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- My name is Andrew Yang.
I'm Andrew Yang.
Today is April 4, 2019.
February 25, 2020.
[piano music]
I'm 44.
I'm 45.
Took a taxi with several staffers.
I walked to set with one staffer.
I'm running for President to try and make this country
something I'm proud to pass along to my children.
I believed by running for President, I could wake us up
to the real situation we're in
and then activate real solutions.
Well, the Internet has me at 14% and so I would use
the Internet as the arbiter of collective wisdom.
I can categorically say that the odds of my winning
the Democratic nomination are zero.
[laughs]
I have 214 thousand followers on Twitter.
I have 1.2 million Twitter followers.
At least several times a day minimum.
Now that we're back more in the swing of things,
I probably check it once every hour or two.
Definitely.
I think everyone has trolls on Twitter.
Most of the people who follow me seem very very positive,
but I'm sure I do.
Most of the time, I don't respond
unless it seems like they have genuine reason,
objections or confusion.
Yeah, there was a period when I would engage with people
who had negative comments.
I found myself doing less and less of that over time
because it didn't necessarily seem like a good use of time.
I'm going to guess there are probably millions of results.
Well, I think that would be a miscount
because there are a lot of Andrew Yangs,
and so any search would probably be over-inclusive.
Apparently there are 192 million Google results for me now.
Most of them were nice, I think.
[laughs]
I don't know.
There are probably some mean ones in there.
So I think that the two biggest celebrities
that have donated publicly have been Nicholas Cage
and Rivers Cuomo of Weezer.
I'm fans of both of theirs
so that was actually a lot of fun.
[laughs]
Wow, so Dave Chappelle clearly.
I was endorsed by Elon Musk so thank you Elon.
Donald Glover, Ken Jeong, Terri Hatcher,
Dane Dehaan, Anita Baker.
When Jeremy Lin was on the Nets, I actually met him
when he was on the Nets.
He and I have many friends in common.
I haven't talked to him about the Yang 2020 campaign.
After his season ends, we're gonna get him in the Yang Gang.
Did Jeremy Lin ever make it to the Yang Gang?
That's a good question.
I gotta find Jeremy and ask him, so maybe not officially.
John Lennon's son, Ken Jeong,
Martin Luther King the third, Arianna Huffington.
There are some others though, this is not the greatest list.
Whoopi Goldberg, Ryan Reynolds,
AOC, Judd Apatow, Aubrey Plaza.
I haven't met all these people,
but it's certainly very flattering
to be followed by some of them.
[laughs]
Dysfunctional, polarized.
And behind the times.
And behind-the-curve.
And behind-the-curve is hyphenated, so that's one word.
Because of the polarization,
we can't take any significant action
and the government is able to do less and less.
Our economy is transforming in fundamental ways
that are leaving more and more Americans behind
and we're not even talking about it,
much less addressing it.
There was a high school student in Central Iowa
who said that he has classmates
that they're already addicted to opioids.
It stuck with me, it's like what do you do about that?
And that question from that 18 year old in Iowa
led me to conclude that we should decriminalize opioids.
There's so many moments that have stuck with me
in my campaign.
Had moms crying in my arms
because their sons passed away from opioids.
Also had people crying tears of joy
talking about how my campaign helped bring them
out of a depression.
So it's like humanity turned up where you'd see
the best and worst of human experience
on any given day.
I certainly remember the gun violence event
and it was a mom telling a story about how her twin
three year olds, I believe, were shot in front of her
and then one of them died.
And I have two boys myself who are four and seven,
which were about the same age.
But yeah, I'll remember that forever
because that story is not something you forget.
"Why are you away so much?"
That happened.
"I like your bus."
That was exciting.
"Yang Gang", they liked that.
They like some of the Yang Gang music.
One of them liked the slogan mat.
So they said a lot of fun stuff.
Well, one of them, the older one,
was looking at the list of all the Presidents,
and then he said, "Who's going to be the 46th President?"
And then I said, "No one knows."
And then he looked at me and he said,
"You should be the 46th President."
Yeah, yeah, definitely not where he is now.
[laughs]
Well, when I stopped on the street,
the number one question is "Are you Andrew Yang?"
I've always admired Teddy Roosevelt a great deal.
I think Teddy was a very principled leader
and I am his great great granddaughter's godfather.
I was a big Barack Obama fan.
I mean, I was an honorary ambassador in his administration
and so he was the first person I think of in that regard.
I received a phone call from Barack Obama last week
and he's always been a real role model on many levels.
The 3000 person rally in San Francisco about two weeks ago.
Well, the Presidential Debates, I think were watched
by something like 17 million people,
so I guess that would be the largest number.
Definitely the Joe Rogan Experience.
Let's just say I was not getting stopped
on the street pre Joe Rogan.
But post Joe Rogan, it happened an awful lot.
Oh, I've been interviewed by so many incredible people.
But I think most people would have to say
it was my appearance with Joe Rogan.
Certainly it would be making the DNC Primary Debates
and then having CNN give us a Town Hall.
People don't like to bust out the credit card
and be like, "I'm gonna give five, 10, 20, 25 bucks."
SO the fact that 425 thousand or so Americans did that
is clearly our biggest accomplishment.
I saw one in Iowa.
I haven't seen one in the wild, where I was just driving
from place to place and I passed a yard sign.
When I was campaigning in Iowa and New Hampshire, every day,
so thank you Yang Gang.
Now, not very much though.
That doesn't bother me.
I mean, it rhymes.
When I hear the term Yang Gang, I think of all
the incredible people who I've met on the trail
and have supported me in the campaign,
so I love the Yang Gang.
It's impossible for me not to then love the term Yang Gang.
I did meet him, I met him in South Carolina.
He came up with the acronym Make America Think Harder
for MATH, and there were actually other suggestions
for what MATH could stand for.
Make America Truly Happy was one.
I've been listening to a lot of Florence and the Machine
for whatever reason.
I've been listening to a lot of Imagine Dragons lately
because I've become friends with the guitarist.
"How Soon Is Now" by The Smiths.
I have 130 thousand Instagram followers.
I have 577 thousand Instagram followers.
So my most liked Instagram photo is an animated me
celebrating qualifying for the DNC Primary Debates.
My most liked photo on Instagram is a thank you video
from me and Evelyn to everyone who supported the campaign.
Someone suggested that we prepare some script
and then I said, "I don't think that's gonna work.
"I think I should just speak from the heart."
So it was a very difficult message to record.
One is the one I'm in now, which is media mode.
Number two is campaign mode,
which is when you're in Iowa or New Hampshire.
So you're in someone's home or a diner,
you can be talking to five or 10 people or 50 people.
And then, number three is rally mode.
Well, so keep in mind, I've been off the trail now
for two weeks, so I've been trying to remind my kids
what I look like and whatnot.
So there's definitely been some more Dad mode
that's been chasing around the kids and going on a hike
with them and stuff like that.
Is there still rally mode inside of me?
Yeah, very much so.
But for now, it's Dad mode, which I have to admit,
is a lot of fun.
My wife's doing great, happily.
Unfortunately, she and my kids are getting a little too used
to daddy not being around.
I think she's glad that I'm off the trail on some levels,
even though she was 100% campaigning
right alongside me down the stretch.
I'm so proud of her that she's become such this voice
for progress and reflecting the experience
of so many people and women in particular.
But yeah, in some ways, this campaign has really empowered
our family in ways that you never could have predicted
so I'm happy to say she's doing great.
I see them whenever I'm home,
which is approximately 40% of the time.
Now I see them a lot, happily.
I'm not traveling as much now that I'm off the trail,
so I wouldn't say I see them every day
because I'm still traveling a little bit
but I see them most days now, which is a treat, a delight.
They're totally bored of anything Dad related
that's not Dad in person,
so Dad on TV is not a thing for them.
That debate is not their speed,
they have Baby Shark on or something.
Maybe 10 or 11 days.
Probably two weeks.
I have breakfast, then I bring my oldest son to school.
I go to the office if there's nothing going on
but more often than not, I'll go to a media interview.
Have media interviews and meetings and calls
all day if I'm here in New York.
I might get home around dinner time.
Hopefully, I'm there to watch the kids go to sleep.
Then I have a little bit of time with my wife
at the end of the day.
If I am going to exercise or go to the gym,
it would probably be late at night.
Campaign life, you're scheduled down
to the five or 10 minutes.
Whereas now, I can have a whole 15, 20 minutes
where I'm just kind of milling around,
going from place to place.
I also don't have an entourage around me now,
which is actually quite delightful.
Who needs five people around you all the time?
Not this guy.
[laughs]
Sure, sometimes.
You feel like a lot of people that are relying on you
and you need to make a good impression at every new stop
because most people have never seen or heard you before.
There was a lot of pressure because opportunities
don't come around like this all the time.
There's someone that left the campaign early on
that I still have no idea why.
So I would say the regret
is not understanding why that happened.
I still don't know!
[laughs]
One regret I have is that I didn't make more of an effort
to talk to more people in DC earlier on
because it turns out that the DC media establishment
has more influence in terms of who people
feel like supporting than I had realized starting out.
People don't know who I am.
That I don't understand certain people's experiences
because I'm sure that's totally correct.
I mean, I try.
Not as often as I should, but I'd say once every day or two.
I write emails to my supporters once or twice a week
and those sometimes serve as pseudo-journals.
I have not written in my journal in quite some time
because on the campaign trail, it's not the most
contemplative of environments.
You kinda wish it were, like you get to the hotel
and you'll be like, "Oh, let me reflect on that."
But actually, you get back to the hotel
and you're dead tired
because you had seven events that day
or you were in a car for seven hours
or whatever the heck the situation was.
Pragmatism and work with people that have an interest
in real solutions.
Solving problems, getting things done,
moving the country forward.
That we will adopt universal basic income
by the end of 2021.
I believe that my campaign has already accelerated
the end of poverty in the United States of America
by a number of years, maybe even generations.
We're not gonna rest until we actually accomplish this,
but I believe we've already made a lot of progress
over the last number of months.
A year from now is gonna be April 2020, wow.
That's going to mean that you've been through
the first primaries, you won Iowa and New Hampshire,
Nevada, South Carolina, California.
You won them all.
You're the first person to win every state.
[laughs]
That's what I hope to be saying to myself.
I hope that we have continued to build this movement,
that the energy around the campaign has just continued
to grow, that more and more Americans realize
that we can evolve and start to think about ourselves
as the centers of this economy, rather than inputs
into this giant capital efficiency machine.
I mean, I had massive failures and mistakes.
I mean, my first business failed.
Second business didn't really work out,
though that wasn't even mine.
I mean, I showed up and did my best.
But I have no complaints, I'm very proud of it overall.
Even the failures, I felt like I was at least trying
to do something.
I've been very very fortunate, so it's really hard
for me to have major regrets in terms of my career.
I've just been really lucky to be able to do work
that I believe in with people that are awesome.
So it's hard to have many regrets.
Try to enjoy the ride because you're having experiences
that most people will never have
and though it sometimes seems like work or exertions,
I mean if your younger self could see you now,
it would be like wow, that's kind of amazing.
That's pretty good.
Pretty good, Andrew of the past.
My future self?
I mean, presumably my future self will know more
than I do now, so I should actually ask
my future self for advice.
What should I do, future Andrew?
I mean, if I have any advice, it's just to stay grounded.
Enjoy your family, friends.
Particularly, just be nice to your parents
'cause they're not gonna be here forever.
I have an interview with Ali Velshi of MSNBC,
so we're gonna have a sit down discussion about the economy.
I'm gonna have dinner with my family
and then I'm gonna go watch the debate
and then comment on it for CNN.
CNN, this is CNN.
That's my James Earl Jones impression.
What do you think?
Should they replace his voice with mine?
I don't think they're going to.
I don't think they're going to replace Darth Vader.
[laughs]
With Andrew Yang's "This is CNN".
Appreciate your mom, daddy loves you, drink milk.
[laughs]
Thank you for putting up with daddy's absence
over these last number of months, I'll make it up to you.
We're gonna go to Great Adventure, Sesame Place,
Hershey Park, any place you guys want
because dad has not been around as much as he'd like
but he loves you very very much
and he was doing what he could for your country too.