Dear Hank & John - 251: 5 Seconds is 1 Mile
Episode Date: August 3, 2020Where should I be during a phone interview? Do other animals get sick as often as humans do? What's the time/distance correlation between lightning and thunder? What's a rehearsal dinner? What do I do... with really minor TikTok fame? What happens to amputated limbs? How do I make remote wedding guests feel included? 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
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Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John!
Where's everybody think of it dear John and Hank?
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions,
give you dubious advice and bring you all the weeks news from both Mars and
AFC Wimbledon.
John, if Italians are from Italy, where are battalions from?
Battalions would be from, I guess, technically from butterly.
Yes, that's where they're from.
They're from butterly.
By spelling, by spelling, they're from that, that, thataly, which actually makes a kind of
sense.
Why?
Because battalions battle.
Oh, that's very good.
That's very good.
But I just wanted to say butterly.
I wanted to make you say butterly.
Well, I'm glad that you say buttally.
Well, I'm glad that made you happy, Hank.
It's the little things in life
that really matter right now,
by getting people to say buttally,
which isn't even a funny word.
Like every time I say it, you laugh,
but it's not, it's not a funny word.
Yeah, like if there were a place called buttally,
it would be, I wouldn't like,
trip me up every time the way that the name of the eighth planet does.
Seven.
That's a seventh.
A seventh, yeah.
Seventh.
I always think Jupiter is seventh
because I associate the number seven
with extremely large objects for some reason.
Oh, yeah, I hear that, but it isn't.
Yeah, I have this problem with months
where I think that the farther from summer you get the longer the month names get
Which is kind of true, but it mixes it up sometimes and confuses me
Especially in Montana where April is definitely still the winter as is March actually right March is a little longer
No the name no, it's it's the exact same length
No, the name. No, it's the exact same length.
But I and Elle are very thin.
Oh, you mean like the way that it exists in your mind.
Yes, okay.
The physical space, the day.
I'm just thinking in terms of characters,
not in terms of like the length of a letter,
but it's interesting how the different
all men work.
This is the high quality content
that people download
our podcast every week for.
So I guess that's what it's come to.
And Hank and I trying to not directly talk about 2020,
we are now talking about the relative length
of March and April, not as months, but as words.
Also just like, eel.
Huh?
Nothing. I was just thinking about the way they sound. March feels
like a big march is a good word. Big word and April seems like a little word, even though it's got
two syllables and March only has once, but like March just feels very big. Do you ever think
of a way to do that? Anyway, all the all all humans are going to die and like then at some point
nobody will be around to like translate our language. Yeah. And then at some point, nobody will be around
to translate our language.
And then our language will be gone as well.
And nobody will know that March was a slightly
angry or word than April.
Yeah, I do think about that, John.
And I think it's important just because of our roots
here on Dear Hank and John,
that we do interface with that reality sometimes,
occasionally, because that's, you know,
it's where we used to be a podcast about death.
Yeah, we've left it behind a little bit
because it's a lot at the moment.
Yeah, we look forward to the days
when this can again be a podcast about death
when everything else on Earth has stopped being about that.
The first question comes from Abigail.
Who has, Steer Egg and John are doing a phone interview
for a writing internship at a teen magazine next week.
I've never been interviewed for anything before
and I'm very nervous, especially because even ordering
a pizza on the phone makes me stressed.
Because it isn't a video call I can be wherever I want
in the house.
Where should I sit during my interview?
Should I take notes?
What will I do with my hands?
Any do-be-use advice would be greatly appreciated Abigail.
Boy, it's, it's, I also had to learn this.
Now I get on a phone call and I know exactly what to do with my body.
I know what works for me.
But yeah, I remember those days when I was like, what am I supposed to even be doing?
Yeah. Where are my hands go?
Well, and it's a form of getting nervous, right?
Like part of getting nervous is imagining the situation
and you can't imagine the situation
unless you can imagine where you're gonna be
and like what's gonna be in front of you.
I do have strong opinions about this, though, Abigail.
So I think that you should be in a room
where you will not be interrupted
and without outside distractions.
So like a room without screens, for instance. And I think you should have physical paper and
depend. And I think you should feel free to doodle. Yes. Because there have been studies that say that
actually when you doodle, you do a better job of paying attention and retaining information.
If you're a doodle or then if you don't. And I also think that you should take notes
as you find them helpful,
but that you shouldn't feel obligated
to take tons and tons of notes
because really you want it to be a conversation.
I think for me the most important notes
to take are questions that I have
because I often forget them.
So in the moment they're talking,
I have a question and I don't write it down
and then they finish talking and I'm like,
what was that? And then I'm like, I had a question. I don't write it down and then these finish talking and I'm like What was that and then I'm like I had a question but I forgot it
Remember what it was I forgot the question and I'm just talking now to try and remember the question
I sound like a dope so I try to avoid that by writing down the question when it pops into my head
So having a pen and paper is good and pens it like in general
It helps me and this is me to have something to do with my hands
Sometimes I stand up and walk around Like in general, it helps me, and this is me, to have something to do with my hands.
Sometimes I stand up and walk around.
Sometimes I hold a pen.
Sometimes I have a fidget.
Sometimes I doodle.
All that stuff helps me concentrate
and not get distracted and get lost in some unrelated thought.
So yeah, I think that all those things are important.
Being in a space that is somewhat physically familiar
is good because then you won't be distracted
by things in this space, but that sounds like it's probably going
to be the case no matter what.
But yeah, I think that's great advice, John.
Good luck, Abigail.
Let us know how it goes.
Also, if it's helpful, you can always tell them, you know, I'm such a good writer that
I actually got my question answered on noted American third tier advice podcast, your
Hank and John.
Yeah.
Who knows? And it's very completely normal to be nervous in situations like this,
embrace it, I've never been in an interview where I wasn't nervous. Me neither. I don't
really clearly remember the last time I wasn't nervous. It's been a few months.
Yeah, what I say, I'm never in an interview with him, I'm not nervous, it's just what I'm saying is,
I'm just the nerves, I feel them.
Oh boy.
This next question comes from Tara,
who writes to you, John and Hank,
I was recently listening to John's podcast,
The Anthropocene Reviewed on Staff of the Caucus Aureus.
By the way, Hank, I don't know if you heard it,
but I did an episode of my podcast,
The Anthropocene Reviewed about staff
and staff infections.
I am opposed to them, but lots of people have lots of different texts.
Anyway, do other animals get sick as much as humans do?
That's Tari's question.
I mean, I've had to take my dog to the vet once or twice before,
because he's felt sick for some reason,
but humans get sick all the dang time.
The list just goes on and on.
It's not just staff infections.
It's also flu, malaria, cold, strep.
So what's going on here?
Is there something specific to humans? Are we just like weaker than other organisms? Or do they
get sick as much as we do? We just don't know as much about it. Oh, there seem to be several different
things going on here. One is that we live a lifestyle that is good at spreading disease. Super good.
Yeah. So that seems to be the biggest piece of it
is that like your dog doesn't see that many dogs
on a daily basis.
See some, see some, you know, run into other,
some of the dogs, but there's just like on average,
the average person sees way more people
and is around way more people than the average dog is.
Also dogs travel a lot less in their average lifetimes
than humans travel in their average lifetimes.
But there is more to it than that,
because we are also susceptible to certain water-borne illnesses
in ways that many other mammals aren't.
But some other mammals are.
Yes.
And we're not really sure what this is about,
except that like we've
gotten good at avoiding diseases in various ways. And that means that it's that they
kill us less. And so we are, it is less important for us to develop strategies to not be killed
by them genetically. Like in terms of how our bodies are built, because we have cultural ways of preventing those diseases.
Right. That's a big deal.
I also think it's a big deal that we have relatively long lives,
like compared to dogs or cats, for instance.
Yeah. And so we get sick more because we're around for longer.
And the other thing is that a lot of animals in the wild do get sick and they die.
Yeah, a lot of times they die.
Yeah.
Like a lot of illnesses in non-human animals are fatal illnesses.
Yeah, I mean, it's wild.
Like things that we handle pretty easily in ourselves, like tooth decay, for example,
we have ways of treating cavities early, but they can be, can easily be fatal if left untreated.
We don't think about that anymore because we treat them.
There are also a lot of animals that aren't here anymore because of diseases like the
Kuaio stopped existing largely because of avian malaria, partly because of other human-broad problems. And so we don't
hear about those creatures getting sick because we killed all of them. Yeah. But usually like big enough
populations usually have ways of getting around serious infectious diseases. Even if they have
really tremendous impacts, that ecological niche remains
and some animals are able to repopulate it.
But the process of having that happen is really, it includes a great deal of suffering and
we don't want that to happen to people.
So we have all these other strategies, and we're good at it.
And we're better at it now than we used to be.
And we're gonna be better at it in the future than we are now.
We better be fingers crossed.
I think it's a weird time, Hank,
to be tuning our own horn in the disease knowledge and treatment.
Yeah, in response, yeah, agree.
I feel like when you say we are good at it,
you mean like as a species, we have the capacity.
Yeah, not like as the as a species, we always do this.
Yeah, this next question is from Tiffany
who asks, dear Hank and John,
I am writing to you in the midst of a thunderstorm.
I grew up in tornado alley, so we really got some doosies.
And I remember all throughout childhood being told that if you count the number of seconds between seeing lightning and hearing
a thunder clap, you can estimate how many miles the lightning strike is away from you. And
I believe it was one second equals one mile. Is this true? The lightning I just saw seemed
a lot closer than the corresponding thunder clap would suggest. Also, my cat is hiding underneath the kitchen sink,
which is irrelevant, but adorable Tiffany.
This is one of those pieces of misinformation
that is so widely shared and is a little bit actively
dangerous.
Now, obviously, is it the most actively dangerous
misinformation that's being shared in the year of our Lord
2020?
No, but it is wrong and it is really, and it leads people to have a false sense of security
when they shouldn't have one.
When you see a lightning strike and then you count the seconds until you hear the thunder,
five seconds equals one mile. So one second equals one fifth of one mile.
What confuses me about this is that it's actually, there is a number and it's very clear and it's
easy. It's not hard. It's five seconds. My seconds equals one mile.
It's not exactly, but it's very close to five seconds equals one mile.
one mile. I mean, it's not exactly, but it's very close to five seconds equals one mile. But and before the internet was a thing, we counted and we, that was our rule. And growing
up in Florida is one second is one mile. And like that information spread around. Yeah.
Person to person, the way information used to. And, and, but now we are in a world of
really easy access
to more information, but we're still stuck
on the like 1985 version one second equals one mile.
We need to correct this misunderstanding.
So five seconds equals one mile,
one second equals one fifth of a mile.
20% of a mile, which is not a large distance.
That's very far. Go inside.
Yeah. Honestly, go inside if it's five seconds.
Like, that's only a mile. Yeah.
When we were growing up as kids in Central Florida,
we were always taught that if you hear thunder go inside,
which I think is great advice and like, why not?
Why not? Insights great.
Well, I mean, air conditioned in there.
Yeah, but obviously only with the people
who are in your immediate distancing group.
If you're in the United States, if you're in New Zealand,
of course, you can do whatever the heck you want.
Absolutely.
Okay.
This next version comes from Anna who writes,
dear John and Hank, I've been reading
the New York Times bestselling novel
and absolutely remarkable thing.
By the way, Hank, congratulations on a beautifully
foolish endeavor, your second novel,
making the New York Times bestseller list.
Thank you.
Anyway, my question is, what's a rehearsal dinner?
They mention one in the book and I don't understand.
Are they simply the same as a wedding party
but the day before, like a wedding eve?
Do you just repeat everything the next day?
How can they be emotional if you know you'll repeat them?
I'm not.
I'm not.
Pumpkins and penguins, Anna.
I was legitimately bummed out when I found out
about wedding rehearsals.
And I think yours was the first wedding rehearsal
I ever knew about.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, we're gonna like do it, but not actually.
Well, to me, it didn't, it never feels like you're actually doing a wedding.
It feels like you're rehearsing.
So like you're told where to stand and you're told what's gonna happen when and like, because
if you didn't do any of that the whole time, I, well, I guess I'm a person who's anxious
and so I like to know what I'm getting myself into.
I like to be as prepared as I can be.
But if you just tell me to like show up at the church at 230
and by three o'clock I'll be married, I'll be like,
wait, what happens and when?
But yeah, well, but like you're eliminating
all chance of the unexpected.
No, you're definitely not, because for instance,
one of my grooms was infainted,
and there was no preparing for that. Like we didn't discuss that happened against the rehearsal. That wasn't a rehearsal. No, but that actually isn't the question
The question is about an even weirder wedding-related tradition, which is the rehearsal dinner
The idea is that after the rehearsal
No, here's what what happens everybody pretends to eat food, and you all think, okay, we're gonna put the food down,
but there's no food, and the plate comes down,
and then you like, take your knife and fork out,
and you try to carve up your fake food,
and then you have a fake food fight, and it's really cute.
No, all of that is incorrect.
This is a culturally specific thing, probably,
and it's a much bigger deal in our family
than it is in other families.
But in our family, the rehearsal dinner is a huge deal
where you bring all of the wedding party
and the out of town guests into a dinner
the night before the wedding.
And the dinner is really just an excuse
to have this wonderful series of toasts.
And it's usually hosted by the groom's family.
And it could be like at an applebees,
or it could be at like a formal dining,
like a formal reception place.
Like a place space.
Yeah.
And then you have these toasts at the end of the night
that like people pour so much work into making funny
and I mean, like I worked harder on my toast
at Hank's rehearsal dinner
that I've ever worked on any speech I've ever given.
I mean, I didn't not work hard on mine.
The best speech at my rehearsal dinner
was given by my friend, Levin,
who had gone to the wrong place
and he'd gone to a rehearsal dinner at a different wedding,
and he just hadn't noticed.
And he was there at the cocktails portion
of the rehearsal dinner, like,
before sitting down for like an hour,
and he was just talking to people and having a good time.
And finally, someone said,
so how do you know Jackie and Bob?
And then Levin showed up at our rehearsal dinner
and he gave this, I mean, he's a professional comedian
but he gave this incredible toast to Jackie and Bob.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, so it's not,
it is the dinner that happens after the rehearsal.
Yeah.
I think the idea, and the goal is like, all these people, a lot of people
came into town, it'd be a shame if we only had one dinner.
So we're just gonna throw in another dinner,
which is expensive.
So you don't have to do it,
but it is just another chance to have more time together
since there aren't gonna be any opportunities.
In your life, it turns out to have all those people
together in the same place.
Grand The Great News is, you get to actually eat.
It's not pretend eating.
Yes, indeed.
Real food occurs.
This next question, John comes from Holly
who asks, dear Hank and John,
this morning I made a TikTok about Romeo and Juliet
and it's completely blown up.
I am now very mildly TikTok famous.
Someone in the comments called me the queen of Shakespeare TikTok.
What do I do with this title?
If I were the queen of a Shakespeare play,
I would probably plan a murder, my own death, or both.
But obviously, these choices are not ideal.
Hard to be the bard, but harder to be internet famous, Holly.
So Hank, we included this question because I would say
like one out of every 45 emails
we get at the moment is about someone who suddenly just became TikTok famous.
Yeah, it's really interesting to watch as a person who's been doing this for a while
because TikTok is so good at highlighting new content and putting eyeballs on it that
it's not uncommon to have something that gets millions of views or even hundreds of thousands, which is a lot, right?
Right.
But also, like, compared to other platforms that that view is very devalued because like you're constantly streaming through new stuff and
like converting from a view to a follow is less likely and also follows themselves are devalued because people almost never leave their for you page.
So it's really interesting like that so many people and now we're going to get the experience
of what it's like to have something that they made get a fairly large audience. And that's
valuable, but it isn't like the kind of thing that you can turn into something that can support
your career or anything. Or maybe you can. I mean, I think some people are going to go from being
the queen of Shakespeare TikTok to being the queen
of Shakespeare analysis on the internet or whatever.
I think some of that will happen.
Anytime you're dealing with a really new platform,
we don't yet know all the ways that it's going to shake out
in terms of like it becoming a job.
But also, that isn't the only point of doing stuff like that.
Yeah, absolutely.
There are reasons to make work other than to try to turn it into money.
Creating is in itself really wonderful.
And having people find your creations and enjoy them is also really wonderful.
So one, that's great and and and and like follow the joy,
but and the curiosity, but but if that joy and curiosity dries up, like it's, there's nothing
wrong with like moving on. Yeah. I remember a long time ago, I saw a presentation by Zay Frank,
where he talked about the first time he ever had something he made on the internet go viral.
He'd sent out like a invitation to a party that included a series of videos on like how
to dance well.
And it felt so good to get all of that outside validation.
And it felt, I mean, I remember the feeling of waking up the day that your video got featured
on the front page of YouTube in 2007 and just feeling this rush of energy and excitement
and it was just tremendously fulfilling
and it's natural to like want that again.
You know, like, how about that but more?
Like, can I have it every day?
Like, and so in this presentation,
Zay Frank talked about how, you know,
he tried to do a bunch of things
and they didn't really resonate with a large audience
in the same way.
So then he created how to dance well too.
And how we all have this urge to like,
I wanna get that feeling back.
I wanna get that feeling back.
And it is a wonderful feeling.
It is really intoxicating,
but I would say it's intoxicating in all the ways that other
intoxicants are intoxicating, including that it can become a real problem if you chase it
for its own sake all the time.
Yeah, but making stuff can be really wonderful.
And even if it isn't reaching a large audience, so there's probably an opportunity to have a hobby that is fun.
And maybe we'll come in handy, whether this becomes like, whether it's a thing that's like,
the most unlikely outcome is that this becomes itself a job. But a very likely outcome is that it
informs your understanding of the world in a way that helps you in other work or in other creation.
And also maybe is something that is fun to put on a college
like application or job resume or something.
Yeah, also it's like great conversation.
Oh yeah.
You know, like 20 years from now when people are talking about TikTok
and you're just enjoying a quiet night outside with your friends and people are talking about TikTok and you're just enjoying a quiet night outside
with your friends and people are talking about TikTok. You'll be like,
you're all you're never going to believe this, but I was actually the queen of Shakespeare TikTok.
And people are going to love that story. Holly, I watched your TikTok. It was funny,
good job and also very insightful. So it seems like that's a good combination
you got going for you and all kinds of opportunities
in the future.
But I do not know how to be famous.
I do not know how to have influence.
I do not know what the way to do that,
what's the right way to do that.
And I think that the most important thing is that we think about it
intelligently, that we're thoughtful about it, that we understand what we're chasing. And like know when
the fuels are healthy and when they aren't.
Yeah. I mean, we all fly toward light somewhat mindlessly, right? But we also all have the
capacity to be like, wait, why am I flying toward this light so relentlessly? Like, is
there, is not the only light I could be flying toward? Or if I look in this other direction,
is there a light that I could maybe fly toward instead?
John, this next question comes from Montana
who asks, dear Hank and John,
when you get a limb amputated,
what do they do with it afterwards?
Do they like compost it or do you get to keep it?
Not the state Montana.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Do they like what it composted?
That's all you said.
What did I say?
Did I say composted?
You said composted.
And I...
I don't know.
Is that a regionalism?
No.
I think it's how they say it in England.
But oh, oh, it's part of your fake English accent.
It probably isn't even how they say it in England. It's all part of your fake English accent. That probably isn't even how they say it in England.
Oh, it's all part of your fake English accent.
Just like comes to the fore.
Sarah and I were talking recently.
Well, John, I don't know if you know,
but I spent a little bit of time in the United Kingdom.
Oh, God.
So occasionally one of my bridges,
oh, there's nothing scarier than American
who spent eight days in England
coming home with a fake British accent.
Sarah and I were recently talking about the fact
that like having grown up in the South,
Sarah grew up in the South,
and I went to high school in the South,
that our natural inclination is always
to put the emphasis when we're trying to not
have a southern accent.
Our natural inclination is always to put the emphasis on a syllable other than the first syllable
because in southern accents people might say like insurance or umbrella or gay
Raj.
And so when we want to sound like like regular American, whatever that accent is.
So when we were kids and we wanted to sound like not Southern,
we would always put the emphasis on the second or third syllable, but that sometimes leads to
humorous mispronunciations when you're just trying to not have an accent like Sarah would always
say, uh, Yahoo male. That's adorable.
Not that there's anything wrong with having a Southern accent,
of course, just that when I was a kid,
I happened to like want to sound like,
I don't know, like MTV sounded.
Right, yeah, I get it.
But that wasn't the question.
Right, do they, do they,
I apologize for my pronunciation.
Right, right, but to get back to the question,
do they compost?
I think that they don't, they definitely don't compost.
I think that's what they say in England.
God, it's getting worth it.
Just some time you do it.
Right, me a letter.
Tell me how I'm doing.
Oh, they will.
Don't worry.
They will, usually it is incinerated,
it is taken to the crematorium. And sometimes it is incinerated, it is taken to the crematorium.
And sometimes it is used in science,
but, and they will push back against this sometimes,
but in most places in America, it's yours,
and you can have it if you want it.
Good to know.
Okay.
So you can look up and see people who have decided that they would like to hold on to their
remains for one reason or another.
And obviously there are religious reasons why some people do this, but also it can just
be a matter of personal preference.
And it's like, I would like to have my foot.
Thank you.
I like that you think the way that English people say compost is you think they say compost.
If you think I'm if you think I'm gonna let it go.
You're incorrect. Look, just say a sentence that has compost in it but do it with a British accent, John.
You've hit me in my weak point.
You've hit me in my weak point. Yeah, that's not a weak point is that you won't just do it.
Whereas I have no shame.
Let me think.
Let me think if I can do it.
I'm going away from the microphone to do it
into my own mouth.
I can't do it. Come on, Jeremiah.
Why won't you just compost it?
See?
No shame.
I'm not saying it was good.
Do you think that when English people do an American accent, it's that bad?
Like, never.
It's never that bad.
No, no.
And when Americans do a British accent, it's not that bad.
It's not.
It's never that bad.
It's just me.
Whenever I hear other people do American accents,
because also it's because of the things they say,
like, you're like, should we compost the tea or whatever?
But they're always like, hey, Bob, wanna go get a hamburger?
It just tells you so much where I was like,
I was like whiny about compost with Jeremiah.
Yeah, yeah.
Whereas like when English people do American accents,
they're like, hey, you wanna pay $27,000
for a one nightnight hospital stay?
Which reminds me, actually, that today's podcast is brought to you by the US Health Care
System. The US Health Care System, you can either spend $27,000 on the most luxurious,
two-week vacation imaginable by a human being or spend a night in the hospital.
This podcast is also brought to you by Jackie and Bob.
They had a wedding and Levin went to it.
And then he was very complimentary and celebratory
of that happy couple I hope they're doing well.
I still think about them often.
Today's podcast is also, of course,
brought to you by Lightning, Lightning closer than you think.
And finally, this podcast is brought to you
by drawing something while extremely stressed out.
Doodling!
It's called Doodling!
Oh!
We also have a project for awesome message to read.
It's from Emily.
Thanks for donating to the project for awesome to Benjamin.
My two and a half year old son, Benjamin,
absolutely loves both of you.
He is especially obsessed with my John and Hank Bobbleheads. He has to give them hugs and kisses every night before bed. Would you
mind telling Benjamin, good night.
Okay.
Good night.
Benjamin, John here, good night. It's now time to put the Bobbleheads back on the shelf
and go to sleep.
Good night Benjamin. Put the Bobbleheads back on the shelf and go to sleep. Good night Benjamin, put the bobble heads back on the shelf.
That was Hank Benjamin.
He didn't identify himself because he walks around the world
constantly thinking that people know who he is.
Good night Benjamin.
It's Hank.
It's time to put the bobble heads back on the shelf.
Oh great, now he's gonna have terrible dreams.
Hahaha.
Benjamin, thank you for being such a good little guy.
And Emily, thank you for donating to the project for awesome.
That was very cute.
I can't believe you did that.
You know how like Alex Honnold can like climb mountain faces without any ropes because
he doesn't have a very active amygdala?
I'd love to know like what part of your brain doesn't work that allows you to like plow
ahead with that English accent,
even though you have to know how bad it is.
Ugh.
I think I did fine.
I think that one was way better.
This next question comes from Leah who writes, dear John and Hank, my fiance.
Fiancé.
My fiance.
No.
Now who's, now, how do they, where do they pronounce it like that John how are you gonna say that
All right this next question comes from Leah right dear John and Hank my fiancee and I planned our wedding for this summer
And we're going ahead with it even even with the current whole world situation,
you know, it was always going to be a pretty small wedding, but now none of us, the grandparents,
have been able to make it. We're going to livestream and record it for their benefit,
but it just won't be the same. My question is, what else should we do to try to include them
and to have a joyful day in such a difficult time. My God. Wow.
Who got everybody just I hope that you're all clapping for John at home.
Wow. What a thing.
All right. I did it.
I knew I was going to have to do it and I did it.
But I just want to state for the record that my armpit sweat is out of this world.
I'm drenched.
All right.
Well, yeah, yeah, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry about the bummer.
That's the end of the sentence.
Yeah.
There have to be,
there have to be people who have,
who have tried to solve this problem in some ways.
You know, you gotta put the laptop on a robot
and have it just room but down the aisle.
That kind of thing.
I think it's more about calling attention
to the people who aren't there and paying attention
to them and saying that you're grateful that they're watching.
I think that's what makes people feel included.
If they're just watching a live stream, that does start to feel like a bit of a bummer.
By the way, Leah and Nick have just decided to postpone their wedding.
I just went to their wedding when I've said and found out the same thing.
So a lot of people who are writing you should laugh.
Leah, Leah, I was at your website earlier today.
And your wedding was not postponed earlier today, but it is postponed now.
And I'm really sorry.
Fortunately, you are still registered
for sauce pans and I bought you one.
This is going to be a wedding advice podcast if we only reward the wedding people.
Well, I mean, anybody could include a link to their Amazon wish list is just that only
the people who are getting married do. That was a nice saucepan, John.
That's not mean, yeah, it's a good saucepan.
So this became less helpful for for you, Lea. But it became helpful for all the people who are
writing us being like, here's how my school is going to open back up. And how do I handle this?
Because like, boy, do you not actually know that that's what's going to happen.
Yeah, I mean, there's so much, oh God.
Primmie, that's...
Yeah, prepare for what they're telling you to prepare for,
but also prepare for the possibility
that that's not what's gonna happen.
The only declarative sentence that I feel comfortable saying right now
is that I don't know.
Yeah.
Oh, and that your English accent is really bad.
So the news from AFC Wimbledon Hake is that we have signed a player,
which is encouraging, because it implies that we will maybe play football this coming season, which would be great.
Yeah. The player's name is Che Alexander. He is a fullback. And he comes to us from Barnett,
a team that plays, I believe in the fifth tier of English soccer. This is a thing that we've
been doing over the years because Wimbledon has a very small budget
they have to overperform every year.
So we sign players from outside the top four tiers of English football and then we hope
that they do a great job and sometimes they do an amazing job.
Like for instance, Joe Piggitt was signed from a national league side, a fifth tier side.
Other times maybe it goes less well, but this is the recruitment strategy that works
given the financial constraints that the club is under.
So welcome to the club, Che Alexander.
You seem ready to go from your interview that I watched when you said, I'm ready to go. I'm looking at a picture of him,
and he looks like a football player.
He looks like he'd be good at football playing.
He does.
He looks like he's got all the major assets you need.
The cleats.
Uh-huh.
He's got a jersey on.
Yes.
You know what?
There's an intensity in his gaze.
Which I like. Yeah.
And we've also resigned a number of important players, including Anthony
Hardigan, who's been a Wimbledon player since his youth and also Shane McLaughlin.
So I don't know. I'm feeling, huh, is it, I mean, it's a fair to say I'm feeling good.
No, it's not. I'm not feeling good yet.
But I cannot wait to see AFC Wimbledon play in
their new stadium. That is going to be a magical, magical moment for me. I hope that it happens
soon.
John, in this week's Mars news, it's time. It's launch time because we are, the planet
is currently close to Mars, our planet is close to Mars, and so everything is launching.
The United Arab Emirates launched on July 20th, the Hope Orbiter,
which successfully launched, they established contact with it,
so everything went as planned, and it will reach Mars,
and then we'll be collecting data about Mars' weather,
and helping scientists understand how Mars lost its hydrogen and oxygen.
There was another Mars mission launched on July 23rd. It's Tianwen 1. And the name of that
mission comes from a poem from 300 BC. And it means questions to heaven, which is really,
really great. And it has an orbiter and a lander rover duo,
which is the first time something like that combination
has been sent to Mars.
Like the United Arab Emirates, Hope Orbiter,
it should arrive in February,
and the lander rover duo is scheduled to land in Mars
as Northern hemisphere,
around two to three months after that.
The rover and orbiter will be gathering information
about geology, the soil, the ionosphere,
and other things
about Mars' internal structure.
And finally, the scheduled for launch, NASA's Perseverance Rover on July 30th.
So by the time this podcast is posted, it should have been launched and you will know better
than I, person listening, how that went.
Fingers crossed that that went well.
It is, it is launch time.
It's a very, very busy sky right now for Mars missions.
All right, let's get that stuff in the air
and on the very long journey.
That's a very long journey, but they will arrive.
It's exciting.
It's exciting.
I am excited too.
Hank.
Yes.
Thank you for potting with me.
And thanks to everybody for listening.
You can send us your questions at Hank and John
at gmail.com.
We love reading your questions,
and we're sorry for all the ones that we haven't answered.
This podcast is edited by Joseph Tuna Metash.
It's produced by Rosiana Hals Rohaston,
Sheridan Gibson.
Our editorial assistant is Deboky Trockervardi.
Our communications coordinator is Julia Bloom.
The music you're hearing now is by the great Gunnarola,
and as they say in our hometown,
don't forget to be awesome.