What A Day - Don't Touch That Dial, The Coup Hearing Is On
Episode Date: June 9, 2022The January 6th House committee finally begins its hearings tonight. The committee intends to lay out what happened on the day of the insurrection, the larger effort to overturn the 2020 presidential ...election and future elections. Dan Pfeiffer, co-host of Pod Save America, joins us to discuss what to expect and look out for.And in headlines: the House voted to advance stricter gun control measures, Moderna is seeking FDA approval for an Omicron-specific COVID booster, and San Francisco voters recalled progressive district attorney Chesa Boudin.Show Notes:Dan Pfeiffer – https://twitter.com/danpfeifferDonate to Crooked Media’s Pride Fund – https://crooked.com/pride/Sign up for Crooked Coffee’s launch on June 21st – http://go.crooked.com/coffee-wadFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is Thursday, June 9th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi. And this is What A Day, where we're waiting until tonight's hearing
to decide whether or not January 6th was bad.
Yes, to be clear, we think it was bad. We think it was quite bad. But we don't want to go
beyond that without hearing from folks who were there.
Yeah, you know what? This is what it means to be a critical thinker.
On today's show, we recap Tuesday's primary results,
including San Francisco recalling its progressive DA, Chase Abudin,
plus more mass shooting survivors and victims' families pressed Congress for action on gun control yesterday. But first, today is the day the January 6th House Committee
finally begins its hearings tonight.
To jog your memory, it has been 17 months since this happened.
Can I speak to Pelosi?
Yeah, we're coming, bitch.
Oh, my bitch, we're coming for you too, fucking senator.
Gotta turn down my volume every time.
Yeah, really not something you want to listen to or, you know, turn on your TV and see happening as happened to me on January 6th.
I will never forget it.
It's certainly different than Young Sheldon.
So tonight's hearing will be held in primetime and it will be the first installment of a series of hearings the committee will hold this month. The committee's intent is to not only lay out what happened on January 6th,
but to also talk about the larger effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election,
as well as future elections.
Committee member Representative Adam Schiff,
who we are scheduled to chat with for tomorrow's show,
told reporters yesterday the reasoning behind these hearings is to, quote,
expose everything that went on that put our democracy at risk
and propose reforms to
protect our country going forward. What we should specifically expect tonight are two witnesses.
One is Caroline Edwards, a Capitol Police officer who was injured in the line of duty on January 6th.
The second is Nick Quested, a documentary filmmaker who was actually with the Proud Boys that day.
And the committee is going to great lengths to keep viewers engaged.
They actually hired a former ABC News executive
to help produce these hearings.
Interesting resume leap for this person.
Gonna be cool to see that.
To get ready for tonight's hearing, though,
and find out more about what to expect
and look out for going forward,
we have with us Dan Pfeiffer, host of Pod Save America
and the author of Battling the Big Lie, How Fox, Facebook, and the MAGA Media Are Destroying America.
Dan, welcome back to What A Day. Thanks for having me.
So let's start out with the basics. What specifically will you be watching for
in this first round of hearings? Well, I think that there are two related
but separate stories about January 6th. The first one is the one most people
seem focused on, which is who organized the violent mob at the Capitol? What led to that?
Who fomented it? And that is an incredibly important story. But there is a larger story
that I think is more forward-looking that we have to tell, which is how much of the hearings are going to focus on the incredibly wide, incredibly sophisticated criminal conspiracy to overturn the
election that included members of Congress, it included the president's aides, according to
reports, included outside allies, and it even included the wife of a Supreme Court justice.
That's a story that has to be told because the violent assault at the Capitol doesn't happen
without that. And that is what they are actively and openly planning for 2024.
Yeah. And to that point, you know, we're all pretty tapped into January 6th and what happened after.
But do you expect the majority of Americans to really like engage with these hearings or even to honestly care about them,
given everything else that's happening?
And is it going to be about what sort of new information gets presented that could actually impact opinion? I mean,
we should assume the majority of Americans are not going to pay attention because the majority
of Americans are not paying attention to political news on a given day. Even the majority of voters
don't pay attention to political news on a given day. And we have 40% of Americans who opt out of
political process. But just because you're not watching that night,
or you're not watching the CNN or MSNBC coverage, or listening to the Crooked podcast talk about it,
if it becomes part of the conversation in the country, right, whether that's around the dinner
table or in family group chats or on Facebook, people could consume it. And we have seen in
polling that people care a lot about this. Even if they think the election was stolen, they hate what happened on January 6th. And the new stuff matters a lot.
And that was one of the mistakes I think a lot of Democrats made during the first impeachment was
we knew everything before anyone. So they told us what was going to happen. And then a often
compelling credible witness sat down and then told us again. And reportedly, they're holding
some stuff back in order to get the networks to cover it and people to tune in. And surprise is
an incredibly important currency in the internet attention economy. Totally. Yeah, that's a super
interesting point. And to that end, there is intentionality here about having this first
hearing in primetime. How do you think that that sort of will impact the flow of information from this,
the actual ability to get attention to it? And are there any potential downsides
to deciding to do that? I don't think there's any downsides to doing it in primetime,
as long as people are going to give you airtime when most people have their eyeballs on their
television. It's a little bit of an outdated concept because primetime used to matter a lot
because you can only watch a certain number of channels. You're like, I want to watch Chicago
Fire. But look, now I have to watch Adam Schiff. But that's not how the world works anymore, right?
The other thing that doing a primetime allows them to do is not depend on the media to be the ones
who communicate what happened to the voters. Because what that always advantages Republicans, in my mind, in two ways.
One is Republicans can, like in the impeachment hearings, can throw their temper tantrums,
their fits, and then the coverage is Democrats, Republicans fight.
And then the voters that you're most trying to reach are the ones who don't tune into
politics, are a little more inherently cynical about politicians, about the process, about
the press, and they just kind of throw up their arms and say this.
And those people don't trust the press very much.
And so they tune out.
If you can communicate directly with voters and directly with the public,
that's always a better way to do it.
Speaking of primetime and networks, one place that this notably will not be is Fox News.
They are not airing these hearings.
How worrisome is that?
And is that just something that we should expect at this point?
We should not be surprised by it in any way, shape or form.
Like the mask is off, right?
Fox, which has always been a right wing propaganda disinformation organization whose goal is Republican political power.
That's why it exists.
That's why Roger Ailes and Rupert Murdoch started it. And they pretended to do journalism because, as I write in my book, that is a way to get
regular people and other media outlets to cover what you do because you're a quote-unquote
journalist.
That is gone.
They have a financial incentive to do this because, as we remember, when they called
Arizona for Biden and initially decided not to abide by the big lie, what happened was all of their viewers
left and went to OAN and Newsmax. And Fox for the first time was not number one in cable ratings.
So what did they do? They fired the people who made the Arizona prediction. They got rid of an
hour of news. And what are they going to do? This is what is so offensive. It's not just that they're
not covering it. They are going to air Tucker Carlson, the person who has done more to spread conspiracy theories about who is responsible for this incident at the Capitol than anyone else.
And he's who's going to be on TV.
And so this is what the right wing has wanted to do, which is create a hermetically sealed information bubble where they decide what good news gets to them, what bad news gets to them.
And they are going to shut these hearings out.
That speaks to the power
of what I like to call the MAGA megaphone. Yeah. And to that point, the book is called
Battling the Big Lie, How Fox, Facebook, and the MAGA media are Destroying America. And to stick
with that point that you're bringing up, and what we're going to find and learn from these committee
hearings, how much do you sort of anticipate that this sort of hermetically sealed ecosystem
is going to be directly confronted and directly linked to the notion that people could even be
incentivized and persuaded to storm the Capitol? We should be crystal clear that January 6th
does not happen without Fox News and Facebook. I think it's important to step back and think about what really happened here.
There was a close electoral college victory for Joe Biden.
It was close.
It wasn't that much closer than Trump's win in 2016.
And in both of those times, the vast majority of Americans believed in the integrity of
the results.
In this case, independent election officials and Republican election officials testified the integrity of the results. In this case, independent election officials and
Republican election officials testified the integrity of the results. Courts with judges
appointed by Trump threw out all the claims. And no piece of evidence has ever been produced
that showed any votes were stolen. And 70% of Republicans still believe that the election was
stolen. And that is not an accident. That is the final result of a decades-long billionaire-funded
operation to build up this right-wing disinformation and propaganda operation. This is where we are,
and I think, and it's why I wrote the book, it's the most powerful weapon in American politics,
and it's the greatest threat to democracy. There are going to be several more hearings,
you know, in the coming weeks, some of which will be in primetime, some won't be. What is the best way for people who are consuming this at home to kind
of keep track of what's going on? I mean, obviously, I can think of a few daily news
podcasts people should listen to that would be a great way of doing that. That wasn't the point
of the question, I promise. Nicely done. Yes, this is the challenge for Democrats on the committee.
And I keep saying Democrats, but it's not.
I should be clear.
It's not Democrats.
This is a bipartisan committee. And the committee has to lay the story out in pieces.
They have to present all the evidence, but it can't be too complicated.
What I really hope is that the committee is forward looking about the ongoing threat,
because it is a rallying cry on the right
that January 6th was practiced.
And January 6th, that's the Proud Boys and Malicious
saying that about the violence on that day.
But it's also all of the big lie-believing people
running for office all around this country.
They have to tell this as a story.
And I think it has to be in chapters
because people's attention span are not such that if you tell half the story about this one part on
Wednesday, and then you come back on Monday, that people are going to follow that. You have to be
able to watch one hearing or consume one day of news and understand in totality one important
piece of this puzzle. Totally. That was Dan Pfeiffer, the host of Crooked's Pod Save America.
Dan, thank you so much for being here with us today.
Thanks for having me.
Dan's book, Battling the Big Lie,
How Fox, Facebook, and the MAGA Media
Are Destroying America is out now.
You should check it out.
Get your copy.
I have mine on the way.
It's actually signed, but you know.
You can get yours too.
I'm sure he'll sign it.
But who's bragging?
But who's bragging?
I'm sure he'll sign it if you run itgging but who's bragging I'm sure he'll sign it
if you run it to him
we'll be sure to keep you
updated on all things
January 6th hearings
the second hearing
will be on Monday
at 10 a.m. Eastern
and tune in to tomorrow's show
where we will also be speaking
to Andrea Bernstein
the co-host of the podcast
Will Be Wild
we'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Hours after hearing emotional testimonies from survivors and several family members of victims of recent mass shootings in Uvalde, Texas and Buffalo, New York,
the House voted almost entirely on party lines to advance stricter gun control measures on Wednesday.
These include raising the minimum age for the purchase of most semi-automatic rifles to 21 and banning high-capacity magazines.
The testimonies that the committee members heard just prior included a prerecorded video of 11-year-old Mia Cerrio of Uvalde.
She spoke about how she had to stay quiet as the gunman shot her classmates and her teacher in the head.
Several parents from Uvalde called for specific gun policies, like the ones the House voted on,
and lamented the changes they've seen in students who survived the horrific shooting over the past two weeks.
And Zanetta Everhart, the mother of a survivor in the Buffalo supermarket shooting, describes caring for her son now.
To the lawmakers who feel that we do not need stricter gun laws, let me paint a picture for you.
My son, Zaire, has a hole in the right side of his neck, two on his back, and another on his left leg, caused by an exploding bullet from an AR-15.
As I clean his wounds, I can feel pieces of that bullet in his back. Shrapnel will be left inside of his body for the rest of his life. Now I want you to picture that exact scenario for one of your
children. This should not be your story or mine.
She's right.
Of course, Republicans in the Senate
are not expected to be on board
with the same restrictions that the House is.
They're still working on a bipartisan deal
to accomplish what they can on the issue.
The time to like sit around
and talk about a bipartisan deal
is really running out.
Like you got to do something.
Yeah.
A group representing 90 women,
including multiple Olympic gymnasts like Simone Biles, has asked the FBI for $1 billion in damages
over its mishandling of the Larry Nassar sexual abuse case. To recap, over 250 women and children
accused Nassar of sexually assaulting and abusing them during his tenure as the doctor for the U.S. Olympic women's gymnastics team.
The abuse was reported to the FBI in 2015, but there was little to no follow-up for over a year after the report was made.
The FBI admitted to its botched investigation last year,
but in May, the Department of Justice announced that the FBI agents deemed responsible for the Bureau's failure to arrest Nassar sooner
would not face any criminal charges. Wednesday's claim states that the FBI's negligence allowed Nassar to abuse more victims
during that time period when no action was taken. And this comes after survivors of Nassar's abuse
settled with Olympic officials for $380 million last year over their negligence on the issue.
Olympic gold medalist Michaela Maroney, who's part of the group behind yesterday's legal claim,
said, quote,
My fellow survivors and I
were betrayed by every institution
that was supposed to protect us.
It is clear that the only path
to justice is healing
through this legal process.
We are approaching
the most hotly anticipated
release of 2022,
apart from the superhero
vampire thriller Morbius.
That one is for the Tuesday WOD fans.
We thank you so much for sticking around. That one is for the Tuesday WOD fans. We thank you so much for
sticking around. That's me. For Morbin time again. An Omicron specific COVID booster could be coming
soon from Moderna, which announced yesterday that it is seeking the FDA's approval for its new shot.
The company released preliminary data yesterday showing that this new booster is much more
effective against the BA1 variant than its existing vaccine. However, it's unclear how it will fare against newer Omicron sub-variants,
and there are quite a lot of them.
Since Moderna ran these tests,
BA1 has been joined by its little cousins BA4 and BA5,
which have proven to be even better at evading the immune system's defenses,
just as actual little cousins are in human form as well.
But Moderna says that at the very least,
its new booster will provide people
with another layer of protection
as more subvariants emerge.
And if nothing else,
it'll give us all a blissful 15 minutes
to sit in a chair and do nothing
while being monitored by a healthcare provider.
The bottom line,
more effective vaccines are critical right now
as the nation braces itself
for a possible fall or winter COVID wave.
Aye, aye, aye.
Okay, this is incredible news.
As someone who recently had COVID for a second time,
it wasn't pleasant, wasn't fun, had to miss out on things in my regular life.
And if I had this and was boosted, probably wouldn't have had to miss.
So that's just your message, everybody.
Get boosted when you can.
Then you won't miss out on fun things in your social life.
That's right.
Los Angeles voters proved that there are limits to how much they love malls on Tuesday
when they declined to give billionaire and titan of retail Rick Caruso
the electoral majority he needed to avoid a runoff in his city's mayoral race.
After spending almost $39 million of his own money on the campaign,
Caruso came away with
43% of the vote, setting him up to face Representative Karen Bass in November. And
progressives better hope that she beats him since Caruso's Giuliani-esque plan to, quote,
clean up LA involves hiring over a thousand more police officers and prosecuting more low-level
crimes. Further north in California, in San Francisco, voters did go full law and order.
On Tuesday, they voted to recall Progressive District Attorney Chesa Boudin by a 20-point
margin, indicating that they thought his efforts to reform the criminal justice system were making
the city less safe. The numbers don't bear this out, though. SF Mayor London Breed will appoint
Boudin's successor. A couple other takeaways from Tuesday's primaries, which were held in seven states. In House primaries nationwide, Trump-aligned primary challengers
generally lost their races against Republican incumbents, so it seems like spending 10 grand
on Bredy Calamari at Mar-a-Lago may not be enough to win you an election anymore.
Sorry to say, the moment has passed. And in New Jersey, residents voted to formalize
Take Your Son to Work Day.
Democrat Bob Menendez Jr. won his House primary to represent the state in the halls of Congress.
And if you don't know who that is, he is the son of Senator Bob Menendez,
who also represents New Jersey in those same halls of Congress.
Yeah, it's important to not look for any other possible politicians that are outside
one specific nuclear family.
That is the goal of every race.
Yeah, I hear that's the rule of thumb.
If you recognize the name, you vote for them.
Exactly right.
Historically, how it's gone.
Unfortunately, it's true.
I also wonder, this calamari, if the bigger issue is the fact that
the exterior could be bready or if the interior is too spongy,
which also can be a problem if
you drop 10,000 on it. I fear we may need to go to investigate this for ourselves. It's true.
Watt investigates. We need $10,000 to eat as much as we can at Mar-a-Lago and also for the medical
bills that will follow. Okay. And those are the headlines. One more thing before we go. This week
on Pod Save the World, Ben and Tommy are
joined by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. He was in the office, looked awesome, didn't get
the memo that he was going to be there. Fine. This is the first time a sitting head of state
has been on a crooked pod, and they discuss the state of democracy, the best comedians in Canada,
Ukraine, and gun control. Take a listen to this excerpt.
One of the big challenges we have is illegal guns
flowing across the border from the U.S. into Canada.
And our proximity to the U.S. and the gun numbers here
has always meant that we have more guns
than perhaps another equivalent country would in Canada.
So we've been really cracking down on the border.
Last year, we seized more than twice the amount of the previous year
of illegal guns smuggled across the border, and there's lots more to do.
One of the things that we're seeing with the debate in the States
is you get more and more of the American-style right-to-carry,
self-defense arguments filtering up through the usual,
more right-wing communications channels.
Things are so bad here that they are bad elsewhere is the message I'm taking from that.
That and that his voice has a vague hint of McConaughey in there.
Are you getting that?
Like just a little bit.
Not the like twang part.
Some like fry, I guess.
But like the like gravelly and like whisper.
I don't know.
I have a lot of voice commentary lately on this show.
Anyways, it's an episode you don't want to miss.
To listen, head to the Pod Save the World feed today.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
spend a blissful 15 minutes in a chair, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading, and not just the directory at malls not owned by Caruso,
like me, what today is also a nightly newsletter,
check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And it's still Morbid time.
It's never not.
Until we say it, assume it always is.
I learned about Morbius entirely from listening to Tuesday's WOD.
I was taking a lovely scenic walk and was just dying of laughter.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance,
Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me, Gideon Resnick.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.