Trainwreck: Mayor of Mayhem (2025) Movie Script

Wow, full house.
Well, good afternoon, everyone.
I'd like to take this opportunity
to address a number of issues
that have circulated
in the media over the last few days.
I do not use crack cocaine,
nor am I an addict of crack cocaine.
Holy shit.
Holy crap.
I cannot believe what the Mayor of Toronto
just said on live television.
Enough is enough, and I want respect.
From the moment Rob Ford was elected,
we all recognized that this
was not gonna be a boring four years.
The public loved him.
He was like a rock star.
His success made no sense
by any normal political standards.
This is backdooring a quick motion.
Staff doesn't support it. You're upset.
He turned City Hall into a circus.
He does not have a shred of credibility.
He was always delivering
this image of the everyman,
but what he told everybody was a lie.
All of a sudden, we realized
control of Canada's biggest city
was in the hands of a man
who had no personal control over his life.
Get off my property!
If you are an alcoholic, which, you know...
Mayor Ford, do you have a drug problem?
I said, "Rob, they say they have
a video of you smoking crack cocaine."
And he told me,
"Don't worry, buddy. There's no video."
Trust me, I've seen it.
He is smoking drugs in this video.
It's just lies after lies and lies.
Whoa, I can't believe I'm here right now.
Like, this is nuts.
When you attack my integrity, I see red.
There were just so many twists and turns
that you couldn't predict it.
Oh, and the last thing was, um,
Olivia Gondek says I wanted to eat her...
Holy fuck!
Buckle up. Like, this is gonna get wild.
The raccoons were in it,
in the overflowing dumpsters
on Spadina overnight.
Their paws sticky at the feast,
courtesy of the garbage strike
now 16 days old.
Back in 2009,
I was an assignment editor
at a 24-hour news station in Toronto.
Toronto is the fourth-largest city
in North America.
And the garbage strike
was just gripping the city,
and it was disgusting.
The garbage is mounting up,
and people are throwing--
They're just throwing it everywhere,
and that's not right.
In order for me to go to work,
I'd have to grab some rocks on the road,
and I would throw it
to scatter the raccoons.
There was garbage piling up
when it was hot, and stinky, and smelly.
Now the trash is baking in temperatures
that hit more than 30 degrees today.
It was particularly damaging
for the mayor then,
a man named David Miller.
The mayor, quite frankly, isn't showing
very much leadership in this dispute.
The garbage strike
kind of politically wounded him,
and he decided to step back in 2010
and end his mayoralty.
There was no favorite
waiting in the wings, ready to go.
Meaning the race was wide open
for anyone to jump in
and sort of steal the narrative
and steal those headlines.
Can you tell them he's here?
As a friend of Rob Ford,
I phoned him right away.
I said, "Rob, you gotta run."
He says, "You think so, buddy?"
And I said,
"Yes, this is the time for you."
I mean, right from the very beginning
of his political life,
he considered himself a public servant.
He worked for the people.
Word was they wanted to be represented,
and they weren't represented.
There's no secret to it. They said,
"Will you be a full-time councillor?"
I said, "Absolutely."
People were upset,
and people were tired of City Hall.
And that's why I knew this area
was ripe for someone like Rob,
and so much so that I actually quit
my direct-marketing job,
and I went to work for him...
...as a social media guide.
It's time to stop the gravy train
that provides luxuries
and perks to politicians
and rich contracts to their friends.
I remember the first time I saw Rob,
right after the 2003 election,
and I thought,
"Where did this guy come from?"
He came on and he started smirking at me.
I said, "You should do the same
as Councillor Cho." He said, "Shut up."
He was so aggressive that a lot of people
didn't wanna sit near him.
And he was always changing seats
until he ended up two seats away from me.
- Quiet, no one's talking to you.
- Okay, Councillor.
Rob Ford was a controversial councillor,
known for saying things
that were not politically correct.
If you're not doing needles
and you're not gay,
you won't get AIDS, probably.
One day, I started talking to him,
and he said,
"I'm gonna run for mayor, buddy."
And I was like, "Oh, Rob, don't do that.
You're gonna lose."
"You have no chance of winning.
Why put your family through that?"
And he'd say, "No, I'm gonna win, buddy.
Really, I'm gonna win."
Bottom line, run against me
if you think you can do a better job
for my constituents in Ward 2.
A friend called me and said,
"What do you know about Rob Ford?"
And whether I thought he could be mayor.
And I said, "No."
"I don't think he can be mayor."
I spent 14 years as an Army officer
in the Canadian Forces.
I came back to Canada exhausted
and completely disconnected
from my business network,
and so I was looking for a job.
My introduction to the Ford family
was Rob's older brother, Doug Ford.
He said, "Will you come on
as the chief of staff?"
And, uh, I said, "Yes..."
...because I, honestly, thought
it was gonna be six weeks' work,
because I didn't think
Rob Ford could go very far.
Doug and Rob were very close.
Doug, obviously, had an enormous influence
because he was the older brother
and the campaign manager.
There was always an understanding
that this was the Ford family enterprise.
Rob Ford may be new to politics,
but his family isn't.
My father represented south of the 401.
Rob's late father came from the streets
and, uh, made himself
into a multimillionaire.
I raised my family out here.
We started a business
on a ping-pong table in a basement.
He ran a printing company.
Um...
Oh!
Here's a-- Here's--
Here's a Rob Ford sticker from Deco,
which was the company at the time.
That man, uh, was somebody
that was very tough on his kids.
And so, uh, you know,
Rob was always trying to, you know,
please his father in a lot of ways.
Why don't you shut your mouth?
His, uh, father had also been a politician
and played football.
Rob loved football, but wasn't good at it.
He had no aptitude for business.
So the only thing left for him
to please his dad was to go into politics.
Doug Ford had sketched out
his visual of how we were gonna launch.
It'd be at the Toronto Congress Centre.
It'd have 5,000 people out.
I laughed. I didn't laugh out loud,
I laughed quietly.
'Cause I've never seen a political event
with more than a couple hundred people.
5,000 seemed to be ridiculous.
Ford for mayor!
But through social media, we amassed
a bunch of our, uh-- our supporters,
and what we were gonna do
is march to City Hall.
We're gonna leave in about five minutes.
We're gonna walk up Yonge Street.
At the very last minute,
if anybody knows Toronto,
we walked up Victoria Street,
where there is a TV studio.
So we walked by the TV studio.
Here's Rob Ford trying for his cheap plug
in the background right now
on breakfast television.
They stopped the breakfast morning show,
to mention, to talk about, "Look at this."
They're just going round the block
and back and forth. There we go.
It was brilliant,
free publicity on launch day,
and I was embarrassed
that it wasn't my idea.
It was like, "Brilliant, Tom.
Great idea. Lead us on."
I'm from Etobicoke,
where Rob Ford is from.
We're around the same age.
I'm a little older than him.
But, you know, on one-on-one,
I found him
quite personable and interesting.
So I thought,
"Well, of course, I should cover this."
And I'll admit, I drove out to Etobicoke
not knowing what to expect.
And I got to this large hall,
and I thought,
"Is he actually gonna be able
to fill this?"
I was the only daily news reporter there.
But I walked in,
and with so many people already packed in,
they kept having to run
and get more chairs.
The room was full.
I told him
there was about 2,000 people there,
would be my estimate.
Um, he gets up onto the stage and says,
"Thank you. Thank you so much for coming."
You know, "Wow, there's
5,000 people here tonight."
Because if you say it, it's true.
I looked around that room,
and there were Bay Street bankers,
and there were bus drivers.
I feel that Rob Ford
should be the next mayor for Toronto.
He's gonna look after my money
and your money.
The people that came out to support him
was a cross-section
of the city of Toronto.
I think he's a man of integrity.
Rob is the guy
for the people, by the people.
The way his campaign was put to me was,
Rob Ford gives his business card out
to almost everybody he meets,
and he says,
"If you have any problems, call me."
My colleague tells me a story
about her dad had a tree in his backyard,
and the tree was dying.
My friend's father called Rob Ford.
He came to the house,
he looked at the tree,
and he mediated sort of a solution.
So he got things done on the ground.
You have any problems with your unit?
Your shower, your stove, fridge?
He helped everybody.
It didn't matter if you were in his ward.
It didn't matter anywhere in the city,
and he was adored for that.
Rob Ford is the best, he's honest.
We need somebody
who can stand for what he believes in.
Come on, Toronto. Rob Ford for mayor.
The love, the power, and the support
in that room for him was mind-blowing.
And for the first time, I thought,
"I think this guy could win."
The media was quite surprised
at how popular Rob was becoming.
I'm voting for the guy.
- Ready?
- I'm ready.
So they started to dig into his past.
Ford faced scrutiny
over an impaired-driving conviction
in Florida in 1999.
Rob Ford revealed the charge
after a recent newspaper report
accused him of lying
about a possession-of-marijuana charge.
I made a mistake, I'm only human,
and I don't know what more to say,
I apologize.
That apology from 2006
after he lied
about swearing and yelling at a couple
during a hockey game, while drunk.
But despite all of those stories,
his popularity did just keep growing.
People are sick of wasteful spending,
that's for sure.
So he's resonating
with people in that way,
but he's a bit of a loose cannon.
I'd be driving the campaign bus,
and I'd get two responses.
People would be waving and cheering,
and others would be giving me the finger.
There was no middle ground.
A day of choice, a day of change.
The polls have just closed across the GTA,
where voters elect their new mayors...
On election day, the Ford family
gathers at the family house,
and some select media were invited.
The least confident person
on our team was Rob Ford.
He was having a lot of doubt.
He was having a lot of trepidation
that this didn't work, he'd screwed it up.
Pretty clear from the results
we have so far that he has won this race.
Rob Ford is the mayor-elect in Toronto.
- Elected!
- Elected!
Oh my God!
It was a big relief that he had won,
and we all went to the Congress Centre,
which is where we started the whole thing,
and thousands of people were there.
We were having to push and shove.
You literally could almost not breathe.
It was like riot training in the Army,
pushing through this mass of people.
But it did feel good,
and it felt like a vindication,
because a lot of people...
didn't think he could do it.
I didn't think he could do it.
Toronto now is open for business,
ladies and gentlemen.
One, two, three, smile.
Second last shot.
The first day on the job
was quite incredible.
We were outsiders all that time.
And now, we're insiders.
I came to Toronto City Council, uh,
the same time
as Rob Ford was elected mayor.
I had heard about him over the years
for his very right-wing populist positions
on issues.
The first year,
he was able to get his agenda passed.
He just said, "If you agree with me,
I'll work with you,
and if you don't, I will destroy you."
He got City Council
to repeal a vehicle-registration tax.
He got our local transit, uh, workers
declared an essential service
so that they couldn't strike.
He was ticking off,
you know, piece by piece,
his plan to make the city work
and end the waste.
And so it was a good first year.
But there's little signs that Rob is...
not performing at 100%.
He would disappear from city meetings
to go coach football.
He coached
a high school football team in Etobicoke.
Drive. Drive, drive.
His passion
is coaching high school football,
and it got him into trouble
when, as a councillor,
he used office stationery
to ask Toronto lobbyists
to give money to his football foundation.
That's a conflict of interest,
and so a court case began.
The unprecedented court case
had the city's chief magistrate
running away from the media,
as he tried to avoid questions.
He can't talk. The trial's still on.
The judge ruled
that it was a conflict of interest
and that the only punishment
the law allowed
was removal from office.
And Rob is upset.
This comes down to left-wing politics.
They want me out of here
and will do anything in their power.
I'm gonna fight tooth and nail, um,
to hold on to my job.
And Rob Ford did appeal.
The mayor was beaming
as he walked into his office
minutes after a panel of three judges
unanimously ruled in favor of his appeal.
In the end...
...Rob won.
But the stress of these court trials
was clearly eating away at him.
It's the deepest part of winter 2013,
and I am at the Garrison Ball in Toronto,
which is an annual military gala.
These are some people that I know
from my service in the military.
There's a fraternal bond there.
So I'm hoping to have
an enjoyable evening.
I don't think Rob is gonna be there,
because Rob had spent a weekend in Chicago
with his brother and some friends
to watch a hockey game.
So it was kind of a boys' weekend away.
I get a text from the body man
assigned for him that night
saying, "He's coming,"
and I think... like, just crushing.
Very shortly thereafter,
I get another message saying,
"They're here, I need you now."
And so I go to the front door,
and Rob is there,
and he is not in a good way.
He's dressed in his suit,
but his collars are up.
And his--
one of his shirt tails is untucked,
and he looks drenched from sweat.
And I try to stop him
from going in the room.
And he basically tells me
to step out of the way
or he'll take me down.
Somebody called me and said,
"Tom, there's an issue with the mayor."
So I pulled into the parking lot,
and there's Rob
with Mark Towhey in a headlock.
And I thought it was quite comical,
until I realized, you know, well,
"I don't think Mark was really too happy
about being in a headlock from Rob."
He eventually leaves, and I think,
"Wow, we'll read about this
in the morning."
I was working at the Toronto Star,
and I got a tip
that Rob Ford was so drunk.
And we had a city councillor on the record
saying he'd been asked to leave.
He told his chief of staff,
"I think it'd be better
for everybody involved, uh,
if the mayor left."
My experience covering Rob Ford
really changed me as a journalist.
This is where it started to turn dark.
A front-page story
in the Toronto Star alleges
Rob Ford has a drinking problem.
The Fords freaked out,
and they went, you know, totally ballistic
on me and the Toronto Star.
The Toronto Star
going after me again and again and again.
The Toronto Star is generally considered
a progressive paper,
and he was an arch-conservative
in a lot of ways.
They're relentless, that's fine.
I'll go head-to-head
with the Toronto Star anytime.
He officially cut us off.
It's just lies after lies and lies,
and I've called you pathological liars.
Rob Ford demonizing the media,
years before Donald Trump
did the same thing...
...was extremely effective.
He wanted to plant the seeds of mistrust
in the public's mind,
so that when the media
did report something bad about him,
he could say,
"See? They're out to get me."
And he would ramp it up
every time he knew
that there might be another scandal.
One day, I was working on a story.
I remember getting a call from this guy
who said he had a video
of Ford smoking crack.
It was April Fools' Day, which is never
the day you wanna get a call like that.
Um, but yeah, I mean, I just--
I handled it as professionally as I could
and said, "Okay, well..."
You know. "Tell me more."
"Can I see it?"
"Can we meet?"
So we met at a parking lot.
This guy pulled up and said, you know,
"Leave your bags and your phones,
etcetera, in your car, get in this car,"
and then drove us to a different location.
Another individual got in the car.
They seemed, um, very nervous.
I remember that
they wouldn't let us hold the phone.
They were holding the phone,
kind of showing it to us.
But when the screen turned on,
it was just so obvious it was Rob Ford...
...smoking out of a-- a glass pipe.
Holy shit.
And then they wanted
to sell it to us for $100,000.
But Canadian media does not pay for news.
You know, something like
the National Enquirer might do or TMZ,
but-- but that doesn't happen here.
Now what?
We all gathered
in the Toronto Star newsroom
to figure out what we needed
before we could publish the story
without having the tape ourselves.
I just remember sitting at my desk
and putting my head down on my desk,
because I was like, "Maybe this story
is never gonna come out."
And then about two weeks
after we saw the video...
...I was at a friend's book launch.
And, uh, all of a sudden,
someone came over to me, uh,
and said, "Robyn, did you see this?"
And the screen was Gawker.
The US website called Gawker
published a story
where they said, uh, the editor,
John Cook, had seen the same video.
Now, it was out there.
We could publish the story.
It was on the front page the next day.
It said, "Star reporters have seen a video
in which Rob Ford
appears to be smoking crack cocaine."
The paper acknowledges
it cannot verify the video
and says it did not pay for it
and doesn't have a copy.
Doolittle, a City Hall reporter,
believes it is the mayor.
Looks like Mayor Rob Ford,
sounds like Mayor Rob Ford.
Holy shit.
Our mayor just got caught
in a crack cocaine scandal on video.
It was so shocking.
It was unprecedented for a mayor
to be involved in anything like that.
You know,
I knew things were kind of crazy,
but I certainly didn't know
they were that crazy.
When I saw the story, I thought,
"That's a problem."
And I called him and I said,
"Rob, they say they have a video
of you smoking crack cocaine."
And he told me,
"Don't worry, buddy. There's no video."
And that was not
the answer I wanted to hear.
Because, to me, that suggested
that there could've been a video.
I do not use crack cocaine,
nor am I an addict of crack cocaine.
As for a video,
I cannot comment on a video
that I have never seen or does not exist.
It is most unfortunate
that I have been judged by the media
without any evidence.
The mayor says it didn't happen,
it didn't.
Our messaging
was always the same as Rob's.
We all know pictures can be photoshopped.
It could've been Ford, but I doubt it.
I just don't think it's his style.
There was a poll done in the city,
and something like 50%
of people in Toronto
thought that we had fabricated
the crack story.
It's a very clear agenda,
trying to, uh, make as much problem
for Rob Ford as possible.
I just really did not understand
how much people mistrust media
and how the Fords really successfully
had framed the media
as a political opponent.
Let's be clear. I'm gonna answer.
You ask the questions.
If I get interrupted,
questions are over, simple.
I started getting death threats.
Yeah, it was--
it was just extremely, uh, tense.
The proof has yet to surface,
clouding the world's view of Toronto,
according to some on city council.
This is the, um, chief magistrate
of, uh, our great city,
and, uh, it's a problem.
I said that this was going to finish him,
unless he went to rehab.
And so, at that point,
I started to change every conversation
that I had with him.
Every time he wanted to talk
about policy or an initiative
or something
that he wanted done in the city,
all I'd say is, "You need to go to rehab."
And I knew then...
...that by giving him only that choice,
he would either eventually give in and go,
or he would fire me.
And he chose option B, to fire me.
Have you urged the mayor to seek help?
My advice to the mayor is confidential.
And so I walked out the front door
with security, basically, marching me out.
Mark Towhey being fired
was one of those pivotal moments.
It was not a good time for me.
It was frustrating, and it was angering.
It just felt like betrayal.
And then he just left,
and it sort of left the reporters
in this moment of shock
that something big was coming.
I just didn't know what at that point.
So it's Halloween,
and I remember getting
a text from a police source
who said, "Are-- Are you near a TV?"
"You'll wanna watch
this press conference in half an hour."
I've been advised
that we are now in possession
of a recovered digital video file.
I will not be releasing it today.
Toronto Police Chief, Bill Blair, came out
and said, "We've got the crack video."
He wouldn't share it, but Toronto Police
were in possession of that video.
That file contains video images,
which appear to be, uh, those images
which were previously reported
in-- in the press.
The crack video was captured
in a massive gun smuggling raid
after a horrible shooting in Toronto.
And, ultimately, it was the individuals
targeted in this investigation...
...that the mayor was seeming to be buying
and smoking serious drugs with.
That's what started this second wave
of chaos at Toronto City Hall.
Hey, get that flash down.
Lower that flash.
Well, good afternoon. Um...
I think everybody's seen
the... uh, the allegations.
So I... Well, I think it's quite...
I... I think it's...
No, I'm not. Uh, no. No.
You know what? No. No.
Uh... I have no reason to resign.
I'm gonna go back
and gonna return my phone calls.
I'm gonna be out
doing what the people elected me to do.
And that's save taxpayers' money
and run a great government
that we've been running
for the last three years.
So that's all I can say.
Again, that's all I can say.
Is this acceptable behavior for a mayor?
Again, I can't...
I've said everything I said.
Have you lied to the people of Toronto?
You're saying
the Chief of Police is lying, Mayor Ford?
- Why won't you resign?
- Mayor Ford!
I was working
in corporate security at City Hall.
On the day
that the police chief, Bill Blair,
came out and said that the police
were in the possession of the crack video,
I was escorting Mayor Ford
to his-- his car.
And, uh, he said, "Listen, Jerry,
I need some type of close protection
because the media, they are relentless."
"You're basically gonna be
my right-hand man." You know.
I was just like, "Holy crap."
It's not every day
the mayor of the biggest city in Canada
asks you to come work for him.
You know? And so I was like, "Okay."
- Come on, let's go, then. Come on.
- Let's go.
It was like I'd been dropped into a storm.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
- You hit him.
- I didn't.
You did. I just saw you.
He didn't. He pushed him out of the way.
It was relentless.
The media were hounding Rob.
Guys, you're under the cameras.
Get off my driveway, please.
It was a feeding frenzy. It was sharks.
Please, can you get off my driveway?
Can you get off my property, please?
- Go! Get off my property!
- Leaving!
- Take it off my property!
- I'm leaving!
Oh, here we go.
It just became an absolute circus,
and it got even worse.
Then all of a sudden,
international media's there.
I'm trying to do my work
at the front desk,
and, uh, I had, uh, relatives
from Scotland texting me saying,
"Tom, we see you in Scotland, in Glasgow,
and you're at the mayor's office."
"What's going on over there?"
Now, the rumors have been swirling
around him since May,
but now Canadian police
say they've seen a video
appearing to show the Mayor of Toronto
smoking a crack pipe.
He became the punchline
to jokes on late-night, uh, talk shows.
Is this dude on crack?
He needs professional help,
he needs amateur help.
He can go see a witch doctor.
But to be fair, there's not a lot
to do in Toronto. Come on, guys.
Excuse me. Excuse me.
Meanwhile, Rob continued to deny it
and continued to just want...
...to do business as usual.
Whatever this video shows, folks,
Toronto residents deserve to see it,
and, Chief, I'm asking you
to release this video now.
Rob, you've gotta keep--
keep moving forward.
As I say, keep your nose clean
and-- and, uh, move forward.
He, um, didn't believe
that there was any kind of footage.
I didn't believe
there was any kind of footage.
Mayor!
Do you think Chief Blair
should step aside?
You guys have asked me
a question back in May.
You can repeat that question.
The one we asked in May?
- Do you smoke crack cocaine?
- Exactly.
Yes, I have smoked crack cocaine.
- When, sir?
- But no-- Do I?
Am I an addict? No.
Have I tried it?
Um, probably in one of my drunken stupors
probably approximately about a year ago.
Yes, I've made-- I've made mistakes.
All I can do now is apologize and move on.
- I don't know what else Can I just--
- Yeah, go ahead.
There's been times
when I've been in a drunken stupor.
That's why I wanna see the tape.
I want everyone in the city
to see this tape.
I'd like to see this tape.
I don't even recall there being
a tape or a video, and I know that,
so I wanna see
the state that I was in, but, um...
That's exactly it. I wanna get--
Are you on drugs right now?
Okay...
Nobody had seen the video.
But when Rob confessed,
it was a huge blow to me and the team.
For six months, I talked
to literally 100, 150 people a day.
And a lot of them
were wondering about this crack thing.
I always had swore
that that was false, it was not true.
And, uh, when he finally admitted it, uh,
I was actually crushed.
I was the longest-serving staffer, uh,
the entire time.
I was working 24 hours a day,
seven days a week...
...uh, so much so that my wife left me.
You know, I had misled Toronto residents
for all that time.
And then proven wrong, uh,
by the man himself.
So it took a real toll on me,
and, um, I couldn't do it anymore.
With today's announcement...
I know I embarrassed
everyone in this city,
and I will be forever sorry.
Right after Rob admitted to smoking crack,
everything seemed to completely implode.
And it was only a matter of time
until more videos came out.
I'll rip his fucking throat out.
When he stands up,
I'll make sure that motherfucker's dead.
There's one where he's in a house.
He seems to be pantomiming a fight.
I'm a sick motherfucker, dude,
but no one's gonna fuck around me.
It's extremely embarrassing,
and I-- I don't know what to say.
Um, again and again and again,
I apologize.
At that time, the situation
was so unbelievable,
day after day after day.
Have you purchased illegal drugs
in the last two years?
Yes, I have.
Scandal flew off Rob Ford
like-- like sweat off a runner.
It was classic Mayor Ford.
One moment, contrite.
I really, uh, effed up.
The next, defiant.
I'm moving on.
You guys can do what you want.
Oh man.
There were some days
where we're just-- I'm just like,
"Whoa, I can't believe I'm here right now.
Like, this is nuts."
Mayor, any comments
on the latest allegations?
As all of this was happening,
then he just makes this offhand comment
after he was accused of demeaning
a staffer named Olivia Gondek.
Um, he wanted--
Oh, okay, so we're gonna use
some language, everybody.
Just-- I can't believe I'm at the office,
and I'm gonna say this.
Um, but, you know, he said...
Oh, and the last thing
was, um, Olivia Gondek.
It says that I wanted to eat her pussy.
Olivia Gondek.
I've never said that. I'm happily married.
I've got more than enough to eat at home.
Thank you very much.
Holy fuck!
I know we're up live right now,
but I don't know if we can...
I... Mayor Ford, speaking,
as Mayor Ford does, very plainly,
as he said in council yesterday,
he effed up,
and now using language
that I don't think we can broadcast on TV,
but we just broadcast that on TV.
Another unbelievable day...
When things are constantly so shocking,
you know how you sort of get numb to it?
This broke any spell of numbness.
No money, man.
Ja! Bumbaclot, man!
And then, there was this video
of him speaking in a Jamaican patois,
talking about Bill Blair,
the police chief of Toronto,
who had started investigating.
Chief Blair. Ja, man.
He chase me around for five months, man.
I've almost forgotten that one.
I mean, it-- it just-- Like, it all blurs.
Bumbaclot, man!
Rassclart, Bumbaclot!
Leave me alone, man.
I got to take some ownership here.
Okay, so Rob really loves spicy food.
We get talking about Jamaican food,
and he'd short me, he'd be like,
"Aw, buddy, you don't know, man."
And that's where we would banter
back and forth in patois.
So he was just ranting and raving.
Like, "You're wasting taxpayer dollars
to-- to try to find something on me,
and you're-- this is ridiculous."
It was a bona fide investigation
by the Toronto police.
He got caught smoking
crack cocaine with gunrunners,
opening himself up to extortion,
as the Mayor of Toronto
who had an influence
over the police budget.
So it was very clear to me and others
that he could not remain mayor.
I came up with the idea
of removing his powers.
We have to, um, try to disarm the mayor
as much as possible.
I offered to not make the motion
if he would just agree...
...to voluntarily go into rehab,
and, uh, he said no.
I voted for Rob Ford back in 2010,
and, damn, was I ever wrong.
We walked into the council chamber.
Shame, shame, shame!
And, um, there's a bunch of people, um,
giving the mayor the finger,
flipping him off.
You know, people started yelling,
"Shame, shame, shame,"
and all-- all hell broke loose.
You're the scumbag.
- How do you know--
- You're the scumbag, you little punk.
This was a session
full of jaw-dropping moments.
When it couldn't get worse, it did.
The mayor ran
into Councillor Pam McConnell,
almost knocking her to the ground.
I'm still shaking, I'm sorry.
After the debate, voting began.
It's still happening right now.
We could not remove Rob Ford as mayor.
Only the electorate can do that.
But what we were able to do
was remove the powers of mayor,
provide them to the deputy mayor...
...and then work as a council
in a collaborative, collegial way
to run the city.
This, folks, reminds me
of when Saddam attacked Kuwait.
You guys have just attacked Kuwait.
Most people in Rob Ford's position,
after going through the scandal
and the mess he put all of us through,
would've stepped aside in shame.
What Rob Ford did
is he leaned in on the scandal.
He tells Torontonians to re-elect him.
Rob Ford is holding his campaign launch
here at the Congress Centre in Etobicoke.
Volunteers are getting everything ready
for the fundraiser.
How many do you think you'll sell tonight?
Oh, a lot.
I think it's gonna be phenomenal.
Of course, he was gonna run.
Why retreat when you can
just keep pushing ahead?
I've been the best mayor
that this city's ever had.
My record speaks for itself.
It was pretty incredible
to see Rob Ford get up, say,
"I've done a great job as mayor."
Four more years!
What was equally amazing
is how many people cheered him on.
- You got my vote, Rob.
- I really appreciate the support, sir.
It's very kind of you.
People love a comeback story.
This week he's gonna be resurrected.
Jesus and Rob Ford.
There was a feeling
that if he can keep his demons at bay,
that, you know, he has at least
a very good shot of winning this thing.
In early 2014,
I'd just left the Toronto Star
and joined The Globe and Mail.
And then something like
three days into the job,
I get a call from someone who said
he had another video
of Rob Ford smoking crack.
I just remember kind of standing there
going, "Oh damn."
Canadian media
will pay for freelance photos.
So I remember just saying,
"We should buy five screenshots
from this video for $2,000 a piece."
And The Globe just got it done.
They were like, "Yes, let's do this."
These are the damning
pictures that surfaced tonight.
Snapshots of a new video
allegedly showing Rob Ford
with what could be
a crack pipe in his hand.
It just sort of added that layer
of, you know, everything was
already so unbelievable.
And then this.
It really built
this, uh, frustration and anger
among voters outside of Ford Nation
that enough is enough.
And he's just like, "Yeah, I've gotta get
treatment and-- and-- and get help."
And that's where he went away to rehab.
Now, I think I speak
for everyone when I say
I'm just happy Mayor Ford is finally
getting the help he so desperately needs.
What? What's that? Really?
I'm told Rob Ford's escaped from rehab.
He's on the loose in the Los Angeles area.
Let's take a look.
People really didn't get it.
Like, it was hard for him. Um...
He'd call me up
in the middle of the night at rehab.
He's like,
"Buddy, this place is like jail, bro."
I'm like, "Man, they got a gym up there?"
He's like, "Yeah." I'm like, "Work out."
So when he came back, uh,
the guy was about 30 pounds lighter.
There was one guy I couldn't beat.
It was that guy in the mirror.
One morning I got up. I said, "That's it."
They said, "You can't. There's a mayor."
I said, "I'm going.
I have to take care of myself."
He was, you know, firing on all cylinders.
He's training, working out.
I'm like, "Yeah, we're back."
He also invited wrestlers,
celebrities, to show up at his office.
And he created a carnival atmosphere.
Do you remember one of those...
...accidental tirades of his?
He did say he would kick my butt.
- You're kidding.
- Oh, okay.
It was the day
after Mike Tyson had come to City Hall.
And we go for breakfast in the morning,
and Rob had just, like, no appetite.
And he's just like, "I don't know,
I'm just not feeling well."
"There's this pain in my side.
It's, like, burning."
And Doug was like,
"Jerry, just take him to the hospital."
Uh, so I drop him off.
He goes to see the-- a doctor,
and I-- I just wait in the parking lot.
A few hours pass,
and, uh, Rob calls me up.
He's like, "Buddy, I don't know,
it's not looking good."
"Um, you got to call Doug
and tell him to get here ASAP."
Doug shows up,
and Doug and I go into the hospital.
And we see Rob laying there.
And he tells us
that, uh, they had to do a scan,
and they found a tumor.
And I just broke down crying.
Sorry.
The diagnosis is a malignant liposarcoma.
We think it's a fairly aggressive tumor,
a very rare tumor
and a very difficult tumor.
I feel so sad for Rob, for his illness.
And I-- I just pray he's gonna be okay.
In spite of his illness,
Rob Ford has decided to remain
in the race for a seat on city council
while his brother, Doug Ford,
runs for the top job in his place.
My brother Rob told me
that he needed me to take the torch
while he focuses on getting better.
Rob dropped out of the mayor's race,
and his brother jumped
into the mayor's race.
Doug Ford came close to winning,
having only jumped into the race
with 30 days left to go,
so kudos to him.
Rob was re-elected
as the councillor once again for Ward 2.
- Rob! Rob!
- We love you, Rob! Thank you, Jesus!
Rob would never, ever admit defeat,
even with cancer.
He thought he was going to beat it,
like he'd-- he'd beaten everything.
Um, he was always, you know,
the comeback kid.
It's World Cancer Day.
It seems very relevant to talk to you
and find out how you're doing right now
in this whole process.
Well, thanks for asking, Cynthia.
It's very kind when people come up
and ask, uh, how I'm doing.
Um...
I'm doing the best I can
in this situation. Um...
I got, uh, in about six months ago.
I can just keep my head up high every day,
take one day at a time,
and just keep fighting
and, um, keep praying.
Um...
It's a struggle.
I'm outside Mount Sinai Hospital.
This is where Rob Ford
spent his last few days,
with his family by his side,
as he battled
a rare and aggressive form of cancer.
It was like a-- you know,
a Shakespearean tragedy
where he didn't get that final act
where he was able
to, you know, overcome all those demons
and come back, you know,
in a positive light.
His ending was cut short,
and that, in itself, was a tragedy.
And I really miss him.
He was a really good friend.
Ford Nation!
There's not a day that goes by
that I don't think
about some conversation I had with him
that-- it taught me something.
Oh man, these emotions.
Ooh!
I'm proud and I'm honored
that I'm able
to share this side of the story
and be able to give people an inside look
as to why I stood by him
through thick and thin.
And I don't care what anybody says.
They can go fly a kite.
At his funeral, you know,
Doug told this story how...
Rob loved his, uh, sandwiches.
I was working late one night,
and Rob came in with, uh, a sub.
And he said, "I went in to MR. SUB,
and Gus was there."
"And Gus worked 16 hours a day
trying to make a living."
"And an order came in
on the phone... for MR. SUB,
and the total order was about $32."
"And Gus didn't have
anyone to deliver it."
I think you know
where this story is going here.
Well, Rob's like,
"Well, just give it to me.
I'll go deliver it for you."
See, imagine you ordered some subs,
and then... a knock,
there's the Mayor of Toronto
delivering your subs.
He said, "You wouldn't believe it."
"I met, you know, four new voters."
"So I have them as supporters now."
And he said, "The best thing of it all,
they gave me $35, and I got a $3 tip."
You know...
But, again, you know,
that-- that's classic Rob.
What do you think Rob Ford's legacy is?
Hmm.
What is Rob Ford's legacy?
I've been thinking about that.
'Cause I knew
you were gonna ask me that question.
And I think Rob Ford's legacy,
it all comes down to who you ask.
So, Mark, who was Rob Ford?
He was dishonest.
- Selfless.
- Smart.
Outspoken.
Unpredictable.
Exploitative.
You know, all of us have a Rob,
you know, somewhere in our life.
And I think in the long run,
history will think of him
as a man who had an illness...
One more year!
...who, despite that,
accomplished some things
that had never been accomplished before.
And... the bad stuff,
yep, it speaks for itself.