cover of episode Young Donald Trump, Roy Cohn, and the Dark Arts of Power

Young Donald Trump, Roy Cohn, and the Dark Arts of Power

2024/9/27
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This chapter explores the formative relationship between a young Donald Trump and his mentor, Roy Cohn. It delves into Cohn's background, his influence on Trump's approach to power and public image, and the eventual betrayal that marked the end of their partnership.
  • Roy Cohn mentored Donald Trump in the dark arts of power brokering.
  • Cohn taught Trump to use the media to his advantage.
  • Trump's early success can be attributed to Cohn's guidance.
  • Trump abandoned Cohn when he became ill and needed help.
  • Their relationship ended in betrayal.

Shownotes Transcript

Actors and comedians have usually played Donald Trump as larger than life, almost as a cartoon. In the new film “The Apprentice,” Sebastian Stan doesn’t play for laughs. He stars as a very young Trump falling under the sway of Roy Cohn (played by Jeremy Strong)— the notorious, amoral lawyer and fixer.  “Cohn took Donald Trump under his wing when Donald was a nobody from the outer boroughs,” the film’s writer and executive producer Gabriel Sherman tells David Remnick. He “taught him the dark arts of power brokering … [and] introduced him to New York society.” Sherman, a contributing editor to New York magazine, also chronicled Roger Ailes’s rise to power at Fox News in “The Loudest Voice in the Room.” Sherman insists, though, that the film is not anti-Trump—or not exactly. “The movie got cast into this political left-right schema, and it’s not that. It’s a humanist work of drama,” in which the protégé eventually betrays his mentor. It almost goes without saying that Donald Trump has threatened to sue the producers of the film, and the major Hollywood studios wouldn’t touch it.  Sherman talks with Remnick about how the film, which opens October 11th, came to be.

 Plus, Jill Lepore) is a *New Yorker *staff writer, a professor of history at Harvard University, and the author of the best-seller “These Truths)” as well as many other works of history. While her professional life is absorbed in the uniqueness of the American experience, she finds her relaxation across the pond, watching police procedurals from Britain. “There’s not a lot of gun action,” she notes, “not the same kind of swagger.” She talks with David Remnick about three favorites: “Annika” and “The Magpie Murders,” on PBS Masterpiece; and “Karen Pirie,” on BritBox. And Remnick can’t resist a digression to bring up their shared reverence for “Slow Horses,” a spy series on Apple TV+ that’s based on books by Mick Herron, whom Lepore profiled) for The New Yorker.