Pod Save America - Marc Maron on Brainf*cked Trolls and Liberal Scolds

Episode Date: August 24, 2025

Marc Maron, comedian and podcast trailblazer, sits down with Lovett to discuss why the left always has to be such a buzzkill, whether Americans voted for Trump purely out of annoyance, and why the arm...ies of online trolls love to do the president's bidding. Then they discuss whether we're living in an Age of Mania, if Democrats can shut down anti-woke comedy by simply being funnier, and whether Lovett can learn to stop catastrophizing every time his calls drop.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)
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Starting point is 00:01:00 That's simplysafe.com slash crooked. There's no safe like SimplySafe. Maren to talk about the end of his podcast, to talk about his comedy special, talk about politics, Trump, Theo Von, Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Maher. I think Janine Garofalo came up very briefly. We covered a lot of ground about the right, the left, life and death. It was a great conversation. Producer Austin said it was a funny conversation and one of the darkest conversations we've had. And, you know, you'll decide how right that is. But it was really great. And here it is. Hi, thanks for being here. You're welcome. Nice to be here. I've admired your work from afar,
Starting point is 00:02:05 my friend. Oh, that's so nice to hear. We all, yeah, what about up close? Well, I'm going to see how that goes. Okay. Okay. Okay. When we, you were on Loved or Leaving in 2017, I went back and listened to it, and my takeaway had nothing to do with you. You were there, but I was mostly listening to how I sounded. Sure. And it was one of the first shows we did. Yeah. And it's one of the first times I've been doing a show on a stage, and I'm still getting the hang of it. And I remember when you came on, I really felt you not annoyed at me, but like, you're like, yeah, okay, sure. I felt like you needed to be one over. Like you've been doing this a long time. You think you're going to, we're going to talk. I felt you like alpha do me a little bit. Oh. But, but in a,
Starting point is 00:02:46 but not in a bad way, but it was fine. But in watching you do interviews, here's what I took from it, which is, when you're with somebody you genuinely like, you will not laugh as much, but you'll sometimes throw a pity laugh at someone who's trying their best, who you don't care for. And I wasn't getting that. And I wasn't getting that. With people in terms of pity laughs, you know, there's an old radio habit. I don't know if people who started in podcasting, but it seems to have, there is a radio laugh that you do out of politeness, and it's instinctual.
Starting point is 00:03:16 And I think after a certain point, you may not know the difference between that and a real laugh. But it is an acknowledgement. It's not always pity. It's just saying like, yeah, okay. Yeah, you did it. You got to fill the space until it gets to the next part of it. Well, I mean, if it's funny, it's funny. You know, but I think people know when I'm really laughing.
Starting point is 00:03:35 And I think that in terms of alpha-dogging, I get a little dick-ish. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, but it's not full power play. It's just sort of a defiance. I'm defying you to bring me down a notch. But you're setting a bar for if you're going to want to have a conversation. Sure. You're going to have to bring something.
Starting point is 00:03:56 Yeah, I don't know what's going to show up empty-handed. Sure. I mean, yeah, because I can talk probably too much if I'm allowed to. I don't mind it. This is the first time I've done sort of a run of guesting in a long time over the last month or so. Yeah, no, no, I noticed that. I feel like you've done every podcast, and I assume what's left after this is maybe like the Geico Caveman. Is that what's after this?
Starting point is 00:04:21 Is he doing one? Yeah, yeah. I think you're going to hit that. Well, I did a couple. That Petco dog. Sure. Yeah. I don't think I'll do it.
Starting point is 00:04:26 do that. I was kind of strategic in what I wanted to do for reasons that I had. Some of them were not the reasons that were sort of interpreted. I learned recently that, you know, people are going to assume they know why you did things or frame why you did things in their particular context. And I know why I did things. And it's very odd to come up against these type of people where they're like, you did that because of this. I'm like, I wasn't even thinking that. What's an example of that? Well, I mean, for instance, that there was this notion that, you know, I did a lot of the comedy podcast, the more broish ones that, you know, I would do or get on, you know, specifically to take them to task.
Starting point is 00:05:13 And I, it really was the farthest thing from my mind. I just wanted to make sure that people who were fans of comedy knew that I had a special out there. You know, no matter what ilk they are, that was really the intention. Because I got into stuff that I've been talking about a long time about the political situation within comedy, that would just happen. It wasn't like that was my agenda. I didn't want to talk that shit to Howie Mandel. I barely wanted to be on Howie Show. That does come across.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Sure. But I mean, but it was like, you know, I know how to have fun. Yeah, yeah. You know, but he was, you know, spouting his mouth off in sort of a boomery, shallow, kind of insulated way that I thought was, you know, way off the mark. And so I didn't engage, you know, fun mark because it became not fun very quickly and it became serious. And he didn't have much to say. Yeah. Let's talk about politics because you have been going already.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Well, yeah, it's just what I put on the top of the card. edit however. No, no. We don't have to follow this. Oh, you're kidding. Do what you got to do. He's kidding. So in your special, which is great. Yeah, thank you. Which is great. You say it's your best. I think so. I like your last two. I think they're both your best. End times fun, bleak to dark. Yeah, yeah. And this one, it's kind of a trilogy. Panicked. One of the things you'd say in the special is that liberals annoyed average Americans into fascism and that we have a buzzkill problem. Now, a lot of the buzz kills listening to this are going to take issue with that. But what is the buzzkill problem? What is it? I think most
Starting point is 00:06:56 of my specials. I speak to politics and culture, you know, in a specific way because I think I should. I think it's my responsibility. And over time, I, especially in this last episode, I figured out a way to what I felt was finessing it because the situation culturally and politically for this special was different than the other ones. And some sort of strange empathy kind of evolved in terms of my presentation. So I'll explain to you.
Starting point is 00:07:30 I'll answer the question. But in my last special, like bleak to dark, where I talked about Christian fascism, you know, it was sort of like I had some swagger to it. I was laying something down. I wasn't really exploring it. It was sort of a heads-up in a fairly cocky way in what you would say, probably what it looks like as alpha-dog. In the special before that, I did a fairly operatic closing bit with Mike Pence blowing Jesus, which is a specific sort of homage to a comic that, you know, had an impact on me.
Starting point is 00:08:06 In this special, huh? You gave him a blow job. Yeah. Well, you know, you got to do what you got to do. No, it was more like, as I get older, I realize what my influences are, and I realize what part they play in certain bits. Like, I can kind of identify it. So I see it that way. I see that, like, I would not have been inspired to navigate this joke without, you know, Hicks. So that's that. But in this special, because I started doing it after the election or maybe a little leading up to it, I found that. I found that at the audiences and the theater audiences that there was a, you know, there was a frightened, desperate, angry vibe, which was, you know, justified and real and despairing.
Starting point is 00:08:54 And so over time of building the material, I realized that that was sort of doing some sort of community service in a real sense that, you know, these are, you know, liberals, Democrats, you know, Democrat liberals, Democrats, you know, Democrat liberals, Democratic liberals, Democratic liberals, whatever. to the left of center, that these people were showing up. I don't know their lives. I don't know how long they're sitting at home alone on the phone. I don't know what they're doing. But I did know they were scared, and I knew I was in the same boat. So I figured out a way, I made a decision this special to speak directly to them. You know, not just posture as one of us, but to say, look, I'll do this for you. We're all in the same boat. We all have flaws. There's funny things about us. I don't have any answers for you.
Starting point is 00:09:42 But I can give you that kind of relief of being, of sort of taking pokes at who we are. Yeah, yeah. And that joke, and I think it's a problem now, too, with comics and comedy. When I do comedy, when I say we annoyed the average American into fascism, that's a joke. Yeah, it's a joke. But it resonates. And it resonates for a reason. because I've also lately been exploring the difference between anger and hate
Starting point is 00:10:13 that, you know, anger as a tone in all its spectrum is not always entertaining. And, you know, self-righteous anger is about the most intolerable anger. Yeah, and even if you believe what the person is saying, you want them to shut the fuck up. Yeah. So the, so that joke, and to answer your question, I think we know what these things are. And I don't know that there's a way around it. I mean, that's going to take some sort of amazing vulnerability and empathy in the face of a completely unsympathetic and terrifying force to make it not annoying.
Starting point is 00:10:59 But, I mean, I think that's sort of what's at stake. Yeah, it's funny because... Did that make sense? Yes, it does make sense. Well, even when I was thinking about what I wanted to talk to you about, I know when I say, you know, oh, you in the special joke about America having a buzzkill problem, annoying people into fascism, the people are going to say, well, that's not fair. It's obviously more complicated with it than that, but that's why it's a joke.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Is it? But see, and I say it in the special, that, you know, in terms of a real organized left, you know, when was the last time we had that? And look, I did Air America. I know what it's like to deal with different factions of the left. And even within, you know, the Democrats, trying to figure out how to platform the left, right? And I know that there's very insulated, very committed groups of people to very specific things that are all part of this big umbrella idea. But there is no unifying policy. There is no unifying community.
Starting point is 00:11:55 There is no, it's not as simple in terms of what it's become as what Bernie preaches, the original American left, right? So when you have all that fragmentation, it, what becomes annoying is people's commitment to their specific cause. As righteous as it may be, it doesn't fill into the umbrella of the community necessarily. It does not have that much significance on its own. I mean, some issues do. So it almost becomes, you know, I don't want to use the word virtue signaling, but there is a sort of righteousness. And I get the whole idea, so I pick an issue and you work it. But bigger problems about,
Starting point is 00:12:38 Yeah. My take on it is we do have a problem of being buzzkills, that the Americans do have a very dim view of Democrats. Americans do find Democrats annoying. Why is that? One reason, they're kind of annoying. That's true. Another is, yes, there's like a kind of a collective sense of loss and righteous anger and uncertainty around the fact that that's even more extreme this time because at least in 2017, you can say, half the country didn't vote for this. It's a fluke. He won the electoral vote, not the population. vote, but we lived through it and the country embraced it. And anyone, a majority this time, which makes it even more kind of enraging and insecure poking kind of experience for the left. But there's also a big right-wing apparatus that exists to take all these things. And the most annoying liberal and make them famous, there is... Yeah, they turn it, they turn it around. And then there's social media that takes the most annoying bits of things. Like, you know, you make a joke in your special about Theo Van. It's very funny. It's a great joke. It is everywhere. It is everywhere. It is.
Starting point is 00:13:38 everywhere. That gets pulled out, right? And it gets spread because it's great material. It's very funny. It's resonant. But it's not surprising that the more thoughtful and circumspect parts of the special, it's not surprising that those parts aren't what's online. What's online is the bit that travels. Well, there's a bit about the, yeah, the R-word and the Theo Vaughn thing. A couple of the smaller ones did okay out there. But yeah, there's a lot in the special. And, you know, I had to think about, you know, what that Theo Vaughn joke would do because there's this idea, there's a talking point within the right wing, you know, tribalized comedy community that any sort of criticism is some sort of jealousy, which in which it isn't. And I had this issue years ago before this type of stuff. If you're going to be critical through humor of people in your own profession, there's always this sort of stigma to it.
Starting point is 00:14:38 it. But I believe that as somebody becomes a cultural phenomenon, and they are part of the cultural apparatus that they're fair game. And I think the Theo joke, at its base, is funny. You know, what it implies, you can do whatever you want with that. Sure, it's, it's, it's an easy correlation to make to Trump or to humanizing fascism. But in and of itself, the impression was good enough. You know, the jokes that I put within him talking were funny. Yeah. I mean, I'd, I'd be hard to think that he didn't think it was funny. It's really funny. It's good. But my point is only that like...
Starting point is 00:15:14 Sure, the apparatus is it's impossible to fight against. And, you know, that's a whole other problem that the left messaging is never going to be as efficient because we don't have an army of frustrated teenage boys who have been taught over the last 20 years that this is all some sort of game and that trolling is a pastime. and they were sort of turned out and radicalized by, you know, Bannon and it just, the apparatus, it feeds itself and people who are doing it are not ideological thinkers or deep guys. They just are in it for the game. Yeah, well, that's what I mean about it being going further than just the left being annoying. Of course. But it's also, you know, you look it in the past. I'm talking on a human level.
Starting point is 00:16:07 human level. But when countries have embraced right-wing fascistic leaders, right? Germany. The economy is in shambles. Millions of men were in World War I. Their brains are all fucked up. There's no word for it.
Starting point is 00:16:23 The only advice is for everyone to whisper, right? Like, there's nothing. And they embrace this autocrat. America had a lot of problems in 2016. They had a lot of problems in 2024, more than we had before. But we don't have, let's try autocracy problems. But there's something about this era, whether it's social media or what's happened in the economy, that's led people to
Starting point is 00:16:43 feel this loss of meaning, loss of purpose, loss of order. And they're casting out. And Donald Trump had purchased with a lot of those people. A lot of people, turns out, were excited about someone like Donald Trump their whole lives. We just didn't know it, which was very frightening. But there was a lot of people that were just receptive to someone like Donald Trump in a way that I think was very surprising. It was surprising to me. I don't know if it was surprising to you. I think that, look, anger and the excitement of being validated and having your grievances honored despite any sort of, you know, human connection to them, I think it's appealing to angry people. And the people that weren't angry were annoyed.
Starting point is 00:17:29 And they may be untethered. They may not have any real sense of civic responsibility. or even the structure of government. They just knew that it felt good to be able to double down on hate and to double down on othering and to double down on bullying. I think most people have an innate bully.
Starting point is 00:17:49 I think that empathy is a muscle that you have to work. And at some point, the Democrats were okay at that. But I don't think most people are naturally empathetic. I used to think that. But I also think that a lot of this propaganda you're talking about and the sort of intensity of what we're taking in on a day-to-day level creates the mental relationship with the information
Starting point is 00:18:09 creates a kind of mania. I just watched a brilliant documentary this morning. I've watched all this guy's stuff. It's a guy he calls himself Elephant Graveyard on YouTube. And it specifically focuses on the alignment of politics and comedy. He did one called Comedy Jonestown, how comedy was doing. destroyed by an anti-reality doomsday cult. And I think that that is a bigger conversation about what you're saying, that, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:43 the propaganda and the existence of social media platforms and what they can do to the human brain and what they can do to foment a sort of mania. Yeah, mania is a good word for it. That enables it. You hear it in people on these mics. And I used to do it. I used to do morning radio. And I knew what it took to get it up to do that, you know, for three hours.
Starting point is 00:19:04 know you're up at three in the morning, you're crunching news, we're doing comedy bits, you're live. So there is, there was a mania to it. And if that mania has a specific ideological thrust that's driven by talking points and, you know, basic debate exercises, it's rewarding. And it lands and it makes you feel good. Mania makes you feel good. Yeah. And it's, and it has sort of left, you know, conservative radio, talk radio. It was in your car. And a lot of people listen to do it. You know, a lot of salesmen and truck drivers. Let's do it all day every day. It was like kind of this secret audience for it. But you got out of your car and it stayed in the car and you lived your life. And now that kind of frenetic pace follows us all the time. And I do think
Starting point is 00:19:48 like you're going to look back on this area and you say, what happened and we're going to look at the way in which we all kind of, whatever direction it was, we were all radicalizing each other through. Totally. Our phones. But radicalizing in emotion. Yeah. That the information is fleeting and unfounded, but if it fits your emotional feeling, then just drive it. Yeah, and now it's everywhere. People, it's, the guy in this new documentary, in the Doomsday Cult documentary, identifies something about collaborators that may not have seen themselves as being willing collaborators at the beginning, but they go through something called, I think
Starting point is 00:20:30 he called it Philososide, which is where you don't kill yourself. but you kill yourself inside. And if you look at somebody like Mark Rubio or anybody within that administration in what happens in cult-like behavior is some point after another in order to stay in the game, they kill whatever principles they might have had, even though they were a few.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Yeah, they surrender to it. And there's also, I think, another part of this. I think killing it is probably better because that sort of supports the mania element. That you have to surrender, but you have to aggressively push it back. Because you literally have to, your personality is in conflict with that until it's not. Look, we're doing Germany. We're doing 1984. Deal with it. But like, you know, in 1984, it's about letting go.
Starting point is 00:21:17 You know, you're fighting against this tide. You're fighting against this tide. And all of a sudden, just like, you know what, I'm just going to float. But that's the rest of us. That's not the operatives. I mean, the operatives, you know, they make a deal. They make a deal. Like, I mean, I, you know, have had to on some level believe. And. And accept, not in the way that I surrender to it, that we're currently in an authoritarian country. I have to see it that way in order to exist in my life. I have to frame it like that. I'm not saying that there's not hope. But I do think that what we're up against is something more than a two-party problem.
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Starting point is 00:23:32 Tommyjohn.com slash crooked C-Sight for details. One way we think people rationalize it is, is around, well, you know, I don't like Trump, but I really hate the fucking Democrats, right? Or like, I don't, I don't totally on board with this, but both sides. But that's a false equivalency, right? Of course it is. Of course it is. But what I, what I see, there's a, there is a reason that Donald Trump gains purchase
Starting point is 00:23:59 in this ecosystem of podcast at the same time. that a bunch of this anti-woke, anti-trans, masculinity core takes hold at the same time. And it has to do with some, there's some way in which a lot of men feel lost. And there's order and meaning in what Trump offers, in what kind of the Rogan kind of way of learning about the world. Oh, look, bad daddies are pretty powerful. Yeah. And, you know, these docs that he talks a lot about the daddy hole in these guys, you know, from bad daddies, that void that needs to be filled. Then, you know, a lot of megalomaniacal people come from that.
Starting point is 00:24:34 Trump comes from that. I mean, look, I'm no psychiatrist or psychologist, you know, but in order for someone to define themselves, especially if they're lost or they feel neutered or diminished, if you get the right words into those people, they're going to light up. And if they feel like they have a leader, they're going to light up. And as opposed to like, you know, why didn't like what the Democrats had to say or whatever, I think that is all part and parcel to the demonization of Democrats as not having real policy or not being real men or not speaking to the working class. Because there's a couple of guys out there, and I don't follow as much as I used to, but it seems like there's a couple of guys out there that are rational, sort of level-headed, very wonky, democratic politicians that are.
Starting point is 00:25:30 totally inoffensive and really bright and are making it as simple as possible to understand what the real issues are. But I don't know if that's what it takes to get people on board. And then you got Newsom's approach, which is, okay. He's trying to get, everyone is struggling. Look, I do think that the collapse society can be tied back to crowd work. I think we can get it back to crowd comedians that are just doing crowd work. And in the same way, we can talk about how what goes viral, what spreads, what gets people's attention is conflict, it's anger. And so the satisfying things.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Satisfying things. Because cats do too, you know. Right. Sure. Yeah. Things that scratch some sort of a primitive itch in there. Yeah, whether it's like sweet or sad. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:20 Cats too. Yeah. You know, a rescued puppy getting a growth removed will also get millions of them. Yeah. I can watch a pipe evacuate itself for a minute. You ever see a video of someone pulling a tire through a pipe? Oh, yeah. Great.
Starting point is 00:26:33 It's the best. I'll watch that all day. I guess that's a kind of primal fecal thing. Yeah. Well, bring it back to crowdwork is that they're, with all this othering and with all this sort of idea, this is when they're big debate points. When you come at them, they accuse liberals of being closed-minded in terms of really embracing other people's point of view.
Starting point is 00:26:54 And for me, if that other point of view is shut the fuck up, I don't want to hear it. Yeah, right, right. Well, I just think what happens is once the othering is successful, and I covered in the special that, you know, real rights are denied and real lives are at stake because of, you know, what comics thought was an anti-woke just was just about their language issue. And now they were used under the sort of auspices of anti-woke. You destroy all the policy that helps people who are vulnerable. or marginalized or in trouble.
Starting point is 00:27:27 And I can't separate them. I will remain committed to the fact that they did that, that comics helped that. But I think in the bigger picture with, say, crowdwork or the kind of, you know, hackney tropes of tribalized comedy is what ultimately happens, and I said this to Howie, and with all the proliferation of podcasts, is that because. the production values are shitty and everybody knows them now and because crowdwork is kind of establishes this way of lighting a you know kind of having an improvisational moment what happens to all this stuff that is really good and and truly creative and interesting is that the bar
Starting point is 00:28:12 gets lowered to the point where regular people just adapt to the garbage and and they don't seek out the other stuff and the the sort of uh outlets that make the other stuff are kind of marginalized mainstream show business is kind of marginalized so all this stuff fits into that anti-elitism kind of frame of right-wing thinking yeah and it does it's a it's about taste too which is that this stuff performs well it does well in the world for good and for ill all the gatekeepers are gone right you can kind of build your build an audience online that's good a lot of amazing people have started online. But we've lost, there was curation.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Yeah. There was, there was, human connection was a limited resource, whether it was through art or through having to go somewhere to meet a friend. Like, you didn't know what happened to people in your life, so you saw them at a party. The party had real meaning. Right.
Starting point is 00:29:12 Because you connected there. That's it. And all of this took out, the availability of all this removed the meaning of liking a comic, discovering someone, going to a club, and seeing someone's hilarious. telling your friends about people with researched and respected opinions right so yeah i look and i did a joke that was you know turned inside out by one particular kind of libertarian you know thinker
Starting point is 00:29:36 i don't even want to give him that he's a comic but i said it was better when everybody didn't have a voice it's a joke yeah it's a joke but it's the same thing as saying like everyone's got a podcast now but i just said it like that so i left myself open to like that guy you I see the liberals or, you know, they're totalitarian, you know. Well, it's everybody, you know, they cancel culture, anti-wow comedy. It was about feeling like there's feedback that they didn't want to hear here anymore. But I also, like, being a celebrity got worse, too, which is why I think it was able to spread so far, right? Like, because, you know, if you were famous in the 1950s, you could drive your, you can do Coke, get
Starting point is 00:30:22 drunk, drive your car through a plate glass window, give $200 to the materty at the hotel, and it was gone. Now, like, James Corden gets into a fight pulling a suitcase down from the overhead, and it's news, and it follows him forever. There's a way in which attention, celebrity, and feedback have made having the power of a platform less fun, and I think that annoys very powerful people. It's predatory. Well, yeah, they have to insulate themselves, but I do still think that outside of just the kind of emaciated world of press and this chasing of clickbait, I do think in terms of the ideological bend on it is that it's anti-elitism, it's anti-intellectualism, it's anti-expert. I think it's all part of that. Yeah. I think that Hollywood has been framed
Starting point is 00:31:14 as elitists. I think that not unlike with the universities and, The intellectual thing was always part of fascism. But I think that Hollywood represents elitism to the right. And I don't believe that's true. I mean, you know, movie stars and movie stars. But I really think that's where a lot of that comes from outside of just quick-baity stuff. Yeah. And then there's also just a big audience for it, right?
Starting point is 00:31:38 If there is, it turns out, an audience for... Yeah, but that doesn't make it right. No, of course not. I think that... What does it tell us about the people listening, that they wanted this? Well, but most people, like, so what do you got? 75 million vote for Kamala, 77.5, you know, vote for Trump. And there's 150 people who did what?
Starting point is 00:31:59 What are they doing? Who are those people? Are they just floating? Are they the ones that's watching? It's a lot of people. Yeah. What are they doing? So, so I, and I think that in terms of how fascism or authoritarianism, like, you know, we've got a president who is a thug.
Starting point is 00:32:15 So, you know, his way of doing business is like, oh, you got to. got a pretty nice university here hate for anything bad to happen to it you know like that's a nice state no hate for anything bad to happen to it you know maybe you kick into the charity yeah it's it's straight up mob shit but the you know but like people like um russ vote yes vote i mean that's the guy that's doing it yeah you know so like however you see trump you know he's still a puppet to something that is bigger that he doesn't give a shit about as long as he can be the guy out front. But those guys are the guys that are dismantling the federal government in the name of Christian nationalism. But I think that the way that business, see, what you're
Starting point is 00:33:00 saying to me feels like that, you know, fascism is good for business. Yeah. Because if you, like Netflix, like Netflix will just, you know, co-op to anybody that can take that algorithm. And I think you kind of, I used to do a joke about it, I don't, I, that, you know, Netflix can become Reich flicks, you know, very quickly. And, and, and, and I think the, the pivotal moment was when they had pushback from the trans community about Chappelle, they realized after several days that that community was not going to affect their bottom line at all. Yeah. And they cut them loose. And, you know, that is how fascism works in business. Right. Well, right. Their, their, their argument and response would be, well, we believe in being a home for everybody. So there's Chappelle, there's
Starting point is 00:33:49 Ricky Jervais, there's all these kinds of comics that do the same fucking joke. And we have a bunch of gay movies and films and queer stuff. And like, we're a home for everybody and that's our answer. Sure. But ultimately, who's getting the big deals? Which shows stay on the air? Yeah, yeah. You know, what do they keep repeating? It's like the bigger audience. Yeah, that's them saying, like, we got this other stuff and we know there's a few of you. But we're throwing you a bum. So shut up, but the big money's on the ones that you're talking about that titillate in a certain way that is not always right-minded. And look, I, I'm, people can say whatever they want. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:27 Like, my belief is that eventually this stuff would have found its level. That ultimately, in terms of left-leaning or specific marginalized cultures, you know, creating grassroots action, you know, by overwhelming Twitter and stuff. that when Trump was campaigning for the second time, that was ebbing, that it would have found a level where tolerance would have maybe reigned. Because, like, I believe that in order for democracy to work, if these guys are doubling down on intolerance and hate, that you got nothing to work with. I mean, it used to be like, you know, you'd get a guy who'd be like,
Starting point is 00:35:10 yeah, gay marriage, now the gays, they want to get married. It's ridiculous. Fuck the gays. and then it passes in his state and over time he's like, I don't know I work with a guy, you know, they're nice and it evolves in the way that democracy's supposed to work. But I think it should always be said
Starting point is 00:35:24 that what these guys are fighting for is not democracy and they're shameless about it. They can say that, you know, democracy enabled us to vote for that guy but that was the fucking end of it and that's the loophole in democracy is that you can freely elect a fascist
Starting point is 00:35:40 and then who the hell knows what's going to happen, right? but I do feel that they are shamelessly anti-American in their political ideology. And I imagine most of them would own it. The hope, right, too, is like, this is hacky shit, right? A lot of this, like, anti-woke comedy is like hacky shit. And the way you beat that, you can scold people. I'm not saying you're doing it,
Starting point is 00:36:00 but people on social media can try to scold their way to the other side of it. But the answer is to just be fucking funny. And the answer is to have a bit about the Ovan that people really like and sort of clicks turn something on in their brain that makes it silly to them sure it's right but it's not
Starting point is 00:36:18 going to make it silly to the guys that are brain fucked in that direction it's not going to make it silly to the believers and the problem with like comedy comedians as news influencers is that now anything any comic says is a representation of their
Starting point is 00:36:34 personal ideology so the ability for them to be objective about humor is gone and they are subjective which most humor is to a specific ideological bent. And sure, you can make it as funny as you want. There's plenty of beautifully funny people doing amazing comedy all the time. But they're in the shadow of this momentum of the tribalized comedy, of, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:02 Rogan, and again, those documentaries, which I highly recommend from Elephant Graveyard, you know, Rogan has positioned himself as the arbiter of what comedy is. And my, the way I framed it in my conversation with Howie was like, how long can you kind of claim the victim mantle? Right. It's like my question is it's like you guys won, woke is dead. What do you got to keep beating these people up for? Some of them are losing their rights. Some of them are being, you know, literally killed.
Starting point is 00:37:32 Some of them are being deported. And these were all the big funnies for you guys who claim to be victims of this horrible policy. So then why not stop? now well but also part of it is yeah but then also there's this sort of well we're just comedians just telling jokes here and then it's like well hold on a second you can't they're not you well you can't have the president on uh in the run up to an election and give that person a forum trump uh and not push back uh you can't uh get behind him and then when you don't like the consequences say like well i didn't i don't like any of this immigration stuff but i'm just a comedian i just had
Starting point is 00:38:09 I'm on. He was a guest. I can't forgive it. I can't forgive it. Yeah. Don't think you should. And it's like in the sense that like, well, you should have done your fucking homework. You know, before you, you, you, you, you, you come out and say this is the guy to your army of, of kind of, uh, minions who, who look to you for intellectual fortitude and the proper diet and, you know, what is real and what isn't real. So in a sense, it's like they're going to backpedal and they're going to backpedal in relation to what's kind of like moving through MAGA in general. And I don't know that it matters. I mean, this. I think it does matter. Oh, I think it does matter. No, I mean, I don't know that it matters. Oh, if MAGA buckles
Starting point is 00:38:53 and they have to accommodate them. I think we have to be practical. And I can't go back in time and make people not endorse Trump, but people with big platforms realizing that they were, look, where is a decadent and depraved era in American politics and American society. And part of that is a glibness with very serious things. You have, you have Zelensky in the Oval. He's getting questions about putting on a suit. His country is being murdered by Vladimir Putin. He's getting joky questions. Donald Trump is showing him his fucking hat collection. This is a depraved and decadent era. And as part of that decadence, there are people being glib about life and death decisions, including endorsing a monster because it's good for the Graham. And that, and that happened. How do we help? Now, there's a good
Starting point is 00:39:34 side to that, which is there's a shallowness to that support and that embrace. which means, yes, we can say, that was stupid, I don't forgive you, fine. But we got to get those people to realize. We got to make ourselves feel open to them because those people with those platforms are maybe getable, as are the kind of soft Trump voters that maybe got on poor because all their favorite hosts liked them. I'll agree with that. Okay. But I think you're taking out of the picture.
Starting point is 00:39:59 They're afraid. They're in, man. And they're in over their head. And, you know, there's real consequences. when you push back against your authoritarian overlords. And who the hell knows what they are? Because once you get it above Russ Vaught, I mean, you've got the tech oligarchs, all right?
Starting point is 00:40:18 So they're the real ones, you know, whoever's, you know, pawned out, you know, Vance is a stooge for those guys, for Elon and Thiel and those guys. So once you get above Project 2025 and you get above Trump, then you've got these guys who really seek to destroy the fact. of democratic society. Okay. So if you're on the, if you're on the payroll of that shit,
Starting point is 00:40:46 you know, and you want to, you know, soften up, you know, there's a lot at stake, you know. So it's not, it's not just sort of,
Starting point is 00:40:54 we've got to say the right thing to these people and change your minds because you don't think Rubio is shitting his pants every fucking day. I mean, you don't think like any judge that rules against him is getting like hundreds and hundreds
Starting point is 00:41:08 of death threats. I mean, this is straight up, you know, terrorizing shit. So I know we were heading towards hope somehow. And we don't need to. Let's turn around. No, but I think that in terms of voters and whatnot, if they are still capable of empathy, you know, underneath this mania of grievance validation, then in so much to say as if they're still human, that maybe something will speak to them. Well, I think that's where there is genuine. hope. Yeah, Trump has many powers, talents. One of them is he is very good at making what's the worst thing about you, the truest thing about you. He's very good at that. He's very about kind of reaching into somebody and saying, this thing, this, this weakness you have,
Starting point is 00:41:53 I'm going to make that more true, whether it's animus towards immigrants or embracing their ambition over their politics if it's a politician. But one reason I think Trump was able to get back is because there's a there was a big hole. And I, I, I, everybody listening will be annoyed. Am I saying it? But whatever, again. But the bully pulpit, Joe Biden, he left it open. And we didn't understand how big of a price we were paying for not having a vocal, aggressive, relentless advocate for democracy, for just empathy, which is something Joe Biden I think is very good at, but had lost his ability to communicate well. And if we can start getting leaders and influencers, it matters now, it's the world we live in, to kind of reflect those
Starting point is 00:42:36 values more, suddenly a lot of people that were open to Trump might remember some good parts of themselves. Because I think people are complicated. And you're right. In every person there's a bully. But in every person, there's always an empathetic part of them as well. Donald Trump does a crackdown on immigration. Terrible, terrible, terrible crackdown. And what happens for the support for immigration, just itself as a good, rises. No, anti-immigration. Anti-immigration summit plummets. Support of immigration itself, irrespective of the policy, rises to 80 percent. It's been a decades. There's something that you can turn on in That's what leadership is. And we kind of, and we need that. I think it's possible.
Starting point is 00:43:10 No, I agree with that. I mean, of course. And like historically, it happens. Yeah. You know, you can push back. And you can, you know, change people's minds if the sadness, the weight of it. But like what happens to, like, I've become sort of obsessed with this idea of these, you know, these angry white dudes that you were talking about that were untethered. And many of them, the whole sort of angle of, you know, Democrats used to be like, they're voting against their self-interest. That used to be the big thing. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:42 How does that happen? You know, because it feels good to be angry. Well, you can't tell people what their interests are is one thing. I guess. But I'm just economic. Right. So, but now it's like, I don't want to get more grim. I'll stick with, yes, maybe people.
Starting point is 00:44:01 Well, you get all these angry dudes. I mean, and then you offer them, I mean, South Park Cubs. it, the second one, offer them a job in ice as, as, you know, non-officer guys with guns for big money. And again, then you get into that philosophide thing where, where they kill part of themselves to serve this because they're self-interest. And I guess that ties into me with what you're saying about influencers and about that. If you can get, you know, them out from under their self-interest, which sometimes is just posturing for a particular cause that determines their brand sort of appeal that but is rooted in almost nothing. I mean, how do you make-
Starting point is 00:44:48 Momentum becomes momentum almost. Well, it just becomes like you're just, you're using it as a marker to sort of determine your brand. Everyone is stuck in honoring the context of the social media platform. So arguably, if you really want to do it, there's no free speech. You're, because you're trying to get onto this platform and get traction with what you have to say in the bits and pieces that you can do it and make it appealing to enough people to get you some sort of recognition so you can get your grift going or move money into the right direction. And subscribe to our YouTube. But there's one of those fake lines. But also there's a difference between this hyper-reality and just sort of like, you know, going swimming. So I just think that. I just think that,
Starting point is 00:45:30 it's complicated without a unified message. I think that's true. Let's turn to life. I think we've done it off politics. Is that too much? Am I the bleakest guy you've had on? No, and it's going to edit beautifully. It's going to edit.
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Starting point is 00:47:25 Speeds may slow above 35 gigabytes on unlimited plan. And faxes and fees extra cement mobile for details. All right, let's talk about life. Sure. Do you ever buy that $14,000 amp? Yes, a long time ago. You got it. You got the nice amp.
Starting point is 00:47:42 Yeah, I don't spend much money on things, but I did buy that. Yeah, it's a tube amp. It's a, yeah, Macintosh. Some people don't love them. But I've got a good stereo set up with some nice Wilson speakers and the Macintosh amp and the Macintosh amp and a Riga 6 turntable and a Hama car. Archridge and, you know, I kind of, it's waning a little bit. That's the problem with getting obsessed and not being a fully committed nerd to a thing. You know, fully committed nerds have one thing and they do their life with that. Mine kind of comes, it dabbles, but when I dabble
Starting point is 00:48:14 hard, then when it starts to pass, you're like, I'm going to have to build another structure for these records. Oh, yeah, I get, I get monomaniacal and then move on. Yeah, yeah. And you're left with a bunch of objects. Yeah, sometimes they're great and you can go back to them. Like, Boots always seem to come back around. You have boots going? Nice. Well, I got, yeah, these ones, I'm trying to figure out if I like them or not. But what I was going to tell you before, sorry, is that, like I said before, about playing to our audience and having enough, you know, skill to kind of take little shots and have that fun moment of, like,
Starting point is 00:48:47 we are kind of like that, that entering the political part of this last special, I, days before, I changed the tone of how I was going to do it. because like I said with that alpha doggy or whatever thing that like with the swagger which is either genuine or just a means for me to confidently a trick to deliver it I decided in this one just go under it almost be passive about it like hey everything's great you know everything and then move from that tone because I believed in the spirit of what you're doing here that if I do it like that. You know, people who aren't necessarily like-minded, well, listen. Yeah. And I did some of these shows. I had a guy come up to me in like Skokie or somewhere. And I did all that
Starting point is 00:49:39 stuff. And he came up to me and said, you know, I think I'm probably the only Trump supporter in here. And I said, did I get it right? And he said, yeah, man, he's crazy. Like, what do you even do with that? Well, I think it gets to something important, which is I feel like a lot of liberals and the kind of buzzkill thing. A lot of liberals have kind of had convinced themselves that if only we can reach people with the truth, they just don't have the facts. And once they have the facts, we got to get them the facts. We got to make sure the New York Times headlines are accurate, that they capture things correctly. Because if people had the facts, they really knew who Trump was, then they wouldn't do it. But no, a lot of people got behind Trump knowing who he was. And that's a
Starting point is 00:50:19 harder, deeper, sadder problem. And that, I think that is where we're at now. I think the first term was, oh, we just have to reach people to make them understand. Now it's, wait, wait, wait. They did understand. They did this anyway. This is a bigger problem that we realized. You have to, like you said, have a leader that believes in liberal democracy. Yeah. And can speak to why it's good. You know, even with, you know, creating policy that may, you know, undermine businesses, maybe, you know, creating policy for the benefit of all. You have to somehow re-engage people with the idea that, you know, they have a civic responsibility for those who don't have. And it has to deliver. It has to deliver for people because I do think that's
Starting point is 00:51:06 right that people have come to believe that it just doesn't matter, that Democrats can't, they under promise, they over promise and they under deliver if they deliver at all. And really, the federal government just doesn't affect me. And that's a wealth problem. It's a wealth problem. I think it's also a, a, this is a kind of cultural problem right now, which is, uh, the assumption that, that as things, that, that how things were is how they will be, that there are certain things you can count on, right? Like, you can just, yeah, the Trump is crazy, but social security's going to function. And yeah, Trump is crazy, but like, he's not going to ruin the whole global economy with it by announcing tariffs for penguins. Like, the, there's, that I think
Starting point is 00:51:48 a lot of people, but learn from the first term that things don't really get that bad. Yeah, but that was before they had 2025 in place. Exactly. Of course, of course. And all they had was Bannon and, you know, his mystical beliefs, you know, churning out executive orders. But now you have guys that really know all the fucking weak spots of the government who are churning out executive orders. And they had four years to prepare. Totally.
Starting point is 00:52:13 And second term presidents always know the job better than first term presidents. They rarely get four years to be outside so that the policy people, the wonks, can get their plan together. That's what's so different. Sure. But also, how do you get the young people that identify with liberal democratic or leftist politics, you know, to focus on getting involved in being involved in the government? Well, I think this is where it's like what brings all these disparate groups together, what makes people see themselves as part of one movement, leadership, and we didn't have it. and Democrats didn't have enough troughs with non-democrats to believe the threats, to believe what we were saying about what Trump posed.
Starting point is 00:52:58 And Democrats didn't have enough purchase with less engaged lefties to earn their vote and to believe that they could be trusted either to kind of get people excited. And Kamala did a lot to try to fix the damage that Biden had left, but there wasn't enough time. So Theo Von, Dak Shepard, you, is there something about being, a recovered addict that makes you good at hosting a podcast and having conversation? Well, I cited as a foundational thing the sort of idea of the seed of AA thought is that one alcoholic talks to another alcoholic about their life and gets out of themselves. So on that premise, maybe.
Starting point is 00:53:52 I just feel also that if you have some experience in recovery, you're very used to people being very candid about showing their emotions and vulnerabilities and telling their stories of the most horrible things. It's just part of the community and part of how it works. So on that level, maybe. You know, there's a lot of people that are miserable and hate their, lives and they're not brave enough to fix it and they're also not brave enough to do drugs you know it takes a little bit of courage i think to ruin your life with drugs you've joked about that too
Starting point is 00:54:26 in the past um and like you know bravery is just a kind of recklessness that we like you know it's recklessness with a good good uh good with a good direction i don't know if they see it as bravery i think they're out of control and if they survive they can frame it you know i i don't my joke was i don't trust anybody who hasn't lost complete control of their life for a few years There's a kind of, yeah, a willingness to say, fuck it, right? There's a fuck it quality. And I think that, like, sometimes it's a compulsion more than a willingness. Well, maybe at some point it started as I'm just, I'm furious, I'm angry, I'm sad, I'm whatever.
Starting point is 00:55:02 Oh, yeah. I'm going to throw this back and change my circumstances. But there's a vulnerability to it, too. I feel like in the addicts that the people that I know that have had an addiction. Once they've gotten out of it, yeah. Well, once they've gotten out. Because the hole is open. The hole is open, but also I do think that there's a kind of a, a vulnerability.
Starting point is 00:55:17 vulnerability from before, too, a kind of a softness that made a pain, right? I think that comes from a vulnerability. And that continues after you've beaten it. But I think it's part of, I think, what makes you a good host, right? You know, you are open, right? Yeah. And I'm pretty like, you know, my empathy is sort of expanded from doing it. And also, I'm kind of innately kind of codependent in that, you know, I assume that anyone I'm talking to has their shit together more than me and I kind of meld with them and I kind of pick up their vibe and there's certain times where I'll ask Brendan McDonald my producer. I'm like did I start talking like an old Jew when I was talking to Mel Brooks? He's like yeah and did I start talking a little bit like a
Starting point is 00:56:01 black guy when I was talking to a black guy happens. You mirror you mirror yeah right yeah but that's me yeah I don't know how they do it I don't know they do it either yeah there's something about that that you kind of like match somebody's energy are we doing that I think so a little yeah you're you're a A little guarded. You think? A little bit. It's okay. I think I am.
Starting point is 00:56:22 Well, I can bring it down. No, you don't have to. It's your show. You got to drive. I don't even know how to be. I don't even know what's the guard. What's should I take down? What do you think it is?
Starting point is 00:56:32 I think you, you know, you have purpose. I think that we're all scared, but you have to sort of keep it together for the operation. Yeah, I think that's true. locally and globally. I think I want to make sure, I know you as a performer. And I want to make sure we don't land in the fucking grave. You know,
Starting point is 00:56:56 I want to, I want to be out of it by the end. I think we're good. But I also want to, I want to people, I want to, yeah, so I think that's right. Well, I think that if you watch the special that I do, you know, I do walk a tightrope, but it definitely it comes out funny. And it took a lot of time
Starting point is 00:57:12 to do that. I remember you in the Conan days. Like, I remember watching you on Conan. And I wouldn't have known you were on drugs and drinking that, like when you were in those in that. I wasn't like sloppy, you know, and a lot of times I didn't do it the day of those shows. You know, I don't think, a lot of people think I was on Coke for that HBO half hour at the Fillmore in 95. I was just sweaty. I don't think I was on Coke. I do know on my first Comedy Central half hour, I had done Coke the night before and I didn't sleep well. But I wasn't getting Jack to work. You weren't. You weren't. No. Even
Starting point is 00:57:46 now I forget when I'm thinking about like I don't sort you into the category of oh guys that did a lot of drinking and coke because you strike me as a nerd you're like a nerdy guy kind of contained Jewish like I just I think of you like that and even when I think of you from the Conan days I think if it was being like a like not a party guy I think of you being a like a record guy yeah I think I was like I kind of wrote a line you know I grew up in you know towny culture in albuquerque but I was from Jersey and I was very compelled towards you know higher pursuits. I wanted to really be an intellectual, but I do have at some point, you know, a rock and roll element. I was never really a nerd. I was more of an awkward person, unfocused.
Starting point is 00:58:30 I think nerds are awkward, focused people, and they can find community in that. I was just an uncomfortable guy that knew how to be funny and sort of moved through all different clicks, but it was never that focused. And I kind of took to, and still due to a kind of rock and roll sensibility. So it's that combination of that with pretty, I think I don't like using the word, but neurotic, anxious Jewishness. So it's kind of a hybrid.
Starting point is 00:59:00 I think that Randy Newman once told Lauren Michaels many years ago, and Lauren told Jim Biederman, who was producing me on a show for Broadway video, it was a streaming show that was before streaming, though. But Randy said I was a verbesen, which is a sourpuss. Oh, yeah. And I kind of, I'm okay with that. I was a cranky guy, but I didn't know quite how to make it funny.
Starting point is 00:59:24 I don't think I have the, you know, real cranky guys who are naturally funny. It's a rare thing, you know, like Lewis Black is good at that. Yeah. I think, you know, burr at some time, just to sort of put upon, you know, kind of anger that doesn't cross over into intense anger, Which isn't fundamentally entertaining, which is where I would go. I think over time I've become a little more cranky funny. That's interesting. Why is that?
Starting point is 00:59:50 And I think part of it is for whatever reason, there's a way in which with like Bill Burr, Lewis, Black, you're rooting for them. Even when they're. Populous crank. Yeah, they're populist. I'm a heady guy. Yeah, yeah. I'm more of a poet in terms of how my brain processes things. It never rhyme, though.
Starting point is 01:00:12 No, it's all a free verse. Occasionally there's a rhyme. I take them right out. You do. Yeah, you got to take them out. Yeah, rhymes are cheap. Rimes and puns. No, can't do it.
Starting point is 01:00:24 Yeah, we do it. That's okay. We do it. Sure. It's cute. There's a way which now, I don't know, you seem more like comfortable as a performer, as a stand-up, which is amazing how you're doing it for such a long time.
Starting point is 01:00:38 Was it, like, I know that when I was in politics. I remember when I got a job as a speechwriter. Like, I have several chips on my shoulder. A couple of them are still there. But I've seen them fall off, like when I've had milestones. Yeah. And you say you can't get, you know, that outside validation can't really change how you feel. I don't think that's true.
Starting point is 01:00:56 I think it absolutely can. Totally. Do you think for you success has, was it financial success, a claim? Did those things matter in how you are on stage? Did it make you feel comfortable, safer, freer, what? I think that, and I've said it before, that for a long time, however long it takes, you know, your comic's job is to pretend like they're not afraid. You know, and then eventually the fear will leave you, and that's sort of a big day.
Starting point is 01:01:26 And I think in terms of success, just the fact that I was able to build an audience of grown-up people mostly, you know, mostly thinky, creative, you know, disgruntled, you know, people, you know, you know, I kind of talk about in the special. You know, I worry about alienating them, but there's also some part of me that wants to a little. But I think that once I got an audience and I had a freedom of mind that I knew would be received,
Starting point is 01:01:54 that it did help my comedy. And I guess that's success. But ultimately, I have been working a long time at this. And I think along with that fearlessness, you know, especially in this special, was one of the only, it's the only special where beforehand I didn't let my brain undermine me for dumb shit. There's some part of my brain that prepares that way. I've got to find something to make me uncomfortable.
Starting point is 01:02:21 And it just didn't happen. And I was more grounded in this special than I ever have been because I had a purpose. Like I always kind of do, but I had a different purpose both to my audience, to the way I thought about culture and politics, and also to, the risks I wanted to take around personal things. Like a long time ago, I really set out to not talk about anything that wasn't from my point of view because I could own that and no one could take it. And anytime that I'd see similar things, I'd have to sort of like go, well, is it that similar? I'll just lose it. You know, I don't, I want it to be mine. So the risks I took in the last two bits around trauma and around grief were, it took a long time to work, though,
Starting point is 01:03:09 out so i just feel like that i have a confidence in how i do what i do that is much more grounded than it than it's ever been but yeah validation is still too important to me is it yeah who do you want it from i don't know my parents it's always about the parents so yeah i mean because like if you don't have a voice in yourself that you've evolved because of being you know emotionally you know manipulated one way or the other in a negative way by, you know, your early experiences, it's hard to have a voice in your head that says good job. And you don't have that even now? No, I do, you know, but I still, like, I know it, but then when other people don't know it as much as I do, it makes me upset. Yeah. With this one, the stuff that, like, I felt like it was really the
Starting point is 01:04:02 best work that I've done in terms of, from, like, the risks were different. The last special was about grief and, you know, at least 20, 25 minutes. And this one was back to sort of almost a three-act structure, you know, where, you know, I do the political, cultural stuff. Then I tell them I want to just be entertaining and I do that. And then I get into personal stuff. But I do feel like the stuff that I thought needed to get out there in terms of not the stuff, like you said before, there's a lot of stuff in this. that goes, you know, undiscussed, that's gnarly shit and deep shit. But, you know, the stuff that landed, I'm okay with because I felt like it was not being said,
Starting point is 01:04:49 you know, in a way that was, like, no one can deny my skill set. So as a comic, if I'm going to take on what's going on in comedy in relation to culture, and I do it in a funny way, then I've achieved something because a lot of comics are scared to talk about it. They, they're afraid of audiences. And, you know, you just got to really get that ratio into your head. It was, you know, 75 million to 77.5 million. It, not every room is full of monsters and certainly not in LA. And that there has to be some, you have to have the, the guts to be a stand-up, stand-up and say what you want to say. Again, you know, it's dicey when you sort of take on people in your world. but when it reflects on the world at large in a negative way, I think it's ripe. But to the point, like, I felt good about it. I articulated it well and going into it,
Starting point is 01:05:49 I was 100% confident in the set. And I feel good about it. And I'm fortunate in that it was received very well, which is not always the case. Pod Save America is brought you by Acorns. Acorns makes it easy to start investing like an expert, even if you're an expert at something else. Acorns is the financial wellness app that helps you invest for your future, safer tomorrow, and spend smarter today. Acorns makes it easy to start doing more with your money.
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Starting point is 01:07:10 Join the over 14 million all-time customers who've already saved and invested over $25 billion with Acorns. Head to Acorns.com slash Crooked or download the Acorns app to get started. Paid non-client endorsement. Compensation provides incentive to positively promote Acorns. Tier 2 compensation provided investing involves risk. Acorns Advisors, LLC, an SEC registered investment advisor. The important disclosures at Acorns.com slash crooked. I think it's technically your cusp, but I think of you as a quintessential.
Starting point is 01:07:34 Gen X. Yeah, I think so. A comic. Last year, boomers. So it's, it's, yeah, you're right there. You're right, but, but Gen X energy all the way through. Sure. Right there with the kind of in the, in the, sure.
Starting point is 01:07:46 In the sort of. There's probably a little too much led Zeppelin in me to be fully GenX, but yeah. Grunge it up a little, I suppose. Sure, I did. Yeah, it was later. Later, yeah. Went through your grace. The groundwork had been laid by acts from the 70s.
Starting point is 01:08:01 But why do we, we have had a bunch of baby, boomer presidents uh i'm not running no and and thank first of all thank you yeah yeah that's one less thing to fucking worry about imagine that oh that would be annoying but uh just you just you heckling democrats back out you just it be what a disaster i don't know Gavin's doing that yeah yeah i think he's more suited to it honestly than you oh he wants it pretty bad i can't like i look i know what it's i know what it's like to think you are speaking your truth and to be completely completely saturated in talking points that you don't know anymore.
Starting point is 01:08:38 I mean, I did Air America for a year every morning and you start to, you realize like, I didn't think this. I don't remember your show being that talking pointsy. No, it's not, but it's the tone.
Starting point is 01:08:49 Yeah, yeah. You know, that radio, that you're honoring a narrative. But we're, we seem to have skipped over Gen X in terms of presidents. And there's a sort of a gap in terms of even our representation.
Starting point is 01:09:03 We went right from a lot of boomer members Congress. There's obviously Gen Xers in there, but went right from the boomers to the millennials as well. Why is it that Gen X hasn't really shown up? They've also moved to the right more than millennials have. What was something about your generation that kind of had this sort of... I think it was probably the beginning of that sort of self-centered entitlement and need to define yourself in a unique way that was based on, you know, music. music, fashion, you know, bits and pieces of, you know, esoteric wisdom from old books and
Starting point is 01:09:40 whatnot. I think it was probably, you know, the boomers are selfish in a different way, you know, because they built the world and now as they were looking down the tunnel at death, they kind of want to end it. They only buried in their pyramids. Well, they just, I think there's a part of narcissism that it's like if the world ends at the same time they do, they don't miss anything. And I think Gen X is probably guilty of a kind of the beginning of a terminal uniqueness on an individual level and not so hip to, you know, real civic community.
Starting point is 01:10:20 Yeah. Maybe. I don't know. I'm really spitballing. I don't really think in terms of generations that much. I do know that the boomers need to get out of the way. There's the sort of the Gen X comics, John Stewart's in there, you're in there, Bill Maher is in that group, I think. It's a little older. Is he a little older? I think he's a little older, buddy. I think he's kind of solid boomer.
Starting point is 01:10:41 You think? Yeah, he's got to be like, got to be close to 70. Somebody. Let's get a Bill Maher. He's check. 69, yeah. Nice. Famously 69.
Starting point is 01:10:52 Oh, right, we talked to him about it. I had him on. Yeah, that's pretty solid boomer shit. But Janine, you know, John, sure. you know, some of the other Gen Xers, you know, Patton, and then there's a bunch of other, you know, younger guys. The alt comedy scene for whatever it did
Starting point is 01:11:11 was mostly Gen Xers and some millennials, I guess. Yeah. It was an insulated community that was based a lot in kind of snark. And, you know, Snark doesn't age well because it doesn't run that deep. Yeah. And it's, well, there's something about it,
Starting point is 01:11:29 too that's um snark you have to be on the outside and you have to not want to be on the inside right that's your answer right there yeah i think that's it there's something about there's something about gen x that was like you know what we're just gonna we'll be we'll be back here yeah we'll back here with our zines yeah exactly yeah i think that's it i think it was a mistake i think you should have guys got it gotten in the ring with us i'm i'm the last boomer don't don't plan hey you're right okay okay you're right i take that back i take the back so you're a catastrophizer i i i was because i was thinking about this because i did i went back and i watched uh parts of this special from bleak to dark. And, you know, I'm a catastrophizer as well. So if I'm on the phone call
Starting point is 01:12:05 with my, I'm on the phone with my fiance. I'm engaged. Congratulations. This is what's going to take. But the, uh, uh, uh, how long have you been engaged? Like six months. Okay. Six months. You're still. Good. Oh, good. Yeah, we're planning the wedding. It's not like a six year engagement. No, no, no. The last one, we didn't plan the wedding. And I think that that was a sign. This is a second marriage? Second engagement. Seconding, okay. It was no first marriage. Okay. Okay. I made a lot of changes when I turned 40. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:12:29 A lot of changes. Yeah? Like what? I was no longer engaged once I was 40. Yeah. I actually never was single in my 30s. Yeah. I was single when I was 29.
Starting point is 01:12:40 I met somebody. And the next time I was single, I was 40. Uh-huh. So I forgot to be single in my 30s. And yet you did it again. Well, if I did, I thought it was going to be like when I was in my 20s. It is not when you're in your 40s. A little more work.
Starting point is 01:12:54 Yeah. Yes, yes, you can't get, my dunk gone, and I didn't have a dunk. Yeah, the game starts to fade. And now I'm 40? Yeah. But you look good, yeah. I'm okay, I'm working on, doing Pilates. Do you Pilates?
Starting point is 01:13:08 No, I do, I do like kind of a full body flexibility workout, and then I run a few days a week. You run? This morning I did, yeah. Where do you run? I do a hike out in Glendale sometimes, and then other times I just do intervals on the treadmill at Equinox. Okay. I like Equinox. Okay.
Starting point is 01:13:27 I'm an elitist. You seem to be aging well. I think comedians age well. That is not true. Not physically. They become ghouls, but I'm saying that mentally, some of the great, like... You're going to have to give me an example. Well, I think, I think comedians that have tried to stay kind of sharp and curious about the world, I think you're one of them.
Starting point is 01:13:47 There's got to be a couple more. Yeah, I don't know. I think it's a faulty premise, but you said it confidently. I think that, well, like, look, I think Seinfeld is somebody that's keep trying to do new material, and I do, like, you can like or dislike what Seinfeld does. Oh, yeah, but even, you can, but even the, great, but even the other day, like, he, he gave some answer about woke stuff, and it got some blowback, and he actually came back, and he said, you know what, I was wrong about that, and he actually gave a really good answer.
Starting point is 01:14:15 He thought about it. He came back, and he said, you know what? What I said was stupid, and actually, if the goalpost move, I should hit the goalpost move, I should hit the goalpost. That's my job. And I thought that was cool. I think that what happened with Jerry ultimately is that he was really a guy that didn't speak much publicly. And then just because of the advent of podcasting and the needs of the new publicity environment, all of a sudden Jerry was never shutting up. So everybody saw Jerry for Jerry. And you do with that what you will. Okay. I'll do with it what I will. I'm glad he apologized. And you feel good about that.
Starting point is 01:14:52 who else let's say let's do some more beefs what do you think about bill mar i can't i can't do it you know i can't you know i don't tone i always had a problem with this tone i think i did i did politically correct years ago yeah i'm sure you did a couple of times maybe and i think i did real time maybe once or twice but i don't you were dating in colter at the time oh yeah yeah that was a dark time i tried to help her um there's no she's lost cause i couldn't do it and there's nothing i could do yeah uh with all my years of experience in and out of bed that could help her okay so uh no i don't i don't know like i feel with bill that there is this and it happens with some of the other boomers there's this
Starting point is 01:15:41 desperate chasing of relevance that you know changes someone's mind uh in terms of how they approach what they do and also kind of makes the whole undertaking feel desperate and uh you know outside of you know his ideas about a primarily i think wokeness um uh i don't know it it's it's just not for me i know his joke you know he's got good joke writers who know how to write for his tone and i've known a couple of those guys they were comics and they're good guys but i i can't i can't see past you know the desperation and what he's willing to do to stay in the conversation and what do you think about the death of like you know late shows gone conan show's obviously gone yeah it's coming undone this this place
Starting point is 01:16:34 that i know i'm sure for you with this pinnacle of where comics went what comedy was like yeah from carson to letterman to conan yeah uh what do you think of that i i think it's just the nature of what we talked about before is that if the bar has been lowered to consuming only clips you know which is dictated by media platforms that this whole idea of, like, you know, algorithms and what people's attention span can and can't do is it's sort of a, I don't know if it's a catch-22, but it's like even with any stream you work on, it's like, well, our algorithm says people can't pay attention for this one. And I'm like, but not my people. And if you keep promoting that, they won't. I mean, if something is good, they'll stay in it. I guess the format and
Starting point is 01:17:21 the nature of show business has just, again, shifted to entrepreneurs and, you know, media bubbles that are self-driven by, you know, individuals or tribal entities. And that the whole, the whole framing of show business being this, you know, it's the talk show. Here come the celebrities. It's just people don't care anymore. And they're all chasing clicks on, you know, for quips of, you know, having interesting people do dumb shit. And we're going to bring those pies in in a second. Oh, God damn. I knew there was a big closer.
Starting point is 01:17:56 No, I want to end with this. It's a serious question, and it's where I was going to before. But when I'm on the phone with Ari and the phone cuts out, I think they're dead. I just assume the building has collapsed, truly. Like, earthquake, a 9-11, truly, if they're in New York, I'll think a 9-11 has happened. Like, I'd really go there. You're a catastrophizer, done it your whole life. And, you know, you've been through a terrible loss.
Starting point is 01:18:20 Your plane hit the mountain. Did it change how you view catastrophe? Does it change how you allow your mind to create catastrophe all of the time? No, what it changed was my sense of mortality. It did not change. Like it doesn't, you know, tragic loss of somebody you love, that's not my go-to catastrophe. I didn't see that coming at all. I mean, my parents are both still alive, you know.
Starting point is 01:18:46 It's not great. But I didn't see what happened to Lynn. There was no way I could have ever seen that coming. So, you know, when somebody dies tragically, you know, all the other catastrophizing about me and cancer or, you know, what someone's going to say about me or the world or the fires or anything else, when somebody dies, it does make me more scared in relationship because it's happened. But it also sort of makes you realize just how fragile it all is and how there is no real kind of universe. order to it. And, you know, there's no way to answer the question why. And that, that's just life. So I don't, it didn't diminish my catastrophizing, but it did make me realize how fragile life is. And I think we're, too heavy for an answer. No, I just think now we're ready to start.
Starting point is 01:19:41 Let's record. Oh, good. Finally. We got warmed up. And, yeah, now we're now we're in it. They're good. And Mark Marin, good to have you. Thank you. Nice to be here. That's all for this week. Thank you to Mark Maren for Stop Bake Bye. We'll be back in your podcast feeds on Tuesday with our usual episode with me, John and Tommy. If you want to listen to Pod Save America ad-free or get access to our subscriber Discord and exclusive podcasts, consider joining our Friends of the Pod community at cricket.com slash friends or subscribe on Apple Podcasts directly from the Pod Save America feed. Also, please consider leaving us a review to help boost.
Starting point is 01:20:21 this episode and everything we do here at Crooked. Pod Save America is a Crooked Media production. Our producers are David Toledo, Emma Ilic Frank, and Saul Rubin. Our associate producer is Farah Safari. Austin Fisher is our senior producer. Reid Churlin is our executive editor. Adrian Hill is our head of news and politics. The show is mixed and edited by Andrew Chadwick.
Starting point is 01:20:41 Jordan Cantor is our sound engineer with audio support from Kyle Seiglin and Charlotte Landis. Matt DeGroote is our head of production. Naomi Sengel is our executive assistant. Thanks to our digital team. Elijah Cohn, Haley Jones, Ben Hefcoat, Mia Kelman, Carol Pellevieve, David Tolls, and Ryan Young. Our production staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East.

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