had to just run with it
because you had no other option to survive.
And then you come out of this and it's like,
how many times did you think like, wow, this,
there is a potential this will stay with me
for the rest of my life?
Well, I had a whole, I call it my dark decade.
I mean, it was a whole period of
floundering and having no purpose. I mean, I'm always lucky. My family's always been amazing.
I've always had friends. Thank God. You stepped away for about 10 years.
That was my- That was the time.
Yeah. Did you date at all?
Yeah. Okay. So I have always dated, not very, like not always successfully
dated. And I was somebody who had wanted to get married and have kids. And I'm sort of past that
point of having kids naturally. So that, I think that was a focus for a long time, but it was definitely
my dating life has been complicated, I think at times.
In dating, when you were trying to get back to some form of normalcy?
Did you find in moments that men
were in it for the wrong reason?
I've had a couple instances like that.
I mean, it's sort of this wide spectrum of...
I think my bullshit detector for someone who was there for the wrong reason has been pretty
strong luckily.
But then there had been, you know, there's a wide spectrum of like how intimacy goes
after something like this.
And it's, you know, it's like, I mean, thankfully no one's ever asked me
to wear beret in the bedroom, but I mean,
there have been, it's complicated.
Look, I think our comfort level,
and it might be generational,
but I think comfort level of really feeling like you can own your
own sexuality fully is, can be one layer that many of us go through when you add on the
way I was sexualized and humiliated around sex,
you know, it makes it more complicated, you know, so.
I appreciate you sharing that though,
because like I couldn't help but think, you know,
there was this massive focus on your sex life in your 20s.
And I've even talked about it
in the beginning days of my show.
It was way more sexual and it was fun.
But then I would go on dates and I was like,
wait, no, like I think you have the wrong idea.
That's one part of me.
I mean, it's funny because what was amazing to me,
I was thinking about coming in and sitting down with you.
And it was like, oh, you know, thanks to your, I think it was episode three and like you took the mantle
of blowjob queen. I cannot thank you enough. You know, so it was, you know, what was it? The Gigi
9,000 or the Gluck Gluck 9,000 girl. But it's, I, I'm obsessed that you just said that, but that in itself is like,
there's the reclaiming of as women to be like,
I'm gonna own it first before you can own it.
But then you talking about, you know, being slut shamed,
like how did you start to trust people again?
Like getting into a relationship with a man
or going into a bedroom with a man
that you think you trust.
It's, you know, I think that those,
I think that the first handful of years,
I was very self-conscious
because of how I'd been sexualized
and because as we were talking before of having the most powerful
man, you know, wag their finger and say, I didn't have sex with that woman. And George
Lakoff wrote this essay where he was talking about how I wrote about this a little in one
of my articles, but how we see, because we haven't
had a fucking woman president yet, but we see the male president as a father figure.
This idea of the father of the country saying, you know, and so I had concerns about that.
And I think that there, again, because of my own self-esteem issues
already, I think that it impacted things. And I don't drink anymore. I mean, I have
champagne on like rare. I'm not sober. I just don't drink. But I think that helped for a while. And then, I joke now, if I were still drinking,
I'd probably have a lot more sex. Because the moment in the night was like, or I should say,
more casual sex, but that moment in the night where you're going like lean into this thing.
Like you just start, you start to get more self-conscious.
You know?
Yes, and you start to get more self-conscious
and then you get in your head
and I get what you're saying.
Like having a glass of wine, it relaxes you,
but I see what you're saying.
It's like, this is this, again,
the smaller version of what you experienced
when I think so many women can relate to
whether it's middle school or high school or college,
and a guy runs around saying something
about a hookup with you, whether it was true or a lie.
I've had that happen to me where you're like,
that's not true, and you're so embarrassed.
And a lot of those moments,
I then would like replay
my exchanges with that person.
And I don't know if you had this where you're like
self-consciously being made fun of.
So then you're like, well, what did I, like,
do you know, do I make sense a little bit here?
You're just like replaying like, what did I do?
And what was I like?
And as a woman, like so much of our worth people put on us is our sexuality. So then to be publicly put down, you're like, what did I do? And what was I like? And as a woman, like, so much of our worth people
put on us is our sexuality. So then to be publicly put down, you're like, oh my God, and as a 24 year
old woman, then it's like, what am I worth? And of course, you're worth everything more than that.
But at the time, your self-worth is like- Well, and I had, I had had a lot of, I had had some
sexual trauma from when I was younger that, you know, we didn't even have,
again, didn't have language for the kinds of things that, you know, that happened. And so
you don't even know that you're acting out. You know, you don't but I, you know, I've also been really lucky in, I haven't been super successful
at a, you know, at a relationship. I haven't been successful at all at a relationship that goes the
full distance. But I have been really lucky and dated some amazing men. And those men, each in their own way,
have helped me find a piece of myself again, you know?
Shame.
Can we talk about that for all the young women listening?
Yeah.
You have tackled it head on, quite literally,
and it is something that I think every woman
in our lifetime, we experience it in a way
that men just will not understand.
Can you talk a little bit, if you have any advice
on how to overcome shame as a woman
when someone is putting you down again sexually
for not being enough, whatever it be.
I guess my brain's going in a few places,
but I guess the kind of good news and bad news is,
the good news is that those moments will dissipate,
like that shame spear that stabs you, that wound will heal.
that shame spear that stabs you, that wound will heal. The bad news is that we keep dealing with shame in different ways throughout life.
And I think for me, the thing that is, I think of shame almost being like a bacteria in a Petri dish.
That it's like when you put it into this Petri dish and it's all by itself, it just grows,
but it's still alone.
And that's the thing to know the most is that almost everything anybody might feel shame
about, somebody else is feeling the same thing.
Like it is not, it doesn't necessarily mean there's, you're not going to feel some shame, but for it to lessen a
bit, in some ways, and it is, I wish, I wish, wish, wish, you
know, we get to a place in our world where women can just sort
of like, shirk the shame,
and just, you can't even be shamed.
Because that's what we see with some men in the world
who are shameless.
And that's, it's complicated.
It is, it's something I still deal with,
so less and less.
I wanna just kind of conclude on the double standards.
Okay, any advice for women when it comes So less and less. I want to just kind of conclude on the double standards. Okay.
Any advice for women when it comes
to navigating double standards
in how we are treated versus men?
I can only imagine the amount of women listening
that have a workplace dynamic with a boss
or a relationship, or like you said,
some financial situation.
Like, do you have any advice?
I don't know how successful I have been in
trying to navigate the double standards. I think in some ways my own reclaiming
is trying to open a path or continue a path that not a lot of
women have been able to go through before, which is to be a fallen woman and to rise.
And so letting many other women know,
it doesn't, I'm not the one to say this,
this is like a well-known quote of just,
it doesn't matter how many times you fall down,
it matters how many you get up.
And so I think that's the most important thing.
So I'm sorry, I don't have a better answer for you on that.
But Monica, it's the most honest answer you can give
because I have sat with so many people,
I literally call my mom about it in moments
where I'm frustrated if I see something online
or in my real personal life.
I grapple with it constantly
because I start conversations like this.
Like, what do we do, Monica?
Like you experienced something
on the biggest platform in the world.
How do we change this?
Because as much as I would like to say,
it wouldn't happen to another woman again.
I do think it could happen to another woman again,
looking at like what's going on in our world.
And so I do think the reality as upsetting as it is to say is like, I don't think there
is a solution yet.
Yeah.
Because we're working, you know, and I think the thing that is so important about change
and it's one of the things I admire about you and I'm so excited for you and grateful to you is that you are,
you are pushing forward in a path in, in business and podcasts as a young woman,
right up there, right up there with these men who are, you know, who are valuing what their
contribution is in their podcast and they're being, they're having that reflected to them and what
they've sold
them for. And you have done that, Alex. Like, I hope you take that in every day because
of you. Other women are going to be able to have successful podcasts that they then move
on to other places for, for, you know what I mean?
No, I can't. First of all, I can't thank you enough for saying that, but I hope you know I feel the same way about you.
The fact that you have chosen to sit here
and continue to sit in front of cameras
and speak about your experience,
it like makes me emotional.
It's like, there are so many women that look at you
and it's like, if she can get through that, then I can get through this.
And it's not that it should be your job
to make people feel more seen and more hopeful,
but it is so incredible that you haven't given up
and that you didn't just go away
and just decide to like pull back.
Like you kept your fucking name, Monica Lewinsky,
and you're not going anywhere.
And that's why I'm so excited for you.
Podcasting is so incredible.
It's so hard.
It's so hard, but it's so incredible.
It's so much harder than I thought.
Everyone will give you grace in the fact
that you are going onto this new venture.
Okay, I hope so. I am so excited for you.
I am going to give you my personal number.
And I'm here. Okay, good.
If you need any advice.
Okay, last question. If you need any advice. Okay, last question.
If you could go back and talk to your 22 year old self,
what would you tell her?
Do not go to Washington.
Monica.
Thank you so much for cut me on Call Her Daddy.
Thank you, Alex.
This was so lovely.