https://youtubetranscript.com/?v=5Cvd3HnsSWE

I know that in Braveheart, William Wallace doesn’t achieve the goal. He’s executed. Other people achieve the goal. I know that in the Pendragon cycle, in turn, both Taliesin and Merlin and Arthur fail to achieve the goal. They draw us one step closer to that goal and they go through huge losses. So perhaps in a narrative sense, I was drawn to these stories about how it’s not our job to save the world, it’s only our job to do our part. Hello everyone watching and listening. Today I’m speaking with screenwriter, director, and co-founder of The Daily Wire, Jeremy Boring. We discuss yesterday’s landmark launch of the Bent Key Kids platform. What children’s entertainment, really cultural drama, should be trying to keep politics out of it? The strange inversion of Hollywood from the transcendental and literary to the political and the folly of propagandistic populism put forward at the expense of traditional values, culture, enjoyment, and your children. Hello Jeremy, it’s good to see you. Nice to see you. We haven’t talked for a while. I’m in Lisbon at the moment. I arrived literally like an hour and a half ago, if that. And so, yeah, I’ve zipped over here to the studio so that we could talk. You had a big announcement yesterday. So let’s start off our conversation. Well, first of all, why don’t you tell everybody who’s watching and listening what our relationship is and exactly who you are in relationship to me and so forth. And then we’ll talk about last night’s announcement. So I’m the co-founder and on a good day, co-CEO of The Daily Wire. I’m actually on the leave of absence from that co-CEO role at the moment. I’m in Eastern Europe and Croatia today producing our first major scripted series for Daily Wire plus called The Pin Dragon Cycle. But our relationship is because of my involvement with Daily Wire where your podcast is hosted and we make a lot of projects together, which has been a real treat for me. One of the things that Ben and I, Shapiro, when we first started working together in advance of founding The Daily Wire, we really wanted to be involved in things that we thought had had weight beyond just the politics of the moment. And that may sound obvious, but we’re both we’re both in a very political sphere. And so it wasn’t readily apparent how to get from point A to point B, how to go from talking about politics every day to talking about deeper issues and ultimately to not only criticizing culture, but to making culture, to doing something proactive in the culture. But that’s that’s what our journey has been. And in some ways, our announcement yesterday is is another major step. But truly beginning to work with you a little over a year ago was a major step in that regard as well, just to move us out of only being able to talk about today and to talk about the things that that undergird today, the things that undergird the news. So that’s our relationship. And I think tees up well the announcement from yesterday as well, which is that we launched our new company called Bent Key, which is our children’s entertainment entity. We we announced a little over a year ago that we were going to do so in the wake of those tapes that Chris Ruffo leaked from Disney, where executives were talking about their not so secret gay agenda and inserting queerness into their content. They were talking about the reimagined Disney campaign where they were going to have more than 50 percent of all of the talent of all of the onscreen characters in Disney content be from so-called underrepresented groups. It was just this. They said the quiet part out loud, which is essentially that they were going to use this brand that has for 100 years built goodwill and trust with parents to inculcate in children the sort of woke politics of the now. We felt a real need to challenge that. We’ve been committed to spend 100 million dollars over three years pursuing a challenge to it. And yesterday we took the first step, which is launching this new app, this new company, Bent Key, with four original shows with over 18 licensed shows from around the world that have all been carefully vetted to first be highly entertaining for kids and second not to betray the values of the kinds of people who find value in your work or in daily wire’s work or Ben Shapiro’s work. That they could trust that they could put their kids in front of this content and not and not receive sort of a woke sucker punch for their trouble. OK, so let’s delve into that a little bit. So I was thinking the rejoinder to the implicit suppositions that you’re bringing to bear on this conversation is something like the left’s insistence that everything is political. You know, and when I I taught this course at Harvard and then at the University of Toronto and it’s online called Maps of Meaning, and it was about I think what it’s about is the inevitable religious substrate of culture itself. And I have a reason for saying inevitably religious. And, you know, the students used to ask me, you know, why was I convinced that what I was discussing wasn’t just another ideology among ideologies, which is a variant of the claim that everything is political. Now, you know, one of the things you and I have discussed and Shapiro as well at the Daily Wire is our belief that everything isn’t political and that there’s a strata of culture that is associated with deeper narrative, let’s say. And fairy tales would certainly fit into that category that has to maintain its separateness from what’s political. And it can. Now, you mentioned, you know, with the Daily Wire that part of the limitations of its original conceptualization was that it was of the moment. And, you know, I’ve seen that’s a that’s a box in some ways that Shapiro has been in. He was participating with the Exodus seminar, and I could tell that was a real pleasure for him because he got to stretch his in his significant intellectual abilities beyond the merely political. So what do you think you have to offer at Ben Key that isn’t political? And is there a way that you can defend the claim that it’s actually not political? And if it’s not political, then how do you know it isn’t? How do you stop it from being political? And and why should people find that credible given the political orientation of the Daily Wire? Sure. Well, first of all, I don’t mean in any way to say that Daily Wire isn’t political or that I’m not a political operator. Obviously, in many ways, I am. Shapiro in many ways is. And it’s perhaps a political act to launch Ben Key at all. I mean, certainly it’s a reaction to what we see as the excesses of the left manifesting themselves in particularly children’s entertainment. But, you know, if you look at the broader work that we’ve been doing over the last several years, entertainment more more generally, I’ve learned not to refer to it as adult entertainment, although we would get more clicks, probably if I did. So it is a political action that we’re taking, but that’s that is distinct from saying, in particular with the kids content, that the content itself will be intended to communicate politics. And I think that that’s a perhaps a subtle, but very important distinction. Kids deserve a childhood. I think that you can make a good argument that one of the problems in our culture is that we infantilize adults that through the university system, for example, we now refer to 23 year olds as college kids and expect that they would not be held accountable for anything that they do, as though there’s still juvenile legal standards for 23 year olds who at any other point in human history would have been, you know, married parents productive in their societies, perhaps, perhaps of Fodden Wars, perhaps be members of the clubs and institutions that used to be a major part of what held up sort of the culture itself, you know, church communities and other kinds of civic organizations. Now we call them kids. But then on the other hand, we take actual kids and in many ways deny them their childhoods because we instead are using them as a sort of social experiments to see if it’s possible to inculcate into them a set of almost anti value values. I say anti value because they’re not anything that would have historically been considered values. And they in many ways oppose the values on which civilization thus far has been built. And we want to just see what happens. You know, what happens if we tell little boys that they’re little girls? What happens if we drug an entire generation of boys out of all of the sort of biological impulses that boys have? What happens if we have children marching in political rallies and use them as political instruments? That’s what I don’t want Bent Key to be. So while I’m doing something political in the launch of Bent Key, what Bent Key itself from a content point of view is endeavoring to do is say, no, you know, I don’t think that adults are kids, but I think that kids by God should be. And we should provide them with the kind of content that almost all of us up until this particular moment got to have in our youth, which was content that took the values on which our civilization was built, wrapped them in a sense of imagination, wrapped them in a sense of wonder, wrapped them in a sense of joy and gave children the opportunity to engage with them not as not as lessons, but as entire worlds in which they might see themselves and project themselves into. That’s what Bent Key was to be. There’s a bunch of thoughts going on in my mind about how to distinguish the political from the, I think, from the eternal. And so we could say the deeper a story is, the less it’s reflective of the immediate moment and the more it’s reflective of the eternal. Now, the problem with that is that if it gets too reflective of the eternal, it tends to float away. Mircea Eliade, historian of religions, he called that the Deus abscondus, the God who floats away, essentially. And one of the things that Eliade did that was very interesting was note that the Nietzschean death of God was actually a recurring motif in culture, that a society would be founded on a religious revelation, which was its core narrative. And then it would run in some ways till it exhausted that narrative or ran into a counter proposition that took it out or degenerated, you know, degenerated into sort of a multi headed paganism, something like that. But that it wasn’t uncommon for God to disappear. And God would disappear, so to speak, when his conceptualization became so far removed from the concrete that it was as if he was like the God of Einstein, just sort of an abstract cosmic force. Right now, you want to find a great narrative. You you you you announce the first live action movie that you’re going to produce Snow White, which is a very interesting choice, because it was the movie, of course, that Disney based his empire on. But also, it’s a timeless fairy tale. Now, a timeless fairy tale is it’s sort of halfway between the ultimately religious and the proximal and and and temporally bound. And we have evidence there is evidence from the historical from historical research that some of the fairy tales that are commonly known are up to 15000 years old. So and the reason that’s relevant is because they’ve demonstrated their eternal relevance merely as a consequence of being remembered that long. And so one of the ways that the reason I’m saying this is because what there’s a technical way to some degree that you can distinguish what’s merely political from what’s timeless and eternal, because what has the latter properties is so ancient and unchanging. And and one of the things I learned in this Exodus seminar, and this was mostly from Jonathan Pagel because he developed this idea most most specifically and accurately was that for a society to order itself properly. It has to order itself under a pyramidal structure and one element of that pyramidal structure is horizontal and that would be the Jacobs ladder leading up to heaven and the other axis is communitarian. And so that’s reflected in a popular culture, you might say well if enough people believe that it’s true. And you could also say that you should go along with the crowd unless you have reason not to and you should say that you should be socialized into your cultural mores and the objection to that is. Well, what do you do then when the society goes off the rails and how can a society go to off the rails if it’s only consensus. It goes off the rails like Nazi Germany or after the French Revolution or with the Soviets and the answer to that is well you need that horizontal axis. That orients you towards what’s timeless and that and the landing point here is well that’s one of the things that great stories do right they they bring God down to earth a little bit so that. he’s more human and more accessible that’s a way of thinking about it, but they also escape the constraints of what’s immediate and they’re not political and so let’s take this snow white story for. For example, I mean you you place Brett Cooper as the star and that’s a very interesting choice she’s not your classic snow white she’s quite an athletic and like. robust looking person right she’s a tough cookie Brett and and how do you know and why are you convinced that your political. affiliations beliefs haven’t skewed your narrative comprehension, why do you think you’re a reasonable judge of that and did you even have anything to do with the way that snow white itself, the new movie was constructed. yeah absolutely so. I don’t think that it’s possible to say that that you can completely separate my politics out obviously the choices that I make her informed by who I am. What I would say is that I would offer to two points of view here, one is about the daily wire and one is about me. let’s start with the daily wire the daily wire was essentially founded by three men myself Ben Shapiro and Caleb Robinson the three of us have incredibly diverse religious backgrounds Caleb. grew up and was was very committed in a religious circle that that is Christian. But keeps Jewish law and so it’s a very small flock kind of mentality there’s not a lot of people. Who see the world the way that they see it as a very small community, but a very devoted community as one must be to keep all of the religious holidays to keep Sabbath to keep biblical kosher. You know, it was a very it was a religious point of view that took work then, of course, is an orthodox Jew and everything that accompanies that you’ll keep. You know, Ben the Jews suffer the worst terror attack. In living memory of any of you know any except the very oldest Holocaust survivors who live now have never seen anything as bad as what happened 10 days ago. And yet Ben didn’t even know about it, why, because it was the Sabbath. And in Ben’s community they’re so devoted to their religious beliefs that even in a moment like that. I could not reach Ben with any electronic device to communicate this information to him. I had to communicate something to him because I put extra security on his family and on his home. And so I had the security guard walk up and tell him some small version of what had happened. But I use it to point out that Ben is incredibly dedicated to his beliefs, but his beliefs are incredibly distinct from Caleb’s. They share all these religious holidays, they share many aspects of Old Testament law, but they depart wildly when the New Testament comes into play. And then you have me who for 15 years taught a home church in Southern California and who is, you know, a Pollyan, you know, sort of New Covenant radical, the furthest from Ben and the furthest from Caleb. And what I think about, you know, what the Gentile is to make of the law and other things. I don’t mean to get too far off into that except to say that baked into the very heart of the Daily Wire is fundamental disagreement between the three founders on some of the most important questions while still seeing in one another kinship and what we see as the fight of our lifetime in our culture. And so for that reason, you know, we rarely get sucked into sort of purity politics at the Daily Wire. I think it’s allowed us to weather a lot of sort of, you know, what I what I call, um, purity death spirals that come along in politics from time to time and it makes us each question not only our own beliefs all the time because we have to find a way to work together and build this company around worldview while not sharing every aspect of our worldview. But it also makes us question the kind of content that we make. If there’s a piece of content that both Ben and Caleb and I find resonates, well that must mean that it necessarily transcends some of our disagreements. And I think that that’s a fairly good way of saying that no one of our individual politics necessarily override in the content that we make. The other thing I would say is just about me personally, which is you know, I’m I’m a conservative in the American sense, but I’m not a conservative in the classic European sense that is somewhat ascendant even in America today. You know, I’m I’m very much of the Reagan moment in America where part of what American conservatism seeks to conserve is the unique brand of American liberalism that was that came to the fore in our founding era. You know, I think that lower case liberalism is the immune system within a traditional society. It looks out for those who are hard done by by the structures that are overwhelmingly good that were generated from ancient wisdom but that nevertheless are imperfect in an imperfect world and that liberalism does a good job of saying well some people are dispossessed in these systems. Some people, you know, we need to question those systems. We don’t need to burn them down. We don’t need to throw them out, but we need to always be working to better them and we need to be looking after the people who are left out in those systems. You know, this is the sort of all men are created equal endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights brand of American liberalism very distinct from French liberalism or European liberalism. And I think an important part of the American tradition. So to the extent that I’m a conservative I want to maintain the institutions that I know are imperfect, but I also know under guard our society. But one of those institutions at least for Americans is this unique brand of liberalism, which has always been incredibly helpful in helping our system be again imperfect, but perhaps healthier than other systems in moments, for example in the 20th century. And so what what comes with my particular brand of you know, American conservatism is always self-doubt. Because the American liberalism in me knows that my imperfections are also manifest in the things that I do and that my American liberalism says that I also need to be protecting people from my worst excesses from my worst impulses that not all of my decisions are correct that not everything that I set my hand to is right and I think that that brings along I’m certainly in no way claiming not to fail at this quite often But I am conscious of the mistakes that I make as much as I can be you know, we were discussing even before the show and I will go into specifics, but I inadvertently harmed someone who who you and I both hold in high esteem recently I’m not unaware that I did it and I’m not unaware that I have some culpability even though I didn’t set about to do it I didn’t do it deliberately I think that that particular view though also helps with this content question that you’re asking I would certainly never suggest that our content does not in some ways reflect my political opinions because I’m imperfect But I think that the the unique mixture that is the daily wire and the unique mixture that is my own politics perhaps uniquely prepares us and me for this moment of trying to be critical of my own impulses trying to be critical of my own beliefs and trying to find something that transcends them and that speaks to those Institutions on which our society has been built Absolutely, our content will fail at that but that’s what our content is going to endeavor to do right? Well, it’s a tricky business. Say I was reflecting I saw the snow white trailer last night day and I would say as a neutral observer It’s pretty easy for me to determine whether something I watch or listen to Is of is of a certain quality now? I would say my judgment in that regard is unerring but It’s not too bad and i’m reasonably informed on that front, but I did find Right away much to my chagrin and i’ve experienced this before that it was difficult for me to evaluate the snow white trailer Because I I know well I work with you guys and I genuinely wanted to succeed and I believe that your heart And your pocketbook is in the right place in relationship to this it made it very hard for me to Decide how I felt about the trailer so and and so this is part of the reason I asked the content question and so your claim is that You there’s a diverse range truly diverse range of opinion at the daily wire now my experience Just so everybody watching and listening knows, you know, I was very concerned about forming a partnership with you guys and my Negotiating team I was quite ill with this was happening But my negotiating team and your side went back and forth for a long time like six months hammering this deal out and it was Full-blown boxing match doing it although always cordial on both sides and that’s how it should be because you want to hammer out a detail where all the Or a deal where all the details are hammered out and everyone is thrilled to be on board and when We finally managed that I was thrilled to be on board and then we got a lot of backlash from people, you know and they were afraid that you guys would interfere with the free content that I was generating and that my My approach to Public communication would be somehow Twisted and bent into the more political daily wire mode And most of that criticism has disappeared now if I do something political some of it pops back up But most of it has disappeared and also any remaining concerns I had have disappeared because all i’ve experienced While working with the daily wire has been a very high level of professional excellence In everything that’s been done Including all the editing of the various documentaries that i’ve done with you guys a real openness to creative exploration I mean we did I don’t know we’ve done five documentaries. I think in a way on a wing and a promise I said I was going to a certain place. We did this with the biblical museum documentary. That’s one that’s been released I went there and I talked to people we had a film crew We filmed hours and hours of content and you had a great editorial staff make that into a compelling documentary, but We didn’t have a detailed business plan for it worked out and it was spontaneous and playful and Investigative and creative in the best sense. So all i’ve found working with you so far and this has been quite a surprise really is Apart from the high level of professionalism, which makes everything that i’ve been able to do done better I’ve also found that it’s done nothing but facilitate anything I wanted to do that was creative and that included the exodus seminar because you guys also took a big risk on that I mean first of all Organizing the first part of it, which was all there was supposed to be which was about eight episodes and then doubling the length And you were very generous about that and everyone who came down to participate had a remarkably Good time would be happy to do it again and it was very productive and so the reason i’m telling that whole story is because I think I have some reason to assume that your Claim to be able to engage in a creative endeavor rather than a political endeavor has some Has some gravitas right? It’s it’s reliable. I really saw that with the documentaries now I contrast that in my own mind with the other problem, which I mentioned which is yeah, but If you’re hoping that someone will succeed and you are aligned with them in sentiment let’s say it gets hard to actually evaluate the creative content because your biases emerge and so What sort of response have you got to the bent key programming for kids? that’s already been viewed by children and parents by your target market and How has that made you feel about the possibility like the actuality of quality and the possibility of success in that regard? well as we said here the the app has been live for just over 24 hours and so We’re only just now getting real feedback I mean up until now everyone who’s viewed any of the content in some way is going to be predisposed to like it in the ways that you That you’re saying Uh, so it’s early people are just now engaging with the content But the the feedback has been very good except in one place You know Deadline Hollywood ran a story about Snow White and many of the comments are very negative But of course that’s because most of the people who read Deadline Hollywood are people who have another set of biases There’s being against and so I probably put them in the same category that I put you you’re you’re a friend. You’re a Collaborator you’re a partner In many of our endeavors and so of course your biases come to bear their biases are going to come to bear But so far the audience has really responded to the content and we worked incredibly hard on these original shows a wonderful day with Mabel McClay I truly believe Is a show that kids 20 years from now will talk about the way that I talk about. Mr. Rogers Uh, you know something that is so dear to me from my own childhood I think that the creators of that show Ryan and Katie chase whom i’ve known for many many years Were almost put on earth to make this content. It’s beautiful It’s filled with wonder It’s filled with joy. It’s filled with imagination. It isn’t they are not Political operators at all. They’re people who Ran an improv comedy school for kids in la for a decade. They they love kids. They’re delighted by children They understand children and they’ve made a show That I put in a category of about five pieces of content the exodus seminar being one of them Matt walsh’s documentary what is a woman being another this very small group of content that I believe is The things that i’m the most proud of having published in in my career Then we have chip chilla The writers who came over to do chip chilla our guys who’ve been working they worked on veggie tales and other animated shows in the past Highly creative. We we worked very hard to get them on board on the team much like we work to get you On the team the producers a guy who came over from disney worked was the creator of the tangled animated Series, which is a true piece of art. Oh, you know There are no schlubs over at disney when it comes to making great content And i’m very proud of chip chilla. I think kids love it my as I sat down my own daughter had not gotten to see it yet She saw her first episode before I left the house She’s three years old and my wife texted me and said that she just came into her room and said mommy I want to sit on the potty and watch chip chilla. So that’s one vote of that’s one vote of confidence I think people are really going to respond to that content, but it is a it is a journey most of the people who are Excellent at making this kind of content are making it You don’t become excellent without experience and if you have experience it’s because you’ve been working within the very system that we’re challenging and so of course the The undertaking is is enormous, you know building up to the kind of quality that you see at disney. We’re gonna miss We’re gonna we’re gonna strive there are gonna be times where we hit it. There’s gonna be times where we miss We’re gonna learn from our mistakes. We’re gonna get better as we go You know, I always laugh at people who? Walk out of the hospital with their first kid and they have a world’s world’s greatest dad ball cap And I always think buddy, you’re not even a you’re not even a mediocre dad You’ve been a dad for you’ve been a tad for 17 hours, you know It’s an aspirational statement though the hat right and so I would right now wear a world’s greatest kids content producer hat Not because it’s what I am, but it’s because what I aspire to be We we believe that this is an important charge We believe that it is the mission of a lifetime to help reclaim our culture in all the ways that matter most We’re going to pour ourselves into it to the point of Well as we’ve poured ourselves into everything else to the point of breaking and finding joy in the sheer difficulty of it because we believe We believe in the thing that we’re doing and yeah, well you guys are a strange bunch of conservatives, you know And maybe that’s a consequence of the strange fracturing of the political landscape because well, first of all a libertarian conservative Is not that easy to distinguish from a classic liberal in many ways And so but then you know the research I did and that was done by a number of psychologists at the same time Showed quite clearly that say 10 years ago the best predictors of conservative belief on the temperament side were low openness, which is interest in ideas and interest in aesthetics and certainly It’s low interest in aesthetics in particular that was one of the big predictors of classic conservatism in our studies and that would Argue very strongly against being interested in something particularly like child’s literary entertainment, right? so and then and so it Now but it is the case that all of the people that i’ve worked with at the daily wire have this Very very high level of interest in creative production. And so that does say something strange about the fractionating of culture but it’s also something I find that I find a difficult to You’re a complex sort of person to understand and so I wanted to delve into that a little bit and so You have this background in in in christian teaching And now you’ve started this crazy company which seems to be working extremely well And now you’re branching out into the entertainment world now the daily wire has produced a number of movies We could talk about those momentarily with some degree of success. It’s like I don’t understand how it is that you’re that guy like where did you develop your interest in enter in entertainment? Why do you think you have the aesthetic capacity to make the kind of judgments necessary to run? Well, what’s what’s attempting to be a full-fledged entertainment network? Why do you think that’s you and and if it is you how did you come to have those abilities now you’re in europe? We could talk about this too Very deeply involved in this pen dragon cycle. I i’d like to hear more about that But like where did these interests come from in you and and why do you think you have the ability to manage this? Well, the first question first, where does it come from? You know, I I grew up in a very rural town in west texas Called slayton And it’s on the flattest land mass on earth called the ano estacado. It’s it’s we have towns with names like level land and plain view Uh a town called no trees it’s it is Truly flat and desolate what we have in abundance is sky because there’s nothing to obscure your view of it And this particular region has produced an enormous disproportionate number of successful musical stars from buddy holly who was who was very famously from lubbock texas natalie mains of the dixie chicks joe ely Leanne will mac, you know went to school out there a lot of country stars in particular And so a lot of people wonder why this area has produced a disproportionate number Of artists in music but those of us who grew up in it and my best friend my childhood best friend’s father Sort of ran the local entertainment industry. He ran the local music industry in that part of the world So I I had access to all of that growing up, you know, I I wasn’t very good at sports But I you know was working backstage at theatrical and musical productions at the theater that he owned or at bars or other things From a very young age in fact the key that I wear around my neck for which our company is named the bent key Was the key to a regional theater in post texas called the garza theater where I grew up doing plays I had access to this wonderful world of entertainment what I understood from From the people I was getting to work with the adults I was getting to work with Is that it was the desolation of that area? It was the fact that we had no trees to look at and nothing but sky joe ely says we had nothing But a but a desolate void to fill And I think that’s true And so for any of us who’ve had any bent in that direction You couldn’t produce enough to ever fill that void You’d look up at the sky as your for your inspiration instead of being able to look around you And that’s what took me ultimately to california Sure a little bit of manifest destiny but an awful lot of stars in my eyes That I moved out there because I wanted to be an actor. I wanted to be a producer I got out there and realized very quickly that I didn’t have what it took to be a successful actor That was a very hard moment in my life And I really what were you lacking? I I what I came to realize is that The environment that I grew up in I thought was teaching me to be an actor But it wasn’t what it was teaching me to be was a producer and by producer what I mean is Someone who creates something out of nothing That in a way the acting that I had done in my youth Hadn’t been the kind of acting that true actors do it had been the kind of acting that a producer does the acting that is necessary To create the something out of nothing, you know, I would walk around at 16 15 14 years old I would walk around with a can of black spray paint in one hand and a script in the other because I both had lines to act in the show and I was Concerned with touching up the paint on the proscenium at the front of the stage because I hated that people would come in and see the nicks and the nicks from where the set had been built or in other words everything that I was doing was to try to ultimately create this aesthetic experience and acting was just in service of That but I didn’t know I I like the maturity to know that You know, one of the things I talk about very often is how I’ve gotten to live a dream life truly. Dr Peter simon croatia Three days ago I was in italy three days before that I was in slovenia. I was in hungary uh, you know But I live a dream life in many ways because I let my dreams die I had these dreams as a young man and they were very useful for getting me out the front door They were very useful for putting me on the on the path But if I had held to them too tightly The path would have led to nowhere And because by god’s grace I had that’s a great ob that’s a great observation, you know because I counsel people to develop a vision for their life because If you don’t have a vision for your life You’re going to be playing a role in someone else’s vision and it might not be one you would award to yourself but I also say Don’t assume that it’s the precise That the precise details of this vision are what going to unfold but Actually what it is, it’s a it’s a self-correcting system is you aim up But you don’t really know what you’re doing and then you wander towards that up and as you go you collect more information And that enables you to modify the vision So I would say maybe tell me what you think about this that it wasn’t so much that your dreams died Is that as you pursued them they got sharper and clearer and that meant you had to leave some of the excess detail behind but you do when you when you when you translate a Vague notion like i’d like to go to hollywood and be successful. That’s a pretty vague plan When you transfer that into the real world that should sharpen right you should find your Specific destiny and that’s also by the way, that’s the bringing down to earth of the meta narrative, right? I mean the meta narrative is young man from small town goes to hollywood and makes good but there’s not a lot of detail in that and You fleshed that out as you move forward and sharpened your vision and so you found that you had specific talent More on the production. And so what did you discover about yourself that was relevant? to the production side of things and how did that tangle up with the with the um With the instantiation of the daily wire and then its expansion into entertainment Well, let’s say when I was a child I thought as a child, right? I had this dream as you say it had It was it was nothing if not Ambiguous it seemed it seemed clear to me because my exposure to the world had been so small, you know Go west make good as you say that that That seems substantial. But of course anyone who’s lived any life as an adult at all knows that’s not substantial in any way That has there’s nothing there you can hang your life on so I came to hollywood and I immediately began failing in fact one of the great criticisms that people make if you even read comments about the The kids announcement of the snow white announcement this week. You’ll read many people saying Jeremy boring is a failed film producer. He’s at it again Failed screenwriter ben shapiro, and I always think that’s a very funny criticism. I mean after all I don’t say this with any sense of arrogance. I say it simply as a matter of fact, i’m quite successful In any material sense, I am a quite successful person That success is built atop all of the failures that my detractors online are trying to mock me for what they What they don’t understand is how proud I am of those failures how instrumental those failures were in helping me To come however far i’ve come and it’ll be future failures that take me wherever it is that I ultimately go A few decades ago private citizens used to be largely that private the internet has changed this Think about everything you’ve browsed searched for watched or tweeted now Imagine all of that data being crawled through collected and aggregated by third parties into a permanent public record your record Having your private life exposed for others to see was once something only celebrities worried about but in an era where everyone is online Everyone is a public figure to keep my data private when I go online. 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The worst part is they don’t have to tell you who they’re selling it to or get your consent One of these data points is your ip address data harvesters use your ip to uniquely identify you and your location But with express vpn my connection gets rerouted through an encrypted server and my ip address is masked Every time I turn express vpn on i’m given a random ip address shared by other express vpn customers That makes it more difficult for third parties to identify me and harvest my data And the best part is how easy express vpn is to use no matter what device you’re on phone laptop or smart tv All you have to do is tap one button to get protected So if like me you believe that your data is your business secure yourself with the number one rated vpn on the market Visit express vpn.com Slash jordan that’s express vpn.com Jordan for three extra months free express vpn.com slash jordan Well, you know a failure Failure is a very interesting way of thinking about something It’s a foolish way of thinking about something if you’re committed to the end goal I mean what i’ve learned in my life is that i’ve never done anything That I actually did That wasn’t a success now. I had added a code into that which is that doesn’t mean it would it succeeded the way I thought it would Right, so but but if you put your heart into something and the original end that you had Conceived of doesn’t make itself manifest. That doesn’t mean that you didn’t learn 10,000 useful things that you’re going to be able to apply to the next project. It also doesn’t mean that I’ve often salvaged projects from years later when I think oh, okay Well, that didn’t work out there, but i’ve got all that sitting there that i’ve mastered I can now apply it to this and I I truly don’t believe that i’ve ever put my heart into anything in a committed way that hasn’t really radically paid off even though the time frame of that payoff was indeterminate and the the the Potential initial goal might not have been Realized and then the other thing I would say about the critics who are criticizing Your repeated failures is that they don’t know anything about entrepreneurial activity and I I studied entrepreneurial activity technically For a very long time and one of the things that you see with entrepreneurs is that and you see this with venture capital Investors is that the ratio of failure to success is very high And you have to do a lot of things before something goes viral and bears fruit But that doesn’t mean that all those other attempts that didn’t magically catch fire were failures It just means that you have to You have to do a lot of things before any one thing really catches on And so if you think that you can be successful Without failure you don’t know anything about how to be successful. So that’s just a foolish criticism Now it does sound to me too oddly though, you know, because people watching and listening and watching the daily wire their presumption is going to be something like and this would have been mine is that all of the Major players in the daily wire world were basically politically oriented people who decided to make a foray into the entertainment world But what you’re telling me was that in your case and this might be true with chapiro, too Because I know he was extremely interested in music is that you are actually primarily interested in In entertainment so to speak and it’s not such a stupid word entertainment because that’s not what it is Let’s call it culture. You were primarily interested in dramatic culture rather than politics And so this is actually for you. This is actually a return to what you had originally dreamed of and envisioned Both in both in the general end in the particular i’m i’m as you say i’m in europe producing this pin dragon cycle when I was 20 years old 21 years old sitting in a Apartment I couldn’t afford in the worst part of the san fernando valley Truly looking for quarters under the couch to see if I could afford dollar menu jack in the box I as a teenager had been in love with stephen lawhead’s novels the pin dragon cycle. It’s a it’s a young adult Series about arthurian myth and about the fall of roman britain and the sort of rise of sub roman britain and the preservation of christianity In this very small celtic area in wales And it deeply shaped my world view I mean these books were incredibly formative for me and at 21 i’m i’ve realized that I can’t make it as an actor I don’t really know what my life is supposed to be i’m desperately poor Um, and I started writing adaptations of these novels. I didn’t own the the right I I had not I had not optioned the rights from the author to write these adaptations I didn’t even know there was such a thing as optioning the rights Uh, I was I was that young and that naive and I labored for two years trying to work on this And here I am at the fulfillment of this moment where i’m actually producing Not not only have I returned to sort of my original dream of making this cultural content in the general but in the very particular But even that wasn’t by design It was it was by taking the steps that were in front of me By accepting the outcomes that weren’t the outcomes. I didn’t always accept them gracefully But I ultimately because of grace was able to accept them And therefore was able to keep growing in life and and the circle brought me back around to this moment Yes, ben shapiro was a virtuosic violinist as a young man There’s a beautiful video of him playing the theme from schindler’s list for larry king when he’s nine years old Or something andrew clavin who was there from the very founding of the daily wire? Obviously was a his he had an entire life as a fiction as a as a novelist Before he ever engaged with politics at all. He had written screenplays for big hollywood films with michael douglas clint eastwood and others We were we were part of this west coast bright bardian by which I mean andrew bright bardian conservative moment that happened where all these Entertainment industry people began to realize that the culture had slipped out from under them And through people like andrew bright bard through organizations like friends of a which I ended up being the executive director of for five years in la Which was this underground group of 2,500? entertainment industry professionals who would meet in secret for fear of being discovered as Conservatives would would come together and that that moment was so unique Uh, and it bore so much fruit and I think it’s part of why daily wire is unique. We’re unique a because of the sort of built-in Worldview differences between chapiro boring and robinson. We’re unique because we came out of this milieu of Of cultural entertainment west coast conservatism that happened in la in the mid 2000s This very unique moment in time And we’re unique because we don’t pander to our audience We’re unique because we’re lowercase our republicans because we believe that our job is yes Never to betray our audience Yes to represent our audience, but also to lead our audiences You know We we don’t give our audience exactly what they think that they want because our belief is that they don’t actually want what they May think superficially that they want Right now that doesn’t mean I have the right to betray my audience to give them what they decidedly do not want But people will write in all the time and say when are you going to make a christian movie? Well, I know they don’t actually want a christian movie. I know that because I see the box office numbers for Those those types of movies, right? I know that what they what they What they’re crying out for is for christians, for example to make truly entertaining and meaningful content for them The way that they express that right if you’re if you’re a populist you would just give them exactly what they’re expressing But give them giving them exactly what that misses that transcendental axis Well, and I think this is the problem with leading by poll Like one of the things you learn as a research psychologist is that it’s not that easy to figure out what people think And you can’t find out just by asking them one question First of all, the question sets up the answer So you have to ask them a whole panoply of questions to get anything near anything like their actual opinions and then it is also the case that So what does it mean to lead under those circumstances? This is where the for-profit mechanism is so powerful Because I have two conversations with my audience. I have the polling conversation. What do you want? And they tell me what they want to want But then I have my for-profit conversation, which is where I give them options and they tell me with their actions what they actually want Right exactly right. There’s a kind of Difference there there’s a kind of content that we all want to want And then there’s the kind of content that we actually want that we actually engage with and that’s yeah That’s what we’re trying to do at the daily wire. We’re we are trying to give our audience what they want Just not necessarily what they want to want That’s the right that’s the tension that we’re living in right? Well, that’s what a that’s what a real political leader should do too Is rather than and i’ve seen so i’ve actually seen many many political leaders founder on exactly this problem because they start out Motivated by commitment to a set of principles assuming they’re not just you know The psychopathic types are out for themselves, but they start by being motivated by a set of principles And then they allied themselves with political consultants because they’re afraid of their own inexperience They hire people to run their campaign Which you can’t do because it’s your campaign They hire people to write their speeches and then they just get transformed into another Stamped political product and they almost always fail right, and so you need that you you can’t you can’t rely on foolish sampling of public opinion to govern what you’re going to offer because the public is striving towards something but If they had it they could describe it But if they’re aspiring towards it, they’re still stumbling towards its description and then it’s incumbent on the leaders to listen And to to take them to the next step and that is what a great storyteller should do and that the failure to do that will be punished by the market because A christian movie could be just as propagandistic and dull and is very much likely to be like if it’s explicitly christian It’s because it’s not a movie. It’s a piece of propaganda designed to push really what’s a political agenda Not even a religious agenda. It’s a political agenda disguised as a religious agenda and certainly People who proclaim their christianity all too loudly are just as likely to fall prey to that temptation as anyone else What people want is a story that captures their imagination, right and the imagination too It’s different than so the the the neural system that governs the imagination is a different system than the system that governs Linguistic content. It’s more archaic. It’s more emotional. It’s more instinctual It’s less attuned to the moment. It’s less specific and adapted to immediacy So it’s got a it’s got a local impracticality, but it’s got a medium to long-term vision a much broader vision and great cultural drama appeals to the imagination and it has to be of the pattern of the imagination And that may be quite distinct like one of the things i’ve really been struck with for example is just as Political correctness hit its height the marvel universe became most popular And it was fascinating for me to watch because tony stark is as close to a fascist as any Hollywood hero has ever been right. I mean, he’s a military industrial self-absorbed hyper ayn rand capitalist Right, so he’s as far away from woke as you could be and then and so that was extremely interesting to see although the marvel people until recently never took the bait they never got political and so they kept the politics Implicit in the story and then I watched the black widow with scarlett Johansson and you couldn’t have come up with a more anti-woke movie if you would have scripted it for that purpose and But because that wasn’t why it was scripted it was successful. I mean the black widow was literally about a communist demagogue Quasi god who lived in the sky who was a remnant of the communist empire Taking over the minds of young women And destabilizing the whole world. It’s like well, yeah, it looks like that’s happening. And then what was so strange too is that Johansson who was the savior in the in the narrative the only reason that she Was able to break the hold of this propaganda on the minds of her female compatriots was because she had been raised in something approximating a loving nuclear family, even though it was It was deeply flawed and partly false. And so so why am I saying all that? Well, it’s because You will get punished by the market if you do turn your Dr. Cultural dramas into political propaganda and it’s it’s also very comical to see the weird reversal here, too Because what you see happening in hollywood Is that the actors dream of being political activists and they seem i’ve had Conversations with hollywood actors about this. I said look you guys are already you already occupy a kind of pinnacle Why would you subordinate that pinnacle to the political you’re subordinating the greater? The dramatic culture to the lesser now you guys are taking the reverse tack Because you made your your largest scale success in an essentially political realm and now you want to transcend that and move into the cultural So it’s very fascinating to watch this. Well, i’ve I watched I have lived through I think the most rapid transfer political transformation on on Probably in human history. I mean in 2008 Barack obama could not be elected president as a democrat if he opposed gay marriage And in 2012, barack obama could not be elected as a democrat if he i’m sorry Yeah, he he could not be elected in 2008 if he supported gay marriage I’m sorry, and he could not be elected in 2012 if he opposed gay marriage In four years There was that rapid a change on an issue So deeply fundamental about which there were such deeply held beliefs such deeply held passions How could that change so quickly and what changed obviously is culture? and we could You know we can debate whether that was good or bad or was it some good and some bad That’s not even the conversation i’m trying to engage in i’m only interested in the fact of it And the the fact that the the overton window had shifted so far and what shifted it, you know 80 of what shifted it was a single Network television show called will and grace That for the first time on nbc on the biggest network for comedy every single day, you know 15 million people brought into their homes these Vibrant wonderful characters who were gay and it fundamentally transformed how they saw that issue That is That is a power that politicians obviously don’t have if they did barack obama wouldn’t have had to have changed He always supported gay marriage So you would have never heard him oppose gay marriage in the first place if politics is where the real power lives Politics is incredibly powerful, of course But it has to operate within a cultural window And the real failure of the right in america in my lifetime is that they seeded all of that ground almost completely to the left The bible is the root of all wisdom inspiration and spiritual nourishment The halo app empowers you to explore the bible’s profound teachings and to effortlessly incorporate them into your daily life A great place to start while you deepen your understanding of the bible is to check out father mike schmidt’s bible in a year Available on the halo app for brief daily readings and reflections Here you can dive into an extensive library of bible reading plans accompanied by insightful reflections and audio-guided meditations Whether you’re a seasoned bible reader or just starting your journey Halo provides a platform for you to engage with scripture like never before Studying the bible’s literary brilliance has influenced countless writers poets and artists throughout history by studying the bible yourself You’ll gain a deeper appreciation for the power of storytelling symbolism and metaphor enriching your understanding of literature across different genres The halo app also helps you connect with a community of like-minded individuals sharing experiences insights and encouragement along the path to spiritual growth Download the app for free at halo.com Jordan you can set reminders and track your progress along the way enrich your education and nurture your mind and soul today Download the halo app at halo.com Jordan that’s halo.com Jordan halo.com Jordan for an exclusive three-month free trial of all 10 000 plus prayers and meditations Right right, okay, so let’s let’s i’ve got two threads to to walk off on from that point the first is This has been a weird reversal too I mean one of the strangest things i’ve seen in the last decade and i’ve seen a lot of strange things in the last decade By the way was the babalon b? Uh Comedians interviewed jonathan pagio It was a preposterous interview because pagio was speaking very seriously about the bible About the architectural and mythological significance of the monsters on the outside of medieval cathedrals And relating that to the fuzzy edges of cognitive and perceptual categories, which is a very sophisticated intellectual Discussion and these idiot commentators from the babalon b and i mean idiot in the best possible way We’re cracking absurd jokes in the background and acting like frat boys And being very comical but keeping up with the conversation And pagio was cracking jokes along with them and keeping up quite nicely And that was all done in the name of christian satire, which is like, what do you mean christian satire? Christian satire. I mean, I think the babalon b has taken out the onion. That’s what it looks like to me and it’s like What what the hell where did christian satirists come from? And so i’m curious here. What do you think’s going on? The first is how did you reconcile the conflict between a kind of traditional christian protestant? american evangelism and the entertainment industry because that’s quite the damn gulf and And why do you think that can be successfully broached that gulf? Why do you think it should be? I mean you you talked about the importance of culture But that doesn’t mean that you should dance with the devil, you know to lead people down the appropriate road and that must have The hollywood culture even though you wanted to be part of it. There must have there must have been a moral quandary there Oh, yeah, people would always say in hollywood in in christian hollywood when I was in my 20s They would say we have to reclaim hollywood for christ and i’d be like guys He was never here. Uh I think that right right all the best answer was satan as mart simpson said yeah, right. That’s right I think that it is american protestantism. That’s part of it for me though. Um, you know, i’m i’m decidedly not catholic or mainline protestant. I didn’t grow up in a church that has uh Deep historic roots And so I think probably if i’m being honest with myself, you know, I know a lot of people who grow up in Who are very devoted catholics or very devoted episcopalians very devoted presbyterians I I don’t even know if they believe in christ. I don’t know if they even believe in the bible, but they they certainly have had Enormous benefit and enormous structure put in their life by these traditions Probably even more precisely. I know many anglicans who fit That description, you know, they’re they’re incredibly intelligent and they understand the value of their church but they don’t necessarily believe that it’s true and I I understand that I think that that’s a A somewhat tragic view, but I think that it’s a perfectly relatable view Especially if you’re in one of those institutions that has such history But I didn’t grow up in that kind of an institution. I grew up in A kind of american evangelicalism that I think is somewhat ungrounded uh In many ways that I think are actually, you know as an adult I can say in many ways that I think are bad but one of the benefits that it has and one of the benefits that it gave to me is probably my My belief in god is because of narrative. It’s not because of institution In other words, I came to believe in god because of the story of god because of the the redemptive story of christ And so in in that sense, I understand the power of story You know, we we are interesting creatures, aren’t we because we’re we’re both material and immaterial, right? We’re we’re meat and we are the thing that transcends meat And it’s very hard to know where the line between those two things is probably because in an ultimate sense There isn’t one It’s very hard to understand where illnesses begin You and I I mean you far more than me, but certainly both of us in our life have seen bad thoughts Actually lead to physical destruction And so you did did the thing that began the thing that began in the physical world Transcended into the spiritual world for a person and certainly if you believe any of the stories of of the bible the new testament Or the old you must believe that there are things that start in the spiritual that then manifest themselves in the physical somehow that that door swings Both ways we don’t fully understand that the problem though with the sort of conservatism you described earlier the conservatism That doesn’t care about narrative that doesn’t care about aesthetic my argument would be yes, but narrative and aesthetic care about you Right, right. That’s for sure narrative is real narrative is a as an active force in the world and so The narrative impacted me and changed my life And so it’s that understanding of the power of narrative that caused me to be drawn in that direction Okay. Okay. Well, you know, i’m i’m writing this new book called we who wrestle with god and Um, it’s going quite nicely and one of the arguments that I lay out in there and I believe this to be True at multiple levels simultaneously. It’s true scientifically. It’s true philosophically It’s true metaphysically. It’s true religiously all of that is that A description of the structure through which we perceive the world Is a story that’s what a story is and you cannot perceive the world without a story This is why the empiricists and the postmodernists got this right, by the way, this is why the empiricists are wrong There’s a trillion facts You have to rank order them in terms of their value and a description of that rank ordering is a story So when you watch someone on screen walk through their life What you’re seeing are the choices they make the value choices they make and the consequences and we’re so interested in that because we Want to fill in our narrative so that we have a narrative that will allow us to orient ourselves in the world properly And the biblical narrative is the is the meta narrative of western culture and there’s no escaping that now What the postmodernists did wrong after realizing that we saw the world through a story was Insist that that story was one of power And if you think the ruler of the world is the person who wields the most power you are Literally the farthest thing from a christian you could possibly be because the entire judaeo-christian narrative moses We talked about this in the exodus seminar moses is forbidden from entering the promised land even though He had led the israelites faithfully for decades under the most appalling conditions Merely because he uses force once when god tells him instead to use his words and that’s it It’s like the punishment is hey you’re right in the border of the promised land But you used your staff to hit the rocks when you were told to speak and you don’t get to proceed And so you made yourself god You you well and you also made the assumption that you that’s exactly right you you used force You used your ability to compel When you should have used your ability to invite and to entice you didn’t tell the right story you use thomas jefferson makes this brilliant Thomas jefferson makes a brilliant argument in his uh He wrote the virginia charter of religious freedom And in the in the preamble to the virginia charter of religious freedom I won’t quote it because I would misquote it but he essentially says Since god alone has both the power and the right to compel us to believe And since he chose not to Who would we be to do otherwise? Right great great. Yeah, great. Absolutely. Well that yeah. Yeah precisely and that and the insistence that In the judaic christian tradition that we do have true choice true free choice And that we can use that in the moral domain and that has been reserved to us That is part and parcel of the notion that we have Responsibility and the right to our own destiny. I mean one of the things you see i’ve been i’ve been writing about the prophet elijah In this new book and elijah is an interesting figure because he’s one of the prophets that shows up on the mount when christ is Transfigured it’s moses and elijah and it’s like you might ask. Well, who’s elijah, right? You know who moses is but Elijah is the first person first of all to take a stance against that No, he’s the most outstanding exemplar of the people who took a stance against deifying nature So he’s the enemy of the prophets of bal and bal is a nature god, right? The god of the earthquake the god of the environmentalists bal is a variant of gaia, although he’s male and so and Elijah realizes that whatever god is is not nature despite nature’s awesome capacity and ability to to elicit something You know approximating admiration and awe. It’s not it’s not the earthquake and it’s not the it’s not the hurricane It’s not the storm. It’s instead the still small voice within that’s where that line comes from and so and so there’s the so that that the Conscience has to be free in that regard And and that’s all right. So let me ask you another question here so the other thing that people are going to be skeptical about i’m less skeptical about this now, you know, because i’ve Worked with some of your very talented people jonathan. Hay and elliot felled for example Brilliant editors brilliant and being an editor is very hard work and they’re very good at it They can get to the core of a story and i’ve seen them do that multiple times That takes a very special talent and someone who’s awake, you know, that’s hard now Where are you getting your talent? And how do you select them on the creative side? You know because you’d think well who’s going to go work for daily for the new daily wire enterprise I mean, I know there’s a lot of disaffected people in the entertainment industry and they’re sick and tired of being told what to do And having their talent subverted to the woke mob, but but but i’m curious You’ve collected a lot of creative people around you and how have you done that and how do you assess and evaluate them? Yeah Well, one one thing that I would say is it’s much easier with kids entertainment than it has been with our more general entertainment With with general entertainment There are a lot of disaffected people as you say in hollywood. They want to come over and be a part of something that they believe in The challenge is I can’t offer them a career I can only offer them a job and if the job that I offer them gets in could actually be detrimental to their career Well, then that’s a pretty bad bargain So one of the things that we’re endeavoring to do Obviously get talent where we can To grow talent internally, you know to stretch ourselves Over time and success to be able to show people look this isn’t a flash in the pan There’s going to be more and more opportunity over here I think that will draw more and more talent to take that that leap and come over and work with us On the kids front. It’s been much easier the second I announced that we were doing this we had huge writers from dreamworks and disney huge producers from dreamworks and disney and other animated And kids entertainment companies jumped ship and come straight to us and at first I didn’t understand why because they’re they’re taking in some ways an even bigger risk But then I realized oh it makes sense if if you had come to me when I was 25, let’s say And said jeremy we read this pilot that you wrote it’s fantastic. We really like it. We’d love to make it But you know, you’re gonna have to put uh An anti-gun agenda in there and the one character is gonna have to have an abortion and these two men are gonna kiss in the third act I would have been I may have said no because i’m a bit of a contrarian at heart, but I may have said yes You know because I I wanted so badly for those dreams to come true But if you tell me to do that for a show that’s going to be marketed to seven-year-olds Well now there’s really no conflict at all. I simply cannot do it I cannot have i’m not going to for any amount of money for any amount of my dreams coming true Get comfortable with putting transgendered characters in shows aimed at seven-year-olds and since that is actually what’s happening At these major hollywood studios right now people who people who were drawn to kids entertainment in particular are people who love Kids, they love the innocence of children the youth of children. They feel a responsibility You know the people who work at disney are a special breed there. I’ve worked with some of them now They’re damn near impossible by the way there. It’s terrible to manage them because they’re so creative They’re so full of love. They’re so full of life. They’re so full of vision It makes them challenging to manage. They’re incredible artists truly in every sense of the word and and they feel Deeply responsible for the content that they create Whereas if you ask me to be a writer on game of thrones it may go against some of my values But i’d be stoked to be working on the biggest show I’d be stoked to be working with the best people in the industry and i’d console myself at night with the knowledge that Adults can make their own choices adults have the right to engage with content Maybe the people who watch it won’t even agree with it, but they’ll enjoy it for other reasons You don’t feel that way with little kids So from the second we launched the disaffected in general entertainment Put out feelers to us keep us posted they’ll come take a meeting and then they’ll back off On the kids front it’s where do we sign up? Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Oh what they’re being asked to do in their daily lives is evil And they don’t want to participate in evil Hmm. Hmm. So what sort of applicant pool have you been able to draw from like how many I don’t know how many people you’ve hired In the bent key apparatus who are creative. Can you give us an approximate number? Yeah, you know i’ve because i’ve been out of the country for the last many months on this leave of absence and i’m I found out yesterday that since i’ve left we’ve hired almost 30 people Uh, which is that’s a lot. That’s a big number of my company now that i’ve never even met But it’s it’s necessary for how we’re doing things for me to be on this sleeve, but I would say two dozen Creatives in the in the Kids entertainment is probably an accurate number Right so it’s still a small number and how many how many how many inquiries have you had about the possibility of such positioning? Daily Okay, okay, so you have a huge applicant pool to select from And people like I say people who’ve worked at very high levels at very big studios Uh, you know, it must be tempting to hire all of them Yeah, if we had the resources, we would have hired probably all of them by now You know it is we grow out of cash flow you’ll read all these rumors about how we’re funded by billionaires We spend over 200 million dollars a year. You’d have to be quite a billionaire to fund the daily wire There’s not I know it’s it’s hard for people to understand how money works But a guy with a billion dollars can’t spend 200 million dollars a year on propping up The daily wire the daily wire is a four-part he also doesn’t in most cases He also doesn’t have that money It’s not like I always think of the scrooge mcduck image because that’s what people think You know that the typical billionaire has a money bin where he goes and swims in pennies and your money is out there If you have more money than you need for your daily Necessities your money is invested in all sorts of things. It’s that’s not it’s yours to control but It’s not it’s not yours in the simple sense that you have a billion dollar It’s not yours in the simple sense that you have the money in your wallet Or if it is you’re you’re being foolish with your money So, you know, that’s a hard number of people the number of people on the number of people on planet earth who could just fund An operation like the daily wire is remarkably small. It’s not even billionaires. It’s deca billionaires We the daily wire can go away tomorrow In if we fail and that’s a very real possibility all of the time There have been numerous moments in the history of the company where we’ve come right up against it and Even that is a huge lesson to me. It’s not I wouldn’t have known that until I took this journey I always thought in the in the early years. I thought well, we’ll reach a point eventually where there’s some stability But we keep expanding we keep growing if you’re not growing you’re dying You know the first year of the company that might be the only real stability jeremy, you know because A biological organism tends to deteriorate very rapidly if it isn’t growing and expanding, right? There’s the real stability might be that creative edge and that’s particularly going to be true if you’re in entertainment And what that does mean or in in cultural drama? Let’s say what that does mean and this is one of the things i’ve really found exciting by the way about working with the daily wire because i’ve worked with a lot of different organizations now and some of them were quite great like harvard was great in The 90s when I was there and i’ve started a number of companies and they’ve done quite well and i’m accustomed to having very good graduate students around me and but one of the things I really have enjoyed about the daily wire is that Everything is done to a high standard of excellence. So that’s cool to see And that people are taking that responsibility onto themselves, which I also really like to see because it means that you’ve distributed responsibility and Creative freedom at the same time quite extensively and that gives your company a real dynamism And I really saw that with the with the documentaries and so that that’s but I think that’s the only kind of stability You can really hope for doing what you’re doing It has to be a living stability and not and not some false stability that comes from Resting on your laurels and assuming that what you’ve already going to that’s like burying your talents in the ground I give a speech to all of our new recruits once a month they bring and of course I haven’t gotten to do this in the last five months But once a month they bring all the new people into a room and I go and visit with them And I tell them every time the daily wire is an incredibly difficult place to work Uh, it’s an incredibly difficult place to work because We have an actual mission and you know If I can I liken it into the mission of say a space x even though obviously what we do is very different But we’re we’re trying to get to mars And we’re building the rocket as we go And there’s every possibility at every new step that will crash back to earth. If you don’t get breakaway velocity, there’s only The inevitable crashing becomes an inevitability. It’s just a matter of time and that may well be our our fate We could one day have a billion dollars of your a year of revenue and then fail and you could say well I don’t understand you used to be succeeding with 30 million dollars a year of revenue. How could you fail with a billion? Well, it’s easier to fail at a billion because the mistakes get much more costly much faster Daily wire is hard. The pressure is intense Every startup is hard and our startup has actual enemies We have all the major giants in social media except perhaps elon actively trying to shut us down trying to demonetize us We have billionaire funded nonprofits who exist they pay people six figures a year to listen to our content And then to try to target our advertisers into dropping us on the basis of the things that we say on that content We have a government that’s hostile To the things that we do The entire apparatus of of our culture is arrayed essentially against our business Of course, it’s an incredibly challenging environment for people to work in I say it is possible It is possible that I will one day fire you because of a mistake Of course hypothetically there’s a mistake that you could make that’s so vast. I would have to fire you and that has happened one or two times But in the vast majority of instances, that’s not why people burn out at the daily wire or quit the daily wire and get fired Far more prevalent is people who? Try to rest on past successes If you try to rest on I understand that temptation But past successes will not get us to mars You know, we will crash with all of those past successes firmly in our pocket It’s the next success that has to happen and the one after that and the one after that And if you’re not willing to continue to challenge yourself and continue to grow and take responsibility If if I walk in and say you made a mistake, I need you to say yes I did and here’s what I learned from it I tell people my dream in life is to one day make a one billion dollar mistake You know you talked about enemies and and risk and I think part of the reason that It’s exciting to be working with the daily wire is because The risk is calibrated properly See One of the things you do as a therapist I had a client who was very afraid of of death now Everyone’s afraid of death and logically so but you can be so afraid of death that it Completely obliterates your ability to live and she was a vegan And couldn’t even walk into a butcher store and it was because the idea of death was just Too much for her. She she tried to stay asleep most of the time. She was very suicidal She had she had a panoply of problems and one of the things we did in treatment I outlined this in my book was go watch an embalming Go watch an embalming And that was very very dramatic was dramatic for me, too It’s it’s not a trivial thing to see that’s for sure and part of the reason you do that with people and I did this because she had a dream that indicated some Necessity on her part to do something that dramatic in order to lift herself out of her fear and it really did and part of the reason it lifted herself out of her fear was because If you have to confront something truly terrible, this is what happens when Uh, um archaic people initiate their teenagers, especially the boys they subject them to something truly awful And the reason they do that is because then their nervous system is calibrated properly They know the difference between something truly awful And something that’s just you know, not that good and if you don’t have that calibration then everything that’s just not that good becomes truly awful Now one of the things that’s cool about the daily wire and this may be a consequence of the intense assault on its existence is that Because you guys are surrounded by enemies and the probability of failure is spectacular That risk is built in like just accepting that risk is built into the psyches of the people who work there And so when I say well, why don’t we go do a documentary in jerusalem and athens and rome? And we won’t script it and we’ll just see what happens when we go there everybody says well That sounds like it would be interesting instead of having a neurotic fit about all the multiple ways that could go wrong Which and there are multiple ways it could go wrong and the probability that it would succeed is very low but I know perfectly well when you’re trying to engage people Unless you put yourself on the ragged edge of disaster You’re you’re not interesting And so, you know it could easily be that all this adversarial tension that you’re experiencing that i’m experiencing as well is actually not only not an Antithetical to that success to radical success, but actually a precondition for radical success it’s certainly you know, one of the things my family has learned through bitter experience is that the worst attacks Have the most Possibility embedded in them if you can Stop panicking and pull back and evaluate the situation There’s all sorts of opportunity in a bitter attack especially if you don’t apologize if you can withstand the attack if you can You can meet it with a sense of humor and playfulness, which is a very strange thing to be able to do when it’s a true attack but There’s certainly the journalists who have treated me most harshly Have been the ones who have done me the biggest favors And that’s a very strange thing to see and learn, you know, it’s It kind of stands your understanding of the world on its on its head But in a way that’s also a great relief. It’s like don’t be so sure that’s just a catastrophe You know, I mean sometimes that’s obviously very hard to rationalize but even in the extreme situations It’s not obvious You know no matter how big the dragon there might be a treasure that’s associated that’s just as big or bigger It might be that that’s how the world is structured So let’s close this with that’s great. I wanted to ask you about pen dragon and what you’re doing in europe and you mentioned that that series was very Relevant to you and the shaping of your worldview So why don’t you you walk us through that a bit and then tell us exactly what you are doing in europe and when this Is all going to be launched and what you expect of it So stephen lawhead Is an american author he’s expatriated about 30 years ago and has lived in oxford ever since he was a American sort of evangelical worked in the evangelical music industry actually in franklin tennessee right down the road from the daily wire offices and he’s been anglicanized and and you know, he’s obviously a major anglophile moved to oxford and really pursued His writing from from a historic point of view that’s not to say that he writes history he certainly doesn’t it’s very fiction It’s very much fiction But it’s it’s fiction that’s grounded to a large degree that takes place in a time and a place which he understands incredibly well and it’s it’s masculine and it’s Christian but it’s christian in a way that’s very grounded as well. I mean it’s about You know, it’s about This very dark period in british history. It’s about war and it’s about death and it’s about The human struggle and I would say that I found the pin dragon cycle about the same time that I found braveheart When braveheart first came out in theaters and braveheart is the film that impacted me The most in my life For many of the same reasons it’s historical fiction. Obviously, it’s not that’s not quite the story of william walace, but It’s an important story and an important take on a story That’s fundamentally about I think what it means to be a man of purpose and a man of faith in the real world Not the sort of maybe christian, you know, I grew up in the jesus’s nice 90s When when when jesus is just not true. That’s just not true. I’ve always said I want to write a book called jesus the jerk Because you know jesus was a tough guy to like Uh, he he showed love in a way that only god can show love which is You know Yeah, it has an edge put it that way. That’s right And i’m, not even sure that you could show love in the ways that jesus sometimes Showed love for example if you met a woman at a well And she had one source of absolute shame and you chose to lead with it I’m, not sure that you could make the claim that you are acting out of love But christ could make the claim that he was acting out of love. That’s a very unique All of that to say The sort of nice hippie jesus who came to hug it out Uh was very unappealing to me. It didn’t seem real. It didn’t seem You know, I lived in a small town my friends as as is true in many american small towns in that era You know horrible drug use horrible drug use happening inside my family lots of pain and suffering all around me Uh, and I just didn’t see how this nice guy jesus Held up Held up and then I encountered these stories law head stories Mel gibson and randall wallace’s story of of braveheart And I saw what it would be to be a man of purpose who actually lived out faith in a in a In a world that wasn’t very nice And that really inspired a lot of my thinking a lot of my worldview I’m sure that my politics is Formed in those moments. I’m sure that my faith is forged in many ways in those it’s interesting that you saw that You know, um, i’ve been writing about abraham And the abrahamic story is extremely interesting Which is of course why we still remember it But there’s there’s a couple of elements that I find particularly germane to our discussion and to the state of the current world so Abraham has the socialist paradise at the beginning of the story Essentially, like if you imagine that the socialist paradise is a place where all your needs are met Abraham has that right because he’s the son of a wealthy man and He has everything he needs at hand and he’s actually luxuriated in that for decades because I think he’s 75 when the story opens and god comes to him and says You’re you’re not built for laying around and and you know And existing on a non-stop diet of topless servant girls and milk and honey Get the hell out there in the world and and what and what? Have your adventure. Well, the thing about an adventure is it’s rough. It’s rough but it’s funny because It appears that a rough adventure is better than an endless diet of milk and honey You know, even when you think about what we do when we go to movies We don’t go and watch people Satiate themselves with materialist goods. We don’t go to movies and watch people shop We don’t watch them eat ice cream, right? We don’t we don’t see them with the possible exception of sex We don’t see them engaging in Consumatory activities technically speaking we go watch people like james bond We go watch people who are having dangerous adventures and that’s exactly what god actually puts in front of abraham And the reason that abraham can handle these dangerous adventures is because he continually makes the appropriate sacrifices He always keeps his eye on what’s highest and that leads him through War and starvation and the possible loss of his wife and the necessity in principle to sacrifice his son and all the Calamities of the world are in the abrahamic story And he prevails against all that and becomes the father of nations in consequence But what’s so cool about the story and it goes along with your observation that the christ is a nice hippie story Just doesn’t cut it. It’s like no you’re built to be You’re built to take on death and hell Fundamentally And that’s part and parcel of the christian passion story too because it means that a full encounter with life is an encounter with All of the terrible elements of death something I covered in detail with pageo when we did the jerusalem documentary That’ll be coming out later And that wasn’t even enough is that the full christian passion story is you don’t have to just encounter death And the worst sort of death, you know at the hands of your own community Disgraced despite your innocence you have to encounter the reality of hell itself to have lived a full life and you know that’s brutal, but it is What it what it offers and this is something that’s really an offering especially to young men is that Well, it offers you the adventure of your life and maybe if you had that That would be That would be what you actually want instead of what you say you want, you know It could be that that’s how things work Well, and it sounds like you know, you started this in part by saying, you know You are having the adventure of your life. You’re in italy. You’re in europe. You’re you’re pursuing this This series that’s actually the fulfillment of a dream that you’ve had since you were a teenager and strangely everything it can to kill me Right. It’s the hardest thing i’ve ever done by any measure Uh I think that i’m i think that i’m on the brink. I think i’m the brink of personal collapse. It’s been So difficult. I’m i’m edgy i’m Mercurial in ways that i’m not typically mercurial um I i’m I don’t Gain weight. I don’t lose weight It’s just been this horrible grind and everyone who sees me say or sees photos of me or saw my video a few days ago Say i’ve never seen you look so happy And I think well, yeah because both of those things are true Right, right, right, right, right. Yeah, isn’t that a strange thing? and so how do you account for the fact that how do you account for the fact that you are doing this perversely impossible thing that is Unlikely beyond belief, but that’s actually happening. I mean first of all with the daily wire in general second with what is so far, uh Improbably successful foray into the domain of culture and then third and even more specifically that Well, you’re making the series of your dreams essentially like why do you think? Why do you what do you think you’ve done apart from being the fortunate recipient of god’s grace? What do you think you’ve done? or not done to make this a possibility I I think that I would say that God recommends god God doesn’t recommend us This is one of the the lessons that I encounter over and over and over in my life and where I see Uh, the real pride set in is when we think god is recommending us When quite often he’s recommending well, well, perhaps exclusively he’s recommending himself Uh, you know What have what have I done? Well, i’ve done a lot of things a lot of them are good and a lot of them are bad I am a lot of things i’m complex like everyone else is complex and in a lot of superficial ways I’ve made great choices and done great good things and in a lot of more subtle areas of life I’ve i’ve done probably And am probably worse than people who’ve been made worse superficial choices Than i’ve made You know you you talked a little bit ago about free will and how important free will is and of course I agree You can’t I don’t think one can honestly look at life and deny free will I think that you look at I think a lot of people can reason their way out of believing in free will but if there is a supercomputer which could somehow measure all of the Vibrations from every photon and every electron Sense the big bang and crunch it all up. Could it figure out that i’m going to clap my hands right now on this podcast? Well, if there is such a supercomputer that computer is god that Which speaks to The fact that there is both an experiential free will and there is something beyond free will as well You know that that in some ways i’m responsible for my choices and in some ways i’m not From a governing point of view from a justice point of view we can only organize society around the idea of free will You couldn’t organize society around determinism. It would be an unjust society If you did but part of humility is to say free will isn’t sufficient to completely describe The human experience just as determinism Isn’t perhaps at all Satisfactory to describe the human experience. So I take all of that and I And I mentioned that a lot of drug use happened in my family You know, I have an uncle who’s a year younger than me. We were basically raised as brothers very small town very close incredibly close to this day with my grandparents and We grew up in the same house at the same time. Basically, you know That’s not literally true. But for all intents and purposes, it’s true And at about the same time in our lives We started walking into rooms where there was alcohol and at about the same time in our lives We started walking into rooms where there were cigarettes and at about the same time we walked into rooms where there were drugs And he became addicted to all of those things And I didn’t Is that as simple as I made better choices than him? Well, it’s certainly not as simple as I made better choices than him If the room had been filled with ranch dressing he would have walked out addicted to ranch dressing There is a there’s a switch in his brain that’s different than the switch in my brain and You know by god’s grace. He’s he’s Been freed from those things and and so that’s why I don’t feel bad talking about it It’s not as though he’s still in the throes of it or has been in a very long time But I always look at his life in my life and say You could easily say that I made better choices And in some ways I did but even those choices I don’t know that I deserve much credit for and I also made some really terrible choices and just didn’t get stuck with the Consequences as he did At the same time while he went through this phase of doing superficially incredibly terrible things I also can’t look at his life and and conclude that I’m better I made a lot I I did a lot better in those superficial areas and I also know the darkness that I’m carrying around and in my heart I know The judgments that I have of other people I know, you know I know that the devil on one shoulder and the angel on the other shoulder both speak in my own voice And so it’s very hard to ever trust Your own perceptions of your goodness or your badness. I say all of that to say I can’t really describe how I am where I am a wholly apart from the grace of god I don’t I don’t understand why I’ve made choices that have led to this I could point to some of the choices that I think have without fully taking any action Without fully taking any credit for them I I am As I said earlier, I’m committed to the institutions that have helped us shape our society and i’m critical of those institutions But I don’t feel a desire to burn them down I only feel a desire that I think we should all take up a responsibility in our generation to Out with the with the bad and and rebuild The the important edifices. I don’t know where that comes from except story I know that in Braveheart, William Wallace doesn’t achieve the goal. He’s he’s executed other people achieve the goal I know that in the pin dragon cycle in turn both tally essen and merlin and arthur fail to achieve the goal They get they draw us one step closer to that goal and they go through huge losses so perhaps in a narrative sense, I I was drawn to these stories about how It’s not our job to save the world. It’s only our job to do our part When andrew bribert wrote his book righteous indignation, excuse me while I saved the world I called him and said andrew You can’t call the book that and he said well, I am indignant and it is righteous I said well, you can call you can use that part, but don’t use the subtitle I said it’s you’re not saving the world and god is a jealous god He’s not going to share credit for saving the world with you And I understand I understand that andrew was on that mission. I I supported him. I loved him in that mission But the mission is to do our part In god’s work not to think that we’re god and that the work is ours to do and I don’t mean to be Critical of my friend only of this one bad idea that I think that he this one bad idea that I think that he had And so I I do think I do think that’s part of the grace that’s helped me accomplish the things that i’ve accomplished I’m doing what’s put in front of me to do I’m skeptical of my own motivations Enough that I challenge myself and try to do better and I know it isn’t ultimately my fight to win And somehow in that i’ve been able to participate in a grace And it may all fail so I don’t want to hold myself up as some great example of how you should live your life I only want to say that I think the only correct posture between us and god is humility The only correct posture between us in our own lives is a sense of responsibility for our actions on the one hand And a sense of humility before god and the other and somewhere in that i’ve been able to live A happy life in times of success and in times of failure And i’m i’m not I’m not displeased to currently be in a phase of success success can be much harder by the way than failure It comes with its own as you know as Probably much better even than I success comes with enormous challenges But there’s a reason we call it success too. It comes with a lot of amazing benefits That’s a really good place to stop. We’re at about the right time and that’s that’s a very good closing and So i’m very much looking forward to seeing what happens with bent key on the child’s entertainment front It’s something i’m very interested in I hope the pen dragon series knocks them dead. I’m really looking forward to the release of our documentaries. It’s been Spectacularly good fun and serious as well to be working with the daily wire. So I thank you for that that’s been really nothing but good and That’s that’s quite something we’ve been working together for Year and a half now something like that and and it’s been All of it’s been good on my side And so i’m very pleased about that and would like as long as you keep never saying anything that I don’t agree with Yeah Yeah, yeah Well, you you know you talked about firing me if I make a mistake I mean i’ve known for six years that i’m one wrong statement away from catastrophe and So but that is an exciting place to exist There is that and it does force you to be awake and there is something useful about being forced to be awake And and I think daily wire is awake in the right way, so Good luck with your venture. Um, as you know anything I can do to help that would be appropriate I would be more than happy to do and uh, i’m thrilled to see I’m very interested to see what’s going to happen with snow white because that’s so preposterous and ridiculous and comical and pointed And a nice a nice move in relationship to disney’s 100th anniversary You guys have a very good sense of timing and so that’s very funny to watch and so Thank you very much for the conversation as everyone who’s watching and listening knows I will spend another half an hour with jeremy on the daily wire side of things and so If you want to head over there consider a subscription you’ll get access to the bent key Productions now too, which seems to be an additional benefit, especially if you have kids So give that some consideration and thank you to the film crew here in lisbon and to the daily wire for making all of this Possible and jeremy it was a pleasure talking to you and getting to know you a little bit better Thank you so much for having me You