The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Jon Favreau On How Be A Better Public Speaker & Have Your Ideas Heard
Episode Date: April 27, 2026#965: Join us as we sit down with Jon Favreau – co-founder of Crooked Media, co-host of Pod Save America, and former presidential speechwriter for Barack Obama. Jon has crafted some of the most memo...rable speeches during President Obama's tenure, and has since launched his own media company while hosting a top political podcast that breaks down current events and U.S. politics in a more conversational, accessible way. In this episode, Jon shares what it takes to craft powerful messaging that resonates with millions, how to simplify complex political issues without losing nuance, and why storytelling is one of the most important tools in shaping public opinion. He also opens up about the transition from the White House to building a media company, the current state of political discourse, and how to stay informed without feeling overwhelmed. To Watch the Show click HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TheBossticks.com To connect with Jon Favreau click HERE To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE Head to our ShopMy page HERE and LTK page HERE to find all of the products mentioned in each episode. Get your burning questions featured on the show! Leave the Him & Her Show a voicemail at +1 (512) 537-7194. This Episode is sponsored by The Skinny Confidential Shop the limited edition Eden Rock x The Skinny Confidential collab at https://boutique.oetkerhotels.com and at http://shopskinnyconfidential.com. While supplies last. This episode is sponsored by Branch Basics Get 15% off the Premium Starter Kit at http://BranchBasics.com with code SKINNY15. This episode is sponsored by Alice + Olivia Visit http://aliceandolivia.com/skinny for 15% off. Exclusions may apply. This episode is sponsored by Batch Go to http://hellobatch.com/skinny and use code skinny at checkout. This episode is sponsored by Troscriptions Give it a try at http://troscriptions.com/SKINNY or enter CODE at checkout for 10% off your first order This episode is sponsored by Neurogum For a limited time, you can get 20% off your first order at http://neurogum.com by using code SKINNY. This episode is sponsored by Xyzal Visit http://xyzal.com for more information. This episode is sponsored by Running Point Watch Running Point S2, Now. Only on Netflix. Produced by Dear Media
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Bostics, starring Lauren Bostic and Michael Bostick.
Together, they are the Bostics.
Hello, everybody.
Welcome back to another episode of The Bostics.
Today we are sitting down with John Favro, who is the co-founder of Crooked Media and co-host of Pod Save America,
a wildly popular show that I'm sure many of you have heard or listened to.
He has a former presidential speechwriter, podcast host, and political commentator,
best known for being the head speechwriter for President Barack Obama,
where he helped craft some of Obama's most memorable speeches during his presidency.
After leaving the White House, he co-founded Crooked Media, like I said earlier,
and now hosts a wildly popular podcast where he breaks down current events and U.S. politics
in a more conversational, accessible way.
We had an incredible conversation with John.
It's widespreading.
We talk all about speeches, speechwriting.
We talk about the state of politics in this country.
We talk about how it's okay to talk to different people from different walks of life and different
political ideal beliefs.
We also talk about empowering the future.
of America through political education and what it really takes to bring people back together again.
Again, this is a wide-ranging conversation.
Really enjoyed sitting down with John.
Easy to talk to fellow podcasters and hosts.
With that, John Favro, welcome with the Bostics.
Okay, so I'm just going to keep it going.
John first, we'll do the intro later, of course, but welcome to the show.
And I want to keep rolling what we were just talking about, which is this is your world.
But everything these days feels like it's getting blended into some political conversation.
This show is 10 years old now.
We started health, wellness, marketing, relationships, how to build an online brand.
Now you find yourself navigating these potholes of conversation.
So I would love your perspective because it's like obviously this is your world.
You're in politics.
But does everything these days have to be political?
It shouldn't have to be.
It's a real careful what you wish for situation because, you know, I was in politics for many years.
I believe very deeply in organizing and the power of politics to change people's lives.
And so I've always wanted more people to get involved and participate in politics,
not quite like everyone is today, which is, you know, it's like crisis to crisis,
and it has infected almost every area of people's lives and not for, not always for good.
and it's not like everyone's having, you know, thoughtful conversations and debates about the best way to change the world.
And so I think to the extent that politics has invaded everything in a way where it's like hobbyism, like people are sort of viewing it like they view sports and who's winning, who's losing, and, you know, what's the drama of the day?
And it's like a reality show.
Like, I don't think that is obviously very helpful.
what we try to do is, you know, help people who may be following the news but are not political
junkies like us to sort of make sense of what's going on.
You give it in layman.
Like you make it digestible for people to understand.
Yeah.
I think like what's challenging in media these days, not just on this platform, but just in media
in general, is to your point, like it's become this spectator sport where there's one side
or the other.
One's going to win.
one's going to lose. One's good, one's bad, depending on which side you're on.
And we've largely got to a place where, I think we're around the similar age.
When we all came up, like, you could have different conversations with different people
and with different thought patterns.
Now doing something like this, like we'll put a trailer out sometimes, depending on someone
leaning left or right, and like, you son of a bit, you know, like before the content even
comes out, and it's almost like you're allowed to talk to some people, you're allowed
to not, like depending on which side of the audience you're on.
And I think that's a, it's a challenging time to be in media navigating all of that.
I think the internet has played a huge role there as well, because I still find that when I talk to people in person and people who may not share my politics, I can have like very reasonable conversations with them.
Yeah.
Like we may walk away disagreeing.
Usually we do.
But you can have a civil conversation.
I think when you are having all these conversations mediated by all of these algorithms,
then what you're exposed to, and especially if you're someone in media,
is you're exposed to the most extreme opinions on both sides.
And it would be nice to say, oh, that doesn't have an effect on you as someone who's in media,
but it does.
It has effects on all of us.
Like none of us are impervious to like seeing all that crap all the time.
And so I think that actually, unfortunately, continues to like polarize the conversation more deeply.
And that's something I talk about that a lot on.
I have one podcast called Offline where we sort of talk about how the internet is breaking our brains and society and making democracy harder.
And, you know, there's a lot of research on it that it's just, it's not a healthy thing, both for for us and for the country, for the world, to just be getting all of our information through our screens all day long.
We have to talk about the art of speech writing.
Yeah.
Can you tell when a speech is written by chat GPT?
Yes.
For now.
Okay.
Because, first of all, a lot of speeches aren't very good before chat GPT came along.
They were very good.
And so, but, you know, now that we've had, I don't know, a couple years of large language models,
especially chat GPT, you can tell the, the, the,
m-dashes and it's not this, it's that.
And you know, you're not just right, you're really right.
Like it's just a very recognizable.
It's like a rhythm.
Yes, it's a rhythm.
I don't think it'll be like that forever, at least according to all the people who are building
AI.
They think it's going to get smarter and smarter.
But I do think that AI will be able to replace a lot of speeches,
because like I said, I think a lot of speeches were pretty pedestrian.
I think it will then incentivize people who are really creative to write better speeches and to give better speeches.
And I think that will sort of be the test.
You should launch a speech AI chat.
I'm sure that will come along.
You have to do it yourself.
I feel like it would crush it by you.
I do it as like the early, remember the early days of social when like people would squeak in those ads that were like they were scammy and people would like think it was real.
And then like over time, you just get really good at recognizing like, hey, that's, that's, that's, that's BS or it's not good. Same with like the AI slop. I think that is what will happen with AI with humans. I think we'll just get really good at recognizing. Because a lot of people take a more pessimistic view and they're like, oh my God, we're never going to be able to tell what's real and what's not. I think the opposite. I think humans are going to get very good at being able to distinguish like, that's human. That's human. That's and I think we'll crave more of the human. I think that's right. You become the youngest political speechwriter in history. That's crazy. What was that like for you?
It happened by accident. I was in college, College of the Holy Cross, Massachusetts. I grew up in Massachusetts, just north of Boston. And there was an internship program, my junior year in college. I interned for Senator John Kerry, who was my home state senator. And I did that because I thought maybe I'd be interested in politics, but it was a good opportunity to take an internship and go to D.C. for a semester with a lot of my friends who were going. So I did that. I sat in the communications office.
I sat next to Senator Kerry's communications director, who also happened to be a speechwriter,
and just learned a lot from him, especially as they were preparing to launch John Kerry's presidential campaign in 2003.
You know, he gave me the opportunity to start writing constituent letters, maybe an op-ed in a local newspaper.
And so I got the taste of writing for someone else.
And I thought, oh, this is kind of cool.
Graduated college, joined the Kerry campaign as an assistant.
that was the press assistant to six different people in the press office.
And that was like, wake up at 4 a.m., get all the news clips, fax them to everyone because
it was 2002, 2003, and get everyone lunches and all that kind of stuff.
But at one point in the campaign, John Kerry was losing in the primary.
Howard Dean was winning.
They thought Howard Dean was going to be the nominee.
Got about Howard Dean.
Yeah, I know.
A lot of people did.
Someone mentioned today, like, remember Howard Dean was too crazy because he yelled a little
loudly at the end of a speech.
Seems pretty tame now.
But when John Kerry was losing,
a bunch of people quit the campaign,
some people were fired,
he had to mortgage his house,
they ran out of money,
and they needed a deputy speechwriter.
And I originally asked if I could have the job,
and they said, no, you're too inexperienced
for only like 21.
And then when they were really out of money
and no one else wanted to join the campaign
because it was a sinking ship,
they were like, all right,
you can have a chance being deputy speechwriter
because this thing's probably going to be over
in a couple months anyway. And we don't have to pay you more. I was making $24,000 a year.
And so I got the job. And then John Kerry wins the primary. And so I was speechwriter all
through the general election. And then when we lost to Bush, my former boss in the Kerry campaign
had gone to work for now Senator Barack Obama at the time. He had been running for the Senate.
And so he wins the Senate. And Robert Gibbs, who had by my boss, reached out and said, you know,
he wrote that 2004 convention speech himself. He doesn't think he needs a speechwriter,
but I think, I know he needs a speechwriter because he's in the Senate now and he's going to be
given a lot of speeches and he's not going to have time to write. And so would you come down
to D.C. and have breakfast with him and see if you guys mash and had breakfast with Obama, his
first week in the Senate in January of 2005. And we hit it off. And he was like, I still don't
think I need a speechwriter, but you seem nice enough. So let's give this a whirl.
and we'll see how it goes.
When you met him, did you know right away the talent that he had?
Because, I mean, I think he's probably one of the best speakers of the last few generations, right?
Like, I mean, just like natural.
I don't know how much of that is.
Maybe you tell me it's not natural, but so talented.
Do you recognize that right away, or is that something you guys work on together?
The first time I met him was at the 2004 convention in Boston.
He was the keynote speaker, and I was on the Kerry campaign,
and I was backstage at the convention, and my job was,
to go over a lot of the speeches from the different speakers at the convention. And I saw the
Obama speech. And I remember reading it for the first time and thinking, oh, this is different. It's a
pretty good speech. And then I got a call from my boss who was on the road traveling with John
Kerry. And he said, there's a line in the speech being delivered by Barack Obama, the keynote
speaker that John Kerry wants in his speech. And so we need to take it out. And I was like, okay,
why are you calling me? It's like, well, you need to go find Barack Obama and take the line out of his
speech. And I'm like, okay. So I walked down the hall and he was practicing the speech for the
first time. It was the first time he had ever used a teleprompter. So he was practicing. And I went up
to Robert Gibbs, who had been my boss. I was like, okay, I don't have to talk to Obama. I can talk
to Gibbs. And I told him the whole story. And Gibbs is like, I'm not telling him to take out that line.
He loves that line. You go talk to him. So that's how I met Barack Obama. And he came up to me
within like an inch of my face
and was like, are you trying to tell me
I have to take out my favorite line?
And I think I blacked out for a few seconds.
And then when I came to,
a man walked up to me,
introduced himself at David Auxerod,
and he said, son, let's walk outside
and we'll rewrite the line together.
So we did.
And then I heard him deliver the speech that night.
When I heard him deliver it,
I was like, this guy is something special.
And then when I sat down with him
a year later
in the Senate office
I had read his book
at that point in preparation for
sitting down with them and I read dreams for my father
and when I read that book
it's like the fact that someone who wrote
this honestly is now
in national politics
and was this vulnerable in the book
and this like if someone like
this can make it in politics
like I need to be part of that. And that was a different time in politics
because people weren't doing that. No. Those books were
real dry back then. Yeah. Yeah. I mean
I mean, he talked about like drinking, smoking, weed, the cocaine men's sh-like, it was all in there.
All the taboo stuff that you just couldn't do.
Yeah, and it was also just beautifully written and it was like a, you know, he talked a lot about race and just the things that politicians didn't do at the time.
So from your perspective, for people that are interested in giving speeches or speech writing, what makes a compelling speech?
Yeah, what makes a compelling speech is it should be as close to a conversation.
that you're having with someone in real life as possible.
Huh.
That's a good tip.
Yeah, because I think a lot of people sit down and there's the formality of a speech,
there's the professionalism, and so you think you have to write it like your,
people especially do this in politics, but in all aspects of life.
People write, like they're writing for history, they're writing to like read it in the book.
And if you want to really connect with an audience, especially now,
where so many speeches or, you know, commentations,
Terry's are delivered just on a screen alone and someone's just watching it. You have to speak like
you're just chatting with someone. And, you know, it's not a hard and fast rule because it needs to be
elevated a little bit if it's a speech. But too many speeches like start up here at like 10,000
feet. And they need to, you need to write the speeches if you're trying to convince or, you know,
persuade or talk to just a friend at a bar or at a restaurant. That's what I always try to think.
And you were trying to tell a story, right?
Like a good speech is telling a good story.
And so it should have a beginning, a middle, and an end.
And it should be, it should grab people at the beginning.
It should have humor.
It should have some emotion.
And it also should not be that long.
No one has ever left a speech and said to themselves, like, that was a great speech,
but I wish it was just like five minutes longer, 10 minutes longer.
And everyone writes too long and speeches are always too long.
So take note wedding toasters.
That's my main advice on a wedding toast.
My main advice, because everyone, first of all, all the wedding speeches are like very cliche.
And there's a lot of, you know, talking about the process of writing the wedding toast.
It's like, when I was told I was going to do this, I had thought about all the stories.
I would not want you in the audience when I was doing a wedding speech.
I'd be like, fuck.
Well, the annoying thing is when I'm, so many weddings I've been to, even when I don't know the people super well, like, family.
members giving the speech will be like, and I know there's an Obama speech writer in the audience.
And so it's always a, you get the call out.
You know what's so interesting when you're saying what makes a good speech?
This is like very weird, but that makes a good piece of social media content too.
It does.
Like when I'm, when I am, like when I hop on my Instagram story, I try to hit what you're talking about,
which is like feeling like you are talking directly to the person.
And you've seen people like Alex Earle, who's obviously blown up.
And her whole thing is she talks to the audience like she's FaceTiming them.
So in a weird way, it's a little bit like creating a piece of content for social media, obviously, on a bigger stage.
But it's similar.
It's similar points.
Very similar.
Yeah.
Very similar.
And look, I think there's a slight difference if you're delivering a speech to a crowd of, you know, 5,000 people, 20,000 people.
Like, you're going to want some lines in the speech and moments in the speech where you get applause or you get people on their feet.
you get people feeling emotion.
So, you know, depending on the venue and the audience, it can change a bit.
But I still think it's a hard and fast rule to make the speech as conversational as possible.
So on the personality side, and I'm sure you've analyzed this and thought about it before,
if you were to look at Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Trump, what do you think that they,
because obviously they all became president and one is still president,
what do you think each of their strengths are and weaknesses are as a relationship?
to giving speeches because obviously, like,
these people have been able to resonate with audiences.
Yeah.
I mean, I'll start with just their,
I think that people who rise to that level in politics
have a confidence and a self-assuredness.
And it is this belief that like,
this is who I am and this is what I believe.
Yeah.
And you like it or you don't like it.
And, you know, I know that.
watching Obama firsthand and getting to know him really well.
You can clearly tell that from Donald Trump.
And I do think Biden has an element of that too.
Because I think he has been in politics, obviously, for a very, very long time.
But, you know, the Joe Biden, I mean, and I got to know him in the White House as well,
but like the Joe Biden that was in public is the Joe Biden behind the scenes as well, too.
You know, he's just, he is who he is.
And he isn't, he's okay, not changing that.
I think that for speaking, you know, with Donald Trump, like Donald Trump is at his worst speaking,
if we're just talking about the style of speaking.
Yeah, I'm just like the style of stuff.
He's at his worst when he has to read off a prompter.
And you can tell that he is reading something that his staff wrote for him and he doesn't like it
because he has this feel for the crowd.
It's also, it's the same as he's better in front of a crowd than he is when it's just the camera
because he has a sense of like what's working and what's,
not working. Obama was like this too. When he was in front of a big crowd, he could just, he knew
when a line was working when it wasn't, when a riff was working when it wasn't, then we'd go
back and retool it and he would use the ones that were working well and not. And so I think that
that ability to feel and sense where the crowd was going and how it was reacting is like a
strength for both Obama. They can like feel the energy of what's going on in the room no matter
how big. Yes. They know how to react to maybe moments that weren't planned. Yes. I think for
Obama, one of the weaknesses, one of the challenges that we always had to overcome is he wants to
over-explain everything if something's not working or he thinks something's unpopular.
Like his instinct is, okay, if I just explain more, more facts, more statistics, then like it's
going to land.
And I think in this attentional environment, even back then, when you only have people's
attention for short amount of time. You can't just be like going deep into the weeds on everything.
And so we would constantly have to like cut, shape, polish so that he was giving more of an
emotional argument than like getting into the weeds on every single policy issue.
He needed to land the plane. He needed to land the plane. I mean, with Trump, it's like that been
in a different way. Trump's not really trying to over explain, but he's just going on and on and on.
And I mean, like the two hour, two and a half hour rally speeches are, it's amazing to watch that he can just talk that long.
I don't think it serves him that well.
I think that, you know, he's probably at his best when the cameras cut to him for like 10 minutes at a rally.
I don't think it necessarily works with the television audience, but it works with the people who go to the rally.
You know what though?
And I, again, like, I'm not so close to this, but when I just think about watching,
both of them give speeches,
now that I'm like analyzing it in this way,
which I've never done.
There's something about the way they speak
where you just feel like they're
speaking to you in such a common sense way.
They're speaking to you in such terms
that you can understand.
It's like it's so digestible.
It's relatable is what it is.
No matter like what's going on.
They're able to deliver it in a way
where you, like to your point,
you feel like you're talking to your buddy
and that they like, they understand.
Is that them or the speech writer though?
Well, that part's that.
Because I don't, because I think sometimes where, at least for me, like it goes over the head is when you feel like you're being delivered some very coordinated and like polished and designed thing.
Or someone uses way too big a words.
I'm like, I can't do it.
I can't get a thoris out.
There's something like a spider sense that I think kicks in and all of us.
We're like, I don't know if I trust that.
You know what they both do is they break the third wall a lot.
And Obama's humor was always at its best when he was making fun of the game that is politics and letting people know, like, I know that a lot of this is bullshit.
And believe me, like, I'm still normal.
I get that this is crazy.
I'm just going to tell you about it.
And Trump does the same thing pretty well.
Yeah, it's very human.
Yes.
And I think like what I think both of them have done, and buy it to a little bit, but both of them have done is they kind of took us out of the Bush, Clinton,
in regular, like polished political realm.
And you talked about a little bit with the book,
and they made it feel like, okay, I'm participating in this
as opposed to just viewing it and kind of trying to keep up.
Right.
And because I think that, you know, it's no accident that that sort of coincided with
just trust in political institutions, media, all institutions,
going way, way down.
And so people are more primed to think that what they're hearing from a politician
or a business leader or anyone is bullshit.
And so if it sounds like you are reading something that is tightly scripted
or that you're like reading the stage directions,
then people aren't going to trust you fundamentally.
And if you sound like you're just talking on them,
then they're more likely to trust you.
And I think a lot of politicians have a problem with that.
Can you explain to the audience how you conceptualize a speech?
Like say Obama came to you and he wants to talk about blank.
you could give us a topic. How do you guys start to do it? Is it collaborative the whole time? Tell us the
behind the scenes. Sure. So let's say, let's say, so last time I worked with him on something was the
last Democratic convention when he spoke for Kamala. And, you know, I would talk to him and say,
okay, what do you want to communicate? Like, what is the one thing that you really want the audience to
take away, what's been on your mind that's really like bothering you about politics or bothering
you about the campaign or you think you want to say. So you sort of, I just get his thoughts. And then
he and I will usually just have a conversation about politics, what's going on, the news,
and I will sit there and just type everything he says and just get it all down on a piece of paper.
And he will sometimes have like an outline in his mind of where he wants to go in the speech. Like he's,
It is the real lawyerly part in him where, like, I remember when during the 08 campaign,
he gave this big speech on race about his pastor, Jeremiah Wright, and it was this big controversy,
and so he delivered this big speech on race.
And he called me the Saturday night before the speech at like 11 o'clock at night after he'd
been on the campaign trail.
We were given the speech two days later.
I was freaked out that I had to write it so quickly.
And he was like, I'm just going to be stream of consciousness and tell.
you like what's on my mind and then hopefully you can like put something together and then he starts
going like all right i want to talk about one one a two two a two b then go through like he had
off the top of his head the outline of what he wanted to say now that didn't happen all the time
but he's very good at figuring out the outlines of the speech partly i think it's the lawyer
and partly it's the storyteller because he knows that like the speech a lot of a lot of political
speeches are just like a plaz line after applause line and or
like this is going to be quoted by the press so I got to put this line in but they're not all like
connected together so he's very good at connecting different parts of the speech into a story so once
we get the story of the speech the layout the logic the flow of the speech correct and I get his
thoughts then I go off and I'll do a draft and I'll write the speech if there's research needed
I'll have I have a team that would help do research for the speech whether it's like finding an
interesting anecdote or a quote from history or just policy research if we're doing a policy topic
And so I'd get all that input, finish the draft.
I would send it around to all the relevant people in the campaign or the White House, depending on what it was.
Then I would send it to Obama.
It would either come back with a bunch of edits and markups, and he would take a pen and just sort of like rewrite and stuff like that.
Or it would come back with very few marks on it and like a notepad, a yellow note pad just full of writing,
which meant like he wanted to really rework the speech.
And which I ended up, I liked that because whenever he put a lot of effort into the speech and a lot of himself into the speech, it ended up being a speech that only he could give and one of the better speeches he would give.
You know, I mean, we were, when he got the Nobel Prize, we didn't have much time at all to write that speech. And I remember it was the morning that we left for Oslo that he handed us, I worked on the speech with Ben Rhodes, my fellow speechwriter, he handed us 11.
pages of written material for the speech plus the speech we had already written.
And he was like, I like some of what you guys have.
Here's what I'm thinking.
Can you combine it all together and have it ready before we get on the plane tonight?
And then when we landed in Oslo, he had to deliver the speech right after like an hour after landing.
And this pre-C-Chouchy-T, you can't just blend it all together.
No chat chit.
Is there a teleprompter there?
Yeah.
Yes.
So he's reading a teleprompter as well.
Yes.
Yes.
And on that speech, I added the last page of the speech.
into the teleprompter as he was walking up to the stage.
It was the closest we had ever gotten to not having a speech.
What's the worst speech you've ever seen in your entire life?
Wow.
That's a good one.
Be honest.
I mean, you know, there's a lot of Trump ones that are pretty bad.
I don't know that I could, like...
Biden had some bad ones too.
Yeah.
He had some rough ones too.
Biden had some rough ones too.
Not as rough as the debate.
performance is the word. But you're also coming off the back of like one of the, again,
greatest speech givers of all time. So it's like it's a hard bar. You know,
you already got to work with like the top. I mean, there's speeches that are bad just because
they're written poorly or the person delivering them is delivering them poorly. Or they plagiarize.
Or they plagiarize. Yeah. But then there's also, we were talking about this recently,
there's speeches, like sometimes we got in the habit of this in the White House sometimes because
Barack Obama was such a great speaker is people thinking that if there's a big problem, a speech.
will solve the problem. Right. And like no matter what if we just give a speech. And I remember back in 2010,
there was the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf. And remember, it just kept spilling oil over and over
and no one could plug the hole. And Barack Obama was getting like so much criticism for it. And everyone was
like, we have to give an Oval Office address on the oil spill. I was like, great, do we have a solution
to stop the oil spill? And we didn't. And I was like, this speech is going to be. And I was like, this speech is
going to be terrible because no matter how well it's written and no matter how well it's delivered,
people want the oil spill to stop. And if it doesn't do that, it was going to be judged a failure.
So, like, people who give speeches, and I do think that, and we talked about it recently because
Trump's speech about around last week, the prime time address was very similar. Like, the speech
didn't have any news in it. So there was just don't want to be at war. Yeah. Like, he didn't, he
wasn't announcing the end of the war. He wasn't announcing war war. He was just, just like,
summarizing his true social posts.
So it wasn't judged well because it didn't do anything,
didn't solve any problems.
What about a speech that blew your mind, not political?
Hmm.
Maybe it was at the Oscars.
Maybe it was a TED talk.
What's something where you were like, damn, that person really nailed it?
I'm trying to think of who.
Those are hard questions.
Yeah, they're really hard questions.
I just think that you, I feel like you would point us to a speech where we could go watch it
and be like, that's how you get the speech.
That's an amazing speech.
God.
Someone just gave one, I feel like.
like at the Oscars, but maybe not this time.
Maybe it was the last time that was so good
that had everyone standing and clapping,
but I can't remember who was.
Wasn't Sean Penn.
Was it not Sean Penn now.
I didn't see Sean Penn speech.
He didn't even did anyone else.
Okay.
I didn't shop.
I'm trying to think.
There was Matthew McConaughey's pretty good at speeches.
Yes.
He's,
he gets you going with that accent.
He's got his mannerisms.
There's something about him the way he speaks pretty good.
I like watching some of these guys go and speak
at college graduations.
Jim Carrey's done a good one.
Remember that one? Oprah.
Oprah's excellent.
Charlie Munger did a good one.
Do you think that's natural or all contrived or both?
I think some people are just naturally talented at doing that.
I think Oprah is just as good as people think she is.
Like when she gives a speech like that, you're like, oh, that's something that only she
could do.
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a little bit here. When someone like yourself who has the experience you have in Washington being as
close to politics and political leaders as you have been, what's your filter when you've
view the news or when you you watch people cover politics, knowing what you know.
Filter in what way. Like, what am I? Like, how do you, like, do you look at this? You're like,
oh, this is BS. I know exactly what's going on behind the scenes. It's a talking point. Or you're like,
hey, this is something I got to pay it. Like, how do you, like, how do you consume now knowing
what you know? I mean, when it's news about politics on the White House, I or campaigns,
even though I've now been out of politics since 2013.
I think about my experience in the White House,
my experience in politics and try to judge what's happening based on that.
So there's some sort of insight that that gives me that I judge it on.
I've also now been podcasting and in media for the last almost decade.
You're a pioneer.
I don't know if I'm a pioneer, but it's been a long time now.
You're one of the early ones.
One of the early ones.
And so I, you know, I judge a lot of the media content based on just, you know,
what I've seen over the last decade.
But look, I think one of the, we sort of fell into podcasting.
And one of the reasons I like the medium so much is, I do you think television is a, as a
medium and a lot of the television news broadcasts, cable broadcasts, we talked about this with
speeches, like they are at a point where because how television news and cable news is structured
and how anchors speak, it's not how people consume information anymore. So if people are used to
consuming information with, you know, watching an influencer on TikTok or Instagram, and then they
tune into the news and at someone like sitting there with their papers and reading like their
Walter Cronkite, then it's not going to feel as compelling because they're not going to feel as
authentic and there's there's going to be that distance between the person delivering the news or
talking about politics and the audience and with podcasting like you're just sitting around to
table you forget that the camera's there you're having a conversation with friends it's not sound bites
either it's not sound bites and so you just sort of let go and you have to clarify that like you say
something and something oh what did you mean like they're not used to doing that on these other platforms
just like one question back back and then you're done and I notice it now because I still do
cable hits from time to time and whenever I'm on cable TV I'm like oh I have like two minutes
and there's going to be a commercial break I can't it's still I still I still am not like I've gotten
better at it over the podcasting has made me better because I now don't worry about the appearance that I'm
like whatever it's going to be on I'm sitting in my usually I'm sitting in the studio the podcast
studio so I'll just talk and sometimes it's good and sometimes it's not but like at some point you
don't care as much you've like had enough reps that you're like whatever speaking of that
I wanted to talk to you about this.
So, again, we started this show, if you could go back 10 years.
We started it health, wellness.
We were curious about the medium.
We were listening to a lot of shows, like Tim Ferriss and Rich Roll, like, you know, self-optimization, a lot of that.
And we just fell into this.
And it's evolved into a medium where the types of people that will now come on shows like this compared to the early days is drastically different, right?
Yeah.
Like it was back in the day, if any politician or any A-List person went on any show, it was like, in the podcast,
industry was like, oh my God, somebody, like, I remember Tim Ferriss had LeBron
and people were like, I can't believe this happened.
I remember when Obama did Mark Marin.
Yep, that was huge too.
It was like, it was like people hadn't heard of a podcast before.
Yeah.
And so, you know, obviously it's a, we've evolved with the medium.
Recently we had R of K Jr. on here and obviously like that hits a nerve on both sides.
Some people are very excited.
I'm sure everyone was thrilled.
No, but what I, what I, what we appreciate about the medium is, you know, whether you
agree with someone's policies or not. Like if somebody's actively in office, they're going to
affect you in some kind of way. So like we had some clarifying questions. What I've seen you talk about
this in the past where you say you think more people on both sides of the aisle should do more
long-form content. And one of the criticisms we got, which I read in a lot of them I ignore.
I say, okay, like the people are just angry because somebody's on like ignore. You know, people are like,
do better ignore. But some of the feedback was, hey, why do you guys have this person and not
invite more people on the left. And what I don't think they see is like recently we invited
Gavin Newsom on Gavin if you're listening. And maybe if it got to him, not sure, but it for sure
got to is people into decline. And what I've seen doing this is there's maybe a willingness for
more people on the right or the perceived right to come and do long form and maybe less so on the left.
I don't know if you agree with that or not. I think that was, that has definitely been true
over the last couple of years. I think it's changing a lot. I mean, Gavin, I'm surprised he said no,
because he's been doing a lot. He's got a new book. I'll try to get it.
to him. I'll try to tell him. And listen, maybe he didn't even know. But I, but I, sometimes,
you know, like, I think maybe one of his people saw it and they're like, oh, they had this on and they
think it's the perception is one way or another. Yeah. That for him is, is not a problem because
he has been among a lot of different Democrats. Gavin's good about this. Rocahn is good about
this. Is like going on right wing or not right wing, but even just like right leaning or not political
at all podcasts and just like talking with people who may disagree with him and Gavin has a podcast and
he's had you know he had Charlie Kirk on he had Steve Bannon on so he's been trying this like
talking to people from trying to get into the medium I've seen yeah I think I think that's why I thought
he would say yes yeah because I think and look some of these things is he's he's got the book and he's
running around it also could be also the people well we can't just blame Gavin it could be the people
but anyways what I'm addressing is I think like you know as hosts all you can really do is
extend the invites.
Yes.
Like we have,
and what I've noticed,
and again,
I won't get into particulars and put everybody down.
I did that for Gavin because I want to pressure them to come on.
But what I've noticed is we're typically able to get a few more yeses
for people that are maybe considered in the right camp than we are in the left camp.
And I don't think it's just this show.
I just think there's more people in that realm that are open to doing long form like this
and having these debates.
Maybe it's changing and I just wanted to talk to you about it.
I mean,
I think it's,
I hope it's changing because I,
You know, I very much believe that Democratic politicians are left-leaning political figures
should absolutely be everywhere all the time. And I think the Democratic Party and Democratic
politicians have been slow to realize that not everyone, in fact, most people aren't getting
their news from CNN or MSNBC anymore. We don't have the news in our house anymore.
I mean, it's, we don't watch it in our house. It's not on. And I do it for a living.
That's crazy.
And that's interesting to hear you say that.
Yeah, because it's just, it's not, well, I mean, also, part of the problem is we have two little kids.
Yeah.
And so I'm like, I can't put the news on.
Listen, I go to my 82-year-old dad's house and that thing is blasting.
And it's just like, it takes me.
I put it on mute when I go.
It's PTSD right back to childhood.
It is funny.
No, my parents live up in Thousand Oaks.
And my wife always notes that when we like, we walk into their house and like the TV's on MS now.
And it's like, they just always have that TV.
That TV is on.
Yeah.
But I think that Democrats were slow to.
realize that people are consuming information in so many different ways and like you just have to be
there. And I don't think it's a like a partisan reason for like, oh, we don't want to go in more
right-leaning spaces or places that aren't friendly to Democrats. I think it is a fear of like,
am I going to do well? Am I going to be normal? Am I going to say, you know, like there's this
this sort of innate caution that I think for Democrats is born of now having lost two elections
to Donald Trump and a lot of most Democrats in the party don't trust their instincts anymore
because they're like, well, we lost the first election, then we lost the second.
That actually makes sense.
Now we don't know what to say.
So they'll be all stiff and, you know, like everyone's like, oh, Joe Rogan, everyone should
go on Joe Rogan.
Yes, but I could also like count on one hand the number of Democratic politicians if I was working
for them that I would trust to go on Joe Rogan because a lot of them, I think, would be,
have no idea what they were getting into.
Because he's so smart.
just because he would
just because he would throw them
questions on topics that they are
totally not prepared for. Yeah, like you could go down
a lot. But I think that, but funny
enough, I think that's what people
are looking for. It's like, I want to hear your perspective
on policy and ideas. I also want to hear how you think about
parenting. And I also want to think about what you do for
a hobby and what you like. And are you going to
watch the new Star Wars movie, The Mandalorian? I want
to, like, I think people want to know
that stuff. They want to know them. I think they want to know
the behind the scenes. And what I've always viewed it
as, because we've been doing the show for a long time, is it, whenever you start to broach those
conversations, say, hey, I want to have this person. Well, what are the topics? What are the questions?
I'm like, no, we're going to like just have a, like, we can give you ideas of what we want to talk about,
but there's no like, these are not, there's not like set talking points. There's no set questions.
It's that we're going to have a conversation. And I think that throws some people.
We have in the, in the, in the, in the Democratic Party, we have a lot of, um, front row kids
who were in their, in class, they were like in the front row, raising their hand, asking for more homework.
And I think the challenge is when they're in those settings and you're asking them like,
what are your hobbies?
What do you like to do?
They know the answers.
But the editors going in their head and they're like, what is safe?
What if I say this?
And this upsets this person.
If I say this, then this person's going to be mad.
And what if people don't like my hobby?
And what if my hobbies?
Like the self-editing starts and they're just too nervous to.
Which is, again, that goes back to like what Obama has.
Like, you have to be comfortable in your own skin.
and just like, this is who I am, and these are my answers, and if people don't like them, whatever.
Well, Obama can do it, and he does some shows, and he thinks he's great, and obviously Trump does.
And to Secretary Kennedy's credit, like, and I'll just say we had, there was no preempted questions.
There was no script.
We made him sign a release like everybody else ahead of time.
There was no, it was like, it was like, it just had a conversation and he answered the question.
And I thought that, you know, we tried to keep it very, like, down the line of like what's going on,
particularly in health and health policy.
But, like, we threw some questions out.
him and he at least had answers and I think like people appreciate that because they want to see that the people in charge are at least thinking about trying to figure out a solution whether you agree with the solution or not like we want to know like hey what are you guys working on over there yeah how are you thinking about us right that's and I think people appreciate when even if they um falter a little bit or even if they kind of stumble and they are trying and you're seeing like they actually are thinking about it like I think we're we recognize the human element and appreciate people doing that yeah no it's just I think it's all
Also, the only way anyone makes progress on anything is like having real conversations,
sometimes difficult conversations, having sometimes disagreements and debates, lives that
aren't like perfectly mediated and planned and ahead of time.
Like that's how like real change comes about and persuasion.
Speaking of persuasion, you said politics is a persuasion game.
What's, and this is from the team, this is not my question.
we'll say this is a team question.
They said, what's a specific political belief that you've held that you were successfully
persuaded to change?
Well, I think this is sort of over the last couple of years, but as a Democrat coming
up in Democratic politics, anytime you would give a speech about Israel, or a democratic
politician would give a speech about Israel, you would talk about how amazing Israel is and
our closest ally and wonderful.
and it's like you have to be pro-Israel no matter what.
And that's like the whole, that's like a core thing to the Democratic Party.
And I think even when, obviously October 7th happened and I was just horrified,
I think it's like what Hamas did was like the worst things you can do to other human beings.
And I think when there at first was criticism of Israel's prosecution of the war in Gaza,
I was much more likely to think, well, that's just people who,
who are on the far left and they don't, you know, and then as more came out and the war went on
and the killing continued, you know, I really did start changing my opinion of the Israeli government
and Israel and what it was doing in the Middle East. And it's hard in the Democratic Party even now.
I think it's a big split in the party because there's still people who's like, well, that's our,
you know, our closest ally in the Middle East. I also think like, you know, here in the United States,
I very much believe that we have a president who is, you know, has authoritarian tendencies
and wants to turn the United States into something that I don't, you know, believe it should be
turned into. And so I'm always like, why couldn't that happen in Israel as well, right? Like,
that's just, I think that's what Bibi Netanyahu and a lot of the Israeli government has done
there as well. So my opinion on Israel and not to bring up an issue that is,
I know this is an easy issue that everyone agrees on, but it's changed over time.
It's changed over time.
I highly consider myself independent, large, because I've never been in politics and I try
to take issue by issue.
But I imagine when you have the party affiliations that's one like yourself has,
they're that close, and you start to change your opinion.
Like, is that a challenge to do?
Do you lose friends over that?
Do you start to have pushback?
Do you have professionals reaching out?
Do you saying, don't do that?
Yeah, you do.
I mean, you know, I, people have gotten out of it.
Well, it's funny because when I was in politics, it didn't happen as much because you're really in the bubble when you're working in politics.
You're in the White House.
You're on a campaign.
And so you're just surrounded by people who think like you.
And there is a bunker mentality, especially when you get to the White House.
I think that's true of every administration of both parties.
Once I started podcasting and being a political commentator, you still have some of that.
Like the first couple of years, I think I still had that.
Now I am much more willing to say something.
that I believe and if people on my side get mad at me.
Yeah, whatever.
You've like really broken out and built your own thing to get your media company show,
so it's a bit different.
But I imagine that's a struggle because it might, it almost feels like you're like abandoning.
I mean, this wasn't like a policy issue, but the, um, the, the, the most criticism we got
was after that first debate with Biden and Trump.
And we all right after that debate said, you know, Biden should really consider dropping
out.
Yeah.
But I mean, like, do people, I mean, like, I think all of us at the time were like, well, there's something off a little bit here.
I mean, that's why we were like, are you, and we would get like so much pushback from the Biden campaign, from friends of ours in democratic politics that we've had forever.
It's like, what are you guys doing? You don't know what you're talking about. You were just, you were always jealous of, of Joe Biden and the Obama White House. And it's a, it's a vendetta that the pod guys have. And, you know, Hunter Biden was very mad at us. But of course, like, I was like, I was like, I was like, I was like,
like, well, do you guys realize what most of the country believes right now?
But that was, you know, and it's not like it was tough.
I was very happy to do it.
And I think we were right.
Well, I mean, like the country, we all have eyeballs.
That's what I said.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, but it was like, it was, you know.
Well, I think, I mean, credit to you because I think the people that didn't do that
and kept up like, you know, maybe we're like carrying on a facade that they knew was not true.
It's like they, I think a lot of those people lost a lot of credibility, right?
Because it's like the truth always kind of shines through.
We can all see what's going on.
And so if you didn't do that, I don't think you'd have the platform you have now.
We were just talking on an earlier episode about how one of the highest signs of intelligence
is flexibility of the mind and being able to change your mind.
And it feels like sometimes in this day and age, if you change your mind, it's the torches
and the trolls coming after you.
We have to be able to get to a point where people are allowed to change their mind.
Yeah.
Like I'm sorry.
Just because I thought, you know, five years ago that I,
I liked this or that doesn't mean I have to think it today.
Well, and as it relates to politics, too, and again, I just will, I'll pick on the RFK issue one more time.
Like, agree with this policies or not, whatever.
I want to hear somebody come on and give a counter idea or a better idea if you disagree.
What I don't like is these people just fighting and attacking each other constantly.
It's like, okay, if we all can step back and say, well, maybe there's a health issue going on in the country.
We're all kind of aware of it.
If that's not the right idea, I'm not highlighting a specific policy,
then what is what's the better idea but when people just scream and yell and say this person's
this or that like i think it does a disservice to everybody in the conversation well rfk junior
is a great example because i think that if uh democrats just write off the maha movement as a bunch
of cooks then that is not only wrong but politically um dumb um because you know i heard i heard some
the episode where you guys talked to RFK. And like a lot of it is stuff that Michelle Obama could
have said when she did, let's move as an initiative in the White House. And I get it. Like the,
I'm very into health and wellness. I fiercely disagree with him on on vaccines. And I, um, also
wish that a lot of what he believes about companies and food companies and like what they do
to our food, like that there was actually more regulatory pushback in the administration. Um, I think
he has wanted some of that and the rest of the administration has said no um which i think glycivate issue
we brought up yeah like he was not happy i think i think it says something about like the priorities of the
rest of the administration and and i think actually some of the stuff that i probably agree with him most on
he hasn't made as much progress on as some of the stuff that i don't agree with him on but i get that
there is complexity there even recently about iran right like i'm very against this war and i wanted to
end and yeah Tucker carlson gave a a 40-minute monologue on his show about the war that i'm
I listened to this morning and I like posted it. I'm like I know I'm supposed to say like I don't
agree with Tucker but he made a few good points. I'm like I thought that 40 minutes of this
there was a there were only a few things that I disagreed with here. Well this is where I think that
we're seeing the breaking of the traditional parties in this country because there's people now that
are like I mean there's things that again we've been around a little longer than some of the audience.
If you go back 20 years some of these policies that we're all talking about used to be on the left
Now someone on the right and they're like flip-flop positions.
But somebody's like, wait, I'm still on this side and like how that get over there and that's over there.
And so it's confusing, right?
And, you know, Bill Maher's been on the show and he talks about that all the time where he's like, you know, I, he always says that he didn't change.
Like, things have changed.
And I think what we're, what we're viewing here is that people are wanting to take common sense, practical.
I'm talking about the majority of American people.
They just, they want to be healthier.
They want their kids to be okay.
They want to thrive.
They want to be safe.
They don't want to be an endless war.
Like, those are things that people want.
And I think sometimes if it doesn't align, they feel scared to say that.
But we're all kind of looking for the same thing, which is prosperity for ourselves and our families.
Yeah.
And look, sometimes people can very much agree on what the problem is and have very fierce and legitimate disagreements on the outcome.
Like, health care coverage is a great example of that.
You know, like you can have most of the country thinks that we pay too much for health care.
and that everyone in the country should have access to affordable health care.
How to get that done is obviously a point of fierce disagreement with both parties.
And I have my views and other people have their views,
but at least you can agree on a problem.
I do think there's two different things we're talking about here.
One is sort of policy differences.
And the other is like a larger sort of political, political strategy,
how we talk to each other, whether we give each other grace for making mistakes,
for not using the exact right words for everything,
for changing our minds,
for going back and forth on things,
for making mistakes.
And I think that both parties have had issues with that,
especially over the last decade,
especially in the social media age.
And this goes back to our conversation
about sort of going on other podcasts
with people you disagree with.
I think there was a time where it was like,
don't platform this person,
or don't say that,
or you can't be seen with this person,
or you can't be having,
you can be associated with this person.
They're not going away.
They're not going away.
And again, it's not like if you go on someone's podcast or you're associated with someone,
you have to agree with all of their views.
I look up to Barbara Walters.
Barbara Walters, I think, interviewed Saddam Hussein.
Yeah.
No one on the internet said, you're giving Saddam Hussein a platform.
Like, guess what he had a platform.
I'm a media outlet.
If I like to interview people of all different walks of life and I like to understand why people
came to that conclusion, it doesn't mean that I'm co-signing them.
And a lot of people that come on here I don't agree with.
Yeah.
But it's up to the audience to form their own opinion.
I don't have an agenda to work through the person to get to the audience.
Well, and when sometimes the audience gets upset, what I always try to tell folks is like when you're listening to something or watching something,
the point of it is not to make you feel that all of your preexisting views are validated?
Because maybe it is, but if that's the case, then like, what did you get from that?
It's like it's comfort food, right?
It's like, I believe this.
I listen to this.
Oh, that's right.
Absolutely.
It's why you turn sign filled out and I had to go to sleep.
Right.
It's not chat chit.
No, like I want to be challenged.
I want to listen to a challenging conversation between people.
Like what if the criticism that we get sometimes and I take it seriously is the four of us on Pots Save America,
we like we agree a lot.
We're really good friends.
We've been around each of the forever.
So it's like it's hard to disagree.
But sometimes we try to like have debates or sometimes we try to bring people.
We often try to bring people on that we don't agree with because I do think, and we're trying to do that more,
because I do think that for the audience, you want to hear our perspective, but you also want to hear
perspective challenging us because otherwise it's just a whole bunch of people agreeing with each other and you,
and I don't know that anyone gets anything out of that.
I also think, I think that you have to think what kind of dinner party do you want to host?
Yeah.
We don't want a dinner party where everyone is.
Flopping each other on the back and saying you're right.
I'm bored with tears.
Like, I'm meditating with my eyes up and I got to be honest.
No, I want some different.
I need some different color.
I want some different opinions.
I want a little fight.
Maybe it's Thanksgiving.
Aunt Bertha says something weird.
I need like a lot of different energy.
You're dramatic, Lauren.
No, I love, like I want different opinions.
I am.
At the Democratic Convention last time in Chicago,
we were in our little area and got a knock on the door.
These two young kids and they were like,
oh, we're from Jesse Waters' show.
He would love to have you on the show.
Would you like come upstairs to the Fox Studio right now at the convention
and go on Jesse Waters.
And some of my staff were like, you're crazy.
You can't go.
You're going into the Lionsden.
You're not prepared.
And I was like, why not?
Who cares?
What's going to happen?
I agree with you.
And it was funny because I like, I walk up there and it's like being in the mothership.
And it's like, there's Laura Ingraham and they're all walking around.
And I went on Jesse's show and he gave me shit.
And I gave him shit back.
And we like gave as good as we got.
And it was fun.
My prediction is that that kind of content, what you just said, that's,
off the cuff and not so planned out and methodical and is going to go viral. I think you're going
to see all. That's what people want to watch. They want to watch different people having different
opinions. He's done very well with it. I mean, again, like, he's done very well building his show
independently with this kind of conversation and just having different people. I mean, I think he,
you know, it's an eclectic group that he has on. That's a hard one too because I've seen here's the show
And it's like, when you have a bunch of people who are all remote and they're all in the boxes,
and it's like, it's a lot.
Because then you're, then you're yelling over, but that I'm like, maybe it's good TV, but I,
maybe that's not for me.
But like, sitting around to table with a bunch of people, you disagree.
Like that to me is, I could do that for sure.
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boutique and the spa. Eden Rock, St. Bartz, wherever you are. So the way I look at it is we're all
entrepreneurs, business people, and I look at it through the lens of like if I'm trying to do a deal
with someone or if I'm trying to, you know, build something with someone and I start by just
personally attacking them and screaming at them and telling them how shitty their ideas are,
It's going to be hard for me to do anything with anyone.
And what I worry about in American politics,
and I guess now world politics, general,
is that if that's how every conversation is starting
and every kind of negotiation is starting,
like how do you ever solve anything for anyone?
Because if the idea is that you're a terrible person
and all your ideas are shit and then write back, same thing,
you could never in the business world get a deal done that way.
Well, in politics,
The analogy is the people I think who understand how to persuade the best are people who've
knocked on doors, like the organizers.
Because if you've been on a campaign and you have to go knock on a bunch of random doors,
first of all, you're not, sometimes you're knocking on doors and just reminding people who
are already going to vote for your candidate, like get out and vote.
But a lot of times you're going into neighborhoods where people either might not vote or they
might vote for the other candidate.
And you get all kinds of people on the doors.
And it's not even like you get.
get like hardcore right-wing people with all right-wing views. You get people with, like everyone
in the country, such complicated views. And so they could be very liberal on one issue and very
conservative on the other. And sometimes they could give you a crazy conspiracy theory that's not
true at all. And sometimes they could be nice and sometimes they could shut the door in your face.
And so I always find that people who have been on campaigns, who have organized door-to-door
and have talked to actual voters usually are better at persuasion, more practical, more pragmatic,
wherever you stand on the ideological perspective.
You could be far left and pragmatic
because you've knocked down doors
and far right and pragmatic.
They are more pragmatic and persuasive
than people who only argue about politics on the internet.
What makes someone persuasive?
I think empathy to me is probably the most important value there
is, and I think about this all the time
as a former speech writer,
and now in what I do is put myself in the shoes
of someone listening to this
who may not agree, put myself in the shoes of the audience that I'm speaking to or that the person
I'm writing a speech for or speaking to. And what are they thinking? What are their hopes? What are
their fears? What are their, based on their background, based on their demographics? Like, what might they be
thinking about politics? And then also, once you've thought about that, what do we have in common?
because the whole thing falls apart if we cannot find in this country like the the thread that connects us all
because if we don't have that and look that doesn't mean that we're always going to agree on everything
like we are we are divided and we're probably going to be divided for a long time I think the hope is
can we live together even with these divisions and these disagreements that's the test now right
because otherwise the whole thing falls apart and I think you need to have politicians
who, and this is why I always think of like,
there's this thing now when,
you know, a Trump voter
has someone in their family
who's deported, they're like, oh, well,
good, you voted for that, you know.
And it's like anyone who
experiences a harm
like that or who's
thinking twice about the political decision they made,
I want to be open to that person and like
welcome them over and say like, come on
over to our side. And I think we,
I think the Democratic party-
You know, you'll kick them while they're down.
No, I think Trump did that.
well in 2024. And now I think a lot of the people that came over to Trump in 2024 are probably
now the first ones to leave because he didn't, he hasn't quite delivered what they thought.
But I think in the campaign, they were very skilled in RFK Jr. is an example of that.
Like people who hadn't been in the tent, they were like, welcome. You can be part of our crew.
And I think Democrats need to do that as well.
What do you think needs to happen for in the country? And again, if you could wave a magic wand,
for us to get to a place where we're not so divided.
I do think that we put too much emphasis on the actions of politicians and political leaders.
I think that if we only see politics as a transactional enterprise,
which is every couple years, politicians campaign, they ask for our votes.
we say, okay, this one seems better than the other one,
going to give you my vote, and then I'm going to go back to my life,
and then you're going to go fix my problems.
And if you don't, then I'm going to be pissed off,
and then I'm going to throw you out, and then I'm going to elect someone else.
Like, we will continue to be disappointed and divided.
I think more people need to be involved in the act of governing.
And when something doesn't happen, between elections,
reach out to your member of Congress, run for office yourself,
get involved in your local community.
I do think that because politics is,
become so nationalized because of the media environment and like everything's about politics.
Everything's not about local politics or state politics. Everything's about national politics.
I think that real change happens on a local level. And so I would love to see like more,
I think of more Americans got involved in their community, in their neighborhood. First of all,
you would encounter more people who don't agree with you necessarily, even if you're living
in a blue area or red area, there's still people with different views. And so you would learn more
to work with other people and get things done with other people who you don't necessarily agree with.
And that would filter up as opposed to us hoping that we're going to elect the perfect person to then filter the good feelings and the unity down.
Right.
Like I think that we we just see politics too much as transactional right now.
Because look, like you get the politics that you fight for that you deserve.
And if we don't have good people running for office, then the way to change that is for other people to run for office.
And it's for other people to get involved in politics.
And so I do think that like political participation and more political participation, not just political hobbyism, which I think is just watching politics unfold, getting nervous about politics, commenting on politics, yelling online, I think treating it as a sport.
I think less of that and more of the actual work of getting stuff done and changing things on a local level.
I think that's going to help a lot.
Is this where I announce my run?
There it is.
If I win an Oscar, will you help me write my speech?
Wait, you've got to be an actress.
Absolutely.
You never know.
I could.
I'm multifaceted.
I might win an Oscar.
I'm going to put it out there.
Will you help me write my speech?
Or if you have to get any speech.
The number of, especially since I moved out to L.A.,
the number of potential award winners
who, like, through their agents or other people
have been like, hey, will you write?
And I'm like, I'm out of that business, but I will.
I usually say, I'm happy to look at a draft
and have a conversation with the person,
but I can't do anything from scratch
because I don't have the time to do that.
So I've done that a few times with people.
I feel like you've already been to like a speech
trader's version of the Super Bowl. That's a big ass. Okay, I want to switch just a little bit of gear
one more time with you and talk about your business. Sure. We have tremendous respect for you and
what you've built because we know ourselves firsthand how hard it is, one, to build a show,
but then to build a media company beyond the show, create other shows, work with other people,
have that be successful. When did you decide you wanted to start crooked with your partners?
And what was the motivation behind it? We, um, we, the podcast that is now Podsavis,
America started as a podcast called Keepin at 1600 and we did it during the 2016 campaign and we did it
with the ringer, which is Bill Simmons Media Company. And I had known Bill previously. We both went to the same
college. We got to know each other when he came to the White House to interview Obama. And he said,
you know, we do sports and entertainment and culture, but like I'd love to do politics. It's an election year.
Would you be, you moved out to L.A.? Would you be interested in like doing a podcast? So,
me, Dan Pfeiffer, Tommy Vitor, John Lovett, we all started this podcast and then we all had our other jobs and we thought Hillary Clinton would win and then we would be done and we would go back to our lives and be retired from politics and then Donald Trump wins.
You didn't know that one?
Yeah.
And we and then Donald Trump wins and we were like, oh, maybe we're not retired from politics and maybe we had talked before about when we were in the White House, oh, the media is failing because of this or we don't like a.
because of that and wouldn't it be we should have more progressive media companies and wouldn't it be
cool to start one and it was always sort of a you know a conversation you'd have intermittently and then
once trump won we were like we should continue doing this podcast but we should build the media
company that we've talked about and just started from scratch and started pods of america and we
so there was love it and Tommy and I sitting at my kitchen table in west Hollywood at the time
and we hired a woman named Tanya Sominator as our chief content officer, and she had worked at the Obama White House.
We got introduced to her through my now wife.
And we had her.
We hired Sarah Wick, who was our chief, our C-O, again through a friend, and she had worked on some startups.
And then we hired an assistant.
And it was literally the six of us sitting around my kitchen table.
We went to the Bank of America and West Hollywood, and we were like, we'd like to open an account for our.
media company and the woman's like great do you have money and we're like no did we
need money so yeah we're like do you have 10 bucks here let's open it I mean it was just so
like we had no idea we were doing a company at the time where you just we formed a company
we like talked to some lawyers but like I would say it was raw hiring I mean you guys know
this like hiring people to do that to like build the business is the most important thing
you can do when I started this I tried to find a CEO that would I was like okay now I
I got to get a CEO to do it and nobody, like, I had this woman and she, at the last,
I was like, I don't want the job.
Well, who the hell is?
I was doing something else.
I'm like, well, who's going to do that?
And then I was like, well, I guess like I have it.
And you realize at the beginning, you do everything, you know, and you're in every meeting
and your mind has pulled in your time is pulled in a million different directions.
And now we mostly, the founders, we mostly do just hosting.
And, you know, we're on the board.
And so we have board meetings and we do big strategic.
directions and have, you know, meetings, but we have a CEO who's like a very experienced CEO
and an adult Lucinda Tried who's been at the company for a while and thank God for her because now
most things happen in the company and we don't even know. But you know, at the time when you guys
did it similar to this, I think people like now everyone know, like I used to explain to people,
like we used to create social videos that we would put on her Instagram story showing people
where to find the podcast application because at the time people were like, what the hell is that?
And now everybody, and now I just call them shows at this point, right?
Because their audio, video.
I mean, there was that weird appears like, is it going to be video and audio?
And like, that was a big thing.
Yeah, we've all just recreated television.
Exactly.
But people forget there was also like much fewer ways to monetize.
So it was hard.
There was very few people taking the medium seriously.
It was like the weird stepchild of media.
It's like, oh, you're doing a podcast.
It was other.
It was like, I'm sorry you do that.
Like, you know?
And so I, the reason I have so much respect for you is because I think for the early
people that were able to like slug through it those are and like kind of form the market like
now if you want to do something like this what yes it's more competitive but the market's very well
established and there's some huge tailwinds and it's and you can make real living doing this but at
the time it was like it's going to work or not yeah well look we had a we had a theory and it wasn't
even it wasn't a business theory at least it wasn't you know thought of like that it was like okay
what is missing in media in political media right now what is missing in political media
is, you know, we all just worked in politics for the last 10 years and the conversations we would
have, even in the most heated, serious moments in politics were still accessible to people.
They were, we had gallows humor when things were bad, we joked around when things were good,
we approached the job with joy, we were like, you know, made friends that are our friends for
life in this. And like, what if we could bring that to the public? Because I think right now,
people think of politics as what they see on cable news or what they see when a politician gives a speech,
which is stilted, boring, self-serious. It was basically the people who were in political media
were too self-serious and they weren't treating the topics with the seriousness they deserve.
And we wanted to flip that and say, like, let's treat these issues like they are life and death
serious issues, but let's do it with humor about ourselves and not take ourselves too seriously
and joke around and just be who we are.
Well, and clearly it resonated.
So, no, I just thought I wanted to hear the story
because obviously from afar,
we've viewed a lot of what you've done.
But what I find interesting about early adopters
in this medium, it kind of just,
a lot of people that became successful,
it just started as like a passion
or as like a need to fill a gap that they weren't.
Like, for the same thing.
Like, we just weren't finding what we were looking for
to service our own show.
It's like, okay, well, we'll just like do this for fun
and maybe if it works, it works.
I'll never forget. It was maybe a month into the company, and we were invited to the Upfront Summit here.
And Karras Swisher was going to interview us on stage. And she sits and she's like, okay, so what is the business plan?
Like, what is the revenue plan? And John Lovett just goes. He's like, honestly, we just turn the microphones on and then the money just starts coming.
Like, that's just been how it's working so far. She's like, what?
And we're like, but that is like, and it was a joke, but it was also like we had not, we did not have this like detailed business plan the whole time.
It's pretty cool.
Yeah.
It's really cool.
Democracy or else.
How to Save America in 10 easy steps.
Go check out the book.
Pod Save America.
What else?
Where can everyone say hi to you?
Yeah, you can find, I'm unfortunately always on Twitter all day long at John Favs and Instagram.
Okay.
And I also host offline with John Favreau.
You can catch that all the time.
and Pod Save America and our YouTube channel.
Now we're always in just churning out content on the YouTube channel.
You're busy, man.
Very busy.
Congratulations, John.
Thank you for coming on the show.
Thanks for having me.
This was fun.
