Freakonomics Radio - 342. Has Lance Armstrong Finally Come Clean?

Episode Date: July 26, 2018

He was once the most lionized athlete on the planet, with seven straight Tour de France wins and a victory over cancer too. Then the doping charges caught up with him. When he finally confessed to Opr...ah, he admits, “it didn’t go well at all.” That’s because he wasn’t actually contrite yet. Now, five years later, he says he is. Do you believe him?

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 My name is Lance Armstrong, and I'm... What do I do? That's a really good question. Armstrong, of course, used to be the most lionized athlete in the world. He's from Plano, Texas. He came up relatively hard. I mean, I didn't grow up on the street, but I didn't grow up behind a white picket fence with, you know, 2.3 brothers and sisters and an SUV and a mom and a dad. My mom and I were scrappers. He swam competitively, ran track and cross country. He rode a bike, too.
Starting point is 00:00:30 And then I did triathlons professionally from the age of 15 to 18. He specialized in events that placed a high value on the ability to withstand suffering. You have to train very hard and you just got to be tough as nails. Armstrong wasn't good at school and and he wasn't interested either. But it didn't seem to matter. He became a professional cyclist, and when he was 27 years old, he won the Tour de France, the three-week, 2,200-mile race that makes the labors of Hercules look like a walk in the park.
Starting point is 00:00:58 I mean, it is really a brutally, brutally hard sport. The Tour de France is so famous that it's known even by people who know zero about cycling, which in America was pretty much everyone. That changed with Lance Armstrong, especially when he won again the following year. He put half the nation in spandex. And then he won again, again, again, an unprecedented seven tour wins all in a row. He became a hero, then a legend, and then something even bigger because he won those seven tours after having survived cancer and starting a cancer foundation called Livestrong. You know those yellow
Starting point is 00:01:39 Livestrong bracelets? He put even more people in them than he put in spandex. Armstrong was loud, cocky, and combative on and off the bike, but it worked. It seemed he literally couldn't lose at anything. He had a rock star girlfriend. There was talk of him going into politics someday, maybe running for governor of Texas. But there was also talk of him cheating, of doping his way to victory. Cycling, along with most other sports, has a long history of cheating. You know, the original tour riders were jumping on trains and holding onto cars and taking cocaine. Journalists and others came forward with seemingly credible evidence that Armstrong was using, among other things, erythropoietin, or EPO,
Starting point is 00:02:26 a naturally occurring hormone thought to boost performance. Armstrong aggressively denied the charges. I have never doped. We're sick and tired of these allegations, and we're going to do everything we can to fight them. In some denials, he seemed to wrap himself in the cape of a cancer survivor superhero, like this one from his 2005 Tour de France victory speech.
Starting point is 00:02:52 The cynics and the skeptics, I'm sorry for you. I'm sorry you can't dream big, and I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. But in 2012, seven years after his last Tour de France victory, most of the allegations were finally proven true. Some breaking news now on Lance Armstrong. The global governing body of cycling has just announced moments ago it will ban Armstrong for life and strip him of his seven Tour titles.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Ultimately, Armstrong confessed, but America wasn't buying it. It wasn't just that he doped. That's what cyclists did. Nor was it that he lied. It was the way he lied, attacking his accusers, suing them. Even his confession seemed to lack an ounce of contrition. Armstrong had gotten very rich, but between lawsuits and lost sponsorships and other clawbacks, he had to pay back more than $100 million. He was sued by, among many others, the U.S. government for having defrauded his team's sponsor, the U.S. Postal Service. Armstrong also got kicked out of his own cancer foundation. So where does all this leave a person?
Starting point is 00:04:02 My name is Lance Armstrong, and I'm... What do I do? That's a really good question. He's got five kids, three from his first marriage and two with his fiancée. His offspring are also athletic. My son, I just took him off to Rice University where he's playing football. Armstrong splits his time between Austin, Texas and Aspen, Colorado. He was in Aspen when we spoke with him. I just took my wife and my son over to the CP Burger and had a cheeseburger and some fries and chocolate milkshake.
Starting point is 00:04:35 He also hosts a couple of podcasts, a seasonal Tour de France commentary called The Move and his mainstay, an interview show called The Forward. Many of the guests that I've had on have had these moments in their lives and his mainstay, an interview show called The Forward. Many of the guests that I've had on have had these moments in their lives where they've had to establish some sort of a bottom, a low point in their life, and then decide for their own sake and their family's sake and everybody's sake that they're going to move forward. Today on Freakonomics Radio, you'll hear a man trying to reinvent himself and grappling with his mistakes in real time. I was like, okay, you know what? I don't, f*** it. I don't know what's going on.
Starting point is 00:05:15 Has Lance Armstrong finally come clean? You be the judge. From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything. Here's your host, Stephen Dubner. Lance Armstrong spends a lot of time these days trying to reconcile how the world sees him and how he sees himself. Nobody wants to hear that a certain segment of any population is pissed at them or hates them or whatever. And for a long, long time, that really, really affected me and bothered me. And I just want to be honest with you and the listeners, I understand. How could you not be?
Starting point is 00:06:13 The 2018 Tour de France is finishing up this week. There are still constant doping allegations and occasionally penalties. Armstrong still feels he was unfairly scapegoated for all of cycling's sins. I mean, I raced in a generation and on a team that was amongst 20 other teams that all did the same thing. Every single one of them did the same thing. And, you know, we all, we were on this American team in the, well, gosh, I went to the team in 92. And I've referred to this a lot over the years. I mean, I refer to it as sort of low octane and high octane, right? Cortisone and things like that are low octane. And then when
Starting point is 00:06:55 you get into EPO, the 10 percenters, those are high octane. And the sport of cycling in the mid 90s, EPO was like wildfire. And we were holding out, holding out, holding out, just assuming that, come on, there has to be a test for this. And we got to this moment where we looked around and we're like, oh my God, we don't have a choice. Or other, well, we do have a choice. Our choice is to go home. We can just quit, you know, retire. But if we want to stay and fight, you know, we all walking around with knives because we, we were told we were going to a knife fight. And next thing you know, everybody had guns and we said, Oh, these boys are carrying guns. And so in the spring of, of 95, we, uh, we went
Starting point is 00:07:38 to the gun store. Are you surprised at how long you got away with it? And I'm curious what kind of cost or burden it must have been to keep it secret for so long, especially when you're getting accused of it. It's made a lot easier when you have drugs that were undetectable. And really, not even drugs, plural. I mean, really a drug, right? This was really sort of all about EPO. Yeah. And so you had two things. One, a drug that was undetectable for a very, very long time. So it was the wild, wild west. And secondly, you had a drug in EPO that had a half-life of somewhere between four and five hours. So very easy to monitor that. And if you knew that you were going to be in that window of time, you'd be tested.
Starting point is 00:08:34 You could – if you could just do some basic math, you could figure that out. And then thirdly, you know, and I did say this and I got a bunch of criticism for it, which I should have. My line used to always be, I've passed every drug test they've ever given me. And people sort of laughed at that after the fact. But the reality is that that's actually true. Because every time those tests were given, they were clean. Because if you manage the half-life and you manage the time of year, there's a window of risk. I cared about one event and that's the Tour de France and it's in
Starting point is 00:09:13 July. So I knew that I had to open up that window of risk for six to eight weeks and that was it. So come August, September, October, all the rest of the months, guys, you can come all day long, any day, any time of day. It doesn't matter. Of course, that doesn't change anything, right? I mean, most people would say, well, just because you managed the half-life and did the math right, that doesn't mean that the test was clean. But I guess all to say that there was no other nefarious sort of masking or anything. It was just about managing, managing the math. But there was some masking.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Swapping out blood, for instance, to avoid detection. Here from the 2013 documentary The Armstrong Lie is the journalist Daniel Coyle. In 2000, they developed a test for EPO. So the smart guys, Ferrari being one of them, went back to an older technology, which was you take out bags of blood before the race. During the race, you put them back in. Ferrari is Michele Ferrari, the Italian doctor and doping expert who worked closely with Armstrong and has also been banned from the sport.
Starting point is 00:10:28 The transfusion became part of our world once they developed the test. It became a part of everybody's world. I mean, transfusions is old school, right? That's retro. That's what they did in the 80s, 70s and 80s. And so people said, OK, well, we'll just go retro. That's what they did in the 80s, 70s and 80s. And so people said, okay, well, we'll just go retro. Well, I mean, if we're talking old school and doping, I mean, you can go back to the early days of the tour. You can go back to the early, the original Olympics. I mean, performance enhancement drugs have been around as long as, if not longer than sports, right?
Starting point is 00:11:01 Well, that is, all of that is true. But I know none of us thought about the ancient Greeks. We were thinking about ourselves and thinking about just how hard this sport is and how we're just getting throttled. You know, you'd been riding for so many years, you had this unbelievable endurance, physical and mental, and then you started taking EPO and now you're riding often the same courses, the same hills, whatnot. You knew what it felt like before. What'd it feel like, physically, what'd it feel like in comparison when you had EPO in your bloodstream? Oh, I mean, it's very hard to compare. I can try to imagine. I mean, I'm 46 years old and 15 pounds heavier than I was then. So naturally it's, it's, it's a lot harder. You
Starting point is 00:11:47 go a lot slower, you breathe harder, you sweat more and you know, that's just that. I mean, did it feel like you had a little engine, uh, you know, helping you out? Was it that drastic or not really? It's interesting. I mean, it, look, you still – there's no – that I've ever heard of or seen or taken, there's no compound that prevents suffering, right? So even with these – with EPO or whatever, you still – all of the effects of – if you're in a race and you're over the limit and you're suffering and you're – the only thing we can point to is that it had an unbelievable ability to buffer lactic acid. So when you're on a one hour climb in the Tour de France, you know, the thing that starts to make you go slower is lactic acid. If you just went running up a hill as fast as you could and sprinting, you would start to slow, slow, slow, slow, stop. The thing that stops you is
Starting point is 00:12:45 lactic acid. So I had this ability to not only buffer it, but clear it. So once we hit the downhill, then my lactate levels would drop significantly faster than anybody else. So that's really the only thing we could point to. And then it's like, I just just i trained my ass off i loved it i thrived on um the work and the process it was my favorite part of it to be honest and uh and then when i got in the race i just i didn't want to lose but do you think you could have won any tours de france without doping well it depends what else what the other 199 were doing. Well, considering what was actually happening at the time,
Starting point is 00:13:30 considering the opponents you were actually racing against, right? Yeah, if you did nothing, could you have won? Zero percent chance. The subject of doping occasionally comes up on Armstrong's Tour de France podcast, The Move. Hey, everybody. Welcome back to The Move podcast. Let's talk about today, the 200 best cyclists... Here he is at the start of this year's tour, talking to his co-host J.B. Hager about the champion British cyclist Chris Froome. Froome had recently come under suspicion after a urine test showed a high level of an
Starting point is 00:14:10 asthma medication. But a ruling by the World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, put Froome in the clear to ride in this year's race. And so they roll out the teams, they introduce the teams, and they go in the reverse order. And all of the articles that I read were just about this unbelievably hostile reception that Chris Froome got at the team presentation, which, not surprising. I mean, I said that's going to happen, and that's going to – his is going to be like that for three weeks, so get used to it. But they were all really focused on that. And then I started watching the race, three guys in the break, Johan Ofredo, this young kid, Kevin Le Donois, whose father, Yvon Le Donois, I raced with for a long time. Long story short, Johan Ofredo, here's a kid who's,
Starting point is 00:15:03 I'm watching, everybody's clapping, everybody's happy, got our French guy out there and they're loving it. And here's a kid who missed three tests in 2012, suspended for a year. And I'm just going, hang on a second. I get it that the tallest trees get all the wind. I know that. But how are we? Is there anybody else in the race that's had to sit out a year? I don't know exactly, but... I'm sure there are.
Starting point is 00:15:28 That's just... Come on, people. Come on. No. Yeah, so Lance, that was an amazing moment to me to hear you making that commentary and to hear at the end of it, your kind of frustration that after all you've done and been through and after all the sport has been through, that it feels like it's more dysfunctional than ever. And I just really wanted to get
Starting point is 00:15:55 your kind of take on the state of the sport, especially as doping is involved. Yeah. And I don't know if doping is or is not involved. The situation with Chris Froome involved his asthma inhaler. I mean, this is a far cry from a gallon of EPO. This is very, very different. So nonetheless, it was twice the allowed limit, which got him in the hot water. And look, Chris Froome has won four tours. He's trying to win a fifth. The rider that I kept referring to there, Johan Ofredo, he hasn't won his neighborhood criterium. So it's obvious, we all know that the biggest, as I said in that clip, the tallest trees catch the wind. But it's still, and I try not to, and it may come off like you know, and I try not to, and I, and it may come off like I am,
Starting point is 00:16:46 but I try not to, to relate these things to me, but you know, half of, you know, not half, but a huge chunk of my competitors are driving team, team cars and working for sponsors and working for the organizer of the Tour de France. So it's, but none of them won seven tours. And so it's, it's a very similar situation and so that I do get frustrated with that but it let's just get straight to the point here of what is wrong with the system and if the aim in 2012 was to finally fix the system they didn't they absolutely didn't and and and we still see it today and it's a disservice to not just Chris Froome or the fans,
Starting point is 00:17:26 it's a disservice to all of the stakeholders, the riders, the teams, the sponsors, the media, the fans, everybody involved. And listen, you and me could talk, we don't have enough time to talk about how dysfunctional cycling is in the structure of the sport. All right, we'll just get to the good part at the end. Let's pretend for a minute that you were made czar of global cycling for a year. What would you do? Okay. The first thing that I would do, that's a loaded question. And in to, I would, and in fact, it's a fun side project to take on, but just off the top of my head, the first thing that I would do is I would leave the Olympic movement. I would get out of, from under the control of the
Starting point is 00:18:16 International Olympic Committee, be your own sport, structure your own sport, manage your own sport, you know, have your own anti-doping regulations, but don't be beholden to people like the IOC and Tawada and to these organizations that are not interested in the success or the health of the sport of cycling. They're interested, they're politicians. And so get as far away from that as you possibly can, as quick as you can. And then from that point on, then you have to decide, right, how do we structure this thing? Who has equity here? And the first, I guess the second thing I would then do is I would go to back up just half a step. The only entity that makes money in this sport is ASO, and that's the parent company that owns the Tour de
Starting point is 00:19:06 France. If you look at the NFL, you look at MLB, you look at the NBA, guess what? All of those players, all of those teams, even if you look at the premiership in England, the teams and the team owners, they get one very important thing, and that is a share in TV revenue. I'll give you a guess at how much revenue the riders and the teams in cycling get from the Tour de France. You know, I wanted to get into this. It starts with a zero and it ends with a zero. Wow, you're kidding me.
Starting point is 00:19:38 I'm not. So is that because, I mean, there are other individual sports. You don't have to be unionized, like the NFLPA and so on. You don't have to be unionized like the NFLPA and so on. You don't have to be unionized to get a cut. Although, interestingly, do you follow UFC much? A little. A little.
Starting point is 00:19:55 I know there was a fight the other night, for example, but I don't know. So the athletes in UFC apparently get around 8% to 10% of total revenues, whereas in the NFL it's about 50%. It's been as high as 60%. So, I mean, you could argue that you need the union to make it happen. What is the story in cycling? Why have the athletes never been able to get enough leverage to get any cash off the top? You really have to have that union. And the union has to be united, has to be strong, and has to be well-led. And when I say united, I mean nobody can cross that line. If we go to ASO, the owner of the tour, and say, okay, you know, and by the way, we don't have to go in and say we want 50% today.
Starting point is 00:20:38 You know what? Let's start at, I don't care where we start. Let's start at 10%. Let's be strategic here. I'm not trying to lay out a playbook here because none of this is going to happen. No, I like it. You and me are not. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:49 So let's start. Let's be reasonable, right? Let's come in with the Trojan horse. Let's get what we can. And then every two years or every whatever, we're going to come in and redeal you. And if you don't, well, guess what? We're not coming. They can put other people in the race, scabs, but it's not going to be the same race.
Starting point is 00:21:10 And listen, there is a union, just so you know. There's a union in place. It's called the CPA. But it is completely ineffective. They have no power, no stroke, no influence. And the people like ESO and the tour, as great as that event is, boy, they sit there every day and go, thank God. Thank God these guys are not organized. And then just one final thing, because this one really speaks to investing in the game. So the way that cycling works today is almost akin to NASCAR, right?
Starting point is 00:21:49 So you have team owners, you have different teams. They go find sponsors. They go find Lowe's. They go find Home Depot. They go find Target. That's exactly the way it works in cycling. That's very different than Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys, the Steinbrenners and the Yankees, John Elway and the Bronx, you know, whoever, you know, et cetera, et cetera. There, they actually
Starting point is 00:22:07 own the team. And when they're done or when they want to be done, they can sell the team. We see it happen quite frequently now. In cycling, once that sponsor, once the last day of that contract is up and you do not find a new sponsor, but I mean, you just go home. The only equity you're left with, and this is, this is so sad. I mean, you just go home. The only equity you're left with, and this is so sad. I mean, you could have had a team with a budget of $25 million a year for four years. So you just had $100 million come through the sport. At the end of it all, here's what you own. Because you don't have a stadium. You don't have a franchise, all you have are all the old bikes, the team bus, maybe some team cars, a whole lot of apparel, and that is it. You do not own a thing.
Starting point is 00:22:55 And for the athletes then, you're certainly not controlling the fate of your employer, which I would think would create an incentive to do whatever you can for yourself at that moment. last five years. I mean, this, this is your, your, you are exactly right. Cause when, when an athlete, especially a young athlete from, you know, maybe from a, uh, you know, a rough background, uneducated, you put that kid in that place. I was that kid that would, that would, I know exactly what that kid is thinking. And, and they look around and they're like, okay, what's my option set here. I can tell you what they're going to do and it really it's where the two right we're talking about the business of cycling and then you can also talk about the anti-doping movement it is where the two meet and also by the way if the union is strong and unified and well organized andized and well-led. And there is incentive because we're making money
Starting point is 00:24:06 off the TV revenue or the TV rights worldwide. If we're all participating in the upside of the sport, you would think, and I truly believe that the athletes then start to self-police. Because look, they look across, there's 200 guys in the group, they look over there like, hey, man, if you're doing what I think you're doing, you know, just keep in mind that we're all participating in the upside here. And that is potentially damaging to our revenue. And so it just all, you know, it's so frustrating because it just will never, it'll never happen. So I was curious, you look at the post-career resurgence and public embrace of Alex Rodriguez, who's, you know, he's, here's a guy who doped at the highest levels and also performed at the highest levels. Do you look at someone like him and wonder why he gets more of a pass than you seem to be? And what are the differences? Okay, so the answer is absolutely. But I just want to be really clear that when I ask the question to myself and really, really want an answer, it's not because I'm jealous or envious. I've met Alex many times. He's been perfectly nice
Starting point is 00:25:21 to me and my kids. I wish him the best. The reason I ask is I just want to know why. What is the difference? And I actually, this is so funny. It's crazy. You've been tapping my phone. It was like six months ago. I woke up one day and I was in Austin alone. And I woke up and it was on my mind and I went crazy. I was literally running around the house. And I said, okay, I'm going to ask five of the smartest people I know what they think the difference is between Alex Rodriguez and myself. And the answers were pretty consistent. The one key thing is that Alex Rodriguez was allowed to come back and play
Starting point is 00:26:05 and Alex Rodriguez was part of a team sport and thirdly Alex Rodriguez never stood for anything else other than baseball so I was never allowed to come back to my sport at any level and most people viewed it as an individual sport. And I stood for much more than just cycling. And so it's, you know, when I hear this crazy little side note of that day, I was running, I'm not shitting you, I was running around the house. And it was a Sunday. And I was watching the NFL on Fox because I love watching football. And the lady says, and we'd like to introduce our newest cast member on the desk here on NFL Sunday on Fox, Michael Vick. And then I just lost it.
Starting point is 00:27:03 I was like, okay. You know what? I don't, f**k it. I don't know what's going on. Well, let me offer a fourth possible explanation. As everyone has said throughout history, the cover-up is way worse than the crime usually, right? So, the situation as I see it is that, A, you were the tallest tree in the land, you win sevens, that's going to be number one. But number two, even though your argument and the argument of a lot of people is everyone was doing it, when you were confronted with it and
Starting point is 00:27:35 charged with it all along, you didn't kind of duck it, but you denied it with a vigor and a venom and sometime really viciously against individual people that when it came out that it was true, I think that's, to me, that's what people don't want to forgive. And if that's what it is, the difference between you and an A-Rod, I'm curious whether you think that's, you know, maybe is a worse infraction. I mean, if you believe what you read, and believe me, I'm the last one to believe everything I read. But if you believe what you read, and let's just use it for discussion, the purposes of this discussion, you know, there was not just one offense. There was two, which is worse. There was an extremely litigious nature to his action and reaction. And so not to debate it with you, but there is no difference. So it must just be that he's better looking than you or something. It's got gotta be cosmetic.
Starting point is 00:28:46 Listen, that is not very hard to do. I mean, this is, this is, I was at the back of the line when they were handing out the looks, but, um, you look and, and the only thing I'll say just to my fans or maybe fans or no fans is I know I did that. I know I treated people the wrong way. I know I sued people. But I'll tell you what I have done. This thing's cost me $111 million. Everybody's been paid back. The people that were treated poorly, I have traveled the world to sit with, to talk to, to apologize to, to make amends, and to try to move forward.
Starting point is 00:29:27 Coming up after the break, this moving forward thing doesn't always go as planned. He goes, f*** you! F*** you! F***! And he wouldn't stop, but I'm sitting there and I'm saying to myself, you're Lance Armstrong. You have to do something.
Starting point is 00:29:47 You can't take that. So what does Armstrong do? We'll find out right after this. Even today, Lance Armstrong is not one to shy away from a fight. Whether it's talking about his career, his fall from grace, or his current self-reclamation project, he's willing to be accountable to some degree, but you get the sense he's also constantly eyeing the horizon to see who's coming after him. He was, remember, a scrapper as a kid, raised by a single mom. He didn't have much pedigree or advantage.
Starting point is 00:30:35 He went pro as a teenager and then as a lead rider on a cycling team. He was surrounded by other riders whose job essentially was to shield him from the wind, from opposing riders, from unwanted scrutiny. But now, Armstrong is pretty much without a shield. And it's been a big adjustment. Like a lot of world-class athletes, he got walled off early in life from the real world. When you finally get dropped back into reality, the rules of engagement aren't so clear. This was evident back in early 2013 when Armstrong sat for a long interview with Oprah Winfrey. It was time to finally admit what he'd been denying for years. He called his cycling career one big lie. So let's start with the
Starting point is 00:31:22 questions that people around the world have been waiting for you to answer. And for now, I'd just like a yes or no. Okay. Okay? This whole conversation, we have a lot of time, will be about the details. Yes or no, did you ever take banned substances to enhance your cycling performance? Yes. Yes or no, was one of those banned substances EPO? Yes. Yes or no. Was one of those banned substances EPO?
Starting point is 00:31:46 Yes. Did you ever blood dope or use blood transfusions to enhance your cycling? You went on The Oprah Show to confess finally after a lot of round and round and round. I'm curious, you know, a lot of people criticize what seemed to be a lack of contrition. And I'm curious to know if you came to regret that and I'm also curious to know why why and how you chose that forum the Oprah show to to do that um I'll work backwards so she had been a friend of mine for a long time. She is obviously who she is. I trusted her to do a tough yet a fair interview. And there were a few other options.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Tom Brokaw is a good friend of mine. I had discussions with him. And look, no matter who I talked to, be it you, be it Jesus Christ, be it whoever, it was not going to be good. It was only going to be bad. But I had to do it, and I had to do it for this very reason, is I knew that I was going to get sued six ways to Sunday. And we all know what happens when you get sued. When you get the papers, next thing you know, they notice up your deposition. Next thing you know, you're sitting in that chair with your hand in the air and you're supposed to tell the truth and you're on video, you're on audio. And those questions would have been the hardest hitting, most mean-spirited, unfair questions.
Starting point is 00:33:22 And the next step after that was going to be the leak to the media. And so I was faced with a situation where, do I do this on my terms, or do I do it on some opposing attorney's terms across the table? And so I chose to do it my way with her. And look, it didn't go well. It didn't go well at all. But it couldn't have gone well, right? I mean, this is just... My buddy said it the best. He's a really bright guy. He said, Lance, for cycling fans, it wasn't enough.
Starting point is 00:33:58 And for the casual fan, it was too much. So, and I don't know if that makes any sense. I can break it down farther, but that's, yeah. And so that leaves you with a room where nobody's happy. Right. Including yourself, it sounds like. You know, oddly enough, Oprah and I, we were high-fiving after that. We thought it went, she thought I did a great job. And I thought I was completely honest and sincere. I was. I mean, I tried at least as hard as I could to be, but it just didn't.
Starting point is 00:34:31 You know, there were some technical things. They broke it up into two shows. The first show, which had the admission and talked about all of the drugs, was the bulk of that show. The second show, I talked about my family. And I cried. You know, when I talked about my son, I cried and, you know, but once people saw show one, they're like, well, shit, I don't need to see show two.
Starting point is 00:34:50 I wonder if it's also just like, you know, contrition, like maybe you weren't there yet. You were caught. You had to do this. Wait, time out. Maybe I wasn't there yet? No, there's no maybe. I definitely was not there yet.
Starting point is 00:35:08 But again, I made the decision to do it because I didn't want to do it on the terms of a mean spirited opposing lawyer that was going to leak it to the media. So I chose that setting and time and venue. And no, I wasn't there. I wasn't there at all. It took me a good three or four years to get to this place. You know what it took me? It took me enough instances of having somebody come up to me that just, they were fan they had my back they defended me and they were absolutely devastated by the revelation and you know the their sense of betrayal was so high but but and this is one that came to me a year and a half ago, is I had a longtime employee of Livestrong finally reach out to me after, oddly enough, she rode the whole wave of this thing and then
Starting point is 00:36:13 absolutely hated my guts. Somebody, oddly enough, came to her and said, you ought to listen to his podcast. I don't know. This guy sounds a little different. And so she listened to a couple and she started to come around and then she reached out and she said, can we go have coffee? And I said, absolutely. And so she's to a couple and she started to come around and then she reached out and she said, can we go have coffee? And I said, absolutely. And so she's walking me through. I asked her about the process of what was happening at Livestrong whilst all the accusations were there and there was a lot of smoke. And then eventually there was fire.
Starting point is 00:36:38 And, you know, she walked me through the whole thing. And she said, you know, at the end of the day, we all felt really complicit. Wow. Yes. That must have made you feel really good, huh? Now you drag everybody in. Well, it changed my life. How so?
Starting point is 00:36:58 Look, betrayal is a terrible word. It's a word that nobody wants a child to their parent, a friend to another friend, a spouse to a spouse, a CEO to his company, whatever. It's a very heavy word. Complicit is 100x. And for me, that was really, I had already started to get my mind and my heart around the fact that people had suffered this tremendous amount of betrayal. And then I was hit with complicit. And it just, it rocked me to the core. But it was, I tell you, it was the greatest. It was the greatest. her name is Melissa, it was the greatest gift that anybody has given me the last six years.
Starting point is 00:37:52 You sound like you've forgiven yourself or are on the way to forgiving yourself. Is that the case? I don't, you know, I haven't, I don't think about that much, but I guess I have. I still... I mean, you can't undo it. No, no, of course not. No, no, no, no. No, but I can learn from it, and I think I have. I'm certainly not perfect.
Starting point is 00:38:20 And by the way, I wouldn't change a damn thing. I wouldn't change a f***ing thing about any of this like two four years ago because why well let me just first say i mean if you'd ask me i mean i spent three and a half four years just talking about how screwed i got and and post coffee with melissa and realizing that so many many people felt complicit because of me and because they trusted me. But when I look around my life, I know who's on the team right now. I know why they're on this team and I can, and I can believe in them and trust them in many ways. And so, uh, I spent many, many years like any athlete does, whether it's five years or 15 years where you're at the top of the game and you're at the best
Starting point is 00:39:13 parties and you're on private jets and you're making a bunch of money and there's champagne and there's girls and there's everything. Everybody likes that party. But not many people have liked the parties of my life the last six years. You recently settled this Department of Justice civil lawsuit paying out $5 million to the U.S. government. There was the possibility you'd have to pay out much, much, much more, which would have maybe, I don't know, financially ruined you. Betsy Andreu, the wife of former teammate Frankie Andreu, she says the $5 million settlement means you essentially got away with it. I'm curious if it feels like that to you. I actually don't think it has anything to do with who got away with
Starting point is 00:39:57 anything. I think it has everything to do with two opposing sides coming to the start of the game and having to look at their whole card. The reality is that the Postal Service was not damaged. And I say that with 100% confidence because the Department of Justice and their lawyers freely admitted every time that they were asked in any hearing, any proceeding, they freely admitted, your honor, we cannot prove any damages. So the way the law and the structure of key TAM cases work is you have to actually prove damage to get any sort of penalty. And so we were a month from trial, and I think that the other side looked at their hand and said, we got to get out. And so it's not about getting away with anything. Look, it wasn't five, it was six and a half
Starting point is 00:40:58 million dollars. That is a lot of money. Yeah. How were you fixed your money generally? Are you fine? I mean, life had to be adjusted and the burn rate had to be taken down. But yeah, yeah. You know, I mean, kids are expensive. Raising five kids are expensive. We like to do nice things. And I got very, very lucky on a few unbelievable investments many, many years ago through smart, smart people. Uber was one of those, I understand. Is that true? Yeah, Uber was one. DocuSign was another. And by the way, I mean, I had nothing to do with those decisions other than the decision to give, to trust somebody else with your money to invest it, which they did amazingly well. And a large chunk of that was put into a small company valued at $3.7 million called Uber. I had no idea.
Starting point is 00:41:56 And now it's $60 billion, somewhere like that? It's silly. I don't even... Yeah, $60, $70. It's a lot. And so, you know, that's just, I mean, that's just lucky. So on your podcast, The Forward, you're interviewing Brian Fogel, who directed this amazing film Icarus, which is about doping in sports. And you're talking to him about how he gained the trust and even the friendship of the head of the Russian anti-doping effort, this guy Grigory Radchenkov, I believe. And you said to Fogel, you know, why on earth did he trust you? And then you said to him, Fogel, just kind of as an aside, you know,
Starting point is 00:42:35 I don't really trust anybody in my life these days. And I was really curious whether you meant that and if you did, what it means. It's a good question. You know, of course there are people i trust um but those are people that have been in my life for a long time and they made a choice five years ago do we stay or do we leave and you know they're the ones that are very very close your best friends your your your your your fiance, your, you know. But I definitely am very, very careful. I'm just careful with people. Just, you know, at this point, my lens
Starting point is 00:43:16 and filter is just different than it was. And I don't think that's bad. I think that's a positive for me. I asked Armstrong why he wanted to make a podcast like The Forward about people living out their second chances. Many, many of these people, whether you're Michael Morton, who spent 26 years in prison for a crime you didn't do, whether you're Mia Khalifa, who made a regrettable decision in her words and did porn for three months and has branded a porn actress for the rest of her life. There's just a lot of these stories where people have just moved on and moved forward. And my life was, or actually is still going through that. And so for me, there were a lot of interesting people. I really tried to take only people that I really cared to listen to. I don't like to read a bunch
Starting point is 00:44:12 about, you know, I never did homework in school. So for me to sit down and do homework on these people's, yeah, I was a terrible student. But this is actually the most homework I've ever done my entire life. And it's been really fun to dig in and learn about other people's lives and then sit across from them and talk for an hour. And then, you know, I had this thing just in my own sports life where I was – 2012 happened. My world came crashing down largely due to my own actions and bad decisions. And the sport, the industry, the media, the fans, everybody turned. And so I basically said, okay, the bike up. I didn't ride. I own a bike shop in austin. I never went to my own shop And I started running started swimming started doing a lot of other sports except cycling and fast forward to A year ago. I got injured from running
Starting point is 00:45:17 Had to find some sport that I could do just to stay sane and stay fit and went back to the bike And found myself without sounding hokey, found myself falling back in love with cycling just as a, just as a sport, just as a, uh, an exercise. Well, I've taken the time you promised and, uh and I really enjoyed the conversation. I learned a lot. I didn't, I'll be honest with you, I didn't really know what to expect. I mean, listening to your podcast, I get a pretty good sense of where you are as a human right now. And, you know, I know a lot of people are probably in your words and in your voice that you realize what you did to doing—we had the move down in Denver for the Colorado Classic.
Starting point is 00:46:31 And I walked out of my Airbnb, and there were all these little cool brew pubs. And, you know, I always know when somebody's like, ah, here's Lance. You know, you just kind of get that sense. And so I see across the way these people notice me. I call an Uber because I got to get to the race. And my Uber's on the other side of the street in front of the bar. And it's a patio scene. And I walk out, I'm getting in my Uber. And this one guy goes, hey, Lance. And I fully expected him to go, what's up, dude? And you know, right on, man,
Starting point is 00:47:00 love you. And I go, hey, what's up? He goes, you, you, and he wouldn't stop. And the next thing you know, the entire patio is screaming, you, you, and Steve, I've never, I was like, I've never had that happen. I was like, oh, I was shaking. So I got in the car, and it was a very short drive to the race, but I'm sitting there, and I'm not saying a word, but I'm saying to myself, you're Lance Armstrong. You have to do something. You can't take that.
Starting point is 00:47:43 So I called the bar. I said, put the manager on the phone. Manager gets on the phone. I explained to him everything that happened. And he said, oh, man, I'm so sorry, dude. That's, you know, that's really regrettable. I hope it doesn't happen again. And I said, okay, I need you to do me a favor.
Starting point is 00:48:02 I said, here's my credit card number. I said, I want you to walk out there and you buy everything they're eating and drinking and tell them that I understand. So that was, you know, me of 10 years ago, I would have jumped across the railing and start throwing punches. But me, and this is 2017 in the summer, sitting in the car saying, I have to act. I got to do something. And that's the best thing that I could come up with. And just to say to those people, look, I get it. And so it's the only time it's happened. It might happen tomorrow. It might happen a hundred times in the next year. I don't know, but that's the way I live it now. So. I think you've come a long way, Lance Armstrong.
Starting point is 00:48:48 It's pretty impressive, I'll be honest with you. Thank you. Thanks for having me on. Coming up next time on Freakonomics Radio, an astronaut, a Catalan, and two linguists walk into a bar. It's our live non-fiction game show. Tell me something I don't know. I got to fly twice on the space shuttle.
Starting point is 00:49:15 And both of my missions, I went to the Hubble Space Telescope and repaired it. And I was also the first person to tweet from space. There you go. I love that's what gets the applause. You fixed the telescope. That's next time on Freakonomics Radio. Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions. This episode was produced by Derek John.
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