
·S1 E23
Jack Schlossberg’s Congressional Run
Episode Transcript
I'm George Severis and I'm Julia Clair, and this is United States of Kennedy, a podcast about our cultural fascination with the Kennedy dynasty.
Every week we go into one aspect of the Kennedy story.
And today we are taking a little break from our regularly scheduled programming to talk about something that's been in the news lately that is right up our alley.
Speaker 2And no, we're not talking about RFK Junior's erotic poetry or his recent decision to change the CDC websites language on vaccines and autism.
Speaker 1We are talking about something a little less alarming than that, which is that one of our favorite characters here on United States of Kennedy, Jack Schlasberg, JFK's only grandson, has announced that he is running for Congress in New York.
Speaker 2Schlasberg is one of over ten people currently running to replace Jerry Nadler in New York's twelfth congressional district.
This is the wealthiest district in New York and a huge Democratic stronghold.
According to the New York Times quote, it offers immediate access to the city's concentration of wealthy donors, media giants, and democratic top Brass.
Speaker 1So we've talked about Schlasberg before on the podcast, mostly as a sort of confounding curiosity.
This very strange, very twenty twenty four twenty twenty five social media star.
So he's posting shirtless videos of himself singing and dancing.
Then he's starting fights with his cousin RFK Junior.
He is talking about how the Democratic Party needs to move on from old men, and he's endorsing Zarnmmdani in the New York mamurial election.
And then there is the sort of more trollish part of him.
He once, of course tweeted to his followers asking if Usha Vans is hotter than his own grandmother, Jacqueline Kennedy.
And when he's confronted about this behavior, he claims that it is all a strategic ploy to get people to talking about politics and reclaim the attention economy from the Republicans.
Speaker 3I mean, clearly, he's a genius.
Speaker 2But today we wanted to talk more specifically about his foray into electoral politics and what the race might look like for him to do that.
We are joined by Washington Post political features writer Kara Vote Okay.
Speaker 1Hello, Kara, So let's get into it.
Almost exactly a year ago today, you wrote this big piece in the Washington Post on Jack Schlossberg titled we don't know Jack, and I want to know what led to that piece and what the experience of trying to chase him down.
Speaker 3Was, like, thank you for asking.
As I write in the piece, I encountered Jack the way I'm sure all of you did, which is on the internet.
And I can't remember exactly what led me to it, but I think it was the videos of him doing the various impressions of New Yorkers who do not want to vote for Robert F.
Kennedy Junior for president.
This was back in I think it was April or May.
Speaker 1Yes, and there were a lot of accents from what I remember that some people took issue with.
You know, Julia and I in past lives work comedians, so we are obviously very well versed in sort of character work, and we really appreciate the intent, right.
Speaker 3There was definitely some blowback.
I think the New York Times headline on him doing that was like offensive accents from the Kennedy scion, which was funny to me because they totally missed the point.
But I will also say that missing the point was why I was so intrigued by Jack, because I feel like I got the bit.
I feel like I understood what he was doing, that he was lending this political heritage, this really American idealism that anyone who knows the Kennedys has come to admire, lending it to this new way of doing politics.
And I thought, holy shit, this kid is doing something fascinating.
And I thought it was funny too, because he was still doing all the very traditional Kennedy things of going to the Profile and Courage awards and shaking hands and putting on a suit and talking about his grandpa.
So I reached out to him on Instagram and I asked him for his email address, and he gave it to me, and we started a correspondence of I'd like to write about you.
I'm sure I'm not the only one, and we kept setting dates to get together to talk.
And actually, I can talk about this now because I'm sure listeners of this show will have seen the news that his sister, Tatana Schasburg, has terminal cancer.
Right about a month after Jack and I first started talking, we had set a date to get together for early June for this profile that I was going to write about him, and he said to me, I'm so sorry.
My sister has just had a baby and we think there's also cancer.
And I was like, oh my goodness, wow, And I said, well, okay, totally.
Please take time in you for your family.
And as Tatiana writes in the piece, again, I don't feel bad disclosing this now because I think that this is all sort of in the open.
She's really been on a roller coaster of she's better, she's not doing better.
She's better for most of twenty twenty four, at least the times when Jack and I were talking a lot, she seems like there was a good sense that she was on her way to remission and was going to be okay.
But anyways, we had a false start there and we got together.
I happened to be in New York at the end of June.
We took a long walk together in Chelsea, where Jack lived, and talked about his family, about the campaign, about This was the weekend after the debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, so everyone's like, what's going on.
He was himself trying to figure things out.
He just signed this contract with Vogue.
He didn't know what the Vogue thing was going to be, but he's like, you know, I think things are better, Like we should do the profile sometime this summer, and I said great.
And then the can just kept getting kicked down the road for various reasons of busy or not a good time.
I detail a lot of that in the story I wrote about him.
And our plan had always been to go paddleboarding, and that's one of Jack's favorite activities.
And when I said let's do something around the Chicago convention, the Democrats were there to coordinate Kamala Harris, he said, great, And this is very funny.
The kinds of things you do as a journalist are not so dissimilar from the kinds of things you do on a date or when you're like getting ready to meet up with somebody, Like you pick out what are you going to wear?
How are you going to bring?
All the tools you need for the job without seeming really weird.
Our job is so weird.
We're like really invasive, and we're doing these weird things with people, these stunts.
So I had ordered a very special waterproof case for my phone that would still allow me to use a microphone, so while we were out paddleboarding, I would have what I needed.
But of course we never went paddle boarding.
He blew me off and he just just like, now's not a good time.
I'm the only person here representing my family at the DNC.
It's not a good time.
And I was at this point we'd pushed it or four times, So speaking for myself, I was really mad.
So that's such as life.
Such as life.
And then when all of these Jack Schlosberg lookalike contests started showing up last November, about a year ago, I said to my editor at the time, I am the world's foremost expert on John Bouvier Kennedy Schlosberg, and I am feeling crazy seeing all of these various things exploding, all of the interest in him hitting this like fever pitch.
And at the time Jack and I weren't talking that much, but he was still very much in the way that we all surveil each other.
He's still looking at my Instagram stories and he's looking at what I'm doing.
And something I should have said at the beginning the full disclaimer.
We all know the term silly goose has been our lexicon for a long time.
But when Jack and I first started talking, when I was trying to pitch him on the kind of story I would do, I said, you know, you're like a silly goose.
Like a silly goose is like trying to get the truth out there.
And he was like, Oh, that's really That's a good way to think about it, and thought about myself that way.
Then everywhere I go, I see Jack calling himself a silly goose, And this happens all the time.
Moreen Dowd, who just wrote the wonderful profile of Jack for The New York Times, I happened to know that she had called Dick Cheeney darth Vader, and it became a name he liked so much that he stuck with it.
And she said to me, like, yeah, take it as a term of endearment or as a sign of you doing good work that someone's she says something to someone as a writer and they want to make it their own thing.
Long story short, I use the arc of Jack to tell the story of Jack and what he's liked and trying to give a sense of not only his energy, his persona what he was doing as this online influencer for the Democrats, but then also a sense of what it's like to be a Kennedy, which I feel like with him, I got a good glimpse, which is enough attention to note and to have an impact, but not so much that there's scrutiny, and not so much that there's pressure.
And the very weird extended family.
I feel like I got a little glimpse into that too, that there's an expectation that because you related to someone who has a Kennedy last name, that you will behave a certain way, you have a certain duty, right.
I feel like Jack really thinks that tension, that kind of expectation that we put on Kennedy's I feel like he felt that very much.
Speaker 1Yeah, well, he both tries to live up to it sometimes and doesn't at others.
I mean, the tension you're describing is him being a silly goose, as you say, in the sense that he is posting crazy things online, whether it's shirtless videos of himself dancing or really provocative Twitter jokes or whatever.
So he's doing that on the one side, and then he's also interviewing Mike Pence and giving him the Profile and Courage Award on the other.
So it's interesting now seeing him run for Congress.
You're sort of like, so, which one of the two one over?
On the one hand, the Kennedy side did because he's going into electoral politics, which he feels is his birth rate.
On the other hand, what set him apart is the sort of crazy, crazy social media star thing, and so if he abandons that, then he only has a Kennedy name to trade it.
But since writing this piece, how has he changed?
Would you describe him differently now?
In the year since then?
Obviously Donald Trump was eventually elected after Jack was like very focused on being a mouthpiece for the DNC and going on Jimmy Kimmel and speaking at the DNC and whatever.
How has he evolved over the last year.
Speaker 3So I'm going to bring in some of the reporting from Maureen Dad's profile and fill it in with some of my own knowledge.
So about a year and a half ago last spring, Jack was living in Hawaii working in a surf shop.
He did not have a plan, he did not know what he was going to do, and the videos were pretty organic and silly and they took off.
It was the right content for the right time in a moment of politics that felt so icky and weird, and here's this symbol of Americana helping us feel a little less icky and weird about all of it.
He was gonna be an actor, he was going to practice law, he was going to work for the Biden campaign.
I mean, the jobs that Maureen mentions in that piece.
It's almost like when you ask a five year old what they want to be when they go.
It was all very like anything anything.
And I don't have inside knowledge into this, but what I've seen from Jack over the last eighteen months two years is an attempt to formalize whatever that organic energy is, an attempt to put it into something like a YouTube show and now like run for Congress.
I do believe that he very much embodies this sense of, you know, to quote his grandfather, what can you do for your country?
I just really watched that on a Kennedy podcast.
I'm really sorry.
Speaker 2Wait, it's ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for you.
Speaker 1You can do for your country.
I have to say I've always thought that it's such a crazy thing to say in an inauguration speech when you're trying to prove what you are offering to the people.
To be like, Okay, thank you for electing me, and now the balls in your court, folks, Like it really has always struck me as so strange.
Speaker 2We'll be back with more United States of Kennedy after this break, and we're back with more United States of Kennedy.
Speaker 1One of the reasons why I'm asking about the YouTube show is because we noticed that it's one of the many things that has now been scrapped from the internet.
So if you go on the YouTube page, it says all ten episodes are unlisted, which means I believe that if you have the link, you can watch them.
They're not like deleted, but but they're not publicly available.
Yeah.
So yes, and the YouTube show, for anyone who does know, he was in a van and doing a combination of like speaking directly to Cameron also interviewing guests.
Speaker 3Right, and I think it was mostly to camera stuff.
I didn't catch every episode.
I did watch the Schumer episode because I was like, what are we doing here?
The show did not take off.
I think that he has much more of an audience when he is just kind of reacting spontaneously.
And I also think that there's a lot of people with shows.
There's a lot of influencers who have a YouTube show he is not special and he's late to the game in that regard.
And now we're seeing in his congressional run that's an attempt to formalize some of that Jua demive too, of like trying to fit it into the strictures of running for office.
And you have to wonder what his campaign would look like if he was not a Kennedy, because plenty of influencers run for office.
I'm forgetting her name.
There was a young woman in Arizona who just ran in the special election.
Who is that?
She's a Democratic influencer?
Right, yes, great, very big deal gen Z Democratic influencer and they're not really bound by the should I go to shake hands at the soup kitchen energy?
Kept up with what Jack stops have been so far about organizing that kind of thing.
Speaker 1But there's a real.
Speaker 3Old school energy that feels like it's on his campaign and I have to wonder how much of that is just that's the way Jack wants it, and how much of that is there's an expectation that he would have a more traditional campaign in some respects, and also do I see it that way because of the way that we all view Kennedy's is this all kind of novel and new and interesting, But we always have this lens on him because of where he came from.
What past generations did Kennedy's a wursehock test?
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 3The way that we see them tells us as much about us as it does about Yeah.
Speaker 1Totally right.
Speaker 2And I think when he first came into the public consciousness, it was through these very silly videos, and I think that did butt up against a lot of our views of what a Kennedy is or what a Kennedy is quote unquote supposed to be.
And now his campaign is like a push and pull between those two almost opposing forces, because the reason why he has become notable and popular is because of this goofiness, silliness, these kind of irreverent social media posts.
But now that he is running for a congressional seat, it seems like he is either himself or he is being advised to pull back and distance himself from that what has made him prominent.
Speaker 1Right, That's what seems confusing to me.
Because we watched and listened to some interviews with him last time we talked about him on a broader level, a few months ago, he did this interview with Jen Saki, He went on Kimmel, and his value proposition has always been I am being intentionally provocative in order to gain the attention economy the same way Republicans do, because Democrats are too scared to be controversial and provocative.
But if we gain the attention economy, get eyeballs and ears on our side, then we can use that attentional power to talk about the real issues.
And you even said it like he's a silly goose and he's out there to spread the truth or whatever.
And I really have noticed that since announcing the congressional run, he hid his YouTube series.
He has deleted certain tweets.
Julia, what was the one you found?
Speaker 3Oh?
Speaker 2The one immediately after the twenty twenty four election where some of Harris staffers went on Pod Save America and the tweets said, I think pod saved my limptic right, So that's gone now?
So that's gone now?
Oh I should check my profile for broken links.
I think I mentioned that one at lengths.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, I remember last time we were talking about him, I looked through his Twitter to be like, what are his craziest recent tweets and it was like I would scroll for, you know, fifteen minutes and it would still be like a week ago.
I did the same thing today, and he barely tweets anymore, and when he does, it's very serious.
So I don't know, what do you think this makes sense as a strategy.
Isn't he sort of abandoning what drew people to him?
Speaker 3So I have a rule for myself, because I live in Washington and I work for the Washington Post, that I do not go too deep on New York politics because it's a city that is so full of so many political reporters with way too much time on their hands.
So I cannot speak to the particular of the New York twelve.
What I can say is what he is doing is not why he resonated with people in the first place.
Yeah, Like, I feel that in my bones, And I don't know if it's a political strategy.
I have no idea what these voters are like.
It is interesting to me though, in a moment when so much of the discourse in politics is about authenticity, you know, I'm thinking about not to like compare him to Graham Platner, the Senate candidate who's running in Maine, who in case your listeners are not caught up Democrat progressive, but likes hunting and as an oyster farmer and has this kind of hipster energy to him, like sort of Noah concre And he has this tattoo from when he was in the Armed Services that it turns out was a Nazi symbol and he got it covered up recently once the symbolism of the tattoo was known.
And I'm bringing this up because there's a way in which really leaning into who you are and your story and where you've been without shame is really powerful for a lot of people.
There's a lot of people in this world who have made a lot of mistakes and said things they wish they hadn't said, and posted things they wish they hadn't posted, and have talked about, you know, learn my lesson or yeah that was weird, or even just owned it and been like you know what at the time, pod should save my limp dick, you know, like for example.
And I feel like what made Jack powerful last year and what made him so interesting is that because of who he was, there were things that he could get away with and things that were funny and things that made sense.
If they came out of anybody else's mouth orround anyone else's feed, you would be like, what, Like, I can't even imagine most other interesting democratic influencers saying pod save my olymptck and having it have that effect.
And I would be curious what this campaign would have looked like if he just left everything up there and the OPO people went through.
And also it's very silly because like anyone who works in oppositional research has already gotten all these tweets because they know how this works, since ways to recover them very easily.
So it's not like if an enterprising reporter wasn't asking around, they could just get the entire ream of any filthy thing he ever said, right.
Speaker 1If anything, That's what makes me think it is an incorrect strategy, Not because he's like trying to be respectable, like I get trying to be respectable, to even think this could make a difference, makes me think he's working with someone who doesn't quite know how the media ecosystem.
Speaker 3Yeah, I think.
Speaker 2Also, you know, we just obviously in New York, we just had the mayoral race, and Zoron is someone who's also a digital native, a social media native, and he just left all of his tweets up, which I think makes sense in those music videos, right, and he kind of made it part of his campaign and like, oh look at me, I was so silly.
And to your point about Graham Platner, a lot of his posts, you know, Opposition Research has uncovered some Reddit posts of his, and he has also folded that into his story, saying I was a lost young man, as so many American men are, and I, you know, I have since learned and educated myself and changed, and there's something powerful, there is something that resonates with people.
And I'm confused about Jack's decision to distance himself from the very thing that endeared him to people.
Speaker 1Yeah, you know, we wanted to sort of take some time to go through his campaign website and more specifically, you know, okay, so how is he selling himself?
Speaker 2Now?
Speaker 1This is like his This is almost like a big reset.
For let's say two years, all the media coverage of him was like, look at this strange curiosity.
You'll never believe this.
He's a Kennedy but he's shirtless and he's hot, and he like has a funny, good relationship with his parents, and there's sometimes in his videos, but then he also can dress up and suddenly he's covered like an influencer.
And then suddenly it's this very old fashioned.
First of all, the imagery Julia planted this out to me earlier.
The imagery really like references a bunch of old Kennedy yes images, whether that's his grandfather or whether that's JFK.
Junior.
And then we have twelve promises to the people of New York's twelfth District, and it's these really like platitude written sentences for each one.
Speaker 3Also not for nothing, but like I just googled Jack Schlosberg to pull this website up, and it wasn't even the first five pages of results.
I had to actually put in Jack Schlossberg campaign to get it.
So that doesn't coos ceo.
Speaker 2So the twelfth Promises to the People of New York's twelfth District service courage, strength, accountability, optimism, independence, focus, pragmatism, unity, patriotism, creativity, and positivity.
I mean they almost strike you as something you would find on bad art at home goods.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Well, and also each of them is truly written as like a thesis statement in a high school essay or something.
It really is very much like Gandhi once said.
Speaker 2Like under focus, it says all three branches of government are equal, but Congress comes first.
Speaker 3Just check the Constitution.
It's Article one for a reason, People's House has all the power.
Speaker 1I do want to say in his defense, you know it's important to remember, and I know we don't want to talk about the ins and outs of New York politics, it's important to remember he is running for New York's twelve congressional district, which is if you're thinking of like the most stereotypical rich, out of touch vote blue no matter who Democrats, that will respond even to this day, to like we got to get that cheeto out of the White House.
This is that district.
So yes, it might seem completely beside the point to us, and we might think it sounds like lame or something, but these are exactly the kind of people who would respond to this kind of messaging.
So that would be my one point in his defense.
Speaker 3I also think that one of the through lines of Jack from the time when he and I first started talking to now is he's it's really earnest and even though he is funny, there is an earnestness in his humor.
He has never actually totally detached.
There isn't a ry nous, there isn't a cynicism.
It's silly, it's ridiculous, over the top, but it's always earnest.
And Julia, as you were reading those qualities aloud and some of the descriptions, what's funny is the intonation of it is still very Jack like in that he has a kind of Peter Panish quality to him that is part of the charm, a little bit like I'm not going to be weighed down by my three and a half decades of living in America in a mostly post nine to eleven world.
I Am going to still see the good qualities.
And there's a bit of a wink and a nod to me as I hear you read through them that if you know Jack and you're familiar with his game, you can kind of see the sort of content behind the earnestness.
And I guess to the point George was just making about the voters.
If you don't know it, it just sounds like a nice young boy whose grandfather was their favorite president, go out and vote for him.
So maybe he's trying to kind of have it both ways.
I don't know if it'll be effective for voters, but I could see it that way.
He's not being dishonest and like totally burying who he was, but he's playing up the very particular aspect of his earnest self to various audiences and seeing how the chips fall.
Speaker 2I mean, he's also not making any specific policy promises.
It's all these, as George said, vague platitudes.
So I don't know, it's interesting.
It kind of strikes me as someone who doesn't quite know who he is yet, but also someone who much has been asked of him, specifically from the Democratic establishment, you know, as you noted in your piece.
In twenty twenty four, he was named a New York delegate at the DNC, and then he was a speaker at the DNC in Chicago.
But then in the aftermath of Kamala's loss, he was very critical of Kamala's campaign, you know, rightfully, so sure, but I'm confused about this push and pull with Hi, like, do you have a sense of how he is perceived within the Democratic Party.
Speaker 3I think it was telling that Jack was asked to speak and to be clear like this convention came together very quickly.
It wasn't like, oh, we know exactly what's going to happen, because Kamala Harris became the nominee a couple of weeks before, so a lot of seat of the pants stuff.
I know that his addition was a little bit on the later side, and it was telling.
I think that they had him show up with Jimmy Carter's grandson.
Remember that it was an early block.
I forgot what day of the week it is, was not during the primetime.
So this was a really fan service for the people in the convention center, and it was getting the blessing of the Kennedy family and the blessing of the Carter family.
And that was important in a moment when RFK Junior is still glooming as this free radical.
He hadn't quite linked arms with Trump yet.
I think that was coming in like the week or so later, and that's what he talked about at the DNC.
He talked about the legacy, he talked about the baton.
He didn't talk about himself, he didn't talk about his videos.
He didn't talk about what the party could be doing reaching out to young people who the likes of whom follow him.
He was talking about his grandparents and he talks about his mother, and I think the Democratic Party he is still that he is, above all else, a Kennedy who can remind Democrats of the good times.
Speaker 1It's also like because RFK Junior, especially now obviously is inside the Trump administration, which he wasn't, then there is almost, I would imagine, in the Democrat's mind this idea, they have the bad Kennedy and we have the good Kennedy.
Look, they have the one who's spreading misinformation and having affairs with journalists, and then we have the one who's young and attractive and has hope in his eyes and you know, is inspiring the youth.
Speaker 3Yeah, I think that's probably right.
But I think it's telling because I don't think the value they saw in him is really through the things that connected so many people to him, which is his social media and his like just attention talent.
And that's what we talked to Jen Zacki about.
In other interviews, he's discussed this.
There is a real disconnect between the value that Jack can add to Democrats and the value they want him to add, at least historically speaking.
The run for Congress is like a whole other things.
Speaker 1Right, We're going to take a short break, stay with us, and we're back with United States of Kennedy.
Speaker 2Well, it seems like the value that perhaps he has to the Democratic Party how they see him is symbolic, and I'm curious if you have a sense of how he sees himself in that way, and how do you think he sees his own role inside or outside of the Democratic establishment.
Speaker 3So Jack and I have never spoken on the record, so I want to just promise what I'm about to say that way, because I'm not a liberty to share what's in his head.
But I think you see this play out on social media.
I think you see it play out before he started cleaning up his various feeds.
I think there's a real tension of being yanked in the direction of like, Okay, it's your turn, kid, we need you to come do this thing, and just like your sisters and your mother before you, it's your turn to carry the mantle for us.
And I think he does have really strong ideas about the fact that the party is not doing what it can to attract new audiences, to bring people into the fault.
I think his criticism of the campaign after the fact was the most telling aspect of this.
Speaker 1And his endorsement of Zoron you could say, like he felt very passionate about you know, he has this famous video where he's like, we need to get all these old Democrats out of office.
We need young blah blah blah.
Julian and I were talking about this off Mike earlier, and she made the point that he both represents the establishment and not the establishment, like in his mind he doesn't shy away from the Kennedy name, like it's very open.
It's on his website, like he both thinks part of the value proposition is that he is a quintessential Democratic candidate from the old times and also that he's part of a new generation that is unseating the old crusty men, right.
Speaker 3And I think that, as we've been discussing, though it doesn't work so seamlessly as him being able to do both things.
In fact, both things are often at odds with each other in how they manifest in him.
Speaker 1Yeah, and so we've talked about, you know, how he's perceived within the Democratic Party, how he perceives himself.
I mean, the obvious next question is how actual normal people perceive him, because I have to say I was not surprised, but I was intrigued by the fact that, despite all the love he has experienced over the last two years, when he did finally announce his run, the reaction that I saw at least was mostly negative.
All these people that thought he was so fun and funny and shared his videos were not being like, all right, I'm pumped up, let's go.
I think part of that is because it's such a crowded field, and I was just saying before, like, he's not even in this field the young and hot one.
There's literally like a twenty five year old, yeah, former Parkland teen who's cool and gay and going around and giving like fun interviews, which really sucks for him.
He can't even be like the offantoreable of this specific campaign totally.
What is your take on the response, I mean, it's sort of landed with a thud to me.
Yeah.
Speaker 3I think there's a couple of things going on.
One of them is, for sure, this is a really crowded race full of charismatic gay beautiful men exactly.
Yeah, but like also maybe George Conway, Kelly and Conway that has been.
It is a clown car of people.
Speaker 1And there's also like in the more serious side, there's you know, Michael Asher is like Jerry Nadler's protege, and Nadler will probably endorse him.
Like there's already a candidate for the serious older people, there's already a candidate for the like young progressive people.
There's very little grasp on too.
Speaker 3But the comparison point and the scene setting here is important because you could imagine in another race where it's just I don't know, just for example, let's say Jack and Dan Goldman, the kind of old or I forget which district he represents, forgive me New.
Speaker 2Yorkers, but it's mine, Yeah, it's ours, ye okay, great.
Speaker 3So he is very serious and a little bit older and not a good hang and like very establishment coded.
And you could see like someone like Jack running against him and just kind of dancing circles around him being like, yeah, look at me.
He can't do that in this race.
So his fish tank is he's a little bit boxed in by the other fish that are already there.
I don't know why I'm talking about fish, just please bear with me.
It's a tableau.
The other thing is I do think that, for whatever reason, there are some people who are getting the ick out there.
I think that Jack's popularity really was peak pre post election, and in fact pre twenty twenty four election, when he was starting to do more events with Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, you could kind of see this like strain of like he's trying to make these guys a little cool, like make it kind of get people excited about the election.
I felt like that was some of his weakest content that he was making, and after the election he exploded with his like tear it all down energy, And then with the show, I hear more people who last summer were saying, oh my god, Carol, he's going to be at the convention, what if we kissed under the balloon drop?
Just like fantasizing about like what it would be like to meet Jack slaws.
Speaker 2I mean, they were calling him the internet's baby girl, right, very baby girl.
Speaker 3People of both genders, I should say, were like pitching out to me all sexual orientations were like what if we kiss under the ball drop?
To now being like ew ew, I'm just so sick of seeing Jack Schlossberg.
He's giving me the egg.
I don't know what makes the Internet turn on somebody like that.
I can't figure it out.
I'd be curious if you guys have any thoughts on why that is.
But it is definitely happening.
I have a theory in this particular political moment.
It's interesting because Jack, as we said, he endorsed Uran.
In Zoran's victory speech, he specifically referenced that his election is the end of a political dynasty.
It is the end of the Cuomo dynasty, and it is implicitly or explicitly hopefully the end of dynastic politics in America.
And crucially, a Cuomo dynasty is in part of Kennedy dynasty.
Given the marriage to right.
I can see why.
Speaker 2People like Jack Schlossberg as a fun, kooky almost like a little eadie, deeply for the modern age.
But it seems that there is really not an appetite right now for dynastic politics, at least maybe not in his district honestly, because his district went for Cuomo.
So maybe there is more of an appetite in his district for a member of a political dynasty.
Speaker 3But I think it's.
Speaker 2Both the fact that we are sick of dynastic politics writ large in this country and also that the other most prominent Kennedy right now is.
Speaker 3Anesthma to anyone left of center.
That's my theory, right.
Speaker 1And the fact that Jack has obviously spent so much of his time arguing with the Kennedy referring to RFK Junior is not quite having the intended effect.
It's like the Kennedy name has still taken a hit because of you know, the last two years, likeingly, and to be honest, the last generation that really associated the Kennedys with this statesmanship and with JFK is the Boomers, Like it just isn't that anymore.
Speaker 2John Junior was going to be the last great hope, I think, and maybe would have been that person for gen X had he not breached his untimely end.
And it seems like Jack is trying to kind of emulate that too.
He wants to be connected to that legacy.
On his campaign website, there's a picture of him on a bicycle that is almost an exact recreation of a paparazzi shout of JFK Junior.
So I think what I keep coming back to over and over again.
Is that this is someone who kind of has a little bit of an identity crisis.
Speaker 3Yeah, I mean I think that this is probably not unique to a Kennedy.
But if you're going to pursue the family business with a name like that, it is impossible to figure out who you are without that history weighing on you.
And it'd be one thing if a member of the Bush family went and opened a pizza shop.
No one in the Bush family, as far as I know, has a pizza shop, And you don't have to think too hard about how Prescott Bush made pizza or George H.
W or George W.
Because who the f knows.
But if you're going into politics, there is a thought and expectation about who you are and what you represent.
I don't know what ended up happening.
One of the Bush grandchildren was thinking about running for was a governor or senate in Maine.
I don't know if he actually launched his campaign, But you know, what is a Bush in twenty twenty five in the midst of Maga.
You know, there is constantly both the liberal nostalgia for the Bushes but also Maga hatred for them.
When Dick Cheney died.
I follow a lot of the right online because of my job, and there was a real good is that to me being thirty six years old?
Gosh, it was the most firebrand liberals growing up who were like, I wish death upon Dick Cheney.
So to see the maga people like spitting on his grave, I was like, Wow, we've really come far.
So that is also say that I can only imagine how hard it is to figure out how to be a person in general when you have a legacy behind you, a high profile one, and you're trying to be yourself against that backdrop.
I don't know if it's a possible thing.
Speaker 1To pull off.
Speaker 2And I think, to your point, what is a Bush right now?
And what is the role of a Kennedy?
I actually think that the person who has gotten it exactly right is Jenna Bush.
That's right, and that is right kind of and and honestly I could see someone like Jack being equally as successful in a similar role in a non political but still entertainment, still a very visible legacy of this family.
Speaker 3Well, he wanted to be an actor, I mean yet Patrick Schwarzenegger, and I know that he comes by that for various ways.
But Maria Shriver was a journalist.
John Junior was a journalist.
There's a way of being able to translate the life experience and the people you know for the rest of us that I think is one of the most compelling ways to be a Kennedy right now.
Speaker 1Yeah, And when Jack was a kooky social media influencer and Vogue columnist, there was something sort of perfect about that.
It was like, all right, that's exactly what we can do with you, and you can sort of serve that function.
Speaker 2So you note in your profile or what was supposed to be a profile last year that it did end up calling apart because, as you said, the Ken kept getting kicked down the road.
And one of the passages that I thought was really interesting that you ended on was and now here.
I was just another journalist who tried to scale the walls of Camelot only to belly flop into the moat.
What is it about the Kennedys that makes them court media attention and then simultaneously spurneth.
Speaker 3The best example that comes to mind for me is the Royal family in England that their power is only really derived from public attention, and yet to lend oneself publicly in the way that the royal family does is also to lose the really humanity of being a private citizen, of having things you do that are not publicly available for consumption.
But the Kennedys are kind of the same, and this has been a repeating theme throughout the generations, of knowing that having an audience and keeping America enmeshed in the myth and the legacy is like, there's only power as long as that's still true.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 3If every Kennedy decided today to go be a private citizen, this generation would have some questions and be like, huh, what's up with them?
But probably by the time the next couple generations came through, we wouldn't think about it and be like, oh, yeah, there used to be Kennedy the same way like there used to be you know, other very famous families Asters.
I don't know if Asters are still around.
That's probably not a good example.
But this is all to say that it feels to me it's a two way street that there are at least some members of the family who aren't ready to give up on being this important family for America.
I don't think every member of the family feels this way.
And I think that great New York magazine piece about the Kennedy's got it.
This is like how much mileage do does the family member want from being a Kennedy.
But I think that they let us get close and push us away because they understand the public and their love of them sustains the family name.
Speaker 1Wow, that is a perfect place to end.
It could be the final sentence of every of every episode of the United States of Kennedy.
Thank you so much, kar This was really great and our best wishes to Jack.
Sadly, Julia and I are not in his districts, so we can't vote for him.
Speaker 3But Jackie and Jack, you always have an invitation to come on the.
Speaker 1Show, and maybe if you do, we will.
We will move to the Upper West Side.
I hear it's really affordable.
Speaker 3Really really nice.
Yeah, and I would also say that no matter what you think about him and what he's up to, he's definitely going through a lot with tatianas of course, Yes, nothing but good thoughts for her and her family as there as they're making their way through it.
Speaker 1Yeah, and from us as well.
Speaker 3Thank you so much, Kara, Thanks guys, Thank you Karen.
Speaker 1So that's it for this week's episode.
Speaker 2Next week, we're talking about the history of Kennedy Fashion.
So subscribe and follow the United States of Kennedy for all things Kennedy each week.
United States of Kennedy is hosted by me Julia Clair and George Saveres.
Speaker 1Original music by Joshua Chapolski.
Speaker 3Editing by Graham Gibson.
Speaker 1Mixing and mastering by Doug Bame.
Speaker 3Research by Dave Bruce and Austin Thompson.
Speaker 1Our producer is Carmen Laurent.
Speaker 3Our executive producer is Jenna Cagle.
Speaker 1Created by Lyra Smith.
Speaker 2United States of Kennedy is a production of iHeart Podcasts.