Episode Transcript
Hey, we are back.
Normally, they shouldn't normal.
Speaker 2It takes for Wendy and gets weird.
I'm Mary Katherine and I'm Carol Marko.
It's how are you married, Catherine?
How was your weekend?
Speaker 1Pretty good?
I went to the beach for the weekend.
I a little get away in Nice.
Speaker 2Which beach?
Speaker 1I love it?
Speaker 2Yes, back to where you got married.
Speaker 1That's right.
And so got a little, I mean very little son.
I'm me, but I pretended like I was getting sun and had a cocktail and then came back ready for to do it all again.
Yeah, tan, rested and ready for my next vacation.
Speaker 2I love it.
Thanksgiving my favorite holiday.
I really love it.
I love the whole thing.
Speaker 3I love the food, I love the thankfulness, I love the family.
I'm all about it.
My brother and his family are visiting.
They're here for their year.
You know, I hate the whole switching off years.
Speaker 2But I mean, you gotta do it right, you got to.
You gotta share him.
Speaker 1I'm excited.
We're going to North Carolina, so we'll be out of here in a couple of days.
Speaker 2Love it all right.
Speaker 3Well, before we get to the turkey and the stuffing and the side dishes Donald Trump and z or Mom Donnie had a much too warm situation happened at the Old Office on Friday, and I wasn't sure if we would still be talking about this for Tuesday's episode, but it remains kind of the biggest story around.
Speaker 2I don't think anything else is beating it today.
Well let's talk about it.
Speaker 3Let's talk about those two crazy kids and the fun they had at the Oval Office together.
Speaker 1They had so much fun.
So Mom Donnie comes down to the Oval Office a couple things from his perspective.
From Mom Donnie's, I do think there's a risk of losing a bunch of cred with his very liberal folks.
But the problem for him is he needs someone to fund his socialism.
Speaker 3The funding of the socialism is always the hardest part of the socialism, and like.
Speaker 1Hookl might not do it, So I guess he's coming down here.
She's definitely not.
I think mostly the two of them like the camera more than almost anything else that was happening that day, and so the both of them were like, this is great.
Everybody's got all eyes on us.
But it occurred to me that Mamdani is doing what twenty seventeen Democrats should have done hich.
Speaker 2Oh my god.
Yeah, just roll up in that Oval office.
Speaker 1Tell him how many votes he got in your district.
How there's so many people who agree with him on stuff, How you agree with him on stuff?
Here's the things we should do together, And he's like, maybe we should Yeah.
Yeah.
Speaker 3I wrote about this at the time, how Democrats were missing a huge opportunity.
Trump is not in doctrinaire Republican.
They could have gotten so much from him, with him all around, they chose to fight him instead.
Actually I called this the Kim Kardashian rule.
She was like, come to the Oval office, take a bunch of pictures together.
Speaker 2Get what I want.
Policy wise, she got, you.
Speaker 3Know, a party for an yes and policy change about non violent drug non violent offenders in general.
Speaker 2So yeah, it's the first step back, That's what it was called.
Speaker 1Yes, very effective work on her part, right, something people should have learned from and perhaps Mom Danny is the guy who did.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 3I have to admit to a bit of an emotional rollercoaster ride about this whole thing.
Speaker 2I don't know I first saw it.
Speaker 3I was like, oh no, like really didn't like it, felt that betrayed by Trump, because listen, if we didn't we didn't talk about it in advance, but had we talked about it, I would have said Trump is going to kill him with kindness.
Speaker 2He's going to be super nice.
All of that.
I knew that was going to happen.
Speaker 3I had no illusions that they were going to have some major clash in the Oval Office.
Speaker 2But I felt, I don't know, like I didn't like.
Speaker 3The line that particularly I didn't like was Donald Trump saying conservatives are going to be happy about some of his policies, and I was like, no, we're not very much.
Speaker 1No.
Speaker 3But I have been on a little bit of an emotional rollercoaster about this, and I have ultimately come out on There was some really wise.
Speaker 2Things that Trump did.
Speaker 3The joke that he made, well we'll play a clip in a minute, but I'll just tell you the joke that everybody was sharing where a reporter asked, Mom, Donnie, do you still think Trump is a fascist?
And Trump is like, go ahead, say yes, who cares, Like you know it's fine, and m Donnie's like, yes, he's a fascist.
But then he said it again on the Sunday shows.
I think it was Meet the Press at that point, it sounded completely defangd he he doesn't think he's a fascist.
He can't even say it anymore because you stood next to a fascist and told him how people in your district voted for him and share work them together.
Come on, if you think he's a fascist, you're not doing that.
So Trump really did get him in that way.
And I think he doesn't have the kind of nails that he had going into that meeting.
Speaker 2And that's that's a good thing.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1Again, like I said, I think both of their prayer, he was perhaps being on camera and enjoying themselves.
That's number one.
Number two, I do think because Trump doesn't Trump loves New York City.
He is not joking around when he says I want him to succeed.
Speaker 3Now.
Speaker 1He's also not an ideologue, nor is he that interested in like economic policy outside of terrorists.
So he's not I don't think he's spent a ton of time thinking about what those policies will look like.
And he's agreeing that the buses are very slow.
It's like, great, but they're not going to be free and fast.
That's not gonna happens, sir.
If they're free, sure, you know, but I think like both of these people understand the appeal a they're good on camera, be they're good at appealing to populism.
Trump a right version, Mamdannie a left version.
So he's they're kind of right that they have things to agree on and yours.
And my complaint about Trump has always been that he's creeping too far left for us right, and so I think that's a lot of what you saw.
What I did not like is that Trump defanged arguments against Mam Donnie by plenty of other people who could correctly, morally and usefully politically run against this force in New York City at least.
Yeah, but Trump, That's not Trump's number one priority.
Phou show.
I think the thing about Trump is if he likes you, he likes you.
Yeah, And I think this guy came in and he liked him, and he emphasized the right things.
You could tell mom Donnie had thought about, like what are the things he likes to hear?
Because he kept emphasizing people who had voted for him and Trump, the things that Trump and he both want to give to people.
And I did I especially did not love Trump's credulousness on well he said he doesn't want any crime.
It's like, okay, great, same, how how's that gonna work?
Speaker 2Right?
Yeah, So I'm sure they have crossover voters.
Speaker 3But if you look at the New York City voting map, the ange Cuomo areas, the Angeclomo one were the areas that went for Donald Trump.
So while there is some crossover in general, there isn't.
Speaker 1Also, I don't want to.
I don't want to right populism and left populism.
A while that sounds terrible to me, This is awful, awful, bad economics for everyone.
Speaker 2Totally.
Let's play this clip and then get into that.
He's got views and out there, but who knows he's going to change.
Speaker 1Also, we all change.
Speaker 2I change a lot.
Speaker 3I think he is going to surprise some conservative people.
Actually, President trumpa's desk, and I've.
Speaker 2Been called much worse than a desk bud.
Speaker 1So it's it's not that insulting.
Speaker 3I expect to be helping him, not hurting him.
A big help because I want New York City to be great.
Do you think you're sitting next to a johnstraight now in the overwhelper?
Speaker 1No?
Speaker 3I know you say things sometimes in a campaign.
Speaker 2I met with a man who's a very rational person.
Speaker 1Are you affirming that you think Trump's a fascist?
Speaker 2I've spoken about that's okay, you can just say, okay, it's easier.
Speaker 1It's easier than explaining a pedal.
But the pat that part was very funny.
Speaker 2Yeah, it was.
It was funny.
I mean, look, Donald Trump has a very good sense of humor.
Our concerns remain that he drifts leftboard when left his own devices.
But you're right, he loves New York.
He wants New York to succeed.
Speaker 3I don't think he cares very much about it succeeding in a conservative policy way, which you know, you and I would care more about.
But yeah, the left and right populism thing is a real big issue for people who are not into that sort of thing.
We'll talk about in the next segment about Twitter x now putting people's location on their bios and what we found in the last few days again, we'll get into the next segment.
But the groeper class that pushes the left and right populism together.
I've seen so many tweets in the last few days since the moum Donnie thing, like we need we need to.
Speaker 2Have social conservativism and liberal economics, and it's like, no, we don't.
We definitely don't.
Speaker 1Well, and I think he also probably appealed it sounded like behind closed doors that Mom Donnie was talking a lot about building stuff.
Again, exactly what Trump wants to hear, but not what you heard from Mom Donnie on the campaign trail, and Trump pointed that out.
He's like, I didn't really hear much of that when he was running, but you know, it's a campaign.
But now he's telling me he wants to build stuff.
Okay, I'll believe that when I see it.
But that was part of the message that appealed to Donald Trump, which then makes him friendly to you in the room, which means when you're asked about genocide and you affirm that you believe the Israeli government is committing it, you know, to push back on you.
Speaker 2That's right.
Speaker 1Yeah, I would really like to see because he knows better than that.
Speaker 3Yeah right, yes, taking me back to Friday where I was like all angry and then had the weekend to like digest.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
Trump loves to be loved.
He loves and people say no thanks to him.
It is an achilles heel.
I always worried about this, and we saw it in action here.
Speaker 1We'll see where at least Stephonic takes it from here, because she again is running against Kathy Hochel for governor of New York and the idea is to use him as a foil.
But if Donald Trump is saying I'd have no problem living in New York under Mom Donny, that's gonna be a little bit of an issue.
Speaker 2But he totally will you know what I mean?
Speaker 3Even as a billionaire, even as you know, among the richest people living in New York, you still as soon as you leave your golden palace, you have homelessness on the street, you have disarray in the city.
Donald Trump's not going back to that.
I'll put my five bucks on it right now.
I'm getting too gambling.
In the last segment five bucks, Donald Trump does not go back to New York after his presidency.
Speaker 1Also, Trump reserves the right to change his mind about everything he said a beating tomorrow.
Yeah, and he probably will in like a several days.
Speaker 3Yeah.
I think at least Devonic should still run against creeping socialism and Kathy Hockel's embrace of that, and I wish her the best we'll be right back with more on normally and where is your favorite X account from Malaysia, Tunisia, Turkey, we'll find out.
We are back on normally where X introduced a very popular new feature where you can click on somebody's profile and see where they signed up for X and where they are based.
Basically where what app store they use to log on.
So maybe you were on vacation and decided to join Twitter in like you know, twenty fifteen, and you joined from Aruba, but then your app store still is US.
So a lot of people have been exposed because of this, and there's a lot of hoopla around it.
I think it's an amazing policy.
I actually think you should not have to click through.
I think it should be right on the profile so you see where the people are from and what their bias is.
Speaker 2I think it's very important.
Speaker 3And a lot of a lot of accounts have been exposed in the last few days, including one of my personal favorites, because it does hit the real world, not just in our ex world.
Palestinian journalist allegedly that was writing for the BBC turns out doesn't live in Gaza at all, lives in Turkey, so yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah, this is an interesting thing because it is by its very nature extremely online, right, But there was the background is that was there was always this suspicion that we were being messed with by a lot of accounts that pose as true patriotic America First accounts or tint dwelling Gaza residents who are happily regurgitated by the BBC and others that weren't misrepresenting themselves.
And we've found that out on a case by case basis at times.
But I believe and I don't think I'm incorrect about this, but somebody, Katie Pavlich, suggested this change on Twitter and Elon Musk took it up and then show these things, so well done her.
And there is a fun sort of flattening of the earth that happens on next where you can just say like, hey, elin you should try this.
So transparency is very helpful because I don't mind if you're from another country, and America is a superpower.
We have a lot of influence.
You have thoughts, Fine, I'm not gonna take your thoughts with the same weight that I would other people's, but don't lie to me about where you are and what you're in and so I think the transparency is very helpful.
And like we always talk about, these very online things become part of the discourse, which then is broadcast on media and then sort of trickles down to become this idea of what our country is.
And if our country is not actually as populated or animated by groidbers, I would like to know that.
I want to know if they're real.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's it, That's what it is.
Speaker 3It's like, is what we're seeing online something that's actually happening or is it manufactured outrage?
And I think that a lot of what we've seen in the last few days turns out that many of these accounts are in other countries and they're not actually the farm girl in Iowa baking pies for her husband and being a good trad wife and commenting on how the Jews are taking everything over.
It turns out that's just a dude living in like Morocco and he has some thoughts.
Speaker 2But I'm with you.
Speaker 3Like the thing is, if you're honest, it doesn't matter right, put it right in your bio Moroccan man interested in American politics, and then put whatever you want and tweet whatever you want and.
Speaker 2See if it becomes popular.
Speaker 3It still may, but this lie that you're American and that you have as much of a stake in it as the rest of us do.
It's really appalling, and I'm so glad it's being exposed well.
Speaker 1And there's the larger issue of the attention economy and the fact that monetization of X, although I think admirable in some ways, incentivizes both rage baiting people sure crazy things that you don't actually believe, and incentivizes people in countries that are not as prosperous as ours to log on and pretend to be Annie in Iowa and put some rage bait out there and make a couple hundred bucks a month, which is quite good money and it's not a chicken scratch anywhere, but it's much better money in smaller countries with smaller economies, and so you sort of incentivize that situation.
That being said, there are plenty of Americans who have these detestable views in many places.
In many cases, I do think perhaps that these points of view are being favored and amplified in a way that distorts how many of these people there actually are.
And then that leads people to think you and I don't do it, but like to think that to talk to your audience, you must adopt these views because your audience is animated by these views.
But how animated actually are they?
Is it real?
Is it not?
And I think that's what we're getting a little closer to understanding, right.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's absolutely right.
Speaker 3Other you know, changes that i'd love to see on X is just I guess to keep up with that.
Does the person still you know, check in from wherever people are?
Speaker 2They do move they you know, all of that does happen.
Speaker 3But if you're an American and who moved to Russia because you like their system better, I kind of want that information in your bio.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's important information.
Speaker 3Many other changes you want to see X make.
The edit button needs improvement, by the way, Elon, if you're listening, I can never edit my tweets.
Speaker 1Well, so my edit button mostly works.
I would say that I know you're a blocker.
I'm a muter and the mute doesn't work properly.
Speaker 3Blocking also doesn't work properly.
Yeah, I saw blocking this weekend.
Actually, I had I unblocked somebody because I wanted to follow along with their drama.
Speaker 2But when you block someone, you can't see their tweets?
Like why not?
Speaker 3Like, if they block me, I can't see their tweets, that's fine.
But if I block them, I can't see their tweets.
But what if I want to see what they're what their little fight is about, which I did.
Speaker 1Yeah, well, the drama shall continue, but I do think we have a better handle on parsing who the Americans are in the drama now?
Speaker 2Which is nice America first?
You know?
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean we got to run our elections here, so I'd like to know which ones are real.
Speaker 2We'll be right back with more on normally and gambling on Thanksgiving?
Should you do it?
Speaker 1All?
Right?
We are back on normally with some festive ad making for Thanksgiving, some ideas for things you could do with your family.
This is FanDuel.
Let's just play the ad and then we'll talk about it.
Speaker 3Okay, what passion leg?
Speaker 2What's past the leg?
It's a party you built with your friends.
Leg passed it on, not him one bad.
Speaker 3Wait, why don't you passed the leg yet?
Speaker 2You can't rush the leg?
Dad working on it.
Everybody in the leg has been passed off.
Thanksgiving?
Bet together like never before, get a profit booth, build a group parlay.
I hate it.
I hate it so much.
And you know I'm I'm very squishy on gambling.
I'm a poker player.
It is a game of skill, but.
Speaker 3It has a gambling component that is necessary to the game.
I hate this so much.
It's like just infuriated me.
If you if you didn't see the ad at the end, the family sitting around on their phones at Thanksgiving dinner placing bets.
It's awful.
If you don't know what a parlay is.
It's basically the probability of hitting some random thing in a game.
And if a bunch of people are placing parlays which are already extremely unlikely to ever hit, it's it's just the lowest odds of anything.
So there's not only saying go gamble, encourage your family to do it, but.
Speaker 2Place the worst possible bets that you can.
Speaker 1And do it while sitting at your Thanksgiving table, and do it with all of your family.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I feel like I'm a bit of a squish on the gambling thing as well, because I don't really have a dog in this fight.
I don't gamble.
It's just never been interesting to me, But it is a thing that I'm willing to listen to both sides on because my libertarian side is like, okay, well let me listen.
If you're an adult, you're not hurting anybody else.
But I can see well enough to know that like this probably has some real downstream bad effects.
And the part that's changed over the years since you and I have been paying attention to this is that you can just do it from your phone for everything, anytime, anywhere.
And there used to just be a lot more effort involved in going to a place to do the thing that's like maybe not the best use of your time and money, and now you're just like, let me do it here with my family at Thanksgiving dinner.
Speaker 3That seems bad, awful, and PoCA remains illegal online in most places, so it just it makes no sense to me.
I will say that my brother and his family are visiting for Thanksgiving, and I had told my brother that Florida recently got open carry.
You're now allowed to open carry your guns.
So he's like, so let me get this straight.
He lands yesterday, He's like, you can go to like a seven eleven in sweatpants with two guns in your whole store exposed.
But I can't place a bed online because you actually can't Florida.
Speaker 2So yeah, no gambling for Thanksgiving, a little brother.
Speaker 1We are governed by our community standards, you know.
That's that's the way it works.
And he's in Florida.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 1I do think that there are dark stories underneath a lot of this online betting and sort of the real mainstreaming of it over the past five years.
And this one, like you said, seems un wise, not a great use of your time on Thanksgiving, And it's like, do we want to treat that like wordle like exactly right.
It's sort of treated as if like, oh, we're just doing a game together as fam and I don't know, just sit down and play par cheesy or something.
Speaker 2Totally.
Do you have a wordle chat.
Speaker 1I don't have a world chat, but I know other people.
Speaker 2I'm not.
Speaker 1I'm not I'm not in touch with the people on these things, but they.
Speaker 2Do have a wordal chat.
Speaker 3It's very, very, very active every single day.
Speaker 1So that's good.
You're learning new things.
Yeah, it's doing the vocabulary.
Speaker 3Yeah, vocabulary is better than betting on people you don't know playing a sport, and that you have no, you have no possibility of affecting.
Speaker 2That's the thing.
Speaker 3Like where I always say like poker is different, and it is different than even table games and casinos.
You're playing against the house, and poker you're playing against other people and you're playing with your own skills.
Speaker 2So if poker is illegal.
Speaker 3I don't understand how betting on sports is legal.
I'll just you know, I'll be the bummer and say that it shouldn't be quick.
Speaker 1Exit question before we go?
What dish are you most looking forward to?
Speaker 3Nobody agrees with me on this.
It's the green beans.
It's the green beans.
Speaker 2They're so good.
I make one with a cornflake topping.
Speaker 3And it is delicious and it's next to me because nobody else eats it, and I love it.
Speaker 1I love We're the same, but I love a green bean carast.
Well, I am going to shout out a different cast role that I only have on Thanksgiving.
Well, my dad makes a corn bread stuffing that is very special for Thanksgiving too.
It's very arduous and we only do it once a year.
But there is a potato cast role in the South that's just like potatoes, cheese, sour cream, male like all the things that are fat, and then you put cheese on top and make that crispy, and then you put the corn flakes on top with the with the butter on top, and it is so decadent and ridiculous, and I only eat it once a.
Speaker 2Year, and I love all Right, ship me that recipe.
Let's do it so we can.
We can.
Speaker 1We can trade off our our green beans and our potato casroles.
Care we go.
Speaker 3Well, I hope you're having a very happy Thanksgiving with your families this week.
Speaker 2We will be back with more normally on Tuesday.
We're gonna have a rerun on Thursday.
We wish you all the best.
Have a happy and safe and healthy Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1M
