The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Wrapping 2025 with Jon Favreau and Tim Miller
Episode Date: December 11, 2025As 2025 draws to a close, Jon is joined by Crooked Media's Jon Favreau and "The Bulwark" host Tim Miller. Together, they assess Trump's tumultuous first year back in office, discuss whether his declin...ing popularity offers reason for optimism, and examine what lies ahead for both parties as he enters lame-duck status and the races for both the midterms and presidency begin. Plus, Jon talks about the Best & Worst of Trump, Jimmy Kimmel, and the Baby Jesus! This podcast episode is brought to you by: MINT MOBILE - Shop Mint Unlimited Plans at http://mintmobile.com/TWS AURA FRAMES - Exclusive $35 off Carver Mat at https://on.auraframes.com/TWS. Promo Code TWS. INDEED - https://www.indeed.com/WEEKLY 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 Producer – Gillian Spear Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, everybody. Welcome to the weekly show podcast. My name is John Stewart. I will be your host for this lovely afternoon. It's Wednesday, December 10th. This is the final podcast that we are doing this year. We will be back, I think, in the, maybe the second week of January. You know, old people need a good time. You know, it used to be when you're younger, you go on vacation. I believe I am going to be convalescent.
I believe that is the proper term for ladies and gentlemen over 60 years old who are taking a little bit of a break.
But we would be back then and when we come back publishing on Wednesdays instead of Thursdays, which I know we'll make a really, I don't want to say crucial difference in your life, but the impact will be sensational.
And we're delighted because it's the wrap up episode of the year, we're going to do a wrap up type thing.
We're going to grab a couple of our favorite pundit type individuals and talk to them about how they're viewing about.
about the year in rewind and how they're feeling in terms of optimism for the future,
I'm sure it's going to be all rosy people. That's how we've been living this thing.
So let's get to let's get to them right away and jump into our year and review episode.
Here we go.
Ladies and gentlemen, what would a year-end wrap-up be without two media moguls?
Moguls, that's right, you heard me, moguls. I don't throw that word around.
lightly. I mean it in the sincerest form. John Favreau, founder of Crooked Media and host of Pod Save
America and Tim Miller hosted the Bullwork podcast. Gentlemen, welcome. What's up? Thanks for having me.
Thank you for taking time from your media empires. Yeah, it's upstairs in my house. My kids' room is
right over there. Is it really? Oh, yeah. That's the beauty of podcasting. Favro, by the way,
mentioned this earlier. He has to, let me talk about what a sucker, this motherfucker is. He has to get in a car
and drive to some place of business
in LA no less
where he breathes shared air
with others
well it's a progressive outlet so there are a couple
masked couple of those people are wearing masks
there's always two
there's always two and you always say oh are you sick
and they go I don't want to talk
and then you have to move along gentlemen
as a year end in review let me ask you this
we shall begin with this I think it's the question
of the era
how many years
has this year been
Tim you go first
who could say
I don't know like on the one hand
I'm like how is it Christmas I haven't bought a single
present yet and on the other hand
I feel like every day is a lifetime
and so I don't have a great answer to that
but it's been a slog I'll tell you that
it's been a slog it is a slog
Fabro how are you holding up
I'm holding up okay.
It's been a long year, but it's also been like a long decade.
I'm really feeling the fact that we've been dealing with this in some former fashion since 2015 now,
and it sort of feels like that's the only life I know.
Guys, I didn't want to say this.
I'm 24.
Really?
Look what this is done to me.
Look at this.
I look like I sleep in a meat dehydrator, for God's sakes.
The fuck.
I've got the carry Lake Vaseline on the lens thing to try to help me.
I should smooth that and get some good diffusion that's going on here.
As people, so it is the inevitable contradiction.
So the rise of your media empires coincides with the sort of attention economy that is occurring.
Is it symbiotic?
At this point, you know, people used to say to me during, you know, the Bush years, you know,
I think Larry King said this to me once.
You know, George Bush gets reelected, that good for you.
You hoping for that.
And I was like, no, I have children, Larry.
How do you separate sort of your professional engagement and success from that feeling of it is,
you're having to wade through a turd mine to get there?
yeah uh it's a good question um we're catching we're catching favro on a reflective day deep catholic
guilt for me would be we're having a reflective day with favro i mean i look if if uh donald trump
exited the scene tomorrow and our politics returned to some semblance of normalcy which
probably hasn't been normal in my whole life but some semblance of normalcy and our audience went
away. Like, I would take that trade easily any day over continuing this shitstorm that we've
been in for a decade. So that's that's that. I think what has propelled me this year more than
anything else is just sort of a rage. Tim is nodding, by the way. When you said, what has
propelled me is a rage. I just saw a glint of recognition. I'm usually like the hopeful guy and I
still, you know, I still have some hope, but I'm just, I'm so fucking angry that we're here
and that we're dealing with this and that it's been as bad or worse than, uh, than we
imagined in, uh, in 2024 and before Donald Trump coming back.
Tim, on the emotion wheel, where, where are you? I would have a similar kind of, uh,
rage v optimism and no, no, after a deep abiding rage. Yeah. And, uh, and anger. Um, and I don't
look. For me, though,
I also, because this has been our life, because it's been a decade, I've tried to process
this as like, this is just a job now. Like, this is a, this is our life. Like, this is it.
Like, I don't, I did everything I could think of to try to convince people in my tiny little
way to not vote for this person the first time or the second time or the third time. And I was,
I lost two out of three. And, um, and, you know, we have to deal with the consequences. And so I
I get up, and some days I just, I'm like, it's just a lunch pail, man.
It's just like, we got to get up and talk about this shit.
And I think that's the only way to deal with it and how, let the emotions, you know,
I said last year when I was thinking about this, how was I going to deal with it emotionally?
I was like, I'm only going to get mad and upset about the things that make me really mad
and upset.
And like, there's a lot of, we'll talk about it all in the years, a lot of crazy shit
that happens, that's bad.
It's like objectively bad, but it doesn't really affect me emotionally.
And I just do, that's healthy, I think.
you know, you can't, you know, run at 11 all the time.
And then when something happens, it makes me really upset.
I get on here in my little hole.
I walk up to a little hole and I get upset with people.
Yeah, and I scream.
Yeah, and I agree.
And you allow yourself to do it.
Yeah, people, and I think people want that because they're all screaming at their phones.
So we might as well scream together.
Two things from that that I find interesting.
One is so, you know, Tim, your frustration, you were coming at it from, you know, the
Trump voters were inside the house.
Yeah.
You know, you were coming at it from a more conservative perspective.
I think for John and I, it always felt like an oppositional place.
Our frustration probably went more towards how can you not to the Democrats present a more
coherent and thoughtful and affirmative case other than, I think this guy is fucking nuts.
Don't you?
Doesn't everybody see that?
But having that happen, I don't want to throw this to the Mets, but like the Mets recently lost
Edwin Diaz to the Dodgers.
That's what it feels like to be a Democrat, to be a Mets fan.
But you're coming at it.
You were the, you were on the Dodgers.
Yeah.
I don't do baseball metaphors, but I'm going to go with you on that.
But yeah, it's a family.
I'm going to make it.
Yeah, I'm going to do holidays.
It's a family few.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
It's more personal.
I'm pissed.
You know, it's more personal and you get more upset.
I do that, not that you go, you know what I mean, but like, there's just some, there's a different level of valence.
There's like the narcissism of small differences is that phrase.
Like, I get the most mad at the most normal Republicans, if that makes sense.
Like, they are the, like, they know better.
Like, Marco and, you know, whoever, all the way down the line, the people that I knew personally.
Right.
And I do think that, like, that, like, in your, creates a different, like, body response maybe than,
being mad at somebody that you think has been stupid and wrong the whole time.
That's so interesting because, John, I don't know about you, but my, my feeling is rage against
fecklessness, that idea of, you know, Kamala Harris wrote a book, 107 days. I only had 107 days.
I couldn't put together a coherent governance plan. And you're like, well, it's been a year now.
Like, does anyone over there have chat GPT? Can you fucking just throw that in there?
Like, hey, what's a good, affirmative liberal case for economic? Like, what's your frustration?
it is with that maybe not primarily because I do think like you have to you know
Republicans and Republican politicians have agency and and so to voters look like it's
been it's been 10 years of this all of us are to blame you know like everyone
has a dark hole man everyone has a little dark but you know I know we all try to blame
someone else but it's like we all have a little stink on us here you know voters
media Democrats Republicans but no I do I am very I find myself very frustrated with
the Democratic Party and Democratic politicians
because I just
I can't believe we haven't fucking
figured this out yet
and that we are still making
the same mistakes that we made
I don't know in 2016
on it's just like we haven't
learned many lessons
John to that point you're making
he came down the escalator
in 2015 and I remember being gleeful
I thought well my God
Yosemite
Sam has just entered the race.
A cartoon villain, I mean, who chooses the escalator, the least powerful mode of getting down, you know, you might as well come down on a fire pole.
And then he comes out and he's Mexicans or this and blah, blah, blah.
And I thought, oh, this is just going to be a funny circus that we're all going to enjoy ourselves.
And 10 years later, did you guys watch any of the rally last night?
Oh, yeah.
Unfortunately, that's the whole thing.
Yeah, that's the lunch pail part of the job.
we were talking about earlier.
I only did.
I did a strong 14 minutes, I think.
Really?
What I could take?
Yeah, maybe 16.
All right.
So what was, I'll tell you what jumped out to me.
A, it felt a little bit like when you see a big star from 20 years ago playing a state fair.
Yeah.
Like where they go out there and like everybody's just kind of sitting there like, just fucking do achy, breaky heart and let's go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. His heart really wasn't in any of the affordability message that he was supposed to, which he told us, which is always, this is, you know, you got to give him credit for that. He's like, oh, my chief of staff is making me do this. And they're telling me not to call it a hoax, but it's a hoax. And let me show you all these charts. And he started, has held all these charts up about inflation and the Biden administration. And, you know, no one really cares about the charts. And he's like, let's do one more chart since they're playing so well. And it's like, you know, he is funny.
It's a funny joke, but his heart's not in what voters actually care about or what most voters actually care about.
His heart's in, you know, going off on Ilhan Omar and Somalia and immigration stuff.
But that's also, if you notice for the audience, until he plays the hits.
Yeah.
That's their watchtower right there.
Somalia was the good stuff.
I thought, and it was really gross and the good stuff for him, like working with the audience.
He did like five minutes on Elon Omar last night.
And to me, I thought it was the most telling because, A, it was the crowd response was probably the most into that.
It's the crudest.
Or maybe the fake four more years champ.
And it's like, he needs a foe.
Like that's what is, that is the thing he's good at.
He was good at, you know, making Hillary into a foe.
He's good at making Harris and Biden into foe.
He's good at going after elites.
He's got to going after immigrants.
It's been tough for, it's tough for him on the economy.
He doesn't have a foe, right?
Like, he tested out Jerome Powell.
You know, like, you know whose fault it really is?
It's this kind of Jerome Powell over the thing.
My favorite image of the year, the two of them and hard hats.
Yeah, that didn't really land.
And he's like, you're over budget.
And Powell looks at it and it's like, that's a different project, you dumb fuck.
Yeah, Somalians are much, you know, more in line with the type of thing that his folks are going to respond to.
It's not just that his heart wasn't in it, though.
It's that I think he has become even more out of touch in this second term and in the first year.
Like, he's doing the, last night he was doing the, your kids don't need 37 dolls.
Like, we're like two weeks out from Christmas, you know?
Right.
And he's like, you don't need.
It's the economy is the best it's ever been.
You're all doing amazing.
Make your children at Christmas cry.
And also, like, I just fucking.
the architect for my new ballroom because he couldn't build it big enough or fast enough so well i'm
gold enough yeah i'm sort of you're using gold leaf all over the white house but you know two two dolls
maximum two dolls maybe three so i'm going to throw out to the to the to the sadness i'm going to
inject a little bit of that MDMA in this thing i'm going to throw a little bit of ecstasy into the
room the thing that it strikes me as and and the reason why i bring up sort of the state fair uh
or that the vein of this that's so tapped into something deep and dark in the American spirit
seems to be waning that if you look at somebody in his more he's an authoritarian right he wants
to run this thing he wants us to be more like Russia and more like Orban and all those things
generally authoritarian's in their first year are legitimately popular
That the things that the, I'm going to take care of the drug dealers and I'm going to kill the,
and I'm going to deport the Somalis and all those things that are the trappings of kind of a more
darker authoritarian thing usually play pretty well in the countries where they're deployed.
He's not that popular.
And is that the thing that maybe gives you a little bit like, oh, wait a minute, maybe this
lunch pail shit we're doing, maybe it's working or maybe it's his own.
incoherence that's causing this.
Yeah.
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I think it's zone and coherence. I'll, I'll maybe
take a half dose of the MDMA, because I'm with you on him. He's made a lot of problems
for himself. I think that the nativism and kind of right-wing authoritarianism, I don't know
that's going anywhere. I think you just have to. That holds its appeal. Yeah, you got to hang around
some young MAGA voters for any length of time and you'll kind of see the trajectory we're on
that is still scary. But Trump himself, like the ability for him to control power, you know,
I look back at the year, and in some ways, I think about that inauguration picture with him
with all of the tech billionaires.
And I think maybe the seeds of his demise were really right there.
I do think that he has lost touch with like the types of people that came into his coalition
late who like really were pissed about inflation, who really were kind of pissed about the way
the COVID governance happened, you know, these kind of young men that we all talk about
who are more libertarian-ish, but they had economic concerns, and they didn't like the establishment.
And Trump ends up, like, ensconcing him with, like, the richest people in the world and doing them favors and doing nothing to actually help regular people.
And I think you're seeing the results of that and his numbers going down.
Like, I don't know that he's lost, like, the core mega base, like people that are injecting newsmax into their veins or have not turned on him yet.
But like that layer of people, you know, the Manosphere types and Hispanic voters and other folks who like came in in this last time who voted for him the third time that maybe didn't the first or second time, I think that he's really alienated them and it's hurting his political standing for sure.
Yeah, I think his political standing is probably weaker than it's been at any time in the last decade, save for, you know, after he tried to foment an insurrection.
The capital.
It was pretty dicey there for about a couple weeks.
About two weeks there.
I can't believe that that's been reduced to some sort of subtextual footnote.
There was also that.
If I remember correctly, there was one he tried to overthrow the government of the United States.
Yeah, it was that.
And then right behind it, concerns over inflation.
Yes, no, absolutely.
But, yeah, so politically, he's rarely been weaker, but he's also never had more power than he does right now.
And so I, my concern is that, so the good news is definitely, like, I'll take the full hit of MDMA.
All right. Bring it.
There you go, bud.
Getting some water.
Let's hit the rave, man.
Hit the rave.
Yeah.
Yeah, like, I think, I think the off-year election showed us that I feel like relatively hopeful about the midterms because of this.
But I do think that he and the people around him also are not going to let go of power easily.
and he has proven in the past that the more cornered he is, the more dangerous he is.
And so if I'm looking ahead to next year and the year after, what I worry most about is that
he lashes out and abuses his power in ways that are even more harmful and dangerous to the country
as he gets weaker politically.
You think that as he's more cornered, it'll do it.
Because I'm always struck by that juxtaposition that you're talking about.
When you think about the shit that he's done, like, okay,
January 6th, and there's no question that January 6 was the culmination of a two-month strategy
to overturn that election in any way possible that it could.
Then there's the, I've got the Epstein files, the Q&N sort of power that surged through my campaign
and got me to like, but I'm not doing that because I've done doodles of pubic hair with
like messages of like, and please don't tell anybody about all the girls we fuck.
Like, you know, all those different things.
and we line up all the unbelievably like unprecedented through 250 years of attempted
Republican governance of a country, a historical, you know, consent of the governed experiment
that we're trying. And we lay it all out there. And the uptake of it is always like,
so I think we're going to do better in the midterms. I think the Democrats. And not even that good, actually.
I don't know that we're going to take the Senate.
Like, we're going to do a little better in the midterms, maybe one house, not the other.
What has happened to our zeal, our revolutionary goals of like, have we been reduced to a guy overturning, you know, a unitary executive overturning everything?
And the best we can hope for is like, there's a swing district in Georgia that I think is really, I tell you, they're primed.
If we just get a centrist in there.
Like, has she beaten us down?
I mean, the concern, and this is where I get annoyed with Democrats, is the concern I have is we are in a cycle where one party takes power and then they don't deliver in a way that solves people's concerns and alleviates their distrust in their government.
And so then the party in power gets thrown out and then the other party comes back in.
And that would be difficult enough for democracy if both parties were normal political parties, but we are playing a bit of Russian roulette with these parties because one of them wants an authoritarian takeover of the country, which is the one in power right now.
And so for Democrats, there is a way to look at this, like you just did, John, which is, okay, he's going to be unpopular because he has not fixed people's chief concern, which is costs and inflation and affordability.
And so based on that, we can maybe take back the House, maybe take back the Senate, but maybe not, right?
And then, and then hopefully eke out, eke out a victory in 2028, but only if we focus only on these, you know, economic concerns that people have.
Okay, that's fine, but that is continuing to put a Band-Aid on a gaping wound, a gaping wound that we've had for a decade now.
And if we don't have leaders who speak to the broader set of challenges that we have as a country and not just the ones that voters are saying that they care most about, which are important.
But if we don't have that larger narrative and that larger vision, then we're going to end up right back here.
I want to say one thing about the revolutionary zeal.
I think it was your phrase, John, because like this is the thing.
Please note, Tim, that I am very careless with my wording.
So just know that whatever it is that I said, I take it back.
No, that's great.
I'm right.
We need revolutionary zeal.
And that's what I meant.
Yeah.
Maybe you can be the leader of the Resolutionary Zeal.
I don't know, because here's my frustration with Democrats, which is like, we're in
year 10 of this.
And the last two successful political figures in this country, meaningfully successful,
sorry to gas up Fabro right now.
I really hate to do that.
But it's like a guy who's named Barack Hussein Obama who ran is like the ocean should recede
and red states.
I don't need the first black president.
And, you know, we're not.
Like very grand ambitions.
of hope.
Exactly.
And then it's Donald Trump, who's like a reality show host, Bigot, who's like,
we're going to build the wall and arrest our opponents.
Neither of them were going at all by normal political playbook.
And they tried something new.
The establishment and conventional wisdom and the pundits mocked them, and they won
including myself in both cases.
And they won overwhelmingly.
And it's like, could we learn something?
from that? Could somebody try to try? I'm desperate for somebody to try to try something. It might not
land. It might not be my preferred policies, you know, the great center left, former Republican radical.
It might not be that. And we just, and there's not a lot of trying out there of giving people
something to get excited about. And that I think is frustrating. I'm going to sing your song, Tim. I didn't
want to have to do this, but I'm going to sing your song. Please.
whoa yeah well she was born in Uganda unfortunately so we've got limited gap on his ambitions but isn't
that the the thing you're talking about so I think structurally we are more set up for what you guys
are talking about now so we're we are in a joint custody agreement now sometimes dad gets the country
sometimes mom gets the country but there is no real interaction it is not uh what do they call it
a conscious uncoupling. This has been a, it's one of those divorces that has a lot of
vituperative elements to it. But the structure is also set up now so that these pendulum swings
that you guys are talking about, to go from Barack Hussein Obama to Donald Trump is, you know,
we keep having those pendulum reactions to one another. But now those pendulum swings are set up
to be the gap between them is much more, especially if the Supreme Court grants,
the executive, the ability to come in and just wipe out the entire government, everybody that
comes in there. So depending on which billionaires are the ones that are victorious in whatever
they do there, aren't we set up actually not for the thing that we're all talking about,
which is a healing candidate that brings an affirmative case that finds a way to break through
this kind of attention, the economy fog that we've all.
lived in, aren't we, aren't we in for a little bit of a rougher cycle than that?
Maybe.
We certainly could be.
Yeah.
I was worried about this.
Favro's new friend, Ben Shapiro, he's been on multiple panels with him recently, but
I was watching Ben, and he was like rationalizing Trump.
I forget who he's in an interview with, a lot of bit, but he was rationalizing Trump
by saying that he thinks we're going to go through the cycle you just laid out, John Stewart.
He's like, we're going to have, you know, kind of an authoritarian-ish right-wing person,
followed by an authoritarianish left-wing person.
and if that's going to be the cycle, then I've got no choice but to sign up for the authoritarian as right-wing person.
And I do think there are a lot of forces out there that are like incentivizing that dynamic.
And so I worry about that.
And that is like part of the reason why I'm like trying to, you know, gently encourage opponents to Donald Trump to have some positive ambition or else I think that we could end up there.
and I don't want, I don't want to.
I didn't leave one authoritarian side to join up with another one.
Right.
See, that's where Tim and I, we disagreed a little bit because I was, I was more down
with that.
You're down.
I was more down with, not authoritarian necessarily.
By the way, and I say this in no way to scare anybody except myself, there is a giant
bee.
And at first I thought, oh, look at that giant bee outside.
And now he's on my phone.
And I realized, oh, he's not outside.
and is this a metaphor i wish it was i think it's there is a giant do you want to kill it clearly
unhealthy or let it go or just i don't want to kill it wish it away i want to find out what's wrong
i want to diagnose you want to help it i want to i want to help this be uh desperately not to derail
anybody but if you find me at any point while you're talking going oh my god that's why i apologize to
Rob Vitola for blowing out the sound just now.
When the bee came in, I think you were saying that you wanted a left-wing
Franco.
That's where we were.
You wanted kind of like a Democratic Franco to just shake things up.
Yeah, I mean, I say that sort of, you know, facetiously.
What I want is a Democrat who understands that government's role is partially to be a check
against corporate power, not a lubricant for it.
that when you have government does the shit corporations won't or can't do like health care so like
when we talk about you know obamacare or like setting up an insurance pool to all that like
i want government to understand the lesson that every other industrialized sophisticated country
understands the market for health care is inevitably broken it doesn't work and therefore you
have to accept that like they've all accepted we're the only ones who haven't accepted it and
we see our cause skyrocket so if a more robust executive can use the bully pulpit to push through
what like what john was talking about earlier a policy that could actually solve the problem
that we're facing rather than uh kind of just adding more liquidity to a system that we have
that is already broken through the externalities that capitalism doesn't fix.
Tim, does that sound dystopian to you?
Not dystopian, no.
I mean, you know, we can hash out the details.
I'd like to hear, I'd like to see your white paper, sir.
No, that's, that's right.
You do need a white paper for that.
Hey, folks, it's December.
It snuck up on us.
It means holiday time, which means I'm already late.
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it won't be used and then I will feel shame only shame but I got to tell you some if you're looking
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This is a choice that the next Democratic nominee and hopefully president is going to have to make, which is Donald Trump has taken a sledgehammer to whatever was left of government when he got there and he has politicized everything.
And Democrats, you know, one style and one piece of advice has been you got to fight, you got to be, you get to they play, they don't play by the rules.
Why should we play by the rules?
And in some cases, you know, I agree with that.
I think that Democrats take the Senate, then, and we have a Democratic president, we should get rid of the filibuster immediately because there is going to be no other way to pass legislation where Democrats aren't getting 60 votes in the Senate, probably in the next decade more.
They could try.
I'd like to try that out there.
Oh, you're saying they could try to get elected to try?
Trying to win some races in red states.
But honestly, it's going to be uphill at this point to get to 51, right?
So we're going to need to get rid of the filibuster.
On the other hand, it's like, okay, who's the next attorney general?
Do we want someone who's going to, like, go after all of the MAGA people, like, they went after Democrats?
Or are we actually the party that believes in a government that works and that people can have faith in and trust in and believe isn't politicized?
And so you're going to have someone like that.
And then if you do that, then that gets a bunch of people really pissed off because now you're not fighting hard enough, right?
So there are real choices for the next Democrat to make because of what Donald Trump has done.
Do you get rid of all the people, all the crazies in the Trump administration?
Yeah, I probably would.
But like, what if someone, what if he install someone his Fed chair who's really bad?
But now you're a Democratic president and you're going to fire the Fed chair and that's going to screw up the markets?
Maybe you do that anyway.
But these are, I think the next, I think we are underestimating right now the choices that the next set of Democratic candidates have to make in regard to like what kind of kind of
country they want beyond just. Tim's not having it. No, I'm, oh, I am having it. This is my kind of,
this is my kind of hardball. My question is Favs's optimism is showing. I mean, isn't J.D. Vance or
Donald Trump Jr. going to be in charge of the next Fed chair. Democrats need to actually convince
people and win, you know, but this is nice. I'm talking, no, well, Tam, I'm talking about like
these things will be hashed out in the campaign. Oh, God. Before you, that's why I said Democratic
candidate, right? Like, this is going to be a conversation we're having in 27. Maybe this so is, is,
is kind of the viewpoint of it, which is, and I hear this a lot from the Democratic Party,
is we've got to get rid of the filibuster or we've got to pack the Supreme Court.
And what I don't hear a lot of is, to what end?
Yeah, right.
So when they say, we're going to get rid of the filibuster, I go, oh, great, what are you going to pass?
I think we're going to pass an extension of subsidies to insurance companies that does not in any way
address the broken health care and insurance market system.
and then we're going to continue along with the kind of failed legislation that does not address in an agile way
the needs of the people you purport to represent.
And this is my largest problem.
And Tim, I'm so curious about you, though, because you're in this kind of, it starts out as a diaspora.
Yeah.
And I imagine that you begin to have more affection for sort of the Democratic side, not to suggest like a Stockholm syndrome.
Of course.
But it's sort of like, you know, I don't know if you've.
I've seen Cheryl Hines on any interviews recently.
Oh, yeah.
She was like a diet in the wool liberal, you know, all these different things.
And now she's just like, MAGA opened their heart to me.
And the liberals turned their backs on me.
And you're like, right, because you're useful to them.
You agree with them now.
So they embrace you.
Look at the shit they're saying about other people.
Like, for you, has the embrace of liberals change.
you politically? Do you still feel the same kind of political mindset or are you in a
diaspora? Like, where are you? Yeah, it's changed me some. Anybody who's like Donald Trump
getting elected twice did not change my ideology at all. I think that's a sign of a really small
thinker. It's like, I don't know why in a society we have to be like, oh, the good, the way to show that
you're moral and true is to have the exact same views when you're 22 is when you're 82. Like
That is what a principled person does.
So, yeah, I've changed some.
There are certain things in particular, like, Republican things that were just, I didn't care
about that much, but I just, like, signed up for the team, you know, on issues that
like, like, we're not high priorities for me, that I'm like, you know, you get a little
time to think about them and you change your views.
I'm way more open.
I've also, I've been around way more rich people and important people lately, and I'm
way less impressed with them than I was when I was 22.
And so, like, I'm much.
impressed with them. Yeah, I'm much more open to, you know, extensive taxation of the wealthy
than I was when, you know, I was convinced by the pull you're up, pull myself up from the
bootstrap stuff that I, you know, learned as a college Republican. So I've had some changes.
But there's also stuff I think that, look, I think that in you guys, I'm sure, agree with this.
You know, I haven't gone full native. The Democrats have not done a good job governing a lot of
places where they're in charge of everything. So I'm not on board for everything the Democrats
have done. I lived in San Francisco or in Oakland, but I lived in the Bay for a while.
The Bay wasn't governed that great. And now they've got Lurie in is more of a center guy. And I
think things are getting better. So I'm not on, you know, Chicago's not being governed that
great, right? I don't think that the National Guard should go in and that we should have the,
you know, jackbooted thugs menacing people. But I don't think the mayor of Chicago is doing a
particularly great job. And I think Pritzker would have questions about that if you were to run for
president. So, you know, I've had some changes. And I think that just going back to your Zoron
point about how Democrats could think about this, Zoron's messaging is grand and like the
movement is grand, but the ambitions like aren't that grand, right? It's like free bus. It's tangible
stuff for people. It's free buses. It's rent control. It's we're going to cut some of the red tape
so that you're, you know, the food, you know, truck guys can survive, you know, can survive, the
haul all trucks, right? And so, you know, I'm fully on board with all of that. I think it would
be a big risk for the Democrats to come in and say, we just listed out all the things that need
changed. It's like, okay, well, we're going to put in the Swedish health care system. Sure,
I'm fine with that. I have no love for this current health care system. I'm not going to go to
the mattresses over that. But, like, you know, that's going to be a rocky transition. And that might
lead us right back into a MAGA to MAGA 2032 and so I just mean that like there's a lot of
stuff to consider it's it's it's complicated so Tim and I joke that our politics have sort of moved
now so that we have the same politics like I've moved towards Tim and he's moved towards me and so
we don't disagree on anything anymore that's a bad clip for you on TikTok Fabro I know what this is
part of it when you run when you run for governor in California Tim this is part of it I don't give
a shit what are you guys trying to do to me I'm trying to I don't give a shit I'm getting clicks here
You're fucking me up.
But one way that I've sort of rethought my own priors on this is the delivering on the campaign promises is just as important as the boldness of the promises that you make.
And so when I think back to the 2020 primary on the Democratic side on health care, to stay with that example, it was an entire, every single debate, every single time they all got on stage, it was they were debating the finer points.
of various Medicare for all proposals, and if you didn't have Bernie's, you had to explain
why you were lesser than Bernie and why you weren't as committed to health care as Bernie
was. Everyone on that stage knew, including Bernie, probably, that you're never going to pass
just a clean Medicare for all. Some people had pretty bold plans that would be just light years
better than we are right now. You know, thinking of like Pete Buttigieg was like Medicare for all
who want it. So you have a Medicare program. You can have people choose into it and then it slowly
kills off the insurance system, right? That would be amazing. But so we're debating all the stuff.
Joe Biden wins. And what do we get? We get an extension of the health care subsidies because that's all that
passed, right? Now, what do you think that means? And they also got to negotiate the price of four different
drugs. Four drugs. Yeah. And the other ones are coming soon. Common. You won't believe it. And so do you think,
like, what do you think that does to all the voters who were thinking, oh, we had this big debate about
health care and then we win in 2020. So there's going to be real change coming. Like,
I'm pretty excited about this. And so, and I think the Mamdani point is instructive here,
which is momdani's success is going to like completely hinge on whether he delivers the promises
that he made. That sounds obvious. But like, if he can't do free buses, if he can't freeze the
rent, then it's not like, you know, people's fears are like, oh, he's a, you know, Muslim socialist
who's going to, you know, institute Sharia law. No, the real fear is that he just doesn't manage the city
well and doesn't deliver on his promises. And so therefore, it deepens cynicism and it makes
people less likely to participate in politics. And so I do think that our ability to deliver on
the promises we make has to be as important as the promises themselves. And so you need a
path, a realistic path to get where you say you want to go. And a coherence to it. I mean,
one of the things that strikes me about this administration, I'd love for you guys to think about
is the utter incoherence, he's a wonderful announcement president. He makes great announcements.
We're going to cut drug prices by a thousand percent. He never actually follows up on him.
China is going to buy more of our farmer soybeans than in the history of soybeans. You're going to
have to, we may have to plow over Omaha to plant more soybeans because of how much China's
come by. And then they don't. And then Caroline Levitt goes out and says, under Biden, China didn't
purchase any soybeans. Just a flat out fucking lie. They actually purchase more than they're purchasing
now. Does coherence, the price of, there has to be a price for incoherence. There has to be a
price for somebody who's going to get us in a war to stop drug trafficking while pardoning a guy
who literally moved mountains of cocaine into America. Surely coherence has to be a part of this
at some point.
Surely?
And stop calling me Shirley.
Surely?
I don't know that surely.
I mean, I think he's paying the price for it right now in his approval ratings and
we saw it in the off-year elections.
Like there is, there is a price to it.
But I think that the key is, and what's frustrating, is there's only a price to it when
you are lying to people about something that they know you're lying about because
they're experiencing it in their own lives, right?
And so him going out there last night and being like, it's an A-plus-plus economy and
affordability is a hoax.
Like, that is going to hurt him with voters.
It is hurting him with voters.
Right.
On the other hand, when he says, like, well, I'm getting the worst of the worst off the streets for immigrants.
If, like, if you don't live in a community where ICE has been raiding the community and he's telling you that these immigrants, you know, committed all these horrible crimes and now he's cleaning them up, you know, it's more possible for you to believe that bullshit because you're not experiencing it in your own lives.
So I do think that the economic trouble that he's facing is the first is the, is the thing.
he can't run from with just all of his usual bullshit.
Well, some of it, too, is sowing the seeds of our destruction.
I mean, you know, how do you make America stronger by completely gutting our research
capacity in anything?
So maybe these things don't pile up.
Tim, what do you think is the thing that's going to start to create a sense?
Because even when we say, like, he's not that popular.
Like, I don't understand how he's even in the 30s, quite frankly.
Yeah, the research thing that makes me sad, I want to say one sentence on that.
Because some of the stuff that's in the most destructive that he's done actually isn't going to matter at all.
And that's really, that gets you into a dark place and to wine to have some, have some bourbon.
Because, you know, we won't even know.
We won't ever really be able to say, right?
Like, was it because of that cut that we weren't able to deal with this disease, that we weren't able to have this discovery that we could have had?
And then on the USAID cuts on top of that and all of the vulnerable people throughout the world have died and, you know, share.
Harold Hines doesn't understand why liberals are mad at her, you know, all of that.
Well, that was most even, I saw, I think it was Nicholas Christoph made a great point,
which is for all the MAGA people that are upset about Nigeria attacking Christians,
like nothing will kill more Christians in Africa than cutting off USAID.
So that's sad.
Nothing.
Yes.
But I don't think that will matter.
To me, what has mattered, you know, and I spent a decent amount of time like listening
to like MAGA adjacent media to try to see what's like resonating.
And for them, like, or listening to Marjorie Taylor Green lately, for, you know, like, there
wasn't genuine feeling like the America first thing really did resonate with people.
As it has for 150 years.
Yeah.
And there's obviously there's some racist elements to that that I just, I deplore.
But like just this idea that the government doesn't care about us.
It cares too much about the elites.
It cares too much about our foreign, you know, adventurism and militarism.
And I think that you think that Trump, as I mentioned before, with like having all the tech guys being his new BFFs, bombing people in Venezuela, blocking the Epstein files, you know, caring more about his peace prize than he cares about the food bank lines in Kentucky, like I think that is his real vulnerability, that he seems to just become just like any of the other elites that have let people down.
and it would be for the Democrats to best capitalize that they need to find a messenger
who can, without the racist parts, speak to that, right?
Like, speak to the fact that, like, I do care about your suffering.
But without the racist parts, where's the shush?
It's not as fun.
You got no shush on that.
Yeah, it's not as fun.
John, when you think about sort of, because you guys live more in the world of these pundits.
Tell me about the conversation that occurs not on television, where people, you know, how many times does Marjorie Taylor Green just recently say, you won't believe what Republicans say about Donald Trump when they're not on television or you won't believe the things that they say to me?
You know, what is the conversation below the conversation?
Yeah, Favs, what's Ben Shapiro saying to you in the green room when you guys are hanging out?
John, you and Ben, I think.
We're so tight now.
At Hanukkah's first night, I think it was, which is really the night.
By day six, there's very little enthusiasm for the candles.
I think we all agree on that.
But do you, because I've always said this, the real news is what people are talking about in the green room of the news network,
not the sort of performative news that you see being delivered every night.
That's where the truth is.
Yeah. I mean, I think on the Democratic side, look, I try to keep my whole goal is to narrow the gap between the on-mike conversations and the off-mike conversations. But honestly, on the Democratic side, the conversation is like, what are we, we don't have anyone for 2028. What are we going to do?
really like no one like people can this is why i'm trying to be honest about this like people
people can tell you that they're really impressed with one candidate or the other or they think
this one's going to win or this one has a chance but it's like it's it's either something that you
say in public to not piss everyone off or it's something you tell yourself to make yourself feel
better and like you sort of get to the point where you're like yeah i could get on board with this
one i can maybe get on board this this could work so when democrats say i'm so impressed by our
deep bench they're completely lying
I think either to themselves or to other people.
I, you know, I am, I will say I am not impressed with a deep bench.
Some people are definitely lying to themselves.
I guess I had a Democratic, very prominent Democratic strategist.
I'm an embarrassing.
But like, he gave me the deep bench thing just like a month ago.
And I was like, what are you talking about?
Are you serious?
I was like, is this a bit?
And he was like, no.
So some of them have convinced themselves.
It's a big bench.
There's a lot of people on it.
And by the way, Trump could fuck everything up so bad that it doesn't matter.
Yeah.
Do you have a sense of with the Republicans, like when Marjorie Taylor Green comes out now,
nobody tells the truth until they decide not to run anymore.
And even then, people are a little bit reticent.
So when they talk about that, you know, we can all relate it to kind of the emperor's new clothes.
Like, is anyone ever going to say it when it still means something that the emperor has no clothes?
Or are we really sentenced to this sort of backroom conversation that is the real conversation?
like I would love to know and I know Tim you recently had a spat with Scott Jennings but like I would love to know in his quiet moments when when the demigorgans visit at night like what he really thinks about all this shit because certainly like Dan Bongino recently now as the FBI deputy director said oh all that conspiracy shit well I was being paid yeah I was being paid to lie to you and stir up discontent
and trouble and and all kinds of other incredibly negative emotions to undercut the authority
of the United States government. But now that I'm in it, I just want to let you know, like,
we're all good. Yeah, I guess I'll just look. These guys don't talk to me as much as they did
the first term. He'll be surprised to know. So I have like a somewhat limited advantage point.
Right. Our boy, Scott Jennings, I think he's, I think he's vinaigated himself. I think he's
become the person he pretended to be. So I don't know that he has quiet moments, to be honest.
Maybe it does, but I don't know.
I think that what you're seeing, though, like, where you can kind of get a little peek
into what's happening is in the frustration from the House of Representatives members.
It wasn't just MTG.
Nancy Mace has spoken out about this recently.
Police to Fox running away, running for governor.
A bunch of people retiring.
There's just another one from Texas today.
And they all say the same, like, they're all saying the same things.
Like, we're not doing anything.
I don't feel like we're accomplishing anything.
And, you know, they can't blame the person whose responsibility it is.
But what is it that Nancy Mason, at least Stefanik, thought they were going to accomplish?
Like, they seemed like just bomb throwers.
I mean, at least Stefanic is a pretend, like, I think underneath all that is probably someone much more sober.
But, like, what exactly is Nancy Mace frustrated about not accomplishing?
Yeah, it's a great question.
Look, I think part of it was when things were going well, I think that they were happy to do what
you just said, right? It's like, oh, hey, look, you know, we're going to drink liberal tears and go on Air Force One and go to the, you know, parties at the White House and we're winners, so it doesn't matter. But Trump's poor, but I think what's reviewing about it is that Trump's poor political standing means it's not as fun anymore. And so they do want to be able to say, oh, hey, you know, whatever, whatever it is. Like the Epstein thing was a real break for them, you know, on a variety of other issues. I want to be able to go home and say to people, we're doing, I am like trying to deliver something for you economically. And instead, they're not doing
anything. John, do you find Democrats like during the Biden cycle? Did you find a very similar
thing where all of a sudden some Democrats were like, you don't understand? Because I didn't see much
of that. You know, none of them were very few people were coming out and going like, yeah, I'm not sure
this guy's up for a reelection campaign. Yeah, look, there was anyone who was close to the White
House was even privately spinning the same shit that you would hear in public with like maybe
taking it down a few notches but like he's fine he's tired he has his days but he's good you know
i was in a meeting with the other day he was so smart he and it was it's yeah it's it's very like
uh you know participation trophy kind of thing it's like he stayed it sounds like a parent
teacher conference you can't believe let me show you a picture this he drew this remember jill biden
after that debate when she came out on stage and was like joe you answered all the questions and
like everyone it's why are we doing this i know i'm you're traumatized you're traumatized
Sorry, sorry. Sorry, sorry. But anyway, yeah, no, so you didn't. But people who weren't close to the White House, yeah, that was the same thing. Look, this happened, but this was, this goes back to like, 2016. If people who weren't close to the Clinton campaign were like, oh, Hillary, not a great candidate. But like, you know what? Donald Trump is so bad that she's obviously has to win and we just got to, we just got to get her there. And I just, I cannot, I cannot go into another presidential cycle where it's like, you know, the person isn't the best, but like, they've got to be better.
than J.D. Vance, and I think we can just get him there.
I think we can, it's just to compare him to J.D. Vance, and we'll get him there.
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Speaking of JD-Vans, let's pivot for a second because Donald Trump will. He's 79 years old.
As much as he threatens the, you know, we're going to change the constitution or there's a lot of things we're looking at.
That talk is quieted somewhat based on popularity. And certainly J.D. Vance would be seen as, as most vice presidents are.
the person that's going to inherit this.
But I think most people look at J.D. Vance and go, doesn't have the magic.
Like Donald Trump gets away with, there's a certain antibiotic-resistant kind of being to Donald Trump.
Shit doesn't stick to him.
He's able to get away with saying the most horrible shit and it doesn't seem to affect.
That dude doesn't have it.
And Rubio doesn't have it.
So they're going to be back to, okay, now we're stuck with Pat Buchanan's platform,
but without Trump's ability to somehow put gold leaf on it and make people not see it.
I'm with you on that.
Look, maybe we can compete on this and have some sort of competition.
I don't know that there's anybody that has more disdain for J.D. Vance and me.
Like, I find him utterly contemptible.
I'm up there.
Like, like, literally do agree on everything.
Yeah, name somebody in public life, your entire life that you like less than J.D. Vance.
And it's literally like mass murder.
You know what I mean?
Epstein.
You know what I mean?
Like, it's hard to find somebody.
I think Stephen Miller's up there for me.
Okay.
So I hate Vance more.
So anyway, with that big wind up, he's a learner.
He's a learner.
Like, you know, I think it'd be, it's a little bit of hopium.
Shape shifter.
Yeah, he's a shapeshifter and he's good at it.
I think about him on Theo Vaughn's podcast, the Manistair guy from here in Louisiana.
And he did fine, actually.
I mean, like, it wasn't my cup of tea, but like they did some cocaine jokes.
Like he seemed quite kind of, he didn't seem scary.
And I could see how he could, you know, kind of learn how to adapt and appeal in a way that's better than he is now.
But he would have to soften the, you know, Stephen Miller is only.
is only able to be there because Donald Trump dilutes the poison.
Sure.
Yes.
Right.
That's true.
They may not, there may be no difference or distance between what they actually believe,
but you can't feed that shit.
I truly believe this.
I'm not one of those people who believes that America at its heart.
I think this nativist era we're living through is antithetical to our actual country's spirit
and being like i really do i don't think people dig this and miller's poison has to be filtered
and trump is the perfect vessel to be able to do that you take that away and when people
get a real taste of this shit i don't know i i maybe i'm being naive no i i think there's
some truth to that but i don't think i will agree with tim again i don't know that van i think
He's definitely not as good as a vessel as Donald Trump for Stephen Miller's bullshit,
but he is, he can code switch in a different way than Donald Trump, which is he has been
part of the elite circles in media and the never-Trump or worlds that we all have been
swimming in for the last decade.
And so he, like, think about him against Tim Walz in that debate.
Like, that was a nicer, more respectful, J.D. Vance.
And the way he makes the argument for a nativism is not as, let's say, exciting as Donald Trump, but it is more cohesive and intellectualized in a way that is targeted to people who, like when, you know, when he talks about, there was this quote he was trying to explain himself the other day where he's like, you know, should you really, what's wrong with not wanting your neighbors to speak English? So you can, if you go over for a cup of sugar, you know, you can ask them in English. And when they don't speak English, like, that's okay that they
don't speak English, but really? Do you want a whole town like that of people who don't
speak your language, right? And it's like he's, like, I don't, I think it's bullshit. I laugh at it,
but like, I think he is more adept at speaking to sort of the nativist strains in Americans
than we might think. And I worry about that because that, that coalition after Trump is going
to be more ideological. That's what I mean. This is more personalistic right now because it's all
about Trump. The post-Trump coalition will be more ideological, more dangerous, I think, in many
ways. And so, but maybe more, maybe politically weaker. But Tucker would embody that much more
cleanly. Yes, you're right. I agree with that. He would be much more like that. And he's more
entertaining. He's like more, he's more genuinely, I can't believe I'm saying this, but funnier than
J.D. Vance. Like, J.D. Vance does have a stiffness to him that, yeah, I don't think Tucker has.
Tucker might be believing his own bullshit now, though. I was a little more scared.
of Tucker a year or two ago, but I think Tucker might have seriously had a psychotic break. At some
level, Donald Trump knows it's an act, right? Like, remember he'd made fun of Mike Pence for
being too religious and, like, he makes fun of Stephen Miller being like, I don't know if we'd want
with this guy. He knows this. I don't know what's in his head. And Tucker might, I think,
have had an actual psychotic break. It may, he may now be a long. I tell you, the moment for me,
and you know, I've been a fan of his friends. Long time, yeah. For a long time. For me, you know,
my break, obviously, with subscribing to Carlson.com or whatever it is that they do there,
was when he said he was attacked by a demon and scratched.
And I was like, that's weird.
And then he told the story.
He's like, so I'm asleep with my four hunting dogs.
And I wake up with four scratches, you know, because I was fighting a demon.
And I'm like, look, I'm not, obviously, I don't want to be like Occam's razor here.
But, you know, there is a possibility.
I have dogs.
I sleep with them
and I do wake up
occasionally with
with markings.
My first thought
isn't demon.
It's Toby.
Toby?
What did you do?
Toby,
why would you scratch me?
Maybe that shows you're out of touch.
Maybe the deem.
Maybe you should be thinking of demon.
John?
I think the problem that he'll have is,
again,
there's a shape,
there's too much of a shapeshifter element.
The whole thing about Trump was
authenticity.
you know if your career was i'm the bowtie wearing buckley and now you're i'm the marlborough man
who fights off demons like that's a hard pill for americans i think to swallow yeah but we don't
have long memories i'm i'm gonna throw one out there for you there's only one person within
that coalition who has that sort of magic that trump has and the kind of like i don't give a fuck
devotion and that's
RFK. He's
the only one that possesses
that and
I would think can do the most pull-up set of
any of those motherfuckers.
Too weird. The voice.
Voice I'll give you. I think that might, I don't
think too weird.
I think that's part of the mythology
that gives him his, it's
like saying like Donald Trump never would have been. I mean,
look at his house. He shits in a gold toilet.
Nobody's going to buy that.
But the problem with Trump that we miss
is it was like oh he's too offensive he's too offensive no one is going to do that it's
our case problem is not that he's too offensive it's like the whale carcass and the and the all that
shit i think i think you're falling for sort of and and you're falling for monology rather than
like that's become the butt of a joke like oh he's got a worm in his brain and a bear carcass
and i i don't think that is in any way he's going to be 75 i think are we ever going to have a
Yeah. Can it again? It's not a thousand years old.
And the other thing is he can't be, um, he can't be outsider shaking up the system anymore.
And like, like, if you're a weirdo, but like, eh, you're going to go in there and you're going to, you're going to shake some things up.
Like, he's going to have run HHS for four years and he'll have a, he'll have a record.
But his people don't view him as weirdo. What I'm trying to say is his people view him as a, like, heroic Hercules standing against the tides.
of institutions that are designed to kill Americans.
Like, there's a mythology around that guy that none of the other ones have.
Yeah, but he'll have to answer for, did you do anything to those institutions over the last
four years?
Did you save us?
Will he?
Does anyone have to answer for anything anymore?
Isn't that the lesson of the Trump administration?
No, no, the lesson is that once you're, when you're out of power, it's easy to just
throw rocks at the institutions.
But once you're in power, then people get pissed to you, and then they throw you out and
they put someone else in the tree.
That's the only thing I would say.
No, no, no.
I'm intrigued.
I think Bobby versus Stewart.
I heard something under his breath. Let me hear. Let me hear more.
I'm intrigued. I think Bobby versus Stewart. He wants to do it, obviously.
I think if you'd read the Lovianitze book, I mean, she's very honest about that.
Do you guys see yesterday? Cheryl says no.
Cheryl says he's not running in 2028 no matter what.
And she's been very predictive.
Yeah, she doesn't need to be running the show.
He's never going to, I mean, endorsing Trump.
That's a bridge too far.
He'd never stray from our.
Mary.
The voice, though, is really, I think, the saving grace.
That may be a political reality for Americans that make it harder.
In your, let's sort of try and wrap up, is the way to change the results we're getting
from our government, do we have to change the incentive structure around what wins?
because the thing I noticed in Washington is
it runs on a different currency
than what its purported kind of ideal is.
It's sort of like the Washington Post.
Remember the Washington Post put up on their masthead.
Democracy dies in darkness.
You know, but meanwhile, in the Washington Post boardroom,
they had a list of articles
and how many clicks it got, you know,
and they were running on a different currency.
It feels like the political system
and the media,
which I sort of likened to America,
immune system, right? If those two things are corrupted, and I think they are, we don't get the
results that build a healthier environment. Do we need to change the incentive structures on
media, on social media, on governance? They're not rewarded down there in the same way that you
think they are. Does that sound fair to you guys? I think that, yes.
I think you do need to change the incentive structures for sure.
But then the question is, how do you change the incentive structures?
And I think the way to change or the best chance of changing the incentive structures is to have someone who wins, who doesn't follow those incentive structures and proves to everyone else that you can run a different way and win.
This is the, you're going back to Obama wins, Donald Trump wins, and they won based on campaigns that people would have guessed before.
they ran would not have been successful. And so I do think it still comes back to, in my opinion,
you need a person willing to like a leader willing to sort of go outside the box and sort of swim
against those tides and show people see all this stuff that you think you need to win is actually
bullshit and you can win by doing, you know, something different. Yeah. Look, Trump has revealed that
like this structural, you know, um, architecture of our government and society is a lot weaker
than we thought it was, right? And so I'm totally with you. I am pointing and thumbs
upping Tim right now for those you. Great. And so I, and I think that like a successful
candidate potentially in the future would run on like a just total reform. Yes. Yes. Right.
like and really like not not just kind of a marginal change like really and in ways that
would make people uncomfortable ways to probably make me uncomfortable I think that's probably
right the thing that I struggle with on this though John is like I go up a little bit back
and forth like I think that's obviously true if you look at Trump the other thing though I think
that's obviously true that's in conflict with that is that like our society has went through
so many worse times than the 2016 to 2024, just like putting Trump aside, like,
economic, like, people's lived, people's experience living through, like, you know.
Except for the pandemic, I think that's probably true.
The pandemic had had historical echoes to it in a way that most things don't.
It did for sure.
But, you know, I mean, look, we went through, like, look at how black folks were treated
throughout the entire history of the country, through the Civil Rights Act.
They didn't, like, turn to, you know, their stupidest.
you know, like, I guess stupid,
authoritarian, like, black nationalist to try to overthrow the government.
I just like...
Two weeks are wearing a mask in Massachusetts and guys stormed it with assault rifles.
Right, exactly.
And I'm sure black people are like, oh.
And so to me, you think about that and it's like something else is happening too, right?
It's like, yeah, people are struggling.
I don't want to, like, I'm trying to minimize anybody's struggles.
I just been like, looking at a historical lens, like, what we're going through now
does not seem to match, like, the level of rage.
and the political reaction to what people are going through, and why is that? And like, the phone is really the answer to that, I think. And so then, like, how do you deal with that? Is that fixable? Is that not fixable? Is that a generational thing where it's our kids will be able to manage that better than we are? I don't know the answer to that. Like, that to me is the other element of us.
No, I've said that, I think, for a while, which is the catastrophizing that occurs when you live online. Yeah. Because that the incentive struck,
of social media and all those things is to, you know, the weaponization.
Like, again, I had to go back to the Bongino thing, but, like, he basically said it.
Like, my job was to make you feel like shit is completely falling apart, and we are in
an existential crisis.
Now my job is to try and hold things together, so I can tell you what's actually going on,
and it's actually not that bad.
And you almost, you know, it's that part of it.
Right. It's like, so oopsie, oopsie, poopsie. But AI is going to make that worse. And what have we done to that? Rather than, again, show the government as maybe the only powerful enough check against that power, we've invited them into the hen house.
Yeah. And I don't think anyone is speaking thoughtfully about AI and how we're going to handle it on the Democratic side at all. Like even the social media stuff, to some extent, we're now fighting the last war on that because people are moving.
you know, even off social media towards their chatbots who they're going to be friends with.
And but like the way we, I mean, we talk about this is like, is it really the phones?
But it's the way humans interact with one another, right?
And if the way that we interact with each other, get information from each other, debate with
each other has fundamentally shifted, then of course our politics is going to change dramatically.
And I think that if AI continues to push us further, you know, it could divide us.
further. It could make us lonelier. It could make us, you know, we have these chatbots that are
obsequious and they're going to just flatter us the whole time and tell us everything we want to
hear. Or drive vulnerable kids to suicide. I mean, literally drive them to suicide. Yep. And,
and what are we going to do? We're just going to, we're charging ahead so that like the 10 people
that run these companies can become like trillionaires and not just billionaires. Maybe we'll have
a benevolent AI president. That's what Sam Altman said. The AI is going to poll everyone, see what
everybody wants and then do what everybody wants problem solved what the hell are we needed for and
none of that will ever get weaponized by the mercers to try and figure out exactly see that's the
problem all these technologies are being weaponized i think it used to be i used to think like oh it's going
to be it used to be like communism versus capitalism or democracy or you know those various
things then i thought it was woke versus unwoke that was going to be the new schism i actually think
trumps onto something different which is the sort of stable world order
that we had that was based on kind of shared liberal or democratic values, he does not in any
way value. He thinks that's for pussies. His mindset seems to be the five families. Russia is the
Gambinos. We got China over there is, you know, whoever that family is. And, you know, and we're going to
divide up turf. Yeah. It's very, it's very great powers. Yeah, we're North Jersey. It's, you know what
it is it's uh you know if you ever watched uh thomas shelby and uh you know uh do you remember
that show um peeky blinders at a theory of power called big fuck small and and that's what strikes me
as so i think this next election what we're really going to be fighting over is is the world order
going to be the five families dividing up the spoils or are we going to try and go back to a more
stable uh liberal thing but i don't think that
can be the explicit battle.
The Democrats can't make this about,
we don't wanna go to a spoil system,
we wanna go back, they've got to address
real people's concerns.
Is that sound fair to you guys again?
Yeah, I mean, what they are selling,
what's behind that sort of five families style
of leadership is it's zero sum politics, right?
It's, and it's domestic as well, this is Trump's view,
which is if you win, someone else loses.
And so it's might makes right and it's survival of the fittest.
And that's why I like the people with power and I like the people with wealth and everyone else is a sucker.
And so we're not losers.
We're the hottest country in the world.
We're not losers.
If you're the right person and you have enough strength and you have enough power, then you can get whatever you want and take whatever you want and everyone else fend for themselves.
and that's why I respect Putin.
That's why I respect she.
And I respect all these people who, you know, who are tough.
He only respects people that don't have to face elections or real elections.
And I think that the argument we have to make is that this is not like politics isn't zero sum,
that there is, that there can be winners and winners and that like we can grow the economy
in a way that benefits everyone.
We can have a government that benefits everyone that we actually do believe.
But that can't be the argument.
The argument has to be explicitly like.
Child care doesn't work, healthcare doesn't work, education does work, and here are the ways that we have to do it.
And we have to actually deliver.
Well, yeah.
And I would just say, look, like the spoils system, my argument to them against it is more as less that he pitched you that the spoils was going to come to you.
That was the point of the spoils system.
And like that these liberal democratic pussies, as John put it, cared more about what was happening in the Netherlands and, you know, in Rwanda.
And I don't.
I want the spoil system to help you.
But we saw what happens to the spoil system actually.
The spoil system helped Trump.
The spoils were for Trump and his family and their crypto money.
And we need an alternative vision to that.
Like, what is the counter vision to that that is not like the League of Nations?
You know what I mean?
Like people don't care about that stuff.
I do.
Which is why the corruption message comes in in addition to what you're saying, John,
which is like, yes, child care, health care, all the things people want.
But you have to talk to people about why they're not getting it and haven't been getting it.
And Trump is giving a perfect example of that right now.
The difficulty with the corruption message is in the nuance.
of it. Yes. Because I think Tim said it earlier, which I thought was a really great point, which is
Trump has found the ways to do this. He's made the corruption that we all suspected were in our society
explicit. But it's a hard argument to make. You know, you look at 1789 Capitol or you look at,
you know, Jared Kushner is now going to finance the buying of CNN and hand it to the president
so that he can kill it in front of us or. Or hand it to the cutteries and the Saudis.
Or give it to the Saudis. You know, Donald Trump Jr.,
is suddenly now the head of a drone company
or on the board that has like a half a billion dollar contract.
The problem is Hunter Biden was on the board of Burisma.
And you may say, oh, but that the order of magnitude is different.
And you're right.
But it speaks to the same thing.
That proximity to privilege is what matters.
It's how kleptocracies and those things work.
And so I think if the Democrats try and make it again a moral corruption argument, there's
enough whiffs and notes and heady hints of teapot dome and Tammany Hall in their backgrounds
that it's a hard argument to make.
But that's why you don't, the message can't be they're corrupt and we're not so elect us
because we're better and trust us.
But that is always what they do.
I know, I know, I know.
weird moral black and white but back to what we were saying earlier that's why you needed an
actual reform agenda like i am willing to change the institutions i'm willing to change the incentive
structure i'm willing to get money out of politics a new deal for uh against corruption a new deal
to tap into inequality occurs because we value capital and not labor there's got to be a way to tap
tim is tim is a socialist now i see it on his face he is so excited about this new plan yeah you can
definitely sell me on just painful levels of taxation for the AI CEOs.
You know, like, you can get, I will, I will flank Elizabeth Warren on the left on.
But you can't, here's when you can't sell taxation, Tim, because the Democrats haven't
proven that people will get value for that extra money.
The message of we need to get rid of the filibuster or we need to tax billionaires means
nothing if nobody ties it to fair value.
they have to be more remedial than that they have to step back forward now you can frame it two
different ways you know the first thing is the first commercial democrats should run is trump said
he was for you he said democrats are for they them and he's for you and that works if you're galane
maxwell if you're the cutteries if you like that should be every ad is showing who you is yep
but on the democratic side if they can't prove the taxpayers get value for their dollar they are
no matter what they think of.
See, this is where we're becoming more centrist, John.
We're moving towards Tim.
Yeah.
Wait, what?
Exactly.
What just happened?
Yeah, no more welfare reform, okay?
We're going to have high taxation,
socialism and welfare reform and cutting red tape so we can build things for one.
We can do that, but value doesn't mean not because first of all, it's not welfare.
It's not an entitlement.
It's an investment.
If we invest in oil companies to go drilling somewhere, how the fuck?
can you not invest in human beings getting enough food and getting enough shelter to be their best
selves? These are investments. That's value. Yeah, you got me. All right. I think we're done here.
Almost.
Gentlemen, I need to see the white paper still. You're probably right. Any moment from this year
that you would like to highlight on your way out to go to your respective media empires,
anything that strikes you. The one that for me that was both, because I think it represents,
the year, which is simultaneously, it's like the dark comedy.
Like, it's really, like, heartbreakingly horrible, but also just clownish was when Terry
Moran was interviewing Trump in the Oval Office.
And they're asked about Kilmar-Bergo-Garcia.
And Trump's team to, like, prove that Kilmar-Mar-Gar-Garcero was MS-13, had done, like,
the MS-P paints, like the font.
It was like Ariel 12 font that they put on top of his hands, and it says MS-13.
And Trump says to Terry Moran, he's like,
you're crazy.
Like, obviously he's MS-13 that said it on his fingers.
And Terry's like, that was Photoshop.
And he's like, no, it wasn't.
And then Terry's like, I guess we'd have to agree to disagree.
And Trump won't let it go.
Like Terry's trying to let him off the hook.
And Trump's like, get me the picture.
That was it for me.
That's a beautiful one, John.
Um, it's funny, I was going to do, I was going to do, well, Kilmer Brigo Garcia, this was a little darker, but I mean, the fact that the, when I knew that like this was much darker than, uh, even I had expected, the fact that the United States government in court admitted that they mistakenly sent someone to a torture chamber. And then their response to that was not bring him back. It wasn't even, okay, well, get him out of there and send him somewhere else. It's, where, it's, where.
We're now going to ruin this guy's life and make this a big cause on our side that we are going to punish this guy no matter what just because.
And that is how they dealt with the whole deportation regime since then.
And it is a they are delighting in violence and wanting us to know that they delight in the violence and the abuse.
Right.
And I think it's that that sadism.
The memes.
Yeah.
The memes and how they try to make it like a joke, but funny, like the desensitizing people to violence and abuse.
and sort of dehumanizing people is, I think,
the underlying, like the real poison of the last year
and something that's going to take a lot more
to get out of the system than just a few better policies.
That's so interesting.
And it is, it's the dehumanization as a virtue.
Yes.
The idea that that is the virtuous way.
And it really is, it's they make a virtue
of the ignorance of a lack of discernment.
And the thing that I think always comes to you
is we're not actually safer when our government can't tell the difference between MS-13
and an 18-year-old valedictorian who's lived here from Honduras since she was seven,
but got the same treatment and sent to some facility in Louisiana.
That's the thing that I think maybe also has to be brought to bear to the American people
is our ignorance doesn't make us safer.
It doesn't make us America first.
That discernment is the first quality you need.
in building a better state of understanding individuals and not groups gentlemen uh i so appreciate you
taking the time i know you guys are are awful busy uh timiller from the bulwark and john favro from
pod save america uh and obviously you will be consolidated uh when the ellison spy you and i think that's
by the way i think it's a great move on their part we're not selling that was uh for the moment for me
and this is probably selfish is when uh donald trump is like i'll choose who get
It's Warner Brothers, and you're like, is that where we are?
Like, literally, the President of the United States.
Make me another rush hour.
I want rush hour, four, five, and six.
I want rush hours, and you can have it.
Guys, thank you so much.
Have a wonderful Christmas, holiday, Hanukkah, New Year's,
and I look forward to seeing all the good stuff you do in the next year.
You too, John.
Thank you.
Thanks, guys.
I'd be honest with you.
They seemed like worn down at first.
I think they started to gather that vigor again to go back into battle.
But they definitely, I had a feeling of like, it's fucking December.
Yes.
And I want to buy presents for my family and my friends.
But like this is an incessant grinding.
This year has felt a million years long as you said at the top.
But you also weren't introduced.
Using such fun ideas like RFK is going to inherit the earth, you know?
You're saying that actually I was not in any way bringing optimism and...
Maybe you tried.
You are the problem.
I definitely didn't leave the conversation feeling optimistic, but I wouldn't expect that for a conversation recapping 2025.
Yeah, look at our outfits. We all spontaneously wore black.
Oh, God. I didn't even recognize that.
Can I say maybe I'm insane, but I remain optimistic.
I honestly think the despicable nature of this administration is the effect that it's having on those two.
That is not the effect that it has on political operatives.
That is the effect that it has on human beings that don't want to live in this acid-based.
This is not like it's a, it's Mars.
We don't want to have to wear space.
suits to breathe freely amongst our people.
Yeah.
People are sick of the shit, I think.
Sick of this shit.
And they're starting to realize he's the band leader.
Trump is the band leader of this shit.
Optimism!
There you go.
We did it.
Gillian's so not buying this, by the way.
No, I really, I think that you're right and I want it to be true as much as I think it's
true.
All right.
Well, for real optimism, we'll have a new mayor in the new year.
And listen, man, which presents opportunity like we haven't had in a very long time.
And each one of the things, these moments, presents opportunity to get some fresh water into this brackish cesspool that we've been swimming in and we'll get out of it.
And it's the end of the year.
Obviously, we want to give our listeners a chance to pop in a couple of questions there.
Brittany, what do we got from?
All right.
They are versatile.
Any of these kids.
So here we go.
They are versatile.
This is our last podcast of the year, by the way.
That's why I'm talking like that.
John, in your opinion, what is the best and worst thing that Trump did this year?
Oh, God.
Best and worst?
Yes, sir.
I mean, holy shit, really?
I mean, obviously, like, for me, the worst thing is it's creating clouds of humanity that are not individuals.
They're just a patina generally shaded that he feels are inferior to his, you know, I think he truly believes in those kind of hierarchies.
And he believes that his people are at the top of the hierarchy and, you know, take this for however you think it, but that the lower casts are disposable.
They're not individuals.
They're not particularly on the same level of humanity that he is on.
There is no individuality.
A Somali doctor has nothing against a Swedish petty larcenist.
Like, a Somali doctor is worse because he's in that cloud
and therefore can be treated in the manner that his administration is treating him.
And that's by far, I think, the worst thing.
It's not an individual thing.
that he's doing.
The best thing he did was accept a trophy from the World Cup that literally looks like
zombies reaching out of the grave to tickle the underside of his balls.
He also banned, didn't he ban paper straws?
So, I mean, I can't take that for granted.
I'll give him that one.
All right.
What's next?
Hopefully this one will perk us up a little bit.
I doubt it.
Oh, boy.
End of year.
People are hurting, man.
We'll get there.
John, Trump has stated that he believes it's seditious, perhaps even treasonous, for the press to report on his health.
Care to comment on his health?
First of all, I think he's doing great health-wise.
He looks great.
I have found, and again, I'm obviously not like an orthopedist, but I've found that the thicker, the ankle, the better the balance.
That is that famous thing.
And that's for old people falling is really, but if you get those, if your ankles are tree trunks, you can't get knocked over.
you can't break the hip, and that's generally the beginning of the downward slide. So I would suggest that
that in and of itself would give you confidence that this may be the healthiest, most robust
president that we've ever had in the history of the United States of America.
Angle circumference alone, yeah. But it once again gets to the point of for Donald Trump,
the level of fealty can never rise to a level that is satisfactory him. There is no level of
ass kissing that you can do. I mean, when you watch is, you know, everything is seditious that
falls beneath the level of, my God, sir, thank you for not allowing too many hurricanes to
hit the United States, as Christy Noem did in that stupid cabinet meeting that they had. He is
angry at Fox News, which is literally like a 24 hour a day ball washing machine for Trump. And
and is designed specifically to keep him in power.
So for him to say something is seditious and treasonous
means nothing because the bar of entry to Donald Trump
is purely about how deeply you are proving
your undying loyalty to the king.
Anything below that, obviously, is seditious.
And none of us measure up, unfortunately.
It is sad
And I hate it because
You know, it's so hard to be a billionaire president
I know
I mean, I don't know
But sure
But you can imagine
Money corrupts and power corrupts
And to have all the money and all the power
It's like if Lord of the Rings ended
Where they're going to drop the ring into the fire
And then instead of hitting the fire
He catches it
Oh, spoiler.
Think of how hard that is on someone.
Yeah, we don't feel bad enough for it.
That's why you're so sleepy.
That's right.
That's right.
All right, what's next?
All right, next.
Do you think it's possible for Trump and Jimmy Kimmel to end their feud, or is it too far gone at this point?
First of all, Jimmy Kilnell might be the most generous, kind-hearted individual that I have met in my entire life.
He is someone, he doesn't even sleep.
like he spent in the middle of the night he will just sit and google like ideas for what the best
thoughtful gift might be for you that he could send to you in a moment when you're feeling low like
that dude is all heart like all of it like he is always he is a naturally generous gregarious
a warm individual that people are drawn to and he is drawn to people.
He is, I wish I could be more like him.
I am a kind of introvert, loner type personality that, like, I love people over there.
He brings them in into an embrace in a manner.
So if anybody could do it, it would be him.
He is the antithesis of everything that that guy stands for.
And he has been, and his family has been put to the ringer for no apparent reason.
Donald Trump could say, nobody, you know, everybody's mean to me.
And you're like, because you're the fucking president.
And you have an army and nuclear weapons.
Yeah, it's kind of part of the job.
Right.
And he's also mean, so.
Yeah.
But you've drawn fire on him and his family because he said shit about you you didn't like.
Tough shit.
You know.
Learn to take a fucking joke.
Boom.
I would love a president that could take a joke and stay awake through a meeting.
Two things.
Like, I don't ask for a lot.
When was the last time this country had that?
I think it might have been Eisenhower.
I just hate that.
He's honestly like one of the best human individuals.
underneath the scenes, behind the scene, whatever, that you will ever see in your entire fucking life.
Colbert, too, by the way. I'm very fortunate that those people in my life who understand my eccentricity,
but also warmly embrace me at the same time, I'm very lucky to have folks like that in my life. Absolutely.
Something to be grateful for in the holiday season.
Yeah, this is a good optimistic note.
Brittany, you just put a bow on that. Well done.
Thank you so much.
Yeah.
Last but not least, John, do you think Christmas should be more about Santa Claus or the baby Jesus?
Oh, God, this is not in my jurisdiction.
I don't know, well, I've got some explaining to do to the people at home.
I don't know if you can tell by, let's say, my face, but I would be more comfortable answering any question about Fiddler on the roof.
I can give you the ins and outs of the show Yentel.
But as far as this, I'm assuming that Christmas has, I mean, other than the birth of Jesus being the tent post, the rest of it doesn't appear to be about that in any way, shape, or form.
Am I, you guys might know better than me.
It's giving presents.
Yeah, it should be more about Santa.
Yeah.
Like, I don't ever go like on November 19th.
Oh, my God, the Jesus commercials are starting so early.
leave us here. Like, it doesn't seem to have a whole lot to do with that. But I will tell you this,
as someone who never experienced it when I was younger, when my kids were younger and they still
believed in all that. It was the most fun holiday I have ever experienced when they still believed
in magic. Like, Brittany, do you recall when you believed? Like, did your family? Oh, very much so.
kind of magical yes my mom actually
one of my favorite memories is I was 11 years old
and my mom sat me down and she goes you know Santa
and I said yeah she goes well it's me
she wanted the credit
and I was like that's awesome
devastated I love that yeah we didn't
it like it was one of those things that like we were always
talking about like when are they going to figure this out
because we knew it wasn't going to come
Vermont. They would be like, so Katie told me. Yes. Katie. And it is your entree into the world of
lies. Like it is your and then your entire worldview is like, wait a minute, there's no Santa.
And I think the president might be corrupt. The jump from there. And the way that you parent your
kids up to that point and then after that point is like before that, it's all a certain.
like magical morality tale you know it's nice to be important but it's important to be nice sharing is
caring like it's all that and like as soon as that other thing hits it's a lot of like there's fentanyl and
cocaine remember that everything fucking changes very quickly all right well uh uh this is our last
podcast of the year as we said we're back january 14th so it's a nice long beautiful and you guys have
and have earned it.
In the new year, obviously,
we're publishing podcasts on Wednesday instead of Thursday.
That's just something that you can lie down there.
And this end of the year is a nice time to remind everybody
that all the work that is done on this podcast
that hopefully you find yourself enjoying
is done by the people that I'm talking to now
or that you are not seeing,
but they are behind the scenes.
And they put in the diligent work that allows me to feel prepared
and ready to talk to anybody and I mean anybody they're throwing me the creators of AI and
political pundits and all these other things and I just I love it I love being able to just talk
to people that I find interesting and fascinating and pick their brains and learn there is nothing
better in this entire fucking world than learning something you didn't know yesterday and it's it's
just something I really appreciate and I really appreciate you guys for obviously
doing the hard work that allows me to do those sorts of things.
Brittany, how do they get a hold of us?
Twitter, we are weekly show pod, Instagram threads, TikTok, Blue Sky.
We are weekly show podcasts.
And you can like, subscribe and comment on our YouTube channel,
the weekly show with Joan Stewart.
Our lead producers, Lauren Walker, producer Brittany Mehmedevick,
producer Jillian Spear, video editor and engineer Rob Vatolo,
who has to sit back there when I see a bee and go,
oh, that's going to suck.
audio editor and engineer Nicole Boyce who also has to deal with that.
Rob actually more has to deal with just how much of the Knicks picture I'm going to show
and how pale I'm going to look.
Nicole is the one actually who has to turn down.
I guess it's the gain.
I don't really know what it is when I shriek like a scared girl.
And our executive producers Chris McShane and Katie Gray who keep the whole ship running.
Thank you guys so much for all of it.
And thank you guys for in any way listening or watching this.
really do appreciate your support, and we will see you guys next year. Bye-bye.
The weekly show with John Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast. It's produced by Paramount
Audio and Bus Boy Productions.
Paramount Podcasts.
