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It doesnât take long into our conversation before Jon Ronson and I are discussing whether Donald Trump is a psychopath. The author and journalist is the right man to ask, after all, given his 2011 bestseller The Psychopath Test was a global sensation that remains a ubiquitous presence on bookshelves to this day. âMy answer to this,â says Ronson, chatting over Zoom from his home in upstate New York, âis when you look at Trump, whatâs going on under the surface? Are there a lot of emotions? A lot of wounds that wonât heal? If thatâs the case, heâs probably a narcissist. If whatâs going on under the surface is nothing, then that kind of makes him a psychopath. The outward manifestation of psychopathy and narcissism is quite similar but it feels like thereâs a volcano of emotions going on underneath Trumpâs surface.â
For the book, Ronson â whoâs also written about cancel culture in So Youâve Been Publicly Shamed, and terrorists and racists in Them: Adventures with Extremists â immersed himself in the world of psychopathy. He visited the most dangerous units of Broadmoor Hospital to interview patients, and found himself in the gauche Florida mansion of a once prominent CEO, as he explored the idea of how the cutthroat corporate world rewarded psychopathic behaviours, such as lying and deceit, lack of empathy, lack of remorse or guilt, egocentricity and a grandiose sense of self-worth.
Ronsonâs 2011 study went on âa journey through the madness industryâ, using psychologist Robert D Hareâs famous checklist to identify psychopaths. Now, itâs a subject heâs returning to again for a UK-wide tour, as he asks âDo psychopaths rule the world?â while reopening the case âwith exclusive anecdotes and fresh reflections, taking you on a thrilling exploration of madness and the elusive psychopathic mindâ.
So, 13 years on from publication, whatâs the enduring fascination for him? âItâs just so interesting,â he says, in his distinct, softly spoken voice, with those trademark round spectacles meeting my gaze. âFor instance, this idea that of all the mental disorders, the one that weâve decided to promote as a society is the very worst one. If you were going to choose a mental disorder to make society go around, to make the world turn, you wouldnât want to choose psychopathy but yet we reward psychopathic traits. Thatâs fascinating.â
Ronson will also be exploring the huge spike in self-diagnosis in mental health. âIt used to be that we would diagnose each other with disorders as a way of stigmatising that person, but that feels like itâs really changed,â he says. âThereâs a huge amount of self-diagnoses going on, of things like trauma, ADHD and autism, which I want to talk about. When is that a good thing? When is that a bad thing? When does an expansion of mental health diagnoses benefit society? And when does it cause problems? Which I find interesting because I donât have a strong ideological position on this. Sometimes itâs a really good thing, sometimes itâs bad.â
One of the other huge changes to have taken place, culturally and societally, since the publication of Ronsonâs original book, is the insatiable appetite for true crime stories that has taken hold. Is there a danger this kind of subject matter can feed into the more unpleasant end of this? âIâm just so aware of that stuff that Iâm not worried,â he says. âI feel very confident that I get it tonally right. But I agree with you. Some of these true crime podcasts are just so gleeful. They love all the blood and the gore. This [psychopath tour] isnât like that at all.â
However, it does make Ronson pause for a moment to reflect on his own contributions to this. He seems a little uneasy thinking about his 2019 podcast series, The Last Days of August, which covered the suicide of the adult industry worker August Ames. âIn many ways, it was a critique of true crime podcasting,â he says. âBut, you know, maybe that slid a little too close to comfort for my ethical likings. August only died a couple of months before I started making that show and there I was poking around in peopleâs lives so soon after she died. So even though that show was really careful not to fall into those true crime podcasting traps, itâs still possible to do it.â
Ronson can draw a connecting line between our grisly obsession with true crime, and amateur sleuths, with the way people operate online. âItâs kind of like Twitter, in that weâre taking fragments of bits of information about somebody and then drawing an entire narrative about that person,â he says. âWhich is very wrong. Itâs a very bad thing to do.â Is there a direct correlation between the way people behave on social media and in real life, does Ronson feel? âI wouldnât say social media promotes a lack of empathy but it certainly promotes a highly selective empathy,â he says. âAnd also, things like pathological lying. I think thatâs another big change to society. Just think of the millions of public figures now who are accused of transgressions and theyâre just unapologetic. Aspects of psychopathic behaviour are becoming more and more acceptable in our society, not just among our leaders, but among the general public too.â
With people leaving Twitter/X in droves and with less of a centralised platform to gather on, Ronson is beginning to feel like some of social mediaâs clout and influence may be on the downturn. âI think itâs losing power in a lot of ways,â he says. âI mean, X is just a mess. If you click the âfor youâ tab instead of the âfollowingâ tab, itâs just snuff videos. Videos of white people beating up Black people, and the caption is, âHe f***ed around and found out.â Death videos. Videos of people getting hit and killed by cars. I mean, Jesus Christ. Thatâs X now. I never thought Iâd say this, because of all the good that Twitter used to do, but Iâll actually be relieved if X collapses at this point.â
Twitter/X has become, for Ronson, a place with no redeeming features left. âThose positive things donât really seem to happen anymore,â he says. âItâs just videos of people being maimed or killed, and lies. The one positive thing thatâs come from it is that itâs defanged the worst side of left-wing publishing, where you might have a main character figure with hundreds of thousands of followers who can instigate a pile-on. That doesnât really exist anymore because everybodyâs fled. Those people have moved to [invite-only X alternative] Bluesky and that doesnât have the power. But whatâs taken its place is this gross right-wing public shaming. All the years they were going on about how terrible cancel culture is and the minute they had the power, they did the same.â
He compares the exodus to a scene that his friend, the documentary filmmaker Adam Curtis, predicted. âAt the beginning of Twitter, Adam said to me that itâs going to create an internet thatâs going to be like a John Carpenter movie,â he says. âAll of these warrior gangs yelling at each other and then, just like in those John Carpenter movies, most people are going to want to leave to the safe suburbs where people are nice to each other. He said that to me in about 2009 and it sort of feels that thatâs where we are now.â
While I may have been expecting a somewhat diplomatic response from such a seasoned journalist as Ronson, when I ask him his views on the man behind Twitter/X, he simply cannot hide his disdain for Elon Musk. âHe just epitomises despicability,â he says. âJust the other day, heâs standing next to Trump and he says if Kamala wins the next election this will be the last election and that heâs genuinely worried thereâll never be another one. Iâm just like, f*** off with that scaremongering bulls***.â And donât get him started on another area of Muskâs cultural impact. âHave you seen those cyber trucks?!â he exclaims, animated and angry. âHave you seen what they look like in the flesh? God, itâs like a civil war. Itâs all totally signalling like a sort of f***-you swagger.â
So, Musk is not someone Ronson would be interested in as a subject to sit down with? âIâm going to make a third season of Things Fell Apart,â he says of his culture-wars podcast. âAnd Iâve been thinking about Elon Musk as somebody who I could explore for that. But Iâm not entirely sure. Maybe we all know what we think about him and thatâs enough. I listened to a couple of biographies on him and I want to try to surprise people but I didnât find anything about Musk that we donât already know.â
As someone who has spent a prolonged period of time submerged neck-deep in a world of conspiracy theories, culture wars, and generally some of the more perturbing, nefarious and baffling aspects of the modern world that we occupy, rather than feeling burned out or despondent, Ronson appears to be clinging onto hope. âIn terms of America, I feel, in the long run, a bit more optimistic,â he says. He thinks the provocative right-wing mega troll types, who over the years have emerged and run rampant from the darkest depths of the internet, may be waning. âIâm not sure how sustainable it is, honestly,â he says. âI wouldnât be surprised if it goes out of vogue because I think people are getting sick of division wherever itâs emanating from.â
He also feels we may be about to see a generational attitudinal shift come into play. As someone who has witnessed his sonâs formative teenage years at the same time heâs documented the culture wars, Ronson has seen this up close. âYounger kids are coming up now and I donât think they are as involved in these things as their older siblings,â he says. âI remember thinking when So Youâve Been Publicly Shamed (2015) came out that the young were creating a set of rules for themselves that were so stringent and draconian that they wouldnât be able to abide by them themselves. I think younger kids are coming along and seeing these rules that their older siblings created, and theyâre like, f*** that, Iâm not spending my life tiptoeing around a minefield.â
Heâs even veering towards a positive outcome for the upcoming election. âIf I had to put money on it, Iâd say that Kamala is probably going to win,â he says. âI could absolutely be wrong about that, but I just canât bear the thought of another four years of Trump.â
Jon Ronsonâs Psychopath Night is touring across the UK from 12 October. Tickets here.Â