The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Iran, Beyond the Headlines with Maziar Bahari
Episode Date: June 26, 2025With the US now directly engaged in the Israel-Iran conflict, Jon is joined by Maziar Bahari, publisher of iranwire.com and author of “Then They Came for Me,” a memoir that served as the basis for... Jon’s 2014 film “Rosewater.” Together, they explore the reality of life under Iran's current government, discuss the complex challenges of regime change both in Iran and elsewhere, and consider what ordinary Iranians actually want: peace and the freedom to live their lives. This podcast episode is brought to you by: MINT MOBILE - New customers get 3 months of unlimited wireless for just $15 a month at https://mintmobile.com/tws INDEED - Speed up your hiring with Indeed. Got to https://indeed.com/weekly to get a $75 sponsored job credit. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast> TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher & Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello everybody. Welcome once again to the weekly show podcast. My name is John Stewart
and we are currently not at war. It's been hours, I think. It means Wednesday. It's Wednesday, June 25th. This will probably come out Thursday.
Right now we are not at war in Iran.
Doesn't have a nuclear weapon by tomorrow.
Maybe the nuclear weapon and we're back at war and we either, uh, completely
obliterated their nuclear program or set it back 36 hours.
Boy, this has just been everything that is so difficult
about this administration just on display in the moment.
Just the, even actions that it might take
that can be successful are fraught with his fragility
at all times.
We obliterated their nuclear program.
Well, the early intelligence says, oh, that's, but that's scumbags reported
that and people that hate the pilots.
And you just think, Hey man, if it's real and that, and, and, and all the
things that you said you had accomplished had been accomplished, then it shouldn't be that hard
to not be so defensive and angry all the time.
And just, it's, it is such an amazing moment. And you see a guy who's the commander in chief of the United States and the
president of the United States in a situation room with like a Trump was right
about everything.
Like how many of history's great leaders
had their own merch?
What you're having in the moment of triumph in the moment,
you know, it's Roosevelt at Yalta
with Churchill and Stalin, you know, wearing a nice, no fear, fear itself.
He had fear itself on the T-shirt,
available on Roosevelt's website.
And just the shallowness sometimes of their, you know,
JD Vance, people are saying, you know,
we're concerned about intervention in the Middle East
and how these things can have unforeseen consequences
and instability throughout.
And JD Vance says, yes, no, we understand
that that's something the American people are afraid of,
but the American people have never had
a smart person before.
Now we have a smart person, a smart person, and because we have a smart person,
you will not have unforeseen consequences.
A smart person that thinks anybody that might possibly
look into whether or not it was actually obliterated
is a scumbag.
Press Secretary Carolyn Levitt comes out,
and they ask her, was it obliterated?
And she says
everybody knows what happens when you drop bunk everybody knows is what she
said everybody knows what happens when you have a precision strike with these
kinds of weapons these weapons have never been used before in the history of
the planet but everybody knows what happens It's just beyond the silliness.
And if anybody pushes back there, they demand 100% fealty and anything
beyond that sets off anger and frustration because of the fragility.
And speaking of which my favorite comment from the news has been, has this attack, what
is the future for Ali Khamenei, for the Ayatollah?
What is the future?
Does this put his future in doubt?
And you're like, he's 86 and, and he ain't Jack Delaney. Like he's not the healthiest dude in the
world. Like, I don't know what's more dangerous right now to the Ayatollah, uh, the American and
Israeli attacks or stairs. Like this is fuck man. But I am, you know, in these moments,
years ago, a friend of mine, Maziar Bahari was a journalist
and was imprisoned in Iran and he wrote a book
about his time in solitary confinement.
He was imprisoned for reporting on the Green Revolution
in 2008, 2009 during that election.
And wrote a book about it called, and then they came
for me and then he and I did a movie about it called Rosewater and now he does still
a journalist and does something called Iranwire.com which allows voices within Iran to have an
outlet where information because it's a difficult country
to get information out of, can come out.
And he is such an interesting and has such an encyclopedic and brilliant knowledge of
all that has happened in that country and the things that are currently happening.
And the first thing I thought as I saw this was,
boy, I just want to talk to Maziar
and just see how he's feeling,
what he's thinking about this.
And so very luckily we're going to get a chance
to do that today.
Ladies and gentlemen, oh, what a treat today.
We're very excited.
Our guest today, writer, journalist, filmmaker, Bon vivant,
traveler of international renown, author Maziar Bahari,
and also the publisher of Iranwire.com and my dear old friend Maziar,
what are you doing, man? Well, you know, you called me a Bon Vivant, but Vivant is not Bon
enough. It's not good at all. No, yes. No, I can see. I recognize that. Yeah, it's a, no, it's a very, very sad and tragic moment for many Iranians,
including myself all around the world.
But for me personally,
because many of our colleagues in Iran and citizen journalists and also the
families of our colleagues outside of Iran have been harassed
and they've been interrogated by different intelligence agents.
And this is something that the Iranian government does when it loses a war, a fight.
Iran has been defeated by Israel. Iran has been embarrassed and we're worried
that what they're going to do. They executed three people this morning
because of espionage and you know because of an assassination that
happened two years ago. They've been forcing people to confess against
themselves. So Iranians really really really, they're stuck between this
thuggish, hostage-taking, corrupt government and Israelis who think that by bombing they can solve
everything, that by bombing they can bring democracy to Iran. And people are thinking that,
okay, if with bombing you could bring democracy to a country,
Gaza would be a Scandinavian democracy by now.
Gaza would be like Norway.
Absolutely.
But it is, so Iranians are just,
they have these mixed feelings.
And as people outside of Iran
who are in touch with Iran all the time,
we just feel helpless.
And this is just so depressing.
So it's just
hard. I want to I want to step back for the audience right now
just to give a sense of where Maziar is coming from. So
Maziar, for many of you don't remember, wrote a book called
and then they came for me, you were covering the Green
Revolution. This was the 2008 election. I think it was 2009.
To 2009.
Ahmadinejad against was it Mosavi?
Mosavi. Yeah.
Uh, so Masriar was covering it, filming at the, uh, the Basij stations where there was a lot of
violence. That's sort of their kind of secret police that would come out on these motorcycles
and harass and hurt people.
At Basij arms depot. Yes.
In the middle of a residential neighborhood.
For people to forget that.
And people were going up to that end and being shot and killed.
And Maziar was arrested, interrogated, and then held in solitary confinement at Evan
Prison for months until a campaign spearheaded by his wife, Fala and many other international
human rights groups got him released, got him out.
So your experience in Iran is of this moment that you're talking about.
The Iranian government cracking down on what they think are the dissidents and the people that are
undermining whatever their security is. Iranwire, which is the site you started, is an incredible
outlet for these citizen journalists that are in Iran. So just to give kind of that, you know,
kind of a basic run there of where it is that, that you're coming
from there. You've experienced this cycle personally. Uh, and, and now you think that's
going to play out on the streets. Have you, have your sources there been able to still
reach out or is it kind of a radio silence right now?
What are you saying?
It's been very difficult.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's been very difficult because sometimes they narrowed the
bandwidth of the internet.
Sometimes they shut down the internet.
So it's been very difficult to get in touch with us and, you know, both
citizen journalists and officials as well.
Since last year when
former president Raisi died in a helicopter crash many Iranian officials
have been in touch with us and leaking information because they think that
they are on a sinking ship and they don't know what's going to happen and
because of that they are informing us about different things. And one thing that
they're talking about is corruption. So I always like to say that the Islamic Republic
is not either an Islamic or Republic. You remember that episode of Seinfeld that, you
know, remember that episode of Seinfeld that George told Jerry that, you know, it's my artistic integrity that I'm worried about.
And Jerry goes, what the fuck you're talking about?
You're not artistic and you don't have any integrity.
That is the Islamic Republic.
So.
Maziar Bihari, by the way, one of the only Iran experts who will quote Seinfeld
fluently.
Exactly.
One of the only ones.
Yeah.
Yes. And days of our lives. Exactly. One of the only ones. Yeah. Yes.
And days of our lives, yeah.
And days of our lives.
So what are they saying now?
Is it that the corruption may be the thing that finally
undermines their authority?
So let me go through my spiel.
So the Islamic Republic right now,
Islamic Republic of Iran is not Islamic Republic of
Iran.
It's Islamic Republic of Corruption.
It's Islamic Republic of Persecution and Islamic Republic of Masturbation.
We get to the masturbation in a few minutes.
Wait, what?
I tell you.
All right.
So this is a government that's corrupt to the core.
Why do you think that the Israelis managed to know
how many Revolutionary Guards commanders
live in what places,
and they managed to kill 12 of them on the first night?
Because of the fact that Israel
has so many spies around Iran.
And because of the fact that they know
the coming and going of
these revolutionary guards commanders, they know exactly where the bases are, they know
everything. And how if because of despise because this economy is so bad that they can
hire a spy for $5,000. And you know, according to our sources, some of these spies that people see even in prisons,
they're not getting like a hundred thousand dollars or $200 dollars,
you know, like Russian spies during the cold war,
they're getting like $5,000 for a bit of information that which commander lives
where. And then the Israelis,
they juxtapose all that information together and they have this hole which has helped them to do that.
And that corruption is existing in every aspect of this government and society.
It's an Islamic Republic of persecution.
All it knows, you know, in the absence of any real governing of the country, in the
absence of providing people with electricity, in the absence of providing
people with employment, all they can do is that imprison people, torture people,
you know, arresting people because of their hijab, etc. So they're not really
interested. They have given up governing the country maybe since 2019, since the protests in 2019. And persecution is what
they're doing. Those were after the death of Massa Amini. Is that the ones in 2019?
Before the death of Massa Amini. This is even before that? Yeah, before the death of Massa Amini,
when we had three days of total internet shutdown
and they killed almost 2,000 people. And then of course, during the time of Massa Amini,
there were others. And then it's the Islamic Republic of Masturbation. Why? Because all they
do is that they're just keeping themselves happy with propaganda. All they do is that through these forced confessions,
through this propaganda, like right now,
they have these rallies in Tehran
for the victory of Iran in this war.
You know what victory you should be embarrassed about.
So it's really like, you know,
when you think about the Islamic Republic's leaders, I would be embarrassed
if I were them because they're not even good at being evil.
Incompetent at being evil.
At incompetence at being evil.
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And on the other hand, you have the Israelis who know exactly what they're doing, who have
managed to destroy Hezbollah to a certain extent, Hamas to a
certain extent, Iran's, uh, the flights and, you know, the airplanes are, and, you know,
they come and go as much as they want.
In 2012, let me tell you a story.
You would be interested in this story.
In 2012, uh, five Iranian terrorists, they went to Bangkok, Thailand to kill Ehud Barak, who
was the minister at the time and was going to visit Thailand.
Minister of Israel, right.
He was not prime minister, he was minister, I think, foreign affairs at the time.
So he went to Bangkok, Iranians, they sent five agents to kill Ehud Barak.
Three of them hang out with hookers the night before.
There's a picture of them in Pattaya, which is a beach just south of Bangkok.
On the day of bombing, the bomb that they were supposed to have for Ehud Barak, it blew
up in the apartment building that they were, which was a few blocks from Iran's
cultural center in Bangkok.
The guys came out, people called the police,
they held the taxi, the taxi didn't stop,
they threw a hand grenade, and the hand grenade bounced back
and one of them lost his leg.
This is the type of inefficiency of evil
you're talking about, you know, like Hannah Arendt
talked about the banality of evil.
This is like the inefficiency, ineptitude of evil.
The inefficiency and incompetence.
But let me ask you, Muzgar, so you talked about
the difficulty of getting information now
out of Iran and into these other things.
What about information getting into Iran
and when the Supreme Leader and whoever else it is in the Ministry of Propaganda who are putting out the idea that this is a great victory.
I think they put out that they had completely destroyed the American base and cutter.
The people obviously are quite skeptical of all that.
But is there an ability for them?
Look, it's hard enough for us to get the information. We don't know what happened to those nuclear sites.
We don't know what our bombs did. It's hard enough for so-called open information societies to understand the realities on the ground within Iran, how much is their propaganda
dismissed and with skepticism?
How effective is it?
I mean, and when we talk about that too, we'll roll back.
Iran is not a monolith by any stretch.
It's similar to many countries.
You sort of look at it as red and blue.
There's this divide there,
but what is the information
that they're getting?
So Iranians, when the internet works normally, like when there is a connection between the
Iranians and international worldwide web, they can get their information. There are
many sites that are blocked, including Iranware.com, but people use VPNs and people
use filter busters. And funnily enough, Iranian government uses Chinese firewalls in order to stop
the internet and Iranians use Chinese filter busters developed by Chinese, some of them.
So they use VPNs. They get the information. There are satellite channels that are beamed into Iran that people look at.
And also because the Iranian government cannot at the moment because of that inefficiency
that we talked about, they cannot shut down the internet totally.
There are times that people can get the information.
So we are using WhatsApp, for example,
we have a channel on WhatsApp, on Telegram.
So people can get the information as much as they want.
But yesterday the Iranian government sent an SMS,
a text to many Iranians,
millions of Iranians around the country saying that
you should not like or post on any
Zionist or Zionist friendly sites or platforms. That's open to interpretation.
That's going to be all of them. I mean we do control.
That's open to interpretation because you know anyone can be a Zionist and for
even most of the Iranian government officials
that I've met, they don't know what the Zionism means.
They all think that Zion was a person
and these people like, you know, Marxists,
they support Zion.
Who is this Zion that they're talking about?
This is something that I heard from a senior government
official that damn that Zion who started Zionism.
You know, this is a level of...
Oh my...
But at the same time, you have this society that is educated.
They are, you know, they want, you know, they're secular mostly.
They hate this government, but unfortunately there is no alternative.
So when I hear about regime change in Iran, like from different
senators, Congress people, different, you know, like Netanyahu,
Netanyahu talked about, you know, regime change.
It's got to happen.
Yeah.
Regime change to what?
You know, the Iranian opposition has been its own worst
enemy for the past few years. Uh, when was it? Three,
almost three years ago after the Massa, I mean his death.
And during the woman life freedom movement,
a few of these opposition figures,
they got together in Georgetown University and they
had this manifesto and people were really looking forward to something happening.
I mean, there were actors and actresses and football players, soccer players, and people
thought that they might be able to do something.
They could not even hold that group together
for more than a month or so.
So the Iranian opposition really does not exist.
So imagine if the regime collapses tomorrow,
there is no Mandela or Václav Havel
who's going to take care of the country.
People compare Iran to the situation in South Africa that bring to the end of the country. You know, people compare Iran to this situation in South Africa that, you know, bring to the end of the apartheid. But Mandela was not himself. You know,
there are some interesting figures in the Iranian opposition, but they don't have a real political
party behind them. Mandela had people like Oliver Tambo, Chris Haney, Mbeke, the current
Tambo, Chris Haney, Mbeke, the current president, Sarah Ramaphosa, who managed to, you know, negotiations, the transition and all that. And also on top of that, ANC, the African National
Congress that came to power after apartheid, was a political party with decades of history.
was a political party with decades of history. Many of these opposition figures outside of Iran,
they have not managed to bring even a
small group of people together in an organized way,
to be able to talk to different governments.
They don't talk about, they don't have any plans for transition.
People say that, yes, we will be in charge of the transition
that but they have no idea about transition, transitional justice, and that means that for
the majority of Iranians who are secular, who hate this government, and they want change to look at
the neighborhood around them, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and those are like great role models to emulate.
So because of that, we are in a situation where we are,
that we have this millions of Iranians
who are sophisticated, educated, open-minded,
they're taken hostage by this group of thugs
who are organized, who have power, who have money, et cetera.
So when I heard the president yesterday saying,
these are the two countries that don't know
what the fuck they're doing,
that was, I think that was the exact emotion
that millions of Iranians and most probably millions
of Israelis could express as well.
Right, I wanna tell you, there's quite a few Americans who feel that way right now.
And Americans.
So there's, it's kind of a universal statement.
I think it's why it's become such a meme, but I think also for, for people to
understand, you know, Iran is really split the power base for, uh, this
current, you know, uh, the Ayatollah is more the rural areas, more religious,
more extreme. There is that dichotomy of the more educated people in the cities
and they have a more liberal, but you know, relate this to when you and I were
in Jordan, it was in the middle of sort of that Arab Spring, that feeling of there was a real
sense of hope and possibility of what a more democratic ideal might be, generally one that
we were kind of projecting onto them.
And I think Egypt presents a really interesting example because that was a ground up revolution.
First there was Mubarak who was sort of the authoritarian dictator who had been there
for all those many years.
The people on the street during the Arab Spring rose up and over through Mubarak and they
were going to institute a democratic election.
And what everybody began to realize is,
oh, the only people that are organized enough,
as because civic institutions had degraded
for so long over that time, was Muslim Brotherhood.
They were the only ones that had any.
So Morsi, through Muslim Brotherhood,
becomes the leader of Egypt.
They become dissatisfied with Morsi's rule.
The streets rise up again.
This is, it takes a year.
And who takes over?
Sisi, another autocrat, basically Mubarak again.
And now he's very popular.
I think the point that you made is really interesting.
Without, if you have an authoritarian regime over a period of time,
it degrades your civic institutions.
So when you talk about who's next, If you have an authoritarian regime over a period of time, it degrades your civic institutions.
So when you talk about who's next, it's maybe another Ayatollah, maybe it's somebody from Quds Force, maybe it's somebody from Revolutionary Guard, but it is not probably going to be
some democratically minded leader who's going to empower the people.
Would that be fair to say?
Well, uh, let's go back to the premise that, you know, that the,
the country is divided between rural and urban area and educated and not.
I think that was maybe the old paradigm at the moment.
We can say that Iran, uh,
right now is very similar to Soviet Union in the 1980s.
So you have many people who support the regime as they did in Soviet Union.
You have millions of people who are getting paid by the intelligence services like you
had in Soviet Union. And they are supporting an
ideology, but at the same time, they are getting paid by the system. So they have material interest
in the existence of the system. Right he was supporting because he was getting paid
and because he had seen 70 years of corruption
and dictatorship in his country.
And you know that communism is a very important thing
because it's a very important thing
and it's a very important thing to us.
So I think that's the way that he was supporting
a lot of them.
A lot of them.
So in like 1985, if you ask a KGB agent, But he was supporting because he was getting paid and because he had seen 70 years of corruption and
Dictatorship in his country and you know that you know communism did not work. So at the moment
Many people who support the government
I would say most people who support the government they have some material interests
It can be because they are getting paid by Imam Khomeini's charity foundation
It can be because they are getting paid by Imam Khomeini's charity foundation that is supporting up to 10 million people.
Maybe because they are getting paid by different foundations because of the Revolutionary Guards
and also as you know, Revolutionary Guards is not only an army, the Revolutionary Guards
is one of the biggest industrial companies in Iran. It has
universities, it has hospitals, so many people are getting paid by the Revolutionary Guards and
support it. Going back to the other question that you have in terms of the organized opposition.
Right. So there is no organized opposition outside of the government.
At the moment, I would say that the government is fractured into different parts.
Some of them are hardcore supporters of Ayatoll, corruption and dirt. And someone who, as they say,
he's the, basically the backbone of the revolution. I would say there are, there are many of them,
there would be maybe four or five million of them who vote for the most hardline candidates
during the presidential elections usually.
But there are many other people who do not believe in the government.
They believe in the, but they work, they still work for the government.
And many of them are good bureaucrats who would be good bureaucrats for a good government.
No matter what.
Yes, for a good government.
Like, you know, Iran's deep state. Some diplomats, exactly. Some diplomats that we have, some
accountants, bookkeepers, etc. So they don't have any kind of ideological belonging to the system.
So the best case scenario would be to have a leader who would realize that Iran needs
stability, and most people really don't care about many of the dictatorial aspects of the
regime.
They want stability in life.
And when Trump says, you know, they don't know what the fuck they're doing,
I can understand his frustration
because as a businessman, he looks at Iran and he says,
you guys have gas, you have oil, you have an amazing country.
I hang out with these Iranian property owners in New York
and I know how brilliant they are.
Why do you keep on, you know,
chanting these ideological slogans
and just don't make money?
Just be quiet and make money,
like the rest of the Middle East,
like people in UAE, people in Saudi Arabia,
people in many other countries.
And because of that, I think the best case scenario
would be to have a leader who is nationalist, who can bring different
groups together, who can give people social freedom, who can tolerate some level of democracy and
elections in Iran, and then Iranians would rally around him as someone who has a plan. Because
Iranians, they're smart enough to know that if someone doesn't have a plan,
they're not going to support that person. Right. Someone like, uh,
Mohammed Mossadik that we overthrew in 1953.
Well, maybe so maybe somebody like that. Yeah. Mohammed Mossad.
Right. Someone like him. Yeah.
Because he basically came through the system as well. And you know, here,
let's make it open.
Apprentices because we couldn't allow it because we thought he was a communist. He basically came through the system as well. And you know, here, let's make open apprentices because-
Well, we couldn't allow it because we thought he was a communist.
So that-
No, exactly.
But the thing about Mossadegh as well is that people say here that, you know, not here,
like in the US, I've seen a lot of my leftist friends and liberals say that he was democratically
elected.
Mossadegh was not democratically elected.
Mossadegh became prime minister like many other prime ministers before him and after
him.
The Shah introduced him to the parliament and he and you know the parliament voted for
him as the prime minister.
Mossadegh's main mistake and I think that many other Iranian politicians and many politicians in different places. Main mistake was to make
the Americans afraid of the Soviets so much that they couldn't trust them anymore. And
they said that, okay, we have to bring our own strong man because most of them was saying
that, was telling Truman and then you know
Churchill and Atlee at the time said you know if you don't support me the Soviets are going to take
over the communists are going to take over and then you know the CIA was a young organization at
that time and you know when Eisenhower came to power with Alan Dallas and you know they said that
well if you're so weak that you cannot withstand
the Soviets, then we can have our own people.
We can have the strong military.
So that's why, you know, the coup happened.
And he also did, you know, British petroleum
and the fact that they couldn't trust
Exactly.
that Mosaddegh would do what they wanted him to do
for British petroleum.
Yeah, so I think it's very important to understand,
you know, understand the other people's narrative.
I think Monsadar's main problem was that he did not understand the American Cold War narrative
at the time.
He did not understand the level of fear in the US.
That that was viewed as an existential threat in the United States, right?
Exactly.
And the Americans at that time, they didn't care about the narrative in Iran.
And they thought, you know, with the coup, they can bring, you know, stability and they
could break it.
The Shah will be our guy.
Exactly.
And 25 years later, it backfired.
Then there was a revolution in Iran.
At the moment, I think that's happening as well, that, you know, people don't understand
each other's narrative. And there is a lot of misunderstanding and miscommunication.
So let's talk about narrative because that you bring up an excellent point because so
much of this is about narrative. So, and I do have a couple of questions on that. One
is, and I'm sorry for drinking so much water. It's so hot here that, you know, I have to
hydrate myself.
Maziar, I can tell. First of all, it's very upsetting to me how good you look.
I'm already upset about that because... You too man you too.
Over the years the eroded. Oh my god no you look like a young George Clooney.
What Maziar thank you. Seriously. That's very kind of you sir.
That by the way when we were making Rose, which is a film about Maziar's experiences
in captivity in Iran, we had to get Gaël Garcia Bernal to do it because there was no
one else handsome enough to play a young Maziar Bahari.
It just wasn't.
And unfortunately, Peter Sellers was dead.
In the absence of Peter Sellers, we had to get We could have gone with someone handsome enough or witty enough.
And we went with Gaelle.
Yeah.
Who, who did a very good job.
Who did a very good job.
Bridge the gap.
Talking about narrative.
So, and it's the two narratives, one in Iran.
So the revolution and people know that there's a distinction between, uh,
Khomeini who was the leader in absentia.
And then when the Islamic revolution came to power, he took over.
And then when he passed Hamenei, uh, why do they, if, if this nuclear
program is the sole reason that is preventing them from the
kind of progress that you're seeing in some of these other nations, why do they feel like
that's the key to holding on to their power. Is it still the idea of creating a kind of a more
Shia dominated power source from Syria through Iran? Is it, I
can't wrap my mind around why they do allow themselves to be
so at a remove when they do have so much to offer as, as you
say, in terms of brain power, in terms of everything that they've kind of, you
know, it seems like cut off their own nose to spite their face in some regard.
No, it's a very good question.
And I think it goes back to the, uh, one of the main problems with this
government that it has not managed to define itself.
The fact that 46 years after the revolution, they're happened because of mainly two reasons.
Iranians, they wanted freedom. They wanted to defeat tyranny.
The Shah was a brutal force in Iran. People might forget that.
The Shah was brutal force. And also the Iranians, they started their movement for freedom in 1906,
Because they started their movement for freedom in 1906, one year after the original Russian Revolution and they had the Constitutional Revolution and Iran had the first parliament
in Asia.
So people started to fight for freedom in 1906.
Then you know that movement was defeated and Shah's father came to power and there were
many movements in the 1940s and as you said the coup happened in the early 1950s so
many Iranians they thought that they could use Khomeini in order to defeat
the Shah and then he would just goics, they had a lot of power.
In 1962, the Shah had the White Revolution
and that undermined the power of the clergy in Iran.
So the clergy, they really developed the...
What was the White Revolution?
Go back to that, because I'm not familiar.
Oh yeah, so the White not familiar. Oh, yeah.
So the white revolution had two main tenets.
One was that the big lands had to be taken away from landowners and divided into farmers,
because the shah that field oil system that existed in Iran at the time was a main obstacle
to the progress of Iran. And he was inspired by Kennedy, actually.
He had, he was, you know, at that time Kennedy was in power, so there was a lot of
conversation between the Kennedy administration and Iran. And the second tenet was the giving
women the right to vote. So when Khomeini started his movement in 1962, he wrote a letter to the Shah
saying that, you know, your Royal Majesty, he used the word Royal Majesty, giving women the vote
is going to drive them to prostitution. You know, like, you know, okay, women get a vote and then
they go to a brothel immediately, you know, just like that. It's going to this, this, this letter, this letter is available online, you
know, and then so the white revolution. So after the white revolution, Khomeini, of course,
had his original uprising. He was sent into exile. Many of his supporters were killed
and put in jail, including this, the current Supreme leader, Aytolah Khamenei, who was,
I think, around 23, 24 at the time. He was born in 1939. So, the clergy, they wanted to take power.
And so, in 1979, these two forces, the nationalist forces and Islamic forces,
they managed to topple the Shah. But again, as you said about Egypt, the Islamic forces,
they were more organized. Khomeini had a network of people in mosques around the country. He was a
very good communicator. He knew how to use the cassette tapes. He was sending his messages to
Iran in cassette tapes. He was using photocopies of his messages.
So that was distributed all around Iran.
So when the revolution happened in February, 1979,
Khomeini managed to get rid of all the other groups
one by one, put people in jail, execute them,
and then be the absolute ruler of Iran.
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Now, do you think Iran now, if that's the origin story
of sort of this new version, do they define themselves through the Islamic premise?
Do they define themselves through opposition to the great Satan, which would be America
and I'm assuming Israel?
Do they define themselves through this idea that they are a
counterweight to the majority Sunni population in the region?
Like what is, what, what's kind of the defining foundation then that
holds the nation together?
Yeah.
So I remember that I didn't answer your question about the nuclear.
So I'm going to ask both of them at the same time. So I'm going to answer both of them at the same time.
We got so much.
Yeah, I know.
I answered both of them at the same time.
So again, like what we are talking about the opposition right now, when Khomeini came to
power, he had an ideal of creating Islamic utopia, exporting the revolution, and he inspired
millions of people around the world.
You know there's a guy who lives in Iran right now who came from Washington and
you know he killed someone on behalf of the Iranian government and he's been
living in Iran for the past 46 years. He inspired millions of people around the
world and as you remember in the 1970s and the 60s, revolutions were in vogue. So Khomeini was really a good revolutionary leader,
but that utopia was, you know,
it was an unrealistic idea.
It was a mirage.
The Islamic Republic, as we said that, you know,
it's like, you know, George with artistic integrity,
that, you know, that does not exist.
So in the absence of being able to create this Islamic utopia,
what Khomeini did and what his successor Ali Khamenei sorry, he's been, they've been,
they've been insisting on that revolutionary aspect
of the Iranian government.
Right.
Of the Islamic Republic.
And what do you need for a revolution?
You need an enemy.
So you have to have enemies.
And Khomeini said it himself,
that Saddam Hussein's invasion of Iran in 1980 was a
gift to the Islamic Republic. Because when Saddam Hussein invaded Iran and it started the Iran-Iraq
War for eight years, that brought everyone together and they supported Khomeini. And as a result,
people, you know, he managed to mobilize people. Then Khomeini. And as a result, people, you know, he banished to mobilize people.
Then Khomeini died in 1989. Ali Khamenei came to power. And he's been his catchphrase is
dushman, the enemy. And you know, he's been talking about dushman. And you know, talking about Dushman and you know talking about Dushman is like really for him is it's give him these you know it's his character it's like you know Barry
Gibb finding his porcelain you know just like that you know it's like when you think about Barry Gibb before you know
see this is the fun of hanging out with Maziar. No no but seriously like you know Saturday Night Fever
before and after.
Sure.
It's like, you know, it's like, how many talks about...
Once they found that signature sound, man, do shman.
Exactly.
Do shman was the staying alive.
You know, because apparently, how many smokes opium and, you know, people who've known him,
they say that every now and then he likes to smoke a little bit of opium.
He doesn't say dushman, he says dushman, which is a very much, you know, like an opium infected
sound.
Anyway, so yeah, so he has to define a new dushman, a new enemy for himself every time.
So it was Saddam Hussein, which was a blessing.
And then of course, America, the great Satan, Israel, the little Satan.
And then, you know, the then I think around 1993, 94, he talked about the cultural invasion because of the Western cultural invasion,
because of all the velvet revolutions that were happening in Eastern Europe.
He talked about that. So he keeps on talking about that.
And how can you defeat an enemy through military power?
And what is the most potent military device that you can have to defeat and, you know, defeat the enemies.
That's the nuclear program.
And they've been trying to do that since.
Wow. As far as we know, since the late 1980s, when the
former Revolutionary Guards Commandant, the letter is available as Khomeini, after many defeats during the Iran-Iraq war that we have to start developing a nuclear program.
Wasn't even the Shah pursuing that, I think, towards the end?
Well, Shah was not pursuing nuclear weapon.
He was a nuclear weapon.
We don't know yet.
We don't know yet. We don't know. The funny thing about the Shah is that
the Americans, they helped the Shah during the time of Eisenhower around the 1956-55-56
to develop the program Atoms for Peace. And many countries, they had that. And the Shah had a very smart idea actually. The Shah was saying that oil
is a finite resource. So we cannot use oil only for heat. And you know, we have to have
alternative sources of power and keep oil for other usage. So the Shah was developing nuclear energy and in early, around late 1970s,
there are some documents that some Israelis, they were saying that the Shah should develop
nuclear weapon in order to be able to defeat the
Arab enemies, the same way or at least frighten the Arab enemies. And at that time, the Americans,
they did not want the Shah to have that and prevented that. And when this government came
to power, it basically got rid of all the nuclear programs in the beginning and then they started again in the late 1980s
So when you go to the Israeli archives that part of the archives is still not available to the public
but when you talk to the
People in the Israeli army in the old times the add the army the militarye, the Mossad people in Iran at the top,
they're telling you that that's what happened,
that we wanted to have Iran nuclear program.
And the other thing is that, you know,
between Iran and Israel is that there is no real beef
between Iran and Israel.
Iran needs Israel.
By the way, I think more Jews in Iran than any other country around there after Israel. By the way, I think more Jews in Iran
than any other country around there after Israel
and the United States.
Maybe after Turkey, I'm not 100% sure, but.
Right, maybe Turkey, right.
There's a sizable Jewish community in Iran
and it's one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world.
And you know that they're not Ashkenazi
and they're not Sephardic.
There are, you know, Iranian Jews, Persian Jews, Persian Jews. And you know, and there are many of
them is they are very close to where you live. Yeah. You know, they're in Long Island. Wait, what?
Yeah. Yeah. I thought it was Los Angeles. No, no, no, no. Great neck, great neck in Long Island
has the biggest Persian Jewish community.
They know, you know, they know the vertigo is like, these are like beautiful areas.
They have very, very beautiful...
You got to go by waterfront, you know, the Jews meet the ocean breeze.
So yeah, so there's no beef between Iran and Israel.
But it is, Iran's been very clear they would like to destroy Israel and Israel's been very
clear they would like to destroy at least this regime.
Yeah. Well, Iran has to say that again because Khamenei and the regime as a whole, they need an enemy, but...
Dogeman, that's the Dogeman.
They need the Dogeman, yeah, or Dogeman if you want to emulate.
Dogeman, right.
So yeah, there is no... in the Shahostime, there was no de facto relationship between Iran
and Israel, but Israelis had up to 10,000 people working in Iran in different industries,
advisors, there was a direct flight between Tehran and Tel Aviv.
Really? Yeah, to ordinary Iranians, there are no animosity
between Iran and Israel.
Yes, of course.
Is the Palestinian question not as important to the Iranians?
No, the thing is that the Palestinian question
is as important to Iranians as the situation of Rohingya is
important to the Israelis.
You know, they are sad about it.
Yes, of course, when they see destroyed houses, their children, et cetera, they're sad about
it, but it's not their issue.
The same thing for the Israelis.
The Israelis, when they look at the Rohingya in Burma,
they're sad about it, but this is not something that has to do with them. So many Iranians,
they just don't understand why they are stuck between a corrupt, violent government, a regime,
and a government in Israel that thinks that they can just bomb everything and the solution to everything is bombing.
Including bringing democracy. And the icing on the cake was a few days ago when the Israelis, they bombed every prison
in a symbolic gesture that you know we want to be free. We are freeing you.
And what happened, many buildings were destroyed, many windows were shattered, and many prisoners were hurt seriously were injured seriously and those are the
people who hate the Iranian government and those are the people who are the
future of Iran and the Israelis are hurting them because they want to bring
democracy around Iran right this is such it's it's it's such a repeat of so many
of the ill-founded efforts that we have had in that region for
these past 100 years of that idea of, oh, we're going to bring democracy.
How does the Saudi bloc and Qatar, UAE, how do they play into this because I'm always surprised given the
brutality of this campaign in Gaza, given this, you know,
there's a lot of rhetoric from Turkey, the Saudis cutter,
nobody seems to do anything. Nobody seems to want to get
involved on behalf of the Palestinians like to create
they'll they'll every now and again,
they'll put out a kind of statement about a peace plan that they were going to
do, but nobody will put skin in the game.
And I'm wondering now, you know, as they're bombing Iran,
the passivity of all the other countries,
is that tacit approval of these actions?
I wouldn't say that it's tacit. Yeah, I wouldn't say that it's a tacit approval.
Some of them, you know, because Iran has been trying to have its proxies in different countries,
including Saudi Arabia, and it has cells in Bahrain and UAE and Kuwait.
Well, certainly Hezbollah and Hamas are the most well known.
Yes, but also-
And maybe the militias in Iraq.
Smaller groups, yeah.
Smaller groups they have in Saudi Arabia,
in Bahrain and other places,
and Iran and Saudi Arabia,
they haven't had a very brotherly relationship
since 1979, even before that.
But so on one hand, many people among the Arab countries
around the Persian Gulf,
they're kind of happy that Iran and Israel are fighting
and the fact that Iran is being
weakened by Israel and United States.
But at the same time,
because the security and stability of the
region, especially the Strait of Hormuz where, you know,
20% of the oil produced in the world, it goes through straight of
hormones every day.
They are worried about the stability of that region.
So maybe in their heart, they're happy that Iran is being weakened.
But when they think about it, the instability and insecurity of the region is not something that can be helping even the Persian Gulf Arab countries.
And for all that time, you know, again, people always talk about the off-ramps. helpful about this Maziar is you giving us the kind of context and background
about how Iran developed and how they got here gives us sort of an idea
into the psychology of it.
You know, you and I still live in the 1979 world to some extent.
I would imagine that the majority of people now in Iran and in that region.
Do not in any way remember 1979 don't have any real ties to that.
You know, the enemies and foes and friends of that time.
foes and friends of that time.
It does present an opportunity to redefine what that region can be. It, it seems insane to me that this region has been so fraught.
What are the real dangers?
Well, you know, in Iran, the situation is not like as you described
because in Iran, they celebrate 1979 revolution every day
People see pictures. They still live in that moment. Oh, yeah people see pictures of Khomeini
Ayatollah, Ruhullah Khomeini the founder of the revolution every day and people
collectively
Remember of the collective fuck-up that they had in
1979 who came to the streets and chanted
when the devil goes out the angel comes in
meaning that when the shah goes out the angel
ruhallah humayni would come in and i think yeah i mean the
the whole nation even the young people who don't remember 1979 and the majority
of iranians maybe 85 percent, have been born out
after 1979, they still regret that historical mistake that they made in 1979 to have a revolution
without knowing, without having a plan for the future. And that includes many people in the government now. People who were revolutionaries
at the time. When you talk to them privately and sometimes even publicly when you talk to them,
they said we made a mistake. We should have given the Shah the opportunity to reform the country.
The Shah was afraid of the Soviets, of the communists, and then maybe after the collapse of Soviet Union,
there would be more opening.
In any case, the situation would not be as bad as it is now.
And that is according to many people
within the Iranian government.
Are there resentments more internal
or are there resentments that look,
we've imposed really devastating
sanctions on that country. You know, I would imagine it's very easy for them to
point to as they did with you, that you are an agent of the West sent to weaken
them. That's been their game plan. You've been the dogemon. The West has been the
dogemon for so long that how reflective are they?
And even within Iran, for those who resent, you know, what would you say is the,
is the regime's actual sort of support level, you know, given everything that's happened?
Yeah, I would say based on the last election that we had, and the majority of people voted for the person
who was not Khamenei's first choice for president,
and people, you know, about five to six million people,
or maybe a little bit more, seven million people maybe,
they voted for Jalili, who was Khamenei's chosen candidate
during the presidential election last year.
I would say that is the
highest level of support that you would have in the country.
And that includes people who are getting funding by the government, the intelligence agents,
et cetera.
But this question of sanctions is very important because I think it's multilayered.
The problem is mult-layered.
In order to impose targeted sanctions against the nuclear program, against the human rights
violators in terms of certain sectors within the Iranian economy, you need the bureaucracy to back it up.
You need the people in the treasury,
in the state department, other places,
in order to be able to liaise with the banks,
saying that, okay, this pharmaceutical company
that wants to import medicine from the US
or medical equipment from the US, they can be exempted.
They can have this OFAC license that, you know, Treasury issues for the exceptions.
But that bureaucracy has not existed in the US government since the beginning, since 1979 when
Carter's administration imposed the sanction and you know neither Reagan,
Bush, Clinton, Obama, Bush senior, Bush junior, none of them had that and it
doesn't exist at the moment. And at the same time the Revolutionary Guards is
not only a military force in Iran.
It is the biggest industrialist in Iran and it has many companies.
It has shares in some private companies.
So when the Revolutionary Guard Corps IRGC is prescribed, is subjected to sanctions that means that the pharmaceutical companies
that are owned by the Revolutionary Guards, the pharmaceutical companies that bring medical
equipment to Iran, they are subjected to sanctions as well. That somehow resembles hiding amongst civilians for the
Revolutionary Guards because it is like an octopus. It has its tentacles
everywhere in every aspect of Iranian society. And sometimes you know you are a
bookkeeper or you're an accountant working for a company, for a pharmaceutical
company, and then the Revolutionary Guards take over, you immediately become subjected to
sanctions by the American government and many other governments. So I think this
question about sanctions is very, very complicated.
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But I think the main reason for the sanctions is the behavior of the Iranian government.
In 1979, when the sanctions started, they started because a group of students inspired
and supported by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini took over the American embassy in Tehran,
meaning the part of the American land. And I think that resentment still exists among many American diplomats.
And actually among many older Americans who are voting for different elections.
Absolutely. That's what I meant by it.
For the younger Americans, I don't think they have any foreknowledge of that.
But for older people who still remember the
pain of that time, that's why I'm saying this seems like a moment where we can finally break free
from this kind of historic self-defeating pattern that has isolated.
That requires reading and education though.
Well, it's funny. You always think the one thing Maziar was always really clear with me so
we always talked about this when we were sort of working on the film was the difference between
incompetence and evil and you know you were always really clear that so much of and we tried to sort
of insinuate that with the interrogator that used to, that Kim Badna who played your interrogator that would
come in this idea that they weren't evil as much as ignorant and incompetent.
And, and that chasm seems like it's only grown and it is the revolutionary guard.
The only organization
within Iran now that kind of functions as holding that whole thing together.
No, I think the civil society in Iran is still very strong.
Iranians are educated and since the woman life freedom movement,
Iranian society has changed a lot.
You see strong civil society groups and these civil society groups they are not maybe politically active and they want to topple the
government. They are environmentalists. They are you know they are involved in providing employment
to different people. They are targeting poverty in different parts of the group.
So this society as a whole is really progressing and is really advancing regardless of what
the government is doing.
Almost nature finds a way.
Exactly.
And you know, some many Iranians in the absence of any viable opposition to this government, they are implicitly and explicitly asking the government,
just leave us alone.
Just leave us the fuck alone.
We want to do, you know, we want to provide jobs.
We want to clean the environment.
This is the air that we all are breathing.
You know, let us clean the air.
What's wrong with that?
But the revolutionary guards, on the other hand,
they are very organized.
And, but again, the revolutionary guards
is not a monolith.
There are different factions within the revolutionary guards
who are fighting against each other.
A voice file came out about five, six years ago.
It was about the clash between Qasem Soleimani, the former head of the Quds Force and the
commander of the Revolutionary Guards because of the fact that Soleimani was involved in
some money laundering, etc.
So that guy was criticizing him. So Revolutionary Guards is
not a monolith as well. And also you have to remember that, and I hope that the American
administration remembers that as well, that many people are drafted into Revolutionary Guards.
So when a young person is graduating from high school or maybe dot drafting, but enjoys the army.
They have a few choices.
They can go to the army, the Navy, or they can be drafted into
Revolutionary Guards and they have no ideological belonging to the Revolutionary
Guard. They don't ideologically support, but they're just drafted to the Revolutionary Guard. They don't ideologically support, but they're just drafted to the Revolutionary Guard.
So the Revolutionary Guard is really not a monolith as well.
And yeah, so in the absence of any viable opposition,
in the absence of any viable alternative,
the majority of Iranians, they want security,
they want peace, they want to be able to provide
the basics for the family, whether under this government or not.
And have a sense of a future.
I mean, it's...
And they want to have a sense of future.
And I think, yeah, I think that's very important.
You know, when the Israelis, they are targeting Tehran
and they're targeting civilian areas
or they're targeting oil refineries.
And when people remember what the Israelis have done in Gaza,
that doesn't give them the confidence
that the Israelis, they want to work with them
in the future.
Exactly, that they want to work with them in the future.
But see, this is what's so heartbreaking about this region.
And this is something that I think I learned from working with you and from
being over there.
I don't know of a region of the world where there is a larger gap
between the nature of the people and the nature of their
leadership, between the nature of the people and the nature of their leadership. The
extremities of people's leadership in these areas versus, I mean, I can remember
when we sent Jason Jones when we originally interviewed you during that
time of the Ahmadinejad election, a warmer group of people, better educated, a more artistic, you will not find when you
go into often these regions that are being torn apart by extremist violence, you know,
the people in Palestine, a more hospitable, like lovely with nothing, who I remember we would go into those refugee camps in, in
Jordan, people with nothing who wanted only to invite us in and
feed us.
And I was so struck by the gap between the beauty of the hearts
of those people and the hardness of the hearts of the leadership.
And I feel like that is where we're caught right now.
Yeah.
And you know, when you travel to countries like Malaysia
or Thailand or any other South Asian countries,
but I'm giving Malaysia as an example
because it's a Muslim country
and they don't have any
relations with Israel.
The majority of people don't like Israel because of what it's doing to the Palestinians.
But the Malaysian government does not build a weapon and write in Hebrew on it, death
to Israel.
You know, they don't invest so much money into denying the Holocaust, into anti-Semitic propaganda.
No, they don't have relations with Israel, but you know they're doing their job,
they have good relations with the US and them. But it's not their reason for
existing is to destroy them. Exactly, it's not the reasons for this. They don't do
anything about Israel, they just don't like it, they don't deal with them, that's
all. Maybe they deal with them, but it's not something that the Malays Israel, they just don't like it. They don't deal with them. That's all. Maybe they deal with them with that. But it's not something that the Malaysians, they wake up
in the morning and see death to Israel all the time. And you know, if you think about
it, like when you're, if you're an Israeli and I've been to Israel a few times in the
past 10 years or so, when you are an Israeli and you have this government that chants death to Israel all the time as I said
and the example I gave is a real example that they build bombs and they wrote on in Hebrew on it death to Israel and
At the same time you see that they are funding groups that are acting against you
That doesn't give you the confidence as an Israeli that you can deal with this government
and you think about doing something.
Then you also though have politicians in the Knesset
saying we should nuke Gaza.
I mean, that's exactly, I can't imagine
that's giving much confidence on the other side.
Of course, I mean, there are some rabbis in Israel
who are saying that we have to emulate Iran
and we have to have a Jewish kingdom in Israel.
But I mean, we're not talking about like the extremes. We're talking about normal people.
For normal Israelis, I think it would be interesting. But the problem is that there is
the narrative exactly that the ordinary Israelis, they do not understand the narrative of ordinary Iranians and vice versa.
Yeah.
If I want to blow our own horn, is that what we're doing in Iran,
why are we trying to somehow translate these narratives for the Iranian audiences,
but what the rest of the world are saying and for the rest of the world,
but what the Iran of the world are saying and for the rest of the world, but what the Iranians are saying.
And it kind of takes us around sort of full circle to what we were talking about earlier.
And, you know, we're talking to Maziar Bahrie, who had been imprisoned in, in Evan,
and has certainly, you know, his family had been arrested by the Shah.
I mean, that's the other thing I want to make clear is, you know, Maziar's
experience, his experience was with Khamenei and being, uh, in solitary
confinement, his father's experience was with similar, uh, repression,
but under the Shah.
Yes.
And so you've, you've seen, you know, the, the US aligned
government and the non-US aligned government acting in, in
the same fashion, you know, as they say, meet the new boss.
Oh, within the same, but similar fashion.
Similar fashion, meet the new boss same as the old boss.
Is there some way, and, and this is probably a question beyond all of it, where a country born in revolution, and let's say the birthday is 79 or in Israel born in Zionism or whatever it was that that created it through.
was that that created it through that they mature past this
existential tightrope that they seem to always feel like they're walking and, and, and get past whatever they believe is the fear
or humiliation of, of actions and take this chance of, of maturing past that moment
and giving their good people an opportunity to rejoin the family
of other nations and, and, and obviously have issues and, and
act fucking normal.
Like that's it. Act fucking normal. Like that, that's it.
Act fucking normal.
Act normal, like you know,
the government of Malaysia, for example,
it's not the best government in the world,
but it doesn't wake up and say, death to America.
You know, it took you about two or three minutes
to ask that question.
I think that process, it was a long question.
No, but it's, you know, but it's a-
I was trying to work my way through it.
No, no, no, but it's important for the right question to be asked.
You need to take your time. You need to think about it and you need to articulate it. For this
change that you're asking about, people have to think about it. People have to introspect and
people have to come up with solutions. The Iranian Iranian society the majority of Iranians are doing that
What you're asking about is not going to happen as a result of a bombing
It's not going right as a result of sudden change as I said after the woman life freedom
Iranian society
Was changing it has been changing this
set of bombing this 12-day war I'm not sure whether it's going to be an
obstacle to that or it had it may have weakened the regime to a certain extent
that they may listen to people if If they're wise enough they would
be listening to people and don't worry about hijab and things like that and
they would just try to have people on their side and survive but survive in a
more normal way. But there's also the fear, the danger that they go to the Khomeini's way,
that after 1988, after defeat from Iraq, the military defeat,
they can close the society.
But one way or another,
I am very hopeful about the long-term future of Iran,
because the people I talk to, the young women and men I talk
to, especially young women, men I talk to, especially young women.
I think the Iranian women, they're just, it's just, it's really, their,
their future is theirs.
And when you think about the sacrifices that they've made, the amount of shit
they have to go through since 1979 and even before that, and their resilience
and their brilliance, you can see that the future of Iran
can be in the hands of these women and I'm very hopeful about the long-term future of Iran, but
in the short term, especially in the next few months after such a
humiliating defeat
by Israelis and Americans, I'm not sure. There might be
some tragedies happening in the next few days, weeks, months.
And I can remember you and I would talk about, you know, these movements and the
Green Movement and when they would sort of dissipate. The people would
come out in the street, the Basij or the Revolutionary Guard or
you know would put it down violently and you said something to me once that really struck with me
which was the people of Iran decided they like life more than they like freedom. Exactly. And
they were tired of for their freedom,
having to put themselves in such harm's way.
And boy, that was such a powerful-
They want to celebrate life.
They just want to have a normal life.
And you know, the most famous song
that came out of the woman life freedom,
it's called Baraye 4,
and the main line in that song is for a normal life.
And that is something that people have been fighting
for, just a normal life.
I want to go out, I want to buy a piece of bread,
I want to just, you know, hang out with my friends,
I want to drink coffee, and that is not,
that is not allowed in a normal life.
And that is not against God, and that is not something that guys on motorcycles with fucking
sticks should drive through us and start beating us as we're doing it.
And the sad thing is that they are shooting themselves in the foot and they are undermining
their own authority by alienating people, by alienating people who may have rallied
around them at the time of war, at the time that a foreign
country has invaded the land.
But unfortunately, I'm sure that they're not going to learn
from this and they're going to continue with this
morality police and things like that.
Well, Maziar, this has been for me, just wonderful to see you.
Wonderful to catch up with you.
Love to see you too.
It's so nice to see you still just passionately doing the work.
And I hope the listeners can tell for Maziar.
I've always said, you're a Renaissance man.
The amount of knowledge that Maziar has and you heard it on display, but man,
get them going on film and music and it gets even, even deeper and more specific.
So, you know, you can always find good analogies with Bee Gees and Seinfeld.
If you know a few Bee Gees and Seinfeld analogies, I think you're set for life.
Yeah. You know, a few Bee Gees and Seifeld analogies, I think, are set for life. Yeah, he can can pull them in.
Very few people of the custodians of history have that same knowledge of the disco era.
Well, thank you very much.
Maziar has to see you, too.
Yeah, it wonderful.
And Iran Wire is just this incredible platform that allows people in Iran
to still have a voice outside of Iran
and get their stories out.
And Maziar has been doing that work for now.
It's gotta be what, 10, 12 years.
12 years now, yeah.
12 years now.
And it's also available in English.
So people can go to Iranware.com
and read the articles in English.
Or we are also on Substack.
I read, oh, look at you.
Look at look at modern Masi are very nice.
All right. Well, it's it's just lovely to see it.
Masi are hard. Yeah, it's everybody. Thank you.
How much you love Masi are bar.
So funny. He's so great.
And he is a dead ringer for Peter Sellers when he said that.
It really clicked for me. And Peter Sellers when he said that it really clicked for me.
And Peter Sellers, he never let race get in the way of a good part.
No, no.
And by the way, then that's why we had Gael, a Mexican national playing an Iranian national.
And I remember saying to Maziar, when we were first going to do the movie, I said, Maziar, when we were first gonna do the movie, I said, Maziar, I have this idea,
all Iranian cast, and maybe even we do it in Farsi,
and this is gonna be the most naturalistic portrayal.
And he was like, don't you want people to see the movie?
He's like, my first rule is he has to be handsome.
That actually was his first rule. He thought Guy Al was close to handsome.
So he was good there, but it's so great to hear him.
And very few people have, again, his knowledge of history,
but also culture and are so agile.
He's so agile in the way that he weaves it all together.
But you can tell he's worried.
And I think he has so many friends and family members
and people that I think he's really concerned about.
And I think he, you know,
the uncertainty of the moment I could see is weighing on him.
Absolutely.
It was so good though,
to get those first person accounts
through him of what young people are saying on the ground.
It's just because that's so often lost in this conversation
is what the Iranian people want
for the future of their country.
Just the breadth of what I don't know about Iran,
what I assume most Americans don't know about Iran,
what I feel confident saying our leaders don't know about Iran, what I feel confident saying our leaders
don't know about Iran, at least Ted Cruz, staggering.
Right, well I can even remember when we did Rosewater,
you know, we talked a lot about it,
and the idea was like, if you're an American,
this was the most nuanced view of, you know,
inside Iran you'd ever seen, but if you're an American, this was the most nuanced view of, you know, inside Iran you'd ever seen.
But if you were Iranian, it probably felt like an utter farce, two
dimensional sledgehammer.
You know what I mean?
Like that's, that's the gap between our understandings of the separate countries.
And you can see how those gaps lead to such devastating outcomes.
And I think Maziar said it best, we said it's, it's not a monolith.
There are those that really support and are really locked into
that revolutionary mindset.
And there are those that are just like, we just want to fucking live our lives.
Yeah.
And who can't relate to that.
Totally.
I was thinking about something you all were saying, which is, you know, the
generosity of the people on the ground, not matching what the leadership has to say.
And it is also by design, keeping information from people and framing things a certain way.
And we saw that with the attack on the base in Qatar, where the internet is cut off from
Iran and they just declared victory.
And so I think it makes sense. That destroyed the base.
Yeah, we need to like take a moment
and think about what information
is actually reaching people
before we just assume that we disagree with them
and this will be a protracted battle forever.
And I think he very smartly said,
and there are a lot of people there that are grabbing VPNs
or it's ways of bypassing,
but that is always going to be
a narrower swath of the people.
And so we don't know the story that they're being told.
And by the way, before we get to kind of high on ourselves,
we're not sure the story we're being told.
Oh, of course.
And it's been obliterate. They're done.
It's over.
We had to do it.
They were within days.
They were, who the fuck knows anymore?
Now we are, we're off next week, right?
Yes, we are.
A little celebration of America's birthday there.
Or Big Beautiful Bill if that happens.
Oh, Christ.
That's another one where watching them all have to say that reminds me of like
whenever you call Disney and they have to end every conversation with and have a beautiful
Disney day or whatever the fuck they have.
A magical day.
Have a magical day. And when they say big, beautiful bill, it feels like a hostage video
at almost every turn. Just ridiculous. But Brittany,
what let's answer the listeners before we get going. And then
we'll, we'll head off into the sunset. Sure thing. Um, first
up, we've got John, do you think Donald Trump should get the
Nobel peace prize? Sure. Kissinger got it. Why not?
Whoever's got the bombs, give them the prize. What the fuck does it even matter?
The idea that winning that is somehow...
Means anything at this point?
There's a big cash prize. I think that's why he's into it.
Why doesn't he just make his own?
He does his own meme coin, make his own.
Do the Trump Peace Prize, award it to yourself,
and then have it for the rest of the time.
You'd rather have it that anyway.
That's such a solid prediction.
He's going to.
Right.
The Trump Prize will be given to whoever
it was that did the most towards world peace.
And it turns out it's me.
Oh my god.
I win, guys.
And they'll hold the reception at the Kennedy Center
where he runs it.
It'll be perfect.
And remember he said he was gonna be a world-class,
I don't remember what he said,
violinist, flautist, whatever it was that he said.
He was talking to somebody saying
he could have been world-class in an instrument
and he can play the music.
He's a one-man band.
What do we need anything else for?
He plays the flute?
Oh, he said something in an interview, like I could have been. Oh, my brain just broke. He's a one man band. What do we need anything else for? He plays the flute?
Oh, he said something in an interview.
Like I could have been.
Oh, my brain just broke, sorry.
New Trump lore just dropped.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He said it was in an interview
and he was saying to somebody
he could have been a world-class musician.
Could have been.
Whatever else.
Yeah, he just decided.
Same.
Oh, how the world could have been different.
What else we got?
Next up we've got, if you were stranded on an island,
Colbert or Corral?
Oh, that's easy, a boat.
I would have a boat.
Why would I have one of those two knuckleheads
who neither of us, by the way,
that's not even a choice on an Island.
Like there's no, there's not a survival skill amongst the three of us.
It wouldn't matter who you had on there.
We'd all be gone within three days.
So I did none of us, a boat.
I'd want a boat for God's sakes.
Uh, uh, but this is great.
Uh, I hope you guys have you guys have a great week off.
Boy, you guys have been fantastic.
And give yourselves a good time to decompress.
Brittany, how do they keep in touch with us?
Twitter, We Are Weekly Show Pod,
Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky,
We Are Weekly Show Podcast.
And you can like, subscribe, and comment
on our YouTube channel, The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart.
Boom, roasted. Lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Mamedovic, video editor and
engineer, Rob Vettel, audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce, researcher and associate producer,
Jillian Spear and our executive producers, Chris McShane, Katie Gray. Guys have a wonderful week
off. We will see you all. The week after.
The week after, early July.
Thanks so much and see you next time.
Bye bye.
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