The Ezra Klein Show - Jon Stewart Looks Back With Sanity and/or Fear
Episode Date: November 4, 2024In 2010, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert held a satirical rally on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., called the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear. This was amid the Tea Party movement. Politica...l emotions were running high. And Stewart ended the rally with a speech slamming the media for stoking the country’s divisions.“But we live now in hard times, not end times,” he said. “And we can have animus and not be enemies. But unfortunately, one of our main tools in delineating the two broke.” That rally has a Rosetta Stone quality to it now. Because what Stewart was describing has only gotten worse. Our divisions feel deeper and more dangerous. So as we enter election week, I wanted to have a conversation with Stewart about some of the arcs he has traced in American politics since he first hosted “The Daily Show” in 1999. We discuss how the media has become increasingly segmented and polarized in the past 25 years, how that has affected politics, how he understands Tucker Carlson’s political transformation and whether his own politics have changed.Note: The Washington Post is one of several news organizations mentioned in this conversation. We taped this interview before the recent controversy at the Washington Post over ending its practice of presidential endorsements -- a decision made by the paper's owner, Jeff Bezos.This episode contains strong language.Book Recommendations:I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This (But I’m Going to Anyway) by Chelsea DevantezThe works of Kurt Vonnegut (Breakfast of Champions, Player Piano, Cat’s Cradle, Slaughterhouse-Five, God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater, etc.)Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Elias Isquith. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Annie Galvin, Rollin Hu and Kristin Lin. Original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From New York Times opinion, this is the Ezra Klein show. So you go back to the tea party moment in 2010.
Tucker Carlson had only just been hired by Fox News.
He was just two years out from being employed by MSNBC.
Elon Musk was standing for Barack Obama.
He got Jon Stewart then into his second decade as a host of The Daily Show.
And he and Stephen Colbert host this satirical rally to restore sanity and or fear at the
National Mall in Washington, DC.
And Stewart gives this speech.
But we live now in hard times, not end times. And we can have animus and not be enemies. But unfortunately, one of our main tools in delineating the two broke.
When I look back now from the vantage point of the era we're in and the eras we've been
in, this moment to me, it has this kind of Rosetta stone quality.
There's so much in it that is going to blossom in such strange and terrifying ways.
And there's something about the sanity fear framing.
It seemed like a joke then.
In some way, it doesn't seem like a joke now.
In the years since the rally, Stewart has continued to track the media's tendency to
amplify some of the worst, most divisive tendencies in American politics.
He's now back hosting the Daily Show sometimes he's got the weekly show
podcast with Jon Stewart, which is great.
So with very, very little time now before election day, I wanted to have him on
the show to talk about his understanding of this arc of these decades, what he
has seen, the way he has seen the media, some of the figures in it change the way he has changed.
As always, my email, Ezra Klein show at NY times.com
John Stewart, welcome to the show.
Thank you, Ezra.
I'm delighted.
I'm delighted to be here.
So can we go in the way back machine to the rally for fear and sanity and or my God, how
that's a, uh, how many years we were all young.
We were all young and apparently getting a contact.
I that has a little bit of a Rosetta Stone quality for me that, that, that rally, how We were all young. We were all young and apparently getting a contact high.
That has a little bit of a Rosetta Stone quality for me, that rally.
How did it come about?
How did you decide to do a rally?
I'm trying to think back.
I think what happened was this was at the height of Glenn Beck and he was doing these
sort of oddly demagoguish rallies
where he would go down to Washington
and you would see like older tea partiers in lawn chairs
sort of surrounding the waiting pool.
And I think it came of that.
I think I remember being on the phone with Steven
and we were just laughing about it.
And I said, we should just go down there
and bang one of those out.
I mean, it was an entire clusterfuck.
Like that, we really, I mean, as you could tell
from watching it probably, the preparation was not.
It has been very hard to get clean audio from it.
Yes, that's what I'm running into.
That morning, so Steven and I, I was doing my show,
he was doing Colbert Report.
So we didn't rehearse anything, we didn't do anything.
And that morning, we were driving over to the mall early.
And you don't, at that time, you really didn't have a sense
of if anybody would show up.
And we're driving in and there's a just a shit ton of people
pouring out of it.
We're like, Oh, what's going on?
And they were all going there and we'd only set up like two large screen TVs.
Like that's pretty much all we had.
And so we sat in a little makeshift trailer with the roots, Ozzy Osbourne, the OJs, and Yusuf Islam
and walked through, like we were literally walking
those guys through the ideas.
So the Roots are playing the songs and we're like,
Yusuf Islam, you're gonna come out and do Peace Train.
We're gonna do an old thing.
And then Ozzy, you're gonna interrupt
after like two bar stanzas with crazy train.
And Yusuf is just looking at it's like, but peace train is a beautiful song.
Why would you, why would you interrupt?
It was the whole thing was bonkers.
There's something about that rally I thought a lot about in, in the years
after, because in some weird way after that, I mean, maybe it was happening then too.
The political coalitions kind of split
into the aesthetics of sanity, institutions, systems,
in this house we believe in science,
and the aesthetics of fear, conspiracy, rage, anger,
a kind of nativist populism.
And you were beginning to see it, right?
Glenn Beck was the weird thing happening on Fox News.
But when you were looking at the landscape then,
like what did sanity mean to you
and what did fear mean to you in politics?
Well, I think it was, I mean, again,
I'm trying to put myself back in the head space of all that.
I mean, all of it was kind of a reaction to,
and our show was a reaction to,
what I saw as kind of this,
at that point, probably 40 year project
of rebuilding parallel institutions to the left.
So there was this idea, you know,
people always talked about like,
your show, it degraded the discourse
and, you know, poked fun at things.
And I'm like, do you have an AM radio like I used to because I drove to
a lot of gigs you know doing stand-up to the I don't know your listeners may not
know this show businesses they're very glamorous a lot of times you would get
in what we would call a rental car and drive to Rochester and then you would go
to Buffalo if you were lucky.
And then all the towns in between, Poughkeepsie's connected.
You know, you'd hit the old vaudeville circuit.
But I listened to a lot of AM radio.
And the vitriol and, I mean, nonstop fire hose
of degradation towards anything left of,
I wanna say Lyndon LaRouche,
but anything that'll left of that was ubiquitous.
So I saw that cleaving, that Roger Ailes
sitting in the White House in 1972 or wherever,
1973 or 1974 going,
I will never allow what the left did to Nixon to ever happen again
And so the right very smartly
Rebuilt their own institutions in their image
colleges think tanks media and
they portrayed anything that had been the standard institution as
wildly left wing, an activist,
even if it might not be, even if it just had the patina
of notions of equality or fairness,
the kinds of things that just don't fly in those situations.
So you're describing the fear side of this.
I wanna zoom you in on the sanity side side because I think that gets at something interesting
that happens around then and is a big part of politics, which is it's imbalanced in a
way, right?
It's not like good versus bad.
The sort of aesthetic that emerged, I think it emerged in media too at that time.
There is a lot in right-wing media that is about fear.
And left-wing media was not like,
we're gonna tax the billionaires, right?
Maybe it wants to do that, right?
The Democrats have become this party.
Well, you've got to confine left-wing media, though.
That's totally fair, but let me say Democrats, right?
The Obama-era Democratic Party,
the way the Democratic coalition is changing,
is not a class warfare coalition.
It is a coalition that makes a big point about technocracy.
If we could just come together and listen to the experts and look at the right charts,
I am part of this Ed Wong blog,
we'd all come to the right conclusion.
Can we just be sane about this, common sense about this?
It's a pro-system coalition.
In this weird way you develop,
I think this new aesthetic in politics that you guys pick up on, it's not like, oh, the right wants to go to
war against communism and the left wants to tax rich people.
It has this, this other cultural dimension.
It's like the left are the experts.
We're smart.
We think about things.
The right are, you know, they're the heartland, they're the real Americans.
They're tough.
Right.
And it's this whole other like slightly orthogonal, but I think now very dominant. the right are, you know, they're the heartland, they're the real Americans, they're tough.
And it's this whole other, like, slightly orthogonal,
but I think now very dominant way that politics cleaves it
is almost barely related to what people want to do.
First of all, I cannot tell you how often people
just throw the word orthogonal at me.
Do you enjoy it or no?
Everywhere I go, no, I don't know what it means.
Tell me what that means.
See, this is a problem with like the left-wing coalition
over here.
Uh, sort of existing separately from, right?
Ah, okay, okay, okay.
It's like a different, like a totally different space.
So that's, I think that's really a nice perceptive analysis
of those Obama years.
I would probably go further and say
that was the foundation of the left from,
I mean, I think that's what the Goldwater revolution
was more about, you know, this idea that
the best and the brightest, right?
That's sort of the Kennedy idea of we're gonna get the best and the brightest, right? That's sort of the Kennedy idea of,
we're gonna get the best and the brightest,
and that's gonna get us Vietnam, you know?
But I think in some ways what you're describing
is that original cleaving that I think Obama
maybe represented, but is much more about
that Kennedy coalition that came in
and the Goldwater coalition that rose up to oppose it.
Or I mean, Roosevelt to some extent,
when you think about the New Deal
and maybe that's what they would consider
the original sin of the left,
this idea that government will expand to help people,
which was a huge sin.
The idea that, hey, wait, that guy's hungry?
What if we gave him soup?
And people would be like, what?
No!
That is the job of the sisters of the poor.
That government can't do that.
But ultimately, that's been the battle.
I wanna play you a bit of your speech that day.
I was going back and listening to it.
And one thing that struck me about it,
yeah, I'm so sorry.
Nothing worse than this for me.
This is a terrible, terrible nightmare
that I'm about to experience.
By the way, and the rally to resource sanity,
here's what I think social media exists for.
Social media exists for people to remind you
what they will never forgive you for.
Like what we thought was kind of a larf
and we're gonna have a fun day has turned into,
there's very little I can do, even today,
that people won't come on.
So I get two things on social media in the comment section.
One is, you're a Jew.
That's just kind of no matter what happens,
whether I put out like, this is a picture of my dog
and like somebody's gonna come in the comment and be like,
why did you change your name Jew and
The second is I will never forgive you for that fucking stupid rally to restore sanity that
Apparently handed control of Congress to the Republicans. You know, it sucks for you
It has become the worst thing of all
Yeah text and that is how that is how we are treating it here. You've, you created a text.
Yes.
So I want to play you a bit of your speech. I'm very sorry. But one of the interesting
things about your speech there and about your show in that time, about Stephen Colbert is
it's, it's not really about the right, it's about the media. So, and the way that the
media amplifies hostility and distorts relationships between Americans.
Sure. Because the image of Americans
that is reflected back to us by our
political and media process is false.
It is us through a funhouse mirror,
and not the good kind that makes you
look slim in the waist and maybe taller.
But the kind where you have a giant
forehead and
an ass shaped like a month old
pumpkin and one eyeball.
So why wouldn't we work together?
Why would you reach across
the aisle to a pumpkin-assed
forehead eyeball monster?
If the picture of us were true,
of course our inability to solve problems
would actually be quite sane and reasonable.
Why would you work with Marxists
actively subverting our Constitution,
or racists and homophobes
who see no one's humanity, but their own.
Jeez.
How does that hit for you now?
Well, there is very little in this world, more unappealing than the
sound of your own voice being at moments sincere or, or also projecting.
Like it's, it's very hard to listen to yourself projecting into a field.
It's like a bizarro campaign speech where you're like, Oh, I, it has the rhythm
and tone and volume of a campaign speech, but I'm talking about a pumpkin ass.
So there was a big idea at that time.
Barack Obama used to talk about this all the time, right?
It's the subject of the famous 04 DNC speech that launches international
politics and that cable news and later Twitter and the 24 hour news cycle and It's the subject of the famous 04 DNC speech that launches him to national politics.
And that cable news and later Twitter and the 24 hour news cycle and all the rest of
it, it distorts us.
It's a fun house mirror.
We get pumpkin asses and single eyeballs.
I'm so sorry about that.
That is not the appropriate reference.
It's a vivid image.
A vivid image.
Right.
And it's wrong.
And then on the other hand, as time went on, and I wonder sometimes whether the media was
cause or effect here, right?
Politics begins to feel, I think, a little more not pumpkin-assed, but when I watch
people in politics, when I watch Donald Trump, when I watch people acting in Congress now,
I wonder to myself which one, which of us are the real
us, right? It doesn't seem like always that our conflicts are so overstated, that the
enmity is a distortion. Did you feel it is something that the media amplified and then
it became reality? Or do you feel like it then it became reality?
Or do you feel like it's still not reality?
Well, it's probably not as black and white as any of that
in terms of, you know, is it reality?
But I can tell you this, I mean, I live in deep maga country
where I am and there's, you know, New Jersey's a blue state,
but there are really red pockets and I live in one.
And on a day-to-day basis, so if you're telling me like,
do I think my neighbors have an enmity
and an unpleasantness that I can't cut?
No, I don't think that at all.
I have wonderful and meaningful relationships
with people that, and there's certain topics
that you try to avoid and there are other topics
that you don't avoid at all and you give each other
tremendous amounts of shit for.
So, and again, that's
Anecdotal not data so I can't tell you what's what I can only tell you my experience
But in my experience
media is
Has an effect it has a weight and it has an ability to warp
Perceptions, you know cable news to me was mind-blowing and it has an ability to warp perceptions.
Cable news to me was mind blowing.
24 hour news cycle is good for one thing and that's 9-11.
Like when 9-11 happens, you want that fucking station
to be on all day and you want people
and you want something because the world
is so tenuous in that moment.
But in the absence of it,
how are you gonna keep people watching?
We have to, in some ways, impose kind of a contrived urgency
or a fear, and it's nothing new.
It's just a question of degrees.
How many times, you know, in the olden days
of Roger Mudd and eyewitness news,
it was, you know, do you have children?
Well, you won't believe the dangers in your bathroom.
And you're like, well, I would, I shit there.
Like I would think it's probably not hygienic, but it's always been about.
How do we keep the eyeballs?
Right.
I'm going to use, can, may I use a not safe for work and somewhat a tawdry
example here as a, before now, this has all been safe for work.
This has been your version of PG.
This is a classy program.
So I don't.
You do what you need to do.
Ezra, you're a good man.
Thank you.
When I was a young man, 13, 14 years old,
if I got ahold of a Sears catalog,
and there was a picture of a woman in a bra in it,
I was like, this is the most sexually exciting
and arousing image. And as you get older, you I was like, this is the most sexually exciting and arousing image.
And as you get older, you get to like,
that doesn't work on you anymore.
And you get to that point where you're like,
three people, a goat,
and someone's singing Pavarotti.
You're like, you know, that is,
you have to keep stimulating people further and further to different extremities
to get that same hit of dopamine.
And those apps and that media, especially now, are scientifically designed purposefully,
like the woman who was blowing the whistle on Facebook, like our food is designed to
escape that part of your brain that says, I should stop eating right now. blowing the whistle on Facebook, like our food is designed to escape
that part of your brain that says,
I should stop eating right now.
Like this is purposeful.
The way that we are divided as people,
some of it is political and weaponized by political actors,
but the majority of it is capitalism.
Capitalism with the idea of how do I generate the most income out of engagement?
And it turns out fear and anger and hate and outrage pay huge.
I'm not suggesting that a monkey washing a cat is in a tremendous video and that we'll also
get clicks, but that's not a business model. The business model is creating an atmosphere
of outrage and anger. And so when you ask, does that have an effect? It absolutely does. And I
think it does rewire the brains of the users.
When I was on your show, we were talking about
a piece of this actually, which is the way that
you were saying, you know, there was AM radio
and then there was Fox News.
And one thing that has happened in, I mean,
in my lifetime, right, which is, and I'm 40,
is this tremendous segmentation.
The media broke into these little competitive slices,
and competition can be great in the sense
that it creates a lot of innovation.
And if the innovation is how to get your little slice
away from everybody else, sometimes the competition
can become warping.
And one of the things I always think people get really wrong
about the media is they think that it is stronger
and more self-directed than it is when particularly
when it has gotten very, very competitive.
And it has-
When you say self-directed, what do you mean by that?
I've been involved in lots of different media
over the years.
And I think something that has surprised me
from going from somebody who reads it to somebody
who makes it is watching the way the media comes to reflect its audience unless a tremendous
amount of editorial strength is applied in the opposite direction.
So the sense of the media just driving the audience is not quite right.
You just named, you named the game.
You know, and I think we talked about this,
a lie travels eight times faster than the truth.
But that means that the truth has to work
nine or 10 times harder than a lie.
And lies are the thing that are most weaponized.
The truth is rarely weaponized,
but the lies sure as shit are,
because that's what propaganda is and
so the thing that you just said about
the media not being self-directed I
Think is probably putting your finger on in my mind exactly. What is troubling?
that they themselves are victims of
that they themselves are victims of the incentivized algorithm
that they're trying to compete with, as opposed to viewing it as part of an ongoing battle
to combat lies.
Your show has existed in two forms over time, right?
There's the form on Comedy Central,
and then the chopped up form that goes on YouTube.
Right.
Does YouTube change it at all?
Do you understand the YouTube difference as an audience?
And do you think that the fact that it has this other life
has shifted the way in its earlier incarnation
or in its current one, the show gets made
or what gets on it?
It hasn't changed the way we make it.
I don't know if chopping it up changes
the way people experience it.
I would guess it does.
You mean in like, because people get shorter and shorter,
like it lasts?
Not only do they get shorter and shorter,
but in an episode, I think about this all the time
in my work, right?
When I was running Vox, when I was at the post,
it used to be that you bought the paper as a whole, right? Vox, when I was at the Post, he used to be the guy, he bought the paper as a
whole, right, or the magazine, I was at the American
Prospect, he got the thing as a whole. And so, as an editor
at one of those places, you would balance things out, the
stuff that was really appealing with the stuff that was maybe
a bit more vegetables, the stuff that was a little bit more
right and the stuff that was a little bit more left, across
the bundle that you are offering people.
But when The Way Things Worked was he grabbed one article and shared it around,
and that article is then how people understood you. Your ability to exercise editorial control
over the whole of the thing went away. And so, you know, maybe you do an episode that has
different things in it for different people or as a whole it exists in some way.
But then the fact that each segment has its own life
when I'm watching it on YouTube,
which is often where I watch it.
That sort of control, that ability to give you
the balanced diet, it's actually just not
in your control any longer.
Yeah, I mean, boy, that's a good one
because television is so different
than, you know, I think your background is probably more in writing and and how people
consume but but reading is is such a more active process than viewership. And so I think because I have always been in stand-up or television, I assume a more
passive audience.
And so I never think quite about, did they get the whole thing?
Because I just always assume they're doing something else.
Like especially, you know, it's 11 at night, it's 11.30 at night. I just always assume that I was a mild form of foreplay,
but just kind of, so I think the interesting thing
about our process that's maybe different
than what you're describing is how little we think
about who might watch it and how they might watch it.
And someone asked me this once, they said,
has the social media or any of those other things changed the way people
consume your show? And I was like, I don't know. I don't know them. I know this.
It hasn't changed the way we make it, which is probably stupid.
It has changed the way we try to publicize it. Like we will send out,
like if there's a good joke chunk,
we'll send that out there and maybe people consume that as a way to maybe entice them.
But the other part of it is you're looking at the totality of analysis and news that
makes up writing, a considered art form that you're really able to express a variety of different elements and you need the totality of
that to you know actualize your your readers. The Daily Show really was like
one op-ed and then and you know it became the evolution of The Daily Show
was in we became you know a series of monologue jokes that became slightly
more essayistic but it was always just one essay.
So the burden of carrying that larger information world,
I think we never felt, if that makes sense.
And because we were steeped in television,
you don't think of it in the same intellectual way
that like you might as you're building Vox
or as you're thinking about the New York Times. Yeah, the other thing that makes me think about, which is more private thought I've
had over the years, is one of the dangerous things as media went online.
You always want to be selling something that isn't the politics as your service to the
audience, which is to say you were selling jokes as your first service to the audience
and there was politics and analysis alongside that, but they could come for the jokes.
He didn't have to agree with the politics.
The New York Times, that's reporting, right?
You might hate what you understand to be the New York Times politics, but there's a ton
of international reporting and we have people all over.
The New Yorker, it's the narrative journalism, right?
There's a politics to the New Yorker. But you can come for the stories first. And when you just sell in the
politics, when you sort of distill it down to that, I mean, you are sort of making this about
lies and truths. But I think once it just becomes a politics, what you can really,
like you have to be in agreement. If you're a highly ideological organization
and you have an audience,
you have to be in agreement with the audience
or they have to be in agreement with you
or you're going to die.
And the way that the internet unbundled everything,
you couldn't just be coming for the sports.
It made that much more intense.
Yeah.
So again, that's when we talk about weaponization.
So it's this idea, it depends on,
I would say rather than lies and truth,
maybe the binary that I would talk about
is good faith, bad faith.
Are you a purely political actor?
Or do you believe there's utility in information?
Or utility in good faith argumentation?
I would say that a lot of the media
is not good faith argumentation. It's
political actors weaponizing forms of communication for the desired goal of shifting a political
conversation towards one side. You know, and there's different parameters to that. You
can do that by heightening your side's political thing. You can do that by demonizing the other
side's political thing. You can do that by underizing the other side's political thing, you can do that by undercutting,
you can do that by warping.
But that's the real difference.
I think media doesn't know how to deal with bad actors
and bad faith actors that have weaponized it.
And so they're forced to, it reminds me of every
Supreme Court confirmation hearing,
where the person that has achieved this level of accolade
as a lawyer or as a judge or whatever it is,
sits there and they say,
well, what do you think about this?
And they go, I am an umpire.
I would call balls and strikes
and I would start a decisis the precedent.
It's what I, and then they get on the court
and they're like, I hate women.
And I'm gonna do, you know,
it's all a bullshit show that's bad faith. You may remember, or actually many people may not remember, there was a show on CNN
called Crossfire for a period of time.
That I'm not familiar with.
But it sounds fantastic. I like any show that is named after what innocent
bystanders get caught in, in a, let's say, gang violence.
For somebody who's never seen Crossfire,
because something happened and ended up
getting taken off of the air due to the actions of a rogue
comedian, what was it?
What it started out as was this idea of good faith argumentation between people
of differing political viewpoints.
The original premise of that is not by definition a bad thing.
I don't necessarily think that the binary of right and left or liberal and
conservative is a particularly useful one, but it was Michael Kinsley and
Patrick Buchanan, the original sanity versus fear, actually. Yes, one, but. And it was Michael Kinsley and Patrick Buchanan, the original Sanity versus Fear, actually.
Yes, but exactly right.
Slate versus Father Coughlin.
But what it turned into was,
and this is maybe the critique of Crossfire
that I think everyone has misunderstood was this idea.
I wasn't calling for civility.
I was calling for a non-kabuki theater version.
That debate, of course, should be robust and at times angry,
but it should be in a modicum of good faith.
And what it had become was sort of this very weaponized
in Santa Vice theater.
So when you ask again, back to the original question,
what comes first, the chicken or the egg?
Well, what came first was an intention
of having really interesting argumentation
that could be illuminating and articulate differences.
And what the business model of 24 hour cable news
turned it into was a perverse
exercise in cynical weaponized divisive conversation.
You're going to enjoy this.
So I'm going to play a clip for you.
Sorry.
This is not fun.
You've done a lot to deserve this.
There's karma.
You do this for other people.
This is unpleasant.
You have listeners out there.
Has this not happened to you?
No.
Really?
No.
Yeah, unfortunately it's happening now.
I've not had a this is your life like this
where you play things that,
my wife, after Crossfire, my wife,
and this was before everything became viral
and things like that.
That really hadn't happened at that point.
This was a long time ago.
This was like 2000 and I don't know what, four, six, eight.
I have no idea.
My wife called me, called me, not texted me on my iPhone.
None of that shit existed.
She called me and said,
don't you ever do something like that again.
And I try and-
I'm gonna play first what you did and then we can talk about it.
Sorry. You can cover your ears.
I'm here to confront you because we need help from the media and they're hurting
us. And it's the idea is.
If the indictment is, and I have seen you say this, that Crossfire Roots is everything, as I said in the intro,
to left, right, black, white.
Well, it's because, see, we're a debate show.
It's like seeing a one-shot on a news is everything.
No, no, no, no, no, that'd be great.
To a storm show.
I would love to see a debate show.
30 minutes in a 24-hour day where we have each side on
as best we can get them.
No, no, no, no, no, that would be great.
And have them fight it out.
To do a debate would be great,
but that's like saying pro wrestling
is a show about athletic competition.
I think you're a good comedian. I think your lectures are boring.
Let me ask you a question on the news.
No, this is theater. I mean, it's obvious.
How old are you?
35.
And you wear a bow tie.
Yeah, I do. I do.
So this is...
No, no, I know, I know. You're a great theater.
Let me just go. Now, come on.
And listen, I'm not suggesting that you're not a smart guy because those are not easy
to tie.
But the thing is that this, you're doing theater when you should be doing debate, which would
be great.
You do debate.
No, it's not a pro.
It's not honest.
What you do is not honest.
What you do is partisan hackery.
I knew Tucker Carlson in those days.
And his signal characteristic to me, the thing I think you were picking up on particularly
about him is he treated it all as a joke.
You can go back and read Tucker Carlson's old magazine journalism.
And it's great, hilarious magazine journalism.
He was a very, very good magazine writer when he was young.
And he went through all these, you know, very quick transformations.
He was on MSNBC for a while.
People forget that.
Rachel Maddow's, one of her early breaks was that she was a regular contributor
to Tucker Carlson's show on MSNBC.
He was this kind of good times libertarian type.
And he was a guy who treated it all kind of as a game, right?
Above it.
I guess what I will say for him now is I don't think it's a joke to him now.
Something happened there.
I think his politics are much more serious and much more real.
And obviously for that much more dangerous.
Humiliation happened.
Yeah.
I'm curious how you understand his, what happened to him psychologically.
Well, I think, and I hate to do this to you Ezra, I'm going to, I'm going to describe
this to you in professional wrestling terms
since that was one of the analogies that I used on there.
See, this is actually the sport I know.
Okay, then Ezra, you and I are gonna have a good time here.
We're in good shape here.
K-Fabe, I got it.
Beautiful.
So what I was complaining about on Crossfire was K-Fabe,
was this idea that this is just theater
and everybody's playing a character
and nobody's a ba-ba-ba.
But the other way to describe it for them is
there's an establishment and then there's
the anti-establishment, right?
The disruptors and the rebels.
Tucker Carlson was establishment
and he tried to be a face, he was a heel.
Like Fox News, Megyn Kelly, same thing.
Face being a good guy, heel being a bad guy.
That's right.
So she's on the heel network, Fox,
but she's kind of the face on Fox.
She's the one that like every now and again
will say something and like the establishment
or liberals will go like,
wow, she actually, that's empathy.
That's like, that's interesting.
Oh, she's not toeing a dogmatic party line, right?
So they decide like, oh, I will live amongst the faces.
I will join them.
I will be a part of the establishment
and the establishment and the faces reject them.
They feel wrongly and with a dogmatic litmus test
and it's never good enough and it's their intolerance
that put them in that position.
So they tried to live amongst the normies, right?
And when that blows up and creates humiliation
and returns them to, I think, their truer selves,
I prefer them the way they are right now.
I kind of dig it.
It is like, I'd rather someone not pretend to be Barbie
and just be who she is,
which is, I think, Ursula from The Little Mermaid.
See, I went from pro wrestling to The Little Mermaid.
You know, in many ways, Ezra,
I am still stuck in the same entertainment options
that I was using when my kids were little.
I am frozen in that time.
But do you get my point about like,
what happened is they view,
and Donald Trump in the same way,
he views that there's this world that is excluding them,
and they are excluding them purely for dogmatic,
and they think they're better than me,
and they hold these views
that they think their shit doesn't stink.
And I stepped into that world and tried to be you know, be amongst them and they rejected that
because they're assholes.
And now I can just be in my own world
and be as angry and as vicious as I think I was treated.
And I think that's kind of the way it goes.
I think it's so interesting.
I don't know Megyn Kelly's story as well as I know, or watched Carlson and Trump. I think it's so interesting. I don't know Megyn Kelly's story as well as I know or watched Carlson and Trump.
I think it's very similar.
Yeah, I've just.
Her moment was the, I joined NBC.
This morning is the launch of Megyn Kelly today, just about six minutes from now.
Megyn, good morning.
Good morning.
I can't hear anything you guys are saying, but I'm excited and we're excited for the
show.
Didn't go that well.
And by the way, in both instances, this is after being run out of Fox News, by the way,
because she asked hard questions of Donald Trump at the first debate, right?
She was rejected by the right first because she was not sufficiently pro Trump and he
came after her and within a year she was out.
Right. And that's why I was saying that's what I meant by she was a face.
She became a face.
So if you think about it, both Tucker Carlson and Megan Kelly were rejected.
And the reasoning behind their rejection, I think is still misunderstood.
Uh, I didn't get crossfire canceled crossfires ratings sucked and CNN
looked for a way out,
and that was a convenient flashpoint.
And by the way, none of that had much to do
with Tucker Carlson anyway.
Person I really didn't like there was Novak,
but he just wasn't on the show that day.
But, and Megyn Kelly in the same thing.
Her show just wasn't connecting on NBC.
And I want to begin with two words.
I'm sorry.
You may have heard that yesterday we had a discussion here
about political correctness and Halloween costumes.
And then she had that moment of a...
It was a blackface, I think, comment about the thing.
I defended the idea, saying as long as it was respectful
and part of a Halloween costume, it seemed okay.
Well, I was wrong wrong and I am sorry.
If her show was killing it.
They found a way to forgive it they found a way to keep her
on there that if but they used it as a convenient excuse.
After public outcry stemming from controversial comments
she made this week all eyes are on what happens next for the
anchor as her time with the Today show comes to an end.
The move comes four days after her blackface comments that provoked a firestorm, leading to a tearful apology.
The chairman of NBC News condemned Kelly's remarks during a staff town hall,
according to Variety, saying,
there is no place on our air or in this workplace for them.
But I'm sure for her, it was incredibly painful
and felt like a canceled because of my viewpoints.
But the truth of the matter is,
NBC executives and CNN executives, they aren't woke.
They aren't any of those things.
They're fucking desperately trying to hold onto their jobs
by generating ad revenue by whatever means necessary.
And so that's what they got caught up on.
And by the way though,
the way that it happened attacked them at a core level.
And that's what's created that.
Like I've been canceled a shit ton of times,
but the only reason I was canceled is like,
the network executives just were like,
yeah, this show sucks.
But they didn't say like, you're a bad person
and that's why we're canceling the show.
And that's what they did to them.
The industry, rather than standing up
for what was really going on there,
which is you're not generating enough revenue and interest to
justify your large contract or whatever it is. They turned it into we're getting rid of you for a
moral failing or lapse. And that was wrong. And that's not listen, I don't care for what they do. I don't care for their opinions, but what happened to them was wrong.
The executives are interesting here.
I was thinking about this when you were relaying that story about Roger Ailes.
Yes.
There was a period of time in my life where I did a lot of MSNBC and was a guest
host on a lot of the primetime programs there.
And so I knew the people who ran it pretty well.
And what I would say about the people who ran MSNBC was they were
fundamentally not that ideological, they were television executives.
What they cared about, and that's why Tucker Carlson had a show,
and why they were so excited about Joe Scarborough,
you know, and still are, why recently they tried to hire Ron McDaniel,
the RNC chair, sort of disgraced RNC chair that didn't end up
working out due to revolt by people at the network of morals. Roger Ailes is honestly
ideological, right? He had, as he's put it, he had a vision, right? He had a view about
how things should be. He wanted to be successful, but he also actually knew what he was trying
to achieve in the world. Those NBC executives who brought on Megyn Kelly,
it was obvious to me that that show wasn't going to work,
but they wanted the look of bringing on Megyn Kelly
because they are not that ideological
and particularly don't want to be seen as ideological.
But they're lying to themselves
because they place things in a moral universe
when they really are just crass executives
who are trying to sell.
That's the part where I think the critique,
if there's one critique of the media from the right
that I do agree with, is the moralizing nature.
I don't know that there is,
the idea that these media executives
moralize their position.
There may be no greater disparity between reality and
whatever idealized moral image you have of themselves than the Washington Post
putting on their masthead democracy dies in darkness like who the fuck do you
think you are you have a board up in your room that shows like who's getting
what clicks where like That's just nonsense.
I would almost welcome,
maybe not necessarily a more moral component,
but a component of the news media
that is more forceful editorially.
Ailes' greatest trick was delegitimizing
the idea of editorial authority
while exercising almost complete editorial authority,
but doing it a way that was really smart.
Like there is no condescension and moralizing on Fox.
It's people on a couch asking questions.
Do you think there's just, you know,
are you worried about how many terrorists
are coming in on the border?
Do you ever worry about that?
Whereas if you turn on MSC sometimes,
you're like, it's like birds descending, you know,
at sea on a tuna boat going,
that's factually incorrect, incorrect!
Not correct, incorrect!
And you're just like, I can't listen to this.
But that's the brilliance of it.
So when I say like, Megyn Kelly's right,
like I do believe she's right.
They pretended that they had to get rid of her
out of some moral obligation
to enlightened racism sensibility.
Like, fuck you.
That is so not what you did.
If they're making money, they're making
money and they'll let you get away with anything, anything, as we see. But when you ain't making
money anymore and they don't for some reason have the temerity to just go, yeah, you're not making
us any money, they find some pretense of your moral failing and yank you. And so I get where some of that anger comes from
from those folks.
Don't have a ton of sympathy
because I've been fired a bunch of times too,
but for the old fashioned reasons of sucking. When I think of Tucker Carlson now, I miss the triviality. I miss the, there was enough agreed upon that you could have the theater, the kabuki, and
now it feels like we've slipped down in this place where it's like, will we be a white
ethno-nationalist state?
That's harder to have like a funny debate over.
But you always have to caution yourself against a nostalgia about this other time that existed because,
William Hearst and yellow journalism,
and remember the main can be just as damaging
even though it's newspaper.
Or think about radio in Rwanda,
or think about propaganda that was piped into soldiers ears
during different times on the radio.
But again, media has to continue to raise the bar
in terms of the circadian rhythm of it, the cadence of it.
It has to happen faster now, it happens more.
And the difficulty is for the parts of media
that we look at as utility, right?
Think about the checks and balances of the government.
This is gonna be a segue that doesn't make any sense.
But think about in the way that they describe
the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Somebody's gotta be the Senate,
not the Senate as it's presently constituted,
but the normal Senate,
before it was an assisted living facility.
So, you know, it has to be the the saucer that cools the milk or
whatever the fuck they want to describe it as. And that's what we're missing
because what's happening is everybody's chasing that most dopamine-addled, you
know, cocaine hamster sitting in a cage tapping the bar., like whatever makes content, right,
becomes kind of fodder for all the other outlets
that make their bones on content.
So like, I don't know what will be clipped from this.
Generally something will be clipped.
Generally it's something that will reflect
very little context about what we're talking about, but could be considered the most divisive or confrontational or provocative or partisan
moment.
Right?
I did an interview with Tim Walls yesterday.
What will get clipped out of that is I had a moment where I was like, do we need the
Cheney's?
Can we get rid of the Cheney's?
We don't need the Cheney's. And that's the moment that will be grabbed
because how do those other outlets make their money?
They don't make their money by going,
oh, I saw this interview and it had ba ba ba ba ba.
They make their money by getting people to click.
So rather than cooling it or debating it in good faith
or looking at the issues,
they look for a moment that they can exploit.
And I don't look back with fond nostalgia
over the early 2000s.
Even the New York Times credulously published something
and Dick Cheney and his friends got to go
on all the Sunday shows the next day and go,
even the New York Times says Saddam Hussein
is trying to make a nuclear weapon with these tubes that can only enrich uranium. Like, I have no nostalgia that somehow this form of media can be
more dangerous or persu... like, it can all be very dangerous. And that's why we have to, in whatever
moment we're living in, fight like fucking hell to take the danger out of it
and to get better understanding into it.
And we have the mechanisms and we have the talent and we have the people.
We just need the will.
Roger Ailes built Fox News Media out of tenacity and will and skill as a producer.
We have to match that with the same intentionality
that he brought to it.
I sat in his office one day and we yelled at each other
for an hour.
But my takeaway from it was that empire was built out
of the back of his head purposefully with an idea
to delegitimize any media that may take
away from his vision of what the world should be.
God, there's so much there.
Um, when you were, when you were talking about nostalgia, I will die on the hill
of fighting the George W.
Bush revisionist nostalgia.
Donald Trump is the fault of Dick Cheney.
We would not have Donald Trump if we had not had Dick Cheney and the Iraq War
and the delegitimization of the entire upper echelons of the Republican Party
that came out of that much failure.
Right.
So something about seeing Dick Cheney, who now endorsing Harris and Liz Cheney, who to be fair, I do admire that Liz Cheney
was willing to lose her seat
to oppose Donald Trump's anti-democratic movements.
Think about the bar that sets though, Ezra.
That's, I applaud the courage of someone
who recognizes a coup and decides to say something about it.
Yeah, but how many of the others didn't?
No, that's what I'm saying.
Like that is the lowest bar.
But there is this way, it's like between recognizing
there's something important there
and the genuine absence of accountability, right?
I mean, there is something.
Oh, I think other people recognize
there's something important.
I just think they put the project over the principle.
Yes.
Look, we're in a different world now, man.
Like the old world communism versus capitalism moment is over.
And by the way, it was a fight that had more death and destruction in it than I think was
probably ever necessary.
All that really I think this country needed
to fend off communism and socialism
is a decent social safety net,
which I think was demonstrated.
But now we're in a different world
where the alignment is, I think, woke versus unwoke.
And the interesting thing is the unwoke people
think they're the defenders of classic liberalism
when all of their allies in it,
like Orban and Putin and that,
that's the new alignment of the world,
woke versus un-woke.
And the classic defenders, the people in the media
and in government who say,
I'm the defenders of the constitution and free speech
and would like to align myself with Orban and Putin.
Like the cognitive dissonance that occurs there is mind-blowing.
I remember when Elon Musk took over Twitter to protect free speech and make sure Twitter
was politically neutral.
And now here we are.
But no, it's, but it's in many ways a cynical exercise.
And you can say to them, Donald Trump is threatening broadcast license
because he doesn't like that they're critical of him
or Donald Trump is calling people the enemy within
and not migrant gangs, he's talking about Nancy Pelosi.
And you say, so how are you the defender
of the first amendment?
And that's the guy you're throwing.
Well, that's just bluster.
Oh, he doesn't mean that.
He does a thing.
None of this particularly makes any sense.
And if you wanna talk about cancel culture,
there is no greater cancel culture than being a Republican
and speaking out even in the mildest forms
against Donald Trump.
Where's the free speech in any of this? None of't, none of this makes any fucking sense, Ezra.
Make sense of it, Ezra, you're very smart.
Please help me.
I think that I like the cut you're making.
Like I do think there's something to the woke, non-woke.
I think that people, I mean, we were talking about this
when I was on your show, it's funny,
because we're circling some of the same topics here.
It is one of the oldest findings of political science that people are not that ideological.
That the people who have this-
I definitely agree with that.
Have this like, who experience politics as this well-connected sense of this web of policies
that all go together.
And if you pick the liberal web or the conservative web, that's like 10% of the population.
Like most people, it's just not how they experience politics or the world.
And one of the things that bugs me is the endless, at this point, I don't think people
should still be saying, should still be surprised that Donald Trump has appeal.
We've seen Donald Trump like figures in too many other countries.
The fact that he doesn't appeal to you.
But if you believe Donald Trump should be losing this election by 60, you know,
it's 65 35, and it was like a failure of political strategy on Kamala Harris's
part, like I think you've missed the boat.
You miss the actual like appeal of strong man politics, which have been there
forever.
You've missed the appeal of people who say, I don't like how all this is changing.
And I wanted to stop.
There are people I love who support Donald Trump.
And it's one of the best things in my politics
that I have them in my life.
Because one, it keeps my sense of people's complexity alive.
But two, one thing you hear is just people saying,
I don't know, everything's different now.
And I don't feel like I have a place in it.
And on some level, Donald Trump agrees with them.
It was better before make America great again.
And that's a politics that sometimes gets policies attached to it, but it's not really a politics that is about policies or even about any one thing.
I mean, vibes, a sense of, do you fit in the world and where it's going?
Do you have status in the world and where it's going?
I think you're trying to-
I don't want the strong man as long as it's my strong man.
As long as it's following along.
To that point, I mean, look, I'm not in a swing state,
so I don't know exactly, but we still have down ballot races
that are being communicated all the time.
The big clamoring about Kamala Harris was,
she has to define who she is through a series of policy
things that appeal to the American people
and that will help them get comfortable with her
as a leader and da da da da da da.
Every commercial that I see on my television,
there's only two arguments the Republicans are making.
Republican candidates are making two arguments.
We're all gonna die because of people coming over
from the border and Kamala Harris is for they, them,
Donald Trump is for you.
Those are the only two commercials,
trans people and migration.
That's it.
And they all talk about trans people shouldn't be in sports
as though like that is the dominant theme
of like high school athletics now is like my kids were high school age
a couple of years ago.
I don't recall there ever being a trans person playing
the sport or dominates or having any consequential action
on that.
But I will tell you this, if you're
concerned about competition and fairness,
I've seen a lot of parents who reclass their kids
to drop them down a grade, not because they can't handle the social aspect of it,
not because they can't handle the academics,
but because it will make them
a more appealing athletic prospect.
So 19 year olds are beating the shit out of 14 year olds
in high school sports.
You wanna do something about competition, do that.
But what they've done is they've taken a kind of non-problem
and blown it into a catastrophic emblem of a society in decline.
But emblem is such an important, I think, word there.
Because the thing, the reason there is strength to what they're doing,
because yeah, it's not, look, if we could, I am fully happy to say if we could agree
on giving people rights and protection from discrimination,
we can then have some conversations about the right way
to manage swimming at the NCAA level.
Like I think like, like a society could say like,
sports are arbitrary, we're gonna figure something out.
But it's all a signal like of.
They are turning society in something you don't understand anymore.
It's not a policy.
They're taking it though.
And they're like, what they do though is, and they blow it out anecdotally through
like these social media apps with their algorithms and incentives.
That is the whole point.
As we circle back to the thing is they are able to take those uncomfortable feelings
of change and create an urgency.
There's something very, like I have anxiety and insomnia,
had it my whole life.
What it does is actually physical.
Like your mind will take you to places
that you believe in your body are now happening.
Cortisol is flowing, and you feel an urgency
and almost a fear and a panic.
Whether or not what you're experiencing
is real, imminent, impossible, it doesn't matter.
And what the algorithms do that is so destructive
and brilliant is what people in white lab coats do
to laze potato chips.
They design it in a way, the algorithm finds a way
to take a piece of information and put it into your body
in a way that
drags you into a rabbit hole and creates in your body, that sense of panic and
fear, they physicalize it in a way that a newspaper never could.
And that's the danger here.
And always by the way, the most vulnerable populations, you notice
that it's not anybody, but like the people with the fewest
defenders, always, always.
I want to end on not how everybody else changed, but how you did.
And when I go back to old Jon Stewart, I'm not going to play anything at you.
You're safe now.
Please.
There was a sort of sanity.
We can all be, you know, let's have some common sense here.
Like, let's not be idiots.
You have this great long traffic analogy in your sanity speech about us all on
the road together.
And I listened to you now, listened to the podcast, got to appear on it,
which was a thrill.
And there's a, you're more of a populist now, like left populist, but it feels
to me like the sense that-
Politically, I think I've always been.
I think politically, but there's a sense that I did not used to get from you.
That I would describe your politics much more now, not as technocratic, but as power can
seize nothing without a fight.
That I completely agree with.
I think the differences in the populations that I'm talking about, I think I've always
separated. that I'm talking about. I think I've always separated, you know, the idea has always been, you know, 80 to 90% of the people
can find some ability to work together in common ground
and move forward in a productive fashion.
And the other 10 to 15% of those people run the place.
And that has always been my position.
And I think some of it has been informed
by having to go down to Washington
to try and accomplish something not in the media world, but in the real world.
And the realities of what it takes to move a machine that is built for the status quo
and built for the disconnect between their power structure and the needs
of the people that they purport to represent.
So there is certainly a more sober view of what it takes to move that machine, but I
have never thought there was anything other than the people and the machine.
And what's so frustrating about that is we the people, by the people, for the people and the machine. And what's so frustrating about that is we the people,
by the people, for the people, of the people.
And what is it about that process
that removes us from them?
That's the part that I think is so difficult.
So now when I think of solutions,
I think less of those processes
and changing it in more fundamental ways.
I think less of, we gotta get more unionizing,
gotta get more people and think like, no,
the whole fucking structure has to change.
They need to be able to participate in the investment
and shareholder economy at that table.
Whatever feast is being had there must be had here.
Poor people shouldn't have to get better lobbyists. Veterans who are struggling with toxic exposure shouldn't
have to find public figures. You know, none of this shit should be the way that
you permeate that bubble. But I don't think the fundamental truth that people
inherently in day-to-day lives have an ability to be with each other
healthily. That hasn't changed for me, I don't think.
That's a great place to end. Always our final question. What are three books you'd
recommend to the audience?
Let's see. I Shouldn't Be Telling You This by Chelsea Devantes. That's what I have there. That sounded like you were telling me a secret. No, the book is called I Shouldn't Be Telling You This by Chelsea Devantes. That's what I have there.
Well, that sounded like you were telling me a secret. No, the book is called I Shouldn't Be Telling You This.
Oh yes.
By Chelsea Devantes.
She's a friend of mine who is a wonderful comedian
and a writer and her memoir,
she just written I think a few months ago
and it's absolutely wonderful.
Chelsea Devantes was her name?
Chelsea Devantes, yeah, fabulous comedian.
You know, whenever I recommend books,
I always go back to the books of my youth.
That's great.
And so it's always Vonnegut.
Get your hands on Vonnegut.
If there was anyone that I think
more impressed my worldview, it was Vonnegut.
This idea of a guy who had been through World War II in
Dresden and yet still maintained a hopeful humanistic
approach, even tinged with the cynicism that obviously
comes through people like Carlin and any book by Carlin
or Vonnegut. And I know those sound disparate.
Where do you start? Give me a, give me a Vonnegut for...
I would start at breakfast of champions with Vonnegut
or maybe play a piano.
You know, boy, you just can't go wrong.
Cat's cradle, you can't go wrong.
Slaughterhouse Five, whatever you wanna do.
God bless you, Mr. Rosewell.
Whatever you want.
It just doesn't matter.
Cause you'll dive in and you'll be transported
to that world of a hopeful, heartbroken man
writing about what he thinks people could be.
It's that, you know,
it's the William Shatner Blue Origin moment
where he goes up in space and he looks down on the earth
and goes, how are we blowing this?
How the fuck in this dark expanse of nothingness,
we have the one, it's like the same thing.
I think when they always say like, we're going to Mars
and you're like, but the water and the food is here.
Why?
Why don't we just stay here and make this work?
What's wrong with that?
A hopeful heartbroken man.
Jon Stewart, thank you very much. All right
This episode of the Ezra Klein Show is produced by Elias Isquith. Fact checking by Michelle Harris.
Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld with additional mixing by Amin Sahota.
Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Annie Galvin, Roland Hu and Kristen Lin.
Original music by Pat McCusker.
Audience strategy by Christina Samieluski and Shannon Busta.
The executive producer of New York Times
Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
Ezra, that was fun.
Super fun, man. Thank you.
Oh, good. I'm glad.
I've wanted to have you on the show
since I started it.
That was all I hoped for, good, I'm glad. I've wanted to have you on the show since I started it. That was all I'd hoped for.
I'm delighted.
And I hope to have disappointed you
and your production team.
That's your only go-for-it.
In all the right ways.
Oh!
Oh!
Oh! Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo