Dear Hank & John - 16: Handling Awful Roomates
Episode Date: September 21, 2015Hey! Let's talk about Patrick Rothfuss's beard! Also, talking with Nathalie, falling asleep instead of singing, and how to run a press junket. It's a pretty weird and varied episode of Dear Hank and J...ohn! A comedy podcast about death.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
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Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Yours, I prefer to think of it Dear John and Hank.
It's a comedy podcast where Hank Green, who is me and John Green,
who's my brother, give you dubious advice,
answer your questions and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
That's true. How are you Hank?
I'm good. Oh man.
I-I-I-my hair is out of control and I can't find a time to get a haircut.
It's a disaster job.
It's so hard to be me.
How have you gotten to a point in your life where you can just call someone and have them
cut your hair while you work?
I had not thought of that.
I imagine that's how the president does it.
That's exactly how the president does it. That's exactly how the president does it.
He's like on the phone with the prime minister
of the United Kingdom and the prime minister's like,
I'm sorry, is there some background noise?
And he's like, oh no, I'm just getting a haircut.
Yeah, I actually went to see the president.
You may remember not to brag or anything,
but I was getting my makeup done by his personal makeup person.
And I asked her, you know, what is it like
to cut the president's hair?
And she was like, oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
I do not, I do not cut the president's hair.
He has a barber.
So it's two separate people.
So he has two, he has two people.
He has a hair person and a makeup person.
Yes.
And the hair person comes into the White House
and cuts his hair.
As far as I can know, in the Oval Office.
So apparently, if you like, just look at the carpet
of the Oval Office, there's hairs from every president.
I think they have never replaced the carpet.
That's amazing.
Nor have they ever vacuumed it, apparently.
Um, well, I mean, since you brought up the fact
that you met the president, Hank, as we are recording
this podcast, I am hours away from what could be
the most wonderful moment of my entire life.
Of course, I have two beautiful children.
I had a wonderful wedding day,
going to your wedding with one of the highlights of my life.
I've had so many great days.
The premiere of the Faultner Stars movie
and the premiere of Paper Towns, both wonderful nights.
But tonight, Hank, here in Indian Ampush,
I have to tell you
Hank, there's maybe eight or nine properly beautiful days a year.
It's usually a little too cold or a little too hot or a lot too cold or raining, but today
the sky is a cloudless blue.
The temperature could be no warmer or colder and be more beautiful. It is just absolutely perfect.
And do you want to know why Indianapolis has chosen today to bring out its best self?
Yes, John, I do. It's because Taylor Swift is coming to town. Taylor Swift is here tonight and Hank,
I may meet her. Oh, like you're going to a Taylor Swift concert and you will watch her and yell Taylor! And then, and then no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Wow. Is she gonna bring you up on stage to sing a song with her? I sincerely hope not as my brother.
You are well aware that when I am brought up on stage by musicians to sing along,
I perform poorly.
Hank always kindly has me come out for the on-course when I'm,
when we're doing shows together.
And oh my god, I'm just the worst.
Am I not? You're not great at singing
It's it's kind of remarkable and the funny thing is you're always like no it was I did the thing and I'm like well
You did the thing you just didn't sing any of the right notes and and you think you do it was just fine and like it's it's fine to
You know did not did not have one of a million skills that humans are capable of
having.
It's just, you know, like all novelists, I desperately wish to be a rock star.
It is true that I can't sing, but I do genuinely believe that when we sung that song, New York
City by day might be giants at Carnegie Hall,
and I sung the statue of Liberty,
Staten Island Fairy Part,
I truly believe I was on key.
Was I not on key that night?
Your silence has broken my heart.
Yes, you were. You were on key.
Are you lying to me?
Is it okay for me to lie to you
and in certain circumstances?
No, just tell me the truth.
Just tell me the truth. You weren't on key.
No, it's...
Oh, that's devastating.
I can't believe you told me that.
I specifically asked you never to tell me that.
Well, tell me more about how you're going to meet Taylor Swift.
Are you going to be backstage?
Are you going to take a selfie and high five and ask her how she's doing?
Hank, I do not know the details, but believe you me on next week's
dear John and Hank, you will hear about them.
You will hear about them in excruciating detail.
I don't even know for sure that I'm going to get
to meet Ms. Swift, but regardless,
I am going to enjoy the concert because,
as you know, I'm a massive fan of 1989,
both the year and the pop album,
and I am just so freaking excited.
I am over the moon.
I would like to thank Taylor, by the way,
for making room at her concert for me in advance.
And not to hijack the whole podcast,
but there is also other news in my life
that I would like to share with you.
Oh my goodness.
I have gone on a social media hiatus.
I stopped the posting on the tumblers
and the Twitter's and the Facebook's.
So the only thing I'm really doing work-wise,
social media-wise is vlog brothers videos on Tuesdays
and then Deer Hank and John are comedy podcast.
And it's so that I can write a novel.
And it's, I'm only two days in so far,
but I have to say it's kind of great
Well, I've identified a problem with your two pieces of news
Which is that you will meet Taylor Swift and and not be able to do anything with that
You have to you have to you have to snap that John it turns out that you don't have to mediate experiences
Through social media in order for them to have really happened
That said I suspect that that if I do meet Ms. Swift,
that I may Instagram that event.
But we'll see, life is long and who knows.
But I'm really enjoying my social media hiatus
because I have missed writing so much.
It's been so long since I've had two or three writing days
in a row, like the two or three that I've had here.
And obviously, you need, you know, a couple hundred of those to write a novel.
But, but yeah, I'm feeling, I'm, I'm feeling excited.
Good. Well, in, in among your social media hiatus,
I will say that I am Hank, GRE on Snapchat, Hank Green on Instagram,
Hank Green on Twitter and, Twitter, and right here at Dear
Hanging John on iTunes.
So if you'd like to follow me, I will not be taking social media hiatus.
Oh, an Edward Spoon Hands on Tumblr.
And I'll be making all kinds of interesting and well-composed filtered pictures of my dinner.
And don't you want to see that?
Follow me, snap chat.
I don't understand your session with Snapchat.
You really seem to believe that Snapchat
is going to be the thing that breaks you out
of your cult following into the proper mainstream success
that like you'll be on the first of all
the tonight show or whatever and Jimmy Fallon or I literally don't know who hosts the tonight show
so I hope it's Jimmy Fallon but whoever hosts the tonight show will be like
so Hank you know you had a big following on the YouTube and of course a big hit comedy podcast
that was full of ruminations about death and Mars, but it wasn't really until your Snapchat hit it big that the world knew about you.
So John, the thing is that the only following worth having is a cult following, because-
Oh, I could not agree more.
Yeah, like the mainstream success is just really unpleasant.
So Snapchat is very good at cultivating that cult following.
And it's just a couple of tens of thousands of people. following and it's just a couple tens of thousands of people
Yeah, it's just it's a nice place now that you've explained it that way
I realized that I was completely wrong and I apologize
Speaking of which before we get to the questions Hank we need to apologize to our listeners
Who like Mario Kart characters other than Luigi and Donkey Kong.
There was, there was a substantial amount of controversy
about that.
Also, we spent a lot of time talking about it.
So let's spend a little more time talking about it.
People were tremendously angry and hurt by the way
that we dismissed the likes of Yoshi, Princess Peach,
and even Bowser.
And I would just like to state for the record that I am a novelist, Hank, the likes of Yoshi, Princess Peach, and even Bowser.
And I would just like to state for the record that I am a novelist, Hank is whatever Hank does.
We are not professional Mario Kart players,
and I apologize for giving advice
as if I were an expert.
Also, as if we were just to be clear,
talking about Mario Kart, circa N64.
Yeah, I mean, I was talking about the Super Mario Kart
that I played on a yellow couch in 1994
when there was no functional worldwide web.
So, just remember that I grew up in a different time.
I'm from a different era.
Hank, should we answer some people's questions?
But John, wait, don't you have to read us a poem?
So Hank, you'll recall last week's short poem
was by William Carlos Williams,
who was a physician often wrote very short poems
on the back of prescription pants.
This is just to say I've eaten the poems
that were in the ice box, et cetera.
Well, this is a slightly longer poem
that I really enjoy.
It's by Kenneth Koch, often associated
with the beat movement, somewhat unfairly, I think, but anyway, moving on, it's it's called variations on a theme by William Carlos Williams.
I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer.
I am sorry, but it was morning and I had nothing to do and its wooden beams were so inviting.
We laughed at the holly hawks together, and then I sprayed them with lie. Forgive
me. I simply do not know what I am doing. I gave away the money that you'd been saving
to live on for the next ten years, the man who asked for it was shabby, and the firm
march wind on the porch was so juicy and cold. Last evening, we went dancing, and I broke
your leg. Forgive me. I was clumsy, and I wanted you here in the wards where I am the doctor
Variations on a theme by William Carlos Williams from Kenneth Cox that poems from 1962 and one of my absolute favorites
That's a it's nice, John. I liked it. I knew I could find a poem you would like if I tried hard enough.
I'm- I'm coming around.
I'm coming around.
I don't know the chicken to sway me into becoming a hardcore A of summa-dun-fan,
but you may yet make me enjoy poetry.
We have a- a question, John.
This question is from anonymous who asks,
dear Hank and John,
I have a very annoying housemate.
She doesn't do her part of chores unless someone tells her.
She doesn't have a job, so her parents pay her rent, but she still gets money from the government,
and yet she can't pay her bills on time. She just sits around all day watching TV or singing.
How can I get her to do her jobs and pay her bills and generally be a better housemate
without sounding like her mother when I ask her to do these things? Oh goodness. Oh goodness.
Well, we've all,
well, having been that housemate,
I feel like I'm a bit of an expert in this.
Um, so for many years, I lived with my best friend,
Shannon James, in the great city of Chicago.
Shannon and I are still extremely close friends.
In fact, she's visiting this weekend.
And I was a very messy person.
I mean, I have obsessive compulsive disorder, and so I have some weird compulsions that,
in general, make it difficult to live with me. But also, I'm just not a very clean person,
and for many years, I didn't recognize what messiness was. So I would be like sitting watching TV
or playing Super Mario Kart or whatever,
and Shannon would be like,
is there any way that you could pick up around the house
a little bit, and I would be like,
I would look around and I would be like,
oh no, everything's good here.
What, I don't even, I don't know what you're talking about
and she would be like, well,
your pants are currently on the coffee table,
and that's not ideal.
And also there's 17 cans of wild cherry diet Pepsi
on the living room table, as you might notice.
And I would be like, oh, that's stuff.
And slowly over the course of many years,
Shannon trained me to have a better understanding
of what messiness is.
But that was an act of extraordinary generosity and love
between two absolute best friends.
This person doesn't sound like your best friend.
You should just kick her out.
Yeah, this person, in fact, it sounds a little bit to me.
Like you sort of waver in this question
between being like this person needs,
we need to like come to a better understanding
and insulting the person, which makes me feel like
you have a bad relationship with the person.
Yeah, I would just go ahead and sever the house maintenance.
There's a bunch of people out there looking for roommates.
Yeah, if that's an option.
I mean, the other thing to remember is that a lot of times
what this activity comes from.
And I also suffer from messiness blindness, the way that John does, which is a struggle
for Catherine.
And she has also lovingly trained me to understand what messy is.
But oftentimes, I had a roommate that was a lot like this.
And it turned out that he was struggling a lot with depression. And that can be, you know, like that's
an unemployment is a symptom of depression,
not doing things is a symptom of depression
and not taking care of things that need to be taken care of.
And so if you do want to keep this person as a roommate
or you have to, then the thing to do is to create a great deal of structure.
And try and have that structure be the boss and not you.
Because one of the great allies of mental stability is structure.
And if you can create that and have it be something that this person doesn't feel like they have an option to avoid,
then they won't avoid it. They will do it.
But that might mean being a little bit of a mom, or someone has to be the authority in that case.
And if it's the kind of thing that this person is going to be like,
you can't be the boss of me, then maybe you find a different place or they find a different place. However, it's set up, whoever's the person on the lease
makes that, is gonna have to make that call in the end.
Yeah, I agree with you.
I kind of feel like if you can't have open lines
of communication in a roommate relationship,
it gets dark and walking on egg shellsy
and passive aggressive really, really fast.
Yeah.
So you've got to just, you've got to,
what Shannon and I would always say,
because we had like other roommates who would come and go,
and what we would always say to the other roommates
is like, in this house, you must be able to fight.
Like you must be able to fight lovingly
and forgive each other because if things are not like
open and honest around here,
then like it gets super weird, super fast.
All right, I, that's actually something
that we both have legitimate experience with.
John, do we have another question?
Yes, we do.
And it's another thing that we both have
with legitimate experience with.
It's from Kathy.
She writes,
Dear John and Hank,
who do you think would win in a fight?
John's Puff or Patrick Rothfuss's beer?
Ah, ha, ha, ha.
I mean, John's Puff is amazing.
Uh, it's elegant.
It is... Some people call it historically significant. is amazing. It's elegant.
It is. Some people call it historically significant.
It is indeed historically significant.
Patrick Rathus is beard is also all of those things
and also much bigger than the puff.
And I would say significantly more bad-ass than the puff.
Yep.
So I think that Patrick Rathus' beard would win.
Patrick Rathus, if you don't know,
is the author of the name of the wind,
an absolutely beautiful fantasy novel
that's part of a series that is in the middle
of being completed.
And he's a great writer.
It's beautiful, it's wonderful stuff.
It's like, you know, if you like fantasy at all,
it's basically, in my opinion, like,
the thing that happened in the, you know,
since 2010, that matters a lot.
I mean, I don't know anything about fantasy.
All I know is that like, sentence to sentence,
he is a beautiful, beautiful writer.
And I met him in real life at VidCon this year,
and you know, I'd seen pictures and everything,
but meeting him in real life is interesting
because almost immediately as soon as you start talking to him, you realize that his beard is bigger than he is.
And it's really the only person I've ever met who's beard is bigger than the person
the beard is growing upon.
Yeah.
So yeah, to me, Patrick Rathus' beard wins going away.
He's also just a lovely, lovely person.
Just to haven't met a nicer person in a nice.
Couldn't be nicer.
Just so nice.
Me neither.
He's like incredibly supportive and nice and empathetic,
but also it doesn't take any of your crap.
Like, he's amazing.
He's, you know how like sometimes you meet people
and you don't know them well, but you like meet them.
And you're like, I look forward to seeing that person again
so much.
You have friends who maybe aren't your closest friends,
but you just love seeing them.
Yeah, he's one of those people to be.
Yeah, we're working on a conference together.
So we're talking a lot right now,
which is nice to get it to be on the phone once a week or so.
And it's called NerdCon Stories.
And tickets are available now.
The agenda went live earlier last week, I guess.
And it's going to be fascinating. It's in Minneapolis and if you're around there, or even if you
just want to Kim see a lot of amazing storytellers, authors, poets, musicians, that sort of thing,
then come on over. John and I will be there. It's going to be a good time.
and then come on over, John and I will be there. It's gonna be a good time.
I will be there.
It's my only public appearance for the next year, actually.
Also Hank, I don't know if you know this,
but are you aware of what Maggie Steve Vader
and Steve Votter Steve Fader?
Yeah.
You know Maggie, are you aware of what Maggie and I are doing?
I heard a rumor, but I don't know if it's true.
We are racing each other in an actual car race
with actual race cars on a dirt track,
a half mile dirt track outside of Minneapolis,
that Friday night.
So in addition to going to NerdCon Stories,
you can go and watch an extremely
successful young adult novelist who is also a race car driver, race me, a person who
has not gotten in a car crash in a couple of years.
I didn't know about that. I heard something about that. I assumed it was remote control cars.
It's one of those things where Maggie was like,
would you wanna do this?
And I was like, yeah, of course, that sounds hilarious.
And then, but I didn't think she would actually set it up.
And then she's asking me how the circumference of my head
so I can get a helmet that's the right size.
And I gotta wear a fire suit in case the race car catches on fire.
And I'm just thinking like, I've gotta not get lapped.
That's my goal.
Just wanna not get lapped.
So that's Friday night and then Saturday
and Sunday is NerdCon Stories.
It's gonna be an amazing weekend.
This one's from Natalie, who says,
dear Hank Adjohn, my name is Natalie.
And I'm thinking about applying to college in the USA,
but I have absolutely no confidence in my speaking
and pronunciation abilities since I'm from Ecuador,
and I speak Spanish as my native language.
Do you have any advice for improving my speaking?
Yes, I do.
Let's come up with a hashtag on Twitter for Talk to Natalie,
and maybe you can find some people who speak English
natively to talk to you.
What should that hashtag be, John?
The hashtag talk to Natalie. So we've English is your first language. Just use the hashtag talk to you. What should that hashtag be, John? Hashtag Talk to Natalie.
So we think that she's your first language.
Just use the hashtag Talk to Natalie,
and then maybe Natalie will find out about this,
and then she can talk to you.
But in general, Natalie, I have to say,
I think you're gonna be fine having read your email,
which was grammatically perfect,
which is extremely rare for dear Hank and John emails.
I think you're in good shape.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yes, all right, that one was easy.
Hey, I'm gonna ask a question that's somewhat harder now.
This one is from Isabella who asks,
what do you do when your parents have a different
political opinion than yours?
And they try to force theirs upon you?
Oh man, John and I don't know because like the only way
that this has happened to us, well, it's happened to me, a bit with my analogs, though they are very nice about it. But with
our parents, it's like, we like how far left can you go? Is is often the topic
at our dinner table? Yeah, I mean, I guess that I do have some different political
beliefs than my parents, but first like they don't try to enforce their beliefs on me,
and they really never have, even when we were little kids.
That's true.
When I was nine years old, and I said that I thought Ronald Reagan
should be elected president and not Walter Mondale,
my dad was incredibly supportive.
In fact, I didn't even know at the time that, you know, he'd secretly written me out of his will.
But...
No, I mean, yeah, our parents are extremely...
I mean, I wouldn't say that they're communist, but I would definitely say that they are further
to the left than either Hank or I, and Hank and I are pretty...
Progressive. ...pregressive on the political spectrum. I don't know, actually. the left than either Hank or I and Hank and I are pretty,
pretty liberal on the political spectrum. I don't know actually, I'm not as liberal as Hank.
The order is my mother, my father, Hank,
and then me, almost in the center.
In some northern European nation, Hank, I would be a centrist.
Oh gosh, in some northern European nation, Sank, I would be a centrist. Oh gosh, in some Northern European nation,
you would be, you would be to the right.
I might be actually.
So, I have a good friend who is a Jesuit priest,
he is a Catholic priest,
and his parents often have political disagreements.
And he has been a real model for me
in like how to talk about politics
or other controversial topics with people
who disagree with you.
And it seems to me that what he does very well is listen.
He listens very well and very openly.
And he tries to understand people's concerns
who disagree with him.
And then he states why he believes what he believes very strongly and clearly.
And he doesn't apologize for it, but he's also not aggressive about it.
He doesn't assume that people who disagree with him are evil.
He just has x, y, and Z justifications for his belief system.
And I also, of course, often disagree with him as well, although my disagreements with
him are different than his family's disagreements with him.
And I find it really kind of invigorating and refreshing to be able to have conversations
with him because they aren't confrontational and they, it doesn't feel dichotomous.
It doesn't feel like there's good and evil and I am always on the side of good and those
who disagree with me are always on the side of evil.
It's just really, really hard in contemporary American political discourse to have those
kinds of conversations to embrace subtlety and nuance and also to acknowledge the possibility
that you might be wrong,
which you might be. I mean, as strong as my convictions are, I might be wrong. I've been wrong before.
That what your friend does, and what, you know, I think we should all attempt to do, is really hard.
It requires great presence of mind and also great sort of understanding of your own perspectives and biases.
And it is important and such an amazing exercise in like in in knowing yourself and understanding,
understanding, you know, where like who like how you became who you are. That's a difficult thing.
But if you can do it, even if you can just try to do it,
it has dividends that are way outside of like
improving your ability to discuss politics with your parents.
Because it helps you know yourself
and it helps you better understand
not only where your opinions come from
but why other people think the way they do.
And that's, it's hard, but
it is a really powerful ability to cultivate.
Yeah, I mean, I don't want to pretend that it's not hard, though, because I think on a day-to-day,
minute-to-minute basis, it's often impossible not to feel outraged, particularly when people
are, you know, expressing outrage at you. It's very difficult not to respond to that by
getting ratcheted up and like,
you know, getting angry and it's hard. And I feel like, I mean, I think it's always been hard,
but I certainly feel like the way that political discourse has become so so black and white that
there are these two political positions in America, one of liberalism and one of
quote unquote conservatism has not helped our ability to have conversations because you
are expected to be either one thing or another.
And then you kind of don't end up having conversations about policy.
And that's the other thing I'd say is that I find it much more interesting and I find
it much more interesting and helpful find it much more interesting and helpful to
have conversations about policy.
Like instead of saying should we tax the rich, like let's ask, well what should the income
tax rate on income over $500,000 a year be?
You know, should it be 34%?
Should it be 37%?
That becomes a question about policy
and about nuance, not a question about
like the government is trying to take
from successful people versus the rich have to do their part.
I find questions about like specific policy considerations
much more beneficial to me personally.
Yeah, that being said, there is a complete possibility that your parents are just really mad and upset
and scared about the state of the world.
And they think that things are going very badly.
And that makes them reactionary and upset.
And it's fear.
That's driving that outrage, usually.
And personal fear, but also fear that things are just going places where they shouldn't
go.
And sometimes when I'm dealing with scared people, what I do is just sort of like acknowledge
their fear and not engage with it because like what are you going to do?
Say you don't have the right to be afraid.
Their fear might come from bad places, their fear might come from unconscious bias,
their fear might come from just being exposed
to people who are intentionally trying to scare them all the time.
But there's not a lot you can do about that.
Yeah, yeah, I totally agree with you.
Let's move on to the next question.
Hank, our next question comes from Emily who who writes, dear John and to Hank,
I've been having trouble falling asleep lately,
particularly because I want to hum and sing songs
I get stuck in my head.
Do you have any advice on how to get the song out of my head
so I can get to sleep?
Thank you for your dubious advice
and don't forget it's a comedy podcast.
Oh, Emily, I have already forgotten that it's a comedy podcast. Oh, Emily, I have already forgotten
that it's a comedy podcast
because all I see in front of me is the gaping canyon
that is the endless misery of being unable to sleep
until finally at last death comes for you
and you can do nothing but sleep.
Oh, I have a sort of surface level question here. Is it possible that you,
a person who's having trouble sleeping and is singing all the time, have a roommate who
might think that you are really messy? Emily, I just need you to double check that you
are paying your bills on time and not really messy.
Because I think the underlying problem could potentially be that you're having a difficult
time with the unemployment and everything.
But if you're a different person, then yeah, I think we need to look at different possible
solutions here.
My number one go to solution for an earworm, which is a song stuck in your head,
is Free Fallen by Tom Petty. Once I just start singing Free Fallen, whatever was in my head goes away, and I can just drift off to sleep
Free Fallen.
I have no
ability to help you because I sleep really well
because I take medicine to make me very tired.
So you could take Mercaptopurine and that works for me.
I'm just trying.
It's not without its side effects.
It is not intended to be a sleepy drug,
but it sure does knock me out.
Yeah, Emily, go ahead and get ulcerative colitis
so you can take the pill that Hank takes
to make him sleepy.
It's worth it.
You know, Hank, when Sarah and I first started dating,
like we would, you know, like, well, you know,
when we first, Hank, when Sarah and I got married
and began to sleep in the same bed for the first time
in our entire relationship, she would often sort of be chatting with me toward the end
of the evening and I would be talking back to her and I'd be talking about something.
And then I would look over and I would learn that she was asleep.
And in fact, in the 11 or 12 years that we've been a going concern, I've never seen her
take more than 12 seconds to fall asleep.
It is the most infuriating thing about my wife.
The idea that you can lay your head upon a pillow and fall asleep at the time of your
choosing is so foreign to me and I am so intensely jealous of it. I can't even
explain it to you. So Emily, I do empathize. My number one piece of advice when it comes to sleeping
is to spend at least 30 minutes away from screens before you try to go to sleep.
Yeah, and another important one is to have a really set schedule of sleep, which is very hard
to do, but that's what the sleep scientists say. The number one thing for insomnia is going to Another important one is to have a really set schedule of sleep, which is very hard to
do, but that's what the sleep scientists say.
The number one thing for insomnia is going to sleep and waking up at roughly the same
time every day.
And who does that, though?
Really?
But the other thing, I can't help but recommend as a solution to this humming business,
maybe listening to the sweet, sweet baritone of a podcast before you go to bed,
like for instance, maybe relisten to old episodes of Dear John and Hank.
I don't know, but that's a good idea. We're too engaging, John.
Today's episode of Dear Hank and John is brought to you by Dear Hank and John Itself.
That's right. We're sponsored by Recursion. Oh, man. Listen to Dear Hank and John it's self. That's right, we're sponsored by Recursion.
Oh man, listen to Dear Hank and John,
it's available on iTunes or wherever podcasts are free.
Today's episode of Dear Hank and John is, of course,
also brought to you by NerdCon Stories.
NerdCon Stories, October, Minneapolis,
race cars, stories.
Today's episode of Dear Hank and John
is brought to you by Patrick Rothfuss' beard,
which is epic and glorious and historically significant and would totally win
over John Green's puff in a fight.
Today's episode of Dear Hank and John is brought to you by Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift, the most important country and pop musician of the last 15 years.
Taylor Swift on tour now.
Ah, Taylor Swift on tour now.
I'd go see her if she came to Missoula Montana.
I'll tell you what.
Um, well, she isn't because I have all of her tour stops memorized.
Ah, yeah, I don't know that she would find a room that could be really suitable.
Though we do have a stadium, she could just play at the stadium.
Sometimes people do that.
The Rolling Stones played.
We have the Rolling Stones, John.
We're a big metropolis now.
We have the Rolling Stones play at the Indianapolis Motor big metropolis now. We have the Rolling Stones play
at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 4th.
It was magical.
I was not actually in town
because I was touring for paper towns,
but I heard that it went well.
Speaking of which, we have a question from Robert.
Robert writes,
Dear John and Hank,
John has written in the past about the do's
and don'ts of meeting him
or any well-known person as a fan.
My question is,
what are the do's and don'ts
of conducting a press junket interview?
Oh, mine.
There are lots of ways it can go wrong, but what can make it go really well?
Uh, well, I've not done, uh, I've done a couple of press junket interviews, but John has
done a million of them.
Literally.
Also, uh, an added question to this is, how can John Green not embarrass himself when meeting Taylor Swift?
So let's do Robert's question first.
Hank, talk to me about what kind of fan interaction works for you. If you're in target and you're
meeting Taylor Swift, no, that's not... No. If you're in target and someone comes up to you and says
hi, what's the ideal way it could go? Um, I mean, there's multiple ideal ways.
Like, some people just be like,
hey, thanks for the videos that help me with biology,
which is great.
Like, I like that a lot,
because then I feel like I,
like, it was, it's immediately obvious the value
I provided, whereas, you know,
I also like it when it's more sort of obscure and like, oh my gosh,
it's you.
I like all of your things.
You do so many things, and I like all of them.
That's also nice.
I just, it's to me, as long as you're not expecting me to do something, like to be, you know,
like funny or like to make,, do some kind of performance,
then I'm happy.
I'm happy to take a picture, I'm happy to talk,
I'm happy to be complemented in public by a stranger.
But there are, have been a couple of times
where it's been like, it felt like this person
is disappointed that I am not doing a thing.
And I'm like, well, I'm currently just here to buy my, to get my suppositories from
the pharmacy.
So.
I just, yeah, I mean, I would say 99% of the time I've been approached by fans.
It's been awesome. Like it is really encouraging to hear from people, to hear from people directly, you know,
what kind of stuff that you make matters to them and how it matters to them.
And that varies from like the person at Target who pointed at me and said, crash course
world history and gave me a fist bump and kept walking.
You know, to people who come up
and tell me that they're Nerdfighters
and what the Nerdfighter community means to them.
And that gives me a chance to talk about
how much it means to me.
So that's really lovely and I think that's the perfect thing.
And that's what I'm gonna try to do
if I do meet Taylor Swift.
I'm just gonna say, I really love your work.
And when we were on the set of the paper towns movie
It was it was long days and and a lot of hard days for me and I listened to
1989 every day and it was like the soundtrack of that part of my life and I'll always have wonderful memories because of it
Not that I've practiced what I'm gonna say
But as far as as far as press junket interviews go
um, I
Mean I don't nobody likes press junket interviews go, I mean, I don't know if he likes press junkets.
The press doesn't like them.
The people who are doing them don't like them.
I think the people at the studio who organize them
don't like them.
I think the people who are running the cameras
and the mics don't like them.
I don't think it's fun for anyone.
I think it's considered sort of a necessary evil
to try to get the word out about the movie or whatever the project is.
I guess the only thing I would say is to try to remember that the people that you're talking to
have been talking to people all day and that they've had a different interview every six minutes
and that they are feeling probably pretty dehumanized and pretty exhausted.
minutes and that they are feeling probably pretty dehumanized and pretty exhausted. When I was on the fresh junket for paper towns, a hippopotamus escaped a zoo in Budapest,
I think.
And between every interview, Nat Wolf would just show me a picture of this escaped hippopotamus
and he would whisper, someday that will be us. And I found it tremendously comforting to think of the escaped hippopotamus. And on multiple
occasions, people would like test how well Nat and I knew each other. And one of the questions would
always be, do like, what's your favorite animal or what's John's favorite animal or whatever.
And it would, we would be so specific, we would write a hippopotamus recently escaped
from zoo in Budapest. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha probably don't have a particularly high set of expectations for what people are going to say because I think it's almost impossible to answer a question thoughtfully when you're
so tired and feel so weird.
But if you want to try to have a really interesting thing, then just do something that's completely
different where you don't ask any of those questions and you just maybe allow them to play
a game.
I remember when I was in Brazil,
a reporter played a game with us where she was like,
Nat, you and I are going to create a new John Green novel together
and John, you are going to provide the dialogue.
And that was really like a really fun seven minutes.
In fact, at the end of it,
Nat was like, can we please just keep doing this and stop the other thing?
So, I don't know.
It's not easy and like, I think it's kind of inherently dehumanizing.
It's really difficult in those situations for the people
who are being interviewed to remember that the interviewer
is a person who is having a very specific seven minutes
of their day and it's really difficult for the interviewer
to think that about the people who are being interviewed.
So my strategy moving forward is going to be trying
to avoid them as much as possible.
All right, Chad, it seems like it might be time for the news from Mars and A of C. Wimbledon.
It is, Hank. I think it is time. What's the news from Mars this week?
Well, in Mars news on the, I think the tonight show with Jimmy Fallon, no, it was with Stephen Colbert.
The new, the new Colbert show, which I don't know what that's called.
It's very confusing because they all sound exactly the same.
To me, did he not change his name to Colbert now?
Is he still Colbert?
I would assume that he did not stop.
Oh, I thought Colbert was just the act,
but is that his real name?
I think that's his real name.
Okay.
Nice guy, by the way.
Yeah, he seems like a great guy.
No, but I've hung out with him. He's really nice. Right, you did, by the way. Yeah, he seems like a great guy. No, but I've hung out with him.
Oh, right, you did, yeah.
Yeah.
I have not.
I just hung out with the president, so.
That was a total brag, I apologize.
I wanna apologize to my friends and family
for that clear, unadulterated brag.
That's fine, no.
Nothing to argue about. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Well, Elon Musk was on Stephen Colbert's show. And they were talking about Mars. Mars came up.
I hate to bring this up, but I've also hung out with Elon Musk.
Ha!
Ha!
Ha!
Did you get to go to the White House and hang out with the President, John?
No, no, no, but only because I was like,
eh, I think my brother should do that.
He hasn't had a big media hit in a while.
Uh-huh. Yep.
That's how I remember it as well. All right, I'm sorry. What did my friend Elon Musk talk about my brother should do that. He hasn't had a big media hit in a while. Uh-huh. Yep.
That's how I remember it as well.
All right, I'm sorry.
What did my friend Elon Musk talk about with my friend, Stephen Colbert?
They were talking about Mars and how to potentially make Mars habitable or more habitable for future
visitors.
And Elon Musk proposed the fast way to make Mars a little warmer and give it some atmosphere
would just be to drop a bunch of thermonuclear bombs on the poles of the planet, which, uh,
what? Yeah. So, Elon Musk, you know, noted Tony Stark impersonator, creator of many amazing things,
including PayPal, which no one talks about,
and Tesla Motors and SpaceX has proposed
that we drop H-bombs on the poles of Mars,
so that the carbon dioxide and water
that had stored in the poles of Mars
would be released to the atmosphere,
then there would be a, quote,
runaway greenhouse effect,
which would warm the planet further,
which would create more carbon dioxide and water
being released to the atmosphere,
which would warm the planet further, et cetera.
This is a legitimate idea.
There are a couple of problems with it, one,
if there is an ecology on Mars,
it would be the largest scientific discovery
in the history of mankind.
And we don't want to just really mess up that ecology really fast before we study it.
To your jump a bunch of thermonuclear weapons on Mars, which might be,
you know, there are ways to design nuclear weapons,
so like particularly fusion bombs, so that they
have less fallout, but there's still going to be some fallout.
That's not ideal.
And of course, you are just releasing carbon dioxide and water into the atmosphere, which
is not the kind of atmosphere that humans would really enjoy breathing.
But it would help shield astronauts from radiation, and it would increase the pressure of the planet, which is good because
it would mean less vacuum to immediately kill people who were on the surface.
It does not solve a lot of the problems that Mars has with regards to habitability, but
it's not that far out there idea.
It's certainly not within the next 100 years, though.
Yes.
As you know, I'm not an expert in science or in Mars or anything
But what would if we did that what would happen to the dinosaurs on Mars? Well
the dinosaurs that are on Mars in our and
Jurassic Mars movie Jurassic Mars would would have to be especially designed to
would have to be specially designed to function
in that atmosphere, whatever that atmosphere is, which it doesn't seem like that doesn't seem outside
of the realm of movie science,
which is completely fake anyway.
So let's just design dinosaurs that can breathe water,
vapor, instead of oxygen,
which of course chemically makes no sense,
but who cares?
And we'll be fine.
Jurassic Mars!
Coming to theaters.
So it has not affected the box office potential of Jurassic Mars.
Not at all. I think that introducing the possibility of thermonuclear warheads into
Jurassic, the plot of Jurassic Mars can only be a positive.
I actually completely agree with you, because whether it's at the beginning of Act 1 or the end of Act 2, there is definitely an opportunity for nuclear war on Jurassic Mars.
So Hank, I don't know how much you know about the history of AFC Wimbledon, but you're about
to know a little bit more.
As you do know, back in 2001, the club was moved by repatius owners to the town of Milton Keynes a hundred miles away
From Wimbledon the historic home of this football club that had been together for 120 years and then
Wimbledon supporters in protest started their own club aFC Wimbledon
But they couldn't start at the historic home of Wimbledon which is actually you know in
Merton,
the stadium called Plow Lane.
So, in fact, on the closed, sad gates of Plow Lane,
at the very end of its history, before it was destroyed in the early 2000s,
someone spray painted Womble till I die,
because the Womble is the mascot of AFC Wimbledon
and fans are often called Wombles.
And so now they play their games in Kingston
at a in South London at a stadium
that also houses a non-league side called King Stoney.
But the dream has always been to get back to Plow Lane.
In fact, AFC Wimbledon fans sing a song,
show me the way to Plow Lane.
The dream has always been to get back to the historic
spiritual home of this football club with a new stadium
that can support permanently, you know, a club of AFC Wimbledon size,
and maybe even allow them to make more money
and have more concession sales and stuff
so they can maybe get up to League One or even higher.
And so they're trying to build this 11,000-seat stadium
that's directly across the street
from where Plow Lane was, Plow Lane is now houses.
And it's been a long effort.
It's really beginning to take shape now.
And as part of that, they're selling Kingsmeadow,
their current stadium to Chelsea Football Club.
One of my least favorite, possibly my least favorite football
club owned by Roman Abramovich, who
bought the club Chelsea literally
with the blood of Russian peasants.
He just sent a large amount of Russian peasant blood to London and then was given Chelsea
football club.
So anyway, Chelsea, it looks like it's going to buy Kingsmeadow to help fund the building
of the new AFC Wimbledon Stadium.
This is great news because for the club to really, really exist long-term, they need a stadium.
They need a place of their own that's in the community of the football club.
This is a huge, huge deal to Wimbledon fans.
I mean, for instance, Hank, MK Don's fans, you know, the team that Wimbledon, that stole
Wimbledon away and made it their new team in Milton Keynes, you know them?
Sure, yeah.
They sing to make fun of AFC Wimbledon.
They sing, you're just a pub team from Kingston to say, like, you're not really Wimbledon,
and you're not really a club, you're just a pub team from Kingston.
To be able to be back in Wimbledon in a stadium
that's appropriate for a football league club
really would be the end of this story
and would put the club on a stable path
where they can really, they can survive.
And so it's a huge deal to be selling Kings Meadow
to help fund the building of the new stadium,
but there's still a long
way to go. And if you're a member of the Don's Trust, which, by the way, you are, I just bought
you a membership. You own exactly as much AFC Wimbledon as I do, or as the chairman of the
Club Eric Samuelson does, all 5,500 of us own equal shares of Wimbledon. Happy birthday.
If you're a member of AFC Wimbledon, you can vote. In fact, you need to vote. If you're a member of AFC Wimbledon, you can vote.
In fact, you need to vote.
If you're a member of the Don's Trust, you need to vote to help move this forward to
sell the current stadium and then to invest to buy and build the new stadium.
It's a really, really exciting time in the club's history.
And really, for the first time, you know, in the last 10 years, it looks like the stadium might actually happen.
That's great.
What's going to happen to the current stadium?
The Chelsea owns it though.
Oh yeah, so Chelsea is going to turn it into a place for their women's team and also their
youth teams.
So they'll play their games there and it'll be good for the development of their women's side and
They're like under under 18 side. So it's great for them to
Potentially anyway because Chelsea need a better developed women soccer program as I've talked about previously in the podcast
AFC Wimbledon has a really strong women's soccer program
But many teams in the football league including very famous ones don't like Manchester United doesn't have strong women's soccer program, but many teams in the football league, including very famous ones, don't.
Like Manchester United doesn't have a women's soccer team
at all, which is just an embarrassment.
And so it's great.
I think it's great, potentially great for everyone,
but the main thing from Wimmelden's perspective is,
you know, gosh, how amazing would it be
to have an 11,000 seat brand new state-of-the-art stadium,
you know, where they could play and grow into being the club that they could be if they just didn't have
this very small stadium.
Cool.
That's exciting, John.
I'm so excited.
I can't even tell you.
I can't wait to go.
Hank, we're going to do so many crazy sponsorships of the new stadium. I'm gonna get so many bricks on the walkway to the new stadium dedicated to you.
I'll be like, this is the Hank Green Mars Sucks Brick.
This is the fourth rock from the Sun Who Cares Brick.
This is the AFC Wimbledon is more important than Mars Brick.
I'm gonna buy you so many anti-Mars bricks at the new stadium.
Alright, um, thanks. I...
You're a jerk.
What did we learn today, Hank?
Oh, we learned that you can...
Never really know why your roommates being a bad roommate, So you need to talk about it! And of course we learned that the key to taking Jurassic Mars to the next level is thermonuclear warfare.
We learned that a podcast can sponsor itself.
And we learned that if a song free-fallen by Tom Petty wasn't in your head, it is now.
Hank, thank you so much for podcasting with me. This is my favorite part of the week, and I also,
I also want to thank everybody for listening their comments and responses on Twitter. I still check my app replies even though I'm
not tweeting. Really do mean a lot to me. So thank you guys for listening and we hope that you
continue to enjoy the podcast. Yeah, if you could hashtag your things on Twitter, hashtag
deerhankinjohn so that we know that those things are there. Don't use hashtag deerjohninhank.
That would be confusing. The show's called deerhank dear hank. Why don't they just use hashtag talk to Natalie, and that way Natalie can also
have more people to get in touch with. Well, I think that if they have specific questions with regard
to dear hank and john, they want to correct us on something. In fact, we do have a correction,
which is that I said that the number one impact that you can have on the world is by controlling
how much you heat or don't heat your place of dwelling,
but in fact, I was corrected.
The number one impact you can have is eating less meat, which there's a tremendous amount
of greenhouse gases that are produced in the production of meat, especially the large
animal meats of pork and beef.
So that is a thing that you can also do and has a tremendous impact.
So corrections such as those or just comments
so that we can see what people are thinking.
You can hashtag dear, John and Hank.
Ah, dear Hank and John.
Ah, hashtag dear Hank and John.
I prefer the hashtag dear John and Hank myself,
but I guess it's up to readers, listeners,
whatever they call themselves.
It's fun, use dear Hank and John.
That's fine. Today's podcast was edited by our friend Nick. Yeah, whatever they call themselves. It's fun. You do your hankin' John, that's fine.
Today's podcast was edited by our friend Nick.
Yeah, the theme music is from Gunnarola.
You can send us questions at hankandjohnatgmail.com.
And as they say in our hometown,
don't forget to be awesome.
you