Firing Line
Baratunde Thurston
9/15/2023 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Baratunde Thurston discusses how nature can bridge divides and help heal the nation.
Writer, activist, comedian and “America Outdoors” host Baratunde Thurston discusses how nature can bridge divides and help heal the nation. He explains why he uses humor to tackle tough topics like race and politics, and weighs in on A.I. and 2024.
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Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Firing Line
Baratunde Thurston
9/15/2023 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Writer, activist, comedian and “America Outdoors” host Baratunde Thurston discusses how nature can bridge divides and help heal the nation. He explains why he uses humor to tackle tough topics like race and politics, and weighs in on A.I. and 2024.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- He's a writer, activist and comedian on a remarkable journey.
This week on "Firing Line."
- My parents gave me an extraordinary name Baratunde Rafiq Thurston.
- His 2019 TED Talk on deconstructing racism has been viewed millions of times and received widespread acclaim.
- My mom just wanted me to have difficulty boarding planes in the 21st century.
- [Margaret] Baratunde Thurston grew up in Washington, D.C., his father was killed when he was just six years old and he went on to attend elite academic institutions.
- And then she sent me in the seventh grade to the private Sidwell Friends School where US presidents send their daughters and where she sent me looking like this.
[audience laughing] - [Margaret] Over the years, he's used humor to broach difficult topics.
- I make a lot of reparations jokes.
It makes folks uncomfortable and I love that.
I think that's hilarious.
- As the digital director for the satirical news publication, "The Onion" and as a producer for "The Daily Show with Trevor Noah," he's now a founding partner at the digital startup Puck and is sought after voice for his cultural commentary.
Plus, his PBS travel program "America Outdoors With Baratunde Thurston" just launched its second season.
- Ah!
- You have arrived.
- I feel it!
- What does Baratunde Thurston say now?
- [Announcer] "Firing Line with Margaret Hoover" is made possible in part by Robert Granieri, Vanessa and Henry Cornell, The Fairweather Foundation, The Tepper Foundation, the Asness Family Foundation, The McKenna Family Foundation, Charles R. Schwab, and by The Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, and Damon Button.
Corporate funding is provided by Stephens Inc. - Baratunde Thurston, welcome to "Firing Line."
- Thank you for having me.
It's good to be here, Margaret.
- Standup comedy, digital media, bestselling author, successful podcast, a PBS series based on the outdoors.
What's the throughline for you that connects the various pursuits you've been involved in?
- The throughline is how do we get to the future?
And the throughline is my mother.
My mom was a computer programmer.
My mom was a community organizer and a politically active person.
My mom was very Black, as am I.
And my mother was a avid lover of the outdoors and our connection to nature.
- Arnita Thurston.
- Yes.
- Was your mom's name.
- Yes.
- You describe her as a pro-Black pan-African tofu-eating hippie who had me memorizing the countries of Africa and reading about apartheid before my 10th birthday.
How'd she shape your ideas?
- With love and high standards.
She shaped my ideas with a lot of exposure.
I remember noticing my friend's parents who had very specific ideas of what the parents wanted their kids to be.
My mother never said, be a doctor, be a writer, be an actor.
But she did sign me up for everything, not always asking me first.
[laughs] So she signed me up for Boy Scouts.
She signed me up for TaeKwonDo.
She signed me up for the Youth Orchestra Program, and through exposure, she shaped my ideas.
- You're a New York Times bestselling author.
The book you wrote was a satirical memoir.
- Yes.
- "How to Be Black."
- Bing.
- You write, quote, "My version of being black adheres as much to the stereotypes as it dramatically breaks from them."
Tell me about your version of being Black.
- [sighs] It keeps evolving.
My version of being Black right now is focused on how to heal beyond being aware of the traumas of being Black.
My version is focused on how to find joy and this elusive concept of freedom, which for a lot of my life, has been an external appeal to others to recognize me.
And quite recently, I've come to the obvious conclusion that that is not a path to freedom, but it took me decades and decades of running down that path to realize it's pretty unsatisfying.
- What precipitated that awareness for you?
- Fatigue.
I think 2020 meant a lot of things to a lot of folks around the world, especially in this nation with respect to COVID directly, but also what COVID revealed.
And in terms of the racial dynamics of the United States and who was on the front lines, and George Floyd and countless others whose names we no longer so easily remember.
It was a shocking awakening of pain.
Pain that I was already aware of, but that moment stripped of my ability to travel around and distract myself, was very sad.
It was very sad.
I found myself to be very, very exhausted.
I'd already written the book "How to Be Black."
I'd already done a big TED Talk about how to end racism.
Apparently not enough people watched it.
And so here we are, reliving this same psychodrama of our sort of unhealed wounds as a nation.
And that precipitated a lot of inner work, a lot of gardening and fighting with squirrels over tomatoes in my backyard.
A lot of long conversations with my wife, a lot of quiet, forced contemplation due to being locked in my house by regulations or at least recommendations.
And in that silence, I started hearing something else.
- Well, once you got outdoors, you took a PS series- - Yes.
- To the outdoors.
- Yes.
- "America Outdoors with Baratunde Thurston" recently started its second season.
- Yes.
- You travel across the United States, Georgia, Oregon, Maine, and you explore how nature shapes the American life and American's relationship with the outdoors.
You say your goal as a storyteller is to quote, "Tell a better story of us."
- Hmm.
- How do you do that?
- With great difficulty.
First, I acknowledge that we are living in fragmented stories of me and you that separate us from becoming an us.
And I think from our political leaders, to some of the business language we use, to pop culture, we are isolated from each other.
The algorithms do it too.
And this show has helped a lot.
It's helped me see the country and feel the country, touch and even taste the country and not just think about or have opinions about the country.
It's really different to be with all the difference in this country, in the same boat, on the same trail, with someone else.
So I've gotten to see the country and its beauty and people's connection to land and nature in a really direct way.
The other thing that helps tell a story of us is just reminding myself that we are a we.
That we're stronger when we're together.
That individualism has such an important place, but not the only place in our identities.
And when we work together, we go farther.
And when we try to do everything by ourselves, we end up alone.
- Has it been healing for you?
- Directly.
The show is far more emotional than I ever understood it would be.
I've hung out with veterans and people recovering from substance abuse disorder who use the outdoors as a direct path to healing their minds, healing their psyches, healing their bodies.
And in the collective sense, Black folk who've been through so much on this land, Indigenous folk who've been through so much on this land, the outdoors isn't always a fun, happy place.
It can often be a side of torture and crime and mayhem, but we have a right to it and we have an opportunity to restore that connection to a way that's much more positive and more healing.
So I've witnessed collective versions of healing for big groups of people who are taking back their place with nature.
- You've called climate change the uninvited co-star.
- Yeah.
Climate change shows up in every episode and it doesn't demand any kind of payment, but it demands to be heard.
- In Maine, you went out with ice harvesters.
- Yeah.
- Who had found their supply had been greatly reduced.
What do you hope the audience takes from the program?
- Ooh.
Did I do my own stunts?
[both laughing] I also hope they take away a number of things.
How beautiful this country really is, physically, humanely beautiful.
You see the landscape, you see the wildlife, you see the people in the landscape with the wildlife, it's a really beautiful picture and it's an image of ourselves we don't often see.
I want people to take away that nature is a part of us, not apart from us.
And there are so many different ways to restore that lost connection.
And I want people to really take away something positive and hopeful.
I think most of these episodes leave you feeling better than when you started.
There are hard stories in some of them, but we're mostly focusing on people who've created this positive connection where often there was none.
And when it comes to something like climate, we're finding a lot of solutions.
We're visiting regenerative ranches in Oregon.
I didn't know what that was until I went there.
So we have a role to play in healing this whole planet which also helps heal us.
I want people to take a lot from the show, apparently.
- One of the episodes, you meet with an Iraq war veteran.
- Yeah.
- Who is treating his post-traumatic stress by immersing himself in nature.
- Yeah.
- What is your observation about how nature can heal us?
- Nature is in a constant process of healing.
So it's a natural role model, no pun intended, but we move through with a tractor or a trail and nature bounces back, or some predator comes through and drives off a herd and they come back or a storm comes through.
We're not always the cause of the interruption, but nature is this cyclical thing and it wants to live, like life finds a way.
"Jurassic Park," remember that back in the day?
It's true.
And so when I'm feeling broken or beaten down, defeated or hurt in some way, nature is a friend.
Nature is a role model.
Nature is a path that I can look to.
So that's one way.
The other's more direct.
Nature feels good a lot of the times.
I felt that.
Nature literally heals.
There are herbs and plants that can stop bleeding and help with wounds.
We've known all this.
Nature is a medicine cabinet because I know I've gotten so accustomed to the modern world and all of these layers between me and nature, physical and metaphorical, that I can forget that we come from this.
So it's home.
It's sometimes rough, and I don't like poison ivy as much as the next person does, but it's there for us.
- There's the natural component, but then there's also this component where you are walking with and experiencing people who come from fundamentally different cultures.
- Yeah.
- Than you've inhabited.
People who know your biography know that you grew up in the 1980s in Washington, D.C., that your own life was touched by gun violence.
- Yeah.
- And then you spend time in Arkansas trap shooting, in New Mexico, shooting turkeys, experiencing Americans who have fundamentally different relationships with firearms.
- Yeah.
- Than perhaps people who grew up in Washington, D.C. in the 1980s.
- Yeah.
- Has this experience helped heal cultural divides for you or can it?
- It has helped.
In that spirit, me going out on a shooting range in Arkansas or on a turkey hunt in New Mexico or on a crab boat in the Chesapeake Bay, on a ranch in Idaho with people who I know explicitly are very, very different from me with a different ideology and a different politics is a really healthy exercise because we don't start with the talking points.
We start with hello.
We start with welcome.
We start with what are we here to do?
We have a little micro moment of a story of us right there.
I'm here to learn from you and you know who I am and you still invited me.
So you're here to share and learn from me as well.
And this show has given me even more of a privilege to explore beyond the talking points where other people are coming from.
- So take something specific like firearms.
- Yeah.
- What did you learn about sportsmen and firearms and the relationship people have with guns in this country that maybe you didn't know previously?
- I learned or relearned that it's a lot of fun.
[gun blasts] [people cheer] - You did it!
[people laughing] - I had fun.
I was learning.
I was getting good.
I love validation, so when, you know, Kayle Browning, a US silver medalist in sport clay shooting said, "You did a good job there."
I'm like, "I did a good job.
Yay!"
And the little, you know, A grade sneaking student in me was very pleased with himself.
So in that sense, yeah, I got some validation.
It was also fun to be outside in that way.
And I remember feeling like, oh, I'm in nature doing this.
And I was aware of how different I felt versus standing on a city street corner.
I learned about the deep amount of respect that all kinds of hunters, and I put people who fish in this category as well, have for the lives of animals.
- Have you found that connecting with others who are different with you can help you bridge your political divides, cultural divides?
- [sighs] I think it can bridge initially psychological divides.
- Yeah.
- And just the idea that I might not have anything to say to a person from over there or down there or out there is thrown out the window the moment we share a moment of laughter, a smile, eye contact, then it's another person.
They become another person and hopefully, I become another person too.
I think with the Arkansas moment with Kayle and Anne Marie Doramus was the other person I was with who's on the Game and Fish Commission, we talked about my history with gun violence.
My father was shot and killed when I was a young child.
They were telling me they had not had that experience so close to them.
They don't know people for whom that's been true.
And we had follow-ups, me and Kayle after that.
I don't know that we're on the same page, but we are closer in the book.
And it wasn't just me who felt some opening, so did she.
And we both were like, "Oh, I didn't know that.
I didn't see it that way.
I've never experienced that myself."
And it was valuable for both of us, I know, to see someone hearing us.
And a lot of what gets in our way is everybody wants to talk and nobody wants to hear.
And it's very easy with distance to do that.
So again, this is one of the blessings of the show.
- You had to go to Elaine, Arkansas.
- I had to go to Arkansas.
In Elaine I found something else completely mind-altering and heart-rending, to be honest, in terms of the history of that town.
- Well, I wanna ask you about that.
I mean, you found there was a massacre in Elaine, Arkansas in 1919.
- Yeah.
- That had been completely written out of history.
How'd you stumble into it?
- I have a really good team around me.
I can't pinpoint who found this story exactly how, but I do know it was a shock.
I wrote a book called "How to Be Black."
I know a lot of Black history things.
It's part of the job.
I never heard of Elaine and this massive race massacre that went down in 1919.
- So what happened in the Elaine Race Massacre of 1919?
- It's known as the Red Summer.
Summer of 1919, very bloody.
Lots of towns in this country had white uprisings to crush Black progress in one way or the other.
Any lane, a group of sharecroppers had been organizing to demand better payment for their labor.
Plantation owners sent a little delegation of armed dudes and shots were fired.
Sheriff comes, rounded up a posse, encouraged the whole town to lay waste to the Black part of town.
Called up the governor, claimed there was a Black insurrection.
500 federal troops come in by train bearing Gatling gun, a very automated firing weapon of its era, essentially a machine gun.
And they train those weapons on the Black partisan, homes destroyed, babies killed.
So the estimate is 200 to a thousand.
- Why is it so easy for us to have forgotten so many of these events?
- Because we set up systems to make it hard to remember, because we erased it.
So in this case, in this town, the white leaders of the town made it very clear to the remaining Black residents, you don't ever speak of this or it'll happen again.
Add shame to that.
Why would you talk about losing so much like this?
So fear and shame will...
Fear and shame will have us forget a lot of who we are and what we've been through.
- I wanna turn to technology now.
- [Baratunde] Let's go.
- At the Aspen Ideas Festival this year, you led an AI workshop.
- Yes.
- And you introduced it with this video.
- All right, all right, All right, welcome, techno adventurers and curiosity connoisseurs.
I'm Baratunde Thurston, your tour guide on this digital safari into the wilds of artificial intelligence.
- Okay, so now it's time for the big reveal.
That was not you.
- No, that was definitely not me.
- It was a deep fake version of you.
- With my consent that a friend of mine named Peter made for me.
- But the script and the voice and the video were all generated by AI.
- That's correct.
- What are the consequences of AI's ability to be able to fake you?
- Yeah.
Part of what is happening and will continue to happen with these generative AI technologies is that our ability to trust the information around us will decline because we will have convincing facsimiles of reality produced not in our best interest or the interest of the truth.
So part of the value of that demonstration was it's clearly not quite there yet.
You see what I sound like now and that wasn't it.
But in months, maybe years, certainly no more than that, that could be a near perfect replica.
And so part of the reason I did that workshop was to inspire thought about AI through direct experience.
And then when we see something like that, we get to ask ourselves, what do we wanna do?
How do we wanna govern and restrict and regulate this?
Do we wanna allow this at all?
In some cases, there's fun and useful applications of things like that and others, it will most certainly undermine our civic fabric and our ability to self govern and live together.
- Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak, one of the founders of Apple, have signed a letter saying we should slow down the investment in the work and the progress on artificial intelligence.
Where do you come down on this idea?
Should we slow it down?
Can we slow it down?
- We can slow it down.
And I do think it's important for we the people to reassert our agency and our role in the world that we wanna live in.
We are not just consumer victims of the market and a handful of geniuses who bestow trinkets upon us at their whim.
So I don't really have much patience for the idea that, well, technology's just gonna technology.
You can't slow it down.
- Right.
- We have powers here.
We have and need to have consent and control and some compensation in some cases for these AI systems for how they affect us.
- One of your major themes is citizenship.
- Yeah.
- Right?
You have this podcast "How to Citizen."
Citizen is an active verb.
In 2021 after the attack on the Capitol on January 6, you said of our country quote, "We're just people capable of anything.
We're capable of turning this democracy into a theocracy or an oligarchy or an aristocracy or an authoritarian regime.
And we can become Hungary.
We can become Russia."
As you look ahead to 2024, to the next presidential election, how do you assess the risks to our democracy?
- They're high.
I don't have a number, I don't have a rating or a score, but they persist.
January 6 was not the end.
It was another milestone in a possible trajectory.
I still more firmly believe it's up to us.
And I don't think there's any foregone conclusion that we are gonna become Hungary or we're gonna become Russia.
I think we are at a very key moment to actively decide, it's up to us what do we want to become?
- How do you assess the risk to democracy of a second Trump presidency?
- I think the risk to democracy of a second Trump presidency is extraordinary.
I think he and the people who are rewarded by him having power have made it very clear that they don't appreciate the voice of the people.
There's a lot of demonstration that at least while they are in power, they're very interested in concentrating more and more power and not allowing the checks and balances of the system that we've grown to admire and try to make more perfect run as it should.
So yeah, I think it's a big threat.
- In 1967, William F. Buckley, Jr. hosted Groucho Marx on this program, on the original version of "Firing Line."
- Yeah.
- His very first question to the great comedian was, is the world funny?
[Baratunde laughing] Watch Groucho Marx's answer.
- Yeah.
- Take a look.
- No, I don't think it's terribly funny, you know.
I don't think it's ever terribly funny.
Sometimes, there are isolated pieces of the world that is funny, but generally it's a pretty serious world.
It always has been.
- What's your answer to Buckley's question?
Is the world funny?
- I laughed out loud when I heard the question 'cause I thought about this funny little caterpillar I saw when we were out filming "America Outdoors" and it had these beady red antenna and it was the cutest fuzziest thing and it clung to the car.
And I'm driving like 50 miles an hour and this caterpillar's just clinging on for dear life and that made me bust out laughing.
I think the world's hilarious.
I think nature's funny.
I think most humans are funny.
I think I'm funny, if I let myself loose a little bit.
So yeah, I think the world is actually quite a funny place, though I respect his answer about the serious nature of things.
- But you disagree with Groucho Marx?
- I do.
I am willing to go on the record.
I disagree with Groucho Marx.
The world is hilarious.
- How do you come to your comedy?
- Hmm.
Initially through anger and disappointment and a need to make sense of something that felt like it didn't make sense.
So I would find the absurdity in a thing and lean on that to explain what I was seeing.
- So comedy's also a way, it sounds like, for you to get to the harder truths.
- It's a way of making sense.
Yes.
- Making sense.
- It is a way of explaining, it is a way of understanding, and a way of surviving.
- You write in your book, also it's a way of getting at difficult issues like race.
- Yeah.
Yeah.
- How'd you use comedy to get at race?
- Oh, man.
I make a lot of reparations jokes.
It makes folks uncomfortable and I love that.
I think that's hilarious.
[laughs] But the way that I think about comedy and race and how I've done it is for me, the comedy's a way to build a relationship.
Even a silly little joke, if two people are laughing, those two people agree with each other for a moment and it bypasses the appropriate part of the brain sometimes.
You're like I shouldn't be laughing at this, but oh, you got me!
And so there's a channel open between two folks in that moment of laughter.
And so well, you're gonna slide into that channel.
- Yeah.
The series is "America Outdoors With Baratunde Thurston."
- Yeah.
- Thank you for joining me on "Firing Line."
- Thank you!
I survived the "Firing Line!"
- You survived.
- [laughs] This was such a pleasure.
Thank you.
- [Announcer] "Firing Line with Margaret Hoover" is made possible in part by Robert Granieri, Vanessa and Henry Cornell, The Fairweather Foundation, The Tepper Foundation, The Asness Family Foundation, The McKenna Family Foundation, Charles R. Schwab and by the Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, and Damon Button.
Corporate funding is provided by Stephens Inc. [dramatic music] [bright music] [light music] - [Announcer] You're watching PBS.
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