Chapter 06

Three Million Doors

Full Transcript · Series Finale

The night Zohran Mamdani won, a hundred thousand neighbors had knocked three million doors. This is how the movement got there — and how I finally stopped watching from the sideline.

This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity. Some filler words and false starts have been removed. Archival audio clips are noted where they appear.

Act One
Create and Capture
Sounds of Cafe Reggio.
Tim Donovan Archival

What is upppp?!

Tim Donovan Archival

Hey, how you doing?

Asad Dandia Archival

Sorry, I was trying to come as fast as I could

Tim Donovan Archival

Don’t worry about it.

Asad Dandia Archival

Yeah, I want to get something. You said you got the affogato, right?

Tim Donovan Archival

I did. It was quite good

Asad Dandia

My name is Asad Dandia. I am a public historian, a tour guide, and a university lecturer.

Asad Dandia Archival

On my tour that I was doing earlier today, one of the undergrads was like, How does it feel that you helped Mamdani become the mayor?

Asad Dandia Archival

And I told him, I still haven’t processed it, like it doesn’t feel like it’s real. Feels like a dream, you know, a fever dream. And maybe it’ll hit me soon, right, but right now it just… I haven’t even sat down in the process it yet, man. And you know this city in particular… moves so damn fast that sometimes you can’t even process things. You just have to go with it, man.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Welcome to “The People’s Republic of Astoria.” This is Episode 06: “Three Million Doors.”

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

It’s also the series finale.


Asad Dandia

I want you, I want you as a listener to picture yourself as an 18 or 19 year old community college student who spends your weekend doing charity or mutual aid work. Your weekends are literally spent delivering rice and beans to poor families all across the New York City area with your homies. And one of those homies comes out to confess that they were a police agent sent to surveil you, your community, your family, and your social circle.

Asad Dandia

What goes through your mind? Who are you going to call? You can’t call the police, they’re the perpetrators. You’re a child of immigrants, you can’t tell your parents, your parents are gonna panic. Our parents would panic if we came home with a “B” on our report card. Imagine telling your parents, like, ‘Mom, I was spied on.’ (Laughs).

Asad Dandia

So the year is late 2011, early 2012, and the idea was very, very, very simple.

Asad Dandia

A bunch of us, and we’re all like late teenagers, 18, 19 years old, some of us are even younger, 15 or 16, all of us pooling together 10 bucks each for our allowances or internships. And every Friday, we go to Costco and buy cereal and rice and mostly non-perishable stuff. And we deliver them to people that we knew needed help.

Asad Dandia

One young man sent me a DM on Facebook in March of 2012 saying he wants to get involved with our charity work.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

His name was Shamiur Rahman. And what Asad didn’t know at the time was that he was an undercover informant for the NYPD.

Asad Dandia

This is back when young people are using Facebook, right? This is pre-TikTok.

Asad Dandia

And I happily invited him to my neighborhood and to my friends group. And we had halal Chinese food together, and I introduced him to all my friends.

Asad Dandia

And he stayed with, you know, me and my friends for eight or nine months until at some point he confesses on facebook that he was an informant from the NYPD sent to spy on me and my community.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Shamiur Rahman was a part of the NYPD’s so-called “mosque crawlers,” program. He’d been trained on “create and capture” techniques, where informants were instructed to, quote, “create” conversations about politically radical topics with unsuspecting Muslims, and then, “capture” the exchanges in reports back to the cops.

Asad Dandia

And we were all completely shaken by it. Our entire community was rattled.

Asad Dandia

You don’t know who to speak to about these things.

Asad Dandia

You have no recourse.

Asad Dandia

And so I didn’t know what to do!

Asad Dandia

Word gets out to the press. Press puts out some articles on it.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Just a few weeks later, Asad got a phone call from the American Civil Liberties Union.

Asad Dandia

And I told them my story and at the end of it they were like, ‘we’re working on a class action lawsuit to sue the NYPD for what they did to you and our community and we want you to be a plaintiff.’

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

This was entirely new territory for Asad.

Asad Dandia

In my mind, I’m like, what? Like, what in the world? Just bear in mind, look, I had never met an attorney in my life up until that point, or at least not a civil rights attorney, right? All the adults I knew were like bodega guys or construction workers or quintessential blue collar New York jobs.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But Asad decided to sign on anyway.

Asad Dandia

So our lawsuit was called Raza versus City of New York.

Asad Dandia

And just to be clear for our listeners, we did not sue for money. We sued for policy change. We did the noble thing. If we sued for money, I probably wouldn’t be here right now. I’d be in the Bahamas vacationing. (Laughs)

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

When Asad Dandia was approached by the ACLU about joining their lawsuit as a named co-plaintiff, he had a choice: to fight back against his city’s own police force, or to let the situation pass him by…

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Let others step up and do the work.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Fighting the NYPD would come with real consequences.

Asad Dandia

So they started to go after my friends. And at the time I had an undocumented friend who was basically abducted or arrested from his home, taken to a detention center. And they quite literally tried to deport him. They asked about me and I feel like they really really shook him up.

Asad Dandia

It’s three weeks later and he tells me about his experience, and he makes a request of me after that, he says, you know, we might have to part ways. And I’m wondering why. And basically it’s because he’s worried they might come after him again because of his affiliation with me. It wasn’t personal, but he had to protect his family.

Asad Dandia

I said, of course, like, I’m not going to coming between you and your family,

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Just a week after the lawsuit was announced, Asad, his mother and sister were getting off a plane at JFK airport, headed back from a short pilgrimage to Mecca. Federal agents were waiting for them there.

Asad Dandia

Yeah my mom was the bravest person in that room because she demanded a phone call to call my dad who was outside. So my dad didn’t make the trip with us.

Asad Dandia

She also demanded that she be present when they go through our luggage. And I remember telling her to like relax and calm down. And she was like, no, you don’t know what they can do. They can plant a bomb in there and say that we did it, right? I need to be there as I go through our luggage. And a really brave thing for her to do and her request was granted. We got to watch them go through our luggage to make sure they’re like planting anything in there.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

In March of 2017, the City of New York and the ACLU agreed to settle the lawsuit, enacting a number of structural reforms to the way NYPD operates.

Asad Dandia

One of the policy changes we got was the elimination of the radicalization report. This was a report that basically claimed to identify signs of radicalization among Muslims. And among those signs were like wearing a hijab, growing out your beard, going sober, discussing politics, right? You know, everyday facets of people’s lives, right, were deemed suspect.

Asad Dandia

And that’s really the story of how I changed New York City policy in my early 20s before I got my first full-time job.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Seven years later, in 2024, Asad would join the inner circle of advisors for a young mayoral candidate. A 32-year-old muslim democratic socialist named zohran mamdani.

Act Two
The Last Shift
Ambient crowd sounds fade in.
Magdalena Moranda Archival

Hi everyone! Welcome to the beautiful People’s Republic of Astoria! (Cheering)

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

In the summer of 2025, after Andrew Cuomo lost to Mamdani in New York’s democratic primary for mayor, the former three-term governor of New York announced his intention to run in the general election as an independent. With Curtis Sliwa on the Republican line, it would be a three-way race for the mayor’s office.

Magdalena Moranda Archival

I’m Magdalena, I’m one of your field leads today—

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

In June, Zohran Mamdani had shocked the world with his upset victory. And in a matter of weeks, I’d set out to document the experience — to chronicle the short history of the movement that made this moment possible.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Now, with August arriving in New York, the general election season was finally gearing up.

Magdalena Moranda Archival

Welcome, I’m so happy that so many of you it’s your first time canvasing ever. This makes me so happy, this is so many people.

Kyle Huey Archival

Who’s first time is it, raise your hand?

Loud cheers
Kyle Huey Archival

Nice

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Magdalena Moranda was running the campaign’s first canvas in Astoria. There were at least sixty people there that day to volunteer.

Magdalena Moranda Archival

We call it “The People’s Republic of Astoria” for a reason. We’re repped by a socialist at every level of government.

Magdalena Moranda Archival

I wanted to introduce our amazing city councilmember, Tiffany Caban.

Cheers
Tiffany Cabán Archival

What’s up y’all?

Tiffany Cabán Archival

It’s the general election, we’re riding high, cuz our boy Zohran won the primary…

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

After losing a heartbreaking race to become Queens District Attorney by just 55 votes, Caban knew a thing or two about what it felt like to come up short in an election. She didn’t plan to let history repeat itself.

Tiffany Cabán Archival

We are not — y’all seen those track videos, where like, the runner is beating the crowd and then, before they get to the finish line, they start celebrating and some motherf***er comes up behind them and — (laughs) we’re not letting that happen. All right? Eyes on the prize. We do not win until we cross that general election finish line… and the reason that we don’t take our foot of the gas is also this… we’re not just trying to win. We’re trying to win with a mandate—

Tiffany Cabán Archival

So we’re gonna go hard on the streets, at the door, talking to your neighbors — every chance you get.

Ambient audio from Athens Park fades out.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

As summer came to a close in 2025, the Zohran Mamdani phenomenon was taking New York City by storm.

Newscaster Archival

Let’s turn our attention back to New York right now. And if you don’t know the name Zohran Mamdani, you soon will—

Newscaster Supercut (crossfaded/intercut)

Zohran Mamdani/Socialist Zohran Mamdani

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

As the general election approached, most of the people I’d met on Magdalena’s Thursday canvases in Astoria had graduated to becoming field leads themselves. Now they were running canvases across Queens and Brooklyn.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I didn’t see much of them that autumn, as I skipped week after week of canvasses to work on this podcast instead.

Ambient audio shifts. Typing, quietly, intermittently, in the background. Maybe birds chirping.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

In no time, it’s Sunday, November 2nd, just two days before New York City’s mayoral election. At this point, I’m fully focused on producing Chapter 03, “Fifty-Five Votes.”

Ambient sounds from my office grow louder, more distinct.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

So picture it —

typing sounds
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I’m at my cluttered desk, at home, alone, listening to Shawna Morlock and Luke Hayes talk about their regrets—

Luke Hayes (quietly, with light reverb)

You know, you just go through so many things you should have done.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I’ve been working on this episode all day. All week, really.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Cutting and cleaning tape, I’m slowly constructing the episode around their words. And I keep hearing them talk about how many other doors they wish they’d knocked. How close they almost came.

Shawna Morlock (quietly, with light reverb)

I think every person was like, ‘if I’d just done four more shifts’—

Luke Hayes (quietly, with light reverb)

Part of you is just like… how did this… how did we get so close?

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And I start wondering… why the hell am I still sitting on the sidelines?


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

So I delay the third episode.

Sounds of pre-canvas instructions fade in.
Kyle Huey Archival

Quick run-through of door knocking—

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

That’s Kyle Huey, an Astoria Field Lead for the Zohran Mamdani campaign.

Kyle Huey Archival

You will see a map. You are the blue dot. The houses you are going to are the grey dots. On each house you will see a number. That’s how many people are in that household. Sometimes a household could be 40 people because it’s a big building. Each person should have an apartment number. Some of them don’t. If you can’t find it, mark ‘Not Home,’ move on—

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

He was running the canvas in my neighborhood two days before the general election.

Kyle Huey Archival

If you can, no more than 5 minutes at the door. We’re not here to have 15 minute debates, we’re here to get out the vote.

Tim Donovan Archival

And I have a request. Would any of you be willing to be recorded? Knocking on doors, talking with people. I mean, no pressure if you don’t want to, I’m here to knock doors… but I was hoping…

Kyle Huey Archival

Anyone want to? Going once, going twice— Yeah? Yeah?

Tim Donovan Archival

Awesome.

Tim Donovan Archival

Thank you so much. Just made my day.

Emily (quietly, in background) Archival

Of course, of course.

Tim Donovan Archival

Wait so where we going?

Emily Archival

Oh sorry, just keep going all the way down 37th and then do a loop back up here?

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah I think so right? Yeah I think that’s easy.

Kyle Huey Archival

Some of the apt numbers in Astoria can get a little crazy, so you have to do a little detective work to figure out which building, which stairwell is which one.

Tim Donovan Archival

What’s the first number?

Emily Archival

The first one is… 23-11—

Emily Archival

This is us!

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah, let’s do it.

Kyle Huey Archival

When you’re knocking on a door, I recommend no cop knocks. (Laughs.) People don’t want to answer the door to that. So what I do, I do “bump bump-bump-bump…”

Actual door knocking underlays Kyle’s voice, with just two door knocks completing the “shave and a haircut” call and response.
Neighbor Archival

Hello?

Tim Donovan Archival

Hi, we’re volunteers with the zohran mamdani campaign, you have a moment to talk?

Kyle Huey Archival

Main two questions, I’m just gonna go back over it again: will you pledge to vote for Zohran Mamdani?

Neighbor Archival

Hello!

Tim Donovan Archival

How’s it going?

Neighbor Archival

Hello, I’m definitely already voting for Zohran.

Tim Donovan Archival

Have you already voted?

Neighbor Archival

No, I’m going to go, I think tomorrow..

Tim Donovan Archival

Monday there’s no early voting, so just so you know—

Neighbor

Ok, sweet

Kyle Huey Archival

And do you have — a plan to vote, yes!

Tim Donovan (to himself) Archival

“And what is your plan…”

Kyle Huey Archival

Yes those are the two things, great.

Tim Donovan Archival

The lines are already crazy, just so you’re warned

Tim Donovan Archival

Awesome, so you have a plan…

Neighbor Archival

Yes

Tim Donovan Archival

You know where you vote?

Neighbor Archival

Yes

Tim Donovan Archival

Excellent.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Just a year earlier, in 2024, Asad was getting pulled into the Zohran campaign, too.

Asad Dandia

Zohran and I both knew of each other for a very long time, but we hadn’t yet sat down one of one between the two of us until August of 2024.

Tim Donovan

Do you… do you remember what the purpose of the conversation was?

Asad Dandia

Yeah, so the purpose of my conversation with Zohran that day was explicitly about his ambitions to run for the mayor of New York City.

Asad Dandia

You know, we were both familiar with each other and what we were doing, but we hadn’t really just chopped it up one on one. And that’s very common in New York. You may know of somebody, you may have heard of them, but you haven’t really just sat down for coffee or for bread.

Asad Dandia

And so we had officially and formally sat down to chat in August of 2024.

Asad Dandia

He reached out to me because a lot of my organizing work has centered around Muslim, Arab South Asian communities of New York City.

Asad Dandia

Zohran wanted to get my feedback and my insight on like ‘can you break it down for me?’ right? Like ‘who should I know? Who should I talk to? What should I know? What should my approach be?’

Asad Dandia

You know, in terms of messaging and so on and so forth. And so I can’t recall how long we were sitting. But it was quite a long conversation.

Asad Dandia

And after our conversation he told me that he might be in touch with me to talk about the campaign and less than two weeks or at least two weeks afterwards, he calls me to basically join this kitchen cabinet of his.

Shawna Morlock

So you have something called a kitchen cabinet on campaigns, which is basically like your inner circle of your inner circle.

Asad Dandia

—It’s this informal kind of advisory board or committee, whatever term you want to use, of people who just can offer feedback to the man himself, but also to the rest of the team.

Asad Dandia

And I immediately said yes, I said ‘put me in, coach.’

Asad Dandia

And we took it from there.

Asad Dandia

And then Zohran announces that he’s running for mayor.

Start Katya election day audio.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

On Tuesday, November 4th, 2025, I spent the whole day volunteering for the Mamdani campaign, in the Ditmars neighborhood of Astoria. I got started early.

Kyle Huey Archival

It’s getting people out to vote, it’s getting people excited for it, it’s joyous, we are a joyous campaign. I know it’s early but it’s early for them too, but they’re headed to work so we wanna try to catch them now.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Shawna Morlock was there, too. She’d been roped into helping out that day as a Field Lead.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Not that she was complaining.

Shawna Morlock

Back at Katya’s house, it was like, the vibes were amazing.

Cheering, drumming, laughing. Tone changes to Katya’s house.
Kyle Huey Archival

Amazing. (Laughs.)

Kyle Huey Archival

Thank you all for being here. This is an incredibly joyous occasion.

Drumming
Kyle Huey Archival

We’ve had press and media from France, Africa, from Japan,

Volunteer Archival

—India!

Kyle Huey Archival

From India—

Volunteer Archival

—Italy!

Kyle Huey Archival

—We’ve had volunteers from D.C., from California, from all over the place. And you all are making this happen, and we appreciate you being here—

Cheering, Drumming. Sounds fade.
Asad Dandia

I was there when he didn’t know what his three main policy planks were gonna be.

Asad Dandia

I sat in that room with, I want to say, roughly 10 other people.

Kyle Huey Archival

Make sure you grab a button if you haven’t had one already and put that on… yeah, let’s do it. Let’s go take a photo.

Asad Dandia

…and the only two policy planks that they had at that point were the rent freeze and the fast and free busses.

Kyle Huey Archival

“Freeze the—!”

Voices: “Rent!”
Kyle Huey Archival

“Make buses fast and—!”

Voices: “Free!”
Kyle Huey Archival

“Support universal—!”

Voices: “Childcare!”
Cheers
Asad Dandia (overlaid over cheering)

And I raised my hand, and I said, ‘childcare.’

Asad Dandia

You know, New York is bleeding out families at an exponential rate. And it’s something that I think is crucial for us to emphasize because cities need families. Cities need kids, children. You know, a city is a multi-generational project.

Asad Dandia

My younger sister, she got married, moved out, she has kids, but she can’t like raise them here, you know what I’m saying? Like, and she’s pretty, she’s doing pretty well for herself.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Back at Katya’s house, everyone was having a good time.

Shawna Morlock

You know, snacks were flowing, people were chilling…

Kyle Huey Archival

We are in a home right now, it is Katya’s home. Just to give you an example, Katya has known Zohran for years, so…. We are in the presence of someone who’s been here since the very beginning, so thank you for having us…

Clapping
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

A local Greek-American woman who’s lived in the neighborhood since the mid 1980s, Katya is a pillar of Astoria’s Democratic Socialist movement. On election day, her house was fully transformed into a staging location for the campaign.

Drumming, cheering, back to Katya’s.
Kyle Huey

Make sure you grab a button if you haven’t had you already and put that on the way out… if you absolutely…

Ducked under the next V.O., from Kyle “If you absolutely cannot do door knocking or absolutely do not want to do poll visibility, you cannot stand for a long time and need to move around, let us know on the way out.”
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Hundreds of people passed through Katya’s home that day, to help the campaign win this general election contest.

Shawna Morlock

Everyone was so worn out, and you could feel the exhaustion, but like, it was like those we didn’t know that we were gonna win.

Katya’s house fades out.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

For new volunteers like me, this day was the culmination of ten months of effort — something invigorating and new.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But for more experienced volunteers like Shawna, it was just one more election in a fight that never ends, where the movement — and an individual’s responsibilities within it — never really stop pushing forward.

Shawna Morlock

You know, but in that moment, there was just this… the beauty of coming together, and the solidarity that everyone felt was just stunning. I was just like, I cannot believe that. And it was a kids—

Tim Donovan

—oh yeah, Mark’s kids—

Mark’s Kid Archival

Look at the chat. You have the group chat?

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah yeah yeah.

Mark’s Kid Archival

Look at the chat.

Tim Donovan Archival

Okay—

Mark’s Kid Archival

I started a, uh, a chant. Wait. Yeah, I started a “Tax the Rich” chant, and another one!

Tim Donovan Archival

Nice!

Shawna Morlock

—it was just like, sincerely, like the most perfect, like, encapsulation.

Tim Donovan Archival

Pardon me folks! Pardon me. Right above your head, right above your head real quick I’m just gonna put one more of those down…

Tim Donovan Archival

Thank you so much, Katya. As always.

Tim Donovan Archival

I’m gonna put this here?

Shawna Morlock

It was really fantastic.

Tim Donovan

Were you there for the singing?

Shawna Morlock

Yes! At 6 o’clock. I’ve got video of it.

And then — singing starts coming in quietly, in the background, until it gets fully loud. A room full of volunteers in between shifts, picking up instruments, singing “power to the people, power to the people… power to the people… people to the power, come on!” Six seconds.
Shawna Morlock

They say with organizing, a choir can hold a note for infinity, because if one person takes a breath, the other people are holding the note.

Second half of “Power to the People.” Twenty seconds.
Shawna Morlock

I was, like, quite literally crying, you know, like, I remember just like, (fake sobs) like, choking up, and like, the solidarity. Like, it was just like, such a beautiful moment.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

The volunteers at Katya’s house are paired off for one final canvass. I seek out Shawna, specifically, and ask if she’d be willing to go with me for the last shift of the campaign.

Noella Archival

Does everyone have lit & folders? Or no?

Tim & Shawna Archival

No folders

Noella Archival

Ok hold on, everyone stay here

Shawna Morlock Archival

I don’t like the folders—

Tim Donovan Archival

I don’t like folders.

Tim Donovan Archival

We have folders here!

Shawna Morlock Archival

We’ve got em, we’ve got em!

Tim Donovan Archival

Sorry, sorry.

Noella

You have folders?

Tim Donovan Archival

Everyone already got lit, we just didn’t distribute folders—

Noella Archival

Oh, okay perfect

Shawna Morlock

Getting to do that last shift together—

Shawna Morlock Archival

…maybe I can just assign myself

Tim Donovan Archival

We can just go. (Laughs) I kinda love that. No, you’re gonna f*** it all up…

Shawna Morlock Archival

Well, you just do the unassigned first. You know there’s like a thing…

Tim Donovan Archival

I don’t know, I never used the backend of that.

Shawna Morlock Archival

Oh! You know what?

Tim Donovan Archival

What?

Shawna Morlock Archival

I told them I would help break down.

Tim Donovan Archival

Ok.

Shawna Morlock Archival

It shouldn’t take more than 30 minutes. You wanna do that and we can knock together after that? Is that okay?

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah yeah yeah, yeah! Yeah, I’ll do anything, I don’t care.

Shawna Morlock Archival

Actually, so why don’t you and I do that—

Tim Donovan Archival

Just go do that, and then we’ll just make our own afterward. Yeah yeah yeah, cool.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

We try to help Katya clean up her house — she basically refuses us, pushing us out onto the sidewalk, telling us to go knock more doors.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Eventually, we do head out.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

The turf we take happens to be my own building: I get to check myself off as having voted.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And with Shawna trailing behind me, we climb my staircase.

Shawna Morlock

I’ve knocked that unit a few times, but not with someone who lives there, which is actually much more convenient, by the way. Thank you very much.

Tim Donovan

It was a lot easier to get in. (Laughs.)

Shawna Morlock

And you’re like, ‘oh, I’m your neighbor!’ Like, that is, you know, the golden ticket to talking to people.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

One of the first doors we knock is a young guy. He tells us that he plans to vote for Mamdani, and we have to ask him… when?! I mean, the polls close in less than three hours.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And then we watch from the hallway as he puts on his shoes.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

As the minutes rush by, we hurry through our turf, trying to finish up early. Shawna has a date at the Bier Garden; while the rest of the city is worrying about a mayoral election tonight, DSA is already looking forward to the next fight. With Zohran the presumptive mayor, there will be a special election in Astoria to replace him in the State Assembly.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And it will happen fast.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Shawna and the DSA? They’re ready.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

As 9 pm approaches, we arrive at the Bier Garden. Shawna has special permission to skip the line and get inside — she’s on the list, there to photograph Diana Moreno, DSA’s State Assembly candidate who’s being introduced to the crowd before the poll results even come in.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But even convincing her to run for office had been something of a struggle for Shawna.

Shawna Morlock

I had reached out to Diana like no one was asking me to do it. I was just like, ‘Hey, she’s amazing. We should actually be considering her.’ And so I’d asked her,. She said no a few times.

Shawna Morlock

I was on vacation, actually visiting some family in Minnesota, and she ends up calling me up, and so she’s like, ‘I, you know, I’ve been thinking about it. It’s been, like, on my mind. I talked to my family, and I think I’m gonna run.’

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Now, Diana will give a stump speech in front of hundreds of her neighbors, to introduce herself.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

As Shawna approaches the doormen to be let inside, we hug goodbye, and I pull stickers promoting the podcast out of my bag.

Act Three
The End of the Beginning
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Out on the street, it is a madhouse.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

This time, the press has fully descended upon the People’s Republic. TV news cameras and crews crowd the sidewalk. And the line to get into the Bier Garden is hundreds long, stretching down and around 24th Avenue, east towards 31st Street.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

It doesn’t take long to give away hundreds of my stickers.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Soon, my bag is empty.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Now, it’s a little after 9 pm and the polls have closed.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

What am I gonna do next?

Quiet.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

It’s strange to be alone. On primary night, I’d been surrounded by people I knew, people I cared about. A whole community, working for a common cause. But this time, my wife is out of the city, and I haven’t seen the regular volunteers I’d gotten to know from March through June. So I head to a bar nearby to watch the results come in, alone.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Almost immediately, I find a small group of Zohran supporters standing on the sidewalk, lost.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I tell them I’m headed to a place nearby showing the election coverage, and they tag along. Soon, we’re picking up other stray Zohran supporters on the way.

Ambient of people talking on the street, cars going by. We’re not totally alone any more, auditorily.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

By the time we get to the bar, I feel like the pied piper of the Mamdani campaign, wearing my orange Zorhan bandana around my forehead, my little crew of fans and volunteers in tow.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

We get inside and find a group of supporters already there.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Now it’s a party.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

On the TVs, the numbers start coming in, and they’re looking good from the start.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Later that night, Zohran Mamdani is declared the winner.

Newscaster Archival

The Democratic Socialist, Zohran Mamdani is the projected winner, the mayor-elect of New York City, the first Muslim to hold that position.

Cheering starts, and continues lightly under the next narration.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Even in that moment, it didn’t feel like an ending.

Zohran Mamdani Archival

Thank you, my friends.

Cheering
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Maybe the end of the beginning.

Zohran Mamdani Archival

Tonight you have delivered a mandate for change. (Cheering.)

Zohran Mamdani Archival

We will fight for you, because we are you.

Zohran Mamdani Archival

Or, as we say on Steinway, ana minkum wa alaikum.

Cheers that fade out, slowly, into silence.
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Zohran would go on to capture more than 50% of the vote in the three-way contest. Over the course of ten short months, his army of volunteers had become a hundred thousand strong. Collectively, we knocked over three million doors.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

We’d taken a political revolution from a small corner of northwest Queens and brought it citywide.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

In 2025, I got to be a part of something built by my neighbors, and powered by my community… something made by people like myself who were further along in their journeys. Who’d signed up earlier, or just committed more fully… and with less fear.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But what comes next? See, that’s harder to say… because DSA can’t risk devolving into a clique where friends elect one another to public office… and then nothing changes. It can’t be a social club masquerading as a movement.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But this victory wasn’t DSA’s alone, and the engine that drove it to victory wasn’t built in 2024, when Zohran decided to run for office. It wasn’t built in 2018, when Shawna Morlock met ten perfect strangers in Astoria Park to attempt the impossible.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

See, a movement is always part of a longer story.


Asad Dandia

For us, the formative moment, as is the case for so many Muslims, was 9-11.

Asad Dandia

I was in the fourth grade. I was in New York. I was in Brooklyn.

Asad Dandia

That was such a defining kind of… turning point in so many of our lives. Because these were our neighbors, right, who were killed in these tragic attacks. And so many of us wanted to mourn. But we were never given a chance to mourn because our community was collectively blamed for the attacks, right?

Asad Dandia

Cuz even if you don’t care about politics, politics cares about you.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I don’t know how long I’ve been asking myself “now what?” without having an answer. For the last eight months, for sure. Really, probably more like the last eight years.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I used to tell myself that I got into volunteering because I finally had the energy and the free time.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But I could have started earlier.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

For seven years, I chose not to get involved.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And back then, for me, it was easy to stay on the sideline — I wasn’t personally affected by ICE raids or abortion bans, and I wasn’t part of the community of people who were already doing the work.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

So I felt no real pressure to join the fight.

Asad Dandia

I want you to understand that… my story was 10 years ago, right? So I want us to understand that history is not just something that happened back then. History is something that is being remade every single day by us, and we have the agency to decide what direction history goes in. And we do it collectively.

Asad Dandia

I mean, here we are today with Zohran in city hall and — a new development for you — his chief counsel is a man named Ramzi Qasim. He was my lawyer when I sued the NYPD.

Asad Dandia

Ramzi and I were standing in front of One Police Plaza in June of 2013, the NYPD headquarters, to announce the launch of a lawsuit against New York City government and specifically the police department for surveilling the Muslim community.

Asad Dandia

And now he sits in City Hall every single day with his boss, the Muslim mayor of New York in 2026.

Asad Dandia

So from suing the government to being in the government, it’s all come full circle.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

When I set out to make this podcast, I didn’t realize that I was reaching for another form of avoidance; a way to keep this movement at arm’s length. But in the process of making it, I learned a lot about the ways that other people confront their alienation, and overcome their fear.

Eric Thor

You know, you could hunker down and let it pass you by… or you could… step up, and fight for something new—

Magdalena Moranda

Cuz every volunteer thing, you’re fighting… you’re fighting the couch—

Benham Jones

To shut your mouth and just pack bread or something… is a good way to remember the things that people really need—

Shawna Morlock

—you chase that feeling… you chase that same feeling forever.

Shawna Morlock Archival

How you doin?

Tim Donovan Archival

I’m good. I’m great. How you doing?

Shawna Morlock Archival

It’s been a… it’s been a year.

Laughs
Tim Donovan Archival

It sure has.

Tim Donovan Archival

What’s your role, what’s your position, what’s your official…? Lay it out for me.

Shawna Morlock Archival

So, I ran for the position of Queens borough rep to NYC DSA’s electoral working group. Felt very important this year.

Tim Donovan Archival

You need leaders, you need organizations.

Shawna Morlock Archival

Being angry is cathartic, but the best catharsis is winning.

Tim Donovan Archival

There’s the line, thank you

Laughs
Shawna Morlock Archival

Yelling and, you know, fist-raised is fantastic, and it should be done, but at the end of the day, sitting down for that 8 pm meeting on a tuesday night also needs to be done, and actually is important to like organize the organizers. and I’m incredibly grateful for the folks that are very good at that.

Shawna Morlock Archival

And I’m, yeah, I’m muddling through all of it.

Ambience of the November 2nd canvas comes in.
Kyle Huey Archival

Ah door knockers, hi. Who has never knocked doors for the campaign yet? Nice. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, nice. Amazing.

Kyle Huey Archival

What I recommend is looking at your first one, ringing it. If they don’t buzz you in, look at your next one on your list—

Door buzzes.
Tim Donovan Archival

Ok, who do we got?

Emily Archival

We also need three—

Buzz, door opens
Tim Donovan (whispering) Archival

It’s never that easy.

Kyle Huey Archival

The first person who opens the door, you will forget your own name. The first door that opens, I’m always like ‘ahhh-blah-blah,’ I stumble over my words. It happens.

Kate Archival

Hello!

Emily Archival

Oh my god, hi! Awesome!

Emily Archival

Uh, Sorry…

Kate Archival

No you’re fine.

Emily Archival

Um, so you’ve already voted as well, is that right?

Kyle Huey Archival

Once you get inside, then you can be knocking on doors. But to get into the building, ring down your list. But do it slowly enough so that the person who buzzes you in is the first apartment you go to.

Climbing stairs
Emily Archival

Hi there!

Tim Donovan Archival

How’s it going?

Neighbor Archival

Hi, how are you?

Emily Archival

I’m good, thanks! My name is Emily, this is Tim, we’re volunteering for Zohran’s campaign for mayor.

Neighbor Archival

I already go to vote.

Emily Archival

You did!

Neighbor Archival

Yeah

Emily Archival

Great

Neighbor Archival

It’s okay

Emily Archival

Ok great, so you’ve already voted, would you mind me asking who you voted for?

Tim Donovan Archival

Did you vote for Zohran?

Neighbor Archival

Yeah

Tim Donovan Archival

Beautiful

Emily Archival

Great

Neighbor Archival

He’s our neighbor!

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah, exactly.

Kyle Huey Archival

Our whole goal here is to turn out our people.

Door opens
Emily Archival

Hi!

Neighbor Archival

Hello!

Tim Donovan Archival

How’s it going?

Tim Donovan Archival

How’s it going.

Neighbor Archival

We already voted

Tim Donovan Archival

Everybody in the house?

Neighbor Archival

Yeah we voted.

Kyle Huey Archival

If it’s a tall building, I recommend starting at the top and working your way down—

Door closing
Emily Archival

Cool!

Tim Donovan Archival

That was a great building, holy crap, it’s never like that!

Laughter.
Climbing stairs
Manny Archival

Oh! Tim?!

Tim Donovan Archival

Yo have you voted yet?

Manny Archival

No I can’t vote

Tim Donovan Archival

Oh you can’t vote? Here take a sticker

Manny Archival

Can you just

Tim Donovan Archival

So good to see you, Manny

Manny Archival

So good to see you, I’m moving out, actually

Tim Donovan Archival

Oh you’re the one… that’s so funny

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah we’re knocking on doors for Zohran

Manny Archival

So you’re campaigning

Tim Donovan Archival

Yeah we’re volunteers

Manny Archival

Oh great, If I could I’d vote. How are you?

Tim Donovan Archival

Well we’re gonna miss you in Astoria. Good luck in Harlem! That’s so crazy. I love this neighborhood.

Tim Donovan Archival

He used to work for me when I managed a bar in a previous life.


Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Astoria’s a special place, and honestly, you probably can’t take this model elsewhere and expect a similar result.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But still, you can try.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Because when they started this here in 2018, it seemed impossible, too. But then my neighbors got busy. And eventually, there were a hundred thousand of us, spread out, knocking three million doors.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

With every staircase, we climbed towards something new.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I can’t tell you if we’ll keep winning — or guarantee that the candidates we do elect will make this city a better place.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

But I know that we’ll keep climbing.

Door buzzes.
Credits
Tim Donovan (V.O.)

The People’s Republic of Astoria is written, narrated, and produced by Tim Donovan. Music by Pyrosion.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

This project could not have happened without the people in my life who supported me along the way. My wife Alice, primarily, who humored me as this project stretched from November of 2025 all the way into June of 2026. And this never could have happened without Daisy Larom, the original co-creator, who gave me the courage to move forward at the very beginning, even as she stepped back. I’d also like to give special thanks to Sarah Noe, who project managed during the early part, where I was still learning to juggle all the various roles and responsibilities.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Thanks to Mark Hassenfratz for peer-pressuring me into coming to a bread rescue with the Astoria Food Pantry in early 2025. And thanks to Nick and John — and the whole crew at Diamond Dogs — for hosting my Launch party. Thanks to Julie Shapiro for her advice, and thanks to Emily, Katya, Shashank, Katie, Mike, Aatif, Mark, Kyle Huey, Caitlin Boas, and all the other members of Queens DSA for their time and insight.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

And of course, thanks to my guests, including those whose voices never made it into an episode.

Magdalena Moranda

Hiii, my name is Magdalena Moranda, I use she-her pronouns. My favorite astoria food — okay, King of Falafel, always. Classic falafel sandwich. Actually, I’m vegan so I can’t eat any of the food at Little Flower cafe, but the iced pink tea with oatmilk at Little Flower is one of my favorite drinks in Astoria.

Ross Barkan

I’m Ross Barkan. The Bier Garden is very nice.

Jimmy Van Bramer

(Laughs) So my name is Jimmy Van Bramer. And my favorite Astoria food…? You know, I’m gonna say pizza from Gaudio’s on 30th Avenue, because when we were young that’s where we went all the time.

Helen Ho

Ooh, my name is Helen Ho, and my favorite food in Astoria… I have to go with the place I eat at the most often, which is Los Portales, a mexican restaurant on Broadway.

Luke Hayes

Ooh. Oh wow. Luke Hayes… favorite food, that’s tough, there’s a lot of good options. Uhhhh. (Laughs) Huh. I’m partial to momos, just because I ate of lot of those on Caban’s campaign. But uh, it’s hard to single out just one.

Asad Dandia

My name is Asad Dandia. Favorite restaurant in Astoria. On Steinway Street. Ah, there are so many options. Okay, at risk… I will say… and they’re all great. I will say I’ve been a sucker for Duzan for a long time.

John Surico

Oh my god. That’s a… divisive question amongst my friend group. Ok, so… my name is John Surico. My favorite food in Astoria. Whoooh. Okay, the place that immediately always comes to mind for me in Abu-Qir on Steinway, which is an egyptian seafood place. Now that our assemblymember’s food options have really made the rounds, the lines at Abu-Qir have grown much longer. But at the same time, it’s a fantastic restaurant, I can see why Zohran likes it so much.

Sofya Aptekar

My name is Sofya Aptekar and, uhhh, so much to choose from. But I would say, the King of Falafel is a special place… and as a vegetarian, I just love their falafel.

Michael Lange

Michael Lange, L-A-N-G-E. My favorite food in Astoria? Baharia… Estiatorio…? On Broadway…? Yup, it’s been a minute, it’s been a minute.

Eric Thor

My name is Eric Thor, E-R-I-C, T-H-O-R.

Benham Jones

Yeah, my name is Benham Jones. Like ben-ham. (Whispers) My favorite food… in Astoria. (Full voice) I love value, the budget Vietnamese… Lotus One! 31st Avenue. There are fancier options, but those are reliably tasty and good-natured people

Michael Thomas Carter

My name is Michael Thomas Carter. I’ll go with Queens generally — I love the food in Flushing, Chinatown.

Shawna Morlock

Oh my gosh… okay. My name is Shawna Morlock, I use she-her pronouns… I’m trying to think where we eat the most at. I mean we do Kylcades now, now that they’ve moved closer… Monday afternoons for lunch at Kylcades for lunch is like, the best thing to do.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

I also must acknowledge an element of this story that was not addressed: I was unable to secure an interview with any opposition voices. As a direct consequence, this story is inherently one-sided. Insofar as it’s the story of a group of people — their movement, what they built — I’ve made my peace with that editorial choice. But it’s a limitation that deserves acknowledgment.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

So… if I did my job over the course of this series, you might be wondering how you can get involved. Check out the website, peoplesrepublicpod.com. I’ve got a page right at the top that points to a bunch of local races and causes you can plug into today.

Tim Donovan (V.O.)

Thanks again for listening. And see you around “The People’s Republic of Astoria.”

Buzzer sounds, footsteps climbing staircases fade in. Buzzer finishes, footsteps fade out.
Production Credits

Written, narrated, and produced by Tim Donovan.

Music by Pyrosion. Full Creative Commons licenses available at peoplesrepublicpod.com.

Special thanks to Alice; to Daisy Larom, the original co-creator; and to Sarah Noe. Thanks to Mark Hassenfratz, to Nick, John, and the crew at Diamond Dogs, to Julie Shapiro, and to Emily, Katya, Shashank, Katie, Mike, Aatif, Mark, Kyle Huey, Caitlin Boas, and all the other members of Queens DSA. And to every guest whose voice appears in the series.