On with Kara Swisher - Wanda Sykes on Why Trump Isn’t Funny Anymore

Episode Date: June 26, 2023

Wanda Sykes can find the funny in almost anything: lockdown during Covid, vaccine hesitancy, book bans. They all come up in her latest Netflix special, “Wanda Sykes: I’m an Entertainer.” But tod...ay, she tells Kara that there are a few things she doesn’t find funny anymore – including Donald Trump.  Also: Need advice?! We have an upcoming episode where Kara and Nayeema tackle your Qs about career, love, or life in general. Call 1-888-KARA-PLZ and leave us a voice note with a question that could feature on the show. Other questions or Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on social media. We’re @karaswisher and @nayeemaraza on Instagram. And Wanda is @iamwandasykes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:59 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. Hi, everyone, from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. It is over. flute? She can. I saw her last night play it. She played beautifully. And the reason I'm referring to is there's a big joke by Wanda Sykes about that. Yes. She was amazing. She was astonishing. She played six or seven songs and just blew the top off the place. It was great. And I would say I'm here because they hire people like Lizzo and other stars to appear at this con Lions event. And so there's parties everywhere and they bring in the big names. You sound tired. I am. I'm exhausted. I've been talking to advertisers and marketers and talking about all kinds of issues. And we taped a live pivot this afternoon.
Starting point is 00:02:11 Oh, wow. After being on a boat for a while with Scott. So it was a lot. Hard life. It's exhausting. A lot of work, actually. It is a little bit. When you're working in somewhere beautiful, you're still working.
Starting point is 00:02:21 I'm still at Martha Stewart's estate. No, you are. You're staying. Married a gardener. It's like gold digging. But it's green digging, you know? Yeah. Good idea. You are in the south of France for Cannes Lion. You know, it's where people get together and make deals. It's essentially marketers and people who are buying advertising meet people who are selling advertising. And all the big internet companies,
Starting point is 00:02:40 which are now big players in digital media, buy out the beaches here and they throw parties and there's a lot of rosé. And it's just a networking event. And I do think a lot of deals get done while it's happening. But they also give out awards and it's an excuse to get together and drink together, I think, in an analog way, which is going to change dramatically, I think. I'm not sure things like this will survive the future. You're going to put on your Apple Vision Pro and just make advertising deals, maybe? I guess advertising's long been a relationship business, and it's increasingly not. It's a data and analytics business.
Starting point is 00:03:13 And so there's all these tech companies here. And an AI business soon. Now, they're all worried about that, for sure. That's been the big topic here is AI. They've been giving out some big awards. I think Anheuser-Busch and Bev won one, which was ironic because of their month-long boycott of Bud Light we've seen in this country. First, they pissed off the right using a trans influencer.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Then they pissed off the left. Yeah. Well, it's a bigger world, the United States of America. It's a bigger world. And that's what happens when you leave it. Yes, it is. And then they also awarded Kevin Hart as Entertainment Person of the Year. It's a party here on the French Riviera.
Starting point is 00:03:43 He also flirted with cancellation for a minute in 2018. I had to step down from the Oscars because of homophobic tweets he'd had in 2009 to 11, and he refused to apologize and apologized repeatedly, which is interesting because our topic today is about comedy and really about this new line in comedy and how comedy has changed over time. And Wanda Sykes is our guest today.
Starting point is 00:04:02 Yeah, I love Wanda Sykes. She's one of my favorites. She's not here. I ran into a lot of the SNL cast last night, including Lorne Michaels, who created SNL. And, you know, she's one of my favorite comics of the many comics I like, and I spend a lot of time listening to comics. But she is one of the people that really is a truth teller. She's very funny. She's more left, I guess, or more liberal than other comics, but she certainly is really funny. And so I think she takes it to people, the powers that be. I just really like her. And she has a new show called I'm an Entertainer, her new Netflix special that
Starting point is 00:04:35 came out last month. And she also had the Netflix series, The Upshaws. But this is a guest you've been dying to have on. We moved the schedule. You did your own prep because we had four episodes taping last week. Why do you love Lawanda so much? Because she's just been consistently a good comic. There's a lot of people that sort of pop up and get well known. And I like most comics, I'll be honest. I really do. I like all kinds of different comics. And some of them would surprise you. I like even sort of politically incorrect comics. I like right-wing comics. They're funny. sort of politically incorrect comics. I like right-wing comics. They're funny. I like humor, and I think this is an area that's really been trying to figure out how to speak to the audience. And she doesn't go into sort of meanness, which I really appreciate. She doesn't need to dunk
Starting point is 00:05:16 constantly, you know, in the way a lot of male comics do, male white comics especially. And she can dunk specific people. Yes, exactly. She doesn't slap down. She slaps up, which I really appreciate. And again, she's a very powerful comic in the pantheon of comics. And there's not that many who's a woman, who's a person of color and a lesbian. I filmed her years ago at a People's State of the Union and she was smacking up to Trump at the time. I think the idea was like kind of dump Trump was the whole event. And she has a sense of humor that's very dry, almost wry. And accessible. And she was exhausted by Trump already. That must have been 2018, 2019. So I was very keen to hear her and how exhausted she would be by now. Right. Well, she's a touring comedian. And so she's been on the road forever and it's
Starting point is 00:06:02 part of her job and something she does. And it sort of changed a little bit during the pandemic. And she was trying to find humor in that. And she has pandemic jokes. She's got political jokes. She calls out Dave Chappelle. Yeah, she gave Dave Chappelle a hard time, which he's much deserved. All right, well, let's get to the interview. We'll take a quick break and we'll be back with Wanda Sykes. 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 of somebody sitting, crouched over their computer with a hoodie on,
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Starting point is 00:09:30 Go to ConstantContact.ca for your free trial. ConstantContact.ca It is on. Welcome, Wanda. Thank you. Thank you for coming. Let's start with a new show and how you made it. This is your first Welcome, Wanda. Thank you. Thank you for coming. Let's start with a new show and how you made it.
Starting point is 00:09:52 This is your first show since the pandemic, and you piled on some very serious topics. Talk a little bit about the conceptual idea behind the show. Yeah, I mean, you know, the pandemic was bizarre. I mean, you know, it was this time that we were going through and being locked down with, you know, the closest people to you, you're locked down with them. And then all these things just were happening, you know, with Black Lives Matter and with Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd. And I'm in the house with white people who I love with all my being. One of them you're married to and the other your children. Yeah, married and my children.
Starting point is 00:10:30 I give my life for them. But I'm in the house stuck with them. And I'm having all these feelings and this anger and just looking around like, what don't you get? And what can you say to help fix this? And they're looking at me for answers, like want me to explain what was going on, where I'm like, it's, you know, this is like asking the victim, why did they get smacked? You know, so I knew, you know, the stages where I go to work things out, not just for comedy, but also just for my peace of mind. Yeah, you're mental. It's my therapy, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:12 But you weren't able to do that during COVID either. You weren't able to sort of save up. Exactly. How did you get it to funny? Well, getting it to funny, I guess it was stepping outside of it and looking at my situation that I was in. It was like, oh my God, all this is going on and I'm in the house with white people. You know, and so it starts there. So one of the things you talked about, trans issues was a big focus, which I appreciated. You called out Dave Chappelle,
Starting point is 00:11:41 as I did and many did, but it seems to have just gotten worse. Talk a little bit about why you wanted to put this in the show. And actually, it's even more pertinent now. I know, I'm not sure when you taped this, but it's gotten worse and worse. Right, right. I mean, it's such a community that I don't understand why even attack, why attack them. These are people who just want to live their lives in the body that they feel that they should be in. I mean, it's just bizarre to me why that bothers you.
Starting point is 00:12:25 I don't understand how that affects your life, you know? And, you know, thank God we have trans people who are out in the public and, you know, lending their voices and being a voice for their community. But you have people who are, you know, trans people who are just in, you know, Milwaukee somewhere, and they don't want all the attention and everything. They just want to live their lives, right? Right, right.
Starting point is 00:12:54 So they don't understand that when they make these jokes, they think they're going after, like... Why do you think they do? It's not just Dave Chappelle. It's Ricky Gervais. There's a lot of people that do it. Elon Musk does it, does all kinds of anti-trans stuff despite having a trans child. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:13:13 I'm saying I really don't know. I mean, it's hateful. It's just hate. I mean, I don't understand why. Why do you want to make someone else's life harder than it is? I mean, this is already rough. But why put that on someone else and put them in danger? And I know they say it's words, but words matter. And people are dying from this, especially black trans women. Huge targets. I mean, and honestly, I don't get it. I really don't. One of the things I wrote about was, you know, you can talk about anything you
Starting point is 00:13:54 want as a comic, obviously, and I think you probably back that. But I always kept going, why an hour on it? Why an hour on it versus like a minute right like he had one kind of okay lesbian joke and a couple of others but an hour and i was like gosh that's a lot that's that to attack someone and you know what's so sad is it's brilliant guy exactly right he's brilliant he's he's so funny i still go back and watch uh uh the killing them I mean, he's a really funny storyteller. I just don't understand, like you said, why a whole hour? So let's play one that you have, which I thought was a perfect joke about the laws around kids at drag shows in places like Arkansas. Let's play that clip. in places like Arkansas. Let's play that clip. These kids know, man. And now they're trying to go backwards, right? Florida, don't say gay ban. What the hell, right? Tennessee, no kids can go to the drag shows. Because like that was a problem in the first place. Oh, I can't tell you how many
Starting point is 00:15:01 drag shows I've been to. And everybody's up in arms because they ran out of high chairs and booster seats. What the fuck is wrong with them? And then I'm going to play a second clip. This is about book banning versus assault weapons. Let's play that clip, too. They're banning books in Texas, banning books. But we're protecting the kids. Well, if you really want to protect the kids, ban assault weapons.
Starting point is 00:15:30 That's what's killing the kids, not the books. I mean, until a drag queen walks into a school and beats eight kids to death with a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird, I think you're focusing on the wrong shit. Can you talk about how you crafted this joke? Because you brought a lot of things in. You have book bands, assault weapons, drag queens, and To to kill a mockingbird, which is always a good thing. Talk about why you did it this way. sense, y'all. This is what it is. And also to point out the hypocrisy in, you know, in just what we do and what people, how they're thinking. It's like back to the drag shows or the story hour, you know, drag queens can't read to children. I'm like, what?
Starting point is 00:16:43 First of all, they're in a library, a public library reading, and it's like, it's going to confuse the kids. And like I said before, if the kids can get snuffleupagus, I think they'll understand what a drag queen is. It's just common sense to me. And it seems like people just go out of their way to make life harder for people who aren't even in their world. You know, like drag queens aren't like just out in Target, you know, shopping and you're going to run and encounter one. Well, if you're in the Castro where my kids grew up. Okay, maybe in the Castro. Yes, you do. Yes, in the Castro.
Starting point is 00:17:23 Yes, yeah. And in the village, maybe. But yeah. Yes, I just don't understand how people go outside of their world to mess with people who, like I said, they would have nothing to do with. Never even encounter. So yeah. Yeah. Why do you think it's gained ground? Because a lot of this stuff is gained ground, whether it's racism, homophobia, anti-trans. Because that's all the right has to offer. They're not offering any policies, you know, except to try to take right. Well, ban drag queen shows.
Starting point is 00:17:55 Except that's their policies. Really, how is that putting food on your table? How is that, you know, making housing more available and affordable? How is that helping the environment? Okay, maybe less hairspray with the drag queens. I don't know. But, I mean, how is that helping? That's the only thing that they have.
Starting point is 00:18:15 That's the only flag that they can raise and to rattle up their fan base, you know, their voters, is to just go after, just on the attack and make up shit. Like, this is what's hurting us. I mean, it's, yeah. And one of the things they've tended to focus on is racial issues now. Oh, yes. There was just a Washington Post survey of Black Americans saying they felt they were better off, but were more scared than ever, which I thought was an interesting juxtaposition that financially they feel better, but they feel much more in danger and exposed to white supremacy and everything else right now. Can you talk about how you think about talking about racism in your show? And you cover racial issues from George Floyd to Ahmaud Arbery. When you are touching on
Starting point is 00:19:05 these hot button issues, do you worry at all from a comic point of view, or do you think this is what people expect you to do to sort of hit all these very thorny issues for people? Be honest with you, I get a little tingly up there when I'm, you know, speaking on these issues. Meaning tingly how? Like, yeah, like your little spidey senses going on. What are you worried about? Hecklers, not so much. I can take care of heckler.
Starting point is 00:19:38 But it's like, what if somebody decides to take it to that next level? You know? But, you know, I have great security. I have amazing fans, like my audience that show up. They're just, I mean, they really are, they're the best. And as far as hecklers, they've taken care of hecklers. You know, it's like, if someone shouts something, you should, I i mean you should hear how the i mean yeah they just jump on them before i can even get to them i assume you have a great number of lesbians in the audience for that would handle exactly yeah let's say we're not playing around so yeah i'm not as concerned do you cut back at all on things
Starting point is 00:20:20 especially around racialists especially with white gaining, like it's out in the open right now in a way that it never has been. And all these polls are showing people are very nervous about their own lives. I know as a gay person, I'm much more nervous than I was since the eighties. Like, honestly, isn't that crazy? It's nuts. It's absolutely nuts. Um, and so when you, when you think about that, does, does that make you pull back? I don't pull back, but let's just say I, because I want to say what I need to say and what I want to say, but maybe the way I phrase it, like the joke I did about, I have a friend who won't get vaccinated, which is true. No, I got a friend who still hasn't been vaccinated.
Starting point is 00:21:07 No, she won't get vaccinated. She's laughing at me. She's like, oh, look at you. You don't know what's in that mess. You just put that mess in your arm. You don't know what's in it. I was like, yeah, I don't know what's in it. And if they told me what was in it, I still wouldn't know what was in it.
Starting point is 00:21:22 I'm not a scientist, jackass. But they laugh at me. They laugh at me. They're supposed to be like, well, I just don't put anything in my body. I'm like, you use Splenda. Shut the fuck up. I used to tell that joke where it was more of a tack of like, I can't believe I have a friend who won't get vaccinated. And she was like, well, I don't know what's in it. And I was like, well, if they told you what was in it, you still
Starting point is 00:22:01 wouldn't know your jackass. But I said, you know what? I understand there's people out there who, because I want them to get the joke. So I was like, maybe it'll go over better if I put it on me where I'm the one who says, yeah, I don't know what, you know. So it's that type of thing. It's more of the massaging jokes where I still get my point across. But you don't have to be in their face. I don't have to punch them first. Do you ever feel like you should push harder even? Because things have gotten worse, like a lot worse.
Starting point is 00:22:42 And I can't imagine being a comic and not being angry on stage. But that's a mistake, presumably. And I've had shows like that. I've had shows where I was just angry and I had to take a step, like really take a step back and breathe. And like I said, that's why I love my audience. And they'll just applaud, like, come on. And then I talk about something silly and I'm good. But that's when I know, okay, that joke's not ready because it's making me too angry, you know. I'm really worried about this whole Trump thing. I'm worried.
Starting point is 00:23:17 I mean, good Lord. Yep, he keeps rising to the top like styrofoam, orange styrofoam. Talk about Trump, how you feel about you. You didn't have a lot of Trump in here. No, not normal. I did a lot of Trump. That was a special before this one. And yeah, this special, one, I couldn't find the, you know, what was so funny.
Starting point is 00:23:42 And two, I want to stop talking about him. I want him to go away. You know, I wanted to hit on, on subjects with him removed. And, and so like, like, guys, let's just get back to these issues and not, not even talk about him. Let's not connect him. Let's not blame him that, that, you know, this is why we're here. Let's just say this is where we're at and let's talk about it, you know. Do you feel like you should be talking about Trump now when you're thinking about what you're doing? He's hard to leave out. And at the same time, you don't want to talk about him.
Starting point is 00:24:21 So what do you do as a comment? Well, now, I mean, now he's back. We have to talk about him now. I mean, he's, you know, he's been indicted again. I mean, we have to talk about him. So what do you do as a comedian? Well, now, I mean, now he's back. We have to talk about him now. I mean, he's, you know, he's been indicted again. I mean, we have to talk about him. Is he a good attack venue for your comedy? Or is it just, you don't find it funny anymore? It's not funny. Yeah. It's just not. And there's nothing that you can say that he won't outdo you. You know, it's like a parody of a parody. So to me, it's more about the voters and the people following him than him, because there's nothing you're going to say about him that's going to sway them. You know, I used to work at NSA before I started doing stand-up. Yes, I'm going to get into that in a minute. Yeah. But no, when he was first running, I said, how can he even run?
Starting point is 00:25:06 I mean, I know the Constitution allows it, but I was like, this dude will never get a security clearance. You can't trust him with secrets. He's already compromised. He owes a shitload of money to China, and then he's in bed with the Saudis. I mean, come on. There's no way this guy can become president. And it happened. And it happened. And it happened. And here we are. And he walked off with a bunch of top secret documents. You were a national security staffer
Starting point is 00:25:37 at the NSA. I worked at the NSA, yeah. What did you do there? Basically, I bought stuff. What did you do there? Basically, I bought stuff. I was a contracting specialist. But I would buy a range of things. Like what? Like spy gear? Anywhere from furniture to, yeah, spy gear. Spy gear.
Starting point is 00:25:59 But you weren't a spy, right? No, I wasn't a cryptologist or anything or a spy. Why did you go there? Because I lived in the area, basically. Really? Yeah, when you grow up in the Maryland, D.C. area, you end up working for the government or government contractor. But also, it was the way for me to serve my country. My father was a retired colonel. My brother, he also served. My mom, she worked at the credit union there at NSA.
Starting point is 00:26:31 So it was like a family thing. You have top security clearance though, correct? Yeah. I had one of both top secret. Wow. Okay. You could be Trump's lawyer now, by the way, just so you know. Do you have any thoughts on the indictment right now?
Starting point is 00:26:53 I'm nervous that it's in Florida and I'm nervous about this, the judge. One of the things that I get nervous about, as I said, is being gay right now and having children and things like that. I'm just curious. Let's talk a little bit about that in your family. Why did you wait until 44 in 2008 to come out? I know it was hard with your parents, I assume due to religion. Right. Was that the issue? Yes. They are what? What is their faith? We're Baptist. Baptist. Oh, are they Southern Baptist? No, no, no. Just regular old Baptist. Regular old black Baptist.
Starting point is 00:27:30 Yeah. So why did you wait so long? Was it working at the NSA? Was it? I didn't go into the military or the CIA because I was gay because I didn't want to not be out. Okay. And that was an issue at the time. Was there any reason why?
Starting point is 00:27:43 Why? I'm sorry. Why you waited till why? Why? I'm sorry. Why you waited till 44? To come out? Yeah. Well, it wasn't NSA because I left NSA back in, I want to say, 93, 94, something like that. I just, one, I didn't know. You know, I mean, I knew when I was young
Starting point is 00:28:12 and then kind of like put that away and said, okay, I'm living my life as a straight woman. Yeah, you had that friend. You talked about a friend. Yeah. We all have that friend. Yeah, yeah. So I just lived my life as a straight woman,
Starting point is 00:28:24 you know, tried marriage to a man. That didn't work. And, yeah, it just, after the marriage, it just hit me like, what is happening? How come all my relationships only go to a certain point and I can't, you know, really get any deeper? Like, I've had so many people say, it feels like if I just walked out, you wouldn't give a damn. And I was like, that's probably, yeah, that's bingo. That's it. You know, I've had people say that to me before. Yeah. Yeah. So and then it hit me that, oh, OK, I forgot about all these other feelings. And and, you know, this is what I'm doing right now. I'm just playing a playing a role i'm you know
Starting point is 00:29:07 wanda sykes in the role of a straight woman right so um so it was easy when it was over just cut move on to the next thing and but who i really am it i figured it out like oh through therapy and all and talking i'm talking it out i I said, I'm a gay woman. I'm a lesbian. And then, you know, a couple of relationships. But when I met Alex, it was just like just deeper. I've never, you know, had feelings that like that. I've never like just understood someone and just felt seen and understood and um and of course that that's when i because at first i said no i never want to have kids but that's when being with her made me go oh she she definitely wanted kids um and it just made sense to me like of course i want to raise a family with you. Of course. And you have two kids, twins, who are 14.
Starting point is 00:30:08 Personally, I think lesbians make ideal parents, especially for boys. I think they should raise all the boys. I have three and just one daughter. But when you met her, she's French, as you say. She's such a part of your act. Talk about the dynamic of bringing your personal life, including being gay, into your act. How difficult was that? And I suppose the answer is I'm an entertainer, so anything is fair game. The gay part, that was, you know, that was easy to bring into the act because by then, you know, we were married and Prop 8 passed in California.
Starting point is 00:30:47 You know, so that made it pretty easy to come out because I had to speak up. You know, something that I had was trying to be, was about to be taken away from me. Did you have your kids then? I suppose you did. No, but Alex was pregnant when we got married, just like maybe two months. pregnant when we when we got married it's like a maybe two months um i know about the anger my kid looked at me and said are we not a family anymore after wow and obama had just won so there was a lot of happiness about that and then we that right and we lived in california so so it was easy to do it on stage to to talk about it yeah out. Yes. What was the reaction to people from your perspective? Was there any difficulty or not at all? It seems like you did it flawlessly and
Starting point is 00:31:31 seamlessly. Exactly. You know, and I get asked when you came out, did you lose fans? Did you lose this? I don't know. I probably did, but I gained so many more, you know? And work-wise, I don't know. I mean, it's whatever roles I didn't get or people, you know, don't want to work with me or whatever because of the gay. I've had so many more, you know, offers. So it's like, I don't know. I can't even answer that. Yeah. Yeah. I don't think so. People like lesbians more, I think. They do. I think they like you better. It's true. Support for this show comes from Indeed. If you need to hire, you may need Indeed. Indeed is a matching and hiring platform with over 350 million global monthly visitors, according to Indeed data.
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Starting point is 00:34:22 which never goes away. It's the new version of politically incorrect or politically correct, really. And you said the whole complaint about cancel culture is a lot of men, especially straight men, and I would say straight white men, I would add that to it, are just pissed off. They can't say anything anymore. And you also note it's not like you can't say these things. You can say them. Now there's consequence. So that's why I say I can't get canceled, only God can say, all right, Wanda, that's enough. But you've taken a stance here in a very strong way. You left the Roseanne reboot after her incredibly horrific statements about Valerie Jarrett.
Starting point is 00:35:00 Talk about that idea of sort of defending woke. I hate that there's even, you know, a title that we're calling it something. Talk about that idea of sort of defending woke. You know, we all should be represented and we all deserve the same things. I mean, I don't, it's crazy that, like I say, evolving is now a bad thing. A lot of comedy rests on that, though, on people being angry about cancel culture, being canceled. In comedy, especially, they're mad if they get shoved out of something or not able to say what they want to say. if they get shoved out of something or not able to say what they want to say. But like I said, you can say what you want to say, but maybe, you know, you might lose some audience. Maybe you might gain some audience. I don't, you know, to me,
Starting point is 00:36:05 it's, you're canceled when you say, hey, I'm going to be here on June 3rd or whatever, and nobody shows up. Okay, now you know. But, you know, go perform someplace else, and maybe people will show up. If they don't show up, then you know you're canceled. Who do you think your audience is? I mean, who's your platonic person who you want to appeal to? Is there anybody or not? When I think about it, it's not like a demographic that I'm going after.
Starting point is 00:36:36 I just like people who are just open-minded and just loving people. Yeah. So would you mind performing in front of conservative audiences? Do you think you have a conservative base? I said loving people. Loving people. Okay. Yes. So, okay.
Starting point is 00:36:49 All right. I see your point. One of the things you didn't cover also, by the way, was Roe v. Wade. Did you come up with a good joke yet? You said you couldn't come up with one. Is there one? Not, no. I mentioned it at the top of the show, not, no. I,
Starting point is 00:37:07 I mentioned it at the top of the show, like, you know, how things are awful. And I, you know, Roe v. Wade was overturned, but I,
Starting point is 00:37:12 no, I can't. You still can't. I can't find it funny. I can't. Can't find it funny. Another thing that's not funny is the writer's strike. Talk a little bit about that and the issues for you. I know you can't appear in certain things.
Starting point is 00:37:23 You certainly have some series. Where are you in that? Because comedy is a little bit about that and the issues for you. I know you can't appear in certain things. You certainly have some series. Where are you in that? Because comedy is a little different, but still an issue as you move forward. Yeah, like we were, we had two more episodes to shoot of the Upshaws, you know, for Netflix. We, you know, we shut down. you know for Netflix we you know we shut down um this is the the most important you know moment I think for our careers and just for the craft of writing and how we create um not just tv and you know film but um this is the line in the sand with AI and all. And even for actors, you know, how AIs just, you know, can create and use, you know, images and it's taking the ownership and power away from writers and performers.
Starting point is 00:38:22 You wouldn't want a Wanda AI. They could input all your stuff and you could. No, no, no, no. Where do you think the strike is going to come out? Because I think they'll say AI is not quite there yet. So we're not going to negotiate on. Well, that's that's the same crap they told us when we were going after, you know, DVD and on demand, you know, the last strike and and oh, no, that's not, we don't know where that's going. You absolutely know where it's going. People are using it to, you know, write their papers, their speeches. I mean, it'll be where the, you know, the producers, they'll just say, give me a script about this. And then they'll just hire writers to do,
Starting point is 00:39:02 you know, punch up or whatever to make it sound, you know, like an actual human wrote it. And now we don't, you know, there's no ownership to it. So where do you think it's going to resolve? Because the actors may go on and strike. You're both. I'm both on both unions. Yeah. And I voted yes for both. So what is the thing you want most from this? Is it the writers rooms? Is it AI? Is it all of it? Because this doesn't seem like the studios are budging at this point. No, yeah. We have to have the rooms, maintain the size of the rooms, stop it with these little small rooms.
Starting point is 00:39:39 Actors, you know, and residuals back. We need for the streamers to be accountable and transparent i mean because you know they can just tell you anything and that's pretty much what happens with netflix i'll say oh x amount of people watch this and but there's there's no data to back it up we have nothing um and and also what i what i hope is for the networks to break off from the streamers, because I believe we can get a deal with the networks. I believe we can do a deal with them, a deal that we'll be happy with, and let the streamers do their own thing.
Starting point is 00:40:21 And, hey, we'll go back. Although sometimes the networks are the streamers, right? But that's their deal. But I think if, yeah, NBC will have a deal with NBC and Peacock, that's a streamer. That's separate. You've been operating,
Starting point is 00:40:37 you're on Netflix, you're on lots of things. How do you look at the changing entertainment environment? Aside from the strike, which these are major issues, the rooms the ai residuals etc everything's changed in terms of economics how do you look at it how have you seen
Starting point is 00:40:52 it well i i see it where you know it's like you like the freedom you like the creative freedom at like a netflix you know they know, they don't bother as much. You like that. You know, it's Netflix. It's sexy, you know. But financially, it's better with the networks as far as with residuals. And especially for like I'm at a level where, hey, I'm, you know, I'm not complaining. But I look at the younger writers and actors who are just starting, there's a lot of issues that, you know, we can't
Starting point is 00:41:38 back down. We have to get these things because that's how they're going to survive. When you think about that, you know, it's changed so drastically in general. But one of the things that sort of hangs over all your heads or you go over to TikTok and there's a million creators, 1% of whom are excellent, like not just good, like high level. Does that worry you where you see all that where comics, like just talk about comedy? I mean, you can see it in lots of different ways, dancing and singing and things like that. But is that a worry to comics like that, where you see a lot of people breaking on these social networks, especially TikTok, I would say, or Instagram, maybe? No, I think it's great. You know, it's just a matter of how you're training. Because at the end of the day,
Starting point is 00:42:24 we're doing the same thing, right? We're saying something and it's getting to a viewer. We're providing content. I just happened to grow up in a system where you went to the comedy clubs and people liked the live performance. And that's how I built my career. I, you know, built my career, but I don't diss anyone who's taking their approach where they're, instead of going through the comedy clubs, they're doing it, you know, through social media. And they're getting the audience, you know, good for them. Is that system of yours where you went to the comedy clubs and you got a special and then you, you know, you might have gotten a show, etc.
Starting point is 00:43:04 Is that over from your perspective or does it still work? No, there's still comics doing the same, you know, going through that. And the audience is still there. There's people who just want to go see a live show. A live show. Yeah. So is that your favorite part of it right now or not? Being on the road or going to do live shows? Doing live shows.
Starting point is 00:43:22 It's the most challenging part. Is it raining there? Yeah, I'm sorry. I didn't make the rain. I'm not apologizing for the rain. It's the woman in me. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I made it rain. I'm sorry. Oh my God, is that thunder? Oh my God, I'm sorry I made it rain. I'm sorry. Oh, my God. Is that thunder? Oh, my God. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to make it thunder. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. It's your fault. It's always my fault.
Starting point is 00:43:51 I'm so sorry. That's the thing I'm trying to break my daughter from. Yeah. She keeps apologizing for everything. Oh, wow. I bumped into her. Mine does not at all. Oh, I bumped into her. Oh, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:44:01 I said, I bumped into you. Stop. Stop it. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop saying you're sorry for stuff. Yeah. My daughter doesn't apologize.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Yeah. We're good. We're good with her. So let me ask you two more questions. Are you on the new season of Curb, your enthusiasm? I hope so. I am not. Oh, why not?
Starting point is 00:44:18 I am not. Your relationship with Larry is near perfect. I miss it. It's almost like I want to go, hey, can you call over the curb and tell Larry, come on, what are you doing? Yeah, that must have been an amazing experience. You guys were perfect. I loved it. My favorite pair.
Starting point is 00:44:32 Loved it. But you did a great job on The Daily Show, too. I was just watching all the clips from your week there. Do you want that job? Is that something you're interested in? I asked this of Roy Wood, who was on earlier. Oh, I love Roy. Roy is great. I love Roy. Roy is great.
Starting point is 00:44:53 I love Roy. Do I want the job? I'm not going to say I, no, I hate to say no, I don't want the job because maybe I'm supposed to have that job. I don't know. It would be nice if a woman and a woman of color had it. That would be great. Maybe that's where I'm supposed to be. I have no idea, but I am not, you know, lobbying or, you know, I'm not going after that job. I don't know if that job works for my family right now or for me. I don't know. Can I ask you who you think is funny right now? Is there one thing you just saw recently? You're like, oh, that's really fucking funny. you just saw recently, you're like, oh, that's really fucking funny. Oh, jeez. Hmm. What makes me laugh?
Starting point is 00:45:29 You know what? Abbott Elementary makes my day. Ah. Abbott Elementary. Why? It's just a nice, pleasant, funny half hour of good TV. Mm-hmm. I love the characters. And they're able to do it where it's sweet,
Starting point is 00:45:52 but not saccharine. It's not just... You know, you enjoy it. It's not cynical either. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. I love that. All right. Wanda, thank you so much. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. I love that.
Starting point is 00:46:05 All right. Wanda, thank you so much. You're a wonderful comic. I'm an enormous fan for decades, for absolute decades. And I really appreciate it. That rain that came in. She's apologizing for the rain. I know.
Starting point is 00:46:28 She's funny. It was a lot of rain. She's trying to share with you that her child is apologizing too much, and you're like, my child is perfect. No apologies for my child. Well, I'm trying to get her to. She does wine for ice cream here in France. Suddenly she's become an addict for French ice cream, which is on every corner. Well, that's nothing to apologize for.
Starting point is 00:46:45 She's like made for their French Riviera, your daughter, by the way. She is. She's looking good. She's wearing the dresses. She's posing all over the place. She's making friends. I left her right now dancing in the middle of a square, eating ice cream and dancing with the band, which was...
Starting point is 00:47:00 By herself or chaperoned? By herself. She was dancing. But she's not by herself. Amanda is by herself. Yes, we leave her there. It's France. I gave her a cigarette, a bottle of wine, and she's on her own.
Starting point is 00:47:10 She'll get herself home. Get yourself home, sweetie. Three years old. Yeah, that's the plan. That's the plan. I liked Wanda. She seemed a little reserved in that interview. She is.
Starting point is 00:47:20 She was very, I think she must be exhausted. You know what I mean in some way but i think one of the things about comics is when they're on they're on when they're not they're often quite quiet um as they're thinking about their act and how they want to present it just even being here for a short time because we have a lot of fans uh both pivot and on fans and getting like constant attention and i like your show and this and that is exhausting. And I'm not famous. I'm famous at Con Lions, but nowhere else.
Starting point is 00:47:49 Maybe South by Southwest. You're conference famous. I'm conference. Well, no, it's full of these people here. But it's really, I think it must be the incoming for someone like her must be quite substantive. And so I think probably they shut down a little bit. Yeah. substantive. And so I think probably they shut down a little bit. Yeah. Just as we as media kind of think about the Trump return and what that means for coverage, she seemed to be thinking about that for comedy and thinking, well, it's not even funny anymore. And I appreciated her point,
Starting point is 00:48:16 which is that everything you do, he will outdo you. Yes. You can't make a joke anymore. It's beyond joke. It's surreal. It's not funny anymore, but what are you going to do? There he is like oxygen. And so I think it's going to be very hard for comics coming forward, though he provides enormous ample material like that recent interview with Brett Baer, where he just is so crazy. And then you're like, what? Huh? And after a while, one, you get tired of talking about him. And two, it's not funny. And three, making fun of it seems to diminish the importance of not making fun of it. So I think it's hard. Comics are going to have a hard time going forward.
Starting point is 00:48:53 And also, he likes to be in on the joke or use the joke to his advantage. And he's a kind of mastermind at that. And we saw that when Caitlin Collins asked him, you know, his flip-flop on the debt ceiling. Yeah. And says, why were you, you know, for raising the debt ceiling when you're president and not now? And his response is, well, I was president then and I'm not now. And that's the difference. Ha ha.
Starting point is 00:49:12 And, you know, that's the power he has. Well, that's the thing. He's not, you can't make fun of him because he makes fun of himself in a weird way. I think it's going to be really interesting. I mean, if you remember the first term, it's all the, you know, Alec Baldwin dressing as Trump. And it's all fun and games. But since the insurrection, I think that really knocked the stuffing out of a lot of people. And I think it's, if you were a comic to try to make Trump jokes, it's going to be hard.
Starting point is 00:49:35 A lot of political jokes. So much of it is so ugly. I'll be interested to see how they do it. Right? And there's not so many great jokes about fascism. Oh, that Mussolini would have cut up. Too soon. Too soon.
Starting point is 00:49:48 It's still too soon. It's still too soon. You know, I really appreciated her point on race. The genesis of her whole project came from having to explain this almost, right? Yeah, right. To her family, to her white family. To her white family, exactly.
Starting point is 00:50:01 And the analogy she uses, it's like asking the victim, why did you get smacked? Which I thought was spot on. Was spot on. You don't want to compare it to being gay, but I remember having to explain things to my family. And I was like, why do I have to explain it to these idiots? You know what I mean? Like, it was interesting. you had Ahmaud Arbery. You had so many different incidents and you had no one to talk to and you couldn't express yourself. You couldn't be on the road where she may have worked this stuff out. Right. Was hard for her. And I thought that was a really prescient thing to think about when she was
Starting point is 00:50:36 working on it. I thought so too. And I appreciated that she was honest about getting, I can't remember if she used the word tingled or something that she started, you know, she felt a certain way. I felt that at parts in the interview. It's like having to explain it and then having to explain how you treat it. It's a really hard thing to work around. And I think she did a beautiful job of it, really. She did.
Starting point is 00:50:56 She did. But anyway, she wasn't giving an inch to conservatives. No. She's like, what did she say? When you asked her, does she imagine that she has conservative audiences? And she's like, I said open-minded or like kind-minded or generous people. Yeah, she's not interested. I like a gal like that.
Starting point is 00:51:12 I like a gal who punches them right in the nose. By the way, you pressed her a lot on kind of why she came out later in age. I was curious. Why were you so curious about that? I just am always interested when people come out at a later age. I'm sort of, especially after AIDS, right? That was the 80s. That's, you know, I felt like, wow, how do you not come out in this day and age, including back then, because of all the different political issues?
Starting point is 00:51:37 I just was like, why would you do it? And obviously, there's your parents, there's religion, there's all kinds of things pressing on anybody, any one person. And her answer was that she didn't know. Yeah. Which I think is fair. Maybe I'm going to one day find out. No. No, Naeem.
Starting point is 00:51:53 No. I'm going to give you that complete answer, no. You once called me the straightest person you've ever met. Well, yeah, except this one gay couple who live in Los Angeles. They're the straightest people I know. All right. You want to read us out? Sure.
Starting point is 00:52:07 From the French Riviera, today's show was produced by Naeem Araza, Blakeney Schick, Christian Castor-Rossell, and Megan Burney. Special thanks to Kate Gallagher. Fernando Arruda engineered this episode, and our theme music is by Trackademics. If you're already following the show, you get a flute lesson from Lizzo, and boy, are you lucky. If not, Wanda Sykes' fan base is coming after you and it's a lot of armed lesbians. Go wherever you listen to podcasts, search for On with Kara Swisher and hit follow. Thanks for
Starting point is 00:52:35 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. and selected for their inherent craft, each hotel tells its own unique story through distinctive design and immersive experiences, from medieval falconry to volcanic wine tasting. Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of over 30 hotel brands around the world. Find the unforgettable at autographcollection.com. Food insecurity still affects millions of individuals around the globe. And Nestle, a global leader in nutrition, health, and wellness, understands the importance of working together to create lasting change.
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