The G Word Begs Americans To Fall Back in Love with Uncle Sam
Adam Conover and President Barack Obama want to unruin the federal government. But they’re not really willing to truly consider that it’s too big and too wasteful.

The confused and muddled messaging of The G Word, a six-part Netflix documentary miniseries about federal government bureaucracies hosted by Adam Conover and produced by former President Barack Obama, is well illustrated toward the end of the very first episode.
Conover has spent much of the episode explaining how the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) works and its role in monitoring our food supply. He takes viewers to a meat processing plant for an explanation of the relationship between USDA inspectors and domestic meat suppliers, heavily weighted toward the importance of having the federal government overseeing the process.
When Conover visits a supermarket, though, the episode shifts and explains the less savory side of the USDA. Conover notes how federal crop subsidies distort the natural food marketplace, line the pockets of wealthy agricultural corporations, and contribute to a flood of cheap but unhealthy junk food.
"It sure feels like the government's mission to help farmers is getting in the way of its mission to help eaters," he says. "Especially since the same USDA that keeps agriculture afloat is also responsible for crafting the dietary guidelines that advise us what to eat. I wonder if that's a little bit of a conflict of interest." It is, of course.
Conover knows that junk food is junk, even if it's delicious, regardless of whatever food pyramids the government may shove in front of us. And he says so, but as he's opining in the checkout line, he complains, "Every article and ad tells us that the key to healthy eating is to make better choices. But why is it all on us? Maybe instead of worrying so much about what we choose off the shelves, we should pay more attention to what the government chooses to put on them. Because only it has the power to determine if our food is safe and fit to eat."
Wait, what? Only the U.S. government has the power to determine if our food is safe and fit to eat? He just noted that he has the ability to independently evaluate the quality of the food he's consuming and yet consumes food that he knows is unhealthy because he likes the taste. He knows full well that we have experts completely outside the realm of government who can adequately advise us on healthy eating. And he even just noted that part of the corruption of the USDA's dietary guidance was the result of the government ignoring these experts for the benefit of agriculture interests.
This is the weirdness of The G Word in a nutshell. Across the six 30-minute episodes, released in late May, Conover details what various federal agencies do and notes how they frequently fail to do what we need them to do. Nevertheless, the purpose of The G Word is to sell to viewers that a large and powerful federal government is good and that citizens need it for protection. Essentially, Conover's flipped his typical script and is trying to unruin the government.
Obama appears in just the first and last episode, but his fingerprints are all over the show's sense of technocratic optimism, a consistent belief that government is supposed to be big and broad and deployed to serve our best interests, whatever those might be. There's an emphasis on what I call the imaginary "we," a familiar refrain of Obama's presidency: the insistent and utterly mistaken belief that "we" all largely want similar things from our government. We do not.
To the extent that the federal government fails or struggles, the show largely lays the blame on two factors—outside corporate manipulation and reductions in funding and staffing. In the second episode, the show calls out AccuWeather's attempts to restrict public access to National Weather Service data so that it can profit off providing them, a very specific claim of meddling. But when talking about the many, many failures of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), it's somewhat vaguely attributed to differing goals and agendas of the various organizations under the agency's umbrella and funding being unfairly distributed based on the political power of differing states (also known as democracy in action).
The funniest moment in the series comes not from the various attempts at humorous sketches. The segment that presents the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) as a parody of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is cringe-inducing to the very edge of unwatchability. The only time I laughed out loud was purely unintentional. At one point, when explaining FEMA's failures to adequately respond to the needs of Puerto Ricans in the wake of Hurricane Maria in 2017, Conover blames "red tape," which he then describes as "the archnemesis" of government. If I had been drinking, I would have done a spit-take here.
While the show is happy to get specific about corporate malfeasance in attempts to capture and control government, it treats the excesses of government bureaucracy as things that just come up out of nowhere and uninvited, like mold growing on bread. The G Word does not in any way approach bureaucracy as itself a form of internal corruption designed to make government more expensive and more powerful in the service of various interested parties that fiscally benefit with contracts and jobs when government is bigger and more intrusive. At no point when the show mentions FEMA's failures in Puerto Rico does anybody mention anything like the federal Jones Act, a deliberately protectionist law that benefits the maritime industry (and its unionized employees) and at the same time makes it extremely expensive to ship anything to the island. It's an example of bureaucracy that is not just some magical evil force showing up out of nowhere. It's there deliberately, and it made it exorbitantly expensive for Puerto Ricans to recover from the disaster caused by the hurricane. Yet, President Joe Biden's administration continues to support it because the maritime unions support it.
Later in the series, Conover expresses confusion that his mother—a public school teacher—was one of those types of people who believed that government is big and wasteful. Rather than tackling any of the many, many, many examples of government being wasteful, The G Word essentially insults the intelligence of the audience by suggesting that the push to shrink the size of government is a modern movement pushed by certain types of people (including think tanks, so presumably Reason falls into this category) as a reaction to the civil rights movement. The G Word says the call for smaller government only really began to build under President Ronald Reagan, shown as an actor performing comically inept surgery on a hunky Uncle Sam.
And while it's true that Reagan did run on the promise of reducing the scope and size of government, federal employment numbers actually increased during his eight years of office, from 2.9 million to 3.1 million. Today's numbers are back down to 2.8 million. Most of the job cuts actually took place under President Bill Clinton (and the show does note that both he and Obama agreed to cutting the size of government), but the data just simply doesn't support the claim that the federal government has actually been reduced in size and scope. If Conover wanted to make the claim that the money going to government isn't being used how it's needed, the problem then lies in the show's unwillingness to explore the reality of the "red tape" or the waste. When the show vaguely references the lack of affordable housing in our cities, it doesn't properly blame it on NIMBYs abusing environmental protection procedures to halt construction or labor unions suing to block projects unless they get a cut of the money but on "anti-housing capitalists," because capitalism apparently somehow hates providing goods in exchange for money?
To its credit, the show is, in a limited sense, willing to explore how federal and local government power is used to cause harm. The DARPA segment discusses the positive private use of drones (to film a wedding) contrasted with our government's deadly deployment of them to assassinate targets in countries we aren't even officially at war with. The G Word even rejects the Obama administration's lackluster undercounting of civilian victims and instead uses independent observer numbers to show how our drone strikes have killed hundreds of unintended targets. (The show, however, stops short of pointing out that the federal government has imprisoned Daniel Hale, the whistleblower who helped reveal how poorly the drone program operated.)
Toward the end, the final 15 minutes of the final episode, The G Word turns its sights toward local government in an attempt to optimistically encourage local election engagement. Here the show notes that this is where, in particular, criminal justice reform needs to take place because most who are serving prison time are in state custody, not in federal prisons. But even here the show is strangely vague, turning to some activists in Philadelphia who were involved in getting District Attorney Larry Krasner elected. But the show apparently no longer has any time to elaborate on why Krasner's election was important or even really explain much of his platform other than a vague reference to reducing cash bail. Krasner doesn't even appear on the show. It doesn't engage with the backlash against progressive district attorneys and their proposed reforms. It doesn't discuss the awkward public safety balancing act that comes from trying to make sure citizens feel safe while also not unnecessarily imprisoning people who would be better served by other systems.
After attributing attempts to reduce the size of government to people with bad intentions, it completely ignores the "Defund the Police" part of the criminal justice reform movement. It doesn't engage with it or attempt to even push the conversation in the direction of getting more mental health and social service experts to respond to certain emergency needs. It just completely ignores it.
On this Independence Day weekend, it's worth noting this series because of the tendency of some people to worship at the altar of big and powerful government as a solution to all our ills even when they absolutely know how frequently it fails, how frequently it hurts people, and how frequently it serves only itself and its friends. There's nothing unusual about Conover (and Obama) thinking that government is failing because it's just somehow not powerful enough or effective enough. It's very American, in fact. But The G Word shows that holding onto this belief that our government isn't funded enough requires completely ignoring huge chunks of what the government does with its money and authority.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
It's part of Netflix continued payoff to Obama for his pushing of net neutrality
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>> https://oldprofits.blogspot.com/
I used to watch and enjoy his cheesy show until he started bringing his ignorant politics into it. Smarmy condescension only works when you're bringing facts, not opinions.
He has been unwatchable from the outset. His interview w Rogan exposed how political and uninformed he actually is.
same, we would throw it on occasionally for a distraction.
He was a disaster on Rogan. When he doesn't have prepared cue cards, he knows nothing and also has very little critical thinking capacity. It was hard to watch him trip all over himself to not offend the wokesters, even when it was obvious common sense stuff (not giving hormones to children)
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job (wbt-05) achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>> http://earncash91.tk
Most people of Millennial age and younger are hilariously ignorant when you take the phones out of their hands. They haven't actually read any books of a higher complexity than dumb YA dystopia fiction, and are so used to just pulling up whatever info they need on Wikipedia that they have no broad base of knowledge.
john had more knowledge in his little toe than Adam or his generational cohort, and that's because he actually read books.
"I used to watch and enjoy his cheesy show until he started bringing his ignorant politics into it. Smarmy condescension only works when you're bringing facts, not opinions."
His appearance on Rogan's podcast should have disabused him of the smarmy nonsense since he knew virtually nothing in that entire episode.
I love that Reason still calls their venerated chocolate messiah "President Barack Obama". It's not just revealing, but unintentionally funny and ironic in a way they likely don't understand.
What do you call a black guy that gets elected president?
Former President, that's what you call him. Funny thing is they often drop the honorific altogether for Republicans.
"Black" or "mixed-race"?
I hate honorifics. Whether or not I voted for a president I'll stick with using just their last name. I get that technically the title holds even after they leave office, but I'm not about to use it either way.
They do the same for "President Ronald Reagan". Interesting that you only complain about the one.
He also called Clinton and Reagan "President" so it's consistent usage
Spend some extratime and chat for free with hot sexy ladies on sextreff tirol
Fuck a Swiss? No thanks, I don't want my dick to hurt when I pee and smell of chocolate.
He may have been bad at it, but he was President and it is rather common to refer to them as President afterwards.
Meh. I agree it's dumb, but it is common journalistic practice and has been for ages. Doesn't bother me too much.
I do find things like calling Hillary "secretary Clinton" pretty obnoxious, though, because that was never a thing for former cabinet members before.
"The G Word essentially insults the intelligence of the audience by suggesting that the push to shrink the size of government is a modern movement pushed by certain types of people (including think tanks, so presumably Reason falls into this category) "
Your going to need to back that statement up with some references. From what I have read over the last 10 years reason has gotten more pro goverment and is now 90% progressive corpratism
They're all for defunding the police though, regardless of how reckless the implementation.
The DARPA segment discusses the positive private use of drones (to film a wedding) contrasted with our government's deadly deployment of them to assassinate targets in countries we aren't even officially at war with
An Obama produced series that does this? Are you shitting me?
https://www.hrw.org/report/2014/02/19/wedding-became-funeral/us-drone-attack-marriage-procession-yemen
What a colossal asshole. I’m sure the Yemeni people appreciate The Lightbringer’s “audacity” in pointing out this contrast.
BTW, good review.
And by the way, FUCK OFF with that whole, "Darpa created the drone program."
That's like the buddy of yours that gave you some advice once and now thinks all your success is due to his genius. It's horse shit. For the record, drones have been developed privately and publicly since WWII. From enthusiasts with RC airplanes, to small university programs, to the DARPA Grand Challenge, there has been funding coming from all over the fucking place.
And by the way, when the chips were down, and kids were being sent to Iraq to be blown up by IEDs, it wasn't DARPA and the Federal Government giving them the Drones they needed to scout out the urban environment. Families were sending soldiers scout drones that they could use locally, purchased from private retailers.
This series does this constantly, as indicated in the article. Did the was the government ever involved in some private product? Anything good about that product is therefore due to the government. Did a private enterprise ever have involvement on a Government program? Every bad thing is therefore due to the private enterprise.
Little known fact: Air traffic control was invented by private industry.
So was home mail delivery.
So was school.
So was the NY subway
And fire departments.
Both of them are colossal assholes, it's astonishing.
The DARPA segment discusses the positive private use of drones (to film a wedding) contrasted with
our government'sObama’s deadly deployment of them to assassinatetargetsTWO AMERICAN CITIZENS in countries we aren't even officially at war with.FIFY
We need experts i charge so that the corporate interests stop asserting so much power. The only thing between us and a return to slavery is a strong and intrusive government telling us what we’re allowed to eat.
Happy 4th of July!
Fuck Joe Biden!
4th of July, Chicago style:
https://chicago.suntimes.com/2022/7/4/23194354/highland-park-fourth-july-parade-gunfire
"the same USDA that keeps agriculture afloat"
Only a damned G-lover could think agriculture would wither away and die if not for government.
I have some sharp words for what the USDA does for agribusiness.
Especially the business of meatpacking. The whole inspector on site and complicated process thing is actually regulatory capture, it makes it very uneconomical to do meat packing on a smaller scale as the inspector cost needs to be amortized over the whole factory.
We've often been at points where we pay a LOT at the grocery store for a poor selection of meat, yet hog farmers are getting such poor prices they are losing money, all because we don't have enough slaughter and meat packing capability. Yet nobody is starting up new meat packing plants, because the barrier to entry is prohibitive.
USDA and regulatory capture have basically broken this market. Thanks Federal Government.
It's a common belief in this country and, I'm guessing, most others: a government institution of long standing blends into the background like a part of nature, and is contrasted with more recent programs which are criticized. So, for instance, the government school teacher who thinks government is big and wasteful, or, "Keep your government hands off my Medicare!"
I recall an in-depth piece in LPNY's newsletter by an activist of longstanding complaining about a temporary measure undertaken after a bridge on the NY Thruway over the Schohairie River fell. The Thruway was diverted onto a temporary access to a nearby road over the river, while local traffic was closed off from that bridge and forced to take a long detour. It's like the Thruway Authority represented big, bad government, while the parallel road was taken as a fact of nature, when in fact the latter was part of the government-provided road network as well.
Not only that but when his mom was a teacher, she very likely was part of a small city or state service. The US Dept of Education wasn't even created until 1980. Prior to that it was the Office of Education combined within the Health and Human services cabinet.
My mother was in the education system at the time, and she too was deeply skeptical of the federal government and its increasingly brazen power grabs of things that she worked hard to create locally.
I remember when Grandpa McCoy was arrested on teevee for trying to fix a hole in a
governmentGovernment road.Maybe someone who has slopped at the public trough for his entire life is not the one to produce a vid regarding that trough.
"Today's numbers are back down to 2.8 million. Most of the job cuts actually took place under President Bill Clinton (and the show does note that both he and Obama agreed to cutting the size of government), but the data just simply doesn't support the claim that the federal government has actually been reduced in size and scope"
This is also untrue. You can't look at the cost of government in Real terms, or the size of Capital City...er, DC and possibly think those numbers are real. Government has figured out how to run multiple functions through contractors, so that it seems like they have a small workforce. But as we have seen in the various executive orders, most of these contractors are nothing but federal employees with a thin veneer of plausible deniability.
Federal, state, and local governments spent about 40% of GDP before the lockdowns, $9T/year, or $30K/citizen; I haven't seen any more recent figures. That's all anyone really needs to measure.
"Every article and ad tells us that the key to healthy eating is to make better choices. But why is it all on us?"
Well there's a line that gives the series whole game away. "Regulate me harder, Big Daddy".
I really fucking hate this guy.
"Why is it all on us?"
Because you're the asshole that has to live with the consequences, asshole. If you want to eat like a pig, get fat, and die of heart failure in your mid-20s, then deal with those choices. It's not somebody else's job to shield you from the consequences of your actions.
But if you WANT to be healthy and happy, get off your ass and get a little daily exercise, and make sure to eat right. Nobody else can exercise for you, and if you trash your own health, you're the one who is harmed and nobody else.
Get the fuck out of here with the idea that we need a government to put us all in insulated plastic bubbles safe from outside harm and not letting us use drugs or eat bacon.
And again, this all assumes that the Government is any good at using The Science! (tm) to identify the best choices for us.
While Shackford rightly points out that this viewpoint is in conflict with their concerns that "Evil corporate interests keep corrupting the government", it cannot be stressed enough that even if we were to create a virtuous, wholly incorruptible government, it wouldn't be enough.
Simply put, even the most seasoned and credentialled expert cannot hold a candle to the computing power of thousands, let alone hundreds of millions of people integrating data specific to their situation in order to make choices.
The internet and government are full of people with the unmitigated arrogance to assume they can choose best for a person thousands of miles away from them. When they break their own rules (as every know-it-all and bureaucrat inevitably does) they have their good reasons for why specific circumstances override the general guidelines they use to pass judgement and even pass laws upon the public.
The government corrupts. If it didn't corrupt, it would still be inferior to the decision making of hundreds of millions of people. And if it weren't inferior, it would still be immoral to force those choices upon people. At every stage, the government is the worst choice.
Simply put, even the most seasoned and credentialled expert cannot hold a candle to the computing power of thousands, let alone hundreds of millions of people integrating data specific to their situation in order to make choices.
Spreading their fake news and misinformation. No thanks.
Even with experts, they have a certain myopia about focusing only on the things they strictly know about. Epidemiologists had a lot of recommendations for the pandemic, but that's because their concern was narrowly tailored to limiting the spread of disease. Of COURSE everyone should be using a high-quality N95 mask. In fact, people should just wear those all the time! And they should limit their exposure to other people, you should never shake hands with anyone, and stay indoors and never go to crowded places at all.
But that's because they don't understand social needs or economics on the broad scale. You make recommendations that people make slight modifications in their behavior, but people aren't going to be wearing masks properly all the time. The more masks get touched, the worse they are. And masks get reused, people sweat on them or drool on them, reducing their efficacy. When you try to scale up something that works in more controlled, limited environments, you introduce variables that you don't account for.
That's why you can't let an expert make decisions for you. They may have a ton of information you don't have, but the greatest expert on my own individual circumstances is me. I may make bad choices, I do it plenty of times, but my choices are still tailored to my own situation. An expert's choices are tailored to a general population.
"Why is it all on us?"
It's called being a grown-up.
And if you reject that responsibility, then you reject all the privileges, like making your own decisions, including voting.
https://twitter.com/JesseKellyDC/status/1543920743263735808?t=BktUQruO40BtH5CjIzyf9g&s=19
Happy Independence Day. Remember, we didn’t gain independence with a piece of paper. We gained independence because brave men went and shot people in the face.
Freedom is earned.
[Flag gif]
https://twitter.com/mkolken/status/1542838128846700545?t=eaJPB3m7BD1wp8bRlMqmEQ&s=19
The 2nd Amendment was specifically designed as a safeguard against the Liberal World Order.
AKA kings, despots, popes, bureaucrats, and oligarchs.
https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/34186311/baseball-barbecue-losing-freedom-fourth-july
https://twitter.com/Amy_Siskind/status/1543684090179846144?t=KImLJ_f8kA1QZIjnHOGHIg&s=19
The state of our country for this year’s July Fourth
[Leftist meme]
https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/dutch-protesters-pour-manure-government-offices-over-industry-killing-regulations
https://twitter.com/WeAreProtestors/status/1543625058123673602?t=CrbkQY43aXGitQ3R2CZAzw&s=19
The #Netherlands is deploying armored vehicles against farmers who plan to blockade the country's airports, ports and distribution centers on Monday. Army trucks may also be mobilized.
#DutchFarmers #Dutch #FarmersProtest #boerenopstand #Boerenprotest #boerenprotesten
[Video]
Lessons from Canadistan.
https://twitter.com/WeAreProtestors/status/1543917057502105602?t=cijW53mu1mpCvjUMFqyPlA&s=19
Dutch farmers block border with Germany with piles of manure as they bring the country to a standstill in protest against ridiculous "green policies".
#DutchFarmers #FarmersProtest #boerenopstand #Boerenprotest #Farmersdefenceforce #boerenprotesten #boerenzakdoek #boerenterreur
[Video]
This stuff happens when the government has no fear of its citizenry.
https://twitter.com/MenuKaktus/status/1543953755040784384?t=KeHnuekrDsqjFWU-hDRbvA&s=19
Staff of blocked distribution center hands out coffee and cookies to the #DutchFarmers. #Boerenprotest #DutchUprising
[Link]
"Wait, what? Only the U.S. government has the power to determine if our food is safe and fit to eat?" Sooo... where was Scott when GOVERNor Ronald Ray-Gun signed the law making it illegal to eat acid? Now that the long shadow of deadly enforcement falls across sprinkled donuts, awareness alluva sudden glimmers faintly. The G-word is Government Gunmen, just like it was then.
Why does Conover strike me as the type of male feminist that gets caught trapping women in bathrooms and forcing them to watch him masturbate?
He's definitely the kind of dork who invited bullying through his passive-aggressive behavior.
https://twitter.com/Gitabushi/status/1543608141279105024?t=U08No2HoWyEAayr3s-eb8w&s=19
Here's the thing.
The Left's end-goal is NOT everyone having an electric car.
Their end goal is ONLY the Elite having private transportation. You will take public transportation or bike everywhere you might want to go.
If you're lucky, there might be trains available.
Might.
Ha! As if you will have time to go anywhere after tending your home garden, repairing your own infrastructure, and filling out your daily government forms.
"Maybe instead of worrying so much about what we choose off the shelves, we should pay more attention to what the government chooses to put on them. Because only it has the power to determine if our food is safe and fit to eat."
Spoken like a good house nigger, er, dinger.
I can only assume this can be summarized as "Government is good!... (brought to you by commies)"
Who would thought President "Phone and Pen" would be behind a documentary fellating the bureaucratic state?
The fact that this unwarrantedly smug dickhead is on a show with Barry O'Bizzle is proof enough that it's a "skip it."
You'd think that President Choom would want to avoid any mention of drones and weddings, but it's not like he has even a modicum of a moral sense.
-jcr
"Adam Conover and President Barack Obama want to unruin the federal government."
I quit reading Reason's propaganda right there. Obama did more damage to the federal government than any other president, and Biden continues it. Corrupting and weaponizing the IRS, DOJ, and FBI. Using the power or the federal government to harass and arrest political opponents. It is disgusting.
Obama contributed greatly to the distrust of government. Unintentionally, of course, but his heavy handedness in forcing acceptance of his moral worldview and intolerance of dissent fostered real and justified resentment.
I doubt it was unintentional. He weaponized the IRS against his political opponents. How can that be unintentional?
For the life of me I cannot comprehend the love of government; and I've seen it across the spectrum, including those who are otherwise very successful, they cannot imagine life without an overlord to make us all behave according to their beliefs and values.
Ok, so I just answered my own question...
Join Shemale Sexchat and have fun with girls!
No.
Just continuing the proud tradition begun by Michael Moore of starting with a conclusion (in this case big government is good) and then only reporting that evidence.
Sounds like a massive waste of whatever the running time is. Thanks for the warning.