On with Kara Swisher - From The Office to SNAFU: Ed Helms on History, Politics & Comedy

Episode Date: April 28, 2025

Ed Helms is best known for playing Andy Bernard in The Office and Stu in The Hangover trilogy. But the comedic actor is also the politically engaged, banjo-playing, podcast-hosting, TV series–produc...ing author of a new book titled, SNAFU: The Definitive Guide to History’s Greatest Screwups.  Kara and Ed discuss domestic politics and satire's role during Trump 2.0; government overreach and history’s tendency to repeat itself; his podcast SNAFU with Ed Helms and the eponymous book; and the entertainment industry’s evolving economics. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram, TikTok, and Bluesky @onwithkaraswisher. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is a long podcast, so you're going to have to talk a lot. Oh, boy. Hi, everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. This is On with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher. My guest today is Ed Helms. He's an actor and comedian best known for his work as a correspondent on The Daily Show in the early and mid aughts and especially for playing Andy Bernard in The Office and Stu in The Hangover Trilogy. You know who Ed Helms is. But he's also the author of a new book called Snafu, a definitive guide to history's greatest
Starting point is 00:00:40 screw-ups. It's smart, funny, and full of little-known stories about human arrogance, government overreach, and in some cases, plain old stupidity. I'm excited to talk to him. I always think he's such a cerebral and interesting comedian and plays a variety of characters incredibly well, all of them with a heart, which is what I am always attracted to when I'm talking to comedians. And of course, I love talking to comedians. At a time when the Trump administration is trying to sanitize our history, it's good to talk to someone who isn't afraid to get real about the mistakes that are a big part of who we are as Americans and as humans.
Starting point is 00:01:13 Our expert question comes from Dr. Lindsay Churwinski, the executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library. So stick around. From early morning workouts that need a boost to late night drives that need vibes, a good playlist can help you make the most out of your everyday. And when it comes to everyday spending, you can count on the PC Insider's World Elite Mastercard to help you earn the most PC optimum points everywhere you shop.
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Starting point is 00:02:56 Get started at servicenow.com slash AI-agents. It is on. Ed, thank you for being on On. agents. Ed, thank you for being on On. I'm so excited to be on On. So you're a man of many talents, obviously you're an actor, but you're also a producer, musician, podcast host, author, and I don't know if I'd call you a political activist, but you're very active politically. So we're going to start with that and get to your book and everything else. Great. You ready?
Starting point is 00:03:25 Let's dive in. Let's dive in. So you campaign for the Harris-Waltz ticket in Reno and Scranton, by the way, my family's from Scranton. Talk about why you decided to get involved. I mean, obviously when you're famous, you get a platform, so why not use it?
Starting point is 00:03:39 On the other hand, one of the knocks on Democrats is that they use too many celebrities or so. What's the calculus in your head as you thought about how to engage publicly in the election? I don't overthink it. It's not a complicated calculus, honestly. I had been posting some things that supported the campaign and then they reached out and I was like, anything I can do. This feels like a critical moment and I'm there.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And they said, well, can you be in Reno in like two days? And I was like, actually I can, that works. And so I bounced out there and I met Tim Walz and I was incredibly impressed and charmed. He's just a lovely guy. And that sort of galvanized me more. You know, I grew up in a very politically engaged home, and so I've always been a little bit of a politics junkie and a news junkie. And my dad collected campaign memorabilia,
Starting point is 00:04:42 which was really fun. We just always had like old, you know, I grew up in Atlanta, so he was a big Jimmy Carter Southern Democrat, my dad, and so we had all this, I don't know, just campaign paraphernalia around the house. So it was always something that. And why was that? Tell me about your parents. Why were they politically engaged? What was his? It's a good question, the why of it all, which I haven't, I don't know that I ever, I never
Starting point is 00:05:08 kind of button-hold him on that question, the why. But he's someone that I think always had a sort of like justice streak. You know, someone who wanted just to see fairness around him in the world. And growing up in the South, really during civil rights, you know, he saw so much social injustice around him. And this is me speculating somewhat, but I think that that sort of galvanized a desire to see a better world and affect change in however he could. And you know, he worked hard on Andy Young's campaign for mayor of Atlanta. And I can remember Andy Young coming to our house when I was a little kid and just being
Starting point is 00:05:56 like, wow. Wow. He was the star. He really was. And then I, for some reason I had that too. I grew up with a kind of like preoccupation with fairness. And I would get really frustrated and confused and angry as a kid when I felt like bullies were getting the best of somebody or like. Oh, we've got lots to talk about. There's something going on in this country right now. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:20 So it's interesting because you're a board member of Represent Us, an anti-corruption organization that advocates for systemic change in the political structure. There's a huge amount of corruption happening right now in real time. But one of the big changes you're pushing for, speaking of fairness, is rank choice voting. Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska recently spat about it in favor, and that's how Alaskans elect their leaders. But the state almost repealed rank choice voting in a ballot measure last year.
Starting point is 00:06:45 Voters in at least six other states rejected it, and Missouri passed a law banning ranked-choice voting. I'd love you to talk a little bit about this idea of why I am very enamored with ranked-choice voting, although it has its critics. And why don't voters like it? Because it sort of tends towards electing reasonable people often like Lisa Murkowski. Well, you just answered your question. Why don't people like it?
Starting point is 00:07:10 It's because it's the system that best represents the largest number of voters sentiment. And when you have entrenched minority power, as we have in this country, it's very hard to sell someone on ranked choice voting. I have this feeling, I get into these debates, I have a family member who's very conservative and I've gotten into these debates with him about ranked choice voting and everything that he comes back to me with, I'm just like, this is just Kool-Aid.
Starting point is 00:07:46 You have definitely, you're not citing, to me there's no intellectually honest argument against ranked choice voting. There's only cynical propaganda messaging. And unfortunately that's been incredibly effective. What's his best argument? That it's confusing, which is a canard. Like, it's not confusing. Ranked choice voting is just when you rank all the candidates based on your favorite. They did in San Francisco for the mayor, and it's fair. People think it's fair, because if you have your choices and your favorites and your second favorites, it makes it, it's just harder for the voter, I think, is the difficulty. The voter has to think harder, which they don't tend to want to do sometimes.
Starting point is 00:08:29 And I think there are real questions about how do you do this transparently, because it's a multi-step process. So, like, what are the, how can you be the most transparent in the process of calculating rank choice results? And that's a fair question, but I think there's answers to that. Yeah, it tends to vote in people who are more reasonable. Right. And the reason for that is that every candidate is actually now answering to every voter. Right. Because every voter has a say in where a candidate will rank on their ballot.
Starting point is 00:09:04 So, if you're a far-right candidate or a far-left candidate, has a say in where a candidate will rank on their ballot. So if you're a far right candidate or a far left candidate and you're just like throwing red meat at your base, then most voters are going to look at that and be like, ah, that's a little extreme. So I'm going to put them lower in my ranking. So then the most extreme people tend to get marginalized. And that's not a bad thing. I'm going to move on to the idea of using the media in affecting this.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Because a lot of it is the media, I don't think, is doing a great job explaining things. And you said you're fascinated by partisanship and division. How much blame does the mainstream media deserve? And specifically since you're in comedy when it comes to political satire and you're comedy alma mater, The Daily Show, still one of the best. And what do you think its role should be, something like The Daily Show? And Jon Stewart's protested that he's not a journalist, but he clearly is more than just entertainment.
Starting point is 00:09:56 People would say to me when I worked on The Daily Show, they're like, you know, I get all my news on The Daily Show. And I was like- My kids do. Yeah. But I was like, that's kind of like doing your grocery shopping at the candy store. Like, you're not getting any vegetables. But I think you need both.
Starting point is 00:10:10 I think you need the establishment media sort of doing their best. And they've dropped the ball quite a lot. But then you need the sort of peanut gallery, which is the Daily Show and comedians just lobbing satirical bombs at the media that just kind of keep them honest but also keep the public entertained and engaged and reflecting a little harder on these things. That's what I think John always did so brilliantly was like, was just be a funny gadfly that would make you or make audiences laugh, but then later on they're still thinking about something like, oh yeah, that thing that he
Starting point is 00:10:51 pointed out that, you know, Mitt Romney said that was so hypocritical, like what? Yeah. And then they're thinking about it more. But I do think the mainstream media, where I get the most frustrated with, well, I mean, first of all, like, what is the mainstream media? But sort of our bigger institutions like CNN and Fox News and the New York Times, et cetera, is the horse race of election coverage is so sensationalized that it dramatically diminishes the integrity of the message of the candidates. And then, of course, with Fox News, that Fox News was really blossoming while I was on the Daily Show. And I remember just being feeling kind of heartbroken that this thing was emerging.
Starting point is 00:11:42 And their slogan at that time, they since abandoned it, but their slogan was fair and balanced. Do you remember that? Yeah. Literally just fair and balanced. I used to say neither fair nor balanced. It was just so cynical. Like this is, they're so overtly unfair and unbalanced. But to say that seemed almost like a snark. Like they're just kind of, they're laughing at us. Although they may believe it. Well, interestingly, a political scientist named Dr. Dana Young studied the difference between liberal versus conservative late night TV. And there's a lot
Starting point is 00:12:14 of comedy on Fox. Well, I don't think it's funny, but it's there. In a nutshell, she found most liberals mostly watch comedy shows that use irony to create humor and conservatives generally watch shows like that that use irony to create humor and conservatives generally watch shows like that that use fear to create outrage. Sure. Or I would also, I would add ridicule. Ridicule. Yeah, ridicule. You're absolutely right. Irony usually signals some level of detachment. Is there something to be found in these right wing,
Starting point is 00:12:39 I'm thinking of Greg Gutfeld and the others, to start cultivating this idea of outrage? And why does that work better in some forms of comedy? It does. Yeah. I think this is, you're getting into a question about a fundamental difference between progressives and conservatives. that progressives tend to think too hard and analyze and even navel gaze a bit. And that's a great landing pad for irony.
Starting point is 00:13:14 And conservatives tend to love things that are very simple and black and white and clear. And the more you analyze something or get into the nuance of something, the more frustrated they're likely to get. And the more you analyze something or get into the nuance of something, the more frustrated they're likely to get and they're going to want to cling to the simpler ideas. And that's a more primal response in some ways, which I think also speaks to the fear, you know, gravitating towards fear. Are you surprised that something like Gut Fowl, which is built as a comedy show, is as popular as it is, comparatively? No, I don't think I'm, I used to be surprised at how, at the sort of rise of Fox News.
Starting point is 00:13:50 But I understand, you know, looking back through history, it just feels like we're at a moment where the American population is severely lacking in general sort of civic education and economic education. A lot of people are struggling with economic opportunity and that has people on edge. And when people are on edge, they're likely to be gravitate towards simpler and or fearful, fear-based messaging. So, speaking of history, it's interesting because it sort of dovetails into your podcast and your book, which is called Snafu. Let me read the bottom one. Here it is right here.
Starting point is 00:14:35 History is the definitive guide to history's greatest screw-ups, which are happening in real time, so you'll be able to have a sequel. Oh, my gosh. Pretty easy. I was trying to write a book that's just a fun, cheeky look back and all of a sudden we're in this moment where it's like, yeah, so this is- What can we fuck up today?
Starting point is 00:14:53 Yeah. It's like an hour by hour fuck up. For people who don't know, what does snafu stand for? Snafu is a term, it's actually an acronym that emerged during World War II. It stands for situation normal all fucked up. So, it's basically like, you know what, everything's fucked up, but isn't it always? And it kind of describes the moment we're in right now. Yeah. And you have a podcast. You have a podcast.
Starting point is 00:15:21 Yeah. So, I have a pod, I started a podcast a couple years ago called Snafu. And season three just came out. Each season is a deep dive into one big sort of major historical snafu. But we tried to kind of find things that are off the beaten path, some things that you may not know about. Not well-known snafu. Exactly. Not like, like, and same with the book, by the way.
Starting point is 00:15:45 There's a reason there's no chapter in the book that's just like, World War II. These are, the curation of the book is much more about. Vietnam, right? All right. So, one of the threads running through his projects is government, overreaching government, stepping all over American civil liberties. There's so many of them. This is actually often a conservative talking about, but why are these so good for this
Starting point is 00:16:13 kind of idea? Well, I think it goes back to the whole reason I engage with RepresentUs and why I engage with politics to begin with. There's just something so frustrating and unnerving about institutional chaos or hypocrisy or even just downright dastardly behavior. And yet there's just no shortage of it. It's been all around us for centuries, well, for thousands of years. But in American history, it's fascinating to look back and just call attention to these things that I think make people think and also give people a little bit of context for the present moment.
Starting point is 00:16:58 Right. So some of the stories actually feel relevant today. For example, in the 1960s, the US Army tried to secretly build a nuclear missile launch site under Greenland's ice sheet, speaking of Greenland, without Denmark's permission. And of course, at the time, Greenland was part of Denmark, continues to be, by the way. It was called Project Iceworm by the Army. Can you explain? Yeah, this is an incredible story. So, Project Iceworm was this insane idea to build tunnels underneath the ice sheet of Greenland so that they could maneuver nuclear missiles all over the island nation undetected and then launch them from wherever they wanted to. 600 missiles.
Starting point is 00:17:38 Yeah. So, this was the plan. It wasn't like one. Yeah. It's kind of a, it feels like a crazy hair-brained plan. And so to test this as a possibility, they built basically like a fort on Greenland and they started digging tunnels just to kind of experiment and see if this would work. And they also added a nuclear reactor there for power. And it didn't work.
Starting point is 00:18:05 It did not work at all. Basically they were tunneling into the ice and it was caving in around them and on top of them and over time they realized this is just not a good idea. All at taxpayer expense, by the way. Yeah. And also no one in Greenland was aware of this and the president of Denmark was like, you know what, just don't tell me.
Starting point is 00:18:26 Do what you guys want, but don't tell me and it's fine. But then, of course, because of nuclear waste, people in a nearby village were getting sick and then it was revealed and it just is. And now, even now, there's nuclear waste frozen in the ice there, along with like years of human waste from the fort that they built there. And that's all going to thaw in due course with global warming and be exposed and just be a terrible hazard once again. Which is why the perfect time for Donald Trump to buy it.
Starting point is 00:19:03 That's the perfect time to steal it or take it or whatever. Um, you have a lot of stories about the CIA too, which is always full of these kinds of schemes or schemes really kind of wacky schemes. One involves a cyborg cat. Another involves pigeons. There's a story about a lot of LSD, which I think is relatively well known. Tell us your favorite one. And also why did the CIA come up with so many of these
Starting point is 00:19:25 harebrained schemes that seem doomed to failure, at least in retrospect? Great question. I think probably the cat one is one of my favorites. Go ahead and recount it for people. So basically, the CIA is always looking for ways to surveil, always looking for ways to be sneaky about getting intel. And so basically the idea was we're going to insert a microphone surgically into a cat's ear because cats have directional ears and they always, they're incredibly sensitive and they're perfectly shaped to capture sound. And isn't this a great idea? And then we'll train the cats to go and sit next to bad guys in parks or wherever and
Starting point is 00:20:10 listen to their conversations and we'll be able to hear it and record it. Because cats are so well trained. Exactly. It's called herding cats. How, who needs to research whether or not you can train cats? We all know this. You cannot train cats. Siegfried and Roy unfortunately learned this very hard way.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Very much so. It's a... They tried. Yeah, so it was obviously a debacle. The other one you mentioned that is very funny too is trying to put little backpacks on pigeons with surveillance equipment. Now what's crazy is like with drone technology, this is happening in kind of a whole new way. Little drones, baby drones, micro drones.
Starting point is 00:20:57 There's something, you know what cracks me up about these things is they just feel like something that a 10-year-old thought of. Right? Like maybe one of these CIA guys was just like, uh, over dinner, like, how are we going to listen to the spies? How are we going to listen in on them? And the kid's like, oh, you can strap a microphone to a cat. And he's like, you're onto something. This is great.
Starting point is 00:21:23 Talk about, you spent some time with a tiger on Hangover, obviously, too, which, speaking of cats, I thought about joining the CIA at one point, but it was the whole gay thing they didn't like at the time. Now I'm sure they'd be thrilled. But did it make you feel differently about the agency? At the end of the day, would you say it's been a net positive or a negative, or you thought what a bunch of crazy people? Oh, no. I've never had a particularly good impression of the agency. At the end of the day, would you say it's been a net positive or a negative? Or you thought what a bunch of crazy people. Oh, no. I've never had a particularly good impression of the CIA. I mean, there are so
Starting point is 00:21:50 many examples of just- Malfeasance, yes. Yeah. I mean, but I don't know. Season two of the Snafu podcast goes really deep on the FBI in an incredible story about a group of activists and outside Philadelphia who broke into an FBI office in media, Pennsylvania Stole all the files and began leaking them to the Washington Post in 1971 but the reason that they broke in is because they could tell that the FBI was
Starting point is 00:22:29 surveilling and harassing people in very illegal, threatening ways. But there was nothing they could do about it. They couldn't go to the FBI and say, hey, some of your guys are bad. It was like they were caught. And this is part of why this moment that we're in right now feels kind of scary, but also familiar in a sort of in a J. Edgar Hoover way. broke in and at massive risks to themselves and their families. And these weren't criminals, but they staged an unbelievable heist. And I strongly encourage your listeners to listen to Snafu season two. It's a very thrilling and heroic story. But it basically uncovered so much of the corruption within the FBI, so much of what they were doing that was explicitly illegal and some of it evil, you know, like trying
Starting point is 00:23:31 to sending letters to Martin Luther King to try to get him to kill himself and all these things. And that led to the church hearings, which is the only reason we now have any congressional oversight over all of our intelligence institutions, the NSA, the FBI, the CIA. It was the misbehavior. Season three of Snafu, probably is about prohibition, by the way. You go all over the place here, specifically how the government killed thousands of Americans by adding poisons to the industrial alcohol which bootleggers were turning into alcoholic beverages. It sounds crazy, but the idea is to scare drinkers into sobriety by killing them. Explain what happened and then tell us what parallels you see today, if any.
Starting point is 00:24:18 That's a wild one. So during Prohibition, of course, there's still industrial alcohol that needs to be produced and distributed around the country. The industrial alcohol supply is also what bootleggers are stealing to then turn into consumer alcohol. The government knew this, they understood this, and they started adding, for a long time they'd been adding chemicals to alcohol to make it basically gross, like unpalatable, undrinkable because it just tasted so bad. And that process is called denaturing alcohol.
Starting point is 00:24:56 And during Prohibition they thought, well, what if we add some poison to this so that people aren't just getting, you know, a little bit nauseous or that they're, it tastes bad, but it's just starting to kill people. And thousands of people died as a result. It's an incredibly tragic story. It's darkly, also weirdly funny in some ways. It's an example of how the most holier than thou intentions can result in some of the most despicable behavior.
Starting point is 00:25:31 Right, right. Right? Yeah, no, a lot of your stories end in despicable. You're like, oh my God, this is another movie. It's like, I'm feeling like I'm listening to Aaron Brockovich over and over again. Like, what did they do? Yeah, exactly. You know, and then they got away with it.
Starting point is 00:25:44 That's the part that's- then they got away with it. That's the part that's- They basically got away with it. They were exposed, but no one really- That's what I mean. Yeah, there were no consequences. Exposure is still getting away with it if you're not put in. You're right.
Starting point is 00:25:57 So is there any parallel to today? Because there's a lot of snafus, again, happening in plain sight right now. Now it's explicit. What was implicit is explicit now. It's like they're doingus, again, happening in plain sight right now. Now it's explicit. What was implicit is explicit now. It's like they're doing the corruption or the crime in plain sight. Sure.
Starting point is 00:26:12 In the broadest sense, I would just say government overreach is sort of the biggest parallel. But gosh, where do you start? There's so much going on right now that feels like it's mean-spirited and harming people. During Prohibition, it's, I don't think that this behavior was, that adding poison to alcohol was necessarily mean-spirited. It wasn't, didn't come from a place of like, we want to punish these people. It was more like, this is going to help us get people to stop drinking. It was an incredibly
Starting point is 00:26:50 flawed logic. But now, it does feel like we're in a moment where pain and suffering are an objective. Or intentional. Yeah. We'll be back in a minute. The regular season is in the rearview and now it's time for the games that matter the most. This is Kenny Beacham and
Starting point is 00:27:19 playoff basketball is finally here on small ball. We're diving deeper to every series, every crunch time finished, every coaching adjustment that can make or break a championship run. Who's building for a 16-win marathon? Which superstar will submit their legacy? And which role player is about to become a household name?
Starting point is 00:27:38 With so many fascinating first-round matchups, will the West be the bloodbath we anticipate? Will the East be as predictable as we think? Can the Celtics defend their title? Can Steph Curry, LeBron James, Kawhi Leonard push the young teams at the top? I'll be bringing the expertise, the passion, and the genuine opinion you need for the most exciting time of the NBA calendar. Small ball is your essential companion for the NBA postseason. Join me Kenny Beecham for new episodes of Small Ball throughout the playoffs. Don't miss Small Ball with Kenny Beecham, new episodes dropping through the playoffs, available on
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Starting point is 00:29:22 The NPR Politics Podcast can help declutter it all for you. Every day, the NPR Politics Podcast team focuses on one thing and boils it down to 15 minutes or less. Each episode makes it easy for you to understand what's going on in politics. From the complete restructure of the federal government to immigration, policy, tariffs, and trade, to unpacking the first hundred days of Trump's presidency. They explore whether the president has lived up to his early promises and how his executive orders and spur of the moment decision making are changing the nation and your life in the
Starting point is 00:29:54 long term. You can tune in and hear about what's being done, what's to come and what might change and of course what it means for you. I really enjoy listening to this NPR program. It does everything in a very short time. I know we're all pressed for time and it's really important to have a really smart politics podcast like NPR Politics Podcast in order to do that. You can listen to the NPR Politics Podcast only from NPR wherever you get your podcasts. Okay. So every episode we get an expert question from someone.
Starting point is 00:30:27 In your case, we got one from a very serious person, Dr. Lindsay Trubinsky, a presidential historian and executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library. She's author also of Making the Presidency. Let's hear her question. Hi, Ed. Congratulations on the book. In your podcast and in this book, you are sharing history with a public audience, and that is amazing.
Starting point is 00:30:46 Anyone who loves history always wants it to be available to the maximum number of people and the maximum number of places. But there are so many options, museums, books, classes, materials online, podcasts. How do you see yourself in conversation with those? Are you a part of the history community? Are you a conduit sharing information from
Starting point is 00:31:08 other places and trying to get it to new listeners? I'd be really curious to know how you think about that and how we can get people more interested in history in lots of different types and spaces. Thanks so much. Great question. Are you a historian? Honestly, I've felt a little bit like I'm in a bubble with a lot of this stuff. And I'm eager to engage more. I've been doing a ton of podcasts over the last couple of years as a guest to help promote
Starting point is 00:31:37 this, my podcast and this book. And that's opened me up to a lot of what's going on out there more. And I'm really hoping on this book tour I have coming up that I get to meet a lot of people from that space. My brother is a history teacher in Washington, D.C., yeah, middle school history teacher. I'm insanely proud of him. And he's been an inspiration and someone that I feel like is part of my connection to like history on the ground.
Starting point is 00:32:06 But in her question, how do you how do you think people should learn about history going forward? Obviously certain things like podcasts, Roman history podcasts are booming for example, right? Because for some reason men love to listen to Roman history. I do too. Let's be clear. But what how do you get to people when you want to talk about history, especially in the current partisan environment? And certainly Trump is doing his best to rewrite history. It's probably fair that Americans are particularly well informed about world history for sure, American history also.
Starting point is 00:32:38 How do you get people to understand history in a way that's obviously you're doing in a funny way, but it's also dark too? Sure. Well, history at its best is great storytelling. I think it is incumbent on people who are passionate about history and whether it's a professor at a university or a teacher in an elementary school or someone with a podcast to convey these narratives, these historical narratives in incredibly engaging ways. And especially in this moment we're in, that where we're so just awash with distractions and insanity. It feels like, especially with the way that Pete
Starting point is 00:33:27 Hegseth is like, you know, washing the Pentagon websites of female or African-American or like any prestigious accomplishments, it just is insane. Like, this is a moment where we have to be extremely skeptical of our sources of history as well. So if you're looking at a government website for history right now, you need to be asking, am I getting the full picture?
Starting point is 00:33:56 And really assuming that you're not. Are there periods of events of history that you find yourself thinking about now? And what piece of history do you wish Americans knew really well if you had to go back as the different things you've looked at? I'm, I feel like that J. Edgar Hoover's sort of reign of terror of the FBI for so long is incredibly instructive to this moment in part because the DOJ and the FBI
Starting point is 00:34:23 have become basically just political arms of the president. And it happened so quickly. And it's very, I think that's, that is scary. But also looking back at J. Edgar Hoover, we're able to see, yes, that was also an extremely scary time. And it took a lot of courage for a lot of people to bring that to light. And like I say in the introduction to the book, part of what looking back at snafus
Starting point is 00:34:54 does for us with distance, like looking at these horrible things from a distance, gives us at least a little bit of a high altitude sense that we move through these things. We get through them. And there are generally some heroes to these stories. And we can look to those heroes as fucked up as a situation might be. We can look to those heroes, for examples, on how we can do better in the present moment. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:35:23 So, I'm going to switch a little bit, and we're going to talk a little bit about news to finish up. We're going to, let's go back to The Daily Show for a minute. You are known for doing field pieces, because this is how to communicate this stuff to people. You've said the formula was find the news item and then just take the dumbest possible stance.
Starting point is 00:35:38 Here's a clip from a segment you did called Mass Stereo About Gay Marriage, Becoming Legal in Massachusetts. I love this one. Now that gay marriage is legal, Massachusetts. I love this one. Now that gay marriage is legal, Massachusetts ranks dead last in illiteracy, 48th in per capita poverty, and a pathetic 49th in total divorces.
Starting point is 00:35:55 Somehow, Don and Robert, one of the state's first married gay couples, don't see the problem. A lot of things that affect the state of Massachusetts far more profoundly than, you know, two people who love each other and getting married. don't see the problem. A lot of things that affect the state of Massachusetts far more profoundly than, you know, two people who love each other and getting married. Name one thing in Massachusetts that's not ruined.
Starting point is 00:36:14 Well, I guess I look good the other way around. I mean, I can't think of anything that gay marriage has actually caused other than letting people get married. Easy for them to say. It still stands up. Oh my gosh, blast from the past. I know, I know.
Starting point is 00:36:31 If you were doing that now, what would you go for? Pick one dumb news event that you would go and then be dumber. Gosh, it's hard to say, but you know what's interesting listening to that and hearing the sort of the angle of attack that we used as correspondents on that show, purely in the service of satire and comedy, is also what you're seeing unironically with Jesse Waters or, you know, some of these guys.
Starting point is 00:37:03 Yes. Dumbst. Jesse Waters or some of these guys. And it's that I think in some ways we may have paved the road for some of those guys. Right, it's like network. Yeah. But I think what was your question about something today that would be worth diving into? God, it's overwhelming. Oh, let me help you here. Elon Musk said he's going to be spending less time in DC after
Starting point is 00:37:25 Tesla fell drastically compared to a year ago. The public seems to be turning on him. Most think he has too much power. Most people think Doge hasn't done a good job, which is actually factual. Yeah, that's a great one. I think you can just take the dumbest possible take, which is that Doge is a massive success and that it's doing amazing work and you butter up Elon Musk and that he's not leaving for, like how cynical is it to think he's
Starting point is 00:37:55 leaving because Tesla is tanking or that Doge is failing? That's a cynical take. The right take is that this is a, he's's taking a victory lap. Right. And he's. Yeah, that's what he's doing. That's what they're actually doing. Right. I don't know why they're doing it, but they're saying everything was great. I'm like, except it wasn't. You know, and the numbers keep falling. Oh, hold on a second. Oh, God. It's Orwellian. It's fully Orwellian at this point.
Starting point is 00:38:20 If it wasn't so stupid, that's the problem. And it's stupid and Orwellian at the same time. I would argue that's the saving grace, is that it's stupid. That's stupid. I'm just curious, it's totally unrelated. His internet sense of humor as a professional comedian, what do you make of it? I think it's odd for someone his age to be obsessed
Starting point is 00:38:35 with 4chan style jokes. Is it unfunny, correct? It's sad to me, it's sad. It's like, I mean, trolling is so, it's such a window into like primal darkness in humanity, I feel like, trolling behavior in general. And it's one of the things that the anonymity of the internet has just shown us in this like black mirror. Oh, this is really who we are. Like, we're pretty awful. Humans are pretty awful. And I think it's really sad and disgraceful that someone who has built such an empire has so little gratitude and so little of a sense of, wow, a lot of people have contributed
Starting point is 00:39:19 to my success. A lot of people still work hard in my factories and buy my products. And I rely on those people for my wealth. But it's my wealth and I'm not going to, I don't know, it just is, there's so, the lack of gratitude, the lack of perspective, the eagerness to troll and harm and hurt, you know, when he tweets about someone, they get, their lives can completely unravel. They get doxed and stalked and death threats and everything. So. Yeah, he said, my heart is seething with hate,
Starting point is 00:39:52 just so you know. It's not. I feel that, Kara. Yeah, I know. I feel that for me right now. I'm seething right now. You're seething. He's just unfunny.
Starting point is 00:40:00 You're smoking. I'm smoking. People who can't see Kara right now, there's actually smoke rising off of her body. Honestly, you're just not funny. He's just not funny. If he was funny, I would say so. You said that Trump has a fragile little ego like Andy Bernard.
Starting point is 00:40:16 There may be more parallels. If you've indulged me just for a second, the office was full of lovable incompetence and some veto incompetence. The Trump administration kind of resembles that, except it's not funny and it's not lovable incompetence and some veto incompetence. The Trump administration kind of resembles that, except it's not funny and it's not lovable. I'm just curious if you had to put people from the Trump administration into a character from the office, if they remind you of, if you don't mind, I'll ask you a few.
Starting point is 00:40:36 That's really interesting. Well, part of what made the incompetence on the office so funny and lovable is that the stakes are so low. Yes. Right. Yes. Right? Yes. You know, when somebody messes up something huge in The Office, like it's a paper company, like it's not,
Starting point is 00:40:52 there's no reverberations across the globe. But gosh. Let me try. Pete Hegseth, try. Okay. Pete Hegseth would be a little like Packer. Yeah, yeah. Someone thinks Meredith, actually, because alcoholism. Oh, interesting. JD Vance?
Starting point is 00:41:12 JD Vance is a little Dwightish, I think. He's a little Dwight Schrutey, maybe. Yeah, absolutely. Karen Levitt. You know what? This is a, she's probably is, she's like a cross between Angela and Ellie. Okay, Marco Rubio. It's hard because I love the characters in The Office. Yeah, I know.
Starting point is 00:41:40 So it's hard to compare them to people that I struggle to like. But he's a little bit Oscar Nunez because you never see Marco's smile. Like, he's so, he feels so tense to me. Because he's living in hell. Yeah, it feels like he's, you're right, he's living this, like he's just signed up for a life that is so against who he is at his core, and so he's living a lie. And in some ways, that was Oscar's sort of thing.
Starting point is 00:42:09 All right, two more. Cash Patel, speaking of the FBI. Hmm, hmm, hmm. Oh, what was Zach Wood's character? There's something there, like intense loyalty, subscribing to a hierarchy with dedication and actually being well spoken in the midst of all of it. Yeah, Gabe.
Starting point is 00:42:30 Gabe, of course. All right, last one, RFK Junior. When Will Ferrell guested on the show, that had RFK vibes. We'll be back in a minute. Support for On with Kara Swisher comes from Nerd Wallet. Folks, if you're anything like me, your day is a nonstop balancing act. You've got things to do, places to be, and honestly, hunting for the best auto insurance deal is not exactly the top of the list. That's where the nerds at NerdWallet come in. They've already crunched the numbers, so you don't have to.
Starting point is 00:43:09 You want a lower auto insurance rate, right? But you've also got your life. You've got to write that speech for your friend's wedding, your new business to grow, and in between all of this, you've got to figure out when you're taking your dog to the vet. NerdWallet makes it easy. Answer a few quick questions and boom, your best insurance match right then and there. Looks like you have the time to hit up the vet and grab a nice leisurely cup of coffee while you're out. Using your brain power on what actually matters. Smart. Letting the nerds use their brain power
Starting point is 00:43:36 on helping you find the right financial products. Genius. Get matched with the lower auto insurance rates today at nerdwallet.com. Not all applicants will qualify for the lowest monthly payments. NerdWallet Insurance Services, This week on Profgy Markets, we speak with Ryan Peterson, founder and CEO of Flexport, a leader in global supply chain management. We discuss how tariffs are actually impacting businesses, and we get Ryan's take on the likely outcomes of this ongoing trade war. If they don't change anything in this 145% duty sticks on China, it'll take out like mass bankruptcies.
Starting point is 00:44:18 We're talking like 80% of small business that buys from China will just die. And millions of employees will go, you know, we'll be unemployed. I mean, it's sort of why I'm like, they obviously have to back off the trade. Like, that can't be that they just do that. I don't believe that they're that crazy. You can find that conversation exclusively on the ProffG Markets podcast. We're going to finish up talking about the entertainment industry in general. You're currently executive producing and starring in a film called Smudge the Blades
Starting point is 00:44:46 about Canadian youth hockey team on an indigenous reservation. It's your second project that deals with issues faced by indigenous people with costar Jana Schmidting. You also starred and executive produced in a series for people called Rutherford Falls. They're not obvious choices for you. Explain why you're doing these. Rutherford Falls emerged as Mike Schur was one of the writers on the office, What obvious choices for you? Explain why you're doing these. Rutherford Falls emerged as Mike Schur was one of the writers on The Office and also
Starting point is 00:45:11 went on to create amazing shows like Parks and Rec and others. He and I have always been close and always sort of like, well, when are we going to work together again? What's it going to be? And a bunch of years ago, we just started having these open-ended phone calls, long conversations or visits. We'd go to each other's offices and just hang out and just explore, like, what's activating us right now? And this was during, I think, the first Trump campaign around 2015.
Starting point is 00:45:47 And we were sort of wanting to tell the story of a guy who didn't understand historical context and had a lot of beliefs and an obsession with his own family origin story. And we wanted to sort of like pull the rug out from this character. Like, what if he learns that his, he always felt like his family was like a very noble and courageous family that did the right thing through the Civil War and he's built his entire identity around this. He's created a museum about his family and so forth.
Starting point is 00:46:21 We were talking about this with another friend of ours, Sierra Ornelas, who's a Native American comedy writer. And then it was like, oh, you know what? There's more, there's a deeper story to tell here. Maybe this is a guy who believes his family like did the right thing by the Native American community. And then we roped Sierra in and she became a showrunner and co-creator with us. And Jana became my co-star on that show and it really emerged into what it became,
Starting point is 00:46:53 which is really a story about reflecting on the narratives that we cling to, then the stories we tell ourselves about who we are and what happens when maybe you're wrong or those things fall apart. And I think, and weirdly in this moment, I think a lot of people have, we've all, I know for myself, we've all been telling ourselves that America is a certain way or has a certain story to it. And suddenly things are shifting and like, oh, maybe I didn't understand things the way I thought I did. Anyway, that's the origin story. In a lot of ways, you're reclaiming history, right?
Starting point is 00:47:27 You're reclaiming it the way it's told. Yeah. And I think looking at past mistakes is like a triumphant exercise. It's like, look where we are. Look how we got through that thing. Look how we emerged. You know, this new executive order about the Smithsonian, that's very unnerving because it does seem to be like we don't want to,
Starting point is 00:47:54 or we're scared of our history. It's such a fearful posture. No, no, no, history is inarguable. History is not something we can, and we either reckon with it or we don't. And if you don't, then you're just living a kind of this false kind of like cardboard cutout of existence. Which some people want to do. I have two more quick questions. Streaming has revolutionized the entertainment industry. The Office, they're starting to actually be profitable.
Starting point is 00:48:20 Obviously, Netflix is killing it. YouTube is also killing it, by the way. The Office was once the most streamed show on Netflix, where NBC reclaimed the show to put it on Peacock. And thank God, because it was a big success for them. It's also in syndication in cable and stuff like that. How does that work for you? How do you think of your career?
Starting point is 00:48:40 Because I'm assuming you're not getting paid every step of these ways, that they're taking the office and taking advantage of the finances around it. But you also had a hit Netflix film called Family Switch, for example. How do you look at the industry right now? The simplest answer is I am confused and a little bit scared of the industry that I have come up in because the rules that I came up with and the structures that I came up through have been so dramatically altered and dismantled that it's confusing. And at the same time, there of course there's tremendous opportunity also. And so it's a matter of trying
Starting point is 00:49:22 to focus on that. There used to be a sense of like, I know how to get a movie made. At least I know the steps I need to take to get a movie made. And or a TV show. I know that I'm going to pitch to this person and then if they like it, they're going to take it to this studio and so forth. Like there was a way of understanding things. That has largely evaporated and now there's a much bigger emphasis on kind of building something
Starting point is 00:49:48 holistically and then presenting it to a buyer. The other hard part is you used to be able to rely on this idea that something successful would become part of the sort of zeitgeist or part of the popular conversation and now so much consumption of media is so siloed that, you know, if you're really deep on a TV show and excited about it and want to go to work and talk about it, you can't be sure that the person in the cubicle next to you even knows that show exists. Right, right. Because you're in your sil exists. Right, right, right. You know, and that's- Because you're in your asylum, yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:25 That's a strange thing. Unless it's one or two things. Like my son just called me, he says, did you watch Severance? I'm like, yeah, I did. Yeah, of course. Certain things break, right, still. But not in the same way, you're absolutely right.
Starting point is 00:50:36 But also like, the Severance numbers aren't, and I don't know what- No, they're not big, they aren't big. But they're not the numbers of like a hit, you know, of like ER. Public office, yeah. You know, or like a big network show from 15 years ago. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:54 So what does that mean for you as an artist? Do you think this is an opportunity to be, this is the same thing that's happening in the media industry, and I've embraced it for a long time, and so I'm like, great mess, I like it. And some people are very entrepreneurial, you seem very entrepreneurial, you're doing your podcast and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:51:10 Do you have to be entrepreneurial now? Is it a good thing or do you like the old paternalistic kind of ways where they just give you the town car and the multi-million dollar salary and then just go over there and be funny? Well, I miss it only because it was, I understood it, and now I'm a little bit, now I feel like everyone's a little more adrift and figuring things out.
Starting point is 00:51:32 And I think maybe the hardest thing in this moment is it's so unclear what buyers want. So when you're developing a show or a movie, you're like, well, maybe this streamer will like this, but those three won't. And is there something, so, whereas you used to be able to take something to the town with a pretty decent idea that like these movies are working or these kinds of TV shows are working and that's what people are buying. Now, it's so hard to tell, and that's a little bit scary. But yes, I think there's- Or they don't buy what you think they were gonna buy.
Starting point is 00:52:08 A very well-known friend of mine was like, I can't believe I pitched this and nobody wanted it. We all have those stories. I have almost a very similar story with lots of big stars in a big funny TV show with a famous creator didn't get picked up. And no one wanted it. And it's like, but we did the math on that.
Starting point is 00:52:31 But it is, so that's scary and unnerving and a little frustrating, but at the same time, always, like anyone with an entrepreneurial spirit is going to be just looking for those avenues and it's still fun. I mean, it's still, it just, it reinforces the core of the process, which is to focus on what you love. Like, what do you love to create and make and what's going to inspire you? And it's what's, I'm so lucky to have had the opportunity to work on things that I love and to now have, like the expansion of the landscape has allowed me
Starting point is 00:53:06 to kind of, oh, take this hobby, like an interest in history, and make a cool podcast. And there's infrastructure, there's money for that. We can get, you know, iHeart is and FilmNation are our partners in my podcast and like they help, they give us money to make this thing. Well, they're making money in case you're interested. That's why. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. All right.
Starting point is 00:53:30 My last question, give me one of your snafus. Oh, boy. I think for me, a personal snafu that I can point to, this is a little heady, but I moved through life for a very long time, feeling a little detached from the world, feeling like I didn't quite understand the world around me and that people operated differently from me or thought differently from me and that that was a little, always this kind of unnerving
Starting point is 00:54:13 feeling that I had. And I could always get along well and move and I had close relationships. I'm lucky to have had wonderful people in my life who I love dearly. So, I wasn't really necessarily adrift, but I always felt like I didn't, there were things I didn't understand. I didn't understand how people did certain jobs or how things came so easily to people. And some of these things are maybe like managing just aspects of one's life, right? Logistics of life always confounded me and has always been a struggle for me.
Starting point is 00:54:55 And this is a, I'm not unique in this sense, but I went to therapy for many years in my 20s, again in my 30s and 40s, and I still couldn't sort of crack this feeling that I'm different and that I wasn't clicking in some way. I finally read a book called Driven to Distraction, which is one of the original sort of academic texts on the ADHD phenomenon. And I wept reading that book because there was so much about my life that I saw and understood in this book. That was just this epic awakening. And also, this was just a couple of years ago. And so, for me to think back on so many of the things that were so hard for me or so confusing or scary or unnerving for me, both socially and in terms of like just steering and navigating life, my heart breaks for that younger me, being so confused and isolated in those feelings. And I sort of think of that as like a snafu in the sense that I really wish.
Starting point is 00:56:20 Well, it's actually the opposite of a snafu. Well, the awareness now, but just had I had an earlier intervention of some kind or the awareness or curiosity to kind of like take that tack a little bit earlier or a lot earlier that some things could have gone differently. That said, I have very little to complain about. Oh, don't do that. Don't do that sentence after. Don't do it.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Don't do it. I appreciate it. That's a wonderful story. That is actually a wonderful story, and it's a good thing to end on. Ed Helms, thank you so much. What a pleasure. Thank you, Kara. On with Kara Swisher is produced by Christian Castro-Rosesell, Kateri Okum, Dave Shaw, Megan
Starting point is 00:57:07 Burney, Megan Cunane, and Kailin Lynch. Nishat Kurwa is Vox Media's executive producer of podcast. Special thanks to Eric Litke. Our engineers are Rick Kwan and Fernando Arruda, and our theme music is by Trackademics. If you're already following the show, you're one of the lovable, more competent office characters, a Pam. If not, well, that's your snafu. Go wherever you listen to podcasts, search for On with Kara Swisher and hit follow.
Starting point is 00:57:33 Thanks for listening to On with Kara Swisher from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast Network and us. We'll be back on Thursday with more.

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