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This American Life

208: Office Politics

This American Life

This American Life

Arts, Society & Culture, News

4.591.3K Ratings

🗓️ 1 March 2026

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Stories of high drama from America's workplaces — surprising, emotional places full of the greed, jealousy, and ambition of real politics.

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  • Prologue: We hear three stories of how conflicts are resolved in offices. Two of those stories come from sociologist Calvin Morrill, who studied the executive suites at a number of large companies in his book The Executive Way: Conflict Management in Corporations. The last story comes from host Ira Glass, who talks about how he ended up punching his own boss in the stomach in front of all his co-workers. (12 minutes)
  • Act One: Starlee Kine with the story of a company in turmoil. A young employee gets in a jam and discovers that in times of trouble, when all else has failed, companies in her industry turn to one woman in a suburban home in Long Island, who solves their corporate problems while the TV plays in the background. (12 minutes)
  • Act Two: David Rakoff discusses the world of birthdays and other holidays, as they're celebrated on the job... and what happens when you call yourself an editorial assistant but the editor you're assisting calls you a secretary. (15 minutes)
  • Act Three: Julie Snyder explains the office politics of street vendors on the corner of Sixth Avenue and Eighth Street in New York City. With her is sociologist Mitch Duneier, who spent years working with the vendors and writing about them for his book Sidewalk. (14 minutes)

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Transcript

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0:00.0

From WBEZ Chicago, it's This American Life. I'm a glass.

0:05.1

Jacobs and the other guys did not like their boss, Manwright.

0:08.6

Manright was full of himself.

0:10.1

He took credit for things that they did.

0:11.8

He was hard to deal with.

0:13.2

And they set out to sabotage him.

0:16.1

A sociologist named Calvin Morel watched how they did it.

0:18.7

It's part of a study of office politics in different companies. These guys all worked for an old line banking firm that he calls old financial.

0:26.1

All the names in this story have been changed. In traditional companies like this one,

0:30.1

Morel says, all the politics happen in secret. It's all subterfuge. Here's how Manright was

0:35.2

destroyed by Jacobs. Manright used to rely on this fellow Jacobs

0:39.3

to prepare him before he would go before the senior executive committee meeting. And Jacobs

0:46.0

was very good, very smart guy, and he could anticipate some of the questions that his boss would be

0:51.2

asked at these meetings. And so when he prepped him, he would just neglect to tell his boss about some of the key questions

0:58.5

that he could anticipate being asked.

1:00.5

And there his boss would stand at the committee meeting naked without the information that he needed.

1:07.1

And eventually, he was removed as a result of this.

1:15.2

Music and eventually he was removed as a result of this. Now, did Manright understand that he had been sabotaged?

1:18.8

He didn't.

1:20.0

When he actually, he got back each time,

1:22.6

this happened to him over the course of several meetings

1:24.8

where he was misprepped, if you will.

...

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