On with Kara Swisher - Stay Tuned with Preet: Elections, Now & Then (with Joanne Freeman)

Episode Date: September 2, 2024

On with Kara Swisher is off for the Labor Day holiday, and we’re sharing an episode of friend-of-the-pod Preet Bharara's podcast Stay Tuned with Preet.  In the episode you’re about to hear, Pree...t interviews leading U.S. political historian Joanne Freeman. Their conversation covers what may turn out to be the craziest 33 days in modern American history – from the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, to President Joe Biden’s decision to withdraw from the presidential race – and the momentum behind Democratic nominee Kamala Harris.  On will be back with a fresh episode on Thursday September 5th. Listen to Stay Tuned with Preet every Monday and Thursday. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's on! from our friends over at Stay Tuned. Hosted by Preet Bharara, former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Stay Tuned covers the news through the lens of law, politics, and power. In this episode, you're about to hear Preet interviews the leading U.S. political historian, Joanne Freeman. Their conversation covers what may turn out to be the craziest 33 days in modern American history, from the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump to President Joe Biden's decision to withdraw from the presidential race and the momentum behind Democratic nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris. We hope you enjoyed this thoughtful discussion and go take a listen to more from Stay Tuned. You can follow the show
Starting point is 00:00:58 by clicking on the link in our show notes or by searching for Stay Tuned with Preet wherever you listen. Support for this show is brought to you by Nissan Kicks. It's never too late to try new things, and it's never too late to reinvent yourself. The all-new reimagined Nissan Kicks is the city-sized crossover vehicle that's been completely revamped for urban adventure. From the design and styling to the performance, all the way to features like the Bose Personal Plus sound system, you can get closer to everything you love about city life in the all-new reimagined nissan kicks learn more at www.nissanusa.com slash 2025 dash kicks available feature bose is a registered trademark of the bose corporation do you feel like your leads never lead anywhere and you're making content
Starting point is 00:02:03 that no one sees and it takes forever to build a campaign. Well, that's why we built HubSpot. It's an AI powered customer platform that builds campaigns for you, tells you which leads are worth knowing and makes writing blogs, creating videos and posting on social a breeze. So now it's easier than ever to be a marketer. Get started at HubSpot.com slash marketers. From CAFE and the Vox Media Podcast Network, welcome to Stay Tuned. I'm Preet Bharara. We live in a time when violence has been in the forefront of our thought and political rhetoric.
Starting point is 00:02:43 That factor has shaped what has become normalized, generally speaking and in politics specifically. That's Joanne Freeman. She's a professor of American history at Yale University and former co-host of the Cafe History podcast, Now and Then. Joanne is a leading expert on the political history of the United States and a trusted voice in moments of political turmoil. She joins me today to discuss the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump,
Starting point is 00:03:15 President Biden's decision not to seek re-election, Vice President Kamala Harris' presidential campaign, and what else we can expect from now until November. And please stick around to the end of the episode to hear a special conversation with the very talented Zeeshan B, whose new album I got to executive produce. That's coming up.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Stay tuned. Now let's get to your questions. This question comes in a tweet from Cynthia, who asks, in order to make SCOTUS reforms, do Dems need to win White House and both chambers of Congress? Well, Cynthia, thanks for your question. We talked at great length about the proposed SCOTUS reforms put forward by President Joe Biden this week on the Cafe Insider podcast, and Joyce Vance and I discussed the ins and outs of how any of this would come about. And with respect to two of the three reforms, I think it's clear that you would need a constitutional amendment. And with respect to one of the proposed reforms, probably you would need a constitutional amendment. To remind people, the three reforms proposed by President Biden are no immunity for crimes a former president committed in office
Starting point is 00:04:28 to essentially overturn the Supreme Court's decision from several weeks ago. Two, 18-year term limits for Supreme Court justices, so you'd have a new justice every two years, like clockwork. And three, a binding code of conduct for the Supreme Court. So to the extent that two or all three of these require a constitutional amendment, as a little civics reminder, the Constitution has only been amended a handful of times since the founding of the country. And to amend the Constitution, you need two-thirds of the House, two-thirds of the Senate. And then after that, the constitutional amendment is presented to the states, and you need three-quarters of the states to ratify what Congress has done. So at current levels of basically equal and divided government,
Starting point is 00:05:10 the House slightly in favor of the Republicans, the Senate slightly in favor of the Democrats, unless some new and unexpected spirit of bipartisanship about the court were to sweep the nation, and in particular, the Congress, I don't see any of this happening anytime soon. As a matter of fact, with respect to the Supreme Court, the conservatives, you might imagine, like the status quo, it's this Supreme Court functioning under these rules and under this confirmation process and under life tenure, during which Roe v. Wade was overturned, affirmative action was overturned, and a whole slew of other things that have been overturned. So even though these reforms are not sort of on their face partisan in any way,
Starting point is 00:05:45 I don't see why conservatives would have any interest or incentive to upset the status quo. I think these reforms are interesting. I think they're warranted on the merits. But given how late it is in the presidential term, given how deeply difficult it is to amend the Constitution, these amount to sort of talking points more than, I think, actionable items for the Congress or for the states. This question comes in an email from Evan, who writes, do you think the 11th Circuit will reverse Judge Cannon's dismissal of Trump's classified documents case in Florida? Is it possible that they reverse her decision and also reassign the case to a new judge? Well, these are great questions that lots of people are speculating about.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Just to remind everyone, there's this criminal case in the Southern District of Florida, overseen by Judge Eileen Cannon, who was appointed some years ago by President Trump himself, that Jack Smith, the special prosecutor, has brought. There have been a series of motions to dismiss the indictment in that case and in other cases where Donald Trump is facing criminal accusation. And lo and behold, just a few weeks ago, I think the Monday after the assassination attempt on President Donald Trump, Eileen Cannon, the judge, picked one of those issues as a basis on which to dismiss the indictment in its entirety against Donald Trump. And the basis of the dismissal was that, in her view, the appointment of Jack Smith, who was neither presidentially appointed nor Senate-confirmed, violated the Appointments Clause of the Constitution
Starting point is 00:07:09 and also violated the Appropriations Clause of the Constitution. And as Joyce and I have said on Cafe Insider a number of times, she's sort of the lone jurist in the country who, when considering this question, has ruled in this manner. Two preliminary questions naturally arise before I even address what I think will happen on the merits in the 11th Circuit. One is, how quickly can this happen? And the answer to the question is, not very quickly. Some people have wondered why Jack Smith has not sought to expedite the appeal on this very significant setback, dismissal of the indictment in its entirety. And I think the clock is what's at play here, and in particular, the election clock. My supposition is that Jack Smith has decided, whether expedited or not, this issue on appeal is not going to be resolved until well after the election, possibly not until even after the next president is sworn in, whether it's Kamala Harris or Donald Trump. And so for that reason, why bother expediting it at all?
Starting point is 00:08:01 Why bother expediting it at all? The other question that arises is, well, it's possible as a legal technical matter to cure the deficiency by just having this case filed by a sitting presidentially appointed Senate confirmed U.S. attorney, like the U.S. attorney in the Southern District of Florida. Because remember, part of the flaw that the judge found, as I've said, is that Jack Smith was not presidentially appointed and Senate confirmed. So just have someone with those credentials and that track record to lead the case. There are many reasons why, prudentially and otherwise, you might not want to do that. But one is, again, the clock. To have a new U.S. attorney file the charges puts you back to day one. And I think there's a decent argument that
Starting point is 00:08:38 even though the appeal will take a long time, refiling the case and having to deal again with lots of similar challenges would be even slower than going through the appeals process. So going back to the 11th Circuit, I think if the 11th Circuit is being clear-eyed and looks closely at the Constitution, looks closely at the law here, it will rule in the same way that other circuits and other district courts have ruled and reverse the dismissal of the indictment. Of course, all of that is subject to the potential unfortunate eventuality of Donald Trump being re-elected, in which case this matter and the D.C. matter in all likelihood go away. This question comes in an email from Ben. Hey Preet, long-time listener.
Starting point is 00:09:19 Quick legal question. Now that you're a big-time music producer, do your song recommendations on Twitter have any sort of legal or civil guarantee of quality? You are an expert, after all. Congratulations on another new success, Ben. Well, that's a wonderful question, Ben. I don't know if I'm a big-time music producer, but I am officially, as I've mentioned, and as you'll hear at the end of the show, an executive producer for what I think is a fantastic and great record album by my friend Zeeshan B. Some of you may know if you're on Twitter or X as some people now call it, starting about three or four weeks ago, every evening I post a song that I love.
Starting point is 00:09:57 I started doing that a few weeks ago, just sort of as an escape for a few minutes every day from all the things that we talk about on the podcast and we think about on television and reading the papers. It's a respite away from politics, away from the law, away from all these controversies and issues that we have to deal with and are important to deal with as citizens who care about our country. I'm sure you'll agree when I say that music that you love is not only uplifting, it's transporting. And I've found that when I take five minutes in the evening every night and just think about what songs, what music makes me happy,
Starting point is 00:10:25 that brings me to a better place, it's probably one of the best parts of my day. And I'm pleased by the reaction I'm getting to some of the picks. Not everyone agrees with every one of my picks, but I'd love to hear from you. What are your favorite songs? What songs would you like me to post? I'll be right back with my conversation with Joanne Freeman. The 2024 election is right around the corner, but who knows what else might happen from now until then? Political historian Joanne Freeman joins me to make sense of it all. Fox Creative. This is advertiser content from Zelle. When you picture an online scammer, what do you see? For the longest time, we have these images
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Starting point is 00:14:39 Learn more at www.nissanusa.com slash 2025 dash kicks. Available feature, Bose is a registered trademark of the Bose Corporation. Joanne Freeman, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me. So goodness gracious, we are recording this. I just want to timestamp it for the audience. We have a lot to get to. You have a lot to explain to me and the public at large about what the hell is going on in the country. So we're recording this on Tuesday afternoon around lunchtime on July 30th. I did the math so you don't have to. I don't know how good at math historians are, but I presume you're excellent at it. But I did the math anyway. No, not this the craziest 33 days, certainly in modern American political history, or is there something to rival it? In modern American political history,
Starting point is 00:15:57 I'm going to do what historians never do, Preet. They never say first, only ultimate best. Well, that's why I constrained it to modern political history. Yeah, thank you. Because otherwise I couldn't say this, but certainly I would say it's the craziest and the quickest, the sort of fastest hyper-speedy moment of political change that I can think of in the modern era. And when you watch the news and you realize these things that are happening now are headlines, but they will be really important parts of history. Yes. Multiple inflection points occurring in the space of less than 33 days. How do you process it yourself as you think both in the immediate term, but always, I assume, ultimately also thinking about in the longer term? That's a really good question because I find myself struggling between the two.
Starting point is 00:16:42 because I find myself struggling between the two. So as a historian, I'm constantly thinking about the dynamics of this moment and how this moment is unfolding and why it's unfolding this way and how I might look at it 10 years from now. So part of my brain is on historian autopilot, I suppose. But another part of my brain is just swept up in this moment. And it's, it's, that cannot be disconnected. So I find myself, you know, sort of analyzing,
Starting point is 00:17:14 like we could, I'm sure at some point, talk about technology in this moment, because I think that's a fascinating thing. And so historian brain is thinking like, wow, new tweak on technology and democracy, how fascinating. Even as the other part of me is saying, I think I'm going to tune into that Kamala Zoom conversation tonight and see what happens because it's so interesting. So emotionally, I'm swept up in this, even apart from historian-dom. And I think that's actually in many ways representative of what a lot of people are feeling right now. Do you think there's a structural reason aside from how media operates and how social media operates and how technology changes things and distorts things? Is there something else about the structure of our democracy that allows this kind of thing? So, for example, this is a terrible analogy or metaphor or parallel, but, you know, we are seeing occasions of extreme weather that
Starting point is 00:18:05 are attributable to climate change. You know, the increase in, you know, by small amounts in the global temperature are causing, people say, more hurricanes, more tornadoes, more, you know, fires, more sorts of, you know, colossally significant weather events. Is there any analogy here? Is there something about the structure of our political system or the nature of our political rhetoric or the technology that you referenced that is giving rise to the craziness of our politics? Well, I think so. You know, I mean, I, now you have to, historian brain will be talking now. But not, I don't want the, I don't want the autopilot, Joanne. No, no. Oh, no autopilot.
Starting point is 00:18:43 I didn't know there was autopilot historian brain. I didn't either. I think I just confessed something I probably shouldn't have confessed. Yeah, I'm telling Google. Uh-oh. Uh-oh. But here's the thing about technology and democracy. And it's going to sound obvious, but I think when it plays out, it isn't. So, basically, if democracy, if you understand that as a conversation between political power holders and we the people who give them power, any technology that shapes that conversation can profoundly shape democracy.
Starting point is 00:19:31 Going back to the period I normally write about, the telegraph did that, where suddenly things happened in Washington and 45 minutes later the entire country knew and people in Washington didn't know what the heck to do with that. And the people around the country didn't quite know what to believe. Television had that kind of an impact where suddenly people were seeing what was happening to the protesters on TV, which gave them a totally different understanding of what was going on. And again, changed the structure of things at the time. Now, moving ahead in time, you could say that social media generally, I mean, having a tweeting president, but also, you know, just Obama using social media and email. You know, I remember getting emails that seemed to be from President Obama. And I remember thinking, not another email from President Obama. It's ridiculous at the time. But here's the thing about this moment, the Zoom moment. Kamala is using Zoom in a way that I think, knowingly or not, is transforming this political moment in important ways.
Starting point is 00:20:27 Because it means you can see, you can connect with. It's the, there have been one or two positive things that came out of the pandemic era. I didn't know what Zoom was four and a half years ago. Exactly. Exactly. Neither did I. And neither did most people, I would bet. And now, so for a while I was like, oh, look at that. Zoom is letting people connect from home. Zoom is allowing small cultural institutions to have a national or international reach with their programming. How great. But now we're watching the political impact of this in a way that it hasn't been used before. And just these Zoom calls, you know, the white dudes for Kamala, white women for Kamala, all of these events that are raising millions and millions of dollars and have hundreds of thousands of people signing up.
Starting point is 00:21:33 And thus, I think democracy. I think that it's, it feels as though, you know People need to talk to Professor Freeman. And part of the reason for that is you wrote a book five years ago or six years ago called The Field of Blood, Violence in Congress and the Road to Civil War. So you're all over the place as people try to make sense of and get explanations about the attempted assassination of Donald Trump that occurred sometime during that 33-day period that we're examining. Is there a way for you as an historian to put that assassination attempt into the pantheon of the U.S.'s history of political violence, or are each of these things just totally separate and singular? Well, I would say one important connection, and I do talk about it in that book, is that for violence or threats to be effective, they just have to seem possible. In my book, I write about, I don't know, 80, 70, 80 violent incidents in the House and Senate in, say, a 30-year period, which is a lot.
Starting point is 00:22:55 But again, I suppose you can do what some mathematically inclined person would do and chop it up. Oh, per year, that's only—someone did that to me once when I was giving a lecture. Well, that's only five incidents per year. That's not—that doesn't seem good to me. But what matters is that people believed. And in the case of my book, I'm talking about Southerners and people who supported slavery, threatening Northerners or anti-slavery advocates with violence, not necessarily carrying out the violence, but threatening. You know, they were armed, they had knives, they had guns. And what mattered was that the Northerners believed they could get hurt. They could get shot. They could get challenged to a duel. And that was enough for a long time for them to self-censor.
Starting point is 00:23:48 violent rhetoric, praising violence, former President Trump, you know, smiling at it, offering to get lawyers for people if they engage in it, all of that kind of behavior over the years in which he clearly, on a certain level, enjoys that people are willing to do that for him. And that ethos, even without actual violence, is enough to encourage violence, to discourage people, to intimid someone in power to use, which is you say or do things that hint at what you like and hint at what you approve in the realm of violence. But then you can say, well, it wasn't me. I was just talking. It's just words. I mean, it's these other people who chose to take action on it. Well, some people might take issue with what you just said to the extent you are suggesting, I don't know that you are, that Donald Trump bears some of the blame for the assassination attempt on him. Is that what you're saying?
Starting point is 00:24:49 Not that directly. I guess what I am saying is he certainly contributed to a climate in which violence has been in the forefront of our political rhetoric. He contributed to that climate. I have no idea, and I don't know if anyone has any idea about what happened actually in that moment and what the person who was shooting was thinking or anything else. There are new reports this morning about some of his social views, but I think it's all unclear. Right. It seems unclear. So I don't think we can actually draw a lot of conclusions about much based on that yet. But I would say that, you know, we live in a time when violence has been in the forefront of our thought and political rhetoric for a couple of years now.
Starting point is 00:25:36 And in some ways, in a direct way that would have been unthinkable not that many years ago. And what I'm mostly saying is that factor has shaped what has become normalized, generally speaking, and in politics specifically. Here's the thing that I kept thinking about that day, and it leads to a bit of a suggested paradox that I'll ask you about in a moment, if I remember. My memory is not great in the short term lately. What would have happened given the powder keg and the polarization that is America? Had the assassin been successful? Do you have a sense, given your understanding of history
Starting point is 00:26:16 and the current climate also, about what kind of violence that would have provoked? I mean, I don't know if I'm speaking now as a historian or just as a person, but it seems to me that that would have unleashed a lot of violence because then it would have felt to people like they had been attacked, they had been victimized with that kind of injury slash death. And once people feel victimized, and we see this a lot in some of the politics
Starting point is 00:26:48 on the right as well, once people are convinced that they're victims, that unleashes everything. Then it's no holds barred. Then it's just, I've been victimized. It's my right to fight back. I should fight back. What kind of a person am I if I don't fight back? Actually, what kind of a man
Starting point is 00:27:06 am I if I don't fight back, which would be more in the realm of where some of the rhetoric on the right is these days. So that even just for that logic alone, I think that would have unleashed a lot of violence. Do you think that by and large, people who are the political adversaries of Donald Trump, namely elected Democrats and others, had the right reaction after the assassination attempt? Did they get the tone right? I ask that because I have a question that I've alluded to a couple of times already. Well, I mean, you inform me.
Starting point is 00:27:38 You know, it felt to me that the reaction was that was bad, that shouldn't have happened. You know, we're sorry, We feel bad for him or whatever. And then a little bit of what actually happened. Was it real? Was it staged? Which I can tell you all the way back to the first assassination attempt against the president that happened then to Andrew Jackson first assassination attempt against the president and people immediately said one of two things. Number one, maybe his enemies sort of made that happen to get rid of him or number two, you know, maybe the whole thing was staged to get him sympathy. So I know that's not new. Oh, no. way back so they're pre-twitter oh way way way pre-twitter yes indeed um though in a way that that's a really logical political reaction in the world of high partisan politics but pre i want to get your read on what are you describing when you say the reaction here's what sort of sits in my head so i'm against trump i don't want him to be reelected. I think it's disastrous for the country. I also don't believe in political violence. And I can believe both of those things at the same time. Because you had a lot of people saying, we wish the
Starting point is 00:28:56 former president a speedy recovery. We're glad it wasn't worse. We're glad he's okay. And the Trump supporters have said, sort of, that's very cynical, some of them, that you have a guy who some liberals say is like Hitler. Hey, the guy who's almost like Hitler, we wish you a speedy recovery and we're glad you're okay. And their point is, which I think is not a valid one, but their point is you're full of shit, right? You're saying these things because they're politically necessary to say. I guess is what they're saying. You're saying these things because they're politically necessary to say. But this is a guy who you think is going to become a dictator, and you're blithely wishing him a happy recovery, and you're happy that he's okay.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And I say to that, that's not inconsistent at all. Right. Because you should not wish death and injury and assassination upon your political rivals. That's why America is great. That's why the peaceful transition of power from one administration to the next is so amazing and idealistic and beautiful and almost sacrosanct and holy in this country. And you don't want bad things to happen to your opponent, even if you think they're terrible. That's what democracy is all about. What am I missing?
Starting point is 00:30:07 No, I sadly, maybe for your broadcast, I agree with you. Because what we are supposed to be able to do as a small d democratic nation is encompass dissent, encompass disagreement, encompass all kinds of diversity. That's how we operate. That's what we're supposed to do. You can look all the way back and say the sort of framers and the founding generation talked a lot about debate and compromise, and that sounds very civilized, but debate doesn't have to be civilized. Debate could be argument. Debate could be angry. Debate can be high levels of dissension and disagreement. Compromise is supposed to be the outcome. But you're absolutely right
Starting point is 00:30:51 that we are supposed to be able to encompass all of this. We're supposed to be able to have a big dent. We haven't necessarily always been good at that. But yeah, I think wishing that your political opponents will be harmed and die, I don't think, as you're suggesting here, I don't think that's really something that is, again, small d democratic. It's also stupid because what goes around comes around. If that's how you're going to want to conduct things, then, you know, people have guns on both sides. Well, exactly. More guns on one side than the other. Both sides are then saying, you know, I don't think you should live. That's not the way a democratic, structured, successful political system can operate.
Starting point is 00:31:44 last number of weeks because i think you made some reference to this or said words to this effect it seems odd to me that it's just a few days since a major party nominee was almost shot to death and it's not the top news anymore because other things have happened is there something there's something odd about that or is that just the way we are now short attention spans well it it certainly struck and strikes me as odd i mean particularly given that sadly in some ways on the person something horrible like that happens and on immediately the person people call and i had a really busy week yeah a really busy media week and then poof it was gone so we actually have that we actually have a scientific metric. It's the Joanne Freeman meter, right? If you were to graph, I love this, this is great, this is actually political science. Political science for dummies who don't know how to do math or graphing, and that would include me. media requests you got starting and i hate you know i don't mean to be frivolous about this but but the day after right you were the preeminent expert on political violence in this country
Starting point is 00:32:50 at yale um how would you describe the fall off so that was what a saturday night or saturday day i would say that by wednesday i was getting far fewer requests. I would say for a few days, I was all over the place. I was radio, TV, people were wanting opinions on things, and then it began to fall off. And I was filmed for a documentary on political violence. I want to say on Wednesday, it was supposed to air the following weekend and they delayed it because there was other news that was more important, namely President Biden deciding not to run. So even within one week, other news bumped that from the media. I want to get more of your thoughts on this. There are conspiracy theories on both sides. One side believes, or there are people on one side who believe that Trump staged his own assassination attempt, which is ludicrous and illogical for about 400,000 reasons. Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:04 in their evaluation of events, even though those, you know, investigation of those events is not complete, that this was a failed deep state coup assassination attempt by Democrats on Donald Trump, which is also ludicrous and stupid for about 400 reasons. Yes. Should we feel good about the fact that this is not new? I mean, I hadn't known. I i guess the different one of the differences is and you referred to technology earlier is that now conspiracy theorists can convene on the internet where they couldn't before does that make it worse or the same oh no it makes it worse and not only convene but just see the conspiracy theories right they don't even have to convene i mean so you know jackson an assassination attempt that the assassin um found him on the steps of the capitol and actually shot one gun at jackson which
Starting point is 00:34:52 misfired and then shot a second gun at jackson which misfired which of course at the time people called providential people found out about it because ultimately it ended up in the newspaper but you know that took time to get around whereas you, you know, in a nanosecond today, that would be all over the nation. There would be people coming up with theories. There would be fake evidence. And I want to come back to that momentarily. There'd be all kinds of things and it would be hard to pierce the veil of what did or didn't happen. And that's part of, you know, what's built into the technology moment that we're experiencing is that factor, too, which involves other technologies. But the fact that even if you're serious and thoughtful and are analyzing and tracking the evidence that you're seeing online, it still can be really difficult to tell what's real. Well, that's a huge problem and will continue to be.
Starting point is 00:35:50 I'll be right back with Joanne Freeman after this. Thank you. shifted their career trajectories? And how do they find their next great idea? Invest 30 minutes in an episode today. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Published by Capital Client Group, Inc. Support for this show comes from Constant Contact. You know what's not easy? Marketing. And when you're starting your small business, while you're so focused on the day-to-day, the personnel, and the finances, marketing is the last thing on your mind. But if customers don't know about you, the rest of it doesn't really matter. Luckily, there's Constant Contact. Constant Contact's award-winning marketing platform can help your businesses stand out,
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Starting point is 00:38:05 It's an AI-powered customer platform that builds campaigns for you, tells you which leads are worth knowing, and makes writing blogs, creating videos, and posting on social a breeze. So now, it's easier than ever to be a marketer. Get started at HubSpot.com slash marketers. started at HubSpot.com slash marketers. I want to go back to a different historical moment that I don't think we mentioned yet. 43 years ago, I still remember, I was a kid,
Starting point is 00:38:35 and I remember watching a live television and seeing the replays of then-President Reagan being shot. And I remember that the news coverage was, you know, nonstop, obviously. He had just been elected. There were some doubts about him, about his age and some other things. How quaint that there were doubts about a 69-year-old man being president of the United States. I resent that now. Gotta love those times. And he made a couple of jokes. I still remember, I think it was something like he was reported to have said when he was getting surgery or at least getting some treatment in the hospital, I hope you're all Republicans. Right.
Starting point is 00:39:13 And that endeared him in a way that's impossible to describe today. Right. To people all over the country, including tens of millions of people who did not vote for him. Right. And did not want him to be the president. Right. And lots of people attribute his early success and continued success to that moment, to how he used that moment with great political skill.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Donald Trump, whatever you think of him, and whatever you think of his campaign and everything else, had one of the most iconic moments in presidential history or electoral history when he did what he did after he was shot with the fist bump and that iconic photograph is it too early to tell what effect that will have on his political fortunes as compared to ronald reagan's political fortunes i think it is too early yeah beyond a small circle of people like you and me and folks who analyze that, I think broadly speaking, people still don't agree on what happened. And they really don't agree on its interpretation in a way that I don't remember being the case when Reagan was shot.
Starting point is 00:40:22 I don't remember. But it was when Jackson was. Jackson, although that was all high I don't remember. But it was when Jackson was. Jackson, although that was all high level political people. Right. So it wasn't the American people at that point. It took them forever to learn about it. And actually, I'd have to do some pretty deep digging to find out what they thought about it. I think I read a diary entry in which someone says it's providential. Jackson is special but um i think now i i wouldn't make that prediction um because with reagan there was a sort of moment where everyone collectively sort of held their
Starting point is 00:40:53 breath and thought oh no and i don't know if that moment happened well there's another difference right that we've talked about in the podcast and i'm sure you've talked about and that is we were at a time when as recently as 1984 where a politician of one party or the other could win 49 states. Right. And I think if you put up like a bottle of shampoo on the Democratic-Republican side, the non-shampoo candidate would not win 49 states. Fair? Probably, although that's taken me a minute, Preet, to get there. You're like, is it dandruff shampoo?
Starting point is 00:41:26 I don't know, maybe conditioner? Is it high-end shampoo? I was trying to come up with some inanimate object to make the point. Right, shampoo. It's just even the word shampoo, Preet. It's just an excellent word. I was going for comedic value there. But the point is, I can't imagine a universe in which even the most pathetic worst candidate,
Starting point is 00:41:44 either as a Republican or a Democrat, would gain only one state. And the best candidate, even when there's a huge wide gulf in the talents and ethics and morality and integrity of a Democrat and a Republican, you wouldn't get a lopsided result like 49 to 1, right? No, that's true. So what do we make of that? You're the historian. What's the takeaway from that? You're the historian. What's the takeaway? Good question. Well, you know, one, I suppose one easy answer is as much as I had very strong feelings about
Starting point is 00:42:14 Reagan and, you know, Republicans and Democrats back at that moment in time, I think I was in college at the time. I wouldn't say that it was a world in which, like now, we truly are not just looking at two different fundamental different worldviews, but there is one side which has a lot of people who fundamentally have stepped away from supporting democracy. democracy. And once it's no longer a matter of, I don't like your foreign policy, I think you should not spend so much money on welfare, I think, you know, whatever, typical, normal policy disagreements, when you have fundamental, structural, and I don't even want to call it a disagreement, structural feelings about whether a democratic constitutional system is good or bad, that's a different world. That's a different planet. And in that kind of climate, everything gets an added meaning to it, whether we want it to or not. That's a new lens through
Starting point is 00:43:21 which we have to understand what's going on politically. So the Biden decision to withdraw from the race, people have recited, people in your profession, historians have said, you know, there are really only three even arguable analogs, and some of them don't really fit. And I wonder what you think of this, of presidents who were able to run again and voluntarily relinquished the chance to do so. able to run again and voluntarily relinquished the chance to do so. George Washington, right, before there were term limits on the presidency, stepped down after two. Harry Truman in the middle of the 20th century, and LBJ with all the swirling controversy around the Vietnam War. Are those the right analogs? And if they are, how do you place the Biden decision in history? Right. So first off, I'll say it is true, broadly, historically speaking, that presidents don't like to step away from power. So the fact that you can tick off a handful like that in and of itself is suggestive. I don't think the reason why I don't think this moment exactly sort of lines up with those is because the moment when Biden did this is different. He had all but, you know, secured the nomination. He was on his way. He was insisting he was going to stay in.
Starting point is 00:45:05 Not because of a war, you know, in the case of LBJ, not because of an outside event, but because of partisan politics. He decided at that moment. And again, as a historian, people keep saying, you know, oh, he was sho the scenes because I can guess, but we don't really know. Still, at this late point, when he made it clear that he wanted to stay and then decided to leave, that's different. And that's not, that's about partisan, actually not partisan, that's about party politics. And that's a different kind of moment than the ones that you just named. How is history going to judge Nancy Pelosi? Some people have suggested that she's the most consequential, and you can choose your way of finishing the sentence, the most consequential speaker, the most consequential democratic politician, the most consequential politician in recent memory. What do you think of that assessment? I think she's enormously consequential. assessment? I think she's enormously consequential. I think she's had a huge influence. I think I'm going to say it because it needs to be said. If she were male, people would have a lot less
Starting point is 00:45:53 negative things to say about Nancy Pelosi. So the fact that she's all of those things and a woman is a problem for some. I do think she's amazingly consequential. I think you can tell that by all of the ridiculous things that people try to attach to her. Like, oh, well, she didn't call in the National Guard, or she, whatever the crazy thing is that people claim, like on January 6th, that have nothing to do with her. I do think, I can say as a historian, that if I, in 10 years, were looking back to this moment, you would have to think hard and really analyze, find her papers, see what people are saying about her behind the scenes
Starting point is 00:46:30 to really understand what's going on now because she does have a broad influence. Yeah, but it's one thing to have influence and wield power, which is impressive, but it's of limited impressiveness when you're the commander-in-chief. You actually are the commander-in-chief. When you're the Speaker of the House, you actually run the House.
Starting point is 00:46:47 You have the gavel. When you're a judge in a courtroom, when you're a prosecutor, you have a grand jury. When you're the Speaker Emerita and you're just one of 435, that's more impressive to me that she was able to assert influence and power. What's the secret of that? Well, part of it, I think, has to do with why she was a powerful speaker. She has a skill set. She has ability. She has a strength of presentation and purpose. She has big political savvy. You know, what she can do and how she does it, both strategically and even performatively,
Starting point is 00:47:24 that has a real power to it. She's really, really good at what she does. So even as someone who is a former speaker and is just one of many, she doesn't leave that history behind her. She carries that power with her and she carries that skill set with her. Yeah, I mean, you have to be very wise and shrewd.
Starting point is 00:47:42 I mean, I guess another person who is sort of in that category as an ex-president and has a lot of influence, at least it seems to be the case, is Barack Obama. Bill Clinton less so. Is that a fair assessment? Yeah, I would agree. Why do you think that is? Is it recency? maybe it's also because there was surrounding obama in the same way that nancy pelosi had some of this a kind of um emotional support look at who this person is look at what this person has done in the case of pelosi well she is a woman doing this so it's you know extra bonus hard and barack obama is a black man extra bonus Clinton, you know, a white man being powerful. OK, he was good at what he did. Yes, he was savvy. Yes, he played the public in a smart way. You know, was it the saxophone that he played? And he talked about his what kind of underwear he wore and all that kind of stuff, which made people think, wow, a different kind of president. And then he kind of walked himself off the edge of the cliff during his presidency. So he has a more complicated and tangled, partly that he did
Starting point is 00:48:52 by himself, legacy as far as what trails after him. And I think Obama and Pelosi do not. As a historical matter, I don't know if you participate in these surveys, and you don't have to say if you do or not, but there's this famous survey every so often, I think every year, where historians rank the presidents based on how good a president they were. And some people have renaissance and some people fade, even though people thought their presidencies were great, closer in time to when they were in office. Do you participate? Do you know what I'm talking about? Yeah, I do. Sometimes I do, sometimes I don't. Sometimes you do, sometimes you don't. On those surveys, is President Clinton, is his star rising or falling or remaining the same?
Starting point is 00:49:35 Oh, that's a good question. I actually do not know the answer to that. I would not think it's rising. What is it in your mind? I would assume he's somewhere in the middle. Yeah. And I don't know if I would know if it's rising or falling, but I don't know why it would be rising. Can you see a time, 20, 30 years hence, that the Trump star rises in that context? Yikes.
Starting point is 00:49:59 Well, so part of my answer to that has to do with where the hell we're going to be down the road and what we're comparing it to. So it's hard for me to say that it would because it seems in so many blatant ways, there were so many bad things about it happening during a moment of extreme crisis. It's hard for me to see, but we live in a time where you can no longer say what is or isn't possible. I want to talk about Kamala Harris and her strengths and her weaknesses people can examine for themselves. But I want to ask you about a particular criticism. And I want to state at the outset, there's no particular reason, Professor Freeman, that I'm asking you this question, but there has been some criticism. You're helping me here. I know. I know where you're going. You're helping. You're really helping me. You really know how to help a guy set it up. There has been some criticism of Kamala Harris's laugh. Are you offended by that criticism for no reason in particular?
Starting point is 00:50:59 For no reason in particular. I am. I am offended, but I'm offended for a very specific reason. So I'm someone who clearly has done a lot of public-minded work. I talk to the public. My lecture courses are online. And I'm very often, I'm a female political historian. I'm talking to rooms full of men, or men are tuning in to me online. And I cannot count on two hands the number of times someone has criticized me for laughing. Yeah. So what the hell is that about? Well, in part, I lump it along with your voice is too high. It's screechy. So I sound female and that's horrible. I also, I just think it's a way, I mean, people have been saying this online
Starting point is 00:51:42 in the last few days too. Men tell you to smile all the time, but they don't like it when you laugh, right? So they want you to be pretty and smile, but they don't want you actually making noise. But that's bizarre. I actually, you know, I don't mean to sound sort of strange. I kind of like the sound of a woman laughing. Yes, well, I like being a woman who's laughing. That means you've made a successful joke. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:52:04 Which is an aspiration of mine every few minutes. What am I missing? Am I not alpha male enough? Ooh, I'm not even going to answer that one, Preet. But of course you're alpha male enough. I think it's partly, I mean, people have been saying this. I couldn't come up with this on my own. That especially now where manhood, you know know masculinity are sort of really uh being talked
Starting point is 00:52:26 about a lot on the right a woman laughing bears with it the idea of a woman laughing at you and so that's bad but i think it's an easy swipe at a woman when people would criticize my laughing they wouldn't say laughing they'd say cackling or giggling and either way it, it's making fun of me for having, you know, taking joy in what I do and not sounding like them. And it was also an excuse for people to not take me seriously. Well, she giggles. Why should I listen to what she said? It's nuts. It's nuts.
Starting point is 00:52:58 And it's a way, it's a highly gendered way of swatting at someone and doing it in such a way that you know i can't deny that i laugh all the time i can't deny that i have a loud laugh and i'm not going to and i'm going to keep doing it because it's who i am but you know we're gonna we're gonna actually in the editing process we're going to amplify the volume of your laughing okay note to the note to note to the team so let's talk about the substance for a moment, or I guess the politics. So my favorite adage comes from the great screenwriter, William Goldman, and he's speaking about the screen trade, but it applies to politics and so many other things. Nobody knows anything. On the morning before Joe Biden dropped out of the race, people were speculating about how divisive things would be, how much infighting there would be, how many people would challenge Kamala Harris, the craziness of the convention was being speculated about. And boy, nobody knew anything. I never heard anybody suggest, and maybe there's some people who are brilliant pundits.
Starting point is 00:53:55 I don't remember hearing anybody suggest, well, one way this could shake out is that Biden endorses her when he withdraws. And one by one, every leading figure, including people who could have been her rivals for the spot, will enthusiastically and jubilantly support her. And she will have the whole thing wrapped up. By the way, with $200 million raised, 60-something percent of whom are first-time contributors within a week. Did anybody see that coming? Well, I can't speak for everyone, but I certainly didn't. You didn't. I did not. And not only did I not, because again, I can't speak for everyone, but I certainly didn't. You didn't. I did not. And not only did I not, because again, I think most people did not.
Starting point is 00:54:28 But given what was happening in the press leading up to that moment with this universal cry for, you know, Biden needs to leave. Biden needs to step down. Why the hell isn't he stepping down? He can't win. It's horrible. why the hell isn't he stepping down? He can't win. It's horrible.
Starting point is 00:54:46 What people were talking about along with that was not, if he does, Kamala's going to be great. It was more like, well, Gavin Newsom might be good. You know, there are any number of other people, often men, who people were suggesting would be better than... I like, by the way, can we just break down the wall for a second? The voice you use when you're taking the position of somebody who's not the brightest yes do you have a do you have a model for that voice no it's my male voice because you've lapsed into it a few times yeah no that's my person of authority voice yeah okay
Starting point is 00:55:20 i didn't even realize that i had just done that but yeah i guess i do that all the time but anyway you what you didn't see in those moments was people saying, and then, man, she would take us to the finish line. So even if, you know, you could get past what felt to me like this, you know, bandwagon of make him go away, that was so extreme that it was pushing the public away from it. It was so over the top. it was pushing the public away from it. It was so over the top. Still, there was no indication there that I picked up on that suggested that Kamala would come in, number one, and number two, that she would come in with this amount of momentum and support and emotion. Is it true that if it had gone the other way and people were fearing that, you know, divided convention, isn't that the way it used to work? And people were talking about it as if it would be the death of the Democratic Party or democracy or some other terrible outcome. But these things were not know, in the 19th century, conventions were actually places
Starting point is 00:56:25 where decisions were made. Yeah. As opposed to people marching in, having pledged themselves to support someone, and then you have the, you know, performative moment. And there were moments when
Starting point is 00:56:34 no one could find anyone who they agreed on, and they would pick some, you know, total dark horse candidate that no one had ever heard of. When was it certain that John Kennedy would be the Democratic nominee
Starting point is 00:56:44 in 1960? I don't even know the answer to that. But it wasn't like, my recollection is it was close in time to the nomination. Right, exactly. Which way is better? Which way is better? I don't know if I would say one is better or worse.
Starting point is 00:57:01 I do protest against people who are using the word coronation to suggest about Kamala Harris is going to go in and she's just going to be coronated. You know, as though somehow or other, it's just monarchical privilege being bestowed. There will be voting and people there because Biden no longer is the candidate. People pledge themselves to Biden. because Biden no longer is the candidate. People pledge themselves to Biden. They can vote, generally speaking, as they choose at the convention.
Starting point is 00:57:28 It's hard for me to believe that we're going to see anything other than Kamala Harris being chosen as the nominee. But coronation is not the word that I would apply to what we're about to see. We're about to see an actual process, which is a fine and wonderful thing to see in American politics, is actual
Starting point is 00:57:46 political processes in action. There's a lot of speculation as we're recording this. I don't think we'll have the answer before this is made public. Who should Kamala Harris pick to be her vice president? Give us an historian's perspective on when the hell that matters and when it doesn't matter and in which direction is it? Can it only do harm or can it sometimes do a lot of good well i think it could do either um i think we're at a moment when the right hasn't yet figured out how to get to kamala because the ways in which traditionally they might have are now big time baggage so if they swatted her for being a woman, they look like the anti-women party in a way that they don't want to appear. If they are racist, openly racist, then that's also exposing a major thread within the right. They haven't yet figured out what to do to get back at her.
Starting point is 00:58:55 To get back at her. So the vice presidential candidate, I suppose, J.D. Vance, for example, might be someone that could do more damage than good. I can't tell. I do want to make one point, though, because I find this fascinating and hopefully you'll agree with me. I'm agreeing in advance. I feel good already. I've been saying for maybe a little less than a year, I even spoke to some senators and said this in a speech to some senators, that when you look back at the 1850s and you look back at the people threatening the Southerners, violent, carrying guns, carrying knives, threatening people, silencing them into submission, what did the people who were really skilled politically at that time do? They used humor to push back. They deflated the bullies and the wannabe authoritarians with humor. Not malicious humor, but actually kind of mild and yet unmistakable humor. And it deflated these southern slaveholders they just you could watch them sort of dissolve into a little puddle because you can't you can't rebut humor no well exactly and because generally speaking authoritarian types their power relies on fear and if you can deflate that by poking fun and getting people to laugh. That's a real power. And some of what we're seeing right now, you know, which is why we talked a little while ago about making fun of Kamala's laugh. Part of the humor of that, to me, speaking as a political historian, is the humor
Starting point is 01:00:20 that she has and is using to swat at Trump and his supporters is highly effective because she's, in a sense, hitting back. And when you look at the late 1850s, when suddenly you had Northerners getting elected into Congress and they came ready to push back, ready to be obnoxious, ready to stand up and not sit down when someone tried to get at them. You suddenly had Northerners saying, yeah, do it again. And it created a kind of a we. It created a groupness. And so some of the dynamic of what we're seeing now, I think it's directly related to that.
Starting point is 01:01:00 Professor Joanne Freeman, thanks so much for spending time with us. Thanks for having me. My conversation with Joanne Freeman continues for members of the Cafe Insider community. In the bonus for insiders, we discuss whether the country is ready for a Kamala Harris presidency and the very implications of that question. When has anyone said, oh, yeah, we're ready for that change? When do we ever see potentially monumental change and say, yeah, we're all in? It's the change itself that makes itself possible. To try out the membership for just $1 for a month, head to cafe.com slash insider. Again, that's cafe.com slash insider. Insider. And I need a place to rest my weary head
Starting point is 01:02:05 Every day Hey folks, to end the show this week, I wanted to do something a little bit different, a little bit special. As I previewed last week, and on social media, I have a new title. On top of being a lawyer, a podcaster,
Starting point is 01:02:24 former U.S. attorney, I am now improbably also an executive producer. An executive producer, no less, of a new music album performed by my friend Zeeshan B. The album is called O Say Can You See? We hope you'll download it from iTunes. Buy the vinyl record that's also available. Without any further ado, I am joined by my friend, Zeeshan B.
Starting point is 01:02:45 Zeeshan, welcome to the show. Preet, it's great to be here with you, brother. This is rather early, is it not? Usually you and I are... You take notes at like two in the morning. Yeah, yeah. We communicate with each other from midnight until the wee hours of the morning. Real pillow talk.
Starting point is 01:02:59 This is very early, you know. Yeah, it's too early for pillow talk, in fact. I'll tell you, a number of people came up to me after they saw that you and I were on Morning Joe talking about the album, and they played a bit of the first track, the first single on my own. Like, what the hell is going on? What are you, how are you producing a record album? And the first thing I like to tell people is, above all other things, you know, not
Starting point is 01:03:23 just your message, not just the nature of your music, but the quality of your voice, which I say all the time. Instead of Morning Joe, it was like a voice from heaven. And people can check out the veracity of that statement when they listen to the album. Variety magazine did a piece on the album in our collaboration and called us the odd couple. We are kind of an odd couple, aren't we? I have to agree with that assessment. Although when they said that we're the odd couple, I said, which one of us is Oscar?
Starting point is 01:03:52 Which one of us is Felix? That was hard to parse out. So should we tell the origin story? You and I met about two and a half years ago at a book launch. We had never met before, and I heard you perform on stage. And I and everyone else in the audience was blown away. This was a venue in New York City. And we got to talking backstage, and we became fast friends. You're the kind of person that I've said before, I've only known you two and a half years, but I feel like I've known you for decades.
Starting point is 01:04:17 So we had an instant connection. And then at some point, you're working on your most recent album, and you asked whether we could collaborate. And I said, what did I say? Did I say yes? At first, I think you were kind of flabbergasted. It was almost like that scene in Goodfellas when Sonny goes up to Pauly and says, hey, kid, just buy this restaurant from me. And Pauly says, well, what do I know about running a restaurant?
Starting point is 01:04:41 I can't do anything. It was exactly like that. It was kind of like that, where you were Pauly, where you said, I don't know how to be a music producer. I don't know anything. And I said, how hard can it be? Just put a cigar in your mouth and order me around a little bit. Although they don't use cigars anymore.
Starting point is 01:04:56 I guess they vape more. Now, people can tell from this conversation how you immediately won me over by essentially using a Goodfellas reference. That'll get me every time. conversation how you immediately won me over by essentially using a Goodfellas reference. That'll get me every time. You've put away a few Goodfellas yourself, so I figured... I have, I have. Can we, before we start talking about some of the album, your roots are in both opera and gospel. You as a young person sang in gospel choirs. Can you tell us more about that? You as a young person sang in gospel choirs.
Starting point is 01:05:24 Can you tell us more about that? Well, it was really a thrill, Preet. I mean, I was the only non-Black kid that was in gospel choir. And not only was I the only Indian kid in gospel choir, I was also the lead soloist. And I think it's because the director of the choir recognized that regardless of what this kid looks like, he's got the goods. You know, he can sing, Jesus on the main line, tell him what you know. Jesus on the main line, tell him what you know.
Starting point is 01:06:04 Jesus on the main line, tell him what you know. You just call him up and tell him what you know. You know? Oh, I know. You have the pipes, my friend. I want to get to this album. Yeah. So, Osei Kenyasi, what are the themes of the album? Why did you do this album?
Starting point is 01:06:21 Well, I wanted to put something out that was inspired by my influences. You know, the pandemic was a time of great reflection for all of us. And in my case, my livelihood was completely taken away from me. And what I did as a musician was deemed non-essential. And so in those difficult circumstances, the only thing I could do was write. And I listened to a lot of orchestral music and at some point decided I'd like to do an album with an orchestra. And so this record is a soul record, a classic soul record. It's recorded with a chamber orchestra, 13 tracks, 12 in English, one in Urdu. One of my favorite songs on the album is in Urdu.
Starting point is 01:07:05 Yeah. And, you know, I feel very lucky to have inherited, and Preet, I'm sure I know you feel the same way, to have inherited a very rich culture from the old country, you know. And I wanted to write an Urdu song that had an R&B flair. And that became the one Urdu song, Wo Zamana Yad Hai, that's on there. And that has really idiomatic strings that sound like something from India,
Starting point is 01:07:34 but the beat is very just 70s R&B. The The first single, and people can catch the video too in the show notes, On My Own. That's a very different song from the one you were just mentioning. What is that song about? That song is about this universal theme of loneliness, especially the loneliness that some of us feel we live in big cities we live in big cities surrounded by people yet we still feel isolated and alone it has a lot of melancholy in it but it also there is a feeling of exaltation
Starting point is 01:08:40 and i wanted to tell people that even though you feel alone, you actually are not because there are many others around you. As the Beatles said, all the lonely people. And in this case, that's what On My Own was. On my own On my own Will anybody miss me when I'm gone? There's a great song, uplifting song on the album called Mountaintop. Tell folks what day you wrote that song or felt compelled to write that song. Well, I went in to write a song with my songwriting partner, Mike McAllister. He's just a wonderful producer, songwriter, and he's the other half of my creative brain. Or should I
Starting point is 01:09:37 say he's a third of my creative brain. Preet occupies 33.3%, the other third. Right, Preet? If you say so. buys 33.3%, the other third, right Preet? If you say so. But getting back to, I went in the studio that day with the intention of writing something that was anthemic. And I had just started writing a song. Mike and I decided we wanted to write something around the liberation theology imagery of a mountaintop that you hear in gospel music or in the speeches of Dr. King. And we had just gotten to that point where it's like, okay, the mountaintop will be that focal point, that sort of linchpin of the song, when I got a text from my wife saying that Roe v. Wade was overturned. And we wrote the song the day Roe v. Wade was overturned. And my wife was so distraught
Starting point is 01:10:26 because she just felt like her voice didn't matter. And I took a break from the session. I went outside to call her and she was so upset and I was trying to console her. But what could I say to her in that moment other than to just listen and hear her out? And just so folks understand, your wife is actually in the medical profession. That's correct. My wife is a doctor. And day in and day out, she sees the disparities that exist
Starting point is 01:10:55 in healthcare when it comes to minorities, and she was on the front lines of the pandemic. And it upset her greatly that women cannot have the access to reproductive care and that their choices are governed by men. And this is something that I think should upset all of us. And so when she told me that awful news about Roe v. Wade being overturned, I felt so helpless, you know, until I went back in the studio and I said, well, this is the opportunity to do something about it, to use my voice as a man. There's such a thing as using our male privilege to speak out on these injustices, these indignities. And still we're out here holding tight Yearning because we share a dream that cannot be denied Until we learn to fly, we'll reach the mountaintop
Starting point is 01:12:03 Mountaintop Mountaintop Mountaintop. Mountaintop. Mountaintop. Oh, one step at a time. How do you feel about this moment with Kamala Harris, and how does that affect your music? I feel really excited. I feel just a burst of optimism and hope.
Starting point is 01:12:22 And Kamala Harris, what's so fascinating is, you know, she's Black and South Asian. And in my case, those are the two cultures that influence my music the most. So in a way, she represents me in many ways. And I couldn't be more excited. And I want to do anything I can in my capacity as a musician to help her campaign and to energize voters. I want to get the Muslim vote out in Detroit, in Michigan. There's so much that I want to do. My music has been used by Biden campaign surrogates back in 2020 to get those Muslim votes. I want to do that again. You know, the album has a lot of songs that I think project that same optimism and that excitement and that idealism that Vice President Harris projects. And so I'm just excited.
Starting point is 01:13:12 I'm thrilled. So am I. Zeeshan, before I let you go, the title track, the title of the album, Oh Say Can You See, where do I know that line from? It sounds very familiar. I think it's your ringtone, right? Well, I'm very patriotic. I'm nothing if not patriotic. You know, this is one thing that Preet and I, another thing we bond on is we love our country very much. And I, for one, have grown tired of patriotism being hijacked by one side and being
Starting point is 01:13:41 enshrouded in the Bible and the flag and guns and other things. You know, those of us who, on the other side, we are just as patriotic. In the case of O Say Can You See, you know, I've sung the national anthem for President Obama at the White House. I also sang it for President Carter at an event in Detroit. And it's a true story. He, you know, after I finished singing it, he said that it was the greatest rendition of the Star Spangled Banner that he ever heard, which was a great compliment to me. And, you know, this is a president, you know, he probably woke up to the sound of, you know, a Marine band playing the Star Spangled Banner.
Starting point is 01:14:21 All that to say, I've sung our national anthem in those sort of high profile situations. And so I felt a certain proximity to it. I felt a certain equity in it, a certain, shall we say, ownership of it that I wanted to recast it in my own way to sort of write my own version of it. But to that question you know oh say can you see can you see what's going on can you see the past can you see the future and the result is uh the title track I'm just made to believe That everyone around They'd never hear the sound Of my voice being drowned Like a murmur in the crowd
Starting point is 01:15:14 Oh say can you see When it came to deciding the name of the album, Preet was the one who said, why don't we just call it the name of the title track? And my production team, none of us had thought about that. None of us had considered that. But it was one of those moments where it's like, yeah, like, whoa, I didn't even think about that. So I got to thank you for that, brother. I don't take credit for much on the album. But I also said to you, I wanted one more song. You did. You thought you were done. And I said, I think we need one more. Right. And that song is Dream On. That's right.
Starting point is 01:16:05 I really enjoyed writing that song because it was a challenge. Like you said, we had already finished writing everything. And I guess I'd start to sit on my laurels and you're like, oh, why don't we do one more? And so very easy. I'm like that coach. Give me 20 more pushups. Like, I'm not getting on the ground. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:16:23 You were the cigar chomping exec producer in that situation. All right, kid, you got to give me one more. I loved it. And so I embraced it. And that song, it speaks to how I really tried to embrace simplicity in this record. I know that's hard to imagine because in the album, you hear this big, complex orchestral sound with strings, horns. There's multiple drummers on some tracks. There's auxiliary percussion, timpani, vibraphone, all that stuff. But that stuff all came later in the process. The first and foremost, the goal was to write songs that can slap with any arrangement behind them.
Starting point is 01:17:01 It doesn't matter if they should be able to be just sung with voice and guitar or voice and piano. And in our case with Dream On, we wrote that song in one day after you had asked for another song. And you had also echoed that sentiment of, can you make something super simple, just almost like we shall overcome. And so it's amazing how hard it is to write stuff that is simple. It's difficult to write things that are simple, but we really enjoyed the challenge and we were very pleased with the result. It's simple.
Starting point is 01:17:37 Well, I am too. A whole lot of crying and dying We're trying to outrun the past. The people are hurting and yearning for a future that's certain to last. But when the sun goes down and darkness falls, hold your ground And wait for the call Of the dreamers Who dare to dream at all Yes, of the dreamers
Starting point is 01:18:17 Who dare to dream at all Zeeshan, congratulations on the album. It's amazing. You and the rest of the band did an unbelievable job. I listen to it all the time. Highest compliment you're going to get, my dad loves the album. Oh wow, really? He listened to it in its entirety. How about that?
Starting point is 01:18:43 On Friday, he totally does. He might be a little bit partial to the Urdu lyrics. The Urdu's one of the songs that we mentioned. But I would urge folks to listen to it. Download the album on iTunes. You have a classic vinyl version of the album. Right. That's available for purchase for those of you who like to listen to music that way.
Starting point is 01:19:02 Very proud of you, sir. Very proud of what we did together. I love you, Sishan. Good luck and congratulations. Thank you, brother. Pr proud of you, sir. Very proud of what we did together. I love you, C. Sean. Good luck and congratulations. Thank you, brother. Proud of you as well. Oh, butterfly Burged up so high
Starting point is 01:19:19 On a branch of the hoiomo tree You love to fly Three thousand miles South across hazy valleys and yellow peas Well, that's it for this episode of Stay Tuned. Thanks again to my guests, Joanne Freeman and Zeeshan B. Thank you. with the hashtag AskPreet. You can also now reach me on threads, or you can call and leave me a message at 669-247-7338. That's 669-24-PREET. Or you can send an email to letters at cafe.com. Stay Tuned is presented by Cafe and the Vox Media Podcast Network. The executive producer is Tamara Sepper. The technical director is David Tadishore. The
Starting point is 01:20:46 deputy editor is Celine Rohr. The editorial producers are Noah Azoulay and Jake Kaplan. The associate producer is Claudia Hernandez. And the cafe team is Matthew Billy, Nat Wiener, and Leanna Greenway. Our music is by Andrew Dost. I'm your host, Preet Bharara. As always, stay tuned. Support for this show is brought to you by Nissan Kicks. It's never too late to try new things, and it's never too late to reinvent yourself. The all-new reimagined Nissan Kicks is the city-sized crossover vehicle that's been completely revamped for urban adventure from the design and styling to the performance all the way to features like the boast personal plus sound system.
Starting point is 01:21:33 You can get closer to everything you love about city life in the all new reimagined Nissan kicks. Learn more at www.nissanusa.com slash 2025 dash kicks. Available feature. Bose is a registered trademark of the Bose Corporation. Support for this podcast comes from Stripe. Stripe is a payments and billing platform supporting millions of businesses around the world, including companies like Uber, BMW, and DoorDash.
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