If Books Could Kill - Pundit Portraits: Kathleen Parker and Chris Cillizza [TEASER]
Episode Date: November 28, 2023To hear the rest of the episode, support us on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/IfBooksPod...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Michael Peter. What do you know about political pundits?
All I know is that the only job easier than their job is doing a podcast about political pundits.
So we were bouncing around premium content for our dedicated listeners, or paying customers.
We are at the end of the day, a media criticism podcast that has sort of taken a firm position
against opinion columnists.
An anti-pundit position, anti-pundit stance. And so what better way to highlight that stance
and dig in than to have a series
where we explain some to each other and to our audience?
Where we introduce each other
to specific pundits and their punditry.
Yeah, because especially because I think
a lot of these people sort of blend together in my mind, right?
Where I have a sense that if I hear a name,
oh, that's a dummy.
Yeah.
But I couldn't quite pin specific opinions on them.
Also, I think there's something interesting
with Punditry and maybe with like everybody on the internet
where it's like they just come to you fully formed.
You're like, this is just a political Pundit
whose views I'm hearing.
And often times you don't know like, wait, who is this person?
I feel like this is also an opportunity to like, wait, who is this person? Yeah.
And this is also an opportunity to like go into the background of some of these people.
Yeah. Although I won't be doing that too much.
Okay. I was substituting my own segment, but maybe we're not going to do that for years.
Well, my pundit portrait is Kathleen Parker, who calmness for the Washington Post,
who is pretty distinctly uninteresting in terms of her history.
She's like as a person.
Now, what do you know about Kathleen Parker?
I literally know nothing.
You said you wanted to start this series with some like more obscure pundits.
And like, this is as obscure as it gets.
I literally know her name and where she works.
That's it.
Yeah, she's at the post.
She's been a columnist since 1987.
She started off with the Orlando Sentinel eventually makes her
way to the post where she remains because that's the kind of job you get and you die with.
It's like a Supreme Court appointment.
It is really weird to me that like this is just like background noise of these fucking
columnists.
They just have their jobs for life.
And you will see as we go through some of her greatest hits, it doesn't matter how wrong you are.
Yes.
If anything, being wrong about a past column,
that's a new column.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So she's now like just over 70 years old,
so has spent like half of her life as an opinion columnist
in major newspapers,
and you can see the effects of that on her brain.
She's mostly just like a generic moderate Republican,
which I guess is sort of like the most common kind
of opinion columnist, right?
She is really just sort of a window into the politics
of like insulated wealthy suburban Republicans.
I have selected some writings of hers to show you. It's possible
that when I send you these columns, you will remember it.
I just love that the editors of these pages are like, we've heard from lots of people who
are correct about things. But what about balance? What about the people who are incorrect?
All the time. Well, that's, that's what's great about the selection that I'm going to show you.
Because Parker does have plenty of like,
just dumb, fluffy columns in the same way
that most columnists do, right?
She's very weird about race
in like a very conventional, older, white person way.
Black, white, or purple.
But what I think sets her apart a little bit
is her willingness to make very bold
and specific predictions,
leading to her being proven very
wrong repeatedly and publicly for years on end. I'm going to drop a piece that was published
by her on November 4th, 2016.
Okay. Oh nice. Go ahead and read me that headline, if you will. It says calm down will be fine, no matter who wins.
And it's a photo of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.
This is right before the election
and she's just being like, can you all relax?
Everyone chill out.
Everything's basically the same.
Nothing matters.
She says, as November 9th, Don's Americans are sure
to be mad as hell.
Those happy with the victor will be re-angry soon enough when they realize they won't be
getting what they were promised.
This is the good news.
Thanks to the brilliance of our tripartite government, nobody gets to be a dictator.
Hell yeah.
And despite what nearly everyone seems to believe, our quote, broken government works pretty
well most of the time.
I love it. our quote, broken government works pretty well most of the time.
I love it.
It's like, I've dedicated my life to political punditry.
And also politics doesn't really matter, you guys.
I'm gonna send you a specific excerpt.
I like that mine is like this kind of three-dimensional,
like tragic figure.
And yours is just like a one-dimensional dunk fest.
There's like, look how much this lady sucks.
If you go into a pundit portrait looking for three dimensional characters,
you're not gonna find that many.
I've misunderstood the brief potentially.
Okay, she says, if Trump wins,
he'll be held more or less in check by the House and Senate,
because that's the way our system of government is set up.
Not even Republicans are eager to follow Trump's lead.
There won't be a wall. He
won't impose any religion-based immigration restrictions, because even Trump isn't that
lame-brained. He'll dress up and behave at state dinners and be funny when called upon.
He'll even invite the media to the White House holiday party. He won't nuke Iran for rude
gestures. He won't assault women. He and Vladimir Putin will hate each other respectfully. Holy shit, this is like eight for 10.
I'm just like wrong predictions.
How, like, you could flip 100 coins and everything.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is like, this is just an insane series
of really terrible predictions,
and they don't make sense.
Like, there won't be a wall.
There already is a wall.
Yeah.
Is a wall?
And that was like a big part of like the
serious people critique of Trump, right?
He won't impose any religion-based
immigration restrictions because even Trump
isn't that lame-brained.
What does that supposed to mean
when this was like one of his primary campaign promises, right?
The Muslim ban. He literally the the nooking Iran is the only one that she was right about.
All the other ones are arguably like she says he and Vladimir Putin will hate each other. That's not
wrong. I don't know. I mean, I guess he didn't assault women in the White House, but we heard that
we know of, but we have right. He assaulted, it appears every other woman he's interacted with.
I love that that is like, don't worry.
Donald Trump won't assault women in the white half of that.
Like I wasn't particularly worried about that, I guess.
Yeah, it's not the specific location of the assaulting
that bothers me, yeah.
This is what makes Pundit so special.
They can just be like outrageously bad at their job,
not just in view of their bosses,
but in public, in view of everyone.
This is cannibalizing my little Pundit section,
but like there's also the thing of like,
why is it their job to predict stuff?
Right, it's like, I think this person's gonna win
or like, this is what's gonna happen.
Well, why don't we just wait and see what happens?
I just, the whole project of people thinking
that their job is to tell people what's going to happen.
It's just very odd to me.
This reminds me of a,
I'm sorry to say something that you will relate to so little,
but this reminds me of like a football game pre-show.
Oh.
When the talking head football analysts make their predictions about who's going to win.
And you might think about it rationally and be like, well, why the fuck are we even listening
to this? The game is about to happen. Yeah, just wait. The game is about to happen. Let's watch the game.
But of course, what's actually happening is that they are just doing it as entertainment.
Every relationship I have with a straight person eventually culminates in them explaining
sports commentary to me.
Here's how I've explained sports to straight women.
I will ask if they do straight women stuff
like watch Bravo.
Okay.
Do they talk about Bravo shows with their friends?
Maybe like the bachelor, right?
Yeah.
The only difference between straight men
and straight women in this regard is that I think
you can get most straight women to admit that that stuff is stupid.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whereas men will try to convince you forever that there is something about sports that is somehow
important.
It is 8.45 a.m. and I've watched three makeup tutorials.
So I'm not going to sit here and pretend that I don't also invite the frivolous commentary.
I think that is sort of quintessential Kathleen Parker.
And the only thing I can say in her favor here is that in 2020, she apologized for this
day.
Oh, did she?
Okay.
She was like, okay, look, I got it wrong.
Although what she sort of focused on was like, look, he has sort of eroded and undermined
these very important institutional norms.
And she was also very critical of his coronavirus response.
And so she's like, okay, sorry, I got that wrong.
She wasn't like, oh, by the way, he did, in fact,
take steps to ban Muslims from entering the country.
Right, like sentence by sentence, yeah.
Right, like the actual things that she got,
like materially incorrect, she doesn't really address.
I also think it's very funny with Trump specifically too,
that it's like the actual pundit view over an over-workin'
is like, yeah, he says he'll do a bunch of authoritarian stuff,
but it's not gonna happen.
Right.
Shouldn't the fact that he's saying
authoritarian stuff constantly,
like that seems like a really big deal.
Like we haven't had that before.
How can you tell me that bad things are going to happen
when a bad thing has never happened to me in my entire life?
Yeah, exactly.
Let's step forward a couple of years.
September 18, 2018, Kathleen drops a heater.
This is during the Brett Kavanaugh nomination drama. He's in the midst of his
confirmation hearings and they have been sort of derailed by a very credible, very detailed accusation of sexual assault made by
Professor Christine Blasey Ford. Kavanaugh of course denies the accusation. And then before either Ford or Kavanaugh so much as testified,
we get this piece, which I'm going to send you.
Oh no.
It, it says, is there a Kavanaugh doppelganger?
Was this this fucking deranged thing
where it's like she, she misidentified someone
who was also there
and it was based on like Google Street View Analysis.
That's the Ed Wheeling spin-off from this op-ed.
That happens after.
But this is basically Kathleen doing, I don't want to call it analysis.
It's something less than that.
But Kathleen is trying to square two things in her brain.
One, she is not a psycho on like sexual assault issues generally.
So when she hears an accusation,
she doesn't think like, oh, this is fraudulent, right?
She believes her, but Kavanaugh has put out a statement denying that it happened. Right. And Kathleen Parker is a Republican who likes Brett Kavanaugh. Right.
But also she wants him to get confirmed. So how can you hold both of these thoughts at once?
And where she lands is what if it wasn't Kavanaugh, but someone who looks like him. So she just like made this up. This is made up.
There's a quote.
As crazy as this sounds, it wouldn't be unheard of.
And given the high regard in which Kavanaugh has been held
throughout his life, including during high school,
it would make the most sense.
Could there be a Kavanaugh doppelganger?
The most sense, Michael.
The most sense.
I love thinking of all news events as basically like a short story prompt.
Yeah.
Just like, well, what if Kathleen continues, could there have been another Kavanaugh-ish-looking
teen at the house that night who might have attacked Ford?
You've got to be kidding.
Cases of mistaken identity are far from rare.
People with the same name are often confused, as was the case with Ford herself.
On Monday, Judge Report tweeted a link to an article
on another site that seemed intended to discredit her
with negative comments by her former students.
But it turned out that the reviews pertain
to another California professor named Christine Ford.
Wait, what?
This has nothing to do with anything.
Mistaking someone's name is not the same as mistaking someone's appearance. You have to really think about this because
this is a an incredible feat of reasoning. The drug report, of course, essentially a far
right gossip blog that is a one hit wonder. They broke the Lewinsky scandal. So once these
accusations were public, they try to smear Professor Ford.
But they miss fire and they end up smearing some other random
Professor who has a similar name.
Right. Parker is using this as evidence against the
veracity of Ford's testimony.
Right. When what it actually is is evidence that people on
the right were engaged in like a shameless effort to discredit Professor Ford.
Right.
An effort that Parker is participating in right now.
Yeah, she's now joining this effort.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She goes on to talk about how in the 1930s, John Dillinger famously had a doppelganger who
was like arrested multiple times.
What?
It's literally like, well, what if she was tripping on acid?
Like fucking, let's just keep throwing out shit
that could possibly explain this.
Yeah, what if she's a Russian spy?
Fucking.
All this is is an attempt to moderate claims
that she's lying, right?
It's like, ooh, you actually don't need to believe
that she's lying or crazy or power hungry or whatever, we can sort of
thread that needle and just say that she's mistaken, but the outcome is the same, right?
We're still protecting our boy.
As in all of these things, the real problem is with the editors, the fact that people
looked at this and we're like, yes, yes, let's put this in like one of the nation's most
prestigious newspapers, just fully just wish casting.
I'm like, this might have happened.
It's wild that no one, I mean,
this is always my fucking issue with these columnists.
Is it like, no one is like, hey, sorry,
we really need some actual basis for this.
They're like, well, you're a columnist
with lifetime tenure.
The basis is that Brett Kavanaugh denied it.
That's it.
I'm now gonna send you the closing paragraph.
Wait, I know, I was just about to Google and find the actual text of this, because I'm like,
there's a little part of me that's like, this can't really be what she's doing.
Right? It can't actually be this bad. Trust me. Trust me.
Okay, she says, thus, giving both the benefit of the doubt, it seems possible to believe both that
Ford was assaulted just as she's described, and also that Kavanaugh didn't do it. In a case without evidence, witnesses, or corroboration,
mistaken identity would provide a welcome resolution to this terrible riddle. Anyone?
I love that she ends up like, is this anything?
Cool rule of thumb. When you have to end a column by saying anyone?
Anyone? It's probably best to just not publish that column.
You know, what this column should actually be titled
is like, how I sleep at night
while still supporting Brett Kavanaugh.
Like she says, okay, a case of mistaken identity
would provide a welcome resolution to this terrible riddle.
What's the riddle?
Yeah, the riddle is just they can't both be lying,
but like men lie about sexually assaulting women
all the fucking time.
I love that what she's sort of implying
almost is an alternate reality where
Kavanaugh immediately confesses.
It's also weird, it's like she's doing this as if
Blossy Ford was like assaulted in like a crowded subway car.
Right.
Like she was in a small group.
It was like a social event where she knew who was there.
It was like a very finite number of people.
And she obviously feels confident enough
that years later, she like stood up,
knowing that it would ruin her reputation.
And those who aren't aware,
like she tried to keep her identity private in this
because she knew she was going to get dragged in the mud,
which of course she was.
Of course.
And then ultimately she got up there and testified like, that's how confident she felt.
Right.
You know, I know that people on the right sort of imagine that there are like rewards for
people who accuse powerful men of sexual assault, but of course the opposite is true.
That's all incredibly strong evidence that she's confident about his identity.
Yeah.
And Kathleen Parker just can't hold those two thoughts at once.
She needs to be able to support Brad Kavanaugh and so she's just working her way there
without going off the deep end like Matt Rudge.
This is me continuing to follow Asalia Banks on Instagram.
I don't want to like her but I still like her.
She's not always right but when she's right.
Ooh, I know.
Fair enough, Asalia.
There's just so much going on here.
Like complete speculation being published
as like a plausible theory,
the theory itself being a way for her to like reassure herself
that it's okay to support this man.
And we are now, and like on top of that,
you get in like this sort of implicit discrediting
of a sexual assault victim.
It's also an acknowledgement that Kavanaugh's basically
just like a generic white guy.
She's like, yeah, everyone kinda looks like this fucking guy.
That is the strongest part of the argument, you know?
Just to go placement level.
You could walk multiple Brett Kavanaugh's
by someone on the sidewalk, like one after another,
and they wouldn't notice that it would be weird.
There's one more article I want to discuss. This one is actually from a couple months
before the Kavanaugh one. This is July 3rd, 2018, as she's writing this Anthony Kennedy has
stepped down from the Supreme Court and he's going to be replaced by a Trump. Brett Kavanaugh
is the likely candidate, although there's been no like investigation, no opposition of research onto him or anything.
So we're just sort of in the early phases here.
And she publishes this heater.
Oh, yeah, classic stuff.
She says calm down, Roe v. Wade isn't going anywhere.
God, there were so many of these, Peter, Jesus Christ.
This is one of the most prominent of this type, but first, is that headline read familiar
to you?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, calm down.
This is like the tactic that like angry guys use when they're in a fight with their wives.
Is this the thing like Roberts won't destroy the reputation of the Supreme Court or whatever?
It's almost less sophisticated than that.
Here's what's going on here, big picture.
Anthony Kennedy was generally considered
the fifth vote for Roe v Wade. He was a supporter of it. And so he's stepping down. He's going to
be replaced by Trump. Several legal analysts, notably Jeffrey Tuben, flagged the distinct possibility
that Roe v Wade was going to be overturned. She says, quote, what new justice would want to be that man or woman
who forevermore would be credited with upending settled law
and causing massive societal upheaval?
What?
They would get more fishing trips to Wisconsin
or whatever the fuck Clarence Thomas is doing.
Why would someone not want to do that?
She says, quote,
only Clarence Thomas would likely vote
to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Swing in a miss.
Oh, yeah, that's rough.
That's rough.
This is someone who in 2018 thought that Sam Alito was a vote to uphold Roe v Wade.
Sam Alito has like six Breitbart tabs open in his browser.
Right.
Right.
Like, how can you look at this guy and be like, no, no, he's a lock.
Yeah, I'm going to send you another key paragraph here.
My God. She says many Americans, no, no, he's a lock. Yeah. Okay, I'm going to send you another key paragraph here. My God.
She says many Americans, including some conservatives, would rather Trump not have access to the employee
suggestion box, much less the Supreme Court.
Then again, corsage, whom he nominated upon taking office, is hardly a radical window.
And though true that Trump promised during his campaign to select justices who would
send abortion back to the States, he doesn't actually get to dictate how they rule.
Oh, this is again, like, although he says explicitly he wants to overturn Roe v. Wade,
he's not going to overturn Roe v. Wade.
Yeah, that's why I like this paragraph so much.
Because once again, Donald Trump is saying something very specific.
I'm going to select justices that will overturn Roe v. Wade.
And she's like, no.
She says he doesn't get to dictate how they rule, which is true, but he does get to choose
the justices.
Whether or not they would rule to overturn Roby Wade is the litmus test for choosing them.
Right.
So it's a distinction without a difference.
So there were columns, including one in the Washington Post itself, that were like, let's take
a quick review of who was wrong about Ruby Wades.
They call out Kathleen Parker herself and they contact her.
And they say, do you stand by it?
And she says, and I quote, 100%.
What?
At the time it was written, it was accurate.
What?
It was on the nose.
The thing is, I can see standing by a wrong prediction.
If you're talking about some sort of act of God,
like, I thought the next Marvel movie would make a billion dollars,
but then the coronavirus pandemic happened,
and nobody went to movies for two years.
Something like that, like, based on the information I had,
I made the correct prediction.
But that's not the case here.
She had the previous decisions of these specific Supreme Court
justices to go on and she just got it wrong.
At the time that I said that you would not be stabbed,
the knife-wielding maniac was 15 feet away from you.
Here's the kicker, if you're ready for this one.
Had the jackals of the abortion rights movement
not protested at Kavanaugh's house, Parker said,
he might well have switched sides in the Dowsky.
Oh, fuck off.
So it's the problem of the leftists.
So not only was I not wrong,
but to the extent I was wrong,
it's sort of your fault for being mean to Brett Kavanaugh,
who by the way just happens to look like the guy who did a sexual assault pack in 1982.
Maybe they didn't even protest in front of his house.
Maybe it was just a guy that looked like him.
Katelyn, follow it, follow it through.
That is sort of a rundown of my quintessential Kathleen Parker columns.
I do want to be clear that although these are three of her most aggressively incorrect columns,
she does have the sort of dumb bullshit that every other columnist does too. And I'm just going
to rattle off some headlines to give you a good sense. These are all from this year. First, a
little crossover with a previous premium episode of ours.
But light started a fight.
It was bound to lose.
Subheading in a time of culturally encouraged identity
confusion and gender fluidity,
and Heizer Bush tried to exploit a 26 year old actress
on TikTok, shame on them.
Oh my God, that's again the thing where she's trying not
to be like out and out transphobic.
Wow. Right. Like defending transphobes and like echoing a bunch of transphobic talking points.
All Bud Light did was partner up for like an Instagram promo with a trans influencer. Yeah.
Kathleen Parker says that is exploiting a 26 year old actress. How was that? It's literally
giving her money to do ads. Just giving her money to do ads. This is a normal. I promise that is the last one that
I'll make you angry. The rest of them are just messing down for the Senate is just bad
matters. I'm fucking I may have read this one. Yeah, this of course is just about a senator
Federman. Yeah. Some heading senators should no more come to the chamber wearing a jogging suit.
Then they should wear a tuxedo to play tennis. What would she have said at your wedding, Peter?
You came out in the tracksuit.
I'm a little bit synchroegious.
That was the only reason I didn't invite her.
Okay.
Some more headlines.
Why I ordered 200 incandescent light bulbs.
What?
And that's just a story about how she likes incandescent light bulbs.
Okay.
That one I'm actually all give her a pass.
When they're dumb, but not harmful, just like, you know what? Have at it,. Okay. That one I'm actually all give her a pass. When they're dumb but not harmful,
just like, you know what, have added Kathleen.
Here's one I like.
Want to be happy, then don't be a lawyer.
Ooh, that's true, Peter.
I mean, that's definitely true.
She could go on five four.
That's just a full column about a poll of lawyers
that says that we're sad, which, of course,
there's like a hundred of those published every year.
Yeah.
The real superheroes of TV, the makeup artist.
Okay. That's just about makeup artists. Yeah, maybe we're, the makeup artist. That's just about makeup artists.
Yeah, maybe we're watching the same tutorials.
That's really all I have for Kathleen Parker.
I feel like she is very emblematic of a type
of very insulated, rich white person, you know?
Like sort of moderately reactionary.
On the other hand, not totally nuts.
She was like very promesk and wrote a lot about that
during COVID and was very critical of Trump's response.
But on the other hand, like she will never get
behind trans rights.
Whenever partisan politics come to the front,
she's pretty distinctly Republican.
And this thing of blaming left-wing activists
for basically everything that the right wing does.
I feel like this is another very common trope
in these columns.
And I think a lot of what makes her so shitty
is that a lot of what she writes about
when she really gets into substantive issues
is just sort of like, oh, it's not so bad.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think that's just a classic,
privileged person sort of position
because for her, it's not so bad, right? And it won't be bad. just a classic, privileged person sort of position
because for her it's not so bad, right?
And it won't be bad, basically no matter what happens.
I like that what qualifies for balance
in the nation's most prestigious opinion pages
is like people who are comfortable
in a mildly left-wing way
and people who are comfortable
in a mildly right-wing way.
All right, we can do whoever yours is.
Okay, are we on, are we on me now?
I think we are.
Okay, so you, I have kept this a secret from you.
I'm doing a somewhat obscure pun,
although I don't actually know if this is obscure to you,
because you're like a Twitter super user,
and this is a person that got yelled at on Twitter constantly,
which is how I first heard of them.
So we are going to talk about Chris Saliza,
I'm familiar with Chris Saliza.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
Okay.
Familiar with Chris Saliza,
he's, I think he's now former CNN, right?
And that is sort of where he spent the last,
I don't know, several years.
Yeah, 2017 to 2022.
Yeah, I don't, this is a perfect pundit portrait
because I have a sense of him,
which is that he's just sort of like a like a horse-brained sort of dummy who gives these sort of
like middling hedging takes that are sort of like bizarrely critical of the left. But I don't
really know any actual details. I've never paid attention to him. It's true that I've seen him get dunked on Twitter quite a bit.
But I've never dug in because he doesn't seem like
the type of person that's worth digging into.
Well, I think this is one of the core paradoxes of this show
is that there's people that just aren't that interesting
to talk about, but also his posts on the Washington Post
would get
three million views, and he was one of the most popular pundits on CNN. So like these are worlds
that just don't interest us very much. Like TV news, commentary, like the fucking Sunday morning
talk shows. But also like we ignore it at our peril because like these fucking self-help books that
we talk about, people like listen to these people. I mean, I think we're still sort of just haunted
by the fact that old people vote and young people go home.
And like these people just have like the news on
in their homes.
Yeah, just voices in the background.
And it's, you know, are you going to be a complete freak
and have Fox news on?
Are you gonna be just sort of a common dummy
and have CNN on?
Whereas we get our news in a much more objective fashion
where we just look at who's getting yelled at on Twitter today.
Absolutely.
Top story bean dad.
This is the whole nation in an uproar.
I scroll my Twitter feed at 100 miles an hour
picking up keywords as I go.
And then I stare out upon the New York City skyline
and I just kind of feel what the vibes are.
And that's how I absorb my news every day.
So, Crystal is actually, it turns out fairly interesting as a person.
He grows up in Connecticut.
It appears that he, like, grew up in, like, a fairly middle-class family,
but he also went to an elite boarding school whose name I forget and I don't care about.
And he has no interest in politics.
He gets into it because he gets an internship
with George Will when he's in college.
And the only reason he's even heard of George Will
at the time is that George Will wrote a book about baseball
and he's like a sports guy.
And I actually, I mean, we talked about it briefly before,
but like, I think the rise of people like Chris Saliza
is part
of this transformation of political journalism into essentially sports commentary.
After he works for George Will, he works for something called a roll call, which is one
of these like political whosup whosdown things.
Then in 2005, he gets hired by the Washington Post and has a column called The Fix.
He gets famous when he starts doing these videos
for Washington Post of like,
who had the best and worst week in Washington?
Oh yeah.
You remember this?
And there's like a wheel that he spins and everything?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Man, this must have been what I was actually absorbing
political nonsense.
Like this.
Like a young, as a young guy, I was living in DC for a bit after
college and reading the hot blogs and absorbing trash into my brain. So we're going to watch some of
this trash. Oh God. Okay.
you