Raging Moderates with Scott Galloway and Jessica Tarlov - Charlamagne Tha God’s Take on the State of the Race
Episode Date: November 1, 2024Scott and Jessica sit down with Charlamagne Tha God to discuss his recent headline-making interviews with Vice President Kamala Harris and his bold takes on today’s political landscape. Charlamagne ...shares his thoughts on Biden's latest gaffes, Harris’s efforts to engage Black and Latino voters, and Trump’s impact on the race. Follow Jessica Tarlov, @JessicaTarlov. Follow Prof G, @profgalloway. Follow Charlamagne Tha God @cthagod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Raging Moderates.
Today, Jessica and I have the one and only Charlemagne Tha God.
Charlemagne's known for his bold takes, and recently he's been at the center of some major political conversations,
including two interviews with Vice President Kamala Harris.
We'll dive into that and much more, including his thoughts on Trump, the role of Black voters, and the state of the race.
Charlemagne, welcome to the show. What's up, Scott? Thank you for having me. What's up, Jessica?
Hey, it's so good to see you. I'm so glad to have you on our turf after you so generously had me on yours. I wanted to jump in with the controversy du jour, Biden's maybe flub about Tony Hinchcliffe's comments about Puerto Ricans.
And I saw that you said that he shouldn't have walked them back. And I was wondering if you
could talk about that a little bit. And if you have, and maybe it's just my own anxiety,
but sometimes when stuff like this happens, I get nervous about losing voters, right? Like
that if Biden doesn't walk it back,
then maybe there are a few people in Pennsylvania
who thought, eh, I was going to vote for Kamala,
but that side thinks that Trump supporters are garbage.
Well, I mean, I get nervous anytime Joe Biden talks.
Joe Biden should have stopped talking.
Definitely.
Joe Biden probably should have stopped talking about a year ago.
But no, I mean, because I think this one is a reach.
I just think it was taken slightly out of context.
I mean, he was very specific about the type of people he was referring to.
He gave examples.
He said that if, you know, you're a person who thinks immigrants poison the blood of America.
He said, if you're somebody who agrees that Puerto Rico
is garbage, he was talking specifically to them. I didn't hear him say that about all Trump
supporters. And I mean, truthfully, if you were a person who said, you know what, I was thinking
about voting for Kamala Harris, but now I'm not because of Biden's comments, I doubt she was
really thinking about voting for her anyway. Because, you know, if you're a Trump supporter, then you're a Trump supporter. And if you're offended by those
comments, it's because you're still supporting Trump and because you feel like, hey, that's the
person I'm going to vote for. But I don't think that he turned off anybody who, you know, wasn't
already planning on voting for Trump anyway. I just didn't think, I think the comments are being
blown out of proportion.
Oh, totally.
But, I mean,
this is how you own a news cycle,
right,
when it seemed like it was going in the other direction
about this
and now they can at least
inject a bit of it
into the proverbial bloodstream.
And Trump,
I mean,
Trump called America garbage last week.
He said America was a garbage can
just last week.
So it's like,
what are we doing?
Like, it's just, I don't know, that's just their way of, like you said, trying to change the headlines.
Totally. I wanted to get your take. So you had Kamala on again, and I saw Lauren LaRosa really
pressed her about the idea that Black men aren't fully backing her. She said it wasn't her
experience, especially at the rallies. Do you think that the media is overplaying these divisions?
Because it feels like data is trickling in that maybe it was a bit of a mirage, this mass exodus from the Democratic Party.
But what's your take?
Yeah, I never agreed with that.
I never agreed with it.
I didn't like when President Obama went out there and, you know, was waving his finger at black men simply because black men have always been the second largest voting bloc of Democrats.
There is no real data that we've seen unless something comes in on Tuesday after election election night that shows us different.
That makes me believe black men are going, you know, show up for the for the vice president.
And then I saw ABC poll that came out Sunday and it proved me right.
I think it said 85% of black men as of
right now are supporting the vice president. So yeah, I just, I never believed that. I mean,
I felt like they should be out there shaking their fingers at white women like Liz Cheney,
Hillary Clinton. They should be out there talking to white women the way Barack Obama was trying to
talk to black men. 52% of white women voted for Trump in 2016, 55% in 2020. Like, why are they, why did
they vote against their own interests in 2016? Why did they vote against their own interests in 2020?
They're the ones that need a talking to. Like, Black men have always showed up for the Democratic
Party, the second largest voting bloc behind Black women. So I always thought those polls
were overstated. So you're obviously pretty close to the campaign. And I imagine at some point
they've asked your advice. What do you think they need to be focused on and kind of the
kind of the homestretch here? I think she's doing it. I think her speech last night was solid.
The fact that she was able to show the clear contrast between her and Donald Trump, which
anybody should have saw already. But also, you know, speaking to the optimism and the hope
of the future of
America. I mean, that's what we as American citizens buy into. I don't care if you're Black,
I don't care if you're white, I don't care if you're male, you know, female, gay, straight,
Democrat, Republican. There's two things that I feel like all of us as American citizens want.
We want to have more money in our pocket and we want to be safe. That's it. Like, and I think that,
you know, you have to speak to that. You have to let people know, how are you going to put more
money in my pocket and how are you going to make me feel safe? How am I going to be able to provide for my family? How am I going to be able to put food on the table and a roof over my head? And how she spoke to the hope and optimism that all of us here in America have.
Do you think, because I mean, you had like the two closing messages in what you just said.
So there is the protecting democracy closing message and then the opportunity economy.
And this is what kind of president I'm going to be.
Do you think that it's reaching the demographics that it actually needs to get to? Because that's my big worry. I feel like we just consume so much information about this that we know that,
you know, what she said at the auto plant in Michigan, and then we know what she said
at this event, and that Americans are only getting like half the story.
Well, I think that's why repetition is important.
You know, when I had my town hall with her a couple of weeks ago,
and, you know, I asked her about the fact people say she sticks to her talking points,
and, you know, she seems like she's always so scripted,
and she was like, well, that's what I call being disciplined.
And she said, that's why I have to repeat these points over and over and over.
And it's true.
I just think that we live in a society where, you know, all of these messages, we see them so much. It's
not like how back in the day you could do a local event in Michigan and just the folks in Michigan
would hear it. Or you do a local event in Pennsylvania somewhere and just folks in
Pennsylvania would hear it. We hear every single thing all the time from everywhere. So it
sounds like she's constantly repeating herself. But I don't think that's a bad thing because,
you know, to your point, I don't think everybody hears everything. Like, you know how many people
I run into every day who literally have not heard 95% of the crazy rhetoric that has come out of
Trump's mouth or come out of people in his camp's mouth. And so it's like, you should keep putting that in people's face to let folks know what he's saying,
what he's planning to do. And you should keep drilling home your message, your plan for the
economy, like, you know, especially her, because she's only been running for 100 days. Like,
so people may not have heard the opportunity economy plan. People may not know, you know, where she
stands as far as, you know, job creation, where she stands as far as, you know, what she wants
to do with small, small businesses. Like, so I think it's not, I think it's nothing wrong with
constantly repeating yourself. And I think you do have to deliver both those messages because
different things resonate with different people for different reasons. Like there's some people
that you can say threatened democracy and they don't even, they're like, what does that mean?
Democracy's never worked for me. You know, there's people people that you can say threaten democracy and they don't even, they're like, what does that mean? Democracy's never worked for me.
You know, there's people that's living in hell right now.
They don't think things can get hotter.
So that might not resonate with them.
But that message of hope, you know,
that message of opportunity economy,
being able to participate in this economy,
that might resonate with them.
So you got to do both.
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Curious, Charlamagne, what is your, you're obviously very involved in this, both professionally and emotionally. How are you trying to be, obviously you feel you're right,
how do you be effective? What's yours, what does the next week look like for you? That is a fantastic question, Scott. Um, I don't know, man, you know, it's
interesting, right? Cause I don't want to, I don't want to come off as a surrogate cause I'm not a,
I'm not a surrogate, right? Like I, I respect. I don't know. I think you are actually,
if surrogate is someone out there, you're unpaid. Yeah. Which quite frankly makes you a more effective surrogate.
So you well, let me start with this. You are important.
And if you show up, you can have an impact. What do you think showing up means for you?
I think showing up for me means just just telling people why I'm voting.
I don't I don't want to telling people why I'm voting.
I'm not pushing people and telling them, you should vote for this individual.
I'm just telling people who I'm voting for and why I'm voting for them.
And when people ask me, because they have been asking me over the past hundred days,
I can tell you right now, when President Biden was running, people were asleep. I was saying that this race was about the Republicans, who I think are the crooks,
the Democrats, who I think are the cowards, because they don't fight enough, and the couch, which is voter apathy.
And there was people that were just on the couch and they weren't moving.
When she got to the top of the ticket, people sat up and they became curious.
And I think that, you know, there's been a lot of a lot of huge missteps the Trump campaign has been making over the last few weeks that have been, you know, really highlighted in a real way that's making people not even just feel
curious. Now they actually want to get up and go do something. And so I just think for me, I'm just,
I'm here to highlight those things. And when people ask me why I'm voting, I tell them the
reasons why. Like, you know, I like her opportunity economy policy. And there's another thing that I
really like too.
It's something President Obama said.
It's the second part of his speech.
And I pulled it up because I like to read it.
But it said, and so sometimes when he was in Pennsylvania, everybody focused on what he said about black men.
But there was a second part where he said, and so sometimes the other excuse we hear when we're talking to folks as well,
it ain't going to make no difference.
Well, no, you're right that we're not eliminating poverty. We're not going to get rid of all problems with race. We're not going to prevent
every bad thing from happening in this country. Whoever we elect president, that's not how things
work. The question is, we have somebody there who sees us, who cares about us, who will work on our
behalf and can make things a little bit better. I think she needs to be leaning into that message.
And that's what I'm telling all of my listeners. I think that we have to stop thinking that
presidents, you know, get in the White House and just wave a magic wand and make everybody's problems disappear.
You just want somebody in office who cares, you know, who has some empathy for the American
people and just wants to make things, you know, a little bit better. That's my message to people.
Who do you think can make your life, you know, just a little bit better? That's who you should go out there and vote for. Yeah, she's actually managed to do that very effectively.
It was one of the first categories that she was able to turn around from when Biden was running,
like who cares about people like me? And you see this in all the town halls and the focus groups
that people think she's a really nice person that cares. Whether that translates to they're going to actually go out there and vote for her, we'll see.
But she's been doing really well on that. And I want to do Scots at it. You're really important.
And it's something that we both think and have been talking a lot about how differently this
campaign has played out media-wise. Like, the mainstream interviews have not mattered nearly as much
as the podcast wars,
coming on The Breakfast Club,
doing your town hall.
Do you think this kind of change
is here to stay?
And what do you see your role
in the future of political media,
which is kind of where you guys sit now?
That is a great question.
I don't know if,
I really don't know how much impact podcasts
and stuff are going to have.
Like, you know, Breakfast Club is different
because we still are a traditional radio station.
I don't know if people understand that
because, you know, everything is so podcast driven,
but we're a radio show that comes on every morning.
We talk to 8 million people weekly. Right.
And then we take that daily show and put it out as a podcast every day.
So our reach is a little bit different and our reach is a little bit more traditional.
But I don't know what all of these podcast appearances.
I don't know how they're going to resonate with voters because in my mind, and I could be completely wrong about this, in my mind, going on podcasts makes a lot of noise, but we
don't know if those young men that are listening to podcasts are actually going to go out there
and vote. You know that The View has people that watch that vote. You know Stephen Colbert has people that watch that vote.
You know Fox, you know, has people that watch and vote.
CNN, you know that.
So I think, you know, Vice President Harris did it really right because she hit both.
Like, she didn't just stick to the podcast like, you know, Trump did.
She did the, you know, Fox News hits.
Then she did The View.
She did, you know, her CNN town hall,
but she also did Colbert. Like she did traditional radio with The Breakfast Club, but then she,
you know, makes an appearance on Univision. So I think that she actually did it right because,
you know, there's just so many different pockets of people that you have to hit and you're not
going to hit them going to one place. Like I, even if you, I love Joee rogan to death but there's people who do not listen to there's many people that listen
to joe rogan there's tens of millions that don't as well so i think she did it right out of uh out
of both candidates and to answer your question um jessica i i still want to i still believe in both
as well you know i believe in mainstream media and I still believe in what is, I guess,
still called non-traditional media,
which I don't know why we call it that anymore,
but because to me it's legacy.
But I believe in both.
So I feel like you have to show up in both.
So I hope I have a presence in both in the future.
So no Democrat is...
You definitely do.
Great. Just to fill in. Go ahead, Scott. So, no Democrat has ever won the presidency without getting the young vote by a pretty wide margin. Young't going to show up, that young men, if you look at like. You seem to be in good shape. You seem
to be making a lot of money. America has worked for you. What about America has worked for you?
And what is it about this campaign that you think will extend those things about America?
I mean, America is the only place where a Black man from Moncks Corner, South Carolina, who was raised on a dirt road,
who never went to college,
can find something within himself
that is a talent, right?
That is a gift, I guess,
my ability to speak, I guess,
and turn that into the multimedia career that I've had.
Like, I'm in the Radio Hall of Fame right now
just because America's free market enterprise,
America's, you know, free speech allows that to happen.
Like, this is the land of opportunity, you know,
for so many people.
Like, you know, that's why people are dying to get over
here, literally. They're dying to get over here just because they know that, you know, the
opportunity comes to those who created in this country. Yeah, there's a lot of obstacles, you
know, there's a lot of hurdles, there's a lot of, you know, systemic issues that keep certain,
you know, groups of people from getting where they need to be,
but it still can be done. You know, this is literally the country where opportunity comes,
comes, comes to those who create it. And so I would just tell, you know, all those black men,
let's not live in a country where, you know, people's freedoms are being taken away because
if we don't have those freedoms, if we don't have those rights, you know, those things can hinder us
from getting to where we need to be. you know you can you can sit around and
think just because it's not happening to you now doesn't mean it can't happen to you in the future
like you know martin luther king jr said injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere so you
can't sit around and you know watch what's happening to you know women or sit around and watch what's happening with
what i think is going to happen to even legal you know uh immigrants in this country like if they
talk about mass deportations i was listening to john stewart the other night and i thought it was
hilarious what he said but it's true he's like you really think donald trump knows the difference
between who's here between what immigrant is here legally and what immigrant
is here illegally. Like they were showing him a picture of women in a deposition and he picked
the woman who accused him of sexual assault. And he said that was his wife. He didn't even realize
that that was a whole other, that wasn't his wife. So my point is you can't sit around and just think,
watch all of these injustices happening to other people and think that they're not going to happen to you.
I don't like anything that,
any rhetoric that is coming from that side right now.
When you, when we, we should not live in a country
where people are,
somebody speaking about putting people in camps,
where somebody led an attempted coup in this country,
where somebody's talking about
locking up political opponents,
where, you know, somebody's talking about
locking up journalists.
Like, where are we?
Where are we as a country? That's not what America is. So, you know, we shouldn't want somebody
leading this country whose mind is even there. Because I promise you, the more they script
rights away from others, it's only a matter of time before it's your turn.
How do you think we got to a place where so many millions of people are comfortable with that kind of rhetoric? Because that's what really stuns me. Like Donald Trump, to me, is a completely depraved human being. And I grew up in New York City. I watched this for a really long time. But I'm shocked still by tens of millions of people who can hear stuff. Like, you play them the tape. Like, we were emailing about the other day, right,
that, like, Jay Tapper has now started playing people the tape
of what he says, and they're still, like, okay with it.
Well, I think that's where mainstream media comes into play, right?
And that's why mainstream media cannot go away
or lose its position to, you know, the podcasters and the YouTubers, right? Because
mainstream media still has a job to do. There's still journalistic integrity that has to happen.
And I really think there's been a lot of journalistic integrity that's been lost
because we talk about Donald Trump being a threat to democracy, but we don't really explain that
to the American people. And we don't treat him
like a threat to democracy. I was on Anderson Cooper the other day, and that's what I was
trying to explain. These networks, they center the wrong conversations all the time. They'll
make more of a bigger deal about, well, is Kamala Harris black or is she a DEI hire, then they will, you know, actual things that Donald Trump has done.
Like, what do you want to do? The two impeachments, the 88 criminal charges, the 34 convictions,
you know, leading an attempted coup in this country. Like, literally, it is a choice to not
center those things as conversation. And then, man, don't even get me started on Merrick Garland and the DOJ.
Like, they definitely didn't treat him like a threat to democracy in any way, shape, or form.
So if nobody, if the media is not talking about him like a true threat to democracy and, you know,
our government and law enforcement isn't treating him like a threat to democracy,
why should the American people think he's a threat to democracy? I've literally listened
to people on YouTube channels because I'm not one of those people that just
dismiss folks that I don't agree with. I want to hear why people are thinking the way that
they're thinking. I heard a guy the other day say, man, if he really tried to overthrow the
government, he'd have been in jail. And the guy that was interviewing him didn't even push back.
And I happen to know the guy because they're young guys, like in their 20s.
I happened to know the guy that was interviewing him.
And I said, yo, why didn't you tell him that, you know, Trump got charged?
He was like, I didn't know.
So you got one guy who didn't know Trump got charged with trying to overthrow the government.
And the guy interviewing him didn't know either.
They know they saw it,
right? We know we all saw January 6th, but they didn't know that there was an actual action taken.
And if you don't see somebody, you know, receive consequences for their actions, you know, you
don't think anything is wrong. So that's how we got here. We got here because we have normalized
Trump by not speaking about him like the actual threat he is. And, you know,
this government not prosecuting him like the threat he is.
So just as we wrap up here, Charlemagne, you obviously an inspiring story coming from
modest means, and now you're interviewing who may be the next president of the United States.
Well, I'm just curious, what are the one or two moments or people in your life that were
really pivotal? When you look back and think this was, this was the moment of the person to put me
where I am. Oh man. I mean, I, I gotta go back to the beginning. Like that, that would definitely
have to be my mother and my father, you know, um, is, is, is, is dysfunctional as, as my father, you know, is dysfunctional as my father was, you know, great man who just had
his own issues like we all do. He had his own issues with mental health and his own issues
with substance abuse. But I learned through therapy. This is something I learned in therapy.
I used to get upset at my father because I felt like he would discipline me for things that he
never taught me. But he did teach me a lot.
He just was raising me out of fear and not love because he didn't want me to make the same mistakes that he made.
Now, granted, I still ended up making a lot of those same mistakes.
But it was all of that extremely tough love in the beginning from him and my mom.
My mom was an English teacher.
You know, she's been teaching English
in South Carolina for my whole life, right? She's retired now. She just does like substitute
teaching, but, and she was a Jehovah Witness. So she'd make me read the Watchtower and make me
read the Awakes and make me read the Bible and take me with her to field service on, you know,
Sundays. But then she was an English teacher. So I was always into like the bookie program.
So I was the guy reading, you know, four books to get a free pizza, you know, every week. And that's what
she, and the biggest piece of advice my mom gave me, she told me to read things that don't pertain
to me. So read things that didn't have anything to do with my life, didn't have anything to do
with the way that I was being raised. And that's what led me to like falling in love with Judy Blume books. That's what led me to fall
with, you know, Beverly Clearly books. So it was like between that and then my father just,
just always being on me about not falling victim to our environment. He gave me one piece of advice
that stuck with me my whole life. He said, if you don't change your lifestyle, you're going to end up in jail,
dead, or broke sitting under the tree. And I promise you from the time I was in,
like second or third grade, my father was always on me about not falling victim to our environment
that we were growing up in, not falling victim to our environment that we were growing up in.
And it was because of that, that when I did start to get in trouble,
it clicked for me right then and there. I realized that I'm not getting any of this time back. And
everything that I do today directly impacts what happens in my life tomorrow. And so that's what
I started focusing on. I just started focusing on what my future would look like. So I started
thinking in five-year intervals, 10-year intervals. I was like, okay,
whatever I want to do for the next five years, I got to start doing now. Whatever I want to be doing for the next 10 years, I got to start doing now. And that's literally what got me on,
you know, the right path to ultimately lead me where I am now. So yes, it was definitely my mom
and dad, for sure. We don't get this time back and read things that don't pertain to you. I think
that's a good place to end it.
We really appreciate your time, Charlemagne.
Thanks for joining us and stay safe on the trail.
Thank you, Scott.
Thank you, Jessica.
Thank you.
So good to see you.
Support for this show is brought to you by Nissan Kicks.
It's never too late to try new things.
And it's never too late to reinvent yourself.
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From the design and styling to the performance, all the way to features like the Bose Personal Plus sound system,
you can get closer to everything you love about city life
in the all-new, reimagined Nissan Kicks.
Learn more at www.nissanusa.com slash 2025 dash kicks.
Available feature.
Bose is a registered trademark of the Bose Corporation.