Pivot - Hollywood on Blast, Vaccine Mandates, and Friends of Pivot Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker
Episode Date: August 3, 2021Kara and guest host Stephanie Ruhle talk about why Scarlett Johansson and Amanda Knox are putting the Hollywood establishment on blast. They also break down the latest on vaccine mandates and infrastr...ucture legislation. Pulitzer-winning Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker join to talk about their best-selling political exposé, I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump’s Catastrophic Final Year, and give us their predictions on whether Trump will run again. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everyone, this is Pivot from New York Magazine
and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Cara Swisher. Scott Galloway is out the entire month of August. So today I'm joined
by our very good friend, NBC News Senior Business Correspondent, MSNBC anchor, Stephanie Ruhl.
Welcome, Stephanie.
Thank you so much. Good to be here. And like, Scott, a month off. Are you kidding me?
I know. I know. He's a European. He thinks he's European or something like that. I'm not sure what's going on. He's Floridian, okay? He's Floridian.
Far from Europe. Yeah, well, you were my first choice to be first, obviously, because we're
such a hit together. And I'm really trying to find new partners in case something happens with Scott,
as you know, it could at any moment. So I like to be prepared and see who I get along with,
who I spark with. And obviously I spark with you.
Do you think we get along?
Yeah, I do.
I do.
I think we get along really well.
Because I just agree with you.
No, you don't.
No, you don't.
No, you don't.
You were just like giving me a hard time about George Hahn, where we were saying he wanted to be on The View and we agreed he'd be really good.
But you made a point.
You made a salient point, which I think is unfair.
But go ahead.
Make it.
Not only do I want George Hahn
to be on The View, I want him to be on The View. I want him to get his own show. However, this
argument of George replacing Meghan McCain is a non-starter in the way of people are cast on that
show. Meghan McCain was the Republican. When they're scouring American Republicans, George
is definitely not on the list of Republicans. So who's going to get that job?
What man would you put in there?
What male would you put in there?
I mean, they should have a man in there, don't you think?
They should.
Or anybody.
You know, how about a Mitt Romney-flavored person?
I know, you know who?
Jeff Flake.
Jeff Flake.
Jeff Flake.
Oh, that would be interesting with him and Whoopi Goldberg.
Interesting. I like it. Plus he's
Midwestern. Yeah.
Every part of the country. And he's not Meghan
McCain. That's the key part of it. Anyway,
so we have a lot to talk about. So let's talk a little bit
about a few short things. One is Scarlett Johansson
suing Disney for breach of contract
after they premiered Black Widow in theaters
and on Disney Plus at the same time.
She was supposed to be paid a portion of the box office revenue, alleges streaming eight into her paycheck.
It's pretty common for movie stars to get paid a portion of the box office, but everything's changing.
At the same time, Reese Witherspoon apparently sold Hello Sunshine for $900 million.
We'll see they're valuing it at that. Let's see what that's worth.
But what's going on in Hollywood, Stephanie?
What's happening?
Well, on the sad front,
now that everything is streaming
or streaming and going box office style
for, you know, sort of that next generation,
they're not going to have the same relationship
with movies that we once did.
And even though everything changed with every generation,
I think it's really sad.
The Scarlett Johansson one,
listen, pre-COVID,
it was not uncommon for big, big stars
to get these profit participations.
So you get 20 million bucks up front
and then depending on how the box office looks,
you get a kicker in the back end.
That could be zero or it could be $50 million.
Of course, everything shut down because of COVID.
Now what's great about the fact that it's a Disney movie,
they have the kind of money where they could shelf that movie
for the last year and a half,
hold it in inventory and wait to release it in the box office.
However, if you're Disney, right?
You're not making money streaming yet.
Disney Plus isn't a home run.
They don't want to say, yes,
we're going to give you a cut of the streaming service.
Because you can't define exactly how much money you should get.
Well, if you sell it, in this case, they sold it for $30.
So, yes, they could.
They could define those sales.
Yes.
Yes.
You know what?
You're right.
I'm wrong there.
But listen, it's dicey territory for them to set a precedent to now pay.
Now, going forward, I'm sure all these big stars are going to cut a different deal.
Or Disney Plus will say, we'll buy projects wholesale, like Netflix style.
Maybe they'll pay you more money up front and nothing in the back end.
However, if she does win or they settle, this opens up the floodgates that whether it's
all the other actors in Marvel movies or other people there.
I think Disney's going to win.
This is the end of the star system in Hollywood.
You know, it sort of was,
the stars used to be sort of kept in an area
and then they'd bring them out in the old days, right?
And that wasn't great.
And then they got enormous power
and they opened and closed movies.
Now, I don't think it matters in these big movies
who's in the star.
I don't think a person can really open a movie anymore.
It just has to be a, you know, a superhero movie
or something with a lot
of noise and this and that. And so I think this is like the last vestiges of things. And if you're
not entrepreneurial, like a Reese Witherspoon, where you do a lot of things, you're-
I was just about to say, you know, if you have your own production company,
if you are actually doing something as a stakeholder-
And on the IP.
actually doing something as a stakeholder and on the IP. Yes. Then you can continue to get paid, but stars who get to be quote unquote equity holders, just because they're stars,
I don't think it's going to last. And given how much money, how difficult the last year and half
has been, remember if you're Disney, it's not just your studios, it's your theme parks. Like
they're just not writing big checks. And with a new CEO, maybe he's viewing this as
JPEG. Here's one of his shifts of like, you know what? I don't need to dance with these stars.
These movies are giant. You got 20 million bucks. You get what you get.
You get what you get. The second thing is another woman blasting Hollywood, Amanda Knox. She took
to Twitter over the weekend and a really great thread to call out Matt Damon movie,
Stillwater. By the way, Matt Damon was also saying movies aren't the same anymore. In another interview, Knox was convicted and then acquitted of killing
her roommate, Meredith Kircher, as a student in Italy. She was, you know, this was sort of just
such a miscarriage of justice. Stillwater opened this past Friday. Its director, Tom McCarthy,
said the film was directly inspired by those events. I'm going to read the first tweet in
the thread that Knox posted the night before the movie opened.
Does my name belong to me, my face?
What about my life, my story?
Why does my name refer to events I had no hand in?
I return to these questions
because others continue to profit off my name,
face, and story without my consent.
Most recently, the film, hashtag Stillwater.
So she's technically a public figure.
What do you think?
What do you think?
I'm going to guess that I disagree with your point of view, so I want you to go first.
I think they should have involved her. Obviously, she didn't have an agent, but she had talked about
not doing things like that. I guess her story is not her own, but it's pretty awful what they did,
I think, at the same time, a living person. I'm going to disagree. I think she's a public
person and it's a public story and they have every right to write a movie, make a movie.
Yes.
Do I think it would have been good or interesting or maybe better for the film if they would have hired her on as a consultant in some sort of capacity?
I'm guessing they didn't since she's out here saying nobody contacted me.
But I haven't seen the film
i don't know what kind of light it paints her in so it seems like it would have maybe been a smart
idea um but them not doing it i don't think it's a big deal like are we now gonna have to pay
it does every biographer have to pay their subject i mean we're gonna interview carol
lenning and phil rucker do they have to pay Trump a side piece because they wrote a book about him?
No.
Yeah.
Well, yes.
I'm sure he would ask for one.
It's sort of like, it's interesting because Monica Lewinsky, another figure who's been taken advantage of quite a bit, I think, is coming out with her own story with American Crime Story.
I think she'll be, she's participating finally in this one where Beanie Friedman plays her.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's going to be great.
But it's a really interesting issue.
I would urge people to read her tweets because I think she's really quite, she's a beautiful
writer, by the way.
And one of the things that's hard is to think about it.
And I think Hollywood doesn't care at all.
And they're just going to use her story if they feel like it.
I think they probably should have gotten her cooperation in some way.
I think they were too scared to contact her, I guess, right? They didn't want to buy her book or whatever,
you know, whatever, whatever they didn't want to do. Do you think it was scared? Because what's
the downside if they contact her? I don't know why they didn't then. I don't know who's telling
the truth. I think it's just a sloppy move. I don't necessarily think it was vindictive. I think
it's a business that thinks about itself.
They had their story.
They knew what they wanted to tell
and they could go forward.
And you could question how it makes her feel,
but all's fair in love and war.
Like it's business.
They don't have to ask her.
Of course, it will call attention to it.
And by the way, Camille Cotten is in it.
I think that's how you pronounce her name.
She was in Call My Agent,
which is my favorite show ever.
She was the star of it.
She's also in it, which is interesting. Anyway, last thing, Jack Dorsey Square is going to buy Australian fintech company
Afterpay. This is a big deal, I feel. What do you think? What do you think about this situation?
It comes as other fintechs such as PayPal and Amex are rushing to capitalize on installment
loan payment trend. It's basically a layaway for the digital age, and Afterpay said its average
user is 31 to 33. Consumer Advocates says it's too
soon to understand the risks of the fledgling trend. Layaway we know about. What do you think,
Stephanie Rule? I think two things. I think anything in the layaway space, in the peer-to-peer
lending space, into lending to people who have less financial security makes me a little bit
skittish, i.e. think about how predatory payday lenders are.
So for me, consumer protections are really important in this space. However, what do I
think is the most important part of the story? Less about the company they bought and more
square. Jack Dorsey knows this company has an extraordinarily high valuation. And so what did
he do? He took his stock out for a spin,
and he bought this company for what? $29 billion, which also is probably an enormously high number.
But going down the line, when people say, what's the valuation of Square? Why is it so high?
Now he gets to say, well, look at my portfolio of assets. That's what I think this is about.
This is about beefing up and putting some
legs under his valuation. And of course, he's spending a lot of time at Square and not Twitter
necessarily. All right. So in terms of pure competing with banks and things like that,
should this make those banks nervous or PayPal or an Amex or others who deal in the credit and
this kind of thing? I don't think it should make anybody nervous. I think it should make regulators wake up in terms of whether you're talking about FinTech or social media,
right? Traditional businesses are highly regulated, like traditional media, traditional banking,
and the new technology side of it isn't. And we haven't seen the dangerous downside yet because
we all love cool, fun, new technology,
especially if it's for young people.
But you and I have all lived through the bad part of these things.
And I just, I'm super worried about consumer protections.
And this is nothing against this company, this industry.
It's just important.
Yeah, fair point.
All right, time for the big story.
The newest trend in corporate America is vaccine mandates. Walmart, Disney, Facebook,
Google are requiring some or all of their employees to be vaccinated to come to work.
Walmart and Disney are two of the country's largest private employers. Here's a list of
companies that are requiring some or all of their employees to be vaccinated to come to work.
Netflix, Saks Fifth Avenue, BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, Delta
and United Airlines for new employees only, by the way. Morgan Stanley, The Washington Post,
which was a surprise to me. Lyft, Uber, Twitter. What do you think? It's not just employees.
Restaurants and Broadway shows are starting to require ticket holders and indoor
diners to show proof of vaccination. Will this work or produce a backlash, Stephanie?
Who cares if it produces a backlash?
They damn well should.
Right?
In France, every day we could turn on the TV and say, look at the protesters.
What are there?
A thousand protesters, 10,000 protesters.
The first week Emmanuel Macron put the mandate in place, almost 4 million people in France
got vaccinated.
It works.
And I guess I'm angry because for all the noise corporate America
gives us about, you know, wanting to do the right thing and being leaders for social justice and
writing letters for voting rights, here's something they absolutely can do to protect our country,
to protect their employees, to also pay back the government who just bailed out businesses big and small to the tune of trillions
of dollars and now do your part. Businesses have that giant carrot that you're always going to have
anti-vaxxers over here, right? They're over here. But in the middle are all of these people,
especially young-ish people who are like, I'm healthy. I don't really need it. But if you say
to that person, great, well, you can't go to work, can't go to a bar, can't go to the gym, and can't go to
your favorite sporting event, they're going to run out and get vaccinated. And I think it's super
selfish and short-sighted that businesses, remember when we first got the vaccines, we kept hearing
people who are fully vaccinated were able to go to this store without a mask on. When was the last
time anyone asked you
your vaccination status when you walked in a store? When I'm in a store and I see people with
masks on, they don't seem to be people who aren't vaccinated. More likely, they're people who are
being extra cautious. Extra cautious, yeah. This will be the next big wave of people getting
vaccinated. And I think when the vaccines go from emergency approval to full approval,
you'll see a lot more businesses do it.
All right.
So incentives have been tried, you know, monetary awards, event tickets, time off, different things like that.
I just talked to the head of America and they were doing things like that.
You got an extra vacation day for current employees.
He doesn't want to make them.
So what would be your argument to Doug Parker or someone else that you should make them?
I was like, I don't think I'll fly American Airlines if I don't know if all your people are vaccinated. I'll be honest with you. Like, I don't think I will. I just think this
argument you can't make people I don't know. I don't like shots either. But when I walked my
five year old to show up for kindergarten on the first day, if he wasn't vaccinated,
my other choice was to homeschool. So we, I mean,
so of course, yes, boom, I'm going to get my kids vaccinated. So all of this is just crazy.
Businesses like, oh, I'm not sure they absolutely should do it. Not just in they're being short
sided. They they're saying, I don't want to make this hard decision. I don't want to face the
backlash. I don't want to lose customers. Well, guess what? If we don't do something significant, we're never getting rid of COVID.
Right. So you want to actually have your business flourish long-term requiring.
So there's two things going on, sort of reassuring vaccinated people that they're not at high risk,
because I think some people in the media has gone a little hogwell in this breakthrough
vaccination thing. And I agree. I have to say, like, when you get to the bottom
of the story, it's always like one person who had a cough, like kind of thing. And it's sort
of like a flu vaccine or anything else where you could get the flu. I've gotten the flu when I've
had the flu vaccine. And some years I don't, right? Some years I don't, some years I do.
So many people think to me, these overdoing the vaccinated people can get COVID thing.
overdoing the vaccinated people can get COVID thing?
Yesterday, I saw someone on TV who said,
this is a category five hurricane.
No, it's not.
It was a category five hurricane last year.
And if we're overdramatic about this,
then people of influence are going to lose even more credibility.
And it's catnip for anti-vaxxers and to you know it was
Ali Velshi who I saw on tv say I thought it was a great point he said vaccines are like seat belts
they're not going to prevent you from having a car accident many people but they could definitely
save your life right because it doesn't yeah I think it was a guy in Britain who did it but one
of the things that's also in contention is these masks, the mask wearing that's now states are arguing, governors are arguing with local municipalities and everyone else over the mask thing.
And I think that's a separate thing, separately.
But one of the things that's interesting is they sort of get mushed together and conflated in some weird fashion.
When was the last time you wore a mask?
Today, right now, in the Starbucks.
Do you always?
Well, it's a new thing in D.C. They require it now. The mayor just required it. So they make you. So I asked because
for months and months and months, I wore a mask. I didn't notice it. I didn't feel it. I thought
nothing of it. And I flew recently. And so I wore a mask. It's amazing when you don't wear it for a while. You're like, somehow it felt like
burdensome, cumbersome, but for months and months, I didn't, I thought nothing of it. I think now
wearing it, I'm mad to be totally honest. I'm angry with the unvaccinated. Yeah. Right. This
is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. I'm angry with what they're doing to society, to culture,
to business, to my kids. I'm mad at them.
Yeah.
It's a dicey situation.
And the question of masks and what cities and states will do and people.
I don't think people are going to cooperate on the mask wearing, on the vaccination.
That's where we need to focus everything is mandates for vaccination for government employees and states.
Democratic governors in California and New York have announced vaccine mandates for government employees. I was just thinking of healthcare workers. And, you know,
it's interesting. I just got a note from one of my kids' schools where they said, you know,
you have to get vaccinated if you can't come to school. Here's two forms, a religious form and
a health form if you can't get vaccinated. And if you can't, you have to be tested every day
and wear a mask kind of thing. And so it was really interesting. And I was like,
okay, this will be an, I'm interested to see the parents that go nuts on this one.
Also everyone who thinks even in a business, oh, well you can use the religious or the medical
exemption. Not really. The business is required to then find a suitable accommodation, right?
It's not like, oh, check the box and I'm in. They're going to make
it cumbersome. You can't just skirt this or they should because the number one issue is how do you
make your employees feel safe? It's having everybody vaccinated. Yeah, 100%. I think
businesses requiring it is critical. Businesses. I think it's gonna be harder for governments to
do it. I think state governments can do it more than federal government. But I think at some level, companies are going to have to step in here and
really suck it up and make it happen that you're right, they took the money, now they have to help
us get out of this. Stephanie, we're gonna have a quick break. When we come back, we're going to
talk a lot about an area that you're very interested in infrastructure. Oh, yeah.
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All right, Stephanie, we're back.
And the Senate is trying to get some work done before the August recess.
They even worked over the weekend to finalize the text of a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, a lot less than Biden had wanted, but the bill includes $550 billion in new spending over five years for roads,
electric vehicle charging stations, replacement of lead water pipes. The text for the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act was more than 2,700 pages. It would provide the biggest infusion of U.S.
federal spending in infrastructure in decades. So $66 billion for Amtrak and rail,
$65 billion for broadband expansion,
clean drinking water, et cetera, et cetera.
Tell us what you think.
Tell us what you think of this right now overall.
And then I have some questions.
I think-
You said it wasn't going to happen, right?
No, no, that's not true.
Okay, all right.
Okay.
I said, what's not going to happen is a bipartisan bill and this separate
three and a half trillion dollar reconciliation. That's what I think. You can't get both of those
things done. Getting this bipartisan bill done would be a tremendous win for the Biden
administration, right? And for the country. We all collectively know we need infrastructure.
Does the one trillion dollar bill have everything in it? No we need infrastructure. Does the $1 trillion bill
have everything in it? No, definitely not. But the argument on the other side that we must link
the $1 trillion package to the $3.5 trillion makes absolutely no sense to me. I think getting
this bipartisan bill done would be huge. We all agree, right, we need new infrastructure in this
country. Trump claimed he was going to do,
he couldn't get it done. And what Democrats I fear are missing here is the Mitch McConnell factor,
right? Self-described grim reaper. They're so, Democrats are so focused on like, yeah, yeah,
yeah. Get the bipartisan bill done, but we also need our bill done at the exact same time. Let's
link the two. I don't think
you can link the two. All of those Republicans are going to walk away. And let's be honest,
irrelevant of what is in this bill, if I was one of those Republicans, I would walk away.
Why would I say, yes, I've spent all this time agreeing on a bill, but at the same time,
you're going to also get your own. And so I completely think that there are lots of things
in the go it alone bill.
And I would like to see them in there like the expanded child tax credit. I'd love for that to
be in there permanently. And I think they should get work, work, working on some stuff in there.
But if they really try to force this and if progressives do and say, I will not sign A
unless I get B, I think it's going to blow the whole thing up. Yeah, they're not going to do
that. Do you think that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is voicing concerns about the bill saying the House
shouldn't pass the bill without the partisan, who you're referring to, $3.5 trillion reconciliation
bill? Is there any chance these bills being considered separately? I think they will end
up needing to be. And even this idea that all Democrats have signed on to the $3.5 trillion,
they haven't. Kyrsten Sinema has already said she's not sure.
Joe Manchin and Sinema and Manchin have other people behind them who want to who vote the way they do.
But Manchin, whether you like him or not, is sort of a human shield.
And I think there are other Democrats who vote the same way he does or ish from states like my own state, New Jersey, but they let him
take the rap. And the other Manchin thing I would say, and you've got West Virginia roots, not me.
There's lots of, if you want to go after Joe Manchin for a million reasons, go for it.
But he doesn't answer to voters in any other state but West Virginia.
Yeah. This is state but West Virginia. Yeah. And this is good for West Virginia.
The things he votes for are what keep him in office. And it's good for West Virginia. And
if you want to have somebody run against him as a Democrat, go for it. But if Joe Manchin loses,
there's a better chance he's losing to a Republican. Yes, that is correct. That is correct.
So what of the things in here? Sixty six billion dollars for rail and Amtrak. What did you think
of that? That's a lot of moolah for Amtrak.
Also, broadband expansion.
What do you think is important here from a tech point of view?
From broadband expansion, absolutely at the top of my list.
What was taken out of this that's a huge disappointment for me was a small number that would have had the biggest return on investment, which was the $80 billion
to fund the IRS. We have a massive tax gap in our country. Tax money that's owed, you don't have to
change a single letter in our tax law, but just not collected. I want to say it's something like
20% of the IRS's workforce has been reduced over the last 10 years. They need more funding. Talk
about technology. They need their systems upgraded.
And so of everything I could look at in infrastructure,
the fastest way to put money in
and get way more money out would be to fund the IRS.
And I'm bummed that they took that money out.
Why do you think they did that?
Because that's a lot of rich people we know
taking advantage of all the different rules
that aren't being enforced.
A hundred percent. But that is, I feel like that's a really important, to me, funding the IRS is
really important, but I'm a nerd, not a lobbyist. And there are other components in there where
people would say there's a lot more need. There's a lot more suffering. They need a lot more support.
So I think there's a lot more, there are many more advocates fighting to put other things in there. And I don't think there's
a lot of people fighting to get more money for the IRS. And mind you, whether you're a Democrat
or Republican, you also have a whole lot of rich donors who aren't necessarily tax cheats,
but they don't want more money and more attention to the IRS. So
you're happy to make them happy. Yeah. All right. Last thing is they're giving money to electric
vehicle charging stations, but a whole lot less. Biden appeared in front of an electric car
company. How is this going to happen? Do you think the companies are just going to have to pay for
the rollout of different charging stations? I've noticed many, many more around put up by Tesla,
whoever, everywhere I go now when I stop and drive and you see them in the back of gas stations and
things like that. Where do you see that? That's gotten, that got cut rather considerably,
but it's still here. It did. Well, listen, from their perspective,
investing in those charging stations is investing in the future. And while that's great,
I think they're looking at it as my house is broken right now.
The pipes are broken, right?
The toilets are broken.
We have to fix that before we put an addition on the house.
And so they looked at things like charging stations as an investment in the future and
said, let's cut that and let's invest more on what's in dire need, like our literal bridges
that are falling apart. So I get it. And most likely those companies are going to have to put
the money forward and that's kind of okay. They can. Yeah, they can. And then, so you think it
will be passed separately? You think that's right? I think there's no way they get passed together.
And if Democrats try to make that happen, they lose. But the one thing I'll say,
you can never count out the depths Mitch McConnell will go to to F something up.
Yeah.
Right. He made it very clear for eight years with Obama. He's made it clear now.
He's here to block the Biden agenda. And he doesn't care if you call him a fake, a phony,
a liar, a jerk.
He'll just hop right back in his turtle shell.
And at the end, he gets what he wants.
So everyone having a dance jam that like, oh my gosh, even Mitch McConnell voted yes.
It was a procedural vote.
Like, I'm not having a party yet.
All right.
Okay.
It's a perfect note to switch to our next topic, our friends of Pivot.
switch to our next topic, our friends of Pivot. Welcome to the Pulitzer-winning Washington Post reporters, Carol Lennig and Phil Rucker. Thank you for coming on. Thanks for having us. Well,
you guys are right at the top of the bestseller list right now, along with several, Mark Levin
and Jesse Waters, but nonetheless, you're right up there. So you interviewed more than 140 senior
administration officials, advisors to the president, even the president himself at Mar-a-Lago
70 days after he left Washington. Trump certainly seemed to think of himself as a kingmaker.
Is he one? So I'd love your sort of thoughts on how you look at that right now.
You know, there's no question, Cara, that he has decided he's going to be a kingmaker.
And there are certainly a ton of people waltzing and flying and trekking to Mar-a-Lago to kiss his ring.
Phil and I sat on the pretty brocade sofas in his lobby at Mar-a-Lago, and we watched a parade of people come in.
But also among them were lawmakers who want his endorsement. He's
not wrong that he has an impact on whether or not they're going to win the primary. Dan Crenshaw was
there when we visited, just waltzed over to say he just thought Trump looked great, healthy and
hail, sir. What's your secret? They are meeting with him on a regular basis, Republican lawmakers who
want to raise money, want to tap into his base, want to seize some of his popularity.
And what happened, Phil, in the Texas special congressional election last week,
the Trump-backed candidate lost. That's exactly right. He endorsed a candidate for a special
election in a congressional seat down there. But another Republican candidate won that race. And it shows
you the limitations of Trump's power. Although there's a consensus, obviously, within the
Republican Party, including with the leaders here in Washington, that Trump's endorsement
is influential and that that may have been a fluke. And heading into the midterm elections,
they're all about Trump still. Stephanie? Except, of course, Republicans lost the midterms while
Trump was in office. I guess the thing that confuses me so much is, what is Trump? He's a
branding genius. Why is he still looked at as a kingmaker? I mean, Carol, yes, the parade of
people all came down there to see him, but they
don't have to, right? There was a moment after the insurrection, after the election, where you saw
there was that one night when Lindsey Graham said, like, enough is enough, like, we're gone.
And then Lindsey Graham got heckled at an airport. And then he said, forget about it. You're my home
boy. Trump lost the midterm, you know, lost the House, lost the Senate, lost the White House.
I don't understand why he has that kingmaker status. Explain why, or is it even true?
Well, it's definitely true still. I mean, if the primary was held tomorrow, he would be the
Republican candidate for president. Now, he's got a long time to go before he has to make that
decision. He certainly intimated to us that he's a guy who's considering running. But I really want to
just zing in on something else you said, Steph, which is this idea that there was a moment when
they could have broken with him. I was talking to a Republican fundraiser and operative who
was nearly in tears a week ago telling me that if all of the Republicans had just joined
hands after January 6th and said, as Lindsey Graham did, enough is enough, that's it,
attack on a democracy, we're done. If they had had the guts and the spine to do that,
Trump would be far more in disgrace because they would have communicated en masse that this was
unacceptable, that this call and response to attack the Capitol, to basically bring people
to the Capitol to, you know, threaten to hang Mike Pence as vice president. If they had done that,
then, according to this operative, we would be looking at a very different field.
So we're watching the hearings last week on the Capitol attack. Your book paints a picture of what led up to that, what was going on in the West Wing, which is going to
be a critical part in these investigations, but you've reported a lot of it. And you also had a
chance to ask Trump what his goal was on January 6th. Talk a little bit about that, Phil. And then
Carol, what do you think is going to come out of these investigations? Well, we did ask Trump what
his goal was,
what he wanted from his supporters
when he said march to the Capitol.
And he, you know, we were struck
by what he said in his answer.
He said, I wanted what they wanted.
Well, what they wanted was to hang Mike Pence.
They wanted an insurrection.
They wanted to overthrow America's democracy.
They wanted violence and the lives of police officers.
You know, Trump that day, according to our
reporting, was watching it all unfold on television. He was in the private dining room just off the
Oval Office, transfixed by the images on TV because he liked what he saw. He saw thousands
of his supporters marching up the steps of the Capitol, waving his flag, wearing his red Make
America Great Again hats. It was the show of force that he wanted to try to intimidate lawmakers.
And it took a lot of persuading over a couple of hours from some of his advisors,
including his daughter, Ivanka Trump, to try to get him into a headspace
where he would actually be willing to tell his supporters to stop the violence and go home.
It's striking that the president wouldn't act.
Why do you believe that BS Ivanka behind
the scenes, all the good that she was doing, trying to get her dad to do the right thing?
Stephanie's not an Ivanka fan. No, because for four years, people kept whispering that garbage
in my ear, what she's doing when no one's or what she does privately. Baloney, then sit down for a public interview
and say, this is what I was doing behind the scenes. The fact that that was, that's the one
thing that I'm like, give me a break, Phil. What makes you believe that Ivanka was urging him?
I hear you, Steph. And look, over those four years, we were told so many times that Ivanka
was the moderating force and she had very little influence doing that. It didn't work almost always. But we know from reporting with other sources on January 6th that she actually that
afternoon did try to pressure her father and persuade him. And she failed repeatedly because
it took several hours for him to actually issue that statement. And she wasn't the only one doing
it, but she was one of the people doing it. All right. So in this case, she was actually
attempting it because things had gone off the rail.
So what do you imagine happening,
Carol,
in these,
in this investigation?
Because you have,
you do have two Republicans who are,
you know,
on the outs with the Republican party inexplicably.
And,
and they're,
they're going to,
they have this amazing testimony.
What,
what is,
what's going to happen?
What from this?
You know,
I don't have very,
I mean, I don't have very high hopes because everybody has turned it into a political game, a strategy of how to avoid making Republicans look bad
for not wanting to acknowledge what actually happened on January 6th.
I mean, we saw this heartbreaking, heartbreaking.
If we thought January 6th was bad, hearing the officers describe what it was like for them, just bone chilling. And I know some of those officers, but I hadn't even heard some of the things that they described. Officer Fanone, we all know, he had a heart attack. He was begging for his life and please don't take my gun and I have kids. This was not the hugging and kissing that Donald Trump
described to us. But as for what's going to happen, not very high hopes that it's going to
get what an investigative reporter wants, which is facts. I will say there's one glimmer of hope,
which is I've heard that several of the committees have been requesting some very specific information
from the FBI. And that information is going to get to the heart of what did our
government know ahead of January 6th? Not just the little bits and pieces that, you know,
the Washington Post and my colleagues and I have reported, but what do you get with a subpoena? Or
rather, what do you get with the power of the Hill? What can we learn about what the FBI knew
ahead of time? Well, does it ever hang on Trump? Any of it? I mean, one of the things, you know, he blames everybody else.
And of course, now he's diminishing it, saying nothing really happened.
It wasn't that bad.
And then you see it being articulated by lots of people.
Megyn Kelly was doing it the other day.
All these people are just sort of articulating that it was a tourist thing.
I mean, I think most people say it's a normal tourist visit.
That one is easily done.
But others are trying to diminish what happened.
And most people should be allowed to protest, etc. Is any of this going to hang on
Trump? Phil? I mean, we'll see if it hangs on him. But you're right about the whitewashing.
It's been extraordinary. It's as if we didn't see it with our own eyes, but we did see it.
And it's all on videotape. And it's not just Trump who's trying to whitewash it. It's the
Republican leaders throughout the Congress. It's conservatives on Fox News.
They're trying to mislead the American people about what happened on January 6th.
And that's why the work of this commission is so important, to get to the bottom of what
really happened and to remind people how dangerous that moment was and how close the
country came to collapse.
But then does the work of the commission result in anything?
Because the people who are moved by this or upset or want something done already felt this way before the hearings. And the Republican, as disgusting as it is, political calculation is the American voter isn't thinking about this. They're not caring about it. They care about putting food on their table and inflation. How do you get voters to care about this? Because that's the only way you get lawmakers to do anything.
Well, one way is to remind people that if, as one Republican I talked to said,
we may have an insurrection every four years if we are going to tolerate this kind of
la-la land description of what didn't happen.
It did happen.
And are people going to do what was urged by
Michael Flynn, one of Trump's greatest allies right before January 6th? The people have to
take to the streets. The courts won't decide. The voters won't decide. The ballot machines
aren't trusted. We have to take to the streets as people with some sort of force and with some
sort of weaponry to decide who's the president. That's a pretty scary place to be.
It might not be every four years. Remember, we're in August. some sort of weaponry to decide who's the president. That's a pretty scary place to be.
It might not be every four years. Remember, we're in August.
So yeah, speaking of which- When the hardcore conspiracy theorist QAnoners believe that Trump is going to be reinstated as
president.
And by the way, and all joking, you could laugh about it, but Mark Meadows sort of
seemed to insinuate something strange in an interview this week. How would you,
he was a big character in your book.
Talk a little bit about him and this recent statement that he made that the cabinet was
meeting and I'm not sure what was going on there.
Such a bizarre statement by Mark Meadows.
He said that Trump is meeting with his cabinet as if he were still the president or running
some sort of shadow presidency.
And of course, I'm racking my mind trying to think which cabinet secretary is actually
meeting with Trump because most of them have distanced themselves from him by now.
But Meadows might have meant his kitchen cabinet, meaning, you know, the political people.
But regardless, when Carol and I were down there at Mar-a-Lago with him, it was clear
to us that he still thinks he's the president or thinks, you know, he wants to continue acting like he's the president with all the adoration and the love
of his supporters and sort of blinding himself intentionally to the reality that Joe Biden is
the president now and that the country is moving on past him.
Carol, did you have that impression? You think he's the president?
I mean, the theater of it, Cara, it's just sort of so stunning. Like,
you know, we're there, arranged to be there by the president at five o'clock dinner hour,
people traipsing in for the club dinner, going out to the beautiful patio. And he's got the
Air Force One model as if he redesigned it. It's there on the coffee table. But he didn't redesign
Air Force One. It's the design he hoped
he would have with this replica is there almost like it exists. And when he walks out onto the
patio, after two hours and 45 minutes of talking to us, dinner is really getting into full swing.
And there is a standing ovation and they play Hail to the Chief as he emerges.
Everything about that visit told me he's created a brigadoon.
He's created a special exile where reality doesn't have to really pierce it.
Then Trump sitting down with you two for an interview, he knows exactly who you are. I mean,
a very stable genius was not a complimentary book about Trump. He knew that this was not going to
result in anything glowing about him. Donald Trump sitting down with you guys, does that not prove,
is he not manifesting that all press is good press? He certainly thinks that, I think. You
know, he wouldn't sit down with us for our first book, Stable Genius, but for the second one,
it didn't take much persuading to get him to
do the interview. He wanted to do it. And I think he thought that he was charismatic enough that he
could somehow change our thinking or persuade us to view his final year in office differently. And
we're not that gullible. We're pretty hard-nosed reporters. And we wanted to go hear what he had
to say. But by the time we got there, we'd already interviewed 140 other people who made pretty clear
to us what the truth was about him.
Wait.
So anything he said didn't make a difference.
You think he thought he could change both of your minds?
Yeah.
He thought he could win us over.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you obviously weren't won over.
So he's given lots of interviews for this attention.
And I think it's coverage is what he's looking for because all the books are on the bestseller list. Landslide, yours. I don't know about the others,
but there's a lot of books and there's more coming out. But how much, that's a lot of books,
that's a lot of noise, just like he would be on The Apprentice or anything else. So talk a little
bit about how he'll do going forward without the platforms he used to have. He's not on Getter yet.
I am on Getter and he's not on Getter. Since he can't go on a major social media network, it's unlikely he'll be restored to Facebook.
It is, he is not going back to Twitter. Getter, we'll see if it, because he hasn't gotten on it,
but it's not that big yet. I can tell you it's quite small after having used it for a little
bit and noisy and it's not the people he wants to reach really. So can you talk a little bit
about how he's going to do that without the social media that he had used so deftly
while he was president?
It seems to me he's going to find his social media
low point or high point.
He's going to find something.
We don't know what that will be at this minute.
And maybe, you're right,
Getter is not massive the way Twitter was.
Who knows what he'll be restored to or what he'll find.
But the truth of the matter is, Kara, he gets press coverage. When Donald Trump says blah,
blah gets picked up. And the reason is because we all know he is a defining figure in the
Republican Party. And who is Kevin McCarthy singing the tune to? Donald Trump's tune. Who is, even Mitch McConnell,
who really despises Donald Trump, finds him responsible for his loss of the Senate leadership,
finds him to be, you know, a person of no principle. Even he is deftly avoiding
ticking off Trump any more than he has to, and certainly trying to continue
to keep those voters for the midterms. So Trump's going to keep having a megaphone,
which he masters beautifully.
Then is the only thing that stops him the law? If he's actually in a legal quagmire
that would prevent him from running for office?
Because he doesn't have a problem fundraising.
Yeah, Steph, I would say the law or his health.
He's 75 years old.
And, you know, to run again for president, he would be 78 when the 2024 campaign rolls around.
He could do it.
Joe Biden has done it.
But, you know, Trump is not the healthiest man out there. So there's a chance that he may not have, you know, quite what
it takes to mount that full campaign. Okay, now he's going to run because you just said that.
So when you look at this, one of the things that's interesting is all this stuff does come out. And
just these notes just come out this week that someone at the Justice Department was taking around the thing.
It's sort of criming in plain sight kind of thing at this point, and all this stuff come out.
Do you imagine he wants to run again? And I'd love for each of you sort of to think about it.
You spent a lot of time talking to everyone around him. What is the hold that he has on
the actual voters, which are in these people would abandon
him in a second if they could, I suspect that's my that's my but not these voters.
So what what what do you imagine the hold is and what do you think he's going to do
if you had to guess?
I mean, I know you're not supposed to guess, but like spending time with him, he it feels
like he wants to run again, correct?
Is that maybe I'm just being spun by him?
I mean, it's funny.
I like the way you put that question, Cara, because two things at once.
One, the guy didn't think he was going to win.
He was shocked on election night in 2016 when he won.
It was a branding exercise.
It was a way to get hub, right?
And when he won, he probably was in that particular room he was sitting, the most surprised of
all of them that that had happened.
But once he became president, he really fell in love with that, and he did not want to give it up. And he did a lot
of things that you could argue if you weren't president, they would be a crime, you would be
indicted. And as for criming, I love that word, I'm going to try to get that into the newspaper
stories. Criming is just a fun one. But, you know, if he were not president, he would have, he met the standard for being indicted on multiple counts, obstruction of justice. In four different instances, he was stunningly able to have a phone call in which he asked a foreign power to investigate an American, also skating right over the law. You asked, what's his
hold? This is where, you know, I think Phil and I realized in the first books reporting for
not before I Alone Can Fix It, Stable Genius, that it's mastery of making people who have felt
forgotten, dismissed, looked down the nose of by coastal elites, making them feel that he's their defender.
He's got their back, even though he has done almost nothing for them, then say, I am your
defender.
The other thing he's got going for him is his ability to stoke that anger and fear,
not address it, amp it up.
And that has had an amazing effect.
Phil and I have gone around, you know, all over the country, remotely, of course, being interviewed.
A lot of Republican people ask us, who are Trump followers, ask us, how dare you have all this hate for Trump?
How dare you put this in this book?
We're never going to change our mind.
Trump is our guy.
And what interests me is they're actually not interested in the facts that we've carefully corroborated. They're not interested in the fact that we fact
check this book with Donald Trump. They're not interested in that. They're interested in the
fighter, the pugilist, the man that says he's their defender. They don't care what he actually
does. They just care that he keeps saying that. But then isn't it just not, we always say it's that forgotten voter, but it's also the very affluent voter, right? In that,
in that make America great again, it's that white affluent voter who, you know, who now likes to say,
oh, I'm being buried by, you know, I can't run my business the way I want. I can't hire who I want.
On August 4th, Windfoot, which the U.S. Open Golf Tournament is supposed to happen
there next week, is having an event for Trump that they've been trying to keep quiet.
That's an 80-person banquet, right?
Like, these are some of the most affluent New Yorkers who know all the things in your
book are true, and half the nonsense out of his mouth is false.
And beyond that nonsense, they all watch the insurrection and they know it's true.
So what about those voters who stand with him, Phil?
It's really important because they've all made their own sort of moral and ethical calculations
where they're going to set aside the things that they know are true and harrowing and
even disgusting about his leadership and his character
because they make a buck. Either their taxes are lower or their businesses can thrive in a way that
they wouldn't under a democratic administration. You know, they care about the bottom line and
they're not going to, you know, focus so much about the morality in that office or about the
America standing abroad. All right. Very last question. Will he run each of you? Prediction?
Yes.
Yes.
Will he win?
He's got a good chance.
If Joe Biden doesn't run again, I think he's got a better than good chance.
On that note. Thank you, Carol Lennig and Phil Rucker.
Their book is called I Alone Can Fix It.
I guess there'll be a third one after this.
Donald J. Trump's catastrophic final year is out now.
We really appreciate you coming on.
Thanks, Cara.
Thanks, Stephanie.
Thank you, guys.
All right, Stephanie, one more quick break.
That was fascinating, a little scary.
It was, for real.
I know, for reals.
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Okay, Stephanie, wins and fails.
I would love to know what you have.
I'm just going to let you do them today.
Wins and fails.
Really?
Okay, I'm going to give you two fails to start.
My first fail is the state of Florida.
They have 67 counties, 66 have high COVID transmission rates.
The average age of a person hospitalized in Florida right now is 42 years old.
Yeah, some devastating stories. Oh, it's for people who are old or vulnerable.
And meanwhile, last week, Governor DeSantis was out giving a speech in Salt Lake City
fighting against the mask mandate, saying he's going to defund schools if they insist
on having mask mandates.
So I would say Florida lost.
The number two loser last week had to be Tom Barrack.
One of President Trump's oldest
friends, closest allies, gets arrested. He is in a heap of trouble. The fact that his bail was $250
million speaks to, I mean, that's an enormous number, right? For a guy who is a super wealthy
California jet-setting international businessman. At the age of 74, he is looking at a tough road ahead.
And I think it's really telling that Trump didn't say one single thing about
it. And I would say the winner for the week, you know,
I'm going to the Olympics, obviously team USA, but most definitely, um,
Sunni Lee, the, the, the now is gold medalist.
My favorite thing was when her dad called, um, Simone Biles is truly the greatest ever because she enabled my daughter to win gold.
And everything that happened around Simone Biles, like it's a win for mental health awareness.
It really is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also she knew what she couldn't do.
She knew she couldn't do it.
People don't understand that.
I would say the fails were continuing people to insult her.
But you're right.
Some of the Olympic stuff is really great.
It's difficult to watch and the ratings are down,
but it's nice that they're still taking place.
Obviously, the upsurge in COVID in Japan is not very welcome.
Yes, that's true.
Ratings are down, but I would say because of all the on-demand,
I can kind of watch it whenever.
Listen, for everybody who's going after Simone Biles,
each one of them, I would love for any of them to come and sit down with us.
And I'd love to know where they showed great mental
or physical fortitude in any significant way.
Based on what I read on Twitter,
it was a bunch of silly boys and lazy boy chairs
moaning and groaning.
Yeah.
I couldn't fight their way out of a paper bag,
as they say, as they say.
Okay, Stephanie, that is the show.
We'll be back on Friday.
My co-host for that show will be attorney and contributing columnist of The Washington
Post, George Conway, who will be able to comment on what Phil and Carol just said.
Go to nymag.com slash pivot to submit your questions for the Pivot podcast.
The link is also in our show notes.
Stephanie, thank you so much for doing this today. And I'm going to let you read us out with the credits. Today's show is
produced by Lara Naiman and Camila Salazar. Ernie Endredat engineered this episode. Make sure you
subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, or if you're an Android user, check us out on Spotify,
or basically wherever you get your podcasts. If you liked our show, please recommend it to a friend,
maybe somebody you don't like.
Thank you for listening to Pivot
from New York Magazine and Vox Media.
We'll be back later this week for another breakdown
of all things tech and business.
Thank you, Stephanie.
Thank you, Cara.
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