The Breakfast Club - INTERVIEW: Andrew Young & John Hope Bryant Talk The Dirty Work Documentary, Friendship With MLK Jr. + More

Episode Date: October 23, 2025

Today on The Breakfast Club, Andrew Young & John Hope Bryant Talk  The Dirty Work   Documentary, Friendship With MLK Jr. Listen For More!YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPo...wer1051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:02:53 You're all finished or y'all's done? Yes, it's the world's most dangerous morning show The Breakfast Club. the guy, DJ Envy, just hilarious. Envy's not here today, but Lauren LaRosa is, and we have an amazing guest in the building today, man. It's interesting when we talk about, you know, black history, as if it's a thing of the past, like, you know, as if we don't have living legends and icons and people who, you know, actually talk, what we're there for the things that we talk about. Mr. Andrew Young is here. Good morning, sir. Good morning. How are you, brother? I'm really glad to be here with you. Yes, sir. I'm long overdue. Man, who are you telling?
Starting point is 00:03:27 I mean, I need to know where you are. Yes, sir. And I'm, I'm out of the sink. I'll look at the book and be honest or die lying. And I probably, you know, I need to read that quickly. Yes, sir. John O'Brien is here as well. John O'Brien, good morning, sir.
Starting point is 00:03:49 Good morning. Mr. Andrew Young has a new documentary out called The Dirty Work. It comes out on this Friday, 1017. Why was it important for you to tell this part of your story now? Well, I'm telling my story, and we see the glamour of the civil rights movement, and it was very glamorous. But every one or two you see on television, there were 500 to 1,000 of us in the background doing the dirty work, and it's the way I got into it.
Starting point is 00:04:24 I was actually up here in New York. in 1957, 58, and Dr. King needed somebody to move with him to Atlanta. My wife was from Marion, Alabama, which was a little country town near Selma, and we saw the MSN, I meant it was a, NBC. documentary on John Lewis in a national sitting story. We just bought a house out in Queens. And I was working up at the National Council of Churches. And when the documentary came on, my wife said, it's time for us to go home. I said, we are home. She said, no, this is New York. New York can't ever be my home. And I said, we just bought this house. We got a good job. She said, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:27 And I hope you'll deal with that. I said, well, what are you going to do? She said, I'm going back to my mama and I'm taking my children. And I said, well, what do you want me to do? She said, I want you to sell this house and find a job down south. And she was, the blessing in New York, though, was that she got a chance to go to Queens College for $18 a semester and get a master's degree. And that's what supported us in those early days.
Starting point is 00:05:57 But it was the attraction of going back south that got me back in the movement. And it was in that transition. Martin Luther King had just been stabbed. And he took... In New York. In New York. He took a month off to go to India and was just coming back and planning to move from Montgomery to Atlanta. So I ended up getting pulled in to try to help him move.
Starting point is 00:06:34 And that was the dirty work. He needed to be in a bigger city than Montgomery. But he couldn't afford to live in Atlanta except with his parents. And so he was trying to raise funds. And that's another story. No, no, that's this story. but that he never he keeps avoiding his own he never had he never had a million dollars a year to work with the entire time we had the movement going and so i was trying to help him raise
Starting point is 00:07:07 some funds and went to my church up here the united church of christ and and asked them they founded a number of colleges howard and tepisk talladega tougaloo all across the south and And so I said, you know, if you would let us use some of these properties or some of them, we could have a movement southwide in little and no time. And so I was sort of being a bridge between him making the transition to Montgomery and coming to Atlanta. I was then moved from Atlanta back to, I mean from New York back to Atlanta. And the first job I got, he was not there.
Starting point is 00:07:56 His secretary said, well, once she said, my wife's in Alabama. She said, you can't be hanging around here loose. He said, idle miners, the devil's workshop. And we got a whole lot of devils. And she said, you need something to do. I said, well, anything I can do to help. And she gave me a great big egg crate packed with, letters. She'd put about a hundred letters in a package, tied them up, and there were maybe a dozen
Starting point is 00:08:31 packages. And so she said, if you can help Dr. King with his mail, well, that's kind of dirty work. But that's really, if you want to get to know a company, if somebody's coming in and wants to get to know it, answer the mail, or at least read the mail, or know what's happening around. And so it gave me, I mean, I ended up with a bucket of mail. And that was sort of a dirty work. So you missed a couple pieces. First of all, you and Dr. King's wife, your wife and Dr. King's. Yeah, my wife and Martin's wife were by coincidence.
Starting point is 00:09:10 And I said, coincidence to God's way of remaining anonymous. They were from the little same country town of 3,000, Marion, Alabama. but there was a good school there and actually in the 1940s that school turned out more black PhDs than any school in the nation because it had a I don't know bad people who were studious and Julian Barnes daddy got his PhDs writing it on a Lincoln School in Marion, Alabama, which is where all of these young people came from. And it was where the movement, a lot of movement people came from there. So Charlemagne, when he, also when he went to go get the job, when he went to go out south,
Starting point is 00:10:04 the stab didn't want him. Dr. King was out giving speeches and on the road. The stab didn't want him. He was smart. He was articulate. He was, like, all the seats are taken. We all, we're good. They sent him packing.
Starting point is 00:10:17 So he came back with a grant The grant was self-funded And it was for nonviolent education Or something like that But he funded his salary So Dr. King said, well, you can sit here You pay for it? You can sit around over here Well, we're not only paid for it
Starting point is 00:10:33 Huh? We not only paid for it I brought access to all of those schools Yes In North Carolina, Kings Mountain Georgia It was Atlanta University
Starting point is 00:10:47 Alabama was Tuguloo, Talladega, Talladega, Alabama, and Tugulah and Mississippi. But the key point of that, Ambassador Young, was, again, you won't take credit of this, he became the one person nobody could fire. So he could speak truth to power. Yeah, but we didn't fire anybody. Exactly, because Dr. King didn't like conflict. If you let me finish my point. Yes, so.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Dr. King didn't like conflict. So he was a conflict manager. So he was the one inside of the state. staff. You had crazy people on the left and crazy folks sort of over here trying to do revolutions. Dr. King did one conflict. So he would expect Ambassador Young to knock heads inside. That's part of the dirty work. That's it. And when he came in, he wanted it to be resolved. And so he was a resolution manager inside the movement and outside the movement. Again, he doesn't take credit for it. But that really became one of his magic pieces was
Starting point is 00:11:41 that he was an independent thinker, just like you are. Just like all you guys are, independent thinkers. Did I get that right? I guess. No, the thing is that the one thing I couldn't do. I couldn't move in there. I grew up in New Orleans. I lived in the South all my life, but I was up here in New York when the movement started. So I couldn't come back down there and claim and I hadn't done anything. Everybody had been beaten up, gone to jail. And I come down with a grant. Well, that's no, I mean, that gives me no scoring points at all. And I didn't need them.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I just wanted to be there to help because, well, I don't know. I left Howard and I really, well, I really fucked up for three and a half years. Man. But I somehow got a degree. and why you say he was fucking up because i was playing around wasn't studying i was trying to make the swimming team trying to make the track team even tried the wrestling team and trying to play ball basketball in the gym and i was i went to college at 15 and so i was trying to get on the girls and i wasn't making any progress at all you know a little nigger from new Orleans uh
Starting point is 00:13:14 And I got along with people, but I was trying to grow up. And when I came, left Howard, and we stopped because you couldn't, had no hotels that let you stay, we stopped at a Kings Mountain, North Carolina, where we had a church conference going on. And I decided to run up the mountain. and that was where I was in good shape but when you're in the hills
Starting point is 00:13:47 you're never running flat you either running downhill or uphill and I was running downhill too fast and still tried to make it to the top of the mountain and somewhere along there I kind of blacked out and I looked around
Starting point is 00:14:04 and everything seemed perfect you know it was a perfect sky perfect cornfield the green trees were sparkling. And I said, damn, everything here has got a purpose. But me. And I said, I cannot be put here on this earth with no purpose at all. And how do I find a purpose?
Starting point is 00:14:28 Well, what I came to was if there's something that I think needs doing and nobody wants to do it, that becomes my purpose. So I was looking for stuff that needed to be done that nobody wanted to do. Did MLK Jr. being, working with him? Did that feel like part of your purpose? Well, he was the only game in town and he had just finished, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:56 the Montgomery Improvement Association. He got stabbed up here in Harlem. And he was recovering from he and Coretta took a trip to India to study more about nonviolence and that was sort of when I came in and he wasn't around so I started cleaning up
Starting point is 00:15:17 but I learned that when he got to be head of the Montgomery Improving Association he wasn't even in a meeting he was back in the in the mammograph room running a mammograph machine
Starting point is 00:15:35 turning out handbills telling you that we're going to have a one-day boycott. Well, that one-day boycott turned into 381 days. But they went to the back room because two preachers, Methodists and Baptists, usually. They were arguing about whose turn it was to be the spokesman. And the ladies in the group said,
Starting point is 00:15:59 look, these brothers always fussing and fighting. Why don't we let this young man in the back be the spokesman? and so they voted him to spokesman and he didn't even know it. Wow. See? That's how he became like, yeah, and they went to the back
Starting point is 00:16:15 and told him that he was going to chair the meeting and he had less than an hour. It was about 7 o'clock. The mass meeting started at 8 o'clock at another church across town. And he had to stand up and define this whole movement. Well, he really was brilliant.
Starting point is 00:16:36 But with that kind of stuff, when you run a mimicrap or seeing all day, your mind's wandering, and somebody says, hold up, you've got 20 minutes, you've got to speak. And nothing you can do but go to the bathroom and lock the door. But somebody had to know he had those gifts, right? Like somebody had to. Well, they had heard him preaching in his church, but it wasn't a gift like running a mass movement. and I mean this was the first time in a long time but it was the first time
Starting point is 00:17:11 and I can remember that any city got together and agreed that everybody would stop riding the bus started out for one day but it was so successful that it ended up being 381 days that was an early Uber by the way because it was a black taxis everybody just decided to drive everybody else around
Starting point is 00:17:32 and not get on the bus but the thing he's the message for your audience Charlemagne is when he was running up that mountain he was insecure he was lost and he was looking for a purpose a lot of people are looking for a purpose Dr. King was looking for a purpose
Starting point is 00:17:49 he was back in the mimieogram machine trying to figure out what his life was going to be like and he'd spend 18 hours preparing for a sermon he had 18 minutes that when his moment came you're on in a half an hour dude but you know the speeches is that that speech, his wife was pregnant, so she couldn't be there.
Starting point is 00:18:09 She asked the choir director to record it. So we have it recorded. And what you see is all of the, you see references to all of the speeches he made when he got the Nobel Peace Prize, when he was at the March on Washington in Selma. I mean, he had a repertoire. and he just pulled it all together and he had a nice voice and a nice cadence and he knew how to move across so he put all of the stuff together and priest's way to the top it's such an interesting perspective when you talk about a purpose too john because in my mind
Starting point is 00:18:53 you know i always thought the purpose was the liberation of black people but you're always just looking for a purpose within yourselves. First and foremost. Well, except you've got to start liberating black people by liberating the one you are. That's right. Black person sitting there. And I'm not liberated.
Starting point is 00:19:14 I'm enslaved to all of the crap that goes on on every college campus and in every neighborhood. And so let's get into real talk. He's got Survivor's guilt. he doesn't sleep he's always working because he was on that balcony when dr king was assassinated and and he was right there it was his friend before that though see we all born into a mess yeah i mean i was born into a neighborhood where my brother and i would only black kids there were three before black families but you had an irish grocery
Starting point is 00:19:53 store on one corner and italian bar on the next the nazi party was on the third corner And I'm smack dab in the middle, 50 yards from each one of them, and at four years old. That's you? That's you? I've been hearing it. Yeah, I hear it. Is that you? I got to be your phone. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:20:13 Tell me you. Call them back. The governor calling you. Let me turn it off for you. I don't know. So, so when he, when Dr. King was assassinated, the FBI told him the instructions for the shooter. If you miss the dreamer, kill the strategist. So he's been, all this time, UN ambassador, first black UN ambassador in history of the United States under Carter, first congressman since Reconstruction in the South, brought the Atlantic, the Olympics to Atlanta, made Atlanta International City, mayor, presidential medal of Freedom Awardee, French foreign Legion of Orty, 150 honorary doctor degrees, brought a venture capital to Africa, liberated Zimbabwe, helped him.
Starting point is 00:20:59 to get Mandela out of prison but underneath all this is I'm here because my friend was a shot so he couldn't enjoy any of it he'd give all his money away he's been a servant his whole life
Starting point is 00:21:14 and he is he's the closest thing we have to Nelson Mandela but he had to stay in jail for 30 years and that was one of the things I was guilty about everybody else had been to jail and they called him an Uncle Tom
Starting point is 00:21:31 and the staff called him Uncle Tom because I was managing the foundation money I couldn't I wasn't supposed to go to jail and so until I got set up in St. Augustine
Starting point is 00:21:49 well really even in Savannah I ended up first time getting arrested because I was walking to try to get Jose Williams out of jail. And there were kids playing picketing in front of the holiday inn. I mean, they were 10 or 12 years old. And the police come up there to arrest them. And I went on and I said, look, these kids are not part of anybody's movement. We wouldn't put
Starting point is 00:22:18 people out here like this with no adults. I said, if you arrest these kids, you're asking for trouble. And they grabbed me and threw me in the paddy wagon. And, but I was glad I went because they immediately shut the thing down. And you got a little slit in there. It was at least close to 100 degrees in Savannah. And they closed the air off. And I got, you know, 15, 20 kids in there and they expected us to start crying and screaming because we were we were really closed in and hot and that's where going to Sunday school helped me and I said look y'all you know how to sing Wade in the water we go into the beach close your eyes and I said and I said we're going down the Tybee Beach and when to get to the beach the water's cold and we're going to get and the
Starting point is 00:23:30 song goes it chills the body but not the soul and so we started then walking them like they were in their mind walking into the water i said we're not going to pash waist deep then everybody's going to get down we're going to cool off and so when we kind of figured out how to stay in an oven and I'd burn I said we're going to sing and they started singing wade in the water
Starting point is 00:23:59 God's going to trouble the water and we turned a tragedy into a triumph the police got mad and took everybody to jail and I had to go with them but then when we got to jail
Starting point is 00:24:17 it was dinner time and they gave everybody a paper plate and they put up grits and grease is what they served them. And the kids said, we don't eat this shit. And they started sailing the plates across the jail.
Starting point is 00:24:37 Wow. And I mean, it was a wild time. But there again, that's, I accidentally got into that. When you, when you, I'm sorry. That was the dirty work.
Starting point is 00:24:52 When you look back, was there a moment when you realize the moral weight of what you were doing could also cost you personally? I think I never worried about that. And I never worried about that because I've never been, I mean, the school I went to in the elementary school, Belina C. Jones was an all-black public school, overcrowded. And I could have gotten killed in school. I mean, it was called a bucket of blood. But I got along.
Starting point is 00:25:35 And then between that in my schooling, and then I went to a church nursery. And they taught me to read and write. So when they put me in public school, I was six years old. but they put me in third grade and everybody else was nine, ten. And so I've always had a burden, which I learned to deal with and not, you know. But I was always playing catch up. Why do this staff call you that supposedly unpleasant phrase, which actually, when you're doing a little research on Uncle Tom,
Starting point is 00:26:21 he was a bad brother, actually. He actually took slaves up north to Canada. He bought a home, bought some property in Canada, and actually housed them and created self-sustainability. Other folks turned the story into something negative. But why do they call you some of the staff, Uncle Tom? Because my daddy taught me to live in that neighborhood and to go to that school, I had to stay calm.
Starting point is 00:26:46 And my dad is motto. So he was a little man, five, four. And he said, look, you're never going to be big enough to beat up anybody. So stay calm and let your mind lead you. Your mind is more powerful than your fist or your feet. You can run from trouble, but you won't feel good about running. And you can fight, but you're probably going to get beat. But if you let your mind work, you can figure out how to get through any trouble.
Starting point is 00:27:17 but don't ever get mad, get smart. And I heard that from four. In fact, he took me to the movie, a segregated movie, to see Jesse Owens in the 1936 Olympics. Because when Jesse Owens won a hundred meter dash, Hitler got mad, and he was supposed to give Jesse Owens the medal, but he walked out of the stadium and took all of his troops with him. And my dad said, now watch Jesse, what's he doing?
Starting point is 00:27:51 I said, he's going about his business. He said, that's the point. He's not letting Hitler get him upset. He's got three more medals to win. And he ended up coming out with four gold medals and a couple of world records. And so it was that preparation that made me ready to do whatever I had to do.
Starting point is 00:28:22 So they didn't understand his role. Dr. King never wanted him arrested. Dr. King, he needed him on the outside. He didn't want, he was not useful getting locked up like the other people. He needed, it was a different frequency. And he's not saying it, but he was a strategist. And I think that's the interesting thing about the doc, right? Like it shows you that the civil rights movement
Starting point is 00:28:43 It wasn't just about marching, and you said this. It was about strategy. So what other dirty work had to be done quietly in the private for the public victories to be popular? Well, you know, they bombed, they bombed 62 homes in Birmingham in 1961, 62. And Fred Shuttlesworth came over there to see us and said, look, we cannot be passively nonviolent.
Starting point is 00:29:12 we got to find a way to be more aggressive and we need you to come over and help us so we agreed before Christmas that we would in January we would come over to Birmingham and start a movement and Dr. King turned to me and said Andy you know any white folks in Birmingham I said I don't know any black folks in Birmingham I ain't been to Birmingham and he said no Well, you got six weeks to get to know some. I said, why? He said, look, if we're going to go there and tear up to people's town, somebody has to go in early and tell them we're going to do it.
Starting point is 00:29:58 I said, then they're going to kill me. I didn't say that. I said, well, why me? He said, because you grew up with white folks. You ain't worried about white folks. You get along with people. and so I ended up by myself going into Birmingham and I had met some people in Michigan at a conference from Birmingham so I called the Episcopal Church and then one of the people I met answered the phone
Starting point is 00:30:28 and I said I need you to help set me set up a meeting with Dr. King and the Episcopal bishop and she said well I can't do that. She said, I don't know Dr. King and he's got a, he said, I tell you what? She said, you come here and I'll get you to see the bishop. So then I had to go see the bishop and explain to him that we're about to move 50 more black folk into your already 90,000 people and we intend to tear up your town. We intend to boycott. We're not going to buy anything but food medicine, you know, and, but we want to find a way to sit down with you and draw up a map where we can peacefully live together and you can respect us and we can respect you and everybody can get along. Well, I mean, he's looking at me like I'm crazy because he ain't used to black
Starting point is 00:31:28 folk talking straight to him like that. And, and, but, I mean, that was no problem for me. And so we set up a series of meetings, and all this stuff that they're talking about at Harvard now, what is it, D-E-I. Yeah, that came from Birmingham, because at the same time, Wyatt Walker, who was pastor up here for a while, he's gone to glory, he was meeting with Fred Shettlesworth and the black preachers. and they wrote a Birmingham manifesto all the things that were wrong with Birmingham and I was meeting with the white folks and they were writing all the things they could do to change.
Starting point is 00:32:17 You had to sit down and put it to them bluntly and say, look, you got black water and white water. Now, you know that's not real. There's no difference between the water. Why you got to put a sign on and say and this was for black folk and I was white folks. It's all water.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Take the signs down. See, if you don't take the signs down, and then you got these black women, and you got them in aprons and smocks, and you let the white women dress up with the clothes they're selling, and they got a commission. But the black folks have to do all the work, keeping the shop clean,
Starting point is 00:32:58 and keeping the clothes, said, why not just let everybody wear the dresses on the rack and let everybody get a commission and they said well we could but then they'd have a thousand reasons why they couldn't do it but we had 90,000 black folk in Birmingham and when 90,000 black folk decided in January that they were going to stop spending money on anything but food and medicine. They bought no shoes. I mean, that's where the blue jeans came from. Everybody had raggedy blue jeans. And so nobody bought any clothes. And that's when the college students who had come down with us from all over the country, they went back and started
Starting point is 00:33:49 wearing blue jeans. Well, that came out of Birmingham. The stuff that the preachers and workers wrote down in the Birmingham manifesto the things they wanted and the things that the white folk wrote down about what they could do to answer this all of that became public but they blamed it on Martin Luther King and he was in jail so he wrote the letter from the Birmingham jail and it didn't have any paper so he wrote it around the march somebody had left him, well, lawyer up here from New York, left him a section of New York Times. And he wrote the letter from the Birmingham Jail
Starting point is 00:34:37 around the margins. In the new podcast, Hell in Heaven, two young Americans moved to the Costa Rican jungle to start over. But one will end up dead. The other tried for murder. Not once. People went wild.
Starting point is 00:34:56 Not twice. Stunned. But three times. John and Ann Bender are rich and attractive, and they're devoted to each other. They create a nature reserve and build a spectacular circular home high on the top of a hill.
Starting point is 00:35:14 But little by little, their dream starts to crumble, and our couple retreat from reality. They lose it. They actually lose it. They sort of want nuts. until one night everything spins out of control listen to hell in heaven on the iHeart radio app
Starting point is 00:35:34 Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts Hey there, I'm Kyle McLaughlin You might know me as that guy from Twin Peaks, Sex in the City Or just the Internet's dad I have a new podcast called What Are We Even Doing Where I embark on a noble quest to understand the brilliant chaos of youth culture. Daddy's looking good.
Starting point is 00:35:57 Each week I invite someone fascinating to join me. Actors, musicians, creatives, highly evolved digital life forms. And we talk about what they love. Sometimes I'll drizzle a little honey in there too from feeling sexy in the morning. What keeps them going? And you're maybe my biggest competition on social media. Like when a kid says bra to me.
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Starting point is 00:38:50 to listen and feel a little better about the future. Listen and subscribe to Here We Go Again with Cal Penn on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Up the newspaper. When he ran out of newspaper space, he wrote on toilet paper. And he used to joke and say, it's a good thing they had tough toilet paper in the Birmingham jail. But he smuggled it out through you. But he smuggled it out.
Starting point is 00:39:18 and we got all of these published. And that was the dirty work behind the movement. Bashan, I need you do me a favor. You're talking to a whole generation. They're the voice for this generation. Your habit is to talk about this person and that person to give this person credit. Look, they need you to tell your story crisply and bluntly
Starting point is 00:39:44 so they can get the memo on how they need. This generation has no. business plan about what you did. What you did was absolutely historic. This is no time to be humble. This is no time of humble pie. I'll set you up, but you've got to hit it out the park. There's some stories I know.
Starting point is 00:40:00 I know these stories. We want them to watch the dirty work, too. Yeah. Yeah, but you can listen to you talk about this boycott, like the work that you did with the boycott, and everybody plays a role in the movement is what I've always heard and learned. I feel like today, when we talk about the boycotts
Starting point is 00:40:16 that we're trying to do actively, there's no real roles we don't take one thing serious we might take the other one serious because there's no there's no structure there's no how did you get people to fall in line even though not everybody agreed with you everybody used to go to church back then and radio black radio wouldn't let wouldn't wouldn't say anything about uh black radio was owned by white folks and they would play the music and but we'd have to slip in an announcement There's going to be a certain meeting that, you know, such and such a Baptist church or such and such a Methodist church.
Starting point is 00:40:56 And they finally even stopped them from doing announcements. So it went by word of mouth. We knew that every night we'd have a mass meeting at some church in some neighborhood. And people would get together about 5 o'clock and nothing to do. and they sing these old songs that the young folk then came in and modified the freedom songs. And then the preachers would come in
Starting point is 00:41:27 and preach it a little bit and tell what's going on. But it was all around the church. And in the daytime, when the churches were not operating, the kids went to the schools and the guys who were, hanging out at the pool hall, we'd stop by there. In fact, Dr. King was a very good pool
Starting point is 00:41:50 played, grew up in the YMCA, and he could get that by his attention because he would go into a pool hall and challenge the guy, say, can I take the winner? And after he, they saw he could run the table, they listened to him. And it was, it was finding a way to get to people where they are and it didn't matter what they look like it didn't matter what the clothes were it didn't matter anything except that I'm ready well they would really say I'm ready to die for my people and it was a threat of death to almost every black man in the south until just recently and it's coming back now it's more organized now but we had to mobilize the entire community but in mobilizing the entire community of Birmingham that's
Starting point is 00:43:08 90,000 black folks. We brought people from Atlanta I came from New Orleans, some others came down from Memphis, some came from New York. The hospital workers, 1199, was here in New York, they would come down and they would work with the hospital workers. And we found a way to mobilize the whole city to, one, stop buying anything but food and medicine. And you do that for six weeks and then six months. And the economy dries up and close, people have to start closing stores. Then we finally ended up with 80 businessmen, people who own the hotels, people who own the drugstores, the shopping centers, sitting down with us.
Starting point is 00:44:08 And they got these two complaints together and agreed on. on the fact that they could change. But they didn't say we are automatically gonna change everything today. We said, let's try it. Okay, we're gonna take down the signs immediately about black and white water. Everybody's gonna drink water.
Starting point is 00:44:32 And okay, that's a good sign. We're gonna let the ladies in the women's department, we're gonna let them, take all those smocks and aprons and we're going to let them put on the clothes that they sell in see and they can get a commission too and we're going to treat to treat them fairly and we took apart to town piece by piece and everything that was not fair we said from now on let's make it fair. And people began to realize that when 90,000 people haven't been shopping and all of a sudden they start showing up, like you go to Atlanta now and all of these stores now, same thing happened
Starting point is 00:45:26 there. We didn't have to organize it like they did in Birmingham. But the brothers who start making a, right now the rappers run the department stores. Because they can come in. They can come in. with their girlfriends, and they spend money about thousands of dollars. But to answer your question, there were rules, just like you have here. He's being humble again. It was strategy. By the way, it wasn't we got the business people to take down the whites' only signs. He did.
Starting point is 00:45:54 Dr. King would shut the economy down in six weeks. They'd march. They knew the 60% of the residents were black. The dollar was the same dollar. So after six weeks, the merchants were, the Wallace were on fire. Then Dr. King would send Andy Young in, Bastard Young, Andy, he called him Andy. Go in there quietly. Take your overalls off.
Starting point is 00:46:16 Put your business suit on. Go behind closed doors. Cut a deal. Don't embarrass them. Don't humiliate them. We want them to win, too. Well, it was a little bigger than that. Well, okay, yeah, but...
Starting point is 00:46:27 Because we had to do it. We had to get... We're acknowledging that. The whole time. I'm just trying to get the blunt truth out. Well, but also, if I take credit for it, I'd be dead. Well, you're not, yeah, but you're alive. Yeah, but you're alive now.
Starting point is 00:46:42 Yeah. But by the way, clearly they knew it because they told them as you can't kill the dream them. Kill a strategist. But there was, there was rules. There were, there were roles. Everybody had a role. He had a role. Dr. King had a role.
Starting point is 00:46:53 The crazy people had a role in the movement. But the women had a role. Yeah. The kids had a role. But the dirty work is getting everybody to realize their world. That's right. And you get the kids and you, you let them know that they can pass out handbills.
Starting point is 00:47:14 And if they happen to see somebody shopping that they think that they shouldn't be shopping, just go and politely hand them a handbill. Don't throw it at them, say, or just put it on the windshield of their car. But they know that the community is watching. But it really was classic to do it in. Birmingham with 90,000 folks. We had trouble when we got to Chicago or New York, and you got millions of folk. And so we, that's where we stumbled.
Starting point is 00:47:51 And that's when Dr. King, I mean, when we were going, coming north and threatening to shut down, I mean, Chicago's got more black folk than they got folk at Alabama. And half of Mississippi in Chicago and Alabama was gone to Chicago. So we didn't have any problem doing the same things with them that we did with their parents in back home. But it was on such a larger scale. And these cities, just getting around is different. So how do we, I want to, it's a question for both of y'all.
Starting point is 00:48:39 How do we teach young people now that the real revolution isn't in just outrage, especially the social media outrage, but it's an actual organizer? Well, that's what my dad started telling me when I was four. Don't get mad, get smart. See, when you lose your temper in a fight, you lose the fight. And every time he was, he was a boxing fan. and when who was
Starting point is 00:49:07 the Sunny Liston was supposed to be fighting Muhammad Ali and Sunny Liston was a bear of a man and my daddy said watch Muhammad Ali he probably knock him out in two rounds I said oh daddy you don't know what you're talking about
Starting point is 00:49:23 he said that man I said that man I said he is a bear and I said Muhammad is I mean he's so thin he's light he, one or two punches, and he's going to go down. He said, no.
Starting point is 00:49:37 He said, watch, Muhammad is not going to lose his temper. And Mohammed is going to be cool. And it'll take him a couple of rounds of playing with him, and then Sonny Liston is out of there. Well, I said, well, he said, don't forget. Same thing applies to you. If you're going to get in a fight, don't get mad. get smart.
Starting point is 00:50:05 Sonny Liston has gotten mad. And he's going to get his ass whipped. Didn't your dad slap you in this example? Well, that's, I mean, we used to. I mean, look. No, it wasn't. It wasn't slapping. It wasn't slapping.
Starting point is 00:50:22 No, it wasn't slapping. It was, he always, he always wanted a shadow box. And he tapped me on the face like that. if I was going the wrong way but if I got lost my temper and started swinging at then he'd knock the hell out. And he'd say again,
Starting point is 00:50:41 you lose your temper, you're going to lose your head. That's right. Because I always wondered like how did y'all so for you, right, you're the strategy he brings, you can't lose your temper. But like there were times I went to a museum in Memphis at the Lorraine Motel when I was there last and they were talking to me about when Martin Luther King
Starting point is 00:50:59 was in, He was rally and the KKK was marching because he was in the city. And times like that, what happened all the time with there was death threats. There were so many things coming you guys away. I'm sure you had to have sometimes face-to-face conversations to clear the way before he got certain places. And you still stayed strategy and brains thrown. The truth is we didn't. That everybody knew.
Starting point is 00:51:22 In fact, the only person who would talk about it openly was Martin Luther King. And he said, now, you know, if we go messing with Birmingham, some of us ain't going to come back see now he knew he was the one most likely targeted but he'd start I mean he'd make a joke out of it and he had a real good sense of humor he said John it might be your turn but it's going to be one of the hardest things I ever do but I'll try my best to preach your ass into heaven And then he'd start preaching all the things that I pick on him about, see. What are you pointing to me?
Starting point is 00:52:11 Because you know, the illustration, I'm saying that that's the way he did all of us. Gotcha. See, he would know, and he would say things you didn't know he knew about you. And he'd ask God to forgive you, and please let him into heaven. You know, I mean, he really. he really turned your death into a comedy and it was it was it wasn't sadistic but the fact that people knew that they could potentially die and still were willing to make that sacrifice is what I think is missing now yeah he also but they shouldn't have you shouldn't be willing to make the sacrifice
Starting point is 00:52:53 you should be willing to take your time and assume that you can make the world right and you don't have to die and we we maybe have made it too difficult most of the people who died we can remember their names but they're literally millions like Martin Luther King got stabbed by a black woman up in Harlem and the with a letter opener. And the letter opener was pressing on the A order of his heart. And they said if he had sneezed, he probably would have died. And he talked about that all the time.
Starting point is 00:53:46 But what he talked about, he said, but he got a letter. And this is why writing the letters answering the letters was important. He said, I remember getting this letter. And this girl said, I'm 11 years. and it shouldn't matter, but I happen to be white. And I just want to thank you and thank God that you did not sneeze. And he talked about that all the time because it represented the fact that there's still many, many good people.
Starting point is 00:54:23 And you shouldn't believe that the whole world is going to hell at a handbasket. See, that right now. So even right now in this moment. Right now. Okay. The whole world is not going to hell in a handbasket. I think there's Friday or something there's supposed to be marches in 28 cities. Saturday.
Starting point is 00:54:46 Saturday. Was that for the protesting against the voting rights act? No, no. They're calling it the no king rally. Oh, the no king rally. Yeah. But we didn't have anything to do with that. But it's...
Starting point is 00:54:57 You mean we mean black people? Black people, but we'll join, but that's mostly white people, see? And like, was it that started? Why are you thinking about that? Let's answer the her question, though. Yes, there was level-head in this, and he was it. No. He would go, there were a whole lot of smart black folk.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Vass Young, with all due respect, you're being, we can either have an interview or a master class, okay? Now, they want it either way, because they're not getting these stories. What about Jay? But the master class, but the master,
Starting point is 00:55:40 Jackie Robertson can tell his own story. We're telling yours. But we're telling, we're telling the story of people who were heroes in a crisis and who were cool and didn't get mad,
Starting point is 00:55:54 they got smart. But they got you here in person. They can go read about Jackie Robert. No, they're not going to read. Okay. They don't read. They don't write. They don't.
Starting point is 00:56:04 No, she hasn't. Jazz, he been watching. Yeah. You better shut out. Now, he knows Jessica. And I'm going to my raggedy jeans for you, too. All right. God bless you.
Starting point is 00:56:13 Right. Thank you. So, so, so let me give you one example. Ambassador Young, so Dr. He had actually a ferocious sense of humor, but, but he couldn't, he didn't want to be like that because he didn't think people were going to take him seriously. So he didn't think people were going to take him seriously.
Starting point is 00:56:27 So he was, like, boxed in, but he had this important role. He needed him to play a role. And the one time he didn't play his role, Dr. King got upset with him. The one time, it was only one time. All the time. All the time you didn't play a role. What did you do? Well, when Meredith got shot on the road walking in Mississippi,
Starting point is 00:56:50 first place, he shouldn't have been walking down a highway by himself. and making this point without getting everybody wanting people and getting somebody to help him. But anyway, we had a rule. If somebody gets killed or hurt doing something that's right for the benefit of all of us, if they go down, we have to go take their place. And we were already in Chicago. we were registering voters in Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia. And we didn't need to have another march to show we were brave.
Starting point is 00:57:38 But everybody was mad because Meredith got shot. And so they said, let's go, let's go. We've got to keep it going. Well, I saw that they were leaving all of the stuff we've been working on for months behind. And it would all suffer. But I got tired of play an Uncle Tom role. I said, okay, let's go. And Dr. King said, Andy, hold up, I got to go to John.
Starting point is 00:58:07 Meet me in my office. And he came in and he said, look, if you're not going to talk sentence and help balance it on the right side, I don't need you. He said, I don't need another crazy Negro. real. We got plenty. Everybody can get emotional. Somebody's got to stay calm. And I said, but I get tired of playing that Uncle Tom role. He said, yeah, but you've been doing it all your life and you ain't going to quit now. Why did they call being calm and level-headed and using strategy being in Uncle Tom? Because when everybody's mad and you calm, then they think something's
Starting point is 00:58:51 wrong with you. They thought the most, they thought a man thought that the most courageous manly thing he can do was to go to jail. Going to prison, getting your rear in whipped was a badge of honor. By the way, strategically, they put women and children in those marches. They didn't want Charlemagne or me or, they didn't
Starting point is 00:59:07 want, because that was aggression against aggression. You wanted to get the sympathy from the TV cameras and the media. So they put women and children. That was strategic. No, we didn't put it. Well, the men wouldn't come. Okay, well, that's okay. All right. Whatever it was, it worked out.
Starting point is 00:59:22 But the point is, the point is that he was playing a very important role. Like, if you look at the pictures in the civil rights movement, Dr. King and Andrew Young, Andrew Young is never looking at the camera. He's looking here. He's looking here. He's looking for threats to his friend. He's not trying to become Dr. King. You guys, when you're interviewing, you're not trying to be the guest.
Starting point is 00:59:46 You're not trying to be the star. That's reason you're so good at it. You're playing your role and you do it brilliantly. And as a result of that, you became stars by focusing on the star. Ambassador Young wanted Andrew, Dr. King, to be successful. And he deferred himself. Again, I'm basically the only person that he lets push him like this. But he knows I'm just trying to pull it out of him so that people can benefit.
Starting point is 01:00:10 He's very uncomfortable talking about himself. But this is so important to understand the dirty work, the stuff behind the scenes, the little things. It's everything. And so this role he played of being calm and cool and chill and stepping overmess and not in it. That's the way I was born. It's a certain temperament. Like, I don't even know he can learn that. Like, that's why, but he saw that in.
Starting point is 01:00:37 You can learn it, I think. Well, can you unlearn it? I mean, I learned it. Every man learns it with his wife. Every man. Okay, that was good. I mean, your wife can cuss you and, I mean, talk about you like a dog. And my wife does regularly.
Starting point is 01:00:57 Now? Now. Carol is no joke. No. Carol is fantastic. No, she, but she was a schoolteacher for 30 years. And she said, I've been dealing with you bad boys all my life. And I ain't going to let you get away with nothing.
Starting point is 01:01:14 Well, okay. But I've been married twice and both up with schoolteachers. and both of them knew how to well one I knew how not to get riled up with I don't believe I've ever lost my temper with my wife
Starting point is 01:01:30 either one one for 40 years and another one for 30 years he taught me you can either be married or you can be right those are two different things in the doc you said after Martin Luther King Jr. got shot
Starting point is 01:01:46 you knew there was no hope what did you know I don't I think I said that. I knew that it was going to be hard, but I really, you know, my mama used to make me go to Sunday school. And one time they were talking about Elijah going to heaven in a flaming chariot, and I was about nine years old, and I said, I don't believe that. They put me out of Sunday school.
Starting point is 01:02:16 But I never forgot that. And that's what I thought. When I saw Martin laying there, one, I said he probably didn't even hear that shot. The bullet power travels faster the speed of sound. So it hit him right in his, and severed his spinal cord. So he probably never heard it. And he probably never felt any pain. And he was dead instantly.
Starting point is 01:02:47 and the thing that occurred to me then was damn my brother than gone to heaven in a flaming chariot and see he used to keep wanting to go back to Memphis well Memphis is right next to the river Mississippi River and Mississippi River runs through and all our spirituals you know my home is over Jordan well Jordan is the Mississippi bus down south and And all of the spirituals talk about, you know, steal away, steal away to Jesus. And I just felt that he'd gone home to the Lord. Yeah. And they left you here.
Starting point is 01:03:37 And left me here. But I knew, and I still know, that there's hardly a. day that I don't talk about him and learn or remember something that he said in a similar situation. And I pass that on to my children, but to all children. And it's one of the reasons why I'm really grateful to those folk. And John is one of them that put together money to tell this story because I don't believe it has ever been I don't believe anybody black white rich or poor has ever had 90 minutes of of TV time telling their story and um these folk came in brother from England uh they backed three 18 wheelers up into my my my my my driveway
Starting point is 01:04:42 and unloaded the equipment, and they set me down. And I talked for three days, eight hours a day. They came back a month or so later with another three days, eight hours a day. And I think we did that three or four times. He's 93. I'm sitting here, like, just watching this in some talk now, like, But it was, and they had read everything ever written by me. And this brother sat down there, and he asked me a question.
Starting point is 01:05:23 I said, where did you get that from? And he told me where it came from. And he made me remember. And so I saw this as having a chance to tell a story. And I don't care how much. we don't read like we used to if we ever did but all the books that were written by the movement are big thick books and and we don't read we don't keep still that long so the mass media radio and television is still our means of communication and it's why you play such an important
Starting point is 01:06:05 part in our community and why I had to I mean I was in a meeting last night to 10 o'clock, went home, got me a few hours sleep, got up at 4 o'clock in the morning, got on a plane and came up back here. Because I wasn't coming to talk to you all. You talk to more people than anybody I know. And when John said, he's going to let you talk to his people. I said, thank you, Jesus. No, it's a privilege, man. Well, but it's a privilege for me. Because I, well, like I was mayor for eight years. And we took Atlanta from, well, half a million people to five million. And we got the world's busiest airport.
Starting point is 01:07:03 And I went up to the airport, the world's business airport. and they used to complain that they didn't have enough women in the decision making and I go into the board meeting and there's 12 people in there and nine of my women, black women, well, eight black women,
Starting point is 01:07:28 one white woman. And that's, that airport handles 114 million people a year. see and and black women are running it and and they we have worked that out and we're trying to expand it and keep it growing but we voted and we get out and vote i got elected because and it poured down rain. It was like Gladys Night thing, or 80 night in Georgia. And it poured down from Sunday. And the only day was Tuesday. And I said, Lord, please stop this rain. And it kept all raining Monday. And it rained all day, Tuesday, and half the night. And I went out to see
Starting point is 01:08:31 how I was doing. And Black folk was still in lines. they went lines in Atlanta like they went line with Mandela in South Africa they stayed in line for days in South Africa because they got Mandela out of jail and elected in president that they elected me mayor and then after that they elected Maynor they elected me to Congress in 72 and then 73 they elected Maynor Jackson mayor
Starting point is 01:09:00 and we've had nine black mayors in a row and everyone has grown the city more and and it's doing well I have a favorite I don't ask you for many favors
Starting point is 01:09:17 I've never seen these folks so quiet they're gonna pay you respect because you are you are the iconic I've never seen them as quiet they're gonna sit yeah yeah but they got questions right and if you keep telling stories about Joe Jack Schmoe and the other
Starting point is 01:09:33 person as will be as I need to for them, this is a master class. This is an opportunity for... He's given one, John. Okay, but I know there's some jewels. But I've been giving him one for the last 20 years. Well, actually, he has, yeah. But also, everything can be said in one interview.
Starting point is 01:09:49 That's why the documentary is important as well. But, I mean, I'm learning a lot. I do, to John's point, I do have a question. Do you think we've honored Dr. King's legacy or just branded it? No, I don't think there's anybody... anybody around that doesn't respect what he did and what he gave his life for. I think that, I think he is a sacred personality in our history.
Starting point is 01:10:19 And, but everyone is like that. I mean, Christmas addicts. I knew about him. He's the first black man, first man to die for this country in Massachusetts. And he's black. And it, well, this country would not be what it is without us. And I think Martin Luther King represents the best of us. But he ain't the only one of us, see, that there were people around him.
Starting point is 01:10:55 And only a half a dozen of us had been to college. I mean, most of us learn from the streets and they learn from our experiences. But the, I mean, Louis Armstrong grew up in my neighborhood, New Orleans. He didn't, I don't think anybody ever gave him trumpet lessons. He just picked up the thing and made it blow. And the thing that I'd like to remind people is that he is a man who grew up in one of the poorest neighborhoods in New Orleans.
Starting point is 01:11:31 And he sings, it's a wonderful world. And there's Ray Charles, who's blind. And there's a big piano out in Albany, Georgia, where he grew up. And he sings America to beautiful. But he doesn't start with the spacious skies. He starts with, oh, beautiful for heroes proved in liberating strife,
Starting point is 01:12:05 who more than self their country loved, and mercy more than life. And we take the history of this country and the history of this planet, and we turn it into a piece of music or a symbol of grace. If we do something, we do it with style. you know and it's and and no matter what it is we do it better and I used to think I could play basketball I wouldn't go near a basketball court with a bunch of women on it because they all would beat the day when the Olympics were in Korea the women's Olympic team was playing an army team.
Starting point is 01:12:58 And I went to the brothers. I said, now look, don't y'all like too rough with these broads? I said, you've got to show them some respect. He said, man, you don't know. These broads beat the shit out of us. And I said, well, they said, no, we got to try to get even. And if you look at the way, well, the Atlanta airport.
Starting point is 01:13:29 I can remember the lady when they said 80% of the, no, $800,000 was made by women in the airport. And this black woman cut up and said, no, no, no, don't clap. Don't clap. It should be a billion. Come back when you've got a billion dollars you've got a women making a billion dollars in this airport then we'll clap and it's
Starting point is 01:14:01 been that it's been that pushing and pulling and thinking and sweating that uh we have excelled at yeah i just say earlier um going back to what you said earlier you said it's coming back right So my question to you, is this the state of this country where it is now? Is it reminiscent of civil rights movement back in the day? No, it's not because when I came up in the city, well, maybe so. Because I was born in 1932. That was a recession year. And there were people starving.
Starting point is 01:14:47 That's where Social Security came from. that's where food stamps came from the government trying to meet people who were starving and they were not they were not black I mean and right now the way the government is moving it's not doing right for anybody yeah but there's some good happening and and I What do you feel the good is that's happening? Well, one, I believe in this country and I believe in God. And I believe this country is a God-fearing, God-blessed country. There's something, I haven't seen any other country.
Starting point is 01:15:37 Well, I've been to, I've traveled to 151 countries. And they're, that only about 210 countries in a lot of, the world, and I've been to 150 of them, but I come right back to the United States, and I come back to Atlanta. I enjoyed New York, and I like to come to New York, but it's just, it takes too long to get places, and the traffic now, you know, I worry about, but now the traffic's come to Atlanta, so we've got to figure out what to do with that. a growing city. Travis comes to growing cities, which you built in Atlanta, by the way.
Starting point is 01:16:21 $800 billion, $580 billion GDP. The same, so Atlanta's a bigger GDP than Singapore. And he built it. And the people he just talked about, they built that into what my wife calls Wakanda. And there's nothing like it in the entire world. Again, these are things that he doesn't talk about. Some of it's in the documentary, by the way, some of it's not. A lot of it's not.
Starting point is 01:16:45 A lot of it ended up on the editing floor. in the editing floor. I want to thank Rachel Maddo, Bill Griffin, MSNBC, for putting resources behind us to make it possible. But this guy's a walking treasure trove
Starting point is 01:16:57 of strategic thought. I mean, and most of it is unarticulated, unrecorded. He just goes about his business. And he's, he got to just literally pull it out of him.
Starting point is 01:17:10 You start talking, you ask him a question, he goes in the 15 other directions. I love it, though. I love it all. He's bragging about other people. You said this now with all of the, you said it's a God-faring country, but when you think about all of the oppression of black people are facing this country, all the challenges we face in this
Starting point is 01:17:25 country, how can those people be fearing of God, treating people like that? Well, because God's son suffered. And suffering is not, suffering is not the end. It's not acceptable. And we should do everything we can to wipe it out, but we shouldn't be afraid of it. it. Like, I just have never been afraid to die. And, um, and most of us that march with Martin Luther King used to argue and, and, and say, okay, who's bombing ham? Uh, is bombing ham? Somebody going to get bombed. And that means I hope, and Dr. King would start preaching your sermon. He said,
Starting point is 01:18:16 if you saw man I'm going to have a hard time getting you in the heaven but he ain't lying but but he would start with finding some of the things that you got you have gathered my people together on this radio
Starting point is 01:18:35 and I want to bless you for that and the Lord will bless you for that because you talk to more people about life than maybe anybody else else I know. And we're grateful. We're not going to forget that. But we also know it took you a little while to get here. And we know that whatever got you here wasn't always, you know, Sunday wasn't lessons you learned in Sunday school. And we, we, but you're forgiven
Starting point is 01:19:15 things in the struggle and you you got a place in glory it sounds like you having a hard time getting me in heaven well no everybody got their role I'm not in yet but doesn't revolution start when people get tired of suffering though yeah no revolution revolution I think is continuous Like I picked up one of your books off the table, and what is it? Get honest? A die line. And sometimes in history, books like that would make one group of people wake up. Now it's hard to get us to read.
Starting point is 01:20:12 That's why you're on the radio. But that's why we're on television also. And Dr. King used to say that news media is worth a million dollars a minute. We would try to get our demonstrations on ABC, NBC, and CBS. And, you know, Cronkite and Brink. But each one of them. If you could get on those three, that time is worth a million dollars a minute. And so you put in some good hours here.
Starting point is 01:20:54 Thank you, brother. And you built a good audience. Is it true that you made the call? In the new podcast, Hell in Heaven, two young Americans moved to the Costa Rican jungle to start over. But one will end up dead. The other tried for murder. Not once. People went wild.
Starting point is 01:21:17 Not twice. Stunned. But three times. John and Ann Bender are rich and attractive, and they're devoted to each other. They create a nature reserve and build a spectacular, circular home high on the top of a hill.
Starting point is 01:21:34 But little by little, their dream starts to crumble, and our couple retreat from reality. They lose it. They actually lose it. They sort of went nuts. Until one night, everything spins out of control. Listen to Hell in Heaven on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey there, I'm Kyle McLaughlin.
Starting point is 01:22:01 You might know me as that guy from Twin Peaks, Sex in the City, or just the Internet's dad. I have a new podcast called What Are We Even Doing, where I embark on a noble quest to understand the brilliant chaos of youth culture. Daddy's looking good. Each week I invite someone fascinating to join me. Actors, musicians, creatives, highly evolved digital life forms. And we talk about what they love. Sometimes I'll drizzle a little honey in there too from feeling sexy in the morning.
Starting point is 01:22:31 What keeps them going? And you're maybe my biggest competition on social media. Like when a kid says bra to me. And how they're navigating this high-speed roller coaster we call reality. In Australia you're looking out for Snakes, spiders, and . Right. Hey, he's no Trey McDougall. This is like the comment section of my Instagram.
Starting point is 01:22:50 Join me and my delightful guests every Thursday, and let's get weird together in a good way. Listen to what are we even doing on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The forces shaping the world's economies and financial markets can be hard to spot. Even though they are such a powerful player in finance, you wouldn't really know that you are interacting with them.
Starting point is 01:23:15 And even harder to understand. Donald Trump's trade war, 2.0, is only accelerating the process of de-dollarization, which in a way is jargon for people turning away from the dollar. That is where the big take from Bloomberg podcast comes in, to connect the dots. How unusual is a deal like this? Unprecedented. Every weekday afternoon, we dive deep into one big global business story. The biggest story of the reality.
Starting point is 01:23:41 The reduction of the oil market to the conflict in the Middle East is one of what has not happened. Katie, you told me that ETFs are your favorite thing. They are. Explain that. Why is that the case? And unpack what it means for you. Our breakfast foods are consistent consumer staples, and so they sort of become outsized indicators of inflation. Listen to the big take from Bloomberg News every weekday afternoon on the IHeart Radio app,
Starting point is 01:24:07 Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Here we go. Hey, I'm Cal Penn, and on my new podcast, Here We Go Again, we'll take today's trends and headlines and ask, why does history keep repeating itself? You may know me as the second hottest actor from the Harold and Kumar movies, but I'm also an author, a White House staffer, and as of like 15 seconds ago, a podcast host.
Starting point is 01:24:34 Along the way, I've made some friends who are experts in science, politics, and pop culture. And each week, one of them will be joined. me to answer my burning questions. Like, are we heading towards another financial crash like in 08? Is non-monogamy back in style? And how come there's never a gate ready for your flight when it lands like two minutes early? We've got guests like Pete Buttigieg, Stacey Abrams, Lily Singh, and Bill Nye. When you start weaponizing outer space, things can potentially go really wrong. Look, the world can seem pretty scary right now, because it is. But my goal here is for you to listen and feel a little better about the future.
Starting point is 01:25:13 Listen and subscribe to Here We Go Again with Cal Penn on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Call to Ms. Corretta Scott King after Dr. King was shot. Did you make the call to Ms. Corretta Scott King when Dr. King was shot? I did. But she had already heard it. But I knew Corretta. See, Corretta and my wife grew up together in a little country town.
Starting point is 01:25:39 and we talked all the time and they talked to each other and she wasn't crying she wasn't she said well there's what I've been worried about but now we have to carry on and that's the way all of her children have tried to carry on and it's hard and it's hard and but all of us in some way a doctor king's children and we see the example that he said and we see her she was she was she was up here in Boston trying to train to be an opera singer And he said, I need you back down south with me.
Starting point is 01:26:45 She actually raised money. She would do concerts. Credit Scott King would sing concerts, operating concerts, and raise money for the civil rights movement for her husband. Behind every successful man is an exhausted woman. Yeah. Which is why he keeps telling the story of women who don't get the credit, who don't get acknowledged.
Starting point is 01:27:02 He keeps pulling. I do admire that he keeps pulling everybody into his story so they get their name mentioned so that they get acknowledged. His wife now is strong. His first wife, Gene Chow's Young, was strong. When he was you and ambassador, they went to Gene Child's hometown.
Starting point is 01:27:23 Little country town in Alabama. And they were in an open-air car. And Gene Chow rung said, hey, Andy, she called him Andy. There's a guy I used to date in high school. He's a bum now. He's on a street corner. So, Ambassador Young's, you're... No, I said, I said, golly, I guess you're glad.
Starting point is 01:27:41 He had a hard time in Vietnam, and he's not doing right. I guess you're glad you didn't marry him. And she said, she is. If I'd marry him, he'd have been the ambassador to the United Nations. And that's true. And there's a John Bryan quote, behind every... Great man is an exhausted woman. Many exhausted women.
Starting point is 01:28:11 I'm glad that you keep bringing up, you know, other people. And I'm glad the doctor is called The Dirty Work because I think playing your position is a lost start. I think everybody wants to be a star now. And it's like, you know, it makes me one that has social media made the struggle too performative because people don't see that unseen grind. They don't see that dirty work. They don't understand how important playing your position is. Well, you know, those who in music
Starting point is 01:28:50 noted you've got to create a certain harmony, a certain rhythm, that you can't do it. I mean, jazz was everybody soloing on their own. But the music now has far more. Well, in good times, it has melody. In hard times, it gets funky. But you got each one expressing the way they feel. And somehow when you hear it and it relates to you,
Starting point is 01:29:28 you go out and buy the record. So you turn on whatever it is. to turn on nowadays. I don't have one of them. I hard radio. Anyway, go ahead. No. But it's, this is a very complex life. I mean, when I lived in New York, I worked up on near Harleham and the near Riverside Church. And one time the lights went off. went off. And I had to walk from up there 120th and Broadway across the Queensville down bridge
Starting point is 01:30:10 to get a bus on the other side to get me up to Hollis. And it's a huge, complicated city. And there's nothing simple. But you have to figure that for anything to work in this city and in In most great cities, there's got to be a series of teams that are making it work. And most of the time, you don't see the ones that are in the background. Yeah. And you don't, I mean, you might see the cook that's preparing the meal, but you don't see the guy that had to slaughter the cow. There's all this work and all the sacrifice that you guys put in
Starting point is 01:31:05 When Martin Luther King was here He wasn't as liked and as revered by everybody as he is today How do you feel when you see? Oh, he almost was, you know? Almost talk about that I mean there were a few people who were jealous of him Who wanted to be him But they were preachers too
Starting point is 01:31:22 And But he was one Stop that kind of hate. I just want you, they've never stopped that kind of hate. No, but he, he did not let that bother him. And it,
Starting point is 01:31:39 well, you have to watch your enemies, but you see them better if you bring them closer and try to get them involved in what you're doing. and you know the teams that win play together and and everything requires a team now we get into a real conversation can you tell me about the team that you and clarence
Starting point is 01:32:15 avon formed oh lord i tell you that that is one of the more he's one of the most beautiful brothers i've ever met love him he called me and said, I'm trying to reach Andrew Young, Andy Young. I said, yeah, I'm Andy Young. He said, nigger, are you crazy? And I said, I don't know what, what makes you think that? They tell me you running for Congress in Georgia. Don't you know that they just killed America over there in Mississippi, how you ain't got good sense and you want to run for Congress? I said, well, before Dr. King was killed, the last thing we talked about was how are we going to take our people from the streets into politics? And with John came along, it was from the
Starting point is 01:33:15 streets to the suites and the banks. And how are we going to integrate the money? How are we going to integrate the culture, see? And he said, well, if you're crazy enough to run, I'm crazy enough to help you. And I said, what would you, he said, what would you do if I could get Bill Cosby, if I could bring Bill Cosby and Isaac Hayes? Now, this was 1970. Bill Cosby was boom, and he just got on, you know. and Isaac Hayes was good music out of Memphis.
Starting point is 01:33:53 And I said, well, you know, I said, I don't even have money to make a phone call to invite him. He said, nigger, I didn't ask you if you had any money. I said, what would you do if they came here? And I said, well, I'd get to baseball stadium, and we'd fill it up. That'd be a great start for camp. Bain. I said, but I told you, I don't have any money. I told you, I ain't said nothing to you
Starting point is 01:34:23 about money. Money is my business. And I shut up. And he hung up on me. But he found out who can handle the radio, I mean the Braves Stadium. And it was about in six weeks, signs were up, well, four weeks. lines were up all over town that Bill Cosby and Isaac Hayes were coming to the baseball stadium. And he blew it out, right? And they filled it up in a pouring down rain. And gave you the money. And didn't even charge
Starting point is 01:34:58 didn't charge anything. I love Clarence, man. See? That's my idol. What was the issue, the real issue between Martin Luther King Jr. And Malcolm X? You know, there was no issue. The difference
Starting point is 01:35:16 was that Martin Luther King learned in college, Malcolm X learned in jail. But Malcolm X read the dictionary and the Bible. And when Martin came back with the Nobel Prize, we were up there in Harlem and the armory. And when we came in the back door, who was standing and act in the back door of Malcolm X. Two people. Malcolm X and Nelson Rockefeller. And Malcolm X said, I just wanted to thank you for all that you've done. And I want you to know that I am with you and anything you want me to do. But I think that it's probably better strategy if you and I don't seem to be so close. And said, that's why I'm not going to come in there with you in public. He wasn't trying to profile.
Starting point is 01:36:15 Malcolm X was not trying to take his life. But when Martin, Malcolm did used to disparage Martin publicly sometime, though. We'll call him Uncle Tom. That was his brand. It wasn't it wasn't Malcolm so much as it was that whole crowd around Elijah Muhammad.
Starting point is 01:36:33 But Martin was close to Elijah too, it seemed like. I know. Well, because when we... The honorable Elijah. Because when we came to if we went into a town, like when we went to Chicago, we got all the big preachers together and got them to agree that we would be there with them and that they could tell us what they wanted us to do. Now, some didn't like it, and some just didn't want anybody to have a profile but them. And we just, we just,
Starting point is 01:37:10 went on around them. But Malcolm, well, I met Malcolm when I was here, and Mike Wallace did the story on Malcolm, on 60 Minutes. And the black guy who was working with Mike Wallace
Starting point is 01:37:32 was married to one of my secretaries at the National Council of Churches. And they, they invited, me and my wife over to dinner, this was before Malcolm X was even known around, but we'd had dinner a couple of times together. Anytime he came to Atlanta, he came by our office, but Martin was never there. But he went to Selma to see Martin, and Martin got arrested that day and was in jail, so he spent today with
Starting point is 01:38:12 Coretta and me and spoke at the mass meeting that night, and then went on his way. Come on, Malcolm. Malcolm. They haven't met? They haven't met? Oh, yeah. They met once? Yeah, they met. No, they met several times. But it was always in private. Publicly. Yeah, publicly. Yeah. That's when they had that
Starting point is 01:38:30 picture together. Yeah, yeah. By the way, when he became mayor, just the point about people playing their roles, when he became mayor of Atlanta, the civil rights leaders, his friends, the second day he was mayor, they picketed him. So he went outside. He said, what are you guys doing? He said, well, you're the mayor now. So you got your job, we got ours.
Starting point is 01:38:48 And he accepted that. So Malcolm was playing his lane. He's playing his role publicly. But privately, he respected Dr. King and just didn't feel that he was useful to him. By the way, a lot of these, the black power movement came out of standing right next to Dr. King, walking in the south,
Starting point is 01:39:08 the black power movement, that's where it started. They'd use Martin's visibility to get visibility for what they were doing, which was easier because people were angry, black power, getting angry. And Martin allowed all of that. He allowed everything to flourish around him. He wasn't insecure. But he just wasn't his way. What he did was on just that, he invited Stokely to come to church.
Starting point is 01:39:40 So next time you're in Atlanta, if you're in Atlanta on a Sunday, please come to church and then come home and have dinner with us afterwards. We need some time to talk. And he came to Atlanta, went to church, and then they went home together. And Coretta fixed dinner with the, well, preachers' wives always have a way of fixing food. No matter who shows up, they got enough. But isn't it true that all of those? leaders at some point criticized Dr. King.
Starting point is 01:40:13 Yeah. Snick. Snick. Go ahead. Yeah, Snick. I mean, that's why I love the documentary King, King in the Wilderness. You know, because it shows that, but it seemed like it was respectful. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:40:26 You know, like they were walking together and they were disagreeing during interviews, but it was respectful disagree. Yeah. But people like John Lewis never disagreed. Right. You know, and it was people. I mean, you have rivalries on the same football team, but they all run in the same play. And that's sort of the way we were, we said, look, we may disagree on how to get there,
Starting point is 01:41:05 but we all are trying to do the same thing and we can do it best if we do it together. So Charlemagne, what I'm hearing from, what I've learned from him is the mission back then was we. The mission now is me. Basically, people want to summarize what the problem is and what you brought up earlier.
Starting point is 01:41:26 People today wake up and go, I'm tired of talking about me, now you talk about me. And it's all about me, me, I, I, and if it doesn't benefit me, then I'm not interested. My likes, my engagement, my views. That's right. My opinion.
Starting point is 01:41:40 And if I got to hurt you, if I got to step on you to elevate myself, then so be it. Back then, it was almost the exact opposite. Well, even now. I mean, I just... You're being gracious.
Starting point is 01:41:52 Yes. I'm not being great. You are being gracious. I'm being respectful. Exactly the point. I've learned this. trying to find if you're going to get along with people, you can easily point out differences. But if you really want to work together, you've got to find those few things
Starting point is 01:42:19 that you agree on. And say, let's get this straight first. That's right. And that's true in the neighborhood. You know, it's true in everything we do. Yeah. I totally respect what You said a little bit back when you said, I've never been afraid to die, right? But I think it's greater that you've never been afraid to die without making a difference or without making a change because you've got a lot of young people that aren't afraid to die either, but for the wrong reasons. No, they're afraid. Okay.
Starting point is 01:42:55 They scared to death. Okay. And it's because they're scared that they do stupid things. See, I mean, most. Street fights would be avoided if somebody could say, blow a whistle and say, just take 10 seconds to cool off. They wouldn't shoot. But they're doing something, and I don't really understand it because I've never had to be that
Starting point is 01:43:31 way. So let me, Bridget, the most dangerous personal world. person with no hope. So they had hope. Slow that down and said it again. The most dangerous person in the world is a person with no hope. They had hope. They had self-esteem, not just confidence. You can be great in music or great and whatever, have enormous confidence, but have low self-esteem. They had spirituality. They believed in something larger and more important themselves. Dr. Keen didn't say, I'm here to say black people. He said, I'm here to redeem the soul of America from the triple evil
Starting point is 01:44:04 was a war racism and poverty. He wrapped everybody in his vision. And he brought everybody in and then lifted everybody up. And with it, yes, black people got lifted too. But it wasn't black people only or black people at the cost of everybody else. And so he made it hard for people to disagree with them. But he had his own self-esteem. When you have no hope, your life has no value. They're willing to die because they had hope. Because it wasn't about this. It's a different nuance. They value themselves enough that they valued everybody else enough that they're willing to sacrifice themselves. So that's a different thing than I don't value me.
Starting point is 01:44:46 I don't value what's going to. I'm not going to live to 25 anyway. What does it matter? None of this matters. So I'm not the most dangerous person in the world is a person with no hope. That's why he said he can't relate to it. So it is that, Charlie, what you said earlier about has it changed? Are you asked?
Starting point is 01:45:01 Yes, I think it has changed. It's me, me, I, I, because I don't value myself. I need to keep pouring water in this cup because this cup has no bottom. The cup has no bottom. I'm pouring all the time. Trying to fill up my self-esteem. And people need validation. They seek validation.
Starting point is 01:45:20 Yes, through everything. So what he's talking about is purpose and life. My God, what he's got to... What's your real purpose? What's your intention? What are you here for? Yes. And you guys are, I think, the most powerful...
Starting point is 01:45:33 what you do in the country, and I believe in the world, because you're all about something. You don't just show up here, me, me, I, I. It's not, again, you facilitate a conversation, and you wouldn't let the other person be, you want the other person to be the center of that conversation, to pull it out of them, and you even sacrifice yourself sometimes
Starting point is 01:45:51 with the people talking mess to you. You've got to know who you are. He knows who he is. Doctor, can you tell him a quick story? It's not in the documentary. Very quick story about, I'm just trying to do this quick because I'm trying to get a lot in and a little bit of time. When you came back with Dr. King from the Nobel Peace Prize and President of the United States, this was when he saw Malcolm and Rockefeller, and the President of the United States refused to meet with you guys
Starting point is 01:46:16 because he didn't want the ask that he knew was coming. And you were in New York. Rockefeller offered you his jet. Well, Rockefeller assumed that we were going to see the President Johnson, and he said, you all can let me know what time you want to leave. I'll have my jet ready to pick you up and take you down to Washington. And that was in the paper. So we got an appointment, we thought, for three o'clock.
Starting point is 01:46:43 And we got there on time. With the president. With the president. We got there on time. But they said he was tied up with the generals talking about Vietnam. He didn't want to see him. And it, But, I mean, we really didn't get to see him until dark.
Starting point is 01:47:05 It was about 6 o'clock, two or three hours late. But we were with the vice president and the attorney general talking about voting rights. When we got in with President Johnson, he was really depressed. And he said, I agree with you, Dr. King. Everything Martin says, he said, I agree with you. I just don't have the power. And that was his only answer. Everything we said, he said, I agree with you.
Starting point is 01:47:37 I just don't have the power. He's the president. Who had the power if it wasn't him? Well, he didn't have the votes. And he had just gotten beat up by the people who were trying to get him to drop atomic bombs on Vietnam. And so he was depressed. And when we left, I said to Dr. King, I said, you know, the president is right. He doesn't have the power, and we don't either.
Starting point is 01:48:11 And I said, this is a perfect time for you to take a sabbatical. You need to take three or four months off, go wherever you want to go, think this through, take your family. or not and then after the next election we'll have a better position and he said no I said well what you're going to do he said we got to get the president some power and I said something else and he said no we got to get the president some power and finally I said nigger you more house man you broke you see because the Nobel Peace Prize was $60,000 Rockefeller doubled it so we had $120,000 but then Martin divided up against all six he gave everybody a sixth of it every civil rights organization he split up the
Starting point is 01:49:13 money and keeping anything for himself and uh and and and and i i said you here we ain't got a pot to piss in or window to throw it out of and you talking about getting the president some power i say you niggas got some nerve and i was talking i went to how it he went to more house so we always were picking on each other and that's the only thing he'd kid you about but when we got back home you said you can tell you what's about more houseman you can tell more house man well yeah I mean that was my line I said you more house man got more nerve than a brass ass monkey you ain't got a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of and yet you're going get the president some power.
Starting point is 01:50:09 What did he say? Huh? He just said we're going to get the president some power. So what happened? When we got back, two days later, Amelia Boynton called and said she was on the way to see us
Starting point is 01:50:23 from Selma. Now, Amelia Boynton had been in Selma since 1932, that's the year I was born. And she went there at 18 with George Washington Carver to teach sharecrows.
Starting point is 01:50:37 of women how to feed their children in the midst of the recession. And so they were doing things like smashing beans. Here you go again, tell everybody else's story. What happened in Selma? But in Selma, when we got to the office, she called and said she was there to see Dr. King. And she and three preachers came in and told what was happening in Selma and said, we have to, you have to help us.
Starting point is 01:51:21 And this was just before Christmas. So he said, well, right after Christmas, we'll come over. And, you know, everybody has an Emancipation Day celebration on the 1st of January. and so we didn't have it on the 1st of January because that was a that was the first Sunday and that's the reason that was that threw everything off but we had it on the second Sunday
Starting point is 01:51:52 and we didn't have it on a Sunday we had it on Tuesday and so but that's when we started to sell them a movement 90 days later Lyndon Johnson was on television saying we shall overcome So back up
Starting point is 01:52:13 So the important part of this is Dr. King made a commitment to go to Selma If he had shown up in Selma The police wouldn't have attacked John Lewis They wouldn't have attacked Dr. King strategically on a bad move They wouldn't let Dr. King march But Dr. King got the wrong date
Starting point is 01:52:30 That's what he just That's what just Again history for him just like talking about like that's a monitor he just glossed over it they they told him the lady in in salma a date but they oh i can't come on that date that's the first sunday i got to be in my church yeah so he stayed back and sent and he sent andy young bas young i called him bastion to go there for him like make sure that the light gets in trouble don't let anybody march he got there and said well these people will march anyway but they're gonna probably go turn us around so don't
Starting point is 01:52:58 worry about it well 300 people in the country town that's a lot of folk yeah so they didn't turn them around. They led them march, but then the troopers ran, that's that famous film where they ran over everybody and they knocked John Lewis out. All that was an accident. I mean, it wasn't supposed to happen because Dr. King was supposed to be there. It was supposed to be in a proper speech. So all are because Dr. King had to be in his church on First Sunday, and they got the date wrong. So they should call John Lewis, Doc, accidental trouble then. That's it. That's what he used to talk about, good trouble. Yeah, good trouble. And so that then triggered three months later. It wasn't, it wasn't,
Starting point is 01:53:33 that that uh that was the first of march yeah it was 4th of july and what happened he signed a civil rights bill wow and and that gave us the right to vote wow got him some power two little black boys from from the south flipping the president of the united states you've been very generous with your time man yes sir his interview's been longer than the documentary by the way okay but we appreciate it and I want to leave on this the dirty work if if the dirty work documentary could teach one lesson to this generation and the next generation to organize this what would you want to be well you know I call it to dirty work but when I kind of realized I had no purpose in life and the way I decided
Starting point is 01:54:28 I said, if there's something that I think needs doing and nobody else wants to do it, that's my job. And that's the way I define my calling. When I went to work with Dr. King, nobody wanted to work with him. He didn't have anybody there. And so I've started, well, Wyatt Walker was coming down, but he hadn't gotten there yet. And it's, and once I got there,
Starting point is 01:54:57 most of the stuff that nobody wanted nobody wanted to go sit down and argue with white folks and I didn't argue because I would be cool but if Jose had gone he would want to it would have been an argument because he he had to argue about everything but that was my role which was
Starting point is 01:55:16 which I did though I didn't necessarily like it to be in that role all the time but it So what's the lesson of this generation? The lesson of this generation is there is some dirty work in any struggle for freedom.
Starting point is 01:55:40 But dirty work could be hard work. Dirty work could be thoughtful work. You know, whatever nobody else wants to do. Like we didn't want to mess with money. And John decided that, He was going to teach folk that you can't be free without voting, but neither can you be free if you broke. And so teaching people how to manage money,
Starting point is 01:56:06 how to save money, how to invest money, how to know the meaning of money to your salvation and survival. That's another issue altogether, but communications is an issue. and so don't be afraid of doing the dirty work embrace it
Starting point is 01:56:31 it is noble work it's not dirty work yeah is that right that's not only the noble work is it's the kind of work
Starting point is 01:56:40 that that has to be done so when when Charlemagne was doing that internship way back when in that first radio program and when people noticed you
Starting point is 01:56:52 that was the dirty work absolutely I'm sure you've done dirty work in your career. You've always not been, both of you not always been sitting here prime time. You've had to hustle. You've had to do things and jobs nobody else wanted. I still do the dirty work now.
Starting point is 01:57:06 You need be. And the work you're doing with mental health, the foundation you're doing, the stuff that nobody sees, the conversation that we have at 2 in the morning, about life in general, all that's the dirty work. And raising your children is
Starting point is 01:57:25 The most honorable version, raising your paying, paying school fees. Like, we've got to be about the basics. We got to get back to the basics and be about we and notches about me. That's really who he is. And I spent Moses' interview trying to draw him out. This was good.
Starting point is 01:57:43 You could see him. Yeah. This was good. I loved it. John O'Brien, thank you for bringing this walking memorial, this iconic, this icon living, Mr. Andrew Young. Thank you for coming, brother. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:55 Well, thank you for having me. That's right. And check out the dirty work this Friday on, it's a peak out, right? MSNBC, MSNBC, globally. On MSNBC globally. 9 p.m. 9 p.m. this Friday. Thank you, brother.
Starting point is 01:58:09 Thank you. And thank all of your audience. Yes, sir. This is a good, this is college on the radio. Woo! I like that. That's a word. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:22 If you didn't have money to go to college, listen in. That's right. Yeah. Thank you. It's the Breakfast Club. Hold up. Every day I wake up. Wake your ass up.
Starting point is 01:58:32 You're going to finish or y'all's done. Hello, America's sweetheart Johnny Knoxville here. I want to tell you about my new true crime podcast, Crimeless, Hillbilly Heist, from Smartless Media, Campside Media, and Big Money Players. It's a wild tale about a gang of high-functioning nitwits who somehow, pulled off America's third largest cash heist. Kind of like Robin Hood, except for the part where he steals from the rich and gives to the poor. I'm not that generous.
Starting point is 01:59:06 It's a damn near inspiring true story for anyone out there who's ever shot for the moon, then just totally muffed up the landing. They stole $17 million and had not bought a ticket to help him escape. So we're saying like, oh God, what do we do? What do we do? That was dumb. people do not follow my example listen to Crimeless Hillbilly Heist on the IHeart Radio app
Starting point is 01:59:31 Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast Hey I'm Kyle McLaughlin You might know me as that guy from Twin Peaks Sex in the City or Just the Internet Stand I have a new podcast called What Are We Even Doing Where I embark on a noble quest To understand the brilliant chaos of youth culture
Starting point is 01:59:52 Each week, I invite someone fascinating to join me to talk about navigating this high-speed rollercoaster we call reality. Join me and my delightful guests every Thursday and let's get weird together in a good way. Listen to what are we even doing on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Two rich young Americans move to the Costa Rican jungle to start over, but one of them will end up dead and the other tried for murder three times. It starts with a dream, a nature reserve, and a spectacular new home. But little by little, they lose it. They actually lose it. They sort of like nuts.
Starting point is 02:00:32 Until one night, everything spins out of control. Listen to Hell in Heaven on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Big Take podcast from Bloomberg News keeps you on top of the biggest source. Stories of the day. My fellow Americans, this is Liberation Day. Stories that move markets. Chair Powell opened the door to this first interest rate cut. Impact politics, change businesses.
Starting point is 02:01:05 This is a really stunning development for the AI world and how you think about your bottom line. Listen to the big take from Bloomberg News every weekday afternoon on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast. Thank you.

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