Andrew:

Foreign.

Blair:

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.

Blair:

Welcome to another episode of the Secular

Blair:

Foxhole podcast.

Blair:

Today we just have another guy from Brooklyn, Andy Bernstein.

Blair:

Andy Bernstein is here to guess as our guest and I really just have one question for him.

Blair:

So Andy, why detective novels and why you?

Andrew:

Well, you know,

Andrew:

I've.

Andrew:

I've written.

Andrew:

I mean from time I was a little kid, I always wanted to be a writer.

Andrew:

I've written of books, serious novels, you know, like Reckoning Race War to America,

Andrew:

a lot of serious non fiction on capitalism, on heroism, know nine rand's philosophy and so

Andrew:

on.

Andrew:

But you know, I always loved heroes.

Andrew:

I always loved tough guy heroes and, and I thought, you know, at some point.

Andrew:

I know, I love Philip Marlon, Raymond Chandler's here.

Andrew:

I love Mike Hammer,

Andrew:

Mike Ham, Robert Clark Spencer.

Andrew:

I love those guys.

Andrew:

So I could write a tough guy series too.

Andrew:

And so, you know, I started working on Tony

Andrew:

Johnson and he's seen Reggie H A R D and Lisa Flowers and I started working on it.

Andrew:

Now I've written three Pony Judge novels.

Andrew:

First one just came out.

Andrew:

Second one will be up this summer, third one

Andrew:

be out Christmas.

Andrew:

I'm writing volume four and you know, I do

Andrew:

this in my spare time for love because it's so much fun.

Blair:

That's great.

Blair:

That's great.

Andrew:

Yeah. Hopefully they sell when I make a lot of money, you know, on it also.

Blair:

Well, I know.

Blair:

Didn't you have the audio versions done with

Blair:

professional people if I asked if I. Was that something else?

Andrew:

Well, that was a dramatic audio podcast of a volume one of Red Meat Village,

Andrew:

Volume one of the Orange and Saga.

Andrew:

It was done by Woyage Media, which is a

Andrew:

professional Hollywood outfit.

Andrew:

Yeah, they got some big stars too.

Andrew:

It was.

Andrew:

It's an audio.

Andrew:

It's a dramatic audio podcast.

Andrew:

Kind of replicated what radio used to be like in the back four hour.

Blair:

That. That's cool.

Blair:

That is.

Andrew:

Yeah, it's really cool.

Andrew:

And they got some big stars to voice the main.

Andrew:

I mean they got Captain Bell, you know, TV star, the voice, Lisa Flowers, they got Malik

Andrew:

Yoba,

Andrew:

who, who's also a TV star and if you remember the movie Cool Runnings, which I, I love.

Blair:

Yeah.

Andrew:

He played Yul Brenner, you know, in programming.

Andrew:

They're very good.

Andrew:

And the dramatic audio podcast that Redeem

Andrew:

builds is very good.

Andrew:

I like it.

Martin:

That's great to hear.

Martin:

And as a podcaster here, as Claire and I,

Martin:

myself and yourself,

Martin:

then we have to promote that with new modern podcast applications.

Martin:

You could get spreading the word and get value for that.

Martin:

So I will look that up and you could provide with the RSS feed and we could promote it in

Martin:

different ways because then you have plenty of individuals there that could get attention and

Martin:

get something for their work.

Martin:

So we will talk more about that.

Martin:

And my question is.

Andrew:

Thank you, Martin.

Martin:

Why a pen name?

Andrew:

Oh, yeah, I'm writing the Point just under the nom de plume,

Andrew:

the pen name of Tris Power.

Andrew:

And it's very simple.

Andrew:

It's the,

Andrew:

the pen name distinguishes my serious writing from my purely fun.

Andrew:

Right.

Blair:

Okay. Okay.

Andrew:

I have an Andrew Bernstein book coming out soon.

Andrew:

I'm compiling a collection of my essays and that's going to be real serious on philosophy,

Andrew:

history and literature, politics, real serious material.

Andrew:

So that's going to be Andrew Bernstein, but you're coming out and June or July and Chris

Andrew:

Power book, Volume two of the Just Saga will also be out this summer.

Andrew:

But you know, they're,

Andrew:

they're distinguishing each other by, by Mr.

Andrew:

Watkins names and, and very possibly have.

Andrew:

I'm sure there's some overlap in you.

Blair:

Now, do you, do you have a follow up audio version of the second book or do you, is

Blair:

that in.

Andrew:

The works or not right now?

Blair:

Okay.

Andrew:

Yeah,

Andrew:

it wasn't, you know, the dramatic audio podcast wasn't so much an audio version of the

Andrew:

book because it was just, it was just, it was a standalone story that was, that was based

Andrew:

on, based on it.

Andrew:

And they changed the writers.

Andrew:

We changed a few things.

Martin:

Yeah, that's, that's cool.

Martin:

So this could be like, it could be like a play

Martin:

Also, like the January 16th and so on in the future.

Martin:

Maybe some other versions of it.

Andrew:

Yeah. Could do it as it could.

Andrew:

It could certainly, it certainly work on the

Andrew:

stage.

Andrew:

It's not, it's not, it's not far flung.

Andrew:

It's not, you know, you're not, you're not all over the world.

Andrew:

It takes place mostly in Brooklyn, but also in New York,

Andrew:

different areas of New York City.

Andrew:

It's, it's right in time and, and space.

Andrew:

So certainly cookies are big.

Martin:

Yeah, that's great.

Blair:

So how did you, I mean you, you say you've been wanting, you've been writing since

Blair:

you were young.

Blair:

And so how did the, how did these characters germinate?

Blair:

How did Reggie Hard and, or H A R D and the others, how do they,

Blair:

how did they germinate to final paper?

Andrew:

Well, that's,

Andrew:

that's a really good question.

Andrew:

Yeah. Plus,

Andrew:

you know,

Andrew:

and a lot of people, Ayn Rand is one.

Andrew:

A lot of people have pointed out that your

Andrew:

most important aspect of fictionite and the Most difficult is over the plot, which I think

Andrew:

is true.

Andrew:

But I, if it's more difficult than creating characters, it's not by very much because, you

Andrew:

know,

Andrew:

to me, as both a fiction and non fiction, I'm not a literary genius, like I'm random

Andrew:

fiction.

Andrew:

But I do think I'm, you know, I'm a good

Andrew:

writer to be.

Andrew:

Fiction writing is more difficult than non fiction because there's an analog in

Andrew:

nonfiction for plot structure.

Andrew:

That is, you have a logical outlook and then,

Andrew:

you know, all the, all the elements of the book follow that outline and it's, it's

Andrew:

roughly similar to apply, you know, when you have a lot of development of,

Andrew:

of events.

Andrew:

Okay, but, but there's nothing in non fiction

Andrew:

that's analogous to creating a whole universe character that is, you know, that, that is

Andrew:

unique to fiction.

Andrew:

So that, so, but fortunately for me, and you

Andrew:

know, I knew this from the time I was a kid, guys, you know,

Andrew:

I was a kid growing up in Brooklyn.

Andrew:

I knew I was going to be a writer.

Andrew:

And everything I did in part was, you know, to prepare me for that.

Andrew:

So, you know, I'm a teenager playing basketball in the park in the local swoop.

Andrew:

Yeah, right.

Andrew:

You know, and I'm playing basketball in the park and you know, there are a lot of good

Andrew:

kids there who were going to school or working, you know, and then there were the

Andrew:

thugs, you know, I knew any, any large part, any part in any large city, you have your drug

Andrew:

dealers,

Andrew:

you know, and they're goons to protect them from hijackers and they're walking around

Andrew:

heavily armed.

Andrew:

Yeah. So anyway, so I, you know, didn't just learn how to survive having to deal with these

Andrew:

thugs, but I knew at the same time, I'm gonna write about this guy.

Andrew:

These guys are gonna be characters and stories at some point in the, in the future.

Andrew:

And so when I got to decades later, I got to the idea, well, I'm going to write some hard

Andrew:

boiled detective story.

Andrew:

I had a hundred characters in my head.

Andrew:

So Tony just.

Andrew:

Somebody asked me, Tony Johnson, philosophy

Andrew:

professor, he's based on you.

Andrew:

I said, yeah, the philosophy professor part is the tough guy.

Andrew:

He's not.

Andrew:

I was always with him.

Andrew:

But I knew, but I knew, you know, heroic type guys who were, who were really good guys.

Andrew:

Good, you know, morally good, upright and not formidable.

Andrew:

Not guys you want to, not guys you want to start fight.

Andrew:

I know guys like that.

Andrew:

And so I could base the characters on one of my experiences.

Andrew:

Now Reggie,

Andrew:

Reggie's an original character because he said he's the he's the toughest guy in the world.

Andrew:

He's going to be a heavyweight champion,

Andrew:

but he's also a genius.

Andrew:

He's been mocked from the time he was a little

Andrew:

kid growing up in the project.

Andrew:

That's where that gangster mentality.

Andrew:

Education is for the white man.

Andrew:

Education for the Asians, but education, stop.

Andrew:

Maybe it's for black women, but it's not for the black.

Andrew:

Black hands.

Andrew:

Gangster, right?

Andrew:

That sick mentality we see too often in the.

Andrew:

In the projects. So Reggie, Reggie was mocked for being a poor.

Andrew:

For him he was beaten and everything.

Andrew:

And as we all.

Andrew:

He fought back and everything.

Andrew:

He never gave up his lovely books.

Andrew:

But he had, you know, beaten into this sense of shame.

Andrew:

So he's got to overcome that.

Andrew:

So you got.

Andrew:

He's.

Andrew:

He's like a superhero.

Andrew:

He's.

Andrew:

He's the physically the most.

Andrew:

The toughest guy in the world.

Andrew:

He's.

Andrew:

He's the most brilliant guy in his universe.

Andrew:

He's almost like the superhero, but he's got an inner problem and it's got.

Andrew:

That he's got himself.

Andrew:

Yeah,

Andrew:

I'm sorry, go ahead.

Blair:

I'm sorry, No, I. Can we pause just for a second?

Blair:

Martin, do you hear his.

Blair:

That little bit of feedback from him or.

Martin:

Yes.

Martin:

Could you see your connection, Andy? It probably will work out in the post

Martin:

production anyway, but a connection with your microphone and your headphones, is it

Martin:

directly.

Martin:

Is it in your.

Martin:

In your computer?

Martin:

Because it is some background noise.

Blair:

It's like a. It's like a small reverb when you talk.

Andrew:

Yeah, I'm not.

Blair:

We can, we can hear it.

Martin:

Yeah.

Andrew:

You want me to, you want me to lower the sound on the mic?

Blair:

Martin, you think that's good or.

Martin:

Yeah, it could be.

Martin:

Yeah, it could be close to the.

Andrew:

Microphone and I hear a little noise when I adjusted the mic gain.

Andrew:

Yeah.

Blair:

Good.

Andrew:

Now you feel better, but how's that? Is that good?

Andrew:

Is that any better?

Blair:

Yes, you're much louder, but yeah, the reverb is gone.

Martin:

Yeah, good.

Andrew:

Okay, good, good.

Blair:

Great.

Martin:

Thanks, Blair, for pointing that out.

Martin:

Yeah, this is how we do it.

Martin:

We do it wrong.

Martin:

I will interrupt your four chain now.

Andrew:

You guys are pros, right?

Martin:

Yeah, yeah, we are.

Blair:

So if I. Next question.

Blair:

If it's a spoiler that you don't have to

Blair:

answer it.

Blair:

But I just cracked your book open at 15 pages

Blair:

and so I'm thinking that H period, A period, R period, D period stands for something, but I'm

Blair:

not sure yet.

Blair:

Is that, Is that a giveaway?

Andrew:

No, it isn't.

Andrew:

You know Reggie H A R D is just a. That's not

Andrew:

his real name.

Andrew:

It's a, you know, he's a professional fighter.

Andrew:

That's his stage name.

Blair:

I see.

Andrew:

His real name is Julius Collimore and he.

Andrew:

Which comes out at some point.

Andrew:

I don't even think it's in volume one.

Andrew:

I think it comes out later.

Andrew:

But Reggie H A R D is a stage.

Andrew:

They're kind of like Notorious B.I.G. the, the rapper.

Andrew:

So you know, some people might just say Reggie Hard because he's hard.

Andrew:

He's hard.

Blair:

He's a tough guy.

Andrew:

But he prefers Reggie H A R D to spell it out like Notorious.

Martin:

B I G Stage name.

Andrew:

But the interesting thing about the characters is as you know it, you're fans of

Andrew:

hard boiled detective fiction.

Andrew:

The female characters are often la Femme Fatale, you know.

Andrew:

And so with Lisa Flowers, who's a married woman, she's a brilliant psychotherapist,

Andrew:

Tony's head over heels in love with her.

Andrew:

I won't give it away here, but the question that runs all through the plot is can Lisa be

Andrew:

trusted? Because there's certain things you know about

Andrew:

her that Tony doesn't trust.

Andrew:

And he, and he, you know, he says it to her face and she even says to, wow.

Andrew:

She says, you know, even love doesn't stop Tony just from being a hard ass.

Andrew:

And so can, can, can Lisa be trusted? I, I don't want to give it away because that's

Andrew:

a big part of, big part of the plot.

Andrew:

But you know,

Andrew:

will this love develop into full fledged relationship or will she turn out to be la

Andrew:

femme fatale as happens so often in hard boiled detective stories?

Martin:

So Andy, I will be a devil's advocate now and you know that I'm a sensitive guy and

Martin:

don't like modern detective like TV series with only blood and gut and whatever.

Martin:

But I still like for example,

Martin:

Mr. A, the Ditko character.

Martin:

So could I read this book?

Martin:

Then I started to read it and it looks very fascinating.

Martin:

And we have new thing going on, upcoming, forthcoming that I really want to be involved

Martin:

in.

Martin:

And I think that's good for the world to have these hard boiled detectives that are fighting

Martin:

for justice and whatnot.

Martin:

And the bad guys will get what they deserve.

Martin:

So if you are sensitive, could you read this book?

Andrew:

Well, it's fun.

Andrew:

The Tony Trust universe is often violent.

Andrew:

So the sensitive souls may not like the violence, but if they're committed to justice,

Andrew:

yes.

Andrew:

And you know, and the bad guys get what they

Andrew:

deserve.

Andrew:

Yes, definitely.

Andrew:

The bad guys killed.

Martin:

So it is like TV Series.

Martin:

What is Time Make My Day Punk.

Andrew:

Dirty Harry.

Martin:

Yeah.

Andrew:

It has a Dirty Harry element.

Andrew:

Or.

Andrew:

Yeah.

Andrew:

If we go way back to the 1950s or 1960s as a.

Andrew:

Mike Hammer.

Martin:

Yeah, Mike Hammer.

Andrew:

Mike Hammer, kind of.

Martin:

So then I will.

Martin:

Yeah.

Andrew:

But, but, but here's the thing that I think there's several aspects that make the

Andrew:

Tony just a tough guy.

Andrew:

Reggie is a tough guy.

Andrew:

Lisa has a gangster past.

Andrew:

You know, she was called gangster girl.

Andrew:

She's.

Andrew:

Even though she's brilliant, she becomes a

Andrew:

brilliant psychotherapist.

Andrew:

She has a. She's an expert with a handgun.

Andrew:

If she becomes part of the team, if she proves trustworthy, she's not just somebody who does

Andrew:

the brain work.

Andrew:

She'd be out in the street with them because

Andrew:

she's gangster girl.

Andrew:

But the genius level here,

Andrew:

Tony, that you don't see generally in the Hard Boiled story, you see him in the softer Boyle

Andrew:

stories, like Sherlock Holmes as a paradigm.

Martin:

Yes, my favorite.

Andrew:

Yeah, me too.

Andrew:

Oh, I could discuss Sherlock Holmes.

Andrew:

We want to do a show just on Sherlock Holmes.

Andrew:

Yes, I love.

Blair:

All right.

Blair:

Okay.

Andrew:

I am definitely a Sherlockian,

Andrew:

but also.

Andrew:

And all the brilliant detectives after him all

Andrew:

pay homage to him, whether it's Aul Poirot or Nero Wolf, they all pay homage to Sherlock.

Martin:

Or the guy with a trench coat that I like.

Martin:

Colombo.

Andrew:

Yeah. Peter F. Peter Falk was great.

Andrew:

Oh, I wonder.

Andrew:

I always wondered if they based that character

Andrew:

on.

Andrew:

On porphyry in Crime and Punishment.

Andrew:

You know, who.

Andrew:

Who torments Raskolnikov in that story, Plays

Andrew:

cat and mouse with him the way Colombo does with his.

Andrew:

With the murderers in that series.

Andrew:

I don't know.

Andrew:

I don't know the answer to that question.

Andrew:

But Tony's a philosophy professor.

Andrew:

He's a brilliant guy.

Andrew:

Lisa, Ph.D. in psychology and came out of a upper class family on the Upper west side.

Andrew:

She's superbly educated in the top prep schools before she went, you know, before she

Andrew:

dropped out to become a gangster in Hell's Kitchen.

Andrew:

But Reggie, Reggie, who's got no schooling at all,

Andrew:

is a genius.

Andrew:

He's the most brilliant of all.

Andrew:

She have these three very, very, very highly intelligent, even brilliant characters.

Andrew:

And so it opens up certain possibilities that you don't normally get in tough guy fiction.

Andrew:

And one of them is, I'll give something away that's coming in future volumes, is Reggie's

Andrew:

got this inner problem.

Andrew:

He knows in his head that his commitment to reading and education is a very, very, very

Andrew:

good thing.

Andrew:

But in his emotional life, he's had it beaten

Andrew:

into him that it's shameful to be a bookworm.

Andrew:

He's got to resolve that.

Andrew:

Well, Lisa's a psychotherapist.

Andrew:

She gets him into psychotherapy and, you know, for a tough guy off the streets, tough kid out

Andrew:

of the projects, that takes more courage to go into psychotherapy and face your inner demons

Andrew:

than it does for him to step into the ring,

Andrew:

you know, and fight all these hard rocks.

Andrew:

It's the most courageous thing Reggie ever

Andrew:

does.

Andrew:

But the reason is it's not just.

Andrew:

I mean, mostly for his own inner fulfillment, right?

Andrew:

Resolve the torment.

Andrew:

But Reggie's got a dream.

Andrew:

He's. He's the.

Andrew:

By volume two and certainly by volume three,

Andrew:

he's the greatest heavyweight, not just the heavyweight champion.

Andrew:

He's the greatest heavyweight since Muhammad Ali, and he is beloved.

Andrew:

And he wants to use his fame and popularity to bring reading into the projects to attack the.

Andrew:

Well, attack's not the right word.

Andrew:

To kind of resolve that physicalistic culture

Andrew:

of drugs, violence, crime.

Andrew:

He wants to open, use his money.

Andrew:

He's making a fortune of money.

Andrew:

Merchandise.

Andrew:

He's got his own brand, Raw gym brand, Roger

Andrew:

Merch.

Andrew:

Merch.

Andrew:

He's making a fortune.

Andrew:

Adult.

Andrew:

You're going to use that money to build libraries and private schools into projects

Andrew:

and bring love of learning, you know,

Andrew:

and love of.

Andrew:

Of books to the.

Andrew:

To these kids.

Andrew:

He wants to take on that gangster culture.

Andrew:

And to do that, he's got to resolve his own sense of shame over this.

Andrew:

So by volume three, I'm bringing a very philosophic element into it because there's a

Andrew:

murder in the projects that they gotta.

Andrew:

That they have to solve and catch the murders.

Andrew:

But the same murderers who are responsible for the killings, they're the ones, the gang

Andrew:

bangers, they're the ones who oppose the construction of the library.

Andrew:

They don't want a library,

Andrew:

you know, and drawing away recruits from the gang to become students and readers and

Andrew:

everything and.

Andrew:

And so bring in this intellectual element that

Andrew:

the real.

Andrew:

The real problem in the projects is not so much white racism as it is this.

Andrew:

This culture that rejects education, that rejects reading for a very physical, very

Andrew:

physicalistic culture, you know, of drugs, drugs, booze, violence, crime and so on.

Andrew:

The leftists are all going to hate me,

Andrew:

but I got two words for them and they ain't Merry Christmas.

Andrew:

But this could really help change.

Andrew:

The homicide rate in the projects is just off

Andrew:

the charts.

Andrew:

These gangsters killing each other as

Andrew:

teenagers.

Andrew:

So Reggie wants to short circuit that violence

Andrew:

and have these kids become strong readers and go on to have real lives.

Martin:

And I get an Idea.

Martin:

Now, Blair, we had Aaron talking about this in

Martin:

a episode, right?

Blair:

Sure.

Martin:

So maybe we could reach out and get out the books where it's needed.

Martin:

Also in Hell's Kitchen and other places.

Martin:

And also when you did the reference to the

Martin:

fighter there, wasn't it recently that some kind of martial arts guy who said after had

Martin:

winning in the ring read Ludwig von Mises or something like that?

Andrew:

Yeah, I did.

Andrew:

So I didn't,

Andrew:

I didn't know.

Andrew:

Know that you mentioned, you mentioned Aaron.

Andrew:

I forget his last name.

Andrew:

Is that the black dude who's an objective

Andrew:

philosophy professor? What's his, what's his last name?

Andrew:

Aaron.

Martin:

With B, I think.

Martin:

Yeah, but we include that in the show.

Blair:

Briley. Aaron Briley.

Andrew:

Briley. Yeah, that's right.

Andrew:

Aaron Briley.

Andrew:

He's a really good guy.

Andrew:

Yeah, guys, just what I hit 70.

Andrew:

My short term memory started to go.

Andrew:

It started senior moment there.

Andrew:

Aaron Briley.

Andrew:

Yeah, he's a really good guy.

Andrew:

And he, and he read I. If I remember

Andrew:

correctly, I think he read volume one of the Tony Joe saga.

Martin:

Great.

Martin:

So we have his connection then.

Blair:

Yeah, I think he moved to Austin, but I. Not 100% certain of that.

Martin:

So yeah, yeah, we have some contacts so we will connect again.

Martin:

So thank you, Andy, for that.

Andrew:

And yeah, I have, I have Aaron's email.

Andrew:

I could always.

Martin:

Good.

Blair:

Yes.

Martin:

So. So do you know already how many volumes it will be in this series?

Martin:

Because you have a name for the series also.

Martin:

What was it called?

Andrew:

Well, the series is just called the Tony Z Saga.

Andrew:

Yeah,

Andrew:

I don't know as many.

Andrew:

You know,

Andrew:

I don't know how many.

Andrew:

Hopefully I live a long time, but hopefully I

Andrew:

still got, you know, many years to go.

Andrew:

I could, I could churn out a Tony, just novel

Andrew:

a year.

Andrew:

And they're fun.

Andrew:

It's not like I, not like I don't enjoy it.

Andrew:

And there's no shortage of possible storylines for tough guy detective in New York City,

Andrew:

Brooklyn, other places.

Andrew:

There's all different kinds of murders.

Andrew:

And you know what else I want to do aside from in the, in the fictional universe?

Andrew:

Resolve the dangers of the physical, physicalistic crime gangster mentality in the

Andrew:

projects.

Andrew:

And by the way, Reggie's not a racist.

Andrew:

He doesn't, he doesn't want to just reach out

Andrew:

to black kids in the hood.

Andrew:

He wants to bring this to kids all across the

Andrew:

country.

Andrew:

White kids, Asian kids, black kids, you know, but he wants to start in the projects in the

Andrew:

toughest place that there is, you know, to encourage learning.

Andrew:

But another thing I want to do with this series, guys,

Andrew:

is I want to create villains.

Andrew:

I mean, you know, real memorable villains,

Andrew:

real bad guys who are like the dangerous.

Andrew:

Like you mentioned Sherlock Holmes, you know,

Andrew:

like Professor Mor.

Andrew:

Yeah. You know, in the Sherlock Holmes series.

Andrew:

So had a villain in volume, volume two and

Andrew:

volume three was a professor himself as a psychology professor who, Who's a pretty good

Andrew:

villain back.

Andrew:

And Vol. I'm working on volume four.

Andrew:

And yeah, I got, I think I have a idea for,

Andrew:

you know, what a good villain and you know, and some, and some memorable characters like

Andrew:

that.

Andrew:

You're real, real smart, dangerous bad guys really spice up a story.

Martin:

And Andy, that's pretty easy to find.

Martin:

Right.

Martin:

You look out around you in the world and see what's going on.

Andrew:

Well, there's a lot, there's a lot of violent guys, but.

Andrew:

But real, you know, real brilliant,

Andrew:

real brilliant bad guys.

Andrew:

That's.

Andrew:

That cost extra.

Andrew:

But, you know, I could.

Martin:

But I mean like academia and certain bureaucrat organizations and.

Andrew:

Yeah. In the Democratic Party.

Martin:

Yeah. In all parties, I think.

Andrew:

But yeah, but yeah.

Andrew:

Yes. Yeah, I could find.

Andrew:

I could find, you know, smart, dangerous guys like that, you know.

Andrew:

You know, it just takes a little creativity.

Martin:

Yes.

Andrew:

A little, little imaginativeness to.

Martin:

And then you have to always, you know, have this footnote or what do you call it,

Martin:

disclaimer that it is fiction.

Martin:

But.

Andrew:

Yeah, yeah, you know, I went to high school with Chuck Schumer, so I know I, I

Andrew:

don't, I don't often.

Blair:

Admit that, but that's the end of this podcast, ladies.

Andrew:

He was two years ahead of me, so I didn't know him.

Andrew:

I didn't know him all that well, you know, fortunately.

Martin:

Yeah. And. And here in Europe we have several of them to pick also in like in

Martin:

academia and so on, especially in philosophical and.

Andrew:

Yeah. So.

Blair:

Yeah. So, Andy, what we mentioned several great historical figures in the.

Blair:

In detection and some authors.

Blair:

So did those authors, did they.

Blair:

You think they influenced you to become.

Blair:

To really want to write detective fiction?

Andrew:

Yeah, well, I was always a hero worshiper, you know, and so I always, always

Andrew:

read hero stories, whether they're, whether they were about real life characters, you

Andrew:

know, like George Washington, you know, Ernest Shackleton, all different kinds of, you know,

Andrew:

Maria Montessori.

Andrew:

All different kinds of heroes and heroines or fictional ones.

Andrew:

I was a kid in the 1960s.

Andrew:

Ian Fleming was still alive and he was, he was publishing the James Bond novels.

Andrew:

And I loved James Bond.

Andrew:

I still do.

Andrew:

I love the.

Blair:

Absolutely.

Blair:

Yeah.

Andrew:

Yeah, absolutely.

Andrew:

And I was reading, I was reading Mickey Spillane, my, My Mickey Spain was alive and he

Andrew:

was writing the Mike Hammer books in the 1960s and all kinds of heroes.

Andrew:

You know, John Wayne was still alive and, you know, making Westerns way.

Blair:

Yeah.

Andrew:

Where he was always a good guy, almost always a good guy of great prowess who uses

Andrew:

prowess to protect the innocent against all kinds of bad guys.

Andrew:

You know, I love that stuff.

Andrew:

And so, yeah, and then.

Andrew:

And of course, the really brilliant, the tough

Andrew:

guy detectives are always very smart because they have to solve the case.

Andrew:

And sometimes that gets lost on readers.

Andrew:

The Mike Hammer is so tough that sometimes you

Andrew:

forget how smart he is, that nobody else, nobody else figures out who the murderer is.

Andrew:

He always does,

Andrew:

but he always figures it out.

Andrew:

And I tell people, listen, if you're ever a

Andrew:

character in a Mike Hammer story, do not kill one of Mike's buddies,

Andrew:

because he will try.

Andrew:

He will find out who done it, he will track

Andrew:

you down, and he will fill you with 45 dum dum, you know,

Andrew:

but, but anyhow,

Andrew:

the brilliant detectives, too, the one, the Sherlock Holmes types that you're the most

Andrew:

with, the most salient characteristic is not how tough they are.

Andrew:

Although Sherlock Holmes was tough, we see that in a lot of instances, but how brilliant

Andrew:

he is.

Andrew:

And you know, I love, and I love the way Rex Stout integrates the two, you know, with the

Andrew:

two characters of Nero Wolf and Archie Goodwin.

Andrew:

You know, you have this, the.

Andrew:

The soft boiled guy who sits in his armchair and figures out who done it, and then the

Andrew:

tough guy who goes out and does all the, all the.

Andrew:

She couldn't do all the dirty work.

Andrew:

You know, it's great.

Andrew:

And, and, and Agatha Christie, because I'm not

Andrew:

a big fan of a Kill Poirot, because to me, he's.

Andrew:

He smacks.

Andrew:

He's like a Palad knockoff of Sherlock Holmes.

Andrew:

But nobody, and I mean nobody, is the plot writer that Agatha Christie is.

Andrew:

I mean, well, she is extraordinary plot writer.

Andrew:

So, you know, I read all of those books and yeah, they did.

Andrew:

I, I always, always loved them.

Andrew:

It didn't occur to me, you know, till many

Andrew:

years later that, that I was right.

Andrew:

Detective stories, because I was always more interested in writing serious, you know, about

Andrew:

serious issues,

Andrew:

fiction and nonfiction.

Andrew:

But then it occurred to me a few years ago,

Andrew:

why not do it? You know, do it for fun.

Andrew:

And then I, then I realized, like I was talking before, there's no reason in the world

Andrew:

why I can't innovate here and introduce serious elements into the tough guy genre.

Andrew:

So while they're chasing down the killers in the projects, they're also dealing with real

Andrew:

serious issues.

Andrew:

They want to, you know, change the culture

Andrew:

from a physicalistic one to a much more intellectual.

Blair:

That's great.

Martin:

Yeah, that's great, because that could really be a positive thing to what's all

Martin:

negativities going around.

Martin:

You mentioned, for example,

Martin:

rappers and others.

Martin:

I mean, there are good rappers out there, but

Martin:

it's lots of other things.

Andrew:

Yeah, the gangster rap.

Martin:

Yeah. And the influence.

Martin:

That is not healthy at all.

Andrew:

Yeah.

Martin:

So if you could introduce them to a good alternative and antidote.

Andrew:

Yeah, no, I'll never forget a really famous movie from the 1980s.

Andrew:

You guys might have seen Stand and Deliver,

Andrew:

Blue Diamond Phillips and Edward.

Andrew:

What's his name?

Andrew:

Edward almost.

Andrew:

Where based on the true story Jaime Escalante, the math teacher in El Barrio in LA who's

Andrew:

working with these Chicano kids and teaching them calculus and everything.

Andrew:

And the Lou Diamond Phillips character, I remember.

Andrew:

I'll never forget the scene because he asks the teacher, I need two sets of textbooks.

Andrew:

Why do you need two?

Andrew:

I keep one at home and I want to school so I don't have to be seen, you know, in the.

Andrew:

In the streets carrying textbooks.

Andrew:

Then the gang bangers are going to be all over

Andrew:

me, you know, and beat the hell out of me for acting white or trying to get an education,

Andrew:

you know, you know, acting like I was.

Andrew:

I was an Asian or a white guy or something.

Andrew:

And that mentality is around.

Blair:

Yeah, it is.

Andrew:

It's around.

Andrew:

And it's very, very harmful for the kids,

Andrew:

especially for the boys.

Andrew:

I don't think they pick on the girls as much,

Andrew:

but they, but they definitely on.

Andrew:

On the boys who want an education, you know,

Andrew:

definitely catch hell from.

Andrew:

From the.

Andrew:

From the gangster mentality.

Martin:

So. So your work of art will be really mind and body integration then, in the future?

Andrew:

Yeah, the.

Andrew:

Yes. Detective stories in a certain way always

Andrew:

are, because the detective has to be smart enough to figure out who done it.

Andrew:

He's got to be in the.

Andrew:

In the hard boiled genre.

Andrew:

He's got to be tough enough to fight off off the bad guys.

Andrew:

But this is taking it to a whole nother level,

Andrew:

the intellectual level of not just figuring out who.

Andrew:

Who perpetrated the crime, but literally trying to change the culture to a much more

Andrew:

intellectual culture in the.

Andrew:

In the projects.

Andrew:

And you can imagine, you know, the mothers are very positive about this.

Andrew:

Oh, you have a library.

Andrew:

We could go.

Andrew:

There's a place where the kids can go to read books and get teaching, you know, and I could.

Andrew:

I could come in with my kids and read to Them in the children's section and the security

Andrew:

guards there.

Andrew:

And Reggie's paying for this.

Andrew:

The Library is open 24 7, 365.

Andrew:

And so, you know, there's a haven, you know, and the mothers love it.

Andrew:

A lot of the girls love it.

Andrew:

Some of the boys love it.

Andrew:

And Reggie's attitude is, well, we're going to reach more of the boys.

Andrew:

It's great.

Andrew:

It's great to bring the.

Andrew:

Great to bring the girls in here and get an education for them.

Andrew:

But they're not the ones killing each other.

Andrew:

It's the teenage boys, you know, who are.

Andrew:

Who are killing each other.

Andrew:

We need to reach them.

Blair:

I get it.

Blair:

Yeah, I get it.

Blair:

Yeah.

Blair:

Listen, Andy, I do have to kind of cut this

Blair:

short,

Blair:

but I wanted to reach out then change the subject just a smidge.

Blair:

You're.

Blair:

You've got a.

Blair:

A class starting on, on your.

Blair:

The history of capitalism book, you wrote.

Andrew:

Yeah, the Capitalist Manifesto.

Blair:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Blair:

So you want to talk about that for a minute?

Andrew:

Oh, well, yeah.

Andrew:

Thank you.

Andrew:

Well, yeah, the, the Capitalist Manifesto, the historic economic and philosophic case for

Andrew:

laissez faire.

Andrew:

I published it 2005.

Andrew:

Don't see possible is 20 years ago already, but it is.

Andrew:

And I wanted a cat man, as I call it.

Andrew:

And if an objectivist friend of mine said cat man, I love that name.

Andrew:

It's like an object objective as superheroes come down to earth to beat up on con man, you

Andrew:

know, on the commies and, and everything.

Martin:

But Thinking cap.

Andrew:

Yeah, yeah, that's right, the thinking cap.

Andrew:

That's right, Martin.

Andrew:

But I envisioned it and, and what the book is,

Andrew:

is one stop shopping for capitalism.

Andrew:

You got the historic case here for capitalism, the economic and above all the moral

Andrew:

philosophic case.

Andrew:

So regarding the history and, and the history

Andrew:

is also, I think is.

Andrew:

Is another novelty here because they don't

Andrew:

teach much on the.

Andrew:

On the actual history of capitalism.

Andrew:

Much of what is taught is propaganda.

Andrew:

Not really teaching this propaganda by Marxists, journalists and intellectuals about

Andrew:

all the horrors of capitalism.

Andrew:

So I had to do a lot of research.

Andrew:

I'm not a historian digging up hundreds of books.

Andrew:

I kept Amazon in business for sure.

Andrew:

Thank God for Amazon.

Andrew:

I got all these books, a lot of them obscure.

Andrew:

And Doug, and Doug and Doug found the actual history of capitalism, which, not

Andrew:

surprisingly, is glorious.

Andrew:

It. It started raising living standards and

Andrew:

life expectancies immediately upon introduction into Great Britain in the late

Andrew:

18th century.

Andrew:

So there's the actual history of capitalism and, and you know, and on the pre capitalist

Andrew:

period was a terrible poverty and starvation level poverty.

Andrew:

So that's, that's generally new in and of itself.

Andrew:

But also then the, the economic section, nothing, you know, which I, you know, I

Andrew:

borrowed, I quoted from the great economists from Adam Smith through von Mises and George

Andrew:

Reisman, Milton Friedman and of course Bastiat may not be an economist, but it was Bastiat.

Andrew:

Henry Hazlett were both brilliant economic journalists.

Andrew:

I love Bastiat's phrase, you know, Paris gets fed, you know, on a free market.

Andrew:

And so, you know, the economic case from the, that the great economists have made and I'm

Andrew:

borrowing from them and then the philosophic moral case, you know, that the, that the mind

Andrew:

is mankind's means of survival,

Andrew:

the mind requires individual rights and freedom and life is the standard of value and

Andrew:

capitalism promotes life much more than any other system.

Andrew:

So I have, you know, in the moral philosophic section it's Ayn Rand has, has established the

Andrew:

philosophic superiority, the economic section, the great economists have established

Andrew:

capitalism's economic superiority.

Andrew:

So I've, I've brought in these elements from those great thinkers, integrated it with the

Andrew:

history section, which is, which is new I think.

Andrew:

One whole section on, on devoted to the accurate history of capitalism.

Andrew:

And here it all is in one book.

Andrew:

We're going to spend 12 weeks studying.

Andrew:

We're going to go in depth, you know,

Andrew:

chapter by chapter and it's going to be, I think it's going to be a really fun course and

Andrew:

it's going to be very, a very informative course on the actual nature of capitalism and

Andrew:

its life giving successes.

Blair:

Do you want to give like the website for that or the, so people can know about it?

Andrew:

Yeah, it's.

Andrew:

Yes, thank you, Blair.

Andrew:

It's, it's put on, promoted by the Objective Standard Institute.

Andrew:

So is it objectivestandard.org or objectivestandard.com I forget.

Andrew:

Off the top maybe.

Blair:

I don't, you know, I don't remember.

Andrew:

I have my, I have my phone here somewhere.

Andrew:

Let's look it up.

Martin:

Yeah, and we will include that in the show note also, so.

Andrew:

Oh great, great.

Andrew:

Thank you.

Andrew:

But the, the technology today is really,

Andrew:

it's objectivestandard.org everybody and you go objectivestandard.org and they have a

Andrew:

section on their courses and there, there's, you know, and there's the headline, the

Andrew:

Capitalist Manifesto course.

Andrew:

You can just click on it and get all the

Andrew:

information and sign up for it.

Andrew:

We are almost at our limit because I wanted to cap enrollment at 12 to keep the interaction

Andrew:

manageable because if we have smart, yeah, 20 people, it's gonna be a lot of people wanting

Andrew:

to talk and we'll never get through, we'll never get through the material that I want to

Andrew:

cover.

Andrew:

I know that for many years of teaching.

Andrew:

So it capped it at 12.

Andrew:

Almost there.

Andrew:

So anybody wants to sign up, you need to, need

Andrew:

to do it quickly.

Blair:

Very good, very good.

Blair:

I just have one minor complaint about that

Blair:

book.

Blair:

It's not, it's not available in Kindle.

Andrew:

Yeah. You know, it's an academic publisher.

Andrew:

If I can blame, I gotta, I gotta blame somebody.

Andrew:

But it's an academic publisher's.

Andrew:

It was University Press of America.

Andrew:

They are not at all entrepreneurial.

Andrew:

I don't want to knock them too much because they love the book,

Andrew:

you know, and they, and they publish it.

Andrew:

But academic publishers is notorious non

Andrew:

entrepreneurial.

Andrew:

So you're doing ebooks or audio books.

Andrew:

It's, it's.

Martin:

But I think we have a solution for that in the free marketplace, Andrew.

Martin:

But, and we could talk about that in the future.

Martin:

But do you of course have a right to, to the content?

Martin:

Right.

Andrew:

No, the, it belongs to the publisher when you, when you.

Andrew:

That.

Andrew:

But there, but there's where the free market

Andrew:

works, Martin.

Andrew:

And you're absolutely right.

Andrew:

Instead of going academic publishers from now on, I'm going to self publish.

Andrew:

Then like, like I've self published the Tony.

Andrew:

Just books.

Andrew:

Then the content belongs to me and I, you know, I can promote it all.

Martin:

I want good clarification and again, we are for friendly competition.

Martin:

So they are doing a great way and they know how to do it and I have done it for a long

Martin:

time.

Martin:

But as you said, and I think I agree with Blair's question there, so.

Martin:

And you have the answer.

Martin:

So you're a smart guy, Andy.

Andrew:

Oh, thank you, thank you.

Andrew:

I appreciate that.

Andrew:

And I just want to put in a plug here.

Andrew:

You know, like I said, I don't want to, I don't want to sound like I'm negative on

Andrew:

University Press of America.

Andrew:

Their chief editor,

Andrew:

the late Judy Rothman, who died of cancer unfortunately a few years ago,

Andrew:

she loved the book.

Andrew:

She told me it was of all the books they

Andrew:

published there that it was her favorite.

Andrew:

And yeah, she really, you know, she really

Andrew:

pushed for them to publish it.

Andrew:

And a couple of my follow up books there, Objectivism and One Lesson in Capitalism

Andrew:

Unbound.

Andrew:

Well also at Roman Littlefield, University

Andrew:

Press of America is one of their imprimatur.

Andrew:

So, so I'm grateful to them because they got me started, you know, and made me a little bit

Andrew:

of a name for myself, but.

Andrew:

But it's well known that, you know, academic

Andrew:

publishers, if they sell a couple hundred copies, they're.

Andrew:

They're happy, you know, they're not.

Andrew:

They're not entrepreneurial.

Martin:

Yeah.

Blair:

Wow. Okay. But nonetheless, that book is the.

Blair:

The.

Blair:

The gold standard.

Martin:

Yes.

Blair:

Of capitalism and are certainly the explanation for capitalism.

Andrew:

Oh, well, thank you, guys.

Andrew:

I. I know.

Andrew:

I appreciate it.

Martin:

And we will spread the manifesto.

Martin:

It's important.

Andrew:

Thank you, guys.

Andrew:

Appreciate it.

Blair:

Listen, gentlemen, I hate to cut this short, but I should.

Blair:

I should get back to him downstairs.

Martin:

Yeah.

Andrew:

And all the best.

Andrew:

All the best to you and your family, Blair.

Blair:

Thank you so much.

Blair:

Thank you.

Martin:

Take care.

Blair:

So once again, we've had Andrew Bernstein, our.

Blair:

One of our very, very favorite guests on with us today.

Blair:

Andy, thanks for manning the foxhole with us.

Andrew:

Always great to be in the foxhole with you and Martin, Blair.

Andrew:

And I know once you have the link, you'll send it to me so I can paste it all across social

Andrew:

media.

Martin:

Yes.

Blair:

Very good.

Blair:

Very good.

Andrew:

Thank you.

Andrew:

Thanks, guys.

Martin:

Thanks.

Martin:

Bye.

Blair:

Bye.

Andrew:

Take care, everybody.

Martin:

You too.

Andrew:

Yep.

Blair:

Bye. Bye.