Dear Hank & John - 15: Get That In Your Mouth!
Episode Date: September 14, 2015What is art? Should we lower the drinking age? What kind of liquor is the best? Who should I play with on Mario Kart? How do decrease my impact on the environment without money? What do you do when "T...he One" leaves you? And OTHER QUESTIONS ANSWERED!!If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams and an exclusive weekly podcast at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Dear John and Hank.
Or as I like to call it Dear Hank and John.
This is a podcast where I, John Green, along with my brother Hank Green, offer some dubious
advice, answer your questions and give you all the week's news for Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
Hank, how are you?
I'm doing good.
John, you and I just had a conference call.
Wasn't that enjoyable? I'm doing good. John, you and I just had a conference call. Wasn't that enjoyable?
I love a good conference call.
I always thought that the whole point
of being a working novelist was that you didn't have
to have meetings, but it turns out that I still do
have to have meetings.
In fact, I have to have an astonishing number of them.
Also Hank, to be completely upfront with you,
I have a hangover.
I threw up from drinking this out for the first time
since my 30th birthday.
Yeah, what are you, a teen?
Well, I hadn't had a drink in about 45 days,
and then I had a few of them.
And I think my tolerance had been significantly affected,
and it was a difficult and painful evening. And indeed, it has been a affected and it was a difficult, uh, it was a difficult
and painful evening. And indeed, it has been a difficult and painful day. I don't want
to, uh, I don't want to undersell it. There is absolutely nothing to recommend how I feel
right now. But we'll talk more about alcohol during the, during the advice portion of the
podcast. But everything else is good with you.
Yeah. Last night I had a glass of wine and a chocolate cake, not a whole chocolate cake,
just a piece of chocolate cake. It was wonderful.
Well, you aren't you a study and moderation. Would you like a poem?
Give me a poem, John.
All right. You've been complaining a lot about the poems lately, especially that they sound...
Ah, it's not complete.
Holy...
It's just, I'm just commenting.
So, I'm going to try to...
What I'm going to try to do today is I'm going to read a very
famous, very short William Carlos Williams poem.
I'm going to try to read it in a way that isn't so poemy.
And then next week, I'm going to read an even less poemy poem, but Hank, please, please
take careful note of this poem.
I want you to listen to it closely, not just for this week, but also for next week, okay?
Okay.
This poem is called This is Just a Say by William Carlos Williams.
I have eaten the plums that were in the ice box, and which you were probably saving for
breakfast.
Forgive me.
They were delicious, so sweet and so cold.
That's the poem.
This is just a say by William Carlos Williams.
I didn't do that to poem.
Did I? Yeah. I Carlos Williams. I didn't do that to Poe Me, did I?
Yeah.
No, I like it.
I'm down.
It still sounds like a poem.
I don't know there's something about it.
Like when you're just reading a book, it sounds like you're reading a book.
And when you're reading a poem, it sounds like you're reading a poem.
I'm not sure what the thing is.
I mean, I can read that one much more Poe Me.
I have eaten the plums that were in the ice bombs,
and which you were probably saving for breakfast.
Anyway, I love that poem.
Despite the fact that I don't really know, for sure,
what an ice box is.
Is that just a refrigerator?
I suppose that's where I would put my plums.
But I think we've all been in that situation,
both literally and metaphorically in our lives,
with those we love, where we must seek their forgiveness,
because despite the fact that they were saving something,
and we should have honored that,
we are overcome by our own need,
by our own personal hunger.
And that's human, but it's also very sad.
My wife has this awful habit. It's not an awful habit.
My wife has this habit that is bad for her because of my habit.
And that habit is that she saves the french fries
that she wants the most for last. Now this seems like a terrible
like idea to me because you want to eat the best
french fries while they're still hot and before someone else has a chance to eat them.
But she saves, and she does this with all foods, not just french fries. She saves the ones
she wants the most for last. And so I finish my food. And then whatever is left over there
is Catherine's food and I grab, but then I've taken, if I take one of her things,
then it's like, it's definitely going to be
one of the things that she's most excited about.
And I'm like, get that into your mouth as soon as possible,
because otherwise you don't know what's gonna happen to it.
The asteroid could hit, you know,
the place could burn down, there could be a fire situation.
You gotta get those good things into your mouth soon.
You know Hank, people often say that the advice
here on dear Hank and John isn't particularly good,
but let me submit that the advice that you just gave,
get that in your mouth as soon as possible,
is brilliant advice.
Get that in your mouth as soon as possible.
That's what we believe here in our family.
Was it, get that in your mouth as soon as possible
or put that in your mouth as soon as possible?
Either way, graded by us.
I couldn't tell you.
But do you want to give some more advice
or possibly just pontificate
after someone asks us a question?
Yeah, absolutely.
This is gonna be one very humorous humor podcast today.
You wanna ask the first question?
Yeah, sure.
I'll ask a question from Rhett who asks,
Dear Hank and John,
what is your definition of the word art?
Oh gosh.
Well, I kinda make a point not to define the word art too much,
but I like to think that art is something
that someone or someone's has or have put into the world
to make my life more interesting.
I like it.
Like I think that art has to be created for an audience
and I think it has to be created as a gift for that audience.
And other than that, I don't try to judge it too much.
Yeah, I have no answer for this question at all.
It just seems like way too difficult
to try and put a box around.
Yeah.
So I say, my definition of the word art
is the very practice of not trying to define the
word art ret.
Yeah, second.
Well, you know, my wife, who is a museum curator and the host of the art assignment, would
completely agree with you that the question of what art is is one of the least interesting
questions that you can ask around art.
I kind of feel that way as a religious person about the question of like, does God exist,
which I find to be a completely uninteresting question
and yet like, people act like it's the only
interesting question about religion, but not to me.
Anyway, can we move on to another question, Hank?
We can, I think.
This question is from Gerard, and it involves
the theme of today's podcast, dear John and Hank,
I am a distiller,
and I was wondering what your thoughts were
on the US legal drinking age,
from a scientific perspective, alcohol's effect
on the developing mind, et cetera,
and a sociological one, effects on young people's perceptions
of alcohol.
Also, I have to ask, what do you enjoy drinking?
Well, Gerard, I can tell you what I regret drinking
from last night, rosé.
Line the taffred and half white.
I don't think I'll be drinking rosé again for a little while.
Yeah, I mean, I am concerned.
I think there are big and legitimate concerns about the effect that alcohol consumption
can have on developing brains.
There are also big and legitimate concerns about the effect that alcohol consumption can have on developing brains. There are also big and legitimate concerns about the effect that alcohol consumption can
have on grown-up brains and grown-up livers.
And yeah, I am not a big advocate for alcohol, which I think is a fairly dangerous drug that
is treated pretty casually in American culture, but I do enjoy drinking in moderation.
But gosh, I do not enjoy drinking in immoteration, which is what I did last night.
Yeah, I, it's, it's a, it's a tricky question because you can look at some
countries where the legal drinking ages lower and say that, you know,
binge drinking is less of a problem in those places. But I don't know that that would necessarily be the case immediately if we lowered the
drinking age in America, because of course, then the culture around alcohol and its place
in taboo and teenage rebellion would not change at least for a while. and then you have people who are really excited to buy and be able to
acquire alcohol easily.
At the same time, it doesn't seem that making it illegal for young people prevents them
from consuming lots of it.
Maybe, but I would say that it almost certainly decreases the number of people who consume lots of it. Maybe, but I would say that it almost certainly
decreases the number of people who consume lots of it.
I don't know, I feel like maybe we aren't experts
in this field, Hank.
What do you enjoy drinking?
That was Gerard's main question.
Well, I do.
I am an expert in the field of the things
that I personally enjoy drinking.
I don't get to drink a ton anymore
because I take a medicine that is not suggested to be taken with alcohol and I take it every day.
But I enjoy beer. I'm a fan, not been able to enjoy beer much.
I just want any beer, any beer at all.
But I also really enjoy gin, drinks, anything.
I really like gin.
And I like some, you know, various brown liqueurs such as such as...
Oh, no, I got to ask you to stop.
I also...
No, you have to stop.'re not you're nauseating me
I can't I can't go on you said brown liakers. I that was it for me
I'm sorry, but we have to move on that's I'm physically ill
There's a question the next one is from Sophia who has dear hankajon. I'm Sophia
I'm I'm 12 and I'm having a midlife crisis.
Who should I play for on Mario Kart?
Oh, I'll tell you Hank,
as someone who had a lot of midlife crises
when he was 12, I sympathize Sophia.
Oh, it was terrible.
It was so challenging being 12,
not just because of the Mario Kart issue.
You haven't made your Mario Kart commitment, but there's so many other commitments that
you haven't made in life.
So many paths that you might take.
And in a way that's liberating, but in another way, it's so constraining because it just
the choices feel infinite.
And it's only once you start to narrow your choices in some ways like that sad when you narrow
your choices in life, but in other
ways it's so freeing because you don't have to feel this, the infinite array of possibilities
that you might... Now I assume Sophia that you're playing Super Mario Kart for the Super
Nintendo, right, as I was when I was 12. And so your choices are Donkey Kong, Princess Peach, Luigi, Mario, Toad, and Yoshi.
Wasn't that it Hank?
Was there anything else?
That sounds about right.
Probably missing a couple.
There was none of this like Wario business.
You know, but I think Bowser was in there.
Bowser of course, but you don't want to play with Bowser because if you're looking for top speed
then you need to look to Donkey Kong, not Bowser. And if you're looking for literally anything else,
oh, and toad, of course, but you don't want toad either. Toad is yours.
You're real core choices here, Sophia, our Princess Peach.
And again, I'm assuming that you're playing this game
20 years ago, 25 years ago.
You're real core choices, our Princess Peach and Luigi.
Mario is just a poor man's Luigi,
and Toad is just a poor man's Princess Peach.
And you can make an argument for Donkey Kong if you're on a track that really, really benefits
high top speed over acceleration,
but almost all of the Mario Kart tracks
require good acceleration,
at least coming out of a jump turn.
So I'm gonna say, I'm gonna say Luigi.
I'm gonna say that on a day-to-day basis,
if you need a character who's kinda gonna be
at the center of your Mario Kart playing life
for the next 10 to 15 years, you're gonna want Luigi.
There are other people who are better in moments,
but you want consistency at this point in your life.
So, if you want someone you can can count on and that someone is Luigi.
Well, as someone who is slightly younger than John Green and thus played mostly Mario
Kart on the Nintendo 64, I have to say that Donkey Kong is the way to go, especially
if you're like me, the kind of Mario Kart player who just isn't very good and is going to be flying all over the place and needs
a guy who can really stick when he crashes into other players and into objects on the
crash.
What is the possible benefit of Donkey Kong in any version of Mario?
He's heavy.
He's heavy so he doesn't get pushed around
so much. So when you're like me and you can't control characters with your
fine motor skills which I can't because I'm one I don't play enough video games
and two my hands don't work very well. You got you it's good to have it's good to
have a Donkey Kong so that you can you can plow through any situation
and you don't slow down as much when you go over the grass. Donkey Kong's got it going
on. Also, he's a big big monkey, which is great.
You know, hey, I don't dislike your argument. I think that for an entry level Mario Kart
player, Donkey Kong is an excellent choice. High top speed, strength, weight, as you said, doesn't get hurt as much going through the
grass, although because the acceleration is so slow coming out of the grass, you don't
get back to top speed.
It takes forever to get back to top speed.
If you're on a beach course, in my opinion, Donkey Kong is just not the best.
My argument for Luigi, and I know that you can tell I feel strongly about
this, but my argument for Luigi, and I don't want to, you know, be mean to you about
your point, but I just feel like Luigi is in every day, every course choice for Mario
Kart, and I feel like Donkey Kong, you know, is sometimes a good choice, but sometimes
a disastrous one. So if we want Sophia to be finishing like solid seconds and thirds when she plays with her friends,
I think Luigi's the better choice.
I agree, I agree.
There's also, of course, something to be said for choosing a character that you feel personally connected to,
because really is it all about winning or is it about feeling good about...
No, it's about winning.
Game playing.
We're not talking about life.
We're talking about Mario Kart,
the most important thing that humans have ever done together.
Well, I appreciate Sophie's question,
and I appreciate John, you have a lot of deep
and significant thoughts about this.
Okay, Hank, here's another question.
This one's from Jeff E. Wright's,
dear John and Hank,
what can an average person
with few financial resources do to slow climate change?
People always say that I should get an electric car
or solar panels,
but those types of things cost a lot of money.
Correct, a great question, Hank.
And please tell us what to do.
Well, the thing in your life that consumes the most energy is in fact not your car, it
is your house.
So the thing you can do is set your thermostat at a more reasonable place and especially
in the winter, which is when we consume most of our resources unless you live in a very
nice tropical place. But on a sweater, and do the Jimmy Carter and, you know, have your house be in the high
60s instead of the low 70s.
Stuff like that is where you save most of your energy.
The heating and cooling of your home, though we do not ever talk about it, is the number one thing that
the number one source of carbon emissions in our lives, unless you, like I do, spend
a tremendous amount of time on airplanes.
I also spend a lot of time on airplanes, and I feel horribly guilty about it, and I'm
trying to fly less, but instead I keep flying more. I just got my like diamond platinum medallion from
the airline that I fly regularly, Delta. And I just, it feels like failure. It feels like every time
I get one of those new medallions, or it just, I just feel that I've done something terribly wrong.
Because I know the carbon emissions are epic, and also it just means that I've done something terribly wrong because I know the carbon emissions are epic
and also it just means that I'm spending lots of time
away from my family, but I can't stop, Hank,
I can't stop getting an airplane.
Yeah, it's hard.
It's hard to be John Green and it is hard to,
it's hard to say no when people want you
to do cool things.
I understand that.
No, it's not hard to be me.
Well, it's hard to be everyone, John.
But I am fascinated by the idea that, of course, what we think about, when we think about
solving or having a smaller impact on the earth, is like what we can acquire to help us do that.
But really, of course, any acquisition is more resources being spent.
is more resources being spent. And like there are certainly arguments to say
that solar panels or an electric car
would be a, you know, resources spent well
and possibly resources that overall
will have, you know, less intense impact
on the environment than not purchasing those things.
But really a lot of what we can do
is just to do less consumption at all.
And that's a difficult thing because it's not exciting.
And nobody's gonna have a really fun marketing campaign
for it, and you can't drive it around and look cool in it.
But it is in fact something that all people,
regardless of level of income, can do.
And that's just a consume less
and in general consume less electricity,
which means a baking places or not less electricity.
You consume less fuel of all kinds,
which means baking places and living in smaller homes and doing things
that we don't necessarily want to do.
But they're free.
So you're saying that really there is no acquisition that's carbon neutral?
Well, yes, there would be.
I mean, solar panels would absolutely be an acquisition that would be, you know, net
negative on the amount of carbon released into the environment.
Okay, so I should get solar panels. Yes, if you can, if you can afford them absolutely
please. We need first adopters to drive down the price of solar panels as it continues to
and hopefully will continue to do for a long time until it is available for everyone,
which will be really great,
because not only then will we have less impact on the environment,
but we will have a distributed power system,
which is much less likely to completely and catastrophically fail
in the event of a large-scale solar flare that could,
and the current state of the American electricity infrastructure
create basically a complete, you know, destruction
of our society.
Really?
Yes.
I'm terrified of giant solar flares.
It is a little bit...
Wait, it is like that...
Would a giant solar flare like cut the, like, make the electrical grid fail for, like,
more than an hour?
It would make...
It could potentially make it fail for more than a year.
Not, wait, really?
Yes, it's terrifying.
It is a thing that we don't worry about at all.
This is a terrible comedy podcast,
but it is like the number one thing
that we should actually be worrying about
in terms of natural disasters.
But since it hasn't ever happened,
we don't worry about it at all.
But it's the kind of thing that if it did happen
and we had, the sun sent out a solar flare
that would have done this to us just a few years ago,
it just happened to be pointed not at us.
It could be a bad thing.
It would take a tremendous amount of work
to get our grid back online in America.
Okay, just one quick follow up question, Hank.
I'm sorry to get distracted here,
but I didn't know about this solar flare thing.
And you know I like to have a good worry
over things that could kill me,
and destroy my life.
And I'm kind of astonished that there's a big one out there
that I wasn't even aware of life, and I'm kind of astonished that there's a big one out there that I wasn't even aware of.
No, I'm sorry.
You're in this scenario where I have no electric power
for a year, by the way, I would definitely die.
But how would I charge my phone?
It might be a good idea to invest in a bicycle power generator, John.
I am gonna do that.
I am gonna invest in solar panels and a bicycle power generator, John. I am gonna do that. I am gonna invest in solar panels and a bicycle power generator, and I'm gonna be the
only guy on my block with electric power.
And I'll tell you what, nobody's gonna notice and come get you.
Oh God, now I'm truly, truly terrified.
Let's go ahead and just move on to another question since I've been taken to an extremely
dark place.
This question comes from Emily, and she writes,
Dear John and Hank, what do you do when the person you thought was the one leaves you?
How do you move past them?
How do you start imagining yourself with someone else?
How do you get them out of your head?
Any thoughts are appreciated, including dubious advice?
Good news, Emily.
Dubious advice is all we have.
The other good news is that John,
John is an expert in this.
And I will just have to step back from the microphone
and have absolutely no advice for you, I'm sorry.
Yeah, Hank's never been dumped, really, right?
That's not true.
I've been dumped, but not by girls who I thought were the one.
Now, have you ever been, have you ever wept from being dumped?
Ah, yes.
You don't remember?
It was a long time ago, John, I'm old.
Let me ask you this.
Have you ever been on your knees and raised your arms up
and said, why hast thou forsaken me
with tears streaming down your cheeks
and not going into your mouth from your nose
as you heaves sobs over having been dumped. Not over having been dumped.
Well, then you haven't been dumped. Okay, so here's the thing, Emily. It hurts. I've said this a lot
over the years. It's something my chaplaincy supervisor said to me
when I got dumped when I was working as a hospital chaplain,
but I found it very helpful.
It hurts because it mattered.
It hurts because it was important.
The grief is intense because it is real
and because the relationship that you were in was an important one to you.
And it needs to be grieved.
And if you don't grieve it, then you're never going to get through that experience of loss.
I know that it sucks.
And obviously, if you're having what you feel to be like mental or physical health problems
that are related to your grief or if you feel like your grief has become complicated or
unhealthy, then you should talk to someone other than your favorite podcasters about that.
But there's nothing wrong with being sad. And I think the answer to how you get through it is time. I think
everything gets easier with time. And you will eventually imagine yourself with someone
else. In fact, you will be with someone else, maybe many more people. And you will eventually realize, I think, or at least this is what the conclusion that
I've come to, that there is no one as such.
There is no single flickering soul out there waiting for you to sift through all the other
souls and find the one.
Instead, relationships, whether they're romantic
relationships or friendships, are things that people
build together over time.
And that, hopefully, I am always in the process
of becoming a good spouse to my spouse
and becoming a good partner and a good friend
to the people I'm partners and friends with.
So I think that you have to look at it as a process,
not an event and that there isn't something like
needle in a haystack that you're searching for.
You know, you're living your life and right now
grief is part of that, but it won't always be
such a big part of it.
Good work, John.
Did you like leave Hank and and go have a diet,
Dr. Pepper, or something?
You, first of all, second of all,
no, I was reading about Mars.
If you ever, ever say anything bad about diet,
Dr. Pepper, ever again, our friendship is over.
Today's podcast is brought to you by delicious diet,
Dr. Pepper, diet, Dr. Pepper,
tastes more like regular Dr. Pepper, which tastes just like heaven.
This podcast is brought to you by Donkey Kong.
Donkey Kong the choice of Mario Kart drivers everywhere who actually care about being
stylin' and awesome.
Today's video is brought to you by crushing solar flares, solar flares waking you up out of your hangover
since 2015 to remind you that everything in life,
including electricity itself, is precious and fleeting.
This podcast is brought to you by Brown Lickers.
Brown Lickers including bourbon and whiskey.
Oh!
Drinks that include ethanol water and things that make them the color brown, which is making
my brother want to vomit in his own mouth.
Oh God, brown.
I don't even mind brown lickers, except when you call them that, it's so upsetting.
Alright, let's move on to another question.
Oh, brown lickers.
This question is from Jenna.
Dear Hank and John, I'm a freshman in college.
I just joined an Earthfighters Club,
and I was wondering what a good food to snack on while you study is.
What, what, what, what, that wasn't my fault.
How do you stay focused while you study?
Thanks. Love you guys.
I used to love chocolate chips.
I just like, it was like one chocolate chip every,
and I try to do it every minute or so.
So just spread them out real thin,
but it's sort of enough to keep me going
and give me something to look forward to.
Is that weird?
It's incredibly weird.
I also think that there is no nutritional science
to back up the idea that that's a good study food.
But I don't know, maybe it like keeps you working while you try to understand organic chemistry, like every time you understand a new kind of bonding or whatever, you get a
chocolate chip, was that the idea?
Uh, no, that would be very few chocolate chips per hour.
Um, it was just sort of like, uh, you know, like have this thing in my mouth.
You know, chocolate like dark chocolate chips, they have, and it keeps you awake.
They got the, they got the, the obro mide in them,
and they're also sort of a little bit bitter,
so they're like, like a sharp taste to,
like make your brain, brain continue braining.
You got that going on.
I don't know, it's what I used to do.
I'd buy like a big bag of semi-sweet chocolate chips
and they're cheap.
All I can think about is get it in your mouth as soon as possible.
But never, like the trick was to only eat them one at a time and they're really small.
And so if you put like five in your mouth or like a handful, then you're just like, then
you're eating. You're not studying. And so I just like one little chocolate chip at a
time. One little chocolate chip. This is very slow.
I'm sure that works. I used to eat a lot of cinnamon toast crunch
as a snack food, but looking back,
here's what I wish I had done.
I wish that I had gone to the cafeteria
and taken some nice fresh fruit
and put it in my little mini fridge,
and then cut up little bowls of fresh fruit to study with
because I think that's the right,
you get a little bit of sugar
and you get a little bit of a kick from it,
but you get it in a fairly healthy,
whole food kind of way.
And so that would do my recommendation,
but I will say as a side note
that cinnamon toast crunch is delicious.
But John, John, what about hot pockets though?
Oh my God, I did enjoy a hot pocket or two during college.
I, oh.
You know, it's a wonder that I had so many digestive problems
when I was a college student, Hank,
what with my diet of cinnamon toast crunch two meals a day
and hot pockets two meals a day
because I believed at the time in the formula day plan.
I would go at times weeks without consuming any food that was not either one kind of hot
pocket or another or cinnamon toast crunch. So I don't think that I'm the right person to answer
this question. Okay. Yes, I also would, yes. I also would suggest, um,
um, ramen noodles and pop tarts because let's be honest.
It's college.
All right, Hank.
Uh, we've got a question here from Elliott who writes, dear, John and Hank,
uh, my question is aimed at John.
Those are my favorite kind of questions, Elliott.
As an AMC woman supporter, I was thrilled when I found out that you're a fan of the club,
but you've probably been asked this before, but how did you discover the club and why did you decide to become a supporter?
Best wishes, Elliot.
Well, I mean, the story of AFC Wimbledon is amazing because they were originally this club
Wimbledon FC and then owners basically stole the club away and moved it to Milton Keynes, where there is
now a club called MK Don's that plays many miles away from Wimbledon in Milton Keynes.
And so the people of Wimbledon started their own football club, way down in the amateur
ranks and then worked their way up through the English League system and became
a full-time League club again and today sell out their stadium every weekend. I first
became aware of that story when I think right before Wimbledon got back into the football
League in 2009 and 2010 when they were just one promotion away from being a full-time professional club again.
And I sort of followed them in that league.
And then when they won this amazing game on penalties with Seb Brown, their 19 year old goalkeeper
saving two penalties in the shootout, that's when I really became addicted to AFC Wimbledon.
And I just feel really lucky because they're such a great club.
They reflect the values that I like in soccer.
Like I, you know, one of the only things that I think is of real value in soccer is the
community building aspect of it.
And AFC Wimbledon is owned equally by everyone of its fans.
You know, my five-year-old son owns just as much of AFC Wimbledon as I do and just as
much of AFC Wimbledon as I do, and just as much of AFC Wimbledon as the chairman
of the club does.
And I think it's pretty magical that, you know,
these thousands of people working together
and collaborating have been able to rebuild something
that was special to them and turn it into something
that in a lot of ways is even cooler than it used to be.
So AFC Wimbledon is pretty great.
Nothing against Mars, because Mars is also nice.
Hank, by the way, I read the Martian.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
How'd you think I'd like it?
It was great.
Holy snooze, it's a good book, it's intense.
Yeah.
Yeah, got a life or death math, right?
Yeah, yeah, it was really exciting.
And I felt like I learned a lot about Mars along the way.
I don't know how good the science is,
but it was convincing to me.
Yeah, it's pretty good science.
Speaking of way, Chank, I suppose that we should maybe
perhaps move on to the news from Mars if there is any.
Well, in this week's news from Mars,
I want to play you a clip, John.
I'd like to play you a clip that is from this guy,
whose name is John Green.
And this is from a video he made in 2009.
Are you ready for the clip?
Yeah.
You share a frickin' planet.
I like the planet.
In terms of places I might live, this planet is like my second favorite after Mars.
And I would totally go live on Mars and stop worrying about America and Iran, but unfortunately
I'm no good at terraforming.
Did you hear that, John?
Did you hear about what your first favorite planet is?
I mean, the first, my first response
is that do you remember in 2009,
when we made videos, and this was our delivery?
I mean, I like the planet Mars.
I'm just screaming at the camera.
I mean, did I like my viewers
or was I trying to attack them with my voice?
Well, I mean, I don't know what to say.
I have to get pretty accurate as to this.
This was sent to me by Michael Benzer
who was going through old vlog where this video
has been found this and sent it to me
for play on the podcast.
Thank you very much, Michael.
Well, it's a difficult day for me
because I have to acknowledge that in 2009,
apparently for a white hot moment,
I briefly in a joke said that Mars was my favorite planet.
In fact, Mars is tied for second among my favorite planets,
but it's tied with literally all the planets
that aren't Earth. So it's tied with literally all the planets that aren't earth.
So it's tied for second. It's also tied for eighth.
The news from ANC Wimbledon, it's good and bad. Just like the news, it really is for any, at any time in human history. You can always find the good and you can always find the bad.
you can always find the good and you can always find the bad. AFC Wimbledon's Senior Men's team drew this week against Mansfield.
They tied.
Ties not a bad result.
But I think that obviously we wish that we were on top of the league
to table right now.
And instead of being on top, we're 13th, which is just under the halfway point,
but you know, whatever, top 13, I'll take it.
But in incredibly exciting news, the AFC Wimbledon ladies won a recent game in the women's FA Cup,
9-to-nothing.
9!
They scored 9 goals, they won nine to nothing. And I have to give a lot of credit to AFC Wimbledon's
Women's Football program.
They're really good.
And there are lots of professional teams,
including like huge teams, like Manchester United,
that field no women's team at all,
and that don't support women's football at all.
And AFC Wimbledon is tremendously supportive of their women's football team and also
their youth their youth girls teams
As well as the youth boys teams and I think it's one of one of you know many many super cool things about the club
So congratulations to the AFC Wimbledon ladies on their nine-nil
first-round
FA Cup victory. That is pretty impressive.
I have not scored nine goals in my entire football career.
How many goals have you scored in your football career, John?
Well, I scored one goal in middle school.
And then I scored a few goals in club soccer in elementary school and middle school.
But for my middle school, like school team,
I only scored one goal.
It was in a six-no victory, as I recall,
and it was the sixth goal.
It was the nail, the nail in the coffin,
the final nail in the coffin.
And I scored it from about eight inches out from the goal.
More than scoring a goal, there was one guy from England on our middle school
soccer team who was really good, his name was James.
And he could kick the ball so hard, he could just kick the ball so much harder than any
of the rest of us.
And my recollection is that we had a corner kick and James kicked the ball so hard, he could just kick the ball so much harder than any of the rest of us. And my recollection is that we had a corner kick and James kicked the ball so incredibly hard
and it just sort of hit my knee and dribbled into the goal.
Well done.
Thank you.
I'm proud of you.
I appreciate it.
I believe I scored one goal in my soccer career as well.
Didn't you mostly play goalie?
I did mostly play goalie, yes, but I did occasionally not play goalie and I believe I scored
one goal during the times when I wasn't playing as goalie.
I did not score a goalie goal as awesome as that would have been.
Oh, those are the best.
So I did get an assist or two as a goalie, yeah.
Yeah.
That's a thing.
I kind of feel like as a goalie, I really shouldn't really be counted as an assist, but
you know, whatever.
And in this week's Mars news, you may have heard that there is some...
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I thought we just had the news from Mars.
Wait, what was that?
That you liked Mars once in 2009?
Yeah, I mean, that's breaking news.
Like, I am a long time opponent of Mars and you've just dredged up a clip via a listener
that proves that I'm a flip flopper.
That's news.
There's more news from Mars.
There's always news from Mars, John.
There's always too much news.
I can never, never quite,
quite give you all the news from Mars,
because there's just so much, because it's a whole planet. But, but this week the news from Mars, because there's just so much,
because it's a whole planet.
But this week's news from Mars,
you may have heard that Apple just had a bunch of new,
slightly different versions of its own previous products
last week that they're very excited about,
and they would like us to acquire.
But if you like better, newer, cooler versions of existing content, then boy, are you going
to love the Mars 2020 Rover planned for launch in 2020, which is a lot like curiosity, but
is different and has a bunch of new, exciting, proposed scientific instruments, including the Mars helicopter scout,
which is a solar-powered helicopter drone
that could pinpoint interesting targets for study
and plan the best driving route for the drone,
like go ahead and take pictures
so that we would know where the rover would go.
So that's cool.
It would fly out and then it would fly back in charge.
So it would be like sort of,
like just sort of extend the range of the rover's
visual sensors, which is just,
I love that idea.
It's so cool.
That's all.
Um, how big is this Martian helicopter
that we're building?
It'll weigh about a kilogram, John.
Let me ask a follow-up question.
How much work do we need to do on Mars in the next, say, six to nine months to ensure
that it is fully habitable in the event that a solar flare makes it impossible for me
to charge my iPhone?
You might want to buy some solar panels, John.
Oh, I'm buying solar panels.
That's, and a bicycle generator, by all means.
I'm also going to hire someone to pedal that bicycle.
Just, what are you talking about?
You have a child.
Just make your child do it.
I've made a bunch of capital outweighs just in the last 15 minutes
Hank to deal with this new crisis that I didn't know about
That's what children are for John to pedal your bicycle powered generator
Oh man
Oh, it's truly spoken like someone who doesn't have children. I can't even get them to eat dinner.
Let alone power my generator.
Oh God.
Alright Hank, what did we learn today?
We learned of course that a solar flare is going to destroy
all life on earth and that I'm going to die.
And not only am I going to die,
I'm not even going to be able to take a selfie
of myself dying because my phone won't charge.
We learned that John has a lot of experience with heartbreak
and having his not run into his mouth while saying,
why has Thalphersick had me for reasons of being dumped?
Whereas the reasons why I have said,
why has Thalphersick had me with not tripping into my mouth has less to do with being dumped. Whereas the reason why I have said why has Thalphersek and me with
not dripping into my mouth has less to do with being dumped.
But thanks to everybody for listening to today's show, even to our cruel and unusual listeners
who dug up evidence that I once briefly expressed an affinity toward Mars. But yeah, thank you guys so much for listening
and for your responses on Twitter, on SoundCloud,
and in the iTunes comments.
It's so awesome to read them.
We really appreciate it.
If you have questions for us
that you would like to hear our answers to
or get some dubious advice,
you can email us at hankinjohnetgmail.com.
The podcast is edited by Nicholas Jenkins,
the theme music that you're hearing right now is from Gunnarola and as they say in our
hometown, don't forget to be awesome.
you