Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #592: Kenneth Branagh, Frank Bruni, Batya Ungar-Sargon

Episode Date: March 12, 2022

Bill’s guests are Kenneth Branagh, Frank Bruni, and Batya Ungar-Sargon (Originally aired 3/11/22) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcast...choices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series Real Time with Bill Maugh. Thank you, people, maskless people. Thank you very much. Great to see you. And I do mean I can finally see you. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Yes, it's been,
Starting point is 00:01:05 it's been almost oh thank you geez what did I do thank you okay thank you that's I'm very
Starting point is 00:01:21 I'm very humble thank you wow these people fucking love me I don't know what I it must be the man you're not wearing this the first time in two years
Starting point is 00:01:29 I have seen an audience thank you great news I don't ever want to see another mask unless you're a surgeon or a Michael Jackson impersonator, okay? That's... Let's go back to when I thought Fauci
Starting point is 00:01:48 was a brand of expensive handbag. You know, I... Two years. I mean, the place Russia was trying to install a puppet government two years ago was here. It's a long time. But, you know... Now the things are opening up,
Starting point is 00:02:10 I was out with a bunch of people there, they said, let's go someplace expensive. So I took them to a Chevron station. That's the thing. We can finally leave the house, and we can't afford to drive anywhere. No, I was putting the nozzle in my car the other day. It felt like I was taking it up the ass.
Starting point is 00:02:31 I mean, I was, I know. There's a gas station in Mendocene. County here in California. Charging $8.45 for a gallon of gasoline. For that money, they should check your oil and your prostate. That's...
Starting point is 00:02:52 But, of course, part of it is because we cut off the oil from Russia, which we had to do, because the terrible war in Ukraine, as people say, we are all Ukrainians now. And by that, I mean, we're also armed with the teeth and our English ain't too good. But...
Starting point is 00:03:13 But we, Americans, when they go all that on something, like now everything Russian is bad, everything. I mean, we are boycotting everything. Russian vodka, pour that shit down the drain. Wouldn't it be better if we used it up? I don't know. The crew. Yeah, you know, Russian dressing.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Can't have that. Don't even think about playing that game where you take a revolver and put one bullet in it. No, that's... It's... Don't... Don't call it that. You're going to do it.
Starting point is 00:03:58 It's called a night out with Nicholas Cage. That's what we... These are scary times, because, you know, the more we put Putin in the corner, God knows what he'll do. I mean, what freaks me out is every time I see a picture of Vladimir Putin, he's sitting by himself at the end
Starting point is 00:04:16 a ridiculously long table all by himself. He's like a cross between... between Ivan the Terrible and Howie Mandel. And, you know, we don't want to start World War III, right? I mean, we're caught in the middle here. We're trying to help Ukraine, but do it, you know, from the sidelines. We're like the gay best friend in a romantic comedy.
Starting point is 00:04:42 That's American. All right, we've got a great show. We have Frank Bruni is here. And Batia Ungar Sargon. First up, he is the writer, director, and producer of the film, Belfast, nominated for seven Academy Awards, one of my favorites. Kenneth Ronna is here.
Starting point is 00:04:58 Wow. Sir. What a great pleasure. I mean that. So sincerely. Thank you. I appreciate that, well, thank you. Welcome to America.
Starting point is 00:05:09 Thank you very much. And I want Americans to see your movie because it's a fantastic movie. Thank you very much. Thank you. But I feel like we need to set it up. Because Americans, they're not great on history. You know, as most historical movies,
Starting point is 00:05:24 when they make them for the American audience, they put like a crawl at the beginning in the movie, you know. In 1378, France was under the rule of... Because otherwise... Handy. Yeah, well, they just don't know. That's not our big thing. It's like the present and old-timey days.
Starting point is 00:05:40 I think we're a lot like you to be perfect, you. Really? Okay, so I'm going to do the geography, and then I want you to do the history. I think people know that there's England. They can picture that, and next to that, the island of Ireland. I don't think they understand. sometimes that England is really the UK, the United Kingdom, made of four provinces. England is one of them, Scotland, Wales, and then Northern Ireland is a piece of Ireland,
Starting point is 00:06:08 but it's part of the UK, and that's where the heartaches begin. Yeah, well put. Okay, so we're talking about in 1968 your childhood when the troubles began. Because in that Northern Ireland part, which again, part of England, half Catholic, half Protestant, unlike Ireland itself, which is all Catholic, okay, why did it start? They lived together for a long time, Protestants and Catholics in Delfast. Why did it start then?
Starting point is 00:06:36 Well, just like in your country in the mid-60s, you'll know much better than either, there was a civil rights movement, and that was definitely on the streets in the north of Ireland, and that was expressing the dissatisfaction of the in the north, as you rightly say, the minority Catholic population who believed that they were not,
Starting point is 00:06:54 free to the same kinds of social and economic opportunities as the dominant Protestant population of the UK-controlled North. So that was expressed. The assertion of those rights expressed through the civil rights movement from the mid-60s onwards by 69, August 15th, 69, when the events at the beginning of this film unfold, it spills into violence. Violence that, in the case of my own particular story,
Starting point is 00:07:20 was in one street, one neighborhood. we were mainly Protestants in that street, probably 70-30, but we loved our Catholic neighbors, and we got on with our Catholic neighbors with the same size houses, with the same kinds of jobs, we did the same kind of things, but in one fell swoop, a Protestant mob came down the street, marked the houses of the Catholics with stones.
Starting point is 00:07:41 They broke the windows, essentially said, we know where you live, time to get out. And then what followed in that awful August of 69, the summer of love here, there was the biggest displacement of population in a European city since the end of the Second World War. And hundreds of thousands of Catholics were forced to move and there was a population rearrangement which began, as you say,
Starting point is 00:08:04 a dark, dark period in the history of that part of the world of 30 years of the troubles. And it's so interesting. I mean, the way you bring it home in a very human way that everybody can relate to is because, I mean, you're a Protestant family. Yeah. And you had good parents. They kind of remind me of my parents. mentioned the civil rights. I lived in a house that I thought was a bit of an outlier in the 60s, an all-white town. But my parents made me understand when I was a kid what was right and wrong about what was going on in America with civil rights. And your parents sort of did the same thing. I mean, because people came and threatened you. You're Protestant. They wanted to get rid of the Catholics. And people came to your father and said, you're either with us or against us. Okay? There's no being in the middle here. And your father stood up to that.
Starting point is 00:08:50 to and people did try and try to. And in the subsequent period, people try to live what you might call a sort of independent existence where that really difficult thing to do of disagreeing fundamentally with someone not translating to
Starting point is 00:09:06 then hating them or rejecting them, but doing the even more difficult thing of actually trying to understand them. That was what the example he said. And also doing the difficult thing when people become tribal, which is what we have here in America, the very difficult thing, which is what we try to do
Starting point is 00:09:28 here on this show, to sometimes no success at all, of trying to say, I'm not with either tribe. I'm thinking for myself about this issue. I'm not going to join with you because you hate the Catholics for reasons I do not. And that seems to be what your, you know, your father and your mother are telling you in this movie. And a nine-year-old has to be taught that. It does have to be taught that, and also you have to you know so much as you say that is in between is that grey area.
Starting point is 00:09:58 And the reason we told the story of this family's journey through the eyes of a nine-year-old is that often we forget that that child's eye view of the world, which is a useful place to see the world from sometimes, not to be naive and sentimental, but because there's a simplicity to it
Starting point is 00:10:15 that I think is very pure and can be very open. But it's also the price that is paid when violence comes to visit is that, you know, that things not only get polarized, but the people whose lives will be forever affected by it,
Starting point is 00:10:31 you know, across decades and decades of whatever you might call it, damage or psychic baggage or trauma or whatever it might be, which also has long-term domino knocking over effects, I think, is what gets lost in the immediate kind of standoff that is sometimes, you know, polarizing, and it can be very much.
Starting point is 00:10:51 magnetic and compelling leader to leader, but in the middle, there's a lot of real people with simple challenges to get through their day. And this obviously is an issue that is still with you all these years later. Yeah. Why now to make the movie? I mean, you could have made it.
Starting point is 00:11:08 You've been a movie maker, a director, a producer. I mean, you've made your own films for a very long time. Why at this moment in your life did you make this movie? Well, you talked about very lovingly about your own parents, and I think one of the things that was gifted me was my parents' belief that their stories were important to them, but not special, and some of the Irish DNA was to not believe
Starting point is 00:11:32 that your story was more important than somebody else's, often to an extreme degree, so that when we left Belfast in a sort of traumatic situation, but we were a loving family who managed to stay together, and we never ever spoke about it. So 50 years, or we never ever... Really? Well, because the... Cardinal sin would be...
Starting point is 00:11:51 Well, you moved to England, right? Yeah, we moved to England. You're Irish, but you moved to England. Is that why you speak British? Yeah, I guess it is. It's across the... I guess it's because... Because I must...
Starting point is 00:12:03 You spotted it. You know, the movie, I started to watch it and I was like, I got to put on the fucking subtitle. Because... No, really. Because, I mean, the Irish accent is pretty heavy. It is, but it's also a beautiful accent.
Starting point is 00:12:15 It is beautiful. It is beautiful. It's my heritage. Exactly. It has many, many, many sort of complexions. But, you know, one of the things I wanted to do, Bill, when I left is I just wanted to... I left the most amazing extended family, a communal street life. For me, it was another beautiful day in the neighborhood every day, and I did not understand why my friend, who happened to be Catholic, today and this morning was my friend, and I could play with him, and this afternoon a man came and told me I couldn't because he's a Catholic.
Starting point is 00:12:39 He's got a badge that I shouldn't approve of. That's been messing with my mind for 50 years, so that's why I wrote it. Wow. If only they... When I was a kid, I wish they took me. me away from the Catholics. Well, can I ask, may I ask you a question? May I ask you a question, which is, have you found that that part of your Catholic upbringing,
Starting point is 00:13:05 wherever you've arrived at now, has behaviors or a legacy that you still can't get away from? You know, that thing of the Jesuits would say, show me the kid till seven and I'll show you the adult. Just some of it stay with you and you hate that? Oh, fuck yes. I mean, I made a whole movie called Religious. I'm bitter. You know, I mean, it embittered me. I had, we went to some of catechism.
Starting point is 00:13:30 Yes, or Christ. Of course, I didn't mean that. Oh, you mean, that was the main subject, yes. Well, the nuns were married to Christ. And apparently he was not putting out because they were mean. And they were mean to me in particular. Anyway. So,
Starting point is 00:13:53 could this happen again, though? I've been reading recently that the Catholic population I think at the beginning of the century was well outnumbered like 53 to 43 or something like that in Northern Ireland. So the Protestants
Starting point is 00:14:09 have always been dominant, which because they were part of England, again, a Protestant country, served them. Now, as we've seen in other parts of the world, like the same kind of situation in Palestine, you know, in Israel, there's a kind of a demographic time bomb they're talking about.
Starting point is 00:14:25 The Catholics now could become the dominant, the majority population-wise, in Northern Ireland, which would just increase the desire to unite with the whole country of Ireland, which again, the country itself only became independent in 1922. Before then, the British had subjugated it. You worry that the troubles could begin again? I think that since 1998 through the efforts of, All parties, but particularly, as you'll know, Senator George Mitchell,
Starting point is 00:14:57 and President Clinton who was involved in the Good Friday Agreement, a sort of a squaring of the circle of many, many divided groups in the North of Ireland was made, reducing the violence hugely, but still creating a situation where the peace was uneasy, remains uneasy, and has to be one every day. I think that across a generation, across my lifetime, that saw 3,700 people lost in the troubles that lasted for 30 years, isn't damaged, in some ways, irreparably,
Starting point is 00:15:26 that that part of the world, followed by 25 years of relative peace, has shown a generation, including people who are the age of the little boy who played the central character in our film, that something else is possible. It's hard to achieve. It continues to live inside friction-packed relationships
Starting point is 00:15:42 in an atmosphere that is trying to polarise and trying to make it tribal, but they see across one generation at the terrible cost of not talking to each other and the possibility, however, compromised in feeling it sometimes is of talking to each other. And as you say, this is on offer. They're the same people. It's the same thing if you go to Palestine.
Starting point is 00:16:04 Yeah. You know, I mean, I've been there when I was making that movie, and, you know, you eat in an Arab restaurant or something, and the Jewish bodyguards are nervous because terrorism is. But basically the people are just, they're the same people. Yeah. As the Protestants in the Catholic, the same people. Yeah. It takes someone to stir up the shit.
Starting point is 00:16:22 You're right. And that's when the bad stuff... And one of the things that there's appeal to audiences with this movie that has been touching is that I've seen, to sort of quote your example, a guy from Congo who was at a screening and he saw me afterwards, tears running down his face saying, that's my story.
Starting point is 00:16:39 A girl from Iran who comes up to me after and says, that's my story. And the universe... Sarajevo. Yes, same thing. And what it deals with, what the movie deals with, is a couple of things that people identify with.
Starting point is 00:16:50 Family, the necessity for it, the need for it, and at its most functional, and of course it's tough because families often aren't functional. But in as much as they can be, that speaks to people as does the coping mechanisms that said families try to use. What is that? Laughter. Laughter. Music, dancing, ad hoc parties,
Starting point is 00:17:09 you name it, all the stuff that for a second releases you from the terrible pressure and tension and unhappiness created by holding these fixed positions where you choose not to understand what someone opposite. you is trying to say. And it's a lesson we have to learn every day. He did it beautifully. Thank you. And I just want to say one more thing, dear.
Starting point is 00:17:31 I remember when you first came on the scene, you know, you did Henry V, you did Hamlet, and people said, oh, this guy is like our generation's Lawrence Olivier. And I just want to say, you did it. That's exactly what you did. You became this generation's Lawrence Olivia. Well, thank you very much. Great pleasure to meet you, sir. Thank you so much. Congratulations on the moment. Okay. Time to meet our panel.
Starting point is 00:17:54 How you doing? Okay, she is the Deputy Opinion editor of Newsweek and author of Bad News, How Woke Media is Undermining Democracy, Batia Ungar Sargon. Great to see you. And he's a professor. Oh, a professor now, excuse me, of media and public policy at Duke University and author of the New York Times bestselling book, The Beauty of Dusk on Vision, Lost and Found. Frank Bruni,
Starting point is 00:18:26 back for this. Great to see you, my friend. Okay, so, boy, it's some scary news lately. You know, I've been hearing a lot about Putin and nuclear weapons. You know, as people say to me, I don't follow the news because it's so depressing. And I always say, well, you know, people who don't engage as citizens, you make the news worse eventually. So I can't really endorse that position. But a week like this, I kind of get it because when I hear about, you know, Putin nuclear, and the other word I hear a lot this week is off-ramp.
Starting point is 00:18:59 we have to give Putin an off-ramp in Ukraine because we're doing the right thing by squeezing him, but it's also making him more desperate. So thoughts on the off-ramp and avoiding nuclear war? Just a tiny question. Yeah, anybody want to feel that one? Al-Lidd, you take this one first. Sure, sure, why not?
Starting point is 00:19:20 Pass the buck, you know. You know, look, I am in the off-ramp camp. I believe that if you're not going to absolutely call it, crush your enemy, you have to give them a way out. And the thing is, we're not going to crush Russia. We are not going to crush Putin. We should not be invading. We should not be giving a no-fly zone.
Starting point is 00:19:39 Now, here's the interesting thing that people who are disconnected from the news, as well as people who are connected from the news, don't know, which is that on Monday, Putin laid out three conditions for immediately stopping the campaign in Ukraine, the invasion of Ukraine, that war there. The three conditions were
Starting point is 00:19:55 that Ukraine give up trying to become part of NATO, that the Crimea be declared part of Russia and that the Donbos region be recognized as independent. In other words, Putin said, if you recognize the actual status quo, I am willing to stop this immediately. Then later that night, Zelensky gave an interview to ABC News where he said, on NATO, he is willing to give up his claim to NATO, his request to join NATO. On the Donbos and on Crimea, he said those requests, he's not going to accept them as ultimatums.
Starting point is 00:20:29 but he is willing to negotiate on them. In other words, the two sides of this conflict on Monday of this week said that there is room to negotiate and agreed on much of the territory. You did not hear about that in any of the mainstream media except for a tiny bit here, a tiny bit there. Why aren't the headlines saying the two sides are willing to accept some of the same conditions?
Starting point is 00:20:50 They're moving towards each other. You only read about that in the Israeli news. Why is that? Why aren't we helping them to end this? Why are we escalating in our media? Well, that's your book. We're going to get to that in the second part of the show. That's the media question.
Starting point is 00:21:06 You're right. That all sounds very rational, but I don't think we're in the realm of the rational here. I don't think Putin is acting rationally. I mean, so I'm not as confident as you are that this thing can be negotiated. You know, like sanctions, for example. I think we're doing the right thing. The more sanctions, the merrier. I don't think they're going to work, though,
Starting point is 00:21:22 because Putin isn't playing in the field of economics. Putin is playing in the field of ego. his and his countries. And, I mean, this is war as a narcissistic meltdown, right? I mean, this isn't rational. Well, he would have a different point of view. The economics is going to bleed into the ego part because in two weeks we have taken the Russian economy
Starting point is 00:21:45 and completely decimated it. I mean, you know, people there are already feeling it. I mean, I'm sure he has cut off as much as he can, the news getting in there, but it's going to get in. This is the 21st century. You can't stop people from understanding what's going on. And when they can't get into their bank accounts and when they can't get food and when the ruble has fallen as much as it has,
Starting point is 00:22:06 they're going to understand something is going on here. I think they already do. And, yeah. So, I mean, the problem is that he is now a guy who's Mr. Macho. I mean, I think he did this. In his mind, he wanted to be a savior. That's what I always think, men who are at that level, they have all the money in the world, they have all the power.
Starting point is 00:22:25 what's left. Same thing with Trump, I think, and is Trump. I'm going to be the savior of this country. They were both wrong, but that's what he thought. I'm going to get Ukraine back. This is our Slavic birthplace. This is, that's what he... He's going to be the ruin of his country. No, because, right, he, we've talking about people who are talking about he's Hitler. He's not even Mussolini. So he looks emasculated with his army. I mean, they are going to eventually get there. They're going to do what the Russian army always does when they get into trouble. They're just going to level places. they're doing it already. Right. But they're going to do it like they did in Chechnya and like they did in Syria.
Starting point is 00:23:04 It's going to get ugly. So, yeah, off-ramp would be a great idea. I don't see why. I don't see. What would it help for the Russians to know more? I mean, there's already 14,000 of them who have been in prison for protesting. Russia's not a democracy. It doesn't matter what the Russian people want, right? It matters what Putin is going to do, right?
Starting point is 00:23:24 Now, he told us in December. He told us in December. He said, I want a commitment that Ukraine will not be part of NATO. He was laughed out of the room. Now, I'm not saying that if we had given that commitment then, he wouldn't have invaded. I don't know. I agree with you. He's not behaving rationally.
Starting point is 00:23:37 But we could have tried. You know what I mean? We could have tried. It does matter what the Russian people want. It depends on how many of them. When enough people want something different, I mean, there was one time a thing called the Russian Revolution. You know, they did once get in the streets and overthrow the government.
Starting point is 00:23:53 And they could do it again if enough of it. of them are unhappy. They have been not that unhappy because, like in China, he bought them off. He built a middle class. I just feel like we are escalating to punish Putin for doing something wrong, something evil, something terrible.
Starting point is 00:24:10 But us punishing him for that is prolonging the suffering. It's prolonging the war, and it's prolonging the cost here as well. I don't know why you're making us sound like the villains here. We're in a really tough spot, you know? I mean, we want to help the Ukrainians, but we don't want to start World War III.
Starting point is 00:24:27 And, I mean, we can be critical of our own government's actions, but let's not take our eye off the ball. The villain here is Vladimir. I totally agree with you. I totally agree with you. All due respect, it sounds to me like you're going through all these ways in which we are not dealing properly with Putin. Let's put the blame where lies.
Starting point is 00:24:45 I totally agree with you. Of course, Putin is the villain here. Of course, nobody is responsible for his murderous actions except for him. Completely agree with that. our job right now is to figure out how to save Ukrainian lives right now. And the way to do that is to de-escalate, is to be anti-war, to figure out an off-ramp for this. Where are we from war?
Starting point is 00:25:05 Because we're not going to sanction our way until the end of this. So you do no sanctions? No, I think the sanctions are a good start. We have to take a moral stand. And to your point, in terms of the sanctions, I don't think they're going to work because, as I said, I don't think we're dealing with a rational man. And yet, there is dissent in Russia already,
Starting point is 00:25:20 despite a magnitude of censorship here that amounts to attempted national brainwashing. And even so, we have seen people protesting. We've seen people protesting, though they are then incarcerated for it. So, I mean, if better information gets into Russia, if his clampdown on a free press doesn't work, and it's not working entirely, and if sanctions squeeze people, I mean, I think that might be our best hope. And they're going to, well, let's talk about how they're squeezing us, because this week we announced Biden did.
Starting point is 00:25:46 We're not going to buy Russian oil anymore. No, Russian oil is pretty big part of it. the third leading oil producer. It's about 10% of the market. And, you know, oil is fungible. People hear that word. I don't know if they really... You know, you explain fungible?
Starting point is 00:26:04 I'm going to tell you the classic Las Vegas joke. And that will explain fungible. Here's the classic Las Vegas. There's a guy standing in front of a casino. Let's just say it's the Mirage, the best one. That's where I work. And a guy comes up to him and he says, hey, buddy, my wife, she's sick.
Starting point is 00:26:23 She needs an operation. I'm the money. Can you give me money? If you don't give me money, my wife's going to die. And the guy says, well, I can give you the money. But how do I know you're going to go right back into the casino and drop it on the tables? And the guy says, oh, I got gambling money. Because money is fungible. You see my point about fun. And the same thing with oil. When we cut off the oil from Russia, it raises the price because it's fungible. Because all around the world, we're taking really from the same pot. And then who gets richer? from that? Vladimir Putin. I mean, there's something very strange
Starting point is 00:26:58 about Biden saying, you know, we're going to cut off Russian oil, but I'm going to go and beg Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Iran, the people who, like, a few weeks ago, we cut off and wouldn't buy their oil because they were the bad guy. But now they're less the bad guy. We've got to find
Starting point is 00:27:14 a better way to play this game than who's the bad guy or the weak we're not buying oil from. Well, it's a great argument. You're making a great argument for energy independence, and you're making a great argument for cleaner energy. Except that... We're not doing so well on either one of those.
Starting point is 00:27:33 Well, wait, wait, wait, wait. I thought that Bill was making a better argument for drilling more at home. I mean, isn't that essentially what you're saying? No, I was making an argument to go seeing me at the mirage. But... But... No, but here's the thing is
Starting point is 00:27:56 we always have the card before the horse. We're like, okay, we're going to stop drilling here domestically. And look, I... environmentalist. I don't want us to keep polluting. The news keeps getting worse and worse. I mean, we found that this week the Amazon has reached this
Starting point is 00:28:11 tipping point. If we don't save it now, it's going to become Savannah, which I'm not sure what it is, but I don't think it's nice and wet. So, but the problem is that we, you know, like, no, we're not going to get oil from Russia, but we still need the same amount of oil. You know? No, we're not going to
Starting point is 00:28:33 drill here, but we still keep using the same amount of oil. You know, I, I, I, That's the problem, is that we don't... I read that last year, no, 2020, we bought more trucks than cars. We're such... Everybody's like on Instagram, I'm so much environmentalist, and yet everybody needs...
Starting point is 00:28:52 I live in the suburbs, but I need a truck that can pull a redwood over a whale. No one cares enough. Well, I mean, with the price of a gallon of gas where it is if that truck is using a lot of gas, it may be a lot less popular in the near future. Right. Yes, right. I think we're seeing a lot of is, you know, this week we saw as gas prices start, you know, really climbed really high.
Starting point is 00:29:20 You had a lot of these, like, very rich liberal celebrities out there being like, you know, I am willing to pay up to $15 a gallon for gas. Or, you know, President Biden saying, yeah, it's going to hurt, it's going to hurt. You know, or Bett Midler being like, I'm willing to pay more. She's worth $250 million. dollars. This is class warfare masquerading as vanity morals. It's the morals of the elites and who has to pay the price. It's the working class. It's the guy...
Starting point is 00:29:52 It's on the courts. You know, they're going to buy electric cars. It's like you let them eat cake of 2020, right? Let them drive electric cars, right? No, you're totally right on that. And you are explaining why we elected Donald Trump in 2016. You're explaining that's... Absolutely. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:30:09 And it's because of that elite disregard for the people feeling the pain. And I saw today in the paper, Biden's approval rating still at 42, not good, and that he's in a dead heat with Trump, 45 to 45, for the next election. And you know, Trump, of course, is just going to pull stuff out of his ass on this issue,
Starting point is 00:30:29 as he always goes. Remember when I was president? Gas was 99 cents? And then the next... A week later, but gas was $0.49 when I was... But gas was free. I think we'll remember it was free gas. I mean, it's...
Starting point is 00:30:48 And the environment was perfect, and there wasn't a problem in the land. Crystal clear, Frank. The water was cleaner. It's all good, yeah. Okay, so, I mean... Yeah, I can't... If we were not in total government paralysis, I feel like this country, if it was a normal country
Starting point is 00:31:06 or the way it used to be semi-normal, we could make a grand bargain where the left gave up some things, you know, they would, I mean, nuclear. I'm not for nuclear. I know it's not a perfect solution, way less, but it's like there are no perfect solutions. Give a little on that one.
Starting point is 00:31:23 Or maybe even fracking. As long as we're going to use the energy, use it here, use the stuff that we get, because we're a big energy producer now. We won't do that. And the right, they could give up a little on green energy and at least trying to build up that sector more.
Starting point is 00:31:42 But we're not going to do that. So we're just going to, I don't know. You spent the whole beginning of the show talking about the problem here, tribalism. Tribalism, yes. We've become so extreme that we routinely let the perfect be the enemy of the good. And that's true on the right and the left both.
Starting point is 00:31:56 Well, okay. I'm always amazed at what goes viral. I always try to predict it and I can't. And then when I see what goes viral, I'm like, oh, my God, why did that go viral? Okay, so I saw this thing on TikTok this week. Some psychologist put out this TikTok video on how you know a relationship is over, like the five ways.
Starting point is 00:32:19 And all I could think of was, like, the people on TikTok must be so young that this shit is news to you? You know, like, you need someone to tell you this? Can you show a little of this guy? I mean, here's, yeah, here's some things like, you are no longer interested in emotional and physical intimacy. Duh. You would rather be alone
Starting point is 00:32:48 than spend time with your partner. You can't have a conversation without leading to conflict. These are the things, again, duh, duh, duh. That you know the relationship observer. So we thought we would offer a more specific group of ways you know.
Starting point is 00:33:02 Would you like to see how we would have known the relationship that's over? Okay. She starts using her wedding ring to open bottles. Okay. When she borrows your razor, it's to shave another man's ball.
Starting point is 00:33:19 Okay. And that's a... He says, let's not ruin this moment by talking. And it's during marriage counseling. The only time you smack each other's ass is when you're killing a bug. Ways you know the relationship is. You're married. Some little ways to...
Starting point is 00:33:58 When you... When you ask his favorite part of being a parent, he says, the babysitter. That's a surfire. She buys new bath towels that say hers an asshole. And you used to worry that someone will steal him. Now you fantasize someone actually will. Okay. So let's talk.
Starting point is 00:34:32 Now we can talk about your book. I thought it's fascinating. Really interested it. It's called How Woke Media is Undermining Democracy. So I thought, I'll put it on my reporter's hat, and I'll ask the how, when and how. These are my three questions. What made it woke? How woke me needs, undermines it?
Starting point is 00:34:49 What made it woke? When did it happen? And how does it undermine democracy? In other words, tell me your whole book right now. Oh, God. Wait, in 30 seconds or less. Go. Okay.
Starting point is 00:35:02 Read me the questions one by one. First question. What made it woke? The abandonment of the working class. Journalism used to be a working class. trade. It was a very low status job. Journalists lived in working-class neighborhood. They lived next door to factory workers and linemen. Jimmy Breslin. Exactly. Maybe a little bit more money than them. They saw themselves as outside of power demanding justice on
Starting point is 00:35:22 behalf of the little guy. Throughout the course of the 20th century, there was a status revolution among journalists to where journalism became basically an elite cast. It is now the provenance of basically people who are very, very, very highly educated, who come from rich, rich parents who come from money. of course there are exceptions, but by and large, the pathway to becoming a journalist now is through the elites, through elite universities. And that has, as journalists ascended to the ranks of the elites, they abandoned the working class that they used to belong to. And I argue that today they're using a moral panic about race to distract from the ways in which they have benefited from income inequality in America. So it's a distraction from the real divide, which is economic and about class rather than political even.
Starting point is 00:36:09 I would even say the tribalism. It's not about politics. That's a mirage. The divide in America is about class. Second question. When? When? When?
Starting point is 00:36:24 Who, what? Why we're? I'm a journalist right now. When did this change take place? Great. Slowly and then all at once. It started around the 50s and the 60s and the 70s. In the 60s, people got televisions,
Starting point is 00:36:36 which meant that suddenly a profession where college was never a premium. the majority of journalists never had a college degree before that. After that, the newspapers wanted a more interpretive kind of journalism because you could get the immediate stuff directly from the TV. That's not a bad thing. That's not a bad thing at all. Well, I mean, I kind of think. For a journalist, I think that it had a very corrosive effect. A college degree?
Starting point is 00:36:59 Yeah, I'm going to get to that in the undermining democracy bit. So, all right, so the 70s, you had all the president's men. This movie came out, right? And suddenly, like a journalist could be this, like sexy sex pot who brings down a president, you know? Suddenly it seemed like it was a glamorous profession. All of a sudden, so someone like JFK who worked on the Harvard Crimson, he would never have dreamed of becoming a journalist because it was so low status,
Starting point is 00:37:23 and he was on this like meritocratic rise. But after that movie, suddenly people who wanted to become famous, who wanted to be a big deal, wanted to have high status, they started considering becoming journalists. These pressures increased, increased by the 80s and 90s. journalists were much more highly educated, much more affluent, you know, much more liberal than Americans overall. So in 1937, less than half of journalists in the elite Washington cohort had a college degree. Today, it's over 92%. Right. Now remember that only 36% of Americans
Starting point is 00:37:53 have a college degree. So that disparity is a really big deal, right? And that, but it really took off with digital media. What happened with digital media was essentially we can learn so much about our readers and our viewers from the back end that we could, you know, journalists could start to really target their journalism. I thought I read something in your book about paywall, that that was the big moment. This is, and you'll forgive me, sir.
Starting point is 00:38:18 Sir? I'm about to talk about the Times. You can say anything you want about the Times you just can't call me sir. That's not enough. Kenneth Rona is a sir. Yeah, exactly. Let's be conscious.
Starting point is 00:38:33 class here. Sir is his dad. So I'm going to say this really quickly, so you have a chance to jump in here. So around 2011 was when the New York Times erected its paywall. What happened then was when the kind of the woke revolution really took hold in digital media, which is
Starting point is 00:38:49 to say that words like oppression, marginalization, people of color, people of color and marginalization in the same sentence, right? Creating that neural pathway, right? That kind of woke worldview, where, you know, white people have all the power and are uniquely evil,
Starting point is 00:39:07 and people of color have no power, no agency, and need our help, and, you know, need us to take care of them. That worldview started to appear in the New York Times, the Washington Post, NPR, the Atlantic, CNN, MSNBC. All of the liberal media outlets started to use these words with just exponential frequency. White supremacy, right? Went from being mentioned, you know, 75 times to being mentioned, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:32 750 times in one year, right? There's just this outpouring of articles that were obsessing over race all the time, starting when the media went digital, and that really had an impact on how white liberals started to think and talk about race.
Starting point is 00:39:48 A rebuttal, sir? No, no, no, I don't have... Thank you. Thank you. Somehow, when you called me, sir, it didn't sound insane. I don't know. I like Sir, for... I think of you is more of an oral, but okay. I don't have a rebuttal.
Starting point is 00:40:07 I think you have your finger on two really important problems. I do think journalists have become detached from what they're supposed to cover, from the people they're supposed to champion. Absolutely. I think journalism used to be about you, and now it's about us. You know, it's about your brand. It's about your social media following. And I think it's one of the reasons that trust in the media is so low
Starting point is 00:40:26 is because I think the audience senses that. They sense that we're not there for them. We're there for our own deification, glorification. And you are correct that wokeness is a problem. I'm not sure the two things fit together as neatly as you're interlocking them. I think wokeness in newsrooms and in society can
Starting point is 00:40:41 absolutely be a problem. It can also be exaggerated. And I think journalists do need to come from a more diverse group of people and they need to worry more about reporting on excuse my cliché's Main Street and less about going to Davos, 100%. The New York Times to me just looks like they feel
Starting point is 00:40:58 so guilty about all the years and decades that underserved the African-American community that they are like trying to, in a few years, now just overcompensate to comic proportions. They obviously feel very guilty, and they should, like everybody in America, but it should reckon with, oh, you know, we underserved.
Starting point is 00:41:19 No, it's a... But, I mean, it does... I mean, let's not beat up too much on the Times. I mean, to the extent that that might be true of the Times, it's merely an example in a mirror. I think you're seeing it throughout society. So Matt Taibi wrote an article last year I thought was fantastic, called We Need a New Media System,
Starting point is 00:41:37 which is kind of ironic because he's on one called Substack. But he meant, I think, a bigger one than that. And I thought the great line at the end was, media companies need to get out of the audience stroking business. And his point was that, yeah, see? I think his point was that they work backwards as to, let's not find the truth. let's say the thing that we know our audience is going to go,
Starting point is 00:42:05 that's right. That's the problem. Yes. I do want to offer a rebuttal to that. That's entirely true. But we make it as if news organizations have done this all in isolation. Readers, Americans, consumers of media have a responsibility here, too. The reason news organizations have abandoned their mission to some extent and done that,
Starting point is 00:42:27 begun producing the news that each organization's particular audience wants, is because people are clicking on things that validate their views. People are not giving their readership, their eyeballs, their viewership to organizations that are saying, here, I'm going to try to play it down the middle, I'm going to show you both sides. What organizations are those besides this show and substack? Because I can't find them.
Starting point is 00:42:49 I can't find them. Matt Taibi raises great questions and does great work, as do other people on substack. But the substack model is not the answer, Because there's a real economic problem when you ask people to pay those sorts of prices. If you do four sub-stack subscriptions, you're now paying $300 a year for four or five writers. It reminds me a lot of what's going on with streaming. Like in the old days, you had a television and you got all the channels.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Now, I've got to pay for each individual channel. I've got to pay for Netflix and HBO Max and Hulu and Disney Plus or whatever. I've got to pay for each channel. And again, who can afford to do that? So people wind up watching Rosoli and Isles. Yeah. You know. And this is to your point of it, you know, to Americans.
Starting point is 00:43:37 No, I mean, we've talked a lot over the last decade about food ghettos when it comes to income inequality. Yes. We now have news ghettos. Yes. And a kind of, yeah. Right. That's so interesting. I will just plug Newsweek.
Starting point is 00:43:49 We run opinion from across the political aisle. I read you there. You're right. Yes, you've read me there. I will say, I think you can tell a lot about who. The New York Times and the Washington Post and the liberal outlets are catering to based on what you read there exactly like you said. So who
Starting point is 00:44:04 are they stroking? And it's these liberal elites who have these, you know, vanity morals that they often impose on the working class, things like defund the police that actually hurts working class black Americans more than anybody else. Eighty-one percent of black Americans oppose it, but it's the only view
Starting point is 00:44:20 that you could read in the New York Times. I'm sorry. For much of 2020. That particular accusation is not true. I mean, you certainly read about the defund police movement, but you read plenty of voices and plenty of articles about the resistance to that. You read about Biden and many Democrats saying, no, that is not a winning path for our party. Much, much later, I mean, when it became safe, like with COVID, right? When it becomes safe to say...
Starting point is 00:44:42 That's the ultimate one where you generally. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, who bore the brunt of the lockdown burdens? It was the working class. Rich people sat at home and they turned being at home into a virtue when actually it was a sign of economic privilege. Right. That's true. But wait a second.
Starting point is 00:44:58 Since you've been beating up on the Times and I'm not here to defend it, I see its flaws. I mean, the Times' pandemic coverage was marvelous and much of it from the very beginning was devoted to the disparity of impact. But then they fired the reporter. You fired...
Starting point is 00:45:12 David Leonhard is great. And he's an outlier in the paper, but he's great. He's on the show coming up. David Leonhardt gets the backing of the paper to the extent the morning... He's the author of the morning newsletter. Every single subscriber gets that.
Starting point is 00:45:27 So he can't be like there's the times, but then David Leehart is the time. No, but his point of view is a great variance with everything else in that paper on that issue. I'm sorry, I have to end it. We've got to go to New Rules. New Rules, everybody. Okay. New Roll, someone has to get in touch with Vladimir Putin's mistress, the gymnast Alina Kabaiva, and ask her what she's smiling about.
Starting point is 00:45:58 Jesus. My neck hurts from reading in bed. And what do you call a position where you believe? blow Putin and twist yourself up in knots. Oh, oh, right, the Tucker Carlson. Neuro, let's stop acting stunned when a ship that sunk to the bottom of the ocean is later found sunk at the bottom of the ocean.
Starting point is 00:46:38 This week, the 100-year-old Antarctic Explorer Ship Endurance was found 10,000 feet beneath the sea off the coast of Antarctica. Or did you think we'd find it? The Short Hills Mall? Look, who would be? doesn't love a good shipwreck, but if you really want to impress me, find out which smoke detector is making the beeping noise.
Starting point is 00:47:11 Newell, if you're what is normally considered a grown-up and you're wearing this Disney Dumbo-themed hoodie, you can't be offended if you walk by people and they start throwing peanuts. Neurl, these people in Veracruz participating in the annual Holy Burial of Christ celebration by dressing up as clowns and parading around town have to ask themselves, exactly what are we doing again? Celebrating Jesus by dressing up like clowns, everybody knows you celebrate the resurrection with the big bunny who delivers eggs. New Rule, let me just say to Teresa Rose, the woman who agreed to a three-way with her husband as a treat for his birthday, realized
Starting point is 00:48:10 during the encounter that she was a lesbian, and then divorced him, good for you for coming to terms with her sexuality. And let me just say to Teresa's husband, Happy birthday? And finally, new rule, don't make World War III all about you. Watching the reactions to war in Ukraine these past few weeks, it's become obvious that America in this age suffers acutely from a particular disease of the mind, which is everything proves what we already believed
Starting point is 00:48:50 and everything goes back to the thing we already hate. All issues today, pandemic, war, whatever, become a stress test for our reflexive partisanship. Can you take a vastly complex situation that is 100% not about your thing and somehow still make it about your thing? And our answer is, watch me. Americans will put anything new in our mouths and nothing new in our heads. So naturally, Republicans blamed Ukraine on Biden being the worst president ever, and Democrats blamed it on Trump's being the worst president ever.
Starting point is 00:49:34 Which he was. There is that. But I'm not sure I can. follow Biden's logic all the way when he dragged January 6th into this. He said, look, how would you feel if you saw a crowd storm and break down the doors of the British Parliament kill five cops, injure 145,
Starting point is 00:49:58 or the German Bundestag or the Italian parliament? I think you'd wonder. Okay, but if Putin thought Trump was really that supportive of him, why didn't he invade when Trump was in office? It's at least worth asking that question
Starting point is 00:50:13 if you're not locked into one intradgment. and thought. Now, one guy we know who's locked into one thought is Donald Trump, who, when asked what went wrong with Ukraine, said, well, what went wrong was a rigged election. Kanye thinks less about Pete Davidson than Trump thinks about the rigged election.
Starting point is 00:50:49 His son is obsessed with Biden's son. Who knows why? Hunter Biden is a near-do-well entitled son of privilege with a party boy passed, and Don Jr., never mind. But for whatever reason, Don Jr. seems obsessed with Hunter.
Starting point is 00:51:10 So when Ukraine happened, Don tweeted, will it ultimately be hunters lucrative and shady as fuck business dealings in Ukraine that gets us into a war with Russia? Let me feel that one for you, mini-mook, no. Nicole Hannah-Jones is the curator of the 1619 project, which posits racism as the deciding factor in pretty much every single issue in America, or apparently everywhere. She said, we should care about Ukraine, but not because the people appear white. All people deserve to be free and to be welcomed when their countries are at war.
Starting point is 00:51:52 Of course. Agreed. And the people there don't appear white, they are. Maybe it should be a reminder that pain does not have a monopoly on race. I know racism is bad, but other things are bad too. It's not like an avocado. You don't have to put it on everything.
Starting point is 00:52:14 Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley knows why this mess happened. The reason Ukraine is in the situation is the United States has been completely and totally distracted. We have to stop this national self-loathing that's happening in our country. Oh, of course. Self-loathing, I hate myself for not thinking of that.
Starting point is 00:52:44 Thank you. Can you guess what Pat Robertson thinks is behind the war in Ukraine? I'll give you a hint. In 1980, 1990, 2006, and 2020, Pat predicted the end of the world due to some troubling story in the news. Now, Pat says, Putin went into the Ukraine, but that wasn't his goal. His goal was to move against Israel.
Starting point is 00:53:16 Because that's where the Bible says the world will end in Israel. It's where Pat gets raptured up to Jesusville. By way of Ukraine? Who's booking this trip? Delta? And then it gets really strange. Q&ONJON says, I don't see this invasion of Ukraine as a bad thing.
Starting point is 00:53:54 I see it as clearing out of a very corrupt center of operations for the cabal. Ah, yes, the cabal. That's the pedophile ring of elitist baby eaters that Q&ONN believes is the real problem in the world. And naturally, when war breaks out, it's really about that. No wonder the government puts it. chips in the vaccine to track you people. By now, anyone other than a total idiot
Starting point is 00:54:29 should see a pattern. But in case, Lauren Bobert is watching. Let me continue. Vanity Fair wants you to know that the fight for Ukraine is also a fight for LGBTQ rights. And conversely, Colonel Mitchell Swan, a Republican running for Congress in Georgia, believes allowing transgender individuals to serve sends a message to our adversaries
Starting point is 00:54:52 that we are more focused on social experimentation, than on the defense of our nation. I see. I see. Yes, transgender. That's the key to the Ukrainian situation. Yeah, Putin was on the fence about invading, and then one night he was watching a mash rerun and send in the tanks. Fox News is Monica Crowley's previous obsession has been cancel culture, and now she says Russia is being canceled.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Really? Really? She said that. She said, I mean, between the fierce Ukrainian resistance and the sanctions, Russia is being canceled. Wait, the Ukrainians shouldn't resist an invasion because that makes them part of cancel culture? But isn't their country what's getting canceled? You know, Justin Bieber once visited Anne Frank's attic and Amsterdam and he wrote in the guest book,
Starting point is 00:55:52 Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a believer. That's what you people sound like. Don't take this personally, but don't take everything personally. Ukraine is not mostly about your pet grievances. It's about Vladimir Putin's. And Putin is bad. Very, very, very bad.
Starting point is 00:56:19 But he's still better than the guy who brings every conversation around to Bitcoin. My pet cause is Peter, the people for the ethical treatment of animals. But I don't think Ukraine got invaded because we haven't neutered enough cats. And I guarantee you that right now, somewhere, some guy who can't get it up
Starting point is 00:56:47 is telling a girl, this never happened before Ukraine. All right, that's our show. Financial Center in Sugarland, Texas, April 9th at the Tulsa Theater in Tulsa, April 10th, at the State Theater in Minneapolis, June 4th. I want to thank Batcha, Ungar Sargon, Frank Bruney, and Kenneth Grana. Now go to YouTube and join us on overtime. Thank you. Catch all new episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher every Friday night at 10,
Starting point is 00:57:14 or watch them anytime on HBO on demand. For more information, log on to HBO.com.

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