Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #523: David Ropeik, Andrew Zimmern
Episode Date: March 14, 2020Bill’s guests are David Ropeik, Andrew Zimmern, Edward Luce, Lis Smith and Tim Miller. (Originally aired 3/13/20) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choice...s. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series,
Real Time with Bill Maugh.
This is...
Welcome to fucking ridiculous with Bill Maher.
It's surreal time is what we're renaming this show.
I don't know if you've heard about this.
I'm going to talk to you because you're the only people here.
But there is a bug going around.
Everybody has the sniffles.
It's got everybody on edge.
This country went from zero to crazy in about three,
seconds this week, and it is
Friday the 13th now.
There's a pandemic.
The markets are
in free fall in general,
and Trump is president.
So I hope we don't run into a spate
of bad luck.
You may notice the sound
is a little different
because we're trying to be on the safe side
here, and, you know, people don't want
to come around. Me, I could be the carrier.
Everybody's fucking nervous, you know,
especially stoner.
every time I cough
I'm like, is that the weed or the virus?
I learned my lesson
with getting stoned
during a pandemic
because I got really baked last night
and I ate all the emergency food I had afforded.
But you know, we've never really seen anything like this, right?
People, I mean, where everything stops,
we've had economic problems
and slowdowns. Now, are we being overly cautious?
Yes, but appropriately so. We don't really know what this is yet. So everything is getting canceling.
Sporting events. I was supposed to be in Vegas tonight. Sorry, can't be there. They canceled the gay
pride parade here in L.A. And they said, stay at least six feet away when you talk to the hand.
That's the other advice, you see. And, you know, so I'm for all this. Masks? Absolutely. I was in
7-Eleven today, two guys were wearing masks.
They were robbing it, but same.
It helped.
Washing hands?
Oh, for fuck sake. I have washed my hands
more times than when I murdered
that guy. I'm telling you.
Social distancing, yes,
I'm all for that.
Arms length, no shaking hands.
Don't lean in when you talk.
What I call how people should behave.
Anyway, you know what?
If you're a hand-pumping close talker,
Don't worry about me.
I've already been avoiding you.
There's a new trend in Europe
where they're into a hand-jicking.
They're tapping on the elbow.
Why? Why touch it all?
What's the point of touching someone
when you meet them?
To verify they're not a ghost?
Could we try to just get through this
without doing stupid shit?
You know, to make it worse?
Did we have to have a run on toilet paper?
I'm almost out.
I was sitting today going,
Jesus, if only Fox News had a print edition.
Okay.
And also, you know, don't stereotype Asian people.
I mean, it doesn't...
It started in China.
It has nothing to do with that.
I hear people calling it the Wuhan flu.
This is a little insensitive.
It's like calling herpes Coachella Surprise, you know?
That's my message here.
Just don't do stupid shit to make it worse.
You know what's up?
All the businesses are closed in America.
Except gun sales.
So American.
I'll shoot the virus.
Get off my porch, you fucking virus,
or I'll blow your...
What are you got in there?
I'll blow it out.
We don't do smart stuff in this country.
Disneyland announced today that they were closing down.
Tomorrow.
Tomorrow.
It's open today.
Because ask any doctor, that's how you do it
when there's an outbreak.
You get everybody together
for one last with.
So, you know, just be logical.
Follow the CDC's recommendations,
avoid crowds,
wash your hands,
don't elect a moron president.
These are simple things.
Big laugh at home on that one.
Shut the fuck up.
Ass kissers.
But, yeah, there's a new protocol in place
because Trump,
Whenever he talks, things get worse.
So it's called Operation Shut the Fuck Up.
Because, you know, Trump, he was in the Rose Garden today,
and he's lost if he can't brag about the stock market.
He's like a porn star whose dick fell off.
He's got nothing.
And also, he's been exposed,
exposing himself constantly to people who have the virus.
The Brazilian dude and the guy at the CPAC and the congressman,
He needs to be quarantined.
Lock him up.
Lock him up.
Lock him up.
And so he made this speech the other night.
You know, and there's, as we know, two Trumps.
There's rally Trump when he's speaking in public and telepromp to Trump.
That's what you get.
You got two choices.
Rally Trump, teleprompter Trump.
You got Barker at a race riot.
Or a safari animal who's been shot with the tranquilizer, darn.
Because that's what he looks like when he's talking.
to the teleprompter. I was watching this. I was like, I cannot believe this clown
is sitting at the same desk where Clinton used to get blown. All right, ladies and gentlemen.
Not that there's really ladies and gentlemen here. We got a great show. Tim Miller,
Edward Luce, and Liz Smith are here. And a little later, we'll be speaking with bizarre food
eater Andrew Zimmern. Okay, first up, teleporting here. He is a former Harvard instructor
of risk communication and risk psychology, and author of How Risk,
is it really? Can you guess why we booked him? David Ropeak. Okay. Thank you so much. David, how are you?
I'm fine. I'm fine. I'm not there so that I could not shake hands with you in person, but you know what?
I want to tell people you were perfectly fine with getting on the plane. We said, you know what? We've done
satellite before. Maybe this is a good time to do it. Just set an example. But tell me first about that.
like you're the guy. This is why I wanted to have you on tonight because the title of your book is so perfect.
How risky is it? Getting on a plane. How risky is it?
The air doesn't transport this stuff, so it's just surfaces that you touch and you touch them in the airports.
So the flying out isn't any different than that. But we hear about, oh, people aren't flying,
and that feeds our kind of emotional relationship to risk. It's a perfect example of what this whole conversation I hope will be about.
You said perfectly in your monologue, quote you,
we don't do smart stuff in this country.
When there's a risk around, we don't do smart stuff.
We don't use the prefrontal cortex, the reasoning part of our brain.
Don't touch your head.
Yeah, right.
Wait.
By the way, I've been introduced a lot of times,
this is the first time there was a reference to oral sex in the Oval Office
and the introduction leading to me.
Thank you.
No, no, no.
The serious point is, and coronavirus is a great teaching.
moment for this. We are hardwired to use our emotions more than reason all the time, but especially
when it comes to keeping ourselves safe. So what happens is we get one or two or three quick
facts and we have to do this quick in case the thread is like right there, right? And then we
run them through a lot of subconscious emotional filters, our personal circumstances, are we healthy,
are we old, our age, our gender, all those things,
and a set of instincts that we all share
that make some risks feel scarier
and some risks feel less scarier.
So imagine like a bunch of stained glass windows, right?
So we're here, we have a few facts.
We're looking through all this dark color, right?
And from that, we're supposed to be objective
on the other side with statistics and evidence.
It's not how we do it.
We end up, as a result, being more afraid than we need to,
like now, or sometimes less afraid than we should be, like with influenza.
But, Doc, you know, the stained glass window is a bad analogy,
because a lot of people look at that and think that's the answer.
And they pray, and they pray for exactly,
hang a second, they pray a lot of people suggest about religion
for exactly this psychology.
So one of the things that coronavirus is scary about is that it's new.
Everybody says, yeah, it's new, it's scary.
Why is that scary?
New is a new cell phone is not scary.
New is not knowing.
And not knowing means we don't know what we need to know to protect ourselves.
And not seeing.
Isn't that it?
We don't know about it and we can't quite see it.
And we can't quite control our own safety because we don't know how to keep ourselves safe.
Talk about seeing.
It's like driving down the road if you can get going at any speed in Los Angeles and your eyes are closed.
That's scary, right?
So we turn, in fact, to religion and many other things, masks, toilet paper, they're all the same.
For a sense of control, when we don't have personal control,
we look for it in other ways.
Wait, masks and toilet paper are the same?
Yeah, and sorry, church.
I'm glad I don't live with you, Doc.
In Islam, right, yeah, right.
But you get it, right?
Now, whenever I hear about this kind of stuff,
I always think of my little dog, Chico,
because, you know, he loves to eat the end of my cereal in the bowl
and when I put it down.
But if I leave the spoon in the bowl,
that is a risk he would.
will not take. He loves
that cereal, but he will not go
near the bowl if there's a fucking spoon
in it. Yet when I pull in the driveway,
he runs right in front of the car.
Two words.
People and dogs
are not good at assessing risk.
That's your... Right?
Yeah. Well, dogs, I've had several
dogs. They're awesome. They're great teachers
about this because they're totally in the moment.
They're taking the cues from absolutely only the evidence
in front of them. Not yesterday,
not tomorrow. Not all these characteristics.
that make risk feel like trauma,
scary or less like control.
Well, yeah.
Okay, so, you know, the panic, I feel,
is making things worse than the actual disease?
What? I see you gesturing.
Yeah, you know, that's absolutely spot on.
Two things.
First of all, panic is when the zombies are attacking us
or the wrong person gets elected, right?
Panic is society run amok.
We're not panicking when we buy total.
It may look silly. We're not doing smart things, like you said, but we're looking for a sense of control, and that's instinctive precaution. It doesn't match the facts. That's what I'm saying. This whole conversation is our fears are what we're going on, not just the evidence alone. But we're not panicking, excuse me, but what we are doing when we overreact is sometimes we're creating other risks. So let me be very specific here. There are people who are more worried about this than they need to be.
And that worry
suppresses their immune system
and makes them more vulnerable
to getting the thing they're worried about.
Yep, yeah. If you lose sleep, if you have stress,
those are terrible factors for your immune system.
Exactly.
You know, the only analogy I could think about this time
is when AIDS hit,
which is not exactly analogous,
but people were panicked.
And I do remember a period
when we didn't know much about it,
and people thought,
they were saying,
maybe it could go airborne
and that made people freak out.
Exactly. It was the not knowing. You said it again.
And the not knowing leaves us feeling like
I don't know how to protect myself. I was putting the mic on for this.
I was telling the guy in the studio that when I was a reporter in Boston in the 80s,
I worked for a union and they wouldn't let me touch any of the gear
until it was time to mic up an AIDS patient. And they were scared.
So I did the micing up because I wasn't.
When you don't know what you need to know to protect yourself,
you're more afraid.
But if I may, to broaden the conversation,
that's only one of these several characteristics
that make us more or less afraid.
We're more afraid of man-made risks than natural risks.
We're more afraid of a risk that's now than later.
That's climate change.
That's why we're not as afraid as we should do climate change, right?
This language of risk perception psychology
that I wrote about and that we're talking about,
this is just one example.
So I feel like our general posture
as a nation has become one of fragile people.
If we were a heartier people
who weren't afraid of everything to begin with,
you know, kids can't walk to school on their own
like they did when I was a kid.
I mean, kids cannot be left alone.
That's a free-range child.
That's verboten these days.
I feel like we would be in a better place to handle this
because we're already so anxious about stuff
that we shouldn't be anxious about.
Don't you think that's a part of it?
It is a part of it,
and it's called in the scientific literature,
the social amplification of risk, which basically means that how we hear about things,
which aren't always perfectly factual and accurate, and they go through our feelings,
lead us to perceive that risk in ways where we do other things that are bad to us,
like teaching our kids that it's a scary world with this, with drills in school that you're
going to be shot, the statistical risk of which is infinitesimal. The messages that we're sending
each other that crime is bad here and oh my god the sky is falling in every which way like
coronavirus is now make no mistake the risk is real and serious and we should acknowledge that
feeds a general sense of what george gurbner at the university of pennsylvania who passed away used to
call the mean world syndrome if all we hear about is that the sky is falling we walk around ducking
what did he pass away from uh being old no not important doc not important
Let me ask you one last question.
I brought this up last week, and I hope it's somewhat true,
which is that I feel like they, they being mean the authorities,
so we don't know quite exactly who's doing the talking,
but the information we get tend to when there's a crisis lurching.
They tend to tell us it's going to be worse,
so that when it's not as bad, we go, oh, good, that wasn't as bad.
It's better to be pleasantly surprised.
You know, the examples I gave were Y2K was going to be horrible at the turn of the century.
And then there was the BP oil spill, which was going to be horrible.
And the fires of Kuwait, remember after the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein lit all the oil wells on fire in Kuwait.
And that was going to be years in the making.
And it was eight months before they put it out.
Do you think that's the same thing here?
They're telling us it's going to be worse so that when it's not as bad, we're pleasantly surprised?
It's part of it, but they're two sides of it.
So let me start on the other side first and get back to your side.
A lot of people in power don't like the fact that people are more afraid than they need to be
and are what they call, you call, panicking, white and toilet paper, right?
They try to control that with the don't panic message.
God, how many times have we heard that from all the people at the very top?
Well, you don't hear it from the reasonable people at the CDC.
You don't hear it from the reasonable people at the WHO.
Joe. They understand the importance of respecting our feelings, not trying to control them and telling
people, hey, you should feel like I want you to feel, which sounds like I want you to feel like
that so you can go buy stocks and be happy and I won't take any grief for this. It's disrespectful to
tell people how they feel. The hells people don't do that, but what they do is what you said.
There's worse coming, and there is. That's a way to put things in perspective now when they get
worse so they won't freak us out even more.
And this talk about, this is like the normal flu, that's not comparing the two diseases.
They're different.
But it is a way of saying, let's put in perspective that we've lived through something like
this before so it doesn't feel as new, which makes it feel scarier.
Okay.
Thank you.
You put a lot in perspective.
I appreciate that.
Stop touching your head.
Thank you, David.
And let's meet our panel.
Thanks, right.
Okay.
Hey.
Hi.
Hi, everybody.
Don't even think about touching me.
All right.
He is a contributor to the bulwark
and former communication director
of Jeb Bush's 2016 presidential campaign.
Tim Miller with us for the first time.
Hey, Tim.
She's a Democratic strategist
and former senior advisor
to Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Liz Smith.
How you doing?
And he's the U.S. national editor
for the Financial Times.
Edward Luce is right over here.
Great to see you.
All right.
There's no overtime.
tonight because, well,
you know, why
kid ourselves?
So I have never
seen events move faster
than during this week.
As I said before,
we are off. Maybe I didn't, so let me
say it now. We are off next week.
We were going to take, we had a hiatus week scheduled
in about two weeks, but we said let's do it
next week since everyone's freaking out and we want
to see where this goes. I hope we
will be back the week after that.
It could be that you're our last
panel for a while. No pressure.
Good thing we have a steady hand
at the wheel. Thank you.
Oh, you mean Trump? I thought it was a shot at
me. Okay. I thought it was too, yeah.
So I have two questions
because I saw today that there was
no food in the store
here. You know, there's literally
lines at the, that's
for bread, which I guess would be
a bread line. You know, like
that can't be good
for a politician. So
given that and everything is canceled,
and no one's going out and no one's going to work
and no one's buying anything.
How can we avoid a depression
and how can the Democrats possibly lose this election?
Don't answer the second one.
Avoid a depression, you need a huge stimulus.
You need Trump to agree to a big injection of cash
to people who need it in the economy,
preferably directly.
As George W. Bush did in 2008,
mail people checks, get it to people,
But we have no money until because we gave it all to tax cuts.
No, money's now cheaper than it's ever been.
You can borrow 1% for 30 years.
So the Treasury can borrow for pretty much nothing.
It's kind of negligent not to in these circumstances.
We're going to have two quarters of deep contraction at minimum.
And the way to assuage that is just mail money to people.
But particularly the people who don't have jobs for whom a payroll tax cut means nothing.
It bypasses them.
altogether?
Well, hopefully,
I'm right about this,
but I think that, you know,
the big question has always been,
Joe Biden, how is he
going to turn people out against Donald Trump, right?
Donald Trump is great at riling people up.
Yeah.
But right now, people want boring.
They want safe.
They want their grandpa there, you know,
telling them it's all going to be okay.
And he did,
it's funny, Howard Stern said this week,
he said, you know,
Joe Biden should go out there
and just pretend he's president already,
and then Biden did it the next day,
and it was the right thing to do.
Yeah, and in front of all those flags.
We want to see that.
We want to see a shadow president,
because we don't have a real one.
Fauci, just like the President of the United States.
When you hear him speak, that's the president.
When you hear Trump speak,
you go buy canned goods at Trader Joe.
Yeah.
The thing I liked about Biden's speech
was he didn't have a whole line of people
effusively praising the sun god for the rain and the sun.
You know, he just went out there.
Right.
He kind of talked about what we should do.
It seemed basically competent, and that's an upgrade.
But honestly, if the Democrats can't win on this message of, you know, we know we're not supposed to say to the Trump people, you're stupid.
Okay, don't.
But just how about you've been had?
Right.
Well, we can say that to Mike Pence, though.
Is it stupid?
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
Yeah, and I think it is a massive indictment.
Like, let's look at, you want to talk about stupid.
So Donald Trump guts the pandemic group in the White House.
Right.
Then we get a global pandemic.
Then he denies that it's coming here.
Then when it comes here, he puts in charge of the handling of it, Mike Pence, a guy who doesn't believe that cigarettes cause cancer, a guy who doesn't believe in climate science, a guy who oversaw the worst HIV outbreak in recent memory, right?
And that doesn't inspire confidence.
That's stupid.
And I really do think that what the American people will want
is, you know, Joe Biden might not send a thrill up your leg.
You know, he might not have a crowd of tens of thousands of people
screaming his name.
But you know he's going to surround himself with the best people.
You know he's going to be hyper-competent.
The thing with the...
The thing with the pandemic is, as terrible as Trump has been,
unless you're in one of some of these marginalized groups, right,
unless you're a refugee trying to get in the country,
unless you're an immigrant that's being caged,
90% of the country
hasn't really been affected in their day-to-day life
by his idiocy.
Like Ukraine, you're right.
You're right. You know, Mueller, none of that stuff.
Nobody, you know, woke up and changed the way
they lived their life, right?
And they actually got richer.
Yeah, right, their 401Ks are doing better.
All the liberals are, I hate Trump, but yes, but yes, you got richer.
He made you richer.
All of a sudden, that starts to make them think,
you know, maybe it is the media in the liberals that are crazy.
Everything seems to be fine.
The economy's fine.
But 79% of Republicans say the government has done a good job
because, of course, they do.
Because it just doesn't get into the facts.
79% isn't that great, actually.
That's a losing number.
79% in this crisis where this moron has done what he's done?
But Joe Biden crutches him if only 79% of Republicans.
I mean, check it in a week.
Check it in a week.
But yeah, it should be 95%.
His approval rating went down 0.5% in the crisis.
So, I mean, on a scale of Mrs. Gerbils being most loyal, because she gave the six-kids cyanide capsules,
rather than live in a world without national socialists, that's most loyal, I would say.
Yeah.
To the average Republican voter who likes Trump, but could be peeled away.
How much will this crisis peel away of the Trump, of the Republican voter?
Because to me, you seem very happy about this number.
It's frightening to me.
95%, by the way, of Republicans think the economic conditions are very good.
Good or very good.
So I'm actually working on this with a group of folks who are looking at trying to get Republicans to support Biden and the general.
And you're really only looking at basically 4 to 8 percent that you need to peel off.
You don't even need to get close to Mrs. Goebbels.
Right?
Like, she can stay.
Ingram can stay.
The people where the red hats can all stay.
To win the election, you know, he only won by 70,000 votes across three states, right?
So the question is, there were a record number of people in 2016 who hated both of them.
Yeah.
I think Liz might have been one of them. I was one of them.
So two of them are here.
Trump, three of them are here.
You all hated Hillary.
I'm in a point.
I do not.
I don't have hate in my heart.
Okay, sorry.
I don't want to project.
Trump won those voters like 70 to 20, right?
So if those people that didn't like them last time don't vote for them, that's all you need.
Okay.
So it was primary day, again, and Biden won five of the six, right?
Yeah.
Bernie won North Dakota, which shouldn't even be a state.
You know, I've said this many times.
Pisses me off that there are two Dakotas.
The Dakota territory has four senators.
Yeah, it's...
And California has two with 40 million people.
There's more people in the state named Dakota.
Than there are in the...
Okay, anyway, so...
I was about to say, five.
With him, it helped produce a movie, you know, Tom Dashel.
There are some good things that came out of Dakota's.
All right.
The point is that Biden is, the point is Biden is
kicking ass.
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, is Bernie being selfish in staying in?
And there's going to be a debate Sunday.
They moved it to Washington, and there are, no live audience, barely two life
cared.
It's, uh, what are they debating about at this point?
Why are we having this, this exercise?
Because I feel it could only hurt Uncle Joe.
which plainly, look, I know he can do the job,
but he is Ronald Coco himself.
He threatened this, you know, a construction worker,
his big go-to is you want to fight?
Who's 78?
And every time there's an argument is like,
you want to take it outside?
I love that moment.
I love the fact that he goes passionate and shush people.
Passionate?
Passionate is one thing, but challenging people to fight?
But it's always been.
It's like roid rage.
It's wrong.
But that's why he's.
But that's why people like Joe Biden.
And you know what?
Because he threatens fighting?
No.
But you know what?
He's not polished, right?
Not every word comes out correctly.
No.
You know, he doesn't always say the right state that he's in.
Or the right wife.
He thought his sister was his wife.
Let me tell you something.
Obama has a big stick.
I love that comment.
He meant to say, speak softly and carries a big stick.
But he said, let me tell you.
I know this man.
He has a big stick.
I mean...
You can't be better than it.
It's entertaining.
It's entertaining.
He sounds like a guy who's just always coming to from being knocked out.
He should be rubbing the back of his...
But he was underestimated every step of this process.
I underestimated him.
And I think I thought, okay, well, he wouldn't excite people.
He expanded the electorate more than Bernie Sanders ever did.
You know, the youth...
The turnout of youth voters is lower than it was in 2016,
as his share of the electorate.
And, you know, I heard all...
over TV on Tuesday from
Liberals saying, you know, we need
the young people to come out in the fall.
We should plan on them not coming out because
they never do. Now look, I'm not
knocking them, first of all, half of
them voted in 2008. This is
the same number that baby boomers
voted in in 1976.
It's not about this generation. It's about
being young. When you're young, you've got
people to fuck and drinks to try.
You're just not into voting.
They've been trying to rock the vote for 30
years. It does not want to be rocked.
It won't be rocked.
We have to plan for winning without the young,
because they don't show up and they won't.
And the ones who would be insulted about that
are not watching this.
You're not watching.
You're doing jello shots, even with the virus.
You don't care about me.
They're high, though.
They forgot to vote.
But that's nihilism.
And this is the thing, we could get them to turn out
if we give them a reason to.
This is the most important.
I know every election cycle
We say it's the most important election cycle.
And this one really is.
It really is.
We're in the middle of a global pandemic.
But they're not, if they don't come out for the primary and vote for their big hero, Bernie Sanders, why?
But that's wrong, though.
He wasn't their big hero.
And the problem is that...
Bernie Sanders is not their big hero?
Sure, in that group.
But he fed the media a bill of goods, and the media took it, hook, line, and sinker.
That he was going to expand the electorate, that he was the sexy candidate who was going to do this.
He didn't do any of that.
Right.
He never expanded his coalition beyond 2016.
And part of the reason why he did so well in 2016
was that a lot of people just were sick of the Clintons.
You know?
And he benefited from that.
I talked to quite a few Bernie voters,
and I think there's a self-defeating message he had,
which is the system is rigged.
Yeah.
And a lot of them, I ask them,
are you going to vote?
They're saying, what's the point?
It's all fixed.
Yeah.
So there was a self-cancelling thing
there amongst the Bernie crowd
that you see on Twitter.
The fix is in.
Yeah.
You see it on Twitter.
Yeah.
It's such bullshit.
It is bullshit.
But it is.
That's it.
It's it.
The people that reply on the tweets are the people that vote, right?
There was supposedly this man behind the curtain of all these other
younger Bernie voters, but they didn't exist.
Like the same people that are, you know, shit posting at me and Liz.
Anytime we say something nice about a neoliberal or a concern, you know, or Mitt Romney,
like those people that are, you know, saying, please clap to me in my Twitter feed.
Like, that's it.
That's all of them.
So you mentioned the ass kissing, which I thought was great for me because I have a little bit here to do about it.
we have given out a couple of times this.
It's called the Ask Kisser of the Month Award.
There was a time, I mean, there's many times.
We've seen this.
Hope Hicks once said, Trump, President, I love this quote.
We gave it to her the first one.
President Trump has a magnetic personality
and exudes positive energy,
which is infectious to those around him.
I thought that was particularly apropos of this week
when he's actually infectious to those around him.
Congressman Diane Black once said,
Thank you, President Trump, for allowing us to have you as your president.
But, and the, who's Stephanie Grisham?
Is she the?
Press secretary now.
Press secretary now.
She once talking about General Kelly, his former chief of staff, and said,
General Kelly was unequipped to handle the genius that is our president.
That's a real quote from here in North Korea.
So this week we're giving it to Mike Pence.
Show the clip.
This is some of what Mike Pence was saying today.
This day should be an inspiration to every American.
Because thanks to your leadership from early on, throughout this process, Mr. President, you've put the health of America first.
Mr. President, you have forged a seamless partnership, but it's all the result of you tasking us with bringing together.
And together, as you've said many times, together we'll get through this.
It's just fucking unbelievable. So anyway, this week's Ask History of the Month.
The last kisser of the month goes to Mike Pence.
Here are some of the other things he said that weren't in the speech.
He said, President Trump is in such amazing shape.
Scientists now believe Kentucky Fried Chicken is good for you.
He said, President Trump can make women orgasm just by liking their tweets.
Wow.
His body creates no waste.
Trump's once-a-year excretion produces a perfect Cadbury egg.
Sometimes when Jared and Ivanka are having sex,
they both pretend the other is Donald Trump.
It's amazing.
Katie Perry's baby, his.
And they wrote it.
They don't know it.
It's amazing how they're not even good audience for their own show.
Fuck you.
The CDC is testing his semen as a vaccine for coronavirus.
This nickname for The Rock is Little Miss Bitch Tits.
He is an incredibly general.
lover, both because of his concern for her pleasure and because he always leaves a tip.
All right.
He is a four-time James Beard Award-winning chef who hosts MSNBC's new series What's Eating America
airing at 9 on Sunday, Andrew Zimmern, Andrew?
Thank you so much.
How you feeling in good health?
Fantastic.
All right.
Don't be shouting because spit could come out of your mouth.
But when I heard about a virus that started from someone eating a virus.
weird animal. I thought
there's only one person to get here. Get me
the head of Andrew Zimmerton.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And any regrets
about your life's work?
No.
I'm kidding. As someone said to me earlier today
because it brings up a couple of really
important issues. I think the first one is
I'm a cultural explorer. Yes, you are.
Not a culinary enabler.
I learned that in rehab.
And I think
I think the, you know, we
practice culinary ethnocentrism.
and culinary racism and have in this country for centuries.
You know, Chinese restaurant syndrome in the 70s,
the MSG complaints, and despite the fact there's more MSG in a can of,
you know, Campbell soup than there is in any Chinese dish in a restaurant in America,
a lot of people seem to want to point fingers and make blame in places that it isn't.
I think your first guest, the risk-reward guy, was talking about that a little bit.
And I think it's just extremely unfair.
playing the blame game does no one any good.
I think that playing the dignity and respect card,
the most powerful drug that we have is where we need to exist.
But yeah, I've eaten a lot of weird stuff in my life.
Yes, you have.
I may have the antibody to the virus.
You might be patient zero.
I don't know.
But I take your point that the Chinese certainly have no monopoly
on putting weird stuff in their mother.
There's something about the human being that will just put anything in their mouth.
Yes.
I don't understand this, but our digestive systems, I think, spoil us.
They're almost too good.
You can almost eat anything.
Culturally, we've actually advanced more than we have physiologically, right?
So what you have to remember is a couple of things.
We've only eaten for pleasure for a very short amount of the human existence, right?
And in that pleasure-seeking, I mean, look at how unfair and grossly incorrect it is,
with 25% of American children going hungry at night, 24, 23% actually, depending on who you look at,
and 24% of Americans going hungry.
We sit there and applaud at the Nathan's hot dog-eating contest.
I mean, I like hot dogs as much as the next guy, but watching someone shove 60 of them in his mouth in two minutes
while there are children going hungry in America at night, something is wrong with that.
We have a perverse love affair with gimmick eating and gimmick foods and, you know, this, you know,
pizza, fried inside a burger, wrapped inside a burrito,
dusted with Cheetos.
We're killing ourselves with our food.
I think there are bigger issues at play here,
but you're definitely onto something
because psychologically we seem to have this desire
to put anything into our mouth that's new.
And over the last 25 years,
as food has become this incredible new sort of rock
in American culture, I think it's gotten worse.
You like hot dog?
I love hot dogs.
Okay. Well, I'm not the next guy.
If it's as much as the next guy.
But I take your point.
And the other reason I wanted to have you on is because hearing you talk,
you sound a lot like things I've said over the last 20 years.
And I feel like I've been very lonely.
You know, food has been a little light motif ever since I've been on TV,
even really before that since the 90s.
I've talked about the fact that, for example, I've complained many times
that until very recently
I had never been to a doctor
no matter for what
who ever said to me
when seeking whatever the cure was
what do you eat
it's the main thing
that affects our health
and they don't ask us
what do you eat
I could go through a list of Bill Marisms
when it comes to food
that I sit there at home and cheer on
we both feel the same way about sugar
we both feel the same way about the diets
that we're putting into our systems
and I think it's extremely
apropos right now in what with the pandemic that we are enduring right now. The fact of the matter
is that we're killing ourselves with our diet, right? We're spending one and a half trillion
dollars a year on the four big food-related diseases, right? So we know that in general,
the American diet is not good for us. The American breakfast, that thing at Denny's with the two
eggs, four French toast, three pancakes, gallon of syrup, scoop of ice cream, you know, all that
kinds of, it's just not good for us, right? We need to be eating less meat, more vegetables,
eating in a more nutritious way,
but eating well in America has become a class issue.
And we're being taken advantage of.
There is such a thing as what I call culinary lawn darts,
and it's called corn syrup.
It's called processed sugar,
where people are making money off of it.
They're pushing it on to Americans,
and we have addicted people to fat and sugar and salt
and other things in a way that is criminal.
No, I mean, when they say that this disease is especially dangerous to people who are elderly or with underlying conditions.
Well, the comorbidity issue, diabetes, pulmonary, cardiopulmonary, these are all the diseases that come from poor diet.
And obesity.
That's correct.
Right.
That's a lot of what the underlying conditions are.
People are not in good health to begin with.
And it's very hard to have a health system that functions, even in good times,
if the people won't, like, put a little skin in the game.
That's exactly right.
But people are making money off of it.
Big pharma is making money off of it.
The doctors, the hospitals, all of that.
You know, it's that follow-the-money thing.
You said something very interesting about no one ever asking you about what you've been eating.
That's in Western medicine.
In Eastern medicine, when I'm in the Far East, I always go to see a doctor.
And it is the first thing they ask.
In fact, they interrogate you about it.
And in fact, what they give you, they don't send you to a drugstore with a prescription.
If they feel that there's something out of whack with you, you get natural homeopathic medicines,
things that we ingest that are actually good for us, that our body responds to.
We kind of have it a little bit backwards in this country.
They interrogate you?
Yes.
Like what do you have for breakfast?
How often, when?
I had a doctor in Hong Kong, follow me out the office.
and across the street because he knew what I did for a living,
and he caught me, he told me, I shouldn't have this,
I shouldn't have this, I shouldn't have this,
and then he caught me eating it 15 seconds later across the street.
It's true story.
I'm not a great patient.
Are you sure that was about food?
Yes.
Okay.
Well, I just want to say, to me, the three S's to get through this.
Sugar, stress, sleep.
get a lot of sleep
don't have sugar
what was the other one
stress and don't stress
turn off the fucking TV
I haven't watched the news all week
I get it we're in trouble
I don't need to see it every two minutes
and I think it's
I've been sleeping better because of it
because I'm either going to get it or not
but that's a whole point like is that
with the present right with Donald Trump
is you know you always talk about how the president's role
is commander chief you know sometimes
the president's role has got to be comforter in chief.
And I appreciated the points you were making earlier about panic
because sometimes the panic can be worse
than some of the underlying things.
And like when Trader Joe's
are turning into Lord of the Fly situations,
it's really bad.
You know?
But he also, what he's not capable of,
and my earnest thought on this,
what he's not capable of what we need from him
and from a president right now
is to explain to people that you're not not going,
you're not having an audience here.
You're not going to a concert you want to go to
because you're going to get sick, right?
Me and Liz, it doesn't matter if we're going to get sick, right?
You're on the borderline.
You're on the edge.
The reason why you don't go...
Are you 80?
People 80 have a 5 out of 6 chance of surviving, which, you know, if that was poker, you'd go, I'm all in on that.
But it's also one bullet in a Russian roulette game, which you wouldn't want to do.
And that's why this should be the president comes to a murder of communal sacrifice.
We are all doing this for each other.
That's the reason why you're not going out
because you don't want the 80-year-old to get sick.
No, you don't. Exactly.
And he's not capable of making that broader communal sacrifice case.
But wait till it affects our food system
and our delivery of that food system.
Because if you take away math and music,
you may get punched in the face,
but you take away bread, you take away rice,
and that's the stuff revolution is made of.
That's the stuff where there's blood in the streets.
And I think there's going to be a big comeuppance
if this thing continues to go on,
and we find that our food delivery system,
people who cook our food, make our food,
immigrants, an unresolved problem.
Immigration reform in this country is going to circle
back like a boomerang on us. We talked
about this in what's eating American, our prime
in Russia. In Wuhan, they didn't run out of food
in China. It's medicine supplies that
matters more. But can I just say I'm 51?
I know I look older.
Only because you're so sophisticated, you know, look old.
The accent, but unjustly puts
points on the IQ. I'm 37.
It's amazingly how
sophisticated I am.
have, which won't surprise you,
as a sort of greater sacrifice for the
neighborhood and the community, I've given up going to the
gym until the end of the year.
And I think we should all do
that.
Well,
I think
countries go through periods
where there's a party, and then the party ends.
We had the gay 90s.
Who remembers the gay 90s?
It was the...
No, no. We're talking about
the 1890s. I get it.
Because you're gay.
The 1890s was that kind of
of time and then there was the roaring 20s
and we had the go-go 80s and we
had the disco 70s and then parties
end when AIDS came around
the party fucking ended in a
big hurry and now the party's over
But there's no party between the recession
and now like I kept waiting for it and it never happened
You don't think we've been on a party for a long time
since we recovered from the last
recession and now with the Trump
era it was starting to get there
it was starting to get there but it was never like the
roaring 20s you know I was expecting a little more
I think because of how slow it happened. Maybe it didn't feel the same way as like the 90s.com boom.
You know, maybe it didn't feel like, oh my gosh, we're throwing around money now because it was such a gradual.
I also think America sees things happen in other countries and things that'll never happen to us.
We see terrorism was like, that's what for other countries to go through.
And then we were the people who had terrorism that is.
And we were the people who saw other people wearing masks.
We're never going to be the masked people. And now we're the masked people.
Everything is we're going to.
to be the people. We should learn that right away. Help out over there and then...
The countries that have been handling this well, like Singapore and Taiwan.
Korea.
And Korea, yeah.
They've been through the drill before with SARS and stuff, but they haven't been declaring national prayer days.
They haven't been sort of calling for religious sort of expectation.
They've been doing it very sort of calmly, expertly.
People trust the government there.
Maybe they shouldn't.
Maybe they shouldn't.
But at times like, normally I wouldn't want to live in Singapore, but if there's an epidemic.
Right, sure.
They're efficient.
I think I would. I think I'd prefer to be there.
Yeah, they're very efficient.
Than in Britain or America.
Well, I also think a country cannot eat its seed corn, as we have been doing in so many different...
I don't mean just economically.
I mean, educationally.
You can't get stupider and stupider and stupider and expect there not to be a reckoning at some point.
Right.
People just, I mean, Trump has his head up his ass.
but the whole country's had its head up as asked for a very long time,
and it's got to bite it.
But that's the point is this could be the point of reckoning.
And maybe we needed to get to the brink,
a brink of a crisis, for people to finally fucking get smarter, you know?
I always thought that, you know, there's this theory that Trump won
because people were going through such hard times
and they wanted somebody to shake it up.
I've always kind of felt like that was wrong.
And, like, the reason why Trump won is because
people were starting to get comfortable, and they were like,
screw it, let's go with the racist game show host
and, like, see how it goes.
And, I mean, I don't want to diminish.
I think there were certain communities where they were going through hard times where Trump did well, like in West Virginia and such.
But he won on the backs of a lot of country club folks, really.
Can I dispute that a little bit?
Life expectancy has been declining in America.
That there is a sort of big middle class problem that's beyond just the gamble on a racist game show host, which is definitely there.
But there is a bigger economic middle squeeze going on.
It's been going on a long time.
And so that's real.
And so that's real.
Trump is not the answer to it.
Yeah.
But if you look at food
and I see everything
through that lens,
this has become a country
where eating well is a class privilege
and so many other things
have become a class privilege.
And while I don't disagree with you
at all,
because I think you're onto something,
I think we've marginalized so many people
and I do hope and pray
that this is that wake-up call.
You were talking...
Oh, sorry.
Oh, no, please.
Talking about the class thing.
As a Brit, I sort of see the class lens
a little bit of people
eating hot dogs and deep fried pizza and
stuff. My neighborhood in Georgetown, D.C.,
there's been a run on fennel
and pelegreino.
The other end of the class spectrum.
It's a very different food habits.
There are two food Americas.
There are two food Americas in this country, and that's a
horror show. Right.
Well, since I don't know exactly
when I'll be seeing you again,
I just want to end on this note.
the virus
does not want to kill you
viruses don't
it's like burning down your own house
then you die
the virus you know
it's like the mafia doesn't want the store
that they're like skimming from to go out of business
they just want to wet their beak a little
so make friends with the virus
no I'm just saying you'll probably be okay
all right it's time for new rules everybody
the rule
okay new rule don't listen to the arrangement
Canadian cleric who says you can cure the coronavirus
by coating your anus with violet leaf oil.
Number one, it doesn't work,
although it makes the sheet smell terrific.
And number two, you're going to get a lot of unwelcome
sexual attention from bees.
Also not true is the Facebook post
that claims cocaine kills the coronavirus,
although I definitely prefer that cure
over an ass full of bees.
New rule, Joe Biden.
has to stop smiling in a way that makes it look like he's already
hot a stroke.
Look, just make it until November.
Then you can have all the strokes you want.
New Rule, stop saying Mike Bloomberg
will be remembered for spending half a billion dollars
and only winning American Samoa.
He dropped out 10 days ago.
We already forgot him.
This is a picture of Robert Durst.
New Rule, instead of serving me a thick milkshake
with a paper straw, just dump it on the ground
and tell me to go fuck myself.
New Rule, people on social media
have to stop acting like the argument is over,
and you've won because you typed out the word, period.
Trump is the greatest president ever, period.
Evolution is fake news because Jesus wrote a dinosaur.
Period.
Well, okay, but allow me to retort.
Did you graduate from high school?
Question mark.
And finally, New Rule,
if you hate all the things that good liberals
are supposed to hate,
like environmental destruction, exploited labor, greed, gluttony, and disease,
you need to join me in calling for an end to cruise ships.
And instead of the 30-day pause that President Trump announced today
in a pledge to keep this great and important industry going,
let's take this opportunity to push the entire disgusting business out to sea
and give it the Viking funeral it so richly deserves.
If there is a silver lining to pandemics, it's that they force a situation.
to rethink traditions like shaking hands,
sharing a dessert, making out with the dog.
And yes, even passing a joint.
Well, to that list, we should add cruise ships.
Cruise ships are what happens when someone asks,
what if my hotel could sink?
Let's not forget, cruise ships were terrible before Corona.
Calling a cruise ship a floating petri dish
It was kind of funny the first 300 times
some gross disease swept through the cabins
but it's not that funny anymore
because petri dishes are small and controllable
and stay locked in a lab where they can't hurt anybody.
Crew ships, on the other hand, are large
and quite difficult to control
which is why they keep crashing into things
like docks and rocks
and each other.
And that lack of control extends to the interior
of the ship as well.
a virus looking for a host,
a cruise ship is like spring break,
Marty Graw in Las Vegas, all rolled into one.
You're going to get laid.
But unlike Vegas,
what happens on a cruise ship does not stay on a cruise ship.
When the coronavirus started infecting cruise ships,
all the other viruses were like,
who's the new guy?
Now, there's a lot of blame to go around
for letting this cat out of the bag,
but until two weeks,
ago, the largest outbreak outside China,
over 700 people, was on a cruise ship.
Then the Grand Princess off San Francisco
became the second one. I remember
when guys in San Francisco would be thrilled
when the fleet came in. Not anymore.
These ships have simply
gotten out of hand. Look at
this thing. That's not a cruise ship.
It's a death star.
Vacation. Looks like a floating
housing project.
Royal Caribbean has a ship now that whole
6,680 passengers.
Even smaller cruise ships emit as much air pollution as a million cars
and pump 150,000 gallons of sewage into the ocean each week.
More if the potato salad sat out.
And I hate to be a vacation scold,
but the reason you can afford a week of all-inclusive fun
is because in the middle of the ocean,
there are very few laws or people to.
who enforce them.
Kind of like Texas.
Scant labor laws.
So a kitchen worker for the Princess Line
works 13 hours a day,
seven days a week, for six straight months.
It's not a grand hotel at sea.
It's a slave ship with a food court.
You may think the crew below deck
is having a rollicking good time
because you remember Titanic.
But the actual living conditions
are more like the room
where Jeffrey Epstein killed himself.
Oh, and you know what's happened 322 times so far this century on a cruise ship?
Someone fell overboard, which is code for got murdered.
Really? You think you're going up top to play King of the World?
Next thing you know, you're playing girl from the opening of Jaws.
Finally, if you've ever been on a cruise, think about your day on board.
Did you really do anything you couldn't do on land?
They have movie theaters and laser tag and skisks.
painting rings at Starbucks.
Congratulations.
You set out for the West Indies
and you made it to West Covina.
I don't get the selling point.
Our ship will make you feel like
you're not on a ship at all.
Then why go?
Some of the new ships actually have
fake windows with a screen
that shows footage of the ocean.
So you can imagine you're on a ship
while you are on a ship.
It's like having sex while you fantasize
about jerking off.
Wouldn't you rather do this?
on the actual ocean.
It's cheaper, safer, and fuck,
you don't have to sit through the magician.
All right, that's our show.
Hopefully not our season.
We're off next week.
I want to thank my guest to Miller,
Liz Smith, Edward Luce,
Andrew Zimmern, and David Ropee.
All right, we'll see you hopefully a week after this.
Stick with it.
Good night.
Catch all new episodes of Real Time
with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10
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