Pod Save America - “Hasn’t Waco Been Through Enough?”

Episode Date: March 28, 2023

Donald Trump warns his indictment could cause violence and celebrates the Jan 6 attacks in Waco, TX. Desantis-curious Republicans are already down on Tiny D. And later Jen Psaki stops by to talk about... the Republican primary, Joe Biden’s 2024 strategy and her new show on MSNBC.Lovett or Leave It: The Errors Tour with dates in June-December, 2023. Use presale code ERRORS to get your tickets today! www.crooked.com/events.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pod Save America. I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Jon Lovett. I'm Tommy Vitor. On today's show, Donald Trump warns his indictment could lead to violence and celebrates the January 6th attacks in Waco, Texas. DeSantis curious Republicans are already down on Tiny D. And later, former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki stops by to talk about the Republican primary, Joe Biden's 2024 strategy and her new show on msnbc speaking of shows love it i hear you're going back out on tour love to leave it's going back on tour you can get tickets right now we're in the middle of pre-sale crooked.com slash events the code is errors because it is the errors tour do you get it you get it yeah you get it's our errors didn't get until today but now i get it tommy's a recently converted swifty yes he has his midriff exposed for all of us to see we are going to be traveling across the country we're going to go to
Starting point is 00:01:12 some uh places that uh where it feels good to be gay some places where it could feel better and we're going to raise money for vote save america's fuck bands colon leave queer kids alone parentheses and adults and all of us you absolute freaks and parens fund a lot of brainstorming around that title
Starting point is 00:01:31 yeah we could have tronked it but we didn't we didn't tronk it so you're gonna be you're gonna be
Starting point is 00:01:37 on the road for a while you're gonna be out of the office you bet oh boy that's great alright alright
Starting point is 00:01:43 yeah what are you guys we'll miss you any chance All right. Yeah. What are you guys going to do? We'll miss you. Any chance you add some shows? Yeah. I guess you guys will have to figure out a way to make conversation between noon and three. Crooked.com slash events. Go get your tickets.
Starting point is 00:02:00 All right. Let's get to the news. Donald Trump held his first big rally of the 2024 election in Waco, Texas this weekend, right in the middle of the 30th anniversary of the deadly standoff between federal agents and a cult that right wing extremists still view as a symbol of government overreach. into it i don't want to cover while we talk i think people are reading too much into trump going to waco thinking it's about federal government violence when he just think it was it was cool that david koresh fucked all those guys wives wow did not yeah yeah i think you're gonna make like a cult joke but um david koresh did do that though sorry keep going everyone know who david koresh is out there in our audience? That was the Waco thing, right? Yeah, we were the Branch Davidians. A bunch of older millennials. That happened in 93. That's 30 years.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Yeah, it's been a while. The twice-impeached Republican frontrunner played footage of the violent insurrection he incited at the rally before it started. You always want to start the rally with just some January 6th footage behind it. You play the hits, right? They also played the song he recorded with a group of men who've been imprisoned for their role in the January 6th footage behind the hits. They also played the song he recorded with a group of men who've been imprisoned for their role in the January 6th attack. The J6 choir. The J6 choir.
Starting point is 00:03:11 Please name them. Of course. Thank you. Of course. Donald Trump, the fourth tenor. You know, you have to joke about it because what else are you going to do?
Starting point is 00:03:20 What are you going to do? Trump also talked about his potential indictment for the first time we're waiting for. It's coming any minute. Who knows? Andy, you're going to let us Trump also talked about his potential indictment for the first time. We're waiting for it. It's coming any minute. Who knows? Andy, you're going to let us know if it happens during the pod, right, Olivia? Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:03:31 When he finally gets arrested, he's going to be like, ah, I called that a week ago. Old news. Anyway, here's how we talked about it at the rally. The Department of Injustice in Washington, D.C. was investigating me for something that is not a crime, not a misdemeanor, not an affair. I never liked horse face. I never liked. It's just not. It's a terrible thing. That wouldn't be the one. Legal scholars can't believe what they're witnessing.
Starting point is 00:04:02 And yet, after going over 11 million pages of documents, they've got nothing. It probably makes me the most innocent man in the history of our country. Friends of mine say that. They're not coming after me. They're coming after you. And I'm just standing in their way. And I'm going to be standing in their way for a long time. You will be vindicated and proud. and the thugs and criminals who are corrupting our justice system will be defeated, discredited and totally disgraced. That's what's happening. From the beginning, it's been one witch hunt and phony investigation after another.
Starting point is 00:04:38 Either the deep state destroys America or we destroy the deep state. That's the way it's got to be. That's the bumper sticker right there. The first clip of him sounded like someone doing an impression of him. It really got that like kind of rumbling grumble. It's gonna be really hard to tell the real Trump from the AI Trumps. Yeah, I'll work on that. So Trump said all of this after last week's truths,
Starting point is 00:05:03 where he threatened that there could be, quote, death and destruction if he's indicted. And then another truth posted a picture of him waving a baseball bat next to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who, by the way, has now received death threats, including a letter threatening to kill him with a powdery substance that's still being tested. How concerned are you guys about the potential for violence if Trump is indicted? We've talked a lot about sort of the legal case, the politics. We haven't talked a lot about the potential violence yet. Yeah, but there's also a bomb threat at the courthouse. Yeah. The Trump fora on the internet, already a pretty hellish place, has gotten pretty violent. The letter with the white powder said, Alvin, I'm going to kill you,
Starting point is 00:05:48 followed by many exclamation points, which you'd think you could just use a period when you include the white powder. Well, no, not in 2023, because for a certain cohort... It seems passive-aggressive. It's passive-aggressive. Every sentence is exclamation point at this point.
Starting point is 00:06:04 So that's probably what that is. I am quite concerned about violence. I am, I think, heartened by the fact that the initial call for protests were met with mockery from some people on the far right. They're like, uh-uh, we got arrested last time. This dude hung us out to dry. No way. But it only takes one deranged person. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:21 Yeah, that's the problem. In Cincinnati, a few days after the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago, a Trump supporter showed up at the field office with a rifle and was killed. Yeah. We've already been through Trump at the height of his power, causing a January 6th that wasn't able to do anything to disrupt our government, but did do a lot of damage and hurt and killed a lot of people. He can do the same thing here. Just takes one person having their radio tuned to the Trump frequency to show up and cause some chaos, which is clearly what he wants, which is why he's escalating. He was disappointed with the response. So he needs to sort of turn the heat up.
Starting point is 00:06:55 I feel like that to your point on me about how some of them are worried because, you know, the last group of people who did this got arrested. I do think that's like, you know, a lot of them on social media are warning that this is like an FBI, these protests in favor of Trump would just be an FBI trap that they're just hoping to get people to those protests so that they can arrest them. But it does show that like what the federal government and law enforcement did after January 6th is being, is a deterrent, is currently a currently a deterrent locking up violent protesters at a turn or violent insurrectionists rather why it's so important that that happened and he and it does
Starting point is 00:07:30 also matter that Trump does not currently have the ability to pardon any of these people yeah and I also think by the way that like you know Dan and I talked on Thursday about how um you know Joe Biden obviously doesn't want to be getting into the legal analysis of this case or talking about the case and other Democrats but I do think and you've seen some of them do this already, that speaking out about Trump trying to incite violence again is probably an important thing for a lot of Democrats to do. And I don't think that Joe Biden needs to like plan a speech about it. But if asked about it, I sure would make a comment. Yeah. I mean, you know, Trump called Alvin Bragg at the Waco event, uh, absolute human scum. And that's just, that is textbook dehumanizing language. And language like that historically has been a prelude to violence of some sort. So even if it's par for the course for Trump. Yeah. And I think, and Biden elevated this issue in the run up to the midterms. And I think it was the right thing to do. It was the smart thing to do. And it also lets people know that this is the threat is serious. And it's not just Trump spouting off,
Starting point is 00:08:30 which it can be easy to think. Why do you guys think Trump and MAGA politicians are so obsessed with the January 6th rioters? Last week, Marjorie Taylor Greene and some others led a CODEL to visit January 6th riders in jail. I mean, these are his shock troopers. You know, these are the ones he could count on in his darkest hours to travel to D.C. and in some cases physically fight for him. And I think what Lovett said earlier is right. I mean, there is this narrative out there that he's abandoned them, and I bet he's worried. He didn't pardon them. He just recently dropped a single when he was working with kanye for months on this track you know um
Starting point is 00:09:11 and so you know i i think it's it's part of like knowing your audience and back to the location of the rally in waco i mean a huge slice of the republican base has this fetish for these right wing anti-government groups david koresh in the Waco standoff was a source of inspiration for them. Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber who killed 168 people, said that his terrorism was retribution for the Ruby Ridge and Waco standoffs. The quote was, I wanted the government to hurt like the people of Waco and Ruby Ridge. And so, you know, they can say that this was an accident lieutenant governor texas dan patrick was like oh waco is centrally located that's why we told him to go there i do you believe that i
Starting point is 00:09:50 don't believe that yeah it's like a message why it's such a bustling metropolis and the site yeah it's why the biggest city in texas because it's so centrally located right where all the votes are yeah it's uh i also do it just for that rally it you know we'll talk about who didn't and didn't get applause but the person who gets the most applause was actually Mike Lindell, which tells you that like, this is a group of people, they want their worldview to be perfect. And the only way their worldview can remain perfect and like unsullied by any nuance or controversy or sense in which they might not have all the answers if these January 6 insurrectionists aren't political prisoners. So they have to be political prisoners, because that's the only way this whole story makes sense.
Starting point is 00:10:26 That's right. Yeah, I think and I think that's what Trump is doing. He wants to muddy the waters on his greatest political vulnerability, which is, you know, attempting a coup and inciting an insurrection. It would take down any normal candidate. Hopefully, you know, Teflon Don. You know, Teflon Don. But I also think for all of these, everyone in the MAGA movement here, like grievance politics depends on these people being seen as victims of persecution, specifically elite persecution and not perpetrators of violence. Right. So they always have in order to be aggrieved in order for this to work, they always have to be the victims of some plot. Trump's entire stump speech is about how corrupt and incompetent and in some cases evil the government is. And the message is very apocalyptic. And I imagine that kind of message resonates with this audience and with the defense of an event like Waco or an event like January 6th. I remember Clive Bundy, the rancher who had a standoff with
Starting point is 00:11:25 federal agents. He got tons of support from Republican elected officials. Some of this useful idiots like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul, but also from Dean Heller spoke out, someone who we think of as sort of a never Trump moderate. So yeah, I mean, Trump is fanning these flames very much at these events. The elites are out to get you. The federal government's out to get you. They have guns. They're coming for you. That's why you should have guns. I mean, this is a whole...
Starting point is 00:11:50 You have Tucker on every night using the footage that McCarthy gave him to tell a story that isn't true about the fact that it was just a couple tours run amok. And that is the... Trump shouted that out at the Waco event. So everything is feeding back to this idea that they are being unjustly held and prosecuted why because it wasn't insurrection why because trump won i learned in prepping for the show that roger stone dedicated his 2015 book to impart the branch davidians who died at mount carmel wow that is wild um the deep cut right there yeah how was the rest of the book get past the fucking to my beloved wife and to the branch davidians yeah so trump got plenty
Starting point is 00:12:29 of criticism for all this violent rhetoric even uh from some of his republican supporters and media friends what do you think are now that we've talked about how terrifying all of this is what do you think are the political implications of making his various investigations and potential indictments the centerpiece of his campaign? He basically said the weaponization. He did say the weaponization of the Justice Department is the central issue of our time. So let's talk about the political implication. Let's start with the primary and then we can talk about the general. So I watched the Waco remarks.
Starting point is 00:13:07 It was, what, a full 45 minutes of this, of this grievance stuff. Just endless, endless, endless. And I was so zoned out by the time I got to the end of the deep state section that I was like, I was halfway through the paragraph where he hit DeSantis and I had to roll it back. Because I was like, wait, when did he DeSantis, and I had to roll it back.
Starting point is 00:13:29 Because I was like, wait, when did he get out of his fucking personal vendettas? What speed were you doing? I was at 1.75. Thank you for asking. I did two. Well, then you slow it back. Full two, huh? You slow to one, and he sounds like he's losing it. Yeah, he sounds drunk.
Starting point is 00:13:38 He really sounds slow and drunk. But he basically speaks like this for 45 minutes, and he goes, and so that's why they're attacking me for you rings a bit hollow it's just unbelievable and so no wonder the audience basically was dead silent through the remaining 45 minutes of his speech where he actually got to the message that his people are trying to get him to deliver it's interesting we've gone through sort of this cycle where for a while, basically all of last year and in the rep to the midterms, every Trump speech was all about Trump and 2020
Starting point is 00:14:13 and how the election was stolen from him. And then like he went on this little burst of, you know, I'm going to announce extreme right-wing policy to get to the right of DeSantis on all this culture war stuff. I'm going to talk about policy a little bit. And now he is, this speech, He's just got right back into like it's 80 percent me grievance, 2020 insurrection. Now my prosecution indictments, all that kind of stuff. And like 20 percent other shit. Yeah. And he gets to the message, which is the anti DeSantis,
Starting point is 00:14:42 the pro Trump anti DeSantis policy message is the one he put in that long statement he put out about DeSantis, which is like a very tough and very sort of clearly well thought out hit on DeSantis. And he ran through it in full. But by the time he got there, these people have been standing out in the sun for hours. He's Trump. The plane landed and he sits there for half an hour on the plane having lunch, doesn't give a fuck what happens to these people. And did you notice how he does the full speech and then they play this new sort of soundtrack, this sort of orchestral movement, and then he just sums the whole thing up for like another seven to ten minutes and does it all again. But John, to your point about like primary versus
Starting point is 00:15:15 general message, I mean, I just think Donald Trump views every war as just a series of short-term battles and he doesn't really care about the day after that. And so in the primary, this does let him get back to just dominating every news cycle. And now everything, once again, is a litibly care about than any other Republican alive and that she has done nothing. So if he wins the nomination, I think like this kind of crap is what moderate voters will not like, or at least like least about him, but we'll see. Yeah. I mean, the latest polling from January of this year, right after the anniversary of January 6th, a day for progress showed 74 percent of all voters think Trump supporters did the wrong thing by inciting violence and threatening our democracy. 17 percent think it was the right thing to stand up for Trump and overturn the election.
Starting point is 00:16:18 It's overwhelming, but you'd love that 74 to be higher. I know. Well, among but then among Republicans, voters, 61% thought it was wrong. 27% thought it was right, which among Republicans, probably better than I expected. Still awful. So it is a fuck. It is a loser in the general. Like we just went through a midterm election where all of the election denier candidates who are extreme did poorly, where Trump was blamed for a lot of these losses, where like extremism celebrating January 6th, talking about the stolen election.
Starting point is 00:16:49 It was just a loser for Republican candidates. Well, and also he's getting he's getting some, I think, unhelpful feedback from what this crowd likes. I mean, this these are the these are Internet adults, goons and dead enders. these are internet adult goons and dead enders. These are people with gold under the stairs just absolute lost fucking souls
Starting point is 00:17:11 out there for five hours. You sure that's the wrong move right now? The Grateful Dead had roadies but the people who went to the Waco show like those were the diehards. Did you see him at Waco? It was amazing. You weren't at Waco. I'm talking about 23 waco not 93 waco do you drop acid at waco trump event yeah of course i did i will say on thursday's pod dan
Starting point is 00:17:34 and i were talking about like what the potential indictment might what effect it might have uh in a republican primary and i was saying that like there's there could be two reactions from sort of desantis curious voters right people who are open to an alternative to Trump, right? And one could be, well, this is all about electability and more indictments for Trump means even more baggage. Can't we just get Trump without the baggage and nominate DeSantis? Or it could be, you know, the, the liberal elite institutions and the deep state are out to get Trump and we have to defend Trump, even if we think maybe he's not that maybe maybe we're tired of Trump, we're going to stand by him. And sure enough, semaphore at the rally interviews,
Starting point is 00:18:13 this 55 year old Latina woman who said she'd been flirting with voting for DeSantis, but was disappointed in his response to Trump's potential indictment and would now keep her vote with Trump. Yeah, I think it was interesting. We were talking about this on Pod Save the World. It's a great show that comes out on Wednesdays. We talked about all sorts of foreign policy news. Seems like you veered sort of into other shows' territory there. No, Max Fisher, the newest contributor here at Crooked Media, did a sort of talk to some political scientists and looked at the landscape of countries that have or have not prosecuted presidents. And they said that where it was effective was often more developed democracies when the list of charges kept adding up and up and up and up.
Starting point is 00:18:54 And people were finally like, okay, like Jacob Zuma in South Africa, like there were like 13 charges against him. And people were like, all right, well, he's got to be guilty of one of these. That's interesting. Well, maybe. So these are diehards. Yeah, I was going to say, I'm hoping that that woman that Semaphore interviewed is reflective of what you guys were just saying, which is the feedback he's getting from the folks at these rallies. These are the biggest. Yes. I also do think we are. We are. It is March of 2023.
Starting point is 00:19:19 We're almost a year out from any actual voting. And there's a difference between. Yeah, of course, I support them. And it's getting close. I support them. And I'm going to cast my vote for this person. Well, just to get into the primary a little bit more. Trump also continued to go after Tiny D at the Waco rally, who is currently his only real primary threat. But the crowd wasn't really into Trump's DeSantis impression. Let's listen. When a man comes to me, tears in his eyes, he's at almost nothing in the polls. And I said, I can't give you an endorsement. There's no way you can win.
Starting point is 00:19:54 You're dead. I said, you can't win, can you? How do you can win? Sir, if you endorse me, I'll win. Please, please, sir, endorse me. And I said, all right, let's give it a shot you know what's funny is i've heard him say this a couple other times and he it's a it's a classic trump he starts he was almost had tears in his eyes now it's now it's he did have tears in his eyes next week it'll be like he was on the top of the bridge he couldn't breathe on the top of the bridge and i said get down ron get down ron i'll endorse you you have to jump off epcot um so the crowd's muted reaction was noted by
Starting point is 00:20:33 many media outlets including none other than fox news uh right-wing pundit mark levin tweeted quote conservatives don't like or want the personal mocking yeah right you guys buy that they love it they love the personal market guys that out there this is look i'm this is not to me as i people can read whatever they want but what i saw was a crowd that was bored as fucking hell just like truly done also what's most interesting to me is the coverage of the response is muted versus the reality of when I finally listened to the clip, like there was some giggles and laughing. It's not the stage of the, to your point about it only being March. It's not the stage of the primary yet where any crowd is going to start clapping and applauding for a hit on another, for another candidate of the same party. That,
Starting point is 00:21:19 that's always the case in primaries, at least at the beginning. He's softening them up. He's warming them up. I mean, pretty soon they'll treat him like Mitch McConnell. It'll be like cocaine Ron, you know, wouldn't support me. Photos with those girls. What was that about? I don't know. That's what's coming.
Starting point is 00:21:33 It's getting better. I do think it's fascinating, though, that Fox, Mark Levin, there was also an editorial in the New York Post saying that, like, what is Trump doing? He's inciting violence. Interesting. Murdoch properties going all in on this. Yeah, it's interesting that the Murdoch properties are going all in on DeSantis. Well, Rupert's just recently got engaged. He's feeling kind of jovial, thinking about maybe he's not as interested in a fascist takeover of global democracy.
Starting point is 00:22:13 Let's talk a little bit about DeSantis, who's hit a bit of a rough patch before his campaign has even begun. Guy hasn't announced, already pronounced dead. I'm frustrated, but I am frustrated that I have to be frustrated on behalf of Ron DeSantis. I know.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Please go ahead. You've always had a soft spot for me. It's the troubling dynamic. It sucks. I know. I know. All right. So here's a sampling of stories from over the weekend.
Starting point is 00:22:34 Ron DeSantis' donors and allies question if he's ready for 2024 NBC News. Some Republicans fear that their non-Trump savior is showing signs of faltering, Politico. DeSantis looks to revamp strategy amid signs of political strain, the Hill. And, but a new set of public opinion strategies polls showed DeSantis leading Trump by eight points in Iowa and tied in New Hampshire, though when you throw in the rest of the field, he's tied in Iowa and trailing in New Hampshire by double digits. But DeSantis does have the best favorability rating of any candidate in those polls, including Trump.
Starting point is 00:23:08 And most other polls, national polls, have shown that as well. So what do you guys think is going on here? So you dig into this and it is, there's really nothing there. There's really nothing to justify this level of like narrative shift you can say all right there was a ukraine gaffe that's absolutely true there was he sort of fucked
Starting point is 00:23:31 up ukraine a ukraine answer and then did some cleanup is that what we'll be talking about said his carefully written statement was uh misinterpreted it was a questionnaire it was a questionnaire again tucker carlson offered a foreign policy questionnaire and he filled it out and then was like how could you mistake my record take that out of context unbelievable but he so he's doing cleanup there we will be talking about that statement in a year probably not uh that desantis went from darling to dud because trump sucked up the oxygen by attacking him which suggests like when you said he was going to be the trump slayer did did you think that was going to happen without Trump ever noticing? Right. Like Trump is doing exactly what everybody would expect Donald Trump to do. And it's having an effect that everybody
Starting point is 00:24:13 would expect it to have. If that means DeSantis' campaign has stumbled, it means it was never going to succeed. So that doesn't make any sense. And then the third piece of it is that DeSantis didn't go hard enough at Trump when he was potentially being indicted. But also DeSantis took the bait by going after Trump because of the potential indictment. Those to me are sort of the three main points, none of which is to me a real critique. And all of them are just sort of what was going to happen at this stage. It feels like everything is just basically static. What do you think, Tommy?
Starting point is 00:24:40 Look, it's obviously not a good thing for a politician to do their big book rollout and their national press tour and then see their national polling numbers just collapse. I mean, that's not great. I don't know why it happened. I think with these early state polls, the Axios leading with the head to head numbers is so stupid. It is not going to be a head to head contest in Iowa or New Hampshire. And in some sense, when you look at this, not as a head to head contest, the numbers look pretty static from where Trump was in 2016. You know, like 39% in New Hampshire is very similar to the 35% Trump got in New Hampshire in 2016. So I'm just like, maybe we're all just like making too much of a bunch of polling from some random Republican firm that got leaked to Axios and misleadingly framed would be kind of my takeaway. I would just, what I see is a race that has not really shifted. And I see DeSantis was the Trump slayer. Then DeSantis campaign stumbles out of the gate. And now we are set up for DeSantis, the comeback kid, which will happen in a couple of weeks. And I do think that-
Starting point is 00:25:40 Will it happen before he even announces his campaign, which is at the earliest is going to be June? And all of this to me is like, you know, you look at the,ces his campaign, which is at the earliest is going to be June? And all of this to me is like, you know, you look at the I think you have to look at the trend in polling. And the only thing I see is in polling that shows DeSantis doing a little bit better in early states than he is nationally is it tells you that the Trump support nationally is soft. And it does remind me of a lot of the polling we saw in early 2007, where you had Giuliani leading nationally, but you actually had McCain and Romney and Huckabee doing far better in Iowa, New Hampshire. And you had Hillary Clinton leading 100% every single poll, every single one. Until September. Until September, and really mostly-
Starting point is 00:26:20 And most of September too. Nationally, basically everything. And then in iowa is actually edwards and and hillary going back and forth but ultimately obama taking the lead there and then and so it shows me that i think the the race is actually pretty static and trump has the lead but it is soft that's that's how i see it on the polling to tommy's point you can't take one poll from one firm as as gospel you can't take many firm many polls for many firms as gospel. But from here on out, you should always pay more attention to the state polls
Starting point is 00:26:48 than the national polls. What the national polls are useful for is, as Lovett just said, trends. And, you know, Nate Cohn did a piece in the New York Times about this. You know, all in all, DeSantis has gained about four points
Starting point is 00:27:00 on average over the last month that warrants all this, you know know crazy narrative shifting so it's i i'm with you i think it's a pretty static race dan had an interesting theory in um in his message box today about all this which is that trump is just better at getting attention oh absolutely then desantis or that anyone maybe anyone that's ever been in politics and i think at this stage in the primary, the candidate getting the most attention tends to do better in the polls. That's also
Starting point is 00:27:30 partially explains the discrepancy between national polls where he's far out ahead and state polls where people have more to go on than just a national media narrative because they're starting to meet DeSantis and see more local coverage about these candidates. And feel connected to their vote, the importance of their vote as an early state voter. Like national polls right now showing that Trump is leading to me is a very soft support for someone they want to rally behind because he's under attack by some Soros-backed liberal fucks in New York. The quote that jumped out at me in this New York Times story about the Waco event was
Starting point is 00:28:00 from a guy named Jeff Fiebert, who was like a farmer who's a diehard Trump person. He said, I like DeSantis, I do, but the ground that needs to be covered is going to take Trump to get it done. And that Trump reminds him of the kind of person who goes into the bar and knocks all the bottles off the shelf just to see where they land. That to me, I thought it was like a pretty good summary
Starting point is 00:28:19 because this felt like DeSantis wasn't that kind of guy. And a lot of these Trump voters just want a nominee who will kick the shit out of the people they hate the most too. Right. Yeah. Liberals, the media, the deep state. That's where I think to the extent that I think DeSantis has screwed something up. I think that Republicans want a fighter. Trump is beating the crap out of him and he's not fighting back. And I know he's in a tough situation, but I don't think that's a great look for him in terms of voters who want someone who goes into a bar and knocks the bottles off the shelf. I think the big question in this primary, which is why I still, in my heart of
Starting point is 00:28:54 hearts, can't predict who's going to win this thing, is I think there is a cohort of voters who are exactly as Tommy described. And I think they make up the core of Trump's base. I think there's a core of voters who've decided they're done with Trump. They don't want anymore. And then I think there's a key group of voters in the middle here who were like, much like that woman that was interviewed at the rally,
Starting point is 00:29:17 who were like, you know, I love Trump, always will love Trump. I'm kind of open to someone else, kind of worried that he's not going to be able to win again. And I'm not sure for them, the fighting thing is as important as it is to the Trump base voters. But I do think what's important to them is like getting to know Ron DeSantis and seeing him and stuff like and and Trump's just going to blot that out, particularly, I guess, if all these indictments come. When I was when I was just going back and looking at the polling from 2007 to 2008, one thing that pops up is McCain for a while was counted out. You had Giuliani leading, maybe Romney was going to take it. But then all of a sudden, as you head into the fall,
Starting point is 00:29:54 there was a bunch of polling that started to show that McCain was the strongest general election candidate, that Romney was getting destroyed by Edwards and even Clinton. But McCain was always the strongest general election candidate. As we get closer, I think the electability argument starts to play in and that's where whatever's going on with whatever attacks they want to launch against the judicial system, the fact that Trump being under indictment starts to become a liability with independence starts to sink, get into the conversation. And Ron DeSantis gets to start making an argument about electability and stability that will carry more weight as we get closer. I mean, let's just say if you have a, if you have a nominee on March 27, 2023, you're a weirdo.
Starting point is 00:30:35 Most of the country does not care. They have not chosen. These are like the diehards that we're talking about. The one thing in this story that did jump out at me is relevant is the big donors positive contributions. There's the Uline family, this like right wing billionaire family that just pumps money into the worst causes you could ever imagine. It did sound like they're pausing on their checks, according to some outlet. I forgot who reported it. I also thought and there's some real galaxy brain takes going on here from some of these Republicans in the NBC story. going on here from some of these Republicans in the NBC story. There was one Republican operative who said DeSantis should have said in response to the potential Trump indictment, under no circumstances will the free state of Florida allow this political prosecution to take place.
Starting point is 00:31:15 And then according to that Republican operative, that would have made DeSantis look like the alpha and Trump look like the beta. Because DeSantis, to your point, then DeSantis would have been the tough guy because he can protect Donald Trump and it would have driven Trump crazy. I was like, what is that? This is a Charlie Kirk thing. Charlie said Florida should be a sanctuary state for Trump. But the idea that that somehow helps DeSantis
Starting point is 00:31:40 is just like a lot. And it is... Alpha. Anyone who says alpha, it's just like people, these like Jordan Peterson, broken brain people. Yeah, well, it does. It does. It does resonate with with certainly a portion of that base. To your point about the electability argument, love it. It's hard for DeSantis to make that argument right now, too, because if you look at the polls, like some polls, he's performing slightly better than Donald Trump against Joe Biden. Some he's not. Now, if we get into Trump under, you know, with multiple investigations and potentially multiple indictments down the road and Trump's out there on the national news every day saying crazy shit. And then you start doing general election polls and Joe Biden's leading Trump by a good deal and DeSantis is closer.
Starting point is 00:32:21 Then he can start making that argument. It's just a harder argument to make right now. It's too early. All right. We will talk about this argument for him to make right now. It's too early. It's too early. All right, we will talk about this and more with Jen Psaki right after this. Joining us now, former White House press secretary and current host of Inside with Jen Psaki, which airs Sundays at noon Eastern on MSNBC, our old pal Jen Psaki. Jen, welcome back.
Starting point is 00:32:51 Hi, guys. How you doing? Good. This is your first PSA appearance after the White House, right? You haven't done one. That is true. And I'm now wearing jeans and I'm feeling a lot more casual and laid back. So there you go. Love that.
Starting point is 00:33:05 A transition of sorts. Saki, congrats on the monster ratings for the first episode. Monster. Thank you. One episode down, guys. Many to go. Let's do a second episode. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:33:17 You have any episodes of you guys done? You could give me a little invite. So many. Oh, yeah. Most are pretty forgettable. But now we've got it down, you know? Yeah. Trump, bad.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Trump is so bad. Trump is bad. but you can't take it for granted. That's the key thing. Got to stay in the fight. Speaking of Trump, we were just talking about him celebrating the insurrection at his Waco rally and threatening violence if he's indicted. Fair to say that probably doesn't play well in the general. But do you think that's a winning message in a Republican primary? What was your reaction to the weekend's events? I mean, sometimes I feel like people say things on television or just in general, like, look at Trump. He's just ahead of all of us.
Starting point is 00:33:57 He's playing three-dimensional chess or whatever analogy is used. And at the end of the day, or whatever analogy is used. And at the end of the day, playing footage from the insurrection, he also had January 6th participants do a performance. It was recorded, but that was also a part of the rally in Waco, which I think somebody from his campaign said something like, I don't know if they said it was a coincidence or something along those lines, whatever it was, it just didn't ring to be true. And it's so on the nose, the analogy of Waco, given that it was a religious cult or a cult, you know, that was, and there was a standoff with law enforcement. It's like he's sending this huge message from all of this craziness to his people. I think that's clearly what he's doing so um i don't think that it is magical amazing politics just like i don't think his uh his uh according to his campaign that him wanting to do a perp walk and get photos and uh make that be a big moment seems like great politics to me i i don't it sometimes it's not, sometimes he's not the master genius politician that people give him credit to be. Yeah, no, I think that's probably right. You had a great segment on your show this
Starting point is 00:35:11 weekend about Ron DeSantis flip-flopping on Ukraine. What do you make of the recent round of stories about Republican operatives and donors already second-guessing his campaign? What do you think is going on with his candidacy? Well, a couple of months ago when he was kind of up in the polls, he reminded me a little bit of, do we all remember Wesley Clark when he got into the race in 2004? I remember, I mean, because a bunch of us were on the Kerry campaign. It was like, oh my God, Wesley Clark is getting in. What are we going to do, right? It looked good on paper and it seemed like it was going to kind of mess up or change up the race and it really didn't.
Starting point is 00:35:51 And with Ron DeSantis, the thing was that he was what, people were projecting upon him what they wanted him to be. And I remember a story, I don't remember where it was, but from November, December of some donors who attended an event with him. And many of them
Starting point is 00:36:07 came out and said, I don't think he was at his best today. And it was like, well, have you seen him before? No. It's like, well, what's his best? So, I mean, I think this is like he's now, even though he hasn't announced, he's kind of in that stage of this where people are starting to ask questions and you actually have to have policy positions and positions on things. And when you're not authentic about it, people recognize that. So that's kind of all playing out for him. But I don't know. I mean, he hasn't figured out how to go after Trump, clearly.
Starting point is 00:36:38 But he also seems to, and I talked about this on the show yesterday, I mean, he also hasn't kind of figured out what his own view is of things. And that's not just a problem. Sometimes on the Republican side, there's problems in the Democratic side on that occasionally as well. But, you know, that's never a good, a good message to send to voters. So no, I don't think he's in search of Elaine. I think he's in search of Elaine. People are going to still what's the old term, like lift the hood, kick the tires. They're starting to kick the tires. And I don't know, the tires may not all be functioning or something. I'm not sure what the analogy is there. The Wesley Clark comparison is good.
Starting point is 00:37:13 I hadn't thought about it. But he actually really did get on an airplane at the very start of his campaign with a sweater. And it was a campaign that was being just entirely about the vote on the Iraq war. And he was asked on that flight, his very first campaign event, did you would you have voted for the Iraq war? And he just didn't have an answer. Not only did not have an answer, but he ended up screaming for his press secretary to come help him. Mary. Wasn't it Mary?
Starting point is 00:37:38 Or Howard Schultz. Remember, it was like, oh, when he gets in the race, it's all going to be over. He's going to bring the world together. It's not exactly what happened. He was a drip. I mean, or on the Republican side in many different primaries, especially 2016. Rick Perry. Remember?
Starting point is 00:37:58 Fred Thompson. Fred Thompson. Yeah. Herman Cain. Marco Rubio. Rudy Giuliani. Whatever happened to that guy? Herman Cain, he had a moment there.
Starting point is 00:38:05 Yeah, he did have a moment. Did he have the 999 plan? Am I remembering this correctly? Oh, see, we're all kind of remembering. I vaguely remember what that was, but that's all affiliated. Also RIP Herman Cain, right? Yeah. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:18 Forgot about that. His memory would be a blessing. Yeah. You guys have anything for Chad? No, I actually honestly did not prepare any questions. Oh, that's great. I'm just here to hang. But he did work very hard on his joke about Howard Schultz,
Starting point is 00:38:31 or just came to him in the moment. No, I'm here to ad-lib. He's prioritizing where he does his work. I was doing a lot of work with ChatGPT and didn't help. Yeah. Saki, how are you feeling about going over to the media side? We're still torn about it. We're political hacks at heart, but now you have about going over to the media side? We're still torn about it. You know, we're political hacks at heart,
Starting point is 00:38:46 but now you have like a real job at a real network where people are counting on you to get it right. I mean, you guys are torn about it. You're about, how far are you into this journey? Seven years? Seven years. Thanks for calling it a journey. Well, what was, keeping it 1600?
Starting point is 00:39:00 Keeping it, yeah. Those were the early days. I remember the OG version. And back then we were like, Trump, what's going to happen? This is silly. Is this guy going to be around for that long? Probably not. Will the indictment stop him?
Starting point is 00:39:14 There was a headline in CNN today that said, Trump leans into extremism as legal woes mount. That could have been appearing every day for the last seven years. Should we let Jen answer the question that? Yeah, sure. Yeah. Well, I mean, the adjustment has been in part that I mean, I have worked in the White House more than anywhere else in my life, which is a weird thing to say, but I've spent more time there
Starting point is 00:39:41 consistently than any other job. So part of coming here was also just coming somewhere new. That was like a big company with lots of people. And the first time I did a special or an election night special, whatever it may have been in the fall, I remember being nervous. Like I was like the new kid at the lunch table. You know, I brought like a bag of snacks. I was like, if I have snacks for people, maybe they'll want to be my friend i don't know so there's been an adjustment like that and just learning kind of a new place um and then there's an adjustment to things like as you guys know because you are experienced you know media it's at this point in time there are things like commercials you can't just keep talking people
Starting point is 00:40:23 will tell you to wrap and stop. It's all, you know, those are things I'm learning, all the technical stuff. But, you know, I will say that there is a nerdy similarity. I mean, obviously journalism is very different. And what I'm doing, I'm not trying to hide from what I've worked on, where I've been, what I think I can bring to the table in this job at all. So in that sense, I'm not trying to be even handed about abortion or who you can marry or any of that. That's not what anyone's asking me to do or what I'm going to do. But I will say, you know how when you work in government, how you have like a bunch of people wandering around who are policy experts on different things and they kind of, there's a lot of nerds flowing around and they know about
Starting point is 00:41:03 different things. There is a weird similarity to that, right? Where it's like, you know, you'll run into somebody who's like doing like a documentary on NASA, like in the elevator, right? And then, you know, you run into somebody who's just been in Georgia. So there's a cool aspect of people who are just smart
Starting point is 00:41:24 and interesting, trying to get to the bottom of stuff and learn more and different layers of nerdiness. So in that sense, it's similar to government. Did you call other trailblazing politicos turned journalists like Sean Spicer for advice before the show? I have not, although I have a great Sean Spicer story. He, well, I mean, it's a small town, right? It was, you know, for a long time, we would be, this was pre-Trump, obviously. He would be one of those people back in 2012, before I went into the campaign, where you'd be in a green room together, or you'd be doing television together, right? He was kind of a run-of mill Republican operative for a while there. Early on in this last iteration
Starting point is 00:42:07 in the White House, I did, I think it was Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me, that show. And I talked about how when I needed to get a good laugh, I would pull up the video of him shimmying in his green shirt, you know, from Dancing with the Stars. And he, to his credit, sent me a signed photo of him shimmying in that shirt. Oh, my God. Is that hanging up on the wall behind you? It is not. But I did think that was a little funny, even though, no, I would not call him for advice. And we don't exactly have the same approach to anything.
Starting point is 00:42:41 That's sort of like a good maybe bathroom picture. You know, you need a piece of art for the bathroom. It's a conversation starter. What what are you trying to do with this show that you think is like different than other cable shows? I mean, one of the things that we've already started doing and we're going to do more of is spending time or a couple of hours with politicians or elected officials, or not even necessarily, like I'd love to do this with athletes or musicians or others, to figure out what they do in their normal day. You know, we call it weekend routines. So it's what do you drink? What kind of coffee are you drinking? What show are you watching? But also, what do you like in your normal life?
Starting point is 00:43:20 What drives you? What is your background? What do you like to do for fun? And you learn so much about people. I mean, I think it's true for all of us. Having spent two decades, I can't believe that's true, working for politicians of all different stripes. You know, they're human beings, right? They're imperfect. They have funny quirks about them. I mean, you guys talk a lot about the funny Obama quirks, as much as he was an amazing president. He's got some funny quirks, right? They all do. And that part of them is so humanizing that, you know, we did a piece with Maxwell Frost yesterday. Such an amazing.
Starting point is 00:43:54 He's great. And it's inspiring, too. I mean, you think everything's terrible in Washington and government's horrible. One, I don't believe that. I think government and people who get into public service are vast majority do it for the right reasons and do it because they want to make the world better. I mean, he's just like such an inspiring 26 year old who is like outspoken on gun violence. He's just guts and he's going to be around for a while where I'm going to spend tomorrow with Danica Rome and Danica. Big friend of the pod here. Big friend of the pod. But, you know, there's there's so many interesting people out there.
Starting point is 00:44:26 So that's one of the things we're trying to do. The other thing is and this has been really fun. I almost start to like giggle because I get so excited about delivering some of these as we're working through them is these segments we're calling Don't Freak Out, which is basically, you know, sometimes it's like everybody's telling you it's a five alarm fire. Basically, you know, sometimes it's like everybody's telling you it's a five alarm fire. There are some five alarm fires. OK, of course, there are. We're living in an era where the former president just like had insurrectionist video like at his rally. So, I mean, like, let's be real. But everything is not right.
Starting point is 00:44:56 And sometimes we can take the temperature down and explain stuff. So those are some of the things. But really, I'm excited to go out and spend time with people, you know, in the environments where they live and work and share a little bit more about who they are, because I think that's what people don't often get to see about politicians. Are you covering the Gwyneth Paltrow trial? I think she's being scammed. I really do. I've seen some clips of this and I don't really understand what happened, if I'm being totally honest. You can have me on. I'll walk you through. All right. Love it. You're invited. Anytime. I've watched hours of depositions.
Starting point is 00:45:29 Yeah, of just this trial. Someone's peed into someone else. Oh, yeah. I tried to read like three paragraphs about it. And I was like, this is ridiculous. Why do I care about this? I know that you're out of the White House, but I'm going to ask you to put your Biden hat back on for a second. Our old friend Hans Nichols at Axios
Starting point is 00:45:45 just wrote about how the president plans to offer a contrast to the nuttiness of the Republican primary that we were just talking about. He said, quote, Biden's advisers are convinced the president can overcome his low approval rating by outlining his infrastructure plan Congress passed last year, project by project and city by city. First question, do you think that's really the strategy? Well, first of all, I'm not, I've known Hans a long time. When I was working like in the house, he was working for the Hill. That is not the sexiest description of a campaign strategy. So I'm not sure Hans is going to be hired to do a campaign slogan. I think the point is though, one, I mean, the contrast is a little bit inherent
Starting point is 00:46:26 right now. I mean, they don't have to do anything right now except have Joe Biden be president and go meet with foreign leaders and sign bills and host events at the White House because the other side is so cuckoo. And so in many ways, the crazy versus the this is way better and way more competent is happening on its own, which I think is part of the reason why he hasn't announced yet or why he doesn't. I don't know that there's the same urgency that there was six to eight months ago because there aren't other people clearly. I mean, maybe some people will, but at this point, jumping in the primary. And right now, the thing about being president and running for reelection is that in itself is an advantage. You have the music, you have the plane, all the things, right? But in terms of the infrastructure, that description, what I do think that how I think they're thinking about this, or if I were sitting in there, how I'd be thinking about this,
Starting point is 00:47:21 is a lot of what they've accomplished. People don't understand what the IRA is, which by the way, is just like a terrible acronym for anything. Acronyms are generally terrible. They don't really understand like the Inflation Reduction Act, even if you spell it out. They do understand if there is like a bridge being built in their community, if their road is no longer, if their road is easier to go over if there's a cool renewable climate project that they can get excited about and so it is smart because there's still an element of all politics is local that i think is very true to who joe biden is but also it's how they can do their accomplishments in a way that's not just like ira bumper stickers which like you know no one knows what that is is. Although Tommy's like thinking about like the Ireland's right now.
Starting point is 00:48:08 Yeah, I'm going to go after some Protestants in a minute. Just to push you on that a little bit, Saki. I mean, every president is like, gets told by their advisors, like, sir, you're doing amazing things. Your communications team is just not selling it well enough. And that's what we're going to fix this next quarter. Right. And so, you know, that happened to us when we worked for Obama and it pissed us off when Joe Biden took office and they passed a ton of covid stimulus money. His advisers were out there saying, you know, look, Obama screwed up by not selling the Recovery Act and the stimulus well enough. Joe is going to hit the road and we're really going to sell it. And then we fast forward to today and his approval is at 38 percent. And it's just sort of like, is it an antiquated idea to think that you can do these road shows
Starting point is 00:48:49 and really sell these granular projects? Well, no, I think that's fair. I mean, I think it's part, it's a little different just to like unpack all of that because part of his accomplishment, what he's done to date is these big bills, right? So it's not the totality of the only thing you do, but it's part of what they can lay the groundwork on now before he announces, which is to help inform people in communities what he's actually done, right? And that's more about the politics of it, I think, than it is about like when you're in the White House, do you sell it? Is your comms team terrible? I've like long joked, and if i ever do this i will make
Starting point is 00:49:25 you guys mugs i want like an uh nacp which stands for not a comms problem um i want one i want two i used to joke with my team when i was the press secretary that that like we needed that mug no one really knew what it meant but we knew what it meant because it's like sometimes it's not a comms problem it's a policy problem by the way um Anyway, I do think once he gets in and once it is an actual contrast with some with a candidate, an opponent, it becomes the like, don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative. And by the way, that guy over there, whoever it may be, unless Nikki Haley has a massive surprising surge in the polls, you know, I'm not betting on it, but we'll see. He is going to be way out of the mainstream on the vast majority of issues. Even if it's Ron DeSantis, he's, yes, less crazy than Donald Trump, or maybe I trust him more with the nuclear codes or something, but he still has policies that are way beyond even like most conservatives.
Starting point is 00:50:25 I mean, he's way out of what the mainstream is. So that will still be the central part. I would say I would bet I would advise in a year from now. But for now, it's like the stage of like, here's what I've actually done. Yeah. Jen, do you think so? Recently, there was this photo was it was Biden and McConnell in front of a bridge and it was Kevin McCarthy and the chaos on the floor of the House. And it was this great contrast. it was biden and mcconnell in front of a bridge and it was kevin mccarthy and the chaos on the floor of the house and it was this great contrast brent spence bridge
Starting point is 00:50:49 the brent spence bridge the famous brent spence which by the way is a scary bridge i've driven over a many times because my husband is from cincinnati and that thing is it's not the same that's why joe biden's gonna fix it that's right. Yeah. But, you know, some of what Joe Biden gets, as you were saying, like these are these are this is some some of this is T-ball, right? Like be against violence before democracy. and environmental infrastructure, how much would you have him enter the fight and start taking shots about what Trump and DeSantis and others are saying? And how much would you let the contrast speak for itself? Well, I mean, when I was there, we didn't do that a lot purposefully, right? And people can judge whether that was the right decision or the wrong decision. But part of that was sort of resettling the nerves of the public, right? So the first year plus, I mean, back, I mean, I left 10 months ago, almost to when I think there was starting to be a little bit of contrast right before I left.
Starting point is 00:51:52 But we didn't really do much of that. We kind of let the crazy be the crazy, right? We didn't talk about Marjorie Taylor Greene. We just let the crazy be the crazy. Now they've done it more and they are, as a now observer of it, they've been still selective about it, but they've done it a little bit more. Obviously, as a campaign picks up, as he, if he decides, presumably he's made every indication he's going to run, he runs, that will become more frequent, including when he's out there doing events. You know, you got to be careful, the
Starting point is 00:52:25 official, unofficial, official, political, that kind of stuff. But I think it increases over the year. And that makes sense. What do you make of this narrative that's out there now that Biden is moving to the center because of, you know, they connect three dots here, the opposition to D.C.'s criminal justice reforms, his support for the Willow oil drilling project, and now the rumored possibility that the administration may bring back family detentions. You've been in government like us and you know that some things are some things are political strategy. Some things are just an unfortunate sequence of events that you have little control over. And sometimes it's a mix of both. So what do you make of it? I think without knowing where the third sits, I think the first two are a bit of an unfortunate sequence of events. I mean, the first, the D.C. bill, which is complicated,
Starting point is 00:53:18 hard for people to understand. There was a total miscommunication, which obviously warrant is, you know, there's warranted criticism. But the mayor of DC, Muriel Bowser did not want that bill, right? She also, so I don't know entirely what happened there, but the thing about Biden is he, and people like this, they don't like it. He's never been as progressive on issues around policing as some in the party might like him to be. I mean, he's, he is, has been an advocate for the George Floyd Justice and Policing Act. He's been an advocate for reforms, but he has also been a defender of funding the police and that puts it in his budget and things like that. And that's kind of part of who he is. So whether people like it or not like it, I don't think it's a shift, I would say. On the Willow Project, as I understand that in my reading, there is a legal component there that is a little bit tricky for them. easy to explain and it feels bad it sounds bad it feels contradictory but the legal stuff uh can be a real pain in the neck when you're in the communications team and i think it's a case of
Starting point is 00:54:31 that yeah sometimes having to follow the laws are real a real pain a real tricky wicket yeah that's why the trump that's why the trump people are just like fuck it we're not gonna do it right right we were still like we cannot violate the hatch act you know we will not although i i guess i got in trouble once whatever but like um you know i got a sternly worded letter but you know they they were like doing their campaign rallies on the south lawn right yeah we were like and then we don't even like i see an attorney general in the hallway and i'd like move the other way wasn't the convention speech on the lawn and then and then it was like and then they're like you violated the hatch hack pay us 500 which means it's just a 500 fee for breaking the hatch act so jen you know you're you're listen i think anyone who watched you at
Starting point is 00:55:20 the podium knows that you are not only uh brilliant but incredibly patient uh and kind to even very dumb questioners but you're also a tough cookie you know we we were in a lot of campaign battle you shut up you're in a lot of campaign battle that's to love it do you own do you owe jen money no we were in a lot of fights with jen in political campaigns we saw her knife fighting sticking it to opponents behind the scenes dropping oppo so now really that you're at your new perch is there anyone at cnn that you want to talk shit about jake tapper anderson cooper let's start a fight has aaron burnett actually been behind this whole time like what who should we go after no jake tapper friend was at my wedding he'll come for you i i don't know i hope not um i love his wife
Starting point is 00:56:07 who's like even the better member of the family i think that's fair to say he'll probably attack you for saying that yeah who is the other i'm uncomfortable with this whole conversation anderson cooper like anderson cooper he's like do i mean he's no all right we'll do this offline you mentioned you mentioned feeling like the first day of school, like have Rachel and Chris and Nicole Wallace let you sit at their lunch table. Oh, yeah. Is there a cool table? Occasionally I do offer snacks. No, they have been really great.
Starting point is 00:56:38 I mean, I have gotten amazing advice from all of them. amazing advice from all of them. You know, Nicole Wallace, like brought me to one of her staff meetings. And I just like watched it all happen when I in my first couple of weeks, Rachel sat with me when I was going through the teleprompter, she may have in her head been like, Oh, she's not good at this. But she didn't say that she's very helpful. Chris has been walked me through how he prepares for for shows. Everybody's a little different right right because famously chris hayes you're not allowed to look him in the eyes but other than that as long as you don't break that role um so um no they've been all really great i i will say there would be a really amazing because because i started months ago i feel like there was such a long lead up i think people were like are you actually gonna have a show or are they like humoring you a little bit here which I feel
Starting point is 00:57:29 like I I got versions of that question sometimes but because I started in September I had time to kind of get to know each people and spend time with people and I went to visit most of the of the anchors in their offices which there would be an amazing I'm like I don't know who I'm pitching this to in the world magazine piece some sort of story about their offices because it's like they're everything you want them to be you know i mean like chris hayes has like a stack of news like of magazine articles you're like of course you do and you've probably read all of them that's annoying but it's like what i wanted it to be. You know, Lawrence O'Donnell has like a portrait of like a member of Moynihan who he once worked for. I mean, it's just Ari Melber's office is like looks like it's in a law firm.
Starting point is 00:58:13 I mean, it's all the things you want them to be. He's got Biggie's ashes. It's just like Lovett's desk is exactly what you'd expect as well. Yeah, pile of shit. Just like empty sneakers. Color coded. Color coded. All right um your show
Starting point is 00:58:26 is fantastic we are so proud of you and so happy for the early success that you've had uh please come back to positive america anytime anytime jen saki i will and you guys come on my show yes anytime anytime we'll come to new york we'll do it no are you new york or dc your babies it's dc babies are welcome great weC. Babies are welcome. Great. Cool spouses are welcome. I mean, I've already been on, but no offense to you guys. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:58:51 That's why it was so nice. That's why it's so nice, yeah. Right. Well, you know. All right, one of these days. Anyway, thank you guys so much. It was great to see you all. Thanks, Jen.
Starting point is 00:59:00 Bye. Sanderson hit Gwyneth. I'm telling you. Sanderson took Gwyneth out him i took her out and then i'm telling you i'm telling you are we still recording yeah sure guenna paltrow is being railroaded don't believe tiktok she is the victim everybody turning up for guenna give us 60 seconds 60 seconds here we go okay so basically here's what I believe happened having watched so much of this trial. And again, because I don't want to be sued because this guy's litigious.
Starting point is 00:59:28 I am just sharing my opinion. My opinion. Now, he claims that he hit hit that he claims that Gwyneth knocked him over with such force that he broke ribs and got a concussion. The problem is he doesn't remember that happening and does not deny that when the collision happened, Gwyneth Paltrow said, you hit me. And he said, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. The eyewitness was 40 feet away and was confused about whether or not Gwyneth was wearing a helmet.
Starting point is 00:59:52 In fact, denied that she was. She was. Gwyneth's story has been incredibly consistent that this guy hit her. Not only that, all the reports by the ski instructors and ski patrol, everyone verified that the story was Gwyneth was hit. And the report that the ski instructor filed when he got to the bottom of the the story was Gwyneth was hit. And the report that the ski instructor filed when he got to the bottom of the hill was that Gwyneth was hit. What happened was, right as the ski instructor was skiing
Starting point is 01:00:10 away from the scene, after everyone was said to be okay, and everybody was done, he turned and he said, your buddy just took out Gwyneth Paltrow. And then he got stars in his eyes. Then the dollar signs started showing up. What happens? He lays back down, says he needs help. We're off to the races. When Gwyneth got to the bottom of the hill, before she knew she was going to be sued she texted that guy really hurt me you don't
Starting point is 01:00:28 send that text if you hit somebody else today's pod save america is brought to you by goop yeah what hollywood producer got to you what hollywood publicist got to you i don't love the jade eggs i don't love the jade eggs and i don't love brone broth for lunch but i know an innocent person when i see one all right i'm calling balls and strikes here. Justice for Gwyneth. Justice for Gwyneth. Are you in the J6 chorus going to record a justice? G6. The G6. The G6.
Starting point is 01:00:53 We're part of the G6 chorus. I'll sing it. I'll sing it. Get ChatGBT to write some lyrics. And one last point about this. One last point about this is I will say that Gwyneth's performance on the stand. This is more preparation than you for the whole performance on the stand is the best she's one of the best performances she's handed in since shakespeare and fucking love she is exquisite on the stand
Starting point is 01:01:14 she makes these lawyers looks like fucking dunces someone compared it to a xanax versus an adderall the lawyer being the adderall is very funny that that look here's the thing that poor that poor lawyer that was trying to interrogate gwyneth Paltrow, I'm sorry. You may be the best they've got in Utah, but this is Hollywood good. You're not going to be able to take Gwyneth out. You're out of peck. This is Oscar good. All I can tell you is the truth, said Gwyneth.
Starting point is 01:01:33 Did she win one? I don't even know. She did win an Oscar. Thank you to Jen Psaki for joining us. Thank you to Jen Psaki. Thank you to our Court TV correspondent, John Lovett. That's how Savannah Guthrie got her start. You watch your tongue, pal.
Starting point is 01:01:46 I know. I know. She's a big shot now. I'm not a lawyer, though. Unfortunately. You're not. No one would be confused. There's the rub.
Starting point is 01:01:57 All right, everyone. We'll talk to you later. Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. The executive producer is Michael Martinez. Our senior producer is Andy Gardner-Bernstein.
Starting point is 01:02:11 Our producers are Hayley Muse and Olivia Martinez. It's mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick. Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis sound engineered the show.
Starting point is 01:02:19 Thanks to Hallie Kiefer, Ari Schwartz, Sandy Gerard, Andy Taft, and Justine Howe for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn, Phoebe Bradford, Milo Kim, and Amelia Montu. Our episodes are uploaded as videos at youtube.com slash podsaveamerica.

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