The One You Feed - Flaws as Fuel: Harness Doubt, Cynicism & Ambition for Real Growth with Claire Hoffman
Episode Date: April 22, 2025In this episode, Claire Hoffman explores the idea behind how our flaws, doubt, cynicism, and even ambition aren’t signs of failure, but can be used as fuel. She tells the story of Aimee Semple M...cPherson, a woman who built a religious empire and faked her own kidnapping. But this episode isn’t about scandal. It’s about the tension that we all carry between our light and dark sides. Claire says sometimes the bad wolf does good work. This conversation is about embracing contradiction and finding grace in the mess. Key Takeaways: Claire’s book: “Sister Sinner: The Miraculous Life and Mysterious Disappearance of Aimee Semple McPherson. Aimee Semple McPherson’s duality of character, embodying both “good” and “bad” traits. The impact of McPherson on American religion and her role in establishing one of the first megachurches. The complexities of fame and its effects on personal identity and mental health. The concept of “audience capture” and its implications for public figures. Societal pressures and judgments faced by women, particularly in the context of McPherson’s life. The significance of grace, forgiveness, and personal transformation in the human experience. Reflections on authenticity, compassion, and the challenges of extending grace in a judgmental world. If you enjoyed this conversation with Claire Hoffman, check out these other episodes: How to Embrace Your Authentic Self with Carmen Rita Wong Faith, Identity, and Finding Your Voice with Dante Stewart For full show notes, click here! Connect with the show: Follow us on YouTube: @TheOneYouFeedPod Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify Follow us on Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey friends, Eric here with some exciting news. I've been writing a book and it's about to be out
in the world in April of 2026. The working title is How a Little Becomes a Lot and it's all about
how small consistent actions, the kind that we talk about all the time on this show, can lead to
real meaningful change. Right now the book is in the editing process and there's still some shaping to do, which is where you come in.
I'd love your input on what to focus on, how to talk about the book,
even what it should be called. If you've got a few minutes and a couple thoughts on what would make this book most helpful for you,
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book survey. You'll also get early updates, fun
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marathons, title debates, existential spirals, and me questioning all of my life choices
at 2am over one stubborn sentence. Again, that's oneu feed.net slash book survey. Thank you so much for being part of this. Your feedback really
means a lot to me truly.
She escapes by sawing off the ropes on her wrists on a serrated
maple syrup can and running through the desert through
incredible heat and also darkness and rattlesnakes and
you know, I mean, it's like she's the star of a movie
and people just immediately had an issue with it.
["The One You Feed"]
Welcome to The One You Feed.
Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized
the importance of the thoughts we have.
Quotes like garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think ring true.
And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us.
We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear.
We see what we don't have instead of what we do.
We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit.
But it's not just about thinking.
Our actions matter.
It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living.
This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction.
How they feed their good wolf.
What if your so-called flaws, your doubt, your cynicism, even your ambition, weren't
signs of failure, but fuel?
This week I talked with journalist Claire Hoffman about Amy Semple McPherson, a woman
who built a religious empire and faked her own kidnapping.
But this episode isn't about scandal, it's about the tension that we all carry between our light and dark sides. Claire says sometimes the bad wolf
does good work and honestly I get that. As someone who's had to make peace with
parts of myself I used to run from, whether that was addiction, cynicism, or
even the days when Solitaire felt like an emotional support animal, I found this conversation personal, moving, and honestly kind of freeing.
This one's about embracing contradiction and finding grace in the mess.
I'm Eric Zimmer, and this is the one you feed.
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podcasts.
Hi, Claire. Welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me back. Back. Yes, a long time back. I think you said nine years ago. It astounds me. I've been
doing anything for that long. It's a career anomaly for me for sure to have continued
in one line for this long. But you have also been a writer since then. Your previous book,
we talked about you growing up in a transcendental
meditation community, I guess you would say. Yeah, we say movement, but they call it movement.
Okay, a movement, yes. And your new book is called Sister Sinner, the Miraculous Life and
Mysterious Disappearance of Amy Semple McPherson.
Yeah, it doesn't seem related, but I think they are.
Yes, and we'll get into that in a moment, but we'll start like we always do with a parable.
And in the parable, there's a grandparent who's talking with her grandchild,
and they say, in life, there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle.
One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love.
And the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear.
And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second.
They look up at their grandparent and they say,
well, which one wins?
And the grandparent says, the one you feed.
So I'd like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work
that you do.
Thank you, Eric. I mean, I had not heard that parable before we
did the podcast together nine years ago. And I think it is
just incredibly important and relevant, especially in terms of
the ways that we sort of strive. And a big part of this new book is about a woman
who had incredible ambition and incredible desires
to do good in the world, like a very powerful good wolf.
And she also had a really ferocious bad wolf inside of her.
And I think for me, kind of thinking about my
own journey and writing this book, I think that parable to me is about recognizing the
value of both wolves, you know, that the bad wolf does good work, you know, and sometimes
you need a bad wolf. So I'm sort of interested in embracing the bad wolf.
What do you mean by the bad wolf does good work?
I mean, you know, I think with my first book, we talked about how doubt and cynicism had
kind of led me back to meditation.
It had been this thing that had pulled me away
and it changed my perspective on the world
that I'd grown up in and taken me away
from the beliefs of my community.
And then, as a young mother, I was just so sick of the voice.
I was so sick of the doubt and I was so sick
of the cynicism and I was really looking for something else. And
you know that led me to going back to meditation. But in doing so I also sort of accepted
that that doubt and cynicism had played a really important role in getting me out, you know,
and getting me into my own space and into, you know, a set of beliefs that
were more comfortable for me, I would say.
Yeah, I think almost any quality can have its good and bad uses depending on how we
use it, when we use it, how much of it we use.
You know, cynicism in its original sense of the word is not a bad thing, right?
It's probably closer in its original use to what we would call skepticism, but skepticism
is not a bad thing.
And doubt is not a bad thing, right?
It's questioning.
In Zen, we talk about the three essentials and they're great faith, great doubt, and
great effort.
And so right there, you've got faith and doubt
right next to each other, you know,
because the doubt, the question,
what is this all about,
is what drives a lot of the endeavor.
Yeah, I've spent six years on this biography
and looking at Amy Semple MacPherson's life,
I think I see that she really bifurcated and divided, you know,
the good and bad. I mean, at one point in her life, she said, I'm either, you know,
the most wonderful saint or I am a total sinner. It's only those two choices. And I thought,
well, there's your problem because you're both, you know what I mean? They're done.
There's your title. And there's the story is that you have created this division. And I think what I
mean by saying embracing the bad wolf is instead of alienating that darkness, kind
of seeing the functional side of those dark feelings I would say.
Yep. I mean it's one of the reasons that I based this show around a parable that you might
imagine now I have read something like 800 times to people.
I think, yeah, had I known, you're going to live with this for 11 years, I might have
been like, well, is that the one I want to use?
But here we are.
But the thing that I really do like about it that I think stands up through any different
interpretation of it, to me is important, is it normalizes that both of these things
are inside of us.
And they're inside all of us.
And that to me is the important thing, right?
There's nothing wrong with us because we have quote unquote what we might think of as bad or dark or negative thoughts,
emotions, ambitions. Like that's just what it is to be human. And we have all these beautiful
aspects of ourselves too. And that's what I love about it is just unlike what Amy did,
which is I'm either this or I'm that, it says we're all both. Yeah. And I feel like, you know, I mean, since after I did my first book, and I think this
is why we have a shared landscape, I got so many letters from people who, you know, were
former Catholics, former Mormons, former, you know, evangelicals, and of course, you
know, lots of people who had been part of the Transcendental
Meditation Movement. I see this real appetite for a conversation around embracing the positive
things about institutional or structured religion and the community of religion and also recognizing all the kind of really shitty things
that happen in these organizations and people really wanting to think that through individually,
right? This is the spiritual but not religious giant chunk of Americans that we are. And I think
this question about that dichotomy really is fundamental to it.
Yeah. So let's talk about Amy Semple MacPherson. Who is she?
I grew up in a sort of quasi Hindu meditation community. But it did mean that I became really interested in religion. And after
interested in religion. And after journalism school, I went to divinity school for a year. And you know, I thought, oh, I'm going to study fundamentalism or, you know, the sort
of an anthropological look at religion. But instead, I was really drawn to the history
of Christianity in America, because it's actually, I think, it's a shared story. And if you're
interested in these questions that we're talking about, the story goes back 400 years
and looking at the way that, you know,
new faiths and religious beliefs are born
and evolve and fight and die, you know,
I mean, it's fascinating.
And when I was at Divinity School,
I learned about Amy Semple MacPherson
and I was kind of fascinated
that I'd never heard of her because she was sort of celebrated as a 20th century pioneer of American
religion. She did not start Pentecostalism, which is a evangelical Protestant faith that is the
fastest growing religion in the world. a quarter of the world's Christians,
identify as charismatic and Pentecostal. And, you know, it's this idea of a living Jesus,
right? That you have a personal relationship with Jesus, that Jesus connects to you and can
provide, you know, the gifts of divine healing and speaking in tongues is really the signature Pentecostal faith. But Amy was a poor Canadian
woman who felt called to spread the gospel. Her mother, since she was a little kid, kind of
praised her as God's promise. And she grew up in a religious household. She converted to Pentecostalism
only like four years after the faith had started in 1906
in Los Angeles. And Amy, you know, just had this incredible appetite and drive to share
her story and share her experience and try and help other people experience this kind
of living Jesus. And she endured unbelievable hardships.
You know, I mean, she was a missionary in China.
She lost her first husband.
She had crazy health issues.
And she kind of ended up living, you know,
just before the World War on the road with her mother
and her young children preaching from town to town. And she just truly
felt called, you know, I sort of imagine almost like a shamanic hippie or something, right? Like
she just, it's like, she just had this sense of like, this was what she was supposed to do.
And she comes to Los Angeles in 1918. It's, you know, one of the century's great success stories. She
shows up with, as she said, $10 in a tambourine. And within, you know, the span of five years,
she builds the largest church in America, like truly every like brick and pew paid for
by altar calls that she raised with her mother.
And she builds the Angelus Temple in 1923, which is arguably the first megachurch in
America.
And she goes on to create kind of what was known as the best show in town.
You know, I mean, 15,000 people coming on Sundays to see, you know, kind of Hollywood
style entertainment.
So she's also considered sort of the founder
of what we know of today as Christian entertainment.
And she has to start
with one of the first Christian radio stations.
So she was like just this incredible pioneer,
but most people don't know about her
because in 1926 at the height of her fame,
she walked into the ocean and disappeared.
And it was this national news story.
Two people died looking for her.
40,000 people stood on the beach searching for her,
like true kind of devotee-style followers.
And 36 days later, she walks in from the desert of Mexico in the middle of
the night and tells a sort of unbelievable story of being kidnapped in broad daylight
and held prisoner and in threats of being sold into sexual slavery. Just a totally bizarre
story.
Yeah, the book is incredibly compelling. Five pages in or
maybe less than that, I was like, holy mackerel, right? Because you very
quickly set up how big of a deal she is, how famous she is, and then the fact that
she just disappears. And the rest of the book is sort of setting up how she got
to that point and then kind of what happened after that point.
And before we go into the trial and whether she actually was kidnapped or what actually
happened and maybe we don't even know, I thought we could talk a little bit more about
her before we get there.
Because there was one thing in the book that stood out to me a little bit, and it was that
when she was doing what she seemed kind of born to do, right, she was just really good
at it, right?
When you get that fame as doing something, it's because you're good at it.
When she was doing that, at least early on, before fame became its own monster, she seemed
like she was a pretty happy person.
But there's a point early on where she tries to become like a regular old housewife.
And I mean, she just falls apart, right?
Yeah, it's incredible. A contemporary biographer of hers called her a flamingo in a chicken coop,
which I think is like just the perfect description, right? On all accounts. I mean, she's relatable, but she's also like a once
in a century personality, you know, and she was just this incredible force. And I mean,
everything that was happening was happening at a time when the expectation for women was
essentially just to be a mother, you know, I mean, there was not a housewife.
And I, you know, I mean, when she started her ministry, I don't think women could even
vote in the majority of states or hold land.
Or a bank account.
Or have a bank account.
It makes all of these achievements of hers, you know, you really have to kind of underscore
it that it was just incredible obstacles. But yes,
she tried to live life as a normal person in a little apartment with her second husband
and her two young children. And it was as if she was physically destroyed by it. She
ended up having a couple of, you know, what she called nervous breakdowns, a hysterectomy,
incredible like internal bleeding,
all these kind of awful things.
And she sort of lost her mind.
I mean, I guess that's the definition
of a nervous breakdown 100 years ago,
but she writes about how all the smallness
of everything drove her mad.
And her neighbors would say,
oh, she was a nice blonde,
but didn't seem to take her housework seriously.
Yeah.
And then she gets back into preaching and seems to make sort of a miraculous recovery.
And what captivated me about that was not just like her being a flamingo in a chicken
coop.
And that's part of it. I think the smallness.
But the other part of it, I think, is this being called by something that feels bigger.
I know for me that when I am part of feeling like I'm contributing something to the world,
like that was sort of the healing of my addiction to a large degree. And so I just was struck by that element of hers
where once she got back to what she felt like was hers to do, she's suddenly all better.
AMT – Yeah, I mean, I feel like Amy for all her ups and downs, there are some really instructional
aspects of her life. And one of them is that she was totally unstoppable
and she really did follow a sense of mission. She did not make herself small and I think that
chapter that you're talking about it's really instructional to me of like, you know, I think a lot of people make themselves smaller than they were meant
to be. And for me, in some ways, I see religion as just the available runway for her at that
moment. You know, I mean, she was a true believer. I'm not questioning her faith. Religion was
a pathway for her bigness. And I think she felt called. She was somebody who was meant to
be public facing. And she had put herself into a corner and into a small life. And it
was absolutely unbearable. And I mean, I find myself an introverted writer, but like I sort
of am like, okay, she got really weird.
She did some really weird stuff.
Sometimes she was rewarded and sometimes she wasn't, but she would not be stopped.
And I think that's something really admirable to see.
One of the themes in the book, and it's one that you've explored through your writing
a few different ways, is kind of the cost of fame. You've written about
Amy Winehouse, you've written about Prince, there are others, but you've really looked
at this idea of fame. And I'm curious, do you see a point for her at which fame began
to become a problem? Or is it really just much more gradual and nuanced than that?
Yeah, I think it is gradual, but thank you
for asking that question, because this is like my favorite
thing, actually.
If there were fame studies, that's
what I would get my PhD in.
Because I find this whole question of people
who are treated as gods on earth as just endlessly fascinating. And
for Amy, I start to see evidence of it in the early 1920s before she builds her temple
while she's still on the road, but she's getting a lot of attention for being a faith healer. She travels around the country and she starts
to attract just wild crowds, huge crowds. People come from surrounding states and they
wield their children and their sick relatives. There's a point in the book where people are
like passing bodies through windows of a building to try and get their loved ones to Amy to
touch, right?
She's sort of treated as this like portal to another realm almost.
And during that time, I mean, there's just incredible pressure.
She's working like 12 hours on the stage doing these healings.
She kind of is dragged away at the end of the night,
like covered in sweat and dirt.
And I noticed, I mean, she wrote quite a few memoirs,
as was her way.
No personal letters, just lots of memoirs.
She starts to write about herself in the third person
in this kind of disassociated way, right?
And I found that really interesting, like, where she starts to have trouble seeing herself
as an individual looking out in the world
and is just seen as this kind of...
She uses the royal we sometimes,
but, like, how she's seen by others
starts to confuse how she sees, if that makes sense.
Mm-hmm. And you mentioned that you think that religion was a path for her, and not that she didn't
believe in what she did, but that it was a way of sort of putting herself out there.
Were there things in her makeup, her personality, that you've seen in common with other people
who are famous, as far as something that she needs from others?
Yeah, it's a great question. I mean, you know, I mean,
certainly she was an incredible talent.
So there's that like really, you know, completely unique, totally mesmerizing,
right? Like she had an ability to capture attention.
She was a show stopper, you know,
she would get up on a stage,
she'd stand in front of her tent,
and people just stopped and were mesmerized.
And you know, I mean, you think about Justin Bieber
playing his music on the street in Canada,
they were actually from almost the same exact place,
which is just a fun fact.
Or, you know, Amy Winehouse as a young woman going into record and that voice just kind of stopping
everything, right?
There is fundamentally a talent.
And I think there's also part of that talent is the experience that you get in the room.
These are people who have the ability to transport you.
They have the ability to stop your mind,
stop your thoughts, and just capture your attention,
so to speak, and everything that means.
That's why they call them spellbinding, mesmerizing,
show-stopping, like these qualities
where they just capture you, so to speak.
In terms of what she got from it,
I think, you know, she had a real desire for an audience.
She had an insatiable desire to be loved.
The back half of the book kind of explores that dark side,
you know, where the negative view
that the world started to have of her
kind of destroyed her in some ways
because she was so attached to public perception of her. Hello, hello, Malcolm Gladwell here.
On this season of Revisionist History, we're going where no podcast has ever gone before. In combination with my three-year-old,
we defend the show that everyone else hates.
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As I'm thinking through this and talking about it, I was thinking about the role of
religion or spirituality and in its practice, it's often intended, and I don't mean this
in a bad way, to make you seem less special in a way, right?
It connects you to everybody else and it ideally would reduce your ego and it would help you see your place
in the greater scheme of everything, right?
And so to me, it's almost the opposite effect of that.
But she is an example of where that certainly didn't counterbalance the desire for fame.
And we can certainly look at plenty of other spiritual communities where the leaders are clearly
egomaniacs to some degree and where whatever the religion or the teaching is, isn't actually
working on them in that way.
Yeah, it's an interesting question because if you read about, and I've included some
of those in the book, her actual religious experiences, you know, I mean, she's laid
out on the ground, as you say.
She's slain is the term that they use, right?
Like, she's just laid out, laying in the dust,
surrounded by others, weeping and crying.
And it is that, yeah, like, what you're talking about,
that kind of religious experience of, like,
I'm nothing, and this is everything, right?
So that does seem to be an element in her own religious experience, especially early
on.
But at the same time, absolutely, she saw herself as divinely chosen.
She saw herself as a selected vessel for God to bring the gospel.
And so there is a sense of specialness. I mean, she said time and again, I want the largest microphone possible and I want love.
Like I want to be in love. That's what she wanted.
So yeah, do with that what you will.
I'm going to take fame a slightly different direction here,
because I want to get to what potentially is so corroding about it. One of the things I often wonder is as we have all become internet personalities to
some degree or other, right?
Nearly everyone is on social media and is wanting to get more attention, more attention.
Is there a connection to that and fame. Is fame corroding because of the way it causes you to seek out
certain adulation? Or is it when you actually get it is when it becomes pernicious? Or probably
both.
In my experience reporting this book and reporting on famous people, what I have seen is a certain loss of self.
And even, you know, reporting on the Transcendental Meditation Movement and our guru, in reporting
that book, you know, I'd always thought like, oh, he took advantage of us, right? Like, he was
constantly raising money. He had these crazy schemes,
like you know, we were victimized by him. But in reading, you know, private papers
and private recollections of him, I also kind of saw him as victimized, like by
our expectations of who he was supposed to be. And that really shifted things for me
and definitely made me think about celebrities, you know,
where they end up sort of caged by the audience.
And I see that in Amy,
and I worry about that for my 14-year-old
when she posts stories on Instagram, you know, of Hoco.
Like, I think there is this thing where you stop having the experience for the experience,
you stop being yourself for yourself, and you start performing. And the performance takes over everything and the audience's expectation of you.
So whether you're a guru
and your audience expects you to be enlightened,
whether you're a evangelist who people think
is a living saint on earth,
whether you're 14 year old girl
who's supposed to just look hot all the time,
you know what I mean?
Like, I think I see the through line as like losing touch with your individual experience
and having to just be projecting out an experience all the time.
Yeah, there's a term and maybe you've heard it. I don't really even know where it comes from,
but it's called audience capture. And the idea is that someone starts
out doing something and they get an audience. That could be a huge audience, it could be
a relatively small audience. And as you said, that audience starts to have some degree of
expectation. And that person then finds themselves in that role, often not even quite aware of it, but oftentimes very aware of it,
where they are living into the persona that they created. And as you said, they
are not then being authentic to who they are and authentic to the ways in which
they might change or develop different interests or be more complex than the simplistic
facing story.
Yeah. I mean, if I fast forward to the end of the book, at the end of Amy's life, I see
so many parallels with Amy Winehouse, with Prince, with Michael Jackson. I mean, particularly Michael Jackson, where, you know, he was living in sort
of exile for reasons good and bad. And, you know, I was struggling with addiction and had a dream
of coming back and being a star and having it feel the old way. Right. So in, in the summer before
Michael Jackson died, you know, he talked
all the time about his comeback, right? He was getting ready for his comeback tour. And
Amy had almost the exact same thing. She was, she had been in conservatorship for years,
every aspect of her life controlled by her accountant. You know, she had a nurse who
was living with her full time.
I'm guessing she was on quite a bit of medication. She was estranged from her family. And, you
know, in the spring before she died, she got herself out of conservatorship, put her son
in charge, filed papers to start, you know, what would have been the first religious television, making her the first televangelist. And she was getting ready for her tour to come back,
you know, and there was so much energy and excitement and stress around that. And that's
really where I sort of saw these like modern day celebrities that I've encountered towards the end of their last chapter, where
they're kind of trapped in a two-dimensional place where they're not who they were before,
but they want to go back. And I think time is a bitch. I don't know if you can say that
on this podcast, but-
You can absolutely say that.
I could say even more but I think you know
time is an aspect in all of this right like we're talking about ego we're talking about
experience we're talking about you know the expectations of others but time is a big piece
of this right and in terms of change and transformation and so I think yeah like these people get
stuck in an idea of how they think things
are supposed to be, but for a million reasons, they aren't that way.
And it becomes unbearable.
Just to give people a little context on Michael Jackson, you wrote his obituary for Rolling
Stone.
I did.
Yeah, I spent the summer that he passed away covering every aspect of his death and wrote Rolling
Stone's big look back at what happened and investigating his death and the circumstances.
So it really that surprised me when doing this book of like, oh my gosh, like this,
you know, woman living in 1940s Los Angeles had such a similar story, you know, even down
to kind of the language of like, oh, I'm going to ready for my comeback and, you know, a love of downers.
Mm-hmm. Obviously things for her start to go wrong after the disappearance, right? She disappears, comes back, says she was kidnapped, and then is largely not believed by an awful lot of people, including Los Angeles law enforcement, who consider putting her on trial,
talk a little bit about what this suddenly not being revered as universally starts to do to her.
It drives her crazy, you know, and I think she had spent a decade up until this point being
She had spent a decade up until this point being a person who translated the world and the unseen and the unknown to other people.
That was part of her gifts, you know, was like giving prophecies, articulating the divine,
I would say.
And so I think she had a real strength and palette as a storyteller.
She came back to Los Angeles and, you know, told pretty much the same story over and over
of her kidnapping. You know, it's like a movie. Like it's a crazy story. And, you know, she
escapes by sawing off the ropes on her wrists on a serrated maple syrup can and running through
the desert through incredible heat and also darkness and rattlesnakes. I mean, it's like
she's the star of a movie. People just immediately had an issue with it. And they could never find any evidence of the place where she said
she was kept or the kidnappers. Yeah, it seemed like that doubt in her just drove her crazy.
She dug in her heels and she began to see the world in darker terms, right? Her ministry up until that point had been very warm, very accepting,
very heaven-oriented, I would say. There was not a lot of devil in Amy Semple Macpherson's preaching.
She was really about all the kind of beautiful, transformative, almost kind of feminine love aspects of Christianity and being born again. And yeah, after that,
her sermons got like very dark and you know, she would have, you know, the devil depicted on her
stage chasing her and she called out, you know, the Catholics of the world for prosecuting her.
And it really changed. And my theory is that this had to do with her mother.
Okay, before we go down that, you said when immediately people started to doubt her, there
was very good reasons to doubt her, right?
I mean, based on the evidence that was coming in, it sure seemed like she had made this
story up.
Now, she might have painted it as people were out to get her her and there probably were people who wanted to see her not succeed,
right? You talk about how the LA underworld did not want her to do well,
there were other preachers who did not want her to do well, there were forces
aligned against her, but she wasn't blackballed for no reason.
Yeah, I mean it's sort of why I love this story.
You know, when I first started looking into her,
I assumed that she was falsely accused.
You know, I, like any good kind of 90s feminist,
I assumed that she had been...
You believe the woman.
Yeah, I believe the woman. I always believe the woman.
Yep.
And when I, you know, started going into the court transcripts and all the newspaper archives,
it was like, oh, like the evidence is really building up. But she also was right that there
were people out to get her and there were people trying to take her down and use this opportunity
to destroy her. I just love that, where it's like, she was a liar and she was right.
And all of it's a little bit of a world of her own making,
which I think is just so incredible.
You know what I mean?
It was just like the biggest scandal
and all this drama ensued.
And she was screaming from the rooftops
and on the radio every night about being persecuted.
And she was right.
And they were also right.
In the midst of all that, there's a really, maybe it means a lot, maybe it means nothing.
You can let me know what you think.
But there's a point where someone is talking about identifying her in another city and
saying like, I saw her in this other city, so she couldn't have been kidnapped, all that. And how did you know
it was her? Oh, it was because of her fat ankles. Based on the way you tell it, it's
almost as if she stops caring about being accused of lying, of everything else,
and is obsessed with the fact that someone thinks she has fat ankles.
I was just struck by how we all can be that level of insecurity or vanity. It's striking.
Yeah, I mean, this is how I see her kind of like playing on different levels, you know
what I mean? Like she's telling the story over and over and I truly believe
she began to believe it. Like I think at some point, probably pretty early on, she did a
version of it in her head and she lived it and that was her story. You know? The ankles
is just hilarious and this, you know, it's a through line. It happens throughout that
summer and fall. It happens in the courtrooms.
They ask her to show her ankles. It's unbelievable. People are looking at their own ankles. It
is to me a perfect snapshot of the ways that women were being judged and looked at and
taken apart. She was totally a part of that. She resented it and was like, it's unfair,
but she was also like,
wait, my ankles are actually not that bad.
You know what I mean?
It's mind fuckery at its best.
My mind.
So.
Yep. Hello, hello, Malcolm Gladwell here.
On this season of Revisionist History, we're going where no podcast has ever gone before.
In combination with my three-year-old, we defend the show that everyone else hates.
I'm talking, of course, about Paw Patrol.
There's some things that really piss me off
when it comes to Paw Patrol.
It's pretty simple. It sucks.
If my son watches Paw Patrol, I hate it.
Everyone hates it, except for me.
Plus, we investigate everything from why American sirens
are so invariably loud, to the impact
of face blindness on social connection, to the secret behind Thomas' English muffins,
perfect nooks and crannies.
And also, we go after Joe Rogan.
Are you ready, Joe?
I'm coming for you.
You won't want to miss it.
Listen to Revisionist History on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Are your ears bored?
Yeah.
Are you looking for a new podcast that will make you laugh, learn, and say que?
Yeah.
Then tune in to Locatora Radio, Season 10 today.
Okay.
I'm Viosa.
I'm Mala.
The host of Locatora Radio, a radiophonic novella.
Which is just a very extra way of saying a podcast.
We're launching this season with a mini-series, Totally Nostalgic, a four-part series about
the Latinos who shaped pop culture in the early 2000s.
It's Lala checking in with all things Y2K, 2000s.
My favorite memory honestly was us having our own media platforms like Mundos and MTV
3.
You could turn on the TV, you see Talia, you see JLo, Nina Sky, Evie Queen, all the girlies
doing their things, all of the beauty reflected right back at us.
It was everything.
Tune in to Locatora Radio Season 10.
Now that's what I call a podcast.
Listen to Locatora Radio Season 10
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Sonoro and iHeart's MyCultura Podcast Network present
The Setup, a new romantic comedy podcast
starring Harvey Guillen and Christian Navarro.
The Set Up follows a lonely museum curator searching for love, but when the perfect man
walks into his life, well I guess I'm saying I like you. You like me? He actually is too good to be true.
This is a con. I'm conning him to get the Delano painting. We could do this together.
To pull off this heist, they'll have to get close and jump into the deep end together. That's a
huge leap, Fernando, don't you think? After you, Chulito. But love is the biggest risk they'll ever
take. Fernando is never going to love you as much as he loves in this job.
as much as he loves in this job. [♪upbeat music playing in background with sound of a gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gunfire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun fire and gun is that it features Los Angeles in the late 1910s, 1920s as a fascinating place, which it obviously
is. A lot of books that I love have come out of there, like the noir tradition of crime writing
comes out of there. Like LA was like this amazing place and also a really dark underside to it.
And so you're seeing the underworld and you're seeing how connected the gangs are in politics
and how roped in the newspapers are.
It's just a really great portrait of a particular time.
I think that if you were going to make a The One you feed video game, you would make it in 1920s Los Angeles
because they called it sunshine and shadows.
I mean, that is the definition of noir,
is a dream that is broken, right?
I love those books, I love that time.
There's so much that comes out of it
in terms of film and art and religion. It's so fascinating.
And I think it is this time where people came to Los Angeles, as they do now, to start over
and to transform and to leave the past behind and become a new person. And whether that means economically or spiritually or cosmetically, you know, I mean, it's the
classic story.
And she was completely part of that and her followers were totally part of that.
But there's also a predatory aspect of that.
First of all, you know, people act out, you know, they act out their addictions, they
act out their dark side. And there's also a lot of people who take advantage of,
you know, these people who are trying to transform or inside their dream.
You mentioned a moment ago, I don't know what you say, it all came down to her mom. Is that
what you said?
Well, I think everything does.
Doesn't it always?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
Mothers out there.
What do you mean?
I think her mother saw her as prophesied from the day she was born.
You know, that's part of her story.
And it was part of her success as her mother.
She was an only child and her mother, you know,
took her when she was a baby to the Salvation Army
and said like, this child is chosen by God.
And that was just part of her legacy.
It's how she opens like all of her biographies,
basically is this pivotal moment.
And the book is reported, it's journalistic,
it's based on factual accounts. But if you're
asking me like what I think walking away from it, I think that she was normal 36 year old
woman at the height of her fame who was interested in her former employee and decided that running
away with him seemed like a great idea at the time and maybe
immediately regretted it. Maybe they got in that house after like five days and she's like, yeah,
I'm good or whatever, or she missed the fame and she missed the audience and she missed her world.
She missed her family and she came back. And I think her commitment to telling that story where she was kidnapped
and victimized, where she hadn't been a sinner, so to speak, was about her mother and this idea
that her mother held of her as being this pure being. I didn't research as fully as you. I'm not
sure I would arrive at the same conclusion, only in that I think there are a lot of factors that go into her being in a cage, right?
Let's just say that before she disappears, she's in a cage.
She can do certain things and certain things only.
Now she's able to do all kinds of things that other women at the time aren't able to do.
But she's still kind of by painting herself, whether it was because of what her mother put into her head, as a, as you said, a
saint, not a sinner, gave her no room to move when, as you said, she sort of fell
in love with someone outside of marriage and didn't know what to do about it. Okay,
with all of that, you spent a lot of time in her world.
You jokingly emailed me that you told me in 2021 you thought you were almost done with
the book and then you email me in 2025.
So you were with her for a long time.
Did writing about her change anything in you?
I would say, you know, in researching the end of Amy's life and where her legacy ended up,
I feel like grace is a really important concept.
As I said, I didn't grow up Christian.
That's not an idea that I grew up with,
I would say, or have an attachment to.
Who knows if I'm even thinking about it right.
But I really loved this idea and wished for more of it for her.
To me, grace is like this beautiful notion of forgiveness and acceptance of our humanity.
And I think it's missing in that way that a lot of religions and, you know, society kind of divides
us, right? Like this divided self. And I feel like grace is, you know,
just this beautiful concept in Christianity of like love and acceptance and embrace of
the lightness and the darkness. And I've tried to give that to myself, you know, because
I think that when we see the world that way as so divided or we see ourselves that way, like this is good
behavior, this is bad behavior, it perverts, you know, for one of a better word or deforms,
you know, I think that it starts to cage us in a sense. And I see, I mean, again, as somebody who did not grow up Christian, who is not Christian, I find
that notion of love and acceptance that is at the core of Christianity so beautiful,
and that that love and forgiveness and that grace can kind of release us. It's just beautiful.
I think it's really beautiful. You know, I mean, part of writing about a, I mean, as a sort of quasi Hindu married to a Jewish person,
like Christianity is like not part of my life, so to speak, but so I feel like I can kind of admire it from the sidelines.
I would also say, like, I mean, I am a person who lives in the world and reads the newspaper every day. You know, I mean, Trump's pastor is a Pentecostal preacher and is working in the White House
every day.
And there's a part of me that I think it's important to look at what the predominant
narratives are.
You know, there's a majority of Americans identify as Christian. And I think it's really important to understand
that faith and to think about these ideas and in a way that is empathetic, I would say.
Jared Sussman Yeah, I love the idea of extending
grace to other people. I think it's a beautiful idea. And I also find it hard to extend grace to people who are not
doing the same thing at all. I'm not naming anybody here, I'm just saying in general,
it gets hard to extend grace. I think it's why when a spiritual leader falls, they fall
so hard, is because they've often really, like they've done part of the painting of themselves as
this way.
But I do agree.
I mean, I'm obviously somebody as a recovering heroin addict, right?
Like I'm glad there was grace in the world for me, right?
I mean, I was not a good person at one time.
Or let me say that differently, I did a lot of things that were not good, that were bad, and that
were harmful. And so I'm glad that parts of the world extended grace to me and that I
was able to extend it to myself. And because I do believe in second chances and I do believe
that people make mistakes and we shouldn't let a single mistake or a couple mistakes
that people make be the entirety of their story. Yeah, I wish that the conversation in Christianity in America was more about these ideas. And I think
there are ways that Christianity has been so fundamental in the world of recovery. You know,
I mean, I have a friend who is a recovering alcoholic who went and did rehab in the basement of Amy's church
like three years ago and I mean he grew up in that tradition so it was a world
that he connected to and made sense to him you know he sees her church as
fundamental to saving his life and saving his family I feel like grace is
so beautiful I mean I say this as a person who got kicked out of high school
for fighting, like, I'm not like that, like...
I'm not that nice.
Yeah.
But maybe that's why I, like, sort of romanticize it.
Like, I love revenge. I love revenge.
It's the best, you know?
I'm hateful.
You know, when you think about forgiveness for when we do bad things, there is like that
kind of soft wash feeling of like letting go, you know, and moving on.
And you know, I think that's beautiful.
As a non-Christian, it's something that I've taken away and I've thought a lot about in
terms of Amy's story because I don't think she was extended a lot of grace.
Yeah. Well, that is a great place for us to wrap up. You and I are going to continue in the post-show conversation because I would be
deeply remiss in my duties to my friend Chris if I did not talk about
you and your limo ride with David Lynch because he's a huge David Lynch fan. I would
be letting him down as a friend. I'm not going to do that. So you and I in the post-show
conversation are going to talk about David Lynch, Transcendental Meditation, your experience
with him. Maybe we get to Eckhart Tolle. I don't know. But listeners, if you'd like access
to this, what's going to be Mesmerizing post-show conversation. Special episodes I create just for you and most importantly to support us because we can use your help. Go
to oneufeed.net slash join. Claire, thank you so much. It's a pleasure to have you back
on and in another decade when you have another book. No, I'm teasing you and me. I probably
will not be doing this in a decade and you will write
another one in less than 10 years, I'm sure. I hope so. I will be back and I hope it won't be
so long. That was not a very graceful way to end the interview. I deserve it. You're speaking right to my soul there.
Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought-provoking, I'd love for you to share it with a friend. Sharing from one person to
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Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.
From the producers who brought you Princess of South Beach comes a new podcast, The Setup.
The Setup follows a lonely museum curator, but when the perfect man walks into his life,
he actually is too good to be true.
Listen to The Set Up on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The number one hit podcast, The Girlfriends, is back with something new, The Girlfriends Spotlight,
where each week you'll hear women share their stories of triumph over adversity.
You'll meet June, who founded an all-female rock band in the 1960s.
I might as well have said, we're going to walk on the moon.
But she showed them who's boss.
They would rush up and say, not bad for chicks.
Come and join our girl gang.
Listen to The Girlfriend Spotlight on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
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My podcast, This Is Working, can help with that.
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You're still the judge of what good looks like.
I'm Dan Roth, LinkedIn's editor-in-chief. On my podcast, This Is Working,
leaders share strategies for success. Listen on the iHeart radio app,
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