You're Wrong About - The O.J. Simpson Trial: The Bronco Chase
Episode Date: June 17, 2020On June 17, 1994, the world screeched to a halt so 95 million Americans could watch a white SUV crawl through L.A. Today, we finally talk about the infamous Bronco chase, the men inside the car and th...e myth they left behind. Digressions include “The Fugitive,” Larry King and Jack Nicholson twice. Like previous episodes about the events of this day, this episode discusses suicidal ideation.Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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And I feel like you know I'm doing this. I'll say something now, kind of knowing as I'm saying it that it's going to inspire fan art.
And so I'm really hoping for like a vintage tourism Joshua Tree of Vagina's poster.
So anyway, all right, shall we?
I've got one. I'm ready.
Okay, go.
I mean, I've had like 18 months to think about this.
So of course I have a tagline.
It's been eight months because the length of the OK Simpson trial itself.
So if you feel like it has been forever since we started telling this story, imagine how you would feel if you were sequestered for this whole time.
You're welcome.
Okay, you ready?
Yes.
Okay, welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast that takes you away from home but always brings you back.
Oh, that's so good.
You like knocked that one out of the park.
I just heard the clean crack of the bat against the ball.
And this is like our 90th episode or something like that.
Something like that.
And, you know, we used to do one episode every two weeks and now we have one or two episodes per week.
And I'm really enjoying it.
And the majority of our correspondence is still about all the words that I'm mispronouncing.
So some things change, some things don't.
Love it.
Yeah.
Hi, I'm Michael Hobbs.
I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall.
I'm working on a book about the Satanic Panic.
And we are on Patreon at patreon.com slash You're Wrong About.
And there's lots of other ways to support the show.
And there's also ways to not support the show.
And you can also support the show spiritually by giving money to sex workers.
Yes.
Or whatever else you want to support.
And we think that's chill and good.
There you go.
And today, oh my God.
We're talking about like the biggest, the most anticipated television event in the history of this podcast.
We are finally talking about the infamous Bronco Chase.
We are.
I'm so happy.
Don't you feel like we're a soap opera that has arrived at a wedding or something like that?
I was going to say, I feel like we're jumping the shark.
Probably.
But then I feel like at the end of this episode, people will feel either satisfied or disappointed
or whatever.
And then they'll look up and be like, oh, and then there's a trial too, I guess.
I would love for you to think back over just the previous nine episodes that we've done.
And just like, just tell me what you think are salient points.
Well, we've followed OJ and Nicole's relationship as it became abusive and then more abusive
and then culminated in him committing the murder of her and Ron Goldman.
We've had Marsha Clark, who's a prosecutor and in the passenger seat of this investigation,
but is trying to reach over and grab the wheel.
Nice.
And when last we left the story, OJ was basically amassing a big legal team to start fighting
this.
And I don't even know which episode we talked about this in, but he had departed on the Bronco
case with his friend, A.C. Cowling, planning to kill himself.
And then they went to the place where Nicole was buried, but there were too many media
there.
And then he was going to kill himself in the car, but then A.C. sort of saw him and he
decided not to.
And that's where we left them, sort of in the midst of this long, slow, weird chase.
Where they have been suspended for a very long time.
Great summarizing.
And my plan after we're done with this episode is to take kind of an OJ hiatus and then pick
up the story again in like a season two.
And so we're going to talk about what was going on in Bob Kardashian's house immediately
leading up to the Bronco chase.
But first we're going to return to one of our gospels, which is the Gospel of Paula.
I mean, first of all, bring us up to speed about who is Paula Barbieri and what do you
remember about the way OJ kind of said goodbye to her before the Bronco chase begins?
Paula Barbieri is OJ's girlfriend who he was seeing before the death of Nicole.
He had basically decided to stop seeing her after all of this happened.
I'm going to rewind and replay for you Paula Barbieri's goodbye scene with OJ as she depicted
it because I want to compare it then to what we learn according to a different source.
Okay.
So she says AC hands her like $2,000 in cash and he says OJ wanted me to give you this
so you can get on a plane and go home.
And OJ is walking Paula out to her friend Tom's Jeep and Paula is saying, I love you.
I love you.
I'll be there for you.
OJ opened the Jeep's passenger door, a gentleman to the end.
I thought grimly and closed it after me.
I held my hand up to the window and OJ put his long fingers up to mine.
Then OJ said goodbye to me in a way I'd never want to hear again.
He reminded me of a boy I'd known back in high school, the class valedictorian in a
rock solid Christian.
Whenever OJ claimed that all men cheated, I'd point to that young man as proof that he
was wrong.
Now you promised me something OJ said through the closed window.
You promised me that you'll get out of California and go back to Panama City and marry that
guy back home.
And then the car pulls away.
It's very Casablanca, isn't it?
It is.
So okay, we are now going to turn to An American Tragedy by Lawrence Schiller, which I'm very
excited to tell you, uses many sources and is basically the book chronicling the defense
team, but is most essentially the gospel according to Bob Kardashian.
Oh.
Who is Bob Kardashian?
David Schwimmer.
Right, okay.
For those who don't know what that means, help us out.
OJ's friend who is a lawyer, but not like a lawyer lawyer, and he acts as OJ's personal
life coach throughout this and is like tangentially on his legal team, but is not like a key member
of his legal team.
Yeah, or he's like key and that he seems to be the one who is like OJ's kind of buddy.
And he is Kim's dad also.
Yes, Kim Kardashian.
Yes.
Yes.
And he's the first Kardashian.
He's like the little foot's mom of Kardashians.
I can tell you've been on a Don Bluth kick lately.
Yeah, I really have.
All right.
Mike, would you like to hear about the David Schwimmer cameo in this?
Really?
Yes.
What?
Okay.
I shall read to you now from Jeffrey Tubin's The Run of His Life, which tells us that Bob
Shapiro is assembling a world-class team of experts for the defense team in the week
following the murders.
And so he does this wooing partly by flying them first class, putting them up in, I believe,
the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
Okay.
If Bob Shapiro wants you on his defense team, he will give you the experience that Richard
Geer gives to Julia Roberts and Pretty Woman.
And so one of the things that he does to charm a medical expert that he's just flown in and
is trying to get on the defense team is that he takes him to the premiere of a new Jack
Nicholson movie called Wolf, which has a role played by a very young actor at the start
of his career named David Schwimmer.
Oh.
Isn't that so satisfying to know?
Yeah.
And then David Schwimmer will, of course, go on to play Bob Kardashian and the people
versus O.K. Simpson, the Ryan Murphy show.
And the world will go on to forget the existence of the movie Wolf entirely.
Okay.
So American Tragedy, the Lawrence Schiller book, has O.J. and Paula Barbieri standing
in the side yard holding each other.
I want you to leave, Simpson said.
She was teary and defiant.
I'm not leaving.
I don't want you to see this.
Look, I didn't do this thing.
I love you and I want you to stay strong.
I'll be all right.
AC has some money to get you back to Florida.
They give her the money and the book says Paula was crying but wouldn't get in the car.
AC, give her the money and get her out of here, Simpson said, almost angrily.
Kardashian and Cowlings, half escorts, half bodyguards, got Paula into the car.
It was embarrassing.
Hmm.
Paula is depicting herself and O.J. as having this fairly prolonged sweet moment where he's
like, you remember that guy you told me about back home?
Find him.
Marry him instead.
And in this version, O.J. is basically just trying to get rid of her.
Well, which one do you think is more plausible?
I am inclined to believe the substance of what Paula is saying but maybe not that it happened
so nicely as she depicted it.
You know, he's like, he's been pretty heavily sedated this week.
He's not making a ton of sense.
He's seeming kind of affectless.
It's interesting that Paula writes a scene where he's able to really like show up for
her.
Right.
And he's historically able to do that kind of thing kind of on autopilot.
So like, it seems likelier to me that like the men writing a book about like the defense
team who seem like very uninterested in Paula generally, like she's barely depicted in this.
Like I'm more ready to believe that like it happened but that like Paula's version of
it makes it maybe nicer than it was.
Yeah.
Or they had that conversation two days previously and she's sort of porting it into the scene
because it's like it's narratively more convincing that way.
That's true too.
That happens a lot in memoir and in the way that we remember things like we unprompted
will I think subconsciously kind of stitch together parts of different memories to make
a coherent story that kind of depicts the whole of a relationship.
Yeah.
And if she's giving herself that moment at all inaccurately then like whatever.
Sure.
Yeah.
So let's talk about what happens after Paula leaves.
Okay.
So it's June 17th, O.J. has been staying in Bob Kardashian's house that week because
the media doesn't know where it is and so they can't find him and surveil him.
He left his house on Rockingham when he realized it was possible for the media to like take
pictures of him and other people through the windows in the house potentially.
So the morning of Friday the 17th, the house is woken up by Bob Shapiro calling to talk
to Bob Kardashian.
The two Bob's are conferring.
Bob Shapiro says, I've got bad news.
They've issued an arrest warrant for O.J.
He has to surrender by 11 and immediately Bob Kardashian by his own account is like,
do you want me to tell him?
And Shapiro is like, why don't you wait until I get there?
So Bob Kardashian tells his fiance Denise who tells him he should call AC to sort of
get someone around to that have like a cooling effect on O.J. because AC is O.J.'s best
and oldest friend.
And Denise also is like, why don't you get the guns out of the house, Bob?
And Bob is like, yeah, I agree.
It's all kind of darkly funny because in this is an implicit acknowledgement that O.J. has
an insane temper and could blow up and do something violent and impulsive, which is exactly
what he's being accused of in the murder of Nicole.
It's a very good point, Mike.
It's almost like an acknowledgement that O.J. could have done this.
We all kind of know.
Yeah.
What people seem to be describing is just this general and maybe this fear that they themselves
are not really trying to name, but it's just like, oh, some various things could happen.
And so Bob Shapiro gets to Bob Kardashian's house.
The two Bob's are united.
They like take their Bob rings and put them together and are like form of gently delivering
bad news.
And then they go up to O.J.'s room and Bob Shapiro is like, O.J., the police have called
me and you're going to have to turn yourself in.
And according to Kardashian, O.J. just like basically doesn't react.
And Shapiro is like, they're going to charge you with double murder and you have to surrender
yourself by 11 o'clock this morning.
And it's like nine.
And then Bob Shapiro says, if you have anything you want to tell us, O.J., this is the time.
This is the last time you were going to be alone with your attorneys with no eavesdropping.
And according to American Tragedy, O.J. says, I've told you everything before.
I've got nothing to hide.
And then he starts talking about how he can't understand why they're not looking for other
people.
Obviously, these murders had to be committed by two people.
Yep.
Colombian drug traffickers, Faye Resnick's involved.
We all know the much more convincing version of the story.
It was the Colombian drug traffickers that are after Faye Resnick.
And anyway, so Bob Shapiro, I mean, well, okay, let's imagine you have Bob Shapiro's
job in this moment.
First of all, congratulations.
And I'm sorry.
What do you do if you like you go out to inform your client and you're like, the police needed
to turn yourself in in a couple of hours, they're going to charge you with double murder.
So if you have anything to say to me before you go to jail, where you probably will be
held without bail, just please tell me now.
And if your client immediately is like, I don't know why this is happening.
Why aren't they looking for two people?
I've already told you everything.
Like what do you do?
I mean, I struggle to put myself in the shoes of Bob Shapiro just because so many.
Because you wouldn't have taken this job because you're like, why would I be doing any of this?
Right.
Like, first of all, I would be trimming my eyebrows.
Secondly, I would not be representing somebody like OJ Simpson.
Secondly, I'd be massaging whatever they put into catcher's mitts to make them supple
on my face.
I mean, I don't know.
I mean, isn't the whole thing with lawyering that like you have to believe your client,
even if it's a little farfetched?
Well, yeah.
I mean, Bob Shapiro is not mandated to use a defense dictated by what his client says.
And initially he's going to be like, OJ, what if we go for diminished capacity?
That could work, right?
And he's like, no, I need a lawyer who believes in my innocence.
And like that is probably the most significant reason why Bob Shapiro gets pushed out.
And Johnny Cochran emerges as OJ's most important lawyer.
But yeah, Bob Shapiro alienates himself from OJ pretty early in the game by not being
faithful enough to OJ's emotional realities, basically.
You know, at this point, you know, they spent a few days kind of talking.
I think he can gather that OJ is like very attached to his version of events and that
it's like an integral to his identity that he's not a bad guy.
Like that seems pretty clear.
And so I think that if I were Bob Shapiro, I would be like, I am not going to try
and take this thing away from you because your whole self has been built around it.
Yeah.
But then I'm thinking like a journalist, right?
That's what journalists do.
I don't know if that's useful to a lawyer.
I mean, this is basically me saying like, if I were a lawyer, that's what I would have
done, but I don't know if I would have been a very good lawyer.
Yeah, that's where I am too.
So I guess we have a good job for what we are.
So anyway, Bob Shapiro chooses the option of accepting OJ's response, being like,
hmm, and then being like, I've got doctors and nurses on the way.
We're going to take some blood samples and some hair samples.
Okay.
He just, he kind of cages the subject, which I feel like is the response of the person
who doesn't know how to respond throughout time.
Yes.
As we remind ourselves, everything's giving.
And so OJ also suddenly seems to remember something and it's like, I've got to take
care of my kids.
I have to make some calls.
And then suddenly he does start acting as if he might be preparing to shake off this
mortal coil.
Oh, okay.
It's ambiguous because he could be preparing to go into jail, but he's also,
he's writing these letters that are ambiguously suicide notes.
They have some of the content of suicide notes, but they're not totally explicit.
Before any of that happens though, before OJ writes these notes that eventually are
going to be read to the American people later that day, OJ finds a tape recorder of
Bob Kardashian's and he starts recording a message on there, kind of like how Felicity
on Felicity would send cassette tape journals to the Genine Garofalo character.
We have a transcription of this in American Trageny.
I'm going to read to you from it.
Okay.
OJ says, Oh boy, I don't know how I ended up here.
There's apparently a long pause.
And then he says, I thought I lived a great life.
I thought I treated everybody well.
I went out of my way to make everybody comfortable and happy.
I felt very lonely at times in recent years and I don't know what it is.
I mean, I had a loving girl in Paula.
My kids loved me.
Everybody loved me, but I don't know why I was feeling so alone all the time.
Look where I am.
I'm the juice, whatever that means.
But I felt at times like I was, I felt goodness in myself.
I don't feel any goodness in myself right now.
I feel emptiness.
I don't even know what I'm saying here.
And the whole tape is about 10 minutes long.
Oh God, thank you for not reading the whole thing.
It sounds like Michelle, just these like long monologues with like these weird
repeated phrases.
Yeah, people are not very entertaining when they're in their depths.
Yeah.
And then he closes with, he seems to kind of return to public OJ at the end.
He says, treat everybody the way you want to be treated and know your friends.
Share your pain with your friends.
If I had made one mistake right now, I'd realize that I didn't share my pain.
And I think that's where I made my mistake.
Oh God, please remember me as the juice.
Please remember me as a good guy.
I don't want you to remember me as whatever negative that might end here.
What do you think about that?
It's so boring.
It's like so morose and self pitting and completely at the same time, refusing
to take any responsibility for any of his own decisions that put him in this place.
Like, why are you lonely?
Well, I don't know because you beat your wife consistently for 18 years to the
point where she hates you and it's hard to spend time with your kids now.
Why are you lonely?
Because you have a history of having these superficial relationships with people
that are just built around you being a celebrity and no actual interest in them.
Yeah, you've created a cage for yourself and it's really lonely in this cage.
Yeah, I think it's like the authentic sadness of someone totally without perspective.
Yeah, yeah, because he's like, I am so sad because of what happened.
What's interesting is that like he seems to be an anguish, but like there's no direct
evidence of guilt, right?
Like he's very sad about he's like, I don't feel any goodness in myself.
Like I don't feel like a good guy and it's like, yes, yes, you're not right now
because you murdered people.
So yes, that identity has been taken away from you.
But like, is that the reason that you're sad?
Like that's what remorse is supposed to feel like.
Like you're supposed to feel bad.
It feels like authentic evidence that he doesn't get it.
Yeah, you know, that he's like, this is about me and my pain.
And it's like, ah, it's not.
But like, that's why you killed them in the first place.
Yeah, because your emotions, however fleeting, were bigger than like two
people's right to continue the existence.
It's also so funny how he's like, man, I just I wish I would have talked about this more.
And it's like, it sounds like he talked about it a lot and that he was really
boring to hang out with.
That's a good point.
You're right.
He did.
It's like, if only I had whined more.
It's like, no, you you whined plenty.
Like that seems like the overwhelming experience of hanging out with you.
If only I had called Cato into the house more and then told him to watch football
with me and then talked over the football and told every woman within five minutes
who I wanted to date how lonely I was.
Like if only I had like leaned in harder to the like, I'm lonely pitch.
Yeah.
OK, so O.J.
does this recording and then he kind of does start doing practical stuff.
Like he calls Nicole's parents and he's like, I want you to become guardians
of our children, the medical experts come and start examining O.J.
because Shapiro wants them to photograph his body before he's taken into custody.
Do you know why they're doing that?
Oh, is that in case he's beaten by the cops?
That's a really good guess.
No, that doesn't come up.
What they're doing is trying to take photographs of his body
to show that he is uninjured, which they are going to argue is proof
that he wasn't the assailant who killed Ron and Nicole.
Oh, God.
Because they're like, how could their killer have escaped unscathed
except for this big cut on his right finger, obviously.
Except for the blood he was burping on his way home.
Yeah, except for that.
Ignore that.
Right.
This is what I like about Bob Shapiro, though.
Like, when he takes a job, he's like, bing, bing, boom.
Let's get this defense team together.
Let's fly people in and put them at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
Yeah.
Let's do a second autopsy.
Every hen house, dog house, tree house for 500 mile,
he's doing the Tommy Lee Jones thing.
I watched that movie a while ago when I was like, these men are in love.
OK, so O.J., the doctors come to give him a physical.
And Bob Kardashian, ever the practical friend, is like, O.J.,
it's like almost 11.
You need to turn yourself into the police by 11.
How do you think O.J. Simpson reacts?
I want to say negatively.
O.J. says, according to Bob Kardashian's account,
why should I hurry?
What can they do to me?
But this is also kind of the weird thing,
that they sent him a calendar invite for an arrest
rather than making an arrest.
I mean, this is what Marsha's been saying since day one, right?
That like, why are you being like, well,
if it's not too much trouble, O.J.,
can we go ahead and a ding-dong arrest
the Lee Diddley, do you for this?
Tom Diddley homicide.
We're talking about somebody who potentially killed two people.
It's very weird that this is all, like, he has to go there
to pick up his lost watch or something.
Yeah, O.J. is like, the LAPD are my pals.
They come over and use my tennis court.
They ignore me beating my wife.
Right, the law has never applied to me before.
Why should it be now?
Yeah, and Bob Kardashian apparently says,
you're right, take your time.
What can they do?
He's like, yep, good point.
And Bob Shapiro is like, no, O.J., like we do,
like my word kind of means something.
Like I would like the police to continue to believe me.
Like I work with them.
So yes, we do have to get you there by 11.
Like I'm sorry to ruin the fun.
And so O.J. apparently accepts this.
And Bob Shapiro keeps being like, please hurry,
because he wants O.J. to arrive at Parker Center,
quote, in his Mercedes, well-dressed, calm, dignified.
If an impatient police contingent found them in Encino,
O.J. would be hustled away in handcuffs,
like a common criminal.
No one was willing to say the words,
but they hung in the air.
I mean, yeah, he understands that this is a press event,
as well as a criminal justice event,
and that you need to produce images
that are congruent with innocence.
And the perp walk thing, which is
bullshit in all circumstances.
Yeah, talk about the perp walk, actually,
because some people don't hear those words
and immediately have a clear mental image.
Well, this thing where they basically parade a suspect
from like whatever, one building to another,
as they're in the middle of the arrest process,
and it's perfect for allowing the cameras to shoot them.
Like these are the paparazzi photos we always see
of suspects being marched from one place to another.
This is not something that they do in other countries,
and this is not something that America has done
for a long time.
Like this is something that is invented for the newspapers.
This is not something that has to be a part
of the criminal justice system.
And so it's essentially the police being complicit
in the production of images that imply somebody's guilt,
which makes things much easier for prosecutors.
And so Bob Shapiro understands on some level
that I don't want my client to be front page
of the newspaper looking like, yes,
quote unquote, a common criminal.
Yeah, and Bob Shapiro, of course, is absolutely right.
And I love thinking about, in the same way
that I love thinking about Marcia Clark
on the morning of June 13th, being like,
my desk is almost clean, and I feel like my life
is like calming down.
I love thinking about Bob Shapiro
on the morning of June 17th, being like,
okay, OJ, just like really the last thing we want
is for the police to have to come and pick you up.
And for the media to get images of you handcuffed
being taken into Parker Center,
like that is the worst thing I can think of.
Yeah.
Good thing there's no chance
of some kind of nationwide media event
that highlights OJ's potential guilt.
Yeah.
So anyway, they're doing the exam,
they're trying to keep the mood light.
Bob Kardashian makes a joke that Reebok called
and asked OJ not to wear their shoes for the arrest.
And that's when Bob.
No one laughed.
So I love that Bob Kardashian and Kato Kalen
are both the kind of archetypal member
of a big family jokester holder together of things.
Yeah, the comedy waiters of our story.
Yeah.
And then the police call again
and they put the police on with Saul Ferstein,
the psychiatrist.
They also put Saul Ferstein on the phone with Marcia,
like they appear to just be passing the phone
to him and being like, Saul, waste some time,
just to say some stuff.
And so they put the police on with Saul
and he's like, I can't give you the address, I'm sorry.
And the detective Saul is talking to says
that they've issued an arrest warrant.
So that means you're harboring a fugitive.
Right.
So Bob Shapiro takes the phone
and finally gives them Bob Kardashian's address.
And so the cops are coming now.
Okay.
So we've got a hard deadline.
And like they've annoyed the police
because the police wanna have a press conference
and be done with it and they keep having to put it off.
And so they feel that this is making them look bad.
Which it is.
Yes.
Which it is.
Also accurate.
And also, you know, it feels like it's OJ's denial, right?
Like he has to also be like, this isn't a serious matter.
Right.
And at this point, Bob Shapiro tells Bob Kardashian,
like the cops are coming, get OJ ready,
get him to shower, put him in a nice suit.
You need to put him in the 90s pants
that are way too big that everybody wore.
That'll make him like trustworthy.
It's gonna be some huge docker.
Yeah.
So he sees off Paula and then Bob Kardashian finds OJ sitting
in the room where he has been sleeping,
which is one of Bob's daughter's rooms.
This book doesn't specify.
In the Ryan Murphy show, it is Kim's bedroom.
Picture a lot of scrunchies lying around.
That's what I picture.
Bob Kardashian comes in and sees that OJ is holding a gun
and feels that OJ is potentially going to commit suicide.
And so he's like, let's pray.
Which seems like a good,
hostile negotiator slash killing time tactic.
Yes.
But it doesn't really seem to work.
And OJ is still talking about suicide.
Finally, Bob Kardashian says,
look, you know it's between you and God.
I think it's wrong.
I don't think you should do this,
but I can't do anything to stop you.
As he talks, Kardashian wonders why he is so accommodating.
Why isn't he stronger?
Why doesn't he go after the gun?
It's because he was played by David Schwimmer.
But something else is at work here.
An iron sense of fatalism.
OJ is looking at two very bad choices.
Either he kills himself, Kardashian assumes,
or he goes to prison and endures unimaginable humiliation.
To a superstar athlete who feeds off mass attention,
public disgrace would be unbearable.
And then begins this absolutely weird sequence
where Bob Kardashian seems to be slowly trying
to wind OJ down and talk him out of killing himself
by finding fault with all of the places OJ picks
in which to kill himself.
Oh, so he's critiquing the logistics?
Like, don't do it there.
I'll read you some of the scene.
First, OJ's like, I'm going to kill myself in this room.
And then Bob's like, you can't.
This is my daughter's room.
That's fair.
And then they go outside and OJ's like,
well, maybe I'll do it here.
Then he's like, no, these bushes are too close to the house.
And then Bob is like, okay, let's walk a little.
This is not funny, but it's darkly funny.
Yeah, I feel like it is in the way of you're like,
go Bob Kardashian.
He just has to do such ridiculous stuff
to try and play for time.
And it feels like having a child who's trying to run away
and you're like, don't forget to pack all these canned goods.
You will never make it with that.
And you're trying to figure out
how to make the little suitcase too heavy for them to carry.
And so they're outside the house.
And Bob's like, why don't you kill yourself
in the yard out here?
That way you'd be away from the house a little bit.
And then OJ says, I'd be baking in the sun.
I don't want to bake in the sun.
What?
And at this point, he's actually kind of contradicting him.
So he's kind of almost trying to talk him into it.
He's like, you're not going to be here.
You're going to be gone and your spirit will be gone.
What do you care if you're baking in the sun?
And OJ's like, I just don't want to be baking in the sun.
Wow.
And so they're like, okay.
Championship contrarianism or someone's like,
I don't want to kill myself for this reason.
And you're like, eh, that's not that good of a reason.
It's very like, it just feels very like a moment
of true friendship, you know?
Whatever else you can say about the contents of it.
We're like, they keep walking around.
And then OJ's like, I'll kill myself there.
And then Bob's like, no, that's like right in front
of the picture window in the living room.
That way I can't sit in the living room
without thinking about you killing yourself.
You can't do it there.
This goes on for a really long time.
Like, yeah, like I feel bad for laughing,
but it's really weird, right?
Well, it's also actually very wise
because my understanding is that what we know about suicide
is that it's much more impulsive than intentional.
And so if you can delay somebody from killing themselves
for like a night, and oftentimes the impulse passes.
Right.
It's just like getting him through the moment.
Yeah.
And Bob's like, why don't you go to the Bel Air church?
You were married there.
And so he's like, great, I'll go there and kill myself.
And so Bob Kardashian has been playing along to this point.
But now that Simpson's like, yeah, okay.
AC will take me there.
Let's do this.
Bob is like, no, we can't let this happen.
And he's like, AC, we've got to stop him.
And finally, Bob kind of like gives it up to God.
He's like, you take care of him, AC.
Like you're in charge now.
And then he's like, let's all take pictures.
What?
Like they're at Disneyland?
What is this?
I think he's just playing for time.
I think Bob Kardashian is just like, ah, pictures.
And then next he'll be like, oval team.
You can't leave without oval team.
So they take these pictures.
Now Kardashian turns his back on his friend of 24 years.
A man should be allowed to kill himself
if he wants to, he growls to himself.
Kardashian walks upstairs to rejoin the doctors.
The police should be here any minute.
His last act as a friend is to leave the athlete alone
to define his life as he wishes.
And I believe you might know what happens next.
So they take these photos, Kardashian goes upstairs.
And then the next thing they know, OJ and AC are gone.
Okay.
Yeah, Bob Kardashian may have let his license lapse,
but he's still enough of a lawyer to be like,
well, I wouldn't know anything about anything
that's transpired in the last 20 minutes.
What are I?
So then they're gone.
The police show up.
They're like, we'd like to take OJ and Nell.
They look for him.
They can't find him.
They realize AC is gone too.
And then the news breaks that he's gone.
Let me actually, let me share some video with you now.
Ooh, okay.
So we're skipping ahead a little bit
to when the white Bronco was first broadcast on the news
because the first news helicopter to find the Bronco
was piloted by Zoe and Marie Couture
who were experienced helicopter journalists in LA.
And helicopter journalism was apparently
a pretty robust field there
because people in Los Angeles were used
to televised car chases.
Oh, right.
And was something that I think people
in the Los Angeles area were apparently used to at the time
but that nationally was weird for people.
And so it was this kind of like novel thing
where like something from LA suddenly like jumps
to a national experience,
which I guess also happens with like weird donuts and stuff.
This was the first step in the path
that led to those like Fox specials
on like the most dangerous car chases or whatever.
Oh yeah.
And also, you know, the cops,
genre cops had been around for years at the time,
but this is like the rickety roller coaster
that we are now trapped on.
Yeah, crime as entertainment.
Crime as entertainment.
And also like the American viewers love
of sort of the communal viewing experience
and of processing news as a live event.
And this is a really powerful example of this
because this was, you know, first picked up
by choppers in LA, broadcast around the country.
There was an NBA playoff game happening that, you know,
what I'm gonna show you is that game
being cut into by this Bronco Chase
and then you can keep watching it in like the tiny TV,
the picture in a picture,
but it's very hard to follow basketball that way.
This was something that was deemed by various, you know,
turners of whatever switches need to be turned
for this to happen.
Where are they being seen by what turned out
to be an audience of 95 million people?
Whoa, that's a third of the country.
Isn't that incredible?
Whoa.
For context, that year's Super Bowl audience
was about 90 million.
Oh, wow.
So, okay, Simpson never made it to the Super Bowl,
but if he had, he would have had a smaller audience
than he had in this moment.
Unbelievable.
Do you have any memory of this?
Cause you were like 11.
12.
Okay.
Yeah, I remember my parents beckoning me to the TV
to be like, look at this.
I didn't know who OJ Simpson was
or I had heard nothing of this,
but I knew it was a huge deal.
Cause I remember we watched it for like that evening.
Yeah. And what do you remember seeing?
Like, what did it look like?
It's just this very boring footage of a car
driving down the road with like this squadron
of police cars behind it that in my memory
are in like a flying V,
but I think they're probably not in real life.
I think at the time I thought he was going
like 60 or 70 miles an hour,
but I've since learned that he was going like 35 or something
that it was like not a high speed chase.
Yeah.
It's funny that it's called a chase
because I don't know if it ever technically was.
It's like, they're following him.
It's like a moving negotiation more than a real chase.
Cause he's not like speeding down streets,
trying to shake them.
It's a moving standoff.
Right.
But anyway, yeah.
So let's watch this footage.
This is the Bronco chase.
Cause imagine you're a sports ball fan, Mike.
And this is what you're watching.
Do you want to do one, two, three, go?
Yeah, let's do it.
Three, two, one, go.
All right, we're seeing basketball.
It's a red team and a white team.
Oh, black screen, special report.
Special report, that beautiful 90s news graphic.
I love that.
California highway patrol is in pursuit
of a white Ford Bronco.
And it might contain OJ Simpson and a friend.
It's, yeah, just helicopter footage of this car
driving on an empty freeway.
What does this remind you of?
Cause it reminds me of something very specific.
Speed, the movie speed.
That's probably not what you were thinking of.
I was going to say it reminds me of watching
the footage of September 11th
and watching the news commentators talking
as they're watching.
Yeah.
Because you can hear them processing in real time
what they're seeing and what you're seeing.
Right.
They're just having to talk through stuff
and to keep talking cause that's their main job apparently.
I also love the weird in-human speech patterns
of announcers, TV announcers during these situations
where they're like, it's a car.
It appears to be white.
We think it's driving on a freeway.
I know, you can hear how empty that language really is.
We now have like what's five cop cars
following behind him.
And are they in a V?
No, unfortunately.
Yeah.
It's funny cause I have that mental image too
and I don't know why.
Like do I imagine that they're like geese?
Oh yeah, there's no other cars on the freeway.
If you were trying to watch this basketball game,
I mean, I can't even see the ball, you know.
And they just said,
O.J. Simpson's holding a gun to his head.
Yeah, so the public has a lot of information actually.
And they're getting accurate information.
Like what's being reported turns out to be true,
which is kind of weird for a situation like this.
Yeah.
Oh, so they think he's on the way to his mother's house.
Okay.
O.J. is talking to the police
and then these news anchors are being told
that O.J. is saying, I want to see my mother.
Take me back to Rockingham so I can see my mother.
That's his demand.
Man, L.A. is big.
He's been turned for ages.
Yeah.
Okay, so now they're talking about spectators.
Right.
And as we cut to a wider shot,
you're going to start seeing people lined up,
pulled over and against that barricade
that separates the different lane directions.
And they're pulled over and looking at O.J.
Oh yeah, he says people are getting out of their cars
and waving at O.J. Simpson.
It looks like a parade, doesn't it?
Yeah.
Oh, and look at that overpass.
Do you see that?
Oh yeah, wow.
Packed overpass of people watching slash waving.
This broadcast has been going on for 11 minutes,
which means that people have had 11 minutes
to be hearing about this on the radio.
See, look at all those cars.
Yeah.
They're seeing it on TV.
They're figuring out where O.J. is going
because they know where basically on the freeway he is
and they know that he wants to see his mother.
So, you know, they know that he's going back
to Rockingham presumably.
So they know where he's going to be passing pretty much.
Yeah, it's like a marathon route or something.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like he's got the ball again, right?
And he's running and he's got a, you know, wrong sport,
but he's got to get home.
Right.
You can hear people cheering very faintly in the background
and I don't even know if that's from the basketball game
or the O.J. footage.
And so the argument that we're going to see
about O.J. as a cultural figure basically
from this moment forward is white people looking
at the fact that there are people in the black community
who everyone can see on TV holding up signs,
encouraging O.J. to escape and going to the sides
of the freeway and trying to spot him
and cheering and supporting him.
After these images are on the news,
this tidal wave of reactionary white pundits
who are like, this is wrong.
I see my high horse, I'm getting it from the stable
and I am sadly not my friends.
And I have no idea what the feeling was
in various black communities at the time
because I wasn't there.
But my guess is that it's nice when you're used
to the police just murdering people who look like you
to have just one person, one black person
who can say of the police, quote,
why should I hurry?
What can they do to me?
Right.
I mean, I can see why people knowing what we know
about the LAPD at that time would have just instinctively
not believed the police accounting of the events.
Yeah.
A knee jerk disbelief of the police is no more illogical
than a knee jerk belief of what the police say.
Yes, the police lie.
The LAPD especially lie.
Like even among police, they're known for lying
and they're known for brutality.
And that's especially obvious to everyone
because this is three years after the beating
of Rodney King, the vicious beating of a man
for the crime of speeding.
Right.
Okay, I'm gonna turn off the sound
but let the video keep going.
Okay, so what do you think of all that?
I think it was a big deal
because the media made it a big deal.
Right.
Like it's not like people were watching this basketball game
and they were like,
I don't wanna be watching this basketball game.
I'm gonna call and demand this car chase.
Right.
Taking place in a city that I probably don't even know
what I'm looking at or where it is or why it's significant.
Because the only reason that this is significant
is because of his celebrity.
That I imagine there are chases like this in LA
relatively frequently and we don't interrupt NBA finals
for them.
There are much better chases in LA.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's really the actual story here
is like troubled celebrity wanted by cops
which is really not a national story.
But that's the entire dynamic of the OJ Simpson trial
from day one, right?
Is that it was never really all that unique of a story.
It was simply two things that Americans love,
celebrities and crime.
So do you think that this is like,
that the media made this a story?
I mean, we've had other celebrities like we had Phil Spector
who was accused of crimes
that I am not super familiar with the details of.
I believe murder.
I think, I also think murder.
And the reason I'm not familiar with that
is because it wasn't a massive media frenzy for a year.
It was just like a really sad story.
And so you can imagine OJ being treated the same way.
What's interesting is OJ was not even that big
of a fucking celebrity.
He was retired.
It had bit parts in the naked gun.
Yeah.
Like surely a lower level of celebrity
than like recording Be My Baby.
Right.
It's like pretty incredible that the network's dedicated,
I don't know, four hours to this.
This is like an hour.
Okay.
But yeah, an hour of like, and we're watching it.
And like, you're like, this is boring.
Yes.
There's literally nothing remarkable about this car.
Right.
I mean, you can imagine this not being on TV
and the OJ Simpson trial playing out differently.
Oh yeah.
You know, it would have been in the newspapers,
but you can imagine it being like page 12, page 13,
not this national media obsession.
I think so much of what ended up happening
was set by this template of interrupting
an NBA finals basketball game for,
which is a pretty big deal.
People love basketball.
Yes.
If you show something to almost 100 million people
and they all experience it together,
then like when it shows up in the news again,
like when that person is in the news again
because he's going to trial, you know,
then people will be like, I remember that.
Yeah.
And like, it's significant to me.
Like I was part of it.
And therefore I'm invested.
So like, let's watch this trial.
Like how much of it was that?
I think that's a very important question.
Right.
I think we were starting to have both
the mercenary quality of broadcast media
and the technological capability
in a way that allowed us to have
more and more live spectacles like this.
Yeah.
Do you know what's going on inside the car?
Yeah.
What do we know about that?
So shortly after OJ and AC takeoff,
OJ who has a cell phone with him
calls Nicole's dad who was at Nicole's condo
going through her things.
And OJ is like, I'm going to come by.
And Nicole's dad is like, okay.
And then he calls the police.
So by the time OJ gets to Nicole's house,
the police are already all over the place.
And so he spots them from far away and avoids the area.
And from there he heads to her grave.
And again, there's too much heat there.
So he avoids it.
District Attorney Gil Garcetti holds a press conference
and says, you can tell that I am a little upset
and I am upset.
This is a very serious case.
Many of us perhaps had empathy to some extent.
We saw perhaps the falling of an American hero.
To some extent, I viewed Mr. Simpson the same way.
But let's remember that we have two innocent people
who have been brutally killed.
I find that interesting.
Yeah, it's weird that he's empathizing.
You don't get that a lot at like,
we're looking for this suspect press conferences.
Yeah, talk about that, Mike.
Find, figure out what's at the bottom of this tote bag.
It's strikingly different language
than they use when they're looking for like
the DC sniper or somebody else.
Yeah, they're pure evil and we're looking for someone
who's the personification of every single thing
that we hate and it's basically not like a human
that we're looking for.
It's like this beast that we're chasing down.
We can see who the figure of the killer is
if the District Attorney is having a press conference.
Well, it's weird to put the killing
of two innocent people after the butt.
It's like, this is a nice guy and he used to play football
and he's going through a lot of stuff.
But we got these two dead people.
Yeah, it's interesting because just looking at the way
I feel about the way crime is covered in the media
and how upsetting I find it that as soon as you have
someone who's arrested or someone who emerges
as a suspect in a crime, they're immediately used
to promote tough on crime policy.
So as someone who just hates to see those narratives
played out over and over again so rotely
and they always are, again and again, I agree with you.
I have the response that I think people had
at the time of like, oh, this is intriguing.
Could this be fair?
It's like, wait, you're allowed to talk about the fact
that you see the alleged murderer as human.
Like you're allowed to do that in your job
as District Attorney and like I know you're allowed
to do that because of the very specific kind of celebrity
of this defendant, but like imagine how you might feel
if you did this more often.
This is like the way vegans feel when like, you know,
they take you out for a vegan meal
and you're like, that was really good
and I feel really great and I enjoyed that.
And they're like, yes, what if you felt this way more often?
I mean, it's also the power of wealth, right?
It's like wealth and celebrity.
It's wealth and celebrity.
Are the only forces that can overcome grace.
And it's not just any kind of celebrity,
it is like the fact that like there are countless white men
who grew up truly loving OJ Simpson, right?
And like maybe no one else, maybe like they feel
no positive feelings for any other black person ever,
but maybe they do feel that for OJ Simpson
because he managed to be that for them.
It is interesting thinking about the ways
in which his celebrity is specifically coded
as appealing to men.
Because we do get a lot of these like,
the American tragedy of the sports star brought down
in almost like Shakespearean tones when it comes to OJ.
The great man brought down.
Yeah, but then we tend not to have those same narratives
of like women when they fuck up.
It's clear that the emotions of the men
who are running media organizations
is wrapped up in all of this.
This is like the intersectionality
of this whole media event because you have like,
he is a man who is loved by other men.
He is a black man who is loved by white men
and he is a man who is loved by men.
And the fact that men have this feeling of love
and agulation for him means that they appear to be willing
to kind of brush aside the fact
that he appears to have murdered his wife.
Right.
All right, the LAPD have a press conference.
Gil Garcetti has a press conference.
And then Bob Shapiro has a press conference.
Everybody has a press conference.
His is at 5 p.m.
So Bob Shapiro begins his press conference
by talking directly to OJ and says,
for the sake of your children, please surrender immediately.
And as being calm and being his Bob Shapiro self.
And also maintaining this idea,
because he's also playing to the cameras to some point too.
So he also wants to reinforce OJ's innocence at this point.
Yes.
And also reinforce his own competence
because then he's talking to the cameras
and he's like, I have arranged many situations
where some of my defendant has to turn themselves in.
And for example, I arranged the surrender of Eric Menendez.
This is going on his show real.
And it is at this point that Bob Kardashian reads OJ's letter
to the press in public.
I'm not clear on his decision-making process.
Like he doesn't even know if OJ is alive.
He doesn't know where he is.
Bob Kardashian apparently is pretty convinced
that OJ could very likely be dead right now.
And then also I feel like if he thinks,
well, maybe OJ is alive,
then he could also be reading it from the perspective of,
this is going to make my friend look more sympathetic, I think.
Okay.
But anyway, Bob reads the letter, which begins first.
Everyone understand I had nothing to do
with Nicole's murder.
And Bob Kardashian reads, I've had a good life.
I'm proud of how I live.
My mama taught me to do unto others.
I treated people the way I wanted to be treated.
I've always tried to be up and helpful.
So why is this happening?
Oh God.
Nicole and I had a good life together.
All this press talk about a rocky relationship
was no more than what every long-term relationship experiences.
All of her friends will confirm
that I've been totally loving and understanding
of what she's been going through.
Not true.
At times I felt like a battered husband or boyfriend.
Oh my God.
But I loved her, made that clear to everyone
and would take whatever to make us work.
God, he had to throw that in, didn't he?
Yeah.
You know, sometimes I felt like a battered husband
because she's so terrible.
But anyway, she's recently died and I didn't do it.
It's like, really dude?
You can't just skip that clause one time?
Yeah, he couldn't not say it.
I felt like a battered husband.
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
And so he concludes with, don't feel sorry for me.
I've had a great life, made great friends.
Please think of the real OJ and not this last person.
Jesus Christ.
Thanks for making my life special.
I hope I helped yours.
Peace and love OJ.
And then inside the O and the OJ is a happy face.
It's like an Elle Woods move.
I think that's how he signs autographs.
Oh, okay.
And so as Bob Kardashian is preparing to read this letter
at this press conference, he's nervous, obviously.
And Bob Shapiro is like, just read slowly.
Jack Nicholson has made a fortune off of speaking slowly.
I'm really interested in Bob Shapiro's
like Jack Nicholson interest.
Like, and I also love that he apparently watched Wolf
the night before, which is a movie
where Jack Nicholson is a werewolf.
And then the next day, Bob Kardashian is like,
how do I read this letter?
And Bob Shapiro is like, just he gotta do a Nicholson.
Just he sold me on that werewolf man.
So they read the letter and then they take questions.
And then one reporter asks, why did Bob Kardashian
read the letter at all?
Fair question.
Because it doesn't make OJ look very innocent.
Yes.
And Bob Shapiro says, we read it because it is the only words
that we have from OJ.
Jeffrey Tubin says, this answer says much about the care
and feeding of celebrity clients.
OJ wanted it done, so it was done.
Jeffrey Tubin does not like any of these people.
And someone asked, what are the last words he heard from OJ?
And he said, my personal words with him
were of a complimentary nature to the way I had been with him
and for him to thank me for everything I had done up to date.
He's like, always be selling, Bob.
You know what?
He said that my rates are really low and I'm always on time.
And so after the press conference,
Bob Kardashian goes back to rocking him, which
is being guarded by officers.
And they're like, we can't let you in.
And he's like, I'm OJ Simpson's doctor.
And they're like, OK.
Doctor?
Yes.
And so they let him in, and he goes to talk to Jason
and Arnell, OJ's children from his first marriage.
And he's basically like, I'm going to level with you guys.
OJ loves you.
He wants you to have all the money you need.
And so based on all that, it's his opinion
that their dad is going to kill himself rather than go to jail.
Whoa.
He just tells them that?
He apparently really thinks that's going to happen.
Yeah, because he's breaking it to them as news pretty much.
Whoa.
And Jason panics and runs away and starts to cry.
And Arnell just sits there just staring at Bob silently crying.
And he's like, your father loved you so much.
And he just felt he had to do this.
And then one of the other family members who's there,
and they have the TV on, is like, wait a minute.
Yeah.
There he is.
Jesus Christ.
I don't know if that's funny or just ironic or what,
but my involuntary reaction is to laugh at that.
It's dark.
It's really dark and weird.
And then Jason apparently is, you know,
he comes out of the bathroom where he's been crying
and is like, come on, dad, come on.
So like, everyone knows what this is.
He's making a run.
So at 2 PM that day, the LAPD has put out an all points bulletin.
And as we talked about before, there
is a couple that are on the road at about 630 heading north
on I-5 when they see the White Bronco.
And they call it in.
Their names are Kathy and Chris.
Thank you, Kathy and Chris.
And so at the same time, Detective Larry Poole
is heading north on I-5 when he also sees a White Bronco
and then quickly reads the plate, radios it in, is like, oh, hey.
So he pulls up to where he's driving alongside Al Kallings.
Al looks at him and, according to American Tragedy,
smiles nervously.
I'm imagining like a Bugs Bunny, like cartoonish shrug.
Like, I don't know what I'm doing.
Here I am, officer.
And then another cop car shows up and then
to quote from American Tragedy, the Bronco
stopped in heavy traffic at Grand Avenue in Orange County.
Kallings glanced to the side and saw two guns pointing at him.
All he heard was the deputies ordering him to cut his engine.
Kallings started screaming, swearing, yelling no,
and pounding his fists on the door.
The blows were so violent, the Broncos shook.
The traffic cleared at Grand Avenue
and the officers found themselves behind Kallings
again, traveling down the freeway.
The chase had begun.
Kallings dialed 911.
And he says, this is AC.
I have OJ in the car.
Right now we're OK, but you've got to tell them.
He's back off.
He's still alive, but he's got a gun to his head.
Let me get back to the house.
And they do.
They've basically made a demand and are having it met
by the police.
It's also worth noting, I mean, it's
so easy to forget in the midst of what this became,
but it's worth pointing out that this all worked out
peacefully.
He did peacefully surrender to the police.
And I think the excitement of watching this
was that people didn't know how it was going to end.
And nothing was happening, but maybe something would happen.
Right.
It's like watching the Indy 500 or something terrible
could happen or it could just be really boring.
And whatever happened was going to end up on TV.
Yeah.
So the news shoppers find the white Bronco.
Did they get that from the radio scanner?
How did they find that out?
Oh, I can tell you exactly.
So Zoe Turner and her wife, Marika,
who kind of are the pioneers of LA freeway chase
helicopter news.
Zoe and Marika have the same hunch
that various members of OJ's defense team
have, which is that he has gone to the cemetery where Nicole
has buried.
And so they take their KCBS chopper to the cemetery.
They notice that the cops have staked out the cemetery.
And then they're like, OK.
So he probably is avoiding a stakeout,
but let's sort of check out the area.
And so that is when they spot OJ.
And start broadcasting a live image of the Bronco.
And then other helicopters also join in.
And so not only does he have the failings of police cars
following him, but he starts to have
just this flock of helicopters following him as well.
And that's when we lose our basketball.
And that's when we lose basketball.
And then we have various news anchors and media personalities
kind of trying to follow along and explain what's happening.
And people who don't know LA geography very well
are kind of lost.
Larry King is talking about this live.
He had really thought that North Korea would be the big news
story that week.
And he did not think that his acquaintance OJ Simpson
would stay in the news for very long, but he was wrong.
And so because he's doing his show from LA,
but he really doesn't know the city well at all,
he has a Los Angeles atlas brought to him
as he's narrating the case so he can see where this is going.
Right, like where on the tic-tac-toe board of freeways
this is.
People who knew the geography as they're following along
are speculating that Al Kallings is going to get off
the San Diego freeway at the Sunset Boulevard exit,
which is then going to take him to OJ's house at Rockingham,
which he does do.
And then I'll read to you from the run of his life.
Kallings indeed left I-405 at Sunset.
Then he docked traffic for about a mile until he could make
a right turn onto the privileged Hilly precincts
of Brentwood.
With the helicopters still tracking him among the gated
homes, Kallings then made a left onto Ashford,
from which he could turn into OJ's driveway.
Kallings, however, almost didn't make it.
There were so many television satellite trucks parked
on tiny ashways that Kallings had to slow it to nearly a full
stop to inch his way past them.
Whoa.
With dusk fast approaching, Kallings finally managed
to pull into the driveway at 316 Earth Rockingham.
The Bronco's flashers illuminated the cobblestones
in the driveway, from which, earlier that week,
police had scraped blood samples.
It was shortly before 8 p.m.
So Detective Tom Lange, who we've heard from quite a bit
in previous episodes, decides to have the LAPD SWAT team
go to Rockingham while OJ is still on the road
and prepare to take him in.
So they have a team of about 25 guys waiting for him there.
Wow.
All of OJ's people are sent away except for his son
Jason and Bob Kardashian.
And the LAPD also invited a photographer for Time and Life
magazine.
Oh my god.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
So it's just the essentials.
It's your eldest son, your oldest friend, a SWAT team,
and a photographer for Time magazine.
It's amazing how both the lawyers and the cops
are deliberately using the press.
Once again, we're getting a tasting sampler of all of this.
So when Al Kallings and OJ pull into Rockingham,
Jason immediately appears at the front door
and is upset and yelling at Al Kallings
and running toward the car.
And Al Kallings reaches out and pushes Jason away.
And so according to Jeffrey Tube and a couple of police
officers come and basically drag Jason back into the house.
And Al Kallings says of OJ, he's got a gun.
Don't do anything stupid.
Get the police away.
And so again, we're in this standoff situation
where the fugitive is making demands
and the police are actually somewhat interested
in negotiating.
Right.
The famously soft hand of American SWAT teams.
Whatever you need.
Yeah.
Do you need a back rub?
So meanwhile, it's getting dark.
These news helicopters are hovering above OJ's house,
still trying to get their footage.
Kato, the dog who has been at Rockingham, is wandering around.
And so for a while, the only footage
that the helicopters have is just of this dog walking around
in the driveway.
And so the LAPD has a negotiator talking to OJ.
And OJ says, I want to speak with my mother.
That's my demand.
And at that moment, the battery in OJ's phone goes dead.
Nice.
So Al Kallings leaves the car, goes into the house
to get a new cell phone for OJ.
And it is at this point that OJ decides to call it.
It's 8.53 PM.
They've been in the driveway for nearly an hour.
The chief of the SWAT team is like, all right,
you're going to have to step out of the car
and surrender yourself.
And OJ does.
What Tubin says is he staggered into the foyer
and collapsed into the officer's arms.
I'm sorry, guys, Simpson kept repeating.
I'm sorry I put you through this.
And so they let him use the bathroom.
They give him a glass of orange juice.
And he calls his mother.
And then after he talks to his mother, the officers,
ask OJ if he's ready to go.
And he says he is.
And then they put handcuffs on him
and start to take him to Parker Center.
However, the police have told the news helicopters
that they are not allowed to shine any lights on the scene.
And so it's dark outside.
No one sees OJ with handcuffs on him being taken out
of the house by the police.
No one sees him being perked walked.
So we didn't get the image of him being walked out
of the house in handcuffs, even though it happened.
So is this where we're going to leave OJ for now?
This is where we leave him for now.
And he's going to be taken into Parker Center and booked.
And he will be in jail until the end of his trial.
So for the next 15 months.
And to trial we go.
And I want to pause here for a while now
that we have completed this chase.
And we're going to return to the story for, I guess,
kind of season two after a hiatus.
OK.
And yeah, I guess, I don't know, Mike,
I would close for now, though, by asking you,
like, would the story of the trial
be as big without the story of the Bronco Chase?
Like, if we hadn't all shared that as Americans,
would we have been so excited to share more?
I mean, we'll never know.
But I believe so.
I mean, I just think that the lack of police brutality
is really striking in this story.
Yes.
I mean, the amount of leeway, even in this situation,
that the police are giving him is remarkable.
Like, here's some orange juice, O.J., like.
What does it suggest about what, like, how they see him?
Yeah.
What kind of person do you treat this way?
I mean, in other scenarios, American SWAT teams
are so vicious that you can call anonymously
and have a SWAT team sent to somebody's house
and they will kill that person on no other information.
Like, there's a reason why SWATting is a thing in America
and it is not a thing in other countries.
SWAT teams will come in and kill people's dogs,
kill people's partners, kill people's kids.
And then now we've got a SWAT team just, like,
hanging out in O.J.'s house.
Like, yeah, use the bathroom.
Don't forget to wash your hands.
Yeah, whenever you're ready, O.J., it's incredible.
It is.
And it's also, it suggests to me that, like, they cannot bring
themselves to truly fear him.
Yeah.
Or to see him as other, right?
Because othering is so important to American police
and culture, right?
That, like, the normal rules don't apply.
Yeah.
I just find it inspiring, you know, because the police are
just, like, we just are doing our best.
And it's, like, you say that.
But remember a time when you had a suspect and you really
decided to not kill him and you didn't?
Remember that?
Remember what happens when you put your mind to something?
Imagine all the people.
You know?
But just, like, I mean, it's my dream that every defendant is
treated like, OK, Simpson.
I want everyone to have a Johnny Cochran.
And if they want, I want everyone to have a Bob Shapiro,
who, you know, is useful for a brief period and is, like,
putting up potential defense witnesses in the freaking
Beverly Wilshire.
Right.
To me, the story of O.J. has always been, there's just so
much happening here.
There's so many stories that were lost at the time and that
we get to revisit now.
There's so many forms of injustice taking place.
But at the end of the day, I'm just like, let's
order the O.J. special for everybody.
Let's make that the standard menu.
It's easy if you try.