Open Book with Anthony Scaramucci - Cancel Culture is Destroying America

Episode Date: August 23, 2025

Blake Bailey is the author of biographies of Philip Roth, John Cheever, Richard Yates, and Charles Jackson. He won the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of... American Historians, a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer and James Tait Black Prizes. A previous memoir, The Splendid Things We Planned, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Autobiography. Get Blake's book "Canceled Lives: My Father, My Scandal, and Me" here: https://amzn.to/3UL09t0 Sol Gittleman is the Alice and Nathan Gantcher University Professor Emeritus at Tufts University, where he taught from 1964 until his retirement in 2015. He served as provost from 1981 to 2002 and has received many awards, fellowships, and honorary degrees for his teaching and service. About the host: Anthony Scaramucci is the founder and managing partner of SkyBridge, a global alternative investment firm, and founder and chairman of SALT, a global thought leadership forum and venture studio. He is the host of the podcast Open Book with Anthony Scaramucci. A graduate of Tufts University and Harvard Law School, he lives in Manhasset, Long Island. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:22 Free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario. Hello, I'm Anthony Scaramucci, and this is Open. and book where I talk to some of the brightest minds about everything surrounding the written word. That's everything. That's from authors and historians to figures in entertainment, political activists, and of course, Wall Street. Before we dive in, make sure to follow or subscribe wherever you get your podcast. And don't forget to leave a review. Good or bad. I want to hear from you. I want to hear whether you're enjoying it or where we can improve. And I can take the hits.
Starting point is 00:01:05 So let me know. If you don't like something, say it straight. Now let's get into it. Welcome to Open Book. I am your host, Anthony Scaramucci, joined today by my co-host. My co-host today is my great friend and former professor, Saul Gittleman, the former provosts of Tufts. And so, Saul, it's great to have you on as my co-host.
Starting point is 00:01:36 And we are joined by our guest, Blake Bailey. Now, Blake is a best-selling author. He's got a new book out called Canceled Lives, My Father, My Scandal, and Me. And this is a great segue if you don't mind, Blake, because Saul and I interviewed you for your book about Philip Roth, who is somebody that I studied under Saul's tutelage just about 40 years ago in Saul's class. I think it was called Introduction to Yiddish Literature. And Saul had written a book called From Stettel to Suburbia,
Starting point is 00:02:11 which is still on my bookshelf here in my, my office here, Blake. But it's great to have you back. So before we get into the book and your other work, tell us a little about your background. And then we're going to get into a very deeply personal book called Canceled Lives. Yes. First of all,
Starting point is 00:02:26 thank you very much for having me. And it's good to see you guys again. Four years ago, my Philip Roth biography was published. I was Phillips only. authorized biographer. I spent a lot of time with Philip for the six years before he died. And the book did quite well when it was first published. Cynthia Ozick, of all people, called it a narrative masterwork on the front page of the New York Times book review. And it
Starting point is 00:03:03 debuted at number 12 on the non-fiction bestseller list, which is pretty rare for a 900 page literary biography. But people were angry about certain revelations about Philip Roth in that book. And there was a lot of media stuff about canceling Philip Roth. Then there were a couple of reviews, most notably Laura Marshes in the New Republic and Pruill Seagulls in the United States. the daily New York Times that were quite harsh and accused me of being sympathetic and even complicitous with Philip Roth's bad behavior, with his alleged flandering and misogyny
Starting point is 00:03:57 and so forth. Long story short, that led to people digging around in my private life. And some stuff got out. Some of it true. Some of it. of it absolutely untrue. And before I knew it, I was roundly canceled. My publisher, W.W. Norton, pulled the Philibroft biography. Had it palt. It has since been reissued in various editions by Skyhorse. And Skyhorse is the publisher of the book under discussion that's just been published,
Starting point is 00:04:31 canceled lives. So I'm going to let you take over for a second. The book is awesome. I know we both went through the book. but why don't you start with some of your questions, Sol? My, me. Okay. Let me start out with a few statements, if I may.
Starting point is 00:04:47 Blake is arguably the finest American literary biographer of the 21st century. I don't think there's anybody writing in the English language in this country, who, on the basis of the books that he's written so far, on Richard Yates, John Cheever. Charles Jackson, the Roth biography, and the James Salter one that come. That corpus puts him ahead of James Atlas and probably also Harold Bloom. I mean, when you're talking about literary biography, by this time, right, as you look back over the last 25, 30 years, Blake is in a class by himself. He is arguably the best American biographer literary biography in the world. So I think that, that, I came to that point after just reading the, all of the Roth Hook and then the four other biograph, I addressively superb, he's an excellent researcher, meticulous scholar, the awards that he was nominated for are not gratuitous.
Starting point is 00:05:55 He is arguably the best we've got writing in the English language. Also, after watching reading about the episode, what happened with him and the Bull Roth biography, I am totally a, to any cancellations at all. I think cancellation was simply a bad idea when it happened. It continues to be a bad idea. And I have only a certain tolerance for despicable geniuses. We were talking before we went online. I really don't like Richard Wagner as a human being. And I don't even like his music. But you have to give him the right that he's been enormously influential. And I'm not going to cancel him. You are not going to sandblast. Thomas Jefferson's face off Mount Rushmore.
Starting point is 00:06:43 Thomas Jefferson, slaveholder, Sally Hemings, the whole sordid case of him sleeping with the slave women. That's fact and that's history. And it's not going to go away. It's evidence. But still, we're going to honor him. D.W. Griffith, Birth of the Nation, scurrilous work, the Klansman, terribly racist movie, arguably one of the great American movies.
Starting point is 00:07:08 You cannot live to understand American film without understanding birth of elation. Laini Riefenstahl, a Nazi monster woman, a woman of such despicable influence, was a genius. So you can't study Nazi film. You can't study 20th century German film without dealing with the phenomenon of Nancy, of Lady Rivenshaw. And you could add Ezra Pound, you could add T.S. Eliot, vicious anti-Semites, nasty guys, swine, if you want. They were literary geniuses and shouldn't be canceled. That's simply a fact. And so cancellation is intellectually dishonest. Even if you are a monster, even if you are a rotten human being, you do not cancel literature. You don't cancel Blake Bailey. So having said all of that,
Starting point is 00:08:01 there were times that I wish I hadn't read Cancel's lives. There were a couple of moments there that for me were dicey. And as I said to Anthony, we were talking before we went online, for all my students, you pay for four and you get the next 40 free. Once a student, always a student. And Tony, Anthony, will be nothing for me for the rest of my life. I'm getting to the end of it, except a student. He will always be a student. I'll always be teaching him. And I always will keep a certain measure of distance between us. From your own mouth, the things you said in canceled lives about those seventh and eighth grade students that you were teaching, those women, that you never got them into your bed until
Starting point is 00:08:51 after they had graduated and they were much older, I still can't buy that. That's not, for me, as a lifelong teacher, acceptable behavior. I agree. having said that, that's all I need to say. I believe your work should be permanently in the books and never canceled, and yet you made a couple of ethical moves that bother me. They are meant to be disturbing, and they're meant to bother you. My aim in writing this book was not to whitewash my conduct.
Starting point is 00:09:30 It was to clarify what I did and what I did not. do. And you didn't help me understand why you chose the subjects you chose, the writers that you write, you go toward people with problems. I do indeed. We all have them. What I wanted to clarify in the book was that I indulged in some bad behavior. And I did sleep with some former students, generally a long time after they were my students. I have never in my role. And never never, never no longer your students. And I, yes, I understand that. But for what it's worth, because I was accused of sleeping with my students while they were my students. I was accused initially of assaulting eighth grade girls. Okay. I have taught students as young as 11 and as old as
Starting point is 00:10:29 98, Norton Girralt. And unlike Philip Roth, I never laid a glove on anybody while they were my student. Usually this... I accepted none of the very charges, by the way. Years later, when these were no longer legal miners and it was consensual. What I wanted to deny in this book vehemently was I did nothing vicious or illicit. legal. I was accused of rape by two people, and I try to reasonably and non-invidiously address those accusations in the book, say exactly what happened. I think non-titilatingly, too. You know,
Starting point is 00:11:22 I'm very clinical and I think objective about my descriptions of what actually happened with those people. So, you know, I mean, it's, again, it's one thing to be a philanderer who sleeps around on a wife that, in my case, I adored and respected, and break my daughter's heart. I did those things, but I did nothing vicious or illegal. I did not rape any body. That's not consciously legal. Except my complete description, except if you had listened to me earlier. Very dose. I hope, though, you found my book to be contrived about, you know, what I... But I don't think you understood your own fault, at least in that context.
Starting point is 00:12:12 As I said again to Anthony, if you're once you're my student, you're always my student. And when you said, when I read in Cancer Lives, I did not sleep with them until they were consenting adults. I can't accept that. That's only my own, my own, your own mind, you know, I emphatically describe it as such in the book. I will not accept somebody's description
Starting point is 00:12:37 of you as a semen-soaked star abroad's the pretty second book. No, you were just, you let yourself get out of it. It's a big of a piece, and I was actually rather pleased by it because, you know, look, this is important.
Starting point is 00:12:52 When I first tried to respond to my scandal in the summer of 2022, okay, I published this book's predecessor, a previous version of this book called repellent. And it was also about my scandal. And when I tried to publish that book, it was quashed by the Philip Roth estate for reasons that we needn't go into and that I'm not allowed to go into. But it was quashed. But when its Amazon page first appeared, it immediately blew up into a big media story. Everyone said, can you believe it? Blake Bailey, this detestable scumbag, is presuming to defend himself. And I was astonished.
Starting point is 00:13:40 You know, the people seemed angrier by my impulse to defend myself than they'd been by what I was accused of. the first place. Because what they want you to do is, you know, put on your sackcloth and ashes and wander off into the desert and get pecked by birds. And I'm not going to do that. Because, again, I did nothing illegal and I did nothing that I think is truly vicious. And yes, I mean, I think the Philip Roth book and my other books deserve to exist, you know. Oh, Picasso. Good, without say. Well, you mentioned these are odious people.
Starting point is 00:14:34 They did odious Alice Monroe, for God's sake. But they are magnificent writers. And I'm going to keep looking at Gurneka and I'm going to keep reading this. That's where I've come. I'm going to get it read. But the double Jewish is, I mean, Byron, Byron, but the ones that always got me were Yates, not Yates, Yates was anti-Semi 2, but Elliot and Pound,
Starting point is 00:14:58 they should have both taken out and shot, particularly as for a pound after World War II. But the American literary world couldn't do that, instead they declared him insane, put him in St. Elizabeth's madhouse in Washington, D.C., and that let him out after that. Orioles. He did. He won the Bolingian Prize. He goes back
Starting point is 00:15:21 to Italy, and the first thing he did was do the fascist salute. He never changed. Well, Powell never changed. Anyway, so this book, this book I tried to publish in 2022, was greeted with total outrage. And...
Starting point is 00:15:37 Reference your lives? Three years later, the culture has changed somewhat, because this time I have been met with contemptuous silence. And you'll be honest. I'm sorry, Solvich,
Starting point is 00:15:50 the canceled movement partially is responsible for us getting Donald Trump. Yeah. I agree. Went too far. Yeah, no. He's moving pendants to leave the other way.
Starting point is 00:16:05 Too far. No question. Yeah. And I didn't know what to expect when when I face the publication of this book, what I will say is that I would never make a public statement to the effect that these women are what they say about their rape accusations are unambiguously false, and here's why.
Starting point is 00:16:36 I would never put myself out like that because, you know, I mean it's inviting, you know, a mob of torches and pitchforks on my lawn. Were, you only could have escaped, the only way you could have escaped out the back. No, no, if you had gotten earlier on in your life, those two little Donald ducks that are on your shoulder, the angel and the devil,
Starting point is 00:17:02 if the angel had prevailed, then you wouldn't be in these pickles right now. You all saw and live and learn. My point is that, You know, Bernie, is let myself out there because I'm telling the truth. And it's not a self-flattering version of the truth. I did some bad things as you have roundly a staff. It's very rear.
Starting point is 00:17:27 It's very real. It's very raw. And it's very honest. And I think the reason why we wanted to have you back on is that to Saul's point, we've got to stop canceling people. I accept I have flaws in my person. personality too, Blake. I'm not, I'm not sitting here. You know, what did Jesus say, right? Throw the first stone of you've not sinned. I'm not a perfect person. And Saul, believe me, knows more than one of my flaws, which I've shared with them. I mean, I, I, you know, and I made my mistakes politically. I've made my mistakes professionally and personally. I guess the thing that Saul's getting at, and I guess that we're the reason I wanted to have you back on is where do you go from here? What is the lesson? I mean, you close that. book. Okay. You're a great author. You're a phenomenal writer and you're writing to a reader. What is the lesson that you want the reader? The reader is closing the book and they've just learned something.
Starting point is 00:18:25 What you what? Canceled Lives? It canceled lives. What do you want that lesson to be from canceled lives, please? Well, I mean, had I to do it all over again, you know, at one point in the book, I examined my behavior. Most of this behavior was 20 plus years ago. And that doesn't excuse it. But I look back on that person that I was. And I simply don't understand what the hell I was doing. You know, I was deeply unhappy for various reasons.
Starting point is 00:19:03 My brother had just killed himself in jail. and my Yates book, which was a critical success, was about to come out. And meanwhile, my publisher kept passing on all my subsequent book proposals. So I felt like, you know, all this hard work was for nothing. And I engaged in some bad behavior, which I would never, ever, ever repeat. have been the non-stop ass stomping that I have gotten over the past four years and given my own evolving sense of right and wrong. That said, you know, my literary biographies, Philip Roth, of John Sheaver, Richard Gates,
Starting point is 00:19:51 and Charles Jackson, all these people were extremely flawed human beings. That's what I got mostly old start of canceled lives. how are you found these people you know Philip Roth when he taught at Penn in the 70s he would have his friend Joel Canero who was the dean and you know when Phillips oversubs oversubscribed class when someone would you know would try to get off the waiting list and get into Phillips oversubs oversubscribed class they would have to go through Joel Canero and Joel Canero would vet these people these women for comeliness and susceptibility at Phillips behest.
Starting point is 00:20:35 I never did that. You know, that's why people were calling for Roth to be canceled after my biography was published. And, you know, I mean, my point is there is a vast discrepancy between someone's public face and what's going on in their private life. Anthony, have you read the plot against America? Yes, and also saw the movie. In fact, you may remember this. You recommended that book to me. It's got to be 20 years ago.
Starting point is 00:21:08 Yeah, and it came true. I mean, if there was only one person per... I mean, the Lindbergh story is the Trump story. Yeah. But, you know, I didn't know what to expect from this book. And as far as Trump is concerned, you know, When he was reelected, I thought, well, this can go either way. I mean, a man who has been civilly convicted of sexual misconduct has been reelected president of the United States.
Starting point is 00:21:44 I'm amid many other alleged misdeeds. Either that means the culture is changing, not necessarily for the better. but it may also mean that there's going to be this all the more virulent backlash against me as, you know, for my past sexual misbehavior. Again, no, I'm not sure of that. For the most part, the response has been a contemptuous silence. The publicity I've done for this book has consisted of a wonderful interview. on the Brett Easton Ellis podcast, almost three hours long, review.
Starting point is 00:22:29 And the now defunct, I think my review killed it. New York Journal of Books, not to be confused with the New York Review of Books, a piece in tablet, a piece in unheard, and a couple of other minor. I don't think your legacy. So I'm thrilled to be here and to be able to say my piece. I'm sorry, Saul. Go ahead. I don't think your legacy is going to be canceled lines. Your legacy is going to be your biographies.
Starting point is 00:22:52 you are a brilliant biographer. Your autobiography, I don't need to know all of that about your family. I don't need to know all about that about you. I can tell you privately and to your face now, you should have comported yourself differently. But when it comes to finding the right biographer to put together a literary biography,
Starting point is 00:23:18 you know, you and James Atlas, I thought were in the same class, You are prolific. You are, you're just the best that we have in the nation, and you cannot be canceled. Well, Saul, that's very, very generous. But I do need to sell a few copies of canceled lives. So help me out. That's problematic. Well, Laura has a future as a writer. If I don't. Problematic equally, you write about. You write about it.
Starting point is 00:23:46 Which, by the way, I think is a good book. It has the virtue of brevity. It's not going to, you know, take up a lot of your time. And it is absolutely truthful from beginning to end. And look, I'm going to say something generationally, Blake, because I think you and I are from the same vintage. Yep. And Saul is probably from our dad's generation. So for me, having five children that range in age from 32 to seven, I think your book is worthwhile because Saul is right, his generation doesn't want to hear all that detail, but the generation that you're talking to as younger than souls probably wants to hear that detail. Again, I'm not saying that it's right or wrong, but I think that there's messages in the book. And what I got from the book was,
Starting point is 00:24:40 I think that you are contrite in the book. What I got from the book, though, is a cautionary tale about boundaries. And my boundaries have been flawed in the past. And Saul knows I grew up with a very tough dad. He was a blue collar worker, beat the living daylights out of me and my brother. And it manifested itself in different ways, which, you know, I've tried to curb some of my accesses as well. But what I got out of the book was you were out of control with your boundaries. Exactly. You've rained it in. And this is a cautionary tale for people to think about their lives where they may be overstepping a boundary somewhere, reined it in, you're going to live a more prosperous, more healthy, more mentally aware, more self-aware life. I think that was the message of the book.
Starting point is 00:25:27 And so I'm proud to have you on. And I agree with Saul about your writing. I think the Philip, you know, he read the others. I have to confess you, I didn't. I've read canceled lives. And I read the Philip Roth book cover to cover. I was influenced to do that by Saul because he, introduced me to Philip Roth who was masturbating in his baseball glove like they can put noise complaint you know what he's up so I'm like he's a little love right
Starting point is 00:25:56 he describes the seaman is smelling like buttermilk and chlorox and this is something I read 40 years ago but you can't remember that's why he was our greatest living novelist yeah so so to me
Starting point is 00:26:14 this is I guess what I would say to you, go forward, sir, in your life and write and go forward in your life. And you're always welcome on this podcast with your books because we are bibliophiles on this podcast. And I, you know, Saul is right in what he's saying. But I'm also think that you did the right thing by writing the book because, yeah, it's not a lot of that. Just stop the canceling, right? If Trump is too far of a pendulum going back the other way, I'm hoping we can get to the middle part of the swing. The trouble is that both sides of that pendulum, Trump and the anti-Trumps are both cancellers.
Starting point is 00:26:56 They both want it. That's the irony. That's not the Iron Age numbers, guys. That's not the First Amendment. It's not what America, it's what America used to be about. It was always that way. I mean, I remember growing up with the band in Boston. We've always done that.
Starting point is 00:27:09 We've always canceled people. And we have to stop. pornography, that's something else. But the stuff that Blake is writing, that that can't, that has to be part of the American canon. Well, look, what what is at the heart of canceled lives is the same basic theme, uh, that's present in my biographies, which again is sort of the vast difference between a person's public image and their private lives. Can I talk a little bit about why my father features so large in this book? The subtitle is my father, my scandal, and me. My father, Burke, Saul, I think you two are pretty much exact contemporaries. You're 91. My father would have been 91. He died seven months
Starting point is 00:28:03 after my scandal blew up and the sheer dizzying horror of what happened to me hastened his death. The reason my father is particularly germane to this story, he was regarded within his profession as a kind of real-life Atticus Finch. He was the best trial lawyer, Oklahoma's ever produced, you know, I mean, say you're the relativistic things about Oklahoma, but still, he was praising you. There's Dinkentzatis Finch, at least in the movie? Pardon me?
Starting point is 00:28:44 Do you think he was as decent as Greg Lee portraying? I'm coming to that. My father was, apart from his abilities as a litigator, was foremost known as a paragon of ethical conduct,
Starting point is 00:29:00 of graciousness, of wit and courtesy within the profession. He won an ethics award. That's what he's primarily known for as being an ethical paragon within his profession. However, Saul, in his private life, my father was very freewheeling, very floundering. My parents had an open marriage. My mother was no slouch. I would come home. There would be drag queen singing torch songs. There would be drugs, et cetera. So you'll agree there was a great thing through, you know, and open marriages, you've got children that you're
Starting point is 00:29:44 responsible for. Right. I may be a Puritan. You know, I'm a Puritan. I am a Jewish Puritan. Once you have children, you are going to be responsible for a great deal of other people's lives. and you philandering, drugs, all that stuff, keep it out of it. Well, this is why you wrote very effectively came through here, and I didn't like him that much. You didn't like my father in the, in the book? No, I get it. Oh, there were times when I said, don't do that. Your deportment stinks.
Starting point is 00:30:18 Well, my father changed, and he divorced my mother. He remarried a woman who I did not get along with. And he became much more puritanical in his private life. Again, he was always a lovely man in his public conduct. And you can't sham that altogether. It wasn't a sham. He's a lovely guy. If you met him, you would likely adore him.
Starting point is 00:30:51 The only way I met him is through your right. But it is possible, again, to be sexually wayward. Saul, and to be a person of the highest ethical ideals otherwise. That was my fault. As long as you're not involving other people, particularly your children. There you go. And I'd like to think if my daughter were here, she would tell you that as a father, I mean, this is why all this was so shocking to her. I mean, it almost destroyed her, as you can imagine. because she never saw any of this in my paternal conduct. I mean, I was doting.
Starting point is 00:31:35 I almost never raised my voice even. We had a wonderful and still have. We have survived this and we have come out the other end. Again, you know, my father, there was nothing wrong with him as a father. And, you know, when my scandal blew up, it could have gone either way. My father was a lovely man, but he was. very judgmental. And he might have said, look, kid, you know, you made your bed sleep in it, et cetera. He said those sort of things to me many times. But he did not. He said, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:13 I love you. I'm with you. Tomorrow will be better than today. And then he died. He went into rapid decline after that. But he kind of saved my life. So that's why I include my father. Always be your father. That's okay. He always will be your father. Well, yeah. And in most ways, Saul, he was an extremely decent human being.
Starting point is 00:32:39 It is possible to be sexually wayward and to be decent in other respects. That's a value, gentlemen. You could think you have another podcast. All right. Well, I mean, the half hour went by very quickly. So, Blake, I'm going to give you the last war. We got about 90 seconds left in the podcast before my advertisers will edit the goddamn thing. So I'm like that to happen.
Starting point is 00:33:03 So you get the last 90 seconds. Go ahead, Blake Bailey. I was hoping you would like give me a cue word like you usually do. All right. Well, let's talk. I'll give you a cue word. The word is canceled. Give me the cue word.
Starting point is 00:33:18 Me. Okay. Yeah, me. And again, you. And, you know, I did some things that I regret. I wrote about them in the book. I hope that you'll get the book and find out what I did and what I didn't do and weigh those one against the other.
Starting point is 00:33:41 And possibly then, after I've sold a few of these books and I can go on and write about Jim Salter and keep having a career, you'll read my other books and learn about other interesting people who did good work. and who are flawed as human beings. We are all flawed as human beings. Indeed. I mean, I think that's ultimate the last word. I think you're a brilliant writer and I want you to sell books. And so I want people to go out and buy cancel and read it.
Starting point is 00:34:11 I think to learn from it, I think it is a cautionary tale in there. I do appreciate you writing it with the level of authenticity and the honesty that you present in the book. I am Anthony Scaramucci and that was open book. Thank you so much for listening. If you like what you hear, tell your friends and make sure you hit follow or subscribe wherever you listen to your podcast. While you're there, please leave us a rating or review. If you want to connect with me or chat more about the discussions, it's at Scaramucci on X or Instagram. I'd love to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:34:48 I'll see you back here next week.

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