This is Fresh Air, I'm Dave Davies.
like to work in a disinformation factory. It's the one created by this man.
“There are dozens of videos and photos of Obama having flies land on him, indoors at all times of”
year, and he'll be next to 100 people and no one has flies on him. Hillary reportedly, I mean, I was told people around are that they think she's demon possessed. Okay, I'm just going insane, okay? You might recognize that as the voice of Alex Jones, the force behind info wars, the website radio program, video streaming show and podcast known for propagating countless conspiracy theories. Among them, the notion that the deadly school shooting at Sandy Hook
Elementary was a hoax staged by the government to justify seizing the guns of American citizens. Joshua and spent four years in his 20s as a video editor and field producer for Jones and his media company. His new memoir takes readers inside the frenetic Infro Wars paranoia shop, where Jones constantly demanded that his staff churn out stories of the evil perpetrated by the
“deep state and global elites, stories based on few if any actual facts. Owens was troubled by the”
work, but stayed longer than he wishes he had, because the pay was good, the work was engaging, and while he found Jones a troubled and sometimes terrifying man, Owens still sought his approval. After leaving Infro Wars, Owens spoke out against conspiratorial thinking, in writing, in appearing in the HBO documentary, The Truth Versus Alex Jones, and by providing a deposition in the successful defamation case, the parents of Sandy Hook children brought
against Jones. Joshua and's book is the madness of believing, a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine. Will Josh Owens welcome to fresh air? Thanks so much for having me. Jones was based in Austin, Texas, and I thought to get a sense of what life was like working for Info Wars. We would just go with you on one of these reporting trips that you took. This was one you took with two or three other Info Wars staff members to drive up the Pacific Coast in California
and stop at multiple beaches and measure radiation levels with a Geiger counter, you were carrying. Well, what prompted this trip? Well, to get a sense of the chaotic nature of that world,
the trip came together in a day. We were basically told to pack our bags and leave with no idea
when we would return. It's pretty simple. Jones saw a video online. He made some assumptions about what that video meant, and then he sent us out there with a preconceived idea for us to report on. So, at Half Moon Bay, surfers beach, actually, in Half Moon Bay, a man shot a video showing high radiation levels. So, Jones tied this all together in his mind. He believed that post the Fukushima disaster, but that's the nuclear disaster in Japan, right? Yeah.
Correct. The Dachi nuclear power plant. Jones believed that radiation was floating over onto the West Coast. So, he had this idea that the West Coast was riddled with radiation, and it was a nightmare scenario, and he wanted us to go there, drive along the Pacific Coast trail and take readings with a Geiger counter that you said. We barely knew how to use. Right. So, you went to these beaches, and the surfers beach that you went to did have higher
than normal radiation readings, but everywhere else you went, well, what did you find? You can explain. Yeah. Well, we didn't find what we were looking for. We did not find high radiation readings, and at the time, this was in the early stage of my employment there. I, along with the
“people who I was there with, just believe that's what we should report. Well, we were finding,”
and so, that's what we did, and Jones got incredibly angry. And the interesting thing about it is that Jones wasn't necessarily explicitly telling us to lie. I think if he was doing that, he wouldn't have as many people working for him, because there was this pretend idea that we were searching for the truth. He more so undermines us, made us question our own findings, made us question our own abilities, our own competence, and I get sweaty a little bit even thinking back
to it. We didn't know what to do. What are we supposed to do? We can't conjure radiation out of thin air, but there was a part of us that wished we could. Well, you know, the website every day had many many stories. You know, and the idea was you had to generate outrage constantly with these stories, and a lot of the stories were picked up from other news sources, mainstream and more fringe ones. What was the policy for actually attributing the information that that info was God? I mean,
did they say where it came from? Well, it depended on my first day I sat down with an editor.
I believe it was a producer for the nightly news at the time, which was this ...
Jones was trying out. It didn't last too long. But we were to, if it was a mainstream outlet that reinforced Jones's beliefs, we were supposed to include that. But if it was anything else, if it was a smaller outlet, maybe something that people weren't necessarily aware of, we were not supposed to include that, which was surprising to me when I was told that.
As an editor, it was almost a form of training. Like, here's what he wants. This is what we should do.
I hadn't ever noticed that before in the videos that I'd watched online. I didn't realize that sources were often omitted. But, you know, truthfully, the content of an any article really made no difference. I don't even think Jones read any of the articles that he would use on his show as evidence to backup his claims. It was only the headline. If the headline could be spun to suit his
“narrative, that's what he did. And that's what we were instructed to use when we were editing videos.”
There's one other story I thought I'd ask you to share, which kind of tells us how uniform awards worked. And that was the day, a low-flying plane passed over Austin, where
uniform awards was headquartered. This set Jones into a intense search for a new story. Well,
tell us the story. It was just a normal day. I don't remember what was going on beforehand. I'm sure I was editing some report at my computer. And then all of a sudden, the windows started to rattle in the office. And a writer ran through and said that there were helicopters flying by. So, you know, in the conspiracy world, you think helicopters, you think black helicopters, you think, you know, Fox Molder X files. So, a news producer, he ran to my desk, told me to
grab a camera and go outside to film this. So, I ran outside. And I noticed that he had already gotten on the roof of the building. And he was running at top speed, holding this telephoto lens out. I didn't see any helicopters. I didn't see anything in the sky. So, I came back in. And he said that he'd gotten it. But it turned out it was a plane. Jones was out of the office that day. And he called in at that time. He called the news producer. The news producer put him on
speakerphone. And he was in this manic fervor saying that he saw a plane. He believed it almost hit a
“building downtown. This was them trying to make people remember, you know, it was a psychological”
operation to make them think that 9/11 was happening all over again. He was being very vivid in his language. He claimed it was an E4B, which he called a doomsday plane. He was giving this incredible details. He saw the metal rivulets glinting in the sun. And so, anyways, he formed this strategy of how we're going to get this out. This is going to be huge news. He said, by the end of the day, it was going to be the biggest news in the country. And so, you know, he started grasping
at all these ideas and putting them into this report. He wanted cut together. And he gave us a headline. He told us what to put out. He told the person who was covering the show for him that day, sort of how to, how to spend this narrative and how to make it a big story. And by the next morning,
it was as if it had never happened. A local news station had reported that it was just a simple military
exercise, a touch and go operation. And I didn't understand what was going on as a viewer. You see these things. And you think, oh, wow, this is a huge story. And then maybe you don't tune in the next day. Maybe you don't realize that it ends up fizzling and being nothing. But while you're in that world, it's pretty stark to realize how something is portrayed as this incredible thing. And then it just becomes nothing very dust. Right. And just to be clear, nobody had been
forwards made calls to the military or aviation authorities to ask what was going on. Let me be clear about that in every sense. Knowing queries were ever made and anything.
“Jones had an idea and that's what stuck. So tell us a little about your background.”
I grew up in North Georgia. When I got sucked into Jones' world, I was relatively young. Throughout high school, I played music. I thought, for sure, that's what I was going to do with the rest of my life. After high school, that as things go, just sort of fell apart. And I was left directionless. I didn't really know what I was going to do. I was a little punk in school. I didn't think it mattered. I had no intention of going to college. So I was kind
of terrified. I didn't know who I was. I didn't know who I wanted to be. I didn't know where I was going. And then, at the most opportune or least opportune, depending on what point I'm looking at it, now it's least opportune timing. I was introduced to Jones' website in full wars and Jones has a
Personality.
anything about politics. It was movies that introduced me to Jones. I was watching Dr. Strange Love with a friend. There's a scene where Sterling Hayden starts talking about, he goes on this manic tirade about water fluoridation. My friend paused the movie and he asked me if I'd ever
heard of Alex Jones. I'd never heard that name. So he ran to the bathroom, grabbed a tube of
toothpaste, and he showed me the warning label where it said, "If you swallow more than a pea-sized amount, call poison control." And he asked me, he said, "You know, if you swallow a pea-sized
“amount and you have to call poison control, how is it that they put it in our water supply and”
we don't know how much we're drinking?" I didn't even know what he was talking about. So I didn't have an answer, but according to him, this guy Alex Jones did. So that night I looked up Jones's info wars, and initially I found a documentary that he had released called Dark Secrets, and Side Bohemian Grove, where he and journalist John Ronson had snuck into the Bohemian club,
which was this group of, it was an all-male meeting of these powerful men in the California Red
Woods. And it was just horrifying. It was like a mix between the Blair Witch project and Eyes wide shut. So I was just sort of hooked from there. Your girlfriend Lacy went to Savannah at the study at the Savannah College of Art and Design. So you went to, you got into film school,
“and then at some point I guess you entered a contest, a kind of an audition to get a job for”
info wars. Tell us about that. Right. Yeah, so Jones put on, he was looking to grow his operation and hire more reporters. And I saw the opportunity, and I thought, you know, why not? Why not give it a shot? So I went to the Jekyll Island Club, which was supposedly the birthplace of the concept of the Federal Reserve. I shot a report, I submitted the report, and what info wars said were thousands of submissions. I got in the top, the top 10, the final round. And Jones, I later learned
Jones didn't believe. I quite had what it took to be a reporter. Thank God. So he hired me as a, as a video editor and camera operator initially. Right. So you plunged into this kind of frenetic world there. I want to play a clip here from Info Wars. This is Jones. It's just a little, it'll introduce something I want to talk about. I love America. It's not fear that makes me a tears of my eyes. It's will and strength, boiling to defeat these tyrants and these globalists.
But that said, just like our information is game changing. The products that we sell,
all of them are powerful. And whether it's colonial silver from 1995, the very best out there,
or whether it's DNA forces now back in stock. Boy, that's Alex Jones. No questioning his commitment to his gig here. So he was selling supplements. He sold other stuff to the right survival gear, body armor, all kinds of things. But he learned actually that the trick of selling supplements dietary supplements from Joe Rogan is this right? That was his intro into that world. You know, Jones' connection with Rogan goes back pretty far actually. The guy Kevin Booth, who was connected
to the comedian Bill Hicks, he produced some of Jones' early documentaries and also produced Joe Rogan's
“very first comedy special. So there's a weird, I think that's how they got connected. But Jones saw”
that it was, it was a profitable successful endeavor for Rogan and saw it as an option for himself. So when Jones spent time on the air, you know, promoting dietary supplements and all this other stuff that he was selling. How important was that to the enterprise? Well, when I first started working there, especially when I first started listening to Jones, it was, it was 2008 when I, when I first heard of him, you know, he would sell T-shirts, he would sell DVDs. But he would also
encourage his audience to to copy the DVDs and give them out for free. I am my naive state. Saw that is like, well, okay. I mean, he's, it's not about money. It's got to be about the ideas. I think that just Jones saw that as free advertising ultimately. But I started working there as soon as he, he started the supplements. And it wasn't gradual. It was almost immediate. He was badgering reporters. They needed to start talking about supplements and their reports. They needed
to cut to ads regularly. When I first was trained on how to edit videos, I say trained. I mean, I was told not to include certain websites. That was pretty much the training. It was basically just do what Jones wants in the moment. A lot of times, he would stand over your shoulder and tell you what
He wanted.
changed. Jones wanted ads on every video. If people were on the radio, they had to, if people were
filling in host hosting the show, they had to near constantly talk about the products that he was selling. Jones had this idea that he wanted to grow his operation into this full-fledged media outlet.
“And his narrative was the only way he could do that is if he was bringing in so much money”
that he had the resources to do it. And it certainly seemed like, you know, there was plenty of money, right? Yeah. Jones's lifestyle changed pretty drastically. For some of the employees, he paid them incredibly well. I wouldn't say that applied to everyone there. But for a select few that were willing to do what Jones wanted. He rewarded people with money. He wasn't a stingy guy in that sense. He also spent time with you and other staff members doing other stuff.
Like shooting guns, he would go out to a private ranch and describe those experiences or one of them. I'm not really a gun guy. Despite growing up in the south, I wasn't really ever around that sort of stuff. But Jones liked to go out to this private ranch and shoot these videos where he would blow stuff up. And they got a lot of views. They were content that he could use on his website
to talk about the second amendment and whatever ideas he had about guns and his love for guns.
So one particular time we went out. Jones was drinking pretty heavily. And he filled a television with Tannerite and we were loading magazines and we were about to shoot at it. And all of a sudden I heard a loud noise like a gun firing off. And I saw not far from me the dirt sort of powder
“up into the air. And we ducked instinctively and we looked around and Jones had a, I believe it”
wasn't AR-15. And it was aiming in hard direction. And he had accidentally shot the gun. And you think in a situation like that was that the most interesting part of the story. And actually it's not. The most interesting part of the story was how everyone reacted afterwards. We were there with one reporter, a woman reporter. And she got incredibly upset. She also wasn't comfortable around guns. Jones just brought her out because he wanted her to be on camera. And she got really
upset and started asking, you know, what is going on? Why this doesn't seem safe? What are you doing? And then everyone, including myself, we all just sort of played into Jones's line. He said it was a joke. He said that he did it intentionally. He was just messing around. The look on his face, I could tell it wasn't intentional. And why would anyone do that intentionally? That's incredibly dangerous, especially for a boss to be doing that to their employees. But we all just sort of
ran to his defense and, you know, get Jones as bad. Don't make him feel uncomfortable. Don't make him feel like he's wrong for doing this. And that was just the immediate reaction. And look, I was part of it. It was, you know, why are you asking questions? Why are you going crazy? This isn't that big of a deal. It was a huge deal. He could have killed us. Right. Right. Right. How did you feel walking into the office in the morning to start a new day? It's funny. Early on, I would
“listen to music on the way to work. I would try and get myself in a good mood. I believe early”
on I was well-meaning. I thought what we were doing was important. I felt like it was a big opportunity to be there. I had been plucked out a film school where I didn't know what my future was and it was just exciting. And I remember there were many times in the beginning. I would go into the office with a good attitude. And then like the snap of the finger, Jones would come into the office. Sometimes he was jovial. Sometimes he was playing around. But that playfulness could turn on a dime.
And we were always on edge waiting for that to turn. And I just remember my attitude shifting
at some point where I thought, okay, I'm not here. This has got nothing to do with me. It's not about being excited. It's not about having ideas or contributing in that way. It's what does Jones need at all times? If he's going to play around, I'll sit here, I'll listen, I'll laugh. But don't get too involved because you might be the one that turns the dime. God, it kind of sounds like being in a cult. Yeah. I am hesitant often to say that because I know
there are people in those situations that deal with a lot of horrific things. But yes, I think that in many ways it was. And it was that fear, constant fear of, you know, you kind of can't leave either because you've attached yourself to Jones. He's kind of a black mark on your resume. He would say this to us on a regular basis. You cannot exist in the world outside of here because you are connected to me. And in that sense, yeah, I mean, I don't know another,
Another way to describe it, but cult-like.
madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine. He'll be back to talk more
after this short break. I'm Dave Davies, and this is fresh air. Support for fresh air comes from W. H. Why? Presenting the pulse, a weekly podcast about health and science. Each episode is full of great stories and big ideas fueled by curiosity and wonder. Can you learn to listen to your intuition? What should electric cars sound like? Why can it be so hard to get an accurate diagnosis? How do fungi communicate? Check out the pulse, available where you get your podcasts.
This is fresh air. I'm Dave Davies. We're listening to the interview I recorded with Josh Owens who spent four years in his 20s working as a video editor and field producer for the conspiracy
theorist Alex Jones and his media enterprise in full wars. In a new memoir, Owens describes
the stress and moral qualms he felt as Jones pressured his staff to generate countless stories about the evil done by globalist elites, the deep state and the mainstream media. Owens book is the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine. One or two more of the reporting trips that you went on, I think worth talking about. Once you were dispatched with some other reporters to El Paso, Texas because the conservative
website Judicial Watch had alleged that ISIS had established a training base in a neighborhood in warheads just across the border there from El Paso. What did you find when you went there? Nothing. We found that's not what they saw, but the website said. Right, that's not what the website said. So we went to this place because of the Judicial Watch report. We went to El Paso and when we got there, I was there with a reporter. When we got there, there was nothing to
report on and so we started getting calls from a news producer saying, Jones is expecting something. What are you doing? What are you guys doing? I remember being so perplexed and angry, like what do you expect us to do? We can't just summon something out of thin air that I said, well, I mean my guess will just make the reporter I'm with. I guess we'll just dress him up as an ISIS. Jihadian haven't walked across the border to show that they could get in and it was just
a moment of anger, a moment of feeling perplexed and the producer said, let me call you right back.
“And so he called us back and he said, yeah, Jones loves the idea, that's what you guys need to do.”
I remember sitting there thinking, what idea? What are you talking about? He's like, you're idea. You guys are going to get the reporter to dress up as ISIS and you're going to film him walking across the border. And there was another one of those moments where like your head goes fuzzy and you think, what? That's not what? But then a day later or two days later, we got a box in the mill at our hotel and it had the whole get up. The news producer had even
stenciled an ISIS flag. He sent a sword. He sent a, he went to a prop shop in Austin and sent a severed head and he wanted us to be in Mexico, simulate, severing a head, the reporter, dressed as ISIS and walk across. And I mean, even repeating this is the most ridiculous thing.
“But in Jones's world, that's what was asked and, you know, every day was ridiculous and that ridiculous”
became normalcy. The idea would be to show that the border was so porous that an ISIS member with a flag and a severed head wouldn't even be stopped entering the country. Yes, that was the concept. But it turned out that the border wasn't as porous as we were claiming it to be. Every time every time we went anywhere near the line, there were border patrol agents everywhere. And so finally, because in the chaos of the situation, letting Jones down, being made a fool,
we just happened to find a little stream that looked like it could be the Rio Grande. And we filmed the video in the middle of nowhere. It was not on the border. And we posted that video and we lied. We said we were on the border. The reporter I was with,
“simulated the badding, walked across. And that's what we posted. What kind of traffic did”
that video get? Do you know? Yeah, I mean, overnight, it had over a million views.
Jones went on the show and he said, you know, we have to share this with friends, share this with family. This is proof. This is evidence that the border is open and that there is danger of foot.
Yeah, the video went viral.
seasoned BS artists, devoid of conscience. At this point, you didn't feel good about what
“you were doing to you. No, no, not at all. But again, like I said, it was, there were so many things”
that I distracted myself with. There were so many excuses I made to continue doing it. I felt like there was no way out. I felt like, you know, a lot of the times I don't even think I was, I was thinking at all. The main thing was, how do I do a good job? How do I get the approval of this person? How do I just mitigate those, those blowups? After the trip to Al Paso, you also discovered what might have been a mosque in Juarez surrounded by barbed wire. This was presented as if it's
certainly an ISIS outpost, which you had no evidence of. But then you went on a separate
another trip to an Islamic community, I guess, in Upper New York State. Is it Islamberg? Do I have
that right? Yes, you do. Where you and some reporters went, and it's a community that practiced
“their faith and kind of kept to themselves. When you went up to the entrance, you were told, well,”
you give us your names and we'll, we're going to check out and make sure you're who you say you are. And after that, you were actually visited by people from the New York Joint Terrorism Task Force, who the Islamberg officials had asked to just check you out to make sure that you're not a threat, right? Am I getting this right? Right. So you end up kind of doing these stories. The headlines were Sharia Law Zones confirmed in America, and then the visit from the Joint Terrorism Task Force,
which was just established that you weren't a threat, were treated as being spied upon by the
deep state. The headline was Info Wars, reporters stalked by terrorism task force. Not exactly what happened was. No, Jones told us before we went there, you know, he had this idea that he wanted us to do this tour around the country to go to these, what he called the American Caliphate to spread this fear about Islam in America. So we were sent to Islamberg. This time we actually gathered information that went directly
against what we had pre-supposed. We spoke to the mayor of deposit, which was the closest town. We spoke to the sheriff. So we spoke to the officials in the area who had direct connection with those people. And they all said, they were friendly, they were great community members, their kids went to school together, they invited them over for holiday parties. There was a single thing that they were suspicious of, or that they felt that those people had done wrong,
or anything. And we did not report that. We took a little clip out of context of the sheriff, where he was saying, yeah, they shoot guns up there. They have like a summer program for kids, which in any other circumstance, Jones and the majority of the people that listened to him would be all for. But because they were Muslims, it was just the most horrifying, terrifying thing that they could possibly imagine. And we reaffirmed those beliefs. We continued that narrative.
We didn't talk about the things that we found. I mean, there was no point even going there. We were just saying the stuff that Jones was saying on his show before we ever went. But in Jones's world, it was all about making things look cinematic. And so we would go out there, we would shoot videos, and almost like a, almost like vise news. Like we were in the weeds. We were showing what was really going on. Join us with a content where you get to see what's actually
happening. But it was all nonsense. It was all ice. Well, I'm a lot older than you. And I can,
“I wouldn't want to be judged by the dumbest things I've done in my 20s. I mean, I think when you're”
that age, you're trying to, you know, please, people that are decades older than you. And that's what they tell you what to do. And it's, you tend to respect authority in trying to a good job, like yes. Yeah, I think that's, that's a big part of the reason why I know. It's a big part of the reason why I wrote this book. I look back on those things. And I think I don't want to be a person that just moves on from it and doesn't take accountability, because then I don't feel like
you can grow. And I would love to grow. I would love to continue growing. I would love to be a better person. And so I just felt like I needed to clear things up for myself. Why was I there? Why did I do these things? Why did I stick around for so long? I don't have all the answers now. But I think exploring it and asking those questions and taking accountability was just sort of part of the process.
I want to take another break here.
the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine. We'll talk more after this break. This is fresh air. Support for fresh air comes from W. H. Y. Presenting the pulse, a weekly podcast about health and science. Each episode is full of great
“stories and big ideas fueled by curiosity and wonder. Can you learn to listen to your intuition?”
What should he let your cars sound like? Why can it be so hard to get an accurate diagnosis? How do fungi communicate? Check out the pulse available where you get your podcasts. This is fresh air and our guest is Josh Owens who spent four years in his 20s working as a video editor and field producer for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his media enterprise info wars. His memoir is the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones
conspiracy machine. You know one thing you don't write much about in the book which would loom large in the broader Alex Jones story was the horrific shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. That happened just a few months before you joined Johns. How aware were you of his and other info wars hosts comments about Sandy Hook during the time you were there? It happened in that exact liminal space between me being offered the job and
“me starting the job and I think you know if I'm being honest so much of my mind was just focused”
on moving to a new place and I wasn't paying attention to those things. The reason I don't write
much about that in the book is because I didn't really have much connection with that. I never
worked on reports about Sandy Hook. I really didn't even notice the gravity of it until it started you know Hillary Clinton called Jones out in the 2016 election and she said you know how dark to someone's heart have to be to tell the stories that Jones did to spread those narratives. You would think most people would hear that and they would be horrified by it but Jones was literally prancing around the office calling himself dart cart but it wasn't till that was
you know there were people covering that story talking to the family members. They were recounting
“their experiences that I realized the gravity of that situation and you know looking back at it I think”
how many instances are we not seeing where that occurred because if Jones said everything was a false flag if Jones made his listeners question these things how how many Sandy Hooks are there that maybe won't go to court that maybe won't get the attention how many lives have been affected by his rhetoric. How long did you think about leaving before you actually took the step? Truthfully I dipped in and out of thinking about leaving from pretty early on. The turning point
I guess or at least the beginning of the turning point is that when we went on that Islamberg trip
we were telling lies and making stories up and basically just trying to do a good job for our boss
the social implications be damned and on the flight back there was a woman with a muzzle woman with a young girl in the girl was sitting in my row and she asked if I could move away from the window seat and give her the window seat and so I said yes and I remember sitting there watching her and it sounds so like cheesy but it was just this moment of like she's she could be living in that community these people didn't do anything they they there's no reason for suspicion it's just
racism and it doesn't matter if we shoot a good report it doesn't matter if Jones is happy why did they care if I was in that situation I could care less if someone was getting a bonus or you know fulfilling their you know having a good career who cares about that when real people are being affected and it was just a shift it was a small shift it's not like I it's not like after that I changed everything and all of a sudden became a good person or started to do the right thing
but it did start to make me look at things a little bit differently how did Alex Jones respond when he actually gave notice I thought I'd looked out and I didn't give notice to him directly
but he called me shortly after and he offered me the world you know first he tried to understand
in in his own way you know I don't like what I'm doing either is what he said you know I don't want to do this either I don't want to do this anymore and he said you don't want to come into the office work remotely well send you reports to do you don't ever even have to come in I know it's a crazy atmosphere you don't even have to worry about it you want me to you know fund a feature length film
For you I'll do it I'll do it I'll double your pay and I you know it was so s...
by that point money was the least of my concerns so I said no and then he got angry and started go he went on the stiotribe about negativity and you know if you focus on the negativity you let it rot in your brain and it's like shooting negative bullets into a negative wall I had no idea
“what he was talking about but I think he was just trying to get me to stay he made it seem like he”
cared about me but I think ultimately it was just about him losing control he didn't want to lose
control of someone that had been so close to him for that long and someone he depended on and relied upon you did depositions for the sandy hook defamation trial to assist the parents in their case you went on camera in the HBO documentary the truth versus Alex Jones and you wrote a story for the New York Times magazine kind of with some of the stories that you've told us today just describing your experience it's interesting that when the magazines fact checkers reached out and contacted
Alex Jones then he knew what you were up to he wrote you and what did he say yeah so initially what I had when he found out that I was not under his control anymore I guess was when Ronson had released the episode of our meeting our secret meeting at the inauguration where I told him a story for this American life and that outreach was hey Josh hope you're doing well and he sent me this voice memo that was like very you know it was it was his manipulative propensity was on
“full display it was you know if you need to do this to make yourself feel better I understand I”
know it would have been you know I understand it was hard living in Austin around these people and so if it makes people like you better it makes you feel better I guess that's okay he's like I know you're a smart guy I care about you but you know I'm just not going to be your villain but then when the New York Times piece came out he sent me two messages the first message was I'm going public which I didn't know what he was talking about and the next message was I hope you have good
legal representation and that's the last I ever heard of him how long was that that was in 2019 okay so quite since then you know I should note that you mentioned John Ronson wrote a did piece for this
American life I commend that to listeners it's an amazing story about Alex Jones and his his
“origin story him in high school and how he ended up in Austin and I won't try and summarize it but it”
is a fascinating story we need to take a break here let me reintroduce you we are speaking with Josh Owens his book is the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine well continue by conversation and just a moment this is fresh air if you're a super fan of fresh air with Terry Gross we have exciting news double UHYY has launched a fresh air society a leadership group dedicated to ensuring fresh air's legacy for over 50 years this program
has brought you fascinating interviews with favorite authors artists actors and more as a member of the fresh air society you'll receive special benefits and recognition learn more at WHYY.org/freshair society this is fresh air and we're speaking with Josh Owens he spent four years in his 20s working for Alex Jones and his media company Info Wars his new book is the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones conspiracy machine you know what are talking about Alex Jones today you
know he you know the parents of the Sandy Hook kids soon bringing a defamation claim against Jones and his businesses and there were trials in Texas and Connecticut and ended up with judges
finding Jones liable for defamation and imposing financial judgments of one and a half billion
dollars against him now that was in 2022 nearly four years ago but he's still around in fact I went on the internet just recently I found this big brother mainstream media government cover ups you want to stop tyranny will so does he lie from the Info Wars dot com studios it's Alex Jones so he still has the you know the show he he has a podcast he has a video streaming program on YouTube he's still selling his supplements
and other merchandise get you explained like how it is after these enormous judgments and losing this case in court he's still doing what he does oh can I explain it um no it's absurd to me that
He's still doing it you know Jones says that he's going to be shut down soon ...
times I just don't trust anything he has to say when Jones was originally de-platformed he was taking off of all social media I think a lot of people wipe their hands of him they said oh great he's gone then the Sandy Hook trials happened this unprecedented judgment and they said okay great he's gone and he's not gone and I can say here with confidence as long as he's alive
he will never be gone you know I contacted one of the attorneys for the for the Connecticut
families Chris Maddie yeah because I was interested in how is he still on the air and what he explained was that Jones and his company declared bankruptcy and the bankruptcy court was supposed to work out how they were going to seize his assets and liquidate and distribute them but then the bankruptcy court somehow couldn't do it in part because Jones wasn't cooperative and so the they kind of watched their hands of it and so Texas state courts are now involved they've appointed a
receiver that is in the process of identifying the assets and apparently has decided that for the moment info wars is generating income income which could be a benefit to the families but
I think the intent is that at some point he would be stripped of his ability to do what he does
“I don't know if that's gonna happen or not but that's why he's still broadcasting four years after”
the settlement right yeah I mean look out I'm I don't know the legalities of everything but I feel confident in saying that he might be stripped of info wars he might be stripped of that name he might be stripped of his current office but he isn't going to be stripped of his voice yeah it's been more than a decade since you went to work for for Alex Jones but today you know there's this big trend of young people particularly young men embracing hateful conspiracy theories I wonder
if you have any insight from your own experience why that might be well from my experience it came at an opportune time it made the world feel more exciting for me it was movies Jones had this cinematic world view he described the world in terms of you know Sydney Lumets network and
“John Carpenter they live in every Stanley Kubrick movie and I was just a guy who that's how I”
communicated that's how I saw the world that's how my being my friends talked growing up I was in film school I was learning about it and it was just you know boom it got me there are a hundred of other ways that Jones is getting people he's much more of a overt now in his racism and his sexism having people on like Nick Fuentes so in some sense you know there's the yeah I don't know much about it but the loneliness epidemic with men there's there's entitlement there's privilege and
Jones sort of creates this world where like hey you don't have to apologize for who you are you not to apologize for what you do you don't have to learn you don't have to grow listen to me you know we're gonna take over the world that seems to be his narrative now it's all this
why identity stuff which before if I ever heard him talk about that stuff I never would have
gotten sucked into his world but now it just seems to be this turning tide of anger and rage you're in your mid 30s now right um oh mid to late okay on 36 what is that what is I tried to do the math once 37 okay you got a lot of years ahead yeah where do you see your life
“going well first off I hope lucky enough that a lot of years ahead of me right now my life is good”
I'm surrounded by friends and family and you know I spent years working on this stuff and I remember an interview with David Sedaris where he said one of the reasons that he wrote was that he wanted the world to love his mother as much as he did and in the most difficult times in writing this book I kind of thought the same thing I thought I want the world to love my partner as much as I do because she was so I mean how lucky am I to have been someone who was surrounded by
you know was with a person who cared about them and and and and and and what asked questions and not push and even when she had every right to that's this is not prescriptive I'm not saying you know people who are with someone that buys in a conspiracy theories you know stick around but I'm just incredibly grateful that she did but I am in the place I am now because of people because of people like Lacy because people like John Ronson and I'm happy I like writing
I'm working on another book now that has nothing to do with Alex Jones so yeah fingers cross
There many years left and they are nothing like the previous tons I wish you ...
thanks for speaking with us well thank you so much for having me on it's a real honor
“Josh Owens' book is the madness of believing a memoir from inside Alex Jones's conspiracy”
machine to keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews
follow us on Instagram @npr for a share fresh air fresh air's executive producer is Sam Brigger
“our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham with additional engineering support from”
Adam Stanachewski our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Philis Myers and Marie
Baldonato Lauren Crenzel Theresa Madden Monique Nazareth they a challenger Susan Yacundee
“and Abalman and Nico Gonzalez-Wisler our digital media producer is Molly Sivian Espert”
referred a show rock directs the show for Terry Gross Antonio Mosley I'm Dave Davies



