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Think Again - a Big Think Podcast

147. Ronan Farrow (investigative journalist) — A Failure to Communicate

Think Again - a Big Think Podcast

Big Think / Panoply

Arts, Society & Culture

4.6594 Ratings

🗓️ 12 May 2018

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In Hollywood movies diplomats always get a bad rap. I’m picturing Claude Rains as “Mr. Dryden” in Lawrence of Arabia looking, as Clyde Rains always does, somewhat reptilian as he hunches over a map of the Middle East with General Allenby, smirking secretively. Hollywood diplomats are slippery. Untrustworthy. More often than not, they turn out to be double agents. On screen, definitive action plays better than careful talk or compromise. This is true of America in general and of our politics in particular—we’re just not comfortable with ambiguity. Leave that to the French. Americans are about gettin’ things done. But the geopolitical world is complex, and allegedly getting more so every day. Meanwhile, over the last several presidencies, America has quietly been shifting its foreign policy approach from diplomacy to military muscle. With the current president, the gutting of the State Department in favor of the Pentagon is starting to look like Friday the 13th part whatever. My guest today is investigative journalist and former State Department official Ronan Farrow. He won the Pulitzer Prize for his his work in the New Yorker on the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse scandal. His new book is War on Peace, The End of Diplomacy and The Decline of American Influence — and the title is pretty much self-explanatory. Surprise conversation-starter clips in this episode: Heather Heying on protest movements Barry Posen on America's intelligence budget Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi there, I'm Jason Gautz, and you're listening to Think Again, a Big Think podcast.

0:11.4

In Hollywood movies, diplomats always get a bad rap.

0:15.2

I'm picturing Claude Rains as Mr. Dryden in Lawrence of Arabia,

0:19.4

looking as Claude Rains always does, somewhat reptilian,

0:22.5

as he hunches over a map of the Middle East with General Allenby, smirking secretively.

0:27.8

Hollywood diplomats are slippery, untrustworthy. More often than not, they turn out to be

0:32.3

double agents. On screen, definitive action plays better than careful talk or compromise.

0:37.7

This is true of America in general and of our politics in particular.

0:42.1

We're just not comfortable with ambiguity.

0:44.7

Leave that to the French.

0:46.2

Americans are about getting things done.

0:48.5

But the geopolitical world is complex and allegedly getting more so every day.

0:52.0

Meanwhile, over the last several presidencies, America has

0:54.6

quietly been shifting its foreign policy approach from diplomacy to military muscle. With the current

1:00.1

president, the gutting of the State Department in favor of the Pentagon is starting to look like

1:04.4

Friday the 13th part whatever. My guest today is investigative journalist and former State

1:09.6

Department official, Ronan Farrow.

1:12.0

He won the Pulitzer Prize for his work in The New Yorker on the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse scandal.

1:17.5

His new book is War on Peace, the End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence,

1:22.8

and the title is pretty much self-explanatory.

1:25.1

Welcome to think again, Rana.

1:26.3

Good to be here, Jason.

...

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