History Meets Galaxy with Tony Gilroy and Mike Duncan
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Speaker 4
Hey, everybody, welcome to the Weekly Show podcast. My name is Jon Stewart.
We are back after being off for, I think, a week there, and we're taping this damn thing. What is there?
Speaker 4
Wednesday, July 9th. It's probably going to air tomorrow.
As of this moment, the Epstein files are still not here.
Speaker 4
They were here. They were on a desk, and then they weren't on the desk.
And then they said that they
Speaker 4 don't have the files. Apparently, a gentleman named Jesse Epstein, who was sex trafficking hundreds of people.
Speaker 4 There were hundreds of victims of this, but apparently acted alone.
Speaker 4
There are no files. And then maybe tomorrow they will have the files.
And it turns out all the files were written on with lemon juice on paper. Oh, they just had to hold them up under the light.
Speaker 4 And then they appeared again.
Speaker 4 This has been such a surreal experience
Speaker 4 watching this administration in this moment. Look,
Speaker 4 Donald Trump very clearly came to power.
Speaker 4 The fuel of his rise
Speaker 4 was
Speaker 4 the kinetic energy of conspiracy. He rode
Speaker 4 the power of quote unquote, the secret knowledge
Speaker 4 to
Speaker 4 light up his audiences, to drive them mad with injustice and how they were going to fight it.
Speaker 4 There was this deep state, and they all knew about it, and there was a liberal conspiracy, and there were children involved, and they were.
Speaker 4 And Trump, and all his influencers, and all those individuals that force amplified
Speaker 4 the conspiracies
Speaker 4 are what I think
Speaker 4 drew his movement together. It was, in many ways, it's the glue that holds the MAGA moment much more than I think patriotism does.
Speaker 4 It's the glue of secret knowledge, of unknown forces that work against you to cause your life. And one of the main forces was this exemplified by this Epstein thing.
Speaker 4 And everybody talked about, oh, when they got in there and they were going to, where we go one, we go all and we're going to clean this thing up. And it is so
Speaker 4 fucking bananas
Speaker 4 to watch them now
Speaker 4 try and diffuse this bomb that they planted.
Speaker 4 Watching Van Bonte. I don't know if you saw the cabinet meeting where somebody uh the the first moment they they brought up Epstein in the cabinet meeting and Trump immediately jumps in.
Speaker 4 Really? You're going to talk about that guy? That guy? The guy that my audience has been clamoring about for 10 years? That's the guy you're going to bring up while children are missing in Texas.
Speaker 4 And you're like, man,
Speaker 4
you were golfing the whole weekend. What are you talking about? How dare someone ask a question? It's desecration.
You were on like the 11th hole when all this was going down.
Speaker 4 You didn't, you didn't change. And it's a very reasonable question.
Speaker 4 But to watch Pam Bondi have to go from, and it's the same that happened with Pongino and Patel, to go from conspiracy theorist to reasoned expert is just,
Speaker 4 chef's kiss. Oh, there's a minute missing from
Speaker 4
the prison videos. They had security camera footage from the prison, but there's a minute missing from 1159 to midnight.
And that minute, man,
Speaker 4 you can
Speaker 4
fit. How many conspiracies can you fit on the head of a minute? Like, you can fit them all.
And watching Pam Bondi have to go, you know, I, yeah, no, listen, I get it. You know, minute is missing.
Speaker 4
But it turns out there's a very simple explanation and it's somewhat innocuous. So it's not the sinister motives that everybody thought it was.
So I'm sure that will
Speaker 4 take all the air out of this conspiracy because I've just explained to you there's a very reasonable
Speaker 4 explanation for why that doesn't exist. Watching them dance on the head of this pin is going to be, and I will guarantee you that ultimately that you're already starting to see it.
Speaker 4 It's fire Pam Bonte. It's not fire the guy.
Speaker 4 Who's in all the pictures with Epstein and who said, I don't know if I'm going to release the files because there's a lot of phony stuff in there. And Trump said there was phony stuff in there.
Speaker 4 And we all know the definition of phony when it comes to Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 anything that reflects poorly on donald trump is phony or fake so by the very fact that he used that word specifically tells you something uh uh very much so and i'm sure it'll morph because somehow dear leader will will find his way out of it it'll be uh pambondi or it'll be somehow there or it'll be the mossad or they'll come up with some idea that oh actually uh trump is being really smart he's got all the information and he's using it as compromont
Speaker 4 to get, to bring peace to this world.
Speaker 4 But man,
Speaker 4 what an upside down.
Speaker 4 It's like watching the movie Speed, where they're all in, they're all, they've all been in the bus driving 80 miles an hour, and suddenly the driver turns out to be one of them.
Speaker 4
And he's like, actually, I planted the bus. I planted the bomb.
And I'm the one who said we couldn't
Speaker 4
drive less than 80. It's, man, we're in such a weird moment, man.
And that's why, so
Speaker 4 we have a great couple of guests today that can actually talk about this weird moment that we're in through the lens of history and through the lens of art and fiction.
Speaker 4 Two people that I just, I so admire the work that they both do. So
Speaker 4 I want to get to that
Speaker 4 and get out of the absurdity of the moment that we're in. So
Speaker 4 let's get to them.
Speaker 4 Folks,
Speaker 4
I am excited here. I've got two fellas.
I'm a huge fan of both of these individuals.
Speaker 4 We've got Tony Gilroy, who, if you're fans of the Born series, the writer, sometimes director of all those great films, the creator.
Speaker 4 of Andor, Roguan, obviously co-wrote, and Mike Duncan, we all know best-selling author.
Speaker 4 And if you're a fan at all of History Podcast, the creator of the history of Rome, one of the most fabulous podcasts ever done, and all those revolutions podcasts, including the upcoming, it's now over in the podcast, but as you know, in the future, there will be a Martian Revolution.
Speaker 4 And Mike Duncan has very graciously informed us about the various things that are going to happen in the
Speaker 4 Martian Revolution. But the reason I wanted to have you both together on the podcast in this moment, because I feel like this is one of those fraught moments in time
Speaker 4 where we all feel we may be on the precipice of one of these schisms that leads to revolution or leads to something historic, but maybe people always feel that way.
Speaker 4 But the reason I wanted to pull the two of you together, Mike, as a historian,
Speaker 4 I think what historians do so well is they view revolution or historical events and they deconstruct them.
Speaker 4 They allow you to take a core sample of these moments in time that we all believe we understand really well,
Speaker 4 but the historian goes through and shows you the component parts may not be
Speaker 4 what you imagine them to be. And then the artist and the writer and the director, like Tony,
Speaker 4 you take those deconstructed moments of revolution, the ingredients, and you reconstruct them to create these beautiful works of art that kind of give insight
Speaker 4 into maybe
Speaker 4
the more emotional aspects of what these are. It's almost as though you're two sides of the same coin.
So I want to start with
Speaker 4 Mike,
Speaker 4 deconstructing history. and revolutions.
Speaker 4 What drew you to that?
Speaker 4 What do you find that you learn from kind of taking that fine-tooth comb and going through these large-scale movements and moments that we all think we understand, but showing us their component parts?
Speaker 7 Yeah, like, I mean, I got into revolutions. Like, I started the Revolutions podcast because revolutions, I think, are inherently interesting moments in time, right?
Speaker 7 Like, this is where so much is happening and, like, so many of the pivots of history, like, exist in this, and it's so chaotic.
Speaker 7 There's so many, like, there's the french revolution is inherently interesting the russian revolution is inherently interesting so i did want to like go through these and i thought it would be a make for a great you know format for a show and then when i'm doing you know the individual revolutions i'm not really thinking about like how these connect necessarily to other revolutions.
Speaker 7 I just want to explain the one that is right in front of my face right now. Like I want to explain the revolution of 1830 in the specifics,
Speaker 7 the specific context of 1830. And then when I do the Mexican Revolution, I want to talk about the specific context of the Mexican Revolution.
Speaker 7 But then, when I was all done with like these 10 seasons worth of revolutions that I had written, I did produce like, I forget how many episodes it is now, like 12 or 15 episodes, where I went back through and really did a big compare and contrast of every revolution that I had covered from the English Civil Wars to the Russian Revolution.
Speaker 7 And there are sort of similar structures, similar character types, similar orders of events.
Speaker 7 There are reasons why things happen that you can sort of, you know, extract from this like an abstract structure.
Speaker 7 And then we would never want to take that abstract structure and like put it on today and say, That means this is how things will go, or put it in the future and say, That's how things will go.
Speaker 7 But when things then do roll out, if we get another revolution, I'll bet you anything you could go back through it, talk about the specific context of that particular revolution, and then see, oh, yep, this is exactly like it was in the Cromwell era and exactly like it was for Robespierre and Danton.
Speaker 7 And that is sort of how things go because, you know, history does not,
Speaker 7 yeah, history doesn't repeat itself, but it absolutely does rhyme.
Speaker 4 It's amazing. And Tony, as you,
Speaker 4 when you're creating these worlds, are you then going through work like the work that Mike does
Speaker 4 as, or as a fan of that, how are you compiling those kinds of ingredients that he's talking about to create the worlds that you're creating? Because what you do so well is
Speaker 4
you make them resonate. There's a reality to them.
They feel three-dimensional,
Speaker 4 which is such for
Speaker 4 an artist, for a director, for a writer, that is such a challenge.
Speaker 4 What's your process like then?
Speaker 6 Well, I mean,
Speaker 6 first of all, I need like a booster seat or flotation device to participate in a real historical conversation because I am not a pro. Like I am.
Speaker 4 That's what Mike's here for, man. Me and you.
Speaker 6 Yeah, no, no, we're on the different side.
Speaker 7 I mean, you know,
Speaker 6 you guys have the kind of,
Speaker 6 you know, you guys have the kind of memories and the kind of minds that, that, that, that, that hang on to all this stuff. I'm, I,
Speaker 6 I'm liberated. I, I get, I really, I, I mean,
Speaker 6 in 40, 40 years of doing this or 35, 37 years of doing this, I have never once done a true life story for a script. You can imagine how how many scripts I've written.
Speaker 6
You can imagine how many things I got offered over the years. I mean, how many, and I've never done one.
My brother and I touched on one, but the character was so obscure it really didn't matter.
Speaker 6 I've even
Speaker 6 hijacked projects that were non-fiction and fought hard to turn them in against
Speaker 6 the tie, to turn, to fictionalize them, say, I can't do this if we're going to stay real. So
Speaker 6 I get this absolute instantaneous free pass. So I don't have to tell the truth.
Speaker 6 It's really, it's.
Speaker 4 You don't have to tell the truth, but when you're building the foundation of a story to make it resonate, to make it believable.
Speaker 6 Yeah, I'm getting there. I mean,
Speaker 6 it's the best possible situation.
Speaker 6
I've listened. I've now listened to all of my, I didn't do it in order.
I would look today. What am I missing? What didn't I do? The only revolution I did not do with Mike was the American Revolution.
Speaker 6
Oh, that's fine. I don't know why, because I did it in school.
That's the only one I didn't do. Yeah,
Speaker 7 you could skip that one.
Speaker 6 And Martian, I didn't do Martian because I didn't want to get, I didn't want to have any, I didn't want to like, I didn't, for five years, I didn't listen to any.
Speaker 7 Oh, you didn't want to go through a whole nother science fiction revolution that space
Speaker 6
after having just been five years doing it. Maybe not.
And so,
Speaker 6 and then, but this, but the reason that I listened to it wasn't just because I was working on the show. The reason I listened to it is because I've been a a freak for this my whole life.
Speaker 6 So, I mean, the library in this house is just a chaos of, you know, of random books from the street and bad history books and great history books and weird things. And so
Speaker 6 I have that
Speaker 6
I have what you were describing before. I use history as a catalog.
I really get to use the entire catalog of incidents. It's almost as if
Speaker 6 it's, you know, I shop for what I need as I go along. And
Speaker 6 I have my, I have one, I have, I have one requirement that, that, that is, uh, above all that, which is it has to be, it has to be behavioral. It has to be relatable to character.
Speaker 6 It all has to be something.
Speaker 4 Explain that. Explain that.
Speaker 6 I mean, all of these, I, I, you know, I don't necessarily, I don't really have a dog in the fight of the great man or great moment philosophies of history. You know, the big debates about all that.
Speaker 6 It doesn't matter to me. But when I read history, I am always,
Speaker 6 if it's not being presented to me overtly, I am always trying to dig behind what's going on for the behavioral aspect of why is Mussolini doing this now? Why is Garibaldi doing this right now?
Speaker 6 Why, why would they do that? And what does he need? What is he so afraid of? That what is she?
Speaker 6 What is she so desperate to have? So, that's my
Speaker 4 all- You're looking for motivation in a lot of ways.
Speaker 6 I think motivation is
Speaker 6
just motivation, is a word that's just right up front. I think behavior is much more important than motivation in a way.
But
Speaker 6 so I don't have any of the moral or objective
Speaker 6 criteria or judgments or comments coming at me about truthfulness that anybody else is going to have.
Speaker 6 But I do have a very high bar in that the behavior has to be honest, it has to be real, it has to be consistent. And I have to find a way to get my people, my characters, um, into situations.
Speaker 6 And I can't, I can't, I can, uh,
Speaker 6 I can set the trap, I can set the things in motion, I can light the kindling on fire, but I cannot, uh, once the characters are involved in the in the machinery, I can't,
Speaker 6
I can't manipulate the machinery to do what I want. The characters have to take it where it goes.
That's my responsibility.
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Speaker 4 We don't think of history in itself as a series of behaviors or motivations and those things. We see it as there's a certain inevitability to it.
Speaker 7 I mean, everything Tony just said is like what I do in revolutions. I'm obsessed with why people do the things that they do.
Speaker 7 And there are large structural forces that people are existing within, like of course, but it is like individual choices and individual like motivations, like what is getting people up out of bed and driving them to do things.
Speaker 7 And then especially when we're talking about like, you know, people like Tsar Nicholas or, you know, Marie Antoinette, like, you know, Czar Nicholas was not sitting down and being like, I'm going to be an evil tyrant today and oppress people and then and then they will, you know, they'll rise up against me, but that, I don't, but I hate them, right?
Speaker 7 No, he, he, he was convinced that he had been given you know his position by god and that it was his job to like steward this responsibility that the romanov family had you know to to reign over russia and hand that off to his uh hand that off to his heir that's their principal motivation that's what they're focused on they're not focused on anything else beyond that and inside of you know nicholas's mind and alexandra's mind this makes a ton of sense and what they're doing makes a ton of sense and is internally consistent with their own belief system even though it appears from the outside to be like well you're just awful people who need to be overthrown.
Speaker 7 That's nobody, nobody actually works like that.
Speaker 7 So anytime I'm reading a biography or I'm reading a history or something, I'm very much focused on, you know, what is the psychological motivation for people and the things that they do.
Speaker 7 That's a huge part of the show.
Speaker 4 See, that's such an interesting, I think that's such an interesting point. And I wonder, Tony, how you deal with this
Speaker 4 in the way that you're constructing these things.
Speaker 4 I think we view that there's a difference between genuine belief and cynical manipulation.
Speaker 4 And in revolutions, there's always that moment, and Orwell sort of, you know, spoke to this, I think, really well, that idea of the people that are in charge, are they behaving based on true belief or are they manipulating systems for maximum power?
Speaker 4 Like Tsar Nicholas, you might look at it that way. But then when we look at like maybe the more modern revolutions where propaganda,
Speaker 4 you know, when you talk about the Nazis or Lenin and Stalin,
Speaker 4 do they believe that what they're doing is right, ordained by God, or are they
Speaker 4 manipulating for power?
Speaker 4 Does that enter into, as you construct, either villains or heroes, Tony?
Speaker 6 No, I will say, I mean, I was going to say about Mike's,
Speaker 6
the Revolutions podcast, I mean, he's dead on. I mean, the reason that makes it so entertaining and the reason why it's so com you listen to it so compulsively.
And I just, it really,
Speaker 6
a lot of hours I put into that. And you don't just do that.
It is personal. It is.
He's delivering characters all the way through.
Speaker 6 I don't think I agree completely with the basis of the question because it's like, I don't see,
Speaker 6 I don't see power
Speaker 6 or rebellion or
Speaker 6 insurrection as I don't see anybody having a
Speaker 6
having a firmer grip on cynicism than anybody else. I think cynicism is a, I think there's some very cynical revolutionary leaders along the way.
I mean, really cynical.
Speaker 6 Right. I mean, people that are just, you know.
Speaker 4 Who are the people that come to mind for you?
Speaker 6
Well, I mean, look how Lennon uses everybody around him for crying out. Look at Mao.
I mean, you know, know, but
Speaker 6 Mao. I mean,
Speaker 6 man, I don't know if there's ever been a greater, I don't know, maybe Mike, maybe this book's discredited.
Speaker 6 Maybe Mike will know more, but I think one of the most incredible books I ever read was, because I don't think there's ever been a personal, personal account of someone who was so close to an historical dynastic leader as Mao's Doctor's book.
Speaker 6 That book that Mao's Doctor wrote is like, it's just, and the cynicism inside that. So I don't think anybody has.
Speaker 6 So I never look at it that if you look at, if you look at our show, if you look at what I do, I think in general,
Speaker 6 I'm really interested in what people wake up in the morning, I guess, and what is really driving them. I think just as many Nazis were driven by
Speaker 6 who had the best parking place and who had the best corner office and who got the best piping and so much.
Speaker 6 I don't think anybody, I don't think a whole lot of people woke up in the morning and thought, you know, it's really great. We're nationalizing the industries and I really hate Jews so much.
Speaker 6 I want to go out and do mass graves. You don't think any of them thought that?
Speaker 4 You really? It couldn't have all been Parkinson's.
Speaker 6
Oh, yeah, sure. No, no, yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no.
But you can't write a character like that. That's why.
Speaker 6
Oh, that's interesting. That's why that movie, The Zone of Silence, was so incredibly effective without doing anything, man.
I remember that, you know,
Speaker 6 the Auschwitz movie that was out two years ago where they never went into the camp.
Speaker 4 The zone of interest, right?
Speaker 6 There's a scene where the wife tries on the coat in the room and you realize when she goes to the pocket that it's someone else's coat and she loves it. And it's like, man,
Speaker 6 that's where I want to live. That's where history is for me.
Speaker 6 History is in the tendency of those people
Speaker 6 to want things.
Speaker 6 Mike can speak much more eloquently, I'm sure, about how individual behaviors get shaped into a lump and a lump gets shaped into
Speaker 6 a movement and and it moves forward. And those title,
Speaker 6 those title shifts are, are, are, you know, they're important and they're story, but I can't start characters from the point of view of anything other than how much chaos they have inside of them.
Speaker 6 What do they really need? What are they afraid of? You know?
Speaker 4 But then what is that, Mike?
Speaker 4 Is it the conductor or is it the orchestra? You know,
Speaker 4 does somebody in revolutions for this? Because
Speaker 4 I think if you look at the span of human history, oppression and violence has always been with us, but it doesn't always combust into revolution.
Speaker 4 Those moments are really specific. And as we're talking about sort of character and behavior, does there have to be a conductor as you look at it?
Speaker 4 Must there be somebody? Yes. You know, when you talk about Nicholas, who is, you know, this person who believes I'm ordained by God and these are the things I'm doing, not to be evil, but because
Speaker 4 this is
Speaker 4 this is biblically, you know, written. How do you view that, Mike, as you, as you look at those?
Speaker 7 Well, it's a giant like interplay of things, right? Like the orchid, the orchestra can play without the conductor and the conductor can wave his arms without the orchestra.
Speaker 7 And the two things like have to come together in order to make the revolution happen in the moment that it does.
Speaker 7 And yeah, like to your point, there was, you know, there's a line from Trotsky that is like, if you're talking about
Speaker 7 sort of what are the, what are the things that cause a revolution? Like, what are the triggers of a revolution?
Speaker 7 You can't really say the misery of the, excuse me, the misery of the peasants is a cause of revolution because the peasants are always miserable.
Speaker 7 The peasants are miserable whether there's a revolution or whether
Speaker 7 it's the very nature of peasantry at the time.
Speaker 7 So you can't, you can't say like, oh, the people are miserable and therefore there's a revolution because human misery is omnipresent so it takes all of these other things fitting together up and down the socioeconomic line from the very inner circles of power all the way down to yes the peasantry is miserable and they are ready to like rise up in my experience with revolutions this gets sort of as i've gone through history you know starting with these very early modern revolutions then moving all the way up into the 20th century you can see revolutions sort of professionalizing as a like career path and like a career choice Because in the early days, you know, like the American Revolution, the French Revolution, like these things,
Speaker 7
chaotic things happen. And there are leaders and there are people trying to do things, make reforms, do this, do that.
But like usually events start to spin out of control.
Speaker 7 Nobody's really in charge of it. And then inside of these chaotic revolutionary vacuums, leaders do pop up and movements do pop up and parties do pop up.
Speaker 7 And then those groups start to like bend, bend events this way and that.
Speaker 7 But at least in the early days, it's never people being like, okay, we're going to sit around, we're going to stage a revolution and then it's going to work.
Speaker 7 Like the first time that even happens is in August of 1792, when they do get together and overthrow the monarchy, but that's three years into the French Revolution by the time they're even getting down to business and planning stuff like that.
Speaker 7
But then you move forward 100 years and yeah, Lenin is a professional revolutionary. Right.
Is what he is trying to do. Like that is his job.
Speaker 7 And so he's trying to create the conditions that will make this revolution happen.
Speaker 4 And that's the first time you really see that being exercised.
Speaker 7
Yeah, yeah. You know, it comes along in the mid-19th century.
There were definitely precursors to Lenin. But even when the Russian revolution gets going, like, where's Lenin? He's in Switzerland.
Speaker 7 Like, he didn't even know it was happening. He was, he had to, he had to cut a deal with the Germans just to get back there so he could lead the revolution that he had nothing to do with.
Speaker 7 And then he did. And then, and then him and the Bolsheviks do like, you know, bend events their way.
Speaker 7 But like, this is really, I mean, revolutions at their bottom are just just really out of any one person's hand for sure.
Speaker 4 Right.
Speaker 6 You know, John, remember, I mean, it's usually, I'm curious if Mike thinks this is true, but it's in the end, it's, it's bott, it's a body in the street.
Speaker 6 It's, it's, it's like the guy who started Arab Spring because he started himself on fire. It's the, it's the women in Paris marching to Versailles.
Speaker 6
It's like someone just says, hey, it's raining. I don't give a fuck.
We're going to, we're going to march to Versailles and demand that we get our bread.
Speaker 6 I mean, and it's in the end, it's somebody goes to the street or somebody, or somebody blows up the Reichstag or somebody or the false flag or somebody does, you know, but it,
Speaker 6 yeah, I'm sure the Spartacus League and various revolutionary groups have a very highly articulated checklist of things that will start a revolution, but I haven't
Speaker 6 pretty sad.
Speaker 7 Yeah, that could be a Thursday. It It could be two years ago.
Speaker 4 That's what I'm getting to, though.
Speaker 6 It's sad, that list.
Speaker 4 It's sad, yes. But as you deconstruct these revolutions, what you end up with is, in some ways, a to-do list.
Speaker 4 And you have a variety of choices and options. Like you say,
Speaker 4
the Reichstag fire, or you have the false flag. Tony, you had that in Andor.
You have that massacre in the square. And they lure them in.
Speaker 4 And you see the planning of uh you know the empire and they're saying you have that wonderful uh uh deedre who says you just need uh the right people to do the wrong thing or the wrong people to do the right you know you need uh the people who think they're the revolutionaries to commit an act that allows the empire to to massacre them well okay just look at that just look at the one thing that you've said because you're just you're gonna hit on a whole bunch of things that have their own, these are all part of the catalog.
Speaker 6 Right, right, right. They don't go into every revolution, probably, you know, I don't know how, but, but, but, you know, building the enemy you want is a key tactic.
Speaker 4 Boy, that's a nice phrase. Building the enemy you want.
Speaker 6
Well, look, J. Edgar Hoover puts people in the, in the, in, in, in the civil rights movement, in the anti-war movement.
Right. You know, the Brits put IRA.
They have been provost.
Speaker 6
I mean, a lot of people would argue, I might agree that Netanyahu built Hamas. I mean, you know, he took apart everything else and he built the enemy that he wanted.
You do that.
Speaker 6
That's what she's saying there. She says, we need people that'll do what you want them to do.
And that is a, that is in the,
Speaker 6 that is in the, that is in the authoritarian playbook for sure. I mean, Mike could probably give you 19 other examples where that happened.
Speaker 7 Well, I mean, the head of the SR combat organization was like taking money from the czar while also planting bombs, right? Like, yeah, there is that.
Speaker 7 There, there are those connections like all the time.
Speaker 7 Again, like, but getting back to like the checklist of stuff, like those guys can have a checklist and you can hit every single part of the checklist and then no revolution happens because there isn't actually like a series of buttons that you press and then like have a revolution happen.
Speaker 7 And even like, you know, in February of 1917, the Bolsheviks, I mean, that the February Revolution gets going because the women went into the streets.
Speaker 7 It was National Women's Day and they wanted to go, the women wanted to go out into the streets and protest. And the Bolsheviks were telling them, like, no, we don't want to do this.
Speaker 7 We don't want to, we want to, you know, keep our gunpowder dry. We're going to save it for May Day, like, which was just a couple of months away.
Speaker 7 And then they went out there, and it was a bright, sunny, warm day after a long winter in St. Petersburg.
Speaker 7 And the whole city just like went crazy outside of everybody's, you know, expectation of what would happen.
Speaker 7 So these things, they happen or they don't, but you're never just going to sit down and do like check nine things and then and then be able to stage a revolution.
Speaker 7 That is absolutely not how these things work.
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Speaker 4 Do you find, is it, you know, when we think about America in the way that we've mythologized our revolution, and I think it speaks sometimes to fiction because the Star Wars universe is so interestingly,
Speaker 4 you know, I think people look at
Speaker 4 the rebel alliance as the liberals and the empire as, well, that must be conservative. The liberals, look, they're all different species and they're living together in sin and doing all kinds of
Speaker 4 different things. And the empire is much more
Speaker 4
kind of fascistic and authoritarian, and they're doing those. But revolutions don't neatly play along.
The liberals are the good guys, and the conservatives are the bad guys. You know,
Speaker 4 Orwell wrote that his was Stalinist, you know.
Speaker 6 Yeah, I mean, no, I mean, the empire is pretty clearly fascistic, I would say. I have fixed it as much as
Speaker 6 possible.
Speaker 7 It seems to have some fascist overtones to it.
Speaker 6 I don't know. Storm Creepers.
Speaker 7 I don't know if anybody gets that connection.
Speaker 6 The color palette, maybe a little bit. Anyway, but
Speaker 6 you know, and look, I don't,
Speaker 6 I am, I win no Star Wars trivia contests at all, but I do know the, the, what I was given was five years.
Speaker 6 I have a five-year piece of the calendar, and the five years that I have is a furnace that's just about to go nuts.
Speaker 6 So, because the Empire is at this moment making a and this is the five years prior to
Speaker 6 five years prior to Rogue One, yeah, prior to the blowing up of the Death Star and the whole thing.
Speaker 6 Yeah, so I get those five years, and I have a couple canonical incidents on the calendar that I have to pay attention to.
Speaker 6 But the general
Speaker 6 the general understanding of that period of time is they are consolidating power aggressively
Speaker 6 because they know they're building this
Speaker 6 energy project that will dominate everything.
Speaker 6 They are doing what every fascistic government does, which is nationalizing all the corporate entities first.
Speaker 6 They are stripping the legal system, they are rewriting, they are emasculating and completely neutering the political organizations.
Speaker 6 I have them write a you know, a public order resentencing directive in the first season, which just changes all of the laws about
Speaker 6 arrests and and and they're building them to prisons to detention centers that are factory prisons that's right to where they're working yeah yeah where they're working and all those different things i mean they're they're uh they're on a big power grab and uh
Speaker 6 the other the other really the other liberating thing about what i'm doing i suppose the other the other the other thing that makes it easy There's a lot of things that are hard about it, but that makes it easy is not just that I don't have to tell the truth or I have to be beholden to any specific revolution,
Speaker 6 But I also, I don't really have anybody espousing their ideology of what they want the galaxy to look like when the fight is over.
Speaker 6 Oh, wow. I don't have anybody saying when we're done, this is what it's going to look like.
Speaker 6 And I thought in the beginning when I came on the show that that was going to really be a very big thing for me. I think I probably somewhere in this office, I have.
Speaker 6 you know, a couple weeks of work on that,
Speaker 6
trying to figure out how I was going to try to deal with that. And I gradually realized that I just didn't really need to do that.
And I thought, how long can I get away with that?
Speaker 6
And then it turned out to be, I don't miss it at all. People don't miss that.
It's, it's.
Speaker 4 Man, you, you just blew my mind because I, I hadn't thought of it that way, Tony, but you're, you're right.
Speaker 4 In the entirety of that five-year period and with with Rogue One, I don't think I ever remember, there's no moment like there is like with with Padme saying, so this is how liberty dies.
Speaker 6 No, no one's saying, well, this is all over. We're really going to have collective bargaining.
Speaker 7 That's because That's because Tony's a really good writer.
Speaker 6 No, because I really enjoyed that.
Speaker 6 That's why you don't hear that line. I'm an old, sneaky writer.
Speaker 6 But
Speaker 6 it's surprising to me that that, I mean, I have some, I mean,
Speaker 6 I tiptoe around it. I have a thing very early on where Forrest Whitaker's character, because he's a real.
Speaker 6
Right. He's a real outlier, you know, partisan, uncontrollable.
And
Speaker 6 he has a long speech with
Speaker 6
John Scars guy. Yeah.
And then he says, man, what are you? Are you? And he names like seven different groups.
Speaker 6 And some of the names I just made up for the moment, you know, human cultists and the Maya Pay Brigade and different things I've put in there. Which, who are you?
Speaker 6 But I never,
Speaker 6
I never pinned them down to what it is they want. That fight is going to come later on.
I do want to suggest that that fight is going to come in coalition.
Speaker 6 And I do spend a lot of energy, as in every revolution and every revolution that Mike's dealing with. I mean,
Speaker 6 fighting authority is just one-third of the battle. Right.
Speaker 6 One-third is trying to get food, the other third is trying to get food, and the other third is fighting with the people you're working with.
Speaker 4 Mike, how, how,
Speaker 4 when you look at those real revolutions, the thing that Tony's talking about, sort of that governing philosophy, the isms that are associated with it,
Speaker 4 what part does that play in being able to coalesce these kind of revolutionary groups into something that is
Speaker 4 more successful or less successful? How much of it is ideology and what the world should look like?
Speaker 7 Well, I think in the beginning, Tony gets it right because it usually is opposition to a single shared enemy, some kind of opponent that you all share a common
Speaker 7 hostility towards.
Speaker 4 Created or otherwise, like created or imagined.
Speaker 7 Yeah, and it's usually, and the way I describe it is like basically whatever you want, whatever it happens to be on the ideological spectrum, there's a, there's an obstacle to getting what you want.
Speaker 7
And so, a lot of people like the king is the obstacle to me. I'm a liberal noble.
I just want to reform things. And then, like, over here, you have the communist.
Speaker 7 The king is an obstacle to me because I want full, you know, I want full luxury communism and we got to get rid of the king.
Speaker 7 So, that makes these two sides, at least in that part of the revolution, allies, of course, because everybody's sharing the same obstacle.
Speaker 7 And so that brings this huge, disparate group together, and they all charge at that one obstacle together and they blow it up. And then, yes, they are left with what to do next.
Speaker 7 And in the Revolutions podcast,
Speaker 7 this pattern showed up very, very early on, which is any revolutionary group that wins immediately breaks into at least two factions and they start fighting each other.
Speaker 4 Is that the most fraught stage, Mike, that you that you see in these types of movements?
Speaker 6 That's well, I mean,
Speaker 7 every stage is fraught. But oh, yeah, dude, a power vacuum is incredible.
Speaker 6 Nobody likes a peace vacuum.
Speaker 7 Yeah, because you're just making it up as you go, right? We declared a provisional government on whose authority.
Speaker 6 We don't know, but we just declared it.
Speaker 7 And hopefully, people will believe it because all this stuff just exists in our mind, you know, like sovereignty and accepting like who has power and who doesn't.
Speaker 7 These are all just like emotional states and psychological states, getting back to that. And so, but when they achieve power,
Speaker 7 they're going to wind up fighting with each other because even though they they shared an obstacle, they did not share an ultimate goal.
Speaker 7 And so this is, so I call this the entropy of victory, which is that anytime a group achieves victory, then they just start to spread apart.
Speaker 7 And usually it breaks down into some kind of binary because then these guys over here roughly say to themselves, well, our new obstacle is those guys over there.
Speaker 7
And these guys are saying, well, our obstacle is those guys over there. And then they start fighting.
This group wins and then they split. This group wins and then they split.
Speaker 7 And then suddenly you got Rope Spirit blowing his own jaw off because he's about to get overthrown.
Speaker 6 And then Frankenstein wakes up, and it turns out he's not dead after all.
Speaker 7 Yeah, he's not dead after all.
Speaker 6 Yeah, no, oh my God, Napoleon the 19th. Yeah, no.
Speaker 4 And Tony, this is this is what's so brilliant about sort of how you construct these in the fictionalized universe.
Speaker 4 And even Star Wars and Joe, it's, it's a new hope, and then it's, you know, or it's Rogue One, but then it's the Empire Strikes Back.
Speaker 4 And then it's the force away, you know, this ebb and flow of.
Speaker 6
I don't have to worry about any of that, John. I just had to do Andor.
I just do an Andor. Right.
Speaker 7 And I, and I could not have been more disappointed with what they decided to do with those sequel movies because, you know, the whole point of the original three movies is like, we defeated the Empire.
Speaker 7 Now we're going to go forward and let's see what happens next.
Speaker 7 And the idea that there is not drama and conflict and incredibly fascinating things to deal with, you know, after you've overthrown the Empire, now you're trying to like restore the old Republic.
Speaker 7 And how does that work? Right, right.
Speaker 6 That stuff, that stuff is all all over the place.
Speaker 7 It is, is, is beautiful fodder. And now we're left with sort of a franchise that like you end the sixth movie and they're dancing on Endor because everything is great.
Speaker 7 And then the first scene of the next movie is like, oh, we're, we're a resistance again. We're fighting Boo.
Speaker 6 Like, what is the new one? I don't know what any of this.
Speaker 7 I thought we beat all these guys.
Speaker 6 Mike said that. I just want to make sure Mike said that.
Speaker 7 I'm saying it's a nobody else has to.
Speaker 6 Yeah. I was,
Speaker 7 I was really, yeah, thank you. I was really bummed out by that because those and people talk about like,
Speaker 7 you know, when I do the show, like
Speaker 7 nothing ends on Bastille Day, right? Like nothing ends when the czar is overthrown. That's the middle of the show or even just still occurring in the first third of the show.
Speaker 7 And then it's everything that happens.
Speaker 4 And they haven't even introduced the new character of Napoleon yet.
Speaker 7
Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. These guys show are showing up like very, very late in the game.
And yeah, so.
Speaker 7 all of that stuff is as fascinating and as much a part of the revolutionary process as the initial overthrow, which is like the first wave of the revolution is usually united.
Speaker 7
It's usually very democratic. Words like freedom and liberty are just like on everyone's lips.
And we see this all the time.
Speaker 7 And then, yeah, as soon as you get power, then it's every group starts breaking against every other group.
Speaker 4 Tony, I thought what was so interesting about Andor is, you know, what he's talking,
Speaker 4 the way that you handled, you know, this idea of what
Speaker 4
Cassian Andor's journey to it. What was so interesting is oftentimes in fiction, there's sort of this idea of the ordained.
There's Neo or there's Skywalker. Cassian Andor is just some guy.
Speaker 4 Like he doesn't, he's not a revolutionary. He has to be like kind of roped into this and his conditions become so extreme that it seems like his behavior really changes.
Speaker 4 How did you resist that kind of
Speaker 4 ordained trope?
Speaker 6 Oh, I mean, it was,
Speaker 6
well, it was baked into the very concept of what I was doing. They tried to do several other prequel shows with the same idea.
And they, you know, what's the smart, what's the obvious thing to do?
Speaker 6 So they wanted to have a show where Cassian and K2 would go do adventures and stuff. So they tried to do that a couple times.
Speaker 6 And
Speaker 6 after they did the first one, it was very slick, the script and the package and everything. But it was Kathy Kennedy sent it over to me,
Speaker 6 not to work on, but just as for advice and said, hey, what do you think about this? And I go, well, you know, this is very smart and slick and entertaining.
Speaker 6
I go, but I don't know what the hell you're going to do after episode five. I mean, what are you going to do? Just storm the Citadel every week? There's nothing to do.
You'll die on the vine here.
Speaker 6 I mean,
Speaker 6 there's no story protein here at all. And she said, well, what should we do? And I said, well, man, if I was going to do this show,
Speaker 6 you'd take this guy back to a roach and take him on the, pick him up on the worst day of his life and try to see how far away from,
Speaker 6 you know, in Rogue One, he's all singing, all dancing,
Speaker 6
revolutionary warrior leader. I mean, he has every skill there is.
Right. He's a butterfly.
So, like, how far away from that could you take somebody to get there in five years?
Speaker 6 And that was too radical for them
Speaker 6
at that moment. And, um, but when they, when they came back, they came back a year and a half later and go, you know, that idea doesn't sound so crazy.
So it was baked in for me.
Speaker 6 I don't see any other way that you would do it. I don't see how
Speaker 6 you'd get there. And
Speaker 6 I don't want to make it seem like I've got a chalkboard here and a calculator, but like, I do want to
Speaker 6 pull from the menu of what radicalizes a human being.
Speaker 6 What are the stations of the cross that make somebody
Speaker 6 wake up?
Speaker 6 to political consciousness and then past political consciousness, how does somebody wake up to the point of
Speaker 6 personal sacrifice and ultimate sacrifice, really? And so that first season is him,
Speaker 6 you know, is me. You know,
Speaker 6 I'm kind of working the menu there. I mean,
Speaker 6 he's a thief, he's a killer, nobody wants to see him, he's broke, he's cynical, he'll be a mercenary, he'll stay a mercenary, he'll go on a party with the money that they stole. And
Speaker 6
everybody that he meets along the way, his mother even, and every single person has an effect on him. I have a Trotsky character who spins ideology to him.
You know, Nemek reads his manifesto.
Speaker 6
He meets people along the way whose whole families were slaughtered. There's people there for revenge.
He meets all these other influences. And then all of that was,
Speaker 6 I try to, you know, pack that musket as tight as I can. And then I send him to prison.
Speaker 6
And in the prison, the only way he's going to get out of the prison is to lead a revolution because no one else is going to do it. And so he builds a mini revolution in the prison.
And
Speaker 6 by the time he gets out and the success of that,
Speaker 6 he's fully committed. And that's so, I mean, I'm trying to show what it takes to get somebody all the way there.
Speaker 6 And if you look at the characters that, you know, that Mike's dealing with in the show all the time, I mean, I don't know. I mean, some of these people are there instantly.
Speaker 6
I mean, if you're in the Haitian Revolution and you're, you know, you're a slave, it's pretty easy to figure out where you want to get. Sure.
I would think.
Speaker 4 But it is interesting how often prison seems to play a role in either the hardening of these revolutionaries or of the awakening of them or of in the you know setting that feeling of like and now this will be look at hitler who who more than hitler right racist pizza if he didn't have time to write that fucking book what would happen i mean holy cow i mean really
Speaker 4 but it is those little moments and again this is one of the brilliant things and i'll ask tony about this because then and and then go to mike but the brilliant thing about i think the rogue universe and the andor universe is you take this one moment that is the climax of the very first Star Wars movie, which is this one in a million trust the force shot of, you know,
Speaker 4 a bomb into an air duct that goes in, and you build out this entire world of how did they make that shot?
Speaker 4 How did they get...
Speaker 4 It turns out the guy who designed it was doing it under Durret. He had placed that in there, but they had to get that plan.
Speaker 4 There's this whole universe in this one moment.
Speaker 4 And it's so brilliant that
Speaker 4 you played that out and created this entire world of...
Speaker 6
Just like Mike said, you go tablespoon by tablespoon. You don't ever look at it as a big thing.
You just go step by step.
Speaker 6 You can't look at it as a, it's like he goes into a brothel to look for a sister. You could say, oh, if he doesn't go in the brothel to look for a sister, you don't blow up the death star.
Speaker 6 Of course, you could look at everything that way. But
Speaker 6 it is stitch by stitch and what feels good and what's behaviorally right and what's politically interesting and what will people really believe. And
Speaker 6 yeah.
Speaker 4 Mike, do you, when you look at the actual history, I think it's easy for us when we look at fictionalized representations to think of the inevitability of revolutions or the inevitability of the victors.
Speaker 4 Are you surprised by the lack of inevitability and the way that they fall apart
Speaker 4 and all the ups and downs that occur? That these moments where we look at it as, oh, sure, the assassination of an archduke. How could that not lead to revolution?
Speaker 4 Right?
Speaker 4 Is that what's surprising to you as you delve into these?
Speaker 7 Well, I mean, surprised isn't the right word because, I mean, I got into revolutions after, you know, like doing the entire history of the Roman Empire, which which is, again, like those aren't necessarily revolutions, but you can definitely see how nothing is inevitable.
Speaker 7 And there's, there are times in history where it just feels like every single thing is locking into place to make a revolution happen and the revolution is going to explode.
Speaker 7 And then just like nothing happens. It fizzles out.
Speaker 7 If you look at what was going on between like 1955 and 1968 in the United States, like there's every reason to believe there was going to be a full-blown revolution in the United States at that time.
Speaker 6 And there's all a lot of the people.
Speaker 4 The 20s and 30s. I look at
Speaker 4 the anarchists of the 20s, the absolute economic collapse of the late 20s and the early 30s. It's almost stunning that there's not a revolution.
Speaker 7
Yeah. And then there are times like in French history, there was...
damn near a revolution in France in the early 1820s that was basically called on account of rain.
Speaker 7 Like everybody started getting like in Paris, like everybody starts getting together.
Speaker 7 And it just rained so hard that day, like literally that people were not as able to get together and storm out into the streets. Whereas in February of 1917, the opposite happened.
Speaker 7 Like I said, when the women went out, it just so happened to be like a very balmy spring day after a long winter. And so like everybody was like, yeah, let's go out into the streets.
Speaker 7
Let's, let's, let's do a thing. And then that becomes the revolution.
And then there are other times where nobody expects a revolution to break out. Nobody thinks anything is going to happen.
Speaker 7
And then the next thing you know, things start running away from it. Like I wrote this biography of Lafayette.
And
Speaker 7 there's a really funny moment where they're having all these battles with King Charles in early 1830. Like he's annulled elections, he's rewriting election laws, he's canceling free press.
Speaker 7 And they're like, we're going to have these battles with him, but like we're going to come back like for the fall session and do all this stuff.
Speaker 7 And there's a note from Lafayette saying, I'm going to leave Paris and I'm going to go back home to Lagrange because like nothing's going to happen over the summer.
Speaker 7 And then like literally 36 hours later, people are manning the barricades in Paris and Charles is on his way to being overthrown.
Speaker 7 And like Lafayette has to immediately turn around and come back to Paris because the revolution he did not think was going to happen suddenly broke out, you know, contrary to anybody's expectations.
Speaker 7
So, that stuff is the stuff of history, and nothing is ever inevitable. Like, nothing is written.
And you might think it is, but it is not.
Speaker 7 And then, things will happen that will surprise you, and things that you absolutely are dead certain will happen just do not happen at all.
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Speaker 4 So Tony creates these incredibly
Speaker 4 just layered
Speaker 4 plays of behavior and things that, that, and how people become these revolutionaries and what they have to do to do it.
Speaker 4 And you're looking at, you know, the different ingredients that went into these things, but we all live in the present.
Speaker 4 And it's really difficult.
Speaker 4 I have a hard time doing this.
Speaker 4 Not looking at the present and gathering up those ingredients that you guys put into, that Tony, you put into this, you know, brilliant show about a revolutionary and Mike, you put into Deconstructing, and not look at the ingredients in this moment and think,
Speaker 6 boy, we...
Speaker 4 We are in a Tinderbox. There's not an ingredient.
Speaker 6 John, John,
Speaker 6 we're in it. We're in it.
Speaker 6 Well, that's like.
Speaker 6 Oh, yeah.
Speaker 6
Don't even worry. Don't even worry about that, man.
Oh my God. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 7
People are flicking matches at a Tinderbox right now. Now, whether or not it's going to go off, nobody knows.
But, dude, yeah, dude, we're there. We've been there for years.
Speaker 6
Where has all the karma gone? I mean, that's what I want to know. Sucks.
Really, man. No, I mean, I think
Speaker 6 I wondered if this question was going to come up because it is.
Speaker 4 That's what I've been leading up to for
Speaker 6 the inert, the inert,
Speaker 6 sort of
Speaker 6 muffled
Speaker 6 response that we've just had to sort of stunned
Speaker 6 past six months is just,
Speaker 6 it would be, I'd be really interesting to hear Mike's podcast in 75 years about this moment, what it would be like, how he would cover, you know, for like six months, it's just like nothing happened.
Speaker 6 I mean, people just, so
Speaker 6 yeah, it's, it's, it's,
Speaker 6 it is getting packed, man. It's packed.
Speaker 7 We're currently in about, I don't know, episode 13 or 14 of a treatment of, you know, the revolutionary upheavals of the, you know, middle 21st century.
Speaker 6 It may be. Yeah.
Speaker 7 Like we would be,
Speaker 7 basically, like my point is that if something broke out tomorrow, it would be the easiest thing in the world to explain the big major structural forces and like individual incidents that brought us to this point.
Speaker 7 It would be very easy to tell that story.
Speaker 6 And it's not hard to predict what the, I mean, if I was, people talk about the predictive quality of the show. Oh, the show is like, and we're even, I mean, we were,
Speaker 6 you know, I've been ducking those questions for four months while we've been out selling. I'm a little bit more, I'm a little bit more freed up at this point.
Speaker 6 But I mean, the, the, you know, as the show started to click out, all these things started to happen.
Speaker 6 We have Gorman and the, and the mineral rights, and that happens right when Greenland happens, and we have the immigration issues, we have ICE, and we have, we have the senator from Iran arrested from the Senate at the same time that Padi is being arrested from the
Speaker 6 and we're like, oh my God, well, you know, all right, so if we're so predictive, it's really
Speaker 6 you know, it's not hard to predict a couple things that are going to definitely happen. I mean,
Speaker 6
I shocked that there has not been an immigration Kent State moment at this point. I mean, that just seems inevitable.
Something
Speaker 6 bad is absolutely going to happen at an ICE, at an ICE conflict. And whether it's false flag or whether it's an accident or
Speaker 6 whether it's fully motivated, that's going to happen. That's going to trigger
Speaker 6 martial law or an attempt.
Speaker 6 That's going to totally tighten up. But we always forget.
Speaker 4 And you think about Kent State and you think, oh, that's the moment that the revolution.
Speaker 4 But in truth, public opinion, and we had talked about this previously, I think, with another guest, the public opinion after Kent State was, fuck those students.
Speaker 6 And there was the hard hat.
Speaker 4 Generally, in this country,
Speaker 4 Nixon played that.
Speaker 4 There were the hard hat riots in New York where
Speaker 7 it hardened each side.
Speaker 6 It hardened each side.
Speaker 6 It hardened each side.
Speaker 4 I mean, I was, you know, what you would think is
Speaker 4 it would have lit a fire under a popular uprising in a way that didn't occur because of
Speaker 4 the view that law and order was under attack and that Kent State represented chaos that the society led in there.
Speaker 4 And that's, you know, when I look at MacArthur Park, you see a tank and a bunch of guys rolling through there.
Speaker 4 When I look at what's happening to press freedom and those other things, it's hard to contextualize it in the pantheon of moments that lead to revolution.
Speaker 4 Like, Mike, is the bar to revolution in a society like ours higher
Speaker 4 than it was in the 1800s where society is maybe not as industrialized, not as developed? Was it easier to inflame revolution then?
Speaker 7 I don't know if it was easier or less, easier or harder by comparison. The United States of America right now does not seem particularly primed for a giant revolution, honestly.
Speaker 7 Like, I think the thing that we are dealing with right now is not like, are we on the verge of revolutionary upheaval? I don't see that. Are we on the verge of civil conflict? Yes.
Speaker 7 Are we on the verge of a regime actually succeeding at planting itself in an authoritarian way and just getting away with that?
Speaker 7 Yeah, that's absolutely the thing that I'm most afraid of because I don't see the kind of large-scale aggressive action that would make me think that a revolution is on the way.
Speaker 7 I certainly do not see the disaffected elites being willing to do anything outside of their comfort zone, which is something that I think is essential for any revolutionary project.
Speaker 7 And that's, you know, Tony nailed this one.
Speaker 7 You know, with the mon mothmas of the world, like, what are the mon mothmas of the world doing right now? They're certainly not engaged in revolutionary upheaval.
Speaker 7 We just had a guy get elected, or he's about to be elected as mayor of New York, and everybody's just like wanting to turn on him and like talk about his SAT scores because one of the great obsessions, going to speaking of Ken State, and one of the great obsessions of American,
Speaker 7 one of the great obsessions of American elites is like elite college admissions. Like it's so crazy how obsessed people are with like elite college behavior.
Speaker 4
Right. Talk about that.
That's interesting, Tony. Talk about Monmoffen because what a crucial figure.
Revolutions were sort of steeped in this mythology that revolutions are from the ground up.
Speaker 4 But it really isn't that way without the elites.
Speaker 6 I was also really fascinated.
Speaker 6 I was also really fascinated with the, you know, the early Christians that started, you know, bringing down the Roman Empire who began to be be elites who began to believe in Christianity and became undermining the power structure.
Speaker 6
I thought the Batter Meinhof group was always really interesting. I thought Red Brigade and wealth.
And the idea of also money, I really wanted to get very initially.
Speaker 6
Revolutions really need money. I have a question for Mike, though.
I'm really curious, what you just said before. Do you think I see, I'm curious whether it seems to me there's two authoritarian
Speaker 6 efforts going on simultaneously. It seems to me that you have the one that you know about,
Speaker 6 with the Emperor Palpatine in the White House. But
Speaker 6 it seems to me that there's a tech Reich that's simultaneously on a parallel track
Speaker 6 that's like that's using him as a host organism and using that clown car of all these other idiots and just like just sort of quietly cooking along,
Speaker 6 getting everything they want.
Speaker 6 And like, I don't know whether I can think of another comp on his list of revolutions where you have, you know, a shadow authority that's really actually more frightening probably than the idiots that are.
Speaker 6 I still adhere to the clown car idiot stumble bum.
Speaker 6 I don't think they're in charge of anything other than staying out of jail.
Speaker 6 But the other thing is really terrifying, this tech wreck that's just, they have wide open field now. Is there a comp in history where there's been two, I don't know.
Speaker 7 Man, that's a really good question. But I completely, I mean, mean, Peter Thiel is more frightening than anybody else that's out there.
Speaker 4 Did you see his interview with Ross Stoathat of the Times? Yeah, where he said, he asked him, should humanity survive? And there's this really long,
Speaker 4 they're talking about how Greta Thunberg might be the Antichrist and there's all these other things. And they say, should humanity survive? And there's kind of a heavy silence.
Speaker 4 And in that moment, you're just like, oh my God, this is the guy who just gave his company all of our data?
Speaker 6
What are we? Yep. This is the guy who eats bond villains, man.
He is like,
Speaker 7 he is because, and that's, and that's the so, that's the social and economic world that we all live in, right?
Speaker 7 We, we're all attached to our phones, we're all attached to the internet, like everything runs through them.
Speaker 7 And yeah, Silicon Valley, there's a wing of Silicon Valley that is developing and has developed a deeply anti-democratic and deeply anti-human ideology that they just want to kind of like float above it all and they do not care what happens to the rest of us.
Speaker 4 Transhumanism, let's go to Mars.
Speaker 6
Yeah, man. So maybe they want a revolution.
Maybe it's in their best interest that in two years there is a revolution, you know? Maybe it is in their interest.
Speaker 4 Which goes back to kind of our original talk about cynicism. Who's conducting, you know?
Speaker 6
Yeah. Okay, I'll write my next season then.
Yeah, the next season is that the Kent State happens on the eve of the elections and he cancels the elections and he declares martial law.
Speaker 6 And who's really happy is,
Speaker 6 you know, the guy who owns Palantir, you know? Right.
Speaker 4 Mike, is there, do you find in these moments of of revolution what do changes in either technology or you know the way that we go from agrarian societies to uh you know industrialized societies we go from lack of communication to a printing press what do these kinds of really transformational
Speaker 4 moments in the way that we live, does that sow a certain instability and create more opportunity for these revolutions?
Speaker 4 more opportunity for people to weaponize these new technologies or these new industrials. What have you seen with that?
Speaker 7
Oh, yeah, 100%. I mean, because it can be big stuff like, I mean, industrialization is transferring like agrarian and old feudal societies into something new.
And that creates different incentives.
Speaker 7 It creates different elites, right? That's one of the big ones. It creates a whole new set of elites who are making money off something that they
Speaker 7 should not be able to make money off of before.
Speaker 4 And
Speaker 4 narrows it.
Speaker 7 Yep. And then you have people living in completely different environments than their parents were.
Speaker 7
And usually the first run of things is going to be very exploitive towards like, you know, the peasants who are coming into the factories. Like, is it better? A little bit.
Yeah.
Speaker 7
You make a little bit more money, but like, it's awful. It's brutal.
It's exploitive. And so those things, yeah, those, that churns.
Speaker 7
discontentment and that churns chaos inside of the society. That's the big stuff.
And then also like, you know, changes in communications technology. Right.
Speaker 7 the way, the way that we spread ideas, the way that we share ideas, like if you don't have a printing press and then you do have a printing press, the big thing about this is when you get that first wave of the printing press, like things are just hitting the market.
Speaker 7 Things are just being said and thrown out there. And ideas that you've never been able to confront or think about before are suddenly in front of your face.
Speaker 7 The French Revolution with, you know, basically invents daily journalism.
Speaker 7 right that didn't really exist before the french revolution which you know people are just trying to chronicle events in real real time and spread, you know, pamphlets and newsletters, but because there was something new happening like every single day, there was always something to comment on.
Speaker 7 And nobody had ever dealt with that kind of flood of paper before, right? And you can't censor that. You can't control that as the regime.
Speaker 7 And so what we find in basically all states, and really, if you, if you start getting down to like, what are the like the
Speaker 7 basic causes of revolution? And a lot of it is a state's inability to adapt to changing circumstances.
Speaker 7 And if the state can adapt to the changing circumstances, if it can co-opt these new elites, if it can maybe ameliorate a little bit the suffering of these people, if it can make this change, if, okay, there's a, there's a, like in Britain, there's a huge middle class that isn't allowed to vote and they're starting to get really restless.
Speaker 7 So let's give them the vote. And those changes are the things that really head off like revolution.
Speaker 6 Or a really big mistake. Or a really big mistake.
Speaker 6 I mean, that's right.
Speaker 7 There are. Elaborate on that, Tony.
Speaker 6 right well i mean i can give the historical comps but like uh you know uh
Speaker 6 uh a breakout virus in february that we didn't prepare for because we have you know uh
Speaker 6 uh captain crunch is the head of the fda right somebody dies
Speaker 6 yeah i mean right good luck then you'll have a revolution There are comps. I'm trying to think what, I mean, there's so all these are filled with so many mistakes.
Speaker 6 All these people, I mean, I mean, the czars and I mean, they all just, I mean, but a big mistake, World War I was a mistake for Russia, right? Yeah. Oh, sure, it was.
Speaker 6 I mean, if they didn't do that, if Russia stayed out, they would have been cool. Everything would have been fine.
Speaker 7 And this is, and this is like the, the big, like the big takeaway from revolutions that people know is, is my great idiot theory of revolution. Yes.
Speaker 7 Which is right, which is not the great man theory, but like
Speaker 7 it does take a certain kind of moron to like actually blow it so bad that you get overthrown. These are, these are some of the dumbest motherfuckers I have ever met in my life.
Speaker 4 Well, watching, when you listen to your podcast on Rome, watching in slow motion the Romans destroying this 100-year period of more egalitarian, more democratic, more, to watch them destroy it by just taking away farmland and you're just, you're watching it in slow motion going, why would you do that?
Speaker 7 Why are you doing this? And I mean, Charles I, who was the first sort of, and he wind up being the sort of prototype for all my future leaders that get overthrown.
Speaker 7
This is during like the Cromwell era in England. Like nobody wanted to to chop his head off.
Like nobody wanted to kill him.
Speaker 6 They just wanted some reform.
Speaker 7 All they wanted was like, we just want parliament to control the budget and maybe like have a veto over war and peace.
Speaker 4 And he's like, look and decapitate.
Speaker 7 Yeah, like I can't do that. So like they had to chop his head off in the end.
Speaker 6
He really, he takes the cake. He really does.
Oh, yeah.
Speaker 7
Yeah, he does. And then, and then when I, and then it was cool because that was the very first season.
And then I see that behavior like over and over and over again.
Speaker 7 Like the revolution of 1830, which is, you know, that's another Charles, like
Speaker 7 don't have King Charles's.
Speaker 6 It's like one of the, one of the, one of the lessons, one of the lessons, one of the reasons, yeah, one of the lessons of revolutions was don't have Charles.
Speaker 7 But like there was no reason for him to get overthrown. He drops these four ordinances like in the middle of the night, basically like annullifying the elections and canceling free speech.
Speaker 7 And really what gets Paris going in 1830 is like the printers have all just been put out of a job. And they're the ones who are the most pissed off and the ones who are going into the streets.
Speaker 7 The The British government that is running the North American colonies, like after the Seven Years' War, just fumbled away those colonies.
Speaker 7 Like there is no reason for them to have been so obtuse politically that they wind up losing control of the eastern seaboard of North America.
Speaker 6 How do you not know we don't love tea?
Speaker 4 We love tea.
Speaker 6 Like, how do you not know?
Speaker 4 Why would you make it more expensive?
Speaker 7 Yeah, like these are mistakes that are being made. And so you don't get revolutions usually against some hyper-competent, tyrannical government.
Speaker 7 It's not just the fact of that they're a dictatorship or there's a lot of oppression that's going on. It's because that you need that structure and also somebody who's running it really badly.
Speaker 7 So much so that the elites inside of that. Because as long as the elites are together, like there's not going to be a revolution.
Speaker 7 But if you get somebody who's really doing a bad job, then other elites are going to be like, we are really frustrated with you and we would like you to go now, please.
Speaker 4 And it is, in some ways, it is like watching a movie, Tony, in that, or even a horror movie where you're just like, don't go in the house. Like, don't drop those ordinances.
Speaker 4 Don't, please don't consolidate the farmland. Like, you're just shouting at these dudes
Speaker 4 not to do that. But I wonder, in a parallel to now, isn't there anybody within the government going,
Speaker 4 don't militarize our cities.
Speaker 4 Don't, just because you need vindication over those you don't think voted for you don't this revenge fantasy is going to
Speaker 4 That's how I feel right now like we're watching this in slow motion
Speaker 6 I
Speaker 6 I do not know how I as sophisticated as my as I may appear and as and as educated or or not or
Speaker 6 I still you'd be shocked at how baffled I am by I still do not understand people who do things things that they know are wrong when the cost is not like your children's hand or something or your, I don't understand, I don't understand the lack of and collective and not, it's not a collective.
Speaker 6 Now it's like a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's just, it's stadiums full of people doing what they know is wrong.
Speaker 6
and just doing it and going along and nobody's standing up. And I'm just fascinated by that.
I don't know how to package that.
Speaker 6
I don't know if that's, it's hard to see an historical comp for that because I've never seen anything in any other show that's like, that's on that scale. But there's an entire city now.
All of our,
Speaker 6
I mean, so many people in America are doing things that they actually know are wrong. They know it.
And yet,
Speaker 4 Mike,
Speaker 4 does that stem from, as you watch through history, as long as they're doing it to the right people,
Speaker 4 as long as the bad actions are being exercised on the so-called deserving enemies of the state,
Speaker 4 is that how this tends to propagate?
Speaker 6 I hope that's the answer.
Speaker 7 I mean, I mean, dude,
Speaker 7 it sure seems like it because, you know, like, I'm, I'm not too far off because I have studied all of this history and yet, you know, I've come into the last like 10, 15 years of politics.
Speaker 7 And, you know, like, I, you know, I cut my teeth during the Bush years and during
Speaker 7 the build at the selling of the Iraq war and like watching people just like
Speaker 6 buying a country.
Speaker 4 And oh, that's a good idea.
Speaker 7 haul off and let's just haul off invade and occupy an entire country and let's just do it and like this is getting like 90 approval like i yeah people will buy into those things and they will go along with them and i think that like you know to be like not not to be a downer but like if he had never if trump had never gotten into the tariff business and really started poking at like the economic parts of the empire if he had stuck strictly which i think he's doing now if he'd stuck strictly to just like let's just cultural terrorize,
Speaker 7
terrorize, and drive out all of the people who are Hispanic or people who are Muslim and just target them. America was going along with that.
American elites were going along with that.
Speaker 7 The American public was going along with that. And it would have worked pretty seamlessly.
Speaker 7 And then if they had, if they were not doing, if they slow rolled this a little bit more, if they had waited before they started going after the ice cream vendor who's been there for 30 years and all these other like beloved parts of the community, I think the United States of America goes along with it.
Speaker 4 In total, yeah. And in total.
Speaker 6 And then approval. I've always said that.
Speaker 4
They didn't vote for foreign wars. They voted for civil war.
I mean,
Speaker 4 in many respects, that's what they're after.
Speaker 7 And to Andor, you know, we can kind of tie these things together. Like, Palpatine is being a great idiot when he...
Speaker 7
gets going on the Death Star. The Death Star is stupid.
Like the Death Star does not need to be there.
Speaker 7 I think that the Empire as such could have insidiously insidiously moved from system to system, a little bit here, a little bit there, built it up.
Speaker 7 The next thing you know, like you're paying taxes to the empire, you're paying taxes to the empire.
Speaker 7 But he gets going on this like huge dramatic fantasy of like having a big orb in space that like blows up planets.
Speaker 7 And that's what leads to like the Gorman massacre. And one of those little bits of point, like the cannon along the way, is that the Gorman massacre like triggers these systems to go into revolt.
Speaker 7 And it creates a dramatic moment that did not
Speaker 7 need to happen.
Speaker 7 And i was skeptical i think early on of how quickly the empire was supposed to take place between like the prequel movies and and the original trilogy because i was like that's such a short amount of time like it's only like 19 years like it felt in the first movie like they'd been around forever and now having watched and or at the same time that i'm watching what's going on in the united states i'm like oh 19 years no that tracks that's yeah that's it's actually two decades is a
Speaker 4 kind of a long time yeah it's a it's a bit of a long time and that's the weird thing about history when you deconstruct it, if you look at it on the overall, you think, oh, it's the part.
Speaker 4 But if you take core samples, there's really only the only core samples that you'll get is like seven to eight years of peace and stability in a moment. Like
Speaker 4 the moment you widen out the time horizon, you see that these things happen really quickly and really violently.
Speaker 4 And I want to end it with, you know, we talked about kind of deconstructing revolution, reconstructing them for art. You've done that now, Mike, with the Martian
Speaker 4 revolution. And I thought what was so brilliant about that is
Speaker 4 it's fiction,
Speaker 4 but it's almost more predictive now that your fiction predicts the time we're living in now in a really prescient.
Speaker 4 way.
Speaker 4 And I wanted you to talk about that a little bit just and you too, Tony, of are you surprised at the works that you've both created out of examining behavior and out of examining the way that people might be turned into something that's different from who they were, the journey that their characters might be taking is actually more predictive of the moment we're living in than the news.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 7 And when I was right, so I wrote The Martian Revolution, it's 29 episodes long and I started it back in October and then was coming out with early episodes of stuff that i'd plotted out kind of for years like things that i wanted to happen mostly because i wanted to like critique as you said like the tech oligarch part of society that i'm really scared of and so there's like there's a monopoly corporation and there's an idiot that's running it that's doing all these things but there there was meant to be inside of this like one of the things those guys do is they just come in like um uh you know like private equity style and they just buy something and then they just fire a bunch of people right and so that's a part of what's going on on mars is like mass indiscriminate firings that they don't know like who does what,
Speaker 7 how or why they do it.
Speaker 4 And that and then it's like a doge.
Speaker 7
Yeah. And then, I mean, literally like three weeks later, they're starting up Doge.
And I'm like, I do not like this at all.
Speaker 7 And then there was also meant to be like, and again, I started this project. Like, I did not, look, I did not think Trump was going to win that election.
Speaker 7 I had, I guess, one last shred of naive hope that we wouldn't do this.
Speaker 7 And so once all those people get fired on Mars, there's a mass deportation business to all of this, where they are coming around and they are rounding up these people.
Speaker 7 Because if you don't have a job on Mars, you got to get off of Mars. And so, like, mass deportations are a part of it.
Speaker 7 And then, several weeks after I dropped those episodes, suddenly we're doing, you know, mass deportations in America. So, I did not enjoy controlling the lathe of heaven.
Speaker 6 I don't know how Tony felt about it. Like, I certainly
Speaker 6 started writing different things.
Speaker 4 I was, Tony, I was, I'm literally watching Andor's mining resources underneath Gorman, the materials that they need to fuel the Death Star as they're signing the mineral agreement
Speaker 4 in Ukraine. It's happening as I'm watching it.
Speaker 6
I mean, you're asking how it, I mean, mostly it makes me, my overwhelming feeling. over the past three months and going out and sell the show is really it's it's it's sadness.
I mean, it's sad.
Speaker 6 There's a really, there's a Tolkien
Speaker 6 had a whole thing thing about
Speaker 6
he didn't like allegory. He didn't like comp people making comps to his work to World War, but he was really into applicability.
He wanted it to be applicable to your life. So
Speaker 6 I'm not exactly sure how wide that
Speaker 6
he takes that term, but to me, it's been shocking to go around the world. We went around the world selling the show.
And every place we went,
Speaker 6 because I really didn't want to,
Speaker 6
particularly in the beginning, I didn't want to have the show get ghettoized by being left or right or political or whatever. I was really, we were really surfing through.
But every journalist,
Speaker 6 every interview that we did, everywhere we went, people were finding ways to take things, the same incident, and make it applicable for them.
Speaker 6 Oh, this is Gaza, this is Ukraine, this is Northern Ireland, this is this, this is me, man, this is me, this is us. And
Speaker 6 that's,
Speaker 6 I, I, it's very sad. I do worry, as I said before, I do worry that
Speaker 6 we're into a different
Speaker 6 situation with tech.
Speaker 6 I wonder if like if if the if our fallacy is that we've been going along going, oh, here's all these revolutions and we know everything about a revolution and Mike's done all these shows about it and Tony's written all this stuff and it's all it's all codified and you just pick one from column A from column B.
Speaker 6 I wonder if if there isn't another page in the book that we haven't seen and that's the book that's the page that we're on now. And that that's the one that worries me the the most.
Speaker 6 Well, then the tech side of it, the AI side of it, and the lack of
Speaker 6 any kind of accountability to that is
Speaker 6 what would keep me up at night more than anything.
Speaker 4
I think you're absolutely right. And I think, you know, like we talked about earlier, these new communications and these new technologies are wildly disruptive.
And I think if I were going to take
Speaker 4 maybe a hopeful sign of it, it's that to me and maybe to you guys, I don't know how you interact with it, it is novel and it is alien.
Speaker 4 And I don't, and I find it discomforting in a way that surprises me, but my hope is that for my kids and maybe even for their kids, their adaptation to it, that it will be native and it will be less destructive, that their brains, that the human instinct will be, you know, when we talk about the printing press comes in and everybody thinks, and that ushered in the Enlightenment.
Speaker 4 But what they forget is it actually ushered in 100 years of like fucking killing witches. Like it just, it ramped up people into all kinds of prejudices.
Speaker 4 But the hope is, is that people's brains.
Speaker 7 Yeah, dude, do Mike and Tony just
Speaker 7 heave huge sighs? Like, is that how we're going to end this? Just the two of us being like, come on, man.
Speaker 6 Yeah. Okay, man.
Speaker 6
You know, Mike and I are going to start. We have to go.
We have some prepping to do. We have to go back to our prepping place.
Speaker 6 Yeah,
Speaker 7 I got to work on my bunker.
Speaker 6 I got to go to the bunker.
Speaker 4 I'm talking about our ability to evolve.
Speaker 6 Come on.
Speaker 7 Yeah, look, I will say one thing, though, because one of the things, I mean, we didn't touch on this, but like Andor dropped into this moment that is talking about resistance to a creeping authoritarian regime.
Speaker 7 That text becomes a part of this political moment, right? The fact that that was given to people right now in this moment, like however few or many actually read it and here, it.
Speaker 7 People are processing what is happening right now in politics through Andor. Like, I go to protests and I see signs that say I have friends everywhere.
Speaker 6 Like, that stuff is out there. Oh, yeah, I know, it's out there.
Speaker 7 It's out there, and you do see it. And I got friends everywhere.
Speaker 6 Yeah, well, I mean,
Speaker 6 I'll go with that hope.
Speaker 4 There you go, Tony.
Speaker 4 Your show and Mike, your podcast become
Speaker 4
part of my kids' brain's ability to evolve to this moment in a more resilient way. I truly mean that.
I'm not trying to like
Speaker 4 fucking kiss your ass here, but like, sure.
Speaker 4 I truly believe that the work that you're doing, Tony, and the work that you're doing, Mike, goes into their brains and it does change the way that they interact with tech in this moment.
Speaker 4 Well, and it's, and it's, and it's a positive.
Speaker 6 I'm glad I was young when I was young.
Speaker 4 That's, that's a good point.
Speaker 7 Yeah, the 90s, the 90s, the 90s were good.
Speaker 4 It was, It was a good time. The 90s were good.
Speaker 4 But remember, too, and this is the thing we forget, we thought the world was spinning out of control. No, I know.
Speaker 4 I grew up, every good person this country produced got fucking shot in the head.
Speaker 6 No, I know.
Speaker 4 You know, look, we have to remain that that's strong. And I so appreciate you guys doing the work that you do.
Speaker 4 It's so engrossing and such a pleasure to watch and feel, and it's so just thorough and all-encompassing and real and not contrived and i i just appreciate you both uh really truly tremendously and and thank you both for adding good things into this sickly soup um
Speaker 4 but uh we're we're honored to have tony gilroy uh who obviously created and or and so many other wonderful things mike duncan uh best-selling author creator history of rome revolutions podcast uh guys thank you so much uh for for spending the time i really appreciate it my pleasure thanks very much.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 4 Damn, I love those guys. Oh, good.
Speaker 4 It's wild
Speaker 4 to see how intentional they are
Speaker 4 about
Speaker 4 everything that they layer into their work, how carefully.
Speaker 12 Tablespoon by tablespoon, as they said, yeah.
Speaker 4 I think it might even be teaspoon by teaspoon.
Speaker 6 I think it might even be small.
Speaker 4 I think a tablespoon is almost a cudgel.
Speaker 7 It's a little heavy-handed.
Speaker 6 It's a little heavy.
Speaker 4 It's a little heavy-handed. But how about, I don't even know if this was on the air, but like at the end, they were both like exchanging numbers.
Speaker 8 You set them up, John.
Speaker 6 I set them up.
Speaker 8 You're a matchmaker.
Speaker 6
Give yourself a little credit. Me next.
Yeah.
Speaker 6 But
Speaker 4 so good and so interesting. And so interesting how, you know, I think for Tony, like, I think he's so used to like selling Andor as, yes, the character.
Speaker 4 So to get an opportunity to like hang with with mike talk about it as an allegory yes you know and to talk about it through history it seemed to like he seemed pleased yeah he did yeah i mean that was so
Speaker 12 the show obviously resonated so much with you know everyone wants to kind of apply it to the moment that you're in but just hearing them zoom out too and like like what a student of history they both are it was so satisfying i guess just to hear them sort of like build that narrative, layer it on top of all of these like very real things that have happened.
Speaker 12 That's right.
Speaker 8 And to hear from them exactly why their work seems predictive to us is because it's not new, because there are these patterns.
Speaker 4 But I also love how, how precise they are. Like when you say to him, like, when you think about their motivations, and he's like, eh, not motivations, behavior.
Speaker 4 Like, they're really,
Speaker 4 I think whenever I talk to people whose work I really admire, I'm always struck by the precision in which they operate.
Speaker 12 Yeah, and that comes through in both of their work so clearly. Right?
Speaker 4
Yeah. No, fantastic.
I was, I was so glad to get a chance to do that. I don't know who put them together.
It's probably Katie Gray, her and her putting people together.
Speaker 6 She's a matchmaker.
Speaker 4 Brittany, what do we got for
Speaker 4 our questions today?
Speaker 13
John, you once compared Dick Cheney to Darth Vader. Yeah.
What Star Wars character would Stephen Miller be?
Speaker 4 Oh, Jesus.
Speaker 4 I don't even know if there's a, I don't know that that universe has conjured up.
Speaker 4 I think it would probably be, you know, kind of one of those characters that they mentioned, but you know, like Darth Sidious. Like one of those that's like, and my teacher taught me,
Speaker 4 taught me the power over life and death. His name was Sidious.
Speaker 4 You know, it's one of, and it would be a sibilant. There'd always be that like
Speaker 4 in one of those characters. It'd be, yeah, that.
Speaker 12 I feel like, yeah, when Tony said, like,
Speaker 12 the characters that are interesting to write, you know, the Nazis that are like the clock punchers and stuff, like, Stephen Miller, you're not interesting enough to write.
Speaker 12 I don't think you're too despicable.
Speaker 4
Yeah. And also almost too much two-dimensional.
Yeah.
Speaker 4 You can't even see him in Inglorious Bastiers where he's like, wait, wait, we have to wait for the cream for the struggle. You know what I mean?
Speaker 6 Like, you can't even do that shit.
Speaker 4 Like, it just.
Speaker 6 all right.
Speaker 4 What else we got?
Speaker 13
Um, all right. The Democrats launched plans for Project 2029.
Do you think they finally figured out how to win? Copycatting and going on podcasts?
Speaker 4
Because their 2029 is so fucking idiotic. And it's the same idiots that put together all the plans that haven't worked out in the first place.
They're not understanding where the energy and
Speaker 4 the desire rests in this country. They have no idea.
Speaker 4 They are looking in the wrong place. And their Project 2029 is going to be a rehash of all the consultant-driven, careful nonsense that has put them in this place of that,
Speaker 4 you know, in a moment when
Speaker 4 the Republican Congress is passing one of the most devastating bills that we have seen in this country in forever to just put out pictures of Hakeem Jeffries from an angle that makes him look six years old holding a baseball bat.
Speaker 4 And you're like, it doesn't look like you're going to fight. It looks like you're going to t-ball.
Speaker 6 And that's where they're all going.
Speaker 4 So,
Speaker 4 you know, hopefully this Project 2029 that they've done is
Speaker 4 just a draft on a Google doc that they can put into edit mode and have people go in there and make some real changes.
Speaker 4 and hopefully understand the desperation of the moment that people are feeling. Because right now,
Speaker 12 do you think anyone's getting it right?
Speaker 4 Yeah, I think there are a lot of young people whose much more populist campaigns.
Speaker 4 I mean, obviously, Mom Donnie is getting all the attention in New York and for very good reasons, but there's a lot of young candidates that are
Speaker 4 it's not even about the savvy in which they use social media or the way that they've gotten attention.
Speaker 6 It's the burning,
Speaker 4 I think, authenticity of how they feel about the inequities and upside-down nature of the society that we're building.
Speaker 4 Like we talked about in the podcast, you know, when you start consolidating and taking people's farmland and just creating more and more elites with larger and larger farmland, that's a recipe for stupidity.
Speaker 4 And so seeing the
Speaker 4
bottom-up energy of some of these candidates, I think they're getting it right. They're not being, I think, in any way nurtured or helped by the party elites.
In fact, I think they're being resisted.
Speaker 4 And I think it's stupidity and suicidal on the part of the party elites. I think they're making a huge mistake.
Speaker 12 It's, yeah, it's both shocking and unsurprising to watch the Democrats respond to all of this this way.
Speaker 6 Right.
Speaker 4 I mean, they're, they're trying to discredit it. Yeah.
Speaker 8 But there's such a shocking
Speaker 8 disparity between the authenticity. Like you're juxtaposing, let's say, Mom Donnie speaking to camera, talking with, you know, so much
Speaker 8 like expertise and feeling about things that affect the city, like a plate of food, how much does this cost? And juxtapose that with a single picture that was, you know, canned and I don't know.
Speaker 13 It's not produced.
Speaker 8 There's just a stark difference between even the message and how it's being said, not just the capturing on social media, even. Totally.
Speaker 4 Well, it's like anything else. The Project 29 they're doing and
Speaker 4 the party elites smack of what is so inauthentic about like taglines on movies. Like, you know,
Speaker 4 and people feel it. It's not of a reality.
Speaker 4 It's of a process that is put into place by people who don't experience reality to try and describe what they think will be a winning message, as opposed to taking in the reality of the emotions and channeling those into positive, you know, change for people.
Speaker 4 And I think you're exactly right, Lauren, about the specificity of Mom Dani when he talks. It's not just platitudes about affordability.
Speaker 4 It's really deconstructing how that inaffordability has been created and how we might
Speaker 4 battle back.
Speaker 8 Yeah, it just shows people how their city works more. I think there's
Speaker 8 a point to that.
Speaker 12 Yeah, policies he understands and believes in. Who would have thought that would be a winning recipe?
Speaker 6 As they say, so you're saying the strategy is authenticity.
Speaker 6 I like it.
Speaker 4 I like the cut of your jib.
Speaker 4
Very, very nice program. Thank you guys, as always, for putting together just a banger.
I really love talking to those guys.
Speaker 4 Lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer Brittany Menovic, video editor and engineer, Rob Vitolo, audio editor and engineer Nicole Boyce, researcher and associate producer Jillian Spear, executive producers Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
Speaker 4 And we will see you guys next week.
Speaker 6 Bye-bye.
Speaker 4 The weekly show with Jon Stewart is a comedy central podcast. It's produced by Paramount Audio and Bus Boy Productions.
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