The Daily Show: Ears Edition - Replay | Is JFK Still Alive? | Jordan Klepper Fingers the Conspiracy

Episode Date: August 11, 2025

Is JFK Jr. still alive? Daily Show contributor and podcast host Jordan Klepper digs deep into this conspiracy theory that’s circulating at Trump rallies and the larger MAGA world. Where did this ide...a come from? Where is it going? Jordan sits down with journalist and author Will Sommer and political scientist and conspiracy theory expert Joseph Uscinski to trace the JFK Jr. myth back to its QAnon origins. Originally aired in 2022. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This winter, take a trip to Tampa on Porter Airlines. Enjoy the warm Tampa Bay temperatures and warm Porter hospitality on your way there. All Porter fairs include beer, wine, and snacks, and free fast-streaming Wi-Fi on planes with no middle seats. And your Tampa Bay vacation includes good times, relaxation, and great Gulf Coast weather. Visit FlyPorter.com and actually enjoy economy. You're listening to Comedy Central. John F. Kennedy Jr. was the son of John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of the United States. Tragically, JFK Jr. was killed in a plane crash in 1999.
Starting point is 00:00:47 Or was he? Yes, he was. Of course he was. But what if he wasn't? What if he were about to reemerge as the vice president of Donald Trump? Who? By the way, is still the president? Sound crazy? It is. In fact, it's one of the wilder conspiracies I've heard in my seven years covering Trump rallies. You're probably familiar with my daily show segments. Jordan Klepper fingers the pulse.
Starting point is 00:01:14 Emmy nominated twice, lost, twice. Where I chat with Trump supporters at rallies. We are not a cold. It's an American ideal that we treat women with respect. You've got to give me the back of that shirt one more time. That's too much fun. Trump that bitch! We don't even see the end.
Starting point is 00:01:30 And if you're into conspiracy theories, then there's nothing that comes close to a Trump rally. What's on your back? Q flag. Kew and not. One of those crazy people. Joseph Biden and Kami Law are not legitimate. Wasn't Q's whole thing that Trump would be reinstated at president? You've never looked.
Starting point is 00:01:47 If you go online, there's a whole list of pedophile symbols. Really? Yes. It's like Woodstock, except everyone there thinks Jimmy Hendrix is a hologram. Normally, when one of these conspiracy theories comes up, I have to respond to then move past it because we're shooting a piece for TV and we have to stay somewhat focused.
Starting point is 00:02:04 But this is a podcast, and we don't have to stay focused at all. So, I'm finally diving into some of the most incredible conspiracy theories that have been pitched to me at Trump rallies by America's most imaginative minds. This is Jordan Klepper Fingers, The Conspiracy, an all-new limited series podcast
Starting point is 00:02:22 from The Daily Show. So folks, come on down from your grassy knolls and let's dig in. Let's talk about John F. Kennedy, Jr. But to help me do that, I want to bring in our first guest, Will Summer. Will's a politics reporter for The Daily Beast. He's got a book coming out in February called Trust the Plan, The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy that unhinged America. Will, welcome to Jordan Klepper Fingers, The Conspiracy. I'm excited to have you on. You are here to help me walk
Starting point is 00:02:53 through and understand what is going on in this world of John F. Kennedy Jr. And I will say this. I go out on the road and I start hearing people talking about JFK Jr. And initially I'm thinking, oh, they're talking about JFK. There's a long history of conspiracies with JFK. And then I'm putting together that it's JFK Jr. And then I start to see signs up. I start to see bumper stickers that have him as vice presidential candidate to Donald Trump. And then a month or so back, I go to a rally in the Midwest. And I'm hearing sweet old grandmothers talk about John F. Kennedy, Jr., and I can't make hedge or tails of it. Can you set out a little bit of where this began? What do we need to know?
Starting point is 00:03:36 Sure. So, I mean, this is really bizarre, as you noted. I mean, the origins of this are within QAnon. Of course, there was this figure Q who was giving these anonymous clues. And then at one point in 2018, Q's sort of vanished for a month on the forums where the clues came out. And then someone named R shows up and starts saying, you know, all of this is really about JFK Jr. And so that's kind of where it begins. And eventually Q comes back and kind of says, like, this JFK Jr stuff's garbage. You know, what are you been tricking all my people? But the JFK Jr. stuff really starts there with this idea that JFK Jr. faked his death to take on the deep state and help Donald Trump sort of bring about this sort of QAnon utopia.
Starting point is 00:04:21 There's a conspiracy inside the conspiracy. It's a, it's a, it's a, it's a conspiracy. turducken right now. Exactly. It's sort of a splinter faction. And you get this situation where like the kind of the mainline Q&N people will often be like, oh my God, like, you know, I believe all this Pizagate stuff. I believe this about Hillary Clinton. But these JFK Jr. people are embarrassing us. They just believe totally stupid stuff. That's the dynamic you want there. We're like, oh my God. Can we just go back to serious things like talking about how the Democrats drink baby's blood and all this JFK Jr. stuff. We're losing credibility people. We're losing
Starting point is 00:04:55 credibility. Put your tinfoil hats back on and let's march. Yeah, I mean, basically they're saying, you know, these JFK Jr. people are almost like a government opt meant to embarrass Q and on. But really, this belief has in JFK Jr. has persisted ever since. So, but what was ours intention in this situation? Like, initially that JFK Jr., one, is alive. So perhaps he faked his death. And two, he's aligning himself with Donald Trump. It feels like there's four steps there that I'm having a hard time connecting. What? Why? Why JFK Jr. And let's start with why he's alive and why that should matter.
Starting point is 00:05:30 Sure. So the arc that is presented by R, and I want to point out here that R is the letter after Q. And so that's sort of the explanation for that. Is it or is it, Will? Your mainstream elitist alphabet says it's the letter after Q. But only if you're moving forward through time. But that's a whole other podcast.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Exactly. So the sort of the story that's laid out is that, John F. Kennedy, the father, is killed by the deep state, you know, in 1963. JFK Jr. sees this and says, oh, man, the deep state might come for me, and I want to get revenge on them for murdering my father. And so for years, he builds up this relationship with Donald Trump, you know, because they were both sort of these New York socialite figures, there are pictures of them together. And so this is used to suggest that they were like best buddies. Then in this storyline, JFK Jr. fakes his death in this plane crash to sort of go undercover. and sort of lay the groundwork for the Q&on journey
Starting point is 00:06:28 and eventually emerge for a while. They thought he was gonna replace Mike Pence in 2020 on the ticket. And that he would sort of kind of help Trump and sort of get this final revenge on the deep state. So in this world, they see JFK Jr. as faking his own death to exist undercover and wait for the right time,
Starting point is 00:06:45 still maintaining a relationship with Donald Trump throughout all of this? Or did Donald Trump just come about and become sort of an avatar for JFK Jr.'s ascension? Yeah, that's a great question. I mean, a lot of it is a little contradictory and not super thought out. You know, that might surprise you, I know. But basically, the idea is that, you know, back in the 90s or the 80s, they kind of cut this deal.
Starting point is 00:07:08 And they said, Donald Trump said, man, this stuff is really messed up, you know. And then JFK Jr. said, tell me about it. You know, they shot my dad. And so then they sort of teamed up and JFK Jr. went into hiding. Tell me about it. They shot my dad. Oh, wow. Yeah, you're right.
Starting point is 00:07:21 This is messed up. Let me run for president a few decades from now and make this thing happen. You're helping me connect that circle, if it's a circle. What I'm confused about, I go out there, JFK, famously, not a Republican. John F. Kennedy, Jr., at least from my perspective, New York, elite, not political, but somebody who is a magazine magnate and Seinfeld character, doesn't exactly match up as the type of person that this often far-right group would align themselves with. Why do they see this potential in somebody who's so outside of the norm?
Starting point is 00:08:02 You know, I think that's a great question. What is the emotional resonance of JFK Jr.? Why is it JFK Jr they fixate on rather than another celebrity who died in the 90s? So I think the answer to it is that when we think about the Q&O believer, and I think in particular the people who go for the JFK Jr. stuff, They're usually baby boomers. And I think the JFK assassination had a huge sort of emotional impact on them. And I think also JFK Jr. was sort of seen as this very prominent baby boomer, sort of an avatar of his generation.
Starting point is 00:08:32 And so in that way, I think there is this kind of this very emotional connection to him in a way that there wouldn't be with another celebrity. I think also the idea of JFK as like the last good Democrat is something that has persisted among Republicans even before QAnon, this idea. kind of this popular martyred president, and O isn't it terrible that, you know, LBJ in the 60s took being a Democrat into such an awful direction. So I think JFK himself still has a lot of resonance with Republicans and QAnon believers. So I think there's a lot of kind of like emotions tied up in all that. When you look back on JFK conspiracies, does it seem quaint? Does it seem sort of like the initial modern conspiracy theory that Americans have sort of built a mythos around? I mean, I think obviously we've had conspiracy theories throughout American history, but
Starting point is 00:09:19 The Kennedy assassination is such a sort of an epical one that I think gets a lot of people into conspiracy theories and is certainly, I think, the biggest and the richest one to dive into in modern history. It also sort of brings everything full circle, incorporating Kennedy. QAnon is sort of a super conspiracy theory or a mega conspiracy theory where you can sort of get whatever you want out of it. And so we see a lot of Kennedy conspiracy theorists drawn into it. I talked to a guy who was a really big QAnon leader, and he had for decades, It's been just like a JFK crank. I mean, he was going to all these conventions, stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:09:53 And then QAnon arrives and he says, oh, you know, I can sort of incorporate my Kennedy beliefs into Q&N and sort of broaden my worldview and see more of the world explained to me in that way. So I do think that's an aspect of it as well. It's interesting. I think what a lot of people miss is just how fun conspiracies are. They are engaging, especially if you're on a computer, one of the most fun things you can do is go down that rabbit hole and also come away with something.
Starting point is 00:10:19 that empowers you because you feel like you know something somebody else doesn't i i did a job down in dallas a decade ago and i i was walking through the grassy knoll multiple times right there there in daly plaza and people would approach you and they would tell you things that you should know and shouldn't know and so there was it was like a cottage industry for a conspiracy theorist to give small little tours uh take you to places that they they tell you what what happened and what They're not telling you. And it's easy to get wrapped up in that. And you see the people starting to develop, you know, not only mindsets out of it, but it gives them importance.
Starting point is 00:10:57 It gives them, in some cases, a job, but it makes them important in that little place. And I start to see that pop up at some of these Trump rallies that I go to, seeing people who now own part of these little conspiracies, and they become many celebrities at these rallies that we see. In looking at this JFK Jr. coming back as part of, there's been discussions. of his reappearance, and there's been groups, one group called negative 48, who has staged events waiting for his return. Can you tell us a little bit about negative 48? Sure, yeah. So negative 48 is a group that is very convinced that JFK, not only JFK Jr., but Kennedy, JFK himself, and all sorts of sort of a bevy of other beloved deceased celebrities are, it's not that they're going to come back to life, but they've sort of been in occlusion.
Starting point is 00:11:46 they've been in hiding, and that they're going to come back and sort of usher in this QAnon world. The reason they're called negative 48 is because they, this is kind of hard to explain to someone who's not really deep in it. But essentially, they believe in this thing called Jamatria, where they assign numerical values to letters, and then they derive meaning from that. A equals one, B equals two, and so on. But essentially, they would say, like, Jordan Klepper, 20, trust the plan, 20, make America great again, 25. they just sort of speak in this language that doesn't really make sense to anyone outside of it. But they see importance in these numbers and in these these coincidences. And so from there, they essentially kind of whip themselves up into believing these things like JFK Jr.'s coming back.
Starting point is 00:12:31 I found out what Jamantria was real quick. One of the rallies I went to when a woman kind of walked me through this, she brought out a Jamotria calculator and started typing in my name, typing in Trump's name, and connecting all sorts of numbers. It was wild. It was real fun. You can kind of make anything make sense there. You type it in the calculator, you get these numbers. And so Michael Jackson's last concert was, this is it, comes to 113. You know what that means? Do you? I don't know what that means. So 113 means not true.
Starting point is 00:13:04 So Michael Jackson, that wasn't his last concert. And he's alive. It's not necessarily a conspiratorial thing, although it's used in that sense. It's correct me if I'm wrong. It's essentially a mathematical way of turning, letters into numbers, and religions have been using this for centuries, just to try to try to derive meaning, trying to look deeper into biblical texts and what have you. And I thought that was a key component when I talked to this woman, because the way she talked about Jamatria was beyond, this is a conspiracy, it's fun, I have power because I have
Starting point is 00:13:36 knowledge, it was also, I'm serving a biblical character. There's religion attached to this. I think that's where the real danger comes here, where you have people who are serving serving religion and serving God through this fun little weird game that they play and then deciding that Aaliyah is going to appear alongside Michael Jackson and perhaps JFK Jr. all at once.
Starting point is 00:14:00 Like Bin Laden with Obama. Clarify who's still alive. Ben Laden? JFK Jr. is JFK Jr. still alive. JFK Jr. is still alive? I think JFK Jr. is going to try and expose globalists because they killed his father. We're talking about Tupac's coming back.
Starting point is 00:14:17 Robin Williams is coming back. Alia, as you mentioned, sort of pick your favorite dead celebrity. And so what happened was these folks descended on Dallas where they thought there was going to be sort of the dead celebrities parade and they're milling around and they're seeing like a homeless guy and they're like, I think that's Robin Williams. And then everyone's go, yeah, that's a Robin Williams and so on. And a lot of these guys, I mean, look, I'm not sure these guys are super up on like Tupac, for example.
Starting point is 00:14:41 And there's, I think that's Tupac. You know, all these guys. I think that's Biggie. and it's sort of this you can see they're sort of going into this world where like nothing bad ever happens no one ever dies of a drug overdose or a suicide the other thing I would add is that
Starting point is 00:14:54 they think a lot of dead celebrities were murdered or went into hiding like JFK Jr. faked their deaths because they were going to blow the lid off the cabal so like the late DJ Avichi you know he faked his death all these kind of people just you know Whitney Houston
Starting point is 00:15:10 oh but they're all coming back at this big moment and you can see these people who have just particularly in this, when they were kind of milling around Dallas for months, just the amount of their own lives and their own hearts that they've invested into it, you know, they're just headed for a brick wall when eventually they realized none of it's happening. It's just predominantly white people who live in a bubble walking around Dallas thinking they see Tupac everywhere. I mean, it's really, hey, that's Tupac. Do you really know who Tupac is?
Starting point is 00:15:40 And you think that guy's Tupac and Biggie? They are, these are diametric. Opposed on many levels, but I bet you're seeing it as the same person who's going into a subway. Well, they would do these live streams where they would say, like, didn't y'all see that dead rapper? Like, they wouldn't know any names, you know, and they'd kind of have this game of telephone to figure it out. I'm not going to be a conspiracist or anything like that, but I just watched a movie last week with Robin Williams in it. It was called Man of the Year. And guess what? They had election fraud back then.
Starting point is 00:16:09 The machines that are switching to doing it electronically, and they were counting wrong. Is this a documentary? No, it's just a movie. Are there any lessons we can take from Mork and Mindy? No. Well, it should be pointed out. They've pointed to people, specifically JFK Jr, as there's been a man who's gone to multiple rallies, stands behind Donald Trump, and that's JFK Jr. I went to CPAC, and I saw him there as well, and he's taken selfies because he's also JFK Jr.
Starting point is 00:16:38 So some people aren't just abstract apparitions. They are actually humans that they point. to and say, you know, this is who you are. Yeah, I've actually, I was just texting with him. So his name is Vincent Fuska. And he is this like Trump super fan in the lead up to, in the 2016 election, he had this van kind of festooned with Trump paraphernalia. And so he kind of ends up becoming because he's a big Trump fan.
Starting point is 00:17:01 He's behind him at a lot of rallies. When the JFK Jr. stuff starts happening. And this guy, I should say, looks nothing like JFK Jr. He dresses, uh, he wears like a big fedora. He's very scruffy guy. He wears like a big suit coat. And so now, to be clear, JFK Jr. was a stylish man. And it could only be assumed that that style mixed with privilege and wealth would have led him into the modern era not choosing to wear a fedora.
Starting point is 00:17:25 Yes, yes. Thank you. Yeah, maybe in the 90s, you know, but now no, I don't think so. And so, oh, yeah, early, yeah, early swing day. Big bad voodoo daddy, he would have had a fedora. There would have been a lot of college kids who wanted to look like JFK Jr. who could pull off a fedora. But modern JFK Jr., no, no freaking way. No way. And so he's standing behind Trump. And when the JFK Jr. stuff starts happening, people go, oh my gosh, I think that's JFK Jr. behind Trump. And then there was like a blonde woman nearby. And they said, I think that's JFK Jr's wife. And so, I mean, they kind of get going. But the wild thing to me about it is this guy doesn't come out and say, hey, guys, I'm not JFK Jr. Leave me alone. He goes, oh, who's to say? And so I've seen this guy maybe seven or eight times. And he'll be at a rally or something. And people go, oh, it's JFK Jr. You know, we want pictures.
Starting point is 00:18:13 then I say to him, uh, hey, you want to tell me about how everyone thinks your JFK Jr? You're obviously not. And he goes, oh, I'd love to talk to you later. How about in an hour? Let me catch up. I'm just so busy today. But I'm in town. You know, you have my number. Let's talk later. Obviously never gets back to me. I talked to this one woman who was like, oh, posing for all these selfies with him. And I said, you know, that's not JFK Jr., right? And she's like, haven't you ever heard of Hollywood? Haven't you heard of visual effects? Haven't you ever heard of Medea? You know, it's, you know, they're really deep. Tyler Perry as evidence. It's a, it's a smart move.
Starting point is 00:18:43 And I give Vincent props. I tell you, if somebody stops me on the street and says, Joel McHale, I love you in community, I don't correct him. Nope, let them think that. Let them live their own reality. As Americans, we have every right to live our own reality. I think it's in the Constitution somewhere, somewhere deep. Now, there's a dark side to some of this,
Starting point is 00:19:05 because I will say when I talked to the woman who was into Jamatrium and she was a part of this negative 48 group, they show up in Dallas. They wait in Dallas for JFK Jr. to arrive. And then they stay there for months and months on end. And there's stories of families who are losing loved ones to this conspiracy mindset. And people are sending money to the leader, Protsman, I believe. Like what are some of the dark sides of believing in these weird fantasies?
Starting point is 00:19:33 Yeah. I mean, so, you know, Q and I've talked to so many people who have lost family and friends to QAnon. And when you talk about something as extreme as negative 48 as sort of that faction, I mean, you're talking about people who have essentially given up their lives at this point. I mean, it's like they've joined kind of like a traveling commune or something. I mean, you know, they're staying in this hotel room for months at a time, which is not cheap. They're kind of pooling all their funds. At one point, you know, there were a bunch of like little toddlers, little kids involved, which, you know, it's not great for them to be roaming around looking for Tupac or whatever.
Starting point is 00:20:01 And, you know, I talked to one guy who, whose wife had, he thought he had a, you know, a totally fine normal marriage. And then she just says, oh, yeah, I'm going to go to this Trump rally. well, as it turned out, she was going to join negative 48, and then just vanishes. And, you know, he's seeing her in these videos and stuff. And he's like, what is happening in my family? There's no evidence she's ever coming back, you know, all this kind of stuff. I mean, it is really, really grim stuff. This is that poor guy.
Starting point is 00:20:26 You just, you see him at home. Like, my wife, she left me for JFK Jr. I get it. What a successful man. And he's been through a lot. You know, he's died. He's come back. He's living at this man, Vincent.
Starting point is 00:20:39 He's trying to pull off fedoras in modern times. It's difficult. Well, he's really, yeah, it's a bold decision, yeah. I'm glad he's found love, but she's left me alone. We're going to pause it right there. We'll be right back. Welcome back to Jordan Klepper Fingers, The Conspiracy. I want to bring in Professor Joe Uzynski, political scientists and conspiracy theory expert
Starting point is 00:21:00 at the University of Miami who followed the JFK Jr. gathering in Dallas. Joe, welcome. Thanks for having me. So, Joe, we got Will Summer here. we've been going down this JFK Jr., wormhole, rabbit hole, whatever hole you want to call it, we're in it. You've looked at what's happening and what continues to happen
Starting point is 00:21:24 in Dallas. From your perspective, what's going on down there? So you have people that probably have a bunch of psychological issues. Maybe they're prone to delusions. They're prone to believing things in spite of evidence. And that's what got them to this point. And this is fanciful. It's fun for them.
Starting point is 00:21:45 They're probably enjoying it. But it doesn't shock me to hear the things that Will is talking about. I mean, there are families, and I get emails from these families once in a while. You know, the son disappeared or, you know, one family member, you know, got into a conspiracy theory. Now they can't even talk to the person. And there isn't much I can say to these families other than I'm not that kind of doctor. I mean, there's nothing I can do for this sort of stuff. And I sympathize and empathize with them, but there isn't much you can do.
Starting point is 00:22:18 What makes people predisposed to believe conspiracy theories in the first place? Why do they go and seek them out? Well, the answer is going to be a little bit unsatisfying, but this is where we are. And that is that some people more than others have a worldview in which, you know, they go over to the window when they wake up in the morning, they look out and they see stuff. And they say, well, it must be caused by a conspiracy, you know, being driven by people who I already don't like. And the question becomes, well, where does that come from? And the answer is, we don't know yet. We just know that it exists.
Starting point is 00:22:50 And we know that some people are just really prone to it. So it's not the beliefs themselves. It's not the ideas. It's that it's people that have a very thick set of lenses. So when they come into contact with these ideas, it's just easy for them to say, yeah, that must be true. you know america it's not a new thing to believe in conspiracy theories it's not a new thing to have perhaps a warped sense of reality we are the country that gave you the salem witch trials we're always looking for weird ways in which to perceive what's happening around us um
Starting point is 00:23:24 how serious is the situation we're living in now is this is this an aberration is this is this something that social media has one created or two is just reflecting what's already been happening out there and we're blowing it into, or it's overblown our perspective on it. Yeah, you know, I mean, look, as you said, I mean, conspiracy theories have been with us throughout American history. Going back to the witch trials, I mean, there's really rich history of it, sort of each kind of big pivot moment in the United States of a conspiracy theory is really abounding. At the same time, I think what's unique about the moment we're in is number one, social media,
Starting point is 00:24:00 as you mentioned, which I think helps people with this kind of conspiratorial mindset that connect with one another. The way I think of it is, if you think of like the Kennedy assassination, in order to find like-minded people, you would have to maybe print a zine, send letters, go to a convention, stuff like that, and then everyone on your block would be saying,
Starting point is 00:24:18 like, you're a nut or whatever. Whereas now these people can just go online and find like-minded people, reinforce their beliefs, and find new recruits really, really easily. The other thing I would say is we've, at least I think in modern history, we haven't seen this kind of conspiratorial thinking
Starting point is 00:24:32 embraced by so many politicians to the point where we have members of Congress who believe in QAnon and have supported it. Recently, Donald Trump is posting really explicit pro-Qaeda on videos. So in that way, I think it really helps mainstream these conspiracy theories in a way that we haven't had before. I love thinking that in the old days, you at least had to learn how to produce a zine. Like there's something to the stereotype of like, well, you had to cut out letters and
Starting point is 00:24:57 you actually had to build a board and connect it with string here and there. And it's like, no, literally, there's a certain buy-in that that buys you. Now you can do this all online. You don't even have to go to Hobby Lobby to buy the shit. You can do it on your internet. The buy-end is so low. Joe, I wonder, where do you see the threat level of something like this? It's with politicians.
Starting point is 00:25:17 So to me, I don't think people have changed all that much over time. If anything, we're believing conspiracy theories as much as we did 10, 20, 30 years ago. What's different now is not just Trump, but particularly Trump. and other people who want to do what Trump has done. So when you have people who can act on conspiracy theories with a monopoly of authoritative force, when you have people who already have large audiences because they're politicians transmitting these things,
Starting point is 00:25:52 that's going to reach a lot of people and it's going to influence a lot of people. Like any of us could go on to social media and spurt out whatever stupid conspiracy theory we want. It doesn't mean anyone's going to pay attention. It doesn't mean anyone's going to care or even look at it. But if Trump does it, that's a very different ballgame, right? And when you have people who have political power engaging in this, that's incredibly dangerous.
Starting point is 00:26:19 And if you look back through history, the times where we have, you know, the worst episodes of conspiracy theorizing, it's usually because of politicians getting involved and acting on it in some way. Is it possible to put these ideas back in a box? Can you roll this back? You know, I recently was out talking to people about, you know, the election and election deniers. And so much is based on this idea of as soon as you have doubt and you see it through a lens of doubt and mistrust everywhere, it almost doesn't matter what's going to happen in the next election. You're going to see it. It's going to be there. Are we already hardwired these brains to see and distrust so many things that there will not be a turning back that even though, even though,
Starting point is 00:27:03 somebody like Donald Trump might wield so much power and be able to direct it in certain ways that we've sort of already infected a generation with this mindset. Well, there's already people who think that no matter what, right? After any election, there's about, you know, 20 to 30 percent of the country who think it was rigged. Why? Because they lost, right? So in politics as in sports, who complains after the football game? Now, it's the losing team, right? So that's sort of normal after every election.
Starting point is 00:27:33 What's abnormal right now is that you have the losing candidate saying it was rigged, I was cheated, and going on and on and on about it, and pulling in the whole of the conservative media and lots of allies in Congress. So now you have sort of a full court press of people saying it's rigged, it's rigged, it's rigged. So that's why you have between 60 and 80 percent of Republicans saying 2020 was rigged, against them, rather than the normal 30, 40, 50% that might have otherwise said it was rigged just for the fact that they lost. How close are we to having 60 or 8% of the GOP believe JFK Jr. is coming back? Is that weeks or months away? I think that would be a tougher one to pull off. I mean, Trump has a lot of influence. So if he got behind a conspiracy theory repeatedly for a long period of time, he could make people buy in.
Starting point is 00:28:27 And if it's something like election fraud, he can pull that off because those ideas are always around. But sometimes you'll come out with conspiracy theories that just don't influence anyone. I mean, I'm not aware of a lot of Ted Cruz's dad kill JFK truthers out there, even though he pushed that, you know, six or seven years ago. I mean, it just didn't take off. But I think if you go after ideas that people are sort of already inclined towards, I mean, he can do a lot of damage that way. Yeah. I mean, I think we are all inclined to the idea of wanting Aaliyah to be back in our lives again. We want another classic album. We want that redemption. I think that's on the cusp. If he even nudges us in that direction, I think we all buy tickets immediately to the next concert, whether or not she appears or not.
Starting point is 00:29:15 I mean, we think that QAnon stuff is wacky and crazy and where do people come up with these ideas. But, I mean, we lived through the 80s. I mean, there was massive satanic panics during that time. Satan was everywhere, and even Oliver Stone's JFK movie, which was, you know, a popular movie, was about the pedophile deep state going after the president of the United States. I mean, Joe Pesci played the defrock pedophile priest. So even the basic idea behind QAnon is not new. I mean, all of this stuff is recycled and rehashed. And it's largely the same people believing the same stuff, sort of a choose-your-own-ad-lib book
Starting point is 00:29:54 that they're just replaying over and over again. I think QAnon has a political valence to it as well. Do you look at the pictures from January 6th? All the people who were there who were convinced that this was going to be kind of this big kind of fascist moment where the dreams were going to come true. And certainly, I mean, I think it's unique
Starting point is 00:30:12 in that it has achieved such mainstream prevalence within the Republican Party. I mean, we're talking about election denial, stuff like that. In many ways, I think QAnon is kind of an easy thing to talk about because you can kind of get a handle on it. it's people holding cues and stuff like that. But a lot of these ideas that are core to QAnon have become, are kind of swirling around the GOP and have become much more successful without
Starting point is 00:30:34 the Q label attached. So we think about, for example, this idea that, you know, talking about gay people existing in a school is part of a pedophile groomer plot. And so we can see these things really being weaponized into policy in, I think, a really ominous way. I want to talk about how this is covered. You know, obviously there are elements of conspiracy theories that belong in the news, that become news, what do you think the role of role should be for journalists in coming some of these fringe beliefs? Is it giving too much air to follow some of these JFK Jr. ideas and put them up on a pedestal so people can see those ideas and have that air out? Or what you're talking about right now, because this is affecting
Starting point is 00:31:16 our culture, do they need to be more vigilant and bring this to the forefront so we can engage with them. We can knock them down or at least be aware that they're out there. Sure. I mean, I think it's a complicated one. For me, you know, you certainly don't want to just go find a couple of nuts online and say like, oh, these guys are so crazy. For me, it's when it starts crossing over into the real world. I mean, we've had QAnon believers murdering people. We had a Q&O guy murder his wife. In 2018, a Q&ON guy shut down a bridge near the Hoover Dam. He had a bunch of guns. That was at the point where I was like, this is not just an online thing anymore. This is something where I have to trust my readers enough, both as an audience and as, you know, citizens that they deserve to know what's going
Starting point is 00:31:54 on in the world. And, you know, I do think that idea of amplification is a relevant one, but at the point where you have Donald Trump saying, like, check out this Q stuff. You know, I think the cow is out of the barn. And I would add, in the case of JFK Jr., I mean, one of these, maybe he's kind of the evil JFK Jr. impersonator, there's another guy who's put together a coalition that is going, that has people running to control elections in battleground states, who's the JFK Jr. impersonator. They're the Republican nominee. So really, I mean, this is stuff that is going to have really, I think, really concrete impact on our lives, unfortunately. That was one of the details when I talked to the Gematria woman. You know, what the talk of the rally at that point was not that this was just a person
Starting point is 00:32:33 who believed this wild thing, but it was a person who was in Dallas, who had a strong following on places like telegram. And the talk was that they had a relationship with the Trump campaign, that a lot of these people from negative 48 were also setting up chairs. and in the fact that they would show up and try to help the campaign get set up at the rallies, they would get certain VIP passes, and this is not just a fringe thing that exists outside some of the campaigns.
Starting point is 00:32:58 In some ways, they're also working and coordinating within them. It's becoming folded into it. There is sort of this tension with the Trump campaign where they seem to see these people as what they are, which is huge Trump super fans, and Trump is kind of constantly signaling to QAnon believers, but at the same time they don't want the average person to see a bunch of Q stuff at the rallies.
Starting point is 00:33:16 So we see the negative 48 people doing the QAnon symbols and stuff at the rallies and they're being told, you know, don't do that, what have you. But there's kind of this pull, this back and forth. And Trump doesn't understand it. It's so complicated. It's so above him. There was some onion headline
Starting point is 00:33:32 that I think nailed it that was essentially Trump half-assing his support of Qaeda. Like, yeah, I guess the Democrats eat babies or whatever the hell it is you guys think. Like, you can feel in like if this makes you like me more sure, but I can't even begin
Starting point is 00:33:48 to wrap my head around what you guys think is going on. Joe, I'm wondering what you think the proper response from the media would be in covering these types of stories. That's a really tough question. I mean, I'll tell you, when I started studying the topic about 15 years ago, there was barely any coverage of conspiracy theories in the mainstream news. So I started a Google alert back then. So every night I would get all the articles that had the term conspiracy theory in it.
Starting point is 00:34:16 And back then, I was getting four or five articles. a day and none on the weekends and at the end of 2015 that had jumped to 100 a day every day and just just this is anecdotal but just for myself I think I took close to 300 interviews in 2020 alone so almost every journalist was calling me when they were writing about it and they were all writing it about it quite a bit and then I think what happened shortly after 2016 is that a lot of major news outlets started getting their own misinformation conspiracy theory social media news desks. So they now have dedicated reporters just covering this topic. So it's going to continue to get a lot of attention. I don't know, you know, what the effect of the coverage is.
Starting point is 00:35:03 I mean, I think that some things went wrong in 2020. I think there were a lot of journalists that had sort of a panic over conspiracy theories and misinformation and the headlines sort of got into their own echo chamber. It was like, Q was taking over the world. and it's the biggest thing ever. And, you know, as I was polling on it, I was like, I'm just not getting these massive numbers. It's there. It exists and they have a presence online.
Starting point is 00:35:28 But I think Will was one of the few people who was in journalism who was saying, you know, maybe it's not as big as some of the fantastic headlines are saying it is. So I think in some ways, you know, some of the sensationalistic reporting got ahead of itself. We'll be right back. Searchlight Pictures, Presents. The Roses, only in theaters August 29th. From the director of Meet the Parents and the writer
Starting point is 00:35:54 of Poor Things Comes The Roses, starring Academy Award winner Olivia Coleman, Academy Award nominee Benedict Cumberbatch, Andy Sandberg, Kate McKinnon, and Allison Janney. A hilarious new comedy filled with drama, excitement, and a little bit of hatred, proving that marriage isn't always a bed of roses. See The Roses only in theaters, August 29th. Will, give us a little perspective here, not only on the Q&O movement as to where it is now, but even looking at something like this JFK Jr. theory, the negative 48 group, you know, how big is it actually and how much of an effect does it have on the conversation? Yeah, sure. So I've actually got some polls right in front of me for just this moment.
Starting point is 00:36:37 So, yeah, okay, so now these polls are a little out of date, and Joe does some great polling on this, and I think he has newer numbers. So, but the difficulty of nailing down Q&NN belief is, there's a couple things. Number one, a lot of times people are going to say they may believe some of the tenets of it, but they're not like on the forum saying, you know, where we go when, we go all, stuff like that. At the same time, we have to realize that at the end of 2020, Q basically told the fans, the brand had become too damaged and to stop saying QQQQ, and just to sort of use the talking points. And so there is going to be an amount, I think, of people who are kind of downplaying it. There's a March 2021 poll, 5,000 people that's found that 15% of them believe Satan.
Starting point is 00:37:17 worshiping pedophiles run a global child sex operation. We got 2,000 people in January 2021 that found 15% believe that Trump was at war with these Hollywood pedophiles. And now when you start asking about Q&ON, the numbers get a little lower. You're talking to like three to seven percent. Still, we're talking about millions of people. That's more popular in some religions in the United States. So, you know, it- Don't shit on the Quakers. Why do you got to shit on the Quakers? I know what you're getting at there. I can read between the lines. good, peaceful group of people, stop shitting on the Quakers. Don't come on my podcast and make all this anti-Quaker attacks. I know. They had a hard time getting people into the, whatever they
Starting point is 00:37:59 call it, community room. But they're working hard on this, okay? To continue, but leave the Quakers out of your mouth. Just getting wrecked by QAnon. Yeah, they're getting blown out. So, so, yeah, when we start talking about that, at the same time, I mean, the JFK Jr. people are kind of a faction of that. And then we get down to the negative 48 group, which is smaller than that. So I would say negative 48, I think, has tens of thousands of telegram subscribers. I think when we think about hardcore fans, we're probably talking a couple thousand. It's actually interesting to see, Joe, where do you see? They're the hardcore fans, the people who show up at the events who are posting most of that information. But there's that secondary element, too,
Starting point is 00:38:37 of when it just becomes a brand. I go to some of these events, and I see people wearing Q paraphernalia. Q's back. And there's Q's shit everywhere. Yes. The online conspiracy. following a mysterious character known as Q was more popular than ever. Is that a Q? Yeah. Are you a Q supporter? Certainly. Some people I taught you, they're worried that just because they understand that it's a, it's trolling behavior, that it's a brand they can put on their body, it's going to piss off the media, it's going to get attention from the people they want to get attention with,
Starting point is 00:39:06 and they may not even know the tenets of what Q is, but they do know that it's something that they support in theory because in their mind the support is just trolling. Is that dangerous? Is that sort of a, is it, is it the evolution of a conspiracy theory that when it just becomes Pepsi that we're, we're in for a world to hurt? Where do you see that, Joe? Well, we're sort of calling everything Q and on now, right? And if you go back to the idea that Q and on adopted a lot of ideas that pre-existed Q&N, then it's not quite as disturbing. So between 2019 and more recently, depending on how you ask the question, if you're just doing direct questions, are you a believer in Q&ON. Do you follow Q&N? We're getting between 5 and 12%, which makes it one of the least
Starting point is 00:39:54 believed and followed things that I poll on. I mean, to put that in perspective, we just say, do you think there was a conspiracy to kill Kennedy in 1963? We're getting between 50 and 60%. So Q&N isn't all that huge. But Will's exactly right. When we ask on these more general ideas, like, are teachers grooming kids to become trans? Are there satanic cults doing massive satanic rituals across the country? Are elites running sex trafficking rings? We're getting between 20 and 35%. Now, I wouldn't call those ideas Q ideas.
Starting point is 00:40:33 I mean, Q&O adopts them, but they could have existed decades ago. And some of those ideas sort of have their origin thousands of years ago. So they've been around, and I just don't want to attribute them to Q because then it says, like, oh, this guy was able to convince 30% of the country that elites are running sex trafficking rings when, in fact, those ideas, you know, might have been around well before that. It's just we weren't paying attention. You know, even back during the satanic panic of the 80s, there were very few polls taken of how many people were buying in to this idea of Satanic cults running around. And I've only found one poll, and it was of Texas. So you have to keep that in mind, but it was 80% of people at the end of the 80s thought that, you know, one of the major problems in the country was satanic cults going around abusing people. So I don't know how well that might have been believed in, you know, some other state at the time.
Starting point is 00:41:31 But right now we're trying to poll on all these things, and it's just we don't have good comparisons to the past. You know, one thing I would note there is that there's something unique about QAnon in comparison to some of these other conspiracy theories. If you're talking about like the thing of the Kennedy assassination was a conspiracy theory or the moon landing was fake, well, there's kind of not a lot you can personally do about it. In the case of QAnon, there's kind of this, there's sort of a fascist utopia at the core of it and that there are places that we are going to go terrorize these satanic pedophiles. So there is kind of like a way that people can participate in it that I think it makes it more dangerous than, you know, believing that, again, the moon landing was fake or something like that. Yeah, I mean, it's a game. There's a group identity, right? So a lot of people believe Kennedy was killed by a conspiracy, but they're not friends.
Starting point is 00:42:23 They don't consider themselves to be part of a group or a movement, right? But Q&on, a lot of those people do. Like they are doing something together. They're following along. They're solving the clues. they're expecting an outcome in a shared way. And that's something that most conspiracy theories don't really have. And that's why QAnon's always been very hard to define, right?
Starting point is 00:42:44 Because it's sort of cultish, but not really a cult. It's a group, but sort of decentralized. It's got a lot of conspiracy theories in it, so it's not just a conspiracy theory. And it's got sort of activities that people can do to sort of be a part of it and play along. other conspiracy theories just don't have. I do love thinking of it like activities.
Starting point is 00:43:07 It's like we get to get together. We get to solve why Tom Hanks is drinking baby blood. It's like just a bunch of little encyclopedia Browns running around America. It's funny you say that. I mean, they had a rally in D.C. And they said, you know, we're going to kind of go on this excursion if you're interested to go protest and comment ping pong. So they have the whole itineraries. Well, before I let you go, part of the reason of this podcast is one for me to wrap my head around some of the stuff that I'm seeing.
Starting point is 00:43:32 out there on the road, but two, help me, what am I going to see out there on the road a couple months from now? One, in regards to the JFK Jr. conspiracy, how does that morph? And two, am I going to get a new Robin Williams movie out of all this? Yeah, you know, I think the JFK Jr. stuff is going to continue. I mean, I saw, in particular, I think if Trump keeps engaging more with Q&ON, I think we're going to see more people getting into Q&O and kind of see some fresh energy behind that. I once went to the kind of the Trumpian July 4th event, and all these women at the Trump
Starting point is 00:44:08 hotel were wearing like JFK Jr. shirts. And this lady had a JFK Jr. mask on her face. And I said to her, you know, what's that about? And she goes, he's alive. And she kind of flitters away. So, I mean, I don't think that energy is going anywhere. And, you know, I think we get new conspiracy theories all the time. And so I think, you know, you got the big one, I'm seeing a lot of movement on this idea that the elites want to make us all eat bugs, Jordan. So, like, you you might want to be on the lookout for that. I think there's going to be a lot of, like, what they say is I will not eat the bugs.
Starting point is 00:44:37 And so I think you might get someone, you know, accost to you about that. So don't make them do it. I hate this. I hate this job so much. Dear Lord. Dear Lord, Jordan, you might want to be on the lookout. I guess there's this thing about elites trying to make you eat bugs.
Starting point is 00:44:52 Bugazi. Is that what it is? Joe, what do I have to look out for? So worse than that, I think the same reporter who was writing about the bug eating was also writing about forced anal swabbing. It's not just about testing for COVID. It's about humiliating you in public. So if you walk down the street and they have like a government tent set up where they're sticking people with Q-tips up the ass,
Starting point is 00:45:20 that's going to be something come true, somebody's dark dream apparently. So this is how I'm writing it down right now. I need to be aware of bug gazi and bumgazi. They're on the horizon. Thank you, gentlemen. Well, Will, Joe, thanks for coming on the podcast. I'm going to go down to a Trump rally and a few do. You guys want to come along?
Starting point is 00:45:44 Might be a little intense for me. Fair enough. Fair enough. Well, thank you guys for joining me and helping me figure this conspiracy. Thanks, Robin. Thank you. Listen to Jordan Klepper Fingers the Conspiracy on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Explore more shows from the Daily Show Podcast.
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