The Bulwark Podcast - Ritchie Torres and Ben Smith: Pride and Priors
Episode Date: June 4, 2024Rep. Ritchie Torres joins Tim Miller to discuss how to win working-class voters, his Dickensian upbringing, and Israel under the microscope of 24-hour news. Plus, mental health, Pride, and Trump as th...e GOP's new lord and savior. Then, Ben Smith talks about Americans fragmenting the media universe, and the Epoch Times grift. show notes: Torres talking about being a Zionist after being heckled New Yorker piece on Guo Wengui that Ben mentionedÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If it's a flat or a squeal, a wobble or peel, your tread's worn down or you need a new wheel,
wherever you go, you can get it from our Tread Experts.
Ensure each winter trip is a safe one for your family.
Enjoy them for years with the Michelin X-Ice Snow Tire.
Get a $50 prepaid MasterCard with select Michelin tires.
Find a Michelin Tread Experts dealer near you at treadexperts.ca slash locations.
From tires to auto repair, we're always there. TreadExperts.ca
Hello and welcome to the Bulwark Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. It's Tuesday, June 4th.
I'm here with Representative Richie Torres, Democratic Congressman from the Bronx. He's a former member of the New York City Council.
He was elected to Congress in 2020. I'm pumped to have him here, but wanted to do this for a while.
How are you doing, Congressman? It's an honor to be here. Happy Pride.
Let's do it. Happy Pride. I've got some Pride questions for you coming down the pike here,
about halfway through. But first, I just wanted to talk a little
bit about Donald Trump. I don't know if you've heard of him. You grew up in public housing in
the Bronx across the street from the site of what was once a garbage dump that then was developed
into a golf course with the Trump's brand name on it. And so my question for you is sometimes do
you feel like you're in like a Dickens novel where there's a buffoonish, greedy villain that haunts your entire life?
Yes.
I feel like the ghost of Donald Trump has been haunting me at every point in my life.
So as you said, I grew up in a visual tale of two cities.
I grew up in Frogs Neck Houses, which is a public housing development right across the street from what was formerly Trump golf course. And I kid you not, as the golf course
was undergoing construction, it unleashed a skunk infestation. So I tell people I've been smelling
the stench of Donald Trump long before he became president. And then the ghost haunted me when I
became a member of Congress. If someone had said to a 50-year-old version of myself, you know,
Richard, you're going to become a member of Congress during a global pandemic and witness an insurrection against the U.S. Capitol
and then vote to impeach the host of The Celebrity Apprentice.
And all of that would happen within the first two weeks.
I would have said that sounds like a movie
written by George Santos.
So, yeah.
And then what about if they said that your colleagues
would then nominate that same reality TV star
that did the insurrection?
They would support him for president again, three years later.
I would have had trouble imagining it until I actually served with these crackpots.
What is it like? I mean, you've kind of strayed from your party on a few things,
or maybe not from the main body of the party, but for some on the left, you know,
you've kind of made alliance on various issues with some Republicans. What's it like serving with these
guys now? I mean, when you're when you're talking to them, is there any kind of awareness that what
they're doing right now is absolutely insane? Like, have you broken any of them, you know,
gotten any of them after a few gummies to admit the truth to you or anything?
Look, unlike the far left, which remains a fringe, Donald Trump is representative of the Republican base.
He is essentially the Freudian id of the Republican Party.
He is a repository of their basest desires and impulse.
And so I have met House Republicans who will secretly acknowledge to me that Donald Trump is an albatross around
the neck of the Republican Party. But these people live in fear of him. Are they still there? Are
they like the Mike Gallagher's that are telling you secretly now they're all leaving? There's a
much wider universe of people who live in fear of Donald Trump. Well, I guess the New York delegation,
we don't need to start naming them. I have a few suspicions in the New York delegation,
let's just say. Well, look, we no longer have a two-party system because you have a normal political party like the Democratic Party.
But the Republican Party is no longer a traditional political party.
It's become a cult of personality around Donald Trump.
The Christianity of the Republican Party has been replaced by Trumpism.
Trump is the new lord and savior.
Watch out.
MTG is going to get mad at you for that.
Well, she already accused us of banning Christianity.
Yeah, that's true.
He came back to your district for the event in the Bronx.
He brought a couple of rappers on stage who are out on bail for gang activity and murder.
Chef G, not one of my favorite rappers.
I've got a few others I prefer.
But some of the polls show, I don't know that that absurd strategy is working, but some
of the polls show there is some backsliding among working class Black and Latino voters, particularly men, towards Trump.
Like, are you seeing that at all back in your district? Like, what's your sense of that?
The honest answer is yes, but at the margins. I mean, the Bronx is overwhelmingly Biden country
and will remain so in November. But Trump has made gains at the margins. He did so in 2020, and he may even make further
gains in 2024. But keep in mind that the communities of color have never been monolithic
in their voting patterns. In the 2000 election, George W. Bush won 40% of the Latino vote.
And the Latino vote in America is highly variegated. Latinos and
Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in the South Bronx are qualitatively different from Venezuelans and
Cubans in Florida, who are qualitatively different from Mexicans in California, who are qualitatively
different from Mexicans in South Texas. And so I know people are shocked by Donald Trump's support in some elements of the
Latino community, but it's actually in keeping with the historical pattern. Like, yes, you know,
there's trends that come in and out with these voters, with all voting groups, right? Coalitions
change. But it's a little alarming, you know, at this moment, given the nature of the threat.
Do you think there's something that the Democrats are doing wrong? There's something that Biden is doing that is not resonating with
this community, something that you could do that the party could do differently over the next five
months to maybe stem some of the exodus, or exodus is overstated, but stem some of the bleed,
you know, among that voting population? Look, I feel like the president has to focus on the bread and butter
issues that matter to voters of color in places like the Bronx. There are going to be members of
the Democratic base for whom abortion and democracy are the pivotal issues that will
motivate him to go to the polls, but that's not true of every voter, right? You know, if you're
a single mother in the South Bronx and you're struggling to put food on the table and pay your
bills, you're concerned about public safety, you're concerned about the cost of living,
the cost of groceries, the cost of gasoline. And so those are the issues that have to be addressed
in order to sustain support among working class voters of color. Going back to the Dickensian thing, I do feel like sometimes like it's missing the look. I used
to be a Republican. So this populist economic messaging is not really, you know, my sweet spot.
But I look at the Democrats right now, it's just like, it seems like there's huge opportunity. And
this is a guy that screwed over working class people his whole career, you know, as a businessman on economic issues, like the Project 2025 plan is cuts to SNAP, cuts to public services, extending tax cuts for rich people. Like, where is the energy around that message on the left right now? Like, it feels a little bit absent from Democratic Party talking points. And they talk about it, There's lip service paid to it. But isn't that the way to kind of reach some of these voters?
Look, I agree with you. And as you know, we in the Democratic Party are a motley crew.
And at the moment, we're divided against ourselves. And we seem to be so divided against
ourselves that we have forgotten the enemy is Donald Trump.
And we have to coalesce around a message, a unified message against Donald Trump. I mean, he is benefiting from the divisions that have taken hold within the Democratic Party.
Before October 7th, the Republican Party was divided against itself. The Republican Party
was self-destructing after the vacated McCarthy. But since October 7th,
it feels like we are the more divided party and it's operating to the benefit of Donald Trump.
I definitely think there's a divide in the Democratic Party, you know, when it comes to
Israel. And that's like the most obvious statement ever. Is that affecting voting behavior, though?
Do you really think Joe Biden's losing votes over this on either side of the sector, either on the pro-Israel or, you know, more critical of Israel side?
He will lose votes no matter what position he takes. But do I feel like it's the issue that's going to decide the outcome of the election? No.
But I do feel like the media coverage of the divide, and by the way, the divide in the democratic party is exaggerated because the
overwhelming majority of democrats have a clear position on the issue but the media coverage of
the divide and the media coverage of all the disruptions that the president has had to face
right i feel has a crowding out effect on a unified message against Donald Trump for listeners
who don't know and so you've taken more of a pro-Israel stance.
I watched a video of you the other day talking about how you're a Zionist and supporting our ally Israel. How do you assess how the president has done on that issue? I feel the president is
the most pro-Israel president in history. I mean, he was the only president to go to Israel in a
time of war. He sent not one but two carriers to the Mediterranean to deter
Hezbollah. You have to consider what a president does relative to the circumstances in which he
finds himself. And there's no one who's had to find himself under more challenging circumstances
than Joe Biden. Israel's waging a war in Gaza under the microscope of 24-7 cable news and social media.
And so the scrutiny has been overwhelming.
The international pressure has been overwhelming.
And in spite of it all, the president has stood firm where it matters most at the level of policy.
George W. Bush, a Republican president, pressured Israel to end the second Lebanon war after a month
and to keep Hezbollah in power, which has led to the present security crisis in the
north.
It's also green with the election of Hamas.
Whereas Biden has sustained his support for Israel for more than eight months in the face
of a massive backlash from the far left of his own party.
And, you know, the lack of gratitude and appreciation that he seems to receive is
just shocking to me.
Well, we're totally aligned on that.
So you don't have any issues with the ways that Biden has tried to distance from Bibi at times?
I might disagree with some of the positions he's taken and some of the pronouncements
that he's made.
But I look at, you know, I don't miss the forest for the trees.
Speaking of people that miss the forest for the trees,
so we get back to Pride, and there's a tie in here.
So just bear with me for a second.
So you, for people who don't know, were in the first congressional class
with non-white, openly gay LGBT members of Congress.
You and your colleague from New York, Mondaire Jones,
who's back running again, are both black and openly gay.
Well, I guess, hold on. It is Pride Month, so I shouldn't cut the asexuals out of the LGBT plus community. And so, we should give some acknowledgement to Tim Scott as well. But
you're a groundbreaker on this. And despite that, you had pro-Palestine, anti-Israel activists
tear down like a Torres Pride kind of flag and put up a flag instead honoring queer
palestinians what do you make of something like that so the fire island pines property association
chose to honor several people including myself you know whether you approve of my position
on israel or not the fact is that i am objectively a trailblazer. You're objectively gay.
I'm objectively gay, and I'm the first Black and the first Latino LGBTQ member of Congress
in American history blazing a trail that had never been blazed before.
And so the association decided to honor me, and it had majority support, but there were a few
agitators who took it upon themselves to vandalize Trailblazers Park and remove the flag honoring me and replace it with a flag in honor of queer Palestinians. is the fact that Hamas, with which these activists show solidarity, is a barbaric oppressor,
a murderous oppressor of queer Palestinians, right? I know there's an organization known as
like Queers for Palestine, Queers for Hamas. I can assure you the love is not mutual. It is a tale
of unrequited love. This is the thing I don't get. I mean, I am probably more than some of my
colleagues and maybe even more than you in various ways, like, concerned about the humanitarian issues in Palestine feel like BB is mismanaging the war a bit don't feel like BB has an endgame criticism of BB has a safe space here criticism of Israel or constructive criticism, or opinions about that are welcome here. It's this thing that really bugs me, though, here in Pride Month. And it's like, there's this free Palestine message. And, you know, it's like, okay, I'm for
free Palestine. But just like Bibi doesn't have a path for Gaza post war, there's no path for a
free Palestine for women and queer people. You know, you can have a queers for Palestine sign,
and that's fine. But there's no end game here, even if Israel just put down their
arms right now, where you come out of it, where women, gays, lesbians, trans people are living
in Gaza or the West Bank as citizens with rights. The disconnect there and the self-righteousness
when making that argument is very frustrating to me and has to drive you up the wall at times. Look, is Israel perfect? No. But it is objectively true that there is no
place in the Middle East where it is safer to be LGBTQ, to be gay, than the state of Israel.
It is far more protective of minority rights, far more protective of women's rights, far more
protective of LGBTQ rights than the rest of the Middle East,
the rest of the Arab world, the rest of the Muslim world, where the standard is autocracy.
That's the hard fact. Yeah, there's some concerns on the internet and Twitter. I'm seeing some
things, you know, people are coming after you. I guess you were hanging out with, you know,
one of Trump's PR people, kind of a far right, pro-Israel advocate new york and you know we're just people are just
checking in and making sure that you're not you're not getting red pilled over this you haven't been
tempted to hang out with any mega you know go go down the mega rabbit hole over this he has the
life of an elected official right i'm at a meeting there are dozens of people there there are people
want to take picture with me i don't necessarily know every person who has taken a picture of me yeah if i take a picture with you it does not mean that i necessarily agree with you
so the gentleman you're referencing asked me to take a picture with his daughter
and him am i going to say no like i don't you know what am i to do in those circumstances so
was he wearing like a t-shirt or like were there any public signifiers that you know there was a q anon was there a ww1
wga there was no red flag on his apparel or hat red hat on his i reject the the game of guilt by
association i feel like we as elected officials should be judged by what we say and do so hold
me accountable for the votes i cast hold me accountable for the votes I cast. Hold me accountable for the statements that I've made.
And I'm crystal clear about where I stand on the issues.
I do not shy away from a clear expression of where I stand.
But to pounce on me for a photo just strikes me as ridiculous.
I've met thousands of people.
I take thousands of photos.
Believe it or not, I'm fundamentally a nice guy.
So when someone asks me to take a photo, I will say yes. It kind of relates to another thing I want
to talk to you about. You've written and talked a lot about how you're kind of an introvert.
You suffer with depression, mental health issues. Back when I worked with Jeb, Jeb's also an
introvert, unlike his brother. I think it explains a little bit about their electoral success,
but maybe that's for another day. But he liked to talk about that. And I would see, I would be moved by the way that it would bring people out
of their shell sometimes when he would talk about it. This is not, I don't know if you've been able
to tell, but I'm not an introvert. So I kind of don't, I sometimes struggle to like relate and
connect on that level, but I could tell that he could. And I appreciate that he talked about it.
And I appreciate that you've written and talked about it, and I appreciate that
you've written and talked about it. So, I'd like to hear you talk a little bit about what is,
what's it like, like being a politician in these situations? People are asking you for pictures,
people are asking you for your opinion on everything, people are up in your grill,
you know, you got to get up every day and do it no matter, no matter what, whether it's a good day
or bad day, and how you like navigate that as somebody that's had, had mental health struggles
and is not, not naturally an extrovert.vert yeah life is a political burden uh for introverts and you know as you know
there are common misconceptions about introversion right introversion does not mean a lack of
sociability it it means a lack of energy that we tend to be exhausted rather than energized
by social interactions and we have a we have a need to replenish
ourselves. For me, the textbook extrovert in American politics was Bill Clinton. You could
tell that social interaction was the air he breathed, that he needed to be around people.
Whereas Barack Obama, who's the most brilliant orator of his generation, feels to me like an introvert, that he's a person who needs personal space to be contemplative and reflective.
And so even the most dynamic, charismatic communicators can be introverts.
I remember when I first ran for public office, I had a fear of public speaking.
I had to drink a glass of wine before every speech.
But, you know, the more I did it, the better I became.
You know, practice made perfect.
And I feel like I've become something of a master of my craft.
And so I never thought in my wildest dreams that I would be an elected official as an introvert.
And certainly not as someone who had a longstanding struggle with depression.
More than a decade ago, I was at the lowest point of my life. I had dropped out of college,
found myself struggling with depression. I attempted suicide. I even underwent hospitalization.
I felt as if the world around me had collapsed. And so I never thought, you know, about seven years later,
I would become the youngest elected official in America's largest city
and then several years later become a member of the United States Congress.
I would not be in Congress.
I would not be alive were it not for mental health care
and the stability that it gave me.
I'm sure that, you sure that when people hear that,
you hear from other folks that are going through dark times,
that have contemplated suicide.
There's obvious cliche advice for everybody,
but as someone that's been there,
is there anything from that experience that sticks with you
that you like to share with people
that those of us who have not gone through it might not, you know, might not think about? Or one, a secondary question is like somebody like me,
if I hear somebody say that, that they're having suicidal thoughts, they're going through deep
depression, like, what was helpful to you? First, I would tell them, you know, never lose hope.
There's no telling where life will take you. And it's possible to overcome struggles with
mental health. And I stand as living proof.
But I would tell people to seek care. You know, mental illness is nothing of which to be ashamed.
Like if you're struggling with depression, you should seek care just like you would seek care
if you were struggling with diabetes, right? It's not a failure of willpower. It's not a failure of character. It's a condition
that requires treatment, that requires psychotherapy and medication. Every morning,
I take Wellbutrin XL 150. I take the same antidepressant that I've taken for more than a
decade. And I feel no shame in admitting it. And I will tell you that it enables me
to be the best version of myself, to be a productive
public servant in an extraordinarily demanding and draining political environment.
I assume you had a support network.
Were there folks on the outside that, is there anything that stands out for you as something
that was particularly helpful?
My greatest hero is my mother, who raised three of us on minimum wage, which in the
1990s was $4.25 in the most expensive city in America.
So she is my hero, and she's achieved Mission Impossible for me and my brothers and my sister.
And when I won my primary in June of 2020, and when I knew that I was going to be the member of Congress,
I publicly said that before I was a congressman or a councilman.
I'm first and foremost the son of Deborah Bosselette, my mother, Deborah Bosselette. And for me, the greatest satisfaction of public life is the honor of representing the South Bronx, which is full of single mothers who have sacrificed and struggled and suffered so that their children and grandchildren can have a fighting chance at a decent life. Like those are the people whom the democratic party should represent first
and foremost,
because they are the unsung heroes of our country.
Amen.
Single mothers one weekend alone with my child.
And I was just like,
Oh my God,
how do single mothers do it?
It is there.
Absolutely.
It is absolutely unbelievable.
I just throw myself on the ground and just throw flowers at every single
mother in my life it is an unbelievable skill that they have and an unbelievable challenge
and they deserve all our praise and support you're right again this goes back to the initial
question i'll let you go like centering those folks centering single mothers centering working
class people like that was a traditionally a democratic strength that i do feel like the
party sometimes gets away from a little bit and strength that I do feel like the party sometimes
gets away from a little bit. And I think that part of the question of a little bit of slippage
among working class people in communities like the Bronx is because they see the Democratic Party as
being, you know, some of the more frivolous, you know, social justice kind of more privileged
faces being put forth, you know, rather than people like your mother.
I don't know. Do you think that there's, do you have any thoughts on how the party can recenter,
you know, people like your mother? Look, I feel like we have to make a concerted effort to speak
to people like my mother. I do worry that the activists and the academics
often have outsized agenda setting power in progressive politics. But we have to return
to our roots as the party of FDR and speak to the working class and to the lowest-income
communities of color, because we are the only party that represents their interests. We are
the only party committed to defending the social safety net from the far right of American politics.
Cheers to your mother. What are you listening to your mother. Do you have any, what are you listening to these days?
Do you have any pride tunes?
I'm sending people out with pride tunes this month.
Do you have one?
Do you have a rec?
I'm the worst person to ask.
I don't like the...
You just listen to podcasts?
You're just listening to, you're just grinding on podcasts all day?
I have a friend who said, Richie, you're utterly lacking in any fashion sense.
You obviously heard of the show, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. He calls himself a straight eye for the queer guy because I have no fashion sense so you obviously heard of the show queer eye for the straight guy
he calls himself a straight eye for the queer guy because i have no fashion sense so so you need
music recs and fashion recs do you have any traditional gay traits do you have any like
are you you know are you into knitting or anything do you have any tradition apart from enjoying men
i have no uh broadway uh i'm not you know when i'm invited i think the last last broadway show i i saw was pretty
serious that was parades okay well you know the only qualification actually this is important
this is an important part of gay life that some people don't realize that want to stereotype from
the outside liking other men is actually the only qualification so uh so you crossed that bar
thank you for the time much love to your mother, Congressman Richie Torres.
Hopefully we can do this again soon.
Up next, we got Ben Smith of Semaphore.
We'll see you soon, buddy.
Take care.
And we're back with my old friend ben smith editor-in-chief of semaphore host of the mixed signal pod with naima raza previously he was media columnist of the new york times
and founding editor-in-chief at buzzfeed his latest book is traffic it's out in paperback
you can go find it at i don't know barnes a Barnes and Noble near you. What's up, Ben?
Thank you for all the plugs, Tim. It's very nice to see you.
Dude, I'm plugging. I'm plugging away. Okay, I want to start here. You know, there are a lot of media conversations over the last nine years. You're probably bored with this conversation about
how one deals with Donald Trump. But I think that a lot of times there are various inflection
points that can make us think about it. And I've been thinking about it a lot this week in the wake of the trial verdict.
I know it's something you're talking about on the new pod.
And I'm just wondering, like, how you would grade how we're doing here broadly in the media.
Because I look at this, I just think it's, I think that Trump is still, you know, kind of playing a lot of people like a fiddle.
You know, it was a very strange situation for the bulk of the trial.
Like we're down here in lower Manhattan and it's two blocks from here.
And I was like unable to find parking for my Kia Niro because it's such a circus, like
a legit media circus of live trucks and cameras.
And yet there was like this sense, it felt like during the trial that like the journalists
weren't really sure whether like the wires were connected, like whether anybody was listening on the other end of their stories
about this trial of the century. I guess I thought that the actual coverage of the verdict,
like this is a big historic story, the president getting convicted, and it felt that way,
and the coverage felt that way. And I think now the question is, you know, one of the challenges
is that political
coverage in general, a lot of the decision making about what's covered is made by the campaigns.
And the Trump campaign was totally ready to come out of this, say that it was, you know,
persecution and send him to a UFC fight, and they knew exactly what they were doing.
And the Democrats really, like, had no plan. I think a lot of them thought he
was going to be acquitted or was going to get a hung jury. And then the White House in particular
seems to have basically made a decision to talk very little about it. And so the sort of normal
hacky political routine of, well, Donald Trump says he's innocent, but Joe Biden says he's guilty
is replaced by Donald Trump says he's innocent and Joe Biden gave a long speech about the Middle East. Yeah. How is it that we haven't figured out how to deal with this
by now here in the middle of 2024? Because we don't have as much power as we think we do,
I think is the fundamental answer. Like deal with this what? Like if only you tweeted a little
better. No, I just mean deal with like not buying like donald trump snake oil bullshit so easily i mean
i was like a number of people have been out saying oh what i don't know do we think this is going to
help him like is trump trump and all his people are pitching about how it's going to help him
and it's like really i mean you cannot even conceive of a universe in which Hillary gets convicted of
felonies for her emails, and people are on TV the next day being like, you know,
this could really be a big boost for the Clinton campaign.
Yeah, that particular strain of analysis, I agree with you, was,
you know, was just on its face pretty dumb.
I guess, how do you think about this at Semaphore? Don't you think it's just like,
it's very challenging to figure out with how to how to think about the flood the river was shit dynamic
with him on the plane home from new york i was watching a documentary about the 76 campaign
and it's like jimmy carter's big scandal was telling playboy that he cheated in his heart
and gerald ford's big scandal that campaign was like on a debate stage where he he tried to be a
little cute and
say that russia soviets aren't really dominating eastern europe and he was trying to be like well
he's not they're not dominating the people the people are still free but he sounded really dumb
explaining it those were the big scandals so it's just like i mean if donald trump had said one of
those things in the bronx like it wouldn't even appear in the semaphore write-up the next day
you know like how are we supposed to deal with
that as we look forward to the rest of the year right with a campaign in which one of the candidates
i mean and this is an old story about all these right-wing populists not just trump that the
things that they say that are outrageous and that the media's reflexes to scold them are like built
to travel through our scolding and And that like Trump is saying things
that are offensive or outrageous or sexist
with like the express intent
that we get upset and amplify them
and that people on Facebook get outraged and share them.
I think the answer is there's not a simple answer.
And for a while you saw this reflex,
which was we're just not going to cover
these outrageous things.
We're not going to get played.
And then somebody noticed like, hey, did you notice that during that speech,
he said he was going to, you know,
use the National Guard to deport millions of people in his first 100 days.
Like maybe we should cover that.
I mean, I guess to the degree that I think there is sort of a smart,
responsible way to cover it,
I think being focused on what he actually says he is going to do as president
is the most important part of the coverage.
But I don't think that really gets
you away from like you know do you cover his visit to the ufc event which is a pretty interesting
political phenomenon right like the extent to which sort of masculinity has become the center
of the campaign or do you not because it's a stunt aimed at distracting from the fact that
i just got convicted of 34 felonies that's a good question what is i don't know what's the answer to that question i don't think i think if there
was like a really simple obvious answer you know we would know yeah and the ufc guy in the post
game press conference is talking about how great trump is you know and so there's this whole
ecosystem out there where people are getting those clips and that's like absent from the mainstream
commentary almost yeah i know i think that's right me from the mainstream commentary almost yeah no i think
that's right me and olivia were talking about this me and olivia and nizzy because when i was at
we were at one of these tp usa events and you know it's the kind of thing that you send weigel to
and like they were really kind of interesting we don't send him we can barely talk him out of going
exactly we reject those expenses but he still does yeah it's the kind of thing that like
you know in 2017 people like wow this is fascinating it's like an alt c pack that's
even crazier and a bunch of people went and you know then it's like 2023 and it's only
weigel and olivia and me like nobody else is there and we're like well haven't we overcorrected the
other way here like isn't isn't it a little concerning like if trump wins again these are the people that are going to be running things yeah i guess i think those are the stories that are
really obvious to tell and smart to tell this um project 2025 stuff where they're really trying to
lay the groundwork for an administration run by kash patel or whoever like that's well that's
real like reportable stuff that you can try to figure out although of course there is also a layer of everybody at tp usa is going to tell you that they're going to be the
secretary of state in the hopes that you'll quote them trump will see it and learn their name yeah
it's just a very strange ecosystem of which the media you know is part but maybe a smaller part
than we used to be yeah no there's no doubt about that it's something that i think about too at
those things where it's like even me they kind of even want to talk to me. And I'm like, am I being used from the jeb campaign where george is basically like you're a liar
stop lying like why is cnn paying you and then casey hunt jazz dices him you know we are good
we are back to the same old debate like it was in 2016 it was c CNN was having Jeff Lord on set, giving an absurd defense, everything Trump did.
And then in 2020, CNN swung to the Zucker model of,
oh, righteous indignation.
And now we're back to square one.
What would you do if they had you replace Chris Licht?
The thing is, Jeff Zucker is a brilliant television programmer
and did the only possible thing from a business perspective, which is that there's a limited set of people who watch cable television.
Every day, some of them die of old age.
And you're not going to find new people.
It's over.
But there's a bunch of people over at MSNBC.
This is what zucker saw and our biggest pool of like still
living cable news viewers is over there and we have to go get them by being more anti-trump than
msnbc and that is what he did and then there were all sorts of highfalutin theories about like well
maybe we can get the people who are watching hgtv who just want some fair news coverage like nope
they tried didn't work cable television is a slow you know slowly but genuinely collapsing
ecosystem and you know some of the people are there to be mad at joe biden and some are there
to be upset at donald trump and there aren't other people and so you can serve one of those
two communities or you cannot devote your life to cable television i think it is a very good
paying job so i don't know but i do think that this is sort of a story about the business of this very strange media that had its 20 years
of dominance and is dying. And when you try to answer it in sort of moral terms or even
journalistic terms, you're missing the way people who make television shows are actually making
decisions. Somebody sent me the stats on the median viewer of these networks age. The median is like 68.
Right.
Median.
So for every person under 68, there's an older person.
It's a pretty old crowd.
And Fox's is older and they sometimes run into issues with the ratings that they stop rating.
Like the rating, the number stops at a certain age.
And so it's hard to develop averages.
That was good from a business standpoint.
This is your media businessman now.
No, I don't mean to be cynical.
I'm just trying to explain the decision making.
No, no, no.
That was good.
There are two parts to this.
And that was a very cogent explanation of the decision making.
Now the question of, okay, the journalistic integrity question, which is, there's a legitimate
debate here.
I don't want to talk and go in the lily.
There's a legitimate debate. One is like, don't want to talk about building the lily there's like a legitimate debate one is like we need to have a conservative
viewpoint represented here if we're going to cover what is happening in politics the other side of it
is okay but what if you can't find anybody that offers that point of view that can do so without
blatantly lying constantly in defense of donald. Maybe there's not a good answer to that
question either. Isn't that fundamentally what CNN is dealing with? Yeah, I mean, I don't, you know,
like, I guess I just reject the idea that we should be looking to cable news as a sort of
journalistic lodestar, that that's where the most important ethical decisions in journalism are made.
I mean, I think there are two different kind of important kinds of stories. Like there is the,
I think, totally legitimate kind of reporting that's like, well, what is happening?
What motivates Donald Trump supporters?
What motivates right-wing populism?
I think there was some very dumb stories
written out of diners
that people like to make fun of,
but actually that kind of journalism
is totally legitimate.
Like you do want,
and what motivates people
who are protesting Gaza?
Like leaving social media,
talking to people who are committed
and engaged in politics,
trying to figure out what's going on.
I think that's really valuable and useful. That's not Jeff Lord, right? That's somebody who likes
Jeff Lord's podcast. And then the other is, I think it depends to some degree, like, do you
believe that there's a huge realignment, political realignment underway in which at some level,
like the Bernie people and the Trump people are moving into one party and both parties are
fighting really hard to make that their party, by the way, right? And that the sort of, you know, J.D. Vance on bills with Democratic legislators and Josh Hawley
on bills with Democratic senators, that we're going to see more and more of that. And that,
you know, that is our politics now. And that whether it's Donald Trump, you know, who knows,
but that that kind of right wing populist is is real and is something that is going
to be a major political force i think it's pretty hard to argue with honestly and i think that you
can't be dismissive of it i mean these are people who maybe you think shouldn't be on television
because they have insane views about the 2020 election but are in fact co-presenting bills with
democratic senators on important issues no i agree with with that. And that's really more comes down to maybe they shouldn't have 18 person panels, you
know, analyzing the political things.
And that's the problem.
Yeah, exactly.
And just interview the newsmakers on there, because I think that's totally legitimate.
Anyway, that probably doesn't rate as well, which speaks to the problem.
But are the 70 year olds that are dying changing the channel?
Maybe that doesn't matter.
I don't know.
I once asked Chris Ruddy, you know, Newsmax is really the most sort of extreme
version of this, of just
treating its viewers like they're morons and
manipulating them, particularly around the election.
And I asked Chris Ruddy, like, isn't it an issue
that you're on channel 973
or whatever? But he said apparently
older people now just all talk to their remotes
and just so it's fun.
I think that is true. I didn't know that.
Now I learned, and I last night talked to my remote a bit.
When I moved into this house, I have a very nice neighbor, elderly woman who has lived
in the house for like 60 years, who is when I walked down the street the first time she
saw me, she was like, you're the boy from 728, whatever the channel is.
I was like, yeah, that's me.
We have a nice little exchange now.
One thing I wonder as you think about the new pod and media coverage in general, I've
just made this mistake I'm about to ask you about, which is like there's this obsession
with what's going on in the dying platforms.
And meanwhile, increasingly between YouTube and TikTok, like the amount of political news
that people are getting that is just totally almost unnoticed by the DC New York media is pretty
astonishing. I mean, I go on Brian Taylor Cohen show all the time, he gets like a million views,
a YouTube thing, you know, there's destiny. There's a right wing media monitoring universe
out there. But, you know, every once in a while, I'm scrolling through TikTok, and I got come up
on something and like the person I've never heard of, you know, it'll have a million views.
How are you guys thinking about that?
It's interesting because the thing that kills me about that is there's so little original reporting and new information being provided by that ecosystem, but a lot of opinions.
That's a great point.
I think the big story right now of media in general, it's a very hard one to cover, is just fragmentation.
The biggest stuff, like the really big, powerful important stuff cnn fox msnbc
whatever is mostly getting smaller the new york times washington post smaller not going away but
doesn't have the power it once did and then there's a lot of medium small and medium-sized
stuff that's kind of getting bigger but it's not going to be as big as those things were it's just
and so you have this ecosystem that's like very very fragmented the most interesting stat in this
is that there was a pew did a survey a couple years ago about podcasts and they asked people
you know what's your favorite who's your favorite podcast host what's your favorite podcast and
obviously everyone the majority said you but of everybody else the number one was joe rogan but
the most interesting thing was the that number one slot was just five percent of people who say
they have a favorite podcast host. So that's an unusual market
where the top share is 5%. And we're used to markets like search where Google has 99%.
And so it's this very, very fragmented universe where people are getting information from
a vast array of different places. And you don't know where the other people are getting information
from. And it's hard to generalize. And it shows how tiny most of those are that Joe Rogan,
despite your kind comments,
is like 100x me. It's a very interesting market in that there is app Joe Rogan at 5% and then
there's like a cut down to another group of people, you know what I mean? And then it's...
And most of the consumption is happening kind of in the middle of the tail. I think really for
better and for worse, like we're coming out of this world where really we were all on one of
two giant platforms, all seeing the same stuff.
If I saw if somebody was like on Twitter in the height of the 2020 election, and I looked over
their shoulder on the subway, they were like reading the same tweet I had just read. If I'm
on the subway now seeing somebody listening to something, I have no idea what it is. And is that
healthier or less healthy? I don't know. The last time around did not work so good.
So this takes me to kind of one of the book topics I want to talk to you about. So, you know, the book Traffic was, you know, kind of a about the downfall of this model
of we're trying to get as many eyeballs as possible. It was a race to go viral. You know,
we're going to pay for this via advertising dollars by the, you know, just unbelievable
amount of eyeballs that we're getting. And as you flip that to a model now that is more fragmented and subscriber based right where
people are in a lot of these cases people are paying you know the individual you know platform
or the individual content provider that they are interested in the one that they're a super fan of
right and i just i was just saying today i was like i just thought even msnbc is doing this now
i got i got to promote today like the msnbc+. We've been doing it for a while, the Bullock.
And so doesn't that eventually lead to its own kind of problems?
Yeah, right, right, right.
That as we swing toward an ecosystem where media is paid,
that all the free stuff is garbage and that you can pay for quality
and otherwise you get garbage and misinformation.
I think that's to some degree where we already are.
That's happening.
You don't have deep thoughts on that?
That's just our reality?
I do think that we who are in the business
like to think about the supply side,
but actually, in fact,
as there was a survey where they offered people in Boston
free subscriptions to the Boston Globe
and nobody would take them.
The barrier to people reading
what we think of as quality news
is not always
money.
Like people pay for Spotify,
they pay for things they want.
And a lot of people don't consume what you and I never did think of as quality
news.
Meanwhile,
do watch local television,
which from time immemorial has just kind of ripped off the front page of the
local paper and read it out loud,
which is great.
So it's a little complicated.
I mean,
I do think more broadly in the media business,
there's an impulse to say like,
subscriptions are immoral because they shut out the population
or advertising is immoral
because it is corrupting
and melts your brain or whatever.
But actual functioning, successful media businesses
tend to find models where they do some of both
and have some of the stuff that's available for everybody
and build these pretty complicated mixed models.
So I don't know.
I'm not that ideological about it.
This is kind of depressing, though.
The demand side argument I had Derek Thompson on last week,
he made the same argument about the demand side problem
is that people want controversial, people want conflict,
and that's what they're drawn to.
Yeah, they want to be entertained.
Yeah, but my question is, in an old world,
if people on the demand side wanted to go buy tabloids, if they wanted to,
you know, watch wrestling or whatever, like they were still just by the nature of the limited number of options, like being force fed vegetables at certain times during the day, you know,
whether it be the local news or whether it be Tom Brokaw or whatever. And it's like now that they
don't have to be ever fed vegetables ever.
So I know you get brought to these little, you know, media confabs where goody two-shoes people
try to solve that problem. Like, is there a solve to the demand side problem in a world where there's
unlimited supply? I don't know. I do not know. I mean, I guess I think that when you add up all
these small podcasts and shows, and some of the TikToker commentary is very good guess I think that when you add up all these small podcasts and shows,
and some of the TikToker commentary is very good.
I think that one way or another, a lot of people, a majority, want to be informed.
It may not exactly be the thing that you and I want, but it's also they don't want to be lied to.
I think you can underestimate the kind of intelligence and curiosity of regular people
who aren't necessarily into like this podcast and the style of podcast or into thousand word articles. But this whole
system of ours really fundamentally depends on the intelligence and curiosity of some decent
number of our fellow citizens. And I do think if you look at, I mean, I think Joe Rogan's a decent
example. It's not like my favorite program and there he says some stuff i think is
nuts but it's also largely kind of long form interview he's curious he's curious he's
something his way trying to be fair he has sometimes quite interesting people on talking
about interesting stuff i mean it's it's not perfect but the person who's listening to that
isn't saying i want like a you, like a 14 second montage of violence,
or please lie to me, right? Like, there's another impulse there.
I worry less about please lie to me is maybe a little more of like,
please explain to me why all the people I hate are wrong. That's the impulse that I think is
hardest to break in that cycle. I think think and maybe i'm horribly optimistic i think the sort
of peak social media of like 2016 2018 was really like perfected that because the thing it turned
out to be best at was finding the like most grotesquely expressed view of your enemy and
bringing it to your attention right like these new formats that are now popular newsletters and
podcasts and surprisingly long youtube shows actually like aren't really built that way like
they tend to leave some space to breathe and to have reasonable disagreements okay i know i don't
know if i share your rosy optimism there but i like it though we'll leave it we'll leave on that
um i want to ask you about one news item today i always pronounce it the epoch times until i wrote
a long form article about them and realized they call themselves the epic times i think maybe it's a little bit of a
translation an epic by the way meaning like an age right like an era yeah yeah like an epic yeah
bill guan the publisher of the epic times was indicted on monday on charges of participating
in a massive money laundering scheme 67 million this is another example of one of these
things right that it's it's like the epic times is everywhere as it's advertising in the subways
it's advertising on youtube they had newspapers that were going out everywhere you know there
was some oversight from time to time people write articles about it but kind of outside of the view
of the mainstream political culture was like advancing a lot of kind of kooky wild-eyed views it turns out to have been a grift i guess which which was pretty obvious
anyone that was looking that closely what do you have any any big thoughts on the epic times
i mean only that this is just one of the great weird media stories ever i mean because it's not
i mean honestly the notion that their real revenue stream was allegedly stolen phone cards or
something i mean it just seemed
totally cryptocurrency it just seemed i i read the indictment and i'm still confused but it didn't
seem like it was media related fraud it seemed like the stream wasn't from the ads or from subs
they were laundering money from some other basically they had some other criminal enterprise
and the media business was like a restaurant through which you launder your money
from your you know gambling and prostitution operations if you're the mafia or whatever or
drug dealing like the media for it was just the like storefront and what a weird storefront and
because it was yes it was it was trying to make itself as kind of like the pro-trump new york
times and really more deeply than that the anti-china new york times because the other
thing to know about the epic times is that it is I would say I've written about this and it's
complicated. People have written controlled by or run by, but I think linked to is maybe the right
way to say it, Falun Gong, which is this dissident Chinese spiritual practice, which the Chinese government claims is a cult and has cracked down on
incredibly brutally and is in exile running a pro-Trump anti-China newspaper
because why not?
And also allegedly doing some money laundering.
The whole thing is so bizarre.
Even before the money laundering story,
it was bizarre.
The thing about this whole operation is it just screams like people who
believe that the ends justify the means, before the money laundering story. It was bizarre. The thing about this whole operation is it just screams like people who believe
that the ends justify the means.
But I've totally lost track of which are the ends
and which are the means here.
Like, are they really deeply pro-Trump
and allegedly committing crimes
in order to get back at China?
Or is that actually the facade?
And that facade is in order to get the money
through the alleged scheme?
Very, very, very confusing and amazing.
I feel that way about Miles Guo, the guy that was funding all the cannons what incredible story yeah because he's
also he's a chinese dissident supposedly but then it's like it's not 100 clear if if he's a real
chinese dissident that was taking money from expat chinese and feeding them to steve bannon
to attack china or whether he's like a double agent pro
Chinese asset who was like using Steve Bannon to foment unrest in the American political environment.
Like it literally could be either or neither. It's real like John le Carre stuff, just sort of
game of shadows. I'm totally unclear what people's motivations are. There's an amazing New Yorker
piece on Guo, like including maybe unclear to Guo day day-to-day like maybe he's just living in the
moment surviving fascinating we'll put a link to that one in there i i'd read part of that one and
i think got distracted as i sometimes do on the internet and my epic times the epic times thing
i did like these ads you have to watch it's like children of the corn ship they're out and it was
very strange um lastly my last thing for you i've been dying to ask you this you're running semaphore we are
running a media outlet here what is the point of it why there are a lot of media outlets out there
what are we serving i don't know what you're serving and i think there's space for many
different kinds and i'm saying as somebody who's doing a startup media company, this is a question we ask ourselves.
And I'm saying now I'm asking it to you.
No, I appreciate it.
And I actually think one of the nice things
about the media environment we've been talking about
is that there's space for a lot of different kinds of things
in a way that's a bit new.
I mean, for us, like, I think we're trying to talk
to an audience who is deeply engaged
with the things we write about with global politics, U politics, finance, technology, media, and often reads or watches or listens to
stuff in the mainstream establishment media, and is sophisticated enough to know like feels in some
way that it's not totally on the level that the publication for sort of formal traditional reasons
can't just come out and tell you what it thinks that the writer is sort of harboring certain
views and a lot of expertise that they're keeping out of it. And there's sort
of a blurring of fact and opinion. And I think we're trying to do an opinion and they call me
it's like when one of these journalists calls me and they're like, will you give a quote for the
thing that I think about this thing that I can put it in the article? Yeah, yeah, this is the
standard article. It's like who, what, when or why journalists theory disguises fact quote from tim miller restating that right and so i think we're trying to sort of pull that apart say here are the facts
like we're sophisticated enough and you're sophisticated enough to be able to say these
are the facts here i've been covering this a long time here is my view but also tim miller has a
totally different view i'm including his his quotations calling me an idiot because you're
going to actually trust me more not less if you know that I'm open to the possibility that I'm an idiot.
So, you know, so we're trying to be transparent in the way we present news, trying to keep it at a pretty high level and trying to take a global view.
Because I do think a lot, most of the big stories in the world, including the rise of right wing populism, are kind of hard to understand if you don't see them globally yeah how do you feel like that model's worked just like not like the business model but the straight article
you know the deconstruction if you will of the of the article people like it yeah the feedback is
good yeah the feedback's been really good broadly good i don't know some some professor told me he's
teaching it to his students which made me kind of happy that's nice i'll tell you um as a consumer
of it what i like is sometimes i really just want to know what Dave's view is.
Yes.
You know, Dave Weigel's view.
And so I'm like, I know the facts.
But I'm like, Dave is actually there and following this stuff.
So I'm just looking for his view on this.
The only time I don't like it is sometimes it feels like
the reporter has to give a view.
I feel like you need to evolve it to an option
or it's like the reporter's like you know i don't really know about this and maybe that does happen
sometimes i just didn't read that article you know it's funny we do we in various ways often
we'll just sort of quietly remove the view section because yes of course often you report some facts
they have no idea what they mean maybe we just have a check mark that's just sort of like a
shruggy emoji yeah yeah that's's what Dave's view on this.
Shruggy emoji.
Come back for more.
I feel like that so often.
Same.
Ben Smith, thank you so much, man.
It's always good to see you.
The new podcast is Mixed Signals.
Mixed Signal or Mixed Signals?
Mixed Signals.
Mixed Signals with Naeem Arraza.
And, you know, go check out Semaphore.
He's got a newsletter.
A bunch of other people have newsletters. and we'll be talking to you again soon.
See you, brother.
Thank you, Tim. D-Block from the block where everybody Air Force out With a new white tee you fresh, nothing phony with us
Make the money, get the mansion, bring the homies with us
I'm still, I'm still Jenny from the block
Used to have a little, now I have a lot
No matter where I go, I know where I came from
Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got
I'm still, I'm still Jenny from the block
Used to have a little, now I have a lot
No matter where I go, I know where I keep from
From in living color to movie scripts
To all my six to J-Lo to this headline clips
I stay grounded as the amounts roll in
I'm real, I thought I told ya
I'm real even on Oprah
That's just me
Nothing phony, don't hate on me
What you get is what you see
Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got
I'm still, I'm still journey from the block
Used to have a little, now I have a lot
No matter where I go, I know where I came from
Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got
I'm still, I'm still journey from the block
Used to have a little, now I have a lot
No matter where I go, I know where I came from Don't be fooled by the rocks that I got The Bullwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.