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Hello again. It's your old friend, Michael Tracey. I don't know where Glenn is. Who cares? It's back and it's me. We are in Chicago right now. We're at the Jewish Democratic Council – I think it's called something to that effect – where there is some sort of reception or function on the outskirts of the convention. So, hopefully, we'll be talking to people.
In the meantime, tonight we have a doozy for you. We were at the logistical fiasco, which was the entry and exits of the convention last night, talking to attendees, just kind of painting a picture of the scene for you, so we kind of give you a tour of everything that was going catastrophically wrong with how Democrats can apparently organize just the basics of how to competently get people into a convention. So, people are waiting for hours and hours and hours and leaving, and not even being able to get in line stretching for blocks upon blocks. We caught people trying to cut the line, including former Congressman Patrick Kennedy, of Rhode Island. That was funny. You know, little kind of chit-chat with different people that we encountered, like, Paul Begala, the CNN pundit and former Clinton operative and all this other sort of miscellaneous.
Then we had a funny meltdown of an interview with this guy, Rick Wilson, who is the asshole head of the Lincoln Project or affiliated with the Lincoln Project, which is the scam organization that just solicits funded donations from paranoid and desperate Democrats to run anti-Trump ads. These are like the former Never Trump Republicans who have this operation running and it's been marred by controversy and scandal for years, but they're still plugging along at least in some form. He had his, like, underlings or his little, you know, lackeys tried to swarm us and stop us for asking really innocuous questions – and I hadn't even gotten yet to my actual questions. I was just doing the gentle intro, essentially, but even that was too much for Rick Wilson and his cadre. So, they jumped in and ended the interview, which, we just got because we just happened upon them.
And then, we also attended the “Hotties for Harris” party last night and interviewed some of the “creators” who had been credentialed by the DNC. We were not officially credentialed. But they were. So, they are getting valuable access to politicians to really hold them accountable. So, you'll see some of that.
I also toured around the “Hotties for Harris.” Frankly, it was a pretty fun event, I have to say. There was a cheeky sense of humor in the ambiance. Now, if you're not totally utterly obsessed with abortion, you might find it a little bit less enjoyable. But either way, when in Rome, I just went along with the ride, went with the flow. I go with the flow. That's me. M.T.
Interview: Rick Wilson
Michael Tracey: So, Rick Wilson, Lincoln Project. First of all, have you ever seen a worse-organized convention logistically?
Rick Wilson: Actually, about four times before in my life.
Michael Tracey: Really?
Rick Wilson: Yeah. There were all RNC conventions where I used to be a Republican. The Houston Convention Raging Shit show, the San Diego Convention, Raging Shit Show, the New Orleans convention, Drunken Shit Show. Those three stand out particularly. This is not disorganized by any sort of historic standards at all. Conventions are large multivariate, complex machines. This one is not extraordinary in any way in terms of good or bad. What I am seeing is it is stretched to the max by the fact that millions of people and hundreds of thousands of people want to be in that room. This is a bigger one than I've ever seen in any other convention, Republican or Democrat, that I've been to. And I've been to conventions since I was eight years old, in 1972. So, I've been around the block on these things a few times. I've worked conventions several times. I've been in the spin team on the Republican side, in two Democratic conventions. So, this is pretty well run, actually. And what they've accomplished so far, I think, is pretty extraordinary.
Michael Tracey: Well, we covered the RNC last month and I'm not making any partisan point, but I don't think we ever waited more than, like, four minutes to get through one of the security checkpoints.
Rick Wilson: There weren’t that many people are interested in being there. And then obviously.
Whitney: (interrupts the interview) Yeah, we're done. We're done. Good night guys.
Rick Wilson: Yeah, we’re not playing this.
Michael Tracey: Wait a minute […]