What A Day - Shock Me Like An Electric Bill
Episode Date: February 22, 2021The US is approaching 500,000 deaths from Covid-19. But there is good news, too: New studies suggest that the vaccines might prevent transmission, and Biden’s goal of administering 100 million COVID... vaccine shots in 100 days seems very much within reach. The extreme weather in Texas is improving, with power back on. Now, the focus is shifting to ensuring people have food and safe water. Some Texans have also discovered that the state’s unregulated, market-driven energy system has led to them being stuck with soaring electricity bills following last weeks energy scarcity. We explain.And in headlines: organizers in Myanmar call for a general strike to protest military takeover, Merrick Garland’s confirmation hearing, and the family of Malcom X brings forward new evidence in government assassination plot.Show Links:"Texas Blackouts Point to Coast-to-Coast Crises Waiting to Happen"https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/20/climate/united-states-infrastructure-storms.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=HomepageFollow Crooked Media on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/Follow What A Day on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit www.crooked/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, February 22nd. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick. And this is What A Day, reminding Joe Biden that it's not too
late to be cool about student loan debt.
Yeah, it's like I always say, you can forgive me and then you can forgive everybody else
and then you'll feel better. That's that's a saying.
Mm hmm. That's yeah, it's an old adage people might not know, but...
You should know it.
On today's show, an update on the situation in Texas
and what's causing some people to see spiking power bills,
then some headlines.
But first, the latest.
You and the president have suggested
that we'll approach normality toward the end of the latest. You and the president have suggested that we'll approach
normality toward the end of the year. What does normal mean? Do you think Americans will still
be wearing masks, for example, in 2022? You know, I think it is possible that that's the case.
And again, it really depends on what you mean by normality. Right. That's what I want you to define it.
If normality is exactly the way it... That was Dr. Fauci on CNN yesterday saying that it's possible that Americans will still have to wear masks in some settings next year.
He went on to say that combining high amounts of vaccinations with low cases could change recommendations of universal masking.
And on that note, things are moving in the right direction in the U.S. still, but we are quickly approaching a devastating 500,000 deaths from COVID or have already hit
that, according to some estimates, now roughly one year into the pandemic. That's more than the
U.S. lost in World War I, World War II, and Vietnam combined. Yeah, it's really hard to even
put into words or understand. And the crazy thing is I was reading that in late March of last year,
Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx said at a briefing that even with strict stay at home orders,
the virus could kill 240,000 Americans, which at the time sounded sort of alarmist to people.
And now here we are. But as you said, we're luckily in a moment where the trend lines are
continuing to move in the right direction. There were about 71,000 cases reported Saturday,
for instance, which is down from more than twice that a month ago. The averages have been good. Then on vaccines,
the CDC is reporting that over 63 million doses have been administered so far. But the awful
winter weather much of the country experienced this past week slowed that down quite a bit.
Yeah. And what have public health officials been saying about that?
So as of last Friday, the White House said that the weather had delayed distribution of about 6 million doses overall. So now what this week is
going to be about is trying to play catch up quickly. Andy Slavitt, the White House senior
advisor on the government's pandemic response, said that the administration is going to be asking
states to extend hours and reschedule appointments that were canceled because of the weather.
That's according to the Washington Post. And then even in places throughout the country that aren't experiencing the weather directly, there have been reported
delays as part of this. On Sunday, Fauci expressed optimism about the ability to catch up by the
middle of the week. And then broadly speaking, we have talked about that 100 shots in 100 days goal
from the Biden administration rolls off the tongue, which now seems very much in reach,
which is great, especially given that daily averages were over 1.5 million before the storm, according to the AP. So because it's been good, some public
health experts have said they want to see those numbers hitting about 3 million daily to really
speed this up. Yeah. And as more people get vaccinated in the US and worldwide, we're
continuing to get more data. So what's the update on the science end of everything?
It still seems good. Two main things have been a point of discussion over the last couple of days.
So there's a Bloomberg report about the Pfizer vaccine in Israel on some preliminary data that the vaccine was over 89% effective at preventing infections.
If that were to hold up, that is really solid evidence of the vaccine preventing spread or transmission, which helps on the path to herd immunity.
That analysis hasn't been peer reviewed at this point. But according to Bloomberg, Pfizer and BioNTech are working to do a deeper dive on
that data. Then piece number two, the New York Times wrote about a set of studies, again,
preliminary here, that suggested those that have previously been infected with COVID need one
vaccine dose, which sort of cuts both ways. Like in one sense, it seems to add some evidence that
if you had it, yes, you do in fact need to be vaccinated, but perhaps only just once. And some researchers that were quoted in that
article said that they were trying to make such recommendations to the CDC. We'll have to see
how that actually plays out there. So we'll follow all that, but let's get back to the winter weather
and specifically what is happening in Texas at the moment. All right. So the situation with the
extreme weather in Texas is improving. The power is back for most residents. The weather is also warming up. The focus has shifted to ensuring people have enough food, safe water and, you know, resources. And at this point, the damage of last week is still being assessed. Over the weekend, the death toll in Texas rose to at least 30, according to reporting. And experts say there won't be complete numbers for up to 90 days given how many rural areas were also hit by the storm. Yeah, it is really devastating, and people are
rightly angry about all the failures that actually led to this disaster. Obviously,
no one individual can account for the historic storm, but the shoddy, increasingly irrelevant
infrastructure across the United States isn't something that we are just learning about now.
Yeah, the New York Times had a great article about that exact point, and we'll link to it
in the show notes. But you're right, the extent to how bad it got was preventable. And the truth is,
the forecast is not that this is a one-off situation. So beyond repairing all of the old
pipes and roads and updating everything, we need lawmakers to take climate change seriously.
And also, we just kind of need new lawmakers. Like, even if you're from a blood-red part of
Texas, you got to know that this is on the people who keep getting elected into power.
Yeah. And also, it's just more and more costly every single time to have to do something about
this after the fact when you know that these kinds of things are going to be the norm. So
we know the Republicans in the state did little to prevent this disaster from spiraling out of
control. But there have also been a lot of people doing good work at the moment and trying to help. Yeah, there were a ton of great organizations on the ground. And over the
weekend, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez actually partnered with some to raise more than
$4 million for relief efforts. Ted Cruz put a 12-pack of Dasani into a Hyundai, so I guess
you can say they both helped, which is a lie because he is useless. And we're going to have
more on that in today's tip check. Also, if you're looking for ways to help, Crooked made a list of great resources.
Check it out on Instagram at the handle Crooked Media. And the last note on Texas here, there's
been reporting on people getting wildly expensive electricity bills from last week, like in the
thousands of dollars. It is deeply enraging to read. Let's explain what's going on there.
Yeah, it's absolutely outrageous. It's not the kind of money I want to spend on just being alive.
So another lesson on Texas's energy system and all the ways it can go wrong for people,
here it comes. Essentially, it's unregulated and market-driven. People are allowed to pick
their energy provider, and some of those energy providers offer market rate prices,
meaning the price of electricity can go up and down based on supply and demand instead of a fixed price. Now, picking a plan like that can be fine, but when supply runs short
and demands run high, like we saw last week, the prices can skyrocket for these customers.
We don't know how many people are getting these bills yet. Most Texans are on the fixed rate plans,
but the bills are wild. There's one guy that got a bill for over $16,000, and that's according to
reporting. And by the way, there's this energy professor, William Hogan, who's considered the architect of this free market system.
And he gave an interview last week saying that this is how the market is designed to work.
High prices are meant to drive down consumption and fix supply and demand issues.
So very cool, Mr. Hogan.
Great that we have to spend all of our money and empty our bank accounts just to stay alive.
And then some people just don't get to.
Right.
That is the definition of the free market at work.
There's mostly outrage over this from customers and lawmakers.
So do we think people are really going to be stuck with these bills in the end?
I mean, they really might.
And some people have already had their bills due and the money deducted from their bank
accounts, which is why I don't believe in just debiting those things.
Like, y'all can send me a bill and we'll talk about it.
Governor Abbott and officials in the state say they are investigating the issue and have ordered
companies to stop issuing invoices to customers until this all gets worked out. Yesterday,
Houston's Mayor Sylvester Turner called for the state to pay the bills, and I agree, get those
bills paid and get the people who've already paid refunded. Others have suggested putting FEMA
dollars towards it. Whatever they got to do, people should not have to pay for this mistake.
Consumer advocates are saying that these market rate electricity programs shouldn't have been offered in the first place because of risks like this.
It's really a mess.
One of the energy companies that offers this kind of deal is called Gritty, not to be confused with giddy or gritty.
It's gritty, like a grid.
It's a Houston-based company with about 30,000 customers. And they were telling people last weekend to switch from them to another company, which like really no confidence in
their ability to keep people warm. Some customers actually did try to switch, but couldn't in time.
So they just had to suffer. Yeah. Like you said, really free market at work. So we'll
keep monitoring this story, but that's the latest for now. It's Monday WOD Squad and for today's temp check,
we're doubling back to a story we discussed last week, the bad vacation of flying Ted Cruz.
So after he got back to Texas, Cruz got right to work rehabilitating his absolutely toxic image. In a tweet posted yesterday, he wrote hashtag Texas strong and shared three photos of him with
his sleeves rolled up, kindly touching a lady on the arm and putting small packs of water into some
cars. He also posted pics of him serving barbecue. Texans weren't won over right away
with a group of them protesting outside Cruz's house yesterday
and also hiring a mariachi band
to play in honor of his love of Mexico.
So Giddy, do you think more posts
will help Ted save his brand?
I think more posts will solidify Ted's brand
as the guy who would think to do something like this in the first place.
You know, you really can't bed in black memory stick.
Yeah, we know about it.
Yeah.
When you were caught in every single step of the act, we'll see what else he gets up
to this week, I will, we'll see what else he gets up to, uh, this week, I guess.
But yeah, I mean, doing posts where you're like, look, I helped is, is very much the
definition of Cruz to me.
So I think, um, I think the brand is strong and I think he's, he's sticking to it.
Yeah.
It's pretty wild that like, he's trying to generate buzz about how he's helping
and then like you have aoc who just like helps and that generates buzz like that's the difference
you have somebody who's actually helping and so it's obvious that people would pay attention and
then him being like hey i know you can't see me over the pile of cash that aoc just fucking helped
raise but um i'm putting one Dasani pallet into a car.
It looks like it could be my car.
Notice me.
I like the idea also of the social media person on that team
snapping those pics and being like,
Senator, we killed it.
Yeah, you look really great.
This is going to repair everything that you've done
in the last three to four days.
Absolutely nailed it, sir. People are absolutely not making jokes about how you're the worst person. This is going to repair everything that you've done in the last three to four days. Absolutely.
People are absolutely not making jokes about how you're the worst person, like that Mexico is not sending their best.
Like those jokes have ceased because of this bottled water.
That's not enough to help anyone at this point.
Yes.
You're really doing it out here.
Great job.
Mission.
Mission accomplished.
So same question for you.
Do you think these posts are going to help, Ted?
Yeah, I don't know.
You know, do you think that posting about putting water in the back of a car will help rehabilitate Toxic Sludge's image?
Who's to say?
I think that he has been garbage.
He has been useless.
He has not helped the people of Texas.
He has only been embarrassing. I mean, again, this is a man who sucks up to someone who called his wife ugly and then
threw his children under the bus when he was like, well, they wanted to go to Mexico.
I was just chaperoning on the flight.
Like, come on, man.
There's no way that anyone with, you know, in their right mind will think that you are
a good, upstanding human being.
You're not.
His character is on display always.
And it is bad.
He is a bad character.
It's like if somebody had a script and they're like, this bad guy seems too like likable. And
maybe we make him sweaty and disgusting. It's like, that's who Ted Cruz is. He is the worst
person in every script. He is to quote community, like God's build a person like he fucking sucks.
So yeah, I think his brand is absolutely intact. I think it would be hard to make it any worse at this point.
Well, just like that, we have checked our temps.
Stay safe.
Continue being a better person than Ted Cruz.
It's not hard.
And we'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines. that's been leading resistance efforts since the coup on February 1st. They're calling the strike the Spring Revolution
and asking people across the country to leave their jobs
and gather together in protest.
The military junta escalated their crackdown on protests over the weekend,
opening fire on a crowd of demonstrators and killing at least two.
Police reportedly also shot at ambulances
and threw tear gas canisters into homes.
Nearly 600 people have been detained in Myanmar since the start of the month.
Merrick Garland will appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee today and is expected to
be confirmed as Biden's pick to serve as Attorney General. Just five years ago,
Garland's nomination to the Supreme Court under Obama was tanked by the Republican-controlled
Senate, which refused to even hold a hearing for him. Republicans, including Mitch McConnell
and Lindsey Graham, tried to argue that the Supreme Court justices shouldn't be appointed in an
election year, which is something I now have reason to believe they don't actually mean.
Another Biden nominee, Neera Tanden, might not have as smooth of a confirmation as Garland.
Tanden was chosen to serve as director at the Office of Management and Budget,
but Democratic Senator Joe Manchin said Friday he will not vote for her in the confirmation process. He argues that her former tweets criticizing Republicans like McConnell
makes her unfit to run the OMB. Biden said last week he won't be withdrawing Tanden's nomination.
Lesson is don't post, you know, just don't. Never post. For perhaps the first time ever,
federal law enforcement might not have been totally upfront about their role in a political
killing. No way. Malcolm X's family released a letter this weekend that they say
provides evidence that the NYPD and FBI participated in his assassination. The letter is from a former
undercover NYPD officer who worked to infiltrate civil rights groups in the 1960s and take them
down from the inside. Days prior to X's assassination in 1965, the officer was told to lure two key members of
his security detail into participating in a bomb plot, which led to their arrest and subsequently
left X unprotected. The letter was released by the officer's family member following his death.
He expressed great remorse for the act and said NYPD officers had coerced him by threatening him
with drug trafficking charges. An investigation launched last year into X's murder and the three members of the Nation of Islam who were charged with it is active and ongoing.
The NYPD says they provided all available records and the FBI has made no comment.
The Golden Globes are this Sunday,
but after the LA Times published a scathing report on the show's inner workings this weekend,
we'll see if the little statue man holding the earth shows up to his own damn show.
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association puts on the Golden Globes, and it's long had a reputation
for giving away awards in exchange for money and access. The Times report confirmed all that
and went further to suggest that the substantial payments paid by the Hollywood Foreign Press to
its 87 members might even call into question the group's tax exempt status as a non-profit.
The Times pointed out that the Hollywood foreign press has no Black members.
Remember, too, that this year, movies with majority Black casts like Judas and the Black Messiah and The Five Bloods
were overlooked for Best Picture, probably because they didn't capture that powerful white nothingness of Mank.
One instance of shady vote-getting stood out in the report.
In 2019, Netflix flew 30 Golden Globe voters out to France to visit the set of
Emily in Paris, putting them up in a five-star hotel, showing them around a private museum,
and treating them like, quote, kings and queens. Now, Emily has a Golden Globe nom,
and I May Destroy You doesn't. At this point, the only awards I think are real are the ones
I personally have received. Yeah, I want to hear what Jared Leto did for his nomination.
I imagine it was threats, And those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
trick Netflix into flying you to France and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the absolutely vicious replies to Ted
Cruz posts like me,
what today is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And keep bumping that mariachi music.
Yep.
The earlier,
the better.
It's,
it's just an alarm clock at this point.
Yeah. It's just like being on the beach in Cancun. Mm-hmm. Takes me back. Sonia Tan is our assistant producer. Our head writer is John Milstein and our executive producers are Katie Long, Akilah Hughes, and me.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.