Kamau - podcast episode cover

Kamau

Nov 26, 201929 minSeason 1Ep. 6
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

On making TV that matters. On being vulnerable on screen. On doing the actual work.

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Teething can be a real nightmare for your little ones. Highlands Naturals Baby oral pain relief tablets can help ease the pain. It's gentle, natural active ingredients like camemeo and arnica suthe your baby's mouth, and gums made with ingredients derived from plant minerals and other sources free of harsh chemicals. You can count on Highlands for serious pain relief for your teething baby. Highlands is a kinder way to care

for teething. Visit Highlands dot com slash kind. That's h y l a n ds dot com slash kind claims based on traditional homeopath a practice not accept the medical evidence not ft evaluated here at Freddy's Sweet could tell you how our original double is this steak burger made with lean ground beef, cooked to order with deliciously crispy edges, and finished off with our Freddy's famous seasoning. But we'd rather let her original double speak for itself. Couldn't have

said it better ourselves. Enjoy food made fresh the freddy Sway, tapnew or learn more at Freddy's USA dot com. Do you suffer from zoom fatigue? Auto dot ai is here to help use auto dot ai to get automatic meeting notes. You can even step away from the meeting and catch up any time. Get started for free at auto dot ai or download in the app stores. That's otter dot Ai. Do I start, Welcome to the podcast. I'm happy to start. This is comedian w Kamal Bell. We met years ago

at the beginning of both of our careers. I think I bombed a couple of volunteer events. Yeah, you bombed a little bit, and I got to see bombs. I love this guy. Look at him bombing like a pro. Yeah, it's great and uh and yeah. It's been wild that our careers have gone in these crazy trajectories and now we reunited to discuss Fred Rogers today come out has a CNN show called United Shades of America where he travels around the US talking to people about what's wrong

with this country. And I wanted to talk with him because he did something really interesting with that show. He sat down with some of the most hateful people I can think of, and he had a conversation. I'm Carvel Wallace and this is Finding Fred, a podcast about Fred Rogers from I Heeart Media and Fatherly in partnership with transmitter media early and I think it was the first season you talked with some white nationalists, uh, and some

pretty heavy movers in that. I imagine you've got a lot of pushback from people about giving the people platform given how did you make sense, why did you decide to do that, and what did you learn in that experience. I believe, and you know, platform and Richard Spencer or any of these people would be tonight in the United Shades, I'm going to take the night off and let Richard Spencer run the show. To me, that's platforming. That's normalizing.

Sitting out and talking to Richards Spencer about what he believes in all of his white nationalists beliefs in the middle of an episode that is highlighting the importance of immigration and refugees in this country. To me, it is not platforming. I also think when Trump was first selected, the fear of platforming and normalizing is I think we're really buzzwords at the left held onto in lieu of doing the actual work, Like you know, no, we I feel like looking at it in the face is actually

helpful to me to go how serious is this? Not looking at it in the face, to me, is is sort of a way to sort of like just pretend like you can still go to yoga class and and uh in the farmer's market, because I think the reason why we have Trumpet office right now is because a lot of people on the left were wanting to look at him, you know, they weren't willing to really like is this possible? No, it's not possible, because I've been

doing a chance in the morning. So for me, it's the fact is it's like if we've if we if we've learned anything in this current air of Americas that we got to look at this stuff in the face, you know what I mean. So for me, you know, it's the it's Sunlight's the best disinfectant. Like I I believe that. Did you find Richard Spencer uh intimidating who's probably a foot shorter than you. Yeah, he's not as short as most whitespurad. I think that's why he was

the leader. He was like, did you play in the NBA? After you go in there, you do realize everybody's like five four and like and they would sort of trying to like walk up to me, a couple of them trying to get me to a flinch or just sort of like and it was like, also six four man, I'm not not. I just sort of like it became fun to me to sort of like look comfortable, you know. And so by the time I sat down and talked to him, it was really fine. We are here to

talk about Mr Rogers. And that's good cause I was like, man, this is really not what I prepared. Know. I tend to approach things from like, um, and Uh, the reason I'm asking about your experiences with Richard Spencer's because I've been really stuck on this this sort of ethical position that Fred Rogers took, which is that it's it's you I like. I like you just the way you are, Uh, that kind of thing. And I wonder how that squares with people who were like Richard Spencer. Could Fred Rogers

say I like you just the way you are? And I know you can't speak for him, So I'm going to ask you to speak for you. Did you when you look at him, see anything that you felt compassion for when you talked with Richard Spencer or some of these other white nationalists? So, Uh, the thing is, when I think about that, I like you just where you are when you sit down with people individually. A lot of times all that stuff, a lot of the bluster goes away. Like when I talked to the clan and

uh in was it in Kentucky. It became very clear to me after a while, like, oh, you guys have come from a community where there's no jobs, there's no opportunity, your educational system isn't good, and you're just mad, and you have bought a bill of goods from somebody that is black people's fault. Like that's the problem is that that you went from, Like I want more opportunity and more jobs of my community too, It's got to be

somebody's fault. And then somebody sold you can we talked to you about black peop they handed you be it's black people fall pans. And so for me, when I take away the when I look at that part, I go, that's the part I could have empathy with. You know, these people are not the billionaire people who were running this country and using tools of white supremacy to keep things going. These are people who are like, got sold a bill of goods based on being vulnerable. A few

years ago, I was in Michigan reporting a story. I was at the gym and I looked up and saw Kamal's face on the TV screen. This was several months after the election, and the alt right was feeling definitely emboldened, so much so in fact, that they were white supremacists marching in downtown Berkeley, of all places, which happened to be where Kamal lived. He had just spoken at a counter protest, and on Fox News they were playing his speech and calling him a radical black separatist, and suddenly

Kamal had become a target of white premises. That was when I got streets got hot for me for a second, exactly the streets got hot for you. And all of a sudden, I was I had a lot of feelings seeing that, actually, dude, Like, on the one hand, I was like, this is absurd, But then in the other hand, it kind of struck a little bit of fear in my heart because I thought, God, if you can call comal, or if you can get like like the Confederate flag waivers income as a black separation, what who among us

is safe? Is like, this is the most integrated dude I've ever met. And uh and um. I was just really amazed by that, and I thought a lot about it, and I guess I want to ask you what that experience was like for you to be targeted in that way and how you made sense of that, like how you navigated that. Was that scary at all? Like it

only became because you had kids at that point. Yeah, it became scary because over the next week or so, it like I became the like the the deep intern dark web, intern hinterland internet all right target, Like I was just the person on summer Jam screen. So like like so all these memes start going up, and you know, we were in downtown Berkeley, so people see me walking into my house, you know, and also we're right now

where all the alright rallies are. It was scary. It was like the first time I felt like that my thing I do on TV is can affect my family, like in a way that it feels like we have to sort of like think about our security protocols and think about like where we send our kids to school as opposed to like oh yeah, you know, and all these sorts of things that sort of that that we

weren't thinking in that way before. Doesn't that kind of make you hate people like they're putting your family in jeopardy and putting you in the situation where you feel like, I mean, doesn't that like trigger rage and hating, you know it triggers like I'd say it, triggers like Papa Bear, protect your family, you know it, triggers like don't do anything stupid the people who are doing this I already wasn't a fan of anyway, like this has really Yeah,

I sort of knew this, you know. And also the history of black people in this country is that, you know, you can't know the history of are people without knowing that, like, you know, we get taken out regularly. Now. I don't think I'm not trying to be some sort of martyr or something, but it's just like, if I choose to do this work and I choose to be public about it, It's not that I'm like ready to die or any of that nonsense. You know, I got too many children

to die right now. But I do feel like this is a part of the gig. I mean, my wife talked about that, like, and I think about like people like Dick Gregory as far as like he actually gave up comedy to be an activist at one point in his life, and so this is the work I want to do, and it feels right now in this country, feels like it's necessary. If anything, I feel bad, but I'm not doing more of it. I think more about that,

like what more can I do? Or how can I do this better than I think about the people who who have enmity towards me. And also the thing is most of them don't even They're just blah blah blah, like they're gonna move on to the next person. We'll be right back. Teething can be a real nightmare for your little ones. So are you looking for the best relief to soothe teething pain? Or Highlands Natural's Baby Oral Pain Relief can help use the pain. It's gentle, natural,

active ingredients like cameramil and arnica. They'll soothe your baby's mouth and gums. No chemicals, no funny business. Highlands is a kinder way to care for teething. Get yours at Highlands dot com, slash kind that's h y l A n d s dot com. Slash kind claims based on traditional homeopath a practice, not accept the medical evidence, not ft evaluated. He loves me, he loves me, not he

loves me? He loves me not. He loves me not, so he returned to me because he had thirty days to do so, which is plenty of time to discover you don't love someone or in my case something, because surprise, I'm a CarMax car who is now back on the market thirty day money back guarantee. It's car are buying reimagined carmacksmit. See carmacks dot com for details. Do you suffer from zoom fatigue? With so many meetings each day?

Who can remember the key takeaways? Try otter dot ai to capture automatic live notes for meetings, interviews, or lectures. You can search the meeting notes, highlight action items, share the notes with your co workers, and also played back the audio. Can't join a meeting, no worries. Send your auto assistant to capture the notes for you. Hotter dot ai works for in person and virtual meetings like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Google meet Get started for free at

otter dot ai or download in the app stores. That's otter dot ai. What's your first earliest memory of seeing Fred Rogers or seeing a show? Did you watch you growing up? I watched you growing up, so I don't have like I don't have the time my mom sat me down, we didn't have cable, so I guess most cable. Uh. And so you know I'm talking about like Sesame Street, Mr Rogers, the Electric Company three to one contact for

my old heads out there lane right now. Yeah. So for me, like Mr. Rogers is just one of the things that I watched on TV. And then for me, the weird part is like, even when I got older, every now again you flip past and go, let me just watch a few minutes. Why what is what? What did that bring to you? I think there's something the greatest of kids programming, there's something so pure about it that it's doing anything he wants to do that adults

watch it too, Like I think that's true. When it's not pure, when it's really about like you just want my kid to buy this thing, don't you, then it's like it becomes too self conscious of like the things that's trying to do. But Mr Rogers is super pure. It's just like this is one persons statement being supported by the team of people around him and somebody who

works in TV. That's hard to do. Yeah, I was gonna ask you about that, like as it has your understanding of what he was able to do change now that you are a maker of television. Yes, great, thank you, goodnight everyone. Yeah. No, I mean it's like it's hard to get everybody on you if you have everybody on the same page that they're all in service of of Mr Rogers. I can still call Mr Rogers. You say Fred because you know him like that, But I've been

called that only by black people on the show. I just want to point that out because white people have been like Fred Red Fred and then viewing and she was like, you know him like that exactly like Fred Rogers. Excuse me? Are you a son that? Uh? Mr Rogers? Is that it's clear that like everybody was on the same page, or at least I knew that this was this is the voice I'm following. That's not that's not case nine percent of the TV that's ever been made.

That's not the case that they're not listening to one for even some of the TV we like, it was like it was a nightmare back there, but when it happens, you can feel it. So for me, there's not much

difference between Mr. Rogers and Atlanta. With Donald Glover, you could feel it like there's not much on that show that Donald Glover hasn't been like check, it's fun, it's the Atlanta's really interesting comparison, one that I had never made um but that rings true for me, partially for what you said about the creative process, but also because both of those shows make a lot of use of space and silence, and they do this thing where they train the listeners to sit still long enough to start

to feel and experience more subtle levels of what's going on. And they've built a lot of trust with the audience. So even if you're like, where's this going, he was like, I'm gonna sit here and see. And I think that's the important thing too, is that the that you when you build that trust with the audience, and that comes from the audience knowing I trust that, uh Mr Rogers or Mr Glover, I trust that these people have a plan, because so many times you watch a lot of TV

and it's like there's no plan. They just had to get this done. They just had to turn this in and there was a way which Mr Rogers did. There's something that feels like we're here for one purpose, we're all pulling together and we're not trying to do something that is cooler hip or trendy. We want to create an experience and have you joined us today and come back the next time. Also, I think talk, I mean

I think againswers from Mr Rogers. I think the reason why I respond to Mr Rogers because the way my mom treated me talking to your kids like their people, you know, like talking, not talking to them like their kids. Like. Certainly Mr Rodgers as slows down because he's trying to make you understand, but you feel like he's a friend of yours. And I think and for me as a parent, when you feel like you're like I'm the I'm your friend. I mean, I'm the friend who pays the rent. So

every now and again I make some decisions. But really I would rather us be friends. I would rather us talk through these problems instead of like, instead of me saying because I said so, yeah, you know, it's interesting you bring up your mom and I met your mom and read her book, and um, she's a person with a very strong black identity, which is part of the

way you were raised. And um, and I wonder when I talk to people about Fred Rogers a lot of times, uh, they'll they'll bring up in some way depending on their race. A question about how I feel about him as a black man. In other words, the question I was actually talking with, of all people, I'm not gonna name drop.

I was talking with someone, don't. I was talking with someone in Cape cod randomly that i'd run into who is a known historian, and I said, I'm doing this thing in Fred Rodgers, and he immediately said he was a white guy. He immediately said, how do black people feel about Fred Rogers? Just like, sir, That's why I'm not gonna name drop, because I don't want to I don't want to kill his book sales because this book

is very important. But but that's the first thing he said, and uh whatever, I stumbled through the answer also kind of annoyed and the excuse myself, But it did make me think about this inherent belief that somehow what Fred Rogers did was like doesn't work for blackness, or there was misaligned and like, you know, that's been I mean, in the famous Eddie Murphy sketch. That's sort of the premise of that joke is that if you did Fred Rogers in the black neighborhood, it might look like this.

But I want to hear you talk a little bit about how people understand funny. At the same time I was taking into Mr Rodgers, I was also watching Eddie murphyst. I never saw Eddie Murphy's Mr Robinsons Neighborhood as being critical of Mr Rogers. His portrayal of Mr Rogers felt like Mr Rogers, but an Eddie Murphy version of it. And also it never occurred to me that it was really the black version of Mr Rodgers. It was just the the the this version of blackness of Mr ross

which is the thing white people do. That's the black version. None, No, that's like the hood, criminal black person M Rodgers. Sorry, thereference criminal and black Viking news. Yea, so radical separatists come out bell Yeah, so again, Tucker Carlson again. So for me, it was just the idea that like, this is how this is Eddie Murphy. It was a love letter Mr Rogers. And when I watched Mr Rogers, I didn't watch him as a white guy. I watched him as Mr Rogers. And I think that's that's the thing.

I think when a white person asked that question, they understand black people and people of color can tell the difference between a white guy and Mr Rogers. If that show had been made for white kids, we would have been able to sniff it through. Doesn't feel like it's talking to me, But the fact is Mr Rogers was talking to all kids. I've been trying to get a black person to come on this show and say that Mr Rogers transcends race. Can I can? I get you?

Can I put you down for transcends race the way that when Prince died, he transcended race. Remember printing Prince dying David Bowie died. I was like, no, I said, David Bowie transcended race. Mr Rogers transcends his race. Wow, we got it, We got it, Cliff. Uh. Yeah, it's funny because I think a lot about um, I think a lot about this. He doesn't transcend race, he transcends

his race. That's so that's an interesting distinction. Tell me more about that, just that he that he's so good that I don't even score him down for being white, that I don't do good, don't see him through through his whiteness, which I see a lot of people through their Yeah. Yeah, I actually it's a really interesting point. No one made that quite as articulately. You're so articulate. Uh, no one's made that quite as articulately as you have.

That there was something It wasn't that he transcended for the existence of race, but something about the way he presented himself didn't allow you to think of him just

as a white guy period. And I wonder what that is, Like, I mean, part of me thinks that because he was trafficking in a certain kind of respect and kindness that typically we don't see associated with like your average run of the mill white person when interacting with like the rest of the world or your average run of the mill kids show, Like there are a lot of times they're yelling, you know, they're they're not actually trying to connect, they're trying to u order, you know, like do this now,

do this? Go buy it? Like it's very like the cast of kid shows. And he was just like he just wanted to sit with you, and it was clear he cared. And I mean, it's so hard to do through the TV camera when you're looking at the camera, because he's literally looking at a camera. He's not looking

at a person. And I know that too, for having to look at camera when they say talk directly the camera and I was like, yeah, because you're looking at a box and you're looking at like half the camera guys shoulder and you know, and you're wondering if he's paying attention or whatever? How do you go about that? Because I was gonna ask you about that, like about similarities if any that you see between Fred Rogers United Shades.

I don't know if you can find that, but but just as you a person who has to like do a similar kind of work, which is I need to talk to people, need to reach people at home, how do you go about that technically? Like how do you

think through that? The thing I think about is vulnerability, Like if you're vulnerable on camera and if you let people know when you don't know, or if you let people see you uh, if if you let people see you break, or if you let people see you like basically sweat, you know, there's like then they connect with you as on a human level. I'm trying to be clear,

I'm not the expert here. I'm sitting with some experts, and I also don't always have the right opinion, and sometimes I mispronounced things and sometimes I will say so we had a moment in a show we did last year in Salt Lake City and I sat down with a bunch of young people to talk about what was life like to be Mormon and me and the LGBTQ

plus community. What's that like? And I said to one person, I said, well, as a gay man, and the person stops said no, no no, no, I'm not a gay man of intersex and I was like, oh sorry, and the person was like, no, no, big deal, Like basically happens all the time. And the first edit that came back from the production that cut out the moment of my mistake, because that's what you're supposed to do in TV, cut out the mistakes. I was like, no, no, no, no no, no,

that's real, that really happened. I'm not if you cut it out, it looks like I always know what I'm talking about. To me, I like lean on the fact that, like I that the audience, to the cores in the show knows that I'm not trying to be the expert. So for me, Mr Rogers feels like a person who's making a TV show. He doesn't feel like the host of a TV show. And I talked about that with the United Shades. If I start to feel like I'm hosting the TV show We're doing something wrong. Fred Rogers,

his work was very much of his time. He did something on TV that was, on the one hand, very successful. On the other hand, almost no one else repeated it. I mean, in his legacy, there's a small tradition, but for the large part, the rest of children's television just became more manic, more insane, more not And so I guess I wonder, assuming that you couldn't have that exact person appear right now in the twenty one century, what

would if Fred Rogers of the century look like. You don't want somebody to repeat, You want somebody to stand on the shoulders of And also it means they may make it look differently. And so I do feel like like I think about like hair Love the animated you know. So so Matthew Cherry wrote a book hair Lovel about a black dad doing his daughter's hair, trying to learn how to do his his black daughter's hair. And I would say black twice, just because it's possible for people

to have kids with different races. So it just turned they turned into an animated feature. And it is that almost sounds like science fiction to me, that that's in a movie theater. And it's not like if you read the book, that's all it's about. It's not about and now we got to go fight a dragon. It's and it's not about like or some bad things gonna happen if I don't do your hair. But the steaks are

not that high. But for me, there's something about it that it's pure, And that's Mr rogers legacy is is the pureness of how to sort of like put out good content for kids in the world that is so pure that adults are excited about it. Given how expanse of his vision for love and acceptance in the world was, and given how uh shitty the world the world is,

do you think he was successful? Yes, because I think that this is the thing I said earlier about like when we're making when I'm making anything I'm making, whether it's a podcast or writing or you know, shades, when I'm writing it, I'm like, this is going to change the world just because you I think you have to feel that. Have to feel that way. Every basketball player thinks that they're they're like top five all times. Have to think that, whereas why you why are you stepping

out there? But then when you get on the court, you just gotta make sure you're helping win the game. Maybe in the gym by yourself your top five all time, or maybe when I'm home writing on my computer or

if I'm making nice shades. I think this is going to be the thing that is like the definitive episode on reproductive justice in America, and then at the end you have to be I hope people watch it and talk about it, and I think Mr Rogers one because people watched it and talked about it, have been inspired by it. You know. I think that it's a big thing to do to make the world a more equitable, just loving place. That's a big task, and you have

that more people working on it. You know. At the same time he was working on it, there's a guy across town named Martin Luther King Jr. Who was also working on you know what I mean. So like and they are different ways to do this. I don't want to call either one of them failures because because it didn't happen. I think that I believe, and there's not proof, right, was that things move in a more equitable and just direction. They just don't always move consistently, and they don't always

stay moving forward. Right now we're at a point where it's starting to move back. But I feel like in the long line of history, to paraphrase Dr King who stole it from a Quaker, the arc of history has been towards justice, but it hasn't always been consistently towards justice. And I think that, Yeah, I think that the fact that we're sitting here talking about Mr Rogers and the fact that we're sort of d constructing it. Two black men talk with Mr Rogers, Mission accomplished? Do you um?

My last question is, uh, if he were here, I would be crying. And after you composed yourself and stopped weeping and cleaned all this snot off of your face, bubbles bubble bubble clear snock bubbles, what would you ask him? What would I ask Mr Rogers? I guess the thing you do? You feel successful? I think that's the thing, because I think a lot of times people who are in on that side of it have very complicated things

about what they've done. Sometimes it's like, it doesn't matter what you caught, what the world tells you, that's how do you feel inside? And so for me, if he felt like nope, that would make me say, I've been thinking about that a lot too. Was Fred's successful? Did Fred feel successful? Next time we'll explore the ways in which he was, but also the many ways in which he wasn't. I went up to get him to come down to the studio and he was. He was a mess.

He said, why am I doing these? These aren't going to do any good. Finding Fred is produced by Transmitter Media. Our team is Dan O'donnald, Jordan Bailey and Mattie Foley. Our editor is Sarah Nicks. The executive producer for Transmitter Media is gretit Cone. Executive producers at Fatherly are Simon Isaacs and Andrew Berman. Thanks to the team at I Heart Media. Our show is mixed by Rick Kwan, music by Blue Dot Sessions and Alison Layton Brown. I'm Carla Wallace.

Thank you for listening. Teething can be a real nightmare for your little ones. Highlands Naturals Baby oral pain relief tablets can help ease the pain. It's gentle, natural active ingredients like camemeo and Arnica suthe your baby's mouth and gums made with ingredients derived from plant minerals and other sources, free of harsh chemicals. You can count on Highlands for

serious pain relief for your teething baby. Highlands is a kinder way to care for teething Visit Highlands dot com, slash kind that's h y l a n ds dot com. Slash kind claims based on traditional homeopath a practice, not accepted medical evidence, not ft evaluated. What spring like in Winter's favorite town? Park City, Utah? Imagine waking up on a blue bird day to ski the greatest snow on Earth.

Having three resorts, Park City, Mountain, Deer Valley in Woodwork, Park City in your backyard, Exploring miles of wide open spaces by snowshoe or cross country skis. Wandering our historic main street with its opera, ski scene and award winning restaurants. To discover spring in winter's favorite town. Learn to visit safely at visit park City dot com. The more we learn about COVID nineteen, the more questions we have. The biggest question now, what's next? What will COVID bring in

six months a year? If you're feeling anxious about the future, You're not alone. Cal Hope offers free COVID nineteen emotional support call eight three, three, four, six seven three or live chat at cal hope dot org today

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android