The Megyn Kelly Show - ABC Host "Humiliated" After Settlement, and Trump's Victory Ending the Cancel Era, with Adam Carolla and Justine Bateman | Ep. 968
Episode Date: December 18, 2024Megyn Kelly is joined by Adam Carolla, host of "The Adam Carolla Show" podcast, to discuss George Stephanopoulos reportedly "defiant" and "humiliated" over his network paying millions to settle the Tr...ump lawsuit, how ABC News blew up their reputation over the years due to their Trump and COVID coverage, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s recent appearance in the Broadway show“& Juliet,” how Broadway has gone “over the top” with woke and pro-trans content, the truth about violent Venezuelan gangs in Colorado, the latest updates on the mysterious East Coast drones, one mayor saying law enforcement drones may be searching for missing radioactive material, the difference Biden and Trump’s comments on the drones, and more. Then filmmaker and author Justine Bateman joins to discuss Trump’s massive victory and how it signals the end of the cancel era, why the mob momentum has now been stopped, the way MeToo and other causes give people an outlet to feel a part of something meaningful, the disturbing polls showing young people approve of Luigi Mangione’s murder of the UnitedHealthcare CEO and what it says about society, the negative impact of internet culture, how pop culture has evolved to reward bad behavior, the meltdowns by leftists on social media after Trump’s victory, her hilarious critiques and director's notes, the blowback she’s received in Hollywood throughout her career, the need for parody and satire, and more. Carolla- https://adamcarolla.com/Bateman- https://credo23.com/Tax Network USA: https://TNUSA.com/MEGYNFirecracker Farm: Get yours today at https://Firecracker.Farm/Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at noon east.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show. We are one week out from Christmas.
Just a warning to those who haven't done their shopping. One week to T minus seven and T minus six till Christmas Eve
for those of you who like to wait until the last minute. Okay, the media story everyone is talking
about has continued to evolve with reports now that George Stephanopoulos over at ABC News is
defiant and humiliated after ABC agreed to pay Trump $15 million to settle his defamation lawsuit against
the network over their star host's false and misleading segment with Representative Nancy
Mace. I went back to look at the so-called apology. That's how we referred to it the other
day. I think that was erroneous. It wasn't really an apology. It was we regret the statements. George Stephanopoulos regrets
the statements. Well, that's not exactly an apology, is it? He was forced to say that by
his network. And now he's reportedly humiliated, as I say. Plus, there's new reporting from The
New York Times that sheds light on President Biden's, quote, weary goodbye and the
full extent of his infirmity, which continues to reveal itself day by day. And would you believe
the team surrounding him is still trying to claim that behind the scenes? He's amazing. He's like
he's like that Olympic break dancer behind the scenes. What was her name?
She stole the whole show, the terrible one, but she was fit and able to move,
unlike our current president. And then we've got an update on those drones. They're slipping the
truth inside of their lives now. What was it? Rego? Rego, Rego, uh, Ray gun, Ray gun. Okay.
It sounds like a toy that we're going to get our kids for Christmas. Anyway, joining me now to
discuss all of this and more Adam Carolla, host of the Adam Carolla show. Are you overwhelmed with
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slash Megan today. Adam, welcome back. Great to see you. Always great to be on the show.
Okay, so I don't, I guess let's start with Stephanopoulos, who is,
he is humiliated and very angry, according to the reports, that this has happened to him.
The New York Times goes inside the suit and talks about how executives had expected or had anticipated that there would be a blowback to settling this.
But they're in full revolt over there at ABC News, where they feel that the reputation has been unnecessarily sullied,
that they didn't feel they should have settled with President Trump. And yet the Times pointing out that Disney had many reasons.
Number one, there was a judge, Judge Altonaga, chief judge in the Southern District of Florida,
who had denied Disney's motion to dismiss with some very strong language saying
a reasonable jury could interpret Stephanopoulos' statements as defamatory. And then added with,
in italics, Stephanopoulos stated 10 times that a jury or juries had found plaintiff liable for
rape, which was obviously not true. And then they pointed out something we speculated about the other day, which was she had also rejected requests to delay the case.
And Disney was told to turn over all remaining documents related to the case. Trump's lawyer
told us they'd only given like one document. And so they had to produce not only all the emails
with Stephanopoulos on them among his producers and so on, but he was going to have to sit for
a deposition, which we knew. They were also worried that this could set an industry standard. In other
words, this could go all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court and New York Times versus Sullivan,
which sets a very, very, very high bar for problematic speech, for finding speech problematic,
could potentially be overturned. Anyway, what do you make of George Stephanopoulos' indignity at what
has happened to him, Adam? Well, OK, they worry about their reputation. So ABC's news division
is worried about their reputation if they offer an apology. They blew up their own reputation
over the last five years systematically, first with Russian collusion
and three or four years of lying, or at least being wrong about that.
And then that dovetailed right into COVID.
So the two biggest stories of basically the last eight or nine years, they screwed up
10 ways to Sunday. So I would tend not to listen to ABC News,
not because the dwarf news anchor offered an apology, but more that they lied about all the
big stories, anything to do with Trump and anything to do with COVID. I mean, let's look at it this
way. The two biggest stories of the last decade have been Trump and COVID and COVID and Trump.
They got every single story wrong and or lied about every single story.
So I will not be listening to ABC News, not because they're cowards and not standing up to this lawsuit,
just because they're wildly inaccurate and probably beyond inaccurate. They're liars.
They say in the New York Post, in an exclusive, George is defiant. One source tells, well,
what does that mean? Defiant in what way? You had to issue the words of regret.
Your company had to pay 15 million. You're no longer in first place.
I believe it's related to that debacle of a debate. There's been a revulsion after, you know,
that night there was one and now there's been a mass exodus in their audience and they want us to
see what he's defiant. How? I mean, the latest news was he deactivated his ex account. It doesn't
really, it doesn't sound defiant, Adam.
It sounds like a coward.
This is their hijacking of the language.
Remember, Kamala Harris wanted to end fracking
and then she wanted to continue fracking
and she wanted to end the border wall.
Then she wanted to continue the border wall,
but she was still staying true to her values.
Okay, that means nothing. And every time there's a school shooting, somebody gets up to the podium and gets behind the microphone,
a police chief or the mayor of the city and says, this is unacceptable. Okay, it's unacceptable,
but it just happened. and it'll happen again.
So there's this weird language thing where they try to make themselves into some sort of patriot heroes, except for they do nothing.
And it's it's really a thing that was born on the left.
And I never really got it.
Yeah. Defiant while you put your tail between your legs and offer an apology and keep
hammering checks you get from ABC. All right. Well, that's defiant. Then so be it. But defiant
is quitting your job and hanging your own shingle somewhere else. That's exactly right. The defiant
is I'm out of here. I refuse to participate in your conciliatory statement. I did nothing wrong and
I'm not going to let my gazillion dollar paycheck force me into bending the knee here because I'm
going to die on principle. No, that's defiant. This is not defiant. I deleting your ex account
because you you're tired of the abuse you're getting from people who know you lied that he
was not found liable by a jury for rape.
Why is it so hard for him just to admit that?
Well, I mean, these guys hate Trump, obviously, and they cannot be
neutral about things. You know, I was thinking about the other day. I mean,
I was kind of talking about it on my podcast, which is every umpire and every baseball game has feelings about the two teams
that are on the field. They just do. I mean, there has to be a thousand guys umpiring Yankees
games who grew up Yankees fans or Red Sox fans, and now they're behind the plate at Fenway. It just has to be, but they have to put
all that aside and call balls and strikes. And the news used to do that, and they don't do it
anymore. And it's now become apparent to those of us who are in the stands watching the game
what is happening because they're so blatant about it. It's obvious where
he stands. It's obviously when you see the A and B interviews between the ones that give Kamala
Harris and the ones that give Trump or J.D. Vance or whomever, it's so abundantly evident now that
I no longer really listen to them because I don't think they're calling balls
and strikes. I don't fault these people for having a preference. You're a human being.
You're going to want either Trump or Harris. That's a fact. But then you have to do your job
and call balls and strikes and they don't do it anymore and they can't.
All right. I got a story for you. Speaking of the Supreme Court,
as I mentioned, there was some fear that if this went up to the Supreme Court, we might have enough
justices to overturn New York Times versus Sullivan, which for the record, I do not want.
It sets a nice high bar that makes it very, very hard to sue for defamation if you're a public
figure. And even as a public
figure, I'm fine with that because I'm also a member of the media and I'm an American first.
And in America, what distinguishes us from virtually all of the other first world countries,
nevermind third, is you can say what you want here. With very, very few limits, you can say
what you want. It takes a lot to get a judge issuing an opinion like this against you and having to pay $15 million. It takes 10 times of saying a jury found him civilly liable for rape
when we put the screen up on the verdict form up on the screen the other day.
Very clearly it says, is he guilty? Did he commit rape on the civil vert? And it says, no, no. Well, did he commit sexual assault?
Yes. You can't as a news anchor language matters, especially around legal stuff like that.
You can't, he said it 10 times. That's why the judge is so mad at him. Anyway,
speaking of the Supreme court, I've got a story for you. Okay. A year or so ago,
we're always railing on Broadway here. I'm sure you do the same because
if you go to Broadway, it used to be a really fun experience. You say you take your kids,
you see a musical, you know, like, oh man, river, you have a good time. Now you go and it's a woke
explosion. Doug and I went to see Macbeth with, um, Daniel, what's his name? The James Bond guy, Craig. And it was
supposed to be 1400 Scotland. It was a majority minority cast. Okay. I don't think so, but okay.
One of the lead players was in a wheelchair, which, okay. The King's son was played by a woman who had a blue Mohawk. They had gotten rid of all
costumes. I guess there's like a budget problem. So the lead character, I think it was the guy
in the wheelchair had a Mickey mouse shirt on, which is like, what's I'm having difficulty
suspending my disbelief here, people. Okay. So that's one. But then my daughter, then 12, went with some friends
to a different play. And this play, trust me, I'll round it back to the Supreme Court in a second.
This play is showing now and it's called I, Juliet. And it was supposed to be this re-imagining
of if Juliet had lived and Juliet, and if Juliet had lived, like what would her life have been
like girl power? I thought, Oh, that's fun. And here's just a clip of me reacting
after my daughter got back. This is last February in show in episode seven, 15 watches.
This was so in your face. I mean, if the, for the listening audience, it shows two guys kissing
on stage. Obviously, one of them is this guy who goes by he, she, and they, all of them,
Adam, all of them. It's just so happy that now we're celebrating queer love, which is not at
all what I thought something based on Shakespeare and about Juliet's next chapter, was going to be? How about the non-disclosure
of any of this in the write-up about the show? Don't we parents get a right to make a call?
You could be sending a much younger child than 12 there. My kid and I have talked about these
issues many times, but many haven't. This could be their first exposure to it.
It's not up to Broadway to do that.
Okay, so that was the two of us talking about how that play is covered with a bunch of trans people doing kissing and whatever. Well, not everyone has a problem with Ann Juliet, because would you look
at who guest starred in it on Broadway within the past week.
SOT 18 for the listening audience, it is Justice Katonji Brown Jackson.
Female empowerment.
Sick.
I like it too.
I think what I like about it is that I am having a very strongly negative reaction to it.
Like I hate it.
Which makes me think it must be brilliant.
Got this feeling in my body
Can't stop the feeling
Got this feeling in my body
I can't stop the feeling Gonna see you in your body Thoughts on that, Adam?
Well, my thoughts are, I have a multitude of thoughts, Megan.
I love that. I have a multitude of thoughts, Megan. One is the left is able and feels fine wearing their politics and their culture sort of on their sleeve.
You know, like if there was a right wing justice doing some old play that Charlton Heston, you know, that was gun centric and male centric, you know,
they would get slammed. They wouldn't do it. They would say, I don't like the optics of it.
You're like, I'm I'm on the Supreme Court. I'm conservative. And you want me to do a play with
an all white male cast about early settlers and how guns settled the West. They would just go,
I'm going to get slammed.
I don't like the optics of it. I'm not going to do it. People on the left do not care. I mean,
it's like I, you know, I live in L.A. I would see a thousand Biden bumper stickers, a thousand
Harris bumper stickers, a thousand Hillary bumper stickers and no Trump bumper stickers, even though
there's a significant amount of people
voted for Trump. So it's kind of interesting that they don't have a mirror and sort of look at
themselves and go, yes, I'm progressive. And yes, I will vote progressive on all these cases,
even if it makes me look like an idiot. But I don't like the optics of it. Circling back to Stephanopoulos, like I should at
least look like an umpire. Stephanopoulos' job is to look like an umpire. Her job is to look like
an umpire. And when you go out and do these kinds of large public displays, then we're going to know
your politics and you're not going to look like an umpire anymore.
Number one. Number two, I think Broadway is really the epicenter, the nougat inside the candy bar of the progressive movement. You know, you say college campuses and college faculty, Hollywood, things like that.
But Broadway is probably the purest, uncut, unstepped on progressivism on the planet, right?
Well, yeah.
I mean, I like I used to love it. Didn't like I when I grew up going to Broadway when I was younger, it wasn't like this. And I know it's woke and I know it's always been very gay. That's just different. That's different. There's a reason more and more groups are going LGB, LGB and breaking up with the T because they see the T as a group that wants to perform conversion
therapy on young gay boys to say, you're not actually gay. You're actually a girl, a straight
girl. And so like, it's very dicey now for them to be embracing the T so heartily. In fact,
we went to a play not long ago and one of the actors in the play noticed me sitting there and I had
done a post on my Instagram celebrating the show. And one of the actors responded saying,
oh, it was great to see you there. You know, you should have come backstage and have said hello.
And then these trans people get on there like, we will cancel you. You like her. You said something nice.
Like they're so over the top now. And even if you try to go there and say, all right,
I'm going to ignore these far left extremists who are trying to trans little boys. They make
it impossible. They're everywhere. Every other role is a trans role now, far more representative
than it is in society. And to the point where it's like fine for a Supreme Court justice.
They've hijacked girl empowerment plays to make them about boy empowerment, which is what a trans, quote, woman is.
And she's fine.
It's the same person who couldn't tell us what a woman is, Adam.
Well, I mean, she's not a bright woman.
I think she's probably there mostly due to affirmative action. Sotomayor's there mostly because of affirmative action, and she's a dope, too. And then there's Kamala Harris. So that entire affirmative action, DEI hire thing has completely, utterly backfired because they're not electing and or hiring people that are up to the job.
And I include her in that group.
Like I said, Sotomayor is a full-blown idiot.
I mean, she's an idiot.
I mean, it's insane that she's on the Supreme Court.
Remember when the whole COVID thing came down
and they were talking about mandatory vaccinations
and she's like, there's 10 million kids on ventilators right now.
She said, dope.
And Kamala Harris is a dope too.
And maybe they should learn their lesson
with their DEI affirmative action appointments.
Get qualified people and then do it.
And Sonia Sotomayor was the one who two weeks ago
when that case about whether these states
are allowed to ban puberty blockers and cross sex hormones for kids went up.
She was like, oh, come on. There are side effects from an aspirin, too.
There are risks as if taking an aspirin is the same as puberty blockers into cross sex hormones for a 10 to 12 year old.
Well, the fact that she would consider letting those words pass her lips means she's a dope. Smart people would never say that
out loud. Smart people think, oh, what if I, and then they go, oh no, I'm not going to say that.
I'll sound like a dope. And so she is a dope, which is crazy, but it's hurting the movement
is what I'm saying. Well, and there are certain narratives
that are not to be allowed or ever deemed acceptable.
And the thought that we are transing children
who are actually fine in their sexed body,
but just going through some sort of unrelated trauma,
whether they've been sexually abused
or they've had a divorce in the family or they've been bullied, you're not allowed to go there. That's that they consider that
conversion therapy of a trans kid. So, you know, there are like these narratives that, that you're
not allowed. And one of the narratives that's prohibited outside of the trans lane is that we
have a Venezuelan gang migrant crime problem in Aurora, Colorado, right? This was up, this came
up a lot during the campaign and, uh, back and forth and back and forth between the left and
the right on whether there really are gangs of Venezuelan illegals in Aurora, Colorado,
taking over apartment complexes. You remember it led, uh, excuse me, to this notable exchange between Martha Raddatz
and J.D. Vance when he went on her show. And she was like, it's fine. And he was like, hello, listen.
So do you support Donald Trump making those claims that the Republican mayor says were grossly
exaggerated? President Trump was actually in Aurora, Colorado talking to people on the ground.
And what we're hearing of course, Martha, is that people are terrified by what has happened
with some of these Venezuelan gangs.
Senator Vance, I'm gonna stop you cuz I know exactly what happened.
I'm gonna stop you.
The incidents were limited to a handful of apartment complexes and the mayor said our
dedicated police officers
have acted on those concerns, a handful of problems.
Only, Martha, do you hear yourself? Only a handful of apartment complexes in America
were taken over by Venezuelan gangs. And Donald Trump is the problem and not Kamala Harris's
open border. Americans are so fed up with what's going
on and they have every right to be. And I really find this exchange, Martha, sort of interesting
because you seem to be more focused with nitpicking everything that Donald Trump has said,
rather than acknowledging that apartment complexes in the United States of America
are being taken over by violent gangs. Okay, let's just end that with they did not invade or take over the city, as Donald Trump said.
I wanna move on to- Just a few apartment complexes, no big deal.
A few apartment complexes that the mayor did not seem was invading the entire city.
She lives in a multimillion dollar estate, which we put on the screen before.
Just a quick follow up, okay, so here was Trump on NBC last week. Okay, we're still at it. The mainstream media trying to say
these are lies. Did you see Martha calling balls and strikes out there? Yeah. Because I didn't.
That didn't seem like an umpire to me. That seemed like a fan who got behind the plate.
Yes. That's right. Go ahead. And so here, so Trump just last week goes on Kristen Welker's
Meet the Press and listen, what happened? You've talked about prioritizing people who
have criminal histories. Correct. But is it your plan to deport everyone who is here illegally
over the next four years? Well, I think you have to do it. And it's a very tough thing to do.
You're saying, yes, you're gonna focus on the people with criminal histories,
but everyone who's here illegally has to go.
I'm saying this, we have to get the criminals out of our country. And you see what they've
done in Colorado and other places. They're taking over, literally taking over apartment complexes
and doing it with impunity. They don't care. They couldn taking over, literally taking over apartment complexes and doing it with
impunity. They don't care. They couldn't, they just are, they're in the real estate.
The local police say that is not the case in Colorado.
Oh, it's totally the case.
Okay. We knew he was telling the truth. We knew JD Vance was telling the truth.
And guess what? Guess what just happened? 14 detained in armed
Aurora, Colorado home invasion are likely illegal Venezuelan gang members, according to local
police. I mean, days after that exchange with NBC where she knew it's not like, oh, well,
it happened after. No, it's been happening. The mainstream media will not admit it, Adam. Yeah, well, was she calling balls and strikes?
I mean, these weren't MSNBC pundits or CNN. This is ABC. This is why we cannot turn to ABC
for information. You just saw three, starting with Stephanopoulos, of their leading news
journalists, anchors. Welker's NBC.
Oh, I'm sorry, NBC, but mainstream- So there were two of the main three.
Broadcasts. Yes. Okay. So we no longer have to turn there for news. Maybe news about an earthquake
in Nicaragua, but certainly nothing to do with Trump.
OK, so that's established.
They did that to themselves.
I don't know why they fell on their own sword that way, but they destroyed their own brand.
And it's sad.
And they keep looking around going, you know, Trump says fake news.
Why don't people listen to us?
People don't listen to you because you've been wrong and lying about everything for a decade.
And we're done.
We hit a saturation point.
All right.
As far as this stuff goes, whatever it is, it all turns out to be true.
You know, Hunter Biden's laptop or ivermectin or hydroxychloroquine.
Where did COVID come from?
Did it come from a lab or did it come from a wet market?
Well, la-di-da, guess what?
Came from a lab.
You know, do masks work.
Herd immunity, whatever.
Vaccination, efficacy, it all.
Every single story ends up going the way that the conspiracy theorists or Trump or J.D.
Vance or whomever spoke about, you spoke about, I spoke about, it all ends up
going that way. So surprise, surprise. This will be one more log on the fire of stuff we talked
about that was poo-pooed and brushed off as hysteria to try to win election, number one.
Number two, I love when they make this argument where they go,
and J.D. Vance made it as well. I've made it many times where they go, yes, the young female jogger
was killed by the illegal gangbanger who should have been deported, but they commit crime at a
much lesser rate than the average. All right. But tell that to the parents of the chick who was jogging,
like a lesser rate. It should be zero idiots. The person shouldn't be in the goddamn country
that the person who was jogging should still be alive. There should be zero Venezuelan gangbangers
in Aurora, Colorado. It's not a big problem. Yeah, it should be zero, idiots.
Yeah, this is the exchange I had with Bill Maher when I went on his show, too. He was like,
oh, like Americans don't commit crime. I'm like, we have to take them.
We can't kick the Americans out. We can put them in jail. We can't kick them out. Why are we having
to deal with the Venezuelan illegals committing these kinds of crimes? And listen to the one that I just gave you the headline of.
This is at a group of apartments, again, where we were told by the mainstream media they had not taken over.
And here's the story.
They kidnapped two victims, a male and a female, and assaulted them. 13 to 15 gang members, mostly males, some females,
entered an apartment where two people were inside. They took the migrant victims to another apartment
at the same location where the victims were threatened and bound, pistol whipped, beaten,
and stabbed. Even the local police chief saying, yeah, sounds like torture to me.
And then they described this as follows. The Aurora Police Chief, Todd Chamberlain, on Tuesday
described a bit of the crime. Stop five. Victims, it was a male and a female. They were accosted
by approximately 13 to 15 armed individuals.
Again, they were pistol whipped.
They were beat.
They were mistreated.
One of the male was actually stabbed.
He had a stab wound.
So does that fall in the category of torture for me?
Yeah, it does.
And I can guarantee you, I will give you my expertise and my knowledge of what I believe.
This is without question a gang incident.
There are Venza Wellens involved.
So again,
there is a high assumption
that they may be affiliated
or affiliated with the TDA gang.
Again, we have a gang problem in Aurora.
Without question.
We have 25-some gangs
like every major city does.
We have a number of gang members.
And it's not just up in that area.
It's not just in that complex.
It's throughout the entire city of Aurora.
I'm just like,
do you think Martha Raddatz or Kristen Welker will be playing this story and that soundbite?
It's just people are being, I don't know, are they being misled? I think Democrats are being
misled. I think they believe these sources still, and they still are scratching their heads like,
I don't get it. Morning Joe told me that she was going to win.
And also Joe Biden was fine.
Yeah, the Kristen Welker clip that's fun to go back in the Wayback Machine and look at
is when Trump was debating Biden and he brought up Russia, Russia, Russia.
And he was saying that, you know, his son took money from Ukraine and
that heated exchange where Biden was saying, me, you took money from Ukraine, your son.
I never did anything. We have 51 intelligence experts. Kristen Welker's trying to moderate
and she keeps yelling, could we get back to race? Could we get back to the subject of race?
It's the funniest thing ever.
It's like a perfect time capsule.
Like these guys are arguing about the biggest story of the year.
And she's like, what about race, sir?
Let's talk about what happened to race.
Can we get back to arguing about race?
Could you two old white guys get back to arguing about race, please?
It's so funny to hear her yelling about race in the background.
It's perfect.
Like, yes, of course that's what you should argue about.
Another person obsessed with race is this representative, Jasmine Crockett,
who is constantly, constantly playing the race card,
accusing everybody of racism on Capitol Hill.
Here she is talking about what the gang problem is to her.
Take a listen.
He said that we've got these cities and these towns that are being overrun by gangs and the crime is out of control.
I absolutely agree with that.
And guess what?
It's the MAGA gang.
It is the white supremacists that have decided to descend upon places such as Springfield, Ohio.
The problems are him and his minions.
The problems aren't the people that have come to make our economy stronger. I agree that there are
problems in our communities, but usually it's some white supremacists on the other side.
She's from Texas. Texas getting bluer and bluer. But that's their representative out
there spewing that nonsense in response to Trump's original claim back at the debate.
Well, there's something that's very dangerous, which is they ran on race.
So the Democrats are all, you know, they race hustle and they run on race. Right.
So what they do is they lay something down. They go, well, this country was founded by racists and it's embedded
in our DNA and blah, blah, blah. And Biden, who didn't turn out to be a moderate at all,
he turned out to be another race hustler, started immediately with the white supremacies,
the biggest problem this country faces. And he got Ray from the FBI and Garland from the DOJ. And he got everybody
coached up on working the white supremacy as a big problem angle, which is fine. They're just
hustling and lying and agitating black people and people of color and white people and everybody in
the nation as well, which is it should be a dereliction of duty. But fine, they're bad people
with no moral compass. But the real problem is, is once you make the proclamation that white
supremacy is the biggest problem this country faces, then you better go find some white supremacy.
And that's what happened with January 6th. That's what happened with all these FBI raids on, you
know, somebody was, you know, protesting an abortion clinic 30 feet away with his son.
They had to create numbers and statistics to back up their false assertions about white supremacy.
And that's when it gets dangerous, because that's when citizens start getting locked up so that they can have a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I mean, wow. Speaking of the Duke lacrosse case, right? That's right on point with what just
happened this week with Crystal Mangum finally admitting she made the whole thing up. I mean,
like, I don't know. Do you think they were having a debate about this on the editors this week,
the National Review podcast, which I love. and they were asking, do you think the Duke
lacrosse case would have unfolded the same way today as it did back in 2006? Would we be
more circumspect about this woman's allegations in 2024, almost 25 America, or would would the media have run with
it tenfold and even more egregiously than it did? I think you and I and folks like us would have
been considerate about it and give it some thought. But I don't think the ladies from The View have moved a millimeter since, you know,
Kyle Rittenhouse or Jussie Smollett or whatever, whatever they got wrong. They get something wrong
every single week. I don't think they would have moved. I don't think the aforementioned
anchors we just saw from the two networks would have backed off this thing. I don't think the
Al Sharpton's or the or even the Obamas or the
Michelle Obamas or the Oprah's or the Hollywood types, the race hustlers out there, I don't think
any of them would have acted any differently. You know, they don't learn lessons. That's part of why
the reason they make the same mistakes over and over again is because they never learn from their
last mistake. They sailed right through COVID. They sailed right through
COVID, never tapped the brakes, never looked around, never thought, hmm, what did I get wrong?
What can I take ownership? What do I owe someone an apology for? None of them have a rearview
mirror. They sailed through four years of being wrong about COVID and never even looked back. The ladies of The View are among
those who are just baffled at the right wing backlash to Caitlin Clark coming out and saying
when nominated or honored as Time Magazine's Athlete of the Year, I do want to acknowledge
my white privilege and point out that what would really be nice is for the black women on whose
backs this league was built to be spotlighted and elevated. They don't get why, especially post the
Trump election, many of us saw that as an absurd statement for her to be asserting her white
privilege as opposed to her athletic accomplishment in getting this honor. They don't get it, Adam. They're not going
to get it no matter how many times Trump or a Trump accolade wins an election, national or state,
et cetera. Yeah, well, I got news for the ladies.
Caitlyn Clark is a great athlete, but the greatest female athlete, and I'm including
Serena and Venus and all the great ones. The greatest
female athlete of all time is Caitlyn Jenner. So sorry, ladies.
The dude is the greatest female athlete of all time, ladies. Sorry. I don't want to ruin your
week. He can crush all of us. Oh, can I tell you something? Speaking of he, I like Caitlin actually.
And I mean him, no disrespect by using he, he knows why I do it. But there was just an unbelievable ruling out of your state. You won't be surprised to learn it's so annoying.
There was a judge out there. Okay, hold on. A judge in California, I got to back up just to explain what happened.
A man who had never said he was secretly a woman, you know, was feeling like a woman inside,
until he was convicted and sent to prison for a long, long time. Then suddenly he decides when he hears that they've changed the rules in California such that men who say they're female
can go into women's prisons. I'm trans. I'm trans.
Well, he gets transferred to a woman's prison. And guess what he does? He rapes somebody. He
allegedly rapes a female prisoner. And now he's in the middle of a trial for that crime. He is in
the middle of being tried for that crime. Well, guess what? Here's what happened. This is according to the
Women's Liberation Front, which is attending the trial and documenting what's happening.
The California DA for this area, Eric Dutemple, gets into court and argues this man raped this
female prisoner. It's deeply wrong, blah, blah, blah. And the prisoner objects saying,
he needs to refer to me as a she and her, the male prisoner who committed the rape.
I'm she, her. The judge pauses the proceedings to take it under consideration. Well, guess what?
Yesterday, the judge made a final decision yesterday, the day before. And the decision
is that the prosecutor must refer to the defendant, male rapist, as a she-her during the trial, which we believe is a first for
a criminal case. This is unbelievable. The prosecutor has to stand up in front of the jury.
This is him. This is our woman. This is she-her. The prosecutor has to say she raped the female inmate. What in the actual F, Adam?
You know, it's an interesting ploy and it happens.
It's happened a few times and it's actually kind of effective because there was a trial or a crime out here in Los Angeles and you probably remember it. That's probably about five years ago now where a young, I don't know, eight or nine year old girl went to a bathroom at a Denny's and then a male went in and raped, sexually assaulted the kid and then decided to become a he, she, her.
You know, it was talking to his dad over a prison phone, laughing, saying he's gaming the system, so on and so forth.
That was a few years ago.
But when I was reading the article and the news story about it in the Los Angeles Times, because the Los Angeles Times is stupid and woke and has to go with the pronouns and everything.
So the story and the pronouns were like they. OK, so imagine you're
reading a story. The story is an eight year old girl goes into a bathroom at a restaurant and a
25 year old male goes into the bathroom and rapes the eight year old in the bathroom. That's the
story. But when you're reading the article, it says, you know, a minor went to the bathroom. That's the story. But when you're reading the article, it says,
you know, a minor went to the bathroom, then they went into the bathroom after her. And then she,
they pulled out her penis and then she raped, she and they raped. And after reading it for five five minutes you just go i i don't even know
what's i i don't even know what's going on leave me alone i i'm moving on i i can't figure this
out they went in no he no no she wait a minute she raped there was it a gang rape was it no it was
she just she raped the other girl it's like it perfect. It's perfect. The jury just goes, I.
I give up. I don't know. I don't I don't know what this is. And it works.
Picture of this man. This man, this picture of this man insisting and succeeding in being called she her in court was taken.
What is it, Deb? March, April. This is this was last April. This was last April. This is not like 10 years ago before the transition.
This is a man working the system and those idiots in California are allowing it. They couldn't give
two shits about the female prisoners in California. They don't care. It's absolutely
outrageous. And by the way, that judge's order
should be appealed. It's unconstitutional. You cannot force speech like this. You cannot force
this compromise of the victim's rights by confusing the jury in this way. I don't think
this is going to be, they should appeal it. This should not be allowed. Okay. A couple of things I
want to get to. Have you been following the drones? I have my eye in the sky,
but I do not claim to have any special information on the drones.
Well, everybody in the Northeast is talking about it
because everyone's seeing them.
They're everywhere.
And first we were told we weren't.
And then we were told, oh, it's nothing.
And then we were told, oh, it's just the same amount of drones
that are always out there.
Like you're just, you're inventing it in your head. You've heard the
story and now you're seeing what's not there. Totally untrue. That's just not true. Then
yesterday, finally the Pentagon and others came out and said, oh, it's, it's like a collection.
It's like hobbyists, commercial fixed wing aircraft, and also law enforcement,
a lot of law enforcement. Like they just drop it in in there like we're, yeah, we know that that's what it appears to be. It could be federal law enforcement,
it could be CIA, it could be FBI, it could be Pentagon. That's all law enforcement.
And now the speculation is, of course, what are they doing up there? What law enforcement,
what are law enforcement drones looking for? And here is New Jersey Mayor of Bellevue,
Michael Melhan, with some new information.
It's hot 12.
We also know that we have drones that are flying in a grid-like pattern.
In my opinion, they're looking for something.
What might they be looking for?
Well, potentially, we're aware of a threat that came in through Port Newark.
Maybe that's radioactive material.
There was and there is an alert that's out right now that radioactive material in New Jersey has gone missing on December 2nd.
It was a shipment.
It arrived at its destination.
The container was damaged and was empty.
So potentially we're looking for that.
Stop right there, Mayor, because that's very important information.
And that came from a credible source.
That came from the U.S. government.
And so it's missing?
Missing.
And they think it's in New Jersey or it could be anywhere?
It was lost in New Jersey in transit.
And again, this is just an example of what I think that we're sniffing for.
Okay.
Like we've lost radioactive.
This is like a scene out of Back to the Future, Adam.
Remember Doc stole a whole thing of pluton the Future, Adam. Remember, Doc stole
a whole thing of plutonium to make the DeLorean run. Where's our radioactive material? And is
that what the drones are looking for? We don't know, but this is why people are freaked out.
Well, to me, it speaks to a larger picture and a huge problem with the current time we're living in, and especially
the Biden administration. If you heard Biden comment on the drones or Mayorkas comment on
the drones or Kamala Harris comment on the drones or Karine Jean-Pierre comment on the drones,
would you believe one word that came out of their mouth?
No. Okay. So that's a problem. Everybody I've, everybody I've spoke to, I go, what do you think?
And what if Biden came out and gave a presser on the drones? Would you believe any of it?
Or anyone from the FBI or anyone from the CIA,, like I said, Mayorkas or Homeland Security or whatever.
And they all go, no, I wouldn't believe anything they said.
Why should we?
And it's like, well, that's kind of a weird testimonial.
You know, I mean, that's that's a weird position to be in in the United States of America.
I've been here for a while.
I remember a day when if the president came out, made a comment or statement about it, or the director of Homeland Security or FBI or DOJ or whomever, CIA, I would tend to believe that.
I no longer believe anything they say. I wouldn't believe anything Biden says or that comes out of the Biden administration.
I don't think he gets
enough credit for being a liar. Yeah, enough credit. Yeah. Let me show you back to back
Biden on the drones on Tuesday and Trump on the drones on Monday. Watch this. The government knows what is happening.
Look, our military knows where they took off from.
If it's a garage, they can go right into that garage.
They know where it came from and where it went.
And for some reason, they don't want to comment.
And I think they'd be better off saying what it is our military knows
and our president knows.
And for some reason, they want to keep people in suspense.
I can't imagine it's the enemy because it was the enemy that blasted out.
Even if they were late, they'd blast it.
Something strange is going on.
For some reason, they don't want to tell the people.
And they should because the people are really, I mean, they happen to be over Bedminster.
We should tell them. They're very close to Bedminster. I think maybe I won't
spend the weekend in Bedminster. I've decided to cancel my trip.
Such a difference for those who couldn't hear Biden, what he said was nothing nefarious,
apparently, but they're checking it all out. There's a lot of drones authorized up
there. I think one started and they all got everybody's want to get in the deal.
And then there was Trump. They know. And they should just tell people.
Remember 10 minutes ago when everyone was explaining to us the adults are back in charge and now we have integrity and transparency,
we're going to have full transparency.
How insane is the last four years been in terms of the adults and transparency?
I mean, he he just if I said to Joe Biden, how do you like your eggs? And he said, sunny side up. I just yell liar.
I don't think he knows. That's the question. At this point, at this point, runny. I don't know.
Like very soft boiled is the show. There's a there's a New York Times article called A Weary Biden Heads for the Exit.
They talk about how he's falling asleep at his international events. He went to some museum.
They had to bring the exhibits out to him. As he walked away from one event, everybody there
cowered in fear that he was going to tumble over. And they say it's hard to imagine that
he seriously thought he could do the world's most stressful job for another four years.
A lie. The New York Times was peddling just months ago, Adam.
But now it's really hard to imagine how he thought he could do it.
Yeah, well, the New York Times not calling balls and strikes,
so we don't have to listen to them either.
But yeah, I just don't feel like Biden.
It's funny because we're focusing on Biden
being sort of out of it, deteriorating mentally,
just like they wanted us to focus on Hunter Biden.
Like this guy had a substance abuse problem.
This guy beat his problem, but he had demons.
It's like, no, no, he was a grifter and a thief.
And Biden is corrupt and a thief.
Yeah, he also has dementia.
And yeah, his son also loved crack.
But first and foremost, they were thieves and grifters
who were trading on the Biden name and enriching themselves.
So don't lose focus of that fact.
This shall be the legacy.
Adam Carolla, always great to see you. Thank you so much for being
here. Always great to see you, Megan. All right. Up next, we stay out on the left coast with
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And now we turn to someone I cannot wait to talk to. Here with me today, filmmaker and author
Justine Bateman. Justine joined me way back in 2021 in episode 81, which you should
definitely go back and check out. We were just babies back then on this show, and she's been
crushing it on social media since then, especially as of late, saying how many of us feel after the
seismic 2024 election. But in her case, it's especially brave because she is a Hollywood person and you know
how it is to be honest about politics out there. She's also been sounding the alarm about the
dangers of AI, which we discussed yesterday with a guest Tristan Harris. You should go back and
listen to that if you haven't heard it. Very scary story about something called character AI.
Justine, welcome back to the show. Hi, good to see you again.
Oh, great to see you too. So we'll get to the AI stuff because it's really,
really interesting. But how do you feel now? Here we are one month and a couple of weeks post
the November 5th seismic change in America. And I don't know, I mean,
I know you don't say who you vote for, but how are you
feeling about the future? I think this is great. It was long overdue. Yeah, just that mob mentality
momentum that's necessary to maintain an atmosphere where your job can be destroyed,
your social standing can be destroyed,
your children's lives at their school can be destroyed.
That momentum ended with the very large national poll
of what people want,
which is our national presidential election,
kind of set stage for that being over. And that's the kind of momentum you need for things like the,
if people remember the McCarthy trials, the HUAC trials, the blacklisting in the 50s,
the witch burning of the 1600s, even things like tulip mania, also the 1600s.
If you don't have that momentum, you can't, you don't have the structure you need to ruin
people's lives. So that's over. How did we get sucked into it so fully? I think it started with the Me Too movement. And I did an essay on this on my
sub stack where Me Too, I think if you're somebody who's prone to feel left out, this is the worst era for you to be in because you know, if you're left out
in, in prior eras, you would know if you were left out in your small group, your town, maybe
your work environment, your school. But now it's like, you know, if you're left out of the entire
world, because what you posted on social media didn't get any likes,
or you're not part of the hashtag. And so you can look on, see the trending topics,
and you can see that you are not part of it. And I think that was true for a lot of women
when they saw the Me Too hashtag trending and all these women in the very unfortunate and not enviable situation
of having been victims of criminal sexual assault. But it was a big topic. And I think a lot of women
felt left out. And then they started kind of lowering the bar to what qualifies for that.
And it became sort of the me, me, me, me too movement.
And also we started glorifying,
there was a lot of attention on people who have PTSD or, you know,
maybe from having been a victim of sexual assault or other reasons.
And there was focus on that too.
And so people want to be part of that as well.
They wanted to, you know, they kind of scrambled within themselves to see like,
well, can't I qualify somehow?
Don't I have some sort of trauma somehow?
And then they started wearing it on their, like almost on a Girl Scout stash, you know, little
badges, and you could see it on their profiles. I'm a this, I'm a that, you know, and they started
sort of highlighting all the ways that they were, they could qualify for invisible disabilities,
or me, me, me, me too, and then it became a sacred cow. I think it's that
Megan, like as soon as something becomes a sacred cow, you're screwed, you know? And then it became
like, Oh, you can't touch that. You can't touch anything to do with sexual assault. You can't do
touch anything to do with, uh, you can't question anybody. You can't look at the animals. I saw a video of somebody
putting a great Dane on an airplane. That's their emotional support.
Yes. It's so ridiculous. And people are afraid to push back because it was so easy on social
media. There was that momentum, right? It was so easy on social media to destroy your career, get you fired. And for anyone who says that's not true, you're, you're either kidding yourself or you're, you're,
you're just kidding yourself. It's, it's, it's, it's childish to say that that wasn't true.
I know people for whom that's true. So it absolutely happened. And, um, okay. Let me ask you this.
Cause I look back at the beginning of the me too movement. And in the beginning, I think there were
some noble moments, you know, I am thrilled that Harvey Weinstein's no longer in power,
but less moon Vez is no longer in power. You know, some real villains, at least with respect to the
way they treated women went down. And I loved that. I think that's worth celebrating because we had
been living in an era in which they had total control and women really did kind of have to go
along to get along or just leave the industry, you know? And then I really think like the pivotal
moment was Kavanaugh, where they tried to Kavanaugh, you know, it's a verb now
to be Kavanaughed, right? Where like, he's an alleged gang rapist and he's been on the federal
bench for all these years. We never knew. And you know, who's pushing those claims? Oh, it's Michael
Avenatti who would wind up in prison himself, right? For defrauding his own clients and being
a professional liar and thief. So that was pivotal, but you're
right. Cause there was a jump, the shark moment. And I remember being on the set at NBC where I
talked to a lot of these women and there was one young woman who sat there and her complaint was
that her boss was complimenting how nice she looked in her dress. And I remember saying to her, come on, like what?
And she was very defensive of how, no, like it's inappropriate. I just don't know how, like
in the same way, like Black Lives Matter, you know, yes, are there some incidents where
we have some bad cops who do some very bad things? Of course. So then this momentum starts, but we just overcorrect everything to the point of completelyity because it's been so exploited. They cannot get off the train. They just, they cannot admit that something that once may have had a noble goal or, you know,
taken down a true villain here or there is no longer, um, admirable is no longer characterized
with valor of any kind is no longer about standing up for anybody who's downtrodden, but really more about being a bully and being a movement that gets used for someone's ulterior motives.
Yeah. But for those people who were taking advantage of it, that was always true. So
imagine what, where were those people before they decided they were going to join these hashtags, even though they didn't qualify?
What was going on in their lives?
What kind of people were they?
And I would hazard a guess that they were lost.
They didn't know what they were going to do with their lives.
They felt like they were of no consequence.
They felt like they were not important.
They felt like they had no,. They felt like nobody was going to
listen to them about anything. And maybe they were people who had not looked within themselves at
their own basket of skills and talents that I believe every single person is born with,
and they haven't bothered to develop any of those. So you take these people and this attention that they got through lowering the bar to qualify for
these hashtags um they were able to use it almost like a drug so now you have a bunch of addicts if
you will and their drug has been removed from them so So they are flailing. And now you see them grabbing onto things like, yeah, let's go after all these other CEOs.
And I'm like, okay.
Yes.
You talk about absurd.
Like it's becoming even more absurd because just like a junkie, you take away their drug or an alcoholic or an or, or an, uh, and, and an anorexic
or a compulsive overeater, like you name it, a workaholic, a sexaholic, anything you take,
any, you take the drug away from them before they've hit bottom. And there's going to be,
you're going to have something that's beyond a panic attack. And that's what a lot of people
are experiencing now, because what it means is they will have to go back, pick up where they left off before they hitch their wagon to these hashtags.
They're going to have to go back there.
I think it's a great opportunity for them.
They're going to have to go back to that point where they left off and start developing their own basket of skills and talents.
And I think if they do that and put in that work, they will see that they do have value.
They do have, they do have a skillset that is a value in society. So I'm excited for them,
but it's, it's, it's going to be uncomfortable for them right now. It's going to take a while.
That is such an interesting and apt point. I hadn't even considered that this weird cult status of this
accused shooter, Luigi Mangione, who very much appears to have killed Brian Thompson,
United Healthcare CEO, and is accused of such, that it's related to this cult mindset.
Well, the reaction, right?
Yeah. They're looking for a new cause. Let me just give you another number and then I'll give it back to you.
We talked yesterday about a poll that showed 40, 41% of 18 to 29 year olds, 41% approve
of what Luigi did allegedly, this murder, approve. Only 40% of that cohort says they disapprove. So basically tied. But the fact
that it's tied on approve, disapprove, this murder of just his only sin was being the CEO of United
Healthcare is astonishing. And then here's more. This is poll tracker pointing out today,
favorability of Luigi by age 18 to 29, favorable opinion of him, him 39% of that cohort
has a favorable opinion, 30% unfavorable, 30 to 44 year olds, unfavorable, 29, favorable, 28.
So it's basically tied for 30 to 44 year olds on the, whether they approve of this guy.
And then as you get older, it goes down unfavorable within the 45
to 64, us Gen Xers, 49% unfavorable, favorable 14, 65 and up, unfavorable 63, favorable five,
but unbelievable, Justine. Well, I think you're seeing a lot of cognitive dissonance with, with him and also this teenage girl who did this shooting recently,
I forget in Wisconsin. Is that right? Yeah. And so cognitive dissonance is interesting. It's a,
you know, where you can't hold two ideas, two different ideas in your head at the same time.
So people are going, oh, well, somebody murdered somebody
and oh, he's well off, oh, and he's educated.
And there's nothing in his social media
that seems to indicate that he's insane
or holds ideas that are in opposition of their positions.
And do you see, like like he doesn't fit into
the category that they expect or that anybody really expects? Who expects that?
And this school shooter, aren't we used to the school shooters being,
I don't know, radicalized young men, or maybe I'm, I'm speaking that incorrectly. I mean,
isn't that usually 19 to 26 year old men, but now you have a young woman teenager who's railing
against misogyny. You see, so these two kill, it's an interesting timing for them. They're
both murderers. That's it. A murderer. They're both murderers.
Neither one of them doing it out of self-defense. So in society, as far as I'm concerned, that is
abhorrent and not to be, it's unacceptable in our society. You can't have a society,
a cohesive society, if that kind of thing is acceptable, obviously.
But I think, yeah, what I said, I think there's a lot of cognitive dissonance for many, many
people that these two killers are the types of people that they are.
I definitely think it relates to like, we're kind of talking about the rise of wokeism
to the explosion of wokeism.
And I think they're directly related to the loss of a national identity, a patriotic thread that binds us
together. You know, when we grew up, that was instilled in the classroom. You'd stand up every
morning and say the pledge. You know, I mean, we used to sing my country tis of thee in my class
in the mornings. And that's gone. And so is religion in the public square,
which was absolutely one of the things that we saw the country founded on. And it's been erased
and erased and erased and replaced with active school shooter drills. And there's a, there's
a search for meaning. Yeah. Uh, and be interesting to like, to see where that started. I really liked doing the Pledge
of Allegiance when I was a kid. I'm sorry to hear that that's, I know that's not been a part of the
regular school, um, mornings for a while now. And that's too bad. I'm not opposed to religion,
not being in schools, or you said you didn't say schools, you said the town square.
Public square.
You know, it's interesting, spirituality, the decline, you know, when you look, there's a chart,
the decline is really sharp, the fall off. I don't know when the sort of steep descent begins. But maybe, Megan, it has to do with the kind of flattening of culture that the internet,
you know, public-facing internet introduced.
And look, there's a lot of great things about the internet.
And one of the consequences, though, was a flattening of culture, a flattening of time too.
Like imagine some interview that I did in 1987, you could find in a magazine, a 1987 issue of a
magazine. And it's in context. You see other people that were, you know, popular enough at
the time to be interviewed. You see ads from that time, news that was happening at that were, you know, popular enough at the time to be interviewed. You see ads from that time,
news that was happening at that time, whatever. But now you see an interview of me from 1987
online. There's no context. It's as if I said it yesterday or, you know, oftentimes these
interviews and articles don't have any dates on them at all. So there's that aspect of it as far as news, as far as what is happening.
And then you also have just this almost a monoculture of everybody knowing what everybody's doing all at once.
You no longer had these pockets sort of, not an incubator, but an area in which, and a time and a space where something could develop
and then emerge. You remember when we were kids, something, if you were living in LA,
there would be like some fashion, like bell bottoms or something like this. And then you'd
go visit your cousins in Wisconsin or Utah or something. and they're like, what are you wearing? And then
three or four years later, that would be a trend there. So all of that went away with the internet
because everything's so immediate. So. And also do you think also raunchier, like, you know,
it used to be the kids were stealing the Playboys out of their dad's, you know, trunk at the foot of the bed. And now it's like graphic triple
X porn available, you know, at the click of a button on the, on the devices. And it's ubiquitous.
I mean, I just had a guy on the show last week who I love named Dr. Leonard Sacks. He's a parenting expert. He's MD, PhD, went to MIT, only takes into account longitudinal
focus group studies in giving his feedback. So he's not like a feelings type guy. He looks at
actual data and studies of large cohorts of children to figure out what's what.
And he was saying parents need to remain the primary influence in their children's life
in 2024 America
through age 18, 18. I said, what are you talking about? In the seventies, we had no parents.
There were no parents anywhere. And we turned out fine. You could argue we turned out better than
the current generations are looking to turn out based on some of the things you discussed.
And he said it was different then because the culture would step in
to fill some of the void. And the culture was family ties, shows with a message, shows with
two parents, shows like Little House on the Prairie, shows like the Waltons. Music had a
more positive message back then. You didn't turn it on and hear, as he always points out,
the wet ass P word song, you know, like it was just
very different. Yeah. I didn't mean to cut you off. I just mean that song is like absolutely
bizarre to me. Yeah. It's disgusting. But I mean, you lived it. You were and remain. This is why,
how we all came to know and love you, a cultural icon because of you, you were part of that
messaging and somehow we lost it. I do think
the internet was a big part in destroying it. Well, yeah, part of it. But think of it,
I think of it this way. You had, when you were interacting with your peers in before the internet,
you had real world consequences. You found out that behaving in a particular way
got you uninvited to the next party. You were shunned in certain areas. But there's opportunity
to earn your way back into a group or something, right? I mean, it was more tribal like that,
right? It was just. But then when the internet was introduced, social media, you could actually get attention,
which is not the same thing as approval.
You could get attention online for behavior and also couple that with, and this preceded
the internet and social media by a bit, reality shows.
So I always think back to the first reality show that I recall, which was Real World on MTV.
And there was a guy on there named Puck.
And Puck misbehaved.
I mean, as you can, that's his name.
So.
I remember. There's a Shakespearean play with Puck misbehaved. I mean, as you can, that's his name. So I remember anybody, there's a Shakespearean play with Puck in it. Yeah. Um, yeah. Uh, is it a little, what is it?
A little summer night street? What is it? Yeah. A little mischief maker. Um, so he was a,
he was a real pain in the ass and, and then, but the people were so enthralled with the idea that
somebody was behaving like that and, and nothing was really happening to him. And so that became
a trend in social, in, um, on reality shows, you know, the worst behavior got rewarded with attention and money and whatever else. So I think people saw these
two things. And then that sort of tribal consequence of being a poor addition to a party
or something was diluted. I think that has something to do with it.
I'm thinking about Omarosa right now on The Apprentice.
Yeah, that was another one. Yeah.
Just like Puck, she kept getting brought back for the MVP edition and then, you know,
the all-star edition because, and I'm one of the people who loved to watch her bad behavior on that show. It was highly entertaining, but I maybe, it has a different effect on a strong personality watching it for mild entertainment in the same way The Real Housewives does versus someone who's impressionable and looking to make a name for themselves or doesn't have that strong sort of sense of self, the strong id, and is looking to fill it up with something, that void.
Yeah. I mean, when you're younger, you look around, you're like, you're new to society, especially as a little kid, right?
What do people value?
There's a sociologist named Rene Girard who has this theory called mimetic, mimetic desire.
His theory is that nobody wants anything when they're born except the core need and desire to survive.
And they look around and they see what other people are desiring who have been here longer.
And then they just sort of mimic their desire. They go, oh, everybody wants that car. Okay. Then I want to want it too, you know, because how else are you
going to, you look around at the society that exists to see how you can, to see what's valued
in order to not only fit in, but to, to be a value in that society as well. And that does come back to somebody's sense of surviving, right?
So it's a shame little kids then,
they looked at that poor reality show behavior.
They look at how people behave online.
They look at, I mean, even Trump's behavior, you know, looked at it objectively in 2016, changed the way he was criticizing people, you know, that I was not in favor of, frankly.
But that changed political behavior.
Do you notice after that it not only changed political behavior. Do you notice after that it not only changed political behavior.
I mean, how many people, how many politicians had online accounts at that point had Twitter,
you know, when it was Twitter or Facebook accounts or anything. And after that, and not only did it
change political behavior, but it's the 24 hour news cycle, always needing a talking head, all the podcasts that need guests, all of this, needing people to be online.
There's an endless amount of air that needs to be filled with people's presence.
And then the bad behavior being kind of awarded.
I think it has attracted a certain type of politician now. Remember when
we first saw C-SPAN in the early 80s or whatever it was? And we look at this and go, you know,
the first time we saw like what, you know, on TV, like what was going on in the House or the Senate,
and we just went, oh my God, it's so boring. Like, how do they stay awake? These people are so dull. What they have to do all day is so dull. And that's not the case anymore. And I think it's attracted people. I think we should bring back the boring politicians like who just they're doing their job. You know, I it's this type that wants to be on camera all the time, you know, and then and it's it's on both sides of the whatever aisle.
I mean, the AOC.
I call AOC a congressional Kardashian.
That's what she seems like to me.
She just wants to get famous and build her socials while she's in there.
And then I guess parlay that into some sort of whatever.
I don't know what her long term plan is.
I don't really care.
But I do think I thought about Trump a lot. He spent his life in the, in the public eye.
He definitely attention is his oxygen. But the thing about Trump that's been interesting is,
yes, he was more crude. One of the reasons why he got such a negative reaction when he first
burst out of the political scene in 15, 16 was yes. he was saying things that the Republican Party considered anathema, you know,
I mean, tariffs, that wasn't their thing, not being, you know, provably pro-life, that was a
problem for them. There are a lot of others more isolationist than the Republican Party, which was
much more neoconny for many, many years. But really what was driving Republicans and Americans nuts
about Trump in the beginning,
many of them, was he was crude, to your point. He did not sound like Ronald Reagan,
you know, the great orator, the great communicator, when he was on camera.
There are lots of reports of how Reagan spoke off camera that are pretty controversial. But
on camera, on the national stage, Trump sounded very crude
many times. And so it was jarring, but then he helped expose some of these other politicians
and what they've been doing behind the scenes, right? That is awful. You know, you think about,
just look at Joe Biden, how he's misused the justice department against his political opponent.
I mean, he's also crude on camera too, but but not not this particular way. So my point is simply
Trump was just the first one to sort of wear it on his sleeve. But behind the scenes behaved
pretty well, whereas so many of these other politicians knew exactly how to play it in
front of the camera. But behind the scenes were complete and total douchebags. Yeah, could be. I think though there, you know,
as far as like people, people ascribing to poor behavior, you know, generally speaking,
you know, I don't mean this to be about, about politics. I was just saying like that introduced back then a whole type of political behavior on social media.
There's interesting just like reality shows and, you know, visible likes and and retweets and follower numbers affected the general public.
But I think there's a swing away from that now, like a big swing away from that.
Not only does it become, it's not shocking anymore. It's people become weary of it.
You know, it becomes tiresome. It becomes repetitive, you know, sort of bad behavior. And I think people are really wanting now something real and genuine and, and loving, frankly, and not in a,
in a patronizing way, just like in a real way, because we're all like at our core as humans, we, we, we hunger for that, which makes me feel like,
you know, we might see a turn to more spirituality now and it doesn't have to be,
I don't think, I know it doesn't have to be within a religion at all. Religion can be a framework for somebody's journey to having a relationship with God and whatever you want to whatever name you want to give my.
He doesn't give a shit, you know.
Right. You know, so long as what you're imagining is someone who knows everything about you, cares about every every scintilla of you, give you never leave your side, give you wisdom at all times. have you make, he's going to guide you to go in particular directions that might be very
uncomfortable, but you will see that it is all to have you become more and more and more and more
yourself. That's the goal to have this relationship with God and become, and I'm not talking about
religion. If anyone has a bad view of that, who rubs them the wrong way, that word, redefine it for yourself.
Or use some other word. Call him Bob. I mean, he just doesn't care.
But I think, because listen, when you've got something like, bringing it all the way around,
when you've got something like AI, generative AI, that is so good at imitating. I'll tell you the reason it's so
good at imitating what we see in our lives is because it's taken everything we've done in our
lives up to now and put it in a blender. And then you put in a prompt and you have this Frankenstein
spoonful and spits it out to you. How could it do that? It's not pulling it out of the air.
It's pulling all the films that have ever been done, all the series that ever been done, all the talk shows that have ever been done,
the books that have ever been written and all of this it's wholesale theft, 100%.
But you've got these, the, you know, these different, uh, applications that reproduce
and we look at it and we think it's real, Or we look at these, you know, the way the
media treated the whole COVID thing, the fear mongering, which I think was unforgivable,
unforgivable. And they'll do it again. It'll be done again. It'll be that kind of fear mongering
will happen again because it's happened repeatedly
in history. Anyway, you've got all these things that are we used to be able to just rely on what
our eyes saw. We used to be able to rely on. Well, or we assumed we could rely on what the media was
telling us, it seemed more even keeled. Right. We're just getting the or the FBI, why, how, right? But if you don't have those things,
and I don't know if that they'll return,
our ability to depend on these things of being real.
I don't know that that will return.
So that being true then,
what are you going to rely on to guide you?
Are you going to look around at other people?
Are you going to look around at what's trending on social media?
Well, that must be the direction. Are you going to go by a video that you see?
Well, I don't know. That could be generative AI. Maybe that's not real. You're going to go
by what the media says. Well, I don't know. What's their agenda? If you, you've got to get
some kind of foundation spiritually, however, you're going to pull that together. Again, I'm not talking about religion. I'm just saying it's available and it will give you a sense of.
It will give you a true north, what I'm saying, it'll give you a sense of direction that is not dependent at all on all those other elements, I just said, because you cannot trust them.
And you, and you know, I just encourage people to develop their own discernment,
which is inherent, right? Your own discernment and your own instincts. And this is not a right
or left. I mean, honestly, I'm, I think I'm not into politics at all. I'm into people divesting themselves of their fears,
most of them irrational in my experience,
so that they can truly become themselves completely.
And if you couple that with a relationship,
a spiritual relationship,
you're going to be so much happier. You're going
to have focus in your life. And you're going to be able to discern whether or not something is
bullshit. And everybody needs that now. Going forward, you're going to need more.
Well, a hefty dose of humility is definitely in order for most people. And believing in a higher power is a good reminder of the need to stay humble and how we are. We are humble human beings.
We don't have all the answers. That doesn't mean Bob doesn't. All right, stand by. More with Justine
right after this. We're going to ask her about those viral videos she did critiquing some of
the meltdowns after Trump won. Have you seen any of these? Because they're very
clever. Stand by. I'm Megyn Kelly, host of The Megyn Kelly Show on Sirius XM. It's your home
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Let's just spend a minute on your critiques of these videos, because it was such a clever way,
I thought, to handle the insanity that broke out when Trump won.
You approached it very forensically as a filmmaker and just kind of had some issues with the direction and the editorial choices by some of these people having the meltdowns.
All right, let's let's watch one, which is I think we've got SOT 2, where this is a woman, we think, with a half shaved head.
Let's watch.
Our kids need to hear you discussing trans and queer topics.
They will be hearing about trans athletes and you need to set the record straight
on the percentage of trans people in the United States and the percentage of competitive trans
athletes. It's super important to stick with the facts. Let's stop the witch hunt on trans people.
So for the listening audience, that woman literally has like a center part
and a long head of hair on one side and a shaved head on the other side. Go ahead,
Justine, your thoughts on her approach to her messaging.
Oh, that one. Oh, geez. I'd have to bring up my critique to really do it justice.
But I think in that critique, I went into, um, gosh, if somebody could bring it up,
that'd be, I've got, I got, I have it here. You read it. This piece introduces many questions.
You should pull up one of the ones that, that where they were crying and like having a,
like a fucking fit anyway, but yeah, so go ahead and read, read the half shaved head.
You read this piece introduces many questions as part of the, I'm shaving my head because I don't
like the election outcome movement. This character has gone only halfway yet. No reason is given.
The viewer is left wondering, is this a new movement? Does this represent those who are
ambivalent about the election outcome? Or is the hairstyle of those
who sympathize with both sides or someone who changed their mind midway? The setting is
refreshingly not in a car, and yet we wonder why or what is beyond the fence? There's a fence behind
her. What is it blocking? Is it blocking an illegally narrow walkway between two houses,
something else? The bright open space above the actress's head also causes the audience
to wonder, is this an escape hatch for the main character, for us? The camera is appropriately
elevated, but it's unnecessarily unsteady. Tripods can be delivered to you the next day through
Amazon. The editing is unfortunate because this is a short piece. All the dialogue can be captured
at once. Another take should have been done. Fiend. End. Meaning that is brilliant.
So well done. Well, the ones that were right after the election were absolutely.
I mean, the the the level of emotion that was released, it was, my first thought when I looked at them was, man, we've had this crying genre in, you know, kind of online posts for like six years.
And as a filmmaker, I always wonder, were you crying really hard?
I mean, something was really upsetting to you and not just about
the election, but I mean, this is happening prior. You were crying really hard about something that
truly upset you. And then the thought entered your head that, oh, I've got to find my phone.
Where's my phone? I've got to record this. And then you held the phone. I put my tears on camera.
I've got to record myself crying. And then you recorded yourself. Maybe you did a couple of
takes and then you watched it back and then you edited it. And then you decided that it should be
distributed internationally and you posted it online. Or were you wondering what to post next
on your social media account? Should it be an unboxing video? Should it be a visit to your
doctor's office? You know, what are you going to do to keep the audience there?
And you go, I know I'll do a crying video.
And you post it and you set your phone up or your camera and then made yourself cry.
It had to have gone one way or the other.
And then I thought, my second thought was, my God, we are so many years into this creator
economy and still the quality looks this shitty.
How is that possible?
Like it's never been easier.
That's why I mentioned that, you know, you could, the creator economy has made so, has
created an entire cottage industry on equipment, lighting, tripod stands.
I mean, everything.
Yeah.
You don't have to live like this, Susan.
There's no excuse. Whatever mean, everything. Yeah. You don't have to live like this, Susan, whatever her name was.
So then I thought, well, I'll just tell them, you know, I'll just do a serious film review of these
items that have been distributed internationally. Here they are.
I like the ones where you, you call people out for not producing real tears. It's like, as an,
as an actual actress, come on, you know, like some, yeah, some of it is forced, some of it's forced and maybe it was the second or third take.
And then, you know, the director of this piece should be aware if they're tiring,
emotionally tiring the actress with too many takes and, but it's better to read them. Actually,
if people go to my sub stack, um, which is justinbatemanstubstack.com, there's an index there of, I've done over a hundred of them. So they can go down, you go all the way down to the bottom even and see the first ones. there was one with a woman who was standing next to this man,
very close as if her one arm is behind him.
And she's looking at him as he's talking and she's nodding her head to
camera. And then she's looking back and nodding. And,
and it really looked like she's a ventriloquist and this is her dummy,
the guy standing next to her. So there's a whole piece on that.
Anyway, it's yeah, it's satire.
Absolutely.
It's a great way to comment on because a lot of times they're saying stuff that's really
heinous.
I'm also clever about it is I mean, that's what you're supposed to do.
You're supposed to laugh at fools who behave so foolishly and they're meant to anger you. They're, they're meaning to upset you to,
to motivate you to cry. And it's, it's the appropriate response to look at a lunatic
like that and just laugh a little like, okay, good luck in your influencer career. I I've got
doubts about how far it's going. Um, did you get any blowback on that? Like,
are you, I know you're, you know, you're towing the line politically and you're not a political
person, which I believe, but do you get blowback just, you know, just by saying,
by not saying you're for Kamala, you can get blowback in Hollywood. I don't remember a time in my career where,
where there was an absence of criticism of me.
So, or of anybody, I mean, I'm not,
there's nothing unique about me in that sense.
I go into detail in my book fame, right?
We talked about that years ago.
You just didn't hear it as often when, because of the effort it took to write a letter to
somebody, you know, back before the internet.
So I've always been, there's always been somebody, at least one person, and I say that
sarcastically, like more than one person, who's got a problem with me is something about my
presence pushes their buttons or they don't like that. I haven't done anything to my face or they,
you know, I mean, so I don't, it, it doesn't, it doesn't any quote blowback I would be getting
from anything I'm saying now is in the same bin. In other words,
it's no different now than it's ever been. So I don't care. And all I'm saying now is
I'm glad that that mob mentality momentum is over because the last eight years and most acutely last four years were fucking unbearable.
Unbearable.
I never want to go through anything like that again in my life.
I truly don't.
It was the most un-American situation I've ever been in.
And I'm 58, I think.
I'm 58.
You know? Yeah, totally agree. People can't say,
can't ask questions, can't say what they think, can't ask that there be some research on this or
that. It was absolutely awful. And I, it was just like revenge of the home monitors. It was the, it was the fucking Debbie Downers, the party poopers, the,
you know, and one of the things, you know, the, the,
the social media video critiques that I'm doing, you know, I mean,
I'm not doing that many anymore because you don't have as many, you know,
people getting all crazy about it.
But I will do it for subscribers for christmas presents for if they
want a christmas present for someone they could like send me their moms or their sisters or
whatever you know i mean it's a good christmas present right and i'll do a critique for them
um anyway that's just amazing but but there's something about satire megan that's
that that was one of the comedy and satire was one of the first things to take a dive that they
squashed. Cause when you think about it, if you have satire and comedy in a society, you have
balance because it serves, it's like an insect in an area in nature that keeps certain things at
bay and you eliminate that insect and you'll find, oh, here comes some vine that starts choking
the trees. Oh, that was the main food source for that insect that you just got rid of.
So satire and comedy are like that. They hem in, and there's other things too, of course,
but those are two elements that will hem in a society and keep a balance.
And you see, those were two of the first things that they got out in order to make this squashing down, this hall monitor bullshit work.
The purification.
The purification of comedy.
Yeah. I mean, it really is puritanical. And I do agree. I think it's over.
One final thing I'll say, we have to wrap, but you have done a very good job of keeping politics out of your family.
Your brother's very famous, too, Jason Bateman.
By the way, I saw Carry On this past weekend.
It was excellent.
Very good film.
He plays a villain.
It's number one on Netflix right now. But your closing message to people who have not been as successful as you guys about just not making your love relationships about politics and or cultural bullshit.
Well, I think if you're making your relationships with your loved ones and your friends about politics, you're really making it about you.
Period.
You're wanting them to focus on you.
You're wanting them. I call it, um, uh, intimacy
through injury. If you have a fight with this person, they're going to be thinking about you.
They're going to want to call you and fix it or whatever, because you're too afraid to just have
a regular relationship with them where they, maybe they don't value you think they don't value you
that much. So I think it's, it's don't value you that much so i think it's
it's not about the people that are doing that it's not about politics i think it's about they're
trying to exact emotional terrorism and control on their friends and family and is just trying
to manipulate the relationship and that's it very insightful gosh you're really not even
so many other it's not even on the list of things right. It's not even on the list of things. How someone votes
is not even on the list of things that I would and would not, uh, you know, want to be around
someone because of. I know exactly. Too often it's done, I think, to people, at least on my
side of the aisle and not by people on my side of the aisle, but they can be guilty of it as well.
Justine, it's such a pleasure to talk to you again.
Thank you so much for being here. Thank you. Thank you. All right. And find out more about her film festival, which is free from AI at credo23, C-R-E-D-O 23.com. Tomorrow, VDH.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.