Dear Hank & John - 247: Lobster Dream Hands
Episode Date: July 6, 2020How do I learn to dance? Why do shirts have tags? Have you ever published a book under a pen name? Where did air quotes come from? How do you answer the phone at 2 AM? Should I be worried about enteri...ng the workforce if I don't like meetings? Why do you two use the same youtube account? Hank Green and John Green have answers! 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 Hank and John.
Or is that for the sake of a Dear John and Hank?
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions,
give you the abuse advice and bring you all the weeks news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
John, I woke up this morning, absolutely covered in copies of a beautifully foolish endeavor,
and I think that I only have my shelf to blame.
That's my last one. That's my last one.
That's my last book related pun.
It's all I got.
I only laugh because I'm looking for any pin-prix of light amid the darkness.
I think it's funny because the implication is that I have a shelf that just has copies
of my own book that I keep directly above my head while I sleep. Well, our finished copy of a beautifully foolish endeavor
arrived over the weekend.
And for those of you who don't know,
Hank's second novel, A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor,
comes out as this podcast is being uploaded tomorrow,
July 7th, Tuesday, July 7th.
We have live events virtual going on.
You can find out more at Hank will insert URL here.
Hankgreen.com. Great job. Oh, wow. I wish I had John green.com,
but it's that realtor in Southern Mississippi.
This is what mom and dad did to you. They gave you a normal name so you couldn't get
your domain. I know. And then I did it to both of my children.
That's fine. For Henry, I've reserved Henry green dot TV info.
And for Alice, I've reserved Alice green dot Russia.
John actually, actually, there's a dot green domain name now.
So you can probably just get like Henry doc green and Alice doc green
and probably not John dot green. That's probably taken. Yeah. I wonder what it's not it's available.
John go get it. No, I wanted I want a dot com. I like John green books dot com. It's great. It
it it expresses what turns out to have been about one quarter of my career.
Anyway, our copy of a beautiful solution
Deva arrived over the weekend and I reread it.
And it's just such a great book, congratulations.
I really think it is that rare sequel that is better than the original.
It's just, I mean, especially right now,
it has helped me understand and think more complexly about
the internet and its role in the social order and also its role in my life. And yeah, it's just
a really great, it's also, of course, a rollicking adventure, but the parable side of it has had me thinking very, very hard of late.
Well, thank you.
I'm feeling, you know, as good as I think I could, you know, right now, a week before publication.
And I'm just like the first reviews are in and they're very positive and that feels very good.
A lot of people who I trust have said really smart things
that feel like they sort of got what I was trying to do.
So I'm feeling really good about it,
and I can't wait for people to read it honestly.
So come see our live shows at HankGreen.com.
Yes.
They won't actually be there,
but that's how you find out where they are.
That's how you find out about them, yes.
All right, let's answer some questions from our listeners.
Beginning with this one from Marina,
who writes, dear John and Hank, how can I learn how to dance?
I'm okay at like circle dancing or line dancing, but I can't seem to get the whole put my
hands in the air like I just don't care kind of dancing.
Arena.
Now, Hank, this is relevant to me as well because one of the stranger things to me about
our siblinghood is that although we were raised in the same home by the same parents,
you were named the best dancer at all of Winter Park High School in 1998, and I have never had a good
moment of dancing in my entire life. Like I tried to do a TikTok dance. What are they called?
Oh no!
Challenge. Yeah. I thought it do a TikTok dance. What are they called? Oh, no. Challenge.
Yeah.
I thought it would be really funny.
Well, I didn't, I got those.
I didn't actually upload the TikTok egg, you know,
I'm sticking with one TikTok.
But I tried to do a TikTok dance challenge
just to be like, okay, like this is just a series
of repeated body motions and I know how to make all of them.
So I should be able to do this TikTok dance challenge
in a way that looks as cool as this person
who I'm watching on TikTok.
And then I did a video of myself doing the dance
and I watched the video and I was like,
no, that's terrible.
Delete that immediately.
Like I did all the right motions, put it in the fire,
but I was terrible.
Yeah, well, I mean, there's a couple of reasons
why it might have not looked great. I, you know, I mean, there's a couple of reasons why it might have not looked great.
I think that there's a point here that is interesting to me
that we theoretically share a lot of genetic information
and we were raised in the same house,
but I have to ask, how much MTV's the grind did you watch?
Not a lot, and we did have very different lives to be fair.
And maybe that's part of it.
But I hear the music.
And the music flows through me.
It's just that like what comes out bodily is all wrong.
Like in college, I dated a dance major for a while.
And it was fascinating to learn from them how,
like, dance worked in their lives and how,
like, dance became, like, a bodily expression of our,
not dissimilar to any other artistic expression.
Whereas, like, to me, dancing is just,
it's the height of self-consciousness.
I'm never more aware of the fact that I have a body than I am when I'm dancing.
Yeah.
As I've gotten older, my body doesn't always move at the speed that I expect it to.
I'm having that sensation more as well.
Also, I will watch what happens in TikTok dances and I will think to myself,
well, I should be able to do that. And then I find that I am incapable of it, which makes me think
that actually I learned a lot more than I think I did, that I, you know, in the process of watching
people dance on my television upstairs and forward, and like dancing along with them, I learned a
lot about how to move my body.
Can I tell you what the TikTok dance was?
Which one was it?
Was it Carstico Boom?
It wasn't Carstico Boom, although it is lovely to me
that one of the songs of our childhood,
Carstico Boom, has become a TikTok phenomenon.
No, it was the Hoki Poke.
You know where you do the Hoki Poke
and you turn yourself around and that's what it's all about.
You put your left foot in, put your right foot out, whatever.
I've heard it, yeah.
So it really should have been doable, right?
Like it wasn't like I was trying to accomplish,
you know, some kind of balletic feet.
What was going through your mind
when you set your camera up
to record yourself doing the Hoki Poke,
did you think you were potentially making content?
No, no, no, of course not.
No, I was never going to upload it to TikTok.
I was just interested in light.
Could I do the dance?
And I don't know if I can do the dance until I look at the video.
And then I know, and the answer was, oh, oh.
You know, I think that like different people do start
at different levels.
I think this is definitely the case with dancing,
but in general, on the internet especially,
but also all over our lives,
we will watch people who look like they are doing
things extremely effortlessly,
that they actually put a lot of time into.
And maybe that was fun time, maybe like that was dancing and not training,
like not like feeling and seeming like work to them,
but a lot of time did go into that.
And that's true of whether it's poetry or dance
or art or novels or any of that stuff,
like video blogs.
And I think that in some cases,
we actually intentionally try to make it seem like
very little work went into something when actually a lot of time did.
Right. That's a very particular aesthetic. And not just on the internet, it also predates the
internet of putting a lot of effort into something that looks dashed off or looks effortless.
Like I remember as a kid thinking like that was in a way
the definition of cool.
Yeah.
You know, it was people who were able to do something
where it looked like they weren't trying hard,
but it was very good.
But of course, the only way to do something very good
is to have previously tried very, very hard.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in the quiet darkness of your bedroom in Orlando, Florida, right,
which is why I was trying to learn the Hockey Poke, but now I've given up. Okay. Well,
that's, you're good at lots of things, though, which is nice. This next question comes from
Hannah who asks, dear Hank and John, why do shirts have tags? Maybe in the olden days,
they had to put a physical tag inside shirt, But now can't this be done in other ways?
Tags are itchy.
I just cut them off and end up with holes in my shirts.
Is it possible that shirt tags are even more useless and outdated than the penny?
Please help.
Only if you got enough life jackets, Hannah.
That's a real, that's a throwback reference.
I barely get that reference.
It's so old. John, as you know, I am in the merchandise business.
And so I know more than you'd like to know about T-shirt tags.
I mean, okay.
So first off, we are in the merchandise business.
Okay.
All right.
So tags, tags have been a thing for a while.
Really interesting thing once happened where so yes,
tags have to be there legally. They are required for a couple of reasons.
Well, the information contained in tags has to be there legally.
Correct. Correct. You have to like say, country of origin and you have to say it is legally required that you tell people how to wash the thing,
and that was originally done by putting on
what the materials in the shirt were.
And so it would be like, this is cotton,
I know how to wash cotton, this is wool,
I know how to wash wool.
Now, shirts and textiles have become very, very complicated now,
and so there are lots of different things
that you've never heard the name of.
So eventually we transitioned to just like care instructions,
but those care instructions also do have to be on the tag.
And sometimes those are just icons,
and sometimes they're written on words.
Now, there are a couple ways to get around the tag.
One is to print the information on the shirt.
This is more expensive to do.
A second print location can, in some cases, you know, almost double the price of the shirt. This is more expensive to do. A second print location can in some
cases, you know, almost double the price of a shirt. So that's why it's not done. It's
more expensive than to have one thing that's been pre-printed a bunch and then to just
sew it in. So one way to get around this was that Haynes did this where they said, we're
going to print the information on the shirt. And then they did this huge ad campaign that basically said that we are,
because it's a 100% cotton, we don't have to have a tag.
But that wasn't true.
They just sort of made that sound like that
to make it sound like there was a purity to their shirts
that made them so pure they didn't have to have a tag.
But really, they just did a second print location.
Their sales went up by like 30%.
And it was like a Michael Jordan ad.
It was a really successful thing.
The other is to have tear out tags, which we have on a lot of DFTVA shirts.
So the tags are there and then they're removable.
Let me ask you a question, Hank.
Yes.
Would it be legal to have a shirt with no tag and no secondary print location, but where
the primary print location is just the instructions.
Yes, that would be, yep.
So we could make a shirt.
You could do that.
We could make a shirt that just said, yeah, in big letters on the front,
made in the United States, 100% cotton, machine wash warm.
Yep, you could do that.
You'd have to find someone to sell you a shirt without a tag, though,
which also might
not be allowed.
So you'd have to, you'd have to, you'd have to go like, you'd have to basically have
a cut and sew operation.
I'm very fond of the idea of a deer hank and John.
Dejuret, that says deer hank and John made in the United States 100% cotton machine wash
warm.
That's all.
Sizing is also important.
So you have to think about that.
Oh, I don't want to have that.
No, no, that I'm out.
I do not want to have the size on the primary print location.
So I'm not interested in that at all.
Moving on.
Next question.
I thought I had a million dollar idea, but it turns out I really
was terrible and we should not do it next question.
Isabella writes, dear John and Hank, I understand you might not be able to tell the truth about
this on the pod, but have either of you ever written and published a book under a pen
name so as not to ride on your own success?
Oh, Isabella, it is so kind of you to think that the main reason one of us would write under
a pen name would be to not ride on our own success.
As if Hank or I has anything approaching that level of goodness and generosity in our
hearts.
If yes, can you recommend the book?
No, I mean, Isabella. So obviously obviously and I don't want to speak for you hang
But if I wrote a book under a pen name
I wouldn't reveal it because the whole point of writing under the pen name would be
To be able to write as someone other than myself not so that I couldn't take advantage of of past success
But so that I could in a way be be free from whatever
You know expectations people bring to my name.
I'm not going to ruin that on an episode of the podcast, but also as it happens, I've
never done it because each time I'm writing a novel, I think, like, oh, I'll publish this
one anonymously.
And then I get to the end of the first draft and I'm like, no, I think I want to,
I think I want to use my name.
Yeah, I want to reach people and have my audience know
about this and like make them happy
and like provide them with more stuff.
Yeah, is that usually the case?
Like I'd never, I'd never really questioned this,
but I guess there was this idea in my head
that like this might be a reason to use a pen name
is to get out from under the idea that my success is based on previous success.
But if you did that, I think what you'd learn is that your success is based on previous success.
Yeah, exactly. I've made some tiktoks that are like, I wouldn't like basically pretend like I'm not Hank Green and up with a thing that is,
doesn't have my face and it doesn't have my voice in it, but it's funny. And those like, don't do as well.
Well, so there are actually a bunch of authors who've had that experience, right?
Like, JK Rowling wrote as Robert Galbraith and got like, you know, medium to good reviews
and sold almost no copies, which is the story for, you know, 90% of fiction.
I have friends who publish under other names that aren't connected to their name,
and they have similar experiences. I also have friends who publish under different names that aren't
connected to their sort of public-facing names, I guess, and they tend to have similar experiences.
And I think if I published a book under a different name with, you know, attempting to obscure the fact that it was written by me,
it would do poorly.
Yeah.
But do comparatively poorly.
Yeah.
I've never created anything.
I don't think that wasn't using my name.
And I wanted to once and then I gave up immediately.
I do have a moderately successful private Reddit account
that is devoted to talking about soccer,
and I will never reveal its identity
because it would take all of the joy
out of those enane soccer conversations for me.
That's great.
I'm glad I have nothing like that.
Instead of that, I just have actual,
like just my normal life,
where none of my friends care about my job. Yeah, that's good normal life, where none of my friends care about my job.
Yeah, that's good.
I mean, none of my friends care about my job either.
In fact, I think most of my friends kind of think
that like I don't really have a job anymore
because my job is like that I used to publish those books.
Right.
This next question comes from Mallory who asks,
Dear Hank and John, okay, so you know how some people
use air quotes
when talking to each other?
Well, I was thinking, who even came up with that
and how would it get passed on?
I'm just imagining the first of a person
to use air quotes doing it
and then the person they're talking to being like,
wait, what the hell was that?
I need my curiosity satiated Mallory.
That is such a, there was a first person who was like,
this thing and someone was like,
whoa, all right, bunny man.
Well, no, because I think the original use of air quotes
was not in quite such a sarcastic context.
Okay.
I kind of even slightly remember this
from the late 1990s,
and I might be wrong,
but this is my personal memory of my college years,
is that people would use air quotes
to actually quote people,
but not in a purgeortive way.
Right.
It would be like,
and then he was like, I love you too,
and you would use air quotes over, I love you too,
but it didn't have the same meaning.
And then I think over time, I love you too, but it didn't have the same meaning. And then I think like over time,
that's my theory, is that over time,
it became the meaning that it has now
starting out in an unsarcastic, unironic way.
Right, just an evolution.
Like you have to have some first step on the process
and you have many steps until you finally get
to where we're at with air quotes now.
Right. That's interesting.
And it would explain how it would get sort of passed
from person to person.
But I also like, it's fairly self-explanatory.
And I do look a little bit like I got two little bunnies
and they're like, hoppin' along.
Well, I think people get the idea
that it's a quote, if you will.
But I don't know that they get the if you will part of it
just from the image of air quotes.
I think that
right. It's also in the intonation. And that's really that's actually weird. You guys actually
hear what I'm doing air quotes even when I'm not doing air quotes. Yeah. So that's often the case
on the Anthropocene Reviewed because you know I write them out in advance but the only version of
them that exists is audio. And I find myself like in the studio doing the air quotes. Right. And you can totally hear it.
It's funny the things that you can hear.
I think the human voice, more and more I think this, that like we, our primary method
of communication is voice, like, you know, traditionally, and this is what we've
like dedicated a huge amount of our cognitive resources to, like being able to make these noises and interpret them is really complicated and wild.
And I starting to think that like the voice is the thing and that a society that like
divorces voice from meaning as we do often on the social internet is a society that has lost a lot of context and has much easier
time sort of assuming negative intent.
And I like voice.
Yeah, okay, but counterargument voice doesn't have to be audible, right?
Because voice also exists in American sign language.
And I would argue that voice exists inside of internet speak too.
Like, there's a difference between LOL and LOL, LLL, LLL, LLL, there's a difference between
this sucks and this sucks.
Like, I feel like on the internet we're in the process of developing strategies for inserting voice
into text, but it's a process and not everybody's on the same page for sure.
Right. It's going to take a while for that to happen. And also, it's been something else,
like being an internet native as a lot of people are new to the thing. And I'm like, I don't understand how you're using this tool, because I've been doing it for a long time.
And there's a lot of cultural understanding I have around this that you do not.
And so like we are using it in very different ways and imagining it in very different ways.
Yeah, all the time, all of us need to try to be a little more aware of the limited context we bring to conversations
and the ways that our limited context
can shape and distort those conversations.
Yeah.
All right, Hank, let's move on to this question from Laura
who writes, dear John and Hank,
sometimes at my job as a care worker,
I have to do night shifts and one of the duties
is to answer the phone and my question is,
what do I say when I answer the phone at two o'clock
in the morning?
It is no longer good evening, but is it good morning yet really?
It's not technically morning and I can't say
good night, Laura speaking or it sounds as if I'm going
to tell them a bedtime story.
I guess I could just say hello,
but that doesn't seem very professional.
Language and landlines, Laura,
just in case you think that like language is finished, Hank,
it's not.
Yeah, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we,
we don't have words for picking up the phone at 2 a.m.
That's not a thing.
I remember when I was, you certainly can't say good night,
which is interesting, like good evening is a greeting.
Good night is always an end.
That's how you say goodbye.
Yeah.
Good night is never how you say hello.
It is weird that good evening means hello
and good night means goodbye.
Like I had never thought about it until just now.
But you can't say good evening at two o'clock in the morning
because it ain't.
I remember when I worked the graveyard shift at stake and shake, there was a regular who would come in
at like 2.30 or 3 o'clock in the morning,
every single night or day,
depending on your world view, I guess.
And he would walk in and he would say,
good morning.
Ow, I just hit something.
And he would say, good morning.
And I would always be like, no, it's not,
not on either level.
I mean, it's morning, if you've slept, you know?
He hadn't.
That's it happens.
But yeah, I guess it is.
Laura, I think that you're safe saying good morning
at two o'clock in the morning
because it is technically two o'clock in the morning. And also the people that you're likely talking to since they're
calling you are presumably awake on some level. So I think you can say good morning.
Yeah, I also think that you can you can go to a more traditional approach and be like,
you know, blank residents, this person speaking, or if it's a facility, like the name of the facility.
So there are like actual professional ways to do it,
but I'm not sure who you're answering the phone for.
Because when I get to the phone at two o'clock in the morning,
what I say is what's wrong?
No, but if it's like a patient,
you don't want to like announce the name of the facility
where they know that they are staying before saying this is war. I'm like, you don't want to announce the name of the facility where they know that they are staying
before saying this is Laura.
Like, you could also just say this is Laura.
Yeah, I've always thought that that's a pretty succinct way
to get to, because the whole job of saying hello
right is to get to the point.
It's the whole, right, because like the whole job
of saying hello is to establish that the connection has been made.
Like that's the reason the word hello
was literally invented.
It was literally invented for the telephone
as a way of saying like, yeah, go ahead.
Oh.
Okay.
But do I ever say hello not on the phone?
Hmm.
I usually say howdy or how are you?
Or good afternoon or something like that.
You have a very particular way of saying hello on the phone too. I don't know if you know that.
But do I tell me more? It's it's it's slightly resigned and world weary. You say hello.
Like usually when you call somebody on the phone, this is a
usually yeah, totally. Usually when you call someone on the phone, Hello, this is a, usually, yeah, totally. Usually when you call someone on the phone,
they say hello as a question mark,
like, because they don't know what's on the other end
of the line, but you act as if you do know,
is if you know exactly what's about to happen
and you say hello.
Well, it is, it is, every time you call me,
I know it's you.
So maybe that's just the hello that you get.
And to be fair, like, I don't generally call with good news.
Uh, yeah.
Like usually when we call each other, it's because there's a problem.
If it's good news, we're about to record a podcast.
Yeah, if it's good news, we text.
Mm-hmm.
Happy birthday.
If it's good news, I'll just make you a video.
That's true.
Hello.
John, I have another question from JJ, who asks,
Steer Hanken-John, hello, I'm a high school senior
who just finished my first internship.
Hello.
That's right there, it's actually in the question.
It was fine, I enjoyed the internship,
but my primary takeaway was that I don't like meetings.
Should I be concerned about this?
How can I become a functioning adult
if I don't like meetings?
They seem very important to adult life. The first Google result of my name is a Swedish band, J.J.
J.J. you got to get yourself into a position of power. It's going to take a bunch of meetings,
but once you're there, then you can get rid of the meetings.
Yeah, and then what you'll find, J.J. is that you slowly have to reintroduce the meetings
one by one because it turned out that they were all there for a reason. So, so, so, JJ, if this internship occurred during lockdown, I do have like a small
piece of good news, which is that in-person meetings are slightly, very slightly less unbearable
than Zoom meetings. Yes, I also think it's very important that you try and schedule meetings for
the appropriate amount of time. And I know
that you're not a person who's in charge of this. But for the people who are, if you are
JJ's superior and you are planning these meetings, do not just let them go on for the amount
of time that they take because it's a weird thing about meetings. They will take exactly
as long as you plan them to take. If you say it's going to be 50 minutes, it's going to
take 50 minutes. If you say it's going be 50 minutes, it's gonna take 50 minutes. If you say it's gonna be 15, it's gonna take 15.
As you know, as you don't hang,
I am a huge believer in not only in ending meetings early,
but in celebrating the success that is inherent
to ending a meeting early.
So when we end a meeting early at Complexly Indianapolis,
I try to thank each and every person
for making this special moment possible.
That's one thing.
The other thing is that it is possible to live in a world
without meetings, even like if you work in an office setting.
Like, it isn't possible for us in our work.
It isn't possible for lots of other kinds of work.
But like, when I worked at Bookless Magazine
as a production editor and as an assistant,
there were a lot of meetings in the sense that I would go
and I would talk to people I worked with
and I would have questions for them
and I would get those questions answered
and sometimes we would gather in small groups
and have those conversations,
but because they were not scheduled or formalized,
they lasted much less time and they were far more efficient.
And there was only one meeting a year.
Now admittedly, I look back on that time of my life with the love of nostalgia that is
inappropriate to how happy I actually was in those years.
But I will say this, while the years of my early adulthood were probably the worst of my life so far.
The lack of meetings was the great saving grace of it all.
I would go weeks, months, sometimes, without even thinking about a meeting.
This is not a familiar idea to me, though I guess I did also have jobs where I had very, very few meetings.
I've forgotten what that life is like.
Which reminds me that today's podcast is brought to you by meetings.
Meetings, everyone hates them, but they still happen.
This podcast is also brought to you by air quotes.
Air quotes, it's when you wanna say something.
This podcast is also brought to you by Hank's pseudonymously written novel. Hank's pseudonymously written novel.
A adverbally adjective noun.
The wild thing about this is that the question asker
thought that either of us would have had time
to do anything they don't know about.
This podcast is also brought to you by the shirt tags.
Shirt tags.
They have vitally important information that is legally required to be on the shirt somewhere.
We also have a project for awesome message.
It's from Dragosh to Iwana.
Hello Iwana, Pingu here.
Shout out for being an awesome person, but I decided to take drastic measures to get your
attention.
Panda feels like he's being ignored.
Narwai thinks you should be training more.
You never know when the apocalypse comes.
Let's avoid having a switch, Azora for Corgi and Narwhy to Leo mission anytime soon.
You and Dragosh would never notice.
I have no idea what just happened, but I said all the words.
I understood none of that.
I think I know what a Corgi is.
Yeah.
And yeah, I think that know what a cork is. Yeah. And yeah,
I think that we were meant to not understand. Yes, I believe that was a code that begins
World War Three. And I for one, I'm ready to be remembered by history. So podcasts that
launched it all off. This next question comes from Sherry who writes, dear John and Hank,
I've been watching Vlogbothers for a while and I've noticed that you two
use the same account to both post and watch slash comment on other videos.
But why? Like, I don't imagine your YouTube recommendations are very
representative of what you actually want to watch and it just seems pretty
inconvenient. Well, actually, yeah, our YouTube recommendations on the Vlog Brothers channel
are totally representative of what we want to watch because the only two people who watch videos
on the Vlog Brothers channel are me and Hank. And what I have experienced anyway is that Hank
introduces me to a lot of new sides of YouTube that I turn out to enjoy. Yeah, and John introduces me to people playing Tetris
and yelling about soccer.
Yeah, not that, that's, that's,
there's definitely more to it.
Like, yeah, I mean, I find all kinds of stuff
because John has been watching it.
And like, I just went to our YouTube channel
and there's like speed runs of video games
which John is super into,
but I also like watching them,
but wouldn't see them if not for having John.
Yeah, and we introduce each other
to like new history channels
and different educational channels as well.
So in some ways, it's almost a way
that we can communicate without communicating.
It's a way that we can share each other's interests without having to like formalize a strategy for it, which I really love. Now,
you have to get the right person to share your YouTube account with. Don't get me wrong. Like,
it's got to be a lifelong, deep relationship. But yeah, I think it's great. I would suggest it. I
think that my YouTube page is better than it would be without you.
I definitely feel the same way.
And I also think that if you weren't there to like,
there's a certain amount of like stuff I might watch
that I don't because I know that you'll know.
Yeah, you don't hate watch too, too much hate.
So and then it like shows up and John Text me
and is like, what did you watch?
Yeah, well, what did you watch?
Why are these things being suggested?
Yeah, yeah, it only takes like one 45 minute
conspiracy theory video to really reshape
the YouTube algorithm suggestions to us.
And so I do, I text take and I'm like,
please stop watching these videos that do nothing
but make you angry because the algorithm
doesn't care if you're angry or happy or well informed.
It only cares that you're there.
Yeah.
And it wants to drag you into.
The algorithm's goal is to get you
to pay a lot of attention to the platform.
And however it can draw you deeply in down the rabbit hole,
it's gonna take you there.
And I for one think speed runs and high level competitive
nest Tetris are the very best that YouTube has to offer.
John, this next question comes from Kate who asks,
Dear Hank and John, for the past few weeks,
I've been having a weird dream in which my family moves
and I go to a new school, which is normal
until I talk to a girl and then she turns into a lobster
while I'm talking to her and then she chases me around
with her lobster hands.
What does it mean with Kate expectations, Kate?
Man, we haven't had enough good name specific sign off lately.
That was great, thank you.
But it doesn't mean anything. Uh, well, but it's recurring. Right. First of all,
lobsters don't have hands. They have claws. Well, we don't know what lobster people have, Hank. Okay.
So let's not tell Kate that her dream is anatomically incorrect. She's already going through a
difficult enough time. But I have like not exactly
that recurring dream, but like similar recurring dreams. And what I enjoy about it is that if you have
the dream enough, it almost becomes like Groundhog Day, where right before the person at the new
school turns into the lobster person, you can think to yourself, she's about to become a lobster person.
And that's when he starts to really have control over the dream,
because I have some pretty scary recurring nightmares.
But on the occasions when I'm able to be aware of it enough
to be like, oh, I bet the weird horrible thing
is about to happen.
And then it happens.
And I'm like, new and calm.
There's a little level,
there's a little level of control in that for me.
So what does it mean?
It means that your anxious about life
and your brain is throwing anxiety-producing scenarios
at you to try and maybe ignore you to future
or prepare you to future stressors.
Probably is what we think.
Yeah.
One of the reasons why we have these stressful dreams.
What does it mean that the source of the stress is a lobster girl?
Nothing.
It's just your brain trying to come up with something that sounds stressful.
It's like, what do you got like the stress bang?
Lobsters?
All right, that's good.
But like, also something else.
Meeting someone for the first time.
Great, great.
We're just going to put those two things together.
Exactly.
I think all of us are maybe trying to process a little more anxiety than usual.
And so it's going to be lobster people for a while.
That's my summary of 2020.
And before we get to the news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon, I just want to say a personal
thank you to the several of you who wrote in to say congratulations to Liverpool on winning the Premier League.
Many of you are also Liverpool fans and it meant as much to some of y'all as it meant to me,
people in Liverpool are often called Scouse. In fact, there's a sign, famous sign held up in the stands at
Anfield that says, we're not English, we're scous. And one River Pudley and Jen wrote
in and said, to be scousers, to persist, to be resilient, to keep waiting and hoping
until one day. And that day for Liverpool fans has arrived. And while obviously sports are not important,
for me, Liverpool winning the Premier League is a reminder
that as they say in the Liverpool song,
you'll never walk alone, though your dreams be tossed and blown,
walk on, walk on with hope in your heart, and you'll never walk alone.
So thanks to everybody who wrote in about that, and I'm really, really happy that we've
ever put on the Premier League after 30 years. It's pretty, pretty great development amid dark times.
development amid dark times. The news from AFC Wimbledon this week, Hank is also encouraging
one of our better players last season is a young man named Shane McLaughlin and there was some uncertainty about his contract because the club is under a lot of financial stress obviously.
the club is under a lot of financial stress, obviously, it's, you know, a lot of players have had to be released, but we have just signed Shane McLaughlin up for another season
of hard, hard work in AFC Wimbledon's midfield. So that's encouraging. Shane McLaughlin is
the kind of player who can keep us in league
one for another season. So I'm excited about that.
Well, I'm glad. And I guess that's, I guess we're headed into that part of the news cycle.
We're going to hear about whether or not you're keeping your players and what new players
you're getting. Next week, I'll share the names of the 43 players we had to release.
I'll share the names of the 43 players we had to release.
Well, the news from Mars is does also make the the anxious noise. Oh, no, no, it's a experience launch has been pushed back again.
Oh, no, still a big window, still a big window.
So on June 24th, NASA announced that there was a contamination issue in the ground support
lines.
And I don't know what this means.
What is that?
But my, so I know what ground support is.
Ground support is the, the people who help out with getting things that go up to go
up, but they themselves do not go up.
Right.
I know.
Yeah.
But what is a contamination in the lines?
I don't even know what a ground support line is. But what I'm imagining is possums.
So, right. I, you know, like something like that, or maybe there was water, where there shouldn't
have been water, or there was carbon dioxide, where there shouldn't. I don't know.
But it might have been possums. So there's contamination in the ground support lines.
And that came, that happened as the rover was being encapsulated in the Atlas 5 rocket.
The launch was originally scheduled for July 17th.
It got pushed back to July 20th.
Now it is pushed back to July 22nd.
So they have to clean up that, whatever that is in the ground support line.
I'm just guessing possums.
And then the rocket itself seems to be all good.
The company building the rocket, United Launch Alliance,
pulled off a wet dress rehearsal,
which includes fueling the rocket.
So that all went well.
The launch window is through August 11th.
But I mean July 22nd to August 11th is not a huge period.
And if they miss that, it's a 19 month wait, right?
It might be possible to extend through August 15th.
So basically what's happening is,
at that point we're getting farther and farther away from Mars.
Right.
And so you have to use more fuel,
and then you have less fuel left over for contingency.
And so then the decision-making point
means like, do we wanna to dip into our contingency
fuel or do we want to wait two years for another launch? So August 15th, honestly, probably we would
still launch if that was there. But yes, July 22nd is the current launch date and everybody
cross your fingers for that. I will definitely keep my fingers crossed. I'm starting to get nervous already.
And that's unfortunate because I already had
as it happens a full complement of anxieties.
You know, it's like when you're playing Uno
and you already have the largest hand
and someone gives you that wild draw for.
To like, really? I know.
Sorry.
It's okay.
By the news is the news.
The news is the news.
Thanks for podding with me.
All right, John.
All right, John.
This podcast is edited by Joseph Tuna Mettish.
It's produced by Rosie on a Halsey Rohaas and shared in Gibson.
Our communications coordinator is Julie of Bloom.
The music you're hearing now at the beginning
of the podcast is by the great Gunnarola.
And as they say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪ OUTRO MUSIC