The Headlines - JD Vance Goes on Joe Rogan, and Young Thug Pleads Guilty
Episode Date: November 1, 2024Plus, the jobs report, with a twist. Tune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times new...s subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. On Today’s Episode:The Jobs Report on Friday May Be a Fluke and a Political Football, by Lydia DePillisVance Tells Rogan: Teens Become Trans to Get Into Ivy League, by Chris Cameron, Simon J. Levien and Neil VigdorTrump and Vance Escalate Efforts to Sow Doubts on Pennsylvania Voting, by Nick Corasaniti and Michael GoldYoung Thug Released After Guilty Plea in Lengthy YSL Case, by Joe CoscarelliMartha Stewart Gives Netflix’s ‘Martha’ a Scalding Review, by Brooks Barnes
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Friday, November 1st.
Here's what we're covering.
The U.S. presidential campaign is about to get a new talking point this morning, the
jobs report and what it says about the American economy.
Anytime significant economic data comes out this close to an election,
it's inevitably going to be picked over and dissected and exploited for political gain.
And this jobs report might be more so than usual.
My colleague Lydia DePillis covers the economy for the Times.
She says, recent data shows things are in pretty good shape. There's high consumer spending and inflation has come back down. But the
jobs report may not be so rosy.
It's probably going to come in lower than we've seen in recent months. And that isn't
necessarily a sign that the labor market has hit a pothole. Rather, there's a couple things that happened over the last month
that we know are going to take a big bite out of the jobs numbers.
Number one, two giant hurricanes that hit in late September and early October,
Helene and Milton, that really had a devastating impact on Florida, Georgia,
and Western North Carolina, especially in
sectors like leisure and hospitality.
The second big thing that we know is going to impact the jobs report is a massive strike
at Boeing, which has put 35,000 workers approximately on the picket lines.
And so if you see a report this morning that appears unusually weak, and if you hear people saying
that the labor market has taken a big downward turn, there are some outside factors that
are causing that.
Very nice to meet you.
Yeah, nice to meet you too.
What is it like running for vice president of the United States?
How crazy is this experience?
It's pretty weird.
It's pretty weird.
Just a week after Donald Trump sat down with Joe Rogan, the country's biggest podcaster,
his running mate, JD Vance, also went on Rogan's show.
The Trump campaign has been trying to reach young men, a key part of Rogan's show. The Trump campaign has been trying to reach young men a key part of
Rogan's audience. And in the three hour conversation, Vance talked about fatherhood, his political
career, and he leaned into what's been a flashpoint for conservatives, what he called gender
transition craziness. Like my four year old will come and say, daddy, I'm a dinosaur, right? I'm
going to take him to like the dinosaur transition clinic
and put scales on him.
And this is crazy.
Vance condemned transition care for minors
and even suggested some teenagers are transitioning
so that they'll have a better chance
of getting into Ivy League schools.
Vance also claimed some liberal women
are celebrating their abortions by baking birthday cakes
and posting about
it on social media.
Rogan pushed back to say he didn't think that was common, which Vance conceded.
Within hours, the Harris campaign moved to highlight some of Vance's more provocative
statements, which could become part of the soundtrack of the final days of the race.
Meanwhile, Vance and Trump have been escalating their baseless claims about voter fraud, particularly
in Pennsylvania. There are more Electoral College votes up for grabs there than any
other battleground state. Yesterday, Vance seized on posts claiming that Democrats were
impersonating election officials at polling sites, calling it fraud.
But the Pennsylvania Secretary of State clarified that the workers were properly identified
partisan volunteers.
And Trump has honed in on Lancaster County, after county officials said they found 2,600
problematic voter registration applications.
The officials say the fact that the applications were flagged is proof that their systems are
working, though Trump has been repeatedly claiming it's evidence of cheating.
In a Fox News interview, the state's Democratic governor, Josh Shapiro, defended Pennsylvania's
election process.
Our system is run by Republican and Democratic clerks of elections in our 67 counties. It's overseen
by my secretary of state, Brett, who is a Republican. I think everybody needs to take
a deep breath and understand that it is our fellow Pennsylvanians who are running these
elections, and we will again have a free and fair, safe and secure election.
Some political scientists warn that the efforts to sow doubt about the election, even before
all the votes are in, could be an effort by Trump and Vance to justify challenging the
results if they lose.
All right, Mr. Williams, is there anything that you want to say?
Yes, ma'am. I take full responsibility for my crimes, for my charges. Really, everybody
that got something to do with this situation, I want to say sorry for just like, you know.
The rapper, Jeffrey Williams, known as Young Thug, pleaded guilty to criminal street gang
activity on Thursday, a major development in a case where rap lyrics were presented
as evidence of a crime.
Prosecutors say Williams' record label, YSL, overlapped with the criminal street gang Young
Slime Life, and they cited some of the label's songs in their arguments. Critics of the case
pushed back, saying the charges were part of a moral panic over rap music. The case,
which involved 28 defendants, was chaotic from the start.
Jury selection alone dragged on for 10 months, a judge was replaced mid-trial, and one of
the rapper's co-defendants was stabbed in jail.
Ultimately, Williams' lawyers say he pleaded guilty because he felt he was being held,
quote, hostage by the lengthy trial.
Williams was sentenced to 15 years probation
and released from prison.
He's been ordered to stay away from the Atlanta area
for the next decade, and he'll have to make
anti-gang presentations to groups of children.
The case had been closely watched,
not just because of the arguments
over whether lyrics could be considered evidence,
but also because it hinged on the same Georgia
racketeering law that was used to charge Donald Trump and his allies with trying to overturn the 2020 election.
And many looked to this trial as essentially a preview for how Trump's could go.
Trump's case is still ongoing.
And finally. She's one of the most powerful women on the ever wanted to know about Martha Stewart is now
waiting for you on Netflix.
Didn't you have an affair early on?
Yeah, but I don't think Andy ever knew about that.
Titled Martha, it takes a look at the life of the entrepreneur who some say is America's
first self-made woman billionaire. Martha, it takes a look at the life of the entrepreneur who some say is America's first
self-made woman billionaire.
It shows how she built an empire promoting a picture-perfect lifestyle of fabulously
cooked foods and just-so home decor.
It's part of a boom of celebrity documentaries lately, where stars open up their lives in
exchange for a chance to shape the story the public sees.
But with the movie now out, Stewart says she did not get the control she wanted, and she's
not happy.
In a call with the Times, she had thoughts, saying it spends way too much time on her
trial and prison sentence for insider trading.
She also thought the camera angles were unflattering and that some scenes made her look old.
Stewart is 83. She said she
gave the director, R.J. Cutler, pages and pages of notes, but he only made a few of
her suggested changes. Cutler defended the project, saying, quote, It's a movie, not
a Wikipedia page. Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, a look at the local election officials entrusted
with certifying the vote who are prepared to reject it. That's next in the New York
Times audio app, or you can listen wherever you get your podcasts.
This show is made by Robert Jemison, Jessica Metzger, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford,
with help from Isabella Anderson. Original theme by Dan Powell.
Special thanks to Larissa Anderson, Jake Lucas,
Zoe Murphy, and Paula Schuman.
The headlines will be back on Monday.