Real Time with Bill Maher - Ep. #609: B.J. Novak, Catherine Rampell, Noah Rothman
Episode Date: August 20, 2022Bill’s guests are B.J. Novak, Catherine Rampell, and Noah Rothman (Originally aired 08/19/22) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastcho...ices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to an HBO
podcast from the HBO late-night series,
Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen.
Thank you very much, please.
We've got a big show.
Thank you.
I know you're so.
I'm happy to.
I don't know why.
I hate to ruin your son,
but it's my job to report the news.
And there's this terrible fight going on now in Ukraine.
You heard there's a war there?
Oh, my gosh.
And they're fighting near the biggest nuclear plant in Europe.
And if they break it, this could be bad.
Yeah, they say that it could...
The fallout could spread to all these Eastern European countries,
Slovenia, Slovakia.
It could threaten Trump's entire wife's supply.
So we're looking at this situation.
Oh, Trump.
When is this man not going to be in the news?
Now we're in, like, week three of Boxgate.
You know?
When they went down to Mara Lago, the FBI to get his boxes.
And, you know, every week now we hear different stories
about why he is okay to have taken these from Maga Land.
You know, it's like they weren't classified.
Okay, they were classified, but then they were magically declassified.
And the latest, they're planted.
The FBI planted them.
In a related story, Deshaun Watson today said that two dozen massage therapists
planted his dick in their hand.
Rudy Giuliani, he hasn't did.
He said, it's okay that Trump stole this stuff
because, you know, they're in a place
that's just as safe as the place
they originally were.
And everybody knows that's the rule.
You're allowed to take shit
if it's in a safe place.
I wouldn't try this in real life.
I didn't rob that drugstore.
No, it's just in my safe house,
the stuff I took.
And now, it's funny,
the Republicans, very against the evidence.
FBI now. They were always the law and order
people right now. It's like defund the FBI,
get rid of the FBI. The FBI,
am I the only one
remembering this? They're the squares.
They iron their underwear.
That's who the FBI is.
They're dull. They're from the
1950s.
It's like bitching that there's nothing good on
CBS.
I give CBS.
We're at CBS.
We love CBS.
It's not fucking thing.
on my head. But I tell you, this strategy is working. We're coming to the end of primary season.
Trump has won 85% of the people he endorsed. Liz Cheney got tossed on her ass in Wyoming.
By 37 points, the Republicans there were like, who likes elections now, bitch?
But the truth is, most residents of Wyoming just relate more to Trump. Because most
residents of Wyoming are cows. The person who's taking Liz Cheney's
spot there in Wyoming named Harriet
Hagman.
Used to be an anti-Trumper.
Called him all the names that people
called Trump. And then, of course, wanted a
job, switched up, and Trump loves
this is what Trump loves the most. When he flips
someone who used to be against him,
it's like a pimp turning out a virgin, you know?
It's like...
But
he's got four
investigations now against him, and
the people he worked with are being rolled up.
Weisman, his money man
guy, he pleaded guilty this week, 15
counts. Really Giuliani
had to sit for six hours at testimony.
Lindsay Graham, a federal judge
said he must testify there in Georgia
about trying to fuck with the election
there. And Lindsey Graham said
he is not going to cooperate,
but he always wanted to be the target
of a probe. I don't know
I don't know what
that means, but
we make little jobs.
So, and it's so funny, this
really says it all about America and the
world. What we, you know, our scandals are about
like coos, undoing real elections.
You know what a scandal is in Europe?
They're all upset this week about the
Prime Minister of Finland, Sana Marín.
She's 36.
There she is.
And they got her on tape partying.
Yeah.
That's the...
In her defense, it is still hot girl summer.
That's the prime minister of Finland.
That is not fair.
They get that, we get this.
People are saying, like, Margaret Thatcher wouldn't do that.
Yeah, Margaret Thatcher couldn't do that, okay?
I mean, she's a millennial.
Just lucky she wasn't doing it on her phone, you know.
Thank you, one guy.
That guy loved it.
And now, Prime Minister Maroon is saying, she has to answer to this.
She's saying, well, you're drugs.
She said, I've never used illegal drugs.
And as you can see from the video, my hips don't lie.
Why is everyone in the world?
Everyone has to weigh in on this?
In Saudi Arabia,
Mohammed bin Salman said,
I'll give you $10 million for the dancing girl.
And they asked Biden about it.
He said, I have no comment.
He said, I've always had a good relationship
with the prime minister of Finland,
and her hair smells terrific.
All right, we've got a great show.
We have Noah Rothman.
Catherine Rampel.
First up, he is an actor, writer, and director of the new film, Vengeance.
Out in theaters now and available on-demand.
B.J. Novak is over here.
Good to see you.
Look at you. All grown up.
All grown up.
Thanks.
All right.
Let's not bury the lead.
I loved your movie.
I told you that two seconds ago.
Finish your thought.
That's my joke.
I stole from Carl Runner.
It is great.
I love this movie.
So it's very hard to give a synopsis of a good movie.
It's easy to do it with the bad movies.
Okay.
But since the title is vengeance,
I don't want people to...
It sounds like you're trying to be John Wick.
You know, because people do that.
Right.
They get to a certain point in their career,
and they're like, I need a franchise
where I'm a badass killer.
Yeah.
This is not the beginning of a franchise
where you're a badass killer.
Probably not, yeah.
But give a shot at just...
Because people say, what's it about?
Whenever you say, I saw a great movie,
What's it about?
I saw your segment about the obsession with movies that have the word vengeance in it.
Right.
And I smile thinking that maybe you would see this title coming up, but it is in a way about that.
It is, why are we obsessed with vengeance?
And it's about a sort of journalist and podcaster, played by myself, kind of a shallow guy, a little lost.
And he finds what he thinks is the story of a lifetime, his big break, when this woman has
died of an opiate overdose, a girl he was kind of hooking up with. The family thought they were
more serious. It's kind of an awkward comic beginning in a way, and he goes to this small town in
Texas, where the family thinks, A, they were very close, and B, she was murdered and need to
avenge her death. My character wants to not be involved in a vengeance plot, but does want to
talk about why do these people in this red state feel they need vengeance about something
that doesn't need vengeance for.
And it becomes sort of a...
His social thriller story
becomes more of a personal, surprising journey.
And it's funny.
And it's a comedy.
Yeah.
But, I mean, it's the good kind of comedy.
Not a jokey comedy.
There are all the...
Lots of laughs, but I think it comes out of character.
There's one reason I liked it so much.
I also related a lot
because I'm a blue guy who goes to red states all the time,
and I love them.
Right.
And this is, I think, what I got from it, something that your character goes through, too.
How could these people, who I really don't agree with politically, I love them so much?
I see that in the, right?
I mean, your character...
Are you speaking for yourself from my character?
Both.
Well, sure.
I mean, I think what's great about exploring something through comedy or through drama,
which, in my opinion, are basically the same thing with different writing.
That sounds like completely different things.
Let me start again.
A great comedy comes from playing the drama
and finding the funny situation.
So I do think that when you play anything with that,
you need to feel for the characters.
And you need to, every actor needs to love their character.
A director needs to love the characters.
And so finding the love for the point of view
of every single person in this movie,
I think, was an important journey for me.
I'm talking about your character loving the redneck characters.
Oh, sure.
Well, that comes slowly, you know.
But it does come.
Sure.
I mean, you're not there that long in Texas.
You go down there.
It's not that long before you're eating at the water burger or whatever that place.
Absolutely.
Well, I do think in my own experience, you know, even when I went down to research the movie,
the warmth I was shown right away when I expected,
are they going to see this blue state Hollywood guy who is probably super liberal and there to make fun of them?
I should be careful here.
I was treated with so much warmth and benefit of the doubt in person.
The same people that could have gotten...
It's hard to differentiate, though, in this movie,
especially at the beginning.
But when I went there...
But both, I would admit.
Absolutely, and it's the same journey of the character
that once you sit down with people in an actual room,
it's 180 degrees different from who you think you are online.
So one thing I'd like about the movie is there is a character arc.
You know, I mean, we make so few adult movies these days.
It's different than ones where characters have raised shooting out their fingers.
Right.
That's not how you resolve the plot with, br.
So what would you say to American, how this prescription you have for the cognitive dissonance of I don't agree with you politically, but I like you personally,
that your character goes through.
How would you advise the whole country?
How can we do that on a national level en masse?
I think, in my opinion,
it's about emotion more than argument,
and I think it's about stopping ourselves
from picking at the scab of everything that we disagree on,
which is Twitter is a sort of drug for that.
And when we're separate behind screens,
we pick the scab, we bite the canker sore of the things we disagree on.
Yeah.
And I mean, yeah.
And I think that if we just all try to do that less
and focus on things like comedy or sports or art or whatever
or sitting down over dinner, I think that that is a start.
Would you ever live in a place like Texas?
I mean, 49% of Texas is blue, right?
I mean, these places are very diverse.
Right.
So sure.
Yeah, I like Texas.
You love these places.
I do.
And by the way, one
funny part in the movie
is you go to a rodeo
with this family
that you're living with.
Yeah.
someplace you would never go.
And they,
something only someone
not from Texas
would not know
when they yell out the name
of, what is it,
University of Texas?
Who here's a fan
of the University of Texas?
Right.
And you stand up thinking,
I'm going to be a hero
with the crowd.
Yeah.
Not realizing that
University of Texas
is the one in Austin.
Right.
And Austin is not Texas
to
Texans. Right. And it is a very blue place. Yeah. And so when people talk about, when I saw that,
I thought, you know, when people talk about how we're going to have a second civil war,
we can't because we're amongst each other. Yeah, there's no, the only way out is through,
yeah. Meaning, we need to, yeah, there's no separating, we're stuck. We're stuck at the dinner
table, you know. So when are you moving there? No. So, um, they're interested about,
In places like Texas, the big cry is often freedom.
I want my freedom.
The government is getting in the way of their freedom.
And we all have ideas about freedom.
My freedom gets in the way of your freedom.
They want their guns.
Other people say, I want to be free from thinking I might get shot.
Right.
It's a tricky thing, freedom.
But lately, we've been talking a lot about on this show.
We're going to talk about it tonight.
Freedom in the arts.
you know, you've written some episodes of one I can think of off the top of my head,
or the office, which they don't show now.
I see Jamie Fox's new movie was shelved.
I guess he made it a few years ago, but they're not going to ever show it.
They make less comedies.
I mean, you found a way to make a comedy about something.
But I'm sure you have to be very careful about a lot of different things.
They're making less because it's just something.
not worth it to even try.
Where are you on that?
I think that there's a difference between the gatekeepers and the audience, and I think you
probably see this firsthand as a stand-up.
The audiences, I think, are pretty down for everything.
They're pretty smart people.
And can be trusted a lot more than the gatekeepers sometimes worry.
I think the gatekeepers are worried about the chatter in their own spheres, but I think
audiences can be trusted to be pretty smart.
But it's not in the hands of the audience.
That's what I'm saying.
So I'm saying I think the problem, I don't think the problem is that audiences are too sensitive.
I think the problem is that people are worried that other people are too sensitive.
Right.
So, all right, this is like two questions.
They really would ask you on other kinds of shows, but I'm a fan, so I have to ask it.
Is there going to be a reboot at the office?
Oh, my God, Bill.
I know.
I love that show so much.
Thank you. I know you do, and I appreciate that so much, and I love it, too.
It's not up to me.
I know, but I always think that just the relationship between Ryan and Kelly,
which I'm sure is nothing like your real relationship in life.
Is this People Magazine? What is this show?
We were so serious for so long.
I got an applause break for something smart.
I mean...
But what about just that as a show?
The Ryan and Kelly show?
Yes.
Just that relationship, I feel like, would be very funny.
I will, um...
I'll bring it up.
You will?
I'll bring it up, sure.
I'd love to do something with her.
Remember when you're at my house and my dog bit, poor Mindy?
I do remember that.
I feel so bad about that.
I will tell her.
You said that.
Is she okay?
She's recovering.
I should have asked sooner.
Anyway, thanks for being here.
It's a great movie.
You're going to make a lot more great movies, but this is the first one.
Thank you.
Glad you're in the game.
BJ Novak.
Thanks, God.
Thank you.
All right, let's meet our panel.
Hello.
How are you?
Okay, he is an associate editor for Commentary Magazine
and author of The Rise of the New Puritans
fighting back against Progressives' War on Fund,
Noah Rothman.
And she is an op-ed columnist at the Washington Post
and a CNN political and economic commentator, Catherine Rampel.
Wow.
Actual, smart people on the panel.
So let's go right to your book,
because it fits in with what we were just saying
because your book is about how
somehow the left you are saying
and I've certainly heard it before
I may have said it myself before.
They're the ones who seem to have the stick up
their ass now. How did that happen?
That's really the question that
I begin with, this mystery because
finding, corrupting influences
in innocent cultural affair was a right-wing
thing for most of our adult lives.
All of a sudden were treated to moral crusades
from the left and you're probably
familiar with a lot of the arguments. You mean like the
They were gay telitubbies?
Exactly.
Remember that?
Remember when, who was it, Jerry Falwell?
The purple telitubby was gay.
Yeah, that could, that'll corrupt you, corrupt your children, degrade society and the left.
We're hearing some more echoes of that today with Disney.
I mean, those people are still out there.
They are, the right, are cultural revanchists.
All of a sudden, the left, which emphasized self-gratification, even hedonism,
is somehow now decided that they have to emphasize their own moral code, a competing moral code,
and re-moralized society.
You're familiar with all these anecdotes, rather than survey the landscape of crazy and say, this is all crazy.
This applies a moral framework to it to try to tease out the puritanical strains that produced progressivism in mainline Protestant New England
and has produced progressivism today that hates idleness, that which isn't contributing to the progressive project,
even in innocent cultural stuff, is detracting from that project.
Okay, so you're saying if we're not helping, we're hurting, that's their...
That's generally the outlook.
There's virtues to this.
A lot of this is virtuous conduct.
If you're a conservative, for example,
watching progressives rediscover the idea
that when you're in a room with men and women
who are single and it's bathed in alcohol,
socially destabilizing things can happen,
this is a value that conservatives have understood
since time and memorial.
That was not a progressive leftist left-wing value
during the sexual revolution during the 90s,
even the early 2000s.
It is today, increasingly.
I don't know.
We just had a vice president who could be alone
in a room with a woman without his wife,
named mother there. That's what I thought.
I don't know. I take your point. I don't want to be scolded
by left or right, but I'm still much more worried about
original recipe Puritans than left-wing Puritans,
particularly the ones who have power.
Actually, I'm not, because those people never affected my life.
I didn't care about the gay teletubby when Jerry Falwell attacked it.
I'm not into the teletubbies.
Who controls the Supreme Court right now?
I want to see the Jamie Foxx.
movie. That affects my life. Jamie Fox is great. It's about time he got a director's job to make his own movie. He finally did. It's with Robert Downey. He's great, too. I'm sure this movie is fucking awesome. It's funny. And because a small group of people, it's your opinion. You think, I heard someone in TMZ say, well, the movie looks bad. It doesn't. It looks fucking great.
I agree.
And why should your opinion control what I see?
I agree, but my concern is that this is much more widespread.
You know, who's taking the books out of the libraries right now?
Who's taking out Tommy's two mommies and the diary of Anne Frank?
I don't go to the library.
Who's taking out the K?
I mean, this is a bipartisan phenomenon now where it hasn't before.
And to BJ's point, which is very relevant, is there's an element of condescension here.
Who has power in the commanding heights of culture?
It's not the right.
it is the left.
And it's they who have a condescending view of their audiences.
Who has a majority of the Supreme Court?
Who can actually exert this power?
Okay, but the Supreme, I mean, O'Will had it a little wrong.
It's not the government that's Big Brother.
It's social media.
The Supreme Court has, yes, of course, certain powers.
I mean, obviously.
Well, they're restricting people from having sex right now, effective.
Well, there's restricting abortion.
I don't think they're restricting sex quite yet.
I mean, there are states.
are going to carry that through to restricting contraception access.
Well, we hope not, possibly.
Yes, there's all sorts of nuts who want to do all sorts of things.
Let's stick to what's really happening.
We have taken away abortion rights.
That's right.
Okay.
But, again, it doesn't affect my life.
I ain't getting anybody pregnant.
Well, I don't want to de-emphasize that.
I mean, that does affect millions of people's lives.
Yes, it does, and it's wrong.
But we're talking about a specific thing.
Why can't we just...
Why do we always have to go to the what about them?
Yes, we admitted in the first minute here.
There are still the Telitubby people out there.
But this is a whole separate thing.
That's real and going on.
There was an Axios poll this week.
Self-Silencing is what they're calling it now.
That most Americans are self-silencing.
Here's one example.
44% of Democrats publicly say that CEOs should get involved
with making statements.
stands with their company about social issues.
Only 11% privately.
I don't know how they got that because it's private,
but that's what they printed.
Okay, this kind of gap is not good for a country
where people, there is this quiet resentment brewing.
And you're right, there's probably more important things
going on on the right that are actually scarier,
but emotionally, these kind of things affect us.
It's obnoxious to be told what you can.
can see and think.
I think the poll is
disturbing, but we don't actually know that people
are self-censoring more today than they
were in the past. I mean, that's always been the
case that people have their inner monologue and their
outer monologue. People do vote with their
wallets. There's such a thing as moral merch,
which is literally wearing your politics
on your sleeve. That used to be
an expression that described trite and shallow
political values. It is now how you are
expected to navigate society.
To wear a uniform that reflects who you
are, what you believe, to whom
you're subordinate. This is all sort of
something that the left rejected. I don't live
my life that way. I mean... How could
people not be self-censoring more?
Did you hear about the Station
19 story this week? Okay,
if you don't know what this is, I did not.
It's a Chandra Rhymes
show. It's about a firehouse.
Okay,
so it's one of the
characters is racist,
and they had the character in an
outline using a racist term
for Latinos. I'm not going to step in it.
quote it. And it's a word I don't think people should use, but it's a racist character. How else do you
depict character? I mean, all in the family, Archie Bunker was there, people were sophisticated
than they understood. Why are we whitewashing the racists? That's, that's an excellent question.
Like, how do you, how would you do World War II movies going forward? Are the Nazis going to be
nice to the Jews now? You know? It's like you have to portray the ugliness.
But, wait a second. So they closed the whole show down because of a single,
word
spoken by a character,
not one of the writing staff,
a character.
And here's this,
we will not be meeting creatively.
This is their statement.
Nor should we email.
We will not proceed with business as usual
until the recent harm
and systemic issues
have been addressed
and healing has begun
and closed the building.
Like it was a reactor leak.
Like they found legionnaires
in the business.
building. They had to close the whole. How can a country survive with people on the level of this
kind of fragility? Of course people are more aware of what they're saying and afraid to talk.
But I can't, I would put money down that none of them actually believes their colleagues in the
writer's room are ticking time bombs of violent bigotry. They're afraid that you might be
sap that you are and you can't be permitted to be exposed to that cultural stimuli or it would
trigger you. It's a condescension
in part, also a fragility,
but a condescension about everybody else who
might be exposed to this art and what they might
think and do. I think some of it's some virtue
signaling too, right? People want
to show that they are offended to
get, you know, kudos
with their peers. They want to show
that they are offended on behalf of the people
who should be offended. But there's currency there, and that's
part of the problem. Yes, I agree.
But it's like the only permissible
reaction now is overreaction.
that's the only way you're safe
here's another story I wrote about
there was a progressive summer camp
outside of San Francisco called Hidden Vela
okay
so they closed down
because of what they said was structural racism
I had not heard that exact term
you know what it is
a tile
this camp was built in 1913
by somebody who was Buddhist
and has a swastika in the tile
which was a symbol throughout history,
way before the Nazis used it.
Obviously, there are reasons now
why we wouldn't suggest using it.
But it was there from 1913,
before the Nazis.
Okay, somebody saw it.
They had a shit fit.
The people at the camp went,
oh, of course, we'll take the tile away.
Not good enough.
Every progressive camp counselor quit,
and now this camp that was doing a lot of good
for a lot of kids is closed.
It's insanity.
Or it's how you communicate your zeal for the cause.
That's what I mean.
You're promoting the New Puritans.
You are promoting yourself as being most committed
by cutting off not only your enjoyment but other people's enjoyment.
You're contorting yourself most zealously for the cause.
And it gets you a lot of points, as Catherine said.
It does help you in a social dynamic,
but it certainly does deprive us of something enjoyable.
Does anybody ever ask these people,
who are you actually helping?
Because I don't...
So what is your answer to fix this problem
that you write about in your book?
Well, my very simple recommendation
is for all of us to have the courage
to laugh at that, which is objectively hilarious.
Thank you.
Some of these anecdotes are just funny,
and you're doing God's work here
by actually laughing at them.
The second is real commercial pressure.
Doing God's work, I get it.
That was unintentional, but I'll take it.
And the second is commercial pressures.
Among one of the anecdotes that I bring to bear in the book
is the story of banned in Boston.
Banned in Boston, the late 19th century,
was this advertisement against impure literature,
and it was very effective,
but it eventually destroyed itself
by becoming an advertisement for really titillating literary experiences
you had to have for yourself.
So publishers tried to get their books banned in Boston
to get sales increase in the rest of the country.
You won't get this movie released in a major, you know,
distribution company, won't take it.
You release it in,
independently, it gets attacked, and all of a sudden it gets much more play.
Conservative books banned on Amazon, banned on Facebook, what have you, by really overzealous 20-something sensors,
have wild commercial success that a PR campaign wouldn't justify.
It advertises this sort of thing and breaks down the strictures.
I mean, there are plenty of people who have gotten canceled who probably make more money post-cancellation
than pre-cancellation for exactly this phenomenon.
So please cancel my book.
Like who?
There are a lot of people I can think of.
who I will not mention on...
Why? Why are you making money?
Who have speaking careers
who are going around the...
I mean, going back to, like, again,
this predates the exactly
2022, but like a Miloianopolis, you know, right?
Like, his career was built on people protesting him
saying that they didn't want him to speak,
and college students, you know, interrupting speeches,
how does he drum up more business by getting attention to...
That worked for a time.
He was last seen, I think, trying to...
And then he did this show, and the next day, they canceled his book contract and his speaking tour.
He never worked again.
You're welcome.
Okay.
I'm rethinking the canceling the book.
Proving again that sunlight is the best disinfectant.
Okay.
So one of our favorite departments on this show is called 24 Things You Don't Know About Me.
And we thought we would bring it out this week because Alex Jones is in the news.
You know, he got...
He lost his little case there
and has to pay, I think,
$45.2 million to the Sandy Hook victim.
So we thought this would be a good week
to bring out 24 things.
You don't know about me, Alex Jones.
Like, I oppose abortion
because I like to see suckers born every minute.
I've been anally penetrated by aliens
so many times I carry lube.
My theory is that the diary
of Anne Frank is nothing more than a nest.
Airbnb review.
My go-to snack is onions
and a handful of unmarked medication.
I have a line of camouflage that works
so well I can't find it anywhere.
In high school, I was voted
most likely to secede.
I believe the moon landing was real,
but Nott's landing was fake.
Not slanding.
My drag green name is misinformation.
All right.
So, I mentioned in the monologue
the primary scene.
season is winding down.
This is where we pick the...
You kids out there don't follow politics too closely.
It's a lot like sports.
You've got to win in your conference
before you go on to the big game, right?
Okay, so this is primary season
where we pick the people from each party
who then meet in November
when we have our big, midterm election.
So I mentioned this to...
85% of the people Trump endorsed.
One.
151 out of one.
78. Say what you want about Mr. Evil, but boy, what a politician. I mean, that's impressive,
in an evil way, but still impressive. And listen to this. So, and there's 10 members of Congress
who voted to impeach him, and he vowed to knock them off. It's so Tarantino movie, he's going
to get all 10. He got 8 out of the 10. Four quit because they knew they'd lose and four lost.
the two who won, the two who
withstood this.
They were both in something called
an open primary, and that's what I want to
ask you two about. At open primary.
The way we do it now is
the Republicans run only with Republicans
voting, so the biggest nuts come out
and vote for the biggest nut.
And the Democrats have their version of that.
They're not as nutty, but it's, you know,
you just wind up with people who are
the most fringe of each side.
Open primaries, which we don't have much,
but we have in these two places.
Anybody from any party can get in,
and then you appeal after appeal to more moderate voters.
Is this not a fix for much of what ails us?
I think it's very helpful.
It's not going to fix everything.
No, nothing does.
It's not going to fix everything.
The people who show up to the primaries,
you know, they're usually more of the more extreme voters.
Like if you have enough crazy people running in the primary,
you can still get four people who make it through what's called the jungle primaries.
and get to the general.
But yes, I think...
Okay, that's got to change.
The jungle.
Why is it called that?
That's not a name that's going to attract people.
This is...
Democrats, so genius.
I don't know how it got that moniker.
I don't know either.
I'm very skeptical that this is going to be the panacea
that a lot of its advocates think it is.
For example, Washington State has this primary system
and Jamie Herrera Butler,
Butler, who was one of these impeachment votes.
She lost.
The top two vote getters are usually the incumbent
and the challenger, Democrat and Republican,
and it complexifies a process
that doesn't need to be more complicated than anything
that's not most votes wins
is more complicated than that.
And the idea that it'll somehow rid us
of the passions of the populace just isn't borne out
by this primary cycle.
Well, there are problems in that, say there's
an open primary with
three Democrats and two Republicans.
If the three Democrats
split the vote and all
together got 59 percent,
none of them would make it to the final
too, because none of them got more than
20%, whereas the two Republicans
got together 41%.
So they each got 20.5. And that can happen
in a Democrat district. It can, but couldn't you
make a law about that and say, but
you can't have somebody who's
totally misrepresenting the will of the people.
There's got to be a better way to do it than the way we're doing it.
The way we're doing it is not working.
I think the other
interesting thing that
is the case, like in Alaska,
is that in addition to the
jungle primary, they're also doing ranked choice voting for the general, which basically means
like whoever, if nobody gets a majority of the vote, then the person with the fewest votes,
whoever voted for them, whatever they said their second choice was, those votes get
reallocated and things like that. And I think that's also really valuable. A lot of states are
doing that now. At least we're experimenting. Since 1968, the parties have been sacrificing more
of their influence over this process
and giving it small D democratic reforms
that make the voters
have much more control over the process
and it's gotten much crazier
as a result.
Broadening that process, maybe open primaries
are part of it, but I also think the parties need to exert
a lot more influence than they have been in weeding
out bad candidates that may be appealed
to the populace but are otherwise unacceptable
to a party that has one goal
on us to get people elected.
Well, that's not even the goal of
the Republican Party.
They don't need to anymore.
In the battleground states, and again, we're almost at the end of the season.
There's a few more states to vote, but we pretty much can say what's happening.
In the battleground states, okay, the ones that are important, people who don't believe Biden won the election, who deny that he won the election.
Let's call them election deniers.
They won two-thirds of the time.
Problem?
Yes, absolutely.
Absolutely.
I mean, I think actually the Liz Cheney example is a really instructive one, right?
Because she is a dyed-in-the-wall conservative.
She is far right on social issues, on economic issues, on foreign policy.
The only issue on which she disagrees with other Republicans is,
in an election, does the person who gets the most votes win?
That's the only issue in which she disagrees with the rest of the Republican Party.
and the rest of the party is more concerned about, you know, basically protecting Trump's criminal enterprise
than protecting, again, small D democracy.
And that's why you see these other candidates winning in these other races.
It's not because they're conservatives.
It's not because they're running on conservative platforms.
There are no platforms.
They're running on Trump.
So what is the unspoken conceit of the 2020 election fraud idea?
Is that Republicans don't like to lose elections.
So they've erected this narrative that they didn't actually lose the election.
We could see a weakening of this a little bit,
just hold that Donald Trump and the populist aspect
of the Republican Party has over the primary voters.
If Republicans leave a lot of races on the table in 2022,
there are a bunch, as you said, 85%,
a lot of those candidates are really unpalatable
to a general electorate.
Arizona, Georgia, Ohio.
Ohio is competitive.
Ohio shouldn't be competitive.
Ohio was always competitive.
It was known as the bellwether of states.
Trump wanted to buy eight points last second.
But you said was never, it was always...
It was always the state.
When I was going to...
I mean, when I was a kid, it was Missouri.
That's way outside the realm of any...
Missouri is gone, but not Ohio.
Yeah.
So, if Republicans leave a lot of races on the table that could have won,
the electability argument gets another look.
Okay, but do we really think that these people really think
that Trump won the election?
I don't.
I think a lot of them do.
I don't.
I think what they think is
I can't let these crazy people take over the country.
Men can't get pregnant, you can't take over the country.
That's what they think.
That's what they think.
There's so much of this insanity that we were talking about a little while ago
going on that they're like, yeah, I know Trump didn't win
but I can't let you take over the country.
That's really what's going on in their head.
And if I have to steal it, it's a little bit of,
I have to burn the village to save it.
Right.
That didn't work for the village.
It didn't work for the village or Vietnam or us.
But that's kind of where they're headed.
So fear?
Yes.
I have to destroy democracy to save it, to save America.
I think some people are thinking cynically that way.
I think there are true believers out there who actually think...
Yeah, I think most of them live at Mar-a-Lago.
Perhaps.
So, okay.
A little bit of news this week.
The president signed bills the other day extending statute of limitations
for investigating the fraud from the COVID money.
Now, back in April, we did a piece here,
a very long piece because it needed it,
I thought, about how much money was stolen?
COVID money.
Because we did write checks for, I think,
$5.7 trillion when the forever flu hit.
Okay, so we can argue about whether that was an appropriate amount.
I think it might have been a little high.
but what really pisses me off
is that so much of it was stolen
and that's what I was talking about in April
some of these numbers might have been
might be a little out of date since then
but unemployment
insurance
for people 872 billion
went out the door
they estimate maybe up to half
was stolen
the PPP
again very unfortunate
phraseology in that party
that was the paycheck protection program.
Okay, this was small businesses trying to cover their employees
who were now out of work.
Only a quarter paid wages that would have otherwise been lost.
And this is the question I asked back in April,
and I'm going to ask it again.
It doesn't really make me a conservative, does it,
that I don't want to be absolutely robbed blind?
Is there some number at which I go,
you know what? You are just taking my money
and wasting it and letting people steal it.
I mean, I get the
I get the idea that money can never be transferred
except in a leaky bucket. I accept that. But this isn't a bucket
anymore. It's just the handle.
The issue is the bucket was designed to be leaky.
That leaky? Half stolen?
Well, this is, this is.
is what I mean. Government is as functional
or as dysfunctional as we design
it to be, and government was designed to be
dysfunctional.
It was never this dysfunctional.
PPP stands for Paycheck Protection Program,
like you said. What that meant
was it was supposed to keep people
continuing to get their paychecks
even as companies had to shut down
or lay off workers or whatever. The problem is
the government does not know
who was getting a paycheck from whom
and who stopped getting a paycheck. The government should
know these things because companies
pay taxes. They pay payroll taxes.
But the problem is, yes, I know,
let me finish, let me finish.
The problem is
government infrastructure sucks,
and they're using
software that's from the disco era.
I'm not kidding. I'm not kidding.
And so what happens is
the databases can't talk to each other,
the software is really antiquated,
so we have to rely on the honor system,
essentially, where companies say,
look, government,
I need this money, I promise you,
you swear, I'm going to use it to keep people employed.
And some of them did, but a lot of them didn't. A lot of them are not real companies.
We're not, we're Americans. I'm sorry. We can't be on the honor system.
I know.
Look, other countries...
It's just not real.
Other countries, other countries have figured out how to invest in good government and state
capacity. Germany didn't do this, for example.
Germany knows who works for whom, as our government should.
Of course, Germany.
And they pushed out the money.
They pushed out the money through firms directly to employees.
They spent a lot less per employee, and they kept more people employed.
If we wanted to, we could invest in good government.
But we have systemically decided not to.
Partly because it's, like, not sexy to talk about government IT.
And partly because that way, you know, the Republicans...
I thought the Democrats were the good government party.
Why don't they do it?
I get it.
The Republicans want to strangle it in the bathtub.
Yeah.
But why isn't the other...
party. And why aren't the Republicans
are supposed to be, we're the mean old man to watch your
money? Why don't they do their part?
Nobody does any of their part that they should
do. Because what happens? So, you know, it makes
me... I agree. I agree.
The problem is
the problem is, government is
designed to be dysfunctional, and then Republicans
point to it and say, uh-huh, it's dysfunctional.
It's a terrible advertisement for government.
Let's cut their funding, so they're more
dysfunctional. This is the case with the IRS.
It makes me a little less excited about the money
they're planning to spend. I agree. You can say a lot
about the funding that we just gushed out of this country in March of 2020, and then subsequently
again in 2021, February 2021, you can't say that the consequences of rushing money out the door
with very limited oversight were not anticipated. They were anticipated. We knew that this would be
a font of fraud and abuse, and that government would have to come back up and clean it up.
Prosecutors, this is the Prosecutor Paycheck Protection Act. And Congress, Congress has to
engage in oversight here. It's not enough for inspectors general to get engaged and say, well, this
agency spent $75 billion on something
we don't know where it went. Congress has to
go back and conduct its proper
role of overseeing its own
activities. But the money's gone. You're
not getting the money back. And my
concern is when there is another crisis
or recession and there will be, the
choice will be between, I
guess we shouldn't give people the help that they need
because look at all the fraud last time,
like we clearly didn't know how to get it to the right people
or let's helicopter drop more money
and hope that some of it lands
in the right place. Because
I mean, that's basically what happened before.
How did we get to be this shitty country
that we can't do anything?
I don't know.
Okay, all right.
Well, I'm not happy.
Look, the investigation into what...
Americans have very little tolerance for this.
The investigation into waste and abuse
during World War II made Harry Truman's career.
Right.
This is the sort of thing that Americans reward.
They don't look fondly on people who abuse the urgent crisis.
We did use to be able to do it.
Okay.
Thank you, panel.
You were a great time for new rules.
New Rule, you know your dreams of Hollywood stardom are over when the only job you can book is the stock photo of a guy looking at his dick with a magnifying glass.
You can't even console yourself with the line. There are no small parts, only small actors.
New Rule, the people with giant outdoor chess boards have to tell me one thing. Why?
How does that make chess better? Now, hurry up and make your move. I want to go inside and trim my tree.
New Rule, someone must make a monkeypox vaccine that you take with poppers.
You want to make gay sex safer? Make it more intense at the same time.
And let's not be woke about this.
Rush this vaccine to the community whose sexual behavior obviously puts the most at risk.
The clergy.
The rule, Michael Flynn, must explain why he keeps grifting diehard Trump supporters
when he could be making more money on cop shows as the surly chief who says,
McCoy, you're off the case, I want your badge.
If anything, TV's darner will make you more
relative to Trump supporters, since you'll also have
your own trailer.
No, no, someone must tell
everyday Vietnamese cuisine,
thank you.
In a tough economy where restaurants
will do anything for business, you're willing
to say, yeah, nothing special
here. Every day, Vietnamese
cuisine, located at the corner of
whatever street and who gives a shit,
boulevard.
Come visit today, or not, who gives a fuck?
And finally, new rules, since America is such an incredibly fucked-up place right now.
Let's scale back our goal of making it great again and settle for, let's just make the mall great again.
Just start with that and get a W.
And I'll tell you why it's actually a bigger win than you might think,
because online shopping is killing us, psychologically and environmentally.
Do you ever wonder why shopping through the mail didn't be covered?
so big until this century.
Of course, the Internet and smartphones
made it easier, but the Sears catalog
was founded in 1887.
It was Amazon.
Just Amazon that never grew.
People could have been getting everything in the mail
a century and a half ago, and often
with a better reason to, because there weren't
cars that made going to the store so easy.
Why didn't they?
I don't know, but lately I've been seeing a lot of stories
about how isolated and lonely people are.
Maybe it has something to do with
In the golden age of the mall, it was often called America's town hall, as marketplaces have always been the center of society.
Yes, ours was a little tacky, but it was better than this.
Turns out ordering online is way more echo unfriendly than driving to the store ever was.
How could it not be, considering that Americans now shop by the most inefficient means humanly possible,
since we can't get our ass to go try something on
and see how it actually fits and looks and feels,
we order nine and send back eight.
Do you have any idea of the ecological shit show
that's caused just by making people chauffeur
your pants all over town?
You know, back when people still went out
before brick and mortar stores were just for shoplifting,
people didn't shop every day.
No, no.
They made these things called,
shopping lists.
Words that
corresponded to items they needed.
And then they went to the store or mall
and gathered all of these items
on the list at one time.
As opposed to how we do it now,
where robots and humans who are treated like robots
pack your little bag of scrunchies
in a box the size of a doghouse
and deliver it to your home along with
three other giant boxes, each containing one item.
How can you have a thousand types of shoehorn
but only three sizes of boxes to put them in.
Where do we think all that packaging goes?
We stuff it in blue bins like it's a portal to plastic heaven,
but only 14% of it is actually recycled.
The rest goes into landfills, incinerators, and the ocean.
In 2009, America's most successful investor, Warren Buffett,
went big on railroads, and everyone said,
Warren, you must be senile.
Come on, we're living in the age of streaming and AI
and Google Glasses and robot dogs.
Railroads?
And Warren said,
yeah, but after all of you are done clicking
to get your garden weasels and avocado slicers,
something has to actually get it to your door.
For some reason, people just don't trust a condom
made by a 3D printer.
Good luck with Dogecoin.
So listen to this.
There's a vaping device for pot that I, I mean a friend of mine,
uses which has a feature that allows you to turn it on from an app on your phone,
even though it has a button right on the side that works just as well.
Now, I'm not knocking this thing.
I like it.
I'm just not naming it on TV because, well, if you want the benefit of advertising,
I have a podcast, and the ad team would be happy to take your call.
Anyway, the point is.
Anyone under 30 who sees the app feature
thinks it's the eighth wonder of the world
because it doesn't work the old timey way
by pushing a button. It's so cool
because it's on the phone.
Hey kids, get a fucking clue.
Just because it's on the phone
doesn't make it cool.
We think we're super technologically advanced
when we push a button, but every time you click
buy it now, a tree gets its wings.
I know, we don't want to think about the kids that make it
or the truck that brings it or the landfill where it ends up.
We just want that T-shirt that says, mindful.
I know, it's all so easy.
You clicked on the picture of the hot dog toaster,
and it appeared at your door,
ready for you to toss in the garage.
But it didn't come without a cost.
It came across the Pacific on a diesel-powered cargo monster spewing sulfur.
the most downloaded shopping app in the United States
is a Chinese company called Sheehan,
which produces 6,000 new styles a day
and ships them direct from their warehouse in Guangdong
to the 22-year-old in your basement
who thinks they're an influencer.
Sheen is part of a new industry called Fast Fashion,
which specializes in clothing
that will absolutely positively fall apart
if you so much as look at it wrong.
And that's deliberate.
these clothes are made cheap, real cheap,
out of the flimsyest materials
because apparently now,
Gen Z and millennials like to buy clothes,
wear them once and throw them away.
The average U.S. consumer
now throws out 80 pounds of clothing each year.
I hear a lot about how my generation has ruined the environment.
I don't think it's my generation that's doing this.
And for what?
So you can hear someone say,
nice dress, is that paper?
So, look, the CDC made it official last week.
We don't have to stay six feet apart anymore.
You're free to move around the country.
We're no longer on active sneezer alert.
And they've turned off the tighten your asshole sign.
Go out and play.
Go to the mall.
Our social skills are atrophying while we one-click ourselves into oblivion.
Amazon's in its prime, but you're wasting your year.
All right, that's our show.
I'll be at the Kleinings Music Hall in Buffalo, October 9th, the Hulu in New York City, November 12th,
and at the Foxwoods Casino in Mashan, Tucket, Connecticut, November 13th.
I want to thank Noah Rothman, Catherine Rampel, and VJ Novak.
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,
or watch them anytime on HBO on demand.
For more information, log on to HBO.com.
