Real Time with Bill Maher - Overtime – Episode #625: Christoph Waltz, Ari Melber, Sarah Isgur
Episode Date: February 18, 2023Bill Maher and his guests answer viewer questions after the show. (Originally aired 02/17/23) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoice...s.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to an HBO podcast from the HBO late-night series, Real Time with Bill Maugh.
Okay, here we are on CNN.
Wow, I'm still so excited about this.
And our panel tonight, we had Academy Award winning actor Christoph Waltz was on this show.
MSNBC host Ari Melburgh and ABC News, I know, Sarah Iskir.
Okay.
First of all, you just said to me when you sat down, I mean, the last piece I was doing is about people in show business who hate each other.
Have you been on sets like that where...
Well, of course.
I've been in sandboxes when I was five playing with kids that I hated.
It was about playing together, not about hating someone.
But my point was, you know, you can hate each other and still make something great.
And they've made many movies like that, and government should do it too.
Okay.
Speaking of movies, what does the panel think of the climate activists who glued themselves to the red carpet at the Berlin Film Festival?
Have you been to the Berlin Film Festival?
Not when someone was glued to the red carpet.
Are these stunts effective or just an annoying disruption?
Better that than throwing soup at priceless works of art.
I'll take the glue on the red carpet. Nobody cares.
Was it natural glue?
Vegan.
It's about sniffing glue.
Okay.
YouTube star Mr. Beast is receiving backlash for...
Are you familiar with Mr. Beast?
Everyone's familiar?
I'm not.
Okay.
No?
He's super popular.
He's a big.
He is very big.
I have heard of Mr. Beast.
I've never been to Cracker Barrel, but I've heard of Mr. Beast.
You start, is receiving a plaque for funding cataract surgery.
Oh, I did read this story.
For a thousand people.
He funded, yeah, a thousand people needed cataract surgery,
and this guy's making a fortune.
It's a YouTube star.
I mean, how can you not?
If you can make money and do good for other people, isn't, okay,
I don't know what that question is.
He got a lot of criticism.
He got criticism.
Because he used it for ratings.
And it's like, I think the people who got the cataract surgery are too pissed about it.
No, that's not what a lot of the tweets were about.
And these are from somebody in the Washington Post said this.
Somebody, I think, at BuzzFeed said this.
They were criticizing him because their point is that you should not try to correct yourself
if you're blind or deaf or something.
that's like ableism.
Like it's not worse to be blind.
It's just different.
And I would say if that was me, please help me.
Yes.
For involuntary surgeries.
But really, I mean, that's...
Does the same thing go for literacy?
Ah.
Great question.
Nikki Halley has called for politicians
over 75 years old to, oh, yeah,
to be required to take a mental health competency test.
I wonder who that's aimed at.
Both of them, right?
I think she's trolling.
It allows her to draw attention to Biden.
She's in a Republican primary, but it's a subtle hit on Trump.
They're both older politicians.
They have every right to run.
The competency test is a really long campaign,
and people will assess how they seem.
But shouldn't we do that for everybody?
Why just over 75?
because...
I mean...
Over here, my...
It would clear out the House of Representatives.
Right.
Well, I mean, there's only one age requirement.
The Constitution has a minimum age,
and that was because they were so worried
about people passing things on
to their famous sons at the time.
There's no maximum age,
but we have that for pilots and other things.
But, again, I think it's hard.
If you've covered these things,
you know how it is.
It's hard to run for president.
It is.
We're going to see how they do.
And then you're going to...
decide at the debates in other forums whether they seem like they got it.
Well, and as Don Lemon told us on CNN, women actually can't run for president because he said
we're past our prime once we get to our 40s. But since you have to be 35 to run, it's like this
really tight window between 35 and 40.
But it presupposes that's the only way you can be mentally incompetent. I mean, I would take
a guy who's 90 and forgets a few things, but he's seen a lot in his life and has the experience.
Of course, if you have Alzheimer's and you're not there
and you don't remember who your wife is,
obviously that's a different story.
But as opposed to somebody who's 40
and doesn't have a lot of experience.
Yeah, so...
What's funny is, I think ageism is real.
We see it in a lot of industries.
Oh.
And we see it on a sexist basis as well,
as I think you mentioned, which is fair.
I just think that what's funny is
the one place that you see less ageism
in our public life would be politics.
When you look at Pelosi, McConnell, the current president, the last president who's running for re-election.
So while I do think it's a problem, I think we should be less ages.
We were talking about civil rights earlier.
That's one of the things people discriminate on.
Having said that, for whatever reason, incumbency, fame, other things, donor class.
And the voters are older.
The voters keep going back to some of the choices that are upper in the age back.
There's a movement in Europe going on right now, started by an older gentleman who had to deal with this bank.
and the movement's called
I'm old not stupid
I subscribed to that
what was he dealing with
with his bank
because of the
the bank had changed
some online
you know and he said
but this can't be understood
and then they treated him like an idiot
and he said no no no
I'm old not stupid
well there is a lot
of making you try to feel like
you're stupid when you're older
I mean they purposely do things
you know
why do I need to
what's that thing when you take a picture of the...
The QR code?
Thank you.
I do it...
I find that for menus to be the most annoying thing in the world.
I do it to get my car out of valet.
I'm not kidding.
At the cracker barrel.
How about when you have to go
to fill something out and it says, like,
pick the photos with the pickup trucks?
And so it's like, you have to prove to this robot
that you're a human.
Think about it.
And then you get a dog or not.
And it's a marriage.
New census data shows that California, New York, saw mass exodus, well, mass, I don't know,
of people with their populations dropping by around 500,000 people.
It doesn't say over, is that any year?
Maybe it is.
Or the last couple of years.
Can anything bring cost of living down in desirable places?
Texas, Florida, Tennessee, no state income tax, nice weather, and something else.
There's something else about those states.
Is this a referendum on the way we govern here in California, New York?
I mean, obviously this looks like a blue state, red state thing.
I mean, a lot of it is big offices and big cities.
Like, I live in Brooklyn.
A lot of those big Manhattan towers haven't filled back up with people.
But also, that was an urban plan built a long time ago, and maybe it's evolving.
I totally get it.
I mean, in all fairness, I think it's fine.
If people don't want to be in these super expensive cities and go somewhere else,
especially if they don't have to commute to one of those skyscrapers that often,
fine. But I think in New York, like, I don't, from what we can see anecdotally, I don't think all
those buildings are going to fill back up. They're not. And that's okay. Yeah. You know, I think one of
the good things that happened with the pandemic was when time stopped, we got a chance to sort of,
like, reassess. And we were saying to ourselves, why do we need to go to work five days? And it,
and we don't. Not from, you know, you probably should work five days, but maybe you can get your
work done in four days. They found when people work 80% of the time, if they get paid the same,
they do the same amount of work. Because most people, in an eight-hour day, they work three hours.
So why not? And, you know, saved all that commuter time. I love, we come to the office once a week now.
Well, obviously, today to do the show. But other than, yeah, you're welcome. It was a pleasure.
But other than that, once a week. And that's, I feel that's perfect. We could do the rest of it at home.
I don't need to see my lovely staff.
I love them, but, like, once a week is perfect.
Here's the problem.
And I mean that in the...
Totally agree, but we are losing something.
I mean, I work from home, so, like, take this criticism for what it's worth.
But, like, our generation, we already got mentored.
We already got trained.
I think about, like, lawyers, like, law firm partners aren't going in anymore,
and those associates aren't learning how to do a trial.
God knows we don't learn it in law school.
So, like, we don't quite know what's going to be lost
when we have an entire generation who doesn't have anyone actually telling them
how to do their jobs because we're all home in our PJs.
Yeah, I think both things are true.
P-Js.
I think both things are true.
Like, I remember in the very beginning of COVID with the lockdowns,
people were like, what the hell?
Like, I can't stay home.
Like, I need to go out.
And then by the end of COVID, everyone was like,
what the hell?
I can't go out to work.
I need to stay home.
And you're sort of like, this is human nature.
Right.
I think you'd be to mix.
It's going to miss.
Well, you have to go out to the set to make a movie.
So you're going to be out, and we're going to go to the movies together, right?
Not at the same time.
Okay.
Thank you very much.
We'll see you next week.
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