600: Will I Know Anyone at This Party?

600: Will I Know Anyone at This Party?

Oct 28, 2016
This week: Republicans struggling with the split in their own party.
Correction: In the original feed of week’s show we identified Ricochet host and National Review columnist James Lileks as a Trump supporter. He’s not. This has been fixed. (The third Ricochet host, Peter Robinson, insists that Trump isn't as bad as Hillary—but even he is struggling with whether to vote for Trump or write in someone else.)

Every day until Election Day, we'll have a new Chris Ware & John Kuramoto animation. See them all.

  • There’s a seismic, historic change going on in the Republican party this year. Producer Zoe Chace tells Ira about a place you can eavesdrop on a group of Republican friends as they fret and argue about that change week after week: a podcast called Ricochet. Ira talks to Rob Long, one of the hosts of the podcast, and to Avik Roy, who’s appeared on the show.

    Zoe believes many people in the Republican leadership seem like tragic figures this year. Like Paul Ryan, Speaker of the House. Songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez imagine what he’s feeling but can’t say publicly. Neil Patrick Harris sings the part of Paul Ryan. Orchestration and music direction: Stephen Oremus. (12 minutes)

    Emily Bruskin Yarbrough, violin
    Erin Benim Maryland, violin
    Jonathan Dinklage, viola
    Allison Seidner, cello
    Brian Miller, flute and piccolo
    Tony Kadleck, trumpet
    Theodore Primis, horn
    Recorded and mixed by John Kilgore

    Program note: In an excerpt of the podcast Ricochet in the prologue to our show, someone misattributes a quote to the film Jaws that actually was from the movie Miller’s Crossing. Both are great films. The correct quote: "I'd worry a lot less if I thought you were worrying enough." All parties regret the error.
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  • One way to understand the split inside the Republican party is to look at immigration. It’s this urgent, emotional issue for so much of the party these days. But why? Over the past year, as producer Zoe Chace has covered the election, she has wondered, why immigration NOW? She had a hard time getting any answers — and then she stumbled upon a small city in Minnesota called St. Cloud.

    Zoe connects the anti-immigrant sentiment in St. Cloud with a national network of organizations promoting anti-Muslim views and spreading fear about Sharia law. We hear how the Somali immigrants in town deal with their neighbors’ fears. And then a violent attack at a local mall inflames both sides. (44 minutes)ImmigrationPolitics

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  • (Podcast and Internet Only)

    Another tragic figure this year is the head of the Republican National Comittee Reince Preibus, who has the job of holding the whole party together. A grueling and thankless job, this year. We asked Broadway composer Michael Friedman – who did a political musical called Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson – to imagine what Priebus might be thinking but not expressing publicly. John Ellison Conlee sings the part of Reince Priebus.

    Justin Goldner, electric bass, tenor banjo
    Freddy Hall, guitar, ukelele
    Kevin Garcia, drum set
    Recorded and mixed by Jeff Cook
    Arrangements and music direction by Justin Levine.

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