99% Invisible - 543- In Proximity: Ryan Coogler and Roman Mars
Episode Date: July 5, 2023In Proximity is a podcast from Proximity Media about craft, career, and creativity.Proximity founder Ryan Coogler talks all about podcasts with Roman Mars, host and creator of 99% Invisible, a sound-r...ich narrative podcast about architecture and design. They discuss holding pandemic meetings about the business of podcasting, Roman’s journey from science to public radio to 99% Invisible, finding the balance between being an artist and business owner plus why Roman believes a producer is the highest form of worker, collaborating on the Judas and the Black Messiah Podcast, the read-to-tape system, and Prox Recs that include a good coffee table book that will impress your friends and how to make great radio.Listen to In Proximity on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or your favorite podcast app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is 99% Invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
The COVID pandemic was terrible in every way, but I had one strange bright spot in my
locked-in homebound routine, a weekly Zoom call with the genius director, writer, and producer
Ryan Coocler of Black Panther Fruitvale Station and Creed fam.
I know, it surprised me too.
You're about to learn more about how our relationship got started
and our various takes on how we navigate creativity
and collaboration on this episode of Inproximity,
a podcast from Proximity Media,
the company he founded with Cindy Cookeler and Seville Hanion.
It is a fun conversation with a person I really adore
and admire and I thought I could like to hear it.
And after you listen, I encourage you to go subscribe to Inproximity because it is a great
show, especially if you like learning and thinking about the creative process.
So without further ado, here's me being interviewed by Ryan Coogler.
Enjoy. You're listening to PROX.
There's a million ways to make something good.
I've reached this point where I was like, I think there's the beginning of your career,
you feel like you don't know how to make something good.
And then the middle of your career, you're like, I'm the only one who knows how to make
something good.
And you know, it's a perfect way.
There's like one way to tell a story. And then later on in your career, you're like, there's a million ways to make something good. And you know, it's a perfect way. There's like one way to tell a story.
And then later on in your career,
you're like, there's a million ways to make those good.
You're listening to Inproximity.
Roman Mars is the host and creator of 99% Invisible,
a sound rich narrative podcast about architecture and design.
He's also the co-founder of the Independent Podcast Collective, Radio Tobia.
In 2021, his team worked with Proximity Media to produce the Judas and the Black Messiah
podcast, which helped tell the true story behind the events portrayed in the film.
Judas and the Black Messiah is directed by Shaka King
and produced by proximity media, macro,
Warner Bros and our partners.
The story follows FBI informant William O'Neill
played by LaKiefe Stanfield
as he infiltrates the Illinois Black Panther Party
and is tasked with keeping tabs on their charismatic leader,
Chairman Fred Hampton, played by Daniel Calaluja in an Oscar-winning performance. On this episode, Roman sits with our
founder, Ryan Kugler, to talk about what they've learned in leading creative teams,
their love of audio storytelling, and their collaboration on the Judas and
the Black Messiah podcast.
I'm Roman Mars, I'm the hosting creator of the show 99% Invisible. I'm Ryan Kugler, I'm a writer, director, and producer, founder of Proximity Media.
Super excited to talk with you, bro.
I went back to my email to figure out what the day was that we met.
Do you remember what day it was, bro? I just went back and look.
I don't remember what day it was.
I mean, I remember where it was.
So it was June 9th, 2019.
Okay.
It was the association of architects.
Yeah, the American Institute of Architects.
American Institute of Architects, AIA.
It was the architecture conference, right?
Yep.
In Las Vegas, I was hosting it and you were the keynote.
I was the keynote. You were you're the keynote interview. Like sometimes it's a speaker, but mostly is yeah
Yeah, you were the final you're the final act. Yeah. Yeah, it was so cool. What's crazy is like it makes all the station in the world
Why you would be here? I thought it would be fun because, you know, I figure,
you're asked about a million things when it comes
to Black Panther and Marvel and comic books and stuff,
but I didn't think that you'd probably ever spent,
in like a dedicated half hour talking about the built world
in some way, but I know you'd thought about it.
And so that's where I thought it would be,
actually a ton of fun.
And I think it turned out to be pretty fun.
Now I was great.
I had a blast.
We were in Vegas, and I remember just being like,
really excited to meet you,
because I've been obsessed with podcasts for a long time.
And you were there with,
it was a few other podcasts that I was there with you.
I remember like,
right before I went on, I was a little star-struck.
Oh, it's kind of you to say. Well, what I loved about it was when we got to Vegas,
we talked for like, I don't know, 10, 15 minutes before you went on.
And all we did was talk about podcasting.
You were just like, I like this one.
I like this one.
Yeah.
We're thinking about doing this podcast.
All these ideas that you had.
And I knew we were just like, he's an apod way to hit it off in terms of podcasting.
Yeah.
And then like, she got weird with the pandemic and everything.
But I remember somehow, I convinced you
to do like a meeting per week with me
just to like kind of explain how the podcast business works.
And it was great.
Like we booked it and like we had the time protected.
And it got to the point when I was like,
really looking forward to it
because it was during the pandemic,
when everything was nudge,
it was really fun for me too.
I mean, we started with you,
we were talking about proximity moving into podcasting
and I had started my own independent show
and I ran an independent label.
And that was really fun,
but what I remember,
we just had this weekly meeting,
it's like five o'clock or something like that.
And it was like on a Wednesday or something.
Exactly.
It was like Wednesday at five.
We talked, you know, one or two hours a week,
which is more than I talk to, almost anybody.
If you ask anybody, there's like,
Yeah, that's right.
That's a pretty unusual for me.
Yeah.
But it was totally fun.
And what I think I love most about it was,
it was fun to talk about podcasting.
It was fun to hear about movie making from you,
but we would have whole two hour conversations
about just like politics and life and our families
and our upbringing and stuff like that.
It was a real sound for me at a time period
where I was suffering from a lack of connection
to a lot of people, yeah.
It was great, man.
One of the things that I admired the most about it
was how you kind of like demystified a lot of things
that I heard about the podcast business.
Like one of my favorite things you say was like,
your podcast and your radio.
You know, I've been doing radio a long time, you know.
That unlocked something for me.
Because you talk a little bit about how you got started
in doing this.
Yeah, yeah. I was just someone who loved radio. I was in school to do something else. I was trying
to be a scientist for a long time. And I listened to NPR in the lab. I loved the way the people
talked. I just felt comfortable there. And then there was a certain point where I knew science
wasn't for me. My sort of Genesis moment was listening to the show called Talk the Nation.
And at the time, Ray Suarez was the host of Talk the Nation.
And there was this, there was this episode.
It was right around the time of the Clinton scandal with Monica Lewinsky.
And the subject of the hour was, if we don't have these type of heroes anymore,
who are modern day heroes?
If the president is fallible and is held accountable
for something, who is our modern day heroes?
And about midway through the hour,
someone calls in and says,
you know what, race war is, you're my hero.
And I was like sitting there and I was like,
you know what, race war is my hero too.
I feel like I need to work with Race Wars.
Like I can't do what he does because he just seemed unfathomably good at this to me.
But I know that there's a person who reads books and helps him write the questions.
And I would be very, very good at that job.
That's called a producer, but I didn't write it at the time.
So then I began to just sort of like work my life into someone who could be in a position
to get a job like that.
So I left grad school and moved out here and then that was when I kind of fell in love
with radio back then because I couldn't afford a television and listened to the radio all
the time in my drove out to San Francisco in the late 90s,
and that's when I sort of began to sort of figure out
how to do stories and got a Moran,
it's like a cassette recorder,
like these big Moran's recorders,
and began recording people and trying to figure out
what I was gonna do.
I began volunteering at Kale W. in San Francisco,
and I just worked at every type of job
that they would let me work,
and I basically did it for free, and that just worked at every type of job that they would let me work.
I basically did it for free.
That's how I started in radio.
About this time that storytelling of Ira Glass was sort of entering into this ascendancy,
like younger people were becoming more interested in radio as a medium.
I just kind of fell into it and never looked back.
That's amazing.
So were you in college at the time when you had this kind of eureka moment
while you were listening to Rice Whereas?
I was in grad school.
I studied population genetics and plant genetics.
And I loved that stuff.
Like I loved just finding out what made the world
was really interesting to me.
But in the end, I just like knowing that.
In short, I processed like a transition in like realizing
that you had an idea for your own show
and deciding to start it.
What was that like?
Well, so I had worked on every type of public radio show
that you could imagine.
It was sort of like hosting some music shows,
storytelling shows.
I did my own storytelling show that was local for a while,
and that got me the attention of a group
called the Third Coast International Audio Festival.
I moved to Chicago to work at WBZ for a while. And that got me the attention of a group called the Third Coast International Audio Festival. I moved to Chicago to work at WBZ for a while.
And then I was working on a show called Snap Judgment
as a senior producer there for a little bit.
And then 99% of visible was presented to me as an idea
of like the AIA chapter in San Francisco
was sort of partnering with KLW to figure out
would there be a format
for a little two-minute insert of a local building to tell a story about?
And because of my science education, I've always liked sort of technical subjects, like
explaining technical subjects, was always really fascinating to me.
And I thought about this as an idea.
I knew I wanted to expand it kind of more broadly to not be just buildings, but
just like anything in the built world.
My first concept was like curb cuts.
When did curb cuts come into being?
There's like little ramps that make it so people with different abilities can get from
a cross-street essentially.
And I was like, I could tell a little story about an everyday thing.
And I know that there would be a big story behind
what seemed like little decisions.
And that was what became 99% invisible.
And it was really like an exercise in,
could I kind of seduce the audience
through like tone of voice and story
into caring about things that they pass by every day,
that they don't think is interesting.
And the challenge of that and the challenge of doing an audio story about a largely visual
thing that we experienced like built world design, that was really fun for me.
Man, what was it like you transitioned to being a business owner in multiple Google's
bosses like wow,
and still being an artist?
Like how did you find that?
How do you find it today?
I like that my job always changes.
So inside of radio, there's this thing called a producer.
And a producer is I think the highest form of worker
and human that there is.
A producer is a person who just will solve any problem
to get the thing on the
air or like available for someone to download. And that could be just like you do interviews,
you write, you edit things, you do whatever it takes to get a thing done. And that's what a producer
is. And that's why they're like the highest form of worker because they will really do anything
to make something happen. And to me, as the job changed, and my job was
as much about making sure the people under me were paid. Right. I liked solving that problem.
As much as I love to be in pro tools and I love to interview people and stuff like this,
I got a real thrill out of like building something from scratch and making sure payroll was made.
The flip side of like enjoying to do everything
is you end up doing everything
and it's harder to let some of that stuff go.
I'm way better at that now because I have people
on my team, you know, you know this,
it's like they're better at me than things,
you know, like it's like they're just better
and you just like, you job is just to get out of the way.
Totally.
And so like that part took me more time
because you know, it takes a while to bring someone in
and like show them a thing and they take twice as long
as you do and you just wanna like,
I'll just give it to me, you know, like,
and that sort of thing.
I actually thought to myself the other day,
because you know, when you first get started as a filmmaker,
you got a film school and everything,
you did editor, you did cinematographer, you know, you first get started as a film maker you got a film school and everything you did editor You did cinematographer, you know you hold the boom you doing your mix and pro tools
I used to know all of these things and I used to be like fairly good at all of them and I was thinking about it now
Like I'm like fuck out dropped off somewhere and it was like I am a makeup movie. I don't think I could do it
Because like all of all of the muscles. I think of like kind of atrophy
You know to the point where I'm like,
am I just useless now?
You know, like, I feel that way all the time.
It's interesting too, because like,
you talk about like a producer being like the highest form of functioning human on a project.
Like, in a way, direct is almost the opposite sometimes, it feels like,
like, if you got like a real, well functioning set, you got like, good actors,
you could kind of like, not do anything. The movie is still happening in a way you know saying like yeah
I had days on set where I felt like really like insignificant you know saying like just because so much is being delegated at this point
I relate to that what you talking about I know that feeling like I used to mix and be the final mixer on every episode of the show
In the beginning really was just me and then it quickly became more and more and more people.
Now, I don't think MartÃn González,
who's our, you know, sounded here,
I don't think I could even understand
the busing and processing he does to the sound anymore.
Like, I don't think I could even open it up
and really get it.
You know, and he just have to just let it.
Like, I used to think that this would be like,
a spiritual death on my part, you know,
to me not know how the show worked
And now it's just like you just sort of ease into it like freezing the death or
I think that's a that's really interesting so look like
Was great about our relationship was like we didn't just talk about things.
Like we actually got to make something together, you know.
That was really like profoundly exciting for me.
It was honestly like what I liked a lot about you was that we would talk, but it was very
clear to me that I was talking to another person who was a doer, you know.
It wasn't just like pipe dreams.
Like if we had the opportunity to work on something and do something together
Like I had this feeling like it would actually happen
And we got that opportunity with the Judas and Black Messiah podcast
Yeah, it was our first time as a company making something in audio
This is before we hired the great Paul Amardo who runs that division for us
We were like outsourcing it to you guys, you know to make it plain. I just found a process like exhilarating. So one of the proximity media's first films was Judas in the Black Messiah, which was
co-written and directed by Shaka King, and I was fortunate enough to be a producer on it
along with my partners, Sebal Hanian and Zizi Kugler.
It was an incredible process,
but we also had a campaign podcast to the film,
which was narrated by Elvis Mitchell
and produced by Roman Mars, Christopher Johnson,
and the team at 99% and visible.
And it was a companion piece to the film
that really went into the making of it,
but through the eyes of Chairman Fred Hampton's son,
Chairman Fred Hampton Jr.
and it was a really moving experience
getting the make the podcast.
Specifically, I remember when we were talking about the show
and trying to figure out like if there was a show there
and like what may have since,
we spoke for a long time, I blabbed a lot about the process,
what was going on and how it was clear to us
that the show would be helpful in terms of Chairman Fred Hampton Jr.
Talking about the film and really like, we looked at it as like a campaign piece that could help him and his mother and mother of a cool process.
What it's like to have this person's story told through a magic motion picture that affected their lives, you know.
His father, that political leader, and you said something I was really incredible. You kind of boiled down to a sentence and you said, this show should be about a guy who's trying
to protect his father's legacy. And it was like boom, like I understood it. And filmmaking terms,
I got my protagonist, you know what I'm saying? I got the action that they're trying to do.
And now I'm on the hook is it will they won't they? You know what I mean? And I thought that was
just fantastic. Well, I just wanted to be involved because there was a real reason
for the Judas in the Black Messiah podcast to exist,
because there was a person there in Chairman Jr.
who had something to say,
who because of the necessity of two hour film,
dramatic entertainment, can't have everything in it.
Like it just can't. People have to streamline, people have to be combined. You know, like it, can't have everything in it. Like it just can't.
People have to streamline, people have to be combined, you know, like it's just the way
it is.
And you have very real limitations at a medium.
I mean, it's incredible.
You can tell so much more, like in a single image, it tells so much, but also just like,
there's a way that people watch things that you just can't cram in all those details,
the way you can in a conversation
that people follow. And, you know, so I loved the challenge of it. And I loved that it just had,
you know, like I'm a design guy. Like to me, like things have to have a reason to exist. They can't
just exist to be filigree or extra or promotion. Like this was a companion that I thought moved the story
forward in a way.
In term in like needed production,
like he had so much to say that it was like,
okay, so how do we order this?
Like how do we think about this?
How do we think about Mama Kua and how we think about the fact
that he meets this person playing his dad
who he never really met.
You know, all that sort of stuff was so, like,
intense and interesting.
And, like, he had these insights about filmmaking
that were so interesting to me to kind of listen in on.
I should stress here that Christopher Johnson
produced this thing.
I'd like, you know what I mean?
Like, like, a little bit.
Yeah.
I brought in Christopher Johnson to make the thing.
Shout out to Christopher.
Yeah. But like Chairman Jr.,
have these insights like on set about
just the sort of blocking of like having
this white supremacist standing over his father
and his like his father would never do that.
And it's like these things are like, yep, that's right.
Yeah.
It took someone like that and having that conversation
was just really, really interesting.
And your partners at Warner Brothers were really good
about letting him be critical and have it be genuine.
I was impressed by that.
There was just like, it was a cool problem to solve
of like, how do you make a companion
where this person like really has like things to say
and not all of them are like, this is great.
You know what I'm gonna say?
Yeah, yeah, and it just felt like it was interesting
because we were the obstacle.
You know what I mean?
And that log line is like, hey,
you know, this is about a guy trying to protect
his father's legacy, like what's implied there is,
he's trying to protect it from any kind of missteps
we will make in the film.
You know what I'm saying?
He's trying to detect it from this system
that has to flatten things in order to do his job.
It came together.
It was a remarkable piece of journalism.
But what I remember, one of my finest memories was,
I can't remember what exactly the term is,
you got to call it,
but it was like when you guys had to script up on a gold dock
and just kind of like we were listening to it,
you had all your folks kind of like chiming in and the notes.
Yeah, yeah. We call that a read to tape.
It's like a table read. We call it read to tape.
So we have all the clips out.
We have like your parts.
Christopher Red, Elvis's parts.
You know, I would read some of them.
And then we have the tape.
And then there's all these sort of notes in the margins.
So like if there's a mess up, we just keep going.
You know, and everyone makes little notes in the margin.
And I remember we invited you to it.
And I remember this very cutely because I said, you know, we do this for like three hours.
It's long, it's tedious.
We go over every little word it phrase, and it might be really boring.
And you said to me, I look at a guy picking up a coffee cup 30 times to figure out which
one I'm going to use.
There is nothing too boring for me.
It's like six thousand dollars of a coffee cup.
Oh yeah.
It's a true story.
And so yeah, and that was really delightful.
And it's the moment you know, it's coming to life.
Like there's a, you know, I recommend when anyone makes a thing.
It's very important to have these, to experience it with other people, because you feel the
slow parts, the parts that just embarrass you, the parts that you feel them when people
are next to you that you don't feel it by yourself.
You have to have these moments of sharing little bits of it.
Because to me, my ears get hot,
I get embarrassed about it,
and I want that for you to go away so badly.
So I go in and fix it.
Oh yeah.
No, 100% man, I really enjoyed that process.
I got this theory, I'm getting more evidence of it
the other I get is that nobody really knows
what anybody's job is like.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, and you got no idea.
You're opening up your mailbox and your mail is there.
You got no idea how I got there.
What it took, you know.
And that you can't really appreciate something
until you understand what went into it.
And most things you'll never know.
I remember being on that call with you all
and seeing everybody like thinking so deeply
considering everywhere, questioning things.
I thought like, yes, this makes sense.
I love it, this much care is going into this thing.
And I love that, this is how these things are made.
You know what I mean?
Like these podcasts, I'll listen to these radio stories,
I'll listen to these, whether it's 15 minutes or 20 minutes,
seeing that process, and knowing that it's something
that's been developed over time,
I gotta imagine that system, that reads the type system.
How long would you say that system's been around?
Romantic like, oh for, I mean for me, the thing was, I did so much of it by myself for a long time,
that there was no one to kind of work with.
But like as soon as we had more than three people, we began doing it.
And I knew other shows do it, or maybe they, you know,
it's not uncommon to instead record it,
or record scratch tracks of it,
and just send it around for notes and stuff like this.
But I find something really good comes out in the moment,
doing it live, you learn things, and you learn,
you know, especially because like someone's writing
for me, like in those situations, I mean, not on Judas, but like on 99, they're writing
a thing that needs to be said for me to say. And then I would go, well, I think I'd say
a little differently here or that's really, you know, they sometimes I really capture
my voice or make a joke or sometimes a joke comes out through that process. And I've always
sort of felt like what I liked about the format of Nine-Names and I'm visible because I kind of am there as a host
like interjecting kind of all the time was that I wanted the opportunity to you know to react and
someone says a thing and rather than just let it sort of sit there, everyone's thinking the same
thing so it would be fun just to say it you, like, and so we figured that out for our show.
And it's just, I mean, it's like the best part of my day.
We do probably one of those a week.
And sometimes it's hard, but like, you know, you've cracked it.
But it's just like, that's the, I, you know, I sit,
and now it's like sitting in a Zoom with like six or seven
other people.
I'm like hearing their work for the first time
and seeing it come together and seeing them take big swings
and seeing some of them connect and some of them don't.
It's just, I just recommend that you like get a group
together and get a good group of people
and help them be your editors because no one has
that good a taste or that good of instincts.
Like there's a million ways to make something good.
Like, I've reached this point where I was like,
I think there's the beginning of your career,
you feel like you don't know how to make something good.
And then the middle of your career,
you're like, I'm the only one who knows how to make something good.
And you know the perfect way.
There's like one way to tell a story.
And then, later on in your career,
you're like, there's a million
ways to make this good. Like I've heard and seen people do it so good. And you could do it
differently or you could choose this one or you could say it this way. You just have
to write your way out of it to make it make sense for the audience and you're serving an
audience. But there's like a million ways to make a good radio story. There's a million
ways to make a good movie. Absolutely.
And so once you sort of get into that zone,
you allow people to like,
to try lots of different things that you would never try.
I mean, that is like,
heaven as a creator,
is to have a team around you who brings you things
that just blow you away.
You know, I feel like that when I produce for other directors.
You know what I mean? Like, we're talking about Judas. I thought I'd like that when I produce for other directors. You know what I mean?
Like we're talking about Judas.
I thought I'd that with Shaka like every day.
It was like, yeah, I would never make this choice.
But it's a perfect choice.
And I get to be around you.
I totally was fantastic.
When I liked about working with you on Judas
and all that sort of stuff
and those conversations we had was like,
you had other things to do.
I mean, you were writing what kind of forever at the time.
You had a lot going on.
Yeah.
But like, no part of the podcast process
was uninteresting to you.
It was, I love it, man.
I feel fortunate to be involved, man.
It was like a dream of mine.
You know, like to make a podcast in general,
because I think the medium is so fascinating.
It still is fascinating to me, man.
I'll see stuff we had a meeting this morning
with some stuff Paula was doing,
and I was like, man, it's so cool,
and it has similarities to what we do as filmmakers.
But at the same time, it is very different.
It requires another form of thinking,
dude, I love it, man.
It's few things I love as much as that specific medium. So for my prox rec, I'm gonna take the easy way out and I'm gonna recommend Roman's book
to 99% of his city.
I like that.
I think that it's a great book, a great piece of art and it's really cool for me because
you know obviously Roman makes audio.
It was great for me to have a physical thing.
I kind of see I was almost like a campaign
if you're a fan of the show.
But it's a lot of great work in there.
A lot of great work of journalism in art.
It makes you great coffee table with addition.
You know what I mean?
It looks great on a bookshelf.
You know they press your friends.
They come over and I see it.
That's my prox wreck for today.
Yeah, and I should add that I wrote parts of that.
But my co-author Kurt Coles that who,
like honestly, if he didn't work on that book, that book would have never gotten done.
So he's a real driving force behind the book, but I thank you so much.
That means the world to me.
I guess if you're interested in the craft of radio making, audio making, I think few
places are more thoughtful than the website, transome.org.
You could learn a ton and how people make things understand what they're doing,
like, what does it imply when like you have music and the music goes out.
And then the next thing you say, like all of a sudden becomes very important.
You're like learning tricks like this that you pick up on, but you just don't, you
probably never really saw them articulated or heard them in such a way that you got what the emotion was
And that's the same things that I'm sure you learn in like film school and stuff like this is like this is what this does
This is what this cut does you know speeding up the I don't know the edits
You know like do this of a rhythm, you know, so like that. Yes, a language you call it the language
You're sending with every art form has its language. Totally. And so the audio, like the best people
for breaking that down to understanding
how to do a type of audio storytelling
is transom.org and I'd really recommend it.
And the other thing I recommend is just
like listening to things, I like everything.
Roman, I wanna thank you for being on our show
in Proximity.
It means the world that you made time
and I think Fox really enjoyed what you have to say.
So thank you, bro.
Oh, it's my pleasure.
It was a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
It's a real honor.
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To check out Judas in the Black Messiah, the film, and podcast, and 99% invisible, head
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Don't forget to follow at Proximity Media on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok.
The show is produced by me, Palomato.
Executive producers are Ryan Cougler, Zindzi Cougler, Seville Hanyan and me.
Our theme song and additional music is composed by Ludwig Gorenson.
Ken Nana is our sound designer and mix engineer.
Paulina Cherasova is our production assistant.
Audio editing for this episode is by Sedrick Wilson.
Special thanks to the whole proximity media team
and to you for listening to Inproximity.
It was great, man. I remember that day I came by and got the book and I was kind of like, man, it's so
this is where you live, you know what I mean?
It was so close.
It was like down the street, you know what I mean?
We had done all these, all these zooms.
It was like, you get this feeling that somebody like halfway across the world, you know what
I'm saying?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
across the world, you know what I'm saying.