This American Life - 845: A Small Thing That Gives Me a Tiny Shred of Hope
Episode Date: November 3, 2024A wee flame, flickering in the dark. Visit thisamericanlife.org/lifepartners to sign up for our premium subscription.Prologue: Who’s trying to bridge the gap between Blue America and Red America? Ir...a gets a glimpse of one guy who might be able to do just that. (3 minutes)Act One: A politically divided couple searches for a news source they both can trust. (26 minutes)Act Two: "June" is making a tactical decision about her vote this election. (13 minutes)Act Three: Frank Filocomo thinks people care too much about politics when it comes to dating. His dates don’t necessarily agree. (10 minutes)Transcripts are available at thisamericanlife.orgThis American Life privacy policy.Learn more about sponsor message choices.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A quick warning, there are curse words that are un-beeped in today's episode of the show.
If you prefer a beeped version, you can find that at our website, thisamericanlife.org.
Okay, this isn't news to anybody.
Our country is profoundly, cataclysmically divided, disagreeing about so many basic things.
The COVID vaccine was the last election stolen, was January 6th an insurrection,
whereas they called it on the Tucker Carlson show a grandma selfie party.
It's two different visions of reality that seem doomed to never reconcile.
And maybe this is an inappropriate comparison, but somehow this comes to mind for me.
You know that thing in your personal life where you get into a serious fight with somebody who
you really care about, and they see it one way and you see it another way and you're
not seeing eye to eye?
The best outcome, the thing you hope for, is that by talking it through and really listening
to each other and trying to sort it out, in the end, you'll either see it the same way,
you'll have the same story, or this is almost as good.
You won't agree on what happened, but at least you'll get the same story. Or, this is almost as good, you won't agree on what happened.
But at least you'll get where the other person's coming from, and they'll get where you're coming
from, and neither of you thinks the other's crazy, or has ill intent. I just wish we could
do that with our politics. I understand all the reasons why that's not happening. I understand
how some people think, we're way beyond that, it's impossible, counterproductive, just a bad idea. But just to say, I wish. I think
lots of us wish that. Without that, and divided so evenly, nobody can predict the outcome
of a presidential election. Without that, how are we going to keep functioning as a country? But
who's trying to bridge that gap between red America and blue America and bring
us to a common story? I honestly can't name a half dozen people if I try. And so
whenever I hear of anybody attempting to do anything like that and doing what
seems like a decent job of it, I perk up. And I heard about somebody like that and doing what seems like a decent job of it, I perk up and I heard about somebody like that recently,
from somebody who used to work here at our show, Brian Reed.
They did a story on this new podcast that he started with
another former This American Life producer, Robin Simeon.
Robin produces the show, Brian hosts it,
and they did a story about somebody doing this and Brian knows
how I have a B in my bonnet about this particular thing and so he sent me a copy and I am very excited to present a version
of their story for you right now.
Because it gave me a glimpse, like a very tentative first step kind of glimpse and I
know that's a mixed metaphor but just whatever, a first step glimpse of the possibility that
people in this country could listen to each other a little bit and look at the facts of something together and understand each other just maybe a little smudge better.
We have some other stories in today's program.
They're about couples managing their feelings during this heightened political moment on the verge of all of us getting one president or another, one future or another.
the verge of all of us getting one president or another, one future or another.
We're gonna get to all that after the break
from WBEC Chicago.
This is American Life.
I'm Ira Glass.
Stay with us.
["Sympathy for the Future"]
This is American Life, Act One, a tiny thing that gives me hope. Okay, so like I said before the break, this is a story about somebody trying to bridge
the gap in the way that red America and blue America see the world.
And like I said, it comes from this new podcast that Brian Reed is hosting called Question
Everything.
It's a podcast about journalism and the person trying to bridge the gap
between the two Americas in this story as a journalist.
In the story that they did on the podcast,
they get to that guy in a little bit.
The story starts with a couple,
Dick and Emily, who found themselves
unhappily living on opposite sides of the red-blue divide.
When they first met decades ago,
he was a Republican, she
was, she says, a bleeding heart liberal, but it wasn't a big deal. And then that changed.
Here's Brian with one of the producers of Question Everything, Zach St. Louis.
So, Zach, you're the one who's gotten to know Dick and Emily, this couple that was
fighting over the news, right?
Yeah. So, their names are Richard and Emily Newton. He obviously goes by Dick.
They're in their 70s.
They just celebrated their 24th wedding anniversary.
It's a second marriage for both of them.
They fell in love singing hymns together
in the choir at church.
She's an alto, he's a bass.
That's sweet. Where do they live?
They live in Orange County, California.
Okay.
And over the last several years,
they found that they've been growing
more and more miserable
over something that seems so basic, which is what news they would each want to read
in the morning.
We get up and get a cup of coffee and we sit down and we start going through our emails.
And we sit next to each other when we're doing that.
I'd say, Emily, I have an article here.
Would you be interested in me sending it to you?
And she would say, who's it from?
And if I said Brebert News or-
BrightBart, is that what you mean?
BrightBart, that's it, yeah, BrightBart.
Or Epic Times, she knew those were really right leaning and
wasn't really interested.
I was the same way with her.
She found something on Atlantic or New York Times or Washington Post.
This doesn't trust anything, no matter what it is,
that comes from the New York Times or Washington Post.
The Atlantic?
The Atlantic.
MSNBC?
CNN.
CNN is another one.
It doesn't matter what they're saying.
He just automatically dismisses.
Well, they develop their own reputation.
Okay.
I realize we are not reading from the same hymnal here.
So they told me that they started arguing a lot more when Trump came on the political
scene.
Dick supported Trump.
Emily furiously did not.
But then it was after Election Day in 2020 when they had one of their biggest disagreements.
From the beginning, I never believed that the election was fraudulently stolen.
I have more faith in people and in our democracy.
Dick was more open to doubt.
They were saying that there was a lot of things that were going on that shouldn't
have been going on. There was packing drop boxes with ballots.
One person would walk up to the ballot box and drop in all kinds of ballots into it.
So this particular theory Dick's talking about, it's from a movie,
one of the many sources that he was turning to at the time.
It's called 2000 Mules. Have you heard of it?
Um, I've heard of it, yes. I've had people talk to me about it,
as I've been reporting, basically.
Yeah, so this movie, 2000 Mules, it looks like a documentary,
but it's really a propaganda film.
It's about a stolen election theory.
It's not true, but for a while on the right, this movie seemed like it was everywhere.
Everyone seemed to be talking about it.
Trump actually did a screening of it at Mar-a-Lago.
It was in something like 400 movie theaters.
I mean, lots and lots of people believed it.
It's made by Dinesh D'Souza.
He's a right-wing political commentator.
All right, what's the gist?
The gist is that it's about this theory that a bunch of democratic groups were paying people,
who they call mules, to illegally collect ballots and stuff them into ballot boxes
in key swing states.
Philadelphia alone, we've identified more than 1,100 mules.
So there are these talking head interviews and they're intercut with
this grainy surveillance footage that shows like this person like putting
ballots into a box and they're like see there's all the evidence you need. But
that's not real surveillance footage or? It is real surveillance footage but it's
showing people just dropping off ballots legally. And there's scary music under it?
There's scary music, scary voiceover. We are not a democracy. We are a criminal cartel masquerading as a democracy.
And when Dick watched it, like a lot of people, he thought it seemed really plausible.
It just added to the other stories that I was hearing, things that were happening in Arizona and Georgia.
I'm thinking, yeah, there's stuff going on here
that shouldn't be going on.
So Dick is watching this movie, he's reading his sources,
and there are so many sources that cite so many stories
about election fraud, which is part of what made it
so believable.
And also, he's watching the president, President Trump,
say over and over again that the election
was fraudulent and had been stolen from him.
Yes, exactly.
And then Emily's consuming all of her own sources, and they say the exact opposite.
And it all added to this feeling that it wasn't safe for them to talk about politics.
Did that feel different from other arguments or disagreements you'd had about non-political
things over your marriage?
It did because there was no give and take.
We can argue about, you know, what we're going to spend our money on.
We can argue about our kids.
You know, we can argue about the neighborhood.
But we usually come to some sort of resolution.
This whole thing about Trump, there's no resolution.
How did that feel?
Frustrating.
Because I know my husband.
I know what a smart, sensitive, thoughtful person he is.
He's very generous. I know all that about him. And to have him suddenly be aligned to this person
who I found absolutely despicable was very troubling.
She wouldn't talk to me.
She basically just, I don't wanna talk about it.
I would try, but it just, it wasn't going to happen.
And if it did, we'd end up yelling at each other.
I got so angry with her one day that I finally,
I just had to walk out of the house
and walk down the street to cool off.
And then I started thinking, wow,
I'm letting politics get involved in our marriage
because I was really angry at the time.
And I just couldn't stand that.
I never thought that politics was important enough to jeopardize what she and I had together.
Did you feel like that it could do that, that politics could jeopardize it?
Yes, it really did.
I think, what did I get myself into here?
Maybe I did something I shouldn't have done.
What's the mistake you're talking about?
Having someone that was so far left
that I couldn't live with.
Oof.
Yeah, this was a pretty low point in their marriage.
And they told me that they really wanted
to find a way out of it.
We were both looking for some sort of, I don't want to say neutral, but impartial news source.
I was hungry for something that I could count on to peel the layers away and really show
what's in the heart of it.
They started reading different online news sources that branded themselves as being unbiased,
plant-free, that kind of thing.
Interesting.
And then they finally landed on something.
It was a newsletter.
Dick seemed to like it OK.
So did Emily.
We both agreed.
Oh, yes, let's read Tangle.
Tangle.
Yes, that's the newsletter.
All right, so tell me about it.
It's this daily newsletter, comes to your email, it's like a sub stack type thing.
It's run by a guy named Isaac Saul.
He started it, he writes it.
They have about 135,000 subscribers.
It comes to your inbox every weekday.
And each issue is all about one topic from the news.
What they try to do is summarize two or three of the best articles and arguments from right
leaning sources about that topic. And then they do the same thing with left-leaning sources.
And the whole premise of the newsletter is that there are people out there, like Dick
and Emily, that are reading completely separate sources, and why not put all of those in one
place?
So that's what the newsletter is?
Like, it's just like, here's this topic, here are a few stories from the left, here
are a few stories from the right?
Yeah.
So you can actually read what those arguments are.
I think probably the first thing that astounded me was the transparency that when they make a mistake, they correct it as soon as they realize it and they put it right up front.
How is that different than corrections in a newspaper?
A little bit. It's the way that they do it. So corrections in a newspaper, you know, traditionally, they are at the end of the
article.
There'll be like a little footnote.
Actually, we got this wrong.
It's been changed above.
We regret the error, you know, in like little print italics at the bottom.
Tangle's approach to corrections, it's a bit different.
Can you show me?
Yes.
This is from August 21st.
At the very, very top, the very first thing that you see is correction period in big letters.
In our coverage of the Medicare drug pricing negotiations yesterday, we said that four
of the Medicare Part D drugs for which the government had negotiated lower prices were
overprescribed in the United States.
That was false.
We misread the abstract of a study and rushed our review process when we included it.
A sincere thank you to the 10 or so readers who caught the error.
And then in italics right below that, this is our 114th correction in Tangle's 263-week
history and our first correction since August 13th.
We track corrections and place them at the top of the newsletter in an effort to maximize
transparency with readers.
So this is different than a newspaper, I see.
Yeah.
What else did Dick and Emily notice about Tangle?
Yeah, so they noticed that it wasn't so sensational.
It was more measured or even handed in their language.
So, for instance, Tangle noticed that readers on the right would sometimes unsubscribe from the newsletter
after reading a phrase like, undocumented immigrant. But they also didn't think it was right to call someone illegal
or an illegal alien. So they did this big internal review and they settled on the term
unauthorized migrant.
We really like that approach, trying to filter out all the trigger words or the words that were very highly volatile emotionally, which helps both of us then consider the issue with less emotion about it.
I'm not going to say with no emotion.
We would still argue,
but with less emotion about it.
Then we loved Isaac's take.
What's Isaac's take?
So Isaac's take, Isaac refers to Isaac Saul.
He's the founder and writer of the newsletter.
And at the end of every issue, he spends a long time writing his opinion.
And these can be long.
And he says exactly how he feels about the issue after having researched it,
and just describes his own feeling about it.
Wait, do you have an example of this?
Yeah, here I'll send one to you. We can look at it.
Alright, this was earlier this month. his own feeling about it. Wait, do you have an example of this? Yeah, here I'll send one to you. We can look at it.
All right, this was earlier this month.
Hurricane Helene and the disaster relief efforts.
Yes.
The first part is just the topic.
Then they summarize what the right is saying.
They summarize what the left is saying.
But then at the end, you see my take.
And so I'm obviously not going to read this whole thing.
It is.
Yeah, this is long.
Wow.
2,200 words I looked. It's like a whole essay. Yeah, this is long, wow. 2200 words I looked.
It's like a whole essay.
But what's his take on Hurricane Helene?
Yeah, so before we get to his take,
I think you need to understand what he's responding to here.
There've been a lot of attacks on the Biden administration
from the right saying that they're doing nothing
to help people who've been affected by this hurricane.
Like actually nothing.
Well, that they failed to rise to the occasion, basically.
So Isaac, he really puts a stake in the ground and says there's a big problem with this narrative.
It's all nonsense. It's all a lie.
And then he writes, I hate writing pieces like this.
It's not my job to defend the federal government from lies.
And it's hard to write a piece like this without reading it like I'm openly shilling for Harris or Biden.
I am not. I'm not here to do their PR or protect their reputations.
However, I do care about our information ecosystem.
I care about reliable, accurate information being shared widely.
I also care about the North Carolinians in danger right now.
Not just because they're Americans and it's a state I love,
but also because my mom, my aunt, my brother and his family,
my sister-in-law and my niece, they all live in North Carolina.
So the horrors we're all witnessing on the news hit close to home.
Here's the truth though.
Biden and Harris have actually pulled every lever federal executives can in a situation
like this.
None of the critics that I posted above can say exactly what they want them to do that
they aren't already doing.
And if you're planning on writing in to tell me that I am shilling for Harris or being
a left-wing hack by calling out lies online, you better be prepared to tell me exactly what I've gotten wrong here."
And then he goes on for several more paragraphs.
Oh, wow.
Interesting.
I can feel his resentment at having to defend the Democratic administration.
Yeah.
He's like, I don't want to do this just to defend them, but in this case, they're doing
everything they can.
And that's what the facts show.
And so I'm going to say that.
Right.
And this part of the newsletter was something that Dick and Emily really came to appreciate.
He was very clear about what his biases were.
That made him extremely trustworthy.
More often than not, when we get to the end and we read my take,
we look at each other and say, yeah, that's how I feel.
They started realizing that they actually agreed with each other on a lot of things,
and they were able to talk about it.
And eventually, something pretty remarkable happened.
So remember how Dick was totally convinced
the election had been stolen.
He watched 2,000 mules,
he read all of those conspiracies about it.
So as Dick and Emily were starting to have
this shared understanding of the news again,
Tangle did the thing for Dick
that no other source
seemed to be able to do, that Emily wasn't able to do.
And that was proved to him that the 2020 election
had not been stolen.
The only thing that changed my mind completely
was the fact that I started reading Tangle.
And it's only because I trust Isaac and his team so much.
It's incredibly fulfilling, to be honest.
This is Isaac's song.
He's the guy who writes Tangle.
Yes.
It's actually so rewarding because
the election fraud stuff in particular
was one of the most difficult times of my life as a reporter.
The month after that election was like dark, stressful,
really, really hard work.
And hearing that somebody had that reaction,
that their mind was actually changed,
even one person, it's like, yeah, it makes me wanna cry.
So am I getting this right?
It seems like Isaac and this newsletter
tangle, they seem to have done
something that I feel like so many
journalists, myself included, have
been banging our heads against the
wall trying to figure out what to do,
which is how do you get people
to believe the evidence that the
2020 election was not stolen
from Donald Trump.
Something like a third of Americans believe it was. It's really threatening our ability
to function. How do you present those facts and get people to believe them? I mean, we
did a whole episode of our show about Barton Gelman, one of the greatest investigative
reporters of our time, I'd say, who quit journalism because of this problem?
Yeah.
And you're saying Tangle did it.
In this case, Tangle did it.
Yeah, for Dick, Tangle did it.
All right.
So how did Tangle do this?
How did Isaac, the guy who runs this, do this?
Yeah.
So Isaac did a ton of work around this whole election denialism issue.
It wasn't just one newsletter.
Every time a new claim about how the election may have been stolen surfaced, he would spend
all this time running it down, explaining in detail why it was false.
He did that in the days and weeks immediately following the election.
He continued doing it as new claims surfaced in the years since.
But a lot of news sources have done this, you know, looked at these different claims
about how the election was stolen and showed why they aren't true and looked at the court
cases where no evidence surfaced and all this stuff, right? They did. But Isaac was doing a lot of research.
Like, for example, in the weeks following the election, right after, he did this 400-tweet long thread
that was going in detail into each claim. He was really, really deep on this.
But I don't think it was only the research that helped convince Dick.
There's something else that Isaac did. And it was in his tone and how he approached this whole issue
Especially around the claims that seemed more persuasive. He didn't just write them off. He assessed them seriously
He presented them seriously and that didn't make dick feel stupid
Here's Isaac some of the stuff was really convincing and proving that they were wrong
Some of the stuff was really convincing and proving that they were wrong was not as simple
as saying like, oh, this is just like conspiracy nonsense.
Like the ballot stuffing thing,
that was a plausible way to steal an election.
In 2022, he actually dedicated an entire newsletter,
a deep dive into 2000 Yoles,
that movie we were talking about.
So when that movie came out
and everybody just like laughs at Dinesh D'Souza,
I was kind of like, I'm gonna watch it
and like take some of these allegations seriously
and see what's up.
It turned out they're all bullshit,
but like you only know that
if you actually do some of the work.
Can I actually just read you what he wrote
at the top of that newsletter? Yeah, please.
So the title of the newsletter is
An Honest Look at 2000 Mules,
The New Stolen Election Theory.
And this is how he opens it.
I consider myself to be both a skeptic
and an open-minded person.
I am deeply cynical about our government,
believe intelligence agencies are covering up the truth
about UFOs and don't feel any particular loyalty
to any major political parties.
I generally distrust authority, government agencies, and politicians.
But I do believe it's wise to consult expert opinions and advice.
I love a good conspiracy, a good cover-up, and a great story.
A stolen presidential election would be an all-timer in every regard.
A story so gigantic, a conspiracy of corruption and power
so unthinkable that the idea alone is tantalizing enough,
I almost want to believe it."
And then he goes on to dissect every point made in the film
and show why it's inaccurate.
But that's how he starts.
Interesting, okay, so that's the presentation
difference you're talking about?
Yeah, and I'll just say that that framing,
it's really different from how other outlets covered this film.
Like, for example, there's a New York Times headline about the movie.
It was, quote, a big lie in a new package.
There was a Washington Post headline that was, quote,
2000 Mules offers the least convincing election fraud theory yet.
And look, I mean, that's all true. It is a lie.
But Isaac realized he's probably not going to convince someone who already believes the
lie by leading with that.
So instead, he levels with people, explains where he's coming from and all the research
he did, and then explains what he found about the claims.
And so this was what Dick was reading.
After reading his article, what I realized was, and he even admitted, there were some
things that were happening that shouldn't have been happening in some of the polls.
But it wouldn't have changed the dynamics of who won and who lost at all.
That was actually the first time I really realized it for sure, and that really opened my eyes to how
corrupt that was. That really sold me on the fact that the election wasn't stolen.
What I was thinking in my head was like,
I wanna bring all these people in my life under one roof
and I want them to be able to read a news source
that like the, you know, Trump, MAGA, bro, will trust and like the left wing Bernie bro will
trust.
What was the like origin story for Tangle for Isaac? Like he
was a reporter before this?
Yeah, he was a reporter. He worked for Huffington Post a
couple of other places. And he told me that he's always been
the type of person that's brought together people from
different backgrounds in his personal life. Maybe they don't agree. And he's often medi he's always been the type of person that's brought together people from different backgrounds in his personal life.
Maybe they don't agree and he's often mediating between those people.
But really the inspiration for Tangle came out of his own news consumption.
The idea for Tangle basically came from the Trump era of like Trump proposes a border wall.
And I'm like, he's like proposing a 2000 mile border wall and I'm like,
he's like proposing a 2000 mile border wall.
This sounds totally insane.
I can't imagine the best argument for this,
but I really wanna understand,
is this something that would actually work?
And in order to grasp what was actually happening,
my day would be like,
I'm gonna go read the New York Times editorial board.
I'm gonna read their immigration reporting about it.
Then I'm going to go to Fox News and scroll through their opinion page and search for
Trump's border wall.
And then maybe I'll listen to a Ben Shapiro podcast and then I'll go listen to Pod Save
America and then I'll watch The Daily Show, do a bit about it, watch John Oliver, and
then I'll spend an hour on some Tucker Carlson special about it. And then I'll do like 10 hours of all this consuming the news and I'll sit down
and I'll be like, okay, I think I now have a really good understanding of everybody's
perspective, positive and negative about this policy proposal. Why can't I just find that
one place? That should exist somewhere.
Do you know who's reading the newsletter? Why can't I just find that one place? That should exist somewhere.
Do you know who's reading the newsletter? I kind of do based on a reader survey of Tangle subscribers.
So a little bit over half of the subscribers are men,
around 57%.
It's queues very wide, just below 90% of readers.
It's US based, but Isaac says it does reach something
like 55 other countries.
And about a third of the readers say
that they're on the left,
a third on the right, and the last third are either center or independent.
Wow, so pretty evenly politically split.
Yeah, pretty even split politically.
And I did talk to some other readers of the newsletter
who said that it had an impact on them, similar to Dick and Emily.
Like who?
I met this one guy at a political event in New York,
and he told me it's basically the only news that he reads
I talked to a new reader of Tangle a journalist actually and he said that there were some arguments from the right that he'd just written off
but reading Tangle actually helped him see that they had a point and
I even spoke to another guy who like dick had his mind changed about the 2020 election
I assumed that Donald Trump was telling me the truth that they had firm evidence that
it was definitely manipulation of the ballots.
This is a guy named Rick.
Wait, Rick and Dick?
Rick and Dick.
Okay.
Both Richard, if you want to be technical about it.
Got it.
Go on.
It's a really similar story to Dick and Emily's.
Rick was a big Trump supporter, voted for him twice.
Rick's son is on the left politically.
They were arguing about the news a lot.
And the son started forwarding Rick the newsletter, including issues that were about the stolen
election claims.
They weren't just laughing it off.
I have a trust in their news gathering and presentation abilities, head and shoulders
above any other news gathering source.
I have a trust level there that's unequaled.
And again, like Dick and Emily, Rick and his son have mended their relationship.
They can talk to each other about the news again.
And now he doesn't think the election was stolen.
And that feeling of being lied to, it's actually convinced him not to vote for Trump this year.
Really?
of being lied to, it's actually convinced him not to vote for Trump this year. Really? Yeah, the only reason I wouldn't vote for him because he made me look
foolish in front of my son. You know, Zach, you mentioned the importance of striking
the right tone when we're presenting evidence, especially evidence that's
like contrary to what someone believes. And that does seem important, but also,
just hearing the story of Rick and his son
alongside the story of Dick and Emily, his wife,
like I do just wonder, does a person have to be motivated
to get along with someone they love,
to repair a relationship essentially
in order to change their mind?
Yeah, it's a good question.
Wanting to see something from someone else's perspective,
the perspective of someone you love,
it seems like that doesn't hurt.
You know, it's interesting thinking about it.
It's not exactly that Tangle moved both of them
towards the center and they met in the middle,
but it moved Dick more towards Emily, basically.
Yeah, I mean, obviously it would make for a better story if they each move toward the center.
I think that's sort of...
Met in the middle.
What we want from a story like this. Exactly, met in the middle.
But it's really more like Dick believed something that wasn't true, and then he was the one that moved toward facts.
How does Emily say it changed her? Like, does she say it changed her?
So she told me that she didn't have as dramatic a change as Dick.
It wasn't like she believed something that wasn't true and had her mind changed.
But she says she does read the news differently now.
For instance, she told me that hearing some of Kamala Harris' policy proposals
and how before she would have taken some of them at face value as good ideas.
Now she says she's thinking more critically about them.
How are they doing these days?
Yeah, the last time I spoke to them,
they really did seem to be in a better place.
I think on the surface, it seemed like their problem
was that they've been talking across this political divide.
But their real problem was that they weren't agreeing on facts.
They weren't agreeing on what was true.
That's what made it so bitter. It's a huge relief. Dick and I can now agree on more or disagree based on the same information
at least.
I don't feel like I'm walking on eggshells if I want to mention something to her. I mean,
she's her own person. I'm not going to tell her who to vote for. And she wouldn't listen to me anyway.
Now we're on the same hymn book, more or less.
Although he might be reading a different page than me at the time, but it's generally the
same hymn book.
But I mean, agreeing on the same set of facts, being in the same book, that's only going
to get you so far.
Who's Dick voting for?
You know, as far as I'm concerned, I don't like Trump as a person.
The way he handles himself, the things he says, it bothers me a lot.
But the one thing that I did like about him was his policies.
And so I'm definitely leaning towards Trump still.
Okay, that's Dick's take.
That's my take.
That's the first time that he's verbalized to me that he's thinking about voting for
Trump.
My heart just stopped.
Emily and Dick Newton in Orange County, California. So that's Brian Reed and Zach St. Louis of the podcast, Question Everything, which is
produced by KCRW and Placement Theory.
This story was edited by Jonathan Goldstein and Robin Semian.
Coming up, other couples muddling their way through this election using slightly more
extreme tactics.
That's in a minute from Chicago Public Radio, when our program continues.
This is American Life from Ira Glass.
Today's program, a small thing
that gives me a tiny shred of hope.
Okay, so it was Act One and the Tangled Newsletter
that inspired that name for today's episode.
Now in the second half of the show,
the thread from that story that we're gonna pick up
and keep pulling is what is happening with couples
during this election, which is interesting
because as you've probably heard,
there's a real gender gap between men and women
this time out.
Men prefer Trump by eight percentage points,
women prefer Harris by nine.
With that, we turn to act two of our show,
act two, till death do us partisan.
Okay, so if you remember Emily and Dick,
who we heard in act one,
they talk openly between them
about their political differences.
One of our producers, Aviva De Kornfeld,
spoke with a woman who is taking a different tactic
with her husband.
It's been hard to find a time to talk with June.
She's on a three week road trip with her husband
and they have almost no time apart.
So we look for little cracks in our schedule
to sneak in a call.
Do you have a sense of how much time we have right now?
About a half an hour, he's in the shower.
Okay, well half an hour, long shower, luxurious.
Well he has a whole routine, you know,
teeth and everything.
Yeah, yeah.
He's like a teenage girl in that way.
Um, okay.
Do you mind if I record this call?
I don't mind, but I'm a little bit, you know, concerned about, you know, I don't want to
get in trouble.
The trouble June's trying to avoid is an argument with her husband.
They're both conservatives, but after voting Republican for her entire life, this election,
June will be secretly voting for Kamala Harris.
Her husband doesn't know about her plans.
So I really just, that's sort of why I'm a secret voter is because I'll vote however I want to vote but
having the conversations about it is where things you know get just uncomfortable.
While we talk June is pacing around the backyard of their rental house where
her husband can't hear her. It's not like she's scared of him she just doesn't want to fight
with him which is why we're using a pseudonym.
June's not a real name.
The Harris campaign is counting on the idea that there are lots of Junes out there.
They're marketing to these women, specifically, sending Republicans like Liz Cheney all over
the country to talk to them.
And there's a whole grassroots effort of people sticking post-it notes in public restrooms,
reminding these women their vote is private.
I wondered what it was like for people in this situation.
Is it really possible to keep a secret like this from the person you share a house and
a life with?
How do you do that?
What are the consequences?
On our call, June made a point to say it wasn't always this way.
She's been with her husband, who I'll call Rick, for 20 years now.
They first met in an online group for single parents.
June had three little kids from a previous pretty rough marriage.
Rick had two kids, and their courtship started over the phone.
Yes.
I mean, like being in middle school, like you'd spend all day with your best
friend in middle school and then immediately come home and get on the phone with her.
We would just talk for hours and hours and hours.
It just felt like the easiest, most natural connection.
By the time June and Rick actually met in real life a few months later, they were basically already a couple. A year later they got married and
Rick raised June's kids as his own, calls them his kids. June says Rick was totally
apolitical when they met, had never voted, wasn't even registered, which did not sit
right with June. She's always been very politically engaged, makes a real effort to vote in every election,
not just the big ones.
Since June was a lifelong Republican, Rick also registered as a Republican.
And in 2016, they both voted for Donald Trump together.
But June immediately regretted it.
She never liked Trump, but it felt wrong to her not to vote,
and she assumed he wouldn't win anyway.
After the election, June started to lean away
from her political party, but Rick reached towards it.
He started watching Fox News every day.
And it's stirring something up inside of him
that makes him afraid or just like angsty or whatever and
like it just comes bubbling out. Like he's not a big talker to anybody else. I'm the
main person that he talks to. So I think if he talked to a lot of people, maybe I wouldn't
be getting so much of it down the barrel, but because I'm his, you know, I'm his main person,
I think I get it all because I think it makes him very anxious. Like if you heard and believed
every day that you're going to lose your freedom, you're going to lose your job,
you're going to lose your way of life, all these terrible things are going to happen,
I think it's natural that you would be anxious.
Does he have friends?
No.
Not even one?
I mean, he has.
So one of the pastors at my church really likes him, but no, he doesn't really like
people very much.
Rick used to ask June about her opinion on politics.
She would read articles, and he would ask her to summarize them for him.
That was the dynamic.
She researched and came to an opinion, and he trusted her opinions.
But these days, the longer that Donald Trump has been on the picture, the sort of more
like him my husband becomes, you know,
just I'm not allowed to have my own opinions, the hands, you know, I better not vote this
way or that way or, you know, I'm going to go with you and vote and, you know, just getting very hostile about it. And I guess Donald Trump just made it easier or more acceptable
or more popular to act like that.
And that's the only area where he's like that.
But if we have a big confrontation about it, then it's, you know,
then it becomes everything.
You know, it's just.
Oh, I hear a little dog in the background.
Yes, yes, we have puppies with us too.
June is having this disagreement with her husband during a moment
when election coverage is non-stop. Ads are everywhere,
both campaigns are relentlessly calling and texting
and emailing, all while she's stuck in a car
with her husband.
And this is all he wants to talk about.
She said they planned this trip a year ago
when things were calm.
And now she can't believe she did this to herself.
It's been very tense.
But June's got a couple strategies for dealing when politics comes up.
Sometimes she tries something called gray rocking, which is basically just being as boring as possible in conversation.
So Rick has nothing to seize on or react to.
Other times she tries for a classic maneuver, the dodge.
I dodge a lot. No, I'm pretty good at dodging because I'm very busy.
Honey, I'm pretty good at dodging because I'm very busy. Honey, I'm very busy
making dinner. I'm very busy, you know, with cleaning or I have to do some work or whatever.
So I'd say maybe once every 10 days to two weeks do I let my guard down.
And when her guard drops, a fight ensues. They have a big fight every 10 days to two
weeks because it keeps bringing politics up.
He wants to talk to her about all this stuff, and it unsettles him when they're not on
the same page.
He wants her to engage, and so her refusal itself becomes a kind of fuel.
It ends up being very pushy, you know, like, why aren't you talking to me?
Why aren't you answering me?
Like he'll say things and I just take the bait, you know. He'll why aren't you talking to me? Why aren't you answering me? Like, he'll, he'll say things and I just take the bait.
You know, he'll say like, you're a liberal.
What do you say?
Um, I say, I've been a conservative longer than you've been a conservative.
What are you talking about?
Like I am a conservative.
Donald Trump stole my party.
Do you regret getting him politically engaged, given how things have turned out?
Totally.
Really?
Totally, yes.
I talked to a bunch of people like June, women who plan to vote for Kamala, but are going
to all sorts of lengths to avoid telling their family and friends about it.
They're all lifelong conservatives. But then, for a lot of them, January 6 crossed a red line they didn't
even know they had until it happened. And now, they can't bring themselves to vote
for Trump again. I talked to one woman in Louisiana who told me her parents knew she
wasn't going to vote for Trump. They assumed she's going to write in another Republican,
which she's happy to let them think.
She said it's inconceivable to her parents
that she could possibly vote for a Democrat.
Another woman in Missouri told me
that once Kamala entered the race,
she tried to test the waters with her family,
said she was thinking that maybe she would vote for Kamala.
Her family's reaction was so strong,
they said she was going to hell, that she was a communist,
that she had to backtrack.
And they haven't talked about it again since.
I mentioned all this to June.
I've talked to a bunch of people
who are in different versions of your situation,
and everyone tries to avoid
talking about politics with their family
because they obviously want to maintain close relationships with their family.
And it's, they avoid talking about it in service of the relationship.
But actually, they just can't be as close with their family as they want to be
if they can't really share this part of their life with them.
Right. I think like we sort of watch movies and TV shows where like one
sort of explosive thing happens that ends up you know destroying a
relationship or whatever it is but I think in actuality those kinds of
deteriorations happen little by little over time and it's these small, small things
that chip away at any family relationship or any kind of relationship. And so I think
I probably just make a short-term, easy decision to avoid it and that probably does have longer
term consequences.
I want to be clear. June and Rick still have nice parts of their marriage. They still go
on their daily walks. They have those two little dogs that they both obsess over. Rick
does this whole routine with the dogs during their nightly snack time, which delights June.
But with the wall to wall election noise, politics is increasingly crowding out those other,
more peaceful parts of their lives.
I have an older sister who's married to a like-minded man and their relationship is
just so different.
There's just so much more back and forth between the two of them and there's so much less just angst about, like, she can be who she wants to be and he's
just more secure in that, you know, she can voice her opinion and it just doesn't ever
seem like she's looking over her shoulder.
But I definitely feel like I need to look over my shoulder, obviously, sitting in the
back yard. I just feel like I have
to look over my back shoulder, not because something necessarily bad will happen to me,
but just like it's just too exhausting to keep explaining myself, I guess. I just don't
really want to keep doing that.
Who does your husband think you're voting for? I think he's afraid I'm going to vote for Kamala.
You know, I think he has a clue that I'm a never-Trump-er,
but I wouldn't say like he knows for 100% sure.
Tell me if this is like way off base.
Sure.
Because I don't mean to overstep, but it sounds kind of lonely being in a marriage.
Oh my gosh, it's terrible. Oh my gosh, it sounds kind of lonely being in a marriage.
Oh my gosh, it's terrible. Oh my gosh, it's terrible. Don't make me cry.
Yes, he's not who I thought he was or he's becoming somebody, but yes, it's like,
I'm not fully who I am with him and it's sad. Yeah. Do you have a, I don't know, like a plan for if it keeps going down this road or is there,
do you have any red lines or you're just hoping, you know, once the election's over, then you
can go back to talking about other stuff?
Yeah, it sort of like steams up and then cools off, steams up and then cools off.
Yeah, I probably am not going to do anything.
I mean, I'm on do anything. I mean,
I'm on the phone. I'll be done in just five minutes, okay? Yeah, it's not like a fun life to talk about Donald Trump. I just want to forget about him. Was that your husband who came out?
Yeah. Okay, does that sounds like you should go? I should probably wrap it up, yeah.
Okay, well, um, I'll let you go. I really appreciate you talking.
Sure, sure, thank you. It was good to talk with you. Thank you.
Okay.
Alright, bye.
Bye.
A few days after our call, I got a text from June.
She was home from her trip and had gone to vote early with her daughter.
She sent me a selfie of the two of them beaming with their matching voting stickers. They both voted for Kamala.
June said she felt relieved to have cast her vote because now no one could take it away from her.
And more than that, she actually feels excited about the prospect of a Harris presidency.
She thinks she'll do a good job.
After they voted, June and her daughter celebrated, hugged goodbye, and then June peeled her sticker
off and went home. Aviva De Kornfeld is one of the producers of our show.
Okay so the biggest gap between men and women in this election is with younger voters, people
under 30.
An NBC News poll found that 59% of young women in that group support
Harris compared to 42% of men. Which got us wondering, how is a person that age
supposed to find love? Those numbers, if you are straight and under 30 and
looking for somebody of the same party, they are not great. And that question
brings us to act three of our show. Act 3, let me be Frank.
When Aviva De Kornfeld was reaching out to
couples looking for people to interview for
the story that you just heard,
one of the people she came across was a guy named
Frank Filicomo. He's trying to navigate
his way through the rocky shoals of this gender divide.
So she talked to him too about what that's like.
Last year, Frank had a date that went exactly the way you hope a first date goes.
The conversation felt easy. They made each other laugh.
And at the end of the date, they said good night. No kiss.
Frank doesn't kiss on first dates. And went home.
And then we were texting. She was texting me right after the date.
Had such a great time. You know, when do we get to do this again?
And, you know, we're exchanging ideas
for what our next date's gonna be.
And then the morning of the second date, she messages me
and she said, you know, I did some thinking
and I would not like to go out with you again.
And-
What do you think's happening when she says that?
Well, I didn't think, I knew what happened.
Oh, what happened?
What happened is that I have a very unique Italian last name.
If you Google me, I come right up.
I think I wrote, so you must have looked me up?
And she said yes.
And she sent me a screenshot.
And I went, ah, got it.
The thing Frank State had discovered about him?
He's a Republican.
Voted for Trump.
Twice.
The screenshot was of an article he'd written for a conservative magazine.
Trying to date, in deep blue, New York City, as a registered Republican.
Perhaps, unsurprisingly, not so easy.
He knows better than to lead with his politics.
He intentionally leaves it off his dating profile.
But even so, sometimes Frank can't even get past the texting phase and on to the actual date.
A lot of women have said, okay, you know, you seem great and I'd like to meet you and go on a date, but first
you know, who did you vote for or what are your politics?
Oh really?
And then that's when I...
What do you say? you know, who did you vote for? Or what are your politics? And then that's when I...
What do you say?
You know, I say that I'm an independent thinker.
That's really coded as right-wing.
Exactly.
You might as well just say, I voted for Donald Trump.
Yeah, and I have.
And then what do they say?
They say, well, I can't do it. Can't do it.
By Frank's estimate, 40 to 50 women have canceled their dates with him upon discovering
his politics. Having been born and raised in Brooklyn, Frank has this sort of odd problem
on his hands because he basically fits in unless he's talking. Everyone I've ever met
has told me that they think I'm some Bernie progressive. I strike people as being left-wing.
Yeah, well, you live in Brooklyn,
and you have little glasses, so.
I have little glasses and holes in my ears.
He used to have gauges.
He also has a bunch of tattoos.
He's a real mix of things.
He's got some punk in him, but he's also nerdy,
casually says words like,
forclempt and pugilistic.
Though you can't see any of his edge today.
Came straight from his job at a right-wing non-profit.
So he's in his full conservative drag.
Suit, tie, token fun socks.
Frank's been a conservative since he was little.
He grew up in a right-leaning household
and proudly wore a McCain-Palin button
on his backpack at school, and he was 11.
The main thing that makes Frank a conservative these days, he says, is that national sovereignty
is extremely important to him.
Meaning, he thinks we should close the border, build a wall if we need to, anything to discourage
undocumented immigrants from coming here.
Otherwise, basically, he's one of those fiscally conservative, socially liberal
guys. But his dates mostly care about that conservative part. He remembers this one first
date that really kind of stung because he was particularly excited about her. They were
at a bar, bantering back and forth.
And then she said, so what do you do for work? And there's kind of no way around that.
You know, I could say, I could be super ambiguous
and say, oh, I work for a nonprofit.
Yeah.
But then that lends itself to, okay, well, which nonprofit?
Yeah, that could mean anything.
Right.
Frank told her he worked for a branch
of the famously conservative outlet, The National Review,
where he occasionally writes.
His date that he meant the nation,
which is kind of the opposite.
And I clarified now, a little different.
How do you describe the difference?
I said, we're more on the right.
Which is my euphemistic way of saying we're conservative,
because we are.
And I said that, and immediately her whole demeanor changed.
Like what, she leans back in her chair?
Yeah, yup, yup.
Body language changed.
And she said, well, so you're a conservative.
They were only 20 minutes into the date
and decided to call it a night.
I actually planned on walking her out
or walking her to the train station.
And so I said, okay, let me get the bill.
And I go up to the bar to get the bill.
And then I came back and she was gone.
Frank thought maybe she'd gone to the bathroom. But his date had scootered to the bar and arrived with a helmet.
Frank noticed the helmet was also gone.
I'm thinking, I don't think she took her helmet to the bathroom.
But I said, let me give it a few minutes, you know, and I gave it a few minutes and I said she's not she left
It does hurt and when I say this to people I don't mean to make it into a pity thing, you know
It's not like this is being
Conservative is some immutable characteristic, right?
I don't want people to feel bad for me,
but it does hurt because to me, it's like, who am I?
So after 27 years, I'm 27, after 27 years of existence,
if my identity boils down to being a conservative
and a registered Republican,
then that's a sad 27 years that
I've lived. That's really sad.
Frank's a registered Republican, but to him, that's the least interesting thing about him.
Here are some things that Frank would like people to know about him. He plays jazz guitar.
He has a very old cat, 17 years old, who is still in remarkably good health. He's
also obsessed with aquariums. He has four of them in his studio apartment.
The stuff that Frank thinks should matter is the way you comport yourself in the world.
Are you polite to wait staff? Do you hold the door for people? Do you check in on your
friends when they're sick? Most of a relationship, he says, is not about politics.
And so he wants the women he dates to see those other parts of him, not be blinded by
his party affiliation.
So he's tried various tactics over the years to get around it.
Downplaying, addressing it head on, and making a case for himself.
Once, since women kept googling him and finding his writing, he even gave a fake last name.
But that made me feel terrible about myself.
So it wasn't worth doing it again.
I can't do it.
Yeah, that's no way to go through life.
I asked Frank, why not just date conservative women?
He insisted the conservative dating pool in New York City is simply too small.
There's a filter on the dating app Hinge that you can pay for that does let you filter
for political preference.
He did try that once.
And I realized that it was meaningless, you know?
I'm attracted to people for other reasons.
In fact, I would put politics probably at the end.
What?
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Why is that crazy?
Because the thing that should be at the end is like my favorite color is green. That's more important. No, it's crazy. Why is that crazy? Because the thing that should be at the end is like my favorite color is green.
That's more important.
No, it's not.
It absolutely is more important.
Why?
Well, I'm tempted to push it back on you and say why is politics important?
It's not important.
I don't think so at all, actually.
Yeah, but do you think that politics is less important to you because some of the policies
that you might be voting for directly impact you in a less personal way than they impact
the women that you want to date?
Oh, maybe.
I think that's part of it.
And I have a lot of empathy for people who are impacted more directly.
But I think that, you know, I look at my day-to-day life and, you know, I'll walk through a door
and someone, or I'll hold the door for someone and they'll walk through and they won't say,
thank you.
And I go, what was that?
What was that about?
You know, it's stuff like that little interpersonal interactions that means something to me, you
know, or
But to you, but not to the people that you're dating.
I'm sure the women you're dating would be much, it's much more important to them to
be able to get an abortion than have a door held to them.
Oh, sure.
But I'm one out of 340 million people.
I'm not effectuating policy or something.
I can see why his dates don't see it that way.
I have some news to end this story with, which is that, after dozens of dates, Frank is actually
seeing someone.
It's new, but it seems to be going well.
She's a lefty, and she knows all about his views.
Politics actually came up on their first date.
It's been a few months now, and they've had a lot of conversations about politics.
Frank told me his girlfriend's voting for Kamala Harris, and the idea that Frank might
vote for Trump, that really, really bothers her.
Recently, with the election coming up, they had one particularly hard conversation about
it.
She said, you know, we care for each other and we obviously enjoy being around each other
and we have for the past four or five months, however long it's been.
And you know, I don't think she said that she doesn't think it's a deal breaker for
her, but it's something that concerns her, you know, and I don't take that lightly.
So it's made me do a lot of thinking.
What'd you say? I said that I, you know, it's made me do a lot of thinking. What did you say?
I said that I, you know, I want you to know that I hear you.
It was emotional.
I think we were both a little verklemped.
His girlfriend kept saying, Trump's a rapist.
You've got to vote for the whole person, not just the policies you like.
These conversations with his girlfriend and other people have actually moved him.
And so, Frank is thinking of voting third party this election.
Which may have more meaning in his relationship than it does for our country, thanks to the
fucking Electoral College.
Like most of us, Frank doesn't live in a swing state.
I'm Eva De Kornfeld. We first heard about Frank in a story in The Guardian. You can't just sit on the side While you're just wasting our time You can't just wait and see Gotta make a difference for you and me
Oh yeah, if you don't speak You'll never be heard
So get on your feet and jump on that beat
You gotta vote, exercise your rights
You gotta vote, go to the fight
You gotta vote, vote, vote for you and me
You gotta vote
Our program was produced today by Bim, Ada, Woonmi.
The people who put together today's show include
Jandayi Bhan, Zoe Chase, Michael Kamate, Henry Larson, Tobin Lowe,
Katherine Raimondo, Stone Nelson, Nadia Raymond, Ryan Rummery,
Frances Swanson, Christopher Sotalam, Attyrney, Julie Whitaker, and Diane Wu.
Our managing editor, Sara Abdurrahman.
Our senior editor, David Kastenbaum.
Our executive editor, is Emanuel Barry.
This American Life is delivered to public radio stations by PRX, the Public Radio Exchange.
Just a heads up to our life partners.
There is a new bonus episode this week that's out
that you will find in your feed.
Everybody else, if you want to sign up
and get this bonus content and other stuff,
go to thisamericanlife.org slash life partners.
Thanks this week to life partners, Kelly Darnell,
Ken Irwin, Lauren Cahill-Fitzsimmons, Lawrence
Lin, Rob Neurow, Laurel Paul, and Jeannie Thomas.
Thank you guys.
Thanks as always to our program's co-founder, Mr. Tory Malatia, always comparing himself
to Mr. Potato Head.
I have little glasses and holes in my ears.
I'm out of glass.
Back next week with more stories of This American Life.
You've gotta vote.
Give that voice.
You've gotta vote.
Make a choice.
You've gotta vote, vote, vote.
We'll join the team when we turn 18.
Next week on the podcast of This American Life, so many people this year personally feel like this election is up to them.
They've been convincing family members who to vote for, they're monitoring election
sites, they're canvassing, they're fighting lawsuits.
This week we watched them push to complete their missions.
And we hear from some of the people who President Trump has vowed retribution against about
how they feel about the results.
That's next week on the podcast or on your local public radio station.