Search Engine - Talk Easy x Search Engine
Episode Date: October 3, 2025This week, we’re sharing something we loved. An interview with Fresh Air’s Terry Gross about a life made out of conversation. Check out Talk Easy Check out Fresh Air To learn more about listen...er data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Search Engine.
I'm PJ Vote. No question too big, no question too small.
When I was 14, I had a disc man with an FM radio feature.
And when I got tired of whatever weaker than CD was in there,
I turned on the radio and listen to Terry Gross on her show Fresh Air.
Fresh Air, I would argue, is the best long-form interview show that anyone has ever made.
The way she interviews people, Terry Gross is famous for her astounding levels of preparation.
Whoever it is, a writer, a musician, an actor, anybody.
she will have seen or heard everything they've ever done.
She'll read all the other interviews,
and then she'll arrive and just be completely present.
You can feel a lot of times when she interviews someone,
this feeling that she's getting a public person
to reveal something new and genuine about themselves
that they never have.
A good episode of fresh air for me
seems like it can answer the question,
how did this person come to be?
I didn't know all that when I was little.
I just knew I liked her interviews more than any other.
I was drawn to them because I could listen to adults in public
talking the way I imagined they spoke privately.
It was thrilling.
When we started Search Engine,
it was my first time trying to learn how to conduct long-form interviews.
I'd interviewed a lot of people before,
but long-form is a different skill, differently hard.
And I wanted to interview Terry Gross about how she does it.
The question of the episode was either going to be,
how do you interview people, or how do you make an interview show,
or maybe just how do you listen?
I got her email. I sent her a short note that took a very long time to write.
And she wrote back a polite note saying she was busy, but to check again in the future,
when things might be calmer over there. So I was going to do that. But then, a few weeks ago,
I heard this interview she'd given for Fresh Air's 50th anniversary. And it was just to my ear,
the platonic ideal of the conversation I'd hoped to have. Somebody had done it better than I could.
The interviewer is this man named Sam Fragoso. He has a podcast called Talked.
easy. Sam's a young podcaster, but he's the real deal. You can tell he'll be doing this when he's old.
And he's very clearly trying to interview Terry Gross with a level of preparedness and care and
attention with which she interviews other people. Sam is trying to Terry Gross, Terry Gross.
And Terry, who's almost never on the other side of the microphone, is settling into it over the
course of the interview. She's clearly not entirely comfortable being the person being asked
questions, but also she's clearly trying to be generous to someone who has tremendous respect for her,
to give him what other people have given her, trust and vulnerability. The whole thing, it's long,
it's an hour and a half, and when I listened, I thought, this is the conversation you'd play
for someone who asked, how do I interview people? It's a class, but it's not just that. It also helped
me move forward with some other questions that have been crashing around my brain, about life
and lineage and how someone thinks about a life spent in service of their work that they love.
Terry's husband, who she was with for 47 years, the writer Francis Davis, died earlier this year.
And Sam also talks to her about that relationship and that loss.
And she shares what that kind of grief is like. It's a rare kind of conversation.
Okay, here's Sam and Terry.
Terry Gross. Yes. Welcome to the show.
Thank you. Pleasure to be here. Thanks for coming to Philly to do this. I'm
I've never been in Philadelphia. This feels like the perfect occasion to come to Philadelphia. How are you doing?
I'm doing okay. You know, you probably know my husband died a few months ago, but under the circumstances, I think I'm really doing okay.
Has it been easy to get back to work in the aftermath of that? He passed April 14th, right?
Yeah. Well, you know, I took a couple of weeks off just to, you know, organizing the funeral and dealing with some of the immediate stuff.
you have to deal with.
And during that two weeks, I also wrote the on-air tribute I did to him.
I went to people to, like, know who he was.
You came back on the air, I think, two and a half weeks after he passed
and recorded an episode, a kind of eulogy to him.
Yeah.
It was more like, this is who my husband was.
I'm going to read you excerpts of his writing.
I'm going to play you the music that he loved that he was writing about in these excerpts.
So you get to know him.
It wasn't about me.
It wasn't about like, oh, the love we shared, the great moments that we had.
I did mention a couple of things like how we met, but it was mostly like, here's something else that he wrote and he loved this record and here's why.
I do want to talk about the love you shared.
Oh.
We'll wrap our way back to that.
So since then, you've been back at work making, what, four shows a week?
It was 10.
I think it went to 9 and went to 8.
Okay, so it's slowly gone down.
It's like a countdown clock.
Okay, so you're back at work since then.
Yeah.
It's my understanding that on Fridays, you and your staff have what you've described as a marathon meeting.
Yes.
About who's coming on the show and who's not coming on the show.
And since our editorial calendars are often very similar, I thought, why don't you share in this safe space of who's coming on so that we can prepare our calendar around yours?
What's your next question?
Okay.
My next question is, can you at least tell me what day you plan to sit with David Mamet on fresh air?
Yes, that is very unlikely.
I heard your interview with him.
I heard you may be blocking off a whole week for Mamet in September.
Yeah.
Mamet Week, I think it's called.
I think it's called Mamet Week.
So I want to just call on the record and correct the things that he said about me before we get to him walking out.
There's a moment in Sam's interview with him when he's talking about how all his friends abandoned him.
And he mentions like TV shows and NPR, The Atlantic Magazine.
I forget if he mentioned the New Yorker.
I think the New York Times.
The New York Times, yes.
And then he mentioned me by name and he said, you know, that I had abandoned him
because I used to have him on a lot.
On a show he called All Things Considered.
Yes, and he said that Terry Gross from All Things Considered,
she even came to Vermont.
And then he also said that in 2008, when we and everyone else were
rejected him, we sent him a form letter, which we never do. So I'll start there. We don't send out
form letters. I don't host all things considered. I don't work for all things considered. And I've
never been to his place in Vermont. So I'm glad we cleared the air. Yeah. It's just that when
somebody gets everything wrong about me, I wonder what else are they getting wrong? You know.
In the prologue of your book, all I did was ask. You write that on your bad days, you wonder whether, quote, the autobiographical
interview offers much more than the potential for gossip or voyeurism. Since we're here celebrating
50 years of fresh air, half century in, where are you at on that these days? I still believe in it.
I think a lot of what art is about is finding your life reflected back at you with words or
stories that you wouldn't have thought of yourself. And there could be something very clarifying,
very affirming about it. And I also think with an autobiographical interview, when somebody's reasonably
honest about their flaws and shortcomings, as well as their great triumphs, you can find yourself
in that. Or the opposite. In art and in autobiographical interviews, you can learn about people
who are totally unlike you and still see what you share, you know, the shared humanity.
So I still have a lot of faith in them.
There's some books and some interviews where I feel like, well, there's a little bit of self-mythologizing here or a little bit of like intentionally making your life into the moral of the story is.
Or like anybody can achieve this.
All you have to do is work hard, which I really do not believe.
What do you not believe?
I think that some people have a gift and work.
Working hard helps them enhance the gift, focus the gift, improve the craft.
But I could work 10,000 hours learning to play piano or 10,000 hours writing or something.
I would never be great.
Do you know what I mean?
It takes more than time.
It takes a certain aesthetic that you're kind of born with or the guts ingrained in you.
It just takes more than time.
So that's why I don't believe in like hard work and anybody.
could do this. Some things, yes, but not art. Do you think you had some gift that was innate
and asking questions? Well, I wouldn't call interviewing necessarily an art. You don't think it's an art.
I don't know. I just feel like as an interview, if I called it an art, it would sound pretentious and
self-aggrandizing. You've done over 15,000 interviews, over 50 years. At what number are you allowed to be a little
self-aggrandizing.
Well, the number isn't what, I don't think I'm a bad interview.
Don't get me wrong.
I don't think like I really suck at this and somehow I'm still doing it.
Yeah, that would be shocking.
Do you think it's a coincidence in talking about your biography that someone who has devoted
their career to asking questions came of age in a house where questions were not exactly
encouraged?
Revealing things to the outside world wasn't encouraged.
You can ask questions at home.
allowed to ask questions at home. Yeah. Because in many interviews, you talk about how there's a lot of
questions you wish you asked your parents, but you never did, where you felt like you never could.
Yeah. Those were most of the questions about death. Because I think maybe the context of that
was talking about the Maurice Sendak interview in which he knew he didn't have long to live. And he was
talking about facing dying. He was talking about losing friends. Those are subjects my parents
didn't want to talk about. They knew that they were dying when they were dying, but you couldn't
talk to them about that. They weren't from the age of talking personally like that.
What about when you were growing up in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, you know, in a post-war apartment
building that I think was built on an old racetrack? That's what I was told. And yeah.
What was the environment like between you and your parents and your brother also, your older brother?
What were the kind of conversations you did have?
Well, my older brother was like a role model for me when I was growing up,
in the sense that, like, he was the person who got, like, the record player,
and he was the person who bought records.
And so I really benefited from that.
He knew, like, what label people were on.
So it's not like he had a huge collection, but, you know, he had some good stuff.
You said once that you were, quote,
brought up believing that there's some positive value in thinking,
Oh, yes. I think it's a very Kenahara Jewish thing. If you think something is going to turn out badly, then you won't be disappointed when it turns out badly.
Sounds a little bit like a Mel Brooks quote. Hope for the best, expect the worst. It's a quote from one of his lyrics. And that's like, when asked for it, do you have a motto, that's what I offer.
But also it was like if you expect good things to happen, they're not going to.
You know, it went along with my father's, you know, expression.
No one ever said life was about pleasure.
You know, like weekends, you get some time off where you're allotted a certain amount of pleasure.
But during the week, it's like...
What was your mother's motto?
She didn't really have one.
Yeah.
Most people don't have motto.
Yeah.
I mean, it wasn't literally his motto.
But it's something that I heard and certainly that I probably internalized.
Taking this maybe too literally, but like what did that inner monologue of thinking negatively sound like for a young Terry Gross?
Frustrating, a little annoying, but I think I internalized it anyway.
What part was frustrating?
Well, you know, you want some time for pleasure.
And like when I was a little child, this was more when I was a teenager.
Right.
When I was a teenager, I was still a really good student doing really well in school.
But hanging out, I wouldn't exactly call myself a theater kid, but we had something called sing in Brooklyn schools where you write a long sketch, take Broadway melodies and write lyrics to those melodies.
So I was one of the lyricists.
For all four years, you were one of the lyricists, right?
For at least three of them.
But anyways, yeah, I want a pleasure in my life.
Being a lyricist sounds pleasurable.
Oh, it was. It was great. I loved it.
When you're writing those songs in high school, it's my understanding that you once overheard basketball players sing your lyrics.
Now, you remember what those lyrics are, don't you?
I'm too embarrassed to reveal them.
Hold on. You've said in the past that you won't say them.
What if we sang them together?
We're not going to do that.
There's no way we're going to do that.
You don't even know the lyrics.
Well, that's why if you teach me, just imagine yourself as Stephen Sondheim.
Give me one line.
Okay.
I may live to regret this.
That was the alternate title of your book, right?
The alternate title of a lot of my life.
Okay.
So the premise is kind of like a rip-off of how to succeed in business without really trying
where the main character finds like a rulebook for success.
like a self-help book for success called How to Succeed in Business without really trying.
We kind of used the same premise.
And the premise was that we wanted to be like, cool.
And we didn't know how to be cool.
We needed a handbook.
I wish I had that in high school.
Or that we were going to create the handbook.
I think we needed the handbook.
And so the melody was to Lechayim from Fiddler on the roof.
And the opening lyric was,
the book will be our mentor, our noteworthy source of the rules.
It will teach us explicitly in sheer simplicity step by step to be cool.
The school will marvel at how cool and groovy we look.
That won't suspect that the gimmick is that we are mimickers of a 16-page book or something like, 60-page book.
Excellent.
I'm done.
Excellent.
I'm totally done.
With the interview?
No.
I'm not going to pull a mammet.
Or Bill O'Reilly.
Or Bill O'Reilly, or several other people I can think of.
Or Fade Downaway?
Or Fade Downaway.
Or Monica Lewinsey.
Or Monica.
Or Lou Reed after six minutes in 1996?
Yes.
I can keep going of fresh air walkouts.
It's an illustrious roster, I have to say.
It's a really great roster.
That was fantastic.
Listen, if I really live to regret it, you're going to know about it.
I believe it.
And as well, our listeners, that was amazing.
I don't hear the compliments.
I don't hear like...
I said that was amazing.
No, you think it's amazing that I revealed it.
Yeah, you're right. You caught me on that.
I know.
When you were sharing the lyrics, I was like, God, how am I going to remember to sing all these?
This is very long.
Was it satisfying to hear your fellow classmates singing your words?
Oh, it was great.
I felt so affirmed because I wasn't in with like the basketball crowd,
even though I was what was called a booster, not a cheerleader,
but somebody who just kind of screamed loud and got to wear like a special jacket with the team's name on it.
But I didn't really know the guys.
And they were like the cool guys in school.
So a couple of those guys singing a lyric that I'd written that was like, wow.
I mean, so towards the end of high school, did you feel like, oh, I could go down this road?
This could be a job or this could be a career.
Being a lyricist?
Yeah.
Absolutely not.
No.
No.
I don't know if I was thinking as deeply about it.
I was a high school kid reading, you know, existentialist essays and novels.
But I don't know how much I was really comprehending all of the subtext.
But you were enjoying it.
Yeah.
From there, where did you want to go?
Well, initially I wanted to be a writer, but I got disabused of that pretty early on in college.
In your freshman year?
Yeah.
One of the teachers read one of my essays, some of it out loud and said, you know, and he wrote on my paper, like, you have the ability to really like break up language, you know, and do something new.
And then the other teacher assigned us, like, just like, write me a story.
And I was used to, like, having an assignment.
Being told what to do.
Yeah, like, right.
an essay about this or a story about that. And I said to him, like, I don't know what to write about.
And he said to me, well, write a love story. And I thought, well, that sounds really condescending.
I doubt he'd say that to one of the male students. And I wasn't like reading love stories or romance
stories or anything. So I just felt kind of lost and realized, I don't think I'm a writer.
Even then you knew you needed an assignment.
Well, yeah, that's a nice thing about interviewing.
Is that like you're helping to tell a story, but you don't have to actually write it?
Mm-hmm.
Because writing, I don't know about you.
Do you find writing easy?
I don't.
With a Dorothy Parker who said, I hate writing.
I love having written.
That's about how I feel.
I only love after having written if I think it's good, which I usually, I don't hold my writing in very high esteem.
Yeah.
Me, there.
I like your opening essays, if I may call on that, before.
you know, introductions, whatever, before your interviews, they're really well written.
Some of them are good.
I like the ones I've heard.
Thank you, Terry.
In 1968, you leave home for college in New Buffalo.
By your sophomore year, you had already decided to drop out and to hitchhike across the country.
Decided as a strong word because I was really torn.
Did your parents try to stop you?
They definitely tried to stop me.
They flew up to Buffalo.
They flew up.
Yeah.
They told me that basically they were going to cut me off.
Do you remember that conversation?
Not the details of it, but I remember it was horrible.
I mean, I love my parents.
You know, and although I needed to rebel against them, I didn't want to break their hearts.
My father actually, at least my mother told me, because they were in Brooklyn.
I was in Buffalo.
My mother said, like, your father, you've made your father literally sick.
He's in bed.
and it was just like tearing me apart,
but I felt so much like they were trying to hold on so tight
that unless I kind of really cut the string for a few minutes,
that I'd always be like capitulating
to their idea of who I should be or who I was.
And I needed the ability to change.
I think one of the real values of college,
in addition to what you learn in the classroom,
especially if you're privileged enough to go to out-of-town school
or if you have the desire to go to out-of-town school,
not everybody does,
is that you get to rewrite yourself
in ways that you later realize are hilarious,
but some of it was really necessary.
Who did they think you should be?
A good student, well-behaved,
somebody who they could hold out as, you know, a good daughter,
who would make them happy according to their standards.
And you have to keep in mind, too, there's this huge generation gap at this point.
I see all these people now who are so close to their parents.
And it was just the opposite with my generation and many people I knew.
And they were Eastern European.
My grandparents were Eastern European immigrants.
And my parents grew up during the Depression.
My father had a drop out of high school because his father died.
and he had to help support the family.
You know, my mother went to, like, secretarial school
because that's what you did if you were a woman or a girl.
You know, she certainly didn't have the money for college.
My mother was, like, really smart,
but I don't think she would have ever thought of it.
And she read all the time.
Yeah.
And she'd go to the library every week and take out a new book or two.
Sometimes I'd go with her, and she'd read the book.
So did you feel like you had to break their heart in order to find your own way?
I didn't feel like I had to break their heart.
I just felt that I had to at that point disobey them.
And it wasn't even my idea to do this.
I mean, to go cross-country was my boyfriend's idea.
I was really in a lot of ways looking forward to like settling in,
in this like student housing complex of garden apartments, not a dormitory.
And, you know, we'd be living together next door to a other.
of our friends, and that would have been nice to just, you know, kind of nest a little bit.
But I felt like, well, it'll be an adventure, and I did need to break away.
Was there an underlying mission?
The destination was California.
That was the destination.
Was it all inspired by Dennis Hopper and Easy Rider?
Oh, zero percent.
It's not like I didn't like the film, but I wasn't seeing myself in that context at all.
Okay.
I'll paraphrase Joyce Johnson here.
She was Jack Kerouac's girlfriend for a while
and later became an editor and writer,
a book editor and writer.
And in her memoir, it was called Minor Characters.
And it was about seeing the men,
you know, Kerouac and Ginsburg and all those guys
from the perspective of the girlfriend,
the person on the margin.
And she said, like, for men, the adventure was,
going to Mexico, driving cross-country for women, it was being the girlfriend of the guy who did that.
That was the adventure. But I didn't see myself quite that way, but I did see myself as like,
this isn't really me. I'm more of a homebody. It's a huge decision to make for something that's not
you. Yeah. This is the position I felt in like, who am I going to choose between my boyfriend or my
parents. And I'm not sure it occurred to me that I could make up my own mind. You didn't think
there was a third option. Yeah, I didn't think like, what do I really want? Screw what they want.
What do I want? You know, so I really, I'm not proud to say that. What do you, what are you
not proud to say? That I wasn't thinking for myself on making the decision. I was thinking,
like, which are these two sides am I going to choose? As opposed to what, what do I really want in my life? Do I
really want to do that. I was enjoying college. It seems to me that you're, it sounds like you're
blaming yourself a little bit, like it's some kind of personal failure that you didn't know that
there was a third option. I think I wasn't quite a feminist yet, and I wasn't quite
rewriting the rules of the game in my mind, and thinking about what does equality mean,
what does independent mean? What do I really want to?
of life. It was after that trip that I really started reading a lot of feminist literature
and going to a consciousness raising group and all of that.
Speaking of trips, when you took LSD, you brought a pen and paper to accompany you on this trip.
And you said that I had a subject in mind.
Did I say I had a subject in mind?
You said, I'm going to have a subject.
What was subject?
The trip.
The trip itself.
Yeah, I think I thought I'd write about that.
Okay, and you thought that would open up your writerly...
Doors of perception.
And did it?
Well, it opened up my perception for sure.
But the whole idea of writing about it seemed absurd.
Because the whole idea, to me, of the experience was the experience.
Because when you're writing, you're standing apart from the experience.
and describing it as opposed to fully experiencing it.
And to me, this is about like, that's ridiculous.
Get rid of the pen and paper.
Just experience this, live this.
Where were you when you did it?
Central Park.
Oh, my God.
Not for the whole time.
Right.
You're walking around, I assume.
Sitting, walking, riding.
No, just kidding.
My last question about this period, you went to Woodstock.
Oh, yes.
You seemed exasperated me bringing
this up. No, no, no. It's just, it was a mixed experience. How come? Do you ever see the movie
Weekend, the Gendarmovie weekend? Yes, I have. It reminded me of a scene from weekend.
Ah. A kind of nightmare scene. And then when we got there, it's just like I was so crowded.
And having to use those really filthy Johnny on the spots, it was so unpleasant. Is that a
port-a-potty? Yeah, like a port-a-potty kind of thing. They're called Johnny on the spots?
Well, some of them are. It sounds like a band. Like a John.
I could have been playing Woodstock.
Yes.
Yes. Go ahead.
You know, I enjoyed the music.
And I was glad I went.
It was an exciting experience.
Is there a performance that you still, when you think back on the time, you go, God, that was amazing.
I was there.
Because I've seen the movie, I'm sometimes not sure who I saw and who I saw in the movie.
Yes, of course.
But I think Slice Stone.
I think I really saw it.
That's amazing.
By the end of the trip, you once told Philadelphia Magazine,
back in 1992, that you felt very much like a voyeur.
I felt like everybody had a life and I didn't.
This was nice traveling cross country.
Right.
What did you mean by that?
Along the way, but especially in California,
we were mostly crashing in people's houses.
And everybody had a thing that they were doing.
Like they were an artist or they were devoted to something,
gardening or that had a passion.
Single-minded.
Yeah, and they had a passion.
that they did well and that gave their life, like meaning and purpose.
The way you sort of were in high school as a lyricist.
Yeah, and just as a student, you know, and having friends and all that.
And I didn't feel like I had that, especially since I'd already decided I wasn't a writer.
So seeing all these people, like, I wanted that in my life so badly.
But you didn't have it then.
No.
And it's not until you come back home, you've finished comments.
and you're working a not so interesting job typing out faculty policy menu.
You can call it not interesting.
No qualifier necessary.
I actually have a not so interesting explanation as to why I said not so interesting, and I won't share it here.
No, share it because you do so much research.
No, no, no.
Well, yes, yes, yes.
It's because you said everything interesting was happening outside the
the classroom. It was the protests. It was, uh, the music. It was the movies. The movies, everything. And so
the readings. In my framing, I had the not so interesting in reference to this is why it's not so
interesting. Oh, I see. Okay. Yeah. I got it. See everything was, I don't know if you know this,
Terry. In interviews, we like to stack things up together. Oh, absolutely. Definitely. Definitely.
And I, I edit things in my mind as I'm doing the energy. Do you do that? Oh my gosh.
constantly. I've been editing this whole time.
Oh, okay. It's distracting, but you've got to do it. It's very annoying.
But you have to. Why? Why can't I just be here with you?
Well, well, you are here with me. And you're very much in the moment.
I'm trying. But there's a part of your brain. Always.
That's editing, and it needs to because say you want to edit out what we just said.
I think now that we're talking about editing in this kind of metatexual way,
I think we may keep it in. Well, that's the thing. So you'd have to edit out.
out what I'm saying right now if you edited out the thing before, which is why you have to edit
and you, like, you have to decide right now, like, do I think I'm going to leave that in or not?
I'm going to leave it in. Okay. Because there's a teachable moment between, I think, the best to ever do
it and someone who's learned a great deal from that person. Oh, I appreciate that. So tell me,
at your terribly boring job, writing faculty policy manuals for Buffalo State College. Yeah.
Was it on the job while you were listening to the radio that you first discovered the power of the medium?
That's what the good part of the job.
There were two good parts of the job.
One was the donut in the morning that they had a box of donuts.
I was eating that back then.
But the really, really good part was listening to WBFO,
which was this extraordinary NPR affiliate on the campus.
It was like there were maybe five paid people and maybe 100 volunteers.
The show I used to listen to in the afternoon was called This Is Radio.
And that was the show that Fresh Air was initially modeled on.
And I loved all the music that Wally Gaevsky, who was hosting at the time, played,
because it was a mix of jazz and blues and rock and folk.
And it was just great.
And I also realized, like, when you're doing,
doing something that isn't really engaging your mind,
how wonderful it is,
to have something to listen to that your eyes aren't required for.
But you can feed yourself on it.
It keeps you emotionally and mentally fed.
So the way I actually got into radio was not by listening,
because I never dreamed that I could do that.
But at this point, I was kind of fishing around to, like,
what am I going to do next?
I still don't have the passion, the work kind of passion.
You wanted to be one of those people you met on your road trip.
Yeah, like to have the passion that they had.
And coincidentally, one of the women who I live with,
because we were living in a group situation, couple, single person,
and she was going to be on the feminist show on WBFO,
the station that I was listening to.
So she's going to be on the feminist show.
So all the women in our house kind of gathered around the radio to listen.
And she really surprised us.
She came out on the show, which wouldn't have been a big deal, but she hadn't told us yet, her roommates.
So when she came home, we had a long talk, and she said that her girlfriend was going to move from the feminist show to the lesbian feminist show.
And suddenly there was an opening on the feminist show.
And I'm not the kind of person who, at least back then, I wasn't the kind of person who would go and say,
hey, can I work on your show? I have no experience. I've never done this. I don't know anything,
but I'd love to work on the show. But now that there was an opening, and of course, there was no money
being paid so they could only get volunteers, I had my roommate's name, and I had a recommendation.
She gave me the number of somebody to call, and I said, well, why don't you come and do an audition?
And I did. Why do you think your roommate was more inclined to come out on the air than in the comfort
of the apartment you share together.
Yes, I've asked myself that.
And I think perhaps for her,
it was kind of like
sharing something that's almost like
a little bit of a secret with the person next to you
on the airplane because you know you're not going to see them again
and you don't know who they are.
They don't know who you are.
I think it might have not occurred to her
that we'd all be listening,
that this really was a very public thing.
So that's my only guess.
I don't know.
Maybe doing it publicly,
enabled her to do it personally.
I can't read her mind,
so I don't really know.
And I never asked her.
But I'm so grateful to her.
I mean, if that hadn't happened,
who knows what I would be doing now?
It would probably not be radio.
That seemed like one of those moments
that change your course.
Serendipity.
As you begin working in radio
and then come to Philadelphia
to work
fresh air, did something about the fact that she did share it on the air and not in the apartment
and form the way you thought about the power of the medium, like, oh, this can be a space
in which people share things that they do not share in their day to day. Yes. I speculated about
the reason why, but I'll never really know. Tom Boswell, who was or was still a sports writer,
once said that he thought that sometimes people felt more comfortable talking to like a professional.
You know what I mean?
And so like if you're talking to an interviewer like they're a professional, not in the way that a psychologist or a psychiatrist is,
but you feel comfortable placing yourself in their hands.
I don't know if that's true because I think a lot of interviewers are, especially in a part of the personality press,
very prying and that people don't trust themselves
and build big shields around themselves.
After the break, more from Terry Gross.
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Right now, we are living through some of the most tumultuous political times our country
has ever known.
I'm David Remnick, and each week on the New Yorker Radio Hour, I'll try to make sense
of what's happening, alongside politicians and thinkers like Corey Booker, Nancy Pelosi,
Liz Cheney, Tim Walts, Katanji Brown Jackson, Newt Gingrich, Robert F. Kennedy
Junior, Charlemagne the God, and so many more.
That's all in the New Yorker Radio Hour, wherever you listen to podcasts.
Did you feel like a professional when you started your show?
No, hell no. I wasn't. Yeah, I had no idea what I was doing. You know what I did at first?
I was just writing term papers. My first two shows was like women in the blues.
And my other first show was about women's clothes. Like, why were there bras and girdles,
like restrictive undergarments,
long trains on skirts and stuff.
And so I didn't know anybody who knew about that stuff.
So I went to the library and did research and read my paper.
It was like the worst radio you can imagine.
We actually have a clip from that.
Do you want to put it in here?
I'm kidding.
There's no clue.
Oh, thank God.
You terrified me.
I appreciate that you think I could find that one.
Well, you do so much research if anybody could.
You would.
In your Proust questionnaire, you wrote, who would I be? Where would I be? Without the year of 1978. What happened in 1978?
I'll take it chronologically. Danny Miller, our executive producer, who was a senior at Temple University, became an intern on fresh air. I had been doing the show myself, three hours a day, five days a week. It was still a local show.
And when Danny came, suddenly the show was, it was fun.
You know, I had like a partner.
And we shared very similar taste in music, in movies, in comedy.
So instead of this like enormous lift every day, suddenly it was fun.
And he booked guests.
And he lived just a couple of blocks away.
So I remember once there was like a blizzard and he just ran and got some comedy records and brought them over.
because no one was going to get to the station to be a guest.
It was good.
And then the second thing that happened was that I had been told one of my good friends
worked at the campus record store on the Penn Campus,
which is just a few blocks away from the radio station.
And I knew from my friend that Francis had a huge record collection,
including a lot of out-of-print records.
So I had dinner with Francis, talked about the possibility of him doing a feature.
He did an audition tape.
It was incredibly well written.
I wasn't expecting that.
And he became a contributor to the show.
And then we started seeing each other.
And that's how our relationship began.
Then Bill Seamring came.
And Bill was basically the creator of all things considered.
The show that you used to host.
Yes, exactly.
The show that I used to host in David Mamet's mine.
Just to be clear, that it was all on David Mamet's.
it's mine. So, yes, so Bill Searing was, I think, the first vice president for programming at NPR.
And he'd also been a former general manager at WBFO in Buffalo. So he became the station
manager in Philly. And he is just like such a wonderful person and such an ear for radio and so
creative in his thinking about radio. So those were three things. And it's because of Bill
that we became a national show. He told NPR we were worthy. Did you first fall in love with
Francis, or did you first fall in love with Francis's writing? It's hard to say because they were,
it was, I already liked Francis. I wouldn't say I'd fallen in love with him yet, but his writing
amazed me, and his writing is who he was. So, how do you mean? That was his passion. And we were
talking about having a passion. He wasn't really writing much at the time.
He was working at the listening booth.
Yes, and that was a record store.
But he was listening to music constantly.
It's hard to describe music.
He could really do it.
Plus, he knew all of the history behind it.
And I did encourage him to write after that.
He started writing for a Cadence magazine
in which you don't really get paid,
but you get a platform.
And he might have just started doing that himself,
but I encouraged him to write.
And he started writing for them.
And then he started writing for the Enquirer freelance.
But he started developing a portfolio and really learning how to write a review for a newspaper.
Thinking about the two of you living these parallel lives together, him becoming a writer, you working tirelessly to make this show.
Because as I said earlier, we're talking around the 50th anniversary.
There's over 15,000 interviews.
And I thought we could talk about some of them together.
Great. So with the help of Bill Seamering, the show became national in 1985.
It was weekly national, and in 87 it became daily national.
Right. The first clip I want to play is from 1986, where you're talking to author Kurt Vonnegut about writing and censorship.
At the time, some of his catalog, including Slaughterhouse Five, was being taken out of schools across the country.
And here, you're asking him about what sections of his books have created so much unrest in certain pockets of America.
Can you describe some of the passages in your book that are, passages that are responsible for them being banned?
No, and neither can the book banners, as they customarily haven't read them.
And these are nice people.
They're usually not very well educated.
have kids, they want to help the community in some way, they run for the school committee. And so
suddenly, for the first time in their lives, they are dealing with books since high school
or whatever, and so they are over their heads. But there are organizations which will give them
lists of bad books, which they don't even have to read, are these books on your shelves. I think
what's new is not the censorship, but the opposition to censorship is, I think,
for 200 years, people have been perfectly free to censor school libraries, public libraries.
Nobody's opposed them.
And what is new is that suddenly they're being opposed.
The eerie timeliness of that.
Yes.
The cyclical nature of his words in that battle around censorship.
When he left that interview, a producer at the time said that he walked out and he said,
wow, she's really amazing. That's one of the best interviews I've ever done. Oh, I don't remember that at all.
Well, no, I wasn't told to you. It was told to a colleague. But it strikes me as like, wow, that, the moment the show went national, there were already people seeing and hearing the kinds of interviews you were doing and the kinds of work that you were trying to make. I'm curious, how did you and your EP, Danny Miller, how are you reimagining the show when it went to four times a week, five times a week?
Well, we needed to get on to stations because if you're not being carried, you're not going to last.
You need a certain amount of stations to carry you.
So we had to come up with a format that was format friendly for stations.
So instead of being like long-form interviews like an hour long, often what we did, very often what we did, we divided the show into segments so that stations could cut away and have like IDs and weather updates.
at regularly scheduled times.
And so the format was the first half hour would be one interview.
Then there'd be a seven-minute music review, an 11-minute interview that was highly edited,
and that would be long-distance.
And then a four-minute book, movie, or music review.
And we got some hate mail from Philly thinking, like, you sold out to the suits,
you know, because like where's the fresh air that I knew that was like more long form.
Now it's so like chopped up.
We got one letter saying spring arrived and fresh air died because we premiered nationally daily on May 11th.
And it's good you're still holding on to that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That piece of mail.
Yeah, yeah, in my mind.
Did you like the change of direction the show was going in?
I didn't like the format when the first half hour was live as it was for the first few months
that we went national.
I just saw every second ticking away and thinking that answer was really long. I've been robbed
of like four minutes and I'm not going to be able to get in the question I wanted to ask even more.
And instead of radiating some sense of calm, I think I was just getting more and more anxious.
Like, don't you know the time that you just wasted? You know, this is in real time.
I guess what I'm trying to get at is
there were plenty of interview shows in the mid-80s
and it was becoming an emergent form
and a very popular form.
What did you want to do in that format
that you felt like others were not doing?
I don't think I thought about it that way.
I thought I'm just going to do the best I can.
And tell me what the best you can look like.
Well, my approach to interviewing
tends to be when it's like in the arts
of any sort, pop culture, music,
to try to find the connection between somebody's life and their sensibility.
Like, you know, some people are born with a gift, but the gift is shaped by their upbringing,
their parents, the world around them, you know, if they were poor, if they were rich,
if they were sick, if they were well.
And that shapes the stories that you tell,
it shapes the things that you were exposed to, and your gift kind of forms around that.
So what created the person whose work we love?
And who is that person?
Do you think one of the reasons you're especially attuned to doing the kinds of interviews that you do is because you were an English major?
I think that it's very connected.
In two ways, I always loved reading and books.
So, you know, talking to authors was a joy.
I mean, like, I don't have to join a book club.
I get to talk to the writer.
That's the thing I liked about English class is that you got to talk to people who had just read the book onto a teacher who'd probably, like, taught it 100 times.
But I think as an English major, you learn to read between the lines.
You learn what makes a good sentence, even if you can't write one yourself.
You learn a lot about language and what makes something interesting.
There's a boring way and an interesting way to tell a story, and you learn the difference.
You get exposed to new words.
I also always love movies and music.
So finding out who the people were, how that was created, all of that.
I loved it.
One of the writers who did it very well and who came on your show very often was John Updike.
Yes.
And I want to play a clip from the first time you had him on in 1987.
I believe it was.
A writer's job is to, by way of fiction, somehow describe the way we live.
And to me, this seems an important task, very worth doing.
And I think also to the reading public.
it seems, even though they might not articulate it, it seemed to them,
is something worth doing also.
In a way, what you are doing is you're giving, Pascal said this somewhere,
you're giving back people themselves.
You are, by describing as best you can, the fantasies of your own life,
you are showing other people what their lives are like.
And in a way you are giving people life, you are clarifying their life for them.
So this is not an insignificant task, is it?
No, that's a great way of looking at it, too.
Well said, John Ophdike.
He spoke in paragraphs.
He did.
He literally spoke in paragraphs.
He spoke as he wrote.
That's exactly right.
I loved his writing.
Oh, well, I love his writing.
I don't have to put it.
He's not here anymore, but just books are.
I love his writing.
The way he's describing the utility of writing, the job of the writer.
Clarifying, giving people their lives.
Do you see the function of fresh air in similar terms?
Only in the sense that I think you can.
find yourself in other people's stories, true stories, as well as in their art. It can be very
affirming to hear somebody's story and say, like, I'm not the only person in the world who felt
this, or like, I've always felt it. I couldn't express it, but that person put it perfectly,
which is often how I felt about updike and his writing. Do you still get that from interviews,
for yourself? Yeah, my life is not perfectly clarified. And, you know, my life keeps changing.
as you go through different stages of your life,
your needs, your body, your interests,
your future, your present,
they all keep changing.
And there's different things you want to read
at different stages of your life
that you find, you know, sustaining in some way.
You said the...
There's so many things here.
No, but it's interesting.
I'm seeing myself reflected in you.
What I mean by, I don't mean,
I don't mean you're borrowing from me. I mean, like, sometimes in the middle of an interview, I even say this to my guest sometimes. I say to them, just as you just did to me, just give me a minute. I don't know what I want to ask you yet. I just need to think about what direction I want to head in.
On making the show, you've said in the past, it's like you're slowly being changed every day by doing this job. And as we talk about the highlights of the show, I want to talk about some of the moments where you had your own.
David Mamet walkouts. Yes. I mentioned Bill O'Reilly earlier, Lou Reed, Faye Dunaway,
but there's one in 1999 that has really stayed with me. And it was with Monica Lewinsky.
And at the beginning of the episode, you said, I had a really ambivalent reaction when asked
whether I should do the interview. Yeah, we've gotten called by the publicist. Yes. And you said,
in asking about her relationship with former President Clinton, would I be a good journalist or a
And there's that word voyer again.
But in this case, it was literally about sex.
Yes, in this case it was.
And there's a section before she walks out that I thought we could hear together.
Sure.
Monica Lewinsky is my guest.
And as you know, she has a new book called Monica's story.
Let's talk a little bit about what you believe the relationship with President Clinton was about.
You've described the president as your sexual soulmate.
And yet he had told you that he had had hundreds of affairs.
before he was 40, but after he was 40 he'd made a concerted effort to be faithful. Then he confessed to
you that he kept a record of the days he didn't cheat on his wife. So when you hear something like that
from someone, what delusions can you have about the specialness of your relationship?
Well, I think, first let me just correct because, I mean, only in fairness to him, that
he said he, I mean, my recollection of what he had said was that he had kept a record of the days
he had been good.
And so I think to go a step further and say that his being good was necessarily days that he didn't
cheat on his wife is kind of a jump that's a little bit too much to make and it's not really
fair to him or to Mrs. Clinton.
And I don't, I think I felt that also at the time when he sort of said hundreds of affairs
that I didn't necessarily think that was literal that there were a hundred other women.
but I don't know.
I think
I think for me that it was
it was understanding
and it was seeing that
we had some sort of a connection
and the connection started
it was a physical attraction.
There was an attraction there
and it developed into a lot of other things
that come from being intimate
with someone not just physically but emotionally.
You described in the book
that the first time
you engaged in oral sex, he talked with a congressman on the phone about Bosnia.
And at the same time, while that's happening, you're thinking, we clicked at an incredible level.
And, you know, reading that, I just couldn't help but wonder how he could be on the phone while this is happening,
and you're thinking about how incredibly well you're clicking.
I certainly am not going to go through and reenact for you verbally what was going on
and what my feelings and emotions were at the time,
I think you just have to accept it face value
that that's how I was feeling
and that that's what was going on for me.
It's an interesting piece of tape.
Yeah.
How did you feel listening to it?
I have very mixed feelings about having done it.
I had mixed feelings before the interview
and I had mixed feelings after the interview.
And I wrote at the end of the...
Because she walked out.
She walked out after I asked a more explicit question,
which was,
After the oral sex question, that's when she walked out saying the questions were too intimate.
They were.
This is not a question.
I don't usually ask people about having oral sex with somebody, but it was in her book.
And reading her book, I felt like, how can I not ask about this?
And I don't know if her book was ghostwritten, and I don't know when a book is ghost written,
and I'm never really sure how carefully the, you know, the author, you know, the subject has actually read it.
You had this problem with Nancy Reagan.
Yeah.
But I felt like I had to ask.
I didn't feel good about it.
But at the same time, I was told afterwards that she was led to believe that the interview would be about recent trips she had taken and about writing the book and all that, not really anything so specific about the interview.
affair with Clinton. And she ended her tour after this interview. She didn't just walk out on me.
Like, that was the end of the tour. You put an end to it. Well, yeah, it's not what I wanted to do.
I didn't, I don't want to hurt her when the interview was over. And I later wrote the back
announced to the interview. I said, she wasn't comfortable with the question. I wasn't comfortable
asking it. And this seemed like her walking out seemed like a fitting end to an interview in which
the interviewee was uncomfortable
and so was the interviewer.
Do you think you heard her?
I know I did
and I'm really sorry about it.
I've never apologized to her in person
but I'll stand by the fact
that I asked the question
like in that moment
I will stand by having asked her that
but trying to imagine
what she was going through at the time
and like so why did she even write a book?
I imagine she wrote the book
because there was probably a lot of legal fees.
She probably got a really
really nice contract. Why did you go on a tour and be interviewed? That was probably part of the
contract that she'd have to sell the book. Right. I can't imagine what it was like to go through
what she went through. And now I think she's like really managed to turn the worst thing that
happened in her life into something that's really like productive and useful for other people
trying to help women who have been trolled. Because like she, there was no such thing as trolling at.
wasn't an internet, but she was really just dragged through the mud in every way imaginable.
Whatever level of responsibility one thinks she should take for what happened, it's still,
I can't think of anything more horrible. Yeah. Experiencing what she did in the aftermath.
I'll tell you that I had not heard that tape until preparing for this episode. And two things
stood out to me. One, the show, as you've said many times, reflects culture. Doesn't create culture,
it reflects culture. I think what that also means is it also reflects the cultural and moral values
of the moment. And I think at that time, that interview was very much in line with how she was
interviewed in other places. But it struck me as like, given what we have gone through in the
intervening 26 years, would you have done that interview like that now?
I'm not sure I would have done the interview and I wasn't sure I should have done it then.
But reading the book, it seemed so delusional to me.
But that's through the lens of who I am and she was young and obviously didn't seem delusional to her then.
I felt like I had to ask it.
It's not the only thing I asked and I had other things I would have asked.
but I just, it really stood out to me.
And, you know, I think maybe what I'm trying to get at is the, when I hear that tape,
it doesn't sound like the woman who started her radio program on woman power.
Right.
But at the same time, like I said, the culture, like you said, the culture was different
than.
And I felt a responsibility as a journalist to, you know, address something in the book, you know,
because everything had already happened.
And she's still insisting at that point
that there were sexual soulmates
and they clicked at an incredible level.
Like, look at how she's evolved.
So I think we were both living in a different time.
Yes.
I don't think she would have written that
if she was writing it today.
The whole language was different.
I'm not saying that to excuse myself.
But like I said, as a journalist,
I'm willing to still,
Justified that if she was able to write that, then I'm able to ask about it.
I think actually hearing that and hearing you talk about it is a good reminder to everyone how much not only we change, but the culture changes.
And how two people with pretty good intentions can hear and mishear and not reach each other.
It's good and it's okay that people change.
Oh, it's definitely good that people change.
And we ought to be tolerant of that.
Oh, you mean in terms of cancellation?
I think so.
I mean, the amount of guests you've had of people whose careers were basically asked to ignore now.
You had Louis on many times.
Louis C.K. came on.
Yes, and I loved our interviews.
I felt so bad that this person who I'd come to admire and enjoy so much
had done something so thoughtless and harmful.
in the case of Louis.
Yeah.
Or even Monica, for that matter.
How do you think about the limits of the autobiographical interview?
Oh, I think there are limits.
That's what I was trying to get at earlier.
I think that autobiographical interviews are really helpful.
We see ourselves in them.
We learn about people who aren't like ourselves,
and it opens up our understanding of different cultures or countries or religions,
whatever. But at the same time, I think there's a lot that's left out. There's a lot of fiction. The
example I always like to use is, you know, in addition to Louis C.K. now, I once had, like, years ago,
probably in the late 80s, a poet who seemed like a really sensitive poet to me and who seemed
like nervous being on the air. I was trying to be like really, like, gentle with him because
I don't think he was used to being interviewed that much. And I later found out that he,
He was accused of sexual harassment of his students.
And I don't know if it was like assault, a harassment.
The language was like less precise then.
But I felt really bad.
And then he came out with a book that was,
I forget what the title was,
but it was all about his sexual obsession.
And I thought like, oh, I thought,
I knew something about this guy.
I knew nothing.
And that there's so much you do not know
about the person you're interviewing,
no matter how forthcoming they may seem.
Right.
You don't know what's happening underneath all that.
And I don't allude myself about that.
No matter how much research you do.
Yes, because, you know, if you're hiding something,
you're hiding it from everybody else is interviewing you too.
Oftentimes people are hiding it from themselves even.
Well, that's true too, yeah.
When people have asked you, what is your goal in an interview?
What do you want to get at?
You said, I want to talk to people about the time they were struck by lightning when their lives are irrevocably changed.
You mentioned this earlier about needing different books for different times and how you have changed, having done this show and committed so much of your life to making this show.
And in looking through your body or work, there's one episode, one conversation that immediately comes to mind when I read that quote.
And that's with the writer Joan Didion.
You spoke with her in 2006 around the release of her book, The Year of Magical Thinking, which was published shortly after her husband, the writer John Gregory Dunn, passed away.
Can we play a clip from that?
Oh, sure.
I want to quote something you write in your memoir, The Year of Magical Thinking.
You write, marriage is memory, marriage is time.
Marriage is not only time, it is also paradoxically the denial of time.
For 40 years, I saw myself through.
John's eyes. I did not age. This year, for the first time since I was 29, I saw myself
through the eyes of others. This year, for the first time since I was 29, I realized that my image
of myself was of someone significantly younger. Right. As writers, you both worked at home and you
were with each other just about all the time. Did you have a sense of who you were outside of the
marriage, who you were as a single Joan Didion, as opposed to Joan Didion and John Gregory
done as a unit?
Not really, no.
The family was my unit.
It was kind of the way I,
that was actually the way I wanted it.
So no, I had, so it was kind of necessary
to find my, you know, to be fine myself.
I hadn't particularly liked being single.
When you were younger, you mean?
When I was younger.
were there parts of yourself that you kind of relied on him to do i mean you know all parts
i mean i mean uh people often said that he finished sentences for me well he did uh which meant
that i i mean i just relied on him he was he he was between me and the world
he not only answered the telephone he finished my sentence
he was the baffle between me and the world at large.
She was really good.
And in the middle of the episode, one of our producers came
and with something from the wire service
that saying that she just won the National Book Award.
So I broke the news to her.
I heard.
Yeah.
That was amazing.
I hadn't listened to that episode before.
And in discovering it,
I, of course, could not help but think about you
and the year you have had,
where does that tape land with you?
Hearing yourself read those words
from her incredible book.
Well, I think her relationship with her husband
was really different than mine,
but I'll tell you when I read her book,
it was for the interview,
because the book was just coming out.
And I found the book impossible to put down
and impossible to read.
Impossible to put down
because it's so well written
and it's so emotional.
and impossible to read because it's so painful.
And I just kept thinking,
what if this happened to Francis?
What if Francis suddenly died?
I can't imagine anything worse.
How do you endure that?
But my experience in hers were really different.
First of all, Francis was not my protection from the world
and answering the phone for me and all of that.
Your baffle?
Yeah, no, it was nothing like that at all.
I mean, I was the person who drove.
He didn't know how to drive.
There was all kinds of things where I was the one who had to do it.
But he had a long illness.
He was sick for like four and a half years.
COPD and Parkinson's.
Yeah.
And he had major surgery in 2020.
That wasn't related to either of those things.
In the pandemic.
And then the pandemic.
When he was in a school nursing facility for rehab after the hospitalization, I wasn't allowed in.
because they weren't allowing visitors in.
And in the hospital, it was really scary, too.
I was able to visit him, but there was no vaccine,
there was no medication, there's no anything for COVID.
Another real big difference between what Joan Didian experienced
and what I experienced is that when her husband died,
she kept all the clothing and everything.
Because the year of magical thinking is about,
like, he can't really be dead, so maybe he'll come back.
So she was saving his clothes.
If it stays there, then maybe he'll come out of the closet.
Yeah.
And for me, it was like, I don't really need his clothes.
He wasn't like a special dresser.
Like, he didn't care that much about his clothes.
I'm just going to keep the ones that have some kind of meaning to me,
because he wore it so often that I see that robe and I see Francis.
I see this shirt and I see Francis.
What I kept a lot of were his vinyl albums and his CDs.
I sold a lot of them because we had a remote locker.
We had a locker in the basement of where we lived.
We had crates and crates on the floor.
There's an archive in there.
It was we had more than your average record store did.
It was like living in a combination of a used book and record store.
It's kind of like there's a huge,
long wall of just vinyl albums and other walls of CDs. And that's my shrine to Francis now.
I have his ashes, and his ashes are on one of the record shelves. So his ashes are in and urn,
like a little wooden box, surrounded by the music that he loved. And I can think of no better
place. And it's also at eye level when I have my meals, so I can see him. He's surrounded by his
music. It's all good. It's hard for me to
to talk about. I usually don't get very far.
You've gotten pretty far.
You know, when you go through a long-term illness with somebody and then you have a part-time
caregiver and then you have full-time caregiver and then you have 24-hour caregivers and then
you're in and out of the hospital with that person and you see them just kind of slowly decline
and then recover a little bit and then decline even more and never getting back to where you were
before. It's a very painful thing to experience with someone. And through it all, you really kept
working. Was that hard? Or was it in some ways helpful? It was helpful. It was helpful to me because I
don't think I would have survived if I was just home the whole time. And I wanted to make sure that I
maintained part of my life. That was important to me. And we were very lucky. We had
had wonderful caregivers and our daytime caregiver, who was now a very close friend of mine,
he loves music and he loves movies and he loves television and keeps up with all of that.
And so he and Francis would have like great talks.
And Dev would, you know, he'd take him to the movies when there was something that, you know,
Francis wanted to see and either, you know, he'd be able to walk there with assistance,
or even if he was in a wheelchair, our caregiver was like very, very strong.
And we'd just like wheel him over the cobblestones and to get to the movie theater.
And Francis also liked to be alone.
He really wanted to be alone a lot of the time.
And so just being alone in his office, in our home was what he wanted.
If I was there, it's not like we'd be spending all day together.
you know so I think what was hard was that I had to work in the evenings to do more research
remember in the beginning you said that um with that Marie Sundack tape yeah which we'll hear a
little bit of at the end here that you got to have the conversation about death with him
that you didn't get to have with your parents were you able to have those I'm going to need
a minute I'm sorry that's okay no it's okay
Does anyone in the control room have a tissue?
Actually, I do.
It's very soon for me.
We can talk about something if you want there.
The answer was I never really did quite have that conversation.
I think it was very hard for Francis to talk emotionally about it.
It's hard for most people.
I know. I know.
Even though it's something you often ask.
I know.
And you're so good at asking about it.
I tried.
You tried with him.
Yeah.
But you know, there's a distance that you have with an interviewee where you can, you feel empowered to ask anything.
And I always tell my guess if I ask you anything too personal, let me know and I'll move on to something else.
And when I'm asking something super personal that I think might be crossing a line, I'll say, this is what I, this question is what I meant when I said.
If I ask you anything too personal, and you're not going to offend me if you tell me it's too personal.
So I'll ask the question, feel free not to ask it, not to answer it.
But I'm more cautious when asking people who I'm really close to about things like that.
Because, like, it's a different relationship.
Yeah. I think about this all the time.
Do you really?
What are your thoughts?
It's hard because part of doing this with you,
I knew going in that we would have to talk about this.
But the other part...
Do you need your tissue?
Yeah.
I've heard you say over and over and over again
that to be a sensitive interviewer,
I have to be a lousy friend.
I've heard you say that in interviews for...
Yeah.
25 years.
Yeah.
And so I'm thinking about what we ask the people in our lives versus what we ask of the people over the fiber optic cable or across the table.
What I meant, though, was something different.
What I meant was I don't have time.
I didn't then have time for friends.
And I didn't mean in terms of my relationship.
I didn't mean in terms of the questions that I ask friends.
I meant this solely as like, I'm a lousy friends.
because if you call me in the evening,
I'm not going to be able to talk to you.
But to the point,
there are things that we're willing to ask people on tape.
Yes.
The important things that we sometimes don't get around to asking people in our lives.
I think for me,
the violation seems worse if it's somebody who I'm very close with.
Tell me what you mean by that.
Because usually if I'm asking a,
asked about the death of a husband, like I did with Joan Didion, it's because she's written about it.
I'm not likely to ask somebody about death if it hasn't been a subject of their work,
or if I don't think that they can handle it.
Ditto with sex.
When I ask somebody about sex, it's because they've written about it, like Monica Lewinsky.
Or John Updike.
Or John Updike.
He was great about writing about it.
Can I just quote you one line?
So he said, what is the proper etiquette before having sex?
Do you ask if the person needs to use the bathroom first?
As if you were going on a long trip together?
I just think that's so great.
It's amazing.
He was a horny man, or at least the writing.
I'd have trouble with his relationships probably, but in terms of his ability to describe things.
Um, anyhow, it's not like I say to my parents when they're, my parents were dying, like,
I won't be offended if you don't answer this. So I'll ask the question and feel free not to answer it.
That's a very professional, thoughtful. This is the part in the hospital where if you don't like
my questions about dying, um, this is the time to say I don't like this. Yeah. So I mean, I,
I asked it very gently and backed off because I can intuit, I can intuit, I can't,
what my parents are thinking.
I can tell by the look on
my husband's face, what
he's thinking, whether he really
wants to, you know,
talk about something, and I don't
need to go any further
if I see the
not now.
After one more break,
the end of my conversation
with Terry Gross.
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You mentioned this right at the beginning of this episode, two and a half weeks removed.
You got back in this office.
and you got to work and you made this piece about your late husband.
And I re-listened to it this morning.
And it's just, it's just fucking remarkable.
Oh, thank you.
And one of the things that stuck out to me is how you gave so much space to the words and descriptions of other people.
You quoted from magazine after newspaper.
And I was wondering if you did that, one, because you're a good journalist, and two, because at that point, you didn't have the words yet.
I don't have the words.
I mean, I'm not a great writer.
I think I've made that clear.
And also, I'm biased.
I mean, I fell in love with his writing before I fell in love with him or at the same time.
And part of how I fell in love with him was his words.
I don't mean, sweet talking me, I mean, just he just used words in conversation and on the page, like, just so well.
And loving writing as I do, you know, made me just have very deep feelings.
And I had a lot of people come up to me and write to me afterwards saying, like, I had no idea of all the things that he'd accomplished and how highly regarded he was.
because the truth is jazz has become a very, you know, niche kind of music now.
And most people don't listen to jazz.
Even more, most people don't read jazz criticism.
You know our theme music.
So to me, I know what you're saying.
And I like your theme music a lot.
I just don't understand because to me it's very important.
I want to quote something he wrote.
Yes.
In The Atlantic, he wrote a piece about Johnny Cash,
someone who came on your show in the late 90s,
who didn't love doing interviews but said,
boy, you're really good at your job.
That's what he said to you.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, I do.
Man, that's the kind of thing you keep in your mind.
Your husband wrote about Johnny Cash.
He was in his late 30s
and already had plenty of mileage on him
when he was discovered by television.
Longer hair and the shadows and dense of middle age
brought out the character in his face,
making him almost handsome.
The shadows and dense of middle age.
I love that line so much.
That's one of the things I read in my tribute to him.
I wish I could come up with something like that.
I'm totally incapable of it.
But you look at Johnny Cash's face and you know exactly what shadows and dense means.
You know, I was thinking about the shadows and dense in relation to this third act of yours after doing 50 years of
fresh air, there's been so much speculation about when and whether you would retire.
Is that something you're interested in?
Not now, no.
You know, there's the saying that nobody ever other deathbed says, oh, I wish I spent more
time in the office.
Well, I think if you're passionate about your work, which has been a kind of theme of the
interview in a way, you know, of our interview, that it's not time in the office, it's
doing something you're passionate about.
Like, work really gives my life a focus and meaning.
I find my work very meaningful.
And it's not like, ah, I'm going to retire and golf.
Or I'm going to retire and write the Great American novel,
which I just haven't had time to write.
But I know, given the time, I've got it in me.
My attitude about writing a book is like never again.
This book, which is a collection of my interviews
with a kind of long opening essay.
I had an excellent collaborator,
Margaret Moose Pick,
and she did a lot of the editing of the interviews.
She did most of the editing of the interviews,
and yet just like doing, like rewriting intros
and writing the opening essay,
and then it was so time-consuming.
I can't begin to tell you, and that's with help.
So this job that gives your life meaning,
that has given it meaning for as long as it has.
for 50 years, we're living in a moment where $1.1 billion in funding for NPR and PBS, and stations
across the country have been eliminated. It was voted on and passed through the Senate, in part because
of Pennsylvania's own Dave McCormick, who voted in favor of this cut. The New York Times have called
the cuts a time bomb for the public media system. As someone who has given as much of their time in life
to this medium as just about anyone still doing it.
How are you thinking about the future of public media?
I don't know what to expect.
I don't know whether there will be more corporate underwriting coming through
or listener support.
But I know that some stations will probably go under.
I know some stations might have to not be NPR members anymore
because you have to pay dues.
to become a member of NPR if you're a station.
And those dues help support NPR.
And stations pay a fee to carry our show.
I don't know what to expect.
I think the,
I think public radio will probably survive in some form.
I think the form might really change.
I don't know.
I'm really not the right person to predict anything.
I'm not,
I'm not good at that and I don't know.
I'm not concerned about predictions.
I'm more focused on the fact that you say, I have no plans of retirement.
Right.
As someone who's going, within the time bomb, as the New York Times called it, I want to stick it out and do this job that gives me meaning.
How are you feeling day to day?
Day to day, I just do my job.
I don't think about the long-term future of public media day-to-day, at least not in a consuming way.
I think about it a lot.
and I don't know what the future will bring.
I do know, I'll just speak specifically about public radio right now.
It has contributed so much to American culture and journalism.
You know, there is still nothing in the audio space
that's like all things considered or morning edition.
Absolutely nothing.
There's a zillion podcasts.
None of them have reporters around the world.
Maybe the BBC has a podcast.
But there's nothing on the radio.
Let me put it that way,
because all things that are in Morning Edition
aren't whole shows on the podcast.
But there's nothing on radio like that.
There's a lot of communities that are cut off culturally
from a lot of what's happening.
And a lot of those communities
have really relied on public radio
for their cultural news.
And not everybody even knows how to do podcasts,
you know, how to access them.
I meet a lot of people who don't know.
So when I started in public media, when I started in public radio, it was like 1973 or four.
All Things Considered was only two or three years old.
No one knew what public radio was.
My parents thought like this is some kind of, this must be some kind of amateurish thing because I've never heard of it.
It's not going to be a serious career.
You should find something else.
But look at how it grew.
Look at how many artists were connected to audiences.
through public radio shows.
Look at how many shows it helped create, like our show.
We could never have gone national without a very major CPB fund.
The show World Cafe, same thing.
It helped Bill W.HY, Y, with just a local grant
that enabled us to create a newsroom when Bill Searing was here.
So many podcasts are inspired by public radio shows.
This American Life, Serial, Long-Farm Interview shows,
their outgrowth of public radio.
And for years, I felt like, we have no competition.
I don't mean our show.
I mean, like, NPR shows, NPR stations.
There's no, how come someone in commercial media
isn't trying to copy what we do?
Because it's so good, and it has such a devoted audience.
And now, God, there's so much competition.
I feel like I've been just a couple of years away
from the early fruits of the corporation for public broadcast,
and here I am at the other end of it,
when there is no more of that funding.
And I think it's really sad and really unfortunate.
Bill Moyers said that some people confuse journalism with liberalism.
And I think that that's part of what's going on here,
that some people with power, including perhaps the president,
see journalism that's fact-based.
And I think it's liberal,
because they disagree with the facts.
Congressman Scott Perry,
who represents Pennsylvania's 10th District,
says this exact thing.
He says,
it's a no-brainer to slash taxpayer funding
of NPR and PBS.
They are disinformation
and propaganda outlets
that only publish leftist talking points.
Oh, that's simply,
factually, totally untrue.
If you listen to the NPR news shows,
they have on Democrats,
they have on Republicans,
they have on very conservative,
conservative people, they have on arts of all kind. It's just factually not true. And if having on
people of different backgrounds, people who are black, Latino, queer, feminist, if that's a sign of
wokeness, well, it's a sign of America. It's not, it's, it's, it's not, it's not a political position. It's a
of representing human beings who are human beings and who live in our country and who have
great contributions that they've made. As soon as it was safe to come out, we saw that so many
of the artists that everybody loves are queer. And when the doors opened to black writers and
filmmakers and directors, we realized there were so many talented filmmakers who just weren't
given access. And we knew, we already knew that with music.
There was always black music being recorded.
Artists weren't necessarily being paid properly for making it.
They may have been exploited, but we still got to hear the music.
Right.
I don't say that in forgiveness of the exploitation.
I just say that in recognition that that talent was recognized.
So it's impossible to do an art show
without what Scott Perry might think of as being woke
just by virtue of having on great artists who happen
to be black or queer or Latino or feminist,
and that's reflected in their work
because people's lives are always reflected in their work.
I think many people saw their lives reflected
in the work of writer Mori Sendak.
And he came on your show many, many times.
And in celebrating 50 years of fresh air
in the building where it happened, where it continues to happen.
I thought we could play a clip from your conversation
with him in 2012.
I have nothing but have I.
They only do how little I know,
but obviously I give off
something that they trust.
Leave when I die, but
I have to tell you something.
Go ahead.
You are the all very unique
and special in you
and that you were going to.
Well, I'm really glad we got the chance
to speak because when I heard you had a book
coming out, I thought,
what a good excuse.
To call it Maurice Sondack and have a chat.
Yes, that's what we always do, isn't it?
Yeah, it is. It's what we've always done.
It is.
Thank God we're still around to do it.
Yes.
And almost certainly I'll go before you go.
I have to miss you.
Oh, God, what is...
And I don't know whether I'll do another book or not.
I might weigh all the way to the grave.
Well, I'm so glad you have a new book.
I'm really glad we have a new book.
had a chance to talk.
I have to.
And I wish you all good things.
I need another tissue.
So many times
I play him back in my head
saying, live your life,
live your life, live your life.
Like when I get caught up
in a negative thought cycle,
I just, I play that.
My emotions have been very close
to the surface since Francis died.
Is that all right?
Yeah, I mean, they should be,
I mean,
I should be feeling a lot.
We lived our lives together for 47 years.
It's okay.
Why are you saying that to me?
Because I feel like maybe you're uncomfortable that I'm tearing up.
Oh, no, no.
I'm just holding the space.
Yeah.
I also want to reassure you that I'm okay.
You don't have to reassure me anything.
That's not what this is.
Okay.
Are you?
Yeah, I really am.
I know.
There's still a wound.
There's an absence.
But I'm okay.
I have a life.
I have friends.
I have work that I really treasure.
I have people who I see every day at work
who I really care deeply about.
I enjoy seeing them.
I enjoy being in their company.
I enjoy relationships built around a common purpose.
And I have that.
I have that in a very profound way.
When you hear that tape now
It has new meaning
Yeah
And what is that?
I feel like I understand more
What it's like to be in the position
Maurice was in where he had been sick for a while
He'd been declining
He couldn't travel which is why we spoke on the phone
And to know
Death is near
And to, you know
To still find, you know
He's still found beauty in the world
And I love that he did
that's very meaningful to me.
And I really hope that when I'm nearing death,
if it doesn't come suddenly,
like if I know I'm nearing it,
I hope that music and movies or whatever
still brings me, you know,
pleasure and connection and meaning.
I know music still matter to Francis at the very end.
when he says live your life, live your life, live your life, live your life as we go,
how do you want to go about living the rest of it?
I'm in a day by day right now.
I mean, I know I'm not going to retire now.
Give me a good day.
A good day?
Yeah.
A good day, like at work is when an interview goes well.
Or just a day when, you know,
I'm at the point in my life where I'm not looking for the big exclamatory kind of pleasure.
Do you know what I mean?
I'm not planning on any great physical adventures.
I was never a physical adventure.
I was always been a physical coward.
Me too.
Oh, 100%.
And, you know, I'm not much of a traveler, kind of a home body.
but to me I just want inner equanimity, like inner contentment.
And that could just be having dinner alone or having dinner with a friend.
It could be talking to somebody in an interview.
It could be just working with the people I work with.
It could be taking a walk by myself.
It could be sitting and watching a movie.
Do you know what I mean?
But just to feel content and comfortable in my own body and in my mind.
And that doesn't always happen.
That's what I seek.
And the positive value and negative thinking?
Well, that I can't turn off.
I'd like to turn that off.
But those times occur.
And that's when I say it like, I'm okay
because I still have times like that, you know.
What did your dad say about pleasure again?
No one said.
Life is all about pleasure.
pleasure. And he's right, it isn't, but you shouldn't say that in a scolding way to somebody who's
not exactly a hedonist. You know, if you look at me and look at my, you know, the life I've always led.
I've always been, you know, on the introverted side. Studious. Yeah, exactly. You'd never think, like,
that woman, all she cares about is pleasure and she doesn't work. She doesn't focus.
You wouldn't be saying that about me.
My last question for you is, for 50 years, people have listened to your interviews.
They've read them in this book.
And part of what happens is what Updike talked about.
That they see their lives reflected back at them by hearing about other people's experiences.
Do you feel that after 15,000 interviews, 50 years, that hearing other people's stories
trying to understand other people, has it helped you better understand yourself?
I think so. Yeah.
In the sense that it's been helpful to me to hear people talk about things that I would be embarrassed to admit to myself.
And I don't mean like criminal offensive things, but just like thoughts and feelings that, you know, I tend to keep to myself because I think it would reflect badly.
on me or, you know, be embarrassing in some way. And so it's helped me feel more comfortable
within myself and also help me feel that there's value in sharing stories, even maybe mine.
There's a lot of value in it. Well, I say that because I've been a very inhibited
interviewee most of my life because I wanted to not only be invisible, but also be
a bit of a blank slate.
And I feel like
I've been at this long enough that maybe
I can say more about myself
and say it comfortably. And thank you for
asking such good questions
and being such a sensitive interviewer.
I admire your work a lot and felt
very comfortable talking to you
even when I was in tears.
You said
back in the day,
why don't more people
do the kind of interviews that we do at NPR?
And I assure you,
and I know you know this, but I'll say it,
so we have it on the record,
that there would not be
one episode of Talk Easy
if it weren't for you.
Thank you, Sam. It means a lot to me.
It means a lot to me because I admire your work a lot.
And I think you're really good.
I learned from the best.
Terragros, thank you for all the time and everything in between.
Thank you.
Can I give you a hug?
Yes.
This conversation was originally broadcast on Talk Easy, Sam Fregoso's show.
I've never gotten to record over such smooth horns before.
Can I recommend two podcasts at the same time?
Sam's show, again, Talk Easy.
I really like it.
If you want to check out another episode, you could try his Seth Rogen
an interview, which I really enjoyed.
And Fresh Air, just listen to Fresh Air.
I'm not going to send you a specific episode.
It's Fresh Air.
Talk Easy is hosted by Sam Fragoso and is produced by Caroline Reebok.
Talk Easy's executive producer is Jinixa Bravo, editing by Matt Sasaki and Nick Zahn,
mixing by Andrew Vistola and music by Dylan Peck.
As for us, we will be back next week with a brand new episode of Search Engine.
See you then.
Ambition comes in all shapes and sizes.
At First Citizens Bank, we roll with your goals
because we're built for what you're building.
Fit for your ambition, First Citizens Bank.
