What A Day - Nobody Puts COVID In A Corner
Episode Date: September 20, 2022Queen Elizabeth II was laid to rest Monday, marking the end of the ten days of public mourning since her death on September 8th.President Biden said in an interview that the pandemic is "over,” prom...pting swift criticism from public health officials. Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, host of Crooked’s “America Dissected,” tells us, there's still work to be done.And in headlines: Hurricane Fiona left more destruction in the Caribbean, a Russian missile struck near another Ukrainian nuclear plant, and Adnan Syed, whose murder case was featured on the "Serial" podcast, was freed from prison.Show Notes:Vote Save America: Fuck Bans Action Plan – https://votesaveamerica.com/roe/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, September 20th. I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Abdul El-Sayed. And this is What A Day, where we've been feeling sort of lost
ever since we learned that the lead singer of Maroon 5 is not a good husband.
Yes, Adam Levine apparently cheated on his wife, who was a model, with a model.
We should have kind of known if it was called Maroon 5 that there were three extra people there.
That's true.
She should have known what she was getting into.
On today's show, parts of Puerto Rico are underwater
and still without power in the wake of Hurricane Fiona.
Plus, Adnan Syed, whose murder case was featured on the podcast Serial,
was freed from prison.
But first, Queen Elizabeth II was laid to rest, marking the
end to the 10 days of public mourning since her death on September 8th. And also the end to the
very, very, very, very, very long queue for the public to pay their respects to her coffin in
London. And as you can imagine, Abdul, the funeral, with all its pomp and circumstance, commanded a
fair amount of attention. Millions of people in the UK alone watched the televised event, as did over a billion people around the world. I hear that there were lots of heads of
state present at the service, too. That is correct. At least a dozen heads of states were there,
including President Joe Biden, the vice president of China went, which feels like a low-key insult,
and also giving the event some authoritarian flair, were President Erdogan of Turkey and President Bolsonaro of Brazil.
The crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman, was invited but did not attend.
Dude's not even a king yet and thinks he doesn't have to show up to a royal funeral.
At the end of the day, though, I feel like his sense of Queen Elizabeth was that she wasn't despotic enough, right?
Like if you're not murdering and dismembering people in a foreign country, then you're not doing it right, according to him. Yeah. He needs a little bit more monarchy
with his monarchy. Anyway, I imagine all of this couldn't have been cheap. Yeah. I would assume
they were not going for frugal here. So how much did the whole funeral cost? Okay. So honestly,
we don't know. The British government hasn't made that number public yet. They've only said they'll
give details, quote, in due course.
But there are some estimates.
It's expected to cost more than the service for her mother, which cost about $6 million
when she died in 2002.
It's also expected to cost more than the last state funeral in the UK, which was for
Winston Churchill in 1965.
Fun fact, Margaret Thatcher did not get a state funeral.
She made it clear before she died she didn't want one because of the cost. Maybe the only good cost-related decision she ever made.
Overall, estimates say that the events of the past few days will cost taxpayers about 10 million
pounds, which is almost 11 and a half million dollars, which frankly seems kind of like a low
ball to me when you think of all the security costs, et cetera. And this is during a time when
the cost of living is going up for everyone across the UK, plus interest rate hikes and the pound hitting a 37-year low on Wednesday. But that is actually
only the beginning of the cost here. See, I lived in the UK for a couple of years,
and the only thing that's cheap there is the stuff that's subsidized, which,
to be fair, this whole thing was subsidized by government. So there's that.
Exactly. Exactly. So Josie, talk to us about the other costs. So there are also the costs of replacing the Queen's face on basically everything.
Everything features the Queen in England, paper currency, the stamps, the coins, the phone booths.
So now all of that will feature Charles and the transition over will not be cheap.
Plus the crown estate, basically like the royal family, has a truly infuriating amount of money,
about 18 billion pounds in assets that now has to change hands. So that's a whole other pot of
money that's being affected right now. But Abdul, enough about all the money we will never see.
I want to hear your thoughts about the queen's death and about all of the hullabaloo that has
surrounded the past few days. Look, I got to be honest with you. My grandparents
grew up under British colonialism in Egypt, and that era only ended after Britain tried and failed
to overthrow Egypt's president in a coup after he nationalized the Suez Canal, which, by the way,
is entirely in Egypt. So much of the conflict that we see now in post-colonial countries in Asia,
Africa, the Middle East, are the result of arbitrary lines drawn in the name of Her Majesty the Queen. While I think Queen Elizabeth herself did the best she
could and oversaw the largest decolonization in British history, she represented an institution
we really shouldn't be glorifying in 2022. Look, I have no doubts that she was a nice person,
and we can both praise the woman and be honest about the institution she represented.
But so much of the coverage we've heard and seen does work for the monarchy, the pomp and the circumstance, the glitz and the glamour. It pushes a fairy tale that somehow everyone deep down wants
to believe in. It was all built on the backs of slaves and colonies and dehumanizing racism. So
maybe less praise for the crown and more conversation about all the people
the crown has exploited.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I have to say, I would also be a nice old lady
if I didn't really have a job and had $18 billion.
And like 10 corgis.
I mean, I'm just saying, right?
I would be so nice.
Imagine your corgis had butlers
because like that's basically the situation there.
Exactly.
I feel like she lived a pretty good life.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, in this country,
President Joe Biden was in my hometown in Michigan for the North American International Auto Show
and sat down for, well, we'll call it an expansive interview with Scott Pelley on 60 Minutes.
Among many doozies, President Biden dropped this bomb. This president's first Detroit auto show
in three years. Yeah. Is the pandemic over? The pandemic is over.
We still have a problem with COVID. We're still doing a lot of work on it. It's what the pandemic
is over. If you notice, no one's wearing masks. Everybody seems to be in pretty good shape.
And so I think it's changing. And I think this is a perfect example of it.
I don't mean to laugh. It's just this man, he's really
unpredictable. That is a kind of wild thing to say because the pandemic isn't over. As far as I knew,
I thought people were still dying of COVID. I thought we were still in a pandemic. So please,
Abdul, tell me what this means. Well, most of the time when a journalist walks you into an answer,
you don't just word for word say what he said. But hey,
you know, you're absolutely right, Josie. People are definitely still dying of COVID. And for over
the past two weeks alone, nearly 400 people a day have died of COVID-19 here in the United States.
And that's on top of the daily average of more than 30,000 people who've been hospitalized
during that period. So no, it's not over. What I think President Biden is getting at is that cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are down over the
past several weeks. And that's despite the fact that most experts, myself included, thought that
there might be a spike in COVID cases in the fall, like there has been every fall since the pandemic
started. And well, that's good news. Very good news. So how should we be thinking about the
pandemic at this stage?
Personally, I really like the way that WHO Secretary General Tedros Ghebreyesus put it.
We're not there yet, but the end is in sight.
A marathon runner does not stop when the finish line comes into view.
She runs harder with all the energy she has left.
There are fewer COVID deaths now than there were at any time since 2020.
But we've got to sprint through the finish line, as Secretary General Gabrielos has put it.
And the Biden administration knows this.
It's why they requested another $22 billion from Congress to support testing, treatment, and new vaccines.
Which, by the way, Congress has yet to fund in case we do get another surge this fall.
President Biden's comments didn't really help that case.
Yeah.
And that's probably why the White House is now aggressively downplaying his remarks,
saying that there's no plan to lift the national public health emergency just yet.
Yeah.
So when people hear that, but they also know it's not over, but they know it's better,
like what should people be thinking about as they go into the fall?
Like what should people be thinking about as they go into the fall? Like,
what should they be doing? Today would be a good day to get your next vaccine dose if you haven't gotten it already. Even if cases aren't increasing, we still want to be careful,
as a new variant could still yet emerge. Remember, this virus has a lot of tricks up its sleeve.
While it may just have worn out the usefulness of the Omicron set of variants,
there could always be a whole new set around the corner. It's better to be safe than sorry. Oh, and while you're at it, get your flu
shot too. I'm all flu shot it up. That makes me happy. Anyway, that is the latest for now. We'll
be back after some ads. Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
First, an update on Hurricane Fiona.
As we go to record tonight at 9.30 p.m. Eastern Time,
about 100,000 people in Puerto Rico have had their electricity restored.
But the majority of the island is still without power and could be for several days.
Governor Pedro Pierluisi told reporters on Monday
that at least two people have died
and rescue efforts are underway
to help residents stranded by flooding.
President Biden pledged that he would send
more federal workers to Puerto Rico
in the wake of the widespread damage.
And Dean Criswell, the head of FEMA,
is scheduled to travel to the island today.
Meanwhile, Fiona is still on the move.
Yesterday, the Dominican Republic
declared a state of emergency after the hurricane triggered heavy rainfall and landslides there.
Fiona is expected to pass through the Turks and Caicos islands today,
and forecasters say the storm could grow into a Category 3 hurricane or higher by Wednesday.
A Russian missile came close to hitting another nuclear plant in Ukraine on Monday.
Now, this isn't the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant we've discussed on the show before.
Monday's airstrike hit the area surrounding the South Ukraine nuclear power plant,
which is the second largest atomic energy facility in that country.
The attack damaged some industrial equipment near the plant, but thankfully none of the
plant's reactors or employees were harmed. This comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin
threatened to attack more Ukrainian infrastructure last week. Ukrainian authorities declared yesterday's missile attack an act of, quote,
nuclear terrorism. Russian officials have yet to respond to those accusations.
But also, who fires missiles near a nuclear power plant?
Yeah, it's not.
An American held hostage in Afghanistan was freed in exchange for a prominent member of
the Taliban yesterday morning. Mark Frerichs, a Navy veteran and civilian contractor, was kidnapped over two years ago and was believed to be held by a terror
group connected to the Taliban. In exchange, U.S. authorities released Bashir Noorzai, who had been
convicted of drug trafficking back in 2008 and was serving a life sentence in the United States.
This is the first prisoner swap since the Taliban retook power last year. Both sides had been
privately negotiating the exchange for months, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the same work will be done to free other
Americans detained abroad. A federal judge said that ousted Florida prosecutor Andrew Warren will
not get his job back, at least for now, following his suspension by the state's governor and lead
Mickey Mouse antagonist Ron DeSantis. DeSantis suspended Warren last month because Warren
wouldn't prosecute people
under laws punishing abortion and trans health care. Warren challenged the decision in court,
saying it violated his right to free speech. The judge hearing the case denied Warren's request
for a preliminary injunction, and it looks like the dispute will head to trial in the next few
months. Among the outrageous things that Ron DeSantis does all of the time, this is one of the worst.
Yeah.
It's really such a violation of discretion and such an impediment on the rights of the system to decide what they want to go after.
I feel like Dutcher figure out if he's getting one of those free flights to Martha's Vineyard that the governor seems to be so interested in spending $13,000 a pop on.
Right.
That very well might be its own crime.
I can tell you that if Andrew Warren were over-prosecuting people, no one would take
his job away.
It's only when they think he's quote-unquote under-prosecuting, which he's not, that they
get upset.
Disgusting.
On that note, over-prosecuting.
Yeah.
Adnan Syed, who was featured in the wildly popular podcast Serial, walked out of prison
yesterday for the first time in over 20 years.
If you're not familiar with the case, Syed was convicted of the 1999 murder of his ex-girlfriend, Hayman Lee.
We mentioned on our show last week that Baltimore prosecutors filed a motion for a new trial because they said the evidence in the original case wasn't properly handled.
A judge agreed by vacating his conviction and ordered him to be released without bail.
A crowd was waiting for him as he left the courthouse.
Prosecutors now have 30 days to decide if they want a new trial.
Meanwhile, the serial team announced that they're dropping a new episode to follow up on the case
because one should never miss an opportunity to drop a new podcast episode.
I have thoughts about the serial team's responsibility in their first podcast about this,
but I will say I'm very
excited for him and watching him walk into that crowd. That must be so overwhelming. He's been
in prison for over 20 years. It's going to be a lot. It's a lot to adjust to. And it's a lot of
bated breath, given that prosecutors still have 30 days to decide if they want to try this again.
Yeah. But it's exciting news. It's very exciting news for him. Georgia Republican Herschel
Walker is employing a new strategy ahead of his Senate debate next month, making himself so
pitiful that his opponent, Raphael Warnock, just wants to give him a hug. Walker agreed to the
debate last week, and when asked what he's doing to prepare for it, he said this, quote, I'm not
that smart. Warnock is a preacher, is smart, and wears these nice suits.
So he is going to show up and embarrass me at the debate October 14th,
and I'm just waiting to show up and I will do my best.
Oh boy.
Humility is great if your job isn't telling people you deserve to be in a position of
massive power.
Walker's campaign later said his comments were meant to be sarcastic,
which if they were smart, they'd say about every statement he's made this year.
And those are the headlines.
That's all for today. If you liked the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
don't be fooled by Herschel Walker's attacks on himself, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading, and not just Adam Levine's giant tattoo that says California,
like me, What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Abdul El-Sayed.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And stay strong, Senator Warnock.
Stay dumb, Herschel Walker.
Don't give in.
I'm just waiting for Herschel Walker to, like, try and challenge him to some football-related antics.
Oh, God.
And then Warnock actually whoops his ass.
That'd be amazing.
That'd be amazing.
That'd be incredible.
Man of God. And then Warnock actually whoops his ass. That'd be amazing. That'd be amazing. That'd be incredible. Man of God.
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 producer is Lita Martinez
our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kachaka