Hi, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, host of the hit podcast Heavyweight. Our fourth season will begin on September twenty sixth, But worry not, I've prepared a delicious amuse boush to amuse your boosh while you wait. Over the next eight weeks, I'll present the Heavyweight Diaries, short Peabody worthy pieces of hard hitting journalism, sprinkled, as all journalism is, with subtle,
tastefully executed, barely noticeable instances of paid product placements. Set your Heavyweight timers for eight weeks and start polishing your silver plated Heavyweight dessert spoons because you're in for retreat. Alex wants to see you in the studio, Harper says.
Alex is Gimblet Media CEO and founder Alex Bloomberg. Harper is his executive assistant, and the studio is the special one with the shag carpeting and the silent Grandfather clock that, rather than potentially interrupting a recording session with an ill timed dong emits at the stroke of each hour an expensive puff of Chanelle number five. Of course, I know why Bloomberg wants to see me. I've been working on the new season of Heavyweight for months now, without a
single thing to show for it. Where did the time go? It's all panicky blur. In January there was the week long team building event at the Dude Ranch, where my producers and I learned to ride donkeys, learned to milk donkeys, and learn the importance of teamwork by doing trust falls off our donkeys. And most of March was spent preparing for my big news media profile. We want to understand your moves, the reporter told me, the way you embrace
death with such calm resolve. I thought the interview would be Fog of warlike in its depth and Barbara Walters like in its national primetime audiencenss, but instead it ended up being a four minute appearance on a mixed martial arts podcast that thought Heavyweight was a boxing blog. And now the day of reckoning is upon me. Bloomberg wants to see me. Oh why today, of all days, had I chosen to wear socks with holes? Earlier in the day, putting them on made me feel capricious, But now that
regretful choice is making my dogs sweat something awful. What if Bloomberg asks me to take off my shoes out of respect for the studio shag carpeting, or to illustrate some point about resilient adhocracy he'd picked up in management training shoes in a pile, he might say, this pile represents growth. I will nod my head, the shag tickling
my bare, sweaty dogs through the holes. Please don't look down, Alex, I will think a thought that will only make my dogs sweat harder than an ice cold bottle of Miller High Life glistening in the desert sun. As Harper leads me to the studio, my persperant dogs continue to moisten out, pacing the already compromised wicking capacity of my oversaturated socks and rendering the already unpresentable hosiery even more unpresentable. Perhaps Harper would allow me to stop for a bathroom break
along the way. Once safely in a locked toilet stall, I could peel off my socks and tape them to the underbelly of a toilet lid for retrieval after work. Oh, why today, of all days that I forget to pack Gaffer's tape in my fanny pack? Does my caprice know any limits? Maybe I could just squeeze the socks into my front pockets. But what if Bloomberg asks me to empty my front pockets contents of your front pockets in
a pile, He might say, this pile represents growth. Upon seeing socks emerge from my pockets, Bloomberg might inquire as to why I keep socks in my pockets. I was planning on tennis after work, I might say, then, why aren't there pump palms on the ankles of your pocket socks? He might ask, Only a Neanderthal plays tennis without sock
pump poms, Jonathan, are you a Neanderthal? Canadian tennis prohibits pomp pomery of any sort, I might say, such a proud people, He might say, time to see just how proud. Let's strip down to our jockeys and play some tennis right now. I'll whip you, but good. The thought of Bloomberg whipping me but good in my under dainties, what with the dearth of elasticity dangerously compromising my pantywaiste, was enough to get my dogs drooling, And so I decide
to do the mature thing. Harper, I asked, will I be required to take my shoes off during the course of this business? Meeting. When Harper fails to respond or even acknowledge my having spoken words out loud, I realized that posing my question was a bad idea. After a few minutes, I ask if you would mind not repeating this conversation to Bloomberg. But I'm not even sure if what we just had was a conversation. He asked me not to say something Harper might now say to Bloomberg,
But I am saying something. What are you saying, Bloomberg might say, ask him. Harper might say, gesturing in my direction, what aren't you saying? Bloomberg might say, Oh, I'd say I just asked if Harper might not say anything about the surprise birthday party I'm planning for you. My birthday isn't for another ten months. Bloomberg might say, what I'd like most is a surprise tennis for birthday party. But instead of tennis rackets, we could use spanking paddles, the
kind traditionally used on liars. And instead of boring old champagne, I might say, we could drink the champagne of Beers Miller High Life. By the time we reach the studio, my knees are rubbery and my sweat drenched socks are making squishing sounds in my shoes. I walk into the studio, and, to my tremendous relief, see that I'm alone. Bloomberg isn't
here yet, so it's just me and my socks. I quickly take off my shoes with the idea of stashing my socks down my pants and wearing just my now wet shoes, a plan that should work as long as the subject of tennis does not arise, which it shouldn't, as my socks will no longer be in my front pockets, but will rather be secured safely down the front of my pants, where they cannot be seen nor commented upon
by the eagle eyed journalist turned oligarch. Fingers trembling, I remove my right sock and stash it with my left sock and mid peel. I pause for a moment to savor my victory. For once, Jonathan Goldstein will escape humiliation. The sodden sock clears my last little toe with a flourish sending a gentle arc of dog sweat across the studio at the exact moment that Alex Bloomberg walks in the door. This has been chapter one of the Heavyweight Diaries.
With any luck, the new season of Heavyweight will begin on September twenty sixth, and you can chart our progress each week with a new Diary update. And remember the best place to listen to Heavyweight is on Spotify. The second best place to listen to Heavyweight is in a Beautiful Villa in the Italian Alps. Heavyweight is me Jonathan Goldstein along with Jorge just Stevie Lane, Khalila Holt and b A. Parker. This episode was mixed by Emma Munger,
music by Bobby Lord. Our ad music is Vivaldi's Spring performed by the Wichita State University Chamber Players. We'll have a new chapter of the Heavyweight Diaries next week.