Pivot - DC is old news. “The universe revolves around Silicon Valley”

Episode Date: February 22, 2019

Kara brings on co-host, legendary NYTimes journalist, Maureen Dowd. They talk about how Silicon Valley has eclipsed Washington, DC as the country's true seat of power.  Learn more about your ad choic...es. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:50 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. Hi, everyone. Get started at HubSpot.com slash marketers. to the mic today. She's from Washington. We're broadcasting from Washington. Maureen, welcome to Pivot. Thank you, Cara. Thank you for doing this. Now, you got a general sense of what you're supposed to be, Scott, but please be like a thousand times less obnoxious. Well, my only role in life is do whatever Cara tells me, so. Okay, that's a great rule. I think everyone should do that role. Anyway, we're going to talk about a bunch of new stuff and things like that. Just for people, people do know who you are, but explain who Maureen Dowd is she is a famous columnist uh I have a column at the times and I
Starting point is 00:01:50 also have a um a feature in the style section um where I interview people sometimes from Silicon Valley so you so you you like tech or do you do you're very interested in it, right? Yeah, I'm fascinated with it in a sort of a Mary Shelley way. That these are a group of people who think they are creating, you know, are gods creating people and universes and things and possibly killer robots. killer robots. And, you know, in some ways, a lot of them are like little boys in that Palo Alto apartment where Sergey Brin and, or is it just Larry Page and Elon? I don't know. It's all of them. Yeah. And they talk about rockets to Mars and fast cars and, you know, all these amazing things. But, you know, in other ways, there are overlords. Although, as Barry Diller says, really AI is the overlord, not these guys. How do you, when you go see them, how do they compare to Washington people?
Starting point is 00:02:54 Well, you sort of are steeped in this. That is exactly why I love talking to scientists and engineers. Because you ask them a question and they give you an answer and tell you the truth. You know, they don't, in Washington, that's the opposite, obviously, more intensely so now in the Trump era, but it's often hard to get a straight answer out of a politician. So you like meeting with them or meeting or seeing them? Yeah, they think so differently and they answer questions so differently. And, you know, when you're in Silicon Valley, you realize people in Washington think the universe
Starting point is 00:03:32 revolves around them. You know, they're deluded. Right. And who does the universe revolve around? Well, I think at the moment it revolves around Silicon Valley. And still, and do you think Washington is going to get them again this time with regulation? Is that like a big? I don't know. You know, just in the past couple of years, the tenor of how we think about Silicon Valley has grown so dark. You know, Sheryl Sandberg and the others have admitted that they don't know how to keep control of their monsters. So, but, you know, Congress is barely able to speak the language.
Starting point is 00:04:11 So I don't know. That obviously will change with people like AOC, you know, who is completely fluent in social media. Yes, she is. She is. Absolutely. What is the state of Washington right now? And then we'll get to the big story breakdown absolutely. What is the state of Washington right now? And then we'll get to the big story breakdowns. What is the state?
Starting point is 00:04:27 You've been pretty tough on the Trump administration. It's sort of moving in on Mueller now. How do you feel right now, two, three years in? I would say the state is frenzied. Still. The latest is that the Mueller report might be coming out next week. So everyone is completely frenzied. But, you know, it could be that the Mueller report is very disappointing to liberals who have so much
Starting point is 00:04:52 invested in it. I mean, it might not be everything they're hoping and dreaming. They might not be able to impeach Trump. Right. And so what is the feelings around this many years into the Trump administration, which seems to be one thing after the next, essentially? Well, you know, it seems ridiculous to use the words Trump and Dickens in the same sentence. Well, we're with Mary Shelley, so go right ahead. But Trump has an unbelievable talent for cliffhangers. And, you know, in our section, the Times Review section, they try and chart whether there is Trump fatigue. But I just have absolute faith in Donald Trump that if Trump fatigue starts to set in, he will do something so self-destructive and crazy that he will grab back our attention. I'm sure today in the White House he is absolutely fuming
Starting point is 00:05:45 because Michael Cohen postponed his testimony long enough that it's going to be on the same day that he's in Vietnam trying to win a Nobel Peace Prize. Cohen is going to be talking about porn models, playboy models and porn stars. Right, got to keep those apart. Yeah. What is a porn model, Maria?
Starting point is 00:06:09 I don't know. It's a job. Good question. We don't judge here. Yeah. No. But so there'll be a split screen. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:18 Which will, you know, that is the essence of what drives them crazy. Yeah. All right. Let's get to some of the stories. So this week, you know, speaking of like crazy things in Washington, you know, the cable networks have all sort of made us all feel awful all the time. But CNN hired Sarah Isger. She's a former Trump aide. She worked for Jeff Sessions as a new political editor to help run its 2020 election coverage.
Starting point is 00:06:41 She was a spokesman at senior counsel at the Justice Department for Sessions, Jeff Sessions. coverage. She was a spokesman at senior council at the Justice Department for Sessions, Jeff Sessions. Previously, she served as deputy campaign manager for Carly Pierina during her terribly failed presidential bid. She doesn't have any journalism appearance that we can understand of. And so what do you think about this? What do you imagine they're trying to do there? Well, I think she sold herself to CNN and MSNBC as someone who could help, who had deep knowledge with the Mueller report. And it's already paid off because CNN broke the story about how the Mueller report might be coming next week. So I don't believe in hiring people who have made a living trashing you. But she did.
Starting point is 00:07:25 She called the Clinton News. Right. And I also don't believe in hiring political operatives as journalists. Yeah. So why does that happen? I mean, it's like all over the place. Well, you know, this woman aside, we're in an era when, you know, the very people who sold Sarah Palin in the Iraq war are liberal heroes on MSNBC. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:46 You know, so she's the least of it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They all are. We're all cheering them now because they're not awful. Yeah, the liberals were so shocked when Steve Schmidt, you know, took two million or whatever to go work for Howard Schultz as though, you know, he was some pure liberal just because he hates Trump. Yeah, that's what I'm trying to understand. Everyone's washing themselves in the blood of Trump, right?
Starting point is 00:08:07 Right. So what does that do? What does that do to cable? I mean, how do you look at that? Like when they do this, does it matter or is it just a circus? Just a ridiculous circus? Oh, that she. Yeah, that she's going to run political coverage.
Starting point is 00:08:19 Well, I'm sure they'll spin it like we all missed in 2016 the Trump— Resurgence. Yeah, I didn't, and probably you didn't, because we have family members. Yes, we do. You and I know. We know. But maybe their attitude will be, well, you know, we have to have more diversity of outlook. But in an era when all these journalists are getting laid off, why are we hiring political operatives who trash journalists? Yes, indeed.
Starting point is 00:08:52 That is a thing. I think they might be trying to sort of thwart Trump's calling them fake news. But I think they'll continue to do so because it's part of the circus. Well, here's one interesting tidbit. You know, I was talking to Steve Bannon and he said, I was just talking to Steve Bannon at the coffee shop. You probably know this, but he was saying that Fox is not Trump's favorite network. That's CNN is, you know, that loves him some dumb. Well, because yeah, secretly. Yeah. Because he has to pay more attention.
Starting point is 00:09:25 He takes it more seriously in a way because it's not a slam dunk. He loves the New York Times, right? Yes, he's obsessed with the New York Times. The same way Bush Sr. was because his father was. You know, he grew up with a father reading it and Trump did too. And, you know, he called us after he got elected. We were the first call. And he came over and he called us after he got elected. We were the first call. And he came over and he said we were the crown jewel.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And? We were the crown jewel of journalism. And he was just loving on us. And, you know, he's obsessed with Maggie Haberman. And you too, I think. Well, you know, he stopped speaking to me when my book came out and I was promoting it. It was funny. I was on this Mercanus show promoting my book, and I guess I said something negative about him.
Starting point is 00:10:12 And he began tweeting that I was a wacky, neurotic dope. But the funny thing is I was thinking, who's up at 9 a.m. on a Saturday morning watching CNN? Then it was him. Okay, a wacky, neurotic dope. Yeah. Do. on a Saturday morning watching CNN. Then it was him. Okay, a wacky neurotic dope. Yeah. Do you have a special nickname? He hasn't given me a nickname. We wish you had.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Well, according to Chris Christie, if he doesn't give you a nickname, like he hasn't given Nancy one, that means he respects you underneath it all. I see. He trashes you, but there's some lingering. What would be your nickname? W called me Cobra. Cobra. But, no. Trump hasn't given me one yet.
Starting point is 00:10:54 You used to know him pretty well, right? You talked to him, not infrequently. Yeah, I talked to him for 30 years. I talked to him in 1987 when Mikhail Gorbachev came to America for the first time. He was meeting with New York businessmen, and I called Trump before he met with him. And he said, we have to be really careful.
Starting point is 00:11:15 We have to be really skeptical about the Soviet Union. We can't, you know, get rolled by them. And then I called him after the meeting. It's like, I love them. They're amazing. They asked me to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. So the Russians were on to him so fast. It was one compliment. Right. And they had him. Yeah, that's it. Do you think you'd get him back if you complimented him? Yeah. Jared told me that. Jared Kushner said, if I put out two nice tweets and a nice column or one nice tweet and two nice columns or something, he might talk to me again. Oh, my goodness. My goodness. So the
Starting point is 00:11:52 other thing that you wrote about recently, I'm going to move from Trump to another, one of Trump's, I don't know, enemies, I guess, Jeff Bezos, who owns the Washington Post, but more importantly, he is the CEO and founder of Amazon. Now, you wrote about the demise of HQ2 and AOC and Bernie Sanders pushing them out. You had a great take on that. Talk about that. You know, again, we can't look at any news story without seeing the backdrop of what's happened, the darkening of our view of Silicon Valley and also the fallout of no one getting punished in the financial crisis. I mean, these major things that happen in the country infect everything, elections, stories. So, you know, Bezos could behave one way before, but now, you know, he sort of represents all the arrogance and ruthlessness that people have now come to associate Bezos and Zuckerberg and people like that with. And that's why that one moment where he stood up to the National Enquirer was his one.
Starting point is 00:13:12 Well, also how he's handled the Post or sort of heroic moments. But in general, you know, he's part of the problem in Silicon Valley. Were you surprised that he pulled out of there? in Silicon Valley, just his attitude. Were you surprised that he pulled out of there? No, because that they are still of the mindset that New York was lucky to have them rather than they were lucky to have New York. Right, and were you surprised New York pushed back so hard?
Starting point is 00:13:39 Well, it wasn't all of New York. Right. I have de Blasio and Cuomo on my losers list. Oh, yeah, that's true. We'll get to that in a second. But where does it go? Do you think it's going to have a backlash not bringing them there? I think, you know, I think that somebody had to push back. Well, part of it also was the cluelessness of Amazon about the union situation in New York.
Starting point is 00:14:12 Yeah, and other things, not fixing anything, just coming in. Right. I mean, I think it would have been really good for Jeff Bezos on the heels of his positive publicity about the National Enquirer if instead of just, you know, pulling out, he had met with our queen, he had met with our queen, AOC, and, you know, tried to offer some emoluments to make it work or given back some of the money. Yeah, he can't do it.
Starting point is 00:14:43 What do you think of how she got this hat? She was one of the many people who pushed against it. I know, you know, all the guys in my office roll their eyes when her name comes up. But I have a real soft spot for her because I have watched— She was a bartender when Amazon first talked about going there, which was first announced this thing, which is really interesting. I know, I love her trajectory. But also, I've just watched for decades while Democrats were too scared to even call themselves liberals.
Starting point is 00:15:14 You know, they've always been, you know, in the language of S&M, you know, they've always been the submissives. You know, they have. They've always been the submissives. You know, they have. And so I love her whole fierce, you know, don't screw with me attitude. I just love it. I think if she can, you know, learn her way around Washington and get things and not ban our planes and cows. Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:42 You know, I've interviewed her. I just think've interviewed her I just think she's great you know she's not perfect but she has the fight even Hillary Clinton if Hillary Clinton had had a little of that fight like in the debate with Trump
Starting point is 00:15:57 when he was lurking around behind her she had turned around and said get the hell out of my frame I asked her about that in an interview and she said she should have said something. Yes. It was, you know, it's that. She felt like she'd get attacked if she's a new creepy person. Well, that's why she was always hamstrung.
Starting point is 00:16:14 You know, she was always sort of overthinking and overcorrecting. You're not her favorite, as I recall. Well, you've been tough on her. Well, this is another thing that bugs me about Democrats. They just want you to censor and not talk about the flaws of Democrats and only talk about the flaws of Republicans. But you can kind of see what they're doing wrong and everyone else can see. So it would be better if they would just read the column and make a correction. Make a correction.
Starting point is 00:16:43 So last question in this area. So there seems to be a presidential candidate every hour, a different one. How do you think about the various rollouts of all of them? Yeah. At some point, an advisor to Obama told me that Obama had already talked to 46 people and that was, you know, five months ago. Right. Well, I'm running for president. Well, I would vote for you.
Starting point is 00:17:06 Who do you think has done a good job in the rollouts? I think, you know, Amy Klobuchar seems very appealing, but I think this throwing things at staffers is very problematical. More so because she does seem so appealing. It's kind of like, where is that coming from? Right, right, right. Nobody likes a lady who throws things. Yeah, and I love the whole Kamala Harris and Willie Brown. Willie Brown keeps writing columns about how they had this affair,
Starting point is 00:17:39 and he helped her get jobs, but so what? He helped Nancy Pelosi. I think that's a funny. Women running have a whole level. A whole different thing. Different thing. So how did you like, who else? Was Elizabeth Warren?
Starting point is 00:17:53 Who was this weekend? Or was it Bernie Sanders? Oh, well, Bernie Sanders. That's right, Bernie Sanders. I think I'm one of the ones who thinks Bernie Sanders, you know, and Biden had their best shot last time. I could be wrong, but, you know, I just feel like at some point you've got to move on and have some fresh leadership. That sounds like a Moring Dowd column, I think. I need one.
Starting point is 00:18:19 You need one? All right. You need one by Friday. When do you have to have it by? Tomorrow night at 730. That's a good one right there. All right. We're going to take a quick break. When we get back to have it by? Tomorrow night at 7.30. That's a good one right there. All right. We're going to take a quick break.
Starting point is 00:18:28 When we get back, we're here with Maureen Dowd of The New York Times. We're going to talk about wins and fails, and Maureen's going to make some predictions. 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, just kind of typing away in the middle of the night.
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Starting point is 00:20:37 their investment approach, what learnings have 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. We're here with Maureen Dowd. Welcome to wins and fails segments of Pivots, where we get to call out all the people who are messing things up and highlight a couple of people doing it right. So we're going to do a bunch of wins in full calling Rutger Bregman, who was the historian who was on the stage at Davos who called out billionaires and suggested we should be talking about tax avoidance.
Starting point is 00:21:15 A moron, even though it looked like Rutger Bregman was very smart. He also called him a bunch of other things. bunch of other things. And the line that I think Rodger Bregman had that was really amazing was calling him, Tucker Carlson, a millionaire who works for billionaires and sort of just does their bidding and doesn't talk about these issues about the wealthy being too wealthy. This is a big move, this idea of the wealth. It's going to hit Silicon Valley people, all kinds of people, the wealthy being too wealthy and taxing them. AOC has one, Elizabeth Warren, I just talked to her advisors on that. How do you look at that? Again, I look at it in the larger context of the Obama
Starting point is 00:21:51 administration not punishing any of the bankers. I think everything is stemming from this anger that that was not resolved properly. Right, right. And do you think it has legs? Because there's so many of these proposals? Yeah, I do. Because now, isn't it a majority of Democrats who think it's okay? The 70% tax. Lots of people do, actually. Lots of, lots more people than you think.
Starting point is 00:22:14 This is what Rutger Bregman was saying, more people than you think. Well, they brought this on themselves by being pigs. I always say they're so poor, all they have is money. All right, your fail? Oh, my fail. Well, let's see. I wrote down a lot of them. I gave you the split screen one.
Starting point is 00:22:30 Okay, good. And also I think Cuomo and de Blasio are a fail because they couldn't either negotiate this thing or present this thing in a way that could or save this thing in a way that could, or save this thing in a way that could make it work. Right. You know, because in some ways it would have been nice to have all those innovators in New York if it had been properly done. And, oh, and I told you, I think Trump has a fail when he talks about the press and goes up against Deji Salzberger as enemy of the people because every time he does that, our digital subscriptions jump.
Starting point is 00:23:06 Right, which is good. And obviously, Jesse Smollett is a fail. Yeah, yeah. Talk about that. Because, you know, if you're going to stage a homophobic and racist attack, I guess you shouldn't do it with extras from your own show. But also, it might be a fail for the media.
Starting point is 00:23:24 The police were just having a press conference chastising the media because we're all so eager to believe the anti-Trump plot lines. And we have to be careful also in Covington. Do you remember a long time, this is the
Starting point is 00:23:39 teen who, they're suing the Washington Post over this. I'm not sure why they picked the Washington Post particularly over anybody else. But this idea of jumping to conclusions, yes, I was involved myself. But also, you know, I was thinking while I was watching this press conference, I guess the reason he did it is because he wanted a bigger salary. So it would have been better if he just read Lean In and took Sheryl Sandberg's advice. The way to get a bigger salary is to smile at your boss during salary negotiations.
Starting point is 00:24:08 Yeah, he's not going to get any salary now. He's going to be out of salaries. Yeah, he's definitely a failure. It's depressing because issues around people of color and gay people are very severe in this country, for real. And so to use that and then add it on to a Trump thing just was— I can't even think of someone who would think of doing something like that. You make a joke about it.
Starting point is 00:24:28 That Xiao empire is based on King Lear. And there are a lot of comparisons these days with Trump and King Lear, you know, howling at the moon in the storm. This is so like literal, Maureen. I know. You've got Shelley, you've got Dickens, you're bringing Shakespeare in. You're bringing it. Dickens. We're bringing Shakespeare in. I think a win was these documentaries about R. Kelly and Michael Jackson.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Oh, right. And the new Alex Gibney one about Theranos. Yes, exactly. That's coming out. That's in a couple of weeks. It's on HBO. There's several of them. What do you think of these?
Starting point is 00:25:00 I mean, they're all sort of finally telling the tales of what occurred. The one on uh jackson i think it's called leaving neverland um well how do you look at these it's interesting because um my friend maurie north did some groundbreaking she did on michael jackson and vanity fair you know 20 years ago and she would tell me at the time about the vicious reaction of michael jackson fans and she'd say it would be worse, you know, the next day because when the ones from Europe weighed in, you were really in trouble.
Starting point is 00:25:31 And I just thought, you know, when I wrote about it last weekend. Tell them what you said. Well, I just was writing about the documentary. And, you know, these two kids, one was seven and one was eight or nine, you know, when he began abusing them, they're now in their 40s. And when they had sons of their own and their sons are reaching that age,
Starting point is 00:25:54 they have intense trauma symptoms. And they just felt like they couldn't hide the secret anymore, even though they had backed him up in testimony and helped get him off. Yeah, but because this was the interesting thing to me, they were in love with him. He made them fall in love with him and also their mothers. Yeah, the mother.
Starting point is 00:26:15 And the mothers are so scary because they are still in awe of him. They talk about how they got the limos and the credit cards and the cars and the houses and Neverland. And one mother talks about the champagne and the wine and the wine cellar at Neverland and how great it was. And you're just cringing because, you know, one mother is very proud of herself because Michael Jackson said, just leave your son here for a year because he would have one child companion for a year and then he'd move on to another. And the mother said, just leave your son here for a year because he would have one child companion for a year and then he'd move on to another. And the mother said, no, I'm not going to leave him. I'll share him with you.
Starting point is 00:26:53 That was her idea of standing up to Michael Jackson. Which is like amazing. It's an astonishing thing. It's astonishing. And, you know, it's sort of a saga about how celebrity warps judgment. And, you know, from OJ to Bill Cosby to anything, you know, people who are famous can get away with things. Do you think that's true anymore? I mean, look at this R. Kelly thing came out, although he's still operating, he's still not jailed. Yeah, I think that continues to be true. Michael Jackson was a level of star that we rarely see anymore.
Starting point is 00:27:28 Hollywood doesn't have that many stars anymore, you know, so it was much more intense. But yes, I think celebrity continues to warp. To warp people. Do you imagine all this Me Too thing will have resonance? I mean, the Times is one of the papers that really pushed it. Ronan Farrow was someone else who did that. I think, the Times is one of the papers that really pushed it. Ronan Farrow was someone else who did that. I think, yes.
Starting point is 00:27:50 I think that it definitely put a lot of creeps on notice. But I don't think anything will change in Hollywood until we have more than 1% of women directors on the top 100 grossing films. Which you've written about, yeah. And cinematographers. I mean, as long as those statistics remain the same, it's very much like Saudi Arabia or the Catholic Church. If you have a society that systematically excludes the hearts and brains of women, you're going to have a sick, warped society.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Right, the Catholic Church this week, all this stuff. I mean, Silicon Valley, too. Oh, well, hello. Yeah, exactly. You do have a warped thing. In that zone, when you think about those cultures, where is the change point from your perspective? Where do you imagine it shifting? Because Washington was like that. Now it's much more.
Starting point is 00:28:35 There's many more women in Pazaria. Nancy Pelosi. It took a long time, though. Yeah, yeah. It took a crazy long time. I don't know. You know, I think Pelosi is an interesting sort of emblematic figure because when we see her wielding power in that fierce, effective way,
Starting point is 00:28:58 and that's what I was saying about AOC, I think that's what's really going to change the dynamic. Although women do that every day in the home, right? Right. It needs a public thing. Yeah, just to see little girls growing up seeing
Starting point is 00:29:15 that women successfully wielding power, I think will change things. On the flip side, you have Elizabeth from Theranos Holmes. Right. She doesn't represent all women, but it certainly is disappointing. Well, there's this amazing new story in Vanity Fair by Nick Bilton talking about how, you know, even when she was going down, she didn't think she was going down. Siberian husky named Balto as a symbolic gesture about the Siberian huskies who in 1925 brought
Starting point is 00:29:49 the antitoxin in Alaska for diphtheria. And you're thinking, oh my God, this lady is so bananas. Yeah, she shows up at events. I see her. And she has another startup? Yeah, I see her at events. What kind of startup? I don't know. I just move quickly. Yeah, you were on to her. Well, no, I wasn't. I just didn't cover her. You knew something was weird. Luckily, Rico doesn't cover healthcare.
Starting point is 00:30:15 I didn't have a reporter, but I just found it. I just never put her on stage. I didn't. It was a weird feeling. I had a big argument with Bob Iger about it, because he was like, you should put more women on stage like that. And I was like, I don't know. That's the one part of the new documentary. Two things I would like to see more of.
Starting point is 00:30:31 I would like to see the explanation of her strange deep voice that she put on. I think it's not real. And I would like to see more about how she kind of ensorcelled all these older guys. What's with that? Yeah. Weird. Even Jim Mattis. I know.
Starting point is 00:30:46 That was a disappointment. All of them. All of them. It was amazing. And even Schultz. Well, Schultz and the grandson. Yeah. But he was so smitten with her that he couldn't see his grandson was telling the truth.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Yep, yep. It was a really, it's a strange story. And I don't know where it's going to go. She's still under, possible under indictment. It could get worse for her, which is really interesting. But you know, in Silicon Valley, a lot of the people, like, look, Travis Kalanick has his thing. Everybody gets to come back
Starting point is 00:31:11 despite all kinds of problems. In some cases, it's just a regular fail, like what happened with Apple and Steve Jobs. And sometimes it's like, wow, you're back. Here you are again. We thought you stayed down, you know what I mean? But they don't. That's your motto, right? Yeah, stay down, right? I've told Maureen that. here you are again. We thought you stayed down. You know what I mean? That's your motto, right?
Starting point is 00:31:27 Yeah, stay down. Right, I told Maureen that. I'm using that. Yeah, stay down. When are you going to stop? When you stay down. Got that? I think it's a good motto. All right, so now we're going to finish up
Starting point is 00:31:35 and talk about predictions, Maureen. Scott, a couple weeks ago, he predicted famously that Amazon was going to buy Whole Foods, pushing into the healthcare space. I predicted that Amazon would get out. We know so much what would get out of New York. Escape from New York.
Starting point is 00:31:50 Do you have any predictions? I've got three. How many do you have time for? You can have as many as you want. Okay. Speaking of Pelosi, prediction is that she's marshalling her forces. Congress will reverse Trump's declaration, but he'll veto it and they can't override it. Right.
Starting point is 00:32:07 Okay. I think that the Democrats will probably pick Milwaukee as their convention site because Wisconsin will never be forgotten again. No. Miami's fun, but Wisconsin will never be forgotten. Wisconsin. but Wisconsin will never be forgotten. And finally, Jared Kushner is about to announce his Middle East peace plan. And Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman will be at the center of it. The Trump administration is still going to try and revive him, even though he's a psycho.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Yeah, Mr. Bramble, I call him. Yeah, and there's also a scandal brewing with Jared and Tom Barrett and Flynn about giving nuclear reactors to Saudi Arabia. Yeah, what do you think of Jared? We mentioned him earlier, honestly. What did Kelly say, he's playing a government? That's the King Lear part, you know, the king, mad king, surrounded by all these, you know, duplicitous scheming relatives.
Starting point is 00:33:08 Which means Jared, okay, what do you really think? That's disturbing that he's coming up with a Mideast plan. It's like a child playing in government, it really is. Well, yeah, I did hear him one night talking about bringing deliverables to Saudi Arabia, and a chill went down my spine because that means weapons that can be used to kill children in Yemen. I don't know if they're
Starting point is 00:33:32 the ones. Do you think Ivanka will ever run? That's what I keep hearing when I'm here. I think she would have liked to at one point and I think maybe she thinks about it but I just think it's going to be hard for Ivanka and Jared after they get out of this administration.
Starting point is 00:33:48 If they go back to New York, I would think they'd be sort of pariahs in the elite. Oh, come on, those people. They need their children. You think so? Yes, I do, Maureen. I don't have as much faith in humanity as you. I live in Silicon Valley. You're right. You know what I mean? Care is always right. No, it's true.
Starting point is 00:34:04 Come on. Are you kidding? Wouldn't it be great to have Ivanka versus Chelsea? Wouldn't that be interesting? I don't know. Barry Diller seemed kind of disillusioned. About? About Jared and Ivanka. Yes, they did.
Starting point is 00:34:14 So, in fact, this is my prediction. I think Netflix will be the first streaming service to win the Oscar for Best Picture with Roma, which I loved. Well, they've got Harvey Weinstein's old Oscar wrangler. Yes, exactly. The old Oscar wrangler. Anyway, I interviewed Barry Diller this week, speaking of which, and he said, and we'll listen to this very quickly, that Hollywood was over, irrelevant. Then what happens in Hollywood now?
Starting point is 00:34:37 What is it? How do you look at it when you look at Hollywood? Hollywood is now irrelevant. Okay. I mean, it has nothing. That's a big statement. Explain. It is.
Starting point is 00:34:44 irrelevant. I mean, it has nothing. Explain. That's a big statement. Explain. It is. Look, it will make and continue to make programming. Right. Clearly. And that is, was one of its functions. But what happened to the entertainment business since the early, you know, 100 years ago is that the, basically, let's start with radio. Radio essentially was dominated by NBC, CBS, and as the decades went on, they were able to, because the hegemony was complete, they were then able to get into television. Then they were able to get into the cable business. Then they were able to get into all these business, all of which, not that they founded them, but when they got big enough, they would buy them. So Little Warner Brothers Studio bought Time Inc., which had HBO, and CBS, which actually was the leader in news. It wasn't CBS that started 24-hour cable news, but it was Ted Turner who eventually got bought by Warners.
Starting point is 00:35:50 So it was these six movie companies, essentially, were able to extend their hegemony into everything else. Didn't matter that they started it. When it got big enough, they got to buy it. Right. Okay? For the first time, they ain't buying anything. Yeah, he told me that too.
Starting point is 00:36:08 And he admires Reed Hastings more than anyone. He did. He talked about Netflix quite a bit. Yeah, and he just thinks that they've blasted Hollywood into another universe. And what do you think? Do you think that Roma will win? I never disagree with Barry Diller. Or you.
Starting point is 00:36:22 Yeah, yeah. I think it will. Have you seen it? Roma? No. I don't know. Have you seen it? Roma? No, I don't know. Is it too long for you? I used to be. Too black and white?
Starting point is 00:36:30 I grew up being so in love with movies and Hollywood, but they've been putting out such lame product for a long time. I'm not as obsessed. Oh, really? This one you'll like? I think you'll like it. What's the last great movie you saw, Maureen? Shakespeare in Love.
Starting point is 00:36:44 What? Maureen, I was like a teenager then. Come on. Come on. I don't know. You didn't like Black Panther? Oh, I did like Black Panther. I'm just not that much of a comic book person.
Starting point is 00:36:58 Right, but there isn't been a movie. Go see Roma. You will like Roma. I swear to God. It was a very good movie, and it was beautiful. You know I love Rachel Weisz, so I'm rooting for her. Oh, for the favorite. And she's saying that, you know, all these lesbians are coming up to her and thanking her for doing these two great portrayals of lesbian relationships.
Starting point is 00:37:17 She did. She's been a real lesbian this year. I love her. I love Regina King, too, but I'm rooting for Rachel because she's so cool. And she gave me the scoop about her baby, the little 007. Oh, man. So I love her for that, too. I love Bond.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Do you know how much I love Bond? I love Bond. Did you ever notice that? I put a tweet out this week that Stephen Miller looks like a Bond villain. That's fantastic. It got really retweeted. It was amazing. It was astonishing.
Starting point is 00:37:41 Does he rise to that level, though? Well, then everybody sent pictures of all the Bond villains. It's more like Robert Shaw. Yeah, I don't know if Stephen Miller. Stephen Miller is like the guy who fetches cigarettes for the Bond villain. Oh, really? Oh, true. Oh, true.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Well, anyway, they sent pictures, and he looked like every Bond villain, which was really amazing. All right, Maureen. Thank you so much for doing this. I know that you think you're not witty and funny, but you really are. I would only do this for you. I was like up all night studying. Did you? No, I have a horse voice.
Starting point is 00:38:10 So Twitter Live is something I'm not going to get you to do, is it? No. I really want you to do that. You'd be an enormous star on Twitter. Do you understand that? But you told me I couldn't wear makeup. You can't wear makeup? But I promised my sister I would never leave the house without mascara again.
Starting point is 00:38:22 This is the one, the Trump people? Yeah. Well, no, there's a picture that's used from Stephanopoulos' book party where I don't have on mascara, and every time it's in the paper, she calls me and she goes, do not ever. So it's going to be you versus my sister. Oh, man, I would like that.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Yeah, you might win. No mascara on my Twitter live. Maureen, you know, how about just the back of your head and you can just talk? Maybe. Maybe. Alright, we're going to do it. I just have this feeling you'd be an enormous Twitter star. Anyway, I really appreciate you doing this. Thank you so much for taking in. You're much more interesting than Scott.
Starting point is 00:38:56 I love Scott, too. He's great. He is great. He's terrific. Alright, it's time to get out of here. Thank you so much for coming on, Maureen. Again, I'll be back next week. Rebecca Sananis produces this show. Nishat Kerouac is executive producer. Thanks also to Eric much for coming on, Maureen. Again, I'll be back next week. Rebecca Sananis produces this show. Nishat Kerouan is executive producer. Thanks also to Eric Johnson. Thanks again to Maureen Dowd. Thanks for listening to Pivot
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