The Daily Stoic - Olivia Nuzzi Knows She Messed Up
Episode Date: December 13, 2025It’s easy to defend yourself. It’s harder to tell the truth. In today’s episode, Ryan sits down with journalist Olivia Nuzzi for a raw, unfiltered conversation about what it really mean...s to get through dishonor honorably. In the wake of her recent scandal, Olivia opens up about how small compromises compound into big consequences, why accountability still matters in a culture that rewards shamelessness, and the strange grace of being forced off a path you didn’t realize was destroying you.From 2017 to 2024, Olivia Nuzzi was the Washington correspondent for New York magazine. Most recently she was the West Coast Editor for Vanity Fair. Her new book, American Canto, is out now.🎥 You can watch Ryan's conversation with Olivia on The Daily Stoic YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DailyStoic/videos 📚 Stay tuned for the video of Ryan giving Olivia book recommendations on his YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@RyanHolidayOfficial📖 Grab signed copies of American Canto by Olivia Nuzzi at The Painted Porch: https://www.thepaintedporch.comYou can follow Olivia on Instagram @OliviaNuzziX and on X @OliviaNuzzi 👉 Support the podcast and go deeper into Stoicism by subscribing to The Daily Stoic Premium - unlock ad-free listening, early access, and bonus content: https://dailystoic.supercast.com/🎥 Watch the video episodes on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DailyStoic/videos🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoic.
Each weekday, we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoics,
something to help you live up to those four stoic virtues of courage, justice, temperance,
and wisdom.
And then here on the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topic.
We interview stoic philosophers.
We explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied to our actual lives and the challenging issues of our time.
Here on the weekend, when you have a little bit more space, when things have slowed down,
be sure to take some time to think, to go for a walk, to sit with your journal,
and most importantly to prepare for what the week ahead may bring.
the biggest political media scandal of our time since everybody's talking about it
journalist olivia nussie had to resign from her job at new york magazine because it was revealed
that she was having an affair with rfk junior hey it's ryan holiday welcome to another episode of
the daily stoic podcast i know a thing or two about
falling under the sway of people that you look back and you go, what? That's insane. What was
I thinking? I look back on my early 20s and I, I'm proud of some of it and I'm not proud of
other parts of it. I talk about some of it. I don't talk about some of it. You know about some
of it. Maybe you don't know about some of it. I wrote about a bunch of it in Trust Me,
online, which came out back in 2012, is sort of an expose and a tell-all-slash memoir about
my ride through the media and marketing and PR system in the sort of mid-aughts, web 2.0
bloggy world.
It was crazy.
I screwed up.
I look back and I go, what was I doing working for some of these people?
What was driving me?
I mean, in retrospect, this stuff becomes clear, right?
I was clearly imprinting on some of these figures that were powerful and successful and controversial and they seemed confident.
They seemed smart.
They had like an energy that I went to like a moth to the flame.
Dup Charney being one, a guy who was brilliant and provocative and creative and a genius in many ways.
and then tragic and flawed and dark and ultimately quite a scary figure in other ways.
I remember towards the end, you know, when he was fired by the board of directors and there were
these investigations.
I remember, you know, life was threatened.
I remember checking my car for bugs.
It was a crazy period.
I just go, how did I get here?
What happened?
What was I thinking?
And, you know, it's not just like it was inexplicable.
Like it had consequences for people.
I did things that I shouldn't have done.
I talk about this in Courageous Calling, actually, like where I got asked to do this thing that was not just illegal, but like morally repugnant.
And I didn't do it, but I didn't exactly resign in protest.
And I didn't because I was scared.
I didn't because I didn't want to lose my salary.
I didn't want to get fired.
Like in retrospect, it's obvious.
Like, why would you want to keep a job that not doing something illegal could get you.
fired from. But when you're twisted up in it, when you're in the moment, when you have made
compromises along the way, when you've turned your eyes away from things along the way, when you've
said things publicly, you get twisted up, you get upside down, you get in over your head.
So do I regret that period of my life? I mean, yeah. I also obviously understand that it was
formative. It shaped me. I wouldn't be here if that hadn't happened. So I guess I'm just saying
it's complicated and something I'm still dealing with in processing my own role in it. What I did,
what was done to me, what I should have done differently, what I learned, what I took out of it,
which is basically all that you can do in life. And we all have our own versions of that. It's not an
excuse. It's an explanation. And I say all this to segue to today's guests, who I
I've known for a while. I appeared in one of her stories once because someone she was writing about had read. Trust me, I'm lying. And, you know, we've gone back and forth every once in a while. I'm a big fan of her writing. And you've probably read some of her pieces too. I mean, her pieces drove the news cycle, many instances over the last decade or so. When Donald Trump first met Olivia Newsie, as she writes in her new book, American.
Conto, she says, Trump looked me up and down and said, very young, very beautiful. And then the same
person, when she wrote a piece that he didn't like, tweeted that the reporter was a shaky and
unattractive whack job, known as tough but dumb as a rock, who actually wrote a decent story about me
a long time ago. Her name is Olivia Nuzi. I guess what I'm saying, if you have no idea who
this person is, is that she's been on a wild ride. Here, the daily soap podcast, we don't usually
talk about the events of the news. We don't break news. We don't talk about scandal or gossip.
We talk about ancient philosophy. We talk about timeless lessons. We talk about being a person in the
world. If you know anything about Olivia's story, you know, well, she got herself into some
trouble. In fact, she was supposed to record this like a week ago, but she was in the middle of
parting ways with Vanity Fair, the second sort of shoe to drop in a series of shoes to drop
in the last year or so. She talks about all of this in her book, American Canto, which I will
read the first sentence in the back cover. It says a mesmerizing firsthand account of the
warping of American reality over the past decade as Donald Trump has risen to dominance from a
participatory witness who got so far inside the distortion field that it swallowed her whole.
Olivia Newsie spent a third of her life observing those in power. She became a reporter in 2014
when the political landscape began to reconfigure itself around a singular personality
whom she was uniquely primed to understand. Over the next 10 years, she used her access and eye for detail to
chronicle his campaigns, trials, and government, and blockbuster feature stories that drove
the national conversation, propelled her to the heights of her profession. Then, in 2024,
her personal life collided with the public interest in a scandal that cost Newsy her job and
reputation. Amid a full-blown tabloid frenzy, Newsy went quiet, drove west and spent the next year
in self-imposed exile at the edge of the country, where she wrote this searing and astonishingly
clear-eyed account of what she and we have experienced over the last decade. I will say this book is
actually very good. I thought the reviews did it a complete disservice. I don't know what exactly
is motivating some of those reviewers and writers. I don't know what exactly people wanted, but I thought
as a piece of writing, I say this as a person who has written books, written a book about media and
their own role in it, and as a person who owns a bookstore and loves this genre of writing, I think it's
actually a fantastic book. I think it's worth reading. Like so many of her articles are worth
reading. I'll give you a couple of famous ones. I examine Donald Trump's ear and his soul at
Mara Lago, the conspiracy of silence to protect Joe Biden. And then the one that ultimately
led to the events that we will be speaking about directly and indirectly in today's
interview, the mind-bending politics of RFK Jr.'s spoiler campaign.
So look, if you know about the story or don't know about this story, let me tell you sort of what to expect in this interview.
I'm not holding their feet to the fire. I am not interrogating her. I'm not that interested in the specifics and the gossip or the did this happen and what about this and why didn't you do this.
I am just interested in what it is like to be a person on one side of something like this. What happens when what the Stokes would call the passions overwhelm your.
faculties, your values, your decision-making process, and you get yourself into real trouble,
what happens when, again, another ancient term, you unleash the furies of the public's sense of
injustice upon yourself, right? What was it feel like to be publicly shamed? What does it feel like
to lose your perch at the top of your profession, both deservedly and undeservedly for things
you did do and things you didn't do. We talk about the difference between guilt and shame.
We talk about who leans in and who leans out in situations like this, how you learn to trust yourself
when you have a pattern of behavior or thinking that does not serve you well, that gets you
into trouble. I don't know how much more I need to introduce this. I think it's a great interview.
I think the book is great, as I said. She signed a bunch of copies. We have them at the painted
porch. You can go back and read some of her writing. She's worth following on social media.
On Instagram, she's at Olivia Newsy X. Paradoxically, Twitter, she's at Olivia Newsy.
And thank you to Olivia for coming out. She didn't have to do this interview. She didn't have
to reschedule this interview when her life blew up like a second or third time. But she came out
to Austin to do it. Then we walked around the painted porch. The video of that bookstore walkthrough
posted up on YouTube here, probably tomorrow maybe.
I'm glad this happened.
Seems like she's doing better than I would have expected.
So that's good to hear for people who are following very closely,
who are angry or worked up about it.
I would say I get it.
Like, I'm pretty, as I say in the interview,
pretty understanding of people who get themselves into situations like this
because I've been there at least a little bit myself.
But also, like, there's no one who is less of a big fan
of the other person involved in.
this than me. I mean, I think he's one of the chief villains of our time. I think he's done
unimaginable harm. I shudder for young children, not just here in America, but in the developed
world, the sort of just foundly wrong and dangerous and deranged things, he has done to, not just
like the medical system, but the public good that is public health and the public good that is
our information about public health. So I am not a fan. In fact, I will
say. Just a little inside baseball. Back in February of 2024, somebody asked me if I wanted to come to
this, like, dinner he was at with a bunch of other podcasters and maybe he'd come on the show.
And I said, thanks for the note. Hope you're doing well. I could not in good conscience attend,
let alone donate money in support of someone who has spread so much utterly untrue and dangerous
nonsense for so long. I wish Mr. Kennedy nothing but failure and shame because at this point,
obscurity is too much to hope for. So if I can separate my judgment,
feelings about that to the human being that was involved in all this and have this conversation,
I think you should be able to do that as well. And I feel like I learned a lot. I enjoyed the
book. And as always, I will keep reading what Olivia is writing because she is a great writer.
And I hope she keeps doing it. And she signed a bunch of copies of American Canto, which we have at
the Painted Porch. I will link to that in today's show notes. Or you can swing by the store on
historic Main Street here in Bastrop, Texas to grab it. I grabbed mine at the Seattle airport
flying back from my talk there. I guess this was Thursday. She was going to do it on Friday.
I had to cancel last minute. We moved it to Saturday and then this stuff with Vanity Fair happened,
so we canceled it. I wasn't honestly totally sure if it was going to get rescheduled,
but I was pleasantly surprised when she popped up at the painted porch here on following Thursday.
So that would be, I guess, two days from now if you're listening to this on Saturday when it comes out.
Again, grab signed copies of American Conto from the Painted Porch or wherever you get the book.
She read the audiobook, which I'm sure is a great listen.
And let's just get into it.
Okay, I have a book for you.
I thought about as I was reading a book.
I'm going to walk you through the books around pick out some.
This is actually my copy.
But I wondered, have you read by Grand Central Station?
I sat down and wept.
No, I haven't.
Do you know about this book?
No.
Okay.
Okay, so I was thinking of books that might be interesting to you.
Elizabeth Smart?
No, no, not that Elizabeth Smart.
Okay, this is a woman.
She's in the 40s.
She falls in love with this poet.
Uh-huh.
Did it end well?
Well, she falls in love with this poet.
A love is an understatement for this.
She falls in love with his married poet.
Okay.
They have four kids.
All right.
Her family disowns her.
Okay.
She is, I think, deported at one point for, like, moral turpitude.
He continues the other family.
She's a famous...
What made you think of me?
She's a famous copywriter.
She's like, you know, this would be like if Peggy fell in love with Don Draper.
Okay.
This really happened.
And then she wrote this kind of like fever dream of a novel about it.
Oh, I don't have its time.
Where she, yeah, she doesn't mention the person's name.
She doesn't mention the specifics of it.
But it's this beautiful novel about a torrid life-loining love affair.
I can't relate to that at all.
I'm sure you can't relate to at all.
I can't relate to that.
Her parents have the book banned in Canada where she's from.
At one point, I mean, she's so infatuated at this person.
He's in London.
She's in America.
World War II is happening.
And she crosses the Atlantic to go be with him, even though she's risking being killed by a German U-boat.
I like that she was deported.
Yes.
She's either deported or it's like a violation of the.
the man act, like you can't travel. It's just craziness across the board.
Well, I look forward to reading about this foreign experience. Thank you.
But it's a beautifully written book. It's like the source material is torrid and life ruining.
But the art that comes out of it is beautiful, but also remains totally mystifying.
The reason I thought of you and the reason I was going to ask you about it is like,
She's writing what happened, but I'm wondering as she's writing what happened, does it make any sense to her?
Right.
Like, did you have that experience?
Like, could you look back at the events of the last couple of years and you recognize that person and there's a logic to it?
Or you're just like, it's an out-of-body experience?
I wouldn't say there's a logic to it, but there's an illogic to it, I guess.
Does that make sense?
No.
Tell me.
I mean, it's not like I think, oh, boy, what happened?
And it's not like I, you know, fainted in a field of poppies and woke up on the wrong coast or something.
But I can look back and see, like, the suspension of certain critical faculties.
Yeah.
And that makes sense to me, but it doesn't make sense.
Yes.
Right?
Yes, totally.
Yeah.
Well, there is, I think people think that your life can be heading in the wrong direction.
And then you have this sudden epiphany and then you realize you're heading in the wrong direction and then you change everything.
Right. No.
And it's usually much more gradual and then even the exiting out of it is gradual.
And then the coming to terms with what happened and why it happened and where it could have gone differently, that's gradual too.
Well, I felt really grateful for the, I think I write at one point that I felt like the hand of God came and like swatted me off the path that I was on.
And I felt grateful for that.
Like it was abrupt and unpleasant and, you know, it was not a.
smooth landing. It was sort of like being ejected from, from a moving vehicle. But I was
grateful for it. I'm grateful for it now because I thought, well, if that hadn't have happened,
because it struck me that you don't just wake up one morning and make a huge mistake, right?
Yes.
Like necessarily there are many minor or imperceptible mistakes that lead to just like a
misaligned worldview, right? Or just a misshapen path that you're on. And I look back and
when I talk about kind of seeing the suspension of critical faculties, I see.
my dismissing that or dismissing discomfort in my daily life, right?
Like dismissing thinking that it was possible and that there would be no penalty for like pushing aside things that I didn't want to deal with.
And all of that seemed to sort of accumulate into circumstances or conditions that made an enormous mistake possible.
There's another moment in fiction that I thought of when I was reading your book and then I also thought about in my own life because I have some experience going down a path.
that I'm like, what was I thinking? And I missed it. Like, I missed it when I read it in high school.
I missed it when I read it a bunch of times. But in Gatsby, there's this moment where Gatsby comes to Nick when he's trying to get in his good graces. And he says, like, hey, like, I know you don't make a ton of money doing what you do. I had maybe this business opportunity you could help me with. And Caraway says, like, only later did I realize that that was potentially a pivotal moment in my life. That basically Gatsby was trying to draw him into his.
his world. And Carraway sort of dismisses it out of hand because he's not interested in it. But he doesn't, that was his
chance to enter the underworld. Right. And you don't like the moments where you don't do it or you do it don't seem
significant in the moment. You're not like I'm gambling everything on this because they all feel like
small little decisions. Yeah. And I think I, you know, I was like this improbable success in the straight world.
Right. And a lot of my success came from the fact that I didn't play by rules, right? And I was willing to walk into spaces where maybe I shouldn't have been or, you know, use my wits or whims to acclimate myself to environments. And when you're rewarded for that over and over again, I think it kind of, I guess it created a sort of feedback loop where I write about Icarus. And someone was asking me about it, like some journalist at the New York Times, I think recently.
And their interpretation, which I felt said more about this person, as often interpretations often do, was that I was talking about being close to, like, other people's power, right?
Circling too close to other people's power.
But to me, it was just like I had a misunderstanding of my own power, right, and my own ability to know, I was so used to being right.
Yes.
And taking risks and those risks paying off rather than blowing up.
And people deferring to me, right?
Like I got this job at New York Magazine when I think it was like 23 or 24 and I was their first Washington correspondent and I had never been a Washington correspondent, never covered a White House. And luckily the guy in the White House had never been there before either, right? And there were some great things about having a fresh perspective, but there were also perilous things about that, right? But it's a collaborative environment where there are photographers who've been there since like the Carter administration. You could say, is that normal? And they're like, oh, yeah, this is this always happens.
or no, this has never happened before.
But I was used to, you know, I'd say,
what do I do about this to, like, my editor-in-chief?
And he'd be like, oh, you figure it out.
Like, and I'd be like, okay, and then I would figure it out.
And I was correct most of the time, right?
And I got, I think it contributed to just this incorrect view
that I didn't have to police my own judgments, right?
Right.
Or I didn't have to just second-guess myself
as it related to my calculations about right and wrong
and whether or not a risk was a good one
or whether or not there was a,
when I was acting out of ego
or fear, selfishness or whatever.
And I think that kind of accumulates
into this misconfigured worldview.
When you're not exactly surrounded by people
for whom strong black and white moral judgments
and rectitude is a big priority.
I imagine it's destabilizing being around other people
who are also not just bending the rules,
but questioning why there are rules at all.
Or just ignoring.
It's not even like questioning the rules.
It's just rejecting the premise of the rules, right?
Yeah.
And I've said this before,
but it's like Trump's lawlessness,
that lawlessness animates the whole spirit of the place,
whatever place that may be, right?
And you feel like in order,
it's like every cop needs a criminal,
you have to kind of get inside the mind
and the lawlessness inspires lawlessness.
And yeah, I mean,
the whole, a lot of the,
book is about perception, right? And it's about the distortion of reality. And I was trying to
accurately, like, reflect the phantasmicory, right? And what it just has felt like to be here.
And from my vantage point, right? Yes. I had a moment like that. So for people who are listening,
they don't know who I am. I worked for a bunch of controversial people over the years. And this was
a messy, exciting period in my early and mid-20s. And, like,
I remember I read this book, again, another work of fiction, which I do think sometimes fiction gets to the truth of it more than nonfiction can.
But Bud Schulberg, who wrote on the waterfront with this book called The Harder They Fall, which is about a boxing promoter and a press agent.
So the boxing promoter is corrupt.
It's affiliated with the mom.
And he's this press agent.
He's formerly a journalist now he's this press agent.
And he's sort of in this morally dubious space.
And to spoil the ending, it's an amazing book, but it's not really spoiling the ending.
At some point he says, and he keeps, he's really good at what he does, you know, he's good at placing stories and creating this narrative.
They're building this fighter up so it can take a fall.
And he says towards the end, you know, I told myself that I could deal in filth and not become the thing that I touched.
When I look back on my own story, I feel like I read that and that's what changed the trajectory of my life, that I was like, I got to get out.
of this. Right. And then I remember I was talking to Tim Miller, who interviewed you.
Love Tim. Yeah, it's great. And we were talking about this because we wrote similar
sort of confessional books. And I was like, well, let me go, like, see when I read that book.
Yeah. And I read that book in 2009. So I, like, many years went. Like, I understood the information.
I understood what I was playing with. And then I didn't do anything about it. So we can know the
information. We can even know that we're walking a tightrope or that we're playing with fire,
whatever you want to use, and then it can take us a while to wake up to it.
I think you can understand something intellectually, though, and it takes a long time
to absorb it, like, energetically and spiritually.
But you wrote that book, you were, what, like 25 when you wrote that book?
Yeah, 24 maybe.
Right, yeah.
And I reread it when I was writing this.
And I had talked to you about some of what I was writing because I was worried,
too strong a word, but, like, I was trying to sort out the puzzle of, like,
how do I deal without feeling like I'm shirking responsibility?
Yeah.
with things that I was a part of that were kind of just had rotten values or right or how do I
describe those things without it feeling like I'm putting blame on on anybody else right or on
systems or something and it was really it was important for me to reread that book because I
remember reading it years ago and thinking like man this guy's crazy because it's a really
aggressive it's not the right word but it's like it's a machine gun of a of a story right it's like
it's really effective because it's narrow and you're not trying to, you're not throat clearing, right?
You're not, it was, you know, it's like the opposite of how I write in some ways, right?
And I just, I found it very instructive to kind of be confronted with, with that on the other side of my mistake.
Well, I didn't have any literary abilities, probably.
No, it's well done.
But, I mean, you wrote, you wrote like a real book about your experience and that was to me, I didn't, I don't think I had the capacity then or the, the, um, the sense that.
anyone was interested in it. I was just trying to kind of go like, this is all the things that
I've seen. Isn't this fucked up? Yeah. I mean, there's an urgency to the style, right? I guess that's what
I was trying to describe. Yeah. Is that something you wrestled with? Like, because I know I did with the book
where you're like, I'm indicting a system, which I am also a part of. And there's kind of a, that's a tricky
position to be in. I wrote this profile. It was like my favorite piece I ever did at New York
magazine. It was about an anonymous Republican. And one of the many anonymous Republicans who would kind of
She had talked Donald Trump during the first Trump administration, but was a part of the system, right?
And part of that story, and it was part of what informed the choices I made in this book.
But part of the story was about how, I think I say something to the effect of, like, the press provides the alibi as it prosecutes a case, right?
Like, it was selfishly in my immediate interests to rely on people such as that.
Yeah.
Even though every time I would rely on an anonymous person such as that, I was further.
kind of cementing that system of anonymous contradiction with on-the-record behavior or decisions
and helping to perpetuate this system that's bad for people, right,
and probably bad for American society and was getting worse.
And it's not something I wrestled with necessarily with this book,
but I wanted to make sure that none of my decisions,
I had rules for myself for surviving spiritually.
like a scandal in public shaming.
Yeah.
And among the rules where just, you know,
everything has to be from love, not for love, right?
Mm-hmm.
I could never use anyone as a human shield.
I could never spare myself and harm someone else.
My first order was to have dignity amid my big indignity or honor
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And I wanted to make sure I wasn't, you know,
making any decisions on the page that,
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ego and just like the classic showing not telling right i mean that sort of was the standard
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I heard you say that somewhere that you were trying to get through a dishonorable thing, honorably.
What does that mean to you?
I mean, I was thinking a lot about honor.
Yeah.
Right?
Like when you're being, you know, rightfully, in that case, ridiculed, you're prompted a lot to think about what you did wrong.
Yeah.
And to assess what you did wrong, to assess what went wrong.
And I think there was something very interesting about a crisis, like a public drama, right, where everyone gets kind of distilled to their essential, like,
the lawyers are their most
lawyery. The press
people are their most press people-y.
And I
felt like my impulse to not
sort of judge anyone by their worst behavior
kept running into conflict
with the fact that I felt like, well,
it's like people who drink.
If you drink and you're like an angry,
mean drunk, that always scares me
about people because I think, oh, that probably is
revealing something essential
to their character. Yes.
That otherwise is, you know, not
accessible or that they're able to kind of keep a lid on. And I don't think it's a small thing,
right? And I guess it's the same under the kind of external stress of a scandal or of public
crisis where I just felt like I was experiencing a lot of people making selfish decisions
that were dishonest and like just screwed up. But I didn't want to do that. And it was a lot of me
like having to assess really quickly, okay, I'm going to accept this short-term discomfort or short-term
pain rather than eternal suffering, right? And it's actually easy to do that.
It's interesting that you would respond that way because I think the fundamental innovation,
if you want to call it that of this moment in culture, is that people have figured out that
if you dispense with honor or shame, it's actually a hack for getting out of scandals and triumping
over them. Like if you just, you throw out any sense of personal accountability. If you refuse to
cast a stone at yourself, if you just pretend it didn't happen, actually a lot of the mechanisms that
we have as a society for holding people accountable for things, because most of what is a scandal is not
actually illegal, you can kind of survive. And that's, I mean, there's always been shameless people,
but that's kind of a new phenomenon. No, I mean, shamelessness like animates public life in America
now in a way that I think it feels not new, but it feels like an exaggeration from how I
remember it, you know, in the Bush era or something of my youth. But a lot of people told me,
like, just keep going, basically. Like, these guys don't care. You shouldn't care either.
You should just take whatever assignment to go cover the end of the election. And it was an attractive
thought. I was like, oh, like, could I just, I could just pretend this didn't happen? And
And then, like, my insistence that it doesn't matter will eventually, like, manifest.
Yeah, there's not an appendage on Jeffrey Tubin columns in the New York Times.
Well, I don't think there should be.
But I'm just saying, like, there are people who things happen and they just keep doing what they're doing.
But unlike with Tubin, like, I really, I did something wrong, right?
Those ethics rules are really important.
They exist for a reason.
And I ran afoul of those rules.
And in that way, I hurt the whole industry.
And I took that seriously the kind of, like, public part of what I had done wrong.
And privately, like morally, spiritually, I took it really seriously.
It just seemed like this, it was a big deal.
Yeah.
Like, it wasn't, even if people were like, oh, who cares?
And, you know, the few people who were expressing something like that.
You let yourself down.
I cared.
Yeah.
I cared.
I did something wrong.
And I knew better.
And I didn't do better.
Right?
And like, that struck me as like, well, it struck me.
Yeah.
Right?
And it just seemed like a, like, something I needed to take seriously.
And I just, I couldn't really, I couldn't really like.
entertain this notion that I would just continue on and continue to, for a second,
I was, okay, yeah, maybe I will go cover the end of the election for, like, Creed and Carter
or whatever. And I just, like, it would front of foul of the main rule of, like, I had to
be able to live with myself, right? Where does that come from? Because that, where does that
sense come from? Where did you learn that? Or where did you pick that up, do you think?
I don't know. Do you think, I'm just, is that an innate sense? Is that something you get taught? Is that a
religious connotation because it is it's something that is clearly absent and I'm just wondering
how we lost it or it's interesting my brother and I were extremely different like he's just really
he's more type A like he was always in sports and he's a more disciplined person in a lot of
ways like a lot of overt ways and our in a lot of ways our parents were not very disciplined
people right like they struggled with addiction my mother struggled with had you know mental
illness and they both died young and they were sort of wildly irresponsible in a lot of ways,
right?
Yeah.
But they were really good people and they were really like in ways that I couldn't have
appreciated at the time that each of them died.
Like I think most girls who were like who really valorized their father, I assumed, when
he died, I kind of assumed I was grading him on the curve.
Yeah.
You know, like, and I wasn't going to interrogate it too hard.
I just kind of thought like, in one part of my brain, a very tiny voice, like, I'm probably
overstating things.
right? But that's okay. And I didn't really know very many people. You know, he died when I was, I think, 21 and 22. And then as time went on, the more people I met and the more that I just like was on this planet, the more I came around to feeling like, oh, no, he was remarkable in all the ways that I thought and in ways that I didn't know enough to appreciate. And the way that they both were disciplined was like they were both really hard workers. And they were both, there was a certain honesty to the
just to the way that they lived and the way that they tried their best to, like, be here, right? And I guess, so I see that with my brother, too, where, like, for him, you know, it manifests more as just, like, you know, personal responsibility and, like, he does Iron Man competitions and, like, but I think I see sort of the same quality in the both of us. And, like, you have to just deal with, with the world as it is. Yeah. And you can't kind of, you can't wish your way out of misfortune, right? Yeah. I mean, that's what.
I would think, but I don't, not everyone ascribes to that, clearly.
No, but I mean, is that your problem?
No, it's not my problem.
But it's just, it's an interesting, when that was a widely held societal belief, it acts as a check.
And we're, it's weirdly, that's actually the fourth estate, not journalism, like one's sense of shame or honor or reputation or one's ability to be like, yeah, I guess I did fuck up.
Right.
That's actually what journalism was invoking, because the idea that like, hey, if I get caught, that will look bad.
and I care about whether I look bad, as opposed to I only care if people who like me,
like me or whatever.
And so, like, there's a playbook now, right?
It's like, you fuck up or you're, you sense of bad stories coming.
It's like, like, you call this like the Russell Brand playbook.
Like, just become a right winger or, right?
Or conversely, if you're right winger, you're like actually become a never trumper.
Like, you can switch sides.
And then that side will forgive all your transgressions provided you hate the other side.
And it's this kind of like immunity clause you can evoke, right, or invoke.
And so what journalism used to do would be the disinfectant, but the disinfectant had to
care. You had to care if you looked bad in this report.
Yeah.
And when that goes away, or if that isn't a thing people care about, we keep throwing the exposés
in the articles and then we're wondering why it's not working.
And it's like, it's not working because they just decided that it doesn't work anymore.
Yeah. I mean, it's astonishing. And it's also like when I, you know, I found myself in this just due to my own error, right, this completely bizarre world of like sources familiar and like, you know, narratives forming and persisting kind of contorting just into utter, utter delusion. And if you don't participate in that economy, you know, it's a law enforcement cliche. It's if you're not a source your target. Right. And one of my roles was like, you.
knowing that you refuse to be a source anyway, like, because it's like, you know, if you don't
play, you can't lose. You can't win either, but you really can't lose. Actually, you can
definitely lose, right? Because it's not real, right? Like, I sure, but you can't lose anything
that didn't belong to you. Right. You can lose the media narrative, which is not yours to control
anyway, but you win whatever the sort of sense of honor or the limitation standards you set
for yourself. Yeah. And I just had to like, one of the things I just always instill would remind myself is
like any what's fake is ephemeral like I have to believe that right and if I don't waste this
opportunity of this rapturous crack up of my life if I don't waste the opportunity to kind of
to assess it honestly and to like figure out how to proceed better then I will be able to
correct those things with time yes but I can't um I just you know won't participate in the kind
of 3-D chess warfare that it would be, that would be required to win a public narrative.
And like, also, it's just in public, there's no justice in public narrative.
There's poetic justice in public narrative, but there's no such thing as justice in public
narrative.
Yeah.
And when you look at the people who, quote, and who get away with it, I guess the moral
question would be, did they actually get away with it or did they inflict some sort of
greater injury upon themselves, which is they lost the opportunity to reform, to change,
to understand, to grow.
I mean, like suffering, right?
Like, that, to me, that type of suffering is way too high a price to pay to avoid the short-term pain.
Yeah.
So.
What's interesting to me about all that.
And I was, I found this as I was reading the book, the book is very restrained.
That's what I would say.
Like, you choose not to use certain names.
You don't.
You have rules that you set for yourself, right?
What you would do and wouldn't do.
You're just saying.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm thinking.
So there's like a restrainedness to it.
But it's a restrained person writing about a moment or a person who was a person who was.
so fundamentally unrestrained. And that contrast is interesting. And I wonder if you've thought about
that at all. Yeah. I mean, I write about it a little bit, right? Where it's just like when your
privacy is violated, there emerges this expectation that you're going to further violate your
privacy, right? That like you must bear everything in order to, uh, I receive some sort of
absolution. But there were aspects of it. I mean, it was, because at first I was like, I'm never going
to talk about this. We're ever going to write about this. Like, I have nothing.
of use to share about that experience, but I'm always writing, right? And then I'm out, you know,
in L.A., like at the edge of the country, watching the end of the campaign. And it was just my
necessary context, right, for like the literal vantage point and the philosophical, intellectual
vantage point from which I'm synthesizing what became the Trump era, this 10-year period, right,
in which extraordinary things happen, right? He gets elected in the first place. There are two
impeachments. He's never been there before it shows. He's booted from office. It's part of what he says
is not an insurrection. Others disagree. He becomes a felon. He's shot at, right? Like, it just,
and then he's elected again. It's like this epic, insane story. And I felt, I always felt like,
I have to see this thing through. Yeah. Like, I didn't know when I agreed to cover it, I didn't
know that it was never going to end, right? Like, I was.
I was like the cup reporter and he was the unsurious assignment.
And so when I was asked to cover it, I was thrilled because he was a familiar character and I felt like I understood something of his psychology.
He's from Queens.
He's from the periphery of New York and that kind of to me, I was too, I grew up in New Jersey.
That explained a lot of, I thought, the way he operated.
And then it just never ended, right?
And it was like this ensemble that kept getting, no one ever left the ensemble, right?
It kept getting bigger and bigger and more unwieldy.
And I just felt like I was being crushed under the weight a bit.
And a lot of people that I covered round one with were like, not doing that again.
And I thought like, I have to, you know, actually I have to do it again because I have to see this through.
I don't like the context that I possess is important.
And there's something important about people having a fresh perspective too.
And I do value that.
But it's also important for people who've been here and know these characters to be here.
And so I was intent on doing that.
all of a sudden, and in some ways I felt like I was at the height of my powers too, and I had this
kind of new perspective on him, and I felt like useful in a way I hadn't in a while, and I had a lot
I wanted to explore and report out and assess, and then I couldn't, right, right, because of my own
error. And it just felt like if I was going to write about any of that, any of the last 10 years,
the ways in which my personal life and personal story collided, which,
that distortion of reality, seemed like really important context for any reader.
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membership. I'm not trying to let you off the hook, but I'm curious like what you think about
this. Something I thought of when I was reading the book is like, I do agree you were at the height
of your powers. I loved reading your stuff and you're very, very good at it. Thank you. Like when
someone is at the height of their powers. We make exceptions for, for, not even exceptions, we have
certain expectations for people who are great, whether it's like sports, finance, or whatever,
like music. We understand there's kind of a crazy and a chaos that follows. Like, we don't expect
somebody who's putting up 30 points a night in the NBA to have, or selling, you know, a million
records a month to be like orderly and have it all together and have this strict, like, we,
we just sort of expect it like scandal and craziness follows.
And then there's something about our reaction to what you did, your story, that it's not a double standard, but it is like a, I'm just wondering if there's something about writing or journalism that we're like, no, no, no, talent must go hand in hand with having it together personally, that we're not as surprised when we find out an NBA player is cheating or is doing this or that.
You know what I mean? Do you know what I'm saying?
Yeah. I mean, there aren't that many rules for journalists.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's like it's not hard to not run afoul of those rules, right? And I just like did.
So I understood last year I completely understood and I found a lot of value, frankly, in like, reading the criticism and absorbing the discourse around it.
and even when people were being extraordinarily uncharitable or unkind, often they had
something interesting to say.
And sometimes I agree, this more recent, like, chaos that has subsumed the publication of
this book is harder for me to take because I felt like, like, wait, I just did that.
Like, I just did the public ridicule.
I fucked up.
And I felt like I handled that.
right. And I tried really hard to not make any mistakes and how I handled my mistake. And why
is this happening again? And I hit this fall and then I kind of came around to as a coping mechanism
thinking that like, okay, maybe I was operating under this delusion that because I had done the right
thing that I had input good, that I should like extract some sort of good. And it doesn't work
that way. Of course it. Shouldn't they appreciate that you're on the same team? Like, of course it
doesn't work that way, right? Like, it's, and you must do good anyway. And it was, it was important,
I think, to be reminded of that. Yeah. And I think that's the problem, right? People are going,
hey, if I don't do the right thing, I can get away with it. But if I do the right thing,
it's still going to suck. And so we want karma to be real. And we want things to be fair and just.
And the reality is, like, you can do the wrong thing and get away with it. That happens all the time.
and you can do the right thing and still be criticized and not appreciated or not forgiven.
That's just how life is.
Yeah, but I guess it's like get away with it in what sense, so, right?
Because it's like I...
Keep your money, keep your platform.
Yeah, but at what cost, right?
Sure, sure.
I agree.
Like, I think the reason why I'm not crushed is because I don't have, I'm not carrying any shame about like my efforts to
wriggle out of um is there a difference between guilt and shame like because you feel do you feel
guilt about what happened you clearly you're holding herself responsible you brought a catholic here
today to talk about this well it's like i thought a lot about the distinction between shame and
embarrassment okay like i think shame is really important and i know that's shocking for
catholic to think shame is really important but i think shame is important i think embarrassment
is about ego because that's you want people to think about you a certain way
And it's about public perception, right? Shame to me is an interior experience, and embarrassment is more about an exterior experience. And I think shame can be really important if you have done something shameful. Like, you should feel shame. You should, you know, sit with that and figure that out. But embarrassment to me, like, none of this has been embarrassing to me because my value for this book or for myself as a human being is not derived
from the public perception, right?
But in terms of guilt and shame, I don't know.
That's interesting.
What do you think?
I don't know.
I mean, in the sense you're using shame,
which is like, here are my standards and I feel X because I fell short of those standards
or I feel pride because I lived up to those standards.
Then maybe we're using the words interchangeably.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like it's good to be hard on yourself.
I guess guilt implies fault.
Like, right?
you found guilty, you're not found shamed.
Yes.
Right?
You experience shame.
Yeah.
And I think in a way that maybe you don't experience guilt, right?
But it's funny that we call it a public shaming.
Not a public guilting.
Or a public embarrassment.
But like, so you're saying it's good.
But then obviously the thing we do to other people is not good.
No.
Yeah.
No, certainly not.
And like the, is it John Ronson?
Oh, such a good book.
Yes.
But that's a totally different thing, right?
Like that I think I consider that more.
more public humiliation.
Yes.
Than public shame.
But I guess it's private shame, public shame, or different things.
Well, it's hard because we talk about cancel culture as this thing that we went too far with.
It's obviously bad.
And I would agree with that.
At the same time, society does need some mechanism other than the law to say, like, this is not what we do.
And there's consequences for doing the thing we don't do.
Like, I think that's been the remarkable feature of the Trump age that it's like, hey, you can hit your wife.
on camera and still run a, you know, a professional fighting league. And the irony of also,
like, you run a sport where people just slap each other back and forth. It's like a remarkable
thing, right? Like, or you can say horrible racist things in a chat and then not lose your
job over the, like, there has to be some kind of accountability for, it's not that you should be
eternally damned or sent to prison or into exile. But that society does.
have to have some mechanism by which we go, like, here's the line. When you go over the line,
there's consequences for doing that, do I think? Yeah. I mean, I think, like, I guess it just
happens in a slower, invisible way in social situations, right? Where it's like, if you're just,
if you're unpleasant on balance, eventually you're not going to be invited to the gathering, right?
Like, your social circle winnows and winnows. But it does seem like just the attention economy,
me the kind of rotten values of that or that people who are loud and simplistic that wins,
nuance loses, right? But I always just feel like, okay, the loudest people are probably not
who I'm trying to talk to anyway. Right? Like, I'm trying to talk to the smartest person in the
room. And to me, that's the most open-minded person, the person most interested in and capable of
holding nuance. And just the most curious person, right? Someone who matches my curiosity, like I always
think about Michael Pollan, who for me is like the North Star. And it really,
what he is so among things that he's so remarkable at, he's a great, he's a hospitable guide, right?
Like he, as a narrator, you take his hand and you're reading and he's bringing you on this journey, whether it's, you know, through his garden or, you know, into the poppy plant and out into consciousness.
He's got this book about consciousness coming out next year that I'm so excited for.
I don't know him, by the way. I'm just like a huge fan of the work.
But I like that I always think about that where it's like he is not condescending.
He's assuming he's assuming that you're here for good faith reasons.
Yes.
And that you, that he has something to tell you that you're going to find valuable.
And like that is the gold standard for me, right?
So.
Yeah, I just, it's like you live in a world where you can get caught on camera accepting a bag of cash.
Whether that's legal or not.
Does it happen recently?
Who's the like the immigrations are or whatever right?
Yeah, yeah.
And like the legal system will catch up with that at some point or not.
But that should hopefully.
But the point is like I think we're grappling with the society in which the public revelation of that fact does not end anything.
It has just zero effect.
It's like doctors are prescribing antibiotics and they're just not working.
Yeah.
And we're just wrestling with antibiotic resistance at a cultural.
level. Right. And then the question is like, was it incumbent on those doctors to stop and think, well, wait, are we over prescribing antibiotics, right? Or should we be more thoughtful in our prescriptions for whatever is ailing our patients? That way we avoid a situation where everyone is antibiotic resistant. Like I, right? Right. And so I think when the answer to everything is public shame and cancellation, I mean, our whole system has been, was set up.
with a in a consensus reality where there was a definition of value or the shared understanding
of value when there were authorities and there was public trust, right? And even as the
institutions were being built, there was like a good faith that they were being built in good
faith, right? And that like it's, what is a high crime and misdemeanor? Right. It's open to interpretation.
But, you know, why is there no law preventing the bulldozing of the East Wing? It's like, well,
they didn't think about that.
Right.
Right.
Nobody thought about that.
I mean, there was no easy to swing them.
But, you know, it's like.
Yes.
Well, the founders believed that the system, that the system, the final check on the system was the idea of personal virtue, right?
Like, I think Adam says something like they'll go through the system like a whale through a net.
And so we had, it's interesting that they knew that, that, that we were vulnerable to the superbugs or the antibiotic resistant man on horseback, so to speak.
And that, but they just expected.
that would never happen.
I don't, I mean, the, if you can keep it part of the, a republic is overlooked, I think, right?
And like, it's, it's sort of to grandiosly, like, tie it back to my personal error.
It goes back to the, maybe noticing on one level the suspension of certain critical faculties or letting things slide with myself and thinking that I didn't need to judge myself in real time for, in minor things, right?
And then that creates a situation where you make a big mistake.
And I feel like in general, there's a kind of, I don't know, part of it's like, we just don't have a, we don't have a formal mechanisms for, maybe it's like the collapse of institutions and the collapse of the family, right?
Liberal institutions, the family unit are in theory like the midpoint before we get to law enforcement justice departments involved, right?
And if those checks aren't in place, broadly speaking, you can't count on them, then I guess it's like what you're talking about where there's no penalty in real time for misbehavior.
If I was talking to you in 21 or 22, could you have articulated these sort of values very clearly?
And then there's a period where you sort of you override them or forget them or is it more like you've come to understand them?
in the wreckage of what happened.
That's interesting.
But, I mean, I don't think I was consciously thinking about it, right?
So maybe I could have had some sort of like egg-headed intellectual conversation about it.
But also in that period, it's like it was, everything was sort of hazy.
And, you know, I was still covering Donald Trump.
I was covering, you know, the pandemic in the end of that first term.
And then it didn't really end.
And right?
There are all these challenges and trying to kind of make sense of like what that even was.
And then it's like this lithium fire that like the embers of it just spark up again, right?
And like it, I was thinking really very little about my own behavior where I fit in and my character fit in in this kind of broad corruption of character.
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I use in the intro of, trust me, I'm lying, I was
fooling around with that word disintegrated.
Like we go like it disintegrated in the air, right?
It fell apart.
But like if you think about disintegrating meaning not integrated, I was like that's what, like
I had my beliefs, I had my values, I was studying this philosophy, which now like I'm sort
dedicated my life to, and then I had my sort of day-to-day work behavior.
And those two things were not integrated.
It's not either that they were compartmentalized.
They were just not, they were operating independently at each other.
And, like, the reason they were not integrated is that there's a lot of cognitive dissonance between the two.
If they were integrated, then you have to wrestle with the contradiction between what you think your character is and your day-to-day actions.
And so you keep them apart from each other.
And you just, I mean, being busy is a wonderful way to keep them from integrating with each other.
Right. And, like, that's one of the things I write about a little bit about being a reporter is, like, I'm someone who really only has a flight instinct.
And you can just, almost anything, and as a political reporter, the stakes are built in. You never have to wonder, like, am I? Is what I'm doing? Doesn't matter, right? It matters in a really overt way, even in like small little episodes. And the gift of that is tremendous. Like, the few times I've ever been assigned a story about something else, I've always hit this point where I'm like, wait, but I need this story to be about the universe. Yeah. And mankind.
And I need it to be life or death here.
And this, you know, actor or this is not immediately high stakes in a way that I'm used to.
And that is sort of like a gift in the same way that like the great engine for these characters running for office, that's a gift too for a writer.
And there's something too about maybe this is what drew you to in the first place.
By looking and judging other people, you don't have as.
that you're putting energy outwards
that might otherwise go inwards.
Totally.
Yeah.
And I mean, I write about,
it's like when I started writing,
it was really like the height
of the personal essay boom
for young women writers.
It was like the,
maybe it was like the tail end
of the era of like Exo Jane,
but there was just a lot of that diaristic
writing about young,
female experience and sexuality.
I just could not have cared less
about that stuff.
Like I just thought the stakes are so low.
Yeah.
And I don't care.
You know, I care about things that are going to affect other people and the arrogance of the arrogance of thinking that you want to be in charge of anyone else's existence at like a, you know, a scale of greater than like a dinner party.
I should be the most powerful man in the world.
Right, right.
I should affect your life or the lives of people that you love.
And I, you know, I've got it, right?
That to me was just an astonishing premise for anything.
I couldn't believe that anyone could think that way.
And it was endlessly interesting to me.
But isn't funny?
And it allowed me to just completely turn away from that.
That seems like there's a sickness to that, right?
And then, but how often does the artist go like, isn't there a sickness and going,
the world wants to hear what I have to say, right?
And they are similar impulses of different scales and whatever.
Yeah.
And it's more like, I think it's like immediate effect or like less perceptible or just less overt,
maybe slower burn effect, right?
with, I do, I mean, I think that's part of why it's been interesting how all right I've been
with like really negative assessments of this book. And on the one hand, it's just I anticipated,
you know, that there just might be unpleasant reaction, just the premise alone, right? But the other
part is just like, it's a choice to be a public facing person. It's a choice to create work and
submit it for like public consideration. And so you really can't be all that broken.
up when, like, the public face is slapped, right?
Yeah, you, you control what you write.
You don't control what people think about you right, what you write, but that's...
And not really your business.
It's still nicer when they like it.
Yeah, I mean, like, one day I hope to experience that again.
But it's like, you assume the risk that it's going to be unpleasant, and it's still
privileged to do it, right?
And it's not a great tragedy.
Okay, so I have a question.
So you have, there's a section in here, which you've talked about before, but let me,
as I wrote a note on it, and I would be curious.
what you think. You said it was determined the only way for me to survive such a public
relations crisis. Tell all. Spare no detail. Spare my job in my life as it was. This was the
offer on the table. You could write your way out of it. The man for whom I worked told me, I did not
consider this. Have you read Molly Bloom's book? Do you know who that is? Oh, Erin Sorkin made a
movie about her, but she was that famous, she ran those underground poker games in L.A. in New York
City that all these famous and important people. Is that Kevin Spacey movie? No, that's a different
family movie. But she, so she's a, she's an Olympic level skier. She loses, she blows out her knee
and applies her skills to doing something that you're not supposed to do, right? It's illegal.
No one's dying, but it's not right. And she becomes quite wealthy and successful running these
underground poker games. And eventually she gets caught, as everyone eventually does. And basically,
the FBI comes to her and says, look, you can keep your illicit gains if you tell us who was involved in what
You did. And she famously gives up the money rather than tell people what she did. Now, one argument is like, you're not doing it because you don't want those people to come after you. But in both the book and the movie, and I've gotten to know her a little bit, she just felt like it was the wrong thing to do. Her, I did the crime all due the time. That was my view of it. Now, I'm always interested when people take certain moral stands that I don't totally understand. Like you might go, hey, you're all criminals. Yeah. Or all committing a crime.
And why wouldn't you say it?
And I think people might say to you, like, this is, I thought that was interesting because this is a central argument of the book is that, or the conceit of the book, which is that you don't spare yourself, but you don't really talk about anyone, you talk about other people, but you don't name other people and you don't, you don't, I'm sure you have receipts that you did not show, right?
And that's a moral choice you're making.
I'm curious what you think of her moral choice and then how you think about your own choice.
The two things I was thinking when you were talking about her, the first is just, I guess it's like it would be a sort of reverse entrapment, right, for her to do that. But.
Reverse entrapment. What do you mean?
I mean, like, she's the one who created the environment in which these people engaged in this illegal activity, right?
But something more bad people. That was, this would be the argument. I'm thinking. I understand her feeling like that's not right. But then also, I don't know, I'm thinking about like Tony.
Sprono, right? And like the pilots of the Sopranos, one of the great pilots. And, you know, he says
something to the effect of, you know, people used to go into their time. Right. And it's interesting.
I get it. I do. I get that. And it's also like using others as a human shield, that type of thing,
right? Like why that feels so wrong. And it's, to me, though, it's, at the time that I was faced with that
ultimatum, right? I was in this conference room in Lower Manhattan. I thought that I was going
to be talking about something completely different. And then all of a sudden, I'm faced with
this, being confronted over this affair. And the ultimatum was basically like sell out
yourself and the other party here. And then you're forgiven, basically, right? That's your
your penance for this error. And at the time, it was like, I didn't even know what, I couldn't
have synthesized my experience. Like, my experience was ongoing. And there were all these other
factors, too, right? Just in terms of like my, the security violation and the way it was colliding
with my work absent, the confrontation from my employer. And, and then just the betrayal that I
experienced that was sort of in process but had not yet like fully fully occurred both you know from
the person I call the politician obviously is the health secretary now or from from the person I called
the man I did not marry right but I like I didn't even know really what to tell at that moment in time
like right to tell all and say like what exactly you know and and there was no good set of facts there
was no like version of events in which I was some sort of victim or in which something had
happened to me, right?
But there's a version of the book you could have written that I think generally would
have been more redemptive.
I just mean across the board.
And then talking about the book separately, I mean, I just kind of felt like I shared
what felt like it was mine to tell, right?
And what felt like necessary context for what had occurred both with me and my character,
right?
And the dynamics of that relationship, right?
It's like I don't talk, for instance, much about the man I did not marry.
I don't write about why I needed to leave that relationship.
I might be able to guess at this point.
But there's some clues.
But that, to me, there's no public purpose for that, right?
That would have just been about me and my own, like, soothing myself somehow.
It could make you more sympathetic.
Yeah, but who cares, right?
I mean, people, I'm walking you through what people would say or think, right?
Like, why, what the motivated reasoning of people who might make the other choice would be.
Yeah.
I mean, I think the version that would have been much more satisfying, which was nothing I would never have considered doing it, would have been, you know, like chapters with people's names in which I, you know, on such and such date, I met so and so and this is what they did.
And here's why I am now condemning their character.
But I just didn't feel that way also.
Like, I wasn't angry at anybody else.
And even now, like, I'm not angry at anyone else.
I'm not angry at the person that I, you know, did not marry.
And I was not angry at him last year and, you know, I wasn't angry at the health secretary for personal reasons.
And I think, like, being able to make the distinction between I disapprove of that person's actions where I'm dismayed or disturbed by something that someone has done.
but I can kind of like isolate that and assess that for what it is at its appropriate size.
And it doesn't have to destroy me or affect my decisions and how I conduct myself in a book or in conversation.
To me, that's really important, you know.
And I just never, I felt like I had a lot to say about the last 10 years.
And I had kind of, I felt a sort of urgency.
And I also just, I didn't have a job for the first, right?
Like, you're someone who knows about stillness, obviously.
There's some forced stillness.
Yeah, stillness is important to you, and I had really never, I'd avoided it at all costs.
Right.
I sensed that your life was chaotic and busy as a way of not wrestling with or dealing with things that, some of which probably appear in the book and some of which you're probably still wrestling with and dealing with.
Probably will always be, yeah.
But I also, it was like, you know, the kind of the hamster wheel of the Trump administration, the first Trump administration, that busyness and the kind of like righteous.
feeling around it, that there is something sort of addictive is the wrong word, but really
attractive about that and really. And then it's like, it's this linear thing and everything
else is organized around it. Yeah. Having a task. And like I, someone who likes to have a
caper. Yeah. Yeah. You've got to have between one and three capers at all times to be happy.
But that constant motion was a really good way to avoid, you know, looking too critically at myself and my surroundings and questioning, you know, it was easier for me to flee. And then all of a sudden, I have nowhere to go. I have nothing in particular to do. I have no real responsibilities. And I found I didn't really have a choice other than to figure out.
But we're remarkably good at.
finding things to like the other option is you double down on craziness and dysfunction and
bad choices like you also could have done that yeah what would that have looked like sure it would
have been explosive and uh i i don't have the imagination for it i think it's funny because
patterns are clear retroactive yeah right like i think about some of the people that i
worked for and with dev charnie being one and so is why i'm reluctant to
sort of judge other people for their attractions or their time and other people's
orbit. Because in retrospect, it makes very little sense to me. But in the moment, it not just
made sense. It was like exciting and exhilarating. And I thought I was doing mostly good stuff.
And I remember one time I was talking to my aunt and she was like, it's interesting that you
and your sister both ended up working for like this certain personality type. My sister at one
point had a boss not that dissimilar to mine. And I was like, yeah, whoa, what does that say?
Like, here I am thinking I'm making rational or self-interested career decisions.
And then I'm, like, actually in this Freudian psycho-drama, for instance.
And then I'm like, whoa, I wish I'd, like, there probably no amount of pointing that out would have prevented me from doing it.
But it's so, it's so obvious in retrospect that it's just like, ugh, well, what was that?
Have you thought about that for you at all?
Oh, yeah.
And even like over the last, we were talking about the kind of present chaos externally.
and I was thinking like, okay, why am I back here?
Because it does feel like all of a sudden I'm back here.
Yeah, the one common variable in all these situations is you.
Yeah, right.
It's like I am the common denominator and, you know, I walked through the door and like I was
back at the welcome mat and I was, you know, it was sort of disorienting.
And I was thinking, well, what did I not learn last time, right?
What do I need to learn this time?
Because I, whether you think there's some sort of divine organization to all of this or
it's an accident.
of the universe, wherever you fall along those lines, like materialist, metaphysical, I just,
it struck me that it was a loop, right? And so why am I at the start of the track again? And
I theoretically, I should know better how to be here this time. Are you like, I want to get
off this ride? At first, yes. At first I was like, I did not, like, I didn't sign up for a round,
a round trip, but then now I'm kind of like, wait, why am I back on this? How did I get on
this ride again? And do I like the ride? Sure. Like, what do I not understand about how the ride
works? Like, I'm more, I guess on balance, I'm more curious about what's happening than I am
devastated by it. And I have to assume, or there needs to be for my survival, some utility,
Yeah. And I felt like the whole time with the scandal around the affair that it was like, again, if I didn't waste the opportunity of the public shaming and the private shame, that it would be like my new capacity for empathy, if that makes any sense. It felt like this kind of wrecking ball had like hit me in the chest and that the size of the blast radius would be my new capacity for empathy if I did not react from ego or from fear.
Yeah.
And that it would make me better at what I do and it would make me a better chronicler of people if I let it.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
If you have any sort of history of making bad decisions or definitely people in recovery deal with this where you're like, how do I trust my self, my instincts?
When the one thing I know is that I shouldn't trust my instincts or what I'm attracted to or what I feel inclined to do.
No, like I need a conservatorship, right?
And so, like, what does my judgment count for then, right?
If I could admit that there are some serious gaps here, how do I regain trust with myself, right?
And I guess part of, like, working through those things and assessing, you know, there's a lot in this book that I reveal that, like, does not, that nobody knew about, that makes me look terrible, right?
like um and i felt part of it just felt like that was my penance for having made mistakes and
and you know if i lied i put it in the book and like i explained that i lied and or i just did
something like totally boneheaded that was wrong in retrospect right but for me it was less
about like um it was like i think i i thought it didn't matter a lot of those things in real time in real
time yeah like it felt so peripheral and so um private
it, right? It's just hilarious now that we're talking about it here. But like, it just didn't
feel important. And then part of like the realization was just like, no, of course, like every little
thing matters so much. Yeah. Right? Like everything that happens here matters. And every choice
I make matters. And whether or not I can appreciate it in the moment or whether or not it ever looks
that way in retrospect, every little decision I make could be kind of like.
like the flap of the wing that knocks you off your path or puts you onto a better
path, right? And that realization is really important part of the process. Yeah, I find that the
excuses and rationalizations that made sense in the moment, they don't age well. So you tell yourself
it doesn't matter, you tell yourself, no one's looking, you tell yourself, everybody does it,
whatever it is. And then, you know, if you get caught a year later, that's bad. The harder thing
I found is like, what if you never get caught? Right. Right. Like, and you obviously
talk about some stuff in the book, but I think there's this line from Epictetus, one of the Stoics.
He says, you know, whenever you find yourself criticized or attacked by someone, tell yourself,
if they really knew me, they'd say something much worse. And like, like, oftentimes you're not
caught for the worst thing that you've ever done. Right. Or they're not able to ever fully understand
what happened. So there's this part of you. It just doesn't know what to do with the things that you
told yourself didn't matter. And maybe they didn't matter, but they matter to you. And you carry them
with you. Yeah. Also, I mean, there just was very little conscious thought about a lot of it, right? Like, I fell in
love with someone. As unbelievable as the facts of it may seem to a lot of people, which I understand,
like, there was no real rational thought process around it. Like, I just loved someone and cared about
them and suspended certain critical faculties the way that people do when they're caught up in
how they feel about someone else. And that's not to, like, say that there's no,
you know, free will involved in any of that, not to, like, activate the free will
doesn't exist, crowd.
But do you think it exists?
Yeah, I think I don't know what we're doing here if it doesn't.
Well, I know you want it to exist, right?
It's hard to be a stark.
Yes.
It doesn't exist, but, like, how open are you to the idea that it doesn't?
Some philosophers said once, and it's kind of how I try to live my life, which is to assume that
you have free will and nobody else does.
So it's like all your choices of great moral consequence.
And then everyone else's choice, they didn't have a say in it.
And there's a kind of, not pity, but an understanding and an empathy for like it couldn't have gone any other way.
Which is kind of what I took out of by Grand Central Station.
I sat down and went.
And even your book, which is you go like, man, love is like a hell of a drug.
It's blinding.
It can be deranging.
And sometimes it's for the best.
And other times, you know, I'm glad that it didn't happen to me.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
That's kind of how I try to think about it. Obviously, there's different scandals where it's like the person is sort of overtly, I don't know, when the person is victimizing another person, when it's less that and more just like an error in judgment or an overwhelming of one's facilities, I tend to be a little bit like there, but for the grace of God, go I.
Yeah, I mean, I felt like, I guess I felt a little liberated to write of his character, as I experienced it, and as I kind of watched it progress or devolve, right?
And because he had maligned me and lied about my character, right?
And so I felt like I owed him fairness and I owed myself affording him fairness, right?
but on balance the public interest in offering my context for what occurred and where it fit within
this broader story of this tenure period of Trump's rise to dominance and like the distortion
of reality that outweighed any like any feelings of oh well I can't do that you know I can't
do that and like because I was no longer violating the contract had been violated right like and that
doesn't mean that I felt like I had um you know there were no rules and I you know didn't
have to abide by my own code of honor around it. But I did feel like I had total freedom to
sort out exactly what I felt like was useful for this story and for explaining what had happened
and who he was to me and how I saw him, right? And I mean, it's a weird story.
It is weird. It's a weird all the way around. It's a weird story. Yeah. There was a scandal in the
Truman administration and he had some sort of
old cronies that, you know, did some stuff. There's this famous exchange between him and
Secretary of State, Dean Ackson, who says, like, you know, Mr. President, I think you've been
loyal to people who have not been loyal to you. And there's something about that that strikes
this as very unfair. And then I've come to go, like, loyalty's not supposed to be a two-way street.
No, I mean, that's how on balance, you know, one of the things I kept coming back to was, like,
my standards for myself are not affected by other people's standards.
for themselves or for others or for, you know, what they might be willing to tolerate from me, right?
Like what is justified is not the same as what is right. And, you know, the definition of having
a principle is that it's unaffected by external stimuli, right? Like, your behavior is not going to
change, like, how I feel about, you know, X matter. And that was like an important guiding principle
for this and just for this entire era of my life. No one ever talks about young cronies.
Yeah, that's true, because usually they're somebody you go way back with.
Yeah, yeah.
That's true.
Well, we apply, like, we attach terms related to age in funny ways.
Like, you always hear about ancient grains or, like, a young coconut.
Yeah.
So much of this is marketing to get people to care about one thing or see it differently than another thing.
And I mean, that doesn't mean marketing so much as, like, it's coming from corporate interest,
but there is just this endless amount.
Everything is covered in euphemisms and qualifying and hedging.
And that's part of, I think, wisdom is the ability to strip those things out
and be able to see them for what they are.
Right.
Yeah.
I've been thinking a lot in preparing to come here, thinking a lot about Marcus Rillius, obviously, right?
And part of what was interesting about writing through the experience of the affair was just like,
okay were my feelings ever real if he was never real yeah right and i still don't have a
satisfying answer for that right like but i felt like i had to kind of document with as much
integrity as possible like what it was and what it felt like and what you know i was experiencing
at the time and what it would it looked like at the time and like i'm sure my feelings about it and
my assessments will be really different in five years or 10 years you know or god willing
25 years or something. But it was interesting. But I also, it's like if we judge
Aurelius over like who he was privately to himself, right? And we do broadly, right? Like I do.
You seem to, right? It's, I'm not going to weigh whatever rumors or a legend about his
personal life and a taste for vengeance, right?
Yeah, we're also a lot of people think he was like repeatedly cheated on by his wife. And I go,
Like, is that a real thing or is that a 2,000-year-old rumor?
Exactly, right.
It's tough to.
And so it's like, I'm not going to weigh that against the body of evidence about his character or his intentions that we have, right?
What about comidus?
His son sucks.
Oh, yeah.
And he does give him the-
But a lot of great people have less great children.
Why is that?
And are you really great if your legacy, your most direct-
One of them is profiling your-
One of the, like, if your legacy, your most direct legacy, if that's someone who's...
Are you responsible?
Are your kids a reflection of you and your character?
It's like, it's like yes and no.
It's a complicated.
I don't know. I mean, you're kids, right?
No, no, I'm saying. It's a yes and no. It's both, right?
Well, I mean, obviously, they're learning their values from you.
And if you're a horrendous hypocrite, that will have some effect on them.
And at the same time, they're their own people who make their own choices.
And, like, you know, we obviously, we both hold parents responsible for their actions of their kids and then understand their kids are doing their own thing.
Yeah.
It's a tricky business. It's a tricky business is what I'm saying.
It is. And it's like, it strikes me just like anecdotally in my mind.
There's like really conflicting in like our courts of law, right?
Like sometimes a parent's held responsible for a child's crime.
Yes.
And sometimes they're not.
And it's interesting.
I mean, one of the one of Donald Trump's great, one of the only.
cases for him having a good character was always like, well, his kids seem to love him
and are in his life and are not dead or in jail, right? Like early on, that was like a...
Yeah, Hillary says this in the debate. I thought it was one of the dumbest things that you
ever said, but okay. Right. It's like how bad could this guy be if his kids are all functioning
and seem like at least moderately and sometimes extremely employed? And I never found that
super compelling. Is it related to him? So it's the inverse that compelling? Right. Maybe not. I think you said
once. So it's just like great men are often really busy. Yes. They're just gone a lot.
Yeah. If your dad was, if you're like, why is that kid the way that they are? You'd be like,
well, his dad was president, empire, billionaire, whatever. You'd be like that explains it. You know,
good or bad. Yeah. Although it's like I also just really believe in how powerful individual
choices are. Right. And like, and I really believe that like what happens privately within a context
between two people or within a family or a classroom or a big institution very well may change
the course of human history, right? It has. And so it's hard to kind of reconcile those two
ideas, but... No, it is.
I've had this unique experience of not just going through some of the stuff myself,
But then because I wrote a book about, it's kind of about media scandals.
And then also I wrote this book about Stozoism.
Like, weirdly, I get calls from people when their life blows up.
Right?
And so I've got to me.
I called you.
Yours was like, hey, I'm writing a book.
Do you have any advice?
Yours wasn't like, what do I do?
I've gotten some like, oh, I'm very worried about this.
This person is calling me at whether they deserve it or not.
Yeah.
Like, they're a leaf blowing in the wind.
It could go in a bad direction.
So I've just talked to people who are in the middle of these public shaming.
And we could talk about it a bunch of different ways.
But one of the things I have found interesting is the kind of support network that pops up.
Like James Frye is interesting.
He is like taking it upon himself to reach out to people who are in the middle of those things.
I think it's part of his recovery.
He's just like, hey, I know what it feels like to know that the world thinks are a piece of shit.
And it's rooting for this to get worse for you, right?
And, like, so I've been fascinated by, like, in the moments where that's happening, the people that lean in and the people that go away.
I imagine you learned a little bit about that.
Yeah.
I mean, this one, this one is interesting.
There's some people who are, it's like grief where some people are just really frightened and don't know what to say and don't want to think about it because it's just scary.
It's like, wait, but my whole existence is about denying mortality.
Like, I can't come near you right now.
And that I don't fault anyone for ever.
It's just like, you know, you can't, like, people aren't accountable for their limitations, I don't think.
And no one really surprised me.
I mean, some people have had really good advice.
Some of the advice is kind of infuriating in its own way, but they mean well.
And so you can't, you know, judge it, I don't think.
But, you know, someone had said to me early, early on, like, you don't have a constituency, so this is going to be really hard.
And I was like, what do you mean?
It was like, oh, well, you're not aligned with the right wing or the left wing.
And various factions within those factions hate you.
And also, I would say your audience is intermediated by a publication as opposed to like.
Totally, right?
Yeah.
And I like that.
Yeah, sure.
Like I like a barrier.
And I like some distance.
And there's a lot of space in the book.
And I think maybe in some way it was like to me just feels like kind of the charitable thing.
to do for a reader and like I don't want to tell anyone how to think but it's also maybe a way
for me to like fabricate some space for myself too right like this goes in both directions um
but the lack of that was interesting and people who've really who've been through it or who've
been through it I found that like sometimes people who are public people in some capacity and
understand something of being publicly shamed still it's not like um not everyone's reached like
total, I don't know what the term for it would be, like, the point at which they kind of, like,
turn the dial from AM to FM, like the break, right, the, the Carlin break or the Dylan break,
like, the point at which, like, they just baseline, like, don't believe a lot of what they read
or it infects their, like, that distrust sparked by their own experience and the distortions
related to it or their perceived distortions related to it creates just more general distrust.
like my brother on the phone earlier was saying to me, like, reading certain things about me
in the press and something in particular today, I guess.
And he was like, it's just making me, like, have less faith in general with what I read
because I know so, like, viscerally that this is so untrue.
Do you know about the gal amnesia effect?
No.
So, like, gal amnesia effect, I'm probably mispronouncing it.
It's basically like when you read an article or you watch something from the press about something
you know a lot about. You see all the problems and, you know, inaccuracies and insufficiencies. And then
then you turn to its coverage of the Middle East or the stock market or whatever the thing you don't
know about is. And you're like, sure, that seems true. The amnesia effect is our willingness to
see how terribly wrong it is in one or unfair or biased or the weakness is in the area that
we have the expertise. And then we conveniently forget that elsewhere. Or with time, we
forget it elsewhere. You could argue AI has a similar effect where it's like, if you ask it
something you really know about, it's woefully insufficient, but then you're like, you're playing
my vacation. Right, right, right. Yeah, it's interesting. I think, you know, I write in the book about
how in this time period, this 10-year period, it's like anything seemed possible. And like on the one
hand, that is a literal inspirational slogan. Anything's possible. But it also landed as a threat, right?
It was like anything could be believed. Sure. Because anything was possible. And there were no
boundaries all of a sudden because there are no standards because there's no consensus because
we're not living in a consensus reality. And there's no consistency either. It's
wildly. Because consistency requires boundaries and consensus. And there has to be some shared
understanding of value and those things no longer exist. And that is fascinating to me. Right. And
that's sort of what I have personal responsibility for it. And like I have free will, I think.
Yeah. But like I nevertheless, it was in that environment.
and assessing all of that closely in which I made a mistake, right? And that was interesting to me.
When the reason I was asking about, you know, who reached out is not that I'm not looking for names,
but there's a beautiful scene in Oscar Wilde's book, De Profundus, where he talks about this moment
he's being transferred from one prison to another. He's, you know, his life is ruined over, you know,
what we would now say are, you know, nobody's business. But at the time, you know, everything is
taken from. His wife, his family is his money, his reputation.
and he's being transferred from this one prison to another, and a friend, something Robertson, I'm forgetting his name, his friend, he walks down the hall and his friend's just standing there and he just kind of like smiles and nods his head. And he says, like, in this moment, that is everything that Jesus was supposed to represent. Like, that is, that is the Christian tradition there that, like, in your darkest, most abject public humiliation, the person who says, like, I see you and I haven't forsaken you.
And I do think, obviously, public shaming is bad and inexcusable, and we can't do so much about it as a society, but we can as individuals decide to be that person when someone we know is going through something like that.
I mean, I feel like I've been really fortunate in a million different ways, and that's one of them.
Like I, someone asked me recently, like, oh, like, did you lose a lot of friends during him?
It's like, no, what?
right like I was shocked by the question then I thought like oh wow like my great fortune that it didn't even occur to me that people um with whom I'm I'm consider myself really close friends that there might be any doubt right like and I thought that was it was like I felt stupid and then just so lucky that it hadn't even it's more unusual than you think it is I mean I guess you know or it's just like my friends know how stupid I am right like were there people that in the moment were like what are you doing like before
before it happened. Like, like, I sometimes go, like, I wish someone would have told me.
And then nobody knew. It was a secret.
But did they see a direction you were going? Like, I just think about moments and I go,
I wish someone told me. And then they were like, we did try to tell you.
I also was just making myself scarce, you know? And it's like, I think when you're keeping any kind
of secret, you, you keep a lot of other secrets, right, in the process. And like,
you're sick as our secrets. Yeah. And something I mean, something I write about in the book,
because with my mother and, like, the dynamics of the house that I grew up in.
And on the one hand, they're like honest people.
And on the other hand, we're all sort of keeping living in this weird, within this weird secret of her mental illness and her alcoholism.
And it was a lot of my existence was about the upkeep of lies, right?
To protect her and protect, I don't know what, but I was spending, I just remember being exhausting, right?
But there's something sort of comforting about that too.
And it's like, oh, my replicating this pattern of like falling back into a dynamic.
such as that and like seem so right and I think I write about like to my mind there is this
there's this sort of like paradise within the privacy of a lie and in preparing to roll out this
book I remember I was meeting with a PR person I was anticipating a crisis and um yeah it's
quite a prediction yeah and um they said something to the effect of like oh well like you want to fix
I assume you want to fix your like Google results.
It's a lot of, you know, crazy stuff in there.
And I was like, I kind of felt terrified by the notion of that
because there's a sort of anonymity in having a lot of bullshit about you out there, right?
Like there's a, in some ways that's much less scary to me at this point than like this, right?
Or, yeah, I don't know.
It's, I can't remember what the question was.
No, I just, I wonder sometimes.
when I know people that are like twisting in the wind what the obligation is, you know, like,
like, because it's, it's obviously there's a spectrum, right? There's like, they're totally innocent and they don't deserve this. And then there's the like, they really did it to themselves. And then there's the, bro, I think there was a time to stop emailing Epstein. Okay. You know, like, there's the broad spectrum of like how you decide to deal with someone who is,
in the hot seat.
Yeah, although, I should never, I was going to say something about Epstein.
It's all, always safe territory, yeah, same territory.
I wanted to change the narrative, so I wanted to talk about Israel and Jeffrey Epstein, that's okay.
But I, you know, I don't know, I kind of think it's like grief, though, where it's like, my view is that whatever private judgments I may have about anyone's behavior, you can always be a human being.
Yes.
Right?
And that doesn't mean that you have to.
to defend them, either privately or publicly, but I'm going to be a human being first, right?
And form criticisms once I have enough information, but usually there's nothing close to a
complete set of facts available, right, when someone's first, you know, in a public shaming.
And that's, you know, usually been my point of view about it.
And sometimes I'll get like a message and I'll think like, oh, I guess it looks that bad,
huh that like
I guess what did you say like when Monica Lewinsky is checking in on you
but you know it's interesting because so many people have brought her up to me and she's so
lovely and like I'm just I really am just like awed by her ability to come out of that
with just all of this kindness and grace intact and all this empathy and because you could
see very easily how it could have gone another way but I felt very much like okay well
because people keep mentioning her to me and it's like well what happened
to her happened to her, right? Her prefrontal cortex is not developed. Like, there was an enormous
power imbalance. Whatever else was true about that, like, it happened to her. Yeah. And I happened
to me, right? So it feels very different. It does. Although I would say, looking back on, you know,
couple centuries of scandals, it is very rare to find one historically contemporary where you look
back and you go, we were not hard enough on that woman. Like, yeah, we need a witch.
to burn. Yeah, we always need a witch to burn. But also, like, I can withstand burning. It's all right by me, you know? Yeah, that makes sense. That's a rule I try to think about, just as a person when I'm formed. I go, like, how is this? Now that we have some distance on any number of them, are we like, that instinct, whatever that is in the human tribe does not age. It does not age well. It ages like, well. Not typically. Yeah. Yeah. It's nice to be consistent about something.
Yes. Yeah. Conversely, it's not so true the other direction. We often do let certain men off with a slap on the wrist and then come to regret it. You know, like, I mean, look, generally probably public shamings are not good. But I'd just say, like, when you look at things that we get upset about, we're usually like, yeah, we were too, too hard, not too.
Yeah, I mean, the kind of like sexual fervor animating the public discourse is interesting. And that just sort of feels like, okay, I'm in a very old story.
here, right? Like, I am it right now in this story, or I'm back, I guess, for like season
two. And that's interesting. And it doesn't, even though it feels violating, it doesn't feel
personal because it's not, right? It has almost nothing to do with me, like in the actual
facts of anything. But that, you know, I don't know. I kind of, I get it and I'm interested
enough in it to, again, like to not be cowering about it. And I mean, it's complicated because
it's like, I get why, you know, I get why it's a tough one for people to, to process.
And I also, I'm orbiting pretty close to Earth, right?
Like, I'm a nearer villain to, like, treat like a pinata versus, like, anyone, like,
in the federal government or, you know, it's just, it's easier to, um, right?
Like, one of the people that, that sort of went through the both books for me that was always,
it was like, like, Billy Bush read both of my books like a back-to-back, the,
The Stozes is more than the media ones.
And you go, yeah, like, in retrospect, we sort of came down on the dude who didn't do the thing.
Yeah, but he's a translator for, right?
Like, he is the middleman and I was the middlewoman, like, translating these people.
Like, the great privilege of what you do is as a journalist.
It's like you go places and you step in rooms and talk to people who are of interest and consequence to the general public.
But most of the general public doesn't have.
have the time, interest, desire, ability to go and do that. And you must report back for them.
And you've got to be thinking about, like, well, what do they need to know, right? And it's a
privilege to do that. And I, you know, fucked up in such a way that I put that kind of contract
in doubt. And so I understood the last time, last year. Like, I understood the kind of,
you know, general. Well, access is a tricky thing, right? Because I'll say.
Maintaining the access, using the access, knowing when to make the break, when to when to do what Janet Malcolm says is the sort of dishonor, like the, when do you, when do you, when is the betrayal?
Well, I always think about Janet Malcolm and I always reread the journalist and murder. And, but I also think of, I think it's Jean Marie Lascus who said when I report, I fall in love. When I sit down to write, I get divorced. And I never have felt that way. Like I, I don't, I don't. I.
always felt like if I think it's like really the gaitlyse model if the subject is
surprised that means I have failed in some way but I like to argue and like if I disagree with
someone's philosophy or something or something they've stated like I want to talk about it because
I want to understand the nature of the disagreement like why they feel that way and that's what
to me what the access is for but also it's like as much as this was about my mistake within the
context of this election it was this isolated thing where I just fell in love with the wrong
person, right? And so it wasn't like a broad, my work has never been in doubt, right? Like, for
whatever it's worth it, maybe not much, like, you know, the magazine I was working for,
New York Magazine, like, you know, had some scary law firm, like, conduct their review of it.
And, like, it's not like my broad coverage and, like, the 10-year period that we're talking
about here has ever been in doubt, right? Like, nothing's ever been retracted. Like,
there's no. So that's been a little frustrating to seeing kind of like the, but trust and
respect your fragile things, right?
In retrospect, do you see that you have a tendency to compartmentalize?
Like, that's kind of what I notice, it's like, you love this person, but what this person is
doing, not just to you, but like their actual stated sort of like policy goals.
Like there seemed to, those seem to be, again, disintegrated or even like some of the people
that you're like talking to in the book after it's all happening, I'm like, oh, okay.
Like, I don't know.
It seems, is that the journalist part of you that is able to like.
Probably. Probably. But also it's like, I mean, parsing this is probably stupid. But for whatever it's worth, like in the period of time that we're talking about, it's not as if, you know, this was like a kind of peripheral third party effort. Certainly, he was not under the impression that it was going to end up how it ended up for a very long time, nor was I, right, nor was anyone else. And it wasn't as if we sat around and talked about the MMR vaccine.
Right.
Right.
Like, so.
But his negative impact on the world predates and would exist without becoming Secretary of Health and Human Services.
On vaccines, I understand what you're talking about.
But then it's also like, and part of this is, you know, operating under the delusion of just like wanting to assume the best of someone that you love, right?
But it's like, I do see that, you know, on the environment, on just Monsanto alone, right?
like those are big important things that like I valued and like I thought were admirable right and I also just like I think because I was so good at compartmentalizing like my job is to talk to people with whom I have in most cases enormous differences right and to be able to have a productive human conversation and try and understand something of them as a human being understand their psychology you can't really go into that just with judgment right you can hold your
agreements and those don't go away. But like if you're just sitting there vibrating with contempt
because of the differences of opinion, it's never going to work. And I got really used to that,
right? And I think it made it much easier to kind of like just focus on the human being and discount
the rest. But I also like I wasn't sure for like, you know, we didn't talk, you know, we talked about
music and the poetry and, you know. Yeah. And this sounds more judging than it is, but it's like that
expression, your mind so open, your brain fell out.
No, I think that's fair.
I think that's fair.
But it's also just like that, you know, it's not a rational thing to fall in love in general.
This is perhaps particularly irrational.
Yes.
But like, it's going to end in some sort of immense pain.
Yes.
Right.
And so no matter what the premise is or the premise of just like counting on another
human being, all these things are baseline irrational, but also essential to the human
experience, right? Yes. Well, I don't know where to land this thing. I don't know where
if you missed anything. I think I didn't. No, no, no, I'm just being general. You want to go
check out some books? I would love to. Okay, we're going to the bookstore. Thanks so much for
listening. If you could rate this podcast and leave a review on iTunes, that would mean so much to us
and it would really help the show. We appreciate it. And I'll see you next episode.
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