What A Day - 544 Days In An Iranian Prison with Jason Rezaian
Episode Date: October 12, 2021In July of 2014, Iranian-American journalist Jason Rezaian and his wife were accused of being spies by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and were arrested. Jason was held captive for 544 days, and he’s t...he host of Crooked Media’s podcast, “544 Days.” He joins us to discuss his experience in captivity. And in headlines: Merck asked the FDA for emergency use authorization of its experimental COVID-19 pill, Southwest Airlines cancelled thousands of flights since last weekend, and DC Comics announced that the new Superman is bisexual.Show Notes:Listen to “544 Days,” only on Spotify – https://spoti.fi/3v2QX5rFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
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It is Tuesday, October 12th.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And this is What A Day, the podcast that turns you into a blueberry if you listen to it at
Timothee Chalamet's Chocolate Factory.
Yeah.
OK, so in other chocolate factories, it is the chewing gum that does that.
But Chalamet had a different take on that part of the story.
It's a new generation, baby.
On today's show, Southwest canceled thousands of flights since last weekend. Plus, he's not a bird
and he's not a plane. But the Man of Steel is by and he'll come out in an upcoming issue of the
comic. But first, we are going to highlight one of Crooked's newest pods and honestly, one of my favorites. It touches on freedom of the press, a married couple used as
bargaining chips in an international dispute, and avocados of all things. Yeah, I know that sounds
like a mad lib, but it is not. This story starts in 2012 when Iranian-American journalist Jason
Rezaian landed a dream job. The Washington Post
hired him as its bureau chief in Tehran, the capital of Iran. And for a couple of years,
he made his mark by covering stories in ways that highlighted the regular people of the country.
But then in July of 2014, he and his wife were accused of being spies and arrested by the
Revolutionary Guard. He was held captive for 544 days.
544 days is also the name of the Crooked podcast.
He now hosts all about the experience of himself and his wife, Yagi.
Today, he's here with me now, Jason Rezaian.
Welcome to What A Day.
Thanks so much for having me, Priyanka.
I really, really appreciate it.
I appreciate you being here.
So I don't want to spoil too much about the show
because I really want people to listen. It is captivating. But the first episode touches on some of the reasons that
the Revolutionary Guard thought you were a spy, one of which included avocados, which I was not
expecting. I don't think anyone listening to the show would expect. Can you walk us through, you
know, some of the reasoning that they thought you were a spy
and then your experience processing that, how you tried to make sense of it?
So when we were first arrested, I thought that this is just a horrible mistake. I was blindfolded,
handcuffed, put in a room, sat down, and had all of these questions thrown at me. And one of them was about avocados and a failed
Kickstarter project that I had posted four years earlier. And then I realized in the weeks ahead
that no, they had hacked into my emails and looked for anything that seemed confusing or strange or out of the ordinary
and tried to concoct those into charges against me. The avocado project was the first one of many,
but these were some of the things that were used against me to justify my arrest and my detention
for a year and a half. Yeah. And I really wasn't expecting your captors
to be the way that you and your wife, Yegi,
were describing them.
We have some audio of her from the show
so our listeners can hear her say it for herself.
Dumb, but also shameless motherfuckers.
They are willing to play with people's life
for what they want.
Can you tell us a little bit more about the guards and interrogators, the people you were
dealing with throughout this process, and then, you know, your interactions or relationships
with them?
Well, first of all, I should apologize.
There's a lot of F-bombs in this show.
But my captors were, as Yagi said, pretty dumb, you know, not the most sophisticated
people.
And that's a scary
thought. I mean, they are supposedly the intelligence wing of the Revolutionary Guard Corps.
I call them the counterintelligence wing because everything about them was the direct opposite of
intelligent. You know, these are guys that have no understanding of how the rest of the world works. They haven't traveled anywhere.
They're very indoctrinated in the revolutionary dogma of the Islamic Republic. And anything that
is deemed to be opposed to the Islamic Republic, potentially dangerous to the Islamic Republic,
or things that they just can't understand, because things that they can't understand could potentially be dangerous, are seen as threats. You know, they continue their
propaganda campaign against me. It's almost six years since I've been released. They made a 30
episode series supposedly about me. Wow. I think four to six episodes would be plenty. 30 episodes,
I'm not really sure what
they thought that they were doing there. That is wild. It is wild, but it's also quite dangerous.
I mean, my wife and I still get threats on social media, death threats because of it.
Yeah. So what strikes me, even now having this conversation and listening to your show,
is how normal you and your wife sound. So during the time that you were held
captive, you know, you weren't tortured in the physical way that people might, you know, think
of when they think of that, but you kind of realized you were being tortured in other ways.
Can you tell us a little bit about your experience and how your life has changed as a result?
Yeah. You know, solitary confinement is the epitome of torture. In some ways, it's more effective than physical brutality, because your
mind is such a powerful tool, but it also can be turned into a weapon used against yourself.
I was kept in solitary confinement for seven weeks in a cell that was four feet by eight feet.
Lights were turned on all the time.
The idea is to break you, to disconnect you from reality, to make you malleable, to turn you into a caged animal.
And it works.
Along with that, I was deprived of sustenance, living on a diet of a few hundred calories every day.
I lost a tremendous amount of weight.
And so when I came out of that and when I was released after a year and a half, there was a lot of psychological scars.
But there were certain things that I did during my imprisonment that I think buffered me against some of that.
One was I found things to try and laugh about.
I also found ways to walk in my confinement.
And just being able to keep your body in motion kind of tricks your mind into thinking that you're not confined.
So those were a couple of things that I did that helped me out. But as
time went on after my release, I realized that there were going to be things that stuck with me,
things that may never go away. So while I'm able to laugh at the experience, it's not a joke.
Yeah, completely. It really was a testament to you and where you are now and also just who you are that you can listen to your show and feel like engaged and it's not as like dark. There are funny moments in it. I was just really impressed by that.
Thank you. while you were in prison about the likelihood of ever leaving? Because you are confined and
in some cases in solitary confinement. Did you realize that people still knew you were alive
and were trying to get you out of there? Did you think that, I'm not actually sure if anybody knows?
It went in waves pretty quickly. Within a few days, my captors were telling me,
well, our domestic media has reported that you and your wife died in a car accident.
Nobody's coming to get you.
As time went on and I started to cultivate relationships with the prison guards,
I started to hear bits and pieces of things that were being said about me publicly.
I started to get more and more of an understanding that there were efforts to get me out.
My concern then became, am I going to spend many years here?
It was less, am I going to die in here?
And more, am I going to get old in here?
And I tell people that I feel like I spent the perfect amount of time in prison.
Long enough that, you know,
it left an imprint that's never going to go away, short enough that the anger and resentment that
was developing, I've been able to confront that and move forward. Well, that's good to hear.
I'm wondering how it's been for you and your wife now, kind of through this experience of doing your
show and writing your book.
I don't know if you're reliving the experience per se, but just recounting it so often.
How has that been for you?
In the beginning, it was really hard because I didn't have the narrative in my mind the way that I wanted to tell it. And now it might sound crazy to say, but it feels more like a story that I have
to tell than an open wound that needs to heal. I hope that in telling this story, especially in
this format, we have the opportunity to affect the ways that people think about hostages, about Iran, about press freedom,
about love, about family, about, you know, the American citizens' relationship with their
government. So many different things that I think we can, you know, learn from the story that we
have to tell here. You know, now I want to ask you about all of those things that you talked about and how, you know, your opinion has changed or solidified or whatnot, but I am
going to leave something for the listeners of your show. Jason Rezaian, thank you so much for being
here today and for sharing your story. It was a real pleasure, Priyanka. Thank you so much.
While there's much more to this story, you can hear all the rest by listening to 544 Days,
hosted by Jason Rezaian. The entire series is out now for free, and it's exclusively on Spotify.
That's the latest for now. We'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Some promising news in the global fight against COVID-19.
Pharmaceutical giant Merck asked the FDA yesterday to grant emergency use authorization of its
experimental COVID-19 antiviral treatment.
Early trials of the drug Molnupiravir reduced the risk of hospitalization
and death by about half among at-risk patients with mild to moderate COVID cases. The FDA has
already authorized three other antibody drugs that proved highly effective at reducing COVID-19
deaths. However, they are expensive, hard to produce, and require specialty equipment and
health professionals to administer them. Merck's groundbreaking pill could help curb outbreaks in poorer countries with weak
health care systems. It could also be an alternative for the 60 million eligible
Americans still unwilling to get vaccinated. That isn't a horse dewormer, bleach injections,
or making your muscles really big so COVID is afraid of you, although I can confirm that that
does work. Health experts
have compared this pill to Tamiflu, the 20-year-old flu drug that shortens bouts of influenza and
blunts the severity of its symptoms, and the company has yet to publicly disclose the side
effects, but promising data suggests that the pill is equally effective against coronavirus variants.
This is really exciting news, and Josie, you and I were talking, you were talking about how
yesterday we canceled Moderna and today, you know, we have a new people's pill.
Totally. We have moved on. We're just team whatever company is doing like decently that day.
Our allegiance has changed day by day.
Exactly. We're not loyal to the soil when it comes to our drug companies,
which I think is exactly how we're supposed to be.
Precisely.
We hope you had a better start to your week than passengers on Southwest Airlines.
The Dallas-based airline canceled more than 1,800 flights over the weekend
and suspended hundreds more yesterday.
As of Monday afternoon, 10% of the carrier's day-of scheduled flights had been scrapped,
according to the online tracker
FlightAware. There is a bit of a blame game going on and trying to figure out the root cause of
these disruptions. On Sunday, Southwest released a statement blaming traffic control issues and
disruptive weather. However, the Federal Aviation Administration attributed the delays to, quote,
aircraft and crews being out of place. As for that theory, some have speculated that the cancellations
are due to pilots calling in sick
in defiance of the company's COVID vaccine mandate.
But the pilots union denied organizing any action
and instead blamed Southwest's poor planning.
Yikes, what a nightmare.
Our hearts go out to the thousands of passengers
who are stranded across the country,
quickly becoming Halloween skeletons
as they wait on Southwest's customer support line.
Yeah, that's, um...
Unpleasant.
It's very unpleasant.
And it feels like everybody's fault.
I'm blaming everybody.
Everybody.
That's my specialty.
That's my 2021 motto.
It's everybody's fault.
Netflix's commitment to free expression doesn't extend to three of its employees,
who were suspended after crashing a virtual meeting of executives to air their concerns about Dave Chappelle's new stand-up special, The Closer.
In the special, Chappelle returns to an idea he's been workshopping for years now, namely
transphobia.
At one point, he voices his support for the trans-exclusionary radical feminist ideology,
saying, quote, I'm team TERF.
I agree.
I agree, man.
Gender is a fact.
It's just such an unnecessary
hill to die on. Why? Why are you saying this? The special has been condemned by advocates from the
LGBTQ community, including Tara Field, a trans engineer at Netflix who posted a long Twitter
thread about the special this weekend. She connected the ideas promoted in the special
to violence against the trans community. Field was one of the people who joined the high-level Netflix meeting, so she's currently suspended. Netflix
CEO Ted Sarandos has stood by the company's decision to finance and release the special,
saying he doesn't think it crosses the line by intentionally inciting hate or violence, which is
below the bare minimum of what anyone's looking for when they watch a, quote, comedy special.
Certainly.
And I mean, in addition to, you know, this being bad, not particularly interested in watching this, the point that this is a virtual meeting that these people were able to crash
means that someone who was invited to the meeting wanted, like, slacked them the link
and was like, show up.
Right.
Nobody just like randomly stumbled upon the executives meeting.
The meeting and like walked into the room.
No, like.
Totally.
Multiple people.
We need more answers.
Just so you guys know, Priyanka and I are on it.
We will let you know what has happened with the Netflix brouhaha.
Wadpod investigates.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's not all bad in the world of queer news.
Yesterday was National Coming Out Day and DC Comics marked it by announcing that the
new Superman is bisexual and will fall for a male reporter in an upcoming issue of the superman
son of cal l comic series this superman is john kent the son of clark kent and lois lane
as a bi superhero his powers are flying heat vision and having way more potential matches
on hinge the superman son of cal l writer said that the idea of replacing the original Superman
with another, quote,
straight white savior felt like a missed opportunity.
This new Superman is far from the first queer superhero
and comics haven't shied away from commentary
on major social issues in recent years,
but experts say that the visibility
and archetypal American nature of Superman
does make this coming out a big deal.
For all the Superman stans, new and old,
the newest issue of the series
will be released on November 9th.
A happy national coming out day to all.
I feel like this is so exciting.
I mean, I don't know anything about comics.
Me either.
Okay, so we're in good company.
But I have, I do know who Superman is.
I mean, generally.
Yes, that is definitely one of like the biggest.
I mean, if you and I know who we're talking about, definitely a big deal. Also like cool detail
that he's falling for a journalist. Yes. Dreamy folks. I love it. I love it. And those are the
headlines. One more thing before we go, Love It or Leave It is back with weekly live shows at
Cine Lounge Outdoors in Hollywood through November 4th.
And this week's live show, Love It, is joined on Stage Bar.
Beloved Akilah Hughes, who we love so much, plus Solomon Giorgio, Brandon Wardell, and Larry Wilmore.
Listen and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, match with Superman on Hinge,
and tell your friends to listen.
Seriously, why am I married?
I should be matching with Superman on Hinge right now.
And if you are into reading and not just blinking red departure times at airports like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at Cricut.com slash subscribe.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And make COVID afraid of you with vaccination.
Or your pill, if it gets approved.
Otherwise, don't be taking random pills.
Yeah, don't take a pill that anybody tells you is the Merck pill because it's not out yet.
They're lying to you.
At least not like on our advice.
We've covered our bases here.
Yeah, we're not doctors.
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