What A Day - Politics and Musings Live with former Senator Al Franken
Episode Date: June 20, 2025A few weeks ago, What A Day took a trip to the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival in Seattle, Washington, for a conversation with former Democratic Minnesota Senator Al Franken.His path to politics is a fasci...nating one. He transitioned from being a writer and performer on Saturday Night Live, a role he held from 1975 to 1980 and from 1985 to 1995, to a prominent figure in the political arena.Franken's journey took a significant turn when he ran for the Senate in 2008 against Republican Norm Coleman. In a nail-biting race, he emerged victorious by a mere 312 votes, marking one of the closest winning margins in Senate history. Coleman's concession didn’t come until June 2009, a testament to the intensity of the race. Franken served in the Senate until 2018. Show Notes:Check out the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival – https://tinyurl.com/mrxmy45vSubscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, June 20th. I'm Jane Coaston, and this is What a Day. On today's show,
we're doing something different. A few weeks ago, I had a conversation with former Minnesota
Senator and Saturday Night Live stalwart Al Franken. Al Franken has had perhaps one of
the wilder journeys to politics. From 1975 to 1980, and from 1985 to 1995, he was a writer
and performer on Saturday Night Live.
But after getting into liberal politics, including a brief stint at Air America, and a few books
like Rush Limbaugh as a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations, great title, he then ran
for the Senate in 2008 against Republican Norm Coleman.
And he won by 312 votes, one of the closest winning margins in Senate history.
How close?
Coleman didn't concede the election until June 2009.
Franken left the Senate in 2018, but as you'll hear, he still has a lot of thoughts about
politics and comedy, including his efforts to help one Republican senator tell better
jokes and how he's trying to help the Democratic Party reach out to male voters.
We spoke at the Cascade PBS Festival in Seattle, Washington. Here's our conversation.
Hello. Thank you so much for being here. I'm so excited to be back in Big Ten country.
Welcome to the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival.
I'm Jane Kostin, host of Crooked Media's daily news podcast, What a Day.
And I could not be more excited to introduce my guest, you know him from Saturday Night
Live and the United States Senate, Al Franken. So Senator, or should I call you Al, fellow podcaster?
Call me what my grandchildren call me.
Senator.
No, you call me Al. So, Al, how did you get from writing for SNL to sitting in the United States Senate, an
even more deplorable place?
Well, it's kind of a long story.
I grew up in Minnesota, so that helps. My dad was a fan of comedy and he loved Buddy Hackett.
Some older people here. So my dad was a big Buddy Hackett fan and so was I and a
big comedy fan and a big fan of politics as a spectator of sport.
And he was a Republican until 1964.
And what happened there was Barry Goldwater was their nominee,
and he had voted against the 64 Civil Rights bill.
And we used to watch the news while we ate dinner.
And I remember in 1963, there was a demonstration down south,
and the cops were putting tons on people's heads
and sticking dogs on them and fire hoses.
And my dad pointed to the TV and said, no Jew can be for that.
No Jew can be for that. No Jew can be for that.
And so when they nominated Barry Goldwater, who
was against the Civil Rights bill,
my dad changed and became a Democrat.
And that's when I was old enough to figure out
that I was a Democrat, too.
So how did your path get from writing you were writing for us and that.
Answer your question?
Is that what you want me to do?
It's a thing that would be cool.
OK.
Let me try to do that.
So I like comedy, too.
And I started performing in high school
with a partner, Tom Davis.
I don't know if people here remember Franken and Davis.
Yeah.
And we were two of the original SNL writers in 1975.
And we did the first five seasons.
And we left when Lauren left.
And we were Lauren again writers.
We came back five years later and did ten years with the show.
After that, I started writing some books.
I wrote one called Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations.
Nonfiction.
Yeah.
I say the age expanding as I get closer to the present. And then I did another book after that
called Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, a Fair and Balanced Look at the Right.
No? Applause for that? I also did a radio show on Air America, which I, we had a station here in Seattle and I had
one in New York, but then we moved the show to Minneapolis and in, Paul Wellstone was
kind of my hero. And in 2002, he died in a plane crash just about two weeks before the 2002 election,
and Norm Coleman was running against him, and Norm ended up winning that election.
And a few weeks after he arrived in Washington, he said to a Capitol Hill newspaper, to be frank, I'm a 99% improvement over Paul Wellstone.
And when I heard that,
I said, I wonder who's going to beat this guy.
And I thought it could maybe be me.
So during the 2006 cycle,
when I was doing my radio show around the state,
I campaigned for Democrats there and people were saying, you know, maybe you should run against Coleman. And I did that and I clobbered
him by 312 votes. So that's the answer to your question.
What do you think your experience in comedy added to your understanding of politics?
Well obviously speaking in front of an audience, which is what you do very often in comedy and writing what you're
What you're saying is very good preparation for politics
when you're performing for an audience you get feedback and
There is nothing really can substitute for that. It's different than running for office.
But I love doing the show.
I love doing Saturday Night Live.
I'll tell you about one sketch that Tom and I wrote.
People here remember Julia Child bleeding to death?
Remember that?
I do not.
Perhaps you could.
I was born in 1987, so let's just, you know.
OK.
OK.
So Tom and I wrote this.
We were watching the Today Show in the morning,
and Julia Child was on
and she cut her finger. And that gave us an idea. And so the sketch was basically Dan
Ackroyd as Julia Child deboning a chicken and cutting her finger very badly and bleeding to death.
It was comedy. Right, yeah.
Doing the voice and everything. The voice of Julia Child.
Oh, he was brilliant. Danny was just brilliant doing it.
And Tom was under the counter pumping the blood.
He had an
insect sprayer and we actually held it a week. We did we didn't dress rehearsal
one week and we didn't have the blood exactly right but we knew we had
something and on air it just was just magical. And no, it was absolutely fabulous.
And Julia Child insisted when they put her exhibit
in the Smithsonian, she insisted that that sketch be
on a TV in the set running on a loop.
I didn't answer your question, I'm sure.
You know, you got around sort of basically to it, but I actually, you told me in an earlier conversation
about a certain other wannabe comedian, senator from Texas, who may have run some jokes past you.
Okay, Ted Cruz was not my favorite senator, but he was attested to be a fan
of comedy. So every once in a while on a Monday, we come in in the late afternoon or early evening for votes, and he could sometimes come up to me and say, I saw an old repeat of an SNL where you were interviewing, Stuart Smalley was interviewing Michael Jordan, and it was hilarious, and and I'm going, you know what,
he's not so bad.
So every once in a while, he would like, he fancied himself as funny and he would try
jokes out on me.
So this is 2016 where he's running for president and he says I've written a joke and I
want to try it out for you and I went okay and
so he starts telling this joke and
It goes on and on the setup
Goes on and on and at a certain point. I I'm guessing that the punchline is
Hillary's phone Uh-huh, and punchline is Hillary's phone.
Uh-huh.
And then he says, Hillary's phone.
So I said, okay, your audience will laugh at that joke.
But I have to tell you that I knew what the punchline was going to be before you said it.
Now he gets really mad.
Okay, you tell me a joke.
This is Ted.
So I say, okay, and I know it's got to be a quick setup
and a punch line that he can't possibly anticipate.
So I say, okay, what don't you want to hear
after you've blown Willie Nelson?
And Ted tries to, tries to, and gives up very quickly and I say, okay, what don't you want
to hear after you've blown Willie Nelson?
I'm not Willie Nelson. Now Ted wanted to hate the joke, but goddamn that's a good joke. It's
not my joke. And I'm sure somebody here has heard it and didn't yell out the punchline,
so I appreciate that.
We'll be back with more of my conversation with former Minnesota Senator Al Franken in just a minute.
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And we're back with more of my conversation with former Minnesota Senator Al Franken.
Let's talk about Donald Trump. What has surprised you the most about Trump 2.0, Empire Strikes Back?
Boy, oh boy, there's so much.
You know, there's no Jim Mattis's in this iteration. He was the Secretary of Defense and this time we have Pete Hegseth.
So that that was kind of shocking to me. Let's see what else. How corrupt it is. this meme coin.
What's that? I mean, that is corruption just writ large
and there is absolutely no shame.
And the sons are, I guess Donald Jr.
is starting this executive branch.
Is that the thing it's called?
It's like a-
It's like a private club. Executive the thing it's called? It's like a club that you can join for just
$500,000. So the corruption is surprising me.
I also just can't imagine giving $500,000 to Donald Trump Jr. It would be safer giving
it to a cat. Well I assume that you get credit
for it from all the Trumps and it's a bribe isn't it? I hope that Eric's Trump
isn't like what about me? Well he hadn't thought of it so you know
shame on you Eric and no I mean they're they're giving pardons out for people who give a million dollars.
I mean, it's unbelievable.
Let's see, what else has shocked me?
The executive orders, the first, not the first executive order, but on the first day we had
the executive order which pardoned everyone who, know engaged in the January 6th riots
and you know Capitol Police had died because of that and it just I find it
nauseating that that was the case. Is this enough? I mean we could keep going
yeah we could we could we'd just be all night. But I'm curious how you think Democrats should and shouldn't
respond to this.
Well, we should express our outrage.
We should go out and campaign.
I like the fact that Bernie is doing what he's doing,
and AOC does what she's doing with him.
I like that this is not directly at him, but I
like that Democratic members of Congress are going to Republican districts and
having town hall meetings. That's very productive and I think we should be
fighting them every inch of the way, certainly on this latest legislation,
the big beautiful bill that is this enormous tax break for those at the very top.
And so we should be campaigning against that.
And that's... So something, Democrats are kind of obsessed with the idea of messaging, how to message
to people.
Sure.
How should Democrats be talking to voters?
Well I mean there's nothing magic.
Some people are really good at it.
We've had two brilliant, genius candidates in the last 30 years, Clinton and
Obama, and they were very good at it. But I just think that the way to talk about it
is be genuine, and people respect that. They respect that you're giving them the argument.
people respect that they respect that you're
giving them a The argument isn't magical and so we need to be
pressing in and doing it and continuing messaging our message
There is a lot of talk about old guard Democrats versus the new guard and there's a lot of value in that conversation
because a lot of the party elders are
elders, but
Ironically, it seems like one of the best people getting his message out is your former colleague 83 year old senator Bernie Sanders
Yeah, it's great at it
So who do you think is the best person the best people to be leading the charge for the Democratic Party right now?
Well, he's great. AOC is terrific, of course.
There are a lot of new people who were elected.
Alisa Slotkin from Michigan gave the response
on the State of the Union address,
and I thought she did a terrific job.
There's a lot of, you know, Maxwell Frost, is that?
Yeah.
Who is, I guess, the youngest member of Congress.
There's just a lot of people who are very good and we should give them a shot at doing
that.
Yeah.
Ro Khanna.
I think, I mean, it's funny.
John Ossoff?
Yeah. I think that it's funny to ask this question while we're dealing with a president who lies
all the time and then lies more about the lies that he's lying about.
But trust between Americans and the Democratic Party has been eroding for a while, but it
feels like with everything that happened with former President Biden, it seemed like that
kind of threw a stick of dynamite into it. How do you think Democrats can begin to restore faith with voters who,
not, not you guys, probably not you guys, but there are lots of swing voters, the people
who did go from Obama to Trump to Biden to Trump. How do Democrats start thinking about
how to win back their faith and their votes?
Well, I think what Biden did was a shame and he should have stuck with what he said when he ran
in 2020, which is that he'd be a transition. And now we say it.
But I mean, he obviously did a disservice to himself
and his legacy, because he had been
a good president in many ways.
But I can't believe he didn't drop out
right after that debate.
But he should have done it two years
before.
And he should have, after the 2002 midterms, said that I'm not running, and we would have
had a process that we would have picked someone who I think would have had a much better chance.
I mean, Harris ran a race in, what, 100 days?
How long was it? It was...
How long? 107 days. 107 days. Thanks.
And completely, you know, unfair to her in retrospect. I was hoping she'd win, of course. I thought she did. Her
debate was terrific, but in 107 days, you really can't do what we needed to have done.
And it's a crying shame.
Is there something that you've been thinking about in looking ahead to have done and it's a crying shame. Is there something that
you've been thinking about in you know looking ahead to 2026 and even to 2028
that you've learned that you want Democrats and you know left-leaning
progressive voters to be thinking about that we can take forward as we deal with
all of this? To stay active I mean to to stay in it. I mean don't, you know, it's
it's easy to throw up your hands and say I've had it and also it's sickening to
watch this what Trump is doing and it's every day. He doesn't stop and
I think that's part of his plan.
That's part of what he's doing.
And we have to continue to fight and not give up
and fight every day.
Agreed.
Well, Al, Senator, sir, this has been fantastic.
Thank you so much.
And thank you all for joining me in the audience and those of you who are at home.
You can listen to this episode and other episodes of What A Day at cricket.com slash what a
day or on your favorite podcast app.
You know, it's just in the app.
It's fine.
Just look for it.
It's fine. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
I like it.
That was my conversation with former Senator Al Franken recorded earlier this month at the
Cascade PBS Festival in Seattle, Washington. That's all for today.
I'm Jane Coaston.
Thanks for listening.
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