The Bulwark Podcast - Derek Thompson: Winning Without Anger
Episode Date: June 25, 2025A DSA candidate winning a Democratic primary in New York City is not an ideal laboratory for other Dems to draw lessons from, but Mamdani sounded authentic, he successfully juggled our fragmented medi...a environment, and he had the right message for this cost-of-living moment—as well as the proper amount of party heresy for this anti-establishment age. Meanwhile, the Republican tax and budget bill is shockingly out of step with the affordability crisis we are living through. Plus, the dangers of the coming AI wave, Ozempic may be one of the most astonishing medical breakthroughs in the last 100 years, and would shortening the NBA season reduce player injuries? Derek Thompson joins Tim Miller. show notes Derek's Substack Derek's and Ezra's book, "Abundance" "Plain English," Derek's podcast Tim and Bill on the NYC mayor's race
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Ready to date on your terms? Visit line2.com slash audio or download Line 2 in the App Store today. Hello and welcome to the Bollard Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Delighted to have back my man, Derek Thompson.
Last week he left the Atlantic as a staff writer and moved his writing to Substack, Waters Warm over here on Substack. He also hosts the podcast Plain English and
his latest book you might have heard of, it's called Abundance, co-written with some guy
named Ezra Klein. How you doing, Derek?
Derek I'm doing great, man. Before we go on, I just want people to know the reason that
I'm standing in an entirely vacant room with nothing on the shelves is that the movers are here and I am
moving from Chapel Hill, North Carolina to Washington DC in approximately four
and a half hours. So that is why it looks like I'm speaking to you from the least
abundantly outfitted room in America. Yeah, it's a very unabundant room but I
thought maybe that was intentional, right? Like there's a contrast in your life,
you know, kind of bring a yin and yang.
I'm going in the opposite direction. I feel like, you know, Ezra's on abundance right
now. I'm just like, where can I carve out a niche here? Like, let's just swing in the
entire opposite direction. Like monkish living, totally stoic, Steve Jobs in 1970s, just like
an open room, a lamp, a chair, and a computer. That's going to be me at Substack.
Well, we have an abundant amount of topics to get to, but I do have to pick, why are
you moving to Washington DC?
What a horrible life choice for you.
I love DC.
I'm from McLean, Virginia.
You were like, I need to be around the most annoying people in the earth.
I want to be on the side of the soccer field with my children and have people be asking
me about what's happening in the reconciliation bill?
What was it about DC that was appealing to you?
I'm from McLean, Virginia. DC is home.
I've got a ton of friends who live in Washington, DC and have for the last whatever 35, 39 years of my life.
So I got a lot of people there. My wife, wonderful wife, I was down here in North Carolina because she was finishing up her PhD in clinical psychology.
Now she's doing a post-doctorate at Children's National Hospital in Washington, DC.
And look, I like it when people come up to me in the playground and ask about the reconciliation
bill.
You know, you and I just might be built different when it comes to our appetite for a ways and
means committee conversations.
We are definitely built different.
We're also built different on, you know, desire to go to bull feathers as a hanging out spot.
Anyway, there are a couple of good things about DC. I do miss all my 930 club anthem vibes, but boy.
Anyway, I think it's going to be a negative life choice for you. You can report back. We'll come
back. We'll do a pod next summer and you can report back on one year in Washington.
Great. We'll do the one year retrospective.
I love North Carolina.
The truth is I love cities.
I mean, I don't know if you live like in a downtown, like urban area.
Yeah, I'm like a nuanced.
Okay.
Yeah.
I love being somewhere where I can walk out of my door and actually walk somewhere.
And Chapel Hill is fantastic in a lot of ways, but it's very difficult to walk
outside of your sort of suburban complex and and just traipse to the coffee shop.
I'm a traipser.
I want to leave that front door and be able to have a coffee in my hand in 10 minutes
and walk around.
Yeah, I hear you.
I can walk to bars, lunch, a grocery store even.
That's good living.
Okay, great.
I can traipse right on down the street.
I can do so without having any lobbyists in my way.
Anybody in pleaded khakis in a blue blazer.
All right, let's get down to business.
Zoran Mamdani, who recently did interviews with both of us, looks pretty well situated
to likely be the next mayor of New York.
He's going to have to run against the incumbent mayor, Eric Adams, running as an independent
in the general election.
There's also the guy with the beret will be running on the Republican ballot line.
So I guess it's possible that he could lose.
Pretty surprising how handily he beat Andrew Cuomo last night.
I think when I had him on, I said it was about a coin flip race, which I thought was actually
a little kind of run at the time.
I thought maybe it was kind of 60-40 in favor of Andrew.
And so the fact that he won isn't as surprising as like the degree to which he won. I mean,
Cuomo basically only won in the precincts that have the highest percentage of working class black
folks, the Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods, and the Upper East Side. That was basically the only
birds of New York that Cuomo won in. It was pretty much a sweep for Zoran.
So anyway, what are your political takeaways?
And then I want to talk about kind of the substantive policy side of Zoran.
Well, let's start with the political media takeaways.
I think that this guy did have a 30, 40% chance of winning and then he appeared in the Bullwork
podcast and then he became the presumptive mayor of New York City.
So clearly the Bullwork bump TM here is something to take very seriously.
Was it not plain English bump?
Why not the plain English bump?
Hey, I'll talk about the plain English bump too.
I'm just, let's first talk about the bulwark bump.
I mean, I do think it's important to say, like I bring up the podcast
appearances, not just to be funny, but to point out that like, I remember
a couple of years ago, remember when like Pete Buttigieg came on the scene
and similarly started from like 0.5 percent total approval
Rating and then went up and up and up and a part of that was his mere interest in being everywhere
He would talk to anybody he would do any podcast. He would do any television show he trusted in his
articulateness and
His ability to take on any question in any environment. And he also had something to say.
And say what you want about Zoran's policies.
And I have a lot to say about Zoran's policies,
as I know you do as well.
This is someone who's running for something.
He believes clearly in a criticism
of the Democratic Party,
and he wants to talk about it
to anyone who will speak to him.
It's difficult sometimes to get someone on the phone when they're
mere hours away from a primary or election contest.
We were supposed to talk on Wednesday, then it was bumped to Thursday, bumped to Friday.
We ended up talking at 5.35 p.m. on a Saturday after he'd spent hours hanging out with people
at various election parties or various pre-election parties.
You know, I do think that before we get to the substance here,
it speaks to what I think should be a model for politicians
in the modern age, which is that this isn't an age
of enormous monolithic broadcasts anymore,
where you just do this one CBS hit and then you're done.
You have to piece together the fragmentation of media
and make yourself available everywhere and talk to everybody
in order to get the message out and he clearly
He clearly tried to do that the other lesson that I'm taking from this and I'm really interested to know frankly what your takeaways
are here because I don't think you want to
Be too rash about like scaling a lesson from a Democratic primary in New York City
scaling a lesson from a democratic primary in New York City to be like the guiding lesson for Democrats running everywhere across the country.
The country is not New York City.
Only New York City is.
But one lesson I take here is that we're in an anti-institutional, anti-establishment,
anti-status quo age.
And I think that if you're going to run for the Democratic Party, you have to find some way
to run against the Democratic Party.
And that I think is true in Georgia and Maine and Ohio and New York City.
Andrew Cuomo representing the establishment gave him money, but it didn't give him a message.
It gave him something like the opposite of a clear message that voters want to hear when they're upset, when they no longer trust
what the party stands for, when they want to hear a new articulation of its brand.
And so while I don't think that an event like this as shocking as it is and
maybe just because it's shocking, because it's such a surprise, you don't want to
jump to any kind of national conclusions. But if I had to draw one out to like make it my Monday morning quarterbacking
tweet, it would be Democrats around the country to run for the party,
run against the party.
Find the way that your heresy, your heresy is authentic and clear and
communicable to the public because that's what a lot of people are looking for right now.
Yeah, we largely agree on all that, which I guess isn't surprising. I did 42 minutes
with Bill Kristol last night of a deep dive, so if people want my long form take,
they can go listen to that.
Well, give me your short form. I would love to know what you think about this.
Yeah, sure. My short form is, similar to your anti-establishment point, I think that Democrats
need to be much more willing to
just try different shit and be an offered types of candidates that are heterodox in
different in different places. And that's going to look differently in Nebraska than
it does in New York City for sure. But I just think that like the Democratic candidates
lately, they're cookie cutter and I could do the ads myself. AI literally is going to be able to do the ads this fall of, oh, I'm a fighter.
Here's my family picture and here and now you care about kitchen table issues and Donald
Trump is terrible, right?
It's just like you can tune it out and it becomes like the peanuts, like wah, wah, wah,
wah, wah, the democratic ads.
And so I think Zoran tried something.
He ran a campaign that was authentic to him. I think he ran a really great campaign. In addition to what you're saying about
how he went everywhere, like he benefited from Cuomo just like being a caricature of the worst
type of Democratic campaign, right? And Cuomo went nowhere. We asked Cuomo to come on the
bulwark. He didn't get on, he didn't get the bulwark bump. He didn't want to come. I saw that
Cuomo took a black car, five blocks from where he was staying to where he was voting yesterday. You know, and it's just like, this isn't,
it isn't what people want in 2025. So I do think I worry that like the DSA folks will
take from this that the DSA model works everywhere. And I don't think that is the takeaway. And
like, I worry that the establishment folks
just kind of say, well, you know, Andrew Quimman was such a bad candidate and this is kind
of a one-off, fluky thing. I don't actually have to learn anything from this. And I think
that both of those would be the wrong takeaways. I think that there's a way to kind of channel
the Zoran model tactically for different types of candidates. And I think that you've got
to recruit candidates that are...
Say what you want about Zoran.
He was authentically Zoran.
And I think the Democrats need different types of candidates too in different types of places.
You need somebody that is authentically Texas, authentically Georgia, right?
And I feel like the Democrats have been recruiting a lot of people that are like, I grew up in
suburban Atlanta and then I moved and I went to an Ivy League school
and then I went to McKinsey or I became a JAG officer. I did the check mark box of my career
and then I moved home and I was valedictorian and now I'm running back at home. There's a lot of
the same types of people running. So that's my main takeaway from the campaign. And, you know, I don't know. I think it's possible that Zoran in various ways could, could drag down other
Democrats as he becomes kind of a boogie man, like in an AOC type sense.
But I thought he was very, I mean, despite the goof or maybe not a goof, despite,
I think his poor answer to my question about globalizing the Intifada, I thought
in both of our interviews, he's smart and adaptable in a way that
some of the other DSA types aren't.
Right.
I think that he was very, I think, in tune with trying to appeal to a broader
demographic than his core demographic.
I don't know if you felt that way when you talked to him.
Yeah.
As you were talking, a couple of thoughts came to mind, two or three.
One is that I think it's really notable that the substance of his campaign wasn't what some political science nerds call
post material. It wasn't about identity. It wasn't focused on who we are. It was focused
on what we need. It's focused on materialism, on prices and groceries and the cost of housing.
I mean, just look at his poster was, for a New York, you can afford. I think this is another lesson.
For a New York, you can afford.
And if you look at why Democrats shifted
into the Republican column in 2024,
I think I was talking to, it was either David Schor
or some of the pollster about this.
They said the top four reasons
by people at the Democratic party
were cost of living, economy, inflation, and housing,
which is another way of basically saying
cost of living, cost of living, cost of living, cost of living. We're in a cost of living moment right now. That is the character
of the dissatisfaction that people have about the status quo. There's an establishment that is
interested in having fights over here about identity and not interested in having fights here
in the center of what Americans need, which is for life to feel cheaper.
That's one reason why I think Mamdani and I got along on our call.
I say got along with big quotation marks.
I don't like rent freezes as a policy.
I don't like his municipal grocery store plan as a policy.
I have major doubts about or questions certainly about his ability to be an executive, a manager. You know, how good is this guy at running
something? This is a massive unknown. It's actually very hard to tease out in like
an interview. How would I assess the managerial skills of a 33 year old
charismatic democratic socialist? Very, very hard to do. But the focus of
materialism was something we could get along with because fundamentally, what I care about, what abundance is about,
and what Mamdani is about, are about outcomes that make life more affordable for New Yorkers and for
Americans. And so there was something there that I think was very interesting and successful.
Another thing that your point raised for me is that, you know, there's this big question of like, should
Democrats run as socialists, or as left populists, or as
abundancy folks, or as whatever something else? And my answer
to that question, and it's so unsatisfying on like, a
conference stage on a podcast is People vote for people not just for messages themselves
And so there were a bunch of folks I saw
Responding to abundance when it first came out in March and April saying these dweebs these nerds want us to run on
regulatory changes and zoning reform
on regulatory changes and zoning reform, but look at Bernie Sanders, what Americans really want
is just an angry guy saying, fuck all this.
And now we have Mamdani, who's not angry at all.
Like, he's almost buoyant.
Like, he's almost so happy that it's a little cheesy,
but I, as a former musical theater nerd,
do not find cheesy at all.
I'm like,
I know you. I spent a lot of time with people who have exactly this energy. I know it and I like it. Musical theater nerd who went to a liberal arts college who ran for student government.
Like, I got it.
Yeah, right. That's an archetype I'm a little bit familiar with.
Got the time.
It goes to show that like, there was this certainty that the model to be most successful in American
politics today was to run with anger and now the rising star on the left could not be a worse
demonstration of that principle. He's unbelievably optimistic and non-stop smiley on these social
media videos even as he's talking straight to camera about the situation in New York affordability
being completely fucked.
He's very good at doing something there that blends the message of materialism with a style of
Optimism is almost too thin a word here, but a style of this doesn't have to be an angry critique
There's room in this party for us
I'm someone who you would see an open door into a party and say, I want to be in a room
with that guy.
And so I think it does go to show that like poll testing issues isn't worthless, but it
doesn't capture the degree to which people vote for people.
And I do think we're often surprised by the kind of people who end up being most compelling.
The Sanders model and the Momdani model could not be any more different, I think,
from a sort of dispositional standpoint.
But the fact that they're both working in ways-
You know, the lefties would say to you, Derek, that's because you misunderstand this.
Like the lefties on the social media would say you misunderstand politics altogether
and that your model is flawed, the neoliberal, you know, kind of capitalist model.
And the reason that both Bernie and Zoran resonated had nothing to do with their personalities,
it had to do with this deep well of interest in overthrowing the capitalist system
and then putting your finger in the eyes of the corporate elites
and giving people free buses and etc.
Maybe, I mean, I don't think that that's probably true in Texas,
but like maybe that is true
and it wasn't about personality at all.
What would you say to that?
Maybe they're right.
I don't think they're right,
but like, you know, politics is like science.
You have a hypothesis, you throw it out there,
you see what happens.
My guess is that someone running with Mom Donnie's politics
is going to be most successful in a congressional district
that's approximately plus 50 Democrats,
which is what, you know, Brooklyn and Manhattan are.
There's a lot of districts where Democrats have to win
that aren't plus 50 Democrats.
They're plus one, they're negative two,
they're negative five.
These are the places the Democrats have to...
He ran up a 68% victory over Cuomo and Greenpoint,
I think.
I love Greenpoint as much as anybody. I love Greenpoint.
Yeah, there's not a lot of those neighborhoods in North Carolina.
America is in Greenpoint.
But this goes again, this isn't my sly dig at the DSA.
It's just a fact that as you said at the beginning, different people are going to be successful
in different contexts.
A democratic socialist running to represent one of the most liberal cities in
America at a time of deep dissatisfaction with both the Democratic Party and with affordability
is going to have a certain level of success that that same DSA candidate is not going
to have running to be the senator from Ohio or Maine or Georgia.
These are just really different places.
And so that's one place where that's one reason why I'm trying to keep saying,
we need to be humble about the degree to which we can scale the lessons of an incredible
story and extraordinary story from New York.
We have to be humble about the degree to which this is a lesson that spreads across the country
like peanut butter.
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I have two more things I want to talk to you about regarding Zoran and I guess we'll do
the substantive one first.
You know, we won't do meta Twitter commentary first.
My main takeaway from our interview was I think he was listening to the critiques of,
you know, that comes from abundance book that comes from the center left and at least wanted
to engage with them.
I thought that his engagement was kind of limited, right?
And to me, like his poor answer when it came to my question about like whether the phrase
globalized intifada makes him uncomfortable, my reaction to it question about like whether the phrase globalized into father makes him uncomfortable
My reaction to it was less like oh this guy's an anti-semite that hates Jews and my reaction to it was more like
This guy doesn't want to pick a fight with kind of a core
demographic base that he has like I line essentially his core base were folks that were protesting and that were
activists and the left he doesn't want to do something that unnecessarily rankles those folks.
And to me, that would be the concerning thing about him as a mayor of New York.
In your interview, similarly, you asked him if the costs being high on the subway were
related to public sector union costs.
And he wouldn't really even broach the possibility, right?
It was he had some other, I think, accurate assessments for why costs
are too high, consultants and, you know, various red tape, but like he didn't
want to do anything that was critical of the public sector unions.
That would be my substantive concern for him that like he's, he's going to
be kind of tied to whatever the group interests on the progressive side.
What do you make of that critique?
New York City spends more per capita than any city in America.
So the degree to which New York City's problems are fundamentally a function of its inability
to spend enough money strikes me as not a very sound argument.
I think that what ails New York is that in many cases they are spending too much money
in the wrong ways.
And fixing those procedural bureaucratic problems requires making enemies.
Because every single time you amend a process or you cut funding from some
area, you're angering a constituency.
And if you're running as the DSA candidate, you're very likely set up to
anger a left-wing or liberal constituency that you're going to rely on for the
next election.
You can't just tax the bankers more?
You can try.
There's certainly no law against trying to raise taxes on the rich in New York even further
to take New York from being the most high tax place in America or the most high spending
place in America on a per capita basis, even the higher per capita spending place in America.
But that doesn't seem to me to be the thing that actually ails New York.
What ails New York to me is that many of the processes
there, many of the procedures there are just obviously broken in part because of allies
of the Democrats. So the point that I made to him, and I'm really glad that you teed
this up, is that he seems to care a lot about transit construction costs. And in 2017, the
New York Times wrote this story called something like the most expensive subway
mile in the world.
It was a long 2,000, 3,000 word story.
A part of this reporting, which has been confirmed in other places, is that New York City underground
construction tends to have staffing levels that are four times higher than the international
average.
Four times higher.
You simply cannot, as a company or an organization, produce things in a cost-efficient way if
you are legally required to have 4X the standard staffing level.
That's not possible.
At some point, I think that fixing problems with affordability in New York is going to
require angering some of the constituencies that are responsible for lifting Zoran Mamdani
to power.
I don't know the degree to which he can do that.
I absolutely see, I think it's really astute of you
to point out the degree to which your question
about globalizing Intifada and my question
about public sector unions in New York,
while at one level seem to have nothing to do
with one another, are in fact versions
of the same underlying question.
Do you have, will you have the the power and courage to upset people who
are on your side in order to achieve the outcomes that you tell folks like me you
want? That, like the managerial competency question, is a question that you just, I
just don't know the answer to and I still harbor major doubts about because
I do think that in order to fix New York's problems he's gonna have to piss off some people that
are onside that's really really hard to do especially last point especially if
you have a personality type that is as agreeable as his is right I'm not trying
to like psychoanalyze him from afar but like as a sort of like toxically like
pathologically agreeable person myself, nothing makes me
more uncomfortable than angering someone I recognize to be my friend.
And if you put someone like me in government, it's going to be tough because I'm going
to have a really, really hard time making decisions.
It's easy to tweet about pissing people off.
It's harder to actually do it.
And I would say that's a really, really smart reason to be skeptical about Mom Donnie actually
achieving the things he says he wants to achieve.
It's been the biggest cultural shift for me moving from being in Republican politics to
now being in opposition to the Republicans is everybody around me is agreeable, except
for the far left types.
The main Democratic base, it's like a very agreeable group that creates an unusual social
dynamic at times. And so Ron was so agreeable, so affable, so friendly. And I
can understand what the appeal is, even though we have some ideological disagreements.
I have a few like abundance random policy notes around the country that you're seeing.
New York, also New York State is going to try to build a nuclear plant. Kathy Hochul
made that announcement.
This feels like kind of a random niche issue, like with all the crazy things going on in
the world, why would I want to talk about this right now?
But it also feels like kind of an inflection point and kind of important that a democratic
state actually is going to try to, and a democratic politician is actually going to try to push
this through.
I don't know what you make of the nuclear story.
Let me give you my big thoughts on nuclear. Number one, I think nuclear power is awesome.
I wish we built 70 more nuclear power plants in the 1950s, 1960s. It would make climate change
easier. It would make energy abundance easier. It would have been a pure and absolute mitzvah for
the country. But it's not 1961. It's 2025. Nuclear power plants are the most expensive construction
project in the world. I was talking to one energy analyst who said that the Votel power
plant in Georgia costs something like 8 to 10 Burj Khalifas. Imagine in a way hearing
Kathy Hoch will say, what we're going to do in New York is build 8 to 10 Burj Khalifas.
It's be like, wow, that's certainly $10 billion.
That's certainly very expensive.
Nuclear power is incredibly expensive to build, and it takes a long time to build for a variety
of regulatory and site construction reasons.
My enthusiasm here, my optimism here is tempered.
I'm an energy abundance guy, and I'm an all-of-the-above energy abundance guy.
Solar, wind, geothermal, absolutely nuclear. I think we're going to have to rely on natural gas
for a long time to keep energy prices low
as we make this clean energy transition.
So I want to be really enthusiastic about any governor,
especially a blue state governor,
saying we're going to build nuclear power.
But I'm also interested in outcomes,
the outcome of actually getting affordable power
from a nuclear power plant that's already built.
And if it's going to take an average of 10 to 15 years and 10 to 15 billion dollars to
build a nuclear power plant, it just makes me a little bit concerned about the degree
to which my enthusiasm for this announcement should actually translate into hope that this
announcement becomes energy that folks in Albany and New York City can use.
So that's my general outlook.
But look, Spencer Cox in the governor of Utah also made an announcement
about energy abundance and a kind of like race to the top of energy construction and
permitting acceleration among Democratic and Republican governors around energy and housing.
These are the kind of vibe shifts that ultimately I would want abundance to have.
Okay.
I'm glad you're tempered, but I don't know, like the sclerotic Albany democratic establishment
being like, this is bad that we can't build nuclear.
We should do it faster.
That's something.
That's something.
I guess you just want more.
You want more.
It's good.
Of course it's good.
It's a step in the right direction.
You hear what I'm saying.
Of course it's good for them to go from, we don't want to build nuclear.
We want to shut nuclear power plants down, which is where we've been, to, we want to build nuclear power plants
because we recognize that nuclear power is going to be a critical part of our energy future.
That transition is nothing but good, right?
That said, I think it's worth being realistic
about how difficult it is to build nuclear power
and how long it takes to build it.
And so I want us to sort of like temper our enthusiasm
and our pride in this announcement with a recognition
that like doing this stuff is very hard
and the announcement itself is not the end of the journey.
That said, I want to talk to Kathy Hochul about this.
I would love to learn more about the details of this plan,
especially to learn if she has some ideas
for really accelerating the typical timeline
of nuclear construction.
We'll see how tempered your excitement is about this other one.
California is passing a budget today with some housing reforms.
It includes just prepare yourself listeners.
There are going to be a couple of wonky terms here in this list.
So just you can chat GPT and ask about them.
We're not going to explain what every word means. In fill
housing projects are now exempt from CEQA. That's the
environmental regulation in California that prevents
anything from being built. And now it must be approved or
denied in four to six months. A buy right development must be
improved in 90 days. There's a update to the permit
streamlining act. This is good. This is good.
It's amazing. It's awesome. It's awesome.
I don't know that there's a single
silver bullet that's going to fix California's issues,
but if there's 10 silver bullets, this is
absolutely one of the silver bullets.
In-sale housing, we're talking about dense
urban housing, making it easier to
build that kind of housing, which is
close to the best jobs.
Not only is it good for the middle class
that wants to live in downtown areas,
it's also frankly good for the environment
because sprawl is worse than density for the environment.
Speeding up SQL basically meaning that you can build
this infill housing without going through
an environmental review process,
that's sensational, accelerated permitting,
I think that's awesome.
This is what the kind of technocratic achievements
of an abundance movement will have to look like.
It's not going to be incredibly easy things
that you can immediately throw a mission accomplished banner on.
It's going to be stuff like amending a SQL law here,
amending an environmental review here,
making it easier to build here, faster to permit here,
reform zoning there.
This package of policies, which I've
been following for a while out of
California, when Ezra and I were out doing our book tour, Scott Weiner and Wix were just beginning
to put this package together. So the fact that a version of it seems to be nearing the finish line,
I think this is purely wonderful. And it's exactly the sort of stuff that Ezra and I were rather explicitly calling for in the book.
As somebody that is, you know, ideologically more than sympathetic to everything that you're
writing about all this, going back to the political side of it, we're just talking about
all this right now.
The thing that strikes me is it does feel a little bit like a weakness.
Like I was making a joke last night, like where, you know, you're watching on social
media the positive reaction to Zoran from kind of the DSA left types.
And it was like abundance in shambles, you know, free buses for all.
Like I'm going to, I want to drink Ezra Klein's perfect bearded tears, you know, and like
that Iglesias hardest hit.
Like they're like all so excited and I get it.
And there's something to be excited about about I understand why
Young folks in particular are excited about Zoran who haven't had a lot of Democratic candidates to be excited about but his messaging
Like the shorthand of it is is easy to grasp on to like the you know
Whether it's the free buses whether it's you know the grocery stores
It's hard to kind of imagine an inverse like Like, how do you build excitement in the inverse
for what we're just talking about in Sequel?
Like, it's hard to imagine Derek Thompson, like,
tweeting after the Mikey Sherrill victory.
You know, something like,
come down in shambles.
Like, permitting reform.
Momento. You know, it's like,
it's permitting reform summer.
You know, it's hard to memeify.
Do you think about that at all?
Do you care about that?
I care about it.
I do.
But also look, the first post I wrote on Substack was about this phenomenon that
I call the poster politician dividing the left.
If your way of engaging with left abundance discourse is to dunk your head into Twitter and allow your cerebrum to just marinate
in Twitter conflict.
You will think that abundance and the left are enemies.
That will be the only conclusion you can possibly draw.
But then if you have a phone or a Twitter account, and you call up or follow some of the texts or DMs
of progressive and left-wing politicians,
they're much more pro-abundance.
Ro Khanna is one of the most pro-Medicare for All
congressmen in Washington.
He's tweeted several times about how pro-abundance he is
and how many parts of this book he
think are necessary components to the Democratic Party.
You look at, you know, Zoran Mamdani, like, comes on my show and I have conversations with people, like, on his campaign about how enthusiastic they are for, you know, him to talk to me about this book that he really enjoyed and that sort of changed his mind about several ways and reintroduced some ideas about government efficiency,
making government work,
the fact that outcomes are more important sometimes
than processes, learning from the mistakes
of other leftists like Brandon Johnson in Chicago,
how to not just do Chicago Redux
as a left-wing mayor of New York City.
There was a lot of positivity about abundance principles
in our 30, 37 minute conversation.
And there's been a ton of conversations that I've had off the record on background with
progressive and left-wing politicians across the country.
Not just at like a national level, like representatives, I'm talking about like people running for
local office in Texas, in California, in Florida.
And again and again, the message message is like this book and its theme
that we as Democrats cannot ask the public to allow us to add more government
functions unless we prove that government can function in the first
place totally resonated with us. You know one of my favorite ways of sort of
synthesizing the book was Wes Moore the governor of Maryland who said America has the Democratic party, he said, has to move from being a party of
no and slow to a party of yes and now.
What a great sort of campaign poetry synthesis of like a 230 page book of abundance.
So I do think that it is, of course, worth paying attention to like what the left is
saying on Twitter or blue sky or Instagram or whatever else.
It's not that the discourse doesn't matter.
He said the discourse is not the world.
The discourse isn't actually politics.
What's politics to me or what politicians are saying and thinking and doing.
And if you follow what politicians are saying and thinking and doing both
publicly, like Kathy Hockel and
the forthcoming law in California and
Privately the way that politicians in the left progressive politicians are talking to their own staff about the lessons they take from this book
It's really important to me that you have again this poster
Politician divide where the posters are against the book and saying, you know, whatever drink the Libs tears
The politicians aren't saying that at all.
And so ultimately, if what I want is for this book to have power and influence,
I'm not going to judge it by the number of retweets on a Wednesday morning in June
of some post that's shitposting the book.
That's in some ways the worst way to judge the influence of the book.
The way to judge the influence of the book is to call up a politician who's trying to
do something and say, were you influenced?
Did we change your mind?
I like that answer.
I worry a little bit that it's cope.
As somebody that wants the event inside to win, I worry about that because I do worry
that you can't market your way out towards energy, really.
Popular energy just kind of exists.
I remember thinking back to being with Jeb on a plane and him being frustrated about
why he wasn't resonating with the Republican base.
We'd had a couple scotches and I said to him, like, honestly, man, you can say fuck more.
You can take off your glasses or put them back on.
We can change the slogan, but like the energy is with Trump.
And I worry that like, you know, I saw a social media post of an, of an
abundance meetup group and I would love everybody at that meetup would be very
nice, but it just looked like a dorky Derek and a dorky Matt Iglesias just like
10 years younger than the two of you.
And then last night, Zoran's party is bumping.
Everybody's vibing.
I don't know.
That part of it is tough to figure out how to channel all that.
I'm not really even looking for you to answer it.
It's just something I'm thinking through.
Sure.
It was my previous answer, Coke.
I don't think so.
But if someone's interested in putting together a marketing deck for a politician in 2027,
2028, of course, I don't think that the first thing they should run on or the message that
they should set the bumper sticker printers to running on is something like, unleash nuclear
abundance, exempt infill Sequa. That's not the bumper sticker. Of course, unleash nuclear abundance. Exempt infill CEQA.
Like, that's not the bumper sticker.
Of course I get that.
But what I keep saying is the following two things,
when people ask me versions of this question,
which I want to be clear,
it's a perfectly fair question.
It's a perfectly fair, it's an important question.
Number one, the book's three months old.
It's three months old.
Like, we're going to learn about like how,
like what messages connect with people, and what messages come out of the book. we're going to learn about like, how, like what messages connect with
people and what messages come out of the book, we're going to learn that there are years
to figure out ways that this book clicks into a message that people care about. One message
is the way that Westmore is talking, right? That the Democratic Party can't be the party
of know and slow. It has to be the party of fast and now. Another way, frankly, of making
the messages of the book stick is that this is a book that's fundamentally about how do we fucking solve people's problems?
How do we go from like a Republican Party that just breaks shit and a Democratic Party that doesn't do shit to?
Government that gets shit done, right? There are versions of and again
I'm not trying to take the sort of you know old Jeb Bush advice of just throw a four-letter word on it
But like there are ways I think of taking a book that was me and Ezra trying to take the sort of old Jeb Bush advice of just throw a four letter word on it.
But like there are ways I think of taking a book that was me and Ezra trying to say
true things about American politics and policy and turning it into a message that works.
But the most important reaction I have to the question like this, the most important
reaction to this question is people don't vote for books, they vote for people. And we don't know
yet the kind of individuals that are going to take up this message and run on it in 2027.
We don't know their charisma, we don't know their willingness to go on every single show,
we don't know if they're funny, if they're agreeable. Like, Mamdani understands something
that exists at a level that isn't captured by abundance
versus left populism.
I think he understands something that's true about attention.
He understands that to get people's attention,
to hold it, to take it away from somebody else
requires that you present a version of yourself to people on
social media and on podcasts that other people want to be with.
People want to be at the party with you.
They want to be, you know, we used to say before, like, you want to grab a beer with
this person.
I think it's more complicated now.
It's like, do you want to listen to this person talk for three hours on Joe Rogan on a phone
while you're watching Love Island in the background,
but a different kind of like general like vibe of hang.
Those are elements that cannot be predicted or prescribed by a book that's about the right housing policy
and the right way to think about government efficiency.
Like these are different problems to solve for and people will try to solve for them.
It's really, it's almost like not my job to perfectly anticipate and describe the kind
of person who will have this ability to grab and hold attention while also running on ideas
from the book that I think would dramatically improve people's
lives.
Next time you can ask that question, you can just come from RuPaul and you can just say
we need somebody that has charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent.
Charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent.
Because Zoran had it.
Yeah.
Zoran had it.
He had all of it.
I had a feeling that might be an acronym.
You got it?
All right.
You got it. And then it was. Okay, good.
Speaking of people with no charisma, uniqueness, nerve, or talent,
John Thune and Mike Johnson, what do you make of what's happening with the,
whatever, tax and budget bill over on the Hill? It feels anti-abundance to me.
I would just like to hear you cook on their legislative plans.
Yes, it's one of the fucking worst bills I've ever seen in my life.
It's a debt bomb.
It lowers taxes on people who do not need a tax cut in order
to cut services for people who need those services.
The idea that at this point in the economy,
with inequality what it is, with the needs of the poor,
especially in an affordability crisis what they are,
the fact that we're going to give million-dollar tax cuts to folks that run, you know, used car lots
so that we can take Medicaid away from poor people in Alabama and Louisiana is absurd and disgusting.
And I cannot believe they're actually going through with this. I do think
they're going to go through with it. I'm not sure the Republican Party can take a vacancy spot here.
I think they have to pass some version of the big and beautiful bill. It's going to include an
enormous amount of tax cuts that weight overwhelmingly toward the richest 1%. And the only way to make
the numbers work is to cut government spending, and government spending tends to be much more
progressive, which means you're taking money away from
low income people who need food stamps and SNAP and healthcare.
I think this is the sort of thing that Republicans today feel like is an expression of their
values and an expression of their donor interests.
And I also hope, and maybe this is just a bit of projection, but I certainly hope that
it's the sort of thing that come mid end of 2026.
Democrats are going to be able to very successfully pin this and the behavior of Donald Trump
together to create an incredibly compelling argument for throwing a lot of bombs out of
office.
So I think it's a pretty horrendously depressing bill.
And the silver lining as a sort of pathologically optimistic person, the silver lining to me is that a bill
this horrendous cannot help but be an albatross around the neck of the people who vote for it.
And when you combine it with the rest of the agenda, it's pretty astonishing how anti-cost
cutting, their entire anti-affordability, the entire agenda is. This bill and the tax cut for rich folks combined with making healthcare more expensive, getting
rid of healthcare for poor people, getting rid of SNAP benefits for poor people, on top
of that, our aggressive tariff tax increase on everybody that's buying goods.
On top of that, we're going to mass deport the people that are making and building things,
which are going to make those things more expensive. I mean, like the whole economic agenda, it's significantly worse than the Trump 1.0 agenda.
And it is particularly ill-suited for the economic moment, I think, Warren.
Do you agree with that?
It is so shockingly out of step with this economic moment that I honestly sometimes
just can't believe they're going through with it.
I mean, Donald Trump won, as I said, an affordability election.
He won because enough Americans either went to the polls for the first time and voted
for Republican because they felt like life was unaffordable or they shifted from the
Democratic to Republican column because they felt like life was unaffordable.
And like, how do you make life affordable?
You make it cheaper to build houses.
You make energy cheaper.
You make life cheaper.
You make things like healthcare and education cheaper.
And what are they doing?
One of the first things that he did in office
is to announce a tariff on Canadian lumber
and Mexican drywall.
That's like immediately threatening to rise the cost
of home construction.
What does he do on, it's something like manufacturing,
which we would want to be more efficient in this country.
He creates a trade war, which raises the input cost
for things that we build in this country, which means it's harder to build anything in this country. He creates a trade war which raises the input costs for things that we build in this country, which means
it's harder to build anything in this country. What does he do for energy? Well,
the big beautiful bill and a bunch of other Trump policies not only hurt solar
and wind construction, they also raise energy costs across the board. Energy
costs are looking to double in some places in this country in the next year.
This is one of the more important, I think, stories to emerge from the economy
in the next few months.
And then finally on healthcare, we're going to give, again, we're going to give
like sole proprietors of S-Corps million dollar tax cuts that they do not need.
Like that used car salesman is going to vote for you, a Republican, no matter
what you do in the next six months, we're still going to give you a 700 or give you and your
class a $700 billion tax cut that requires us to cut Medicaid by $700
billion. It's completely insane to me. And it's one place where, you know, as
I've gone around the country, as you know, as you and I have done this book
tour, it's almost been too easy for us to make the point that a message of
abundance stands up poetically against a scarcity agenda from the Trump
administration.
We're not even beginning to talk about things that I care a ton about.
And, you know, initially came on the show a lot to talk about things like
science policy.
We're cutting the NIH by $18 billion, by 40%.
Why?
We could amend the big, beautiful bill.
We could reduce the corporate income
tax cut by about 0.7% to save that $18 billion. Instead, we're going to take it away from
Harvard scientists studying the molecular basis of Alzheimer's and infectious disease.
What the fuck are you doing? It's so astonishing to me that they're running on this explicit agenda of scarcity.
Unfortunately for the country and narrowly usefully for my ability to talk about it on
podcasts, it could not be more anti-abundance.
I'm giving you snaps.
Because we're both sickos and just can't help but do discourse, we went longer than I meant
to on Zoran and the meta
discourse around Zoran. So I have a few other notes of things I want to talk to you about.
We're not going to get to all of them. I wanted you to reply to Mark Cuban's bullpitch on this
podcast for AI, which I found completely uncompelling. You had two recent podcasts I like,
one on the unifying theory of America being unhealthy and one on smartphones and mental health.
Which one of those are you hottest to trot on right now, those three topics?
You get to be the host.
I saw the clip of Cuban telling you that he wasn't going to run for president, which I
think is a lie.
I think you think it's a lie.
Tell me what he said about AI so I can respond to that because I'd love to talk about AI.
It went on for a while.
The short original part of the clip he talked about, and I think which is something that is true that I agree with, is just the entrepreneurial
opportunities for AI for somebody that's a young person that's upstarted, that's to learn about a
topic. He's just like, it's going to be unimaginable compared to the past. I agree with that part.
Here is the second part of his bull pitch I was a little less compelled by. I'd like for you to
listen to. It's going to be really tough to know what's real and what's not real.
And you may not need real people to create entertainment, which means that,
no, don't, don't do that because that in my mind, I think it's going to force
more face to face communication.
I just love that in your pro pitch, it's like, it's going to be hard to tell
what's real and what's not real.
And that's in the positive pitch.
Well, yeah, but, but that is positive in some respects, right? Because it's become so easy to overwhelm,
to flood the zone, if you will, with stuff that isn't real. People are going to want stuff that
is real. And we'll want more face-to-face communications. In business as well, when you
get all these fake voices calling you as a sales bitch, it's like, if you're the company that has a salesperson at least knocks
on your door or shows up face to face, you're going to appreciate that.
If you don't know what's real or not, you're going to want somebody
telling it to your face so you know what's real and that you can trust it.
That's insane.
Mark Cuban is really smart.
I don't, I don't dislike him.
I don't, I don't dislike him at all.
This is not coming from a place of like, I, I couldn't wait to call some opinion of Mark Cuban's insane. That's just a bad
take. I have an article going up in my sub stack in about 10 minutes, which is called
Young People Face a Hiring Crisis, AI is Making It Worse. And let me try to do this essay
really quickly, because it clicks exactly into the point that Mark Cuban's making. There's
a lot of conversation around the fear that AI is taking entry-level jobs
from young people graduated from college.
And in fact, you can see the unemployment rate
for young college graduates begin to tick up much faster
than the overall unemployment rate.
That's scary.
The macroeconomic data here is not entirely conclusive.
So I went and called up a bunch
of college career office directors to ask, what are you seeing in the entry level labor
market?
What are your students saying about their job applications?
And they said something that totally stunned me.
They said that today is not uncommon for young people
to use artificial intelligence to apply
to 300 jobs, 500 jobs, even 1,000 jobs in a matter of months.
It's not uncommon.
And as a result, a lot of employers,
in response to this AI barrage, are putting up their own
AY bulwark, so to speak.
They are using AI to conduct early round interviews,
to surveil early round interviews,
to look at body language and facial expressions.
They're sometimes using AI to filter for these job applications so that a young
person applies to a job and five seconds later, you know, they're getting a no from
some AI that's doing a bunch of keyword searches. And what I heard from these
college career counselors is that it is making the job search process so
unbelievably anxiety-producing for young people because they are often not talking
to potential employers at all.
They're talking to chat bots created by these employers
to handle the barrage of AI-enabled job applications.
The process of looking for a job
is becoming so fundamentally inhuman
that the economic anxiety that people feel
about the labor market right now
is being layered with this enormous
dystopian psychological anxiety about
who the hell am I even talking to when I apply to work?
I'm not against AI.
I think AI is really interesting technology in so many ways.
But one thing that we've seen from technology like smartphones and even things like Netflix,
sometimes when a technology is super convenient and creates a kind of frictionlessness to
our lives, it removes the human experience.
That's exactly what's happening to job hunts across the country.
It's going to create a scenario, I think, where young people especially are going to feel
like AI is not just an economic technology, it's a social technology.
Young people are going to use it to replace therapists.
They're going to use it to replace friends.
As weird as that sounds, they're absolutely going to find ways to take questions that
are for friends and redirect it toward AI chatbots.
It's already happening.
There's a company called Character AI
that has tens of millions of unique users a month.
And it's going to happen in these sort of
historically interpersonal exchanges, like the job hunt,
which are going to become more automated
in ways that are going to feel weird and berserk
and dystopian and fundamentally antisocial.
And that's why, as much as I care about abundance, and it's absolutely the most important project
that I'm working on right now,
the other theme that I am most interested in talking about
on this Substack and just in podcasts generally
is this idea I have about the antisocial century,
that in so many ways,
not only are we empirically talking to each other less,
having fewer face-to-face interactions,
but also this AI wave that is coming
is going to not just change the way we work, it's going to change the way that
we engage with other people.
It's going to deform social relations in ways we're not going to understand until it's already
happening.
Right now, my big thesis is the transition line, the pipeline between college and the
workforce is drenched in AI right now.
Young people are cheating on tests. GPAs barely mean anything anymore because what's the value
of a college assessment if you don't know if the underlying assessment is like how good were you
at looking up chat-chip-BTAing like history of the Habsburg Empire or actually understanding
the Habsburg Empire? The job application process is enabled by AI. The human resources process is now automated by AI, and now entry-level jobs themselves,
I think, are being replaced at some level by AI.
If we want to understand what's happening with this technology in the world, we should
study this pipeline from college to the labor force like hell, and I would be shocked if
the near-term outcome was anything like Mark Cuban predicted.
I'm glad you picked that topic because I'm obsessed with this.
I'm going to keep talking about it even though this is a sensibly never Trump or politics
pod because I just, we have to fight against it.
Like there's a dehumanization element to this.
Like must be fought.
I'm not a Luddite.
There was a lot of cool stuff happening with AI, but this notion that like we're going
to go through this period where the slop gets so bad and the dehumanization
Is so intense that folks will crave human contact
I don't that's not a bet that I want to make actually is the following a fair analysis the last 70 years of television technology
That television is so good at allowing people to watch human relations that it's created a renaissance of people hanging out in the physical world.
No.
I would say no.
The exact fucking opposite.
Television is so unbelievably entertaining.
It's so good at just getting our little dopamine to slew us through our brains,
that we sit on the couch and we watch it for five, six, seven hours a day,
especially if you're an American senior,
and it reduces the amount of face-to-face socializing.
Face-to-face socializing has declined by 20%
in the last 20 years.
That's after Bowling Alone by Robert Putnam came out,
looking at the decline of socializing
in the previous 50 years.
These technologies aren't evil.
I don't think Netflix is evil or HBO is evil.
I think that technologies that make life frictionless have a side effect of
often removing frictions we didn't know we needed to be healthy and happy.
It's taken us a while to discover that with TV.
It'll take us a while to really see it maybe in some ways with AI, but it's a
thesis I hold to very, very strongly.
All right. We're going to challenge you right now, Derek.
This is going to be personal growth.
I have a series of rapid fire questions.
You only get two sentences to answer each of them.
On the topic of smartphones and mental health, we're not going to get to that.
You should go listen to Derek's podcast, Plain English.
It's really great.
And sign up for his new sub stack.
Rapid fire.
It's your fault.
You titled it, your unifying theory of America being unhealthy.
So if it's a unifying theory, you should be able to offer it in two sentences.
Why is America unhealthy?
Americans eat too much.
Caloric surplus is probably the most parsimonious explanation for the rise in obesity.
It leads to not just subcutaneous fat, the fat that we can see, but something called
visceral fat that's deeper under our skins and around our organs. Visceral fat, along with other effects of eating too much
caloric surplus, releases toxins into the blood that raises chronic inflammation. And chronic
inflammation is the sort of fountain spring from which so many long-term diseases like cancer,
cardio-metabolic disease, heart attacks, and Alzheimer's become more likely. So we intervene on that how?
We stop, how do you stop that process of those various subterranean fats that you went to?
Look, here's a metaphor.
The human being is a car.
The modern world is a brick dropped on the accelerator.
And as a result, we are accelerating the degree to which we consume, consume, consume.
We are putting ourselves in a state of permanent caloric surplus. And as a result, we are accelerating the degree to which we consume, consume, consume.
We are putting ourselves in a state of permanent caloric surplus,
and this is leading to record high levels of obesity.
I wish there were some obvious, easily scaled, non-medical solutions to this problem.
Eat less and exercise more? Of course one should do that. It's really,
really hard for a variety of reasons. The reason to be optimistic here is that glucagon-like
peptide-1 receptor agonists, otherwise known as GLP-1 drugs, otherwise known as ozempic and
set-bound, seem to be sensational at taking the brick from the accelerator and placing it on the
break. And one of the next pieces that I'm writing right now, the first piece I'm going to write next
week, is about how these GLP-1 drugs are among the most astonishing medical breakthroughs
of the last 100 years and maybe one of the most astonishing medical breakthroughs of
the last several hundred years.
For reasons we don't quite understand, they seem to be good at everything.
They don't just help us lose weight.
They don't just reduce chronic inflammation.
They don't just reduce levels of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, that's being studied
right now.
They seem to be good at just about every single bodily system that we've measured, and a ton
of money is going into making them better.
I am not optimistic about a sudden, spontaneous renaissance of Americans working out more
and eating more broccoli.
I am optimistic though that GLP-1 drugs could be like one of the most important scientific
discoveries of this century.
All right.
That was very challenging and you did fail the test, but the question didn't really call
for it.
There were a ton of semi-colons.
If you could hear my brief breaks, those were all semi-colons.
This could maybe be two words.
Person in the public life that drives you the most insane right now.
Who's annoying you the most in all of public life?
JD.
Same. I see we're so aligned, Derek. Maybe we should merge our podcasts. The Atlantic
writer you're going to miss the most. You left the Atlantic. This is the unofficial
podcast of the Atlantic since we have so many Atlantic guests.
Am I going to get in trouble if I don't say Jeff Goldberg?
If you said Jeff Goldberg, I would be offended.
I'm going to say Jeff Goldberg because that's the answer least likely to get me in trouble,
but I have so many friends at the Atlantic and I love Jeff too.
You began this podcast by extolling the virtues of Democratic candidates who were candid,
who went on podcasts and took tough questions, and here you are copping out.
When I run for mayor of Washington, DC,
maybe I'll give you more honest, interpersonal answers.
All right.
Ezra Klein's most annoying tic on the Abundance Tour?
Most annoying tic?
Tic, yeah, you had to do joint interviews with him.
What was his most annoying tic?
Certainly.
I don't find Ezra particularly annoying.
I'd love to know what he thinks about it.
I'll say this.
It's interesting when you're on the roll
with someone, when you're just around someone talking
for just like fucking hundreds of hours,
you pick up these little things that they say
and you start using them.
My favorite thing that he does is he has this line
where he says, he says, I'd like to make a cut here.
It's a way for him to answer a difficult, I think,
it's a way to answer a difficult question
in two different ways.
So if you ask me, who are you going to miss the most at the Atlantic?
I could say, I'm going to make a cut here.
There are people who I appreciate the most at the Atlantic, and there are people who
I love texting with and slacking with the most at the Atlantic.
So I'd like to make a cut here.
This is a horrible tick.
This is extremely annoying.
It says something about your partnership that this doesn't annoy you. I don't think it's annoying. I'm glad that it says something about your partnership that this doesn't annoy you. I use it all the time. I don't think it's annoying. I think it's magnificently useful.
And I'm sorry for the way that Tim is bastardizing my answer to this question.
Okay. Finally, we need to fix the NBA injury problem. I saw you posted about this.
Yeah.
It's unbelievable that so many of the last few years of playoffs have been ruined by
injuries and the tragedy and the drama and kind of the operatic years of playoffs have been ruined by injuries and the tragedy and the drama
and kind of the operatic nature of game seven and having the Pacers as unlikely underdog,
you know, having it be stripped away from them by Tyrese Albert and their star player
getting injured in the first five minutes with an Achilles tendon tear. At some level,
I feel horrible for Tyrese, but it did make for good drama. But over the course of years
now, there are just so many more injuries than when we were growing up.
How do we fix it?
I'm not sure how easily this is fixable.
I think the reasons for this go to the fact that these players are
unbelievably athletic and the style of play involves a lot more play from
behind the three-point line,
so that there's more sort of start-stop drives
and start-stop defenses where,
if there's more three-point shots,
and you're, say, a wing defender on the Denver Nuggets
and you're playing, you know, I'm the Boston Celtics,
I do nothing but take threes,
you're constantly going from a stop position
or sort of flow position near the basket to
sprinting out to three point line because Jalen Brown is taking his 17-3 of the game.
And a game, I think, that has more of these sudden accelerations from incredibly athletic
people is going to have more injuries.
That said, the season is way too long.
And the consequences of its too long-ness are legion.
I mean, not only is so much of the regular season
just completely worthless.
Two-thirds of the teams make the playoffs for the play-in.
So why do I give a fuck about a game
in the middle of January if it has no bearing
on the outcome of the season?
Like, the Indiana Pacers started this season, what,
like 14 and 19, and they were like maybe one Achilles away
from winning the championship?
So why am I watching any basketball in November at all? So I think
the season itself needs to be shrunk in order to make the games matter more and
I do think that allowing more time between the games might reduce strain on
people's tendons and ligaments which might cash out and fewer injuries toward
the end of the season. But the most important thing about your question is
that it's just exactly right. I mean it's difficult to think of a playoff in the last few years that
wasn't like defined by or potentially defined by a major injury, whether it's
like, you know, Jamal Murray getting injured, uh, in the middle of Jokic's prime.
Right.
Whether it's Janis getting injured or Embiid never being able to play in the
post season or Tatum getting injured or Halliburton getting injured or even
seasons where like in the West. Curry KD.
Yeah.
When the Warriors made, won the championship.
Hats off to Steph Curry.
That was a magical year.
But if I recall, it was like four of the top 10 or five of the top 10 players in the Western
Conference were injured by the end of that playoffs.
Like Kawhi wasn't playing.
Paul George was barely holding it together all these other players like who you would want to compete in the Western Conference
Championship with Jamal they played against us that year. Yeah, right. Yeah, maybe Chris Paul
So I think that we're reaching a point where the product which is already bad
during the regular season because the games kind of don't matter, is also getting diminished in the postseason
because you're basically flipping a coin on the Achilles and knee tendons of every star
player by the end of, by the middle of June.
And that's a huge problem, I think, for the league.
All right.
I'm going to let you get to your move.
I have a little self-criticism.
We're going to do less social media discourse and I'm going to endeavor to find an area
of disagreement the next time you come on, if that sounds good.
Okay, cool. All right, great. Let's disagree about something.
Yeah. And I think really the only one is that you decided to move to Washington. So I guess
that's one topic, but I'll try to find a substantive area of disagreement the next time we get
together. That's Derek Thompson. Go subscribe to a Substack. Appreciate you coming on on
a moving day and we'll talk to you soon, brother.
Thanks, my friend.
All right, man. Thanks so much. much appreciate you. Everybody else come back tomorrow for another edition of the Bullwork
podcast. We'll see you all then. Peace. New York, love, New York, love, New York, love, New York Feel so free, feel so free, feel so free It's my religion
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And Sophie, Sophie is not a legend The Bullork Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.